A Game of Spies

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A Game of Spies Page 1

by John Altman




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  A Game of Spies

  John Altman

  For Anicée

  Thanks to Richard Curtis, my agent,

  for his insight and guidance, and to Neil Nyren, my editor,

  for his countless contributions to this book.

  Overall, France and its allies turn out to have been better equipped for war than was Germany, with more trained men, more and better tanks, more bombers and fighters.… When Germany opened its offensive against the Low Countries and France in May 1940, not a single [German] general expected victory to result. The chief of staff of the German army wrote to his wife that his fellow generals thought what they were doing was “crazy and reckless.”… But if the Allies in May 1940 were in most respects militarily superior, were not badly led, and did not suffer from demoralization (not yet, at least), then what accounts for Germany’s six-week triumph?

  —ERNEST R. MAY, STRANGE VICTORY:

  HITLER’S CONQUEST OF FRANCE

  PROLOGUE

  MÜNCHEN-GLADBACH, GERMANY: OCTOBER 1939

  Hagen had not slept well; his head was throbbing with fatigue.

  As the Mercedes limousine rolled toward the frontier, he reached into his breast pocket and withdrew a vial of SS Sanitäts aspirin. He thumbed it open, put two of the chalky pills into his mouth, and swallowed them dry. After returning the vial to his pocket, he turned to look at his companion, Major Schinkel. Schinkel appeared calm; his eyes were cool and haughty behind rimless spectacles.

  Hagen, seeing this, allowed himself to relax. He leaned back in his seat, willing the aspirin to take hold. He was a pale, Scandinavian-featured man with close-cropped silver hair and a crook in his nose from a long-ago training session that had ended badly. Now, thanks to the restless night, his face looked unusually sunken: the skin drawn too tautly across the high cheekbones, the blue eyes looking out from deep hollows.

  They passed through the German checkpoint with a friendly exchange—but the Dutch were less hospitable. The border guard scowled at the men’s forgeries, held a hasty palaver, then ordered them out of the car. Now the aspirin were starting to take effect, and Hagen was able to watch the inspection with a genuine smirk on his face. There were no weapons in the Mercedes or on their persons. The weapons were in the next car, the one following ten minutes behind.

  Presently, the Dutch could find no reason to keep the men delayed. They were waved back into the car and then waved on.

  After another four minutes, the Mercedes drew to a stop before a two-storied gabled café, with potted plants on a balcony and a scatter of deserted garden chairs out front. Hagen and Schinkel exchanged a glance and then left the car without speaking. They navigated the chairs and moved inside, into a warm room filled with the clatter of silverware and the fragrance of fresh coffee.

  The British had arrived ahead of them.

  The men greeted one another with half-courtesies: the British half-standing, the Germans half-bowing. Hobbs, Hagen thought, looked as if he had not slept well himself. His sandy-blond hair was unkempt; his thin mustache looked more ruffled than usual. He seemed ill at ease in his chair, unable to fit his rangy legs comfortably beneath the table. But the other man, Dill, looked rested—fresh, and overly eager.

  The Germans sat and ordered coffee. A spot of sunlight on the white tablecloth flickered slightly as a cloud drifted through the sky outside.

  They picked up where they had left off, with Dill describing his network of brothers and cousins and sympathetic friends. Dill was not a working man, according to the story he had told the Germans. He had been on the dole for half his life, and had spent that time—cleverly, he seemed to think—cultivating a network against the British. His promises included wide-ranging campaigns of sabotage, espionage, and black propaganda. But Dill’s brogue, Hagen noticed, had a tendency to wax and wane. He played his role with too much gusto, with too much hearty earthiness, betraying his true opinion of the Irish.

