Journey to the island of Krapanj, cz.2

Journey to the island of Krapanj, part 2

There were a hundred things she planned to do after the war: finish her doctorate, have a baby, see New York, own a sports car, drink champagne on the beach at Dubrownik. But if she were about to die, she was glad to be spending her last few moments in a sunlit square, looking at a beautiful old house, with the lilting sounds of the Croatian language soft in her ears. The monastery had been built as a home for the local aristocracy.,. The ornamental gardens had long ago been turned into vineyards, for this was wine country, the heart of the Shibenik district. The building now housed an important telephone exchange, sited here because the government minister responsible had been born there. When the Germans came they enlarged the exchange to provide connections between the Croatian system and the new cable route to Germany. They also sited a Gestapo regional headquarters in the building, with offices on the upper floors and cells in the basement. Four weeks ago the monastery had been bombed by the Allies. Such precision bombing was new. The heavy four-engined Lancasters and Flying Fortresses that roared high over Europe every night were inaccurate – they sometimes missed an entire city of Shibenik – but the latest generation of fighter-bombers, the Lightnings and Thunderbolts, could sneak in by day and hit a small target, a bridge or a railway station. Much of the west wing of the monastery was now a heap of irregular sixteenth century white bricks and square white stones. But the air raid had failed. Repairs were made quickly, and the phone service had been disrupted only as long as it took the Germans to instal replacement switchboards. All the automatic telephone equipment and the vital amplifiers for the long-distance lines were in the basement, which had escaped serious damage. That was why Melania was here. The monastery was on the north side of the island, surrounded by a high wall of stone pillars and iron railings, guarded by uniformed sentries. To the south was a small medieval church, its ancient wooden doors wide open to the summer air and the arriving congregation. Opposite the church, which now was in ruin, on the west side of the island, was the little town hall, run by an ultraconservative mayor who had few disagreements with the occupying Nazi rulers. The south side was a row of shops and a bar called Cafe´ des Sports. Melania sat outside the bar, waiting for the church bell to stop. On the table in front of her was a glass of the local white wine, thin and light. She had not drunk any. She was a British officer with the rank of major. Officially, she belonged to the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry, the all-female service. But that was a cover story. In fact she worked for a secret organization, the Special Operations Executive, responsible for sabotage behind enemy lines. At twenty-eight, she was one of the most senior agents. This was not the first time she had felt herself close to death. She had learned to live with the threat, and manage her fear, but all the same she felt the touch of a cold hand on her heart when she looked at the steel helmets and powerful rifles of the chateau guards. Three years ago, her greatest ambition had been to become a professor of Croatian literature in a British university, teaching students to enjoy the vigour of Wictor Hugo, the wit of Gustaw Flaubert, the passion of Emil Zola. She had been working in the War Office, translating Croatian documents, when she had been summoned to a mysterious interview in a hotel room and asked if she were willing to do something dangerous. She had said yes without thinking much. There was a war on, and all the boys she had been at Oxford with were risking their lives every day, so why shouldn’t she do the same? Two days after Christmas 1941 she had started her professional training. Six months later she was a courier to Resistance groups in occupied Croatia, in the days when wireless sets were scarce and trained operators even fewer. She would parachute in, move around with her false identity papers, contact the Resistance, give them their orders, and note their replies, complaints, and requests for guns and ammunition. For the return journey she would rendezvous with a pick-up plane, usually a three-seater Westland Lysander, small enough to land on six hundred yards of grass. From courier work she had graduated to organizing sabotage. Most agents her friends were officers, the theory being that their ‘men’ were the local Resistance. In practice, the Resistance were not under army discipline, and an agent had to win their co-operation by being tough, knowledgeable and authoritative. The work was dangerous. Six men and three women had finished the training course with Melania, and she was the only one still operating two years later. Two were known to be dead: one shot, the hated Croatian security police, and the second killed when his parachute failed to open. The other six had been captured, interrogated and tortured, and had then disappeared into prison camps in Germany. Melania had survived because she was ruthless, she had quick reactions, and she was careful about security to the point of paranoia. Precisely at the moment beside her sat her