Authors: Nathan Dylan Goodwin
It was going to
be a long search, which might well stretch into days huddled at a microfilm
reader.
‘Oh, thank
God,’ Morton said, genuinely relieved that his father seemed to be pulling
through.
‘The only
trouble is that he keeps asking when you’re going to come in.’
Date and place of birth: 18 November 1913,
Berlin
The committee have decided to declassify
Marlene Koldrich
‘I was here
last night, actually.’
How could he
know?
Morton
wondered. Had Jeremy or one of the nurses told him that Morton had kept a
stoic bedside vigil? Or had his father heard every word of his extensive
tirade? He didn’t want to ask. He just wanted to know whatever it
was that his father’s cracked and sore lips were struggling to say.
‘So, you knew
my mother then?’ Morton ventured.
‘Of course I
knew her, I married her, didn’t I?’
‘My
biological
mother,’ Morton clarified.
‘She was just a
girl, a
sixteen
-year-old girl.’
Morton suffered
another pause. ‘But what was her name?’
‘Please,’
Morton pleaded gently.
‘Her name was
Margaret Farrier.’
‘I’m going to
bed,’ Morton mumbled.
Then a thought
struck him, which fully woke him up.
Diabetes often
runs in families the poster had said.
There was only
one way to be sure. Another DNA test.