Authors: Brian Freemantle
Turning to Werle, but fleetingly included Elke in the look, the Chancellor said: âAs well as a composite report of these discussions I think we want a separate set of position papers, each isolating the individual problems that have been pointed out. I don't want a proliferation of sub-committees: that just creates more and more bureaucracy. But some are going to be necessary to provide us with suggestions to decide upon, in full session.'
Werle nodded in uderstanding and said: âAnd maybe some public reassurance? Events have happened too fast. People â other countries â are confused, each one arriving at different conclusions, even now.'
âYou're right,' Rath agreed. âThere should be a steadying statement: something on the lines that while favouring a United States of Europe, West Germany will make no unilateral decisions without full consultation with its Western Allies.'
âMight we not want to enter separate agreements with the East
without
discussion with other Market members? Or with the United States, for that matter?' asked Schere.
The Chancellor smiled. âPossibly,' he agreed. âIn fact, to do so might provide us with another negotiating lever. Let's insert a rather necessary word into the statement: that West Germany will make no
major
unilateral decisions without consultation with its Allies. Which would not preclude us entering
minor
understandings, would it? And which every foreign government will recognize when they dissect the statement.'
There were answering smiles and nods of approval from those grouped around the table. Werle had been busily writing during the discussion, so that when it finished he was ready. He read out the planned statement and Rath invited more debate. The Finance Minister proposed including an assertion that the West German economy could withstand without difficulty the pressure imposed upon it by the exodus. He was out-argued by both the Chancellor and Schere, who were worried about the risk that foreign analysts and bankers might interpret the statement as a verbal smoke-screen laid down to protect a pressured currency. In the end the statement was agreed virtually as the Chancellor had originally proposed.
Back in the Cabinet Secretary's office, where they went immediately to discuss and agree the session between themselves, Werle said anxiously: âWell! Were you impressed?' He hoped, particularly, that she had recognized his contribution and noted the deference towards him from everyone.
In truth, Elke had not been overly impressed, although passingly she had been aware of Werle's favoured position. Her mind held on to the knowledge that the meeting had been a momentous one, both politically and historically. Yet none of the discussion or the ideas put forward had struck her as matchingly momentous; she'd been disappointed at the lack of dynamism in either the men or their ideas. She said: âIt was fascinating.'
Werle smiled his pleasure, wrongly imagining Elke in awe: he
had
spoken far more than was normal even for him at a Cabinet session, eager to show her his influence and political acumen. âAny difficulties, assembling what's necessary?' he asked.
Elke replied by reading out the sub-headings for the position reports she had already annotated as the meeting progressed and itemizing the points she considered essential for the overall record. Werle agreed to everything, without addition or correction.
âIt's going to be very good, our working together like this, isn't it?' said Werle.
âI hope so,' agreed Elke, cautiously.
He smiled. âYou don't object to my calling you Elke?'
She hesitated. âOf course not.'
âAs I wouldn't mind your calling me Günther.'
Elke shook her head. âThat would be wrong, in front of the rest of the Secretariat.'
âWhen we're not in front of the rest of the Secretariat, then,' Werle insisted.
âI'm sorry I haven't called sooner,' Reimann apologized. âYou can guess how busy I've been, trying to interpret and comment about everything happening here in Germany.'
âI can imagine,' Elke accepted. She'd been depressed, increasingly convinced that he wasn't going to make any further contact, but it had enabled her to work late several evenings, to get out the position papers and the encompassing report. There had been a congratulatory message, from the Chancellor's office, on both the speed and the composition.
âAnd it's going to stay that way,' said Reimann. He allowed a long hesitation, to see if she would say anything. She didn't. He went on: âSo I was wondering whether we could do something together on Saturday? During the day, I mean?'
Now the pause came from Elke. It was established â a firm pattern â for her always to go to Bad Godesberg, to Ida: she'd done so, apart from holiday breaks maybe, for years. The counter-argument came at once. There
had
been holiday interruptions, so the arrangement wasn't inviolate. What was so important about the visit anyway? He'd think she was reluctant if she went on hesitating as she was doing now. âSaturday will be fine,' she accepted.
