Flight from Berlin (27 page)

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Authors: David John

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‘Then I’ll try harder . . . I’m not giving up.’

‘Yes, well, get some rest, old chap. I’ll see you when I’m next in town.’

T
hree weeks later, on a bright day in the third week of September, Denham was discharged. Tom led him by the elbow up the steps of the house on Chamberlain Street, assuring him that he’d helped ‘old people’ with the Cub Scouts. Denham’s movements were slow and paid for with spasms of pain. He’d lost weight.

Eleanor had transformed the house. Swept it out and expelled the ghosts. The curtains in the windows were new, and there were flowers on the hall table.

‘Welcome home, Mr Denham,’ she said, taking off his hat and kissing him in the hall. He felt a soft twining around his leg and saw the amber eyes of a purring tabby looking up, a stray Eleanor had taken in.

He walked through the sunlit sitting room and into the drawing room, followed by Tom and the cat, taking in the changes, the smell of fresh paint and furniture wax. Years of living in dingy Berlin tenements had not prepared him for this. A lump rose in his throat.

He stopped in front of a dark mirror in the drawing room, his arm around Tom’s small shoulders, and looked at his reflection. His Berlin wounds were healing, with only the ghost of a scar likely on his brow and beneath his eye, but with a livid, uglier scar cutting down his right cheek from the corner of his eye to the side of his mouth.

Later that day, when he was propped up with pillows on the divan in the sitting room, Eleanor showed him his Hannah interview in print. It had been published over three weeks previously. The
News Chronicle
had the British exclusive.

It looked good. And the picture he’d taken of them—Jakob, Ilse, Roland, and Hannah—exceeded all his expectations. He was no great photographer, but the play of light from the windows that morning in Grunewald had conspired to make a haunting picture of depth and shadow.

He riffled quickly through the newspapers Eleanor had kept for every day he’d been away. The interview had revived Hannah’s story in the public eye, giving it new impetus for a day or two. But then worrying reports of the war in Spain began filling the headlines, infecting the national mood, dominating the letter pages, as was the news that Mrs Ernest Simpson had filed a suit for divorce. Clearly the King now wanted to marry the woman and make her Queen.

Within a week the world had moved on. Hannah’s story was dead, and as far as he could see there had not been a single reaction from the German government. Just as Rex had said.

He flung the papers to the floor.

Chapter Thirty

W
hile Richard lay in the hospital Eleanor had been busy with more than the house. With some leads from Rex she had written to everyone she could think of who might help in the matter of the Liebermanns. And once she’d started, the list only seemed to grow.

She wrote to the Berlin correspondents of the
New York Times
, the
Daily Express,
the
Mail,
and the
Herald Tribune
, urging them to keep Hannah’s name alive at press briefings. She thanked Sir Eric for his efforts in getting Richard released and asked him to raise the matter of the Liebermanns with the German Foreign Ministry. She made pleas to Lord Beaverbrook and William Randolph Hearst, underlining the public interest in the case and calling for their newspapers to adopt Hannah’s cause. She appealed to the president of the IOC, flattering his vanity by suggesting the Reich leadership would hear his petitions for the release of Hannah Liebermann.

As the weeks passed and the season changed, the responses to Eleanor’s letters dropped like so many leaves onto the doormat: a mixed bag of general sympathy, vague support, and one or two blunt rebuffs. Sir Eric had broached the subject over tea with von Ribbentrop and had been heard with ‘cold contempt.’ A response from the IOC’s president, Count Henri de Baillet-Latour, contained such flannel about goodwill between nations as to be almost meaningless—or at any rate, it meant he wasn’t going to do anything. Only Rex seemed to be really trying, but his questions were met each time by the same statement: that Hannah Liebermann was convalescing from a breakdown and was not receiving visitors in her weakened state. Eleanor tossed each letter onto the shelf over the escritoire. At the end of October a letter from Ambassador Dodd arrived. She and Denham read it together.