  Hagen and Schinkel nodded encouragingly as Dill made his promises, then turned their attention to Hobbs. For the past decade, William Hobbs, according to his cover story, had squandered his time with a variety of pursuits—errand boy, factory worker, stonemason’s apprentice, author of political pamphlets, and member of Owsley’s British Union of Fascists. According to the cover story, he had also spent that time informing on his malfeasant peers for MI6. It was a fine act, Hagen thought, mixing fact and fiction in just the right proportions. The Germans had been watching British spies since the mid-1930s and already had Hobbs on file as a possible agent. It was entirely possible that a man cut from his cloth—part-time spy, part-time provocateur, full-time drinker and womanizer—would be swayed by a few reichsmarks to go over to the other side.

  In reality, of course, it had taken much more than a few.

  The spot of sunlight on the table was lost in a sudden flurry of similar spots. Hagen glanced up. Through the window, he could see the flared black fender of the second Mercedes as it pulled up outside the café.

  He shot a look at Schinkel. The major was listening to Hobbs, looking appropriately disturbed at a demand the man had just made for more money. All for Dill’s benefit, of course. According to the conditions of their agreement, Dill was to be returned to England unharmed within a week, at which point he would no doubt deliver a full report of this encounter to his superiors. So it had to look good.

  “It may be possible,” Schinkel was saying. “But we must have some collateral in exchange, I would think. Something to justify such an increase in expense.”

  Hobbs gave one of his lopsided, patronizing grins; he reached for a cigarette burning in an ashtray. “Herr Schinkel,” he said cheerfully. “You insult me, sir.”

  Hagen’s eyes drifted back to the window. The second Mercedes was waiting patiently. There were three men in the car, indistinct through the frosted windows.

  At last Hobbs and Schinkel had hammered out an agreement—an extra fifty pounds, to be considered a bonus. Hagen stepped in quickly, bringing the meeting to a close before Dill could get any ideas about demanding more money for himself. It would be a waste of time, and time, with the second Mercedes waiting outside, was precious.

  They settled their bill and gathered together their coats, then stood, offered more semi-bows, and shook hands all around. When they began moving toward the exit, Hagen and Schinkel hung back, letting the British go first. Hobbs walked with a slight limp—a trophy of a rugby injury, if Hagen remembered correctly, from many years before.

  As soon as the men had stepped out into the sunshine, the doors of the second Mercedes swung open.

  The three men who emerged from the car held the standard-issue Gestapo firearm, the Luger P 08.

  They fanned out around the two Englishmen with the guns held at waist level. They wore plainclothes, dark and unexceptional. A few Dutch civilians milling in the street looked on, wide-eyed, as the Germans gestured the British toward the waiting car.

  Hagen stayed near the patio of the café, cataloguing possible trouble spots, calculating chances of success. Hobbs would offer no problem, of course, because Hobbs was a willing part of the operation. But Dill would need to be watched closely. To Dill, the kidnapping would come as a rude surprise; and a man with his back to the wall, as Hagen well knew, was a man capable of anything.

  His eyes moved to the Dutch civilians. They were gaping, plainly staggered by the Germans’ effrontery. Holland was a neutral territory, and the spectacle before them now was so unexpected, so barefacedly illegal, that it had paralyzed them. They were sheep, Hagen thought, with a quic
k flash of disdain. There was nothing to fear there.

  One duck-shouldered Dutchman, however, had a look in his eyes—a glimmer of courage. He would bear watching.

  Now Hobbs was being forced into the car at gunpoint. Dill, waiting for his turn, was cursing bitterly at the three Gestapo agents. His hands were raised, perched on either side of his narrow, apple-cheeked face. He was looking for a chance, Hagen thought. But would he be stupid enough to take one?

  Evidently he was. In the next instant, Dill had shoved one of the Gestapo full on the chest. As the man tumbled backward, he made a sudden, frantic break to his right.

  Hagen swore to himself, and moved to intercept.

  Too slow. The two Gestapo still standing raised their guns and fired in unison. The reports sounded flat, rolling off down the quiet street and then echoing back. Dill crumpled forward with a bright red flower spreading between his shoulder blades.

  The door of the Mercedes slammed shut, sealing off Hobbs.

  Hagen moved to check on the wounded Britisher. Still alive. He waved at the Gestapo to come and give him assistance, then bent down and began to wrestle Dill to his feet.

