The Hour of the Cat (27 page)

Read The Hour of the Cat Online

Authors: Peter Quinn

On the file tab that protruded from the folder's edge was a neatly typed label: SEKTIONEN 1-30.6.37/1-10. “Any idea what this means?” Dunne said.
“Got me,” Jimmy said.
“Mind if I take this with me?”
Butts wobbled slightly as he stood. “Lookin' is free, takin' ain't.”
“How much you want? I'll come back tomorrow with what you ask.”

Tomorrow
?” Butts roared with laughter. “Hear that, Jimmy?
Tomorrow!”
Jimmy smiled broadly. “Yeah, Toby, I heard.”
“Tell you what, Mr. I-Ain't-No-Cop. We'll keep that file, and how about throwin' in them shoes and that jacket. You know, as collateral.”
Jimmy moved in front of the blanket that served as a door. He leaned lightly on the nail-studded bat. Somewhere nearby a freighter or passenger liner gave a blast of its horn, a thunderous jolt that seemed to make the tarpapered walls flinch. Dunne put his hands to his ears. Butts said something but a second blast drowned him out. Butts moved closer. Dunne leaned back, lifted his leg and slammed his foot into Butts's groin. He sprang across the room headfirst into Jimmy, who went sprawling into the dirt lane, taking the blanket with him.
Dunne leaped over Jimmy, who lay stunned on the ground. The faces around the campfire barely looked up as he ran by. He scaled the sagging wire fence and bolted across Twelfth Avenue, falling once on the slippery cobblestones. He didn't stop running until he reached Ninth. He leaned against a lamppost to catch his breath. He'd lost his hat. He ran his hand through his hair and wiped the sweat from his forehead. He turned to see if there was any sign of Butts or Jimmy. There wasn't.
“Where's the fire?” The girl in the red dress was having another cigarette in the entrance of the dance hall.
Dunne fanned himself with the folder. “Out for a stroll, that's all.”
“Come upstairs,” she said. “Give you all the exercise you want and you'll never break a sweat. Guaranteed or your money back.”
“Sorry, just spent my last dime.”
“Tell you what, you're good looking enough to get a free spin. Like what you feel, you can come back tomorrow and pay for it.”
“Some other time.”
“Yeah, sure.” She walked inside. Her skin faded to gray beneath the feeble hallway light. She swiveled on the stairs. “That's what all the fairies say.”
5
Sometimes dreams are pure fantasies. More often, they are realities viewed through the lens of the subconscious. Occasionally, they are prophecies.
—MANFRED STERN,
Landscapes of the Imagination
ABWEHR HEADQUARTERS, BERLIN
O
STER WATCHED AS CANARIS read the copy of the memorandum. Over several days, Oster had worked with General Beck to get the words right. Beck's instinct was to indirection and nuance. Oster kept stripping away the verbiage, sharpening what Beck left vague. By now, he knew the text practically by heart.
History will indict these commanders of blood guilt if, in the light of their professional and political knowledge, they do not obey the dictates of their conscience.
He guessed from a sudden arch of Canaris's eyebrows that he had reached the gist of Beck's appeal.
The soldier's duty to obey ceases when his knowledge, his conscience, and his sense of responsibility forbid him to carry out a certain order.
Canaris removed his glasses. “Has he sent it to anyone?”
“To General Brauchitsch.”
“Brauschitsch concurred?”
“He's sympathetic.”
“‘Sympathetic'? That's a woman's word, not a soldier's.”
“He said he'd share it with officers he felt he could trust.”
“This is beginning to sound more like a sewing circle than a conspiracy. So far it seems to me that Beck stands alone. If he refuses to carry out his orders as chief of the General Staff, the Führer will find someone who will, and if Brauchitsch decides that, as commander of the army, he stands with Beck, he'll be replaced too. That's if he's lucky and the Führer doesn't smell a plot and sic Himmler and the SS on them.”
“Beck is trying to build a consensus among the senior commanders to refuse to carry out an order for an attack on Czechoslovakia.”
“A mutiny?”
“A strike.”
“Oster, be serious. The generals have stood by as the high command has been emasculated and now, suddenly, you think they'll band together to defy the Führer? On what grounds?”
“Because Hitler will not be deterred by rational argument. He is determined to plunge Germany into a war we can't win.”
“They've known his intent for almost a year.” Canaris excused himself and went into the bathroom. He poured a packet of headache powder in a glass, filled it with water, and drank the mixture. The froth left him with a white, Führer-like mustache. Looking in the mirror, he wiped it away. He sat on the toilet and massaged his forehead with his fingertips. The hangover he was suffering from was the result of too much wine, which followed an argument with Erika. Oster had made it worse. It was one thing to grumble and grouse in private about the regime. There was a lot of that, especially when it involved the arrogance and lavish excesses of high-ranking Nazis. But to propose in writing a military defection, a strike, an open refusal to carry out an order, was treason.
