176799.fb2 The Leader And The Damned - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 21

The Leader And The Damned - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 21

Chapter Twenty-One

'Just in time,' said Christa. 'Here we are, and we're clear of the street.'

'They'll search the whole area,' Lindsay warned. 'Checking on that tram was only the start…'

They were standing in a narrow alley between ancient walls and the only sign it was daytime was the thin avenue of sky way above their heads. There, was a smell of tomcat. The cobbles beneath their feet were slimy. The buildings had a condemned look. She extracted a key from her purse, inserted it into the lock of a new solid wooden door decorated with iron studs. and paused before she opened it.

'Kurt came here on leave and when he was on the run. His Aunt Helga lives here. As I told you, they took her husband for the labour battalions. She hates the Nazis Your uniform will frighten her. Wait on the third landing while I talk to her..'

It was so dark inside, Lindsay could see nothing when she had shut the outer door. He felt his way up the narrow staircase on his own, clutching the greasy banister rail. Counting the landings, he waited on the third while Christa went on up the fourth flight. He wrinkled his nose at the musty smell; the place had an uninhabited feel. Was the aunt the only occupant, he wondered? Above him he saw light filter out as he heard a door open.

There was a whispered conversation which went with the atmosphere of the place., A pungent odour of urine drifted out from an open door on his landing. He peered inside and saw by the half-light a window smeared with dirt, a lavatory that had not been flushed for some time.

'Ian! Come up.'

Christa's voice. His hand slipped easily up over a section of recently polished banister. At the top, a middle-aged woman with strong features stood beside Christa. Ignoring the uniform, she frowned as she examined his face. 'He has some identification?' she demanded.

'Have you?' Christa queried. 'This is Aunt Helga. She is very cautious..'

'You need to be these days,' the woman interjected grimly. 'It is rumoured there is an underground network which smuggles allied fliers to Switzerland. The Gestapo use their own agents in the guise of British or Americans to try and infiltrate the network..'

'I have my RAF identity card,' Lindsay began.

'And why did they not take this document from you?' demanded the gaunt-faced woman as she took the folder from Lindsay and checked it carefully, comparing the photograph with its owner. 'Christa has told me you were a prisoner.. '

'They did…' Lindsay caught Christa's warning glance. He was to reveal only the minimum information. 'A Gestapo man called Gruber kept it for two days – doubtless to have it photographed for his files..'

'They let him have it back on orders from higher up,' Christa said quickly. 'He is a Wing Commander and I think they hoped to obtain valuable information from him..'

'Take it!' Helga had used her flowered apron to wipe it clean of her fingerprints and thrust it at him, holding it between the cloth of the apron. 'Come inside. I must insist you give me that uniform so I can burn it.'

'The smell will be foul,' Lindsay observed with an attempt at humour but Helga remained stern and aloof.

'We burn anything these days to keep warm. We live with foul smells.' She closed and locked the door of the apartment and went over to the stove where she picked up an iron poker, raised the lid and stirred the smouldering contents. He had the impression she had just armed herself with a weapon. Her next question confirmed his suspicion.

'Where did you obtain that SS uniform from?'

'Aunt Helga!' Christa protested. 'I got it for him – it doesn't matter how. You've got to trust him. I have been to England and I tested him when first we met. Show him the hiding-place.'

'The one Kurt made for himself and was never able to use?' she said bitterly. 'Very well, but I will need that uniform to burn piece by piece..'

The uniform seemed to be an obsession with her. Lindsay guessed she was younger than her weathered appearance. God knew what she had suffered.

'We will get warning this time,' Helga remarked, 'if there is an emergency. A good friend of mine in the country built a fresh door in the alley strong enough to resist cannon-shot. They have to ring the bell now and wait. When they came for Kurt they simply smashed the door in…'

The hiding-place was reached by an ingeniously camouflaged trap-door hinged in the roof alongside a cross-beam. Helga fetched a pair of steps from the kitchen, stood them in a certain place and climbed up, holding a thin-bladed knife.

'You insert the knife tip next to this hook on the beam,' she explained. 'Shove it up like you would your tool into a woman…' Lindsay glanced at Christa, who stared across the room, blushing. 'The knife tip,' Helga continued, 'impinges on a steel bar which Kurt attached to the trap-door. Push it up. So…!'