  From the corner of his eye, he saw the beefy Dutchman coming forward—he had found the courage somewhere.

  Hagen straightened. He left Dill to the SS and moved to deal with the Dutchman himself. He circled around behind the man, raising his hand and forming a knife edge, tucking the thumb into the palm, preparing to deliver a single blow to the base of the neck.

  Before he could complete the act, another gun had fired. The Dutchman’s head whipped back; the air behind him clouded with crimson mist.

  Hagen swore again.

  Complications.

  He hated complications.

  When he looked back over his shoulder, Dill, limp as a rag doll, was being manhandled into the waiting car. The doors closed and the Mercedes pulled away with screaming tires. Hagen took one last look at his surroundings—the Dutchman with his ruined head pulsing out gouts of blood, the bright rust-colored spot left in the street by Dill, Major Schinkel standing with a dazed look on his face. Then he raised a hand to his temple. His headache was back, sharper than before.

  He and Schinkel hurried to their own car. Now engines were revving in the distance. A siren rose, hovered, and languidly fell. Hagen slapped the back of the driver’s seat. “Go!”

  They went.

  The Mercedes with the prisoners would simply barrel through the checkpoint without stopping. Hagen decided they would do well to follow suit. He wondered if Dill was mortally wounded. He wondered if the Dutch would follow them over the border. He decided to instruct the German border guard to open fire if they tried it. This had never happened, after all. The Dutch had no reason for violating German territory.

  He looked again at Major Schinkel. Schinkel still looked dazed. Hagen gave him a reassuring smile. He reached into his pocket and withdrew the aspirin and dry-swallowed two more.

  Complications or not, things had gone well enough. The British were in their custody, and Dill—if he survived—would have no reason to suspect Hobbs of complicity.

  “Success,” he said.

  Schinkel gave his head a small shake. He looked on the verge of vomiting.

  Hagen kept smiling. Now that it was over, he felt extremely calm. Even the headache was receding again.

  There was nothing he liked better than a successful operation.

  PART ONE

  1

  THE HAVEL RIVER, BERLIN: FEBRUARY 1940

  Each time a Berliner moved in her direction, Eva Bernhardt’s heart picked up speed in her chest.

  An old man with a cane and monocle … a young man riding a bicycle with a great mane of unruly dark hair billowing out behind … a middle-aged couple pushing a baby carriage; any of them might have been her contact. But she did not want to attract attention, so she kept her face neutral and her hands folded in her lap. On the bench beside her was a newspaper, Der Stürmer, which she had already read from front to back. It was filled with vitriolic attacks on the Jew devil, the mongrel Russian, and the pygmy Czech. In other words, the usual.

  Today, as for the past several months, the park’s inhabitants—like most of the inhabitants of Berlin—were eerily calm. They were poised on the edge of a knife blade, Eva thought, waiting to see on which side they would fall. If Hitler dragged them into a war, they would be dragged, for it was too late to turn back. But they were not anxious for war. In a month or two, perhaps, if things went well in the West, they would not remember having not been anxious for war. If things went well in the West, they would be only too happy to forget their hesitations and claim their prize. But if things went poorly, they would remember it differently: as something nobody had wanted, as something they had all been helpless to avoid.

  A man was wandering toward the bench.

  She stole a glimpse of him. He was somewhere around forty, balding, wearing a black trench coat, walking with a silver-headed cane. She made herself look away as he drew closer.

  Then he was moving past, muttering something to himself, trailing a snatch of singsong cadence.

  She forced air out between clenched teeth and kept waiting. The wind gave a sudden gust, teasing a strand of auburn hair from beneath her tight-fitting snood. She tucked it back in mechanically. Her hands wanted to keep moving: to rub nervously at the skin beneath her turquoise eyes, or fidget with the tails of her plain cloth coat. She forced them to hold still.

  The man with the silver-headed cane paused. He turned, shuffled back toward the bench, and smiled at her.

  “Good afternoon,” he said.

  “Good afternoon,” Eva said.

