“Mar Lago,” Ava replied. “The wide sea.”
“That’s fitting.” Peggy pursed her lips, thoughtful. “But be warned, when those cobblestones get wet, they’re slippery as a spy. How do you know that anyway? About the Mar Lago stuff?”
“I’m a librarian,” Ava answered proudly. “I love to learn.”
“You’re perfect for this job. Don’t ever let Mr. Sims tell you different.”
Peggy pulled the car past the square. As she did so, Ava’s attention was drawn from the cal?ada to the swarms of people. Chairs and tables spilled from the cafés into the sunlit pavement in such numbers, it was impossible to tell one establishment from the other.
In Ava’s research through the OSS manual and other various books in the library, Portuguese women did not spend time in cafés. However, there were scores of women leaned casually back in the wooden and metal-framed seats, their legs absent stockings as they blew out graceful streams of cigarette smoke. Not a single one wore gloves, let alone a hat.
“The refugees have changed things a bit here.” Peggy turned down a side street called Rua de Santa Justa and pulled the car to a stop. “Don’t let this casual setting fool you. These people are in desperate circumstances. They don’t care if they have hats on their heads or stockings on their legs. They’re all biding their time, churning in the endless hell of transit visas, exit visas, whatever other kind of visas that can trip them up.”
“Like those outside the embassy.” Ava sobered as she recalled the crowd of people.
“Right.” Peggy frowned to herself. “If they’re lucky enough to get those visas, then they need tickets to boats that might never come and cause the crazy cycle to start all over again. You’ll see.”
She slid out from the car. Each woman took one of the suitcases, though Ava ensured she grabbed the heavier of the two, and lugged them up a flight of stairs in a town house to a door marked 101. Peggy pulled out a set of keys and opened the door. “It’s small, but it’s more than most have. Housing and hotel space is tight. Lucky for you, it was available just before your arrival.”
Ava walked into the narrow apartment where the living room, kitchen, and dining room were all rolled into one central location and a door to a bedroom was off to one side. Yet another door revealed her own bathroom, a luxury she’d never had.
“It’s perfect.” She set her suitcase down. “I’m from DC. This is practically a mansion.”
“In that case, you’re welcome.” Peggy handed the apartment keys and a thick envelope to her. “Escudos, the local currency, and quite a bit. Get some rest, then snap up as many publications as you can tomorrow morning. There’s a kiosk just down the street where you can get most of what you need. Someone will be by to pick you up around noon to take you back to the embassy.”
Ava held the envelope. “Is that all I need to do? Buy a few newspapers?”
Peggy shrugged and headed for the door. “You’ll be fine. You’re made for this job.”
The door to Ava’s apartment slammed closed, and she was completely alone with two packed suitcases and soul-deep exhaustion.
In DC, Ava was made for the job in the Rare Book Room, a library where she could name the artist of each painting and sculpture, where the history of every nook and cranny was as familiar to her as her own. She knew the catalog of ancient tomes like the back of her hand as well as her fellow librarians and the etiquette surrounding the hushed splendor of the Library of Congress. Lisbon was a city she had only a week to study for, like a dilettante cramming for a final exam, where she didn’t know the language and everything she’d learned about the culture was wrong.
To everyone, she was perfect for this job. Everyone, that is, except her.
She took nearly an age to fall asleep that night and struggled to rise at eight the next morning, her internal clock still set to DC time. Her suitcases were unpacked, her clothes pressed with an old iron she found in the closet, and her books were neatly shelved in the living area. With the exception of Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, which sat on the nightstand near the bed, where it always lay no matter where she lived.