Part 9 (1/2)

'What's that?' I asked, though I knew, as every Prussian must.

He held it up to the lamp. 'Can you see that insect trapped inside? It's big. A serious collector, someone interested in curiosities, would give his right arm for it, sir.'

'Where would one find such a man?'

He raised his shoulders and his goitre bulged beneath his chin. 'Nordcopp's the place.'

'Do the women go there?'

'There and back in a spit and a cough,' he replied. 'One of the soldiers would let her in and out in exchange for a quick . . . I'm sure you can guess,' he added with a smile that showed the gaps in his teeth, jabbing his right forefinger rapidly in and out of a hole that he formed with the thumb and forefinger of his left hand.

'Who would she seek in Nordcopp?' I pressed him.

He handed back the amber with a shrug of his shoulders.

'She'd know exactly who to give it to.'

'Who?' I insisted again.

'I cannot tell you who,' he said. 'Only where.'

Nordcopp was a forty-minute walk away, he said, along the same rutted carriage-track.

'And while you're there,' he called after me, 'be sure to try the fish soup. It's as good as the amber, but a sight less dangerous.'

I thanked him for his help, and continued tramping on through the sand.

10.

LONG BEFORE I saw the place, my lungs got wind of it.

Fried fish, salt fish, fish boiled and baked. And everything in between, from fresh to foul. The air was more malodorous than the cattle-besmirched streets of Lotingen. There were flies as well, though not so many, nor so big as the ones that I had left behind me. But hunger rebels against such niceties, and I lengthened my stride towards Nordcopp.

This trading-post was known to the Ancients. I have since read up on the place. They considered it to be a sort of Mecca, where all the greatest craftsmen in the world came in search of amber for their workshops. A highway made of tree-trunks, the Amber Road, once stretched to the Mediterranean Sea in the south, and it was regularly tramped by Roman, Greek and Arab traders. Amber was a rich spring from which a mighty river flowed. A thousand streams branched off to every city in the known world. The Romans carved the amber into religious idols; the Greeks chose to fas.h.i.+on fertility phalli. In Italy the heirs of the Renaissance jewellers have long been famed for their tabernacles encrusted with amber and precious stones. In Catholic Danzig they still make rosary-beads to count off Pater Nosters, though amber Bible-covers are the pride of Protestant Konigsberg, where the Pietists hold sway. In Russia, Orthodox churches are panelled with it. And even in the Temple of Atheism, Paris, the sacred stuff is moulded into buckles and gaudy hairpins for harlots and ladies a la mode.

Everyone has always wanted amber, but nowadays the French want it most of all.

Napoleon subdued the rest of the continent, while we pleaded neutrality. But we had amber, so he invaded us. For a year or more, the supply of amber has flowed in one direction only. As I stood before the gates of Nordcopp, I knew that carts and s.h.i.+ps packed with succini prussici, as amber was called in the Latin tongue, were travelling towards Paris at that very moment.

It might be the colour of honey. It might be red, like a blazing sunset. Straw-yellow, like wine. Or the deep, dark brown of mahogany. Whatever the hue, it was worth a small fortune. The stolen riches of Prussia would pay French soldiers' wages while they fought in Spain, and provide them with firearms. Spain would soon be crushed by the power of amber. Then, when Napoleon was ready, he would turn his sights on his only ally, and our Prussian amber would conquer Tsar Alexander as well.

Nordcopp was far smaller than I had expected, but more full of people than I could have guessed. A crowd of men were pus.h.i.+ng their way towards a wooden watch-tower. It was so ancient, it seemed about to topple and crush them all. I joined the throng, and began to thrust with equal determination. On either side, tables of baked fish, stuffed eels, trays of bread and cakes, jugs of ale, legs and wings of roasted chicken were being offered for sale, their virtues loudly proclaimed, as I shuffled towards the guardians of the citadel.

A group of French gendarmes were blocking the entrance, armed with muskets. One of them-a large, fat man with an oriental moustache-was staring hard at me. 'Oi, you!' he called, his bayonet flas.h.i.+ng close to my nose. 'Your face is new. What are you doing here?'

Before I could answer, the man began to provide answers for himself.

'Amber, is it? Come from far off, too, I suppose.'

He hardly seemed interested as his face heaved close to mine. His uniform was smart enough, but his breath stank of half-digested fish, and my empty stomach rolled.

'Where are you from, then?'

'Konigsberg,' I said on impulse.

He nodded back. He did not ask my name, or demand to see my papers. New arrivals were pus.h.i.+ng up against my back and they all seemed bent on entering the place as quickly as possible. All around me, I heard muttered complaints in German. No one moaned too loud, however. They did not intend to be held up by me, or by the guards.

'A bit of business, a plate of fish soup, and I'll be on my way,' I said in French.

