In 2010, while Nicholas Reynolds worked
at the CIA Museum, this Oxford-trained historian discovered information
for a book he penned with a deeply researched and captivating narrative. Writer,
Sailor, Soldier, Spy, reveals his discoveries for the first time, bringing
to light the whole story of this hidden side of Hemingway's life: his troubling
recruitment by Soviet spies to work with the NKVD, the forerunner to the KGB,
followed in short order by a complex set of secret relationships with American
agencies, including the FBI, the Department of State, the Office of Naval
Intelligence (ONI), and the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), a precursor to
the CIA.
A double agent? Oh, Ernest, say it isn't so!
Although, in direct contradiction of my own words, I find the idea exciting. Think of the books we could write with that premise. Take me, for instance. An aging--okay, okay--OLD fluffy romance author traveling the world doing research and spying at the same time. Think of the situations I could get into. Well, I could. And I bet you or any of your characters could, too.
Take the time I was in Berlin and went off on my own while Calvin happily sat in a Starbucks, sipping on espressos and writing. The only German I knew was please and thank-you. I mean, one must be polite wherever you go. But Pollyanna here felt she could handle any situation with a smile.
I stumbled upon a Jewish synagogue guarded by German police. There was a new exhibit of pre-WWII Jewish treasures, buried from the Nazis, recently unearthed and cleaned up that were now on display. Neo-Nazis had threatened to bomb the synagogue where I later found out Einstein and the family of Mandelsshon, German composer, once worshipped. As I went through the metal detector, a guard spoke to me in a harsh tone.
I smiled.
He repeated his statement.
I smiled.
He motioned for a female guard, who was bigger than Atalla the Hun, and she glared at me while repeating the same phrase.
I smiled.
She yelled it.
I nervously smiled. My facial muscles had started to cramp. What in the world was wrong?
She finally grumbled, shrugged, and waved me on.
That night when we had dinner with Kelly, Calvin's son, and his Berliner wife Katrin, he inquired about our day. I told him about my experience at the synagoguee. Kelly asked what the guards kept repeating. I told him. Both he and Katrin started laughing. "Vonnie, they were telling you your zipper, your fly was down."
I didn't smile. "You mean to tell me I walked through 3 floors of a temple with my pants hanging open?" How could I have missed that little faux paus?
See how easy it is to come up with story ideas for your writer turned spy? I'm in the process of spiffing up a romantic suspense I'd written about five years ago. I need to update technology and insert more humor. In what was once Mona Lisa's Room, soon to be NIKO: Licensed to Kill, a simple American art teacher goes to Paris and does the same thing I did in the first two paragraphs. From then on my imagination took over.
EXCERPT:
A
grim-faced guard stepped in front of Alyson Moore when she raised her camera to
take a picture. “Madame, in the
Louvre, we do not photograph the Mona Lisa.”
His lips fashioned a thin line of disapproval.
Alyson’s eyes scanned the crowd, for even as
the security guard admonished her, scores of other tourists, their arms
upraised, used cell phones to snap photos. “Am I the only one trying to take a
picture here?” Without waiting for a reply, she pocketed her camera, and the
snippy, tight-assed guard moved on.
She
shouldered her way through the early morning crowd in the Salon Carrẻ to get a closer look at the painting encased in
bullet-proof glass. Seeing Da Vinci’s masterpiece was a dream come true. No
one, not even an overzealous guard, would spoil her time with Mona.
Once the
museum opened its doors at nine sharp, and Alyson passed through security, she
hurried to see this woman of mystery. The throngs of people already crowding
the room surprised her.
She slipped
between two men and stepped closer to the leading lady of the gallery. Alison’s
nose twitched from the sweet and sour blitz of assorted perfumes and various
degrees of hygiene. Murmurings of adulation echoed off the gallery walls as if
the Mona Lisa were a five-hundred-year-old rock star. How had one painting
achieved such stardom?
If the
ever-present guard wouldn’t allow photographs, she’d sketch some of Mona’s fans
standing, spellbound by her enigmatic smile. When she finally tugged her large
sketchpad free from the tight confines of her yellow leather bag, other items
fell and scattered.
Alyson
crouched to retrieve pieces of charcoal, just as the man standing next to her
bent to place a black shoulder bag, the style European men were so fond of
carrying, on the marble tile floor.
Their
eyes locked.
“Excuse
me, you’re standing on my things.” Alyson pointed to his shoe. The man, face
damp with perspiration, scowled, raised his foot and snatched her navy scarf,
hotel keycard and passport, crushing them into a ball. He stuffed the wadded scarf
into her outstretched hand and stood.
Alyson reached,
fingering for the last charcoal pencil that rolled beyond her reach. She
straightened and realized the man in the dark green t-shirt was walking away.
The tattoo of a scorpion on the back of his neck. “Sir? Sir, you’ve forgotten
your bag. Monsieur?”
