MacLean, Alistair – Partisans

Petersen leaned back in his arm-chair and looked appreciatively around the large living-room. ‘My word. This is nice. Comfort? No. Luxury. You two young people do yourselves well, don’t you?’

‘Colonel Lunz arranged it for us,’ Michael said.

‘Inevitably. Favouritism. My spartan quarters-‘

‘Are of your own choosing,’ Lunz said mildly. ‘It is difficult to arrange accommodation for a person who is in town for three days before he lets anyone know that he’s here.’

‘You have a point. Not, mind you, that this place is perfect in all respects. Take, for instance, the matter of cocktail cabinets.’

‘Neither my brother nor I drink.’ Sarina’s voice was low-pitched and quiet. Petersen noticed that the slender interlaced hands were ivory-knuckled.

‘Admirable.’ Petersen picked up a briefcase he had brought with him, extracted a brandy bottle and two glasses and poured for Lunz and himself. ‘Your health. I hear you wish to join the good Colonel in Montenegro. You must, then, be Royalists. You can prove that?’

Michael said: ‘Do we have to prove it? I mean, don’t you trust us, believe us?’

‘You’ll have to learn and learn quickly- and by that I mean now – to adopt a different tone and attitude.’ Petersen was no longer genial and smiling. ‘Apart from a handful of people and I mean a handful – I haven’t trusted in or believed anyone for many years. Can you prove you’re a Royalist?’

‘We can when we get there.’ Sarina looked at Petersen’s unchanged expression and gave a helpless little shrug. ‘And 1 know King Peter. At least, I did.’

‘As King Peter is in London and London at the moment isn’t taking any calls from the Wehrmacht, that would be rather difficult to prove from here. And don’t tell me you can prove it when we get to Montenegro for that would be too late.’

Michael and Sarina looked at each other, momentarily at a loss for words, then Sarina said hesitatingly: ‘We don’t understand. When you say it would be too late-‘

‘Too late for me if my back is full of holes. Bullet wounds, stab wounds, that sort of thing.’

She stared at him, colour staining her cheeks, then said in a whisper: ‘You must be mad. Why on earth should we -‘

‘I don’t know and I’m not mad. It’s just by liking to live a little longer chat I manage to live a little longer.’ Petersen looked at them for several silent moments, then sighed. ‘So you want to come to Yugoslavia with me?’

‘Not really.’ Her hands were still clenched and now the brown eyes were hostile. ‘Not after what you’ve just said. She looked at her brother, then at Lunz, then back to Petersen. ‘Do we have any options?’

‘Certainly. Any amount. Ask Colonel Lunz ‘

‘Colonel?’

‘Not any amount. Very few and I wouldn’t recommend any of them. The whole point of the exercise is that you both get there intact and if you go by any other means the chances of your doing just that are remote: if you try it on your own the chances don’t exist. With Major Petersen you have safe conduct and guaranteed delivery – alive, that is.’

Michael said, doubt in his voice: ‘You have a great deal of confidence in Major Petersen.’

‘I do. So does Major Petersen. He has every right to, I may add. It’s not just that he knows the country in a way neither of you ever will. He moves as he pleases through any territory whether it’s held by friend or enemy. But what’s really important is that the fields of operations out there are in a state of constant flux. An area held by the Cetniks today can be held by the Partisans tomorrow. You’d be like lambs in the fold when the wolves come down from the hills.’

For the first time the girl smiled slightly. ‘And the Major is another wolf?’

‘More like a sabre-toothed tiger.- And he’s got two others who keep him constant company. Not, mind you, that I’ve ever heard of sabre-toothed tigers meeting up with wolves but you take my point, I hope.’

They didn’t say whether they took his point or not. Petersen looked at them both in turn and said: ‘Those fatigues you’re wearing- they’re British?’

They both nodded.

‘You have spares?’

Again they nodded in unison.

‘Winter clothing? Heavy boots?’

‘Well, no.’ Michael looked his embarrassment. ‘We didn’t think we would need them.’

‘You didn’t think you would need them.’ Petersen briefly contemplated the ceiling then returned his gaze to the uncomfortable pair on the couch. ‘You’re going up the mountains, maybe two thousand metres, in the depths of winter, not to a garden party in high summer.’

