The Excalibur Codex

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The Excalibur Codex Page 8

by James Douglas


  ‘I’m interested in a man called Reinhard Heydrich. He was a top Nazi before and during the Second World War.’

  She pulled up a chair and flipped open the lid of the laptop, instantly bringing it to life. He watched as her fingers fluttered over the keyboard and within a few seconds she turned to him with a puzzled look. ‘Wikipedia or the United States Holocaust Museum archive are the top hits.’

  ‘Let’s try the Holocaust Museum. It’s unlikely to be very complimentary, but potentially more accurate.’

  ‘Is this going to be unpleasant?’

  ‘Probably,’ he admitted. ‘Say hello to the Devil’s Disciple. Heydrich was a bureaucrat, but one with blood on his hands. He’s the man who came up with the phrase “Final Solution”, and he helped make it happen by creating something called the einsatzgruppen, essentially murder squads who followed the Wehrmacht into Russia and wiped out every Jew, gypsy and Communist they could lay their hands on. If I remember correctly, they butchered two million men, women and children.’

  Charlotte flinched at the steel in his voice and he instantly regretted being quite so brutal. Six weeks ago it wouldn’t have happened, but he was a different person now. ‘Sorry.’ He smiled ruefully. ‘I didn’t mean it to come out like that.’

  She gave him a long, appraising stare. For a moment he wondered if she was going to walk out, then her expression changed. ‘It seems you already know quite a lot about him?’

  ‘I know the basics,’ he agreed. ‘But I’m especially interested in what he was doing in the summer of nineteen thirty-seven.’

  She nodded and hit a few more keys. ‘Hmmm. Missed being called up for the First World War by a couple of years, but his family was impoverished in the aftermath. Joined the German navy in nineteen twenty-two, forced to resign in disgrace over a woman in April, ’thirty-one. He must have had something going for him, because he joined the SS in August of that year. Helped form something called the Sicherheitsdienst?’

  ‘They were the Nazi secret service. A bit like the Gestapo, but without the leather coats.’

  ‘In nineteen thirty-three he became deputy commander of the Bavarian police political detective force under Heinrich Himmler. Took part in something called the Night of the Long Knives, which doesn’t sound too pleasant. Appointed overall head of the Nazi security operation, including the Gestapo, in nineteen thirty-six, and continued in that role into the early years of the war. Nothing specific about ’thirty-seven, I’m afraid.’ She kept scrolling and her hand went to her mouth. ‘My God.’

  ‘Yes, he really was a complete and utter bastard. His colleagues called him “The Hangman”, and with good reason—’

  ‘What the fuck is going on?’

  Jamie looked up to see Adam Steele’s substantial frame filling the door, his face twisted with fury. Charlotte turned pale. She opened her mouth to explain. ‘I—’

  ‘I wasn’t asking you. Get out. Go and paint your fucking nails or something.’

  Steele marched across to Jamie, brushing past his assistant as she fled the room. ‘Are you out of your mind? I’ve been searching my whole life for an opportunity like this and the first thing you do is blab about it to the hired help?’

  ‘She’s your PA, Adam. The last time I checked PA meant Personal Assistant, personal, as in keeper of secrets.’ Jamie refrained from pointing out that he could also be counted among the hired help. ‘And just so we’re clear about this, old chum, I was always taught that a gentleman treated women with a certain amount of respect. Maybe I was wrong about you. Maybe I was wrong about this whole thing …’

  Adam Steele met his gaze for a moment, chewing his lip, before he released a long sigh. ‘What can I say?’ He opened his hands in a gesture of defeat. ‘That was completely out of order. I can be a moody bastard sometimes and things haven’t been going too well with the bank. Shareholders all over my backside like a rash. Sometimes Charlotte has to put up with more than she should. I’ll make it up to her. That okay with you?’ Jamie let the silence lengthen and he saw something unexpected in Steele’s eyes, before the banker blinked and it was gone. ‘You have to understand that this has taken a long time and a great deal of hard work to put together,’ Steele continued, grinning ruefully. ‘For a man with my – let’s face it – my obsession, this could be a defining moment. I can’t do it without you, Jamie. Don’t make any rash decisions. Please.’

  ‘I didn’t mention anything about the codex.’ Jamie turned the computer so Steele could see the screen. ‘As far as Charlotte is concerned, we were doing some research on old Nazis.’

