Absolute Friends

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Book: Absolute Friends by John le Carré Read Free Book Online
Authors: John le Carré
replies, showing his passport.
    They take him to the light, examine his passport, then his face.
    "Ever seen the Berlin Wall before?"
    "No."
    "Well look at it now, then go to bed, Englishman. And stay out of trouble."
    He retraces his steps and finds a side road. On a rusted iron door, amid Picasso peace doves and BAN THE BOMB signs, a hairless cat on two legs brandishes its penis. Inside, music and argument combine in a single feral roar.
    "Try the Peace Center, comrade, top floor," a beautiful girl advises him, cupping her hands.
    "Where's the Peace Center?"
    "Upstairs, arsehole."
    He climbs, his feet clanging on the tile steps. It's close on midnight. At each floor a fresh tableau of liberation is revealed to him. On the first, students and babies lounge in a Sunday school ring while a stern woman harangues them on the crippling effect of parents. On the second, a postcoital quiet reigns over bundles of intertwined bodies. _Support the Neutron Bomb!__ a handmade poster urges them. _Kills your mother-in-law! Doesn't harm your TV set!__ On the third, Mundy is thrilled to see some sort of theater workshop is in progress. On the fourth, shaggy Septembrists pummel typewriters, confer, feed paper into hand presses and bark orders into radio telephones.
    He has reached the top floor. A ladder rises to an open trapdoor in the ceiling. He emerges in an attic lit by a builder's inspection light. A passage like the entrance to a mine shaft leads from it. At its end, two men and two women are bowed over a candlelit table strewn with maps and beer bottles. One girl is black-haired and grim-faced, the other fair and large-boned. The nearer man is as tall as Mundy: a Viking with a golden beard and mop of yellow hair bound in a pirate's headscarf. The other man is short, vivid and dark-eyed, with uneven, spindly shoulders that are too narrow for his head. He wears a black Basque beret drawn dead level across his pale brow, and he is Sasha. How does Mundy know this? Because all along, he realizes, he has known intuitively that Ilse was talking about someone as small as herself.
    Too diffident to intrude, he hovers at the opening to the mineshaft, clutching her letter in his hand. He hears fragments of war talk, all Sasha's. The voice is stronger than the body and carries naturally. It is accompanied by imperious gestures of the hands and forearms.... _Don't let the pigs cram us into side streets, hear me?... Stand up to them in the open, where the cameras can see what they do to us...__ Mundy is already deciding to tiptoe back down the ladder and make his entrance another time when the party breaks up. The black-haired girl folds up the maps. The Viking rises and stretches. The blond girl hugs him to her by his buttocks. Sasha stands too, but is no taller than when he was sitting. As Mundy steps forward to present himself, the others move instinctively to shield the little emperor at their center.
    "Good evening. I'm Ted Mundy. I've got a letter for you from Ilse," he says in his best head prefect's voice. And when he receives no answering light of recognition from the wide, dark eyes: "Ilse the Hungarian student of political philosophy. She was here last summer and had the pleasure of meeting you."
    Perhaps it is Mundy's politeness that catches them off balance, for there is a moment of shared suspicion among them. Who is he, this courtly English arsehole with the Beatle haircut? The tall Viking is first to respond. Placing himself between Mundy and the rest of them, he accepts the envelope on Sasha's behalf and subjects it to a quick examination. Ilse has stuck down the flap with tape. Her peremptory scrawl of _Private, Strictly Personal!__ twice underlined, is a clear claim to intimacy. The Viking hands the envelope to Sasha, who rips it open and extracts two blotchy pages of Ilse's densely packed handwriting, with afterthoughts charging up the margins. He reads the first few lines, turns to the back page to find the signature. Then he

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