All My Sins Remembered (58 page)

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Authors: Rosie Thomas

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Julius took hold of Grace’s arm. ‘We’ll go. There’s no need to stay here. Rafael will look after Clio. Grete?’

Grete smiled at him. ‘Go. I will stay with Pilgrim here and keep him company until his Isolde comes back.’

Pilgrim shrugged. ‘That sounds a fair exchange. Go on, Grace. Run away. Leave golden Grete to me.’

The waiters folded their napkins over their arms again. When Rafael and Clio came back to the table they found Pilgrim with one arm draped around Isolde and the other holding Grete. There was a fresh supply of icy vodka, but Pilgrim was silent at last. He looked ready to slide into a deep sleep.

‘I’ll get him home,’ Isolde sighed. ‘Don’t worry, I’ve had years of bloody practice. Come on, you stupid arse.’

‘Gold and silver,’ Pilgrim muttered, ‘silver and gold. Goodnight, sweet ladies.’

‘I am going to talk to Madeleine and Georg,’ Grete said, when they had staggered off. ‘I will take a taxi home.’ She kissed her brother quickly on the cheek, and then kissed Clio too. ‘Goodnight to you both,’ she murmured, and then turned away.

They sat down at the emptied table and drank one more shot of vodka each. The pure spirit tasted as cold as a Christmas sky.

‘I will walk you back to the Adlon,’ Rafael said at last.

In the empty street he put his arm in the sheepskin coat around her shoulder. Clio turned her face a little towards the warmth of him and they began to walk. They passed a great illuminated clock-tower, and she saw that it was half past three.

Rafael said, ‘In an hour, the first people will be going to work. The U-bahn will open and the first trams will start up. It will be morning, another day with everything that must be faced in that day. But now it is still the middle of the night. The quietest hour.’

Now that they were alone, in the deserted night streets, they found that they were not sure what to say to one another. Clio felt that there were great jams of words piling up within her, torrents of explanation and description, all her history waiting to be related in exchange for Rafael’s. She felt greedy for his, and impatient, and uncertain about where they would make the beginning.

‘I think once we start to talk we shall never be able to stop,’ she told him.

‘I know that. There is this quiet hour, and then there is tomorrow.’

‘Do you promise?’ Suddenly she felt like a child. She wanted to seize his lapels and twist them, pummel his chest with her fists, extract a promise from him that could never be broken.

Rafael began to laugh. The sound of his laughter was wonderful in the silent city street. They stopped walking and when she looked into his face she read the happiness in it, a reflection of her own, as if in some magical mirror.

‘I promise,’ he said. ‘I promise there will be tomorrow, and all the days after that.’

‘Thank you,’ she said, now like the child who had unwrapped her present and found it was what she had hoped for, and more than she had dared to hope for.

They reached Pariser Platz and stood under the canopy that ran from the street to the great doors of the hotel. Rafael bent forward and kissed her on the mouth. His mouth was warm and she could feel the curve of a smile in it.

‘Until tomorrow,’ he said.

‘Don’t forget.’

Clio walked on under the canopy and up to the shining doors where the Adlon night porter in his buttons and braid was waiting to let her in.

Fifteen

Berlin was a divided city, and the cold split in it ran invisibly beneath the prosperous streets crowded with shoppers and under the cosmopolitan restaurants and cafés and outlandish nightclubs just as surely as the straight line of Unter den Linden ran up to the Brandenburg Gate and on into the Tiergarten.

Within just a few hours of their arrival Clio and Grace found themselves set on either side of the divide. There had been no chance of bridging it, even at the beginning, and soon they felt that there was no possibility even of calling out to one another from a safe distance beyond the icy edge.

Clio went back to the Café Josef with Rafael Wolf, and Grace received an invitation to take tea with Adolf Hitler at the Reichskanzler-Palais in the Wilhelmstrasse.

‘Are you going to meet him?’ Clio asked when the invitation came, delivered to the Adlon Hotel by one of the Führer’s bodyguard. Grace stared at her in utter disbelief.

‘Of course. Did you imagine that I would refuse?’ Her movements were made jerky by excitement. There was unusual colour in her face.