A square section of the seemingly continuous ceiling elevated to expose a dark hole. Helga dropped the trap in position and came back down the steps. She was carrying them back into the kitchen when she growled the invitation.

'If you are hungry I can provide some discoloured and tasteless liquid which we call soup. At least it will be hot..'

'You've been accepted!' Christa whispered.

At 3 pm precisely, one hour after their arrival at the spotless apartment of Helga, a police detachment called to search the whole building.

The clapper of the large bowl-shaped bell above the apartment door was hammering away like a machine-gun non-stop. Christa swallowed the remnants of her watery coffee and jumped up from the table.

'What the hell's that?'

'Front door bell in the alley,' Helga said laconically.

She opened a window and leaned far out beyond the dormer overhang to look down a sheer wall into the alley beneath. Waving a hand, she shouted something Lindsay, who had also stood up, did not catch. Withdrawing her head she walked into the kitchen and came back with the pair of steps.

'Looks like the whole Munich police force is down there. Stay in the attic until I tap three times on the trap with my broom-handle. Don't forget your cigarette pack, Mr Lindsay..'

He took the knife she handed him and shinned up the steps. He managed to operate the primitive opening device first time and reached down for his suitcase which Christa was holding. Helga was clearing the table of cups and plates, leaving only crockery she had used herself.

The bell started hammering again. Lindsay carted Christa's case up to the attic while the girl collected stubs of cigarettes, wrapped them in a piece of newspaper and shoved it inside her coat pocket.

'My cap…' Lindsay called down.

She rammed it on her head and climbed the steps, grabbing the hand the Englishman extended to haul her up inside the attic. Helga came back, took the steps away and reappeared holding a stick with a knobbly handle. She developed a limp as she went towards the door, looking up at the two faces peering down.

'Rheumatism,' she said drily. 'Takes me ages to get down those stairs..'

It was the nearest Helga had come to displaying a sense of humour since their arrival. Lindsay closed the flap and felt for the bolt. He rammed it home and waited. The trap-door was made of knotted wood like the rest of the ceiling. Poor Kurt had made a skilful job of concealing the trap-door. Christa switched on a small torch she had brought from the kitchen.

The attic had a Disney-like character – roofs slanting at steep angles instead of walls. The floor was boarded over the rafters. Two tiny dormer windows had been masked with heavy curtains which let in no daylight. There were even two sleeping-bags and Christa had settled herself on one.

'Get on the other sleeping-bag,' she warned. 'The floorboards creak..'

'You know this place well?'

'Yes.' She nodded, her expression wistful. Lindsay reflected she had spent time with Kurt in this tiny, hidden world. He had eased himself on to the sleeping-bag next to the trap-door when they heard voices below, voices they could hear with surprising clarity. The police had arrived.

In the room below, Helga was chiding police sergeant Berg, a man of fifty-eight with an ample stomach and a flowing moustache. He had two men with him and instructed them to start the search.

'A body can't even finish her meagre meal without you invading her privacy,' Helga growled, leaning on her stick. 'There ought to be a law against it..'

'We are the law,' Berg reminded her amiably.

'Then there ought to be a law against the law!'

'We're looking for a man and a woman,' Berg explained in a conciliatory tone. 'The man is wearing an SS uniform..'

'I would let the SS into my place! Give him a meal – make him feel at home! Like bloody hell I would..'

'Now, Helga, I'm only doing my duty.'

'Then tell them to be careful in my kitchen. I can hear them messing about with crockery.'

It was at that moment when the knot of wood fell from the trap-door into the room below. Lindsay had pressed his ear to the trap to hear more clearly and was appalled. He distinctly heard it ping on the floor of the room below during a brief pause in the conversation. He heard Berg's reaction.

'What was that?'

The Englishman saw Christa's hand clench before she switched off the torch. Without touching the woodwork, he peered down with one eye through the hole the fallen knot had left. He had a clear view of the room.

Berg had been standing looking out of the window with his back to Helga when the knot fell. Helga sighed and moved her stick four inches, covering the knot with the tip of her stick. Berg had turned round and was looking suspiciously at her. There was no smile on his face now. He had become the official policeman.

