Saturday, January 14, 2012

Chapter 3: Moonlight Becomes You



Interview with Roxy Smothers, 1973:

Since the motorcycle bearing Chicolini and Fat Shmengy was a head of us, I briefly wondered what would happen when they were struck by the train. I mean, two huge masses like that coming together would really illustrate one of those Newton’s law or Einstein’s theories, wouldn’t it? I suspected it would be very untidy for all involved.

Before we got a chance to see such physics in action, Hozzenka or whatever her name was was very concerned about our pursuers and so she pulled out a stick of dynamite out of her handbag. Which may sound a bit unconventional but I can assure you, darling, that having a bit of explosives in one’s clutch can be ever so useful. She lit it with the Turkish cigar she invariable kept in her mouth and popped it out the window. Unfortunately, since the little sport scar was terribly overcrowded with accordions and drunken ballerinas and the like, her aim was less than perfect and the dynamite rolled under the car.

There was a great boom and several things happened very fast all at once. The wheels of the car shot off in various directions, the engine flew right out of the hood, and the vibrations of the explosion caused Skinny Shmengy’s accordion to begin playing “Lady of Spain” by itself. Just as a very large fireball began rising up at my feet, Hummingbird grabbed me and pulled me from the exploding car.

I must have blacked out for a moment but the next thing I knew, Tura was running into the forest, the seat of his trouser alight, and screaming a most girly sort of scream, very like Fay Wray in that big monkey picture.

Suddenly, a strong, comforting hand was helping me up. When I looked up, I was surprised that it wasn’t Hummingbird. Instead I was staring into the face of a young man who was startlingly handsome despite the silly pointed Ruritanian Army cap and gawking look on his face.

“Why, why, it can’t be!” He stammered adorably. “You’re Roxy Summers!”

“Unless I owe you money, I am indeed, Sergeant York. So who are you, tall, dark, and stuttering?”

Despite the darkness of the pre-dawn sky, I could see his handsome face blush enormously, “Oh my… I am… Lieutenant Andrei Milna, commander of the Royal Ruritanian Armored Train, Shmigly…and I’m your biggest fan, Miss Summers!”

At this, the dear puppy-faced young man pulled a copy of an old edition of the Strelzov Tattler, a horrid local gossip rag. It had a whole photo layout about me just after my wedding to Bronislav. Dear lord, I thought as I flipped through it, I’d forgotten about posing with all those mink-milkers.

No, they don’t milk cows in Ruritania, they milk minks. You see there is a species of creature, the Ruritanian Mink, Mustela ruritanensis I believe, that is sort of like a cross between a sheep and an orangutan but much less well mannered, that is indigenous to Ruritania and thereabouts. There big thing, about the size of Shetland pony but with terrible fur. For centuries, it’s been a prime source of food, clothing, and when its milk is fermented, the main source of that dreadful national alcoholic drink, brfnisz. As I recall those milk maids were more foulmouthed and drunken than Seventh Fleet sailors on liberty in Honolulu and smelled worse than the back bay at high tide.

“Oh, and here, Miss Smothers, is my favorite picture of you on a brand new tractor - oh excuse me for just a moment - FIRE!”

When the Lieutenant screamed, the two big guns on the train opened fire and continued to do so at the German hovercraft, buffeting it so heavily that it turned from us and sped back across the border. As it turned, I noticed that one of the people on the deck of the hovercraft was a woman in a black uniform that looked familiar.

“Of course, she came after me,” the sonorous voice of Hummingbird fairly echoed beside me. “It’s our friend from the club, the one who couldn’t shoot me. It’s a sad fact but I seem to have that effect on women - once I’ve touched them, it seems they can never let go of me.”

Oh brother, I thought, can he really believe that stuck on himself?

In the meantime, soldiers from the train were chasing the Graustarker border guard back across the line while a few more were bringing Tura back from the woods. They were apologizing to him, saying that the way he was screaming it sure sounded like a woman and they didn’t mean any offense by calling him “Madam.”

I could see that the rest of my companions rather miraculously had managed to escape from the exploding car with only minor scratches.

I also got to see what had become of the motorcycle. It was sitting in a deep hole that had mysteriously appeared in the middle of the road. Apparently, Chicolini who, for all his many, many, many faults, was an excellent driver. He managed to break the motorcycle just a few feet before it crossed into the train’s path. Unfortunately, the weight of Fat Shmengy kept the sidecar moving - it was one of those physics things again. Fat Shmengy’s sidecar kept going but somehow remained attached to Chicolini’s motorcycle. This resulted in a most intriguing corkscrew effect that drilled the vehicle several feet down into the roadway.

Lieutenant Puppyface’s face suddenly darkened. “Or perhaps I should call you Madam Radziwillovna? Has Prince Bronislav asked to reconcile with you?”

“Hardly, General Custer. When I found he was, how shall I say, dipping his quill into a stranger’s inkpot - well that is something I can never forgive!”

“Oh, Miss Smothers,” his face blushed thirteen shades of scarlet but then took on a delightfully dopey seriousness, “Then he is a fool to have thrown away a treasure such as you for such a thing!”

Oh how adorable, I thought, running my eyes over the muscles bulging beneath the tailor uniform.

I was suddenly swept off my feet. Literally. It was Hummingbird, who apparently didn’t like the way things were going.

He fairly shouted at Puppyface, “Lieutenant, can’t you see that Miss Smothers is in need of attention, yet you keep her standing here in the middle of road! Show me where I can take her to attend to her wounds. I was an ambulance driver in the Great War.”

“Of course, how foolish of me. But sir, allow me to carry her. I am much younger than you and as a serving soldier in much better shape. Allow me.” Here Puppyface grabbed me and started trying to yank me out of Hummingbird’s arms and a real tug-of-war began over me, which can be quite fun in the right circumstances but given all the trouble we had that night, I was hardly in the mood.

“Easy, boys,” I calmed them, “You’ll ruffle the merchandise. Remember, there’s no rationing when it comes to Roxy. I can walk to the train myself.”

They both grudgingly let me go but shot daggers out of their respective eyes at each other.

Wanting to pamper myself a bit more, I let Puppyface take the lead and proceed to show off his armored train to me. No, darling, that’s not a euphemism, it was a locomotive. Although he did seem to talk a lot about the cannons when he was around me.

I remember he said, “Shmigly is armed with two 75mm 02/26 guns with a maximum range of 10,700 meters, a shell weight of 5.3-8 kg, and maximum rate of fire of 10 rounds per minute.”

“Well, you know, dear,” I interrupted just to get him off his rather tedious track, “sometimes time-on-target is more important than rapidity.”

Then I realized that Zoya was staggering onto the train. Not wanting to be upstaged by her yet again, I dropped back a few steps from the Lieutenant and quietly directed the bombed ballerina through a small metal door.

She blearily peered through the door and said, “This doesn’t look like a stateroom, it looks more like the outside.”

Before she could say anymore, I gave her a strong push and slammed the door behind her.

We were soon settled in to a cramped and very comfortable troop car, most perched on soldiers’ blanket rolls. But after all the exertions of the night, to be secure behind nice steel walls protected by friendly armed guards, it wasn’t too bad.

Then I noticed that Zoya was peering in through one of the windows; she must have been clinging to the side of the troop car.

Her muffled voice came through to us, “It’s a bit chilly out here. Do you think I could at least have a wrap?”

Hozzenka the brigandress saw this and said, “I do what Mamushka ask, bring dancy girl safe back across border. I go home now, get back to robbing and murder.” She then turned and took her heavily armed person out off the train.

“And with that she went out of our lives, and we would forever more lack the brilliance of her smile,” recited Hummingbird extemporaneously.

At this, Skinny Shmengy noted, “You really are good at, how you say, shoveling krapluga.”

There were a few minor injuries that a medic bandaged. The most serious complaint came from Tura who studied his face in a mirror before asking, “Is this a powder burn? Do you think it will leave a scar? Does anyone have any pancake make-up. I daren’t show up in the capital looking like this!”

One of the crew, a fireman covered in coal black, spoke up, “Here sir, is make-up case. You might want put rough on cheeks and do something with dark circles under eyes.”

There was an awkward silence at this as the other crewmember looked at their fellow like he was a stranger.

The fireman finally responded, “What? Is my wife’s make-up kit!”

“Da, if your wife is named Dmitri!”

As the train pulled away, towards its base, Wagmore pulled out the little book he had lifted off the drunken German professor in Emeric’s. I noticed that von Schnitzel was looking over his shoulder. They began whispering in low tones, talking about some type of artifact, the relic of some long forgotten migration of an ancient people that the Germans had traced from the Himalayas to the Balkans. I really picked up my ears when they mentioned that this thin, whatever it was, was part of the Ruritanian Crown Jewels and worth a lot of money to whoever could get their hands on it. I knew they were talking about serious money when von Schnitzel’s eyes bugged out of his head like a wall-eye and the vain in his bald head started throbbing like the Dorseys were playing inside his head.

