by War
"Will you forgive me if I don't go?" Jastrow said, smiling.
"It would so startle the Almighty, it might ruin His Sabbath. I shall enjoy looking at your library instead."
While Natalie and the doctor's wife fed the children in the kitchen, Anna Castelnuovo chattered away woman-towoman. She wasn't a believer at all, she cheerily confessed, but kept up the rituals to please her parents. Her husband's Zionism left her just as cold. Her passion was reading novels, especially by Americans. Having an American author in the house, even though he wasn't a novelist, greatly thrilled her.
At Natalie's tale of her marriage to a submarine officer, the doctor's wife was enchanted. "Why, it's like a novel," she said. "A novel by Ernest Hemingway. Romantic." They fell to laughing as Miriam took over the feeding of Louis, both children being ridiculously solemn about it. Then they put the girl and the baby in Miriam's toy-crammed room. "She'll take better care of him than any governess", said Anna.
"I hear Father and Bernardo. come to dimmer."
Sacerdote and Dr. Casteinuovo looked gloomy on their return. The older man put on a worn white skullcap to make a blessing over wine, then removed it. Natalie gathered from murmurs among the family that somebody was late. "Well, we will eat," Sacerdote said. "Let us sit down." One place was vacant.
The fool was neither Italian nor in the kosher style Natalie half-expected. There was a spicy fish dish, a fruit soup, a chicken dish, saffron-flavored rice, and eggplants cooked with meat.
Conversation lagged. Halfway through the meal a son named Amoldo came in; lean, short, twenty or so, his grimy sweater, long tousled hair, and open shirt , n j'amina contrast to the family's formalityHe ate silently and voraciously. Once he arrived the halting talk died.
Sacerdote donned his skullcap to lead a little Hebrew song in which the others joined, but not Amoldo.
Natalie began to regret that she had pushed Aaron to accept this dinner. He was getting through it by emptying his wineglass as fast the doctor's wife filled it. Uncomfortable looks kept passing among the family, and a vague dread seemed to compound the gloom.
Natalie was dying to ask the doctor about Rabinovitz and the Izmir, but his face wore a forbidding aspect that stopped her.
Jewish ceremonies depressed Natalie anyway, and the Sabbath candles still burning on the table were a special sore point. Watching Miriam tonight, she had felt an old deep forgotten ache. Standing beside her mother in the same way twenty years ago, she had asked why mama was lighting candles in the daytime. The reply, that making fire with;is forbidden after sunset on the Sabbath, had seemed perfectly reasonable, since life to a little girl was full of arbitrary prohibitions. But then after the heavy Friday night dinner, her father had struck a flaring wooden match to his long cigar.
She had said in all innocence, "Papa, that's not allowed after sunset." A glance of embarrassment and amusement had passed between her parents. She did not remember what her father had replied as he went on smoking; but the glance she could never forget, for in an instant it had destroyed the Jewish religion for her. Her rowdiness at Sunday school had dated from that night, and soon, though her father was a temple officer, the parents had been unable to make her attend.
Straightening his stained sweater, Amoldo got up while the others were still eating. In rapid Italian, with a winning white-toothed smile, he said to Jastrow, "Sorry, I must leave.
I read your book, sir. Quite a book."
His mother said sadly, "On a Sabbath when we have visitors, Amoldo, can't you stay awhile?"
The smiling face turned sullen. A girl's name whipped out of him in a hostile hiss, "Francesca is waiting for me. Ciao."
He left behind a heavy silence. Dr. Castelnuovo broke it by turning to Jastrow and Natalie. "Well! Now I have a good report for you. The boat Izmir reached Palestine, and the British didn't catch the passengers as they went ashore."
"Ah, my God!" Natalie exclaimed, in a surge of glad relief.
"You're sure?"
"I'm in touch with Avram Rabinovitz. There were bad moments, but on the whole it was a success."
Jastrow put a small damp hand on Natalie's. "Great news!"
"That trip cost us a lot of money." Sacerdote was beaming.
"It's satisfying when the results are good. That doesn't always happen."
Natalie said to the doctor, "But the papers and radio said the ship disappeared. I had nightmares that it was the Struma all over again."
Castelnuovo bitterly grimaced. "Yes, you do hear about the disasters. The world press in not unsympathetic to Jews, once they're destroyed. It's best to keep the successes quiet."
"And Rabinovitz? What about him?"
"He made his way back to Marseilles. that's his base. He's there now."
"What's your connection with him? May I know?"
Casteinuovo shrugged. "Why not? My father-in-law used to rent his films from that man Herbert Rose who went on the boat. When Rabinovitz ran short of money in Naples-what with delays, and repairs -Rose suggested that we might help him. Avram came up here by train.
We gave him a lot of money."
"But one must be careful about such things," Sacerdote put in unhappily. "So incredibly careful! Our position here is delicate, very delicate."
The doctor said, "Well, that's it. Since then he and I have stayed in touch. He's a good man to know."
Castelnuovo talked of the growing danger to Italian Jews.
Jews had no future anywhere in Europe, he said. He had decided that long ago, while going to medical school in Siena.
