“You have put a question to me,” he concluded. “Now, Luigi, I will put a question to you.”
“Yes, Duce.”
“Does this initiative come from President Roosevelt, or is he acting at the request of the Allies?”
“Duce, the President has told me this is his own initiative.”
Ciano cleared his throat, leaned forward with his hands clasped, and said, “Do the British and French know and approve of this visit you are making?”
“No, Excellency. The President said that he would be making informal inquiries of the same nature, at this same time, in London and Paris.”
Mussolini said, “The newspapers have no information on any of this, is that correct?”
“What I have told you, Duce, is known outside this room only to the President and his Secretary of State. My trip is a matter of private business, of no interest to the press, and so it will remain forever.”
“I have stated my deep reservations,” said Mussolini, speaking slowly, in an extremely formal tone. “I have very little hope that such a mission would be to any useful purpose, in view of the maniacal hostility of the British and French ruling circles to the resurgent German nation and its great Führer. But I share Mr. Roosevelt’s sentiment about leaving no stone unturned.” He took a long portentous pause, then spoke with a decisive nod. “If the President sends Sumner Welles on such a mission, I will receive him.”
Gianelli’s fixed smile gave way to a real one of delight and pride. He gushed over Mussolini’s wise and great decision, and his joy at the prospect of Italy and the United States, his two mother countries, joining to rescue the world from tragedy. Mussolini nodded tolerantly, seeming to enjoy the flood of flattery, though he waved a deprecating hand to calm down the banker.
Victor Henry seized the first pause in the banker’s speech to put in, “Duce, may I ask whether Signor Gianelli is permitted to tell the Führer this? That you have consented to receive a formal mission by Sumner Welles?”
Mussolini’s eyes sparked, as sometimes an admiral’s did when Victor Henry said something sharp. He looked to Ciano. The foreign minister said condescendingly in his perfect English, “The Führer will know long before you have a chance to tell him.”
“Okay,” said Henry.
Mussolini rose, took Gianelli’s elbow, and led him out through french doors to the balcony, letting a gust of cold air into the room.
Ciano smoothed his thick black hair with both white hands. “Well, Commander, what do you think of the great German naval victory in the south Atlantic?”
“I hadn’t heard of one.”
“Really? It will be on Rome radio at seven o’clock. The battleship Graf Spee has caught a group of British cruisers and destroyers off Montevideo. The British have lost four or five ships and all the rest have been damaged. It’s a British disaster that changes the whole balance of force in the Atlantic.”
Victor Henry was shocked, but skeptical. “What happened to Graf Spee?”
“Minor hits that will be repaired overnight. Graf Spee was much heavier than anything it faced.”
“The British have acknowledged this?”
Count Ciano smiled. He was a good-looking young man, and obviously knew it; just a little too fat and proud, Pug thought, from living high on the hog. “No, but the British took a little while to acknowledge the sinking of the Royal Oak.”
The dinner celebrating Victor Henry’s promotion began in gloom, because of the Graf Spee news. The two attachés sat talking over highballs, waiting for Byron to show up.
Captain Kirkwood asserted that he believed the story; that in the twenty years since the last war, a deep rot had eaten out the heart of England. Kirkwood looked like an Englishman himself—long-jawed, ruddy, and big-toothed—but he had little use for Great Britain. The British politicians had stalled and cringed in the face of Hitler’s rise, he declared, because they sensed their people no longer had a will to fight. The Limey navy was a shell. England and France were going to crumple under Hitler’s onslaught in the spring.
“It’s too bad, I suppose,” Kirkwood said. “One’s sentiments are with the Allies, naturally. But the world moves on. After all, Hitler halted Communism in its tracks. And don’t worry, once he takes the fight out of the Allies, he’ll settle Stalin’s hash. The Russians are putting on one stumblebum performance in Finland, aren’t they? They’ll be a walkover for the Wehrmacht. In the end we’ll have to make a deal with Hitler, that’s becoming obvious. He holds all the cards on this side of the water.”
“Hi, Dad.” Byron’s sports jacket and slacks were decidedly out of place in this old luxurious restaurant, where half the people wore evening dress.
