Authors: Frank Moorhouse
She remembered Olivia, one of the more outrageous of the circle, had cried out, âOh Bernice, please tell me something so that it can be tortured out of me!'
Edith did know one thing. She knew how important Olivia, a printer, was to the whole illicit business.
At the Molly, she'd become a source of diplomatic information for Bernard and others which, when necessary, she passed on, especially about changes in regulations and procedures and promotions in the Swiss bureaucracy.
Lester must have seen her pondering and guessed about her
reservations. âI understand that I may be wrongly informed about this service being available there. I appreciate that you may not be able to answer at this point. But if there was a possibility I would be pleased to know of it. In due course. And only as a last resort, of course. There are still official channels to be explored. I have been talking with the Irish Minister to France. But we are pessimistic. Joyce has refused an Irish passport which would've made everything easier. He said he wouldn't accept in wartime that which he refused in peacetime.'
âAnd Mr Joyce has approached the League?'
âMore that he approached me as a fellow Irishman who may have influence. More that than an approach to the League, as such.'
âThis is not official League business then?'
âDoes that worry you?'
âOh no. I was simply sorting things into their correct baskets.'
He smiled. âAs always, dear Edith.'
She said, âI suppose it's the League's old problemâhow to be involved with the irregular without losing our probity: how to participate in the murkiness of events without losing our “noble” identity.'
âPrecisely.'
Why had she said the word ânoble' so cynically? She was still fighting that sort of attitude.
She would have to raise this with Bernard before telling Lester anything.
âI will make inquiries,' she said. âAs soon as possible.'
He stood up to show her out, âI would appreciate that.'
As they reached the door, he said, âYou couldn't imagine Avenol, in the old days, making such a request?'
She laughed. âNo. Never. Nor Sir Eric.'
âThese are different times: the rules are bent now.'
âYesâwe live in times bent out of shape.'
She arranged an appointment with Bernard at the Club during the day, outside the Club's usual trading hours.
She realised that she had never been to the Club in the daytime.
She went down the steps and found the door open. What windows there were to the Club were open to allow airing and some light streamed in, but it still had the comfortable, decadent smell of stale alcohol, of cigarette smoke, of perfume, and of perspiration.
A cleaner worked away at the wooden tables with furniture polish and the smell of the polish smelt like it was attempting to
renew
the atmosphere.
That sunlight which did get into the Club from the light well and through the transom windows was feeble and seemed reluctant to enter such a decadent atmosphere.
There in his office, in this semi-daylight, Bernard was just another businessman. He was dressed in a business suit and tie, albeit a rather colourful tie, working away on figures, order books and invoices, with an adding machine in front of him, the enamel worn from the lever.
âCatering supplies and coal, questions of dancers' fees, costume makers behind in their schedule, a shortage of silkâthe life of a nightclub proprietor. As you see, behind the scenes there's no flamboyance and no romance.' He rose to greet her.
Even his voice was more manly and everyday.
They kissed on both cheeks.
When seated over coffee out in the empty Club, their voices were drowned out by the noise of a woman dusting the carpets with a vacuum cleaner.
Bernard called to the woman to stop the vacuuming and to find some cleaning in the kitchens.
Edith explained Lester's request.
Bernard remained silent, considering it.
He then said, âIf the papers were used by Monsieur Joyce for his daughter and some diligent border guard or police officer found them to be forgeries, then what? What would Monsieur Joyce say about their origin? The trail of origin might be too obvious. The Irish connection for a start. And if it were traced back to Lester, what then? What would Lester say? How would it look for the status of the League? What would the Swiss government do? Would we all be at risk? Not just the Clubâbut Monsieur Joyce and his family. And the League as well. Unlike our other transactions, this one could leave a rather damaging trail. And is the moving of his daughter from one hospital in France to another in Switzerland of such priority to be raised above all the other matters we deal with here?'
âI understand the question of people who are well known, I get it at the Leagueâthey hope for special treatment but they also bring greater risk. The refugees come to us with their framed doctorates, their letters of commendation from governments long gone, their certificates of honourable mention.'
She thought about it. âIn some ways, it would be better to handle things on a first come, first served basis. But I suppose that is very Australian.'
âWe would think of it as being very democratically Swiss. The French would think it was a matter of
égalité
.
âThe Joyce matter would involve important people: Lesterâand youâand a writer with a narrow reputation but considered to be important. The Swiss or the Germans may make an extra effort to trace the forged documents in this case. They may feel the tug of big fish. They may use harsh means to get their information. Nothing might protect us then.'
âWhat do you recommend?'
He thought again.
âIf Lester's efforts through the official channels fail, I suggest that he signal this to you. And he should be
circumspect in any visit he makes to Joyce. Not that Joyce would be watched. But we know about Swiss neighbours ⦠And he should turn his back on the matter, making sure that he writes official letters to Joyce saying that nothing can be done. I will take it over from there. And the less you know about it, the better. My emissary will find out from Joyce what is needed to be known and I suggest that it be handled behind Joyce's back as well. If possible, the girl will simply arrive at his doorstep.'
