I made a point of keeping on the right side of the landlord after that.
By my unfailing diligence I even managed to secure his grudging approval, though he was always ready to fly into a pa.s.sion at the least opportunity.
One evening about six o"clock a young man, whom I had never seen among our regular customers, came down the stairs from the street and asked for Haase, who was asleep on the sofa in the inner room. At the sight of the youth, Frau Hedwig jumped off her perch behind the bar and vanished.
She came back directly and, ignoring me, conducted the young man into the inner room, where he remained for about half an hour. Then he reappeared again, accompanied by Frau Hedwig, and went off.
I was shocked by the change in the appearance of the woman. Her face was pale, her eyes red with weeping, and her eyes kept wandering towards the door. It was a slack time of the day within and the cellar was free of customers.
"You look poorly, Frau Hedwig," I said. "Trouble with Haase again?"
She looked up at me and shook her head, her eyes br.i.m.m.i.n.g over. A tear ran down the rouge on her cheek.
"I must speak," she said. "I can"t bear this suspense alone. You are a kind young man. You are discreet. Julius, there is trouble brewing for us!"
"What do you mean?" I asked. A foreboding of evil rose within me.
"Kore!" she whispered.
"Kore?" I echoed. "What of him?"
She looked fearfully about her.
"He was taken yesterday morning," she said.
"Do you mean arrested?" I exclaimed, unwilling to believe the staggering news.
"They entered his apartment early in the morning and seized him in bed.
Ach! it is dreadful!" And she buried her face in her hands.
"But surely," I added soothingly, though with an icy fear at my heart, "there is no need to despair. What is an arrest to-day with all these regulations...."
The woman raised her face, pallid beneath its paint, to mine.
"Kore was shot at Moabit Prison this morning," she said in a low voice.
"That young man brought the news just now." Then she added breathlessly, her words pouring out in a torrent:
"You don"t know what this means to us. Haase had dealings with this Jew.
If they have shot him, it is because they have found out from him all they want to know. That means our ruin, that means that Haase will go the same way as the Jew.
"But Haase is stubborn, foolhardy. The messenger warned him that a raid might be expected here at any moment. I have pleaded with him in vain.
He believes that Kore has split; he believes the police may come, but he says they daren"t touch him: he has been too useful to them: he knows too much. Ach, I am afraid! I am afraid!"
Haase"s voice sounded from the inner room.
"Hedwig!" he called.
The woman hastily dried her eyes and disappeared through the door.
The coast was clear, if I wanted to escape, but where could I go, without a paper or pa.s.sport, a hunted man?
The news of Kore"s arrest and execution haunted me. Of course, the man was in a most perilous trade, and had probably been playing the game for years. But suppose they had tracked me to the house in the street called In den Zelten.
I crossed the room and opened the door to the street. I had never set foot outside since I had come, and, hopeless as it would be for me to attempt to escape, I thought I might reconnoitre the surroundings of the beer-cellar for the event of flight.
I lightly ran up the stairs to the street and nearly cannoned into a man who was lounging in the entrance. We both apologized, but he stared at me hard before he strolled on. Then I saw another man sauntering along on the opposite side of the street. Further away, at the corner, two men were loitering.
Every one of them had his eyes fixed on the cellar entrance at which I was standing.
I knew they could not see my face, for the street was but dimly lit, and behind me was the dark background of the cellar stairway. I took a grip on my nerves and very deliberately lit a cigarette and smoked it, as if I had come up from below to get a breath of fresh air. I waited a little while and then went down.
I was scarcely back in the cellar when Haase appeared from the inner room, followed by the woman. He carried himself erect, and his eyes were shining. I didn"t like the man, but I must say he looked game. In his hand he carried my papers.
"Here you are, my lad," he said in quite a friendly tone, "put "em in your pocket--you may want "em to-night."
I glanced at the papers before I followed his advice.
He noted my action and laughed.
"They have told you about Johann," he said. "Never fear, Julius, you and I are good friends."
The papers were those of Julius Zimmermann all right.
We were having supper at one of the tables in the front room--there were only a couple of customers, as it was so early--when a man, a regular visitor of ours, came down the stairs hurriedly. He went straight over to Haase and spoke into his ear.
"Mind yourself, Haase," I heard him say. "Do you know who had Kore arrested and shot? It was Clubfoot. There is more in this than we know.
Mind yourself and get out! In an hour or so it may be too late."
Then he scurried away, leaving me dazed.
"By G.o.d!" said the landlord, bringing a great fist down on the table so that the gla.s.ses rang, "they won"t touch me. Not the devil himself will make me leave this house before they come, if coming they are!"
The woman burst into tears, while Otto blinked his watery eyes in terror. I sat and looked at my plate, my heart too full for words. It was bitter to have dared so much to get this far and then find the path blocked, as it seemed, by an insuperable barrier. They were after me all right: the mention of Clubfoot"s name, the swift, stern retribution that had befallen Kore, made that certain--and I could do nothing. That cellar was a cul-de-sac, a regular trap, and I knew that if I stirred a foot from the house I should fall into the hands of those men keeping their silent vigil in the street.
Therefore, I must wait, as calmly as I might, and see what the evening would bring forth. Gradually the cellar filled up as people drifted in, but many familiar faces, I noticed, were missing. Evidently the ill tidings had spread. Once a man looked in for a gla.s.s of beer and drifted out again, leaving the door open. As I was closing it, I heard a m.u.f.fled exclamation and the sound of a scuffle at the head of the stairs. It was so quietly done that n.o.body below, save myself, knew what had happened.
The incident showed me that the watch was well kept.
The evening wore on--interminably, as it seemed to me. I darted to and fro from the bar, laden with mugs of beer and gla.s.ses of schnaps, incessantly, up and down. But I never failed, whenever there came a pause in the orders, to see that my journey finished somewhere in the neighbourhood of the door. A faint hope was glimmering in my brain.
Until the end of my life, that interminable evening in the beer-cellar will remain stamped in my memory. I can still see the scene in its every detail, and I know I shall carry the picture with me to the grave; the long, low room with its blackened ceiling, the garish yellow gaslight, the smoke haze, the crowded tables, Otto, shuffling hither and hither with his mean and sulky air, Frau Hedwig, preoccupied at her desk, red-eyed, a graven image of woe, and Haase, presiding over the beer-engine, silent, defiant, calm, but watchful every time the door opened.
When at last the blow fell, it came suddenly. A trampling of feet on the stairs, a great blowing of whistles ... then the door was burst open just as everybody in the cellar sprang to their feet amid exclamations and oaths from the men and shrill screams from the women. Outlined in the doorway stood Clubfoot, majestic, authoritative, wearing some kind of little skull-cap, such as duelling students wear, over a black silk handkerchief bound about his head. At the sight of the man the hubbub ceased on the instant. All were still save Haase, whose bull-like voice roaring for silence broke on the quiet of the room with the force of an explosion.
I was in my corner by the door, pressed back against the coats and hats hanging on the wall. In front of me a frieze of frightened faces screened me from observation. Quickly, I slipped off my ap.r.o.n.
Clubfoot, after casting a cursory glance round the room, strode its length towards the bar where Haase stood, a crowd of plain-clothes men and policemen at his heels. Then quite suddenly the light went out, plunging the place into darkness. Instantly the room was in confusion; women screamed; a voice, which I recognized as Clubfoot"s, bawled stentorianly for lights ... the moment had come to act.
I grabbed a hat and coat from the hall, got into them somehow, and darted to the door. In the dim light shining down the stairs from a street lamp outside, I saw a man at the door. Apparently he was guarding it.
"Back!" he cried, as I stepped up to him.