Henry introduced him to the attaché. “Where have you been? You’re late.”
“I saw a movie, and then went to the YMCA to flake out for a little while.”
“Is that all you could find to do in Rome? See a movie? I wish I had a few free hours in this city.”
“Well, see, I was tired.” Byron appeared much more his old slack self.
The waiter now brought champagne and Kirkwood proposed a toast to Captain Victor Henry.
“Hey, Dad! Four stripes! Really?” Byron sprang to life, radiating surprised joy. He clasped his father’s hand and lifted a brimming glass. “Well! I’m sure glad I came to Rome, just for this. Say, I know one doesn’t mention such things, but the hell with it, doesn’t this put you way out front, Dad?”
Captain Kirkwood said, “He’s been out front all along. That’s what this means.”
“All it takes now is one false move,” said Pug dryly, shaking his head, “one piece of bad luck, one mislaid dispatch, one helmsman doping off on the midwatch. You’re never out front till you retire.”
“What’s your situation, by the way, Byron?” Kirkwood said.
The young man hesitated.
“He’s ROTC,” Pug quickly said. “He’s got a yen for submarines. By the way, Briny, the New London sub school is doubling the enrollment in May and accepting any reserves that can pass the physical.”
Kirkwood smiled, examining Byron with a shade of curiosity. “Now’s the time to get in on the ground floor, Byron. How’re your eyes? Got twenty-twenty vision?”
“My eyes are okay, but I have this job to do here.”
“What sort of job?”
“Historical research.”
Kirkwood’s face wrinkled.
Pug said, “He’s working for a famous author, Aaron Jastrow. You know, the one who wrote A Jew’s Jesus.”
“Oh, Jastrow, yes. That fellow up in Siena. I had lunch with him at the embassy once. Brilliant fellow. Having some trouble getting back home, isn’t he?”
Byron said, “He isn’t having trouble, sir, he just doesn’t want to leave.”
Kirkwood rubbed his chin. “Are you sure? Seems to me that’s why he was in Rome. There’s a foul-up in his papers. He was born in Russia or Lithuania or somewhere, and—whatever it is, I guess something can be worked out. Taught at Yale, didn’t he?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Well, he ought to make tracks while he can. Those Germans are just over the Alps. Not to mention old Benito’s anti-Jew laws.”
Victor Henry was returning to Berlin that night by train, accompanying the banker. He said nothing about his mission in Rome to Kirkwood or his son, and they did not ask. After dinner Byron rode to the railroad station in the taxi with him, in a prolonged silence. Natalie Jastrow was a heavy invisible presence in the cab, and neither one would start the topic. Pug said as they drove into the brilliantly lit empty square before the terminal, “Briny, if the British really took that shellacking off Montevideo, we won’t stay out much longer. We can’t let the Germans close the Atlantic. That’s 1917 again. Why don’t you put in for sub school? It won’t start till May. By then Jastrow’ll be back in the States, if he isn’t simpleminded.”
“May’s a long way off.”
“Well, I’m not going to argue.” Pug got out of the
cab. “Write to your mother a little more often. She’s not happy.”
“Okay, Dad.”
“Don’t miss Warren’s wedding.”
“I’ll try not to. Gosh, won’t that be something, if this family finally gets together again?”
“That’s why I want you there. It’ll be the last time in God knows how many years. Good-bye.”
“Good-bye. Listen, I’m real proud you made captain, Dad.”
Pug Henry gave his son a gloomy half-smile through the cab window and walked off to the train. And still not a word more had passed between them about the Jewish girl.
21
SO irascibly did Rhoda Henry greet her husband on his return that he began to think something might be wrong with her.
He had left her in a nervous slump. Everything was an aggravating mess, the fall weather in Berlin stank, life stank, she was bored, German efficiency was a fiction, nobody understood how to do anything right, and there was no service and no honesty anymore. She had “her pain,” an untreatable affliction that during previous slumps had showed up in an arm and in her back, and now was behind an ear. She feared cancer, but it didn’t really matter because everything good was all finished anyway. Rhoda had always come out of these sags before, and then could be contritely sweet. Pug had hoped when he suddenly left Berlin for Rome that he would find her better when he got back. She was worse.
