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    The spies of warsaw

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      unamused, the ache was in both knees, so not so much the condition

      of the wounded warrior as that of a tall man who, the previous

      evening, had been making love with a short woman in the shower.

      Mercier went first to his apartment, changed quickly into uniform,

      then walked back to the embassy, a handsome building on Nowy

      Swiat, a few doors from the British embassy, on a tree-lined square

      with a statue. In his office, he typed out a brief report of his contact

      with Uhl. Very terse: the date and time and location, the delivery of

      diagrams for the production of the new--1B--version of the Panzer

      tank, the payment made, establishment of the next meeting.

      Should he include the fact that Uhl was wriggling? No, nothing

      had really happened; surely they didn't care, in Paris, to be bothered

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      H OT E L E U RO P E J S K I * 2 5

      with such trivia. He had a long, careful look at the diagrams to make

      sure they were as described--there was potential here for real disaster;

      it had happened more than once, they'd told him; plans for a public

      lavatory or a design for a mechanical can opener--then gave the

      report, the diagrams, and the signed receipt to one of the embassy

      clerks for transmission back to the General Staff in Paris, with a copy

      of the report to the ambassador's office and another for the safe that

      held his office files.

      Next he took a taxi--he had an embassy car and driver available

      to him, but he didn't want to bother--out to the neighborhood of the

      Citadel, where the Polish General Staff had its offices, to a small cafe

      where he was to meet with his Polish counterpart, Colonel Anton

      Vyborg. He was first to arrive. They came to this cafe not precisely for

      secrecy, rather for privacy--it was more comfortable to speak openly

      away from their respective offices. That was one reason, there was

      another.

      As soon as Mercier was seated at their usual table, the proprietor

      produced a large platter of ponczkis, a kind of small jelly doughnut, dusted with granulated sugar, light and fluffy, to which Mercier

      was gravely addicted. The proprietor, chubby and smiling, in a wellspattered apron, produced also a silver carafe of coffee. It required all

      of Mercier's aristocratic courtesy and diplomatic reserve to leave the

      warm, damnably fragrant ponczkis on the platter.

      Vyborg, thank heaven, was precisely on time, and together they

      set upon the pastries. There was something of the Baltic knight in

      Colonel Vyborg. In his forties, he was tall and well-built and thinlipped, with webbed lines at the corners of eyes made to squint into

      blizzards, and stiff, colorless hair cut short in the cavalry officer fashion. He wore high leather boots, supple and dark, well rubbed with

      saddle soap--Mercier always caught a whiff of it in Vyborg's presence, mixed with the smell of the little cigars he smoked.

      Vyborg was a senior officer in the intelligence service, the Oddzial

      II--the Deuxieme Bureau, named in the French tradition--of the Polish Army General Staff, known as the Dwojka, which meant "the

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      2 6 * T H E S P I E S O F WA R S AW

      two." Vyborg worked in Section IIb, where they dealt with Austria,

      Germany, and France; Section IIa occupied itself with the country's

      primary enemies--thus the a--Russia, Lithuania, Byelorussia, and

      the Ukraine. Did Vyborg's section run agents on French territory?

      Likely they did. Did France do the same thing? Mercier thought so,

      but was kept ignorant of such operations, at any rate officially ignorant, but it was more than probable that the French SR, the Service des

      Renseignements, the clandestine service of the Deuxieme Bureau, did

      precisely that. Know your enemies, know your friends, avoid surprise

      at all costs. But the discovery of such operations, when they came to

      light, was always an unhappy moment. Allies were, for reasons of the

      heart more than the brain, supposed to trust each other. And when

      they demonstrably didn't, it was as though the state of the human

      condition had slipped a notch.

      "Have the last one," Vyborg said, refilling Mercier's coffee cup.

      "For you, Anton."

      "No, I must insist."

      Gracefully, Mercier acceded to diplomacy.

      Breakfast over, Vyborg lit one of his miniature cigars, and Mercier

      a Mewa--a Seagull--one of the better Polish cigarettes.

      "So," Vyborg said, "the Renault people will be here the day after

      tomorrow." A delegation of executives and engineers was scheduled to

      visit Warsaw, a step in the process of selling Renault tanks to the Polish army.

      "Yes," Mercier said, "we are ready for them. They're bringing a

      senator."

      "You'll be at the dinner?"

      From Mercier, a rather grim smile: no escape.

      Their eyes met, they had in common a distaste for the obligatory

      social engagements required for their work. "It will be very boring,"

      Vyborg said. "In case you were concerned."

      "I was counting on it."

      "You'll be accompanied?"

      Mercier nodded. With no wife or fiancee, he would be with the

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      H OT E L E U RO P E J S K I * 2 7

      deputy director of protocol at the embassy, who served as table partner to Mercier, and one other bachelor diplomat, when the need arose.

      "You've met Madame Dupin?"

      "I've had the pleasure," Vyborg said.

      "Where is it?"

      "We sent a note to your office," Vyborg said, one eyebrow arched.