Periodically, we heard bangs and thumps as we passed various roadside obstructions and low-hanging tree branches but unfortunately I could see that Zoya was still hanging on. Finally, someone, I think it was Wagmore, took pity on her and left her back into the car. She dropped into a corner where she promptly fell sound asleep. To my chagrin, she didn’t snore at all, just sighed occasionally.

Before we could return to the discussion about the artifact and my share in the loot, Lieutenant Puppyface returned to announce that they had been radioed an order to take us to directly to Strelzov and that would be a few hours, so we should try to relax and maybe get some sleep.

At this point, Zoya began murmuring loudly in her sleep, “Mrs. Bronislav Radziwill, Mrs. Bronislav Radziwill…” Too bad I couldn’t get 10 rounds a minute dropped on top of her at that moment, I thought.

The Lieutenant then took me aside and said, “Miss Smothers, I can’t offer the luxury that I am sure you are accustomed to, but I can offer my cot to you.”

“Why Lieutenant, offering to share your bed with me? Why I hardly know you.”

I know it was terrible to do that to that poor young thing, making him squirm so. He must have turned about fourteen shades of red, and stammered and stuttered for a full fifteen minutes, I think he stopped breathing for five of that. Finally, I left him off the hook and asked, “You don’t happen to have anything to drink of this trolley, do you Conductor?”

“Well, just a small portion of medicinal brfnisz but I can’t imagine you would want any of that.”

“Just try living in a country with Prohibition some time, Buster. You’ll find you can drink just about anything.”

He led me forward to the command car. It was cramped like the rest of the train but there was a small alcove for Puppyface’s use that had a small writing desk and folding bed. I collapsed onto it while he poured me drink of thick viscous liquid that smelled like rubbing alcohol mixed with stewed prunes. But it did the trick and I drifted easily off into a deep dreamless slumber.

The next thing I knew, he was shaking me gently by the shoulder. When I looked up, his face bore such a worried, scared look that I did dare tease him. I noticed that the train had stopped.

“I am so terribly sorry, Miss Smother. But I have received new order from the Minister of War himself. We have had to stop here in this town to pick up your new escort. He is taking you ….into custody. I am so sorry, I think it most unjust and I will speak to the Minister himself if he will see me!”

“Oh darling,” I said. “Don’t worry your pretty little head about it. Roxy’s been in much worse scrapes than this one.”

He took me back to the troop car to join the others. I noticed they were all awake and tense. The soldiers were all standing around them now, all armed and looking very scared. The door to the car opened and I saw a figure silhouetted in the morning sun.

It was a man, not very big and distinctly round. He came into the car and I could see he was about sixty, with a round, open face, and wispy white hair partially framing a balding head. He wore a rumpled brown uniform with strange markings on it. He wasn’t armed but he carried

“Hello, children. I’m Postal Inspector Bogush. Would anyone like a cookie? Mrs. Bogush makes them with molasses.”

Nervous sweat poured off the face of Skinny Shmengy while Fat Shmengy buried his face in his hands and whimpered quietly, “Chicagoooo, baaang, baaang.”

Bogush dismissed the soldier, say, “oh we are all friends here.” They seemed relieved to go.

“Well children,” his voice was soft and soothing but he seemed to know everything about us, probably even my original hair color.

“It seems there was some excitement in Grauheim last night.”

Von Schnitzel gamely tried to bluff it out, “Really, we were in Grauheim last night. There was some excitement. Unfortunately, the film we had was destroyed when our car blew up.”

“How bad about your film. But I happen to have an advanced copy of the Grauheim Gazetta.” He head up a fresh newspaper and there on the front page was a headline that read “Assassins!” and a picture of us all on the truck just moments before the Shmengys opened fire.

“Terrible about Marshal Rhododendron who has lost his pinky toe. Now however do you think that happened?”

Von Schnitzel pointed at the Shmengys and cried out, “It was them! They did it!” Then he pointed to Hummingbird and said, “He put them up to it!”

The Postman smiled, “Well, aren’t you the ‘Helpful Hanushka.’ If this is so, then perhaps some of you might be allowed to make up for any indiscretions if you are of service to the country.”

Then he turned to the Shmengys and said, “Boys why don’t you play something happy. I love to hear happy music. And who knows when you’ll get the chance to play again.”

Von Schnitzel asked, “By service to the country, perhaps a film presenting Ruritania in a positive light, something extolling the glories of her past?”

“Just what I was thinking. We are well aware of your interest in the Grand Duchess’ unpublished novel, Passion’s Epitaph…”

At this, I cut in, “Wait a minute, von Schnitzel, you mean you bought the rights to an unpublished novel? You told me to read it?”

“Of course, I knew you would never read it, and besides, we don’t really have the right yet.”

“You don’t even have the rights yet!”

“What’s the problem? We don’t have a script yet!”

The Postman cleared his throat, “Children, I think you forget what we were discussing and your argument is interrupting this lovely tune.”

At this point, Skinny Shmengy said to his brother in a panic, “Keep playing Yosh, keep playing or else we are become goats of the scaping!”

“Now I am sure that honesty concerning what happened last night will only have a positive effect on your case. I do have one question, though. Who was responsible for the rocket attack - in addition to destroying the better part of a German army encampment and associated equipment and killing dozens of German and Graustarkian soldiers, it leveled several blocks in downtown Graustark?”

We all turned and pointed at Zoya who was just waking up. She yawned, stretched and said, “Good morning everyone! What a fantastic party last night, especially the fireworks! Are there any klopkies for breakfast?”

The Postman got a sad look on his face and sighed, “Poor, poor Zoyushka and such a promising dancer and swimsuit model. Well, it’s really all up to the Minister of War; he will decide your fate now.”

“When do we see him?” I asked.

“The Prince has directed that we bring you to him first thing tomorrow morning.”

“The Prince?”

“Why yes, the Minister of War is Prince Bronislav Radziwill.”

Diary of Zoya Bupkis

August 27, 1939

Dear Diarushka

I don’t really remember how the night ended, I guess I got a little tipsy. I do remember having the oddest dream about being in a trapeze act and kissing trees. It was very strange.

But then I awoke on the train and felt quite well. There was no hot breakfast, it being an army train but there was a very nice elderly gentleman who had some delicious molasses cookies that really hit the spot. But the gentleman seemed sad and said that we would have to talk with the Minister of War about the terrible things they were saying we did in Grauheim the night before. I mean really, perhaps we did get a bit noisy and I danced a bit too much but isn’t that what parties are for? I wasn’t worried anyway, because Bronislav is the Minister of War - what could go wrong?

We arrived in Strelzov in the afternoon. They wouldn’t let me go to my apartment but said we had to go to a special hotel, run by the Postal Service, where we would stay in safety until Bronislav could see us. He was apparently very busy because the Germans and Graustarkians were angry over all the noise.

It was a very strange sort of hotel. Not that it was bad, just that there was no one there except us and the old gentleman who locked the front doors after we all went in. He showed us to our rooms on the top floor of the hotel and as we went up, I still didn’t see any other guests or staff. For dinner, the old gentleman took us down to the dining room where we had several orders of klopkies that he must have gotten from a take-out restaurant. He had to go back three times because Yosh Shmengy kept eating the klopkies before any of us could get to the bags.

We had to share rooms here. The Shmengys who were also very sad, and Mr. Chicolini, and Mr. Tura were in one room. Mr. Director von Schnitzel, Mr. Hummingbird, and Professor Barqueless were in another.

My room was across the hall. I was worried because I had to share a room with Miss Roxy who was the horrid American gold digger that was so terrible to Bronislav. She seemed cross at first and piled the furniture up into a wall that divided the room and told me not to cross it. But then, just before we went to bed, she began telling me stories about criminals in America and how easy it was for them to kill people with all sorts of common household items, especially young girls sleeping in strange hotels. It frightened me a little because she would point to things in our room and tell me how they could be used to kill someone, especially “floozy dancers” whoever they were.

But I am going to sleep now, and not frightened at all. I am happy that I will see my Bronislav tomorrow. Won’t he be ever so happy that I completed the mission he gave me and that I did it so well!

Excerpt from The Sun’s Also Shiny, The Great American Novel, by Ernest Hummingbird:

His unique senses awoke him to the danger before it came close. He heard a throbbing sound of an engine overheard. He recognized it immediately; it was a Luftwaffe transport airship, a sound he’d recognize anywhere.
Just as he sprang from the bed, the old postman came in the room. He said excitedly, “There is trouble and I have called for help but we may need to hang on for a bit ourselves.” Then he dropped several weapons onto the table in the middle of the room.

