Night of Flames
Page 30
Jan stood up and paced around the cellar. “How do you know that neither the general or any of his staff have ever met this Heinrich?”
“I have a source in the Department of the Interior,” Sam replied. “He has seen all the messages and he—”
“Is he certain of it?” Jan demanded, cutting him off.
Sam was silent for a moment then folded his hands on the table. “Non, not certain. Nothing is certain, Colonel, you know that. We have what we believe is good information. It comes from a reliable source, a source that I know personally and would trust with my life.”
“But it’s not your life on the line here, is it?” As soon as he said it, Jan wished he hadn’t. He sensed that this man was not a manipulator like Whitehall. He was like the AK operatives he had known in Poland. He was like Slomak, a patriot, whose country has been occupied by the enemy for years. Jan took a deep breath. “I’m sorry—”
Sam held up his hand. “It’s all right, Colonel. This is all being dropped on you very quickly. C’est correct, it is your life on the line. We’ll do our best to protect you, but beyond that I’m afraid…”
His voice trailed off and the two men fell silent.
Jan sat down and finished his wine. “Well, let’s get on with it. What’s the rest of the plan?”
Sam nodded. “We weren’t given your name, Colonel, or any information about you—and we’re not allowed to ask. From this moment, until your mission is completed, you are ‘Ernst Heinrich.’ Is that understood?”
“Oui, oui, bien sûr. I understand the routine pretty well by now,” Jan replied.
Chapter 57
ERNST HEINRICH WAS NOT at all pleased with his orders. Though a civilian, he had frequent contact with officers in the Wehrmacht and was acutely aware of the situation. Contrary to the propaganda being fed its citizens, Heinrich knew that Germany’s armies were in retreat and the Allies were pursuing them into Belgium.
He couldn’t imagine a greater military target at this point in time than the port of Antwerp, and he’d be stuck in the middle of it. In reality, though, he knew it probably didn’t matter. With the Russians bearing down on Germany from the east and the Americans and British from the west, his chances of surviving this madness appeared bleak.
In the fading light of dusk, Heinrich looked out the train window at the flat terrain, crisscrossed by narrow canals, and wondered if they were in Belgium yet. He had been to Belgium several times over the years—to Antwerp, in fact—and had always enjoyed himself. The food and wines were first rate, the service in the cafés was excellent, and the people had always been friendly and hospitable. That was before the war, of course. He guessed things would be different now.
The car he was in was only about half full, and most of the other passengers appeared to be businessmen, speaking primarily Dutch or French. Three Wehrmacht soldiers had boarded the train in Amsterdam and were sitting two rows behind him, but other than that Heinrich had seen few military personnel. He knew that practically all available men had been sent to the western front months ago. He yawned and leaned back in the seat. He had been on the train since the early hours of the morning, and he was tired.
Bang!
The car lurched, and Heinrich’s head cracked into the window.
Another Bang!
The car lurched in the opposite direction, and Heinrich was thrown from his seat, landing face down in the aisle.
With its steel wheels screeching against the rails, the car jumped the track and pitched forward, bouncing hard to a halt.
A hand gripped the back of Heinrich’s coat and jerked him up. He stumbled forward into a tangle of other passengers, but the hand pulled him backward, up the steep incline of the aisle, toward the rear door. A voice shouted, “Raus! Jetzt!”
Heinrich turned his head and saw that the hand belonged to one of the Wehrmacht soldiers. The other two soldiers were ahead, pushing people out of the way, clearing a path to the door, shouting, “Raus! Raus!”
The soldier gripping his coat yelled at him, “Which is your bag?” motioning at a jumbled pile of suitcases.
Heinrich stared at him, not comprehending.
“Your bag, verdammt! Your bag! Which one’s yours?”
Heinrich pointed it out.
The soldier grabbed it and shoved him forward. When they got to the open door, two of the soldiers had already jumped to the ground. The one who had gripped Heinrich’s coat yelled at him to jump and pushed him out the door.
