He had found another model aircraft â bought from an American pilot who had flown into Gatow with a crate of them to hand out to German children. At the first opportunity, he took it to the Leichts. Lili opened the door to him.
âGood evening, Squadron Leader.'
She gave him a smile but it was still Squadron Leader: never Michael. He removed his cap and followed her through the dark hallway and into the living room where her brother was lying on the couch, reading a book. The grandfather was sitting awake in his armchair, staring vacantly into space, a dribble of saliva at a corner of his mouth.
Rudi sat up at once and got off the couch. As always, he seemed excited to see him but Harrison thought he looked in no better physical shape. He handed over the silver metal plane with its American stars and the boy cradled it carefully in his palms, examining it.
âThis is a C-54, sir? I am right? A Skymaster.'
âYes, absolutely right. Well done.'
âI know this from the photographs you have given me. American, of course. Wright engines?'
He shook his head, smiling. âWrong.'
â
Ach
 . . . then I do not know.'
âPratt and Whitney. How about the makers?'
âDouglas, I think.'
âYes. What other planes do they make?'
âUmmmm . . .'
âIt begins with D.'
âDakotas!'
They had fallen into the habit of playing a sort of aviation quiz on his visits and the boy was learning fast. Harrison went on with it for a while until Rudi seemed to tire and started coughing. His sister made him lie down on the couch again and tucked a blanket over his legs â the sort of threadbare thing that his mother would have consigned to the dog's basket. She bent over her brother for a while, speaking to him quietly in German. Harrison moved away. When she came over, he said, âWould you like me to go?'
She shook her head. âNo, it's all right. He just needs to rest for a bit. He wants to show you his latest scrapbook later, if you don't mind. He's been working on it very hard.'
âI don't mind a bit.'
âThank you. This time we have something to offer you, Squadron Leader. Real coffee. Would you like some? Dirk has stolen it from the Americans, I am sorry to say.'
âNo, thank you.'
âBecause it is stolen?'
âNo, because you need it.'
âNo, we don't. It is a luxury. We don't need it at all. I will make some.'
He agreed because it bought him time. Time to sit at the table and watch her at the stove in the kitchen corner, boiling the water, fetching cups, making the coffee, bringing it to him. The cups had no saucers and hers had no handle. âAs a guest, you must have the best one,' she said when he tried to change them round. She sat down opposite him. He offered her a Player's and lit it for her, and then his own. The simple, companionable act gave him infinite pleasure. He put away the lighter in his tunic pocket. âHow are things? Are you still managing?'
âOh, yes.'
She wouldn't tell him if she wasn't, he thought. âAnd your work?'
âThe same as always.' Her hands, he saw, were in a worse state than ever, the nails broken and split, the skin callused and dotted with small cuts and bruises. Even so, they were beautiful hands with very slender fingers. Hands never made for scraping away at bricks and shovelling rubble.
âI'm sorry that you have to do such a terrible job.'
âIt's not so terrible. And it's useful. Berlin will be built again from our bricks.'
He said encouragingly, âOne day, though, when things are better, you will be able to get a different job.'
âOne day, perhaps.'
âThe economy will recover. Eventually. Some factories in Berlin are still making things, in spite of everything. Telephones, valves, light bulbs . . . As a matter of fact, we're carrying as much of the stuff out for export as we can. As soon as we've unloaded the supply planes we fill them up with goods.'
âI have heard this. It's very generous of the Royal Air Force.'
âWell, we thought there wasn't much point sending back empty planes. And it helps the outside world to know that Berlin is still alive and kicking.'
âDirk tells me that at Tempelhof the Americans don't generally do this.'
âThey have a different theory. They believe that backloading slows the turnaround time of aircraft. They think the object of the airlift is to bring supplies into Berlin, not waste time taking stuff out. It's a valid point. That's about the only thing we don't agree on, though. They're terrific chaps.'
âAnd instead they have been dropping chocolate and candy to the children . . . That's very nice. Very kind. Dirk has seen the little parachutes made of handkerchiefs and scarves coming down. Of course, it's wonderful for the children. They have never known anything like it.'
He glanced round at Rudi in the far corner; he was holding the model Skymaster to his chest and seemed to be half asleep. The old man had nodded off. Harrison lowered his voice. âIt isn't only goods we take out, as a matter of fact. We've been carrying people too. We took a lot of civilians out at the start of the blockade â mostly west Germans who'd got trapped in Berlin. Since then we've been taking others â whenever we can â business people and politicians, people who need special medical treatment, all that sort of thing . . . And lately, we've been carrying elderly people and children. The ones who are sick or undernourished.'
âWhere do they go?'
âTo hospitals, or relatives, or special homes in the British zone. The thing is, it's really easier for us if those sort of people can be safely out of the way . . . before the winter comes.'
âYes, of course. The winter is going to be a big problem. Last year it was not so bad but the year before it was so cold that people literally froze to death.'
âI know. I've heard about it.' He paused. âAnd this one could be the same. It might be a good thing if Rudi could go â perhaps your grandfather, too. Do you have any relatives in the British zone?'
She shook her head. âNone. None anywhere that I know of.'
âNo aunts or uncles?'
âMy parents had no brothers and sisters.'
He felt desperately sorry for her. To have had some sort of family could have helped her. âWell, something could probably be arranged.'
âBut we live in the Russian sector. Surely you would take out only those from the British side.'
âEven so, it might be possible to manage it . . . would you like me to find out, at least?' She fingered the handleless cup and was silent. âThere's no charge,' he went on. âIt's completely free.'
