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Chapter 19 Branch Meeting
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The Spy Who Came In From the Cold ( PDFDrive.com ) (1)
Chapter 19
Branch Meeting. Liz was happy in Leipzig. Austerity pleased her—it gave her the comfort of sacrifice. The little house she stayed in was dark and meagre, the food was poor and most of it had to go to the children. They talked politics at every meal, she and Frau Ebert, Branch Secretary for the Ward Branch of Leipzig-Hohengrün, a small, grey woman whose husband managed a gravel quarry on the outskirts of the city. It was like living in a religious community, Liz thought; a convent or a kibbutz or something. You felt the world was better for your empty stomach. Liz had some German which she had learnt from her aunt, and she was surprised how quickly she was able to use it. She tried it on the children first and they grinned and helped her. The children treated her oddly to begin with, as if she were a person of great quality or rarity value, and on the third day one of them plucked up courage and asked her if she had brought any chocolate from ‘drüben’—from ‘over there’. She’d never thought of that and she felt ashamed. After that they seemed to forget about her. In the evenings there was Party Work. They distributed literature, visited Branch members who had defaulted on their dues or lagged behind in their attendance at meetings, called in at District for a discussion on ‘Problems connected with the centralised distribution of agricultural produce’ at which all local Branch Secretaries were present, and attended a meeting of the Workers’ Consultative Council of a machine tool factory on the outskirts of the town. At last, on the fourth day, the Thursday, came their own Branch Meeting. This was to be, for Liz at least, the most exhilarating experience of all; it would be an example of all that her own Branch in Bayswater could one day be. They had chosen a wonderful title for the evening’s discussions—‘Coexistence after two wars’—and they expected a record attendance. The whole ward had been circularised, they had taken care to see that there was no rival meeting in the neighbourhood that evening; it was not a late shopping day. Seven people came. Seven people and Liz and the Branch Secretary and the man from District. Liz put a brave face on it but she was terribly upset. She could scarcely concentrate on the speaker, and when she tried he used long German compounds that she couldn’t work out anyway. It was like the meetings in Bayswater, it was like mid- week evensong when she used to go to church—the same dutiful, little group of host faces, the same fussy self-consciousness, the same feeling of a great idea in the hands of little people. She always felt the same thing—it was awful, really, but she did—she wished no one would turn up, because that was absolute and it suggested persecution, humiliation—it was something you could react to. But seven people were nothing: they were worse than nothing, because they were evidence of the inertia of the uncapturable mass. They broke your heart. The room was better than the schoolroom in Bayswater, but even that was no comfort. In Bayswater it had been fun trying to find a room. In the early days they had pretended they were something else, not the Party at all. They’d taken back rooms in pubs, a committee room at the Ardena Café, or met secretly in one another’s houses. Then Bill Hazel had joined from the Secondary School and they’d used his classroom. Even that was a risk—the headmaster thought Bill ran a drama group, so theoretically at least they might still be chucked out. Somehow that fitted better than this Peace Hall in pre-cast concrete with the cracks in the corners and the picture of Lenin. Why did they have that silly frame thing all round the picture? Bundles of organ pipes sprouting from the corners and the bunting all dusty. It looked like something from a fascist funeral. Sometimes she thought Alec was right—you believed in things because you needed to; what you believed in had no value of its own, no function. What did he say: ‘A dog scratches where it itches. Different dogs itch in different places. No, it was wrong, Alec was wrong—it was a wicked thing to say. Peace and freedom and equality—they were facts, of course they were. And what about history—all those laws the Party proved. No, Alec was wrong: truth existed outside people, it was demonstrated in history, individuals must bow to it, be crushed by it if necessary. The Party was the vanguard of history, the spearpoint in the fight for Peace … she went over the rubric a little uncertainly. She wished more people had come. Seven was so few. They looked so cross; cross and hungry. The meeting over, Liz waited for Frau Ebert to collect the unsold literature from the heavy table by the door, fill in her attendance book and put on her coat, for it was cold that evening. The speaker had left—rather rudely, Liz thought—before the general discussion. Frau Ebert was standing at the door with her hand on the light switch when a man appeared out of the darkness, framed in the doorway. Just for a moment Liz thought it was Ashe. He was tall and fair and wore one of those raincoats with leather buttons. ‘Comrade Ebert?’ he enquired. ‘Yes?’ ‘I am looking for an English Comrade, Gold. She is staying with you?’ ‘I’m Elizabeth Gold,’ Liz put in, and the man came into the hall, closing the door behind him, so that the light shone full upon his face. ‘I am Holten from District.’ He showed some paper to Frau Ebert who was still standing at the door, and she nodded and glanced a little anxiously towards Liz. ‘I have been asked to give a message to Comrade Gold from the Praesidium,’ he said. ‘It concerns an alteration in your programme; an invitation to attend a special meeting.’ ‘Oh,’ said Liz rather stupidly. It seemed fantastic that the Praesidium should even have heard of her. ‘It is a gesture,’ Holten said. ‘A gesture of goodwill.’ ‘But I—but Frau Ebert…’ Liz began helplessly. ‘Comrade Ebert, I am sure, will forgive you under the circumstances.’ ‘Of course,’ said Frau Ebert quickly. ‘Where is the meeting to be held?’ ‘It will necessitate your leaving tonight,’ Holten replied. ‘We have a long way to go. Nearly to Görlitz.’ ‘To Görlitz… Where’s that?’ ‘East,’ said Frau Ebert quickly. ‘On the Polish border.’ ‘We can drive you home now. You can collect your things and we will continue the journey at once.’ ‘Tonight? Now?’ ‘Yes.’ Holten didn’t seem to consider Liz had much choice. A large black car was waiting for them. There was a driver in the front and a flagpost on the bonnet. It looked rather a military car. |
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