My dear Eleanor:
Life at Tiergartenstr has been most dull without you. Martha, Mattie, and I have missed your company. I can only apologise for taking so long in responding to your letter about the Liebermanns. You’ll forgive me, I hope, when I tell you that we have been waiting on responses to petitions made by the State Department to the Reich government.
Hitler’s reply to our request that Hannah and her family be permitted to emigrate to the States was, I regret to say, a flat refusal. When I tried to get a private interview with him to plead the case in person I was brushed off.
There is little more I can do. I am deeply sorry that this news will disappoint. Let us hope that Hannah’s fame affords her some protection for the time being.
We wish you well, my dear. Martha says she’ll write soon. She has been much in the company of a young Russian here in our diplomatic community, which she’ll want to tell you all about I’m sure. Knowing well how disapproval only emboldens her, I’m keeping my views on this latest suitor to myself!
Please send my fond regards to your father.
Yours affectionately,
W E Dodd

Denham stood up, put his hat on, and went out without saying a word, but Eleanor read over it again, lit a cigarette, and sat watching the trees thrashing in the wind through the kitchen window. The cat was curled on a chair, with one eye open. A log in the stove shifted, sending a heap of ash through the grate.

Despite their efforts, it seemed the book was closing on Hannah, Jakob, and Ilse.

Chapter Thirty-one

E
leanor never seemed to tire of Tom’s company, even when his persistence and curiosity exasperated Denham. On weekends he would stay over and go swimming with her while Denham rested. The boy had none of his father’s taciturn nature and would chat happily for hours, so she soon had knowledge of everything from model gliders to soccer’s offside rule. More than once she’d called him George without thinking. The eight-year-old kid brother she still missed.

She watched Denham recover his health and grow stronger by the week. At half term he was well enough to take Tom to see the new television mast at Alexandra Palace, driving the Morris Oxford she had bought from the automobile dealer on Regent’s Park Road. By November he was working again, writing features for Harry Garobedian. The money he’d earned from the Hannah interview had barely been enough to tide them over, so she was thankful for having funds of her own.

Two matters had preoccupied Eleanor since Denham had proposed that evening on the Hill. The first, her determination to be busy and useful, had been solved with relative ease. With the help of a string pulled by her dad she’d got a job at the United States embassy in Grosvenor Gardens; nothing high level, just filing the voluminous documents pledging plight, peril, or ancestry attached to applications for visas. Most were from European Jews in transit through London to the States.

The second matter was a real headache. Herb had consented to a divorce, but there was still the problem of Reno. In a letter almost as disappointing as Dodd’s, her dad’s lawyer explained that obtaining a divorce in the state of New York was difficult. Most marriages were dissolved out of state. So she or Herb would have to take up residency in Reno, Nevada, for six weeks, after which the state’s more relaxed laws would grant her a divorce. Of course, Herb refused to go, so she would have to, and as she couldn’t leave Richard just yet, Reno, and her freedom, would have to wait, whatever her mother said about living in sin.

O
n a grey afternoon in mid-March, cold enough for snow, but not to deter the crocuses from blossoming on Primrose Hill, Eleanor was returning home from work when she saw Mr Blount putting a sign in the window of his grocery store that exhorted her to
STEP INSIDE AND SEE WHY SPAIN IS FIGHTING FOR YOU!

A smaller sign announced that the shop was offering Spanish goods for sale and a service to send aid parcels to the Republican cause.

An hour later Eleanor returned with an armful of dresses, slacks, blouses, and suits to donate for Spain to the delight of Mr Blount, the grocer, whose eldest son, she learned, was with a brigade outside Barcelona.

‘Are you sure, miss?’ he asked, now joined at the counter by his wife, who was eyeing the bolero jacket and clutch coat. ‘They’re very smart.’

‘I’m positive,’ said Eleanor. ‘And do sell them if you think the cash will be more useful.’

