He became aware that the porter was beckoning him to the phone. His heart sank. He had forgotten everything about Adam Wilson – and even the name of that other Englishman who had been with him the day they liberated Mauthausen. He could pass them in the street and never know it. Perhaps he had even done so, between Victoria and here. That whole period was turning into one merciful blur in his mind. Only the visiting card and its lifeline of promise, was sharp.
‘Yes, hello, please?’ he said. ‘Mister Wilson?’
‘Herr Breit? Is that really . . .’
‘Please! Mister Breit.’
‘Ah yes, of course. So it really is you! But how marvellous! I can hardly believe it.’
‘Your card was all I had . . .’
‘This is amazing. How are you now? Much better, I hope? Well, you could hardly be worse!’
Still no picture attached itself to that tinny voice. ‘Yes, I am much better than when you saw me last, thank you.’
‘Well, as I say, that wouldn’t be difficult. Listen – there’s no point in having a long conversation now. I can be with you in twenty minutes or so. Can you wait? I don’t know what plans you—’
Felix laughed. ‘I can wait, Mister Wilson. Believe me!’
‘Silly question. When did you arrive in London?’
‘Since two hours ago.’
‘My goodness! A man who wastes no time, eh! Listen – be with you in no time, old man. And another thing – you won’t believe this, but I have Tony Palmer with me at this moment – actually in my office! He was my oppo in AMGOT – the other English officer who was there that same day. I don’t know if you remember much? But I’ll bring him, too. He’s grinning his head off here already. We’ll both be over the moon to see you again.’
‘I remember him well. Both of you.’ Felix rummaged for his pocket sketchbook and scribbled the name: Tony Palmer.
‘Good. Good. Let me have another word with McIver, the porter, eh?’
Wilson told the porter that Felix was his guest and was to be given whatever he wanted in the way of food or drink.
‘He’d be some kind of DP, would he, sir?’ The porter asked, anxious for some honourable explanation of Felix’s scruffiness.
‘Before the war, McIver, Felix Breit was probably the finest sculptor in Czechoslovakia. Or was it Hungary? One of those places, anyway. The only reason he’s alive today . . . tell me, is he close enough to overhear this?’
‘No, sir.’
‘He spent part of the war in one of those concentration camps. The only reason he’s here today is that the Nazis kept him alive for medical experiments. He’s been very ill but now he’s an honoured guest who deserves our every consideration. I’m sure you understand me?’
‘Completely, Mister Wilson, sir. Leave it with me.’ He cleared his throat. ‘Just by chance, sir, Mister Corvo’s in the Oval Room. The art critic, you know. I wonder . . . ?’
‘Good idea, McIver. You’re worth your weight in gold, man. Make the introductions for me, there’s a good chap. Tell them I’ll be along in two shakes.’
What finally reassured McIver as to the status of this down-at-heel European type was Corvo’s response. ‘Felix Breit?’ he asked, springing to his feet. ‘The Felix Breit? My dear fellow – so you finally made it here! Wilson and I moved heaven and earth to find you after he came back to London, but you seemed to have vanished off the face of Europe. Where were you hiding?’
Felix observed Corvo closely throughout this speech. The man’s name was vaguely familiar. ‘In hospital in Salzburg,’ he said. ‘My papers went astray and for a long time I was delirious. Then TB. And then convalescence in Hamburg.
McIver cleared his throat. ‘Mister Wilson said that if Mister Breit wanted anything in the way of refreshment . . . ?’
Corvo was all smiles. ‘It would only be a spam sandwich at this hour – or might we rustle up an egg?’
Felix said, ‘They wouldn’t allow me scotch. I haven’t tasted Scotch for three years. If you had even just a thimbleful?’
McIver thought he might be able to find a small sample of Scotch – and an egg and tomato sandwich, too.
Corvo took him into the Oval Room, saying, ‘This is where George the Third was forced to sign away the American Colony, you know – in this actual room – when all this was Lord Lansdowne’s private house. What a momentous bit of paper that was, eh! And now I sit here and scribble little jewelled articles for a living!’
Felix suddenly remembered where he had heard the name. ‘Are you William Corvo, by chance?’ he asked. ‘The Corvo who wrote the British Council monograph on Kokoshka’s English period?’
