So Casey Harmer had come back into Zoë’s life.
It explained her long silences and her eagerness to get back to the States. Casey Harmer had first appeared in England from Canada about 1917 and after the war, Zoë had shot off to Canada as if the hounds of hell were after her in search of the job he’d promised – perhaps also Harmer himself. Now, after nine years, he appeared to be back in circulation.
A bundle of aviation magazines arrived the following morning from Foote. They included articles on women pilots and there was more than one on Zoë alone, together with photographs, invariably depicting her leaning on a wing strut or against a propeller, wearing a flying helmet and the bug-eyed goggles that were so popular. Her normal dress appeared to be jodhpurs or white overalls and her name was mentioned in the same breath with Amelia Earhart, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, Thea Rasche and Ruth Elder, though always it seemed, tagging a little behind the others. Male aviation seemed almost lost in the publicity.
Needing to know more about her, Dicken began to enquire round the hangars. The response was predictable.
‘Hell,’ one pilot said with a grin, ‘that one sure is a looker.’
It seemed to be time to look her up and Dicken started making plans to go to the Baltimore air races. There were two clear weeks at the end of the course when they were free to do as they wished and as Hatto had disappeared to Washington to visit his Foreign Office brother who was at that moment with the Embassy there, Dicken persuaded Doolittle to fly him down.
As they landed, in one corner of the airfield as part of the ballyhoo, an air display was taking place and several elderly machines stood in a flag-enclosed area. A man in a straw hat and yellow boots was collecting entrance money near a notice, ‘Hank Rabat will positively stand upright without support on the top wing of an aeroplane.’
A machine was just climbing over the end of the field and a patch of undoped fabric rippled in the slipstream. One wingtip looked like a bandaged thumb, and there were several tears in the fabric of the fuselage that had been crudely sewn up, but the pilot wore the usual tight-fitting helmet with fluttering ribbons, and big bug-eyed goggles.
‘This is why I spend so much time with the science of the game,’ Doolittle explained. ‘Rabat loops a Ford Trimotor, though what the hell good that does, I don’t know. These guys are on their way out. Flying’s becoming respectable since they issued licences and they’re finding it harder every year now the government’s watching. An inspection would finish most of ’em, I guess.’
A band, flat straw boaters on the backs of their heads, their jackets discarded to show red, white and blue sleeve bands, were thumping out a tune and a few people in flivvers were watching, nervously expectant, chewing at chicken legs and cold fried chops and scattering their newspapers and wrappings to the breeze.
‘Eventually, I guess,’ Doolittle said dryly, ‘somebody’ll change planes, wing to wing, and if they miss and fall nobody’ll give a damn. These guys aren’t aviators; they’re trapeze artists. Tomorrow, there’ll probably be six-inch headlines in the papers, “Plane Plows Into Crowd. Six Dead.” That sort of thing.’
With almost thirty events, the programme included several cross-country races terminating over the field, and a woman pilots’ race round a course marked by three pylons. Somewhere near the finish Dicken had a feeling he would find Zoë.
As he searched for her, to his surprise, he bumped into Udet, a little fatter than before, a little balder, but smiling as always and clutching a bouquet of flowers.
‘Udlinger!’
‘Dicken Quinney!’
‘What are you doing here?’
‘Stunts.’ Udet grinned, led the way into a shabby office where his flying gear was piled on a chair and dragged out a flask. ‘You must come and visit me in Berlin,’ he said as he filled glasses. ‘The Tauentzienstrasse isn’t as good as the Place Pigalle in Paris but Berlin’s always good for entertainment.’
‘I’d like to see Lo again.’
Udet gave him a sad smile. ‘That is over,’ he admitted. ‘It vas my fault, I think. Someone once asked her why she left me. She said, “I left him? You don’t know what you’re talking about. I couldn’t ever keep up with him.” I am here because in Germany things have changed. All is too much political. It iss bad now. I am glad to get avay.’
Underneath his smiles there seemed to be a worry at the way Germany was heading and he had nothing but scorn for her rulers. Assassination, it seemed, was the order of the day and the political parties contained every creed imaginable, while an ex-Serviceman’s party known as the Stahlhelm, largely ex-officers and NCOs, could not forget that they had been chased through the streets after the defeat in 1918 and had their epaulettes torn from their shoulders by the parties of the extreme Left.