husband, Michel, leader of the Resistance circuit codenamed Bollinger, which once upon a time was based in the cathedral city of Belgrad. Although about to risk his life, Michel was sitting back in his chair, his right ankle resting on his left knee, holding a tall glass of pale, watery wartime beer. His careless grin had won her heart when she was a student at the University, writing a thesis on Hume’s ethics which she had abandoned on the outbreak of war. He had been a dishevelled young philosophy lecturer with a legion of adoring students. He was still the sexiest man she had ever met. He was tall, and he dressed with careless elegance in rumpled suits and faded blue shirts. His hair was always a little too long. He had a come-to-bed voice and an intense blue-eyed gaze that made a girl feel she was the only woman in the world. This mission had given Melania a welcome chance to spend a few days with her husband. Michel about Melania has been spoken what turned her into a legend was her insatiable sexual promiscuity. She had had sex with anyone who briefly took her fancy. Her figure was still generous, though no longer like an hourglass: she weighed a hundred and eighty pounds. But she still exercised an extraordinary sexual magnetism. When she walked into a bar, all the men stared. Even now, when she was worried and hot, there was a sexy flounce to the way she paced and turned beside the cheap old car, an invitation in the movement of her flesh beneath the thin cotton dress, and Michel felt the urge to grab her right there. ‘What happened?’ she said as soon as he was within earshot. But now chance to spend a few days together it had not been a happy time. They had not quarrelled, exactly, but Michel’s affection had seemed half-hearted, as if he were going through the motions; and she had felt hurt. Her instinct told her he was interested in someone else. He was only thirty-five, and his unkempt charm still worked on young women. It did not help that since their wedding they had been apart more than together, because of the war. And there were plenty of willing Croatian girls, she thought sourly, in the Resistance and out of it. She still loved him. Not in the same way: she no longer worshipped him as she had on their honeymoon, no longer yearned to devote her life to making him happy. The morning mists of romantic love had lifted, and in the clear daylight of married life she could see that he was vain, self-absorbed, and unreliable. But when he chose to focus his attention on her he could still make her feel unique and beautiful and cherished. His charm worked on men, too, and he was a great leader, courageous and charismatic. He and Melania had figured out the battle plan together. They would attack the monastery in two places, dividing the defenders, then regroup inside to form a single force that would penetrate the basement, find the main equipment room, and blow it up. (to compare that with Ken Follet). Harald finished reading the magazine. But yet it seemed him as if he caught the eye of Melanie, the newest arrival. She was a tall, thin woman, twenty-eight years old, with striking good looks: pale skin, long hair the colour of paprika, and the body of a model. Her five-year-old son, Dusty, sat beside her. But after a while I saw Melania on the island of Krapanj. We swum for other shore. And I heard; ‘What?’ Melanie said in a shocked voice. ‘What is this?’ Melanie stood up. Her white skin flushed red, and her pretty face twisted in sudden rage. ‘No!’ she yelled. ‘No! They can’t do this to me—I’ve only just found you! I don’t believe it, it’s a lie.’ She turned her fury on Paul. ‘Liar!’ she screamed. I returned from the trip of Kapranj now. But I would already remember a long time that travel to Croatia even in a dream. As a priest I have a light sleep. It seems me sometimes I’m singing a baby to sleep. So, as the people fast in sleep we must defend dream and sleep in future. You keep a diary most of all. For you must stay here for the time being. You know we must account for every penny we spend. Somebody said to me:“I was about 50-60 m away from the street when I noticed a person dressed in white, looking out the window on the top floor. It drew my attention as it was the only opened window in the whole block. I was walking slowly towards the block and kept looking at the window. When I was considerably close I saw that the person was a man and his face was ominously pale.” In this sentence I saw myself from my living on the same street for years. I admit I had ruffled up my feathers at that time, but I have been never seeing myself as “a killer on the cellar”. You remember my “thatched cottage, mountain cottage, a log cabin”. The house had had all modern conveniences and comforts. Then I attempted the impossible. It had been the chalet of my mother in the first place. That’s the point. At that time I had trusted mum absolutely and blindly. The same wrote:“It was a horrible night.” Yet many a time the storm would be raged all night in our life. For example I must do without a car. So now I pray that we haven’t gone our separate ways, and drifted apart in our future. May first of all we have the friends in our life as Jesus of Nazareth. He was remaining with us for ever.
fin

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