That tough uphill fight had made him a Zionist. All of Europe was poisoned by nationalist hatred for the Jews; the Dreyfus case in ultraliberal France had been the warning sign, long ago. Under Mussolinis anti-Semitic laws, he himself could practice medicine only because the Siena health authorities had declared him essential. His father-in-law was retaining control of his property through tenuous legal fictions, which put him -at the mercy of Christian associates.
That very evening in the synagogue they had heard that the Fascist regime was preparing concentration camps for Italian Jews, such as already existed for Jewish aliens. The roundup squads would strike on Yom Kippur, four months hence, when the Jews could be caught in their synagogues. Once collected, they would be handed over to the Germans for shipping eastward, where terrible massacres were taking place.
Sacerdote broke in to insist the report was panicky nonsense. The man who had brought it was a rumormonger with no high connections. The stories of secret massacres were all foolishness. The archbishop himself had assured Sacerdote that the Vatican's intelligence net was the best in Europe; and that if the stories had any truth to them, the Pope would have long since denounced Nazi Germany and excommunicated Hitler.
"I've given fortunes to the archbishop's projects." Sacerdote turned moist and worried dark eyes to Jastrow. "I'm the chairman of the orphanage, his pride and joy. He would not lead me astray. You know him. Don't you agree?"
"His Excellency is an Italian gentleman, and a good soul."
Jastrow again emptied his glass. He was very red in the face, but he spoke clearly. "I do agree. Even with a madman as their leader -for it has become my settled view that Hitler is unbalanced-the advanced culture of the Germans, their passion for order, and their legal scrupulosity preclude the truth of these rumors. The Nazis are indeed brutal open anti-Semites, and on such a base of fact, erecting gruesome fantasies becomes all too simple."
"Dr. Jastrow," said Casteinuovo, "what about Lidice? The work of an advanced culture?"
"This fellow Heydrich was a leader of the SS. Reprisal is commonplace in war," Jastrow answered, in a tone of cool academic riposte. "Don't ask me to defend the calculated military frightfulness of the Boche. He doesn't want it defended. He proclaims it. He has proclaimed with great fanfare the annihilation of that poor Czech village."
Castelnuovo came out with a-burst of dry quick Italian. The archbishop didn't know all the Pope knew. The Pope had his reasons to kee
p silent, mainly the protection of the Church property and influence in German-held lands; also, the o Christian dogma that the Jews must suffer down through history, to prove they had guessed wrong on Christ, and must one day acknowledge him. Miriam could not live much longer within reach of German claws; he and his wife had decided that. He was already communicating with Rabinovitz about ways and means of getting out.
Here again the old man struck in. The decision to leave would be a terrible one for himself and his wife. Siena was their home.
Italian was their language. What was worse, Amoldo was determined to remain; he was in love with a Sienese girl. The family would be torn apart, and the property gathered in a lifetime wbuld be lost.
Louis and Miriam were laughing in a distant room. "Why, it's incredible that that child's still awake," Natalie said.
"He's having the time of his life, but I must get him home and to bed."
"Mrs. Henry, why didn't you leave with the other Americans?" The doctor spoke with abrupt sharpness. "Rabinovitz is very puzzled and concerned. He has asked about you repeatedly."
She looked at her uncle, feeling color come into her cheeks.
"We've been temporarily detained."
"But why?"
Jastrow answered, "Again, reprisal. Three German agents in Brazil, posing as Italian journalists, were arrested, and so-"
"German agents in Brazil?" Casteinuovo interrupted, wrinkling his forehead.
"What has that got to do with you?
You're Americans."
His wife said, "That makes no sense."
"None whatever," declared Jastrow. "Our State Department is Pressing the Italian government through Berne to send us to Switzerland at once.
And they're working on the release of those agents in Brazil, in case this pressure fails. I am not concerned."
"I am," said Natalie.
Jastrow said lightly, "My niece finds it hard to accept that our government has one or two other things on its mind besides our release.
As, for instance, that it seems to be losing the war on all fronts, at the moment. But we have other protection. Protection of an unusual nature." He gave Natalie a teasing inebriated smile. "What do you say, my dear? Shall we confide in our pleasant new friends?"
"As you please, Aaron." Natalie pushed back her chair.
His patronizing of these well-to-do but miserable people was annoying her. "The children are strangely quiet, suddenly.
I'll have a look at Louis."
She found him asleep on Miriam's bed in his favorite slumber pose: face down, knees drawn up, rump in the air, arms sprawled. He looked very uncomfortable. Often she had straightened him out, only to watch him return to the pose, still fast asleep, as though he were a rubber baby rebounding to his manufatured shape. Miriam sat beside him, hands folded in her lap, ankles crossed, swinging both feet.
"How long has he been sleeping, dear?"
"Just a few minutes. Shall I cover him?"
"No, I'll take him home soon."
"If only he could stay!"
"Well, come to our house tomorrow and play with him."
"Oh, may I?" The little girl softly clapped her hands. "Will you please tell my mama that?"
"Of course. You should have a baby brother. I hope you will, one day."
