White Eagles Over Serbia

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Authors: Lawrence Durrell
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among a stack of papers and Methuen retired once more to the central registry and reopened the monitoring files. The broadcasts had begun about three months previously—in fact just about the time that reports of the first arrests of Royalist “bandits” had begun to be published. If only he could trace the smallest connection between one thing and the other.… Methuen sighed deeply and shook his head as he read through the highly coloured romances of feudal times. What a jumble of Slav imagery to wander through! How could there be any kind of message embedded in all this? Nevertheless he noticed one thing of interest. Several of the poems had been repeated twice by the actress. “Suppose,” he said to himself, “there was some kind of message to be passed. Repeating a poem might draw attention to it. The listener would know that a twice-repeated poem was one containing a message.”
    This was all very well; but the poems themselves offered very little foothold for his theory. He was putting away his files when Carter and Porson came down with their red despatch-cases and found him waiting there. “Closing time,” said Porson. “Away with dull care. Carter and I are going to take you out to dinner, old man. You will be allowed to choose it of course.”
    â€œDid you have any luck?” said Carter.
    â€œNone at all.”
    â€œBad luck. I thought there was nothing in it.”
    â€œNevertheless I’ll take your book home if you don’t mind and re-read the poems I’ve marked as having been twice recited.”
    But he was not happy at dinner; his mind was tugging at the problem as if it were on a leash. A curious kind of sixth sense told him that there was something to be made of this jumble of words if only he could find the key.
    They dined in one of the only three eating-places available to foreigners: for almost every restaurant in Belgrade had been turned into a canteen where the ragged and half-starved proletariat queued up for its ration of ill-cooked food. Around them in the gloomy ill-lit Majestic Hotel sat the sleek and shaven members of the police and the party, and the fat sleepy members of the intelligentsia—the artists and writers who had given in. An air of desperate, shiftless boredom reigned over everything. Porson made one or two desperate sallies, which fell flat upon the stale air of the place. Then he too fell silent. “I hope”, said Methuen, “that I am not depressing you. The truth is those damned folk-songs and epics are still going round and round in my mind. I feel there’s something very obvious which I have missed there.” Carter smiled and shook his head: ‘False scent,” he said. “I bet you a fiver.”
    â€œMy concern”, said Porson, “is gastronomic. This omelette tastes like Stalin’s moustache.”
    They walked out into the main square of the town together and Methuen smelt the curious stale smell that the Yugoslav public seemed to carry everywhere with them: sour sunflower-oil and rancid kaimak. It hurt him to see how shabby and frightened everyone looked. He had heard of police terror but this was the first time he had come across anything which permeated the very air of the town. The silence, too, was extraordinary; nobody sang or talked aloud, there were no shouts or whistling. Only the dull clump of boots on the broken and scarred pavements of the town. The scattered street lamps carved great pools of black shadow under the trees. At the door of the opera a crowd seethed, waiting to buy rejected tickets. They made a way for the foreigners and looked at them with a hang-dog air of sheepish envy. At the same time two large sleek limousines drew up at the door and the chauffeurs raced to open the car doors for a small group of high party officials. At once there came a burst of sycophantic clapping which echoed in the hollow street like a burst of machine-gun fire.
    The

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