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they stopped to see Emily and get her wise advice. One bright moonlit night they arrived at
Bienvenu, amid the powerful scent of orange and lemon blossoms. Kennst du das Land, wo
die Zitronen blüht? It seemed to Irma that she wanted nothing ever again but to stay in that
heaven-made garden.
For three days she was in ecstasies over their darling little girl, calling Lanny's attention to
every new word she had learned. Lanny, duly responsive, wondered what the little one made
of these two mysterious, godlike beings called mother and father, who swooped down into her
life at long intervals and then vanished in a roar of motors and clouds of dust. He observed
that the child was far more interested in the new playmate whom fate permitted her to have
without interruption. Baby Freddi was blooming like a dark velvet rose in the hot sunshine of
the Midi, for which he had been destined many centuries ago; fear was being forgotten, along
with his father. Irma withheld her thought: "I must get those two apart before they come to the
falling-in-love age!"
VII
All preparations having been made as for a military campaign, at the beginning of September
the young couple set out for Berlin by way of Milan and Vienna. Lanny knew of paintings in
the latter city, and the art business could be made more convincing if he stopped there. He
had written letters to several of his friends in Germany, telling of his intention to spend the
autumn in their country; they would approve his business purpose, for he would be contributing
foreign exchange to the Fatherland, and with foreign exchange the Germans got coffee and
chocolate and oranges, to say nothing of Hollywood movies and Budd machine guns. To Frau
Reichsminister Goebbels he wrote reminding her of her kind offer to advise him; he told of the
proposed Detaze exhibit and enclosed some photographs and clippings, in case the work of this
painter wasn't already known to her. Carefully wrapped and stowed in the back of the car
were several of Marcel's most famous works—not the Poilu, not those sketches satirizing German
militarism, but Pain, and Sister of Mercy, so gentle, yet moving, adapted to a nation which had
just signed a pact renouncing war; also samples of the land- and sea-scapes of that romantic
Riviera coast which so many Germans had visited and come to love. Kennst du das Land!
On the drive through Italy, safe from possible eavesdropping, they discussed the various
possibilities of this campaign. Should they try to appeal to what sense of honor the Commander
of the German Air Force might have? Should they try to make friends with him, and to extract
a favor from him, sometime when they had him well loaded up with good liquor? Should they
make him a straight-out cash proposition? Or should they try to get next to the Führer, and
persuade him that they were the victims of a breach of faith? Should they play the Goebbels
faction, or find somebody in power who needed cash and could pull hidden wires? Should they
try for a secret contact with some of the young Socialists, and perhaps plan a jailbreak?
These and many more schemes they threshed out, and would keep them in mind as they
groped their way into the Nazi jungle. One thing alone was certain; whatever plan they decided
upon they could carry out more safely if they were established in Berlin as socially prominent and
artistically distinguished, the heirs and interpreters of a great French painter, the patrons and
friends of a German Komponist, and so on through various kinds of glamour they might
manage to wrap about themselves.
In Vienna it wasn't at all difficult for Lanny to resume the role of art expert. In one of those
half-dead palaces on the Ringstrasse he came upon a man's head by Hobbema which filled him
with enthusiasm; he cabled to a collector in Tuxedo Park, the sale was completed in two days, and
thus he had earned the cost of a long stay in Berlin before he got there. Irma was impressed, and
said: "Perhaps Göring might let you sell for him those paintings in the Robin palace. Johannes
would be getting his son in exchange for his art works!"
VIII
A detour in order to spend a couple of days at Stubendorf; for Kurt Meissner was like a
fortress which had to be reduced before an army could march beyond it. No doubt Heinrich
had already written something about Lanny's becoming sympathetic to National Socialism, and it
wouldn't do to have Kurt writing back: "Watch out for him, he doesn't really mean it." If
Lanny was to succeed as a spy, here was where he had to begin, and the first step would be the
hardest.
A strange thing to be renewing old friendships and at the same time turning them into
something else! To be listening to Kurt's new piano concerto with one half your mind, and
with the other half thinking: "What shall I say that will be just right, and how shall I lead up
to what I want to tell him about the Robins?"
Was it because of this that Kurt's music seemed to have lost its vitality? In the old days
Lanny's enthusiasm had been unrestrained; all his being had flowed along with those sweeping
melodies, his feet had marched with those thundering chords, he had been absolutely certain
that this was the finest music of the present day. But now he thought: "Kurt has committed
himself to these political fanatics, and all his thinking is adjusted to their formulas. He is
trying to pump himself up and sound impressive, but really it's old stuff. He has got to the
stage where he is repeating himself."