He
didn’t respond.
She
called after him again.
The man
disappeared into the crowd.
The
museum guard approached. “Is there a problem, Madame?”
“Yes,
that man left his shoulder bag here.” Alyson indicated the black canvas bag on
the floor. “He set it down at the same time I dropped some things.” She held
out her navy scarf to show the guard and suddenly it hit her that her scarf was
empty. She shook it out to make sure. “My hotel key and passport!” Pulling
apart the sides of her shoulder bag, she rummaged through its contents, hoping
against hope she’d shoved them inside without thinking. Still, with her
passport the same shade as her scarf, she assumed it was wrapped in the scarf’s
folds. “I don’t believe this. He took my keycard and passport. Why would he
take my things and leave his bag behind?”
The
guard’s eyes widened for a second. “Madame,
you are sure the man left this bag?” He pressed a button and spoke into a
speaker attached to the lapel of his uniform, a scowling gaze intent on
Alyson.
“Yes.
He…he was setting it on the floor at the same time I squatted to retrieve my
fallen items. I asked him to move his foot since he was standing on them.”
Alyson groaned as realization sunk in. She was in a foreign country with no
passport. Oh, hell!
The
guard cautiously unzipped the shoulder bag. Yellow wires. The man depressed the
communications button again and spoke rapid-fire French. Pandemonium erupted. Armed
guards rushed toward the abandoned black bag. Once the word “bomb” was uttered,
visitors screamed as they stampeded from Mona Lisa’s room.
Suddenly,
Alyson stood in the eerie deafening silence with only the pounding of her heart
and the cocking of guns reverberating in her ears—she and the black bag
containing explosives surrounded by eight armed guards. Holy shit!
I'm not sure when I'll have this book ready to self-publish, but I'll be sure to let you know.
I can't get over it. Old Ernest a spy. Who-da-thunk-it!
You'll find me at www.vonniedavis.com
16 comments:
I wonder if Hemingway did it for money, a political bent, or for the adventure of it. Maybe he did it on a bet. He was part journalist and part novelist, so he could have been gaining fodder for his next novel. I do believe writers gain from actually and going and doing what they write about, but for me, I'm thankful for the internet and my imagination. I enjoyed Mona Lisa's Room, Vonnie...I'll bet it will be even better in its next iteration. Great excerpt!
I would bet Hemingway did it for the adventure...and maybe with intent to use what he learned in a novel. Thanks for the post, Vonnie!
Yeah, I'm going for adventure. I can see him with one hand wrapped around a bottle, one with pen and paper in his pocket, talking his way into some den of intrigue. Your book sounds like fun, Vonnie.
Calvin and I wondered if he hadn't been too deep into the bottle at the time, Rolynn. I have no clue. I'd buy the ebook or the paper back, but the ebook was 12.99 and my pinky has a hard time clicking on a price that high.
Angela, Hemingway did love adventure. He was always out to prove his manhood. Thanks for stopping by.
Thanks, Brenda. I'm lost in yours right now. It is so, so good! I got a tattoo for research for a book. I think that's as drastic as I'll get. Joining a political party, especially a dangerous one, is way out of my comfort zone.
I was an avid Hemmingway reader as a teen, and I can see him doing it for the thrill/adventure, too. I've never done anything too weird to research a book...other than visit all sorts of sites online that I wouldn't want my kids visiting! (It's amazing what people will post.) Love the new book already, Vonnie!
Hilarious about the zipper! Apparently we all should learn please, thank you, and zipper. This book sounds too good to languish in your computer. Time to get it back out there! As for Ernest...we all need a hobby, right?
Leah, Calvin has a book of Hemingway's short stories he reads to me in bed on nights I'm especially tense. I love the sound of Cal's deep voice. I snuggle and he reads me to sleep. Some of us just never grow up. We like that bedtime story once in a while.
Jannine, I loved writing these books set mainly in Paris. It was almost as good as being there. I could insert some of my experience and favorites of the city into the story bringing back sweet memories. Yes, for me, learning the word zipper in that country's tongue wouldn't be a bad thing. Neither would "where's the restrooms?"
Very interesting post, and dearly loved your excerpt. Holy shit! Got that right. Get this one moving into the marketplace.
Love the excerpt, Vonnie--and the zipper tale. LOL. As for Hemingway, who knows what he imagined he was doing--more adventure?
Thanks, Margo. I'm trying. I'm glad you enjoyed the excerpt.
I agree, Andrea, I'm thinking Ernest was all about the adventure.
I go for Hemingway doing it for the thrill/adventure. I love, love, love your excerpt. You must get this published. The little details we use in our stories of things that happened to us make the story memorable and more real. How sweet that Calvin reads you to sleep.
Oh my gosh, fascinating. I had no idea! Your excerpt is excellent!!
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