“The man I loved died in a hospital ward over a year ago.
He had pried too deeply and cursed himself for the intrusion.
“A divorcee,” she said presently, putting on a brave smile. “I wonder how my parents will take it.”
“As long as you’re happy, surely they’ll…”
She smiled again, the sadness of the previous minute gone from her face. “Tell that to my father.”
“But will they back you, your parents, if it gets rough?
It might, you know. Perhaps we should be more careful — I don’t mean for me, it’s gone beyond that. The worst the RAF can do is reduce me to the ranks.”
“And stop you from flying. Could you live with that?”
“I’ve thought about it.”
“In any case,” she added quickly. “It’s not going to come to that. Robert’s not going to contest it. If he had wanted to he would have called me, or written.”
The drone of an aircraft, somewhere far above them, probably searching for a gap in the mist through which to land, was the only sound to be heard.
“As for my parents, they’ll be disappointed, but they know what things have been like for the past year or so. I’ve tried to hide it, to put on a brave face, but they know.”
He was about to speak, but she put her finger to his lips.
“No more of this talk. We live for now, you and I. I haven’t had a chance to do that in a long time.”
She jumped out of bed and pulled a dressing gown over her shoulders.
“How about a walk? It’s so beautiful around here, you’ll see.” Her enthusiasm was infectious and he smiled. “I’d love to bring Billy when he’s better, have him to stay for a while. You would come, wouldn’t you?”
“Yes, I’d like that,” he said. He thought of the boy from the East End of London and wondered whether he would feel out of place too. A stranger in a strange land.
“We’ll pass by the baker’s on the way back. If we’re lucky they might even have some bread. The rationing’s not nearly as bad as it is in London.”
Kruze threw back the sheets and moved over to where she was standing, half-dressed, by the window.
“You’re right,” he said, and kissed her softly. “No more talk about tomorrow.”
Herries, washed and in clean clothes, was ushered from the back of the truck by an officer and four military policemen. The DC-3 was already lined up on the runway, its propellers turning. The pilot watched nervously out of the window as the POW and his escort jumped into the back of the aircraft and the door was closed. He didn’t waste any time in opening up the throttles. He’d seen too many pilots caught on the ground to know that it was madness to loiter at an exposed airfield so close to the front.
He’d tried to find out what all the fuss was about while they were waiting for the truck to arrive, but the officer had told him to mind his own business. Now he was simply glad to be flying a plane out of that sector, heading for England. With a bit of luck, they should be there in just four hours.
Staverton sat alone in his office, chewing over the events of the past hour in Churchill’s Downing Street bunker.
When the PM’s private secretary had rung, ordering him to get over to No. 10 straight away, his immediate thoughts were for the Rostock raid. He knew Fleming had pulled it off; he had received the signal along with the supplementary message from Bowman that the Komet was capable of air-to-ground ops as well. And, God knows, that had given him enough cause for concern.
This gave him a great deal more.
Churchill called the special cabinet advisers together whenever there was a crisis. While the career soldiers on the General Staff talked tactics, Staverton and his two counterparts came up with unconventional answers to unconventional situations.
Except crisis wasn’t the word, Staverton thought.
A man was being brought to London from Pilzen, western Czechoslovakia. An Englishman, a traitor, with a story — and documentary evidence — that outlined a Soviet plan to launch an attack on all three fronts in eleven days’ time. They would be in Paris in three weeks and the Channel ports perhaps three after that. And no one knew why.
Until Herries and the documents arrived they were only dealing with a few facts. The most important was that they had the name of the man who was co-ordinating the front-wide assault. Staverton had heard of Shaposhnikov, but he
wasn’t much more than a name. The AVM’s opposite number on the cabinet advisory team had become terribly excited the moment it had been mentioned. So the Kremlin was bringing Shaposhnikov, the arch-strategist, more or less out of retirement for this one. There had to be very special reasons for that.
The marshal’s right-hand men were less well known in intelligence circles. A quick trawl of the text by General Styles’ staff in Czechoslovakia had highlighted three additional key players. General Vorontin would lead the 2nd Belorussian Front to the far north, General Badunov would head up the 1st Belorussian in the centre and General Nerchenko the 2nd Ukrainian to the far south. Shaposhnikov was going to take personal charge of the 1st Ukrainian. But what of the existing front commanders, Marshals Rokossovsky, Zhukov and Konev?
The plans appeared to have been drafted by Shaposhnikov; they were certainly signed by him. They pinpointed where Shaposhnikov would establish his HQ. In addition to leading the 1st Ukrainian’s thrust, he would personally direct the entire six hundred-mile front from a place in western Czechoslovakia called Branodz. That also gave them something to play with, though not much.
“Archangel.” He realized he had said the word aloud, lingering over each syllable. There was irony. The Russians were calling their operation after a semi-deity which had officially ceased to exist almost thirty years before.
There was one further possibility: that it was not the product of the Soviet High Command at all, but of a rebellious faction within the Red Army operating beyond its control. The theory dovetailed neatly with the fact that the three existing marshals at the front appeared not to be part of the plan. But where did that leave them? Should Stalin be informed, or was he the architect? Would a tip-off to the Soviet leader merely precipitate the advance of their tanks? And Heaven knew, Staverton thought, there was little that the battle-weary Allied troops could do to stop them, even with eleven days’ warning.
In the end, everything hinged on Shaposhnikov. Stalin’s Chief of General Staff would trigger Archangel from the front. Churchill wanted to know everything about the man and, when they next convened, an idea of how to stop him.
To Staverton, sitting at his desk under the dimmed electric lighting of the Bunker, it was a bad dream. His sleep-starved mind wandered to the man who had first supplied the information. The report said that he was an Englishman serving in the Wehrmacht — no, the SS. How could they trust intelligence from such a source?
But those who had seen the Archangel documents believed it. And, more to the point, the Prime Minister believed it too. Churchill had long said it was almost inevitable that the Russians would turn their attentions to the West. That the Yalta Agreement was just another piece of paper.
As soon as they entered the sitting room they paused briefly, relishing the warmth of the fire over which they would soon toast the bread kept back for her by the village baker. Then Penny went through to the kitchen to prepare the plates for tea.
Kruze’s gaze was drawn to a picture of Fleming on the table by the window. He was sitting in the cockpit of a Spitfire, posing easily for the camera, a smile creasing his eyes in the hot Italian sun.
Kruze heard Penny starting back and put the picture down. Only then did it strike him that it was the only time he had seen Fleming really happy.