His heavy hand fell on my shoulder. 'Don't rush, monsieur. Enjoy yourself. Every coin you spend in a Prussian shop will help to pay French taxes. You'll be body-searched on the way out, so make sure you get a receipt. And if you haven't got a bill of sale, have some loose change handy in your pocket,' he added with a wink.

I was tempted to pull the written order of General Malaport from my pocket, and wipe that smile off his face. Instead, I pushed on silently through the narrow entrance-gate as he lifted his bayonet and waved me on.

Was Pastoris correct? Were the French in Nordcopp a party to the illegal trade in amber? How would les Halles react if I returned that night and gave him a name with an acute accent on the final syllable, instead of the Prussian name that he seemed to expect?

Nordcopp had once been a fortified village. The wooden watch-tower above the entrance looked down on a maze of narrow by-ways, and I was quickly carried into the heart of this labyrinth. The wattle walls were ragged, worn with age, the grey timber frames of the houses rotten and pockmarked with sh.e.l.l-holes. Evidently, the French had bombarded the stronghold before they sent marauders in to secure it. It was the sort of rank-smelling medieval warren that had all but disappeared in Prussia. As the pride of the nation grew in the wake of reforms of the great King Frederick, hovels like these had been flattened. I might have stepped back into a former time in history. The buildings were dark and low, the straw roofs barely higher than my shoulder, packed so close together that the traders and the open drains all ran stinking downhill in the same direction. On either side of this fetid alley, waist-high counters were loaded with jars and strung with beads, which gleamed and glistened in the half-light, like candles in a church.

We might have been pilgrims jostling our way from one chapel to the next in search of sacred relics or papal indulgences. Each man in that thrusting company had one thing only on his mind: amber. In the first alley, I counted seven tiny shops, like troglodytic holes in the wall. Each cave was crowded with men, heads bent low as they examined the merchandise on offer. Their muted voices were a constant buzz, broken suddenly by a loud exclamation, or a vile expletive, as a deal was made or rejected.

Two or three times I tried to enter a shop, hoping to see what was going on in there, but the backs seemed to stiffen, and elbows suddenly became dangerous weapons. I was forced to pull back on each occasion into the lane and swim with the tide, hoping to find a shop that was less furiously busy.

How should I go about asking questions without provoking suspicion?

It was dark and cramped inside those caverns, and I was ill-equipped for the part that I had chosen to play. Many of the men crus.h.i.+ng up against the sellers' tables held a tiny lamp in their hands to make the task of choosing easier. Thin beams of light flashed this way and that as each man cast around, frantically seeking what he was after. Many a customer had a magnifying-gla.s.s that he clamped to his eye by exerting the muscles in his cheek and brow.

They looked the part of professional amber-traders, whilst I did not.

I felt as out of place as any novice must.

It might be wise, I thought, to find some place where I could eat, and take more careful stock of my position. The smell of grilling fish was overwhelming. Blue smoke swirled and drifted above the heads of the milling crowd. Was there a tavern or a chop-house nearby? Was that where they were all going? I followed the throng down another narrow alley without finding the place. Tavern? I had the impression that these people ate with their eyes, and that the object of their hunger was one thing, and one alone.

Like vultures, they seemed to feast and gorge on the sight of amber.

More than once I was obliged to stop while the man in front of me concluded his business with a dealer on the threshold of a shop, and money changed hands. On another occasion, I was brought to a sudden halt behind a man who began to p.i.s.s against the wall. An obstinate seller continued to dangle a string of amber beads in front of his face, while he emptied his bladder. 'By the Lord, Herr Franz!' the merchant insisted. 'Are they not the finest matching set of natural rarities you have ever seen?'

Franz thrust his member back in his pants, and grunted dismissively about them being rather too 'natural' for his taste. As he moved away, the salesman began to look around more keenly. He did not try his arts on me, but settled instead on the man behind me. 'Just the job for you, Ludwig. Aren't they perfection? Step inside, do, sir!'

Was I marked out in some way? Everyone appeared to know everyone else, but I knew n.o.body. 'Anything for me?' was the phrase that I heard most frequently on the lips of the customers. They would stop for a moment by a doorway, look in over the heads of the men who had got there before them, then call out loudly to the shopkeeper: 'Anything special, Harald? Anything lemon-coloured?'

I was quick to learn, or so I thought.

I stopped before a shop that seemed less crowded than the others. There were only three men inside. 'Anything for me?' I called out.

The seller raised his head. The purchasers turned around. They stared at me in a manner that, I am sure, was intended to be hostile.

They did not say a word. The looks that they exchanged were eloquent enough. Who is this intruder? I held their gaze for a moment, then quickly moved away, carrying my embarra.s.sment off with me.