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Chapter 10

 It had been a terrible two weeks for Mr. Baynes. From his hotel room he had called the Trade Mission every day at noon to ask if the old gentleman had put in an appearance. The answer had been an unvarying no. Mr. Tagomi's voice had become colder and more formal each day. As Mr. Baynes prepared to make his sixteenth call, he thought, Sooner or later they'll tell me that Mr. Tagomi is out. That he isn't accepting any more calls from me. And that will be that.
 What has happened? Where is Mr. Yatabe?
 He had a fairly good idea. The death of Martin Bormann had caused immediate consternation in Tokyo. Mr. Yatabe no doubt had been en route to San Francisco, a day or so offshore, when new instructions had reached him. Return to the Home Islands for further consultation.
 Bad luck, Mr. Baynes realized. Possibly even fatal.
 But he had to remain where he was, in San Francisco. Still trying to arrange the meeting for which he had come. Forty-five minutes by Lufthansa rocket from Berlin, and now this. A weird time in which we are alive. We can travel anywhere we want, even to other planets. And for what? To sit day after day, declining in morale and hope. Falling into an interminable ennui. And meanwhile, the others are busy. They are not sitting helplessly waiting.
 Mr. Baynes unfolded the midday edition of the Nippon Times and once more read the headlines.

DR. GOEBBELS NAMED REICHS CHANCELLOR
 Surprise solution to leadership problem by Partei Committee. Radio speech viewed decisive. Berlin crowds cheer. Statement expected. G?ring may be named Police Chief over Heydrich.