She wanted to go with him to Karinhall. In his absence an invitation engraved in gold on creamy thick stationery, addressed to Commander Victor Henry, had been delivered by a Luftwaffe staff officer. Pug hadn’t been home ten minutes when she brought it out, wanting to know why she hadn’t been invited too. If he went to the Görings’ party at Karinhall and left her behind, she said, she could never face anybody in Berlin again.
Pug could not disclose that he was going along for secret state purposes, as a flunkey to an international financier. He couldn’t take her into the snow-covered garden to soothe her with hints of this; it was almost midnight, and she was wearing a cloudy blue negligee, in which, indeed, she looked very pretty.
“Listen, Rhoda, take my word for it that there are security reasons for all this.”
“Ha. Security reasons. That old chestnut, whenever you want to do anything your way.”
“I’d rather have you along. You know that.”
“Prove it. Call the protocol officer at the air ministry tomorrow. Or if you’re too bashful, I will.”
Pug was conducting this conversation in the library, while glancing through piled-up mail. He put down the letters. After a minute of cold staring at his wife, he said, “Are you well?”
“I’m bored to death, otherwise I’m fine, why?”
“Have you been taking the iron pills?”
“Yes, but I don’t need pills. What I need is a little fun. Maybe I should go on a bender.”
“You’re not calling the air ministry! I hope that’s understood.”
Rhoda made a mutinous noise, and sat pouting.
“Hullo. Here’s a letter from that Kirby fellow. What’s he got to say for himself?”
“Read it. It’s as dull as he is. All about how glad he is to be home, and how good the skiing is around Denver, and how much he enjoyed our hospitality. Three pages of nothing.”
Pug tossed the letter unread on the routine pile.
“Honestly, you’re a riot, you’re so predictable, Pug. For twenty-five years whenever you’ve come home you’ve gone straight for the mail. What are you expecting, a letter from a lost love?”
He laughed, and shoved the letters aside. “Right you are. Let’s have a drink. Let’s have a couple of drinks. You look wonderful.”
“I do not. That goddamned hairdresser baked my hair into shredded wheat again. I’m tired. I’ve been waiting up to talk to you. You were two hours late.”
“There was trouble at the passport office.”
“I know. Well, I’m going to bed. Nothing to talk about, since Karin-hall is out. I even bought a sensational dress. I was going to show it to you, but to hell with it. I’ll send it back.”
“Keep it. You might just find a use for it pretty soon.”
“Oh? Expect to be invited to the Görings’ again?” She went out without staying for an answer.
Pug prepared a couple of highballs to toast the news of his promotion. When he got upstairs, her light was out—an old unpleasant marital signal. He wanted very much to spend the night with his wife. Moreover, he had been saving the story of his encounter with Natalie Jastrow for their bedroom talk. He drank both highballs himself, and slept on the sofa in the library.
The next day was brightened for him by the German announcement that the Graf Spee had heroically scuttled itself after its historic victory, and that its commanding officer had then nobly shot himself in a hotel room. He heard over the BBC that three much lighter British vessels had in fact beaten the German warship in a running sea fight and sent it limping into port before the scuttling. The German people didn’t hear a word of this, and they were baffled by the revelation that the victorious pocket battleship had elected to blow itself up. The Nazi propagandists did not bother to explain, smothering the story instead with a whooping account of a vast fictitious air victory: twenty-five British bombers shot down over Heligoland. Pug knew that the chances of his ever meeting Count Ciano again were remote, but he would have given much to chat with him again about the Graf Spee.
Also, when Rhoda learned of Pug’s promotion she came out of her blues as though by shock. Not another peep did she utter about Karin-hall. She proceeded to give him the honeymoon treatment, and they had a happy week or so. His account of Natalie Jastrow fascinated and appalled her. “Sounds to me as though our only hope is that she’ll come to her senses and drop Briny,” she said.