The writer saw that these included his pistols and his Nitro Express, the gun he had used when he went looking for big game on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro but came face-to-face with Death instead. The gun was perfect.

The others were rousing themselves as the sound of jackboots pounded down the stairs from the roof. The Englishman and director both grabbed pistols and looked at the writer, seeking his direction.

The footsteps echoed through the hall. Then the door was knocked open.



A German stormtrooper looked in at the three men in the room. He suddenly shouted, “He is in here!”

The writer brought his gun to his shoulder and fired. The shot was perfect. It hit the stormtrooper and went through him, going on to hit another that had kicked in the door of the room across the hall. He rushed across, leaping over the bodies of those he had just slain.

He charged into the room with Nitro at the ready. He saw that the Germans had tried to come into the room through the two windows on ropes. Two lay dead in the room.

“That was almost perfect, ladies” he said, nodding to the two women who were crouched in opposite corners of the room, now seemingly pointing their pistols at each other. “Here, ladies I think we need your help in the hallway.”

He noticed that the ladies Englishman was in the room as well, tying the ends of the ropes that came from the airship together. “Why, I was just going to do that myself,” the writer said.

As he turned back into the hallway, the German bullets began striking all around him. None dared hit him. He fired back and two more of the German fell. His companions fired from the doorways of their rooms and, due to the crowded hallway, every shot hit. All except the shots fired by the Actor Tura. Not being used to firing a gun, he

Finally, only one stormtrooper was left standing. The Director screamed at him to surrender but the soldier stood his ground. The Director shot at him, nicking his combat smock but still didn’t budge. Finally, the dancing girl came out with her light pistol and fired it at the stormtrooper. The shot knocked an epaulet from his shoulder and this was enough for him to raise his hands in surrender.



The Director was nonplussed, “How could you stand up to me and then surrender to this slip of a girl?”

The stormtrooper responded, “You don’t understand, any more near misses and the cost of this combat smock would come out of my pay.”

The soldier walked toward him with hands raised, just in time to walk directly in front of the Actor’s gun just as it was fired, the Actor still having his hand wrapped tightly over his eyes. The stormtrooper was hit in the head and dropped dead instantly. The Actor peeked from behind his hand and fell down in a swoon.

Another team of stormtroopers flooded down the stairs, their machine guns at the ready. Suddenly, they saw the Postman standing at the far end of the hall. The old Postman let out a deep-throated growl and launched himself down the hallway, flipping from his feet in a series of handstands and somersaults that managed to avoid the hail of German bullets. He blasted into the crowd of stormtroopers in a flurry of fists and feet, knocked the half dozen of them down in an instant. No more Germans came down the steps.

The writer ran back into the ladies’ room. He leaned out the window and began to fire his big Nitro at the airship that was still tethered to the ropes knotted about the windows in the room. He hit the gasbag of the airship and although it did little damage, he could see the crew noticed and was worried by it. They’d be even more worried if they knew who was firing at them.

Air raid sirens were wailing through the city now and spotlights suddenly lit up the big zeppelin. A stream of ack ack flew into the air above the hotel. As the airship’s engines droned heavily in an attempt to build up speed to escape, the writer clung tightly to the knotted ropes, ensure they stayed secure at his end. The ack ack shells began to stream into the airship and it exploded with a tremendous blast. It began to fall directly down onto the roof of the hotel which began to buckle under pressure.

The writer yelled a warning to his friend to get out. He followed, grabbing the Actress around the waist and carrying her out on his strong arms.

The hotel was caught fire and was destroyed. But the writer and his friends
had escaped.

He had beaten the Nazis again. It was perfect.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Chapter 2: A Rendezvous with Destiny



Interview with Roxy Smothers, 1973:

As we were leaving the club, now a bloody shambles, we saw Emeric emerge from a back room with large can of kerosene. With a disconsolate look on his face, he said, “Looks like it’s time for that insurance fire I always planned for a rainy day.”

The great herd of humanity that was our party ran out into the street, towards a large, dilapidated truck that Chicolini had brought around. This truck had been found for von Schnitzel by our Freedonian “cameraman” and was one of those vehicles, and I use that term with extreme liberality, that was really a self-propelled Swiss cheese and an old one at that. But it did have a great deal of movie-making equipment and even a large, powerful sound system, all lifted gratis by the light-fingered Chicolini, no doubt, who was also charging von Schnitzel and exorbitant rental fee.

It was then that we noticed that we were trapped between numerous police cars that we could hear approaching from the north of us and a large torch lit parade along the cross street to our south.

Von Schnitzel and Hummingbird came up with an escape plan that owed more to Charley Chaplin than Harry Houdini. We rigged up the truck with fascist bunting we tore down from the nearby windows and then jumped on board to act as if we were making some sort of propaganda film. With that we boldly drove up to the police line holding back the enthusiastic crowds.



Wagmore walked up to policeman and said we had been engaged by the Marshal to film the parade from the inside. While the flatfoot was trying to wrap his block-headed mind around that idea, I purred that the Marshal had wanted me, an American movie star to make sure that his message got to the people in the states. Then von Schnitzel closed the deal, demanding the name of his superior and saying he would see the man broken if we were delayed any further. The flatfoot meekly complied and waived us through.

A break in the parade line opened up and we rolled through. I was perched on the hood of the truck, making my best Betty Grable. Oh there were cat calls but I noticed that as soon as we passed, a huge cheer let out. When I turned around, there was Zoya staggering drunkenly behind the truck, trying to do ballet steps in time to the marching bands. The moose Hozzenka was behind her, trying to steer her like a yacht with busted rudder. But when the crowd saw her, the cheering went up in earnest, “The Swimsuit Girl! It’s the Swimsuit Girl! Here in Graustark!” I couldn’t believe that little hussy had upstaged me, no wonder this part of the world was in such a mess!

As we neared the review stand, a Graustarkian official ran up and said that Marshal Rhododendron had invited me up to the platform as his guest. By the binoculars around the flunky’s neck, I guessed that his official duties entailed spotting dates in the crowd for the Great Man.

Realizing that the last thing I wanted was to be separated from my friends and put in the middle of a bunch of second-rate Nazi wannabes, I coyly prevaricated and then up went the cheer as Zoya stumbled by. The official’s eyes shifted to her and he bobbed a half-hearted apology to me, something like, “better luck next time,” and off he went, steering Zoya towards the randy dictator on the stand.

At first I was upset by being so maddeningly upstaged again. I mean really, what kind of morons were here, ME losing out that little tart? Well I guess you could say she was pretty in a backward, most-women-around-here-look-like-toads-so-she’s-the-best-we’ve-got sort of way, but I mean really! Then I realized that she would probably end up shot by dawn and I felt much better about the whole evening. The only bad thing was that the brutish but effective Hozzenka and Wagmore, who I was finding more interesting by the minute, decided to stick by her side, bluffing his way past the review stand guards with credentials he lifted from about a half dozen fascist officials.

So the truck slowly moved forward in the midst of that big chanting crowd. No one seemed to question our presence with von Schnitzel and Chicolini filming like mad and Hummingbird booming out a soothing narrative of praise for the Marshal, his voice resonating over the truck’s loud speakers.

Suddenly a little SS man who was sitting in the review stand, leapt up, and shouted that he recognized that voice, and ordered the truck to be stopped.

At this point, Hummingbird muttered, “Damn, it’s Schwarz, I knew him in Spain. We’re going have to shoot our way out of this!”

At this statement, the Shmengy boys suddenly remembered their time in Chicago. They both reached quickly into their instrument cases and the skinny Shmengy pulled out his tommy gun and started spraying the stage - I saw the Marshal himself fall down in the hail of bullets. Meanwhile, the fat Shmengy turned around and blasted away with a pump shotgun at the motorcycle troops behind us.


All hell broke loose then.

“Why in God’s name did you do that?” I cried.

Skinny Shmangy, in between machinegun bursts, pointed at Hummingbird and said “He told me to. And that voice is so rich and otorototif, I just had to obey.” That actually made sense, whenever Hummingbird gave an order, whether for a sandwich or a casual murder, people seemed to want to comply.

Tura, who was driving the truck, hit the gas and I flew off into the street. Seeing a mass of enraged goose-steppers now heading our way, I called genteelly out for the fellows to please halt and allow me to reenter. When this didn’t work, I yelled, “HOLD IT YOU MUGS! DON’T FORGET THE DAME!” I then hotfooted after them, high-heels and evening gown notwithstanding, having been well-trained for such exertions during numerous outings on sale days at some of the better Los Angeles clothing stores.