  The banker’s eyebrows rose as he recognized the figure in the dark uniform. ‘Heydrich, eh? Well, next time you need a helping hand with your research let me know. Maybe I was too hasty about Charlotte? If there’s going to be a lot of this kind of technical stuff perhaps there’s a place for her on the team. Gault knows his stuff, but her German is better than his. I’ll think about it. The main thing is did you find anything?’ He waved a hand at the computer.

  ‘Only that Heydrich was kept busy locking people up in Dachau, rounding up Jews in Austria and blackening the name of his rivals at the time Wulf Ziegler hints he was involved in the Excalibur affair. Not that that necessarily means anything. He was Hitler’s handyman. If it needed doing Heydrich would get it done.’

  Adam Steele produced an almost beatific smile. ‘That wasn’t all he was good at.’ Jamie waited expectantly. ‘He was also a very expert swordsman, who could have taken both of us on and we wouldn’t have got a touch.’ He grinned at the younger man’s confusion. ‘If any man in Nazi Germany knew his swords, it was Reinhard Tristan Eugen Heydrich.’

  ‘You rang, boss?’ Gault appeared in the doorway.

  ‘Mr Saintclair needs some help with his research.’

  Gault raised an eyebrow and Jamie smiled and threw him a book from the table. ‘You’ve got until dinner tonight to learn everything there is to know about King Arthur and Excalibur. I’ll be taking questions after pudding.’

  IX

  ‘So what do we have?’

  Casually dressed in a pink open-necked shirt and mustard-coloured corduroy trousers, Adam Steele sat back in his chair at the head of the long oak table after his butler had cleared away the dishes and decanted another bottle of wine. Charlotte cast a nervous glance into the dining room a few minutes later and asked if they needed anything else. She looked surprised when Steele gestured to her to take a seat. Gault rose and checked the door.

  ‘All clear, boss.’

  ‘This is all a bit cloak and dagger, isn’t it?’ Jamie laughed.

  Steele sipped his wine. ‘When it’s your million quid, you can do it your way, Jamie, but as long as it’s my hard-earned cash we do it mine, and that means tight security. Christ knows what would happen if another collector got wind of this, or, God help us, the bloody newspapers. No, we keep it within the family for now. Charlotte?’ He produced a wry smile. ‘I apologize for my behaviour earlier. You shouldn’t have to put up with that and I’ll make it up to you. You have a little catching-up to do, so you might want to get out your notebook.’

  Charlotte exchanged glances with Jamie and he nodded.

  ‘So,’ Steele said. ‘What do we have so far?’

  Jamie shrugged. ‘Between us Gault and I have checked every major source we could find for the Arthur legend and every reference to Excalibur in your books or on the Internet, and nothing changes my opinion that you’re wasting your money. The earliest mentions of an Arthur are in a Welsh poem, The Gododdin, about a group of British warriors riding to the aid of a southern king facing annihilation by the Saxons. The Gododdin are all but wiped out, but when he’s listing the heroes who made the trip, the writer, a poet called Aneirin, says of one of them ‘he was no Arthur’. This was supposedly written in the sixth century, but there must have been a parallel oral tradition. There’s no mention of a sword in the poem, yet it appears a couple of hundred years later as Caledfwlch, which apparently means “notched
by battle”, and the man who wields it is called Arthur.’

  Adam Steele nodded, and Jamie realized he was only telling the businessman what he already knew. He paused, pondering where to take the story next. Gault had the look of someone who’d walked into the wrong meeting and his bored eyes wandered restlessly over the paintings of the banker’s uniformly stern, bewigged ancestors lining the wood-panelled walls. Charlotte sat hunched over her notebook with a frown of intense concentration.

  ‘The twelfth-century chronicler Geoffrey of Mon-mouth, who may or may not have been Welsh, latinized the name of the sword to Caliburnus in his Historia Regum Britanniae, a hotchpotch of tales from the island’s settlement by descendants of the Trojans, through the Roman invasions to Arthur and beyond. He claimed the book was a translation of an earlier British work, but it’s more likely to have been put together from Welsh poems, Bede’s earlier history, the writings of a Northumbrian monk called Gildas, and his own fertile imagination. When it was published he was accused of making up the sections that mentioned Arthur …’ From the bay window came the faint sound of a siren somewhere down towards Piccadilly and Jamie faltered, his mind immediately jumping to the chaos of lights and sirens on the TV the day Abbie died.