'The stove, of course!' rasped Helga. 'Sometimes,' she went on with withering sarcasm, 'I get hold of a piece of wood I can actually burn in it! Is there a law against that too?'

Through the spy-hole Lindsay watched and held his breath. The knot of wood was larger than the tip of her stick. Berg had only to look down… His next move would be to look up. And since the policeman was not wearing glasses his eyesight was probably excellent.

Helga, her mouth tight and surly, held Berg's gaze, then she went on talking, her manner aggressive. 'You haven't looked inside that big cupboard yet. Maybe I have your SS man hidden away behind my few clothes. There's plenty of room, dumb-head!'

Berg was so annoyed he went to the cupboard and opened both doors. Helga stooped quickly, picked up the knot of wood and hobbled over to the stove. She used one hand to lift up the lid with the poker and with the other flipped the knot inside. Berg closed the doors of the cupboard and swung round.

'Helga, I don't like this any more than you do. The man wearing SS uniform is British..'

'I know! He has a hooked nose and a scar on his right cheek.'

'You've seen him!'

'Berg, you fell for that one, you old fool!' She cackled, waving her stick at him in a mock threatening gesture. 'Time they put you out to grass!'

She glared as the other two policemen reappeared respectively from the bedroom and the kitchen. They both shook their heads. Pointing her stick at the door to the outer landing, Helga growled at them.

'You know the way out, or have you forgotten the layout of this luxurious apartment?'

Berg made a gesture for them to leave, closed the door and came back into the room. He stood exactly beneath the hole in the trap-door. He only had to glance up… Lindsay tensed. Did he know of the existence of the attic?

Berg reached inside his coat pocket and brought out a round tin which he presented to Helga. 'My brother came on leave from Tunisia a week ago. They captured an English truck which had lost its way in the mountains. Stacked with the stuff – English coffee. Lyons. Something for the trouble you've been caused..'

'Bribery! Black market, too!' Helga's claw-like hand reached out and grasped the tin. 'You're a villain, Berg. You know that? I may drink your health with the first cup.'

'I'll be going – but to save you more trouble I'll leave this document which confirms this building has been searched.' Producing a piece of paper he spread it on the table, dated and signed it and gave it to her. 'If the SS arrive wave this in their faces. It's signed by the Munich chief of police as well as myself.'

'I'l1 see you downstairs. No, don't argue! I want to make sure that outer door to the alley is locked and bolted myself. You wouldn't believe the people who find their way down that alley in the dark.'

'Believe me, I would,' Berg said vehemently.

The door closed and the flat was suddenly unnaturally hushed. In the attic Christa let out a sigh of relief and stretched her aching limbs. She had remained cramped in one position during the whole tense ordeal.

'When that knot of wood came loose I could have screamed,' she said.

'How did you know?'

She grasped his hand and pointed it upwards. Lindsay saw above him a distorted blip of light on the slanting roof, light from the room below. He told her what had happened.

'She's a gutsy old girl,' he remarked. 'Now she's making sure they leave the premises. While she's away there are things you should know in case something happens to me before we make the rendezvous tomorrow. At exactly eleven in the morning in front of the Frauenkirche

He explained every detail of how to link up with the agent, Paco. She nestled up dose to him in the dark, listening carefully. He then went on to tell her something else.

'If you alone get through to Switzerland with Paco…'

'We both get through or not at all,' she said fiercely.

'It's wartime. For God's sake, listen. The Allied Command want to know the location of the Fuhrer's secret headquarters. You can tell them that better than I can. The second thing they want to know is who is controlling the German war machine. Well, it's the Fuhrer himself…' He paused, wondering whether to go on.

"There's something else, isn't there?' she said quietly. 'About the Fuhrer

'Go on…'

'Ever since he returned from that trip to the Eastern front at Smolensk he's seemed different. I don't think other people have noticed because they're so frightened of him – including Keitel and Jodl. And ever since he arrived back he's either listened and said nothing – or else screamed at them. The way he walks isn't quite right. There are other things, little things only a woman would notice. It's uncanny – I've felt I was in the presence of his twin brother – except that he hadn't one..'

