Some writers have a spirit that takes
them, firing up their creativity, triggering a torrent of words. Others have a
person as a muse, someone physically present or mentally imagined, to inspire
them. I have a city.
I first visited Budapest in the winter
of 1990. Hungary, like its neighbours, was transitioning between Communism and
capitalism. The political system was changing but the city remained largely
untouched. Its grand Austro-Hungarian apartment buildings were shabby and
dilapidated, pockmarked by bullet holes and shrapnel scars, the streets and
boulevards crowded with Trabants, their engines rattling as they puffed out
clouds of exhaust.
Budapest in 2017 is a modern European
capital. The buildings have been renovated, the bullet-holes filled in. The
downtown streets and squares are jammed with tourists from around the world.
There are no more Trabants. But while a city can have a physical makeover, its
history can never be erased.
No matter how lovely the architecture,
Budapest is haunted by the ghosts of Nazism and Communism. The number two tram
ride is surely one of Europe’s most scenic public transport routes. It snakes
along the riverfront on the Pest side of the city giving a lovely view of the
Danube. After a few hundred yards it passes a row of black metal shoes by the
edge of the riverbank. The memorial marks the spot where Jews were lined up in
the winter of 1944 before being shot into the river by Hungarian Nazis. Yet not
all the ghosts are morbid: the city still holds the spirit of its golden age,
at the start of the 20th century when the Hungarian capital was host to an
explosion of creative talent. Writers, poets, artists and architects all found
inspiration here.
All this makes a rich backdrop for
fiction. My first novel, The Budapest
Protocol, opens in the Astoria Hotel in the winter of 1944 as the Russian
army advances, then jumps to the present day. The protagonist, a foreign
correspondent called Alex Farkas, goes to visit his grandfather, Miklos, but
discovers he has been murdered. Is Miklos’s death connected to a dark secret he
learned that terrible winter? Alex starts investigating and begins to unearth a
sinister conspiracy that reaches back to the dying days of the Second World War
and a Nazi plan to ensure German economic domination of post-war Europe.
District
VIII, the first volume
of my Budapest new crime noir series, goes even deeper, to parts of the city
that tourists and visitors never see. District VIII is home to Budapest’s
largest Gypsy quarter – including the family of Balthazar Kovacs, a detective
in the murder squad. District VIII is one of the city’s largest and most
interesting – its western edge, which reaches downtown almost to the Danube, is
now called the Palace Quarter, for its grand nineteenth century aristocratic
villas that are now being restored.
But walk away from the river, into the
narrow back streets and alleys and you will find a world of deep poverty, crime
and prostitution. In my book much of the prostitution is controlled by Gaspar
Kovacs – Balthazar’s brother. When a Syrian refugee is murdered during the
migrant crisis of 2015, and the leads point to a connection with Gaspar,
Balthazar has to decide where his loyalties lie: to the law or to his family.
Through it all, Budapest too is a character, sometimes moving the story along,
but always framing it:
Balthazar
stepped out of his apartment building. The warm, humid air was heavy with the
summer smell of the city: car exhaust, cigarette smoke, the greenery of the
park on Klauzal Square. A familiar soundtrack too: a tram trundling by twenty
yards away on the Grand Boulevard, raised voices from the faux-Irish pub on the
corner across the street, a stream of abuse involving farmyard animals
conjoined with various relatives – nobody swore like Hungarians – and a long
burst of laughter. Two young women, one blonde, the other brunette, in
close-fitting tops and short shorts teetered towards him on high heels, on
their way to one of the many nearby rom-kerts, ruin pubs.
Like all the best muses, Budapest can
be obstinate, capricious, even volatile. But she’s always there.
District VIII by Adam LeBor (published by Head of Zeus)
Life's tough for a Gypsy cop in
Budapest. The cops don't trust you because you're a Gypsy. Your fellow Gypsies,
even your own family, shun you because you're a cop. The dead, however, don't care. So when
Balthazar Kovacs, a detective in the city's murder squad, gets a mysterious
message on his phone from a blocked number, he gulps down the rest of his
morning coffee, grabs his police ID and goes to work. The message has two
parts: a photograph and an address. The photograph shows a man lying on his
back with his eyes open, half-covered by a blue plastic sheet. The address is
26, Republic Square, the former Communist Party headquarters and once the most
feared building in the country. But when Kovacs arrives at Republic Square, the
body has gone... Kovacs' investigation
will take him deep into Budapest's shadows, an underworld visitors never get to
see: the gritty back alleys of District VIII; the people smuggling networks
around Keleti Station; the endemic corruption of a country still haunted by the
ghosts of history. And when the leads point to the involvement of his brother
Gaspar, the city's most powerful pimp, Kovacs will be forced to choose between
the law and family loyalty.
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