But Lanny mustn't give the least hint of that. He was an intriguer, a double-dealer, using art
and art criticism as camouflage for his kind of ideology, his set of formulas. He had to say: "Kurt,
that's extraordinary; that finale represents the highest point you have ever attained; the adagio
weeps with all the woe of the world." How silly these phrases of musical rapture sounded; saying
them made a mockery of friendship, took all the charm out of hospitality, even spoiled the taste
of the food which the gute verständige Mutter, Frau Meissner, prepared for her guests.
But it worked. Kurt's heart was warmed to his old friend, and he decided that political
differences must not be allowed to blind one to what was fine in an opponent. Later on, Lanny
went for a walk in the forest, leaving Irma to have a heart-to-heart talk with Kurt, and tackle a
job which would have been difficult for Lanny. For, strangely enough, Irma was play-acting only
in part. She said things to this German musician which she hadn't said to anybody else, and
hadn't thought she would ever say; so she assured him, and of course it touched him. She
explained that Lanny was honest, and had dealt with her fairly, telling her his political
convictions before he had let her become interested in him. But she had been ignorant of the
world, and hadn't realized what it would mean to be a Socialist, or one sympathetic to their
ideas. It meant meeting the most dreadful people, and having them interfere in your affairs, and
your being drawn into theirs. Not merely the sincere ones, but the tricksters and adventurers
who had learned to parrot the phrases! Lanny could never tell the difference—indeed, how could
anybody tell? It was like going out into the world with your skin off, and any insect that came
along could take a bite out of you.
"And not only Socialists," said the young wife, "but Communists, all sorts of trouble-makers.
You know Uncle Jesse, how bitter he is, and what terrible speeches he makes."
"We had millions like him in Germany," replied Kurt. "Thank God that danger is no more."
"I've been pleading and arguing with Lanny for more than four years. At one time I was ready
to give up in despair; but now I really begin to believe I am making some headway. You know how
Lanny is, he believes what people tell him; but of late he seems to be realizing the true nature
of some of the people he's been helping. That's why I wanted to ask you to talk to him. He has
such a deep affection for you, and you may be able to explain what is going on in Germany,
and help him to see things in their true light."
"I've tried many times," said Kurt; "but I never seemed to get anywhere."
"Try once more. Lanny is impressionable, and seeing your movement going to work has given a
jolt to his ideas. What he wants more than anything is to see the problem of unemployment
solved. Do you think the Führer will really be able to do it?"
"I have talked with him, and I know that he has practical plans and is actually getting them
under way."
"Explain that to Lanny, so that while he's here with Marcel's pictures he'll watch and
understand. It may seem strange to you that I'm letting him sell pictures when I have so much
money of my own; but I've made up my mind that he ought to have something to do, and not
have the humiliation of living on his wife's money."
"You're absolutely right," declared the musician, much impressed by the sound judgment of
this young woman, whom he had imagined to be a social butterfly. "Lanny is lucky to have a
wife who understands his weaknesses so well. Make him stick at some one thing, Irma, and
keep him from chasing every will-o'-the-wisp that crosses his path."
IX
So these two boyhood friends got together and renewed their confidences. Life had played
strange tricks upon them, beyond any foreseeing. Back in the peaceful Saxon village of
Hellerau where they had met just twenty years ago, dancing Gluck's Orpheus, suppose that
somebody had told them about the World War, less than a year off, and five years later Kurt
in Paris as a German secret agent, passing ten thousand francs at a time to Uncle Jesse to be
used in stirring up revolt among the French workers! Or suppose they had been told about a
pitiful artist manqué, earning his bread and sausage by painting picture postcards, sleeping at
night among the bums and derelicts of Vienna— and destined twenty years later to become the
master of all Germany! What would they have said to that?
But here was Adolf Hitler, the one and only Führer of the Fatherland, sole possessor of a
solution to the social problem and at the same time of the power to put it into effect. Kurt
explained what Adi was doing and intended to do, and Lanny listened with deep attention. "It
sounds too good to be true," was the younger man's comment.
The Komponist replied: "You will see it, and then you will believe." To himself he said: "Poor
Lanny! He's good, but he's a weakling. Like all the rest of the world, he's impressed by
success."Having been Beauty's lover for eight years, Kurt knew the American language, and
thought: "He is getting ready to climb onto the bandwagon."
So, when the young couple drove away to Berlin, they left everything at Stubendorf the way
they wanted it. Kurt was again their friend, and ready to accept whatever good news might
come concerning them. They could ask him for advice, and for introductions, if needed; they
could invite him to Berlin to see the Detaze show, and exploit his musical reputation for their
own purposes. Lanny didn't let this trouble his conscience; it was for Freddi Robin, not for
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