Read Midnight in Europe Online

Authors: Alan Furst

Tags: #Historical, #Thriller, #Suspense

Midnight in Europe (21 page)

BOOK: Midnight in Europe
5.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Certainly. And some of my schoolmates were good companions, I still have two or three friendships from those days.”

Ferrar had a sip of his chocolate, first dipping up a spoon of Angelina’s exquisite whipped cream from the little pot that accompanied the cup and saucer.

The marquesa said, “And are you still in touch with friends from Spain, Monsieur Ferrar?”

“I am not,” he said. “And I expect that the boys and girls I knew in Barcelona are scattered far and wide by the war. And I fear that some of them are no longer alive.”

“What terrible things war does to us,” she said, with sorrow in her voice.

He nodded. Wanting to move away from this subject he said, “One has to escape it, however one can. For example, having hot chocolate at Angelina’s.” Then he said, “With a friend.”

She nodded her head to one side, eyes briefly closed—thus she accepted his compliment. “You don’t sound as though you have much desire to return there.”

“That’s true, sad to say.”

“And is that because your sympathies lie with the Republic?”

“Yes,” Ferrar said.

“I would imagine,” she said, “that you have been tempted to act on those sympathies.”

“Of course I have … most of the Spanish émigrés here do what they can … in the way of donations, meetings, whatever support is possible. But you don’t have to do much; if General Franco wins, and it is beginning to look like he will, it would be unwise for me to go back to Spain. And then, I’ve become a lover of this city and will stay here. If I can.”

“Oh I’m sure you can, Monsieur Ferrar. One would hate to lose you.” At this, she looked very directly into his eyes.

They went on for a while longer, leaving the border of intimacy and settling on the pleasures of the city for their conversation. When he sensed that she was ready to leave, he asked if he might accompany her to her car and, after she had worked her hands into her gloves, they left the tearoom. Outside, the day had turned cloudy and chilly at the end of the afternoon, he said he hoped they could meet again, she said she would look forward to it and offered him her hand, palm down.


When Ferrar reached the office the following day, Jeannette said, “Mr. Barabee asks if you’ll please stop by his office.” He waited an instant, wondering if she might let him know more, but she returned to her work. Barabee was affable enough to begin with. Still, Ferrar felt something was troubling him. At last Barabee said, “Of all the strange questions I’ve ever had to ask anybody, this may well be the strangest.”

From Ferrar, a noncommittal “Oh?”

“Cristián, is it somehow possible that you stole a Polish train?”

Ferrar took a moment, then said, “Perhaps ‘borrowed’ is a better word, the train is still there. But we were having difficulties with the Polish railway authority—an attempt to block our shipment—and my associate, a fellow who does not easily accept failure, found an engineer who would drive the train up to Danzig.”

Barabee was tight-lipped, then shook his head in a way that meant,
what times we live in
. “The reason I ask is that I’m in touch with an official at the Sûreté Nationale, the French security service, and received from him an unofficial telephone call. Someone in the Polish government called him and said they were contemplating legal action against you. The French security official said he would see to it, informally, and the Pole said in that case they would not proceed. So, now I’ve
spoken to you
about it. But, Cristián, please, try not to draw fire, and, if you’re contemplating another visit to Poland, you might put that off for a time.”

“Thank you, George. And, I promise, no more stealing Polish trains.”

“The truth is, we’re being drawn into European conflict, more every day. The French have sent an arms-purchasing commission to New York and they have retained Coudert to advise them. What’s happened is that they are attempting to purchase five thousand warplanes and have fallen afoul of the Embargo Act. Now, we may be able to help, France may well
need
those warplanes, but I’m told they don’t exist, they will have to be built, and it will take a while to build them. This is a new industry—most of the men who own
aircraft manufacturing companies built their first aircraft with their own hands.”

“This isn’t such good news, about the French.”

“No, it isn’t. We’re safe enough here, for the moment, but that may change in a hurry. The French are
scared
.”

Barabee’s secretary knocked at his door, then opened it and said, “Mr. Barabee, Mr. and Mrs. Blaustein are here for their ten o’clock meeting.”

“We’ll talk later,” Ferrar said, and left the office.

That evening Ferrar went to Chez Lucette for
poulet de Bresse
, then returned home, settled a blanket around his shoulders, poured himself some brandy, lit a Gitane, and found his place in the Robert Byron book he’d been reading,
The Road to Oxiana
. Byron was one of the truly great English travelers and Ferrar read him in order to become lost in another time and place—in this case 1933 and Persia.