He hit the ground, tumbled over on his side and started sliding down the steep embankment, but one of the soldiers grabbed his wrist and hauled him to his feet.
The soldier yelled at him, “Gehen wir! Let’s go!”
“What?” Heinrich mumbled. “Where?”
“We’ve got to get out of here! Schnell! Mach schnell!” the soldier yelled and shoved him forward.
The three soldiers surrounded Heinrich as they scrambled up the other side of the embankment and trotted across a field.
Heinrich stumbled along, trying not to fall. “Where the hell are you taking me?”
The soldier behind him shoved him in the back, almost knocking him down. “Just shut up and keep running!”
They came to a canal and followed it until they came to a small bridge. They trotted across the bridge, crossed another field and came to a dirt road. A truck was parked at the side of the road.
Heinrich was gasping for breath as they slowed to a walk and approached the truck. The soldier in the lead pulled open the canvas covering the back of the truck, and Heinrich looked up at a silver-haired man standing inside.
The soldier turned to Heinrich and motioned for him to get in the truck.
Heinrich hesitated.
The soldier grabbed his jacket and jerked him forward while the other two grabbed his arms and hoisted him into the truck.
As Heinrich sprawled on the floor, the lead soldier climbed in behind him and pulled the canvas cover closed.
The silver-haired man switched on a flashlight and shined it into Heinrich’s face, holding the light there for several seconds.
Then the light moved away and Heinrich blinked, trying to clear his eyes. He blinked again and glanced around. The flashlight was shining on another man, a tall, blond man.
The silver-haired man said something in French, and the tall, blond man nodded.
Heinrich didn’t understand.
The silver-haired man shined the flashlight back into Heinrich’s face and spoke again. Heinrich still didn’t understand and shook his head.
The tall, blond man bent down and barked at him in German. “Take off your clothes, Herr Heinrich. Verstehen Sie? Your trip is over.”
The rest of the operation went as planned. Jan changed into Heinrich’s clothes, while White Brigade operatives bound and gagged Heinrich and put him into the trunk of Sam’s car. The silver-haired man drove off, taking Heinrich to an unknown destination for a “debriefing.”
One of the Wehrmacht “soldiers” drove the truck back to the scene of the train wreck while Jan rode in back with the other two. When they arrived at the site, two ambulances and a half-dozen Belgian policemen were on the scene, trying to restore order and assist the bewildered, stranded passengers. The “soldier” driving the truck called out to a policeman and offered to transport some passengers. Within a few minutes they were bound for a hospital in Antwerp with a dozen additional passengers all suffering from minor injuries.
Having complained of a stiff neck and a sore back, Jan was kept in the hospital overnight for observation. At five o’clock the next morning he slipped out of his room on the third floor, made his way past the single nurse doing paperwork at the nurse’s station and found the staircase. He walked down to the lower level and into a long hallway.
Following his instructions, Jan proceeded to the end of the hallway and through a door to the loading dock. It was still dark, and it took a few seconds for his eyes to adjust before he spotted Sam standing in a corner on the other s
ide of the dock.
“Did you get some sleep?” Sam asked when Jan joined him and they had moved back, out of sight from the street.
“Not much but I’ll be OK. Did you learn anything?”
“Oui, oui, quite a bit, actually,” Sam said. “It seems that Herr Heinrich is no fan of the Nazis, and he’s not inclined to become a martyr for the Reich. Once we convinced him that his only chance of surviving was if you survived, he became quite cooperative.”
“So, he’s a pragmatist; that’s encouraging,” Jan said.
The silver-haired man smiled and continued. “His home is in a town called Langenfeld, just south of Dusseldorf, on the Rhine River. He was last there about two weeks ago before going to Berlin, then heading here. His wife’s name is Frieda, and they have one daughter named Else, who is nine years old. He works for a company by the name of Kleigholst. He said they manufacture demolition devices: blasting caps, fuses, timing pencils, things like that.”
