Fire hoses and loose specks of stone on the floor are a nuisance. Dripping water from the wall nourishes tiny brave mushrooms. All this artificial light flickers. There’s the sour smell of wet concrete—when first poured it didn’t properly dry and now steams. At night I have to tuck my nightgown under my feet to protect my legs from water bugs. Getting a direct hit, the floor shakes and it’s like we’re being pounded down a mile deeper. But I’m used to that knowing it’s much worse outside. Adi’s personal aide, Heinz Linge, is afraid to leave the Bunker even when it’s all clear. We call him a Bunker Bug. Other staff members are Bunker Bugs, too, especially those functionaries from the Berlin Ministry who thought they were so brave exchanging their brown Party uniforms for the field-gray of the Wehrmacht and who are now Bunker cowards.
We have a 60-kilowatt diesel generator, but it’s shut off from time to time to keep out all the smoke and dirt. When it’s off, I tend to get coughing fits and headaches. Potassium cartridges were tried, the type used to purify air in a submarine, but these didn’t work… probably because of our cavernous space.
Magda Goebbels calls our Bunker the “black splotch,” but she’s very clever in helping with morale as she makes us both fashionable gauze masks with sequins—beautiful red sequins that she took from her taffeta Schiaparelli gown with its leg-of-mutton sleeves. Pink silk butterflies are pinned on the masks of her children. Though cheerful, they also protect us from the occasional thick black dust. Just a simple thing like that can lift your spirits.
I have a wrought-iron chair that was once piled on a huge stack of bricks and beams in Friedrichstrasse. Two young lieutenants rescued it while salvos whistled past them and white flashes seared into their eyes. It’s a daring bunker gift. Since good cloth is impossible to find, I’ll cover it with a large linen dinner napkin. I despise all those civilians in the city up above sewing white surrender flags out of flour sacks that could be put to better use. It’s more helpful to Germany to be like the patients confined to SS hospitals who have hand grenades under their pillows ready to pull the pin and take some Russians with them. As Adi says: “Every person to his duty—even the sick.”
It was Adi’s architect, Speer, who designed my initials into a lucky four-leaf clover design, and I’m having a hard time getting the napkin to fit around the chair with the “EB” showing. This morning I received a silver butter knife from Goebbels, one he took from the gutted shell of the Café Kaiserholf. Goebbels looked so funny wearing a huge camel-hair coat in April, bowing before me, holding out this little knife like a flower, suggesting I use the blade to push the linen into each crevice of the chair.
Oak doors were conveniently catapulted by a bomb explosion to the grass above our entrance. They will be good wall panels to cover up patches of ugly moisture, along with an Egyptian blue curtain with gilded detailing that I brought from the Berghof. Bright blue is a favorite of the Empire Style that Adi so admires. Magda moved in eight pieces of furniture which included her table of enameled iron, a gift from novelist Werner Beumelburg who was among the first artists to sign the appeal in support of the Führer’s decree against elite art. I was allowed to bring a cherry wood table with eight matching chairs and a cabinet by Herr Gruber, one of the most esteemed craftsmen in Vienna. But Adi likes it best when I use things like an old trunk for a table. Magda was reading Gulliver’s Travels to her children and the little midget people in the book found a weird object in Gulliver’s pocket. It was a comb that they used for a fence. I’m forced to use my imagination even being normal, like making a milk carton into a bench. The children place toothpicks alongside their bed like medieval spikes to protect them from the enemy.
When we had a surplus of flour, I use to sprinkle it over the walls, letting the flour seep in the cracks to blur the concrete and give it an antique look, a warm weathered surface you might see in Greece or Italy. Even Marie Antoinette had a taste for ancient Rome. I’ve never been to Greece, but I did go to Venice, and I met Musso at the Berghof. Could that man eat and drink. Adi came to admire him saying Mussolini was the only Roman among a whole pack of Italians. Musso would have been a lot more successful if he had some solid German snow now and then—to harden him up. He pampered himself too much. Comes from all that Italian sun. Comes from being waited on by his mother, sisters, and aunts in that silly peasant village of Predappio.
Musso was intimidated by the Italian monarchy and said the Führer ranted and raved like a gramophone with seven records even though he himself gave speeches that Adi felt were so much pasta from the International Lodge of Princes. Yet Adi had an affection for him.