The day’s journey had a wild exhilaration. Up and down the mountains, over the endless flats, we bumped and swooped. The sun flayed us. Great spirals of dust, dancing like demons over the desert, stopped our dashing Chevrolet and choked us. Suddenly, from far across a valley, came the flash of a turquoise jar, bobbing along on a donkey. Its owner walked beside it, clad in a duller blue. And seeing the two lost in that gigantic stony waste, I understood why blue is the Persian colour, and why the Persian word for it means water as well.

Rising to have some more brandy, Ferrar felt as though he was at least beginning to calm down. The conversation with Barabee—who had his ear very close indeed to the political ground—had unsettled him. What if the Germans attacked France? What would he do with his family? Take them to New York? And just when should
he start to make such arrangements? Then, too, working with de Lyon had stirred a certain part of him, and he found himself wondering if it wouldn’t be better to stay and fight, if they would let him.

He poured the brandy in his kitchen, then, on the way back to his study, he opened the shutter over the single window that faced directly away from the Place Saint-Sulpice, and through which he could see a few treetops in the Jardin du Luxembourg. The night sky was clear, the trees visible in moonlight.

3 May. In mid-afternoon, a sudden thunderstorm: lightning bolts flashed over the Champs-Elysées, rain poured down, and Ferrar watched through his window as people ran to shelter in doorways, covering their heads with newspapers. As he forced himself back to work, his telephone rang. The call was from a young woman who worked for the diplomat Molina, the second secretary at the Spanish embassy and the man who had recruited Ferrar to work at the Oficina Técnica. Could he, she asked, come to a meeting that evening? Ferrar agreed. The young woman said he would be telephoned later in the day and given the time and place for the meeting.

“Is it not at the embassy?” Ferrar said.

“We will call you later,” she said and hung up.

By five-thirty Ferrar was beginning to wonder what was going on, then, just before six, the young woman telephoned and said the meeting would be at six-fifteen and gave him an address on the rue de Berri.

Strange, he thought. The rue de Berri was not far from the embassy, but hardly the place for an official meeting; it was a thoroughly commercial street, always busy, home to press agencies, small shops, and a few cafés. Ferrar left the office, then put up his umbrella as he crossed the boulevard. On the other side, he noticed two men sitting in a car, their eyes following him. What was this? Probably nothing. But at the address he’d been given, a man, somehow
kin to the men in the car, was waiting just inside the door. He asked Ferrar who he was, politely enough, then directed him to another building, just up the street. Where, in the lobby, yet one more man who happened to be there said, “Can you tell me your name?” Ferrar told him, then was given the number of an apartment on the fourth floor. He was ushered into the apartment by two men, bigger and tougher than their colleagues, who stared at him a moment longer than necessary, then stepped aside.

“Ah, it’s you,” Molina said, rising from a sofa. The parlor had the feel of a living room at the end of a long social evening; full ashtrays, empty wineglasses and coffee cups, stale air. Even Molina, as always in pince-nez and Vandyke beard, appeared slightly rumpled. This was not, Ferrar thought, the first meeting held in the apartment that day. “Señor Ferrar,” Molina said, some drama in his voice, “allow me to introduce General Juan Quebral.”

A young man, surely not yet thirty years old, rose from the couch. He was tall and fair-haired, wore eyeglasses with steel frames, had his jacket off, tie loosened, and shirtsleeves rolled up. “Pleased to meet you,” Quebral said and took Ferrar’s hand in a powerful grip. His presence was that of a man well known and well respected. And he was, Ferrar knew, all of that and more. General Quebral was one of a small group of young communists who had joined the Army of the Republic, fought well, been promoted through the ranks, led brilliantly, and become senior officers. Formerly an electrician at the Gijon shipyards, he had risen to be the military hope of the Spanish Republic—if their troops were to be led to victory, it was Quebral who would lead them. “Julio,” Quebral said to one of the men guarding the door, “please get a glass of wine for Señor Ferrar.” Turning to Ferrar he said, “Unless you would prefer coffee.”

Ferrar, sitting in a wing chair, said, “A glass of wine, please.”

“I thought so,” Quebral said.

“It is an honor to meet you, General Quebral,” Ferrar said.


My
honor, Señor Ferrar. We are grateful to you and the Oficina
Técnica. The Skoda cannon have reached our base in Salou, thanks to your determination.”

There was a knock at the door, everyone in the room tensed, then the door opened to admit Max de Lyon. Again Molina rose and, as he began his introduction, de Lyon glanced over his left shoulder, then his right, spoofing the man unnerved by excessive security.

