Authors: Lois Ruby
Mr. Wushan Xi
Kwan Ho Employment Agency
Hongkew, Shanghai
Dear Sir
,
I seek the assistance of a clever servant girl, as I anticipate considerable company. Due to the vicissitudes of wartime, I do not know when these guests will arrive. Thus I would require that the aforementioned housemaid be available immediately and on duty shortly. As you well know, I am an impatient and exacting employer. Needless to say, the girl must be eager to work like a beast of burden, yet willing to waive all benefits save modest recompense. Though I live well, my resources are not as they once were. The girl's reward will be the assurance that she is serving the aristocracy of Old China in a time-honoured capacity. I believe you have my telephone number in your file. Please contact my butler, Sheng, with details. Time, as always, is of the essence
.
Cordially yours
,
MADAME LIANG
“What a snotty woman. So, what does this mean?”
“It's the final go-ahead for your first assignment. See the words
shortly
and
waive
? Before the week's out, the Japanese will confiscate all shortwave radios.”
“Who cares? They have everything else of ours.”
“Think. Shortwaves are our only means of contact with the outside. They'll just barge into people's homes and steal the few radios left, you'll see.”
“And I'm to stop them?” I asked hopefully, though I couldn't imagine how.
Erich laughed at how naïve I was and playfully pinched my arm until I yelped. Satisfied, he tapped the street map. “A REACTor, that's you, will go to all the families in this area and warn them to hide their shortwaves. Bury them, if necessary.”
“That's all?”
“Ilse, don't you see? It's a test. Gerhardt wants to check how well you handle this mission. You think it's easy? There's an art to it. You have to convince each person that it's vital to maintain secret communication with the Allies, and you have to do all this without scaring anyone, and above all, you can't tell a soul who put you up to this job and how you know this piece of intelligence directly out of Japanese headquarters. Do you understand?”
Then it was starting to sound a little more complicated, but I nodded in agreement.
“Good, so I'm instructed to send you off, right away. Zigzag. Don't go house to house in a straight row. Only go into a house when the guard turns his back.” He pulled me to him for an awkward hug. “Be careful.” Pushing me away, he looked at his watch. “I will go to the telephone down the block and tell them when you start. You have two hours to finish. Beyond that it begins to look suspicious. When you're done, I telephone to Rolf with your report.”
“Oh, so that's what Madame Liang means by âcontact my butler, Sheng, with details'?”
“Coded, of course.” He handed me the map and rushed me out the door, and that's how I began my first assignment as a saboteur.
The two hours raced by, and I was totally frustrated by my neighbors who just didn't see the importance of my mission. I slunk home to report my pitiful progress.
“I covered thirty-three families in seven buildings, and only six promised they'd hide their radios. Most didn't have radios, and the rest acted like I was a lunatic.”
Erich digested my report soberly. I followed him to the telephone two blocks away and crowded into the booth with him, thrilled by the sound of real coins jangling down the throat of the phone. When had I last had more than one coin in my hand? Erich wouldn't let me see the number he dialed, and what I heard on his end told me nothing:
“Already thirty-three people have applied for jobs at the Peking Road Pencil Factory, but unfortunately, there are only six positions open. Um-hmn. Um-hmn. Yes. I will.” And he hung up. “You passed the test. Tomorrow you hit Frenchtown, same story.”
Not even a week passed before Japanese signs went up all over the place and messages blasted from megaphones up and down the streets:
A
TTENTION!
A
TTENTION!
A
LL
R
ESIDENTS
A
RE
C
OMMANDED TO
T
URN
I
N
S
HORTWAVE
R
ADIOS
I
MMEDIATELY.
V
IOLATORS
W
ILL
B
E
I
MPRISONED.
N
O
E
XCEPTIONS.
REACT was right on the money. I began to feel I was truly part of something important, that even a girl like me could make a difference.