  ‘You all right, Jamie old boy?’ Steele asked eventually.

  Jamie blinked and his vision cleared. ‘Sorry, just got a little lost.’ He licked his lips and discovered that they were the texture of sandpaper. ‘Anyway, a couple of hundred years later the Historia must have been picked up by an impoverished knight called Thomas Malory, because an embellished version of the Arthur sections of Geoffrey appear in a book called Le Morte d’Arthur, apparently written while the author was in jail, only now Arthur’s sword is called Excalibur. The Sword in the Stone first appears in a French poem that is actually about Merlin, who as far as we can tell doesn’t appear in the early sources and shouldn’t have anything to do with Arthur at all. That poem is also the source of the Grail legends and the Lady in the Lake. Le Morte d’Arthur picked up and embellished both these stories and is the basis for every unlikely myth, legend and work of fiction that follows.’ Now all their eyes were on him and he met their gaze with a rueful smile. ‘Everybody wants a piece of the Arthur action. He’s linked to most of Wales, Tintagel in Cornwall, Glastonbury, and anywhere that begins with Cam in England, as well as a couple of places in France. There’s even a historian who claims Arthur is Scottish, but they claim that about most things, I find.’

  In the long silence that followed Jamie could hear the sound of some ancient clock ticking the seconds away. Adam Steele took his time before venturing an opinion. ‘Yet Wulf Ziegler believes he stole a sword later identified as Excalibur for Reinhard Heydrich, who wasn’t a man prone to mistakes?’

  ‘True,’ Jamie conceded. ‘But Heydrich was a man known to indulge in smoke and mirrors from time to time.’

  Steele pursed his lips as if he’d sucked on a lemon. This wasn’t what he wanted to hear. ‘My instinct is that Ziegler is telling the truth as he saw it. You’d agree?’ Jamie nodded, he’d made his point. They both knew that even if the sword was genuine and it had been where Ziegler’s informant claimed in 1941, there was no guarantee they’d be able to track down its present whereabouts. A lot of things had vanished during the Second World War and stayed vanished. If it existed, the chances were that it was in a steel box at the bottom of the Elbe or rusting away in some Bavarian salt mine. One thing was certain, Reinhard Heydrich wasn’t telling. Himmler’s mastermind of the Final Solution had died in Prague in the spring of 1942 from a bad case of the after-effects of hand grenade fragments in the lower intestine. But Adam Steele’s confidence wasn’t to be dented by a little problem like a sixty-odd-year time lapse and a room full of dead witnesses. There had never been any doubt about the decision. He grinned. ‘Then we proceed on the assumption that he found what he believed he found. You still think Dortmund is the place to start?’

  Jamie nodded. ‘Whether you believe him or not, Ziegler left a lot of unanswered questions. Why didn’t he give us a description of the sword? He must have seen it. If we knew what it looked like, it would at least give us a hint whether it was worth chasing after. If Excalibur exists it isn’t a medieval sword, but much earlier. We need to know one way or the other. We have only the slightest hint where the ritual took place—’

  ‘Wewelsburg, surely?’ Steele interrupted, telling Jamie he hadn’t read the codex as carefully as he might have. ‘Himmler’s Camelot.’

  ‘Wewelsburg is the holy of holies Ziegler refers to earlier.’ Gault’s head came up sharply as the art dealer corrected his boss. ‘It’s in northern Germany, not the east. And then there’s the cryptic reference to Adolf Hitler – in a place not far from where the Führer charted the course of the Thousand Year Reich – once we work that out we’ll have a clue, but we need more information. He mentions the Polish invasion, so it’s likely to be somewhere in Poland, but inside the German zone after the country was carved up in nineteen thirty-nine. Which takes us to who took part? Heydrich, almost certainly – it was his party. The others were all of the rank of Obergruppenführer in nineteen forty-one and members of Himmler’s SS inner circle, so we should be able to track down their identities. I have some ideas about that. Ziegler’s informant was a Gruppenführer, an SS general, but not one of the chosen few and he must have been several ranks lower in the early part of nineteen forty-one. That means there were others involved in the ritual, perhaps observers or helpers.’

