anti-Semite, who was himself shot down by the guards.
The anarchists took power. They were led by the gentle Jewish poet Gustav Landauer, whose beard and rhetoric were flowing. The “Schwabing Soviet” nationalised everything, closed all the cafes except Cafe Stefanie and put the students in charge of the universities. They searched houses for hoarded food and found none. There was no food and the Allies were blockading the borders. The Foreign Secretary, a mild man, wrote urgent letters to Lenin and the Pope, complaining that someone had stolen his lavatory key.
In April there was an attempted putsch by the government in exile, and briefly, a Bavarian soviet, led by another Jew, the Spartakist Eugen Levine. The exiles, reluctantly, having hoped to regain Bavaria with Bavarian troops, asked for help from the federal German army. They took Starnberg and Dachau. The White Terror came next. Landauer was brutally slaughtered. Levine was formally executed. The Ehrhardt Brigade, a Freikorps unit, wore on their gold helmets the primitive sexual symbol that had formed part of the blazon of the Thule Society, with its theories of pure and impure blood, the “ancient coil,” the hooked cross, the swastika. They sang full-throated songs in its praise. Order was restored in the Bavarian capital.
The Reds fought bravely, especially in the railway station, where they held out a day and a night.
Charles/Karl, stiffly, asked Wolfgang and Dorothy if they had news of the Stern family. They said no news had come out of Munich, no trains ran, letters went unanswered.
Charles/Karl said that Leon Stern had been killed in the railway station, fighting for his ideas. Wolfgang bent his head. There was a silence.
Charles/Karl said he had been to the Spiegelgarten of Frau Holle. Anselm Stern and Angela were as well as they could be, though thin and hungry. They thought they would move to Berlin, as Munich was now not a good place for Jews.
It had not occurred to Dorothy to ask whether her father was Jewish and he had not felt a need to tell her. She said, slowly,
“Perhaps, when all this is over, they could come here.”
They could make magical plays for a new generation of children. Angela could work, in London, in Kent, somewhere in peace. The idea seemed both possible and unreal.
• • •
They sat, the survivors, quietly round the dinner table, and drank to the memory of Leon. Ghosts occupied their minds, and crowded in the shadows behind them. They all had things they could not speak of and could not free themselves from, stories they survived only by never telling them, although they woke at night, surprised by foul dreams, which returned regularly and always as a new shock.
Katharina lit the candles which had been brought out for the occasion, and stood in silver candlesticks.
Philip sat at the end of a table in a wheelchair that supported his leg. He was next to Dorothy, who was opposite Wolfgang. Charles/Karl was sitting next to Elsie, and their hands touched. Katharina watched her daughter watch Wolfgang Stern. Griselda had become fixed, efficient and almost spinsterly as the war went on. Katharina was almost resigned to seeing her close herself into a college. Now her composed face was discomposed and hungry in a way Katharina had never seen. Katharina asked Wolfgang if he would like more soup, and used the familiar
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This novel owes a great deal to many people, who have told me about things, shown me things, and shared their knowledge. People always thank their patient partners at the end of their acknowledgements, but I want to thank my husband, Peter Duffy, at the beginning. He has shown me southern England, driven me to odd places, and shared with me his considerable knowledge of the First World War, including his books. He has found things out about distances, modes of transport and buildings, and checked (some of) my mistakes. He has also been patient.
I owe a great deal to Marian Campbell, who showed me the gold and silver in the Victoria and Albert Museum —and understood that I would need the Gloucester Candlestick. She also showed me the basement and its treasure. Reino Liefkes showed me the ceramics department, including works by Palissy, and early Majolica dishes. A pot in the hands is quite different from a pot behind glass. Fiona McCarthy sent me her copy of Anthony Burton’s
My daughter, Antonia Byatt, when director of the English Women’s Library, helped me with the history of women’s suffrage and introduced me to Anne Summers, and to Jennian Geddes, whose generous provision of information about women in medicine at the time of my novel was both fascinating and extraordinarily helpful.
Edmund de Waal invited me to visit his studio, and allowed me to put my hands into a wavering clay pot. He also gave me books and suggested more, and I owe him a great deal. I was also helped by Mary Wondrausch whose book on slipware—apart from being full of interest—was also full of technical information and delectable vocabulary.
My friend and translator Melanie Walz, who lives in Munich, showed me the city and took me to the puppet museum—and everywhere else—and shared her wide knowledge of German and Bavarian art and life, over many years. The book could not have been written without her. I am also grateful to Professor Martin Middeke who took me to the Augsburg puppet museum, and to Deborah Holmes and Ingrid Schram who took me to see the Teschner collection in the Austrian Theatre Museum in Vienna, and to the Museum of Applied Arts there, where I learned a great deal, with great pleasure, from Dr. Rainald Franz. And I would like to thank Dimitri Psurtsev and Victor Lanchikov for help with things Russian.
Dr. Gillian Sutherland shared her knowledge of the history of women in Cambridge, and of Newnham College in particular—and again sent books. I am very grateful. Professor Max Saunders helped me with the Rossetti anarchists and his work on the period was informative and elegant.
The books I have collected are too many to mention but I should like to acknowledge the pleasure and information I found in David Kynaston’s great history of the City of London. Linda K. Hughes’s