I came home from the Kadoorie School one day and found Mother curled on her bed. A tentative tap at the door woke her before I could. “It's probably Mrs. Kazimierz from across the street. Back again,” Mother said under her breath. She got up and tidied her hair.
But it wasn't Mrs. Kazimierz. It was a man as bald as a watermelon, wearing plaid suspenders that hitched up his trousers nearly to his armpits.
“Mrs. Span?” He was an American, judging by the way he pronounced our nameâSpan, like it was the span of a bridge, rather than
Shpohn
.
“Yes?” Mother was wary; strangers seldom came to our door, and Americans, never.
He showed Mother a blue air letter with USA on it. “May I come in?”
Mother went pale. “Yes, of course.”
I edged forward to see that the letter was from M. O., but all sorts of postmarks and scribblings cluttered the envelope after months, and thousands of miles, of travel.
Mother offered the man the other chair at the table. I stood between them.
“Mrs. Span, I am Joseph Foley. I am in the employ of Laura Margolies. You know the name?”
“Yes, the social worker, God should bless her.”
“Yes, the
American
social worker,” Mr. Foley boasted. “We both work for the Joint.”
Mother offered Mr. Foley a cup of coffee. I knew what a sacrifice that would be if he accepted; Father would have no coffee for dinner.
He politely declined. “Yes, the JDC, the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. We are here in Shanghai to help the refugees at this unfortuitous time.”
“May I see my letter?” Mother asked, reaching out.
He handed it to her. “Mrs. Span, you know that Americans cannot send mail directly to Japanese-occupied China.”
“I understand.” Mother held the letter to her heart.
“Your letter has taken a circuitous route. It reached China months ago. A delegate from the Swiss consulate happened to be in the office of a certain Japanese officer when the decision was made as to what to do with a bagful of old mail. The Swiss, as you know, are neutral, and they often serve as go-betweens.”
Like Erich does for the Underground
.
“The Swiss man tried to convince the officer to entrust the mail to him, to no avail. But the officer must have felt playful that day.” Mr. Foley rubbed his shiny head and held up three lean fingers. “He offered the Swiss the chance to randomly draw three letters from the mail pouch, and those he was authorized to distribute. The remainder would be burned.” He folded his fingers down one by one and twisted the fist in the air. “Your letter, Mrs. Span, was one of the three. To make a long story short”â
it was too late for that
â“the Swiss consulate delivered the three letters to the Joint, and I am delivering yours to you. However, I must inform you that a certain enclosure has been, shall we say,
appropriated
by the Japanese. Not by the Joint, I want you to know.”
“Thank you,” Mother said, rising. “I shall keep that in mind.”
Mr. Foley took the hint. “Good day,” he said, showing us the top of his pink scalp.
As soon as he was gone, Mother carefully peeled the envelope open. I read over her shoulder.
Dear Frieda
,
This is the last you will hear from me. With the war in the Pacific raging, I am a liability to you. I didn't dare send a package. As you must know, there is a blockade against parcels from any of the Allied countries. But I hope the twenty dollars in this envelope will help to ease your family through the days ahead. M. O
.
There were Japanese characters in the margins, and the M. O. was enclosed in a blood red box. My heart sankâthe money was gone. The outside of the envelope was all marked up, too, and the same red ink encircled the Santa Rosa, California, return address, as if the tentacles of the Japanese Kempetai, the dreaded secret police, could extend as far as America.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
1943
I had barely a second to think about this letter because REACT had another assignment for me.
“No letter from Madame Liang this time, so listen carefully,” Erich instructed me. “You're to go to the Shanghai Club on the Bund.”
“And do what?”
“You're to slip into the water closets on the main floor and bend the rods of the copper floats in each toilet.”
“You're joking.”
“I am perfectly serious,” Erich said. “Disable the toilets and you create, well, let's say, a messy problem for our Japanese friends.”
The European Shanghai Club had become the social gathering place for the Japanese navy. I couldn't just waltz into such a high-security building and ask to jam their plumbing. I was outfitted as a delivery boyâanother way to be invisibleâcomplete with a uniform and cap, into which I stuffed my pinned hair.