Karinhall looked like a federal penitentiary built in the style of a hunting lodge. It sat in a game preserve about two hours’ drive from Berlin, a wilderness of small bare trees and green firs mantled in snow. Off the autobahn, the approach ran through heavy gates electrically controlled, steel and concrete fences jagged with icicles, and a gauntlet of machine-gun-bearing Luftwaffe sentinels whose breaths smoked as they shouted challenges. Just as the car turned a corner and they caught a glimpse of the grandiose timber and stone building, a deer with big frightened eyes bounded across the road. The San Francisco banker no longer wore his automatic smile. His mouth was tightly pursed, and the soft brown Italian eyes were open wide and darting here and there, rather like the deer’s.
In the vaulted banquet room, amid a dazzling crush of uniformed Nazis and their white-shouldered women—some lovely, some grossly fat, all brilliantly gowned and heavily gemmed—Adolf Hitler was playing with the little Göring girl. A string orchestra lost in a corner of the marble-paved expanse was murmuring Mozart. Great logs flamed in a fireplace with a triangular stone pediment soaring to the ceiling, and on a carved heavy table stretching the entire length of the room an untouched banquet lay piled. Rich smells hung in the air: wood smoke, cigar smoke, roast meat, French perfume. The happy, excited crowd of eminent Germans were laughing, cooing, clapping hands, their eyes shining at their Leader in his plain field-gray coat and black trousers as he held the beautiful white-clad child in his arms, talking to her, teasing her with a cake. Göring and his statuesque wife, both ablaze in operatic finery and jewelry, the man more showy than the woman, stood near, beaming with soft affectionate pride. Suddenly the little girl kissed the Führer on his big pale nose, and he laughed and gave her the cake. A cheer went up, everybody applauded, and women wiped their eyes.
“The Führer is so wonderful,” said the Luftwaffe officer accompanying the two Americans, a small dark aviator wearing the diamond-studded cross of the Condor Legion. “Ach, if he could only marry! He loves children.”
And to Pug Henry, also, there was something appealing about Hitler: his shy smile acknowledging the applause, the jocular reluctance with which he handed the girl to her ecstatic mother, his wistful shrug
as he slapped Göring’s back, like any bachelor congratulating a luckier man. At this moment Hitler had a naïve, almost mushy charm.
The Görings escorted Hitler to the table, and this signalled a general swarming toward the buffet. A troop of lackeys in blue and gold livery marched in, setting up gilt tables and chairs, helping the guests to food, pouring the wine, bowing and bowing. Guided by the Luftwaffe officer, he and Gianelli landed at a table with a banker named Wolf Stöller, who hailed the American financier as an old acquaintance: a slight Teuton in his fifties, with sandy hair plastered close to his head. The wife, an ashen-haired beauty, had eyes that glittered clear blue like the large diamonds on her neck, her arms, her fingers, and her ears.
By chance, Victor Henry had just written a short report on Stöller and knew a lot about him. Stöller’s bank was the chief conduit by which Göring was amassing his riches. Stöller’s specialty was acquiring Objekte, the term in German business jargon for Jewish-owned companies forced to the wall.
In the queer Germany of 1939, which Victor Henry was just beginning to understand, there was much stress on legality in looting the Jews. Outright confiscation or violence were rare. New codes of law dating from 1936 simply made it hard for them to do business; and month by month rulings came out making it ever harder. Jewish firms couldn’t get import or export licenses or raw materials. Their use of railroads and shipping was restricted. Conditions kept tightening until they had no course but to sell out. A market flourished in such Objekte, with many alert upper-class Germans bidding eagerly against each other. Wolf Stöller’s technique was to find and unite all the buyers interested in an Objekt, and to make a single very low offer. The owners had the choice of taking it or going bankrupt. Stöller’s group then divided up the firm in shares. Through Göring, Stöller had access to the Gestapo’s records, and was usually first on the scent of a major Jewish firm buckling to its knees. The big prizes Göring bought up himself—metal, banking, textiles—or took a large participation. Stöller’s bank got its broker’s fees and also its own participations in the Objekte.