Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TRIPLE
"Ut's have some coffee," Suza said. "Or would you prefer tear,
"Coffee, please. Thank you."
"I expect you want to see Daddy. He's teaching this morning, but hell be
back soon for lunch." She poured coffee beans into a hand-operated
grinder.
"And your motherr,
"She died fourteen years ago. Cancer." Suza looked at him, expecting the
automatic "I'm sorry." The words did not come, but the thought showed on
his face. Somehow she Red him more for that She ground the beans. The
noise filled the silence.
When she had finished, Dickstein said, "Professor Ashford is still
teaching ... I was just trying to work out his age."
"Sixty-five," she said. "He doesn7t do a lot." Sixty-five sounded ancient
but Daddy didn't seem old, she thought fondly: his mind was still sharp
as a knife. She wondered what Dickstein did for a living. "Didift you
emigrate to Palestine?" she asked him.
"Israel. I live on a kibbutz. I grow grapes and make wine."
Israel. In this house it was always called Palestine. How would Daddy
react to this old friend who now stood for everything Daddy stood
against? She knew the answer: it would make no difference, for Daddy's
politics were theoretical, not practical. She wondered why Dickstein had
come. "Are you on holidayr'
"Business. We now think the wine is good enough to export to Europe."
"'Mat's very good. And you're selling it?"
"Looking out the possibilities. Tell me about yourself. rIl bet you're
not a university professor."
The remark annoyed her a little, and she knew she was blushing faintly
just below her ears: she did not want this man to think she was not
clever enough to be a don. "What makes you say thatT' she said coolly.
"You're so . . . warm." Dickstein looked away, as if he immediately
regretted the choice of word. "Anyway, too young.99
She had misjudged him. He had not been condescending. "I have my father's
ear for languages, but not his academic turn of mind, so I'm an air
hostess," she said, and wondered if it were true that she did not have
an academic mind,
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whether she really was not clever enough to be a don. She poured boiling
water into a filter, and the smell of coffee filled the room. She did not
know what to say next. She glanced up at Dickstein and discovered that he
was openly gazing at her, deep in thought. His eyes were large and dark
brown. Suddenly she felt shy-which was most unusual. She told him so,
"Shy?" he said. "That's because I've been staring at you as if you were
a painting, or something. I'm trying to get used to the fact that you're
not Eila, you're the little girl with the old gray cat."
"Hezekiah died, it must have been soon after you left."
"'Ilere's a lot that's changed."
"Were you great friends with my parentsr
"I was one of your father's students. I admired your mother from a
distance. Eila . . ." Again he looked away, as if to pretend that it was
someone else speaking. "She wasn't just beautiful--she was striking."
Suza looked into his face. She thought: You loved her. Tlie thought came
unbidden; it was intuitive; she immediately suspected it might be wrong.
However, it would explain the severity of his reaction on the doorstep
when he saw her. She said, "My mother was the original hippy-did you know
thatT'
"I don't know what you mean."
"She wanted to be free. She rebelled against the restrictions
put on Arab women, even though she came from an affluent,
liberal home. She married my father to get out of the Middle
East. Of course she found that western society had its own
ways of repressing women --- so she proceeded to break most
of the rules." As she spoke Suza remembered how she had re
alized, while she was becoming a woman and beginning to
understand passion, that her mother was promiscuous. She
had been shocked, she was sure, but somehow she could not
recall the feeling.
"'Mat makes her a hippy?" Dickstein said.
"Hippies believe in free love."
641 see."
And from his reaction to that she knew that her mother had not loved Nat
Dickstein. For no reason at all this made her sad. "Tell me about your
parents," she said. She was talking to him as if they were the same age.
lie
TJUPLE
"Only if you pour the coffee."
She laughed. "I was forgetting."
"My father was a cobbler," Dickstein began. "He was good at mending boots
but he wasn't much of a businessman. Still, the Thirties were good years
for cobblers in the East End of London. People couldn't afford new boots,
so they had their old ones mended year after year. We were never rich,
but we had a little more money than most of the people around us. And,
of course, there was some pressure on my father from his family to expand
the business, open a second shop, employ other men."
Suza passed him his coffee. "Milk, sugar?"
"Sugar, no milk. Thank you."
"Do go on." It was a different world, one she knew nothing about: it had
never occurred to her that a shoe repairer would do well in a depression.
"Me leather dealers thought my father was a tartar-they could never sell
him anything but the best. If there was a second-rate hide they would
say, 'Don't bother . giving that to Dickstein, hell send it straight
back.' So I was told, anyway." He gave that little smile again.
"Is he still alive?" Suza asked.
"He died before the war."
"What happened?"
"Well. The Thirties were the Fascist years in London. They used to hold
open-air meetings every night. The speakers would tell them how Jews the
world over were sucking the blood of working people. The speakers, the
organizers, were respectable middle-class men, but the crowds were unem-
ployed ruffians. After the meetings they would march through the streets,
breaking windows and roughing-up pashersby. Our house was a perfect
target for them. We were Jews; my father was a shopkeeper and therefore
a bloodsucker; and, true to their propaganda, we were slightly better off
than the people around us."
He stopped, staring into space. Suza waited for him to go on. As he told
this story, he seemed to 'huddle-crossing his legs tightly, wrapping his
arms around his body, hunching his back. Sitting there on the kitchen
stool, in his ill-fitting suit of clerical,gray, with his elbows and
knees and shoulders pointing at all angles, he looked like a bundle of
sticks in a bag.
"We lived over the shop. Every damn night I used to lie 119
Ken Felleff
awake, waiting for them to go past. I was blind terrified, mainly because I
knew my father was so frightened. Sometimes they did nothing, just went by.