Exiting the bathroom, Canaris hoped Oster would be gone, but he was still there, in the same chair. “Beck will not be cowed.”
“That, if I remember correctly, is what you said about General von Blomberg.” Canaris opened a file on his desk and pretended to read. He didn't say anything when Oster got up and left. He sensed Oster had been momentarily deflated by the reminder of the speed and ease with which the Führer had turned his would-be puppeteers into puppets. Tall, cultivated, sure of his abilities, Blomberg had exuded the army's confidence that it held final say on Germany's future. “Why quibble over political details when the appropriations for the armed forces outpace our ability to spend them?” he asked Beck. He raised no objection when the soldiers' oath was altered from loyalty to “people and fatherland” to “the Führer and the people.” He took it upon himself to stop referring to “Herr Hitler” and address the Chancellor as “My Führer.”
It wasn't until the previous November, in 1937, when Blomberg returned from a conference summoned by the Führer at the Reichschancellery, that Canaris saw the first cracks in the War Minister's façade of confidence. Blomberg attended along with the service chiefs and Foreign Minister Konstantin von Neurath. Two days later, he gathered his senior commanders and intelligence chiefs to report on the meeting with the Führer. Eyes fixed on the tabletop, Blomberg recounted the monologue with which the Führer had harangued the military chiefs and Neurath. The time had come for military action, the Führer declared. Within a few years, England and France would be rearmed and ready to fight. Austria and Czechoslovakia must be seized as soon as possible, before the Allies even knew what happened. The Polish question would be resolved soon afterwards. The Soviets were a tiger without teeth. There was no danger of a two-front war.
“Obviously, gentlemen,” Blomberg said, “the Führer is the final arbiter of Germany's diplomatic goals, and no one here would argue with him.” Behind Blomberg, stretched across the wall, was a large map of Europe. The room's shadows made the vast pink-colored splotch of the Soviet Union appear almost purple. “But there are tactical questions that can't be answered by constantly invoking the word
destiny
.”
Beck marched to the center of the map and swept his hand eastward, over Czechoslovakia. “Germany is not in a position to run the risks involved in seizing Austria and Czechoslovakia. A further pursuit of this idea on the part of the army cannot be justified. Told of the Führer's speech, Oster flew into one of his tirades, denouncing the “cowards and toadies” who would drag Germany to ruin out of fear of spoiling their own careers. Canaris busied himself with paperwork, looking up only once to find Oster staring at him with a look that reminded him of Heydrich's inquisitive expression.
What is it they are looking for?
As it turned out, General Blomberg's duty to advise on military matters was soon ended. He fell in love with a woman young enough to be his daughter. Oster observed them dancing in the Kadaker Cabaret to the American song “O You Doll.” Buxom, long-legged, and blonde, she was an irresistible target for the general who won her affections and rushed her to the altar, unaware of her professional credentials as a former whore. The SS and Gestapo couldn't hide their glee when he was forced to resign in disgrace. General von Fritsch, the next highest soldier, soon followed. Confronted with a trumped-up charge of homosexuality, cleverly framed by the SS, the general wavered between challenging Himmler to a duel and asking the army for its support. In the end, embarrassed and broken, he resigned.
Blomberg and Fritsch out of the way, the military command in disarray, Hitler used the opportunity to step in and take direct and personal control of the armed forces. The ministry of defense was abolished and replaced by the high command of the armed forces. The hapless, talentless General Wihelm Keitel was made its chief.
Sitting beside Canaris at an official rescreening of the newsreels of the Führer's triumphal entry into Vienna, Oster pointed out Keitel in the car behind Hitler's. Like the SS men and regular soldiers around him, like the crowds in Vienna and the millions throughout the Reich, Keitel beamed with satisfaction.
Canaris leaned close and whispered, “I'm told the Führer regards Keitel as endowed with ‘the brains of a movie usher.'”
“The Führer insults the Reich's movie ushers,” Oster whispered back.
 
