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“What’s all this about?” he snapped at Lothar. “I don’t have anything to say to you. Try to get that into your head. Leave me alone!”

He tried to walk past him, but Lothar blocked his path.

“What’s wrong?” Lothar said.

He stared into the German’s eyes without answering.

“Nothing,” he said eventually. “Just leave me alone.”

“Tell me why you won’t talk to me. I thought we were friends.”

“No, we’re not friends,” he said, “Hannes was my friend.”

“Hannes?”

“Yes, Hannes.”

“Is this because of Hannes?” Lothar said. “Is it because of Hannes you’re acting like this?”

“Leave me alone,” he said.

“What has Hannes got to do with me?”

“You—”

He stopped immediately. Where did Hannes come into the picture? He had not seen Lothar since Hannes’s expulsion. After that Lothar had vanished into thin air. In the meanwhile he had heard Ilona and her friends describe Lothar as a puppet of the security police, a traitor and informer who tried to make people reveal what their friends were thinking and saying. Lothar did not know that he suspected anything. But he had been poised to tell him everything, tell him what Ilona had said about him. Suddenly it struck him that if there was one thing he must not do, it was to give Lothar a piece of his mind, or imply that he knew about him.

It dawned on him how much he still had to learn about the game he was beginning to play, not only with Lothar but also his fellow Icelanders and in fact everyone he met, apart from Ilona.

“I what?” Lothar said stubbornly.

“Nothing,” he said.

“Hannes didn’t belong here any more,” Lothar said. “He had no business being here. You said that yourself. You said that to me. You came to me and we talked about it. We were sitting in the pub and you told me what a cheapskate you thought Hannes was. You and Hannes weren’t friends.”

“No, that’s right,” he said, an unsavoury taste in his mouth. “We weren’t friends.”

He felt he had to say that. He was not fully aware who he was covering for. He no longer knew exactly where he stood. Why he did not speak his mind as he had in the past. He was playing some game of bluff that he barely understood, trying to inch his way forward in total darkness. Maybe he was no braver than that. Maybe he was a coward. His thoughts turned to Ilona. She would have known what to say to Lothar.

“I never said he ought to be expelled,” he said, steeling himself.

“Actually, I recall you talking along exactly those lines,” Lothar said.

“I didn’t,” he said and raised his voice. “That’s a lie.”

Lothar smiled.

“Calm down,” he said.

“Just leave me alone.”

He was about to walk away but Lothar stopped him. This time he was more menacing and gripped his arm tighter, pulling him close and whispering in his ear.

“We need to talk.”

“We have nothing to talk about,” he said and tried to tear himself loose. But Lothar held him fast.

“We just need to have a word about your Ilona.”

He felt his face flush suddenly. His muscles slackened, and Lothar felt his arm go powerless for an instant.

“What are you talking about?” he said, trying not to give himself away.

“I don’t think she’s good enough company for you,” Lothar said, “and I say that as your Betreuer and your comrade. I hope you’ll forgive me for intruding.”

“What are you talking about?” he repeated. “Good enough company? I don’t think it’s any of your business what—”

“I don’t think she associates with the likes of us,” Lothar interrupted him. “I’m afraid she’ll drag you down into the mire with her.”

Speechless, he stared at Lothar.

“What are you talking about?” he blurted out for the third time; he did not know what else he ought to say. His mind was a blank. All he could think about was Ilona.

“We know about the meetings she organises,” Lothar said. “We know who goes to the meetings. We know that you’ve been at those meetings. We know about the pamphlets she circulates.”

He could not believe what he was hearing.

“Let us help you,” Lothar said.

He stared at Lothar, who fixed him with a serious expression. Lothar had dropped all the charades. His false smile was gone. He could see only unflinching harshness on his face.

“Us?” he said. “What us? What are you talking about?”

“Come with me,” Lothar said. “I want to show you something.”

“I’m not coming with you,” he said. “I don’t have to come anywhere with you!”

“You won’t regret it,” Lothar said in the same steady voice. “I’m trying to help you. Try to understand that. Let me show you something. So you understand exactly what I’m talking about.”

“What can you show me?”

“Come on,” Lothar said, half-pushing him along in front. “I’m trying to help you. Trust me.”

He wanted to resist, but fear and curiosity drove him on and he yielded. If Lothar had something to show him it might be worth seeing it, rather than turning his back on him. They left the university building for the city centre, heading across Karl Marx Square and along Barfussgasschen. Soon he saw that they were approaching Dittrichring 24, which he knew was the city headquarters of the security police. He slowed, then stopped dead when he saw that Lothar intended to go up the steps into the building.

“What are we doing here?” he asked.

“Come on,” Lothar said. “We need to talk to you. Don’t make this more difficult for yourself.”

“Difficult? I’m not going in there!”

“Either you come now or they come and get you,” Lothar said. “It’s better this way.”

He stood still in his tracks. He would have liked to run away. What did the security police want of him? He hadn’t done anything. From the street corner he looked in all directions. Would anyone see him go inside?

“What do you mean?” he said in a low voice. He was genuinely afraid.

“Come on,” Lothar said, and opened the door.

Hesitantly, he walked up the steps and followed Lothar into the building. They entered a small foyer with a grey stone staircase and brownish marble walls. A door at the top of the steps led to a reception room. He immediately noticed the smell of dirty linoleum, grimy walls, smoking, sweat and fear. Lothar nodded to the man at reception and opened a door onto a long corridor. The walls were painted green. Halfway down the corridor was an alcove, inside it an office with the door open and beside it a narrow steel door. Lothar went into the office where a weary middle-aged man was sitting at a desk. He looked up and acknowledged Lothar.

“Hell of a long time that took,” the man said to Lothar, ignoring the visitor.

The man smoked fat, pungent cigarettes. His fingers were stained yellow and the ashtray was crammed with minuscule cigarette butts. He had a thick moustache, discoloured by tobacco. He was swarthy, with greying sideburns. He pulled out one of the desk drawers, took out a file and opened it. Inside were a few typed pages and some black-and-white photographs. The man removed the photographs, looked at them, then tossed them across the desk to him.

“Isn’t that you?” he asked.

Tomas picked up the photographs. It took him a while to realise what they were. They had been taken in the evening from some distance and showed people leaving a block of flats. A light above the door illuminated the group. Peering more closely at the photo-graph, he could suddenly see Ilona and a man who had been at the meeting in the basement flat, another woman from the same meeting and himself. He leafed through the photographs. Some were enlargements of faces — Ilona’s face and his own.

After lighting a cigarette, the man with the thick moustache leaned back in his seat. Lothar had sat down on a chair in a corner of the office. On one wall was a street map of Leipzig and a photograph of Ulbricht. Three sturdy steel cupboards stood against another wall.