At this point, Tura tried to pull past the two light tanks that were in front of us. Now Tura had insisted on driving, claiming that he was an expert driver, even raced a few times professionally. What we found out later was that Tura never got more than the Polish equivalent of a learner’s permit and barely knew how to start a car, let alone drive in a high-speed escape. He told the whole lie to show up Hummingbird, who had nearly broken the land speed record in 1935, failing only due to wind resistance caused by his magnificent beard (not that he would have shaved it in any event).


But somehow, Tura slid the truck over onto the sidewalk and got us up next to one of the tanks, where its main gun couldn’t swing around enough to hit us. Chicolini went hog wild, throwing first his knife and then a flaming roll of acetate film into the turret of the tank. Whether it hurt anyone inside or not, it must have scared the hell out of the crew of the tank which swerved wildly and crashed, blocking the street behind us. Of course, von Schnitzel went apoplectic at the waste of his precious film.

There was another tank in front of us, and it swung its turret around and fired its gun point blank at us. Fortunately due to the dilapidated condition of the truck, the shell passed directly through several of the many rust holes and went harmlessly on its way to destroy a corner pastry shop.

By now the crowds had cleared the streets, running off panic-stricken at all the shooting. This left the street to a horde of soldiers and police who were charging at us, blasting away at us. The only thing that saved us for the moment was the wrecked tank and leveled pastry shop holding up their progress.

Then a weird shadow loomed over us. I turned and saw one of the strangest sights I had ever seen outside of a Hollywood cocktail party. It was a tank, big and bulky, but standing a good two storeys high on four spider-like legs.

“One of Hitler’s secret super weapons,” said Hummingbird, “Looks like he really has it in for old Ruprikt.”

Funny, but that little tidbit of knowledge didn’t comfort me. The walking tank fired once and it sheared the wheels and whole undercarriage off the truck. At this point, Chicolini threw another canister of film, discus-like onto the tank. It struck right near the point where the gun came out of the vehicle wall. Skinny Shmengy trained his heater on the disc and it went up in puff of flame and smoke. Lucky for us, it must have gone off right near the gun’s ammunition. There was a terrible rumble inside the tank and a sudden explosion; the big thing toppled over into the street just a few yards from our now ruined truck.

Chicolini turned and was about to fling another roll of film into the remaining tanks in front us. The shocked crew that had just seen this super weapon so easily destroyed hoofed it out of there like a politician running from the Vice Squad.

Just then a large object flew over the street and exploded with amazing force about a block from us, wrecking more buildings and hopefully reducing the population of fascists in our vicinity.

“Hey, dat musta been anudder of them Super-a-Duper Weapons, Huh? Maybe one of doze Buzzer-a-Bombs,” Chicolini offered. Another incredibly load explosion went off a few streets away. Things were really getting too difficult now

Although the road was clear for the moment, our truck was wrecked and walking out of the city was going to be impossible. Chicolini jumped into the tank and began to slowly proceed down the street out of town. The Shmengys, not having a better option, shrugged and jumped onto the back of the tank as it moved along at snail’s pace. Not wanting to be part of a slow-speed chase, I began to look around frantically for some other way out.

At that point, a stylish sportster came out of nowhere and made a screeching stop just inches from the wrecked truck. Hummingbird was behind the wheel, he held open the passenger door and said with an irresistible smile, “Can I offer you a lift, Roxy?”

I tried to be just as nonchalant, “Well, I usually don’t accept favors from newpapermen but my taxi does seem to be a little late….” I hopped in and then von Schnitzel and Tura shoved their way in as well.

“This isn’t exactly the escape I planned,” said an irritated Hummingbird. Still we sped off down the street. However, as we rode around the slow-moving tank, there was a sudden thump and a ripping noise as the rag-top gave way and Skinny Shmengy fell, accordion and tommygun and all, into out laps.

“Howdy! Boy, are we sure glad you found this car,“ Skinny said.

“We?” I asked, with sudden foreboding.

The car lurched to its side as a huge weight struck us.

“There’s little brother,” exclaimed Skinny Shmengy as he reached over the side and grabbed the huge Shmengy’s fat wrists and yanked him in the tiny sports car.

Excerpt from And A One and A Two, My Life Following the Demon Rhythm of the Polka, the unpublished autobiography of Stanislaus Shmengy

Now, I had not mentioned that my brother Yosh was one of the largest men in province of Leutonia. And by large I do not mean big and muscular. Oh, he was strong but he also loved potato klopkies and ate them by the gross. He was said to be best klopky eater in all Leutonia, maybe in whole kingdom of Ruritania, also one of fattest.

So when we jump from tank I make it, but Yosh do not. I manage to hang onto his hand and he ran along beside car, hooffing and pooffing, “Chicago. Huff. Bang. Puff. Bang. Wheeze.”

Finally I pull him in…

Interview with Roxy Smothers, 1973:

We were suddenly deluged by a cascade of fat clarinetist that pushed me and Hummingbird face first into the windshield. But somehow, the car continued to run at high speed out of town, despite the enormous load we were carrying.

We could hear sirens and gunshots and roaring engines all over the city. I doubted if we would ever get out of this alive. But then I remembered that I hadn’t seen Zoya since all the excitement started so maybe she was caught or even dead already. Well, maybe it wasn’t such a bad night after all…



Diary of Zoya Bupkis

August 26, 1939

…We went outside and although things were still a little fuzzy, the cool air did clear my head a bit. It was still the best party I was ever at, so many happy people were on the street, for some reason it was so crowded that I had to walk down the middle. But everyone seemed to know me, so famous a ballerina I had become, so I tried to do some dance routines for them but it was difficult with all the trucks and tanks in the street too. But everyone was cheering so I must have given a good performance. Then someone introduced me to an old bald man in a uniform who smelled of cheap cigarettes and chloroform. He had me sit next to him and I thought it was a surprise party for me or something.

But then the old man put his hand on my knee and I was about to tell him WHATFOR when there was Stash Shmengy on a truck in front of me playing on his accordion. But then his accordion caught fire and the old man fell down and was screaming. It was funny almost like the scream that Sister Perpetua used to make whenever the piece of metal in her head, the one that she got in the Great War, started moving around.

That was when things got confusing again. Everyone was pushing and yelling. And someone asked, “Is the Marshal dead?” I thought I was at a cowboy picture when I heard that. But then someone answered, “No, he is still alive but he has lost his pinky toe!” And I wondered how does someone misplace their pinky toe, don’t they usually, you know, go along with?”

Fortunately the professor was there and so was Hozzenka and we ran off the stage and got into an auto, it was a nice big one with little flags on the front fenders. We drove off but the traffic was terrible. There were all sorts of lorries and autos and even tanks rumbling through the streets and we had to make many sharp turns to avoid them. The Professor did this quite well and I shall have to ask him to teach me to drive some day. Wouldn’t Bronislav be impressed?

We turned down an alley and came to a big field filled with some parked lorries. It was dark and the professor stopped the auto and turned off the headlights. It got very boring and I was sort of hungry so I got out of the auto. I saw a big lorry that looked like it had a Popsicle on top so I thought it was an ice cream vender. I ran over to it but it was just filled with a lot of radios and other machines. Then I saw a button that I thought said “Lunch” and so I pushed it. Suddenly there was a loud whooshing as the Popsicle caught fire and flew up into the air. It flew over some house that were on the edge of the field and exploded with lots of lights and booms and all sorts of things like that.



I was so surprised, I cried out, “Ooooh! Fireworks, for my party? How sweet!”

I was so happy with the fireworks I went over to another popsicle truck that was nearby and pushed the lunch button again. Whoosh it went again but this time, it flew over the field to where there were lots of tents and tanks and funny things that looked like big metal puppets. This time it exploded much nearer the ground and all the tents fell down and caught fire and the Popsicle hit one of the metal puppets and it blew up along with a several tanks that were parked nearby.

“Uh-oh,” I thought, “I don’t think that was in the program.”

Then the Professor grabbed my arm and took me back to the auto. Then we drove all over the place with the professor dodging other autos and things for what seemed like hours. There were also lots of bangs and booms but I don’t think there were any more fireworks for me that night. But it was still The BEST PARTY EVER!

We were soon driving out along a country road and passed by a tank that was parked by the side of the road. The funny Italian man was sitting on it and looked very sad but he got much happier when the professor stopped and gave him a ride.

We had to shift around in the seats so I sat up front with the professor. I remember thinking how very good looking he was….

Excerpt from The Sun’s Also Shiny, The Great American Novel, by Ernest Hummingbird:

The escape plan had been perfect. Of course he couldn’t help it if the others got things mixed up. Still, he had salvaged most it and here he was with the beautiful actress by his side as the drove away into the grey hills.

