She managed to leave the question unspoken for about thirty meters, and then asked it with almost angry abruptness: So, will you do this job for us?
With one condition, Russell told her. I have a friend, a Jewish friend, in Berlin. The police are looking for him, and he needs to get out of the country. You get him across the border, and I will do the job for you.
And how are we supposed to get him across the border? she asked, suspicion in her tone.
The same way you always have, Russell said. I was in the Party myself onceremember? I knew people in the Pass-Apparat, he added, stretching the truth somewhat. Everyone knew about the escape routes into Belgium and Czechoslovakia.
That was many years ago.
Not according to my information, Russell bluffed.
She was silent for about fifty meters. There are a few such routes, she admitted. But they are not safe. If they were, we would not be asking you to bring out these papers. Maybe one person in three gets caught.
In Berlin its more like three out of three.
She sighed. I cant give you an answer now.
I understand that. Someone will have to contact me in Berlin to make the arrangements for my friends journey, and to give me the details of the job you want me to do. Tell your bosses that the moment my friend calls me from outside the Reich, I will collect your papers from wherever they are and bring them out.
Very well, she said after a moments thought. You had better choose a point of contact in Berlin.
The buffet at Zoo Station. I shall be there every morning this week. Between nine and ten.
She nodded approvingly. And a mark of identification. A particular book works well.
A good choice, she agreed, though whether for literary or other reasons she didn't say. Your contact will say that hes been meaning to read it, and will ask you if its any good.
He? Russell asked.
Or she, she conceded.
NINE OCLOCK ON MONDAY morning found him in the Zoo Station buffet, his dog-eared copy of
The sense of raw pain had gone from the Wiesners flatreplaced by a grim busyness, a determination to do whatever needed doing. There was grief to spare, the faces seemed to sayno need to spend it all at once.
And there was good news, Frau Wiesner told him. They had old friends in England, she said, in Manchester. The Doctor had written to them several weeks ago, and a reply had finally arrived, offering a temporary home for the girls. They had tickets to travel a week from Thursday.
I may have more good news, Russell told her. I have friends who may be willing to smuggle Albert across the border.
Mother and daughters all stared at him in amazement. What friends? Frau Wiesner asked.
The comrades, he said simply. The comrades they had both abandoned, he thought.
But I had no idea you were. . . .
Like you, I left a long time ago. And I cant go into details about the arrangements. But if I can fix things, can you get in touch with Albert at short notice?
Yes. The hope in her eyes was painful to see.
And will he trust me, do you think?
She smiled at that. Yes, he likes you.
And if we can get him out, there is nothing to keep you here?
The lack of a visa. Nothing else.
Im still working on that.
HE TRIED TO WRITE THAT AFTERNOON, but the words refused to matter. As evening fell he took himself off to the Alhambra and sat through an overblown Hollywood musical, murmuring sour asides to himself in the dark. The film had been made on the sort of budget which would feed a small country, but was mercifully devoid of consciousness-raising pretensions. The consciousness-lowering effect was presumably accidental.
The Kudamm was gearing up for the night as he emerged, thick with human and motorized traffic. He walked slowly westward with no real destination in mind, looking in windows, studying faces, wondering if the Soviets would agree to his terms. People lined up outside the theaters and cinemas, streamed in and out of the restaurants, most of them laughing or happily talking, living the moment as best they could. A police car careened up the center of the wide road, its siren parting the traffic like waves, but the visible signs of a police state were thin on the ground. In fact, Russell thought, it was the absence of violence which told the real story. The blood and the broken glass, the groups of men on corners, clutching their razors and itching for a brawlthey were all gone. The only violent lawbreakers left on the streets of Berlin were the authorities.
He walked back down the opposite pavement, picked up the car, and drove home.
TUESDAY OFFERED MORE OF THE SAME: waiting in vain at the buffet counter, working with words like a juggler in mittens. Frau Heidegger seemed irritating rather than quirky, Paul almost provokingly gung-ho in his description of the previous Saturdays
At least her film was finished. I have seen the error of my ways, and a good wife is all I want to be! she exclaimed as they left the studio. But only, she added as they reached the car, after Ive slept for at least a week. In the meantime you may wait on me hand and foot.
Later, he was still working up to telling her about his weekend in Posen when he realized shed fallen asleep. Which was all for the best, he decided. Thered be time enough for explanations if and when the Soviets said yes. Looking down at her sleeping face, the familiar lips ever-so-slightly curled in a sleepers smile, the whole business seemed utterly absurd.
CONTACT WAS MADE ON THURSDAY. The buffet clock was reaching toward ten when a man loomed over Russells shoulder and almost whispered the prearranged sentence. Lets walk, he added, before Russell had time to declaim on the virtues or otherwise of
The man made for the door with what seemed unnecessary haste, leaving Russell floundering in his wake. He seemed very young, Russell thought, but he looked anonymous enough: average height and build, tidy hair and a typical German face. His suit was wearing at the elbows, his shoes at the heels.
At the station exit the man turned toward the nearest Tiergarten entrance, pausing for a nervous look back as they reached it. Russell glanced back himself: The street was empty. Ahead of them, a few solitary walkers were visible among the leafless trees.
Its not a bad day, the young man said, looking up at the mostly gray sky. We will walk to Bellevue Station, like friends enjoying a morning stroll in the park.
They set off through the trees.
I am Gert, the young man said. And it is agreed. We will take your friend across the Czech border, and you will bring the papers to us in Prague. He fell silent as a steady stream of walkers passed them in the opposite directiona middle-aged couple and their poodles, a younger couple arm in arm, an older man with a muzzled Dobermanand paused to offer Russell a cigarette on the Lichtenstein Bridge across the Landwehrkanal. His hand, Russell noticed reluctantly, was shaking slightly.