Jan nodded and closed his eyes, concentrating. “Langenfeld…near Dusseldorf…wife’s name Frieda…daughter Else…company is Kleigholst…oui, oui, je comprends.”
Sam continued. “Heinrich was trained as a structural engineer and has been with this company his entire career. He spent most of last year in Normandy providing technical assistance on the installation of explosives at the landing beaches. Before Normandy, he spent some time in Russia working with combat engineers blowing up bridges and railways.” He glanced at his watch. “That’s all I have. You’d better get back before you’re missed. Have you been contacted by anyone yet?”
“Oui, a nurse stopped in late last night with a message from someone on Stolberg’s staff. Apparently I am to be picked up at noon today.”
“Très bien,” Sam said, extending his hand. “Every night, at ten o’clock, I will be at Storage Building Fifteen on the Kattendijkdok. I will wait for thirty minutes. Good luck.”
Chapter 58
ANNA SAT IN THE BACKSEAT of Koenig’s motorcar, staring at the deserted courtyard. The train carrying the last survivors of Drancy had left while she was bathing and eating. The car was a Mercedes-Benz, like her father’s. If she closed her eyes she could imagine Henryk sitting behind the wheel as they drove through the back roads of Poland during those first terrifying hours of the war. It seemed like it had all happened in some other lifetime.
The car was one of only a few vehicles left in the camp, and it was becoming obvious that there was some delay in their departure. Anna’s wrists were secured in handcuffs and attached with a stout chain to shackles around her ankles. The big Feldgendarme sat in the front seat, behind the wheel, and periodically checked his watch. He had glanced at her in the rear view mirror a few times but hadn’t spoken.
“Wie ist Ihr Name?”Anna asked in German.
“Was?” the big man replied.
“Ihr Name. Wie ist Ihr Name. Since we’re obviously going to be traveling together, I’d like to know your name.”
He turned his bulky frame toward her and said, in a deep, raspy voice, “Mein Name ist Otto.”
“Well, Otto, do you know where we’re going?”
The man turned a little more until he could look at her, then abruptly turned back to the front and stiffened up.
The front door on the passenger side jerked open, and Dieter Koenig leaned in. Another SS officer stood behind him. Koenig glanced at Anna with a scowl on his face, then spoke sharply to Otto. “I won’t be going with you. I have to report to Berlin immediately. Mueller will ride along with you. I’ll be there next week. You know what to do.”
Koenig turned and looked at Anna for several long minutes, his eyes moving down the neckline of the flimsy dress he had provided. He reached back with a gloved hand and brushed her cheek. “Ja, ja, already, such an improvement. Otto will take care of you until I return.”
Anna’s skin crawled. She remained silent, staring straight ahead.
Koenig backed out of the car and was gone. The second officer slipped into the front seat and pulled the door shut. He turned toward Anna and reached back, grasping her handcuffs and jerking on the chain that secured them to her ankles. Apparently satisfied that she was sufficiently restrained, he turned around again and motioned for Otto to get started.
Almost twelve hours later, they approached the German border near the city of Aachen, the flags of the Third Reich snapping in the wind at the checkpoint. Anna’s heart sank, icy fingers of fear once again sliding down her back. She was entering the lion’s den.
As they passed through the barricades the road descended into a tunnel, and Anna stared in awe at the hills on either side. The giant concrete bunkers of Germany’s “West Wall” extended north and south as far as she could see. When they emerged on the other side of the tunnel, it was as if a giant door had slammed shut on her life.
They passed through a second set of barricades and headed in a southeasterly direction, driving slowly along an asphalt road lined with tanks, armored cars and thousands of Wehrmacht infantrymen. For the next hour and a half they made little progress as long convoys of soldiers and trucks clogged every road and every intersection. It appeared to Anna that every German male who could carry a gun had been pressed into action.
Eventually, they turned onto a dirt road and followed it for several kilometers through heavily wooded terrain, stopping at a wooden gate. Mueller got out and unlocked the gate, relocking it after Otto drove through. The trees gave way to a broad meadow and, at the far end of the meadow, a wooden barn and a sturdy-looking, two-story brick house.
