North (9 page)

Read North Online

Authors: LOUIS-FERDINAND CÉLINE

Tags: #Autobiographical fiction, #War Stories, #Historical Fiction, #Historical, #Biographical, #World War, #1939-1945, #1939-1945 - Fiction, #Fiction, #Literary, #Adventure stories, #War & Military, #General, #Picaresque literature

BOOK: North
3.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Oh, very little . . . very little . . ."

"Then it would give me great pleasure, since you live across the street . . . you must call for me . . . I shall show you the picturesque spots . . . this city is secretive in a way . . . like your Lyons . . . it has been very much defamed, ah yes . . . slandered . . . sinister city! . . . city of pederasts! of monsters! . . . you must have heard . . ."

"Jealousy, sir . . . nothing more . . ."

"You shall see! . . . you shall see with your own eyes! . . . meanwhile, if you please, my apartment is yours . . . at your disposal. . . and all the flowers! . . . take some for your room . . . the Steinbock doesn't look like much, I know . . . the rooms are in a deplorable state . . . it suffered enormously under the last bombings . . . the whole street to be sure . . . this street, as you see it, is all façades . . . only here and there a room, an apartment . . . a few of the craters have been turned into lodgings, so I'm told . . . myself here, you can see for yourself, I've built . . . with the materials at my disposal . . . a mezzanine in mid-air . . . the ceiling the partitions, are from other buildings . . . across the street . . . next door . . . the furniture is from other destroyed neighborhoods . . . especially
Alt Köln
. . . friends here and there have helped me . . . in this house all the tenants were killed . . . killed in their homes . . . all the bodies identified . . . I am entitled by law . . . as long as I rebuild, occupy the premises residentially and pay my taxes, the place is mine . . . law of 1700, never abrogated . . ."

He was getting excited . . . pleading his cause . . . his pince-nez trembled . . . let no one question his rightl . . . or say he's, not occupying the place residentially! . . . not a florist! certainly not! Petrov's invention . . . filthy beast, ought to be Whipped, jealous swinish Slav!

"I trust it will all be settled . . . go back to Breslau? No! .. ; I'm starting a practice here . . . this will be my office!"

"Of course, my dear sir . . . of course!"

"Centrally situated, as you can see . . . two steps from the Chancellery!"

He taps his forehead . . .

"What! What! You didn't know?"

He gets up . . . really incredible . . . he looks at his watch . . . the Chancellor . . . the Chancellery so near! . . . this is the time, going on four! two steps! . . . would we care to?

"Oh, certainly! . . . delighted! . . . couldn't be more pleased! what luck!"

Pop Bébert in his bag and off we go . . . Not far, he was right . . . hardly a minute . . .

Good grief, is that their Chancellery? . . . a big stone rectangle, something like granite . . . but much more dismal than granite, more funereal . . . no wonder what happened there! . . . the Pantheon and the Invalides are gay by comparison . . . the whole thing on a gloomy small-town square . . . the doors of the Chancellery are really colossal . . . must be armored . . . and that's not all! But Adolf? . . . that's what we came for . . . is he inside? shut up? . . . is he coming out? . . . I ask Le Vig . . . he doesn't know . . . hell! . . . I ask the alleged Faustus . . . "Sh! Sh!" he goes . . . There they are! hear the band?" . . . I don't hear a thing . . . there's nobody but us on the little square . . . the three of us, the four, Lili, me, Le Vig, and him . . . nobody else . . . we stand there and wait . . . this Chancellery Square is really empty . . . not a sentry, not a soldier, not a
schupo
. . . It's beginning to look fishy to me . . . why'd he bring us here? . . . we've seen his Chancellery . . . I tell him so . . .

"Okay . . . let's go back . . ."

"Sh . . . Sh"

He hears something . . . he looks at me . . .

"There they are!"

I don't see a thing. . . I don't hear a thing. . .

Do you see anything?

I ask Lili. . . and Le Vig . . . no! nothing at all! . . . this character has me worried . . . I sort of suspected . . . but now I know . . . we don't hear or see a thing . . . but he . . . he can't contain himself! . . . he starts yelling! . . . bellowing! . . . gets up on his toes! . . .
heil! heil!
right there next to us it comes over him . . . waving his hat! . . .
heil!
. . .
heil!
. . . beside himself! . . . seeing things? . . . there's nothing . . . absolutely nothing! is he pulling our leg? a put-up job? the square is deserted . . . all the shops closed . . . and he sees Hitler!

"See him? He's going in! . . . the gates are opening! . . . magnificent! magnificent!
heil!"

And be bellows three more
heils
. . . Does he want us to . . . ? . . . he puts his hat back on . . . it's all over . . .

"Home now!"