"I did. He died," said the girl in a calm way that chilled Natalie.
She returned to the dinner table. Aaron was describing Werner Beck's intervention to quash the summons from the secret police, at the time when alien Jews had been interned.
"We've been living in tranquillity ever since," Jastrow said.
"Werner couldn't be more thoughtful and protective. He even brings us mail from home, illegally transmitted. Imagine! A high-placed German Foreign Service officer, keeping two Jews from being interned by the Fascists, because I once helped an earnest young history student with his doct, thesis. Bread cast upon the waters!"
The old lady spoke up. "Then why doesn't he help you, Dr. Jastrow, with all this nonsense about Brazil?"
"He has, he has. He's been burning up the wires to Berlin.
He assures us that this outrage will be corrected, that our release via Switzerland is only a matter of time."
I' you believe that?" Castelnuovo addressed Natalie.
She gnawed her lower lip. "Well, we know that a diplomatic fuss is going on, and that he's taking an interest I have a friend in the American legation at Bern who's written me as much."
"My guess would be," said the doctor, "that this Dr. Beck is preventing you from leaving Italy."
"How preposterous!" exclaimed Jastrow.
But Casteinuovo's words stirred a horrible dark sickness in Natalie. "Why? What would there be in it for him?"
"You ask the right question. It's to his advantage to have the famous Dr. Jastrow trapped in Italy and dependent on him. In what way, you will find out."
"You are quite a cynic," Jastrow said, beginning to bristle.
"About my Jewish identity, at this time, and in this place, I believe only the worst possibilities. It's not cynicism, it's common sense. Now I have a message for both of you from Avram Rabinovitz," the doctor said to Natalie. "He says, "Get out, while you can."
"But how?" she almost shrilled at Casteinuovo. "Don't you think I want to get out?"
Jastrow looked at his watch, and said stiffly to the Sacerdotes, "You've taken us into the bosom of your family.
I warmly thank you. We must go. Good-night."
PUG HENRY S-rooD in the reception line with his sons, Janice,. and Carter Aster at a big lawn party on the grounds of the governor's mansion. Amid the palms, the flamboyant tropical shrubbery, the very noisy swanky crowd, the guest of honor visibly stood out.
Alistair Tudsbury's ordeal in an open boat on the high seas had not slimmed him; or if it had, he had managed to eat himself back into shape with a net gain. He wore a yellow silk suit with a bright yellow tie; a yellow lei ringed his neck, and he leaned on a yellow malacca cane; and in the yellow sunshine of a late Hawaiian afternoon, he was altogether a rather blindingly buttery sight. A black patch covered his left eye.
When Pug came up, Tudsbury pulled him into a bear hug.
"Awrr-hawrr! Pug Henry, by God! Late of Berlin, London, and Moscow!
By God, Pug, how are you!"
Stepping forward to embrace Pug, he disclosed his daughter, standing there in a gray sheath dress. Until that moment Pug wasn't sure she was at the party, though the papers said she had arrived with Tudsbury.
The correspondent, out of coyness or mischief, had not mentioned her over the telephone. Engulfed in the hug, losing sight of her in a perfumed crush of yellow flowers, Victor Henry thought how small she was, and how white those bare slender arms were; had she had no sun in all her months in the tropics? She wore her light brown hair as before, unfashionably piled up on her head.
"Well, Yank," boomed Tudsbury hotly and moistly in his ear, "you're in it with us now, aren't you? Up to your necks!
In to the death!" He released Pug. "Awr-hawrr-hawr! And none too soon, none too soon, by God. Well! You do remember Pam, don't you? Or had you quite forgotten her?"
"Hello there." The voice was low, the clasp of her hand and brief. Her pale face was almost as calm, distant, unrecognizing as it had been in their first meeting on the Bremen. But the illusion that she was tiny had been created by the eclipsing mass of her father.
Pamela's green-gray eyes were almost level with his, and her bosom under the thin gray dress was fuller than he remembered.
Tudsbury said, "Governor, this is Captain Victor Henry of the Northampton. The confidant, as I've told you, of presidents and prime ministers." The florid introduction was wasted on the governor, a wrinkled weary-looking man in seersucker, who gave Pug an empty smile suited to a mere cruiser captain. Tudsbury bellowed over the party noise, "What say, Pug, three stalwart sons, eh? I thought I remembered two. And hello, here's the senator's pretty daughter."
When Pug introduced Lieutenant Com
mander Aster the governor's bored eyes came alive. "Ah, the captain of the Devilfish? Really!
Well, now, I've heard of you. Giving the Japs back some of their own, aren't you, skipper? Well done!"
"Thank you, Governor." A modest bob of the head.
Tudsbury's good eye flashed alertly. "Submarine hero, eh?
Let's have a chat later."
Aster answered with a frigid grin.
Under a palm tree far down the garden, Spruance was standing beside Admiral Nimitz, who had his hands folded before him. Spruance's were on the back of his hips, -as though he did not know where else to put his hands. Both admirals wore pained squints. Spruance beckoned to Pug. He approached Cincpac with some trepidation, for he had never met Nimitz.