Corvo beamed. ‘You know it?’
‘One of the first things they put into my hands when I could read once more.’
‘I’m flattered. Oscar still lives here, you know – down in Cornwall. Minus the famous doll! Martin Bloch is also here. I hope you’ll be staying, too, Breit. So many of you brilliant Europeans are merely passing through on your way to America. I’m sure it’s a great mistake. In the world of art America is still a colony – and likely to remain so. The post-war renaissance in art will be here in England. Art and Henry Ford are not compatible.’ He raised his hands and gave a self-deprecatory smile, implying that he knew such talk was premature.
But Felix encouraged him with the lift of an eyebrow and a murmured, ‘Interesting.’
Corvo needed no further invitation. It was a dreadful thing to say, but England had undoubtedly benefited from Hitler’s loathing of ‘modern’ artists. Dozens of them had set up shop here: Bloch in Camberwell, Grose – teaching at Bedford but he’d come to London as soon as the theatres got into swing again – and Mestrovic, of course . . .
‘My first hero,’ Felix said. ‘But for him I’d be an academic blacksmith today. Mestrovic, then Arp. And Brancusi, naturally.’
‘Well, Paris isn’t so far, either. The Golden Arrow is starting again soon. And when air travel gets going again, it’ll only be an hour. London–Paris will be the new artistic axis of the world. And –’ he glanced all about him and lowered his voice – ‘strictly between ourselves, I think London will be the heavier end.’
Paris. His apartment on the Rue d’Argenteuil in the First Arrondissement, which was also the first arrondissement to be ‘cleansed’ by the Gestapo and their French collaborators. ‘Paris is not a good memory for me.’
‘Of course not.’ Corvo was sympathetic. ‘I heard about it from André Derain – when we were trying to trace you.’
‘If he hadn’t interceded for me, I’d have been taken to Łodz the following day. Sartre was no use at all.’ He laughed coldly. ‘I didn’t even know I was Jewish until that day. They told me! I stood at my window watching the others being rounded up, thinking poor bastards! Can you believe that?’
‘I can. But will we ever understand? It’s so . . .’ His long, slender hand groped for a word beyond his horizon. ‘Your English is very good,’ he concluded.
‘I lived in America until I was seven.’
‘Ah! Yes – I thought I detected a trace of American there.’ He smiled apologetically and then added comfortingly, ‘Only very slight, though.’
The sandwiches and whisky arrived – more than a mere sample. Corvo drank tea and declined all offers to share the food, though Felix could see the man was peckish. Enjoys self-sacrifice and delivering commonplace opinions as if they were scandalous, he noted. He could not break the habit of cold-classifying people; in Mauthausen it had spelled the difference between life and death.
Correction: between survival and death.
This was life, beginning again with nothing but a pre-war reputation, a DP pension, and a remote future claim against a reviving Germany – if it ever did revive. And meanwhile there was the heady whiff of grants – CEMA, UNRRA . . . Plus, of course, the seemingly boundless goodwill of all these splendid Englishmen. Oh yes, and the British Council.
‘Talking of staying,’ Corvo said, ‘I trust you have somewhe
re organized for tonight? Otherwise . . .’
Felix waited as long as he decently could to see what that ‘otherwise’ might predicate – not realizing that in polite English usage the word had already delivered a bed and several breakfasts if he wanted them. ‘I’m staying in Bloomsbury,’ he said. ‘A very nice man from CEMA has given me vouchers and a ration card. He says it’s a small, private hotel. I haven’t been there yet. My luggage is still at Victoria.’ He dropped these personal details as people drop chips at roulette, with a public indifference that masks a churning gut. Would he ever accustom himself to yielding information freely, without the rubber hose, or the live wire an inch from his skin?
Corvo smiled. But so had the first caller from the Gestapo; he, too, had been a lover of art. What home in Germany now housed the largest single collection of Breits in the world? None, if the man had any sense of self-preservation. They’d be at the bottom of a lake somewhere.
‘I expect you’re longing to work again,’ Corvo said.
Felix looked dispassionately at his fingertips. ‘I did some clay modelling in hospital. I was surprised to discover how much these guys remembered.’