âWe'll make a full day of it. Dress to spend the day outdoors: jeans if you have any,' Reimann insisted. He was smiling broadly when he put the telephone down.
Chapter Twenty-Three
Reimann prepared with consummate care. The delay in any contact was intentional, to make her nervous, and specifically choosing Saturday was a challenge, to gauge her unwillingness to break a fixed arrangement. There had scarcely been any reluctance at all, which was encouraging, if any further encouragement had been necessary. Sure of himself â and of what was going to happen â Reimann considered Sunday, when Elke always went to Marienfels, to be the definitive test.
He collected her early, kissing her in greeting at the doorway, which startled her. Elke thought she managed to conceal it from him. She didn't. When she got into the car she saw there was a backpack on the rear seat and said: âWhere are we going?'
âOutdoors, like I told you!' he said, lightly. There was an important reason for the outdoor choice.
Elke was glad she'd bought the jeans he'd suggested, although she wished they had not been so obviously new. She was concerned about how she looked in them: she'd spent the previous thirty minutes prior to his arrival trying to survey her rear view in the closet mirror. His jeans were washed and faded, although the light sweater appeared new. She'd taken a chance with canvas shoes: he wore thick, hiking-type boots. Honestly she said: âI've never really thought of myself as an outdoor sort of person.'
âIt'll be quite painless,' he promised.
Elke recognized the approach to the ferry terminal before they reached it. When he lifted the backpack from the car, she heard the clink of glass. As they approached the ticket office he invited her to decide where they would get off, but she demurred, insisting that he should choose. He declared that Koblenz was too far and was tempted to go to Linz, which he knew from his visit with Jutta. He selected Andernach. So close to summer and on a weekend, the ferry was full, but they managed to get seats out on the deck and on the side catching the morning sun. Almost as soon as the ferry set off Reimann began a commentary in opposition to the metallic-voiced public address broadcast about the castles they were passing, on either bank, recounting the legendary folklore of the river but giving it all his own interpretations, always making her laugh. She automatically looked towards Bad Godesbcrg as they sailed by, smiling not at anything Reimann said this time but at Ida's reaction to her telephoned apology (âSorry for what? Do anything to hook him, darling! And I mean
anything!'),
and gazed ashore again when they went by Schloss Marienfels, wondering about Ursula, although there was little to wonder about. Ursula might be with an escorted party, outside in the grounds of the nearby institution. More likely she would be in the room where she would be for tomorrow's visit, moving to her music, her poor mind locked and shuttered against any entry.
At Andernach they had to go some way into the tiny township to get a taxi. Reimann strode easily and fast, the walk of someone athletically fit, and Elke had difficulty matching him. She didn't hear the conversation with the taxi driver, but when they got in he smiled sideways at her and said: âHe promises he knows just the place.'
âYou still haven't told me what we're going to do!'
âPicnic!' announced Reimann.
Elke decided it
was
a perfect place. It took less than fifteen minutes to get beyond the town, and when they followed the path recommended by the driver it led up a gradual incline to a tree-thatched hill, which until they reached the top was deceptive, because it wasn't a top at all but the lip of an open-ended cleft that cut completely across, creating a deeply grassed and silent hollow. Once inside it any sight of the town â any sight of anything â was lost, except for the Rhine which sparkled and glinted for their pleasure through the open end of the tiny valley. The sun, still not oppressive, was just at the tip of one edge, as if it were looking in curiously: the entire dip was bathed in yellow warmth, with just a small patch of shade, like a blemish, from the tree line.
âThis is idyllic!' exclaimed Elke.
âIt is, isn't it?' Reimann agreed. He could not have hoped for better.
Although the grass was not damp he produced a thin blanket from the backpack and laid it out for her with a flourish, making an elaborate arm-sweeping bow for her to sit. As she did so, he said: âSimple fare: quails' eggs, cold guinea fowl, a little bread, a little cheese, some peaches, some grapes. And wine: enough wine to last us through the day.'