 He reread the entire article. And then he put the paper once more away, took the phone, and gave the Trade Mission number.
 "This is Mr. Baynes. May I have Mr. Tagomi?"
 "A moment, sir."
 A very long moment.
 "Mr. Tagomi here."
 Mr. Baynes took a deep breath and said, "Forgive this situation depressing to us both, sir --"
 "Ah. Mr. Baynes."
 "Your hospitality to me sir, could not be exceeded. Someday I know you will have understanding of the reasons which cause me to defer our conference until the old gentleman --"
 "Regretfully, he has not arrived."
 Mr. Baynes shut his eyes. "I thought maybe since yesterday --"
 "Afraid not, sir." The barest politeness. "If you will excuse me, Mr. Baynes. Pressing business."
 "Good day, sir."
 The phone clicked. Today Mr. Tagomi had rung off without even saying good-bye. Mr. Baynes slowly hung the receiver.
 I must take action. Can wait no longer.
 It had been made very clear to him by his superiors that he was not to contact the Abwehr under any circumstances. He was simply to wait until he had managed to make connections with the Japanese military representative; he was to confer with the Japanese, and then he was to return to Berlin. But no one had forseen that Bormann would die at this particular moment. Therefore the orders had to be superseded. By more practical advice. His own, in this case, since there was no one else to consult.
 In the PSA at least ten Abwehr persons were at work, but some of them -- and possibly all -- were known to the local SD and its competent senior regional chief, Bruno Kreuz vom Meere. Years ago he had met Bruno briefly at a Partei gathering. The man had had a certain infamous prestige in Police circles, inasmuch as it had been he, in 1943, who had uncovered the British-Czech plot on Reinhard Heydrich's life, and therefore who might be said to have saved the Hangman from assassination. In any case, Bruno Kreuz vom Meere was already then ascending in authority within the SD. He was not a mere police bureaucrat.
 He was, in fact, a rather dangerous man.
 There was even a possibility that even with all the precautions taken, both on the part of the Abwehr in Berlin and the Tokkoka in Tokyo, the SD had learned of this attempted meeting in San Francisco in the offices of the Ranking Trade Mission. However, this was after all Japanese-administered land. The SD had no official authority to interfere. It could see to it that the German principal -- himself in this case -- was arrested as soon as he set foot again on Reich territory; but it could hardly take action against the Japanese principal, or against the existence of the meeting itself.
 At least, so he hoped.
 Was there any possibility that the SD had managed to detain the old Japanese gentleman somewhere along the route? It was a long way from Tokyo to San Francisco, especially for a person so elderly and frail that he could not attempt air travel.
 What I must do, Mr. Baynes knew, is find out from those above me whether Mr. Yatabe is still coming. They would know. If the SD had intercepted him or if the Tokyo Government has recalled him -- they would know that.
 And if they have managed to get to the old gentleman, he realized, they certainly are going to get to me.
 Yet the situation even in those circumstances was not hopeless. An idea had come to Mr. Baynes as he waited day after day alone in his room at the Abhirati Hotel.
 It would be better to give my information to Mr. Tagomi than to return to Berlin empty-handed. At least that way there would be a chance, even if it is rather slight, that ultimately the proper people will be informed. But Mr. Tagomi could only listen; that was the fault in his idea. At best, he could hear, commit to memory, and as soon as possible take a business trip back to the Home Islands. Whereas Mr. Yatabe stood at policy level. He could both hear and speak.
 Still, it was better than nothing. The time was growing too short. To begin all over, to arrange painstakingly, cautiously, over a period of months once again the delicate contact between a faction in Germany and a faction in Japan. . .
 It certainly would surprise Mr. Tagomi, he thought acidly. To suddenly find knowledge of that kind resting on his shoulders. A long way from facts about injection molds. . .
 Possibly he might have a nervous breakdown. Either blurt out the information to someone around him, or withdraw; pretend, even to himself, that he had not heard it. Simply refuse to believe me. Rise to his feet, bow and excuse himself from the room, the moment I begin.
 Indiscreet. He could regard it that way. He is not supposed to hear such matters.
 So easy, Mr. Baynes thought. The way out is so immediate, so available, to him. He thought, I wish it was for me.
 And yet in the final anaylsis it is not possible even for Mr. Tagomi. We are no different. He can close his ears to the news as it comes from me, comes in the form of words. But later. When it is not a matter of words. If I can make that clear to him now. Or to whomever I finally speak.
 Leaving his hotel room, Mr. Baynes descended by elevator to the lobby. Outside on the sidewalk, he had the doorman call a pedecab for him, and soon he was on his way up Market Street, the Chinese driver pumping away energetically.
 "There," he said to the driver, when he made out the sign which he was watching for. "Pull over to the curb."
 The pedecab stopped by a fire hydrant. Mr. Baynes paid the driver and sent him off. No one seemed to have followed. Mr. Baynes set off along the sidewalk on foot. A moment later, along with several other shoppers, he entered the big downtown Fuga Department Store.
 There were shoppers everywhere. Counter after counter. Salesgirls, mostly white, with a sprinkling of Japanese as department managers. The din was terrific.
 After some confusion Mr. Baynes located the men's clothing department. He stopped at the racks of men's trousers and began to inspect them. Presently a clerk, a young white, came over, greeting him.
 Mr. Baynes said, "I have returned for the pair of dark brown wool slacks which I was looking at yesterday." Meeting the clerk's gaze he said, "You're not the man I spoke to. He was taller. Red mustache. Rather thin. On his jacket he had the name Larry."
 The clerk said, "He is presently out to lunch. But will return."
 "I'll go into a dressing room and try these on," Mr. Baynes said, taking a pair of slacks from the rack.
 "Certainly, sir." The clerk indicated a vacant dressing room, and then went off to wait on someone else.
 Mr. Baynes entered the dressing room and shut the door. He seated himself on one of the two chairs and waited.
 After a few minutes there was a knock. The door of the dressing room opened and a short middle-aged Japanese entered. "You are from out of state, sir?" he said to Mr. Baynes. "And I am to okay your credit? Let me see your identification." He shut the door behind him.
 Mr. Baynes got out his wallet. The Japanese seated himself with the wallet and began inspecting the contents. He halted at a photo of a girl. "Very pretty."
 "My daughter. Martha."
 "I, too, have a daughter named Martha," the Japanese said. "She at present is in Chicago studying piano."
 "My daughter," Mr. Baynes said, "is about to be married."
 The Japanese returned the wallet and waited expectantly.
 Mr. Baynes said, "I have been here two weeks and Mr. Yatabe has not shown up. I want to find out if he is still coming. And if not, what I should do."
 "Return tomorrow afternoon," the Japanese said. He rose, and Mr. Baynes also rose. "Good day."
 "Good day," Mr. Baynes said. He left the dressing room, hung the pair of slacks back up on the rack, and left the Fuga Department Store.
 That did not take very long, he thought as he moved along the busy downtown sidewalk with the other pedestrians. Can he actually get the information by then? Contact Berlin, relay my questions, do all the coding and decoding -- every step involved?
 Apparently so.
 Now I wish I had approached the agent sooner. I would have saved myself much worry and distress. And evidently no major risk was involved; it all appeared to go off smoothly. It took in fact only five or six minutes.
 Mr. Baynes wandered on, looking into store windows. He felt much better now. Presently he found himself viewing display photos of honky-tonk cabarets, grimy flyspecked utterly white nudes whose breasts hung like half-inflated volleyballs. That sight amused him and he loitered, people pushing past him on their various errands up and down Market Street.
 At least he had done something, at last.
 What a relief!