Molina was amused. “You’re a comedian, Max. But you understand precaution. General Quebral has come secretly to Paris, he is in danger here, so we shall keep his visit a secret.”

De Lyon took an armchair and lit one of his brown cigarettes. Molina said, “We’ve been at this all of yesterday and today. Talking to a number of our arms buyers, some of whom had to travel a considerable distance.”

“People we need more than ever,” Quebral said. “Because we are going to make our most important effort of the war. For this we are forming a new army, to be known as the Army of the Ebro. This too should remain secret, of course, although anybody with a map and some knowledge of the terrain will have a good idea of where this campaign will take place.”

Molina said, “Of course we will be fighting, like any army, to gain territory, but I should remind you that we are this time fighting to prove to the world, and particularly to the politicians of Europe, that the Republic is still a powerful force that is nowhere near surrender.”

“We’ll do our best,” de Lyon said.

“Of course you will,” Quebral said. “We expect that. But the reason you are here is that we will now concentrate our efforts in one area, and I thought it would be a good idea if you heard it from me, personally. Now, if I were a fancy journalist, I might call it ‘the future of warfare.’ Our soldiers are digging trenches as I speak, our navy is fighting the submarines, but what we’ve learned in this war, and spilled blood to learn it, is that the outcome of any battle, now and in the future, will be determined in the sky.” He paused, then
said, “I didn’t mean to make a speech, but in a political life I’ve made a lot of them, it becomes a habit.”

“It’s true,” de Lyon said. “We’ve watched it happen. The troops advance, then the Messerschmitts show up and destroy them.” He inhaled on his cigarette, sat forward in his chair, and said, “So then, General, what do you need? And how much time do we have?”

“As for time, that depends on when we begin the campaign,” Quebral said. “Which I know but I can’t tell you.”

De Lyon nodded that he understood. He too had been brought a glass of wine, now he took a sip and said, “I ask because it used to be that we needed everything, and right away. This is different.”

“I know it is,” Quebral said.

“I imagine you have a list,” Ferrar said.

“I do. A short one. It starts with warplanes, which are impossible to find, there’s too much competition—Turks, Greeks, Poles, Yugoslavs, the
French
. Suddenly the world woke up.”

“Didn’t it though,” de Lyon said, with a bitter smile. “The prices of replacement parts for airplanes are hard to believe. And then, even if you’re willing to pay whatever anybody asks, you can’t find them.”

“There is also oil; we still have refineries and can produce aviation fuel.”

“Better for someone who knows that business,” de Lyon said.

“Next, anti-aircraft ammunition. The USSR shipped us anti-aircraft weapons, the seventy-six-millimeter Model F-22, and they are effective, but we lack ammunition. If we can’t fight the Messerschmitts from the air, we will have to fight them from the ground.”

“We may be able to find it,” de Lyon said. “Should we take that as our responsibility?”

“Yes,” Quebral said. “If you think you can do it, it’s yours.”

In time, Ferrar and de Lyon left together. Outside, the rain had stopped and the air smelled fresh and clean.

“What are you doing this evening?” de Lyon said.

“I’m waiting to hear,” Ferrar said.

“Come over to Le Cygne, I’ll be there at eleven-thirty.”


Le Cygne was as Ferrar remembered it; a glossy, black and white Art Deco room in the cellar of a crumbling tenement, not far from the Les Halles market. As always, Max de Lyon’s personal table awaited him, the maître d’ whipped the
RÉSERVÉ
sign off the black lacquer tabletop and pocketed his tip, then beckoned imperiously to a waiter, who hurried over to take de Lyon’s order for champagne. Just about the time it arrived, so did Stavros. With a new girlfriend—he’d had one on either arm the last time they’d met—this one a pale brunette with waves of black hair falling around her face. She wore a black dress that showed a bare shoulder and, Ferrar suspected from her myopic stare, carried a pair of eyeglasses in her purse. He was able to diagnose her myopia because she was staring at him while he, recalling Stavros’s inclination toward Balkan jealousy, looked everywhere but at her.

BOOK: Midnight in Europe
5.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Heiresses by Allison Rushby
Imperative Fate by Paige Johnson
Never Forget Me by Marguerite Kaye
Summer at Shell Cottage by Lucy Diamond
Murder of a Pink Elephant by Denise Swanson
Two Spirits by Jory Strong
Their Virgin Neighbor by Saba Sparks