She nodded. âI'll tell Lester. I gather also that the daughter is troublesome.'
âHow so?'
âViolent. During any travelling, she would need attendants who could handle her.'
âMother of God.' Bernard ran a hand through his hair. âIs there no end to it all?'
He was harried.
She said, âAt this stage it is all hypothetical.'
âYes,' he said, tiredly.
Bernard changed the subject. âHow are things at the Palais?'
She shrugged. âWe pretend that we are still at the centre of the world. We pretend that we are not forgotten. Ambrose is working away at the Library.'
âWill the League take him back?'
âAfter the war? Maybeâno one is being employed at present, of course. I think Lester sees him as part of the League again. Seeks his advice. Uses him for indirect connection to the British Foreign Office.'
âGood. It is a bizarre position for you all to be inâisolatedâreducedâto be so frustrated.'
âWe spend our time planning the New Worldâthe world after the warâand we will be involved in the peace negotiations. There is another peace conference to be planned.'
âBut this time it is unconditional surrender? Isn't that what Churchill insists?'
âThat is what he says. Though we will have some role in the grisly end, I daresay.'
âThe Germans seem to have made their first mistake with the invasion of Russia. It may not be long now.'
âI see that even some of the Swiss are painting the V for Victory signs on walls and railway cuttings as Churchill asked.'
âI am told the street women in Paris see the opening of their legs in a V as an anti-Nazi act,' Bernard covered his mouth with his hand and winked. âOh, that is a rather vulgar thing to say. Apologies.'
Edith smiled. âTch, tch, Bernard.'
As she left his office, they hugged, hugged longer than for a parting hug. A hug to give each other strength.
She met Lester on a street corner away from the Richemond where Joyce and his family were staying. To her surprise he wore a beret and a cravat and looked like a caricature of a Swiss artist.
She did not know whether to laugh.
âI thought I would not dress like a Secretary-General.'
âYou certainly don't look like a Secretary-General.'
âDo I look artistic?'
She made a play of examining him critically, âYou look like a Secretary-General disguised as an artist.' She laughed.
He joined in the laughter.
âPerhaps we should act as a couple involved in a clandestine assignation of a romantic kind,' he said, light-heartedly, as they walked towards the hotel.
âI think that the secret police here in Geneva know us well enough by now.'
âI think so.'
She suspected that he had dressed that way to fit in with Joyce as a writer.
As they walked she glanced at him again. She had never thought of Lester romantically. No. He was a family man and not her type. And he had been a journalist before he became a diplomat and she had had her experience with a journalist.
âIf we feel we're being watched by the police we could, I suppose, act as lovers, if you wish,' she said, not really knowing what that might require.
âNo, I don't think we want that on their files.' He smiled at her. âBut don't think that isn't an attractive proposition for me.'
They asked for Joyce at the reception desk.
His wife Nora came down to greet them and took them up to the room.
Their son, in his late twenties, joined them.
âI read a very early book of your poems,
Chamber Music
, and
Dubliners
,' Lester said. âDo you remember the notice of
A Portrait of the Artist
in the
Freeman's Journal
?'
âI remember it was a fine notice.'
âI have to admit I am responsible for the notice.'
âWell, I thank you again.'
âYou're generous. I'm sure the notice was inadequate. I haven't read the book for fifteen years but I remember vividly the first chapter which describes a typical Irish household in the crisis of 1890.'
It was obvious that Joyce had poor eyesight. His wife found something for him and put it in his hand rather than passing it to him.
She went about preparing tea.
Lester went on nervously, âI tried to read
Ulysses
but didn't finish it. I remember that it gave a fine impression of Dublin's beauty but the Dublin argot beat me. I don't know how foreigners got along with the argot.'
Edith put in that she had enjoyed
Ulysses
but had something of a struggle with the Irish argot.
Joyce seemed pleased that she'd read it but gave his attention to Lester.
Joyce said that it had been translated into French, German, Czech, Russian, Japanese, and he thought Italian as well. âI sometimes wonder what a monsieur in Tokyo made of it. Have you read
Finnegans Wake
?'
Lester said he hadn't seen it yet. âIs it a big book?'
Edith felt embarrassed by the naivety of the question.
Joyce chuckled, âYou remind me of the story of the two drunks on the road to Dundalk who kept falling into the ditch on the side of the road. A stranger came along and asked them how far it was to Dundalk. One of the drunks said it wasn't the length of the road that worried them, it was the width.'
They all laughed.
Joyce told them of a peculiar publication of some of his poems set to music by twelve composers of different nationalitiesââan international type of thing'.
She supposed that he assumed that might interest them.