When Tony was fifteen, Kate suggested he spend his summer vacation in South Africa. He had never been there. 'I can't get away just now, Tony, but you'll find it a fascinating place. I'll make all the arrangements for you.'

'I was s-sort of h-hoping to spend my vacation at Dark Harbor, M-mother.'

'Next summer,' Kate said firmly. 'This summer I would like you to go to Johannesburg.'

Kate carefully briefed the company superintendent in Johan-nesburg, and together they laid out an itinerary for Tony. Each day was planned with one objective in view: to make this trip as exciting as possible for Tony, to make him realize his future lay with the company.

Kate received a daily report about her son. He had been taken into one of the gold mines. He had spent two days in the dia-mond fields. He had been on a guided tour of the Kruger-Brent plants, and had gone on a safari in Kenya.

A few days before Tony's vacation ended, Kate telephoned the company manager in Johannesburg. 'How is Tony getting along?'

'Oh, he's having a great time, Mrs. Blackwell. In fact, this morning he asked if he couldn't stay on a little longer.'

Kate felt a surge of pleasure. 'That's wonderful! Thank you.'

When Tony's vacation was over, he went to Southampton, England, where he boarded a Pan American Airways System plane for the United States. Kate flew Pan American whenever possible. It spoiled her for other airlines.

Kate left an important meeting to greet her son when he arrived at the Pan American terminal at the newly built La Guar-dia Airport in New York. His handsome face was filled with enthusiasm.

'Did you have a good time, darling?'

'South Africa's a f-fantastic country, M-mother. Did you know they f-flew me to the Namib Desert where grandfather s-stole those diamonds from Great-grandfather v-van der Merwe?'

'He didn't steal them, Tony,' Kate corrected him. 'He merely took what was his.'

'Sure,' Tony scoffed. 'Anyway, I was th-there. There was no sea mis, but they s-still have the guards and dogs and everything.' He grinned. 'They wouldn't give me any s-samples.'

Kate laughed happily. 'They don't have to give you any samples, darling. One day they will all be yours.'

'You t-tell them. They wouldn't l-listen to me.'

She hugged him. 'You did enjoy it, didn't you?' She was enormously pleased that at last Tony was excited about his heritage.

'You know what I loved m-most?'

Kate smiled lovingly. 'What?'

'The colors. I p-painted a lot of landscapes th-there. I hated to leave. I want to go back there and p- paint.'

'Paint?' Kate tried to sound enthusiastic. 'That sounds like a wonderful hobby, Tony.'

'No. I don't m-mean as a hobby, Mother. I want to be a p-painter. I've been thinking a lot about it. I'm going to P-paris to study. I really think I might have some talent.'

Kate felt herself tensing. 'You don't want to spend the rest of your life painting.'

'Yes, I do, M-mother. It's the only thing I really c-care about.'

And Kate knew she had lost.

He has a right to live his own life, Kate thought. But how can I let him make such a terrible mistake?

In September, the decision was taken out of both their hands Europe went to war.

'I want you to enroll in the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce,' Kate informed Tony. 'In two years if you still want to be an artist, you'll have my blessing.' Kate was certain that by then Tony would change his mind. It was inconceivable that her son would choose to spend his life slapping daubs of color on bits of canvas when he could head the most exciting conglomerate in the world. He was, after all, her son.

To Kate Blackwell, World War II was another great opportunity. There were worldwide shortages of military supplies and materials, and Kruger-Brent was able to furnish them. One division of the company provided equipment for the armed forces, while another division took care of civilian needs. The company factories were working twenty-four hours a day.

Kate was certain the United States was not going to be able to remain neutral. President Franklin D. Roosevelt called upon the country to be the great arsenal of democracy, and on March 11, 1941, the Lend-Lease Bill was pushed through Congress. Allied shipping across the Atlantic was menaced by the German blockade. U-boats, the German submarines, attacked and sank scores of Allied ships, fighting in wolf packs of eight.

Germany was a juggernaut that seemingly could not be stopped. In defiance of the Versailles Treaty, Adolf Hitler had built up one of the greatest war machines in history. In a new blitzkrieg technique, Germany attacked Poland, Belgium and

the Netherlands, and in rapid succession, the German machine crushed Denmark, Norway, Luxembourg and France.

Kate went into action when she received word that Jews working in the Nazi-confiscated Kruger-Brent, Ltd., factories were being arrested and deported to concentration camps. She made two telephone calls, and the following week she was on her way to Switzerland. When she arrived at the Baur au Lac Hotel in Zurich, there was a message that Colonel Brinkmann wished to see her. Brinkmann had been a manager of the Berlin branch of Kruger-Brent, Ltd. When the factory had been taken over by the Nazi government, Brinkmann was given the rank of colonel and kept in charge.

He came to see Kate at the hotel. He was a thin, precise man with blond hair combed carefully over bis balding skull. 'I am delighted to see you, Frau Blackwell. I have a message for you from my government. I am authorized to assure you that as soon as we have won the war, your factories will be returned to you. Germany is going to be the greatest industrial power the world has ever known, and we welcome the collaboration of people such as yourself.'

'What if Germany loses?'

Colonel Brinkmann allowed a small smile to play on his lips. 'We both know that cannot happen, Frau Blackwell. The United States is wise to stay out of Europe's business. I hope it continues to do so.'

'I'm sure you do, Colonel.' She leaned forward. 'I've heard rumors about Jews being sent to concentration camps and being exterminated. Is that true?'

'British propaganda, I assure you. It is true that die Juden are sent to work camps, but I give you my word as an officer that they are being treated as they should be.'

Kate wondered exactly what those words meant. She intended to find out.

The following day Kate made an appointment with a promi-aent German merchant named Otto Bueller. Bueller was in his fifties, a distinguished-looking man with a compassionate face and eyes that had known deep suffering. They met at a small cafe near the bahnhof. Herr Bueller selected a table in a deserted corner.

'I've been told,' Kate said softly, 'that you've started an underground to help smuggle Jews into neutral countries. Is that true?'

'It's not true, Mrs. Blackwell. Such an act would be treason against the Third Reich.'

'I have also heard that you're in need of funds to run it.'

Herr Bueller shrugged. 'Since there is no underground, I have no need of funds to run it, is that not so?'

His eyes kept nervously darting around the cafe. This was a man who breathed and slept with danger each day of his life.

'I was hoping I might be of some help,' Kate said carefully. 'Kruger-Brent, Limited, has factories in many neutral and Allied countries. If someone could get the refugees there, I would arrange for them to have employment.'

Herr Bueller sat there sipping a bitter coffee. Finally, he said, 'I know nothing about these things. Politics are dangerous these days. But if you are interested in helping someone in distress, I have an uncle in England who suffers from a terrible, debilitating disease. His doctor bills are very high.'

'How high?'

'Fifty thousand dollars a month. Arrangements would have to be made to deposit the money for his medical expenses in London and transfer the deposits to a Swiss bank.'

'That can be arranged.'

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