Otto stopped the car in front of the barn, and Mueller jumped out, stretching and yawning loudly. Then he promptly unbuttoned his trousers and pissed onto the gravel drive. When he was finished he pulled the rear door open and motioned for Anna to get out. Otto opened the barn door and drove the car into it, while Mueller grabbed Anna’s arm and led her hobbling up the steps and into the house.
It was surprisingly well furnished. In the parlor, two large, richly upholstered chairs stood on either side of a fieldstone fireplace. There was a long sofa in front of the windows and an artistic hand-carved coffee table.
Mueller maintained his grip on Anna’s wrist and led her through the parlor and an adjoining, elegantly furnished dining room into a large kitchen. She struggled to keep from falling, forced by the leg irons into taking baby steps. He led her to the far end of the kitchen and stopped in front of a stout, wooden door. He fished some keys out of his pocket, opened the door and pushed her into a room. He followed her in, removed the handcuffs and leg irons then left, slamming the door behind her and turning the key in the lock.
At first it was dark. Then Anna heard a noise from outside that sounded like a muffled engine, and a few seconds later a soft glowing light emanated from a chandelier hanging from the ceiling. She looked around.
It was the most incredible, revolting room that Anna had ever seen: at least four meters on a side with three large windows behind heavy, braided drapes. The walls were covered with red wallpaper, textured in an intricate floral pattern, along with three gold-framed paintings of nudes in various provocative poses. The crystal chandelier hung above a massive, four-poster bed. On either side of the bed were night tables, handcrafted in rich veneers of walnut, maple and cherry.
She walked to one of the windows and pulled back the drapes, not surprised to see heavy steel bars. She wondered how many other women Koenig had brought to this private little bordello over the years…and what had become of them.
Anna looked into a smaller, adjoining room, lit only by a barred skylight in the ceiling. Inside was a wash stand with a hand pump and a chamber pot. Back in the main room, on the same wall as the door to the washroom was a closet in which Anna found a dozen dresses, all her size and all with the same slit skirt and plunging neckline as the horrid thing she was wearing. She slammed the door shut, her stomach churning with revulsion. There was also a bureau, on the wall opposite the bed, which she didn’t need to open—she knew what would be in
side. She slumped down on a wooden chair near one of the barred windows and buried her face in her hands.
Anna snapped awake at the loud knocking sound. She sat up, trying to figure out where she was. Her eyes scanned the red walls and the heavy curtains. When it came back to her she felt sick again. She was sitting on the bed, obviously having crawled up there at some point and fallen asleep. She pulled back the curtain and looked through the bars. It was dark outside.
Again the knocking, this time accompanied by a rough, gravelly voice. “Kommen Sie. Come to the door. Frau Laurent, come to the door.”
At first, the name confused her. Then the cloud of sleep cleared and she remembered. Of course, he would know her as Jeanne Laurent, the name on the passport she had been carrying when she was arrested. In a fleeting thought she wondered if they still had her passport, though she couldn’t imagine what good it would do her now.
Another knock, and this time she slid off the bed and opened the door.
Otto stood on the other side, his massive bulk filling the entire doorway.
“Komm, have your dinner,” he grunted and motioned toward the table.
Anna thought it curious that he had unlocked the door but hadn’t opened it. Was he a gentleman, respecting her privacy? She dismissed the thought as too much to hope for. It was probably some type of security measure to make sure she wasn’t hiding behind the door ready to hit him over the head with the chamber pot.
Anna nodded at the big man and sat down at the table, wishing she had a sweater or shawl to cover the flimsy revealing dress. In front of her was a single setting of blue and white china, a platter filled with pork chops, boiled potatoes and cooked beets along with a plate of fresh bread. The aroma of the food was overwhelming, and Anna was starved. Her self-consciousness vanished and she eagerly filled her plate.