Once more Lanny felt that soft moist hand, once more he looked into those gray-blue eyes set in a pale, pasty face, rather pudgy now. for Adi was gaining weight, in spite of or possibly because of his gall-bladder trouble. Looking at him, Lanny thought once more that here was the world’s greatest mystery. You might have searched all Europe and not found a more commonplace-appearing man; this Führer of the Fatherland had everything it took to make mediocrity. He was smaller than any of his three guests, and as he was now in a plain business suit with a white collar and black tie, he might have been a grocery assistant or traveling salesman for a hair tonic. He took no exercise, and his figure was soft, his shoulders narrow and hips wide like a woman’s. The exponent of Aryan purity was a mongrel if ever there was one; he had straight thick dark hair and wore one lock of it long, as Lanny had done when a boy. Apparently the only thing he tended carefully was that absurd little Charlie Chaplin mustache.
Watching him in his Berlin apartment, Lanny had thought: "It is a dream, and the German people will wake up from it." But now they were more deeply bemused than ever, and Lanny, trying to solve the riddle, decided that here was the Kleinbürgertum incarnate, the average German, the little man, the "man in the street." Thwarted and suppressed, millions of such men found their image in Adi Schicklgruber, understood him and believed his promises. The ways in which he differed from them—as in not eating meat and not getting drunk when he could—these made him romantic and inspiring, a great soul.
VI
The hotel attendant was standing in the doorway, with the picture resting on the floor; he steadied it with his left hand while keeping his right arm and hand extended outward and upward in a permanent salute. The Führer noticed him and asked: "What is this you have brought me?"
Lanny told him, and they stood the picture on a chair, with the attendant behind it, out of sight, holding it firmly. Hitler placed himself at a proper distance, and Lanny ceremoniously removed the cover. Then everybody stood motionless and silent while the great man did his looking.
"A beautiful thing!" he exclaimed. "That is my idea of a work of art. A Frenchman, you say? You may be sure that he had German forefathers. Who is the woman?"
"She is my mother," replied Lanny. He had made that statement hundreds of times in his life—Munich being the fifth great city in which he had assisted at an exhibition.
"A beautiful woman. You should be proud of her."
"I am," said Lanny, and added: "It is called Sister of Mercy. The painter was badly wounded in the war, and later killed. You can see that he felt what he was painting."
"Ah, yes!" exclaimed Adi. "I too, have been wounded, and know how a soldier feels about the women who nurse him. It would appear that great art comes only by suffering."
"So your Goethe has told us, Herr Reichskanzler."
A silence, while Hitler studied the painting some more. "A pure Aryan type," he commented; "the spiritual type which lends itself to idealization." He looked a while longer, and said: "Pity is one of the Aryan virtues. I doubt if the lesser races are capable of feeling it very deeply."
This went on for quite a while. The Führer looked, and then made a remark, and no one else ventured to speak unless it was a question. "This sort of art tells us that life is full of suffering. It should be the great task of mankind to diminish it as far as possible. You agree with that, Herr Budd?"
"Indeed I do; and I know that it was the leading idea of Marcel’s life."
"It is the task of the master race. They alone can fulfill it, because they have both the intelligence and the good will." Lanny was afraid he was going to repeat the question: "You agree with that?" and was trying to figure how to reply without starting an argument. But instead the Führer went on to inform him: "That should be our guiding thought in life. Here in this room we have three of the world’s great nationalities represented: the German, the French, the American. What a gain if these nations would unite to guard their Aryan purity and guarantee the reign of law throughout the world! Do you see any hope for that in our time?"
"It is a goal to aim at, Herr Reichskanzler. Each must do what he can."
"You may be sure that I will, Herr Budd. Tell it to everyone you know."
The master of Germany returned to the seat at his desk. "I am obliged to you for bringing me this portrait. I understand that you are having an exhibition?"
"Yes, Herr Reichskanzler; we should be honored if you would attend; or if you prefer, I will bring other samples of the work."
"I wish I could arrange it. Also"—turning to Kurt—"I was hoping to have you come to my apartment, where I have a piano. But I’m afraid I have to leave for Berlin. I was a happier man when I had only a political party to direct; now, alas, I have a government as well, and therefore a lover of music and art is compelled to give all his time and attention to the jealousies and rivalries of small men."
The picture-viewing was over, and the attendant carried it out, backing away and bowing at every step. The Führer turned to Kurt and asked about his music, and lifted a Komponist to the skies by saying that Kurt had rendered a real service to the cause. "We have to show the world that we National Socialists can produce talent and even genius, equal to the best of the past. Science must be brought to reinforce inspiration so that the Herrenvolk may ascend to new heights, and, if possible, raise the lesser tribes after them."
He turned to Heinrich. He wanted to hear all that a young official could tell him concerning the Hitler Jugend and its progress. The efficient head of a great organization was getting data about personalities and procedures over which he had control. He asked probing questions, watching the respondent through half-closed eyes. He could be sure that this official was telling him the truth, but it would be colored by the young man’s enthusiastic nature. Heinrich was hardly the one to report upon backstairs intrigue and treachery. "I wish I had more young men like you," remarked the Reichskanzler, wistfully.
"You have thousands of them, mein Führer," replied the enraptured ex-forester; "men whom you have never had an opportunity to meet."
"My staff try to shut me up as though I were an oriental despot," said Adi. "They talk to me about physical danger—but I know that it is my destiny to live and complete my work."
VII
It was quite an interview, and Lanny was on pins and needles for fear the great man might rise and say: "I am sorry, but my time is limited." Nobody could imagine anyone in a better humor; and Lanny looked at Kurt, and would have winked at him, only Kurt was keeping his eyes fixed upon his master and guide. Lanny tried telepathy, thinking as hard as he could: "Now! Now!"
"Mein Führer," said Kurt, "before we leave there is something which my friend Budd thinks I ought to tell you."
"What is it?"
"A great misfortune, but not his fault. It happens that his half-sister is married into a Jewish family."
"Dormerwetter!" exclaimed Adolf. "A shocking piece of news!"
"I should add that the husband is a fine concert violinist."
"We have plenty of Aryan artists, and no need to seek anything from that polluted race. What is the man’s name?"