‘Yes, your English really is excellent. It’s so important to imbibe a language in one’s boyhood.’
Felix stared into the middle distance and smiled as he echoed, ‘Boyhood!’
The English were an enigma. In their heart of hearts, they knew that, although they had stood alone against ‘the Hun’ and battled him from Cairo to the Fatherland, those five gruelling years had still not taught them a thing. Europe was still a bewildering, far-off country where Hungary and Czechoslovakia were interchangeable. (Oh yes – his camp-honed ears had overheard that exchange!) From time to time he caught them off their guard, staring into his eyes, looking for answers.
Corvo said slowly, ‘Of all those who survived the camps – I mean, of the few who survived – I believe the artists have the best chance of all. You are in touch with the means to comprehend it . . . convey it to the rest of baffled humanity. Oh dear! Is it patronizing of me to be saying such things to someone like you?’
The whisky burned pleasantly. A long-forgotten sensation, drowsy, fiery, massaged his muscles, slackened off his joints, enabled him to say, ‘Not at all. I agree now, though it’s only lately I’ve been able to think it.’
‘And before?’
‘I was too close to the experience. The idea of taking such an obscenity and somehow fashioning it into art seemed . . . well, an even greater obscenity.’
Corvo pulled a face. ‘I hadn’t considered it like that, but now you put it in such terms, I can’t think of an answer.’
Felix watched him shrewdly. ‘I could give you a comforting lie, Mister Corvo. Go back in history, for instance. Consider the starving eighteenth-century peasant, dying of consumption as he cuts the clay in the Austrian brickfields, and then the fine, brick-built concert hall where Mozart is heard nightly. It’s too remote, isn’t it, for the callous obscenity of the one to reach out and touch the sublime beauty of the other.’
‘That’s very good – and surely quite true?’
Felix shook his head, gently, because of the whisky. ‘I know at least one man who managed it.’
Corvo leaned forward eagerly. ‘A fellow artist?’
‘An artist of a kind, anyway. Reinhard Heydrich – Himmler’s deputy and the actual engineer of the Vernichtung of the Jews – there is no English word, I think.’
‘Annihilation?’
‘Too clinical. Vernichtung means “turning into nothing”. Can one say “the nothing-ing of the Jews”?’
‘One ought to be able to. I see what you mean.’
‘Heydrich once shot a prisoner who dared to warn him that the brake on a quarry wagon was defective. Yet that same Heydrich had his own quartet and was a superb violinist. Sublime, they said.’ He shrugged his shoulders and smiled with an expansive, mid-European weariness.
‘Impossible.’ Corvo tried the same shrug but lacked the experiential referents. ‘But to get back to art . . .’
‘Ah, but we were actually talking about art. Art is not on the side of the angels. Nor of the devils, either. Art is on the side of itself. Only itself. I have survived. Mister Wilson and Mister Palmer will probably tell you it was because, for fourteen months, the doctors fed me nothing but peas and beans. But I know that is the least important part of the truth. I survived because Art wished it. Art needed me. For what purpose, Art will now reveal.’ His hands gestured a mid-European hopelessness. He noted the effect of his words on Corvo and thought: Metaphysics works here! I must remember this line. ‘I have no choice,’ he concluded. ‘Like the scorpion that stings the frog in the middle of the river . . .’
At that moment Wilson and Palmer entered.
The greetings were heartfelt but subdued – in a word: English. When they were done, the four men settled in a rough circle of chintz armchairs and Wilson sent McIver for a fresh pot of tea.
‘I was just saying to Breit,’ Corvo began, ‘I hope he’s not simply passing through on his way to America, like so many. I’m trying to persuade him of the advantages of staying.’
Wilson turned to Felix. ‘It’s up to you, old chap. Whatever you decide, we’ll do our best to help. I know at least one American who’d sponsor you without hesitation – and he, in turn, would know hundreds more.’ To Palmer he said, ‘Willard A Johnson.’
‘Snap!’ Palmer said. To Felix he added: ‘Johnson was our host on the day Mauthausen was liberated. Austria was American territory. We just happened to be on a courtesy visit that day.’