She turned her large green, trusting eyes to him and asked why he had ordered the gangsters to shoot at the stand.

He had hoped to kill the little SS man. He had seen the malignant little man in Spain and seen his handwork there too, nothing but death and pain. But he didn’t say that to her. How can he make her understand, she who came from a world of style and beauty, the ugliness that existed in the hearts of some men?

It was also difficult to talk with the fat man’s armpit shoving his face into the windshield.

They rounded a corner and another car, it was a large military staff car, sped into their path from a crossroad. He saw at once that it was the professor and the dancing girl, the one whose heart he had broken. They stopped briefly and the writer told the other car to follow. With luck, they would reach the border by dawn. He would get them all across to safety. It would be perfect.

Then the sound of engines, lots of engines. Cars and motorcycles by the sound of them, in hot pursuit. He hit the pedal and the sports car sped off.

He rounded a tight turn, taking it perfectly of course. In the rear view mirror, he saw that the professor didn’t do as well and drove off the road. The writer spun the sports car around immediately, making the difficult reversal perfectly. He saw that they would never get the big staff car back onto the road in time. He ordered the two gunsels to help him in tackling the approaching Nazis.




There were four motorcycles with sidecars approaching, followed by two other military vehicles. All were crowded with soldiers. As they neared, the writer opened up with machine gun and shotgun on them. The motorcycles went sprawling across the road. Then one of the cars was hit and burst into flames. The last stopped and then beat a hasty retreat. However, the writer could see that one of car’s crew was calling on a radio for assistance.





Realizing that the staff car was done for, the writer had them take it flags and other markers and place them on the sportster. He then had them retrieve the one undamaged motorcycle. Chicolini, who could drive decently thought not as good as the writer, was dressed up in an overcoat and helmet. Then to relieve the pressure on the sporster, the writer had the fat gangster dress up as a soldier as well. Once they had put the fat gangster into the sidecar, and then righted the motorcycle after it fell over, the rest loaded onto the sportster and they sped off. If they were stopped the disguises might buy a few minutes which he could use to their advantage.

They drove on through the forest towards the eastern border. The night was hurrying toward the growing dawn when they heard the noise. It was a loud whining sound like giant fans.

Then the writer saw it.

It was a large vehicle, certainly not a plane, more like an armored car but hovering over the treetops, held aloft by giant turbo-props that beat against the ever thickening summer air. He could make out the large swastikas on its side and the crewmembers readying to fire machineguns at his car.



He spun the steering wheel hard and the car spun around. He then reversed and spun around and drove forward again. All the while, bullets picked at the road around him, rising to a crescendo of death. He avoided them all, perfectly, and was able to lose the craft when he went under a canopy of trees.

He knew they were near the border, in that last big forest that went right to the crossing. The hovercraft was gone now, he felt he should feel safe but somehow his instinct told him that they weren’t out of trouble yet.

They came to the border crossing. It was a small place, a single hut and guard shack with one sleepy sentry on duty.

Fortunately, the actor was still in costume and when the surprised guard looked into the rear of the sportster, he was greeted by an all too familiar face with a small hairbrush mustache under his nose. The actor played his part well, screaming at the guard who quickly let them pass.

They were near safety now, only a few hundred yards from the border. But then the hovercraft returned. It must have radioed ahead to the guard post, for now a troop of the border guards tumbled out of the hut, firing at the car while overhead the hovercraft sped towards them, more fire spewing from its guns.

The writer knew his best luck was to cross the border and so he sped forward at full speed, Chicolini matching him on the motorcycle despite the heavy weight he carried. The hovercraft followed.

At one point, he knew they had crossed the border but the Germans didn’t seem inclined to stop at such niceties.

Then he saw that they were approaching more forest just over a railroad track. Getting to the cover meant safety so he pushed the car to its limits. Just as they were about to cross the track, he spotted a huge, armored train rushing down the track. He knew they wouldn’t be able to stop in time to avoid a collision. But he had a plan. It was perfect….

Chapter 1: Everyone Goes to Emeric’s



Excerpt from And A One and A Two, My Life Following the Demon Rhythm of the Polka, the unpublished autobiography of Stanislaus Shmengy

Of course, because we have to leave Chicago so quickly after messing up Fratricido Gang’s murder plans, we didn’t have no money. So we tried work our way home, playing here and there. Ocean trip was really tough, I can tell you, crew of merchant sailors on that tramp steamer, SS Kwitchabitchen , wasn’t exactly most recepatiff audience. But we manage to get Grauheim, where we work for Mr. Emeric, who was nice man for filthy, stinking Graustarker. He paid OK and let us sleep in one of broom closets after bar closed. It almost like being home.

We also got to work with Gretl. She was pretty good singer, and good looking girl, for filthy, stinking Graustarker. I have some crush on her I can tell you.



She had finally accepted my invincitation to go on date. There was genuine Ruritanian restaurant in Grauheim Coke Smelting District that served really good potato klopkies and minced pig udders, Leutonian specialty. They even had good prune brfnisz.

So, as you can guess, I was pretty excited about taking her there. Well, during one of our breaks, she comes and tells me she has bad news.

“Well, Stash, as you may know, our Glorious Leader, the Marshal, has become friends with Herr Hitler so he has ordered all of us to read Mein Kampf. I’ve been reading all week and I realize that I can’t go on a date with you since you’re a subhuman. Nothing personal.”

“Puppy puke and oatmeal!” I think “What else could go wrong today.”

Just then, whole club become quiet and wave a fear and trapadanciation sweep room. Elderly man with kindly face walked in. But he wearing brown uniform with badge of the Royal Ruritanian Postal Service on it.

Of course as everyone know, this is most feared and ruthless organization in this part of world, and their motto, “Oh, we’ll deliver your mail alright!” strikes fear in every heart.

No one even questioned how he was able to cross closed border, they are like Japanese ninjas when delivering packages. Also they occasionally will root out spies and traitors or torture confessions out of same, mostly for tips or spare pastry.

My legs turned to pig snout in aspic as he walk up to me.

“Here’s letter for you, sonny, from Ministry of War. It says you and your brother have been mobilized. You have three days to get your Leutonian dupkas to Army or you be shot.” He was then gone as quickly as he come.

“Well, Yosh, that certainly buried cabbage roll under manure pile. We really need to get home now!”

“Chicago, bang bang.” Yosh said in sad voice.

Now I have mention before that my brother was never quite right after getting kicked in head while milking family musk ox. He did well enough in most things but something about injury to his head made him able of only speaking one phrase or sentence at time. Oddly, phrase would change regularly on first day of spring each year. It became regular village holiday to see what new phrase of year would be. People would come from all over the Yatbancha Valley just to see if he would be saying, “Pass pork muffins please” or “Who strangled the budgie?” for whole next year. Papushka even got few extra atvaras by allowing toymaker from Nimitsoran to make talking doll of Yosh. It was very popular gift for St. Kunigunda Day for many years.

But I digest, we were just about to give up hope when suddenly we notice two women entering club. Well one was woman and I think other one was woman too, either that or a big Kravashmirt, although I had not noticed any burning cattle stalls nearby.

But first woman I recognize immediately and knew we had our way home, without being shot.

“Look, Yosh. I said, “It is girl from travel poster!”


Interview with Roxy Smothers, 1973:

Now Emeric’s was one of those surprising places that you sometimes find when you least expect it. It was only a short train ride from Strelzov and Broni and I had gone there a few times in the very brief happy period of our marriage.

Emeric was a mysterious character. Although Graustarkian, he had traveled the world and we never understood why he had returned to his tedious homeland but were thankful he did.

You must understand that Grauheim, indeed the whole of Graustark, is a grim, remorseless place, even under the best circumstances, and back then it was not the best of circumstances. But Emeric had such a wonderful little place, in the ground floor of an unremarkable building that I think housed apartments for the Telegraph and Telephone Ministry secretarial staff. Once inside the club, however, you were transported to a place you would only find in Paris. The booze was cheap too.

When we arrived that night, it was clear that even Emeric had fallen on hard times. The normally fabulous floor show was reduced to some local girl squeaking out a poor rendition of torch songs accompanied by a pair of musicians dressed seemingly to be extras in some Edward G. Robinson gangster film. I can assure you, darling, that Begin the Beguine is not best heard when rendered on an accordion.

He greeted me at the door of course, overflowing with his usual flattery delivered so well that you might almost think he was sincere. Of course he gave us his best table. So von Schnitzel and I settled into our seats along with that odd little Italian man that Eric had somehow picked up. He said he was the best cameraman in the Balkans but I knew that by best, von Schnitzel meant cheapest. Eric was the most intolerable skin flint.