Usually they shouted out slogans. Often, often they broke the windows. A
couple of times they got Into the shop and smashed it up. I thought they
were going to come up the stairs. I put my head under the pillow, crying,
and cursed God for making me Jewish."
"Didn!t the police do anything?"
'Vhat they could. If they were around they stopped it. But they had a lot
to do in those days. The Communists were the only people who would help us
fight back, and my father didn't want their help. All the political parties
were against the Fascists, of course-but it was the Reds who gave out
pickaxe handles and crowbars and built barricades. I tried to join the
Party but they wouldn't have me--too young."
"And your father?"
"He just sort of lost heart. After the shop was wrecked the second time
there was no money to fix it. It seemed be didn't have the energy to start
again somewhere else. He went on the dole, and just kind of wasted. He died
in 1938."
"And you?"
"Grew up fast Joined the army as soon as I looked old enough. Got taken
prisoner early. Came to Oxford after the
war, then dropped out and went to Israel."
"Have you got a family out there?"
"The whole kibbutz is my family but I never mar.
ried."
"Because of my mother?"
"Perhaps. Partly. You're very direct."
She felt the glow of a faint blush below her ears again: it had been a very
intimate question to ask someone who was practically a stranger. Yet it had
come quite naturally. She said, "rm sorry."
"Don't apologize," Dickstein said. "I rarely talk like this. Actually, this
whole trip is, I don't know, full of the past. There's a word for it.
Redolent."
"That means smelling of death."
Dickstein shrugged.
There was a silence. I like this man a lot, Suza thought. I like his
conversation and his silences, his big eyes and his old suit and his
memories. I hope he'll stay a while.
She picked up the coffee cups and opened the dishwasher.
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_ TRIPLE
A spoon slid off a saucer and bounced under the large old freezer. She
said, "Damn."
Dickstein got down on his knees and peered underneath.
"It's there forever, now," Suza said. '~Mat thing is too heavy to move."
Dickstein lifted one end of the freezer with his right hand and reached
underneath it with his left. He lowered the end of the freezer, stood up
and handed the spoon to Suza.
She stared at him. "What are you-Captain America? 11at thing is heavy."
"I work in the fields. How do you know about Captain America? He was the
rage in my boyhood."
"Hes the rage now. 1he art in those comics is fantastic."
"Well, stone the crows," he said. "We had to read them in secret because
they were trash. Now they're art. Quite right, too.91
She smiled. "Do you really work in the fields?" He looked Eke a clerk, not
a field hand.
"Of course."
"A wine salesman who actually gets dirt under his fingernails in the
vineyard. That's unusual."
"Not in Israel. Were a little ... obsessive, I suppose ... about the
soil." *
Suza looked at her watch and was surprised to see how late it was. "Daddy
should be home any minute. Youll eat with us, won't you? Im afraid Ws only
a sandwich."
'qbat would be lovely."
She sliced a French loaf and began to make salad. Dickstein offered to
wash lettuce, and she gave him an apron. After a while she caught him
watching her again, smiling. "What are you thinking?"
"I was remembering something that would embarrass you," he said.
'Tell me anyway."
"I was here one evening, around six," he began. "Your mother was out. I
had come to borrow a book from your,father. You were in your bath. Your
father got a phone call from France, I can't remember why. While he was
talking you began to cry. I went upstairs, took you out of the bath, dried
you and put you into your nightdress. You must have been four or five
years old."
Suza laughed. She had a sudden vision of Dickstein in a
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steamy bathroom, reaching down and effortlessly lifting her out of a hot
bath full of soap bubbles. In the vision she was not a child but a grown
woman with wet breasts and foam between her thighs, and his hands were
strong and sure as he drew her against his chest. Then the kitchen door
opened and her father came 1% and the dream vanished, leaving only a sense
of intrigue and a trace of guilt.
Nat Dickstein thought Professor Ashford had aged wen. He was now bald
except for a monkish fringe of white hair. He had put on a little weight
and his movements were slower, but he still had the spark of intellectual
curiosity in his eyes.
Suza said, "A surprise guest, Daddy."
Ashford looked at him and, without hesitation, said, "Young Dicksteinl
Well, I'm blessedl My dear fellow."
Dickstein shook his hand. ne grip was firm. "How are you, professorr,
"In the Pink, dear boy, especially when my daughter's here to look after
me. You remember Suza?"
"Weve spent the morrung remmiscing," Dickstein said.
"I see shes put you In an apron already. 11aes fast even for her. I've told
her shell never get a husband this way. Take it off, dear boy, and come and
have a drink." -
With a rueful grin at Suza, Dickstein did as he was told and followed
Ashford Into the drawingroom.
"Sherryr Ashford asked.
"'Ibank you, a small one." Dickstein suddenly remembered he was here for a
purpose. He had to get information out of Ashford without the old.man
realizing it. He-had been, as it were, off-duty, for a couple of hours, and
now he had to turn his mind back to work. But softly, softly, he thought
Ashford handed him a small glass of pale sherry. "Now tell me, what have
you been up to all these years?"
Dickstein sipped the sherry. It was very dry, the way they liked it at
Oxford. He told the professor the story he had given to Hassan and to Suza,
about finding export markets for Israeli wine. Ashford asked informed
questions. Were Young People leaving the kibbutzim for the cities? Had time
and Prosperity eroded the communalist ideas of the kibbutzaiks? Did
European Jews mix and intermarry with African and Levantine Jews?
Dickstein's answers were yes, no, and not much. Ashford courteously avoided
the question of
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