She was turning the corner into Chamberlain Street when the grocer came panting after her, smiling and tipping his cap.

‘You left this, miss, in one of your pockets.’

In his hand was a yellowing sealed envelope.

‘I don’t think so—’

‘It’s definitely yours, miss.’

She opened the envelope, and a silver key fell into her hand.

‘Excuse me, Mr Blount?’ The grocer, already halfway down the road, turned. ‘Which item did you find this in?’

‘Your cream jacket, miss.’

Her bolero jacket. When had she last worn that? Certainly not since Berlin.

Not since . . .

And then it came to her.

The old man awkwardly embracing her. At the time she had thought it strange, even in that mêlée of reporters surrounding them, shouting questions. Now she remembered, and she understood.

Please . . . keep it safe.

‘J
akob Liebermann gave you this?’

Denham turned the key over in his hand and examined it under the lamp in the drawing room.

‘I think so.’

‘You think so? Eleanor, do you realise—’

‘I told you. I didn’t realise. He said, “Please, keep it safe.” I didn’t know what he meant, and then he gave me this funny hug, and I thought how weird, but I had
no idea
he was dropping something into my pocket.’

‘And it didn’t occur to you that what he’d said might be significant?’

‘For your information, mister, he had a pack of reporters on him like bloodhounds with only me to protect him, and it was on a day when one damn thing had been happening after the other . . .’

‘Fine, darling, but how is it that seven months on you’ve never found this?’

Eleanor collapsed onto an armchair and pressed her fingers to her temples. ‘I have a lot of clothes,’ she said in a level voice. ‘I didn’t try
not
to find it. I’m sorry, okay? I guess it’s what happens when you shack up with a spoilt little rich girl . . .’

Her eyes began welling with tears.

Denham gave her his handkerchief. ‘I’m sorry. Here, I’ll pour us both a whisky . . .’

He put the key down on the coffee table. It was about three inches long, heavy, plated with nickel, and had a subtly ornamented handle, as if it might open a reliquary or a jewel box.

‘It’s a beautiful thing,’ he said, handing her a drink. ‘Let me see that envelope it was in again.’

She fetched the crumpled blank envelope from her handbag. The flap had been sealed with a licked adhesive, and she’d torn it open along the top.

He held it up to the lamp, then carefully pulled the triangle flap away from the back.

‘Got it,’ he said.

‘Got what?’

‘Look.’

Written inside in pencil, in a small, faint hand, were the numbers
1451
.

‘What does it mean?’ she asked.

‘My guess is that this key opens a safe-deposit box. The question is, a safe-deposit box
where
?’ He was still holding the envelope flap up to the light. ‘Hand me that key again.’

Eleanor passed it to him, and he held it under the lamp, tilting the silver object to the sharp light. Engraved along the ridge of its rounded handle he saw the words
ADALBERT & SONS LOCKSMITHS, ENGLAND
.

T
he next morning they were at the Public Records Office on Chancery Lane in time for its opening, and asked to see the register of all banking houses licenced to trade in England. Together they sat on a green banquette in the reading room and opened it. There was no institution by the name of ‘Liebermann,’ so they began to study the others, the long alphabetical list of banks maritime, merchant, public, and private.

‘There are so many,’ Eleanor said.

‘You’re in the banking capital of the world.’

When no name of any meaning leapt out they turned to the lists of stock brokerages, investment houses, and moneylenders. It did not help that what they were searching for was not at all clear.

By late morning they had almost finished the register. Feeling cast down they joined the lunchtime crowd of print workers and secretaries on Fleet Street, collars turned up and hats pulled down against the bitter wind. For a halfpenny Denham bought a bag of hot chestnuts, which they shared as they walked. Tiny flakes of snow had begun to fall, stinging their faces. The smoke from a brazier, the unseasonal cold, and the drab people trudging the sidewalk like a beaten army all seemed to add to a sense of defeat.

‘What now?’ she asked.

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