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Adam dropped the journal and closed his eyes, barely able to comprehend what he’d just read: his uncle, obviously quite ill after years in captivity. It was almost more than he could bear. He now realized with absolute certainty that it was all true. Tarnov had given a copy of Stalin’s Katyn Order to Hans Frank in 1942. And now he had to get it back. A chill crept down his spine as he thought about the last thing General Kovalenko had said that night on the terrace: “Dmitri Tarnov hasn’t yet found what he’s looking for… and now he’s going after your uncle.”

Natalia’s hand touched his leg. As he opened his eyes and looked at her, his emotions left him reeling. He wanted to take her in his arms, but at the same time an almost irresistible urge to run away threatened to overwhelm him. But Natalia was the one person, perhaps the only person, he knew he could trust. He told her what he knew so far about Tarnov’s search for the order.

“Then we have to find it first,” she said emphatically, “and to do that we have to find your uncle.”

“Where do we start?”

“With your uncle’s friend. His name was in the first journal entry you read.”

“Jerzy Jastremski?”

“You’re about to meet him.”

“What? Are you serious?”

“He works in the Reading Room of the Copernicus Memorial Library. You’re to go there this morning.” She ran her eyes over his new suit. “What’s your cover story for being here?”

“Whitehall arranged it,” Adam said. He felt self-conscious under her scrutiny. “I’m an American industrialist doing business with the Russian military.”

“That’s perfect. You’re a businessman doing research at the library.”

“It’s open again?”

“They’re getting ready for the university to resume classes this fall, but the library is open now. Jastremski knows where your uncle went when he left Krakow.”

“He knows? I don’t understand. How did you—?”

“I have a contact who told me. Before the war Jastremski was a librarian at the law school.”

Adam thought for a moment. A librarian at the law school. He seemed to recall Jastremski from the days when he was doing legal research for his uncle—a slender, middle-aged man sitting behind a desk at the law school library. “I think I remember him.”

“I thought you might,” Natalia said. “Jastremski will have been told to expect a visitor, but he will be extremely wary. Even if he recognizes you, he might not acknowledge it. He’s AK, but very covert, very much under cover. Banach was smuggling documents from Frank’s personal files at the library—hundreds of documents. Details about the Jewish ghettos, concentration camps, all of it passed through the channel to me. Jastremski was part of the channel, though I never knew his name until yesterday.”

“Do you think Jastremski knows about Stalin’s order?”

Natalia shook her head. “According to the journal, your uncle never shared that with anyone.”

“When I meet Jastremski, what’s the code?”

“Ask for some help finding a book. Then tell him you’re new in town. Ask him if he knows what time the mass is on Sunday at the Church of Archangel Michael and Saint Stanislaus.” She reached into a cloth bag she had been carrying, extracted a folded newspaper and handed it to him. “In the lower left-hand corner of page six I’ve written an address in the eastern section of the Kazimierz District. I’ll meet you there at three o’clock this afternoon. The room is on the third floor, number 34. The key will be behind the radiator at the end of the hall.”

Adam suddenly felt uneasy, as though an invisible force was pulling him into a place he wasn’t sure he could go.

Natalia smiled as if, once again, she had read his mind. She reached over and took his hand, then brought it to her lips and kissed it. “Three o’clock,” she said softly. “You can read the rest of the journal.”

Forty-Three

15 JUNE

ADAM STOOD IN FRONT of the imposing multistory structure on Avenue Mickiewicza with his suit coat slung over his shoulder. He glanced up at the words Biblioteka Copernicus embossed in the stone façades above the three-meter-high, copper-clad doors of the main entrance. At least the Germans never had the chance to officially change the name. He put his coat back on and passed through the doors into a three-story circular atrium. He walked through a marble archway that led to the main floor section of the new library.

He smiled at the young woman sitting behind a semicircular, mahogany desk under a sign that read Information and asked for directions to the Reading Room.

“Take the stairs to the first floor and it will be on your right.”

Adam crossed the library’s ground floor gallery, heading for the stairs. His uncle had been instrumental in creating this place but, ironically, it had not been completed until after the German invasion. The gallery was a vast, circular room at least fifty meters in diameter with a marble floor and a high, domed ceiling depicting the heliocentric model of the universe conceived by the sixteenth-century Polish astronomer, Nicolaus Copernicus. In the center of the room stood a life-sized, bronze bust of Copernicus perched on a marble pillar. Around the perimeter of the gallery ranged shelves of periodicals and newspapers, mahogany tables and leather-backed chairs. To his left and right, marble archways led to other areas of the ground floor. And on the far side of the gallery, directly across from the main entrance, a wide marble stairway arched gracefully upward to the first floor.

Adam climbed the stairway, turned right and entered the Reading Room—a large, brightly lit area with windows along one side. About a dozen people were scattered about, sitting quietly at sturdy oak tables, studying books and documents. At the far end of the room a woman in a somber gray dress and a middle-aged man wearing a neatly pressed white shirt and tie sat a few meters apart behind a counter, sorting books and making notations on small cards. Adam set his briefcase on an empty table, took his time opening it and rummaged around until the woman picked up a pile of books and disappeared into the stacks behind the counter.

As Adam approached, the slender man glanced up and peered over the top of his glasses. The man’s face was familiar: thin, white hair, his skin soft and pale, the look of someone who spent most of his time indoors. His name tag read J. Jastremski.

“I’m looking for some records of iron ore production in Silesia,” Adam said.

Jerzy Jastremski was silent for a moment, appearing thoughtful, rotating a pencil between his thumb and forefinger as though he was envisioning the exact book and its precise location. Then he nodded and said, “Yes, I think I know where that might be. What period are you interested in?”

“The 1930s,” Adam replied.

Jastremski got to his feet and wandered off into the stacks. He returned several minutes later carrying a thick leather volume under his arm. He set the book on the counter and turned to the table of contents.

Adam glanced around. The woman librarian hadn’t returned, and everyone else in the room seemed engrossed in their reading.

After a moment Jastremski flipped through the book and said with a note of triumph, “Ah, here it is. I think you’ll find what you’re looking for on pages 1142 through 1156.”

Adam turned the book toward himself and glanced at the pages of dense data. “That looks like what I need.”

“Is there anything else I can help you with?” Jastremski asked.

“There is one other thing,” Adam said, casually. “I’m new in town and I’m thinking of attending mass this Sunday at the Church of Archangel Michael and Saint Stanislaus. Do you know the time?”