'You said hadn't – past tense. Your feeling must be strong. I notice you didn't mention Bormann when you referred to Keitel and Jodl…'

'Bormann has also been acting strangely since the Fuhrer's return. Every time during a military conference when I looked at the Fuhrer, trying to work out what seemed different, I found Bormann watching me like a cat – as though trying to make up his mind abbot something.'

'Something about the Fuhrer?'

'No! Something about me – whether I had noticed the change..'

' The change. Christa, you've put your finger on it. They've found a dummy Fuhrer – Bormann has, I'm certain. While at the Berghof the first time I witnessed a nightmare scene…'

He told her about the man gesturing and screaming at the top of his voice inside the circle of mirrors. Her fingers gripped his arm tightly as he went on. At one moment she had been stroking the edge of his jaw but now she was motionless.

'When was this?' she said eventually. 'I told you – that part of the Berghof was always sealed off by Commandant Mailer..

'When I saw the spit image of Adolf Hitler pirouetting inside the circle of mirrors at the Berghof, the Fuhrer was a thousand miles away at Smolensk..'

'There are two of them? How is that possible, Ian?'

'I don't know. All I know is that it is a fact. Now what you say confirms that the Hitler who boarded the plane for Smolensk was not the same man who stepped off it when the plane returned.

'Is it a plot?' she wondered aloud.

'People always think of plots, conspiracies – when so often the truth is quite simple. What holds up the entire edifice of the Nazi regime, stops the generals launching a military coup?'

'The Fuhrer

'So whatever happens there has to be a Fuhrer. Bormann, Goebbels, Goering, Ribbentrop and all the others – to say nothing of Keitel and Jodl, the whole SS and Gestapo apparatus – all of them depend for their continuing existence on the continuing existence of the Fuhrer !'

'You mean..

'Let me finish. If any one of those top people did suspect a switch had been made would they dare even mention it? They'd go along with the deception,,,'

'What about the generals who disagree with Hitler? Guderian, for example..'

'How often do men like that visit the Fuhrer these days now he's locked himself away at the Wolf's Lair with occasional trips to the Berghof?'

'Very seldom. They expect to see the Fuhrer Christa said slowly.

'So the fact that a substitute may have taken his place would never even cross their minds – especially if the double is convincing enough. And from what I saw during my first stay at the Berghof this unknown man has had plenty of time to perfect his act.'

'There's Eva Braun,' Christa reminded him. 'She's bound to detect the impersonation…'

'And how strong is her position without the Fuhrer? What's she like, incidentally?'

'Attractive and empty-headed. Spends most of her time at the Berghof making herself up and thinks of nothing except clothes. She's vain, often grumbles about the lack of attention paid to her by the Fuhrer

'So the dummy has been on the spot to entertain her during the Fuhrer's long absences. They could even have been carrying on an affair,' Lindsay suggested. 'What would her position be without the Fuhrer?' he repeated.

'She'd find herself in the gutter.' Christa's tone was unequivocal. 'She's hated by the wives of the other Nazis – Ribbentrop, Goebbels and so on. My God, I'm beginning to think you could be right. It would also explain why Commandant Muller sealed off that area of the Berghof..

'And why Commandant Muller had to have an "accident" just about the time the switch would be made by Bormann. I'm sure Muller was murdered – he wasn't the type to commit suicide – or fall over the edge of the Kehlstein parapet. Didn't you say there was a very loud explosion about the time the

Fuhrer's plane was due back from Smolensk?' 'It was like a bomb going off…'

'His plane must have crashed,' Lindsay conjectured. 'Who went to the airfield to meet the plane?' 'Martin Bormann:'

'The Brown Shadow. Always at his master's side – and, wielding immense power "by order of the Fuhrer". Only someone with that power could work the trick.'

'You think the plane crashed by accident?' Christa asked.

'What was the weather like?'

'Diabolical. The fog was at tree height. They said the plane had diverted to another airfield.'

'I'm a flier. I've seen that fog at the Wolf's Lair. Landing a plane under those conditions would be near-suicide…'

'The Fuhrer was always impatient. He probably over-ruled the pilot.'

'You realize what this means if we're right? Bormann will send out a horde of men to catch us with orders to shoot on sight.-We know too much to live.'