Elke decided it was dreamlike: possible, in fact, to imagine herself in a dream instead of in the real, sometimes unsettling world. How good it would be to stay here forever, cocooned, safe, protected. She felt all of those things, with Otto. When he poured the wine â champagne to begin â she realized from its coldness that he had kept it in a freezer compartment. He peeled the eggs for her â carefully collecting the shell in a bag to avoid mess, she noted â and set out the guinea fowl and offered the bread and the cheese selection, an attentive, considerate servant. As the meal progressed he changed from champagne to red wine but went back to the unfinished champagne when they got to the fruit. As he had on the ferry â as he seemed to do all the time when they were together â he talked and made her laugh: telling self-disparaging fantasy tales that fitted the occasion, of being the worst Boy Scout in America and of being a failed hunter in the American backwoods, and totally false stories of cowardly encounters there with wild animals.
âLies!' she accused, breathlessly. âIt's all lies!'
They were sitting sideways and opposite from each other, each resting on an arm, so that he was facing her. Seizing the opening, Reimann became abruptly serious and said: âThat's something I will never do: I will never lie to you.'
Elke matched the seriousness. âI don't believe you ever would,' she said.
Reimann tidied the picnic into the pack, leaving the wine bottles easily accessible, made a mock complaint about the heat and asked if she minded his taking off his shirt: he'd discarded the sweater when they arrived. Elke pretended to look towards the distant river but was able to see him as well. The fitness she'd noticed while hurrying to keep up at Andernach was very obvious: he was hard-bodied and tight-waisted, no excess anywhere, muscles ridged across his stomach and shoulders.
Look all you want, thought Reimann, aware of her covert examination: you're going to see that and a lot more. In feigned apology he said: âI should have suggested you bring a suntop: a swimsuit top, perhaps.' When he'd first seen her photographs in Moscow he'd guessed her soft-skinned, liable to burn in strong sunlight, he remembered. He thought, now, that was a wrong impression.
âI'm quite all right, really,' insisted Elke, who was wearing a long-sleeved cotton shirt. She didn't possess either a suntop or a swimsuit. She wouldn't have worn either in front of him.
Reimann shifted, positioning himself behind her and said: âWhy don't you lie back: use my legs for a pillow. Your arm will go dead, leaning like that. Mine was beginning to.'
Her arm
was
starting to numb, sitting as she was. But to lie as he suggested would bring her very close to his bareness. Fool! she thought. Elke twisted, so that she was at right angles to him, putting her head on his thigh. It was comfortable, as he'd said it would be.
Unseen above her, Reimann smiled down at her hesitation. He said: âI really was sorry not to have called sooner. But it's been incredibly busy.'
Elke lay with her eyes closed against the sun's brightness, drifting both in its warmth and the warmth of the wine. She said: âI know. I had to work late every night.'
So there'd been a Cabinet session, Reimann guessed at once: and of greater length or importance, if she'd had to work late every night, because from the observation before his arrival in Bonn he knew her days ran to clockwork regularity. He tried to think of any particular event in the East to link with such a Cabinet meeting, but couldn't. âI keep forgetting how involved you must be.'
What had she said! Elke stopped herself drifting, recalling the words. No harm, she decided, relieved. âHardly at all.'
âI think you're being over-modest.'
How impressed he would be, she reflected, wistfully. She tried to think of something to say that was not banal â to show that she did have an opinion and an attitude â and recollected her impression after the Cabinet committee. She said: âWhich is not a failing of politicians. Don't you often find them disappointing, when you see them in action, supposedly doing their job?'
What the hell did that mean? Being a personal assistant to the Cabinet Secretary elevated her into a fairly high-ranking position, but not high enough, he wouldn't imagine, for her to make a remark like that: as if she had
seen
them in action. So what was the surmise? Whatever the outcome of the Cabinet gathering, she was critical of it. Contemptuous, maybe? No, he withdrew at once. It would be wrong to try to speculate too deeply. In attempted encouragement he said: âIt's how I find them most of the time. Everyone seems to forget politicians are really ordinary people, not the infallible supermen they expect them to be â¦' He paused, to make her think he was joking, then added: âDictatorship is the only answer! One man for the job: democracy does not work!'