Lunz said hastily: ‘I shouldn’t have much trouble in arranging for these things by morning.’

‘Thank you, Colonel.’ Petersen pointed to two fairly large, canvas-wrapped packages on the floor. ‘Your radios, I take it. British?’

‘Yes,’ Michael said. ‘Latest models. Very tough.’

‘Spares?’

‘Lots. All we’ll ever need, the experts say.’

‘The experts have clearly never fallen down a ravine with a radio strapped to their backs. You’re British-trained, of course.’

‘No. American.’

‘In Cairo?’

‘Cairo is full of them. This was a staff sergeant in the US Marines. An expert in some new codes. He taught quite a few Britishers at the same time.’

‘Seems fair enough. Well, a little co-operation and we should get along just fine.’

‘Co-operation?’ Michael seemed puzzled.

‘Yes. If I have to give some instructions now and again I expect them to be followed.’

‘Instructions?’ Michael looked at his sister. ‘Nobody said anything-‘

‘I’m saying something now. I must express myself more clearly. Orders will be implicitly obeyed. If not, I’ll leave you behind in Italy, jettison you in the Adriatic or just simply abandon you in Yugoslavia. I will not jeopardize my mission for a couple of disobedient children who won’t do as they’re told.’

‘Children!’ Michael actually clenched his fists. ‘You have no right to -‘

‘He has every right to.’ Lunz’s interruption was sharp. ‘Major Petersen was talking about garden parties. He should have been talking about kindergartens. You’re young, ignorant and arrogant and are correspondingly dangerous on all three counts. Whether you’ve been sworn in or not, you’re now members of the Royal Yugoslav Army. Other rankers, such as you, take orders from officers.’

They made no reply, not even when Petersen again regarded the ceiling and said: ‘And we ail know the penalty for the wartime disobedience of orders.’

In Lunz’s staff car Petersen sighed and said: ‘I’m afraid I didn’t quite achieve the degree of rapport back there that I might have. They were in a rather unhappy frame of mind when we left.’

‘They’ll get over it. Young, as I said. Spoilt, into the bargain. Aristocrats, I’m told, even some royal blood. Von Karajan or something like that. Odd name for a Yugoslav.’

‘Not really. Almost certainly from Slovenia and the descendants of Austrians.’

‘Be that as it may, they come from a family that’s clearly not accustomed to taking orders and even less accustomed to being talked to the way you did.’

‘I daresay they’ll learn very quickly ‘

‘I daresay they will.’

Half an hour after returning to his room, Petersen was joined by George and Alex. George said, ‘Well, at least we know their name.’

‘So do I. Von Karajan. What else?’

George was in no way put out. ‘The reception clerk, very old but sharp, told us he’d no idea where they’d arrived from – they’d been brought there by Colonel Lunz. He gave us their room number – no hesitation – but said that if we wanted to see I hem he’d have to announce us, ask permission and then escort us. Then we asked him if either of the rooms next to I he number he had given us was vacant and when he told us those were their bedrooms we left.’

‘You took your time about getting back.’

‘We are accustomed to your injustices. We went round to the back of the hotel, climbed a fire escape and made our way along a narrow ledge. A very narrow ledge. No joke, I can tell you, especially for an old man like me. Perilous, dizzying heights-‘

‘Yes, yes.’ Petersen was patient. The von Karajans had been staying on the first floor. ‘Then?’

‘There was a small balcony outside their room. Net curtains on their French windows.’

‘You could see clearly?’

‘And hear clearly. Young man was sending a radio message.’

‘Interesting. Hardly surprising, though. Morse?’

‘Plain language.’

‘What was he saying?’

‘I have no idea. Could have been Chinese for all I knew. Certainly no European language I’ve ever heard. A very short message. So we came back.’

‘Anyone see you on the fire escape, ledge or balcony?’

George tried to look wounded. ‘My dear Peter -‘

Petersen stopped him with an upraised hand. Not many people called him “Peter” – which was his first name – but, then, not many people had been pre-war students of George’s in Belgrade University where George had been the vastly respected Professor of Occidental Languages. George was known – not reputed, but known – to be fluent in at least a dozen languages and to have a working knowledge of a considerable number more.

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