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He needed to talk to someone, he realized. And there was only Thomas, his former brother-in-law, his best friend. The only man in Berlin – on Earth, come to that – whom he would trust with his life.
He went back downstairs to the telephone.
Thomas sounded happy to hear from him. 'How was America?' he asked.
'Wonderful. But I've run into a few problems since I got back.'
'How long have you been back?'
'In Berlin, about six hours. I'd like a chat, Thomas. Can you find me a half hour or so tomorrow morning if I come to the works?'
'I imagine so. But wouldn't you rather have lunch?'
'I need a private chat.'
'Ah. All right. Ten-thirty? Eleven?'
'Ten-thirty. I'll be there.' Hanging up, he realized he hadn't even asked after Thomas's wife and children.
Back in his room he sat in the window, taking desultory swigs from the second bottle of beer. The roofs of the government district were visible in the distance, a barely discernible line against the night sky. He thought of Effi in her cell, hoped she was curled up in sleep, cocooned from the evil around her. The Schade Printing Works were in Treptow, a couple of streets from the River Spree. As Russell parked the Hanomag alongside Thomas's Adler, a ship's horn sounded on the river, a long mournful sound for such a bright morning. Russell had only managed a few dream-wracked hours of unconsciousness, and the coffee he'd grabbed at Gorlitzer Station had propelled his heart into an unwelcome gallop for longer than seemed safe.
The main print room was the usual cacophony of machines. Thomas's office was at the other end, and Russell exchanged nods of recognition with a couple of the men on his way through. Both looked like Jews, and probably were. Schade Printing Works employed a higher percentage of Jews than any business in Berlin, largely because Thomas insisted that he needed all his highly-skilled workforce to fulfil his many contracts with the government. The irony was not lost on his Jewish workers, much of whose work involved printing anti-Semitic tracts.
A smiling Thomas arose from his desk to shake Russell's hand. 'God, you look terrible,' he half-shouted over the din. 'What's happened?' he added, seeing the look in his friend's eyes.
Russell shut the door, which cut the noise by half. 'Effi's been arrested.'
'Why – or do I need to ask? Someone informed on her… I'm sorry, that's not helpful. Where is she?'
'Prinz Albrecht-Strasse. Can we talk outside?'
'Of course.' Thomas led him back into the printing room, through a store-room and down a few steps into the yard, where a line of tarpaulin-covered wagons stood ready for unloading in the company siding. The two men walked down past the buffers and sat side by side on a low brick wall, facing the yard and printing works. Birds sang in the weed-covered wasteland behind them; a rumble of machinery emanated from the cement works on the other side of the tracks.
'This do?'
Russell looked round. No one could get within earshot without being seen. 'They're going to let her go tomorrow – or at least I think they will. They more or less said as much. I was allowed five minutes with her yesterday – she's scared but she's okay. They haven't done anything to her, haven't even questioned her as far as I know.'
'So what…'
'It's me they're after. They'll only let her go if I agree to work for them.'
'Doing what?'
'I'll find that out tomorrow.'
'What could you do for them?'
'Ah. There's a history to this that you don't know about. You remember those articles I wrote for Pravda?'
'On the positive aspects of Nazi Germany? How could I forget?'
'I needed the money. And the Soviets fed me a line about preparing their readers for peace which I could just about swallow. As I expected, they wanted more than my magic pen – a little espionage on the side. I refused, of course; but then I got involved with the Wiesners – remember them? Felix Wiesner was a big-time doctor until the Nazis came along – an Iron Cross, First Class, by the way – but Kristallnacht finally convinced him that there was no future for his family here. His son was sent to Sachsenhausen and badly beaten. Felix hired me to teach his daughters English so they'd have a head start once he got them out. But then they arrested him on a trumped-up abortion charge, sent him to Sachsenhausen, and beat him to death. His widow and daughters were left in limbo, his son was on the run from the Gestapo. Enter yours truly with a brilliant idea. The Soviets wanted me to bring a few papers out of the country, papers that would interest any of Germany's enemies. I agreed to do it if they got Wiesner's son across the border, and I offered copies to the British in exchange for exit visas for the mother and two girls. Oh, and I demanded an American passport for myself, which I've just been given. Now I won't have to leave Paul and Effi behind when Chamberlain finally stands up to Hitler.'
Thomas was momentarily lost for words. 'My God,' he murmured.
Russell gave him a wry smile. 'It seemed like a good idea at the time.' He paused as a local passenger train rattled by. 'Still does, actually.'
'It sounds like you got away with it.'
'I thought I had. The bastards don't have anything definite against me, but they've got reasons to be suspicious. They know I was in contact with the Soviets over the articles, and they know that the Soviets expect more from their foreign correspondents than journalism. Hell, everyone does these days. The Gestapo, the SD, whichever bunch of goons we're talking about – they'll all be assuming I have contacts among communist circles here in Germany. And if they want to use me as a way in, then they've hit on the perfect way of getting me to cooperate.'
'Did Effi provide them with the excuse?'
Russell told him what she'd said. 'She was reported by another actress, one that she beat to a part.'
Thomas grimaced.
'So what do I do?'
Thomas ran a hand through his spiky grey hair. 'Well, I suppose the first thing is to find out what they want. Whatever it is, you'll have to at least say that you'll go along with it. If it's more than you can stomach, then, first chance you get, you take yourself and Effi out of this godforsaken country.'
'And Paul?'
'Better an absent father than a dead one.'
'Of course. But what if they punish him for my sins?'
Thomas used the clanking of a passing freight train to think about that. 'Maybe I'm being naive,' he said finally, 'but I don't believe they would. What could they do to a twelve year-old aryan boy? And he has his stepfather to stand up for him. Matthias is very fond of Paul – he wouldn't let anything happen to him without a real fight. Neither would I, by the way.'
'I know that. And you're probably right. I was thinking last night – this won't go away, I have to get out. But getting Effi out will take time – they won't just let her leave. Do we have that sort of time? The smart money's all on September, after the harvest, before the rains.'
'There's no way of knowing, is there? We seem to go through the same dramatic scenes every six months. Hitler stamps his foot and shouts a lot, everyone rushes around making him offers, and he graciously accepts a mere 99 per cent of what he asked for. It could happen again.'
'Not with the Poles.'
'You're probably right. I wish I could send Joachim somewhere safe.' Thomas's seventeen-year-old son was doing his compulsory year's service in the Arbeitsdienst public works programme, and would be shifted to auxiliary military duties if war broke out.
The two men sat in silence for a moment.
'So you're seeing the SD tomorrow,' Thomas said eventually. 'How are you going to spend the rest of today?'
'Worrying. And working, I suppose. I have a new job, by the way. Central and East European correspondent of the San Francisco Tribune. Salary, expenses, the works.'
'Well, that makes a welcome change. Congratulations.'
'Thanks. I met the Editor in New York – Ed Cummins. An amazing old man, very pro-Roosevelt.' Russell smiled. 'He wants me to wake America up. Particularly those Americans with their roots in Germany and Germany's neighbours. The Jewish-Americans of course, but the Polish-Americans, the Hungarian-Americans, all of them. He wants them to know what's really happening in the old countries, and to get really angry about it. And not to go along with all that crap – to use his own words – about it being none of America's business.' Russell laughed. 'Of course, we weren't reckoning on the SD and Gestapo breathing down my neck. I'll just have to convince the bastards that retaining my credibility as a journalist is in their interests too. Because if I suddenly start sucking up to them in print, no one who matters will trust anything I do or say.'