He looked at Casimir. “Did he leave anything with you… any papers… documents?” Adam had no idea what these men knew, what Banach might have told them.
Casimir shook his head. “No, there was nothing. Just the few clothes he brought with him.” The white-haired man got up and stepped over to a cupboard, returning with a bottle of vodka and three glasses.
Adam was grateful for the drink. He came to a decision as he set his empty glass on the table. “Ludwik Banach—the Provider—was my uncle.”
Surprise registered in the faces of the two Górale men, but they remained silent.
Adam continued. “Banach discovered something at the Copernicus Memorial Library before he left Krakow. It was a document. Did he say anything about that?”
“He said only that he had to get out of Krakow,” Casimir said, “and that the NKVD would be hunting for him. He stayed with Piotr and Krystyna at first, but we brought him up here as soon as we could, farther away from Nowy Targ. The Russians don’t come up here; it’s too difficult. They don’t know the area, the forests. He was safe here.”
“What is this thing he found, this document?” Piotr asked.
Adam studied the two men. The look in their eyes told him they could be trusted. But it was more than that. It was a look that said they were also AK, and they needed to know what he knew. He continued, “Ludwik Banach discovered a document proving that Stalin ordered the NKVD to secretly murder thousands of Polish officers in the Katyn Forest in 1940.”
Both men stared at him, their eyes wide with astonishment. After a moment, Casimir asked, “And they know? The NKVD knows about this document?”
“They know the document exists,” Adam said. “At least one of them does, an officer named Tarnov. He returned to Krakow from Berlin within the last few days. He tried to locate the same document months ago, back in January when the Russians first came into Krakow. But he couldn’t find it. Then, a month ago, I visited the Sachsenhausen concentration camp…”
The rest of the story spilled out. Adam talked rapidly, watching the growing concern in the other men’s eyes. When he finished, Casimir stood up and paced around the room. Then he placed both hands on the table. “Is it possible that Banach hid the document somewhere in Krakow before he came up here?”
Adam thought about what he’d read in Banach’s journal. There were a few days after the Germans left Krakow before the Russians moved in, a few days when his uncle was not under surveillance.
“Did he notify anyone before he left Krakow,” Casimir continued, “any type of message that—?”
A message!
Adam pushed his chair from the table and stood up, pacing around the tidy room as a thought formed in his mind. Suddenly it all became so clear, he wondered how he could have missed it. “Of course, that’s it!” he blurted out. The answer had been right there all along—in the last line of the journal.
“What is—” Casimir started to say, but Adam held up a hand and stopped him.
“He did leave a message,” Adam said, “a message I never quite figured out until just now. Pathetic pawns on the perilous chessboard of the NKVD!”
Casimir frowned. “I don’t understand.”
“It’s in the library. Stalin’s order authorizing the Katyn massacre is in the Copernicus Memorial Library!”
Fifty-One
ADAM LEFT PROCHOWA just after dawn on horseback. Piotr and Zygmunt followed behind in the wagon. The horse was a bay Carpathian pony, about 14 hands high, broad in the shoulders and sturdy, with an easy gait. Though Adam hadn’t ridden in several years, it gradually came back, and after a mile or two he was able to push the horse to a gallop across the meadows, then relax in the saddle as the sure-footed mare made her way down the rugged slopes.
Adam stopped every hour, alongside creeks or small ponds, allowing the horse to rest for a few minutes and graze on the mountain grass. Then he pressed on, his heart aching with grief, his eyes clouded with tears. Ludwik Banach was gone. He had died of tuberculosis in a remote mountain village. For years Adam thought him dead, but he had never really mourned him. And now… he had stood in front of the simple wooden cross that morning as the sun came up. And the grief had struck him like a hammer blow. He had recited a silent prayer but it wasn’t enough. He would make sure his uncle’s death was not in vain. And he would protect the journal. He had given it to Casimir before he left Prochowa, sure the AK leader would safeguard it.
As he pounded down the mountain, hunched forward in the saddle, Adam’s anxiety rose to a fever pitch with the stunning realization of where his uncle had hidden the order authorizing the Katyn massacre. And he’d left Natalia alone in Krakow… with Tarnov, and God only knew who else, hunting her down.
It was just past noon when Adam spotted the smoke. He slowed the horse to a walk, then guided it up a rocky knoll, a vantage point offering a long view down the mountain. At first there was just a puff, perhaps a kilometer away, darker than the wispy clouds in the background and dissipating quickly. He sat quietly in the saddle and watched, his eyes glued on the horizon. Another puff appeared, then a third, darker than before, lingering longer in the hazy, bluish-white sky. Finally a solid, unbroken plume of dark, black smoke rose above the treetops, drifting off with the breeze.
Adam cursed and jabbed his heels into the mare’s ribs. They bolted forward, down the back side of the knoll and back on the trail. He pushed the horse, ducking to avoid tree limbs, ignoring the risk, his mind a blur of fear and rage.
Ten minutes later he arrived at the clearing in the forest where he and Piotr and the two Górale neighbors had been cutting trees a few days earlier. Adam couldn’t see the cabins from here, but a plume of thick, black smoke rose above the treetops. He could smell the sharp, pungent odor and hear the crackling of burning wood.
Adam tied the pony to a tree, pulled a rifle out of the saddle holster and checked the five-round magazine. It was a Kar 98k sniper rifle that Casimir had given him. One of the Górale men had taken it from a dead German in ’39. He removed the saddlebags and slung them over his shoulder, then hiked into the forest, heading downhill toward the cabins.
It took about a quarter of an hour, moving quickly but quietly through the thick pine forest, before Adam arrived at the crest of a hill where he had a view of the small cluster of cabins. The one belonging to Piotr and Krystyna was on fire. He removed a pair of binoculars from the saddlebags, knelt down and leaned against a tree to scan the area.
He cursed silently as a wave of dizziness blurred his vision, and he suddenly felt nauseous. Goddamn it, not now! He waited a moment, closing his eyes and breathing deeply until it passed. He blinked a few times then peered through the binoculars. In the grassy clearing between the remaining two cabins Adam spotted a group of people on their knees, their hands bound in front of them and secured to a low tether strung between two trees. He counted five of them: three women and two men. One of the women was Krystyna. Russian soldiers with rifles slung over their shoulders patrolled the area, some watching the blazing cabin, others watching the surrounding hills and forest. He counted at least a dozen.
Piotr had told him that Russian soldiers were prowling around Nowy Targ, terrorizing the locals. But these weren’t Red Army soldiers. They were NKVD riflemen. And this was no random act of terrorism. Adam slowly scanned the area, looking for Tarnov between the wisps of black smoke. He didn’t see him, but he knew he had to be there.