‘There’ll be a new renaissance in England,’ Corvo explained to Palmer. ‘We’ve obviously lost our empire. Our new role is to play Greece to America’s Rome.’
‘I hope you’re right,’ Palmer said. ‘We’re about to rent a Græco-Roman revival house in Hertfordshire – Adam and Sally, Nicole and me.’ He smiled at Wilson. ‘It will be the nucleus of our post-war renaissance.’
‘May one ask where?’ Corvo looked apologetically at Felix for turning the spotlight away from him for the moment. This was interesting. There might be a Perspectives article in it. Or Country Life at worst.
‘It’s the Dower House at Barwick Green. I don’t suppose you know it?’
‘Oh but I do!’ Corvo placed complacent fingertips together. ‘I wrote a piece on it for the AR. Between the wars.’ He turned again to Breit, the catch of the week for him. ‘Charming place.’
‘By Henry Holland,’ Palmer said. ‘With additions by Soane.’
Corvo winked at Felix. ‘Architects and planners, eh! You can’t beat them. Perhaps I should explain – Palmer and Wilson here are leading lights in the Greater London Plan, otherwise they’d still be waiting for their demob suits. Abercrombie pulled some strings and got them out. They sit in their offices all day, dishing out neat little prefabs for the proletariat, and then they down pencils and head for their country palace.’
Wilson said, ‘Actually, old man, it’s more of a commune – or a community . . . yes, more of a community.’
‘Is it really a palace?’ Felix asked.
‘No – it’s a pretty run-of-the-mill English country house, actually. Sixty rooms, three floors, Georgian, classical brickwork, pillared portico. There’s a remnant of the original Tudor wing at the back, brickwork in English garden bond . . . plus stables, carriage houses, and so on. And five acres of garden.’
‘Ex-garden,’ Palmer said. ‘But that’s one of our communal projects.’
‘It was a Catholic boys’ school during the war, evacuated from the Channel Isles. Now it belongs to the South Herts Gravel Company, who, frankly, haven’t the first idea what to do with it. However’ – he winked – ‘they do want to keep on the right side of a couple of ‘leading architects in the Greater London Plan’!’ He grinned at Corvo. ‘Ta for the encomium, old boy.’ Then back to Felix: ‘But that’s enough about us. It’s your future that’s important here.’
Felix bit a li
p nervously. ‘Sixty-odd rooms . . .’ he mused. ‘For just two families?’
‘Ah! We hope there’ll soon be more. There’s room for eight or nine. Families, I mean.’
Wilson was on the point of asking Felix if he’d consider joining their budding community when he remembered the rule they had all agreed: No one should ever be invited to join; the first suggestion must always be theirs, so they could never say they were talked into it if things turned sour.
For his part, Felix was wondering how to work around to suggesting that if they had a small stable or outbuilding where he might set up his studio . . . He felt the invitation coming, saw Wilson’s eyes dance in preparation. But then, with a brief flicker in Palmer’s direction, they lowered again and the warmth fled. It reminded him of the despairing irony of the man from UNRRA as he surveyed that ocean of hopeful refugees, in the months after the liberation of Mauthausen: ‘We offer them every assistance short of actual help.’
He understood that to get into this Dower House community he would have to beg. Well, he wasn’t reduced to that, yet.
‘You must come out and see the place,’ Wilson said lamely.
That note he scribbled on the back of his card, Felix thought, and left pinned to my prison jacket – that was just the reflex shriek of an appalled conscience. It no longer translates into anything. Assistance, yes, but not actual help.
‘Yes, that would be nice,’ he said.
Where did one go in this city for a woman? Could one ask such a question in a club for gentlemen?
Friday, 25 April 1947
They emerged from the gloom of Hammersmith tube station, blinking at the bright autumnal sun, now in its evening arc.
Willard stabbed a finger toward the heart of its radiance. ‘Over there!’
Marianne smiled; he always thought it so important to know his way around. For him, Hell must be a new foreign city for which he had no map. Arm in arm they walked down Queen Street toward the river. He asked her: ‘When you said that – about Tony being taken from the Elbe and given to the Thames – did you know he actually lives in a houseboat?’
The Dower House Page 2