We had left word at the hotel for Tura to meet us at the club. Now it was von Schnitzel’s idea to hire a Polish actor to play a Polish king. Personally, I would have rathered he hire someone like Anthony Quinn who could play anything foreign from a Mongol to Sioux. But authenticity was von Schnitzel’s bugaboo. That was why he chose Ruritania, he said, for the location filming. He went on and on about how close the architecture there was so similar to that of 16th century Poland.

He became so enthusiastic about this that he attracted the attention of a passing Englishman, who I thought to be some millionaire because of his good looks and excellent choice in attire. But it turned out he was a professor of archeology, Wagmore Barqueless, at one of those little Central European Universities that were so adorable back then, you know, where the students sing in biergartens and cut each other up with sabers. I was quite surprised to learn this since the Professor was so fit and, did I mention, good looking, and not a hint of tweed or must about him.

Then he made the mistake of agreeing with von Schnitzel who immediately took him on as historical advisor to the film, recompense to be determined latter. Despite not looking like a fuzzy-headed Einstein, he agreed with a bit more alacrity than was healthy. Something was up there.

Just when that was settled, Tura arrived. Now Janusz Tura had been trained as an opera singer but he was far more successful on his good looks. And no darling, there was never a Thing between us, at least not that I can remember. He was a handsome man even though he could be a bit fussy about his looks. And don’t get any ideas about that either; Tura was all man, well, mostly man.

He proceeded to pour himself all over my hand in a wonderfully obsequious Old World manner, taking time out only to order drinks for us.

Then I heard a voice behind me, offering to make me the best martini in the world. It was a deep melodious voice, wrapping itself around me like a pair of comfortable leather gloves. When I turned to see who spoke I noticed the beard first and then the man.



Now this was the first time I met the famous Ernest Hummingbird. And this was in the days before he wrote all those tedious books about marlin fishing and cocktail mixing, before his multiple liver transplants. He was magnificent in those days with a confidence that bordered on godlike or megalomaniacal.

He and Tura immediately took a dislike to each other, playing one-ups-manship on each other over the places they’d been, things they had done, and women they had conquered. Poor Janusz, he never had a chance, since any student of modern American literature can tell you what a master of Crapology Hummingbird was. Still it was a wonder to witness.

For example, Tura would sigh and say something like, “There was a lovely woman I once knew in Paris…”

And Hummingbird would interrupt, saying, “Only one woman? In Paris? Oh I do feel sorry for you old sport!”

So the martinis flowed while the accordion banged on and it was a truly wonderful evening. Until she showed up.

At first, I didn’t think anything of her. Who would have, some scrawny little local girl dressed up in an evening gown five years out of date, sneaking into the local club. Hardly unusual. The big, heavily armed Amazon that was with her was a little surprising but I just took her for the family chaperone. Then the girl approached von Schnitzel, claiming that she had been ordered by Prince Bronislav himself to get him into Ruritania. I should have known something was up by the way she gaped at me like a dead carp when I mentioned that I had been married to the rat Broni but I guess my sensibilities weren’t quite as sharp after a good half dozen of Hummingbird’s martinis.



The Amazon was introduced as the notorious smuggler and brigand Hozzenka who would help us across the border. So everything seems ducky, especially after yet more of those wonderful martinis. The two join us of course, but I knew at once, the girl was not used to drinking, probably raised in a convent school, I thought.

Then the musicians came up during once of their breaks and began talking to the girl in some Ruritanian dialect that I couldn’t understand and she was grinning back at them like an idiot and saying of course, the nice peasants could come with us, we were all going home together and she would invite us all to her wedding which was going to be the biggest and best in Ruritania.

While she was embarrassing herself like that, I noticed that she wasn’t the only one. At the next table, a tiny little man with a great big forehead was well into his cups. He was spouting off to the statuesque blond with him, no doubt trying to impress her.

You could see the blond was not happy, “Herr Doktor,” she said in a strong irritated voice. “I knew this was a bad idea, I should never have allowed it!”

“But Ilsa, my leibshein, we deserve our celebration after all our travels! The artifact in Strelzov is the one we have been searching for, the pictures I have seen and description I have heard all match what we found in Tibet. We have nothing to worry about. In a few days our armies will be in Strelzov and the Royal Jewels will be in our hands. Then the vessel we shall be able to provide Berlin with the power to make the Reich invincible!”

The blond tried to quiet him and nodded to a couple of dark suited goons who headed the inebriated doctor to the door.

But I wasn’t the only one who heard him. Barqueless showed considerable interest in the stunted doctor. The Englishmen got up from the table, ostentatiously saying he need to get some cigarettes, then he bumped lightly into the little German as he was being hustled out. When Barqueless returned, he didn’t have any cigarettes but he was palming away some sort of little notebook. He then suggested we all go into the back rooms which were where the gambling tables were located.

Von Schnitzel got a crazed look on his face at this. He jumped up and ran towards the gaming rooms, chanting, “Bet, bet, bet, bet!”

Oh no, thought I, here comes another massacre. Instead, von Schnitzel won nearly every hand he played over the next few hours. Then I noticed that Barqueless was occasionally slipping cards to him, so smoothly that I don’t think even von Schnitzel noticed. This simple Professor was far more interesting than I thought!

Von Schnitzel was amazed, never having won much of anything; he was suddenly about 200,000 Gruamarks richer. He would have stayed there a week, except we suddenly heard singing coming from the main bar. It was a large number of harsh masculine German voices, banging out one of those horrid thumping tunes that terrified the world in those days. Von Schnitzel became pale as a ghost and asked Emeric if he had a back door out of the place.

The ever-obliging Emeric readily agreed to the request, never asking why and showed us to side door leading to the back stage area that would then let us get out by a side door in the coat check room. By now however, our group had grown to about a dozen and rather than a sleathy sneak, we were more like the Macy’s Thanksgiving
Day parade, a whole mob of us winding our way through the darker corners of Emeric.

As I expected, we soon had trouble. We passed the singer who was ensconsed in a corner backstage, pouring over a copy of Mein Kampf with evident teenage ardor. When the musicians, who were two brothers named Shmengy, passed by her, she somehow pried herself away from her reading with a fanatical look of suspicion on her otherwise vacant face.

“Stash, where are you going with all these foreigners? You’re involved in some type of plot, aren’t you, you little subhuman Slav? ALARM!!”

Good Lord, I thought why couldn’t she have used that big yapper in her singing earlier? Unfortunately, her cries brought a lot of jack-booted attention and we soon found ourselves surrounded by Nazis of all shapes and sizes. One, a little bald man in black raincoat, gold-rimmed glasses, and an oversized fedora seemed to be in charge.

“So, why do so many of you feel the need to leave so surreptitiously? This seems to need more investigation!”

I finally had had enough, “Listen, four-eyes, you are talking to a star. So unless you call your goons off, you have to answer to Hecuba Studious and the Screen Actors’ Guild!”

“Ah, play actors! Well, why don’t you perform for us now and prove it. Then we will know the truth.”

Even though we himmed and hawed a bit at this, we knew it was out best chance to get out of this. Hummingbird jotted a few notes down for a script and Tura and I gathered up some make-up and costumes from backstage while the Shmengy boys tuned their instruments. We sent Hozzenka and Wagmore to act as prop assistants. I then asked Zoya what talent she had to which she drunkenly replied that she was a ballerina.

It all made sense now - she was the little tramp who had cavorted with Broni behind my back. Before I could let her have it, Tura was ushering me on stage. Through gritted teeth I told the girl to go out a hold a plie for as long as she could, hoping she would, at the very least, suffer as severe a leg cramp as anybody in history.

The Nazi goons had rousted all of the customers and most of the staff out of the place, only Emeric stayed to keep an eye on what happened. Von Schnitzel and Hummingbird sat in the audience, next to the bald, four-eyes, pretending this was an ordinary opening. Then von Schnitzel asks Emeric to provide “drinks for our honored guests, the kind we used to drink with out friend Mickey Finn.” The Germans didn’t seem to notice and Emeric soon came back with a tray of drinks. Von Schnitzel offered a cloying toast to der Fuhrer and the goons all drank. And nothing happened.

So we went on with the show. Despite it being a mere outline, Hummingbird’s script was actually quite serviceable. It had us doing a love scene between a humiliated Austrian artist, Adolph, and his little mountain laurel, Eva. I never did learn how Hummingbird knew about Eva Braun back then - at the time, her role as Hitler’s mistress was one of the best kept secrets in Germany.



Meanwhile, backstage, Hozzenka who had been guarded by two of the Germans, managed to get loose and pummeled them. Wagmore had simply lifted a third guard’s pistol when he wasn’t looking and held the guard at bay. That is until Hozzenka slit all three throats. They then waited to spring at the most opportune moment.