  “I wonder if you could direct me to something, young lady. The KaDeWe department store.”

  Her heart flip-flopped in her chest.

  “You’ll need to take a taxi,” she answered easily. “Have you shopped there before?”

  “Not for many years.”

  “Make a point to visit the seventh floor.”

  “Walk with me,” he said under his breath.

  She stood, her heart still pounding urgently, and picked up her newspaper.

  For a few moments they strolled without speaking. She sneaked glances at the man beside her as they walked, trying to figure him out. He was a German—a lifelong Berliner, judging from his accent, although of course that was only speculation. What had made this man go to the other side? He had not lived in England, she guessed, as she had. Perhaps he had been seduced by somebody. MI6 had many tactics at their disposal, but seduction, the oldest and simplest, was often the most effective. It had been the tactic, after all, that had worked so successfully on Eva herself.

  She soon abandoned this theory. The man did not strike her as that type. He struck her as a family man—she noticed a wedding band on one pale hand—who perhaps had children. He was doing this for the noblest reasons, she decided. He wanted his children to grow up in a world where neighbors did not turn on neighbors. Or perhaps he was a Jew, or a half-Jew, or he was married to a Jew. The possible reasons were legion. Most surprising was that there were not more like this man, more like herself.

  After walking for a few dozen yards, the man used his cane to indicate another bench. “Let’s sit.”

  They sat. Eva sent a nervous glance around, looking for Gestapo. She saw none—but that was hardly reassuring. The core of the Gestapo’s organization was not stormtroopers, after all, but ordinary citizens: informers, hausfraus, and gossips eager to cultivate favor.

  The man was unwrapping a cigar he had taken from his pocket. He put it into his mouth, lit it from a dog-eared matchbook, and puffed on it twice.

  “There is a man,” he said mildly, “named Klinger. A clerk for OKW, and a veteran of the Great War. Our benefactors believe he has some high-ranking friends at Zossen—fellow veterans who have applied themselves to their careers with more concentration than Klinger himself.”

  Eva nodded, almost imperceptibly.

 
“These friends,” the man continued, “may possibly have access to details concerning the Wehrmacht’s drive to the West.”

  She nodded again. At some point over the past few months, the Wehrmacht’s drive to the West had become a foregone conclusion. Not so long before, things had been different. Not so long before, it had been easy to believe that Hitler’s only real goal had been the absorption of the Germanic territories: Austria, the Sudetenland, and Czechoslovakia. This goal had struck most Germans as logical, even reasonable. Who could have blamed the Nazis for trying to reunify the ancient Germanic tribes, after the Treaty of Versailles had heaped such injury and insult upon them? Who could have blamed them for trying to regain what rightfully had always been theirs?

  Beneath this line of reasoning had run an unspoken current. If a larger war was to come, then it would come with the Russians, the Untermenschen, and not with the civilized people to the West. Expansion to the East was where Germany’s true destiny lay. Hitler had always made this clear, even when he had been nothing but a failed street artist and a proselytizing convict. He had laid out his plans in plain black and white in the pages of Mein Kampf.

  But then those in the West had made it clear that they would stand up to German aggression in Poland, after having not stood up so spectacularly at Munich, and as a result they had drawn Hitler’s attention in their own direction. The Führer had conducted some hasty diplomacy, and suddenly everything had changed. The Nazi-Soviet pact had been signed, effectively closing off the East as an option, at least for the time being. Poland had been divided as spoils of war between the new, uneasy allies. And now Hitler’s Wehrmacht was focused toward Belgium, Holland, and France—and beyond that, England. The Low Countries would fall easily. Once France had gone, the British would have no choice but to make peace. So now it was only a matter of time.

  “Klinger,” the balding man went on after a few moments, “is not the most ambitious of men. He likes his vices too much. Until now he’s been a loyal, if uninspired, soldier of the Reich. But our benefactors have discovered an interesting fact about Herr Klinger—one that makes them look at him in a slightly different light.” The man paused. “It concerns his father.”

 

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