‘The German people long for a leader,’ Udet said, refilling the glasses. ‘Any leader. But they don’t know who, because there’s nobody who’s an obvious choice.’
He made no bones about the fact that German airmen were being trained in secret under a variety of disguises – and had been for years – on the banks of the Voronezh in Russia.
‘And, of course, we are building aeroplanes,’ he admitted.
The army, he explained, had provided the pretext for a large scale provision of funds by German industrialists. With the French army occupying the Ruhr and clearly not intending to leave, they had said that the only way for Germany to regain its industrial strength was to drive them out, and the industrialists, realising what the prizes could be, had found the money. Fokker aircraft – ironically powered by British Napier Lion engines – had been acquired from Holland, and young Germans in civilian clothes were being sent off with forged passports to learn to fly them. For the look of the thing, Russian machines were dispersed about the airfield and Russian soldiers provided the guards.
‘But everything comes from Germany,’ Udet continued. ‘Shipped from Stettin to Leningrad. The machines are in crates, and bombs are smuggled across the Baltic in small boats. Vhen there are accidents and bodies haf to be brought home they come in cases labelled “engine parts”.’
He gestured with the whisky flask. ‘They tried to get me as Chief Flying Instructor,’ he admitted. ‘But I’m making too much money in my own vay and I don’t like uniforms. On the other hand–’ the old familiar grin came ‘–they do vell with the girls.’
‘Do the German people know all this?’ Dicken asked.
‘But of course, my friend. And they are proud of it. Germany is air-minded in a way that the English have forgotten. Didn’t ve make a public ceremony of the return of the Rittmeister from his grave in France? Thousands turned up. I was there myself. So was President von Hindenburg, several senior officers and many of his old eagles. There are a lot who would like to see the Richthofen Geschwader flying again. And it will.’
‘How?’
Udet shrugged. ‘We teach the liddle boys to glide. There’s nothing in the Versailles peace terms that say ve mustn’t have non-powered aircraft and you can learn a lot about flying in a glider. Enough to move quickly, when the time comes, on to powered aircraft. And Lufthansa, the airline, is run by a type called Erhard Milch, who was a flier during the war. They are good. Even your RAF uses their blind approach system. Goering vorks for them, too, and he and Milch are like that.’ Udet held up two fingers. ‘They’re in it up to here.’ Udet’s hand went to the top of his head. ‘Goering is surrounding himself with fliers und he is telling them “to cherish hatred for the British and the French”. Between them, they are picking the cream of the German youth, and civilian air liners can become bombers just like that.’ His fingers clicked. He leaned closer. ‘Do you know Heinkel has a machine mit a 750-horse BMW engine that is faster than the RAF’s latest fighter?’
‘I expect we know about it,’ Dicken said, doubting it even as he spoke.
Udet smiled. ‘You don’t behave as if you do. Our politicians don’t. Only this Bavarian ex-corporal, Hitler, who runs the National Socialists. And him I don’t trust. I use his picture as a target for pistol practice.’ His smile had changed to a frown.
‘He talks already of war. Und how he talks! I’ve heard him. He doesn’t believe in conciliation, understanding und world peace. Next time, you see, he von’t have to do the fighting, and politicians are always good at going in for wars when they don’t have to wage them. But his aims are for a greater Germany and, I, my friend, am a German and vill do vhat I can to help. There is something here today you must see. During the war did you never notice that vhen you strafed our trenches you aimed your bombs by aiming the airplane? The American Marines have developed that as a technique. In 1919 they discovered they could hit a target more often by diving low at an angle of forty-five degrees, and they began to use it to deal mit the uprisings in Haiti and Santo Domingo. Last year a detachment was cut off in Nicaragua and their DH4s drove the enemy away by this dive-bombing. Such methods could win a war.’
‘Which war?’
‘The next one.’
‘When will that be?’
Udet gave him a wide grin. ‘Sooner than you think, my old friend. If you take the trouble to look, you’ll notice that the Nazis are on the move. The streets of Berlin are full of SA men and if you listen carefully you’ll hear what they’re saying.’
‘What are they saying?’
Udet gave him a smile that was a mixture of sadness and guilt. ‘Deutschland erwache!’ he said. ‘Germany awake!’