The Last Night in London Karen White (books for students to read txt) š
- Author: Karen White
Book online Ā«The Last Night in London Karen White (books for students to read txt) šĀ». Author Karen White
āYou look stunning,ā Mr. Danek said, pulling out a chair for her. āBut I hope you saved some money for food.ā
Eva laughed, but Mr. Danek didnāt join her. It was then that she noticed the other man at the table, nearly hidden behind a cloud of cigarette smoke. Two dark eyes stared out at her from a round face, the skin ruddy with pockmarks. The manās tailored jacket fit his large shoulders and thick, muscled arms expertly. He hadnāt stood as sheād approached, and he regarded her with only mild interest, as one might eye a bug crawling within range to crush.
āEva, meet a countryman of mine, Jiri Zeman.ā
He looked at her, his gaze neither menacing nor friendly. He didnāt offer his hand.
āEva Harlow,ā Eva said, forcing a smile.
āItās a pleasure to meet you,ā Jiri said, his voice lighter than sheād expected. He moved his chair to make room. āAnton here has been telling me all about you.ā
Eva smiled again without commenting, focusing on arranging her skirts on her chair, not wanting to admit that Mr. Danek had never mentioned him to her at all.
Mr. Danek shouted something in Czech to the man behind the counter, and a steaming cup of coffee was set on the table in front of her. āIād compliment you on your makeup,ā he said, ābut there is something else that is making your face glow, I think.ā
āIām in love,ā Eva said a little too loudly. She certainly hadnāt planned on announcing her news in front of a stranger. But she didnāt care. For the first time in her life, she understood what all the fuss was about in the movies sheād watched at the cinema.
Jiri said nothing, only continued to watch her, an odd smile playing on his face. Mr. Danek sat back in his chair and put his cigarette to his lips. He had beautiful hands, Eva thought. Sheād first noticed them as heād applied makeup to one of the models. They were the hands of a pianist or a painter. Sheād said that to him once, and heād looked at her with such sad eyes that sheād wished she hadnāt said anything. It was only later, when they were packing up his makeup cases, that heād told her he had trained as a pianist at Charles University in Prague but had had to leave his piano and his ambitions behind when his wife had died. Alone, heād come to England. When sheād asked him why, heād told her only that heād left while heād still had the chance to choose.
āAh,ā Mr. Danek said. āThat explains why your cheeks are flushed so prettily.ā His face darkened. āIt is satisfying to know that love can still exist today when such horrible things are happening in the world.ā
Now Eva noticed the crumpled copy of the Daily Mirror on the table. She turned it around and read the bold black headline: hitler arrives in prague. She looked back at Mr. Danek, wishing that she had paid attention to the BBC announcers for more than just to imitate their accents. It wasnāt that she didnāt care about world events; she did. It was just that it all seemed so far away and separate from the happiness she was feeling for the first time in her life. Eva pointed to a line in the lead paragraph. āIt says here it was a bloodless invasion.ā
A short, dark man at a nearby table stood abruptly. āBloodless?ā He blew out a puff of air from his lips. With a heavy accent like Mr. Danekās, he said, āYou mark my words: This is just the beginning.ā He pointed a stubby finger at Eva. āYour Chamberlain and his Munich Agreement, saying it meant āpeace in our timeā to give the Sudetenland to Hitler.ā He shook his head in disgust. āAll it did was feed a tyrant a little piece of my country, and that made him hungry for more. Now heās taken the rest of Czechoslovakia, and heās still hungry. Whatās next, hmm? Look what heās done to Austria, how the Jews have been thrown out of all professions, and their synagogues and homes burned. He means to take over all of Europe until there are no more Jews.ā
He leaned closer to Eva. She could smell coffee and cigarettes on his breath. āHitler wonāt stop until heās moved into your Buckingham Palace. And that wonāt be bloodless. I tell you that.ā
The man threw money on his table and stalked out of the cafĆ©, the door slamming shut behind him. Stunned by the odd noise next to her, Eva turned her head, realizing it was Jiri. He appeared to be laughing. Except it wasnāt the sort of laugh she was used to, the sound of joy. This was a brittle, choking sound, as if he had just swallowed something bitter.
Leaning over to crush his cigarette in the ashtray, Jiri said, āThere will always be some who are uneducated and ignorant. They will not see two sides of a story.ā
Eva found she couldnāt look at him. Her eyes focused instead on the coffeepotsāan eclectic collection of all sizes, shapes, and colorsādisplayed on a long shelf over the counter. The man whoād stormed out had seemed not ignorant but passionate about his beliefs and more knowledgeable about a situation she hadnāt considered very important because it hadnāt affected her. Her eyes stung with embarrassment, and she waited until her vision had cleared enough to read the stick-on-letter wall menus before turning back to Mr. Danek.
āIs it true? Is everything as dire as that man said?ā
āJiri and I were discussing just that thing. Werenāt we?ā
Jiri lit another cigarette, his movements blunt and decisive. āIs that what you call doing all the talking?ā He
Comments (0)