I wasn't going to ask him if it was true . . . we don't open our mouths . . . we start off . . . we listen . . . he does the talking . . . Hitler was looking well. . . the crowd was so happy! . . . it's all right with us, we agree . . . all the way back to Schinderstrasse . . . to his house . . . through rubble and ruins . . . acrobatics . . . little stepladders to the "fourth-floor" landing, then down by the long rope ladder to his hammock mezzanine . . . rough! especially for me with my dizzy spells . . . well, here we are . . . where did he find all this furniture? . . . he explains . . . perfectly lucid . . . not raving any more . . . he has connections all over the suburbs . . . he buys furniture from people who've gone away . . . the absquatulated, the bombed-out, the deceased . . . oh, not whole lots . . . only the best pieces! I can see that it's true, he's not talking through his hat . . . good stuff! . . . chests of drawers, tables, chairs, not hideous in the least . . . I ask him . . .

"Is that legal too?"

"Absolutely! . . . Paragraph 4! same law of 1700! . . . reconstruction! I reconstruct! . . . I live here! . . . I pay my taxes! . . . absolutely regular!"

Not nuts at all. . .

"Ordinance of December 13, Potsdam 1700!"

Down cold! . . .

I listen to him . . . our place on rue Girardon, I'm thinking, it must be the same right this minute, they must be helping themselves . . . bet they've got sweet ordinances! . . . and well never see any of the stuff again . . . one side or the other, Boches or brethren, don't worry! all the same, crooks, scavengers, vampires of disaster . . . the uniform doesn't mean a thingi or the flag . . . thieves the whole lot of them . . . murderers! across the Rhine, Transcaucasus, Touraine, Arabidjan, Connecticut, don't beat your brains out, hominids wherever you gol . . . Lower Provence, Upper Silesia, bloodsuckers, phony lunatics, shysters barge in! . . . take everything you've got! . . . bad reputation? string him up! at ease! . . . got the article right here! . . . 75 . . . 113 . . . 117 . . . and the neck stretcher right around the corner . . . on with the noose!
crack!
this fellow here, it seemed to me, was taking pretty bad risks . . . from one minute to the next the whole kaboodle could hit him on the beezer, rare knickknacks, exotic plants, showcases in mid-air . . . they'd grab it all! . . . or suppose the RAF got interested in Berlin again! . . . this was only the intermission! . . . What good would his articles and paragraphs do him? even dating from Frederick . . . where would he go, he and his imaginary Hitler?

Ah, mezzanine! . . . ah, Chancellery! . . . sure, for the moment, during the intermission, he was better off than we were . . . his hanging gardens were kind of jolly . . . did he have visions? . . . possible! his nerves, the bombing? . . . I ask him . . .

"Did you lose everything, my dear sir? bombed out? . . . in Breslau?

I know his Breslau, a black country, earth and sky, blacker than Prussia and colder . . .

"Yes, everything! . . . absolutely everything! . . . material, losses!
ach! ach!

Here a gesture . . . such things mattered little! so little! . . . but! . . . but! . . .

"But my wife, my dear wife Anna! . . . and my younger son Horst, six years old . . ."

We're grieved of course . . . but he's not through yet:

"Two other sons! . . . in Russia . . . no news in sixteen months . . . my brother and nephew in France! . . . no news!"

We let out a few more ohs and ahs . . . best we can do . . . anyway this character, with everybody gone and no news, he rigs up an apartment and a lawyer s office . . . later, on Avenue Junot I saw the exact same thing . . . they took everything we had and moved in residentially . . . Purges are quick . . . half a second, they cut your throat and help themselves . . . you go back and it's all over! . . . your successor is reading his paper, smoking his pipe, Madame is busy doing something with her brassiere, sewing, farting, and discussing vacation plans . . . the little girl is playing the piano, out of tune . . . you've got no more business there . . . go your way, kick off in silence . . . Faustus here had confidence . . . all set up in his hammock-apartment, which belonged to him more or less, he was looking forward to a long future . . . paying his taxes . . . nothing to worry about . . . And the whole place seesawed, it wouldn't have taken much to send his whole flower shop plummeting down into the street . . . one little bomb . . . dive and good-bye! . . . sitting there in the midst of his flumdiddle, I could see him in a regular shop on rue de Provence or Palais-Royal . . . he had everything, stuffed birds, collections of insects . . . fancy drapes . . . losing his wife, his son Horst, and God knows who else . . . and his brother . . . didn't crimp his trust that the tragedy would be over someday and that here with his residential setup, paying his taxes, his future was secure, especially in this location, a few steps from the Chancellery . . . all he had to do was wait . . . I agreed . . . I told him he was perfectly right . . . Le Vig and Lili congratulated him on his good taste, his knickknacks . . . so amusing! . . . his lovely flowers, his perfect French . . .