      Don't you read your mail? "A private dining room at the Europejski,"

      Vyborg said. "They're going to watch a field maneuver earlier in the

      day, so they're sure to be exhausted, which will make the evening even

      more amusing. Then we're going on to a nightclub--the Adria, of

      course--for dancing until dawn."

      "I can't wait," Mercier said.

      "It's obligatory. When the purchasing delegation went to Renault

      in Paris, they were taken to some naughty cancan place--they're still

      talking about it--so . . ."

      "Will you buy anything?"

      "We shouldn't, but there's always a possibility. They want to sell

      us the R Thirty-five, which was demonstrated when the delegation visited the factory. This visit is supposed to close the deal."

      "The R Thirty-five isn't so bad." Mercier, officially loyal to the

      national industries, had to say that and Vyborg knew it. "For infantry

      support."

      Vyborg shrugged. "A thirty-seven-millimeter cannon, one machine

      gun. And they only go twelve miles an hour, with a range of eighty

      miles. The armour's thick enough, but you don't get much machine

      for the money. Truthfully, if it wasn't French, we wouldn't bother, but

      this is up to Smigly-Rydz's office." He meant the inspector general of

      the Polish army. "And they may have to bow to political pressure, so,

      potentially, our tank crews will die for the cancan."

      "What do you have now? The last figure I heard was two hundred."

      "That's about right, unfortunately. The Russians have two thousand, best we know, and the same for the Germans. The Ursus factory

      is working on the Seven TP, our own model, unde
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      2 8 * T H E S P I E S O F WA R S AW

      ers, but Ursus has to make farm tractors as well, and we need those. In

      the end, it's always the same problem: money. You've been out to the

      Ursus factory?"

      "I was. At the end of the summer."

      "Maybe that's the answer, maybe not. It really depends on how

      much time we have until the next war starts."

      Mercier finished his coffee, then refilled both their cups. "Hitler

      loves his tanks," he said.

      "Yes, we heard that story. 'These are wonderful! Make more of

      them!' An infantry soldier in the war, he knows what the British did at

      Cambrai, a hundred tanks, all at once. The Germans broke and ran."

      "Not like them."

      "No, but they did that day."

      For a moment, they were both in the past.

      "Who else is coming to the dinner?" Mercier said.

      "Well, they have a senator, so we'll have somebody from the Sejm.

      Then a few people from the French community: the ubiquitous Monsieur Travas, the Pathe agency manager, is coming, with some gorgeous girlfriend, no doubt, and we've asked your ambassador, of

      course, but he's declined. We may get the charge d'affaires."

      "Who's the senator?"

      "Bernand? Bertrand? Something like that. I have it back at the

      office. One of the Popular Front politicians. Somebody from Beck's

      office will talk with him, though we doubt he'll have anything new to

      say."

      Josef Beck was the Polish foreign minister, and Vyborg now

      referred to the issue that stood between him and Mercier, between

      France and Poland. Treaties aside, would France come to Poland's aid

      if Poland were attacked?

      "Likely he won't," Mercier said.

      "We think not," Vyborg agreed. "But we must try."

      France's political condition--strikes, communist pressure, a right

      wing divided into fascists and conservatives, failure to aid the Spanish

      Republic--continued to deteriorate. The most absurd views were held

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      H OT E L E U RO P E J S K I * 2 9

      sacred, and there was too much deal-making, though all of this was

      seen by a tolerant world as a kind of amiable chaos--a British politician had said that a map of French political opinion would look like

      Einstein's hair. But, to Mercier, it wasn't so amusing. "You know what

      I think, Anton. If the worst happens, and it starts again, you must be

      prepared to stand alone. A map of Europe tells the story. It's that, or

      alliance with Russia--which we favor but Poland will never do--or

      alliance with Germany, which we certainly don't favor, and you won't

      do that either."

      "I know," Vyborg said. "We all know." He paused, then brightened. "But, nevertheless, we'll see you at the Renault dinner."

      "And then at the Adria."

      "You will ask my wife to dance?"

      "I shall. And you, Madame Dupin."

      "Naturally," Vyborg said. "More coffee?"

      At eleven, Mercier was back at the embassy for the daily political

      meeting. The ambassador presided, touched on political events of the

      last twenty-four hours, and looked ahead to the Renault visit--special

      care here, don't bother there. Then LeBeau, the charge d'affaires and

      first officer, reported on unrest, potential anti-Jewish demonstrations

      in Danzig, and a border incident in Silesia. Then the ambassador

      moved on to the topic of electricity consumption at the embassy. How

      difficult was it, really, to turn off the lights when not in use?

      Mercier had a bowl of soup for lunch at a nearby restaurant; half a

      bowl--Polish chicken soup was rich and powerful, laden with heavy,

      twisted noodles--because the ponczkis had finished his appetite for

      the day. He did paperwork in his office until two-thirty, then returned

      to his apartment, changed from uniform back into civilian clothes--

      gray flannel trousers, dark wool jacket, subdued striped tie--and set

      out for his third cafe of the day. This time on Marszalkowska avenue,

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      3 0 * T H E S P I E S O F WA R S AW

      a lively and elegant street with trees, awnings, nightclubs, and smart

      shops.