âIt isn't that. Whatever it cost, somehow we would find it. But I do not know what would be best. Rudi belongs with us â we are all that he has â and Grandfather is so confused and gets very sad sometimes. It might be
worse
for both of them.'
Behind them, on the couch in the corner, Rudi started coughing. Coughing and coughing.
Harrison said quietly, âHe'd be given treatment. Proper food. Lots of care. Your grandfather too.'
âThey might be unhappy.'
He said bluntly, âDo you think they'll be able to get through another winter here â if it's a very bad one? I think that's what you should consider.'
âI must talk to Rudi.'
âDo you want me to find out about it, meanwhile?'
âYes . . . if you would. Thank you.' She still seemed uncertain. âBut why should you bother?'
It's for you, he wanted to tell her. For Rudi, too, and the old man, but mostly for you. I want to do something for you. Instead he said, âIt's no bother. Squadron Leader Hill â that chap you met when we went to the play â is involved in that department, actually. I can ask him. See what he could do. I can't promise anything. It might not be possible at all.'
âOut of the question, I'd say, Michael. We're up to here with applications from our own sector.' Tubby drew an imaginary line under his double chin. âWe can't start spiriting out the Ruskies' lot. Could cause all sorts of ructions. You know what they're like. Any excuse to make a rumpus.'
âIt's just one kid of nine and a doddery old man. Both pretty sick. The kid's got all kinds of problems, TB included, I should say. I don't think either of them have a chance of surviving the winter if they stay here. On humanitarian grounds, I think they should be given a chance to live.'
âThe Russians are supposed to look after their own civilians â not us.'
âFor heaven's sake, Tubby, you know bloody well that they don't. They don't care if they live or die. And if they die it saves them the trouble of feeding them.'
âSteady on, dear boy. Steady on. Don't lose your rag. Whatever possessed you to get involved with these people in the first place? Are they by any chance connected to that charming young lady you introduced me to at the play?'
âThey're her brother and grandfather, as it happens.'
Tubby raised his eyebrows. âYou're sticking your neck out for some little fräulein? You've gone crackers, Michael. You've got your career to think of, remember? Don't make any waves, for God's sake. No blots on the old escutcheon. Everything by the book. Stick to the rules like glue.'
âI'm not aware that there
are
any rules about this.'
âNot precisely. Not in black and white, but obviously we're only shifting our own people out. That goes without saying.'
âAll
I'm
saying is see if you can get their names on the list. Only the two of them. Pull a string.'
âIt's a very long list.'
âHow long?'
âWeeks long. Months maybe.'
âDo your best, will you?'
âI don't promise a thing.'
âFine. Just try.'
Tubby sighed. He took his fountain pen out of his pocket and unscrewed the cap. âGive me their names, then.'
âWhat do you think of the idea, Rudi?'
âI don't know. I'm not sure if I'd want to go away from you and Dirk.'
âIt's only an idea and it may not be possible anyway.'
âHow long for?'
âJust for the winter months. You would be somewhere warmer, with good food and doctors to see that you get well again. That's what the squadron leader says. He thinks it would be much better for you and Grandfather. He said the RAF are taking a lot of children out.'
Rudi brightened. âIn planes? I'd go in a plane?'
âYes, of course. It's the only way to leave west Berlin.'
âWhat sort of plane?'
âI've no idea. One of the RAF ones. A Dakota, perhaps.'
âIt might be a York.'
âYes, I suppose it might.'
âBut where would I live?'
âI'm not exactly sure. They are taking the children to special homes in the British zone, or to hospitals, if that's necessary. Perhaps you might go to a hospital for a little while and then to a home. The doctors would do what would be best for you.'
He turned one of the American plane's propellers slowly with the tip of his forefinger. âBut I'd come back?'
âCertainly.'
âAnd the squadron leader thinks I should go?'
âYes, he does. He's trying to arrange it.'
âThen it must be all right, mustn't it?'
Towards the end of October, Harrison flew to England on leave. The weather in Berlin had already started to deteriorate and before he left there had been several days of thick fog which had caused plenty of headaches in the Ops Room and frustrating delays in the targeted coal deliveries. Ominously, news had come of ice already forming on the Rhine near Wiesbaden. He flew by Dakota to Bückeburg in the British zone and then on to Northolt aerodrome outside London where he took a taxicab to his flat.
The flat was in a Victorian mansion block on the Fulham Road and he had bought it at the end of the war with a legacy from a fond and rich godmother. It was a rather sombre place and somewhat sparsely furnished. His mother had wanted to cheer it up, as she called it, but he had declined the offer firmly. It served as a useful base â somewhere secure to store his clothes and books and records while he was away and to use when he was on leave. There had been minor bomb damage to the building during the war â nothing more serious than cracks in the ceilings and broken windowpanes which had been mended or plastered over. His eyes had grown so accustomed to the devastation of Berlin that London, by contrast, seemed relatively unscathed: a comparison that he would never have made before. There was evidence everywhere of the Luftwaffe's night-time raids â plenty of bomb sites and gaps and rubble-strewn wasteland â but nothing like Berlin.
He let himself into the mansion block and took the creaking lift up to his flat on the first floor. Here were solid walls and ceilings, radiators, running hot water, tins of food in one kitchen cupboard, a full set of china in another, his clothes in the wardrobe, Irish linen sheets and merino wool blankets on the bed, carpets on the floors, curtains to draw over the windows, a drinks cabinet with, if he remembered correctly, some sherry left in it, and a telephone.
He called his mother. She sounded thrilled to hear his voice.
âDarling, how simply wonderful! Why didn't you tell us you were coming?'
âSorry, it wasn't certain till almost the last minute.'
âHow long?'
âTen days.'
âYou'll come down this weekend, won't you?'