Standing on the terrace at Berchtesgaden, his legs widespread, hands on his hips, Adi would imitate the silly ranting and raving of Musso for me and Goebbels: “Salata! Pesce fresca bel canto alfredo. Resotto spinaci! Minestrina biscotti branzino basta!”
Laughing until tears streamed down our cheeks, Goebbels would add: “The Italian Navy has wash flying from their mast.” Then we’d beg Adi to give more Musso speeches… more speeches… until Blondi came bounding in arching a blubbery lip at me and demanding one of her selfish walks.
Musso. Wearing white all the time, he showed poor people that he could afford to have his clothes constantly cleaned for he perspired through five shirts a day from all the food he ate. He sweated so much he had to be toweled by his aides at every available moment.
Adi once took Musso to a good Munich restaurant and even ordered an orchestra to play the Italian fascist anthem “Giovinezza” before dinner. An illiterate eater, the Duce consumed two eel pies for an appetizer, drank a dozen large foaming steins of Salvator Block, ordered the main dish of fish cakes in goose fat five times—two times eating three courses in reverse order. Once he plunged his fat hands into his favorite lamb stew scooping up the meaty liquid around his clunky nose, nearly rinsing his nostrils. He recited one canto of Dante after each course to aid digestion, though it was hard for him to stop at one. So he dispensed with his savagely boring recitation for the sake of a congenial conversation with the Führer. However, in his crude elementary German, he did mention a character named Tacitus who claimed ancient Germans were savage and crude.
“What kind of polite history is that?” I asked Adi.
Adi countered by reciting for him what Tacitus once said: “You don’t know what war is really like until you have fought the Germans.”
“Wonderful! Perfect response! Now if you want a happy vision,” I ventured, “imagine seeing obese Mussolini and Göring side by side in a tiny opera box at La Scala.”
Adi laughed, and it pleased me to see him amused and happy.
After dinner one night at the Berghof, Musso presented us with a gift of one hundred bottles of Olio Sasso, an Italian olive oil much prized in Germany. Then he announced: “I plan to deliver to your New National Museum at Linz the Plague in Florence. A valuable Makart, as you well know. Perhaps I will fly it there myself.”
No doubt this painting was truly authentic since Goebbels told me that Musso had the good taste to loot a fourth century obelisk from Ethiopia that’s now in Rome. Yet fat Musso flying a plane? His adjutant said he was a good pilot, but what else could a lowly adjutant say?
“Why do you hate Barlach’s sculptures so much?” Musso asked in a tone of forced innocence. “He’s not a Jew.”
“We have placed a great importance on art, and his work is too close to the edge of expressionism… though I was quite taken with his The Berserker,” Goebbels replied.
“It’s the brutal title that impresses you.” This from Adi.
“But I believe his woodcuts are often compared to primitive art, a relative of your German Gothic wood carvers,” Musso added.
“We don’t approve of his Animal people,” I put in, remembering the drawings Goebbels showed me… awful hairy charcoals.
“Yet you tolerate houses patterned after the Ringstrasse style—flaunting their elaborate, senseless Gothic baroque,” Musso offered.
“Merely the taste of scattered individuals,” I replied.
“Art is the measure of racial health,” Adi announced. “There is a great bond between art and politics, and we strive for that which declares our race and fatherland into a trusted Volksgemeinschaft. No society outlives the history of their culture.”
Musso, suddenly bored with banter on art, stood looking around for another fruit bowl while splitting open a melon and extracting two tubes of my lipstick from its juicy center. Smiling, he handed them to me all slimy with seeds. An accomplished pickpocket, he had taken them from my purse that was hanging over a chair. Soon he was flaunting a scarf he had stolen from my neck. He entertained us with his cleverness that surprisingly made Adi smile and even chuckle. Though I was happy to see Adi amused, I secretly found Musso superficial.
“Other works can possibly be sent to your Führerbauten in Munich,” Musso announced. “I have a few things in mind for your Kaiser-Friedrich Museum in Berlin. Easy for me to acquire, like a stroll on the Passo Romano. I only request, as a small favor that you secure for me a Shirley Temple doll for a dear lady friend.” He balanced a sprig of grapes in front of his puffy lips and passed me a swollen apple under his chin. “Tell me, Mein Dear Führer, what comes after the Third Reich? The Fourth? And so on?” He gave a sinister laugh.
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