‘I don’t know what I imagined,’ Clio said. She was amazed at Grace’s susceptibility, her willingness to associate herself with the Nazis after what they had seen and half heard. ‘Not this, anyway.’

‘Then you can’t have imagined very much at all,’ Grace answered coldly.

There was no suggestion that Clio might accompany her to the Führer’s palace, any more than there was further mention of her assisting as Grace’s translator. They stood on opposing sides of some conflict that they didn’t even fully understand, without having taken a single step.

As Clio watched her, Grace took a dress on its hanger out of the wardrobe and laid it on the bed. Grace was remembering something that Pilgrim had said in that dismal nightclub, what was it, the Balalaika?

My Janus Face, for ever staring in different directions
.

Well then, so be it, she thought with sudden savagery.

There was a milkiness about Clio, a soft and sentimental lack of direction that blurred her judgements. Grace realized that she found it profoundly irritating. She wished that she had come to Germany on her own, because she did not want to have Clio’s dim misgivings clouding her perception of this new regime.

‘I have to get changed now,’ she said.

Clio went, leaving her to her own affairs.

Grace was escorted with due ceremony from her hotel by two SS men. The palace was only a few steps away, beyond the British Embassy.

The building formed three sides of a square. It was restrained by Berlin architectural standards, a double row of windows with decorative detailing above and a third row of simple dormers in the roof. There were only four classical statues on the top of the central pediment, and the Nazi flag flying from the flagpole in the centre. The fourth side of the square was marked by high railings and pillars that separated it from the street. There were Stormtroopers guarding the gates, and they gave the Nazi salute as Grace passed by.

In the middle of the courtyard there was a circle of frostbitten grass and a stone fountain with nymphs supporting a shallow basin. Grace walked around the circumference of the grass and approached the main door. There was a shallow flight of steps and a glass canopy to protect them. A man in uniform was waiting for her on the top step. Through a flurry of salutes and Heil Hitlers Grace recognized Bruckner, Hitler’s adjutant.

He bowed over her hand, murmuring a welcome, and then led her inside.

They walked down marble-floored corridors and through anterooms hung with gloomy portraits and Nazi insignia. Finally they came to a set of double doors guarded by yet more armed and uniformed men. Grace had a momentary impression of swastikas dancing everywhere. And then the doors were opened and she found herself looking into a light, bright room. It was a drawing room, disconcertingly feminine. There was gilt and cream furniture, spindly legged, and small tables decorated with fine porcelain.

A group of people was arranged in the middle of the room taking afternoon tea. The Führer was sitting amongst them with a cup and saucer balanced on his knee.

It would have seemed funny to Grace, this domestic tableau, if she had not suddenly found herself awed to be in his presence at all. All the way across the courtyard of the Reichskanzler-Palais and along the booming corridors she had not quite believed that at the end of the march she would come face to face with him. And now Adolf Hitler stood up, a small man in a neat civilian suit, and came to meet her with his hands outstretched. She saw very clearly his highly polished shoes and manicured fingernails, and the indoor pallor of his skin.

He greeted her in German. ‘Lady Grace, may we welcome you to Berlin?’ He clasped her hand in both of his. His grip was firm and surprisingly warm.

Grace’s poise deserted her. She could think of no word of German, no words at all, not even the conventional murmurs of drawing-room exchanges. She stood with her feet fixed to the carpet, looking at him, with red patches of colour flaring in her cheeks and her right hand still held between Hitler’s.


Wilkommen
,’ he said again, smiling at her.

Then he let go of her hand and touched her elbow, to guide her forward. She was taller than he was. Grace took a step, beside him, and then another. She heard a tiny sound within her head,
click
, and movement seemed to start up once again around her. Colour seeped back into the room, bleeding inwards from the edges of her field of vision. She became aware of the Führer’s other guests, also standing up to greet her. She could even recognize some of the faces: Dr Dietrich, the controller of Hitler’s press and publicity, and his architect Albert Speer.

Grace shook hands around the circle. There was a director of Mercedes-Benz and his lively wife; the Führer’s personal physician; one or two senior SS and SA men; a handful of others.

