He knew now he could never get back for the bridge but they had a dispatch to deliver and this old man there at the table had put it in his pocket.
"Stand there," Marty said without looking up.
"Listen, Comrade Marty," Gomez broke out, the anis fortifying his anger.
"Once tonight we have been impeded by the ignorance of the anarchists.
Then by the sloth of a bureaucratic fascist.
Now by the oversuspicion of a Communist."
"Close your mouth," Marty said without looking up.
"This is not a meeting."
"Comrade Marty, this is a matter of utmost urgence," Gomez said.
"Of the greatest importance."
The corporal and the soldier with them were taking a lively interest in this as though they were at a play they had seen many times but whose excellent moments they could always savor.
"Everything is of urgence," Marty said.
"All things are of importance."
Now he looked up at them, holding the pencil.
"How did you know Golz was here?
Do you understand how serious it is to come asking for an individual general before an attack?
How could you know such a general would be here?"
"Tell him, _tu_," Gomez said to Andres.
"Comrade General," Andres started--Andre Marty did not correct him in the mistake in rank--"I was given that packet on the other side of the lines--"
"On the other side of the lines?" Marty said.
"Yes, I heard him say you came from the fascist lines."
"It was given to me, Comrade General, by an _Ingles_ named Roberto who had come to us as a dynamiter for this of the bridge.
Understandeth?"
"Continue thy story," Marty said to Andres; using the term story as you would say lie, falsehood, or fabrication.
"Well, Comrade General, the _Ingles_ told me to bring it to the General Golz with all speed. He makes an attack in these hills now on this day and all we ask is to take it to him now promptly if it pleases the Comrade General."
Marty shook his head again.
He was looking at Andres but he was not seeing him.
Golz, he thought in a mixture of horror and exultation as a man might feel hearing that a business enemy had been killed in a particularly nasty motor accident or that some one you hated but whose probity you had never doubted had been guilty of defalcation.
That Golz should be one of them, too.
That Golz should be in such obvious communication with the fascists.
Golz that he had known for nearly twenty years.
Golz who had captured the gold train that winter with Lucacz in Siberia.
Golz who had fought against Kolchak, and in Poland.
In the Caucasus.
In China, and here since the first October.
But he _had_ been close to Tukachevsky. To Voroshilov, yes, too.
But to Tukachevsky.
And to who else?
Here to Karkov, of course.
And to Lucacz.
But all the Hungarians had been intriguers.
He hated Gall.
Golz hated Gall.
Remember that.
Make a note of that.
Golz has always hated Gall.
But he favors Putz.
Remember that.
And Duval is his chief of staff.
See what stems from that.