On stage, we acted on with Tura chewing up the scenery and bewailing how unfair the world was to not recognize his genius but that he would have his revenge against the petty evil no-talents.

“Ballerina!” I suggested viciously as my eyes lit on Zoya who was holding her plie but at a forty degree list. “They are worst, sleaziest, most unprincipled tramps in the world and we get rid of them all!”

At this several of the Nazis began shouting, “Ja! Ja! Death to the Ballerinas!” Then about half of them crumpled to the floor as Emeric’s cocktail began knocking them out.

The little bald Kraut sat shaking his head trying to clear it. He began calling to the rest of his men, those that were still on their feet, to shoot us all.

Von Schnitzel turned the table over and rammed it into Four-eyes and three other goons.

Then the Shmengies reached into their instrument cases and pulled out a shotgun and tommygun. A few short bursts put the rest of the Germans down in a moment.

“Chicago! Bang Bang!”

At this point, the only one standing was the blond, point her pistol with a steady hand, at Hummingbird’s head.


Diary of Zoya Bupkis

August 26, 1939

Dear Diaryushka,

So Hozzenka and I arrived at Grauheim. It was so easy to cross the border, I don’t know whatever Bronislav was so worried about. We only ran into one patrol of border guards and Hozzenka shot or stabbed all of them before they could make a sound. She didn’t even get blood on my traveling coat.

At the hotel where Von Schnitzel was staying, they told us that he was at a club.
So we went to the club and what a wonderful place it was. We found von Schnitzel easily and listened to lots of wonderful music and had the MOST PERFECT DRINKS EVER! I never tasted anything so good!

After that, I don’t remember things so clearly. There was some card tricks I know, and then lots of men singing and we kept running around backstage, I think looking for the water closet. And someone asked me to show them some ballet stances, which I am sure I did wonderfully, since I have such good ankles. Then I think we went to a play about bad things that were going to happen to a ballerina and I felt so sorry for that girl whoever she was.

Then there was a lot of loud noises, I think it was someone saying Bang Bang over and over again. And then we went out into the cool night air and there were lots of people in the streets and all sorts of taxi cabs and we were in a terrible rush to get somewhere but I couldn’t remember where….


Excerpt from The Sun’s Also Shiny, The Great American Novel, by Ernest Hummingbird:

The play was perfect, even though he had written in under a minute on the back of three cocktail napkins and the coat-check girl’s tip jar. Although the actors were clearly not up to the brilliance of his writing, they did a good enough job to fool the Gestapo man and his thugs. At one point in the play, the author noticed with satisfaction that most of the Germans were crying like babies at the poignancy of his words.

Unfortunately for the world of Art, the play was never finished. The drugged Germans began falling and it was the writer’s chance to save his friends. Most of the thugs were dispatched quickly, falling before the writer’s iron fists.

Then he came up against Ilsa. She stood before him pointing a pistol at his head.

“Enough,” she said, “the police will soon be here and if you cease your resistance now, I can promise that you might live.”

The writer turned his piercing eyes on her, and looked directly into her soul.

“You know, my dear,” he said in a voice of such calm authority that the gun began to shiver ever so slightly in her hand. “If you want to kill a man, you should have a better grip on the pistol.”

At this, the writer ran his fingers lightly and unthreateningly over her wrist. She felt a chill to the deepest point of her heart.

“You really need to support your wrist better to make sure the shot will strike directly into my brain.” He gently wrapped his fingers around her wrist and gun began to wildly flutter in her hands until she dropped it to the floor.

The writer pulled her close and pressed his lips upon hers in a passionate kiss. The kiss was perfect. He continued kissing her and she bent back in his arms, with no resistance, willing to surrender her will to his.

At this point, the writer dropped her to the floor and said to his friends, “Alright, let’s go.”

They went into the street where Chicolini had the truck waiting. The Street was filled with jostling crowds. They were there watching a parade of Field Marshal Kesselschlacht’s panzer rolling through the streets. The whine of police klaxons could be heard approaching…

Prologue: Roxy Smothers and the Lost Treasure of the Kurgans



Interview with Roxy Smothers, 1973:


So you want to talk about The War, darling? Good, I thought you were going to ask me what sort of tree I wanted to be.

I know all about the war, since I was there from the beginning.

You know, darling, many people talk endlessly about the causes of the Second World War. Well, it really was quite simple. The World War Number Two began because Eric von Schnitzel lost a poker game to Rufus Firefly! Everything else followed from that.

Now do keep up with me darling, this may get a bit confusing.

It was the summer of 1939, I was still under contract at Mr. Hecuba’s studio. And for some reason, Mr. Hecuba loved the work of von Schnitzel. Von Schnitzel got his start in Berlin in the “cabaret days.” His work was always brooding and moody. Sort of like the stuff Fritz Land and Murnau produced but without the talent. I understand von Schnitzel is quite the rage in the film schools these days, forgotten genius and what-not. Now I had always found Eric nice but a bit overburdened with bombast and underburdened with intellect. Still one plays the hand one is dealt, I suppose. He was also a horrible card player

By the way, darling, have you seen that “Caberet” film? What a simply dreadful piece of fluff, so overwrought and nothing like it really was back then. And that Liza child, can’t sing anything like her mother. Garland? No I didn’t ever work with her but I did get drunk with her a number of times. Oh, but that little Joel Grey is quite adorable. He reminds me of a capuchin monkey I once worked with in Borneo. Funny, that was a von Schnitzel project too?

In any event, Mr. Hecuba felt that I should be the star of von Schnitzels latest project, some sort of vapid costume melodrama about the love between some old Polish king and some Lithuanian girl that ended badly. I knew it would be dreadful stuff but fortunately, it was going to be shot in Ruritania. Now today, everyone thinks of Ruritania as one of those dreary Communist countries somewhere east of Vienna where there’s plenty of missiles and not enough toilet paper. But back before The War, Ruritania was a lovely place, charming in a storybook sort of way, even with the faint odor of cabbage everywhere.

I had actually lived there for a few months the year before. My fifth, (or was it sixth?) husband, the one right after Biggles, was Prince Bronislav Radziwill. He was the son of old King Ruprikt who had been king for simply ages and ages and who was a very nice old fellow but, like most of the Ruritanian Radziwills, not the sharpest hunk of cheese as they say.

Now old Broni was not your typical Radziwill. Oh, he had the good looks and the daring courage, and even the speech impediment but he was clever. Devilishly clever. So clever in fact that they said he was not a Radziwill at all and that his mother must have been nabbed by a czericoot, which is some sort of legendary Ruritanian satyr. Although, come to think of it, I vaguely remember that old Ruprikt’s Queen, Gigi, a former can-can girl, was said to employ an equerry named Cherrycoate but who knows.

Also Broni was randy as a mountain goat. Not that I minded when it was directed at me but unfortunately he was not monomaniacal, at least in that regard or to me. But as I did say, he was clever. That’s why it took me a few months to discover that he had been sneaking around my back with sort of little tart of a third-rate ballerina. It was Broni’s chauffeur, Raoul, who showed me proof of Broni’s infidelity. Well, to make a long story short, we split up, with Broni promising me a large alimony settlement if I kept things quiet. Despite being angry, I left quietly. Not usually my style but I did want to preserve my dignity and did I mention it was a very large sum of money.

But then six months go by, and not one atvara did I see. What? Oh, the gold atvara was the currency in old Ruritania, named after some sort of chicken-headed dragon, I think. I couldn’t get any sort of satisfaction from the courts and if you think lawyers are terrible in this country, you should see what they were like in Ruritania - why they didn’t outlaw trial by combat until 1927.

But then along comes von Schnitzel with his project – he always filmed on location, even back then - and I had a perfect excuse to get into Ruritania and settle accounts with that weasel Broni and his little tart. If all else failed, I still had the keys to the Royal Palace and could at least help myself to some of the Crown Jewels.

So I find myself on the way to Ruritania. Now von Schnitzel had some sort of phobia of the Nazis, refused to travel anywhere they controlled. Of course it got harder to avoid them as time went on and by the summer of 1939, one simply couldn’t get to eastern Europe without a great deal of trouble if one wanted to stay out of Greater Germany.

So rather than a nice liner or the Hindenburg, we have to take a second rate steamer to Freedonia. Ughh, what a horrid place that was, run by that little crook Firefly! He wasn’t even a very good crook. Wouldn’t have even been President if that old harpy Teasdale hadn’t brought him in. Oh, I know he was a great hero in that war against Sylvania, but I think he just got lucky.

The same way he got lucky playing cards with von Schnitzel our first night there. Of course, von Schnitzel lost and he could never admit what a terrible gambler he was so he accused Firefly of cheating. Now accusing a nation’s President of cheating at penny-ante cards isn’t the best way to start a visit to new country, even in Freedonia, and so we found ourselves on the first train to Grauheim before noon the next day.