 
The headache powder hadn't helped. Oster's wistful thinking in the face of the generals' previous inertia only added to the lingering anger Canaris felt toward Erika. It had been simmering all week, since Sunday, when Erika talked him into accompanying her to church. On the way out, still groggy from having napped through much of the service, he was greeted by a woman who acted as though they'd met before. He thought perhaps he recognized her attractive, middle-aged face and exchanged a few pleasantries. Before she walked away, she slipped a pamphlet in his hand, which he presumed to be some pious religious tract until he threw it on his desk at home and saw the title:
Concerning the Situation of the German Non-Aryans
. It was a mass-produced version of the memorandum of the Confessing Church, an indictment of all those who participated in the persecution of the Jews, as well as those who condoned it or were silent. Penciled in the margin was a question: “Admiral, are you one of these?”
He tore the pamphlet into small pieces, bristling with angry resentment at the insufferable sanctimoniousness of those who ignored the brute realities of rebuilding and defending the Reich. Aware of what had transpired and unwilling to let it drop, Erika had raised the issue of the Jews the evening before, ruining what he had hoped would be a quiet, romantic supper. At first, he restrained himself from commenting on her description of the abuse endured by several Jews of her acquaintance. He would do what he could, he said, to expedite their departure from Germany, if that's what they wished.
He turned the conversation to the larger context of contemporary events. He reminded her of the chaos that had followed Germany's defeat and the need to restore order, stability, and love of fatherland. More than ever before, Germans needed to be united as one people. The Jews had never been truly accepted as part of the fatherland. For better or worse, it was too late to change that. “Wouldn't everyone be better off if they went somewhere they were welcomed and felt at home?”
“Most of them have been here for centuries. They feel at home here. At least they
did
.”
He reached across the table and took her hand.
What was the use of trying to explain?
“Look, my dear,” he said, “let's order dinner and leave such matters to those entrusted with the nation's destiny. Besides, politics is bad for the appetite, or so my doctor tells me.” He wanted to make her smile.
She withdrew her hand. Her green accusing eyes sharpened into an aculeate glare:
What is it that drives you besides ambition and duty?
Instead of culminating in lovemaking, as he'd expected, the night ended with him staying in the guest room. Sleep had been elusive. He summoned Gresser and instructed him to hold all calls and turn away any visitors, particularly Oster. He pulled the curtains shut, lay on the couch, closed his eyes, and waited for sleep, a few moments free of doubts, dread. Trying not to think, he sank into the dark, momentarily unsure if he was awake or asleep.
“Hush, you bastards! Look what I've caught!”
An oil slick glides across the black water of the Landwehr Canal, a herring-shaped membrane. The gray monochrome landscape of Berlin in the aftermath of the Spartacist revolt. In the bleak, influenza-ridden winter of 1919, the Freikorp troops hold the whole city in their grip. They tease the navy man in their midst. “Was you salts got the revolution underway. Took the likes of us to turn the tide against the Reds.” The sergeant is as drunk as his men. The warm, revolting taste of their spit seasons the schnapps-filled canteen they pass around. The soldiers are searching the canal for the corpse of Rosa Luxemburg, the diva of the Left, who'd helped lead the unsuccessful attempt of the radicals in the Sparatacist League to seize control of the infant Republic and ignite a Red revolution. The buildings across the way, once prosperous counting houses, are abandoned, windows boarded up, sad, deflated façades of Berlin in the first winter after the surrender.

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