Summary | Excerpt | Reviews | Beyond the Book | Readalikes | Genres & Themes | Author Bio
A Novel
by Alan Furst
And would the world believe it? The tryst that ended in tragedy? Most would,
but some wouldn't, and it was for them that this event had been staged, the
ones who would know immediately that this was politics, not passion. Because
this was not a quiet disappearance, this was public, and flamboyant, so
meant to serve as a warning: We will do anything we want to do, you cannot
stop us. The French would be outraged, but then, the French were habitually
outraged. Well, let them sputter.
It was 2042 when the leader of the OVRA squad left the hotel and crossed to
Amandola's side of the rue Augereau. Hands in pockets, head down, he wore a
rubber raincoat and a black felt hat, rain dripping off the brim. As he
passed the Lancia, he raised his head, revealing a dark, heavy face, a
southern face, and made eye contact with Amandola. A brief glance, but
sufficient. It's done.
4 December, 1938. The Cafe Europa, in a narrow street near the Gare du Nord,
was owned by a Frenchman of Italian descent. A man of fervent and heated
opinions, an idealist, he made his back room available to a group of
Parisian giellisti, so-called for their membership in the Giustizia e
Liberta--known informally by the initials GL, thus giellisti. There were
eight of them that morning, called to an emergency meeting. They all wore
dark overcoats, sitting around a table in the unlit room, and, except for
the one woman, they wore their hats. Because the room was cold and damp, and
also, though nobody ever said it out loud, because it was somehow in keeping
with the conspiratorial nature of their politics: the antifascist
resistance, the Resistenza.
They were all more or less in midlife, emigres from Italy, and members of a
certain class--a lawyer from Rome, a medical school professor from Venice,
an art historian from Siena, a man who had owned a pharmacy in the same
city, the woman formerly an industrial chemist in Milan. And so on--several
with eyeglasses, most of them smoking cigarettes, except for the Sienese
professor of art history, lately employed as a meter reader for the gas
company, who smoked a powerful little cigar.
Three of them had brought along a certain morning newspaper, the very vilest
and most outrageous of the Parisian tabloids, and a copy lay on the table,
folded open to a grainy photograph beneath the headline MURDER/SUICIDE AT
LOVERS HOTEL. Bottini, bare-chested, sat propped against a headboard, a
sheet pulled up to his waist, eyes open and unseeing, blood on his face. By
his side, a shape beneath the sheet, its arms flung wide.
The leader of the group, Arturo Salamone, let the newspaper lie open for a
time, a silent eulogy. Then, with a sigh, he flipped it closed, folded it in
half, and put it by the side of his chair. Salamone was a great bear of a
man, with heavy jowls, and thick eyebrows that met at the bridge of his
nose. He had been a shipping agent in Genoa, now worked as a bookkeeper at
an insurance company. "So then," he said. "Do we accept this?"
"I do not," said the lawyer. "Staged."
"Do we agree?"
The pharmacist cleared his throat and said, "Are we completely sure? That
this was, assassination?"
"I am," Salamone said. "Bottini had no such brutality in him. They killed
him, and his lover--the OVRA, or someone like them. This was ordered by
Rome; it was planned, prepared, and executed. And not only did they murder
Bottini, they defamed him: 'this is the sort of man, unstable, vicious, who
speaks against our noble fascism.' And, of course, there are people who will
believe it."
"Some will, always, anything," the woman chemist said. "But we shall see
what the Italian papers say about it."
Excerpted from The Foreign Correspondent by Alan Furst Copyright © 2006 by Alan Furst. Excerpted by permission of Random House, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher
At times, our own light goes out, and is rekindled by a spark from another person.
Click Here to find out who said this, as well as discovering other famous literary quotes!
Your guide toexceptional books
BookBrowse seeks out and recommends the best in contemporary fiction and nonfiction—books that not only engage and entertain but also deepen our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.