The problem was that this was August 1939 and Graustark had just gone fascist a short time before and everyone was “heiling” someone or something and that tin-pot dictator, Marshal Rhododendron, was wailing about the evil Ruritania Slavs oppressing the Volksgoth minority, Hitler declared solidarity with his southern Aryan brothers and the panzers were rolling through the streets of Grauheim. The worst thing was that the border to Ruritania was being shut down for days at a time as the war scare went on.

The border was closed when we arrived and the streets were full of Nazis and watch salesmen. Von Schnitzel was so nervous; I decided to take him to the only place worth going in all Graustark, Ermeric’s…

Excerpt from The Sun’s Also Shiny, The Great American Novel, by Ernest Hummingbird:

The writer knew he should be back at the typewriter, getting something done. But he also knew that the typewriter could wait for his brilliance. The typewriter was patient and appreciated his attentions. It was never jealous. But Elena was. As was Marita. And Consuela from the Paraguayan Embassy. And Countess Eugenie. All wanted his attention. He tried to decide who he would call first. He had a drink while he decided. He mixed himself a Floridita Special. It was perfect of course, dry enough that the vermouth was barely a hint, the breath of an angel.

He narrowed it down to calling Marita or Elena. Consuela he would call after midnight.

So he had another drink. This time it was a Tobacco Old Fashioned that he first tasted at the Waldorf. It was perfect.

And so he waited and he drank. He knew The War was coming. He got to have a sense about such things. Of course, the tanks and armored cars and troops that were all rumbling through the street were a pretty good clue too.

He knew that it would be soon and that he would go to it, report on it, write about it. His stories would be perfect, of course, setting the standard for war correspondents for decades to come.

But when it started, how would he get to it? The other night, at Marshal Rhododendron’s reception for his new allies, the writer made no friends among the government bureaucrats, praising the Ethopians, and the Spanish Republicans, and the Chinese (all of whom he had fought for). Plenty of sour faces and angry voices there. Silly little men.

Then there was the dance. The Marshal fancied himself an excellent dancer and, for soldier, he wasn’t bad. But the Marshal chose the tango to demonstrate his skill. If there was one dance the writer truly loved, it was the tango. How could he let that buffoon ruin it? Of course, cutting in on a dictator is never a wise idea nor is it a good idea to leave a reception with a dictator’s wife. And mistress.

No, he supposed that the government wouldn’t be approving his press pass.

He had another drink while he thought about his options. It was a Black Forest Sazerac that he first tasted in New Orleans, just after he covered Huey Long’s assassination. The drink was perfect.

Then he realized the answer. If he could only get to Ruritania, there weren’t any American reporters there, they had all gone to cover the other war, the one brewing in Poland. Plus everyone said that Ruritania was bound to lose and lose badly. He liked those kind of odds. Yes, The War was coming here too, he knew it, he could taste it in the air, like the metallic taste of ozone when a storm was coming.

How to get across the closed border? He’d figure it out of course, in his usual brilliant way but he’d have to think about. Over a drink. And the best drinks in Grauheim were to be had at Emeric’s…


Diary of Zoya BupkisFebruary 6, 1939

Dear Diaryushka,

Who would have thought that I would be accepted into the Corps de Ballet here in the Royal Strelzov Ballet. All of Mamushka’s hard work and sacrifice, after Papa died of typhus, putting me through convent school at Saint Kudzu’s and then the dance instruction under Madame Miroslava, have finally paid off. Who knows in a few years, I may become a soloist or even a prima ballerina….

February 12, 1939

Dear Diaryushka,

So wonderful,!I have met the great Prince Bronislav, fifth or maybe sixth in line to the throne, depending on how you figure it. He is a most courteous man, asking for ME to come to his box so that he could compliment me on my dancing. He said I had WONDERFUL ankles. He wished me well and said he would come to my EVERY PERFORMANCE!

February 19, 1939

Dear Diaryushka

The wonderful, handsome, beautiful Prince Bronislav, who is fifth or maybe sixth in line to the throne, depending on how you figure it, has asked me to dine with him tomorrow. AT THE PALACE ITSELF! After the performance, he came to my dressing room, well the general dressing room but his chauffeur did make all the other girls leave. The Prince told me he had the WARMEST of REGARDS for me. He looked at me so strangely – it reminded me of the way Madame Miroslave used to look at me during my stretching exercises. But he invited to dine with him. What shall I wear.

February 20, 1939

Dear Diaryushka,

Oh my beloved Prince! Oh, dear, dear Bronislavushka! What Passion! What Love! What comfortable beds!

Bani (Mrs.) Zoya Radziwill
Bani (Mrs.) Zoya Radziwill
Bani (Mrs.) Princess Zoya Radziwill


February 27, 1939

Dear Diaryushka

Things are so complicated. I did not know that Bronislavushka was married! But of course it was a horrid arranged marriage, just like in the novels and melodrama, to some horrid American gold digger. Dear Bronislavushka is trying to have the travesty annulled so that we might be together FOR EVER AND EVER. But until then, we must keep our love secret. Who knew that a simple country girl like me would live a life right out of an operetta?

March 17, 1939

Dear Diaryushka

Things are ever so complicated. Bronislav – he doesn’t like being called anything else, not even Sweety Pooki-ukums – says we must keep things secret a little longer. But he has a wonderful idea. He has gotten me a position with the Ministry of the Arts. I am to be a Special Assistant to the Deputy Minister for Folk Music and Polka Dancing. Imagine a simple country girl like me now being a Government Official!

April 1, 1939

Dear Diaryushka

How I do miss Bronislav. Oh, the job is fine and everyone is so very nice to me, especially after Bronislav came to visit me at lunch one day, but I am still not sure what my job is, it changes so often. Yesterday they had me listening to the yodeling finalists from Pupushki Province. And the day before that they had me model swimming attire. I wasn’t sure about that until they told me that it was for a travel advertisement and that our country needed to encourage tourism. Oh, when shall that horrid American woman finally go away?

June 24, 1939

Dear Diaryushka

No word from Bronislav. When I called his chauffeur told me that there was some sort of crisis he was attending to, something to do with the fascist taking over Graustark.

July 1, 1939

Dear Diaryushka

The trouble with Graustark is continuing so I still have not seen Bronislav in weeks. The government has been “mobilized” and “militarized” which means that the Ministry is now the Ministry of Propaganda and we are all now part of the Army! I am actually a Poruchnik or Lieutenant as the French say. Who would have thought a simple country girl would become an officer!

August 15, 1939

Dear Diaryushka

I have begun to read the newspapers everyday now. I am quite the intellectual and have even suggested to the Minister, oh sorry, he is now General Sltski that I become an intelligence officer since I know so much about politics and such now. For instances, did you know that Graustark is made up of ethnic Goths and we have got some here in Ruritania who Graustark says want to be part of Graustark? And did you know that Germany has signed an alliance with Graustark and that there may be an ACTUAL WAR?

One thing I just noticed, the paper says that Bronislav was divorced from his wife, the horrid American, some months ago? What can this mean? There was also a picture of him leaving a night club with some red-haired girl on his arm. I shall have to call Bronislav tomorrow.

August 16, 1939

Dear Diaryushka

Bronislav has said that what the paper was mistaken, the marriage is not officially over but it will be very soon, probably by the beginning of September, then we shall be wed! And the red-haired woman was Countess Oopfackr who is an expert in protocol and etiquette. He was consulting her on the details of our wedding which he says will be the greatest that the Kingdom has ever seen! And he had so wanted it to be a surprise!

But then he got very serious and told me he needed me on a very special mission for our Nation. He wanted me to go to Graustark on a secret mission to bring in an American film director who was going to make a movie that will inspire the whole country for the fight with the fascist! But it was secret, I must tell no one and must go myself. When I asked how I would get across, he told me to go in civilian clothes but to be sure to take my military identification in case the border guard stop me – they are required to honor an officer and will let me cross.

August 20,1939

Dear Diaryushka

I was about to go on my secret mission when I suddenly received unexpected help. I told Mamushka about my trip – oh I know Bronislav told me not to tell anyone but mamushkas don’t count in that. Anyway, Mamushka became worried and said she would get me help. So this evening, a dark girl, one of the hill people who might even be a gypsy, with all sorts of weapons, showed up in my office at the Ministry. She said she was the daughter of the notorious brigand Hozzenko. She said her father had answered Mamushka’s plea and sent her to help me. She said she will smuggle me across the border easily and help bring my American out as well. Isn’t that interesting? Who would have thought a simple country girl like I would have such adventures?