I had to make sure no one in our house caught me in this getup. I tiptoed past Tanya's door just as Moishe jumped down from his perch atop the trash boxes. He meowed and curled his tail around my leg and turned gooey eyes toward me. So, he hated the real me but fancied the telegram-boy me. Too bad he was still the same cat.
I did not fool Liu. As usual, he tagged along behind me all the way to the Bund. He was wearing a newish, red-and-white-striped shirt that hung below his knees. I wondered what dead body he'd stripped it from. Somebody a lot larger than he, that was clear. I waved him away, and he hung back a few paces.
If I'd fooled Moishe, maybe I'd fool the angry-looking navy guard who blocked the giant front door of the Shanghai Club. REACT had learned that Admiral Imura conducted a lot of navy business at the club, with a glass of vodka balanced on his rolling belly.
I fluttered a manila envelope under the guard's nose and struck a deep boy's voice: “The Swiss consulate sent this for Admiral Imura. Extremely important.”
My heart skipped a few beats and wild doubts raced through my head, mostly on the theme of
just possibly I wasn't cut out for sabotage
. But I tapped my foot and rolled my eyes to suggest that the fate of the Japanese navy, even the whole war, maybe the world as we knew it, hung on whether this particular guard allowed the message to get through to the admiral promptly.
He studied the envelope with his face pulled together like a drawstring pouch, and then it dawned on me that the man was faking. He couldn't read the German. He probably didn't even read Japanese. As Mother often said, “Such guards are selected for qualities other than their literary proficiency.” Finally he waved me in.
“
Arigato
, thank you,” I said, bowing low. He bowed, I bowed, he bowed, and I slipped past him into the Shanghai Club.
I couldn't pause to admire the beautiful blackstone foyer, because of those mean sentries, stiff as department store dummies, every few paces along the wall. I was dying to get a glimpse of that hundred-foot-long bar we'd heard about. I wanted to knock everything off and slide across the smooth, polished wood in my socks. But this was war; no time for trivialities. No, I had to hurry to the toilets.
A guard's eyes followed me, without his head moving, as I scampered into the men's room. I glanced at the urinals. How could men be so immodest? Well, as Erich said, men had outdoor plumbing, so no one cared.
Disappointing to count only six stallsânot enough toilets to stop the Japanese march through China, but I'd do my part. Rolling up my sleeves, I set to work in the first stall. The copper float was green and coated with some sort of scum. It was slippery and hard as steel. I couldn't bend it a millimeter. Dismal failure on my first attempt. The best I could do was unhook the float and move on to the next stall. That toilet was more accommodating because the float was corroded and easier to snap. The third ball cock cracked in my palm like a raw egg. By the last one I was the underground's expert on dismantling plumbing, and I was feeling quite smug, when someone came into the men's room.
I climbed onto the toilet, crouching so nothing of me would show under or above the divider. Shiny boots appeared two stalls away, then trousers draped over the boots, suspended above the floor by thick fingers. Assuming he was alone, the venerable officer of the Japanese navy began singing.
And then came the moment a saboteur lives for. The officer tried to flush the toilet. The handle jiggled feebly, followed by a string of Japanese curses. Success! I heard him open the door of his stall. Changing his mind, he threw the lock on the door and crawled out under it, so no one would stumble into that stall and discover his shame. An officer of the Japanese navy who didn't flush? Unthinkable!
Water furiously splashed in a basin, the linen towel loop was yanked, and the officer stomped out of the men's room. I finished my work and stuffed a huge wad of tissue into each basin for good measure, then slipped out the swinging door, confident that officers with their elbows on the long bar would have an interesting day or two thanks to REACT. Mission accomplished, I stuffed the manila envelope under my uniform coat and sauntered over to the building entrance. I bowed to the guard, he bowed, I bowed. The Japanese were always polite.