      At midafternoon, the Cafe Cleo was a perfect sanctuary: marble

      tables, black-and-white tiled floor, a bow window looking out on the

      avenue, where a less-favored world hurried by. The small room was

      almost full; the customers chattered away, read the papers, played

      chess, drank foamy cups of hot chocolate with whipped cream; their

      dogs, mostly beagles, lay attentive under the tables, waiting for cake

      crumbs. In a corner at the back, Hana Musser, spectacles pushed

      down on her pert nose, worked at a crossword puzzle, lost in concentration, tapping her teeth with a pencil.

      Mercier liked Hana Musser, a half-Czech, half-German woman of

      uncertain age, who, two years earlier, had fled the fulminous Nazi politics of the Sudetenland and settled in Warsaw, where she worked at

      whatever she could but found the economic life of the city more than

      difficult. She had fine skin and fine features, a mass of brass-colored

      hair drawn back in a clip, and wore a bulky, home-knit cardigan

      sweater of a dreadful pea-green shade. How Colonel Bruner had discovered her--to play the part of Countess Sczelenska--Mercier did

      not know, but he had his suspicions. Was she a prostitute? Never a true

      professional, he guessed, but perhaps a woman who, from time to

      time, might meet a man at a cafe, with some kind of gift to follow an

      afternoon spent in a hotel room. And, if the man had money, the affair

      might continue.

      As Mercier seated himself, she looked up, took her spectacles off,

      smiled at him, and said, "Good afternoon," in German.

      "And to you," Mercier said. "All goes well?"

      "Quite well, thank you. And yourself?"

      "Not so bad," Mercier said. A waiter appeared, Mercier ordered

      coffee. "May I get you something?"

      "Another chocolate, please."

      When the waiter left, Mercier said, "We've made our usual

      deposit."

      "Yes, I know, thank you, as always."

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      H OT E L E U RO P E J S K I * 3 1

      "How do you find your friend, these days?"

      "Much as usual. Herr Uhl is a very straightforward fellow. His

      journeys to Warsaw are the high points of his life. Otherwise, he

      labors away, the good family man."

      "And you, Hana?"

      From Hana, a half smile and a certain sparkle in her eyes--she

      always flirted with him, he never minded. "The Countess Sczelenska

      never changes. She can be difficult, at times, but is captive to her

      heart's desires." She laughed and said, "I rather like her, actually."

      The waiter appeared with coffee and hot chocolate; someone,

      probably the waiter himself, had added a particularly generous gobbet

      of whipped cream atop the chocolate. Hana pressed her hands

      together and said, "Oh my!" How not to reward such a waiter? She

      spooned up almost all of the cream, then stirred in the rest.

      "We are appreciative," Mercier said, "of what you do for us."

      "Ye
    s?" She liked the compliment. "I suppose there are legions of

      us."

      "No, countess, there's only you."

      "Oh I bet," she said, teasing him. "Anyhow, I think I was born to

      be a spy. Wouldn't you agree?"

      "Born? I couldn't say. Perhaps more the times one lives in. Circumstance. There's a French saying, ' Ou le Dieu a vous seme, il faut

      savoir fleurir. ' Let's see, 'Wherever God has planted you, you must

      know how to flower,' " he said in German.

      "That's good," she said.

      "I've never forgotten it."

      She paused, then said, "If you knew what came before, you'd see

      that being a countess is much of an improvement. Have you ever been

      hungry, Andre? Really hungry?"

      "During the war, sometimes."

      "But dinner was coming, sooner or later."

      He nodded.

      "So," she said. "Anyhow, I wanted to say, if Herr Uhl should--

      well, if he goes away, or whatever happens to such people, perhaps I

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      3 2 * T H E S P I E S O F WA R S AW

      could continue. Perhaps you would want something--something different."

      "We might," he said. "One never knows the future."

      "No," she said. "Probably it's better that way."

      "Speaking of the future, your next meeting with Herr Uhl will

      take place on the fifteenth of November. He doesn't say anything

      about me, does he?"

      "No, never. He comes to Warsaw on business."

      Would she tell him if he did?

      "In a week or two he will telephone," she said. "From the Breslau

      railway station. That much he does tell me."

      "A different kind of secret," Mercier said.

      "Yes," she said. "The secret of a love affair." Again the smile, and

      her eyes meeting his.

      18 October, 4:20 p.m. On the 2:10 train from Warsaw, the first-class

      compartment was full, but Herr Edvard Uhl had been early and taken

      the seat by the window. The gray afternoon had at last produced a

      slow rain over the October countryside, where narrow sandy roads led

      away into the forest.

      As the train clattered across central Poland, Uhl was not at ease.

      He stared at the droplets sliding across the window, or at the brown

      fields beyond, but his mind was too much occupied by going home,

      going back to Breslau, to work and family. The unease was not unlike that of a schoolboy's Sunday night; the weekend teased you with

      freedom, then the looming Monday morning took it away. The

     


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