"You really think so?"

"Definitely!"

And more compliments . . .

I stood up and roamed around . . . a closer look . . . a knick-knack, another . . . What the! . . . I look again! . . . no mistake! . . . that fan! . . . seen it before! . . . absolutely! . . . I don't say a word, I keep it to myself . . . it's Madame von Dopfs fan from Baden-Baden . . . no mistake, there isn't another like it. . . I'll tell them when we get back to the hotel . . . in a situation like this a word too much can be fatal . . . I know from experience . . . let's not have any trouble . . . I turn my head, I compliment him some more on his flowers, his Mexican vases . . . his shrewdness in picking up options on all the wreckage in the neighborhood . . . even on the Steinbock across the street . . . rubble at three marks a ton, excavation at ten marks a square yard! . . . what an investment! I talked about everything . . . except the fan! then he had to give us another reading of the texts certifying his rights . . . and Lili had to choose a fewflowers . . . two . . . ten . . . as many as she liked . . . To get bade we'd climb down the ladder to the sidewalk . . . then he'd drop us a basket on a rope . . . all right with us . . . anything he said . . .

"Tomorrow at the same time? I shall take it as a favor . . . well go to Charlottenburg . . . would you like that?"

"Oh, certainly, my dear sir, certainly!"

Ah, the sidewalk! . . . at last! . . . and here's the basket coming down . . . quick! quick! ever so grateful! good-bye . . . good-bye. . .

"Thank you, sir . . . thank you!"

Back to our pad . . . We cross through the rubble quick . . . before the old men can wall us in . . . quick, our staircase . . . it's still there! . . . our rooms too . . .

"Now, you two, listen to me . . . you didn't see anything?"

I'm speaking in a whisper . . .

"No . . . his flowers . . ."

"You didn't see Hitler?"

"No . . ." 

"Who do you think this Faustus is?"

Le Vig doesn't hesitate . . .

"He's a cop, Ferd!"

"What was he after?"

"For us to say something seditious . . ."

"We fucked him there . . . never mind, he'll try again . . . but one thing you didn't see . . . in his place . . . pinned to the curtain in back . . ."

"What?"

"So you didn't notice! . . . easy to see if I'm nuts . . . Lili, where did you put Madame von Dopf's fan?"

No trouble, everything we own is in one suitcase, we know right away . . . Lili dumps it out on the bed, nothing! . . . no fan! . . .

"You didn't notice? . . . it's over at Faustus's!"

"So what?"

"So we've got to split!"

"Faustus never came here . . ."

"No, but Ivan . . ."

"You think they're in cahoots?"

"Babe in arms . . . Take it from me . . . if we don't clear out of here this second, we're in trouble . . . the thieving is nothing . . . it's the hanky-panky that bothers me . . ."

He doesn't think very fast. . . in practical matters . . . Lili neither . . . luckily I'm the boss . . .

"If we stay here we're fucked!"

"Where do we go?"

"Tve got an address!"

I didn't want to use that address . . . but this was no time to be finicky . . . couldn't be helped . . . the "alien squad" with those "anti-us" pictures of ours . . . no other solution . . . but Harras . . . a very compromising friend, couldn't deny it! super-SS! Just too bad!
alea facta!
Caesar hadn't gone into his thing very cheerfully either . . . At least Harras was the genuine article! no half-Nazi, quarter something else . . . Professor Harras, President of the Reich Medical Association . . . yes, plenty compromising, no question, but our first fatal crime was leaving our country . . . it's always the first step that counts!. . . forging checks, cracking safes, shop windows, high treason, and everything eue!. . . the first step is the toboggan of dishonor! . . . Lili and Le Vig see what I mean . . . 

"Yes, sure . . . you're right!"

They agree . . . but what a holy mess! . . . the game was up when we left Montmartre! . . . Le Vig himself, before he left, had built a kind of fort in bis own kitchen, beds, tables, chairs, washboiler . . . but they'd got him in the end! . . . same as they got Bonnot ° and Fort Chabrol °. . . Speaking of Fort Chabrol, a childhood memory, I saw that siege . . . and the surrender . . . and while we're at it, I've read since that Guérin ° was a very shady character . . . cop or not, I saw the bridge company of the First Engineers taking him away . . . he'd died a natural death on Quai de l'Ecluse . . . during the big flood of 1910 . . . those kid memories are always like yesterday . . .

Other books

Dastardly Bastard by Edward Lorn
The Frozen Dead by Bernard Minier
Grave Secrets by Trout, Linda
Wildfire by Billie Green
Dakota Father by Linda Ford
Tuesday The Rabbi Saw Red by Harry Kemelman