Her moment of paralysis was past. She smiled into each pair of eyes and made the appropriate responses. One of the SS men at her shoulder became her interpreter.

Lady Grace Brock, British Member of Parliament visiting Berlin in an unofficial capacity but as a warm friend of the Reich …

‘How do you do?’ Grace murmured. ‘I am very pleased to meet you, very pleased to be here.’

And then she was sitting in the place of honour, beside Hitler, on a straight-backed Empire sofa upholstered in cream- and gold-figured silk. A white and gold teacup was put into her hand, and she gravely declined the offer of chocolate cake layered with cream, then quickly accepted it when she saw the disappointed expression on her host’s face.

The tea-party resumed its mild course.

The conversation was about opera. Hitler was talking about Bayreuth, Grace picked out that much. She sat stiffly beside him, trying to decipher what was being said. After a moment the Führer turned courteously to her and asked her if she was an opera-lover and if she had ever visited Bayreuth herself. The interpreter translated while Hitler watched her. Grace found his stare hypnotic. It became difficult to know where to look, and what to do with her hands, which felt over-large and clumsy in her lap.

‘I have never had the opportunity to hear opera in Germany. But I love Mozart, and Wagner.’

The translator relayed her banal response and Hitler nodded solemnly.

Grace thought of Julius and his Mozart, and of Nathaniel listening to
The Ring
on the gramophone in the Oxford drawing room.

‘Perhaps you will have the opportunity to hear some music while you are in Berlin, Lady Grace.’

‘I hope so, very much.’

There was the polite and stilted interpretation again. Grace had imagined before she was admitted to the cream and gilt room that there would be some serious talk, but now she understood that she would be disappointed. This tea-party conversation circled and led nowhere, while Hitler and his aides listened intently to her uninteresting answers. They all nodded at one another and cocked their heads to the interpreter, and their solemnity seemed only to underline the meaninglessness of their exchanges.

A sense of
déjà vu
stirred in Grace. She realized that in spite of the splendour of the drawing room she was reminded of afternoon visits that she had been obliged to make as a young girl, with Blanche, to country neighbours and hunting families a little less grand than themselves, or to the upper strata of tenant farmers who lived on the Stretton estate. There had been the same polite constraint, and the same edge-of-the-seat attention to formal etiquette.

Only the difference was that here she was sitting beside Hitler, and this small, neat and vaguely unhealthy-looking man was the focus of all their covert attention. She found that she could not look away from him for more than a few seconds at a stretch, and then her eyes were drawn back again. From her quick glances at them she thought that his staff and the small circle of friends felt the same compulsion.

The men waited for him to speak, and leant forward a fraction when he did so. The Mercedes-Benz director and the doctor in their beautifully cut suits were as deferential as the officers in their uniforms and medal ribbons. The two women were more talkative, especially the wife of the Mercedes man who tossed her head and turned it from side to side to show her pretty throat, but like all the others she almost never took her eyes off the Führer’s face.

Of all of them in the room only the Führer seemed completely at his ease, watching them and smiling and listening to their banalities as if they were gems of wisdom.

Grace was sure that the gatherings of Hitler’s intimates could not always be so insipid. Then, with a sudden clarity that almost winded her, she realized why this one was so determinedly neutral. Of course, they were suspicious of her. She had not been given a privileged invitation into the inner circle at all, and it had been vain to imagine that she had. These people imagined that she was a spy or at the very least some kind of eavesdropper for the British Government, a subtle choice for the very reason of being a too-obvious choice.

Was that what it was?

Once they had occurred to her the possibilities of pretence and counter-pretence multiplied in her imagination until she felt dizzy. She also felt sick. The room with its draped curtains and spindly Empire furniture and gilt-framed mirrors reflecting their tense faces was overheated, and the chocolate cake much too sweet and rich.

She had let it be known that she would welcome an opportunity to meet the Führer out of admiration and friendship. Was this vicarage tea a rebuff, or merely a baffling ritual that she was too much of an outsider, or too stupid, or too British even to understand? She shook her head in a tiny gesture of bewilderment and at once Hitler leant forward in solicitous concern. His hand rested for an instant on her arm. He did not mistrust her, Grace was sure of that.

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