  ‘How does that help?’ Charlotte asked.

  ‘The men who played the key roles would all have been in their forties and will almost certainly be dead, if not in the war, then of old age. According to Ziegler, the Gruppenführer was in his mid twenties, so there’s at least a chance he might still be alive. The first step is to talk to Ziegler’s family. If he made a will he must have left his worldly goods to someone. Maybe they’ll give us more clues.’

  Steele rose from the table and stalked the length of the dining room, his voice shaking with passion.

  ‘Can you imagine what it would be like to hold the sword of Arthur?’ The legend says he’s sleeping in a cave waiting for the call to save Britain in its time of need. I find that comforting, although I can’t quite bring myself to believe it. But, make no mistake, this is our time of need.’

  The banker stopped abruptly and his dark eyes challenged anyone in the room to deny it. He fixed on Jamie. ‘The attack that killed your Abbie was just the start. Britain looks for strong leadership. The forces of darkness aren’t just gathering, they’re upon us. What if a man could stand up holding Excalibur high for all to see and offer that leadership? What could that man not achieve?’

  Jamie felt a tightening in his chest at the throwaway use of Abbie’s name, but he managed a smile. ‘I hope you’re not thinking of going into politics, Adam?’

  Steele’s expression didn’t alter. ‘Find it for me, Jamie.’

  X

  Charlotte walked into the office as Jamie and Gault were going over their technical equipment. The former SBS man barely spared her a glance as she sat down at the table. He handed Jamie a mobile phone that looked as if it had come straight from the box. ‘Satellite phone for secure encrypted calls between you and the boss only. Press two and it will speed dial his number and connect from anywhere in the world. The encryption code changes with every call, so theoretically it’s impossible to break into. This phone,’ he held up a slim Nokia, ‘is for everyday use if you want to contact either of us.’

  ‘Us?’ Jamie asked.

  Charlotte grinned like a schoolgirl preparing for her first class trip overseas. ‘Adam decided my research skills might come in useful after all. I’ll be organizing our travel and accommodation.’

  ‘The boss thought it would be more natural having Her Ladyship along,’ Gault said. ‘Provide a nice bit of natural colour while we run around on our wild-goose chase.’ He grinned at Charlotte and she glared back at him.

  There
were clearly tensions here that Jamie didn’t understand, and he wondered if the pair had some kind of history. ‘You don’t believe in the sword,’ he asked the soldier, ‘so why agree to come along?’

  Gault shrugged. ‘Because the boss is the boss, and traipsing around Europe babysitting you is better than doing real work. Now, if we can get back to business?’ He drew a laptop from a padded case. ‘Like the phone, this is state-of-the-art kit with the best security available. Any searches you do on the Internet, files you create or e-mails you send should be safe.’

  ‘You say should? You’re not certain?’

  ‘This is the stuff the CIA uses, which means it’s been tested until it squealed for mercy. Who knows what they know and we don’t? For the same reasons the Russians, the Chinese and maybe even the Iranians will have their best people trying to get into it. You should have one of these already?’ The last was to Charlotte, who nodded.

  ‘Well, you might as well get started,’ Jamie said. ‘We’ll need three flights to Dortmund tomorrow and two nights’ hotel with an option to extend. Oh, and we’ll need a car.’

  She jotted the requests in a notebook. ‘Anything else?’

  ‘While you’re at it, see if you can track down some reading material for the plane. What I’m looking for are the names and a short profile of all the candidates who might have taken part in the Excalibur ritual.’ He saw the shadow of dismay cross her face. ‘Don’t worry,’ he smiled, ‘there weren’t all that many SS-Obergruppenführer in the early days and we only need Himmler’s allies: the men he thought of as his Knights of the Round Table; men who were available to attend the meeting in April nineteen forty-one.’

  The next direct flight to Dortmund was with a budget airline and left from Luton at an unearthly hour, so Steele’s ‘First Class all the way’ would have to wait for another day. Fortunately, it had the advantage of being less than half full and they were able to choose their seats and even have a little privacy. Charlotte handed out the sheets she had made up on the possible participants in the Excalibur ritual and Jamie was impressed by the cast list she’d put together in such a short time, some of them with photographs.

 

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