 Propped comfortably against the car door, Juliana read. Beside her, his elbow out the window, Joe drove with one hand lightly on the wheel, a cigarette stuck to his lower lip; he was a good driver, and they had covered a good deal of the distance from Canon City already.
 The car radio played mushy beer-garden folk music, an accordion band doing one of the countless polkas or schottishes; she had never been able to tell them one from another.
 "Kitsch," Joe said, when the music ended. "Listen, I know a lot about music; I'll tell you who a great conductor was. You probably don't remember him. Arturo Toscanini."
 "No," she said, still reading.
 "He was Italian. But the Nazis wouldn't let him conduct after the war, because of his politics. He's dead, now. I don't like that von Karajan, permanent conductor of the New York Philharmonic. We had to go to concerts by him, our work dorm. What I like, being a wop -- you can guess." He glanced at her. "You like that book?" he said.
 "It's engrossing."
 "I like Verdi and Puccini. All we get in New York is heavy German bombastic Wagner and Orff, and we have to go every week to one of those corny U.S. Nazi Party dramatic spectacles at Madison Square Garden, with the flags and drums and trumpets and the flickering flame. History of the Gothic tribes or other educational crap, chanted instead of spoken, so as to be called 'art.'  Did you ever see New York before the war?"
 "Yes," she said, trying to read.
 "Didn't they have swell theater in those days? That's what I heard. Now it's the same as the movie industry; it's all a cartel in Berlin. In the thirteen years I've been in New York not one good new musical or play ever opened, only those --"
 "Let me read," Juliana said.
 "And the same with the book business," Joe said, unperturbed. "It's all a cartel operating out of Munich. All they do in New York is print; just big printing presses -- but before the war, New York was the center of the world's publishing industry, or so they say."
 Putting her fingers in her ears, she concentrated on the page open in her lap, shutting his voice out. She had arrived at a section in The Grasshopper which described the fabulous television, and it enthralled her; especially the part about the inexpensive little sets for backward people in Africa and Asia.

. . . Only Yankee know-how and the mass-production system -- Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland, the magic names! -- could have done the trick, sent that ceaseless and almost witlessly noble flood of cheap one-dollar (the China Dollar, the trade dollar) television kits to every village and backwater of the Orient. And when the kit had been assembled by some gaunt, feverish-minded youth in the village, starved for a chance, for that which the generous Americans held out to him, that tinny little instrument with its built-in power supply no larger than a marble began to receive. And what did it receive? Crouching before the screen, the youths of the village -- and often the elders as well -- saw words. Instructions. How to read, first. Then the rest. How to dig a deeper well. Plow a deeper furrow. How to purify their water, heal their sick. Overhead, the American artificial moon wheeled, distributing the signal, carrying it everywhere. . . to all the waiting, avid masses of the East.

 "Are you reading straight through?" Joe asked. "Or skipping around in it?"
 She said, "This is wonderful; he has us sending food and education to all the Asiatics, millions of them."
 "Welfare work on a worldwide scale," Joe said.
 "Yes. The New Deal under Tugwell; they raise the level of the masses -- listen." She read aloud to Joe:

. . . What had China been? Yearning, one needful commingled entity looking toward the West, its great democratic President, Chiang Kai-shek, who had led the Chinese people through the years of war, now into the years of peace, into the Decade of Rebuilding. But for China it was not a rebuilding, for that almost supernaturally vast flat land had never been built, lay still slumbering in the ancient dream. Arousing; yes, the entity, the giant, had to partake at last of full consciousness, had to waken into the modern world with its jet airplanes and atomic power, its autobahns and factories and medicines. And from whence would come the crack of thunder which would rouse the giant? Chiang had known that, even during the struggle to defeat Japan. It would come from the United States. And, by 1950, American technicians and engineers, teachers, doctors, agronomists, swarming like some new life form into each province, each --

 Interrupting, Joe said, "You know what he's done, don't you? He's taken the best about Nazism, the socialist part, the Todt Organization and the economic advances we got through Speer, and who's he giving the credit to? The New Deal. And he's left out the bad part, the SS part, the racial extermination and segregation. It's a utopia! You imagine if the Allies had won, the New Deal would have been able to revive the economy and make those socialist welfare improvements, like he says? Hell no; he's talking about a form of state syndicalism, the corporate state, like we developed under the Duce. He's saying, You would have had all the good and none of --"
 "Let me read," she said fiercely.
 He shrugged. But he did cease babbling. She read on at once, but to herself.

. . . And these markets, the countless millions of China, set the factories in Detroit and Chicago to humming; that............

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