There was nothing more to rehearse.
He could see Schell in the next room quietly going about the task of fabricating the documents. He was grateful for the mild intrusion; it provided something to keep his mind off Oberammergau and Branodz.
He stepped over the sleeping form of Herries and walked into the adjoining room. It was dark but for a pool of light from a lamp in the corner, where Joseph Schell worked on the papers that would get him into the airfield. The whole basement was given over to the legitimate trade of a watch-maker; but it was an easy matter turning those same tools to forgery. Perfect cover.
The Rhodesian leant against the wall and watched the young man at work. His father appeared to have taught him well. A strange skill for one so young.
The boy turned to him. “These are good papers,” he said, waving Herries’ ID documents in the air, the ones that had got them over the Cornelius Bridge. “In fact, they’re the best I’ve seen. SOE’s improving.” He grinned at Kruze. “Your papers have been a little more difficult; I’ve never done Rumanian stuff before. Don’t worry, they’ll still get you inside.”
“They’d better,’ Kruze said, attempting to smile. He wondered how the young watchmaker would react if he were to tell him that Herries’ papers were good because they were real.
“You’re going to take an aircraft, aren’t you?”
Kruze tried not to show his surprise. “What makes you think that?”
The boy shrugged. “First they asked me to turn you into a Rumanian, then they say you will need the service papers of a Luftwaffe major. I think—”
“It is best not to think too much.”
“Perhaps.” He smiled and turned back to his work.
“Where did you learn your English?” Kruze asked, moving the conversation away from Oberammergau. The air force uniform that he had worn under his loose civilian clothes since before his last briefing suddenly seemed to constrict him.
“London. My mother took me there when things started to go bad before the war. It is from her that I get my Jewish blood. My father is German, but too good a man ever to have sympathized with the Nazis.”
“When did you come back?”
“About six months ago a man came to my aunt’s house in Streatham and asked whether I would be prepared to go back into Germany. My father had been working for SOE for some years, at first supplying information on troop movements, then moving into the forgery business.” He held up one of his documents to the light and grunted his satisfaction. “But his eyesight has gone and they needed someone to do the work for him. That’s when they thought of me,” he said proudly.
“But you’re only a kid. You can’t be a day over seventeen.’
“I’m eighteen and a half, old enough to fight. Only what I do is more effective, I think.” He passed Kruze’s documents to him. “There, how do they look?”
Kruze peered hard at the papers. He didn’t know whether they contained all the right information to get him into the airfield or not, but they looked authentic, right down to the weathering effect on the carnet, which made it appear as if it had been well-thumbed.
“SOE taught you to do this?”
“And much more besides. Now I can take apart a Sten and reassemble it blindfolded, I know about explosives, how to operate a transmitter-receiver, listen for the codes on the BBC and parachuting—”
“Which is how you got back in.”
“Of course. I made the jump two months ago.”
“And in all that time you have not left the house? What if the Germans were to conduct a search?”
“There is a hidden compartment, like the priest-hole in English mansions. One of the blessings of these old Bavarian buildings is that you can always find somewhere to hide a man if you try.” He laughed softly. “Sometimes the Nazis come to my father to have their clocks or watches mended. Little do they suspect their every word can be heard by a Jew from behind the skirting board.”
He began to pack up his equipment. “The papers are ready,” he said. “You can give these to your friend when he wakes up. Perhaps you should get some sleep also.”
“I’ve done all the sleeping I’m going to do.”
“Do you think you can complete your mission, pilot?”
“I have to. There can be no room for doubt.”
Schell stood up and clapped him on the back. “Come, it is time for the BBC news. I have to listen in case it mentions us.”
“Us? How do you know?”
The boy’s face lit up. “SOE gave me a call-sign all of my own. If I hear it on the news bulletin then I know I must call London and await instructions. How do you think I prepared for your visit at such short notice?”
Schell led the way up the narrow, darkened stairwell to the small back room, where two armchairs pointed forlornly at an empty fire-grate. He moved over to the table in the corner and turned the knob on the large radiogram. “Whatever you do,” he whispered, “stay away from the windows in the front of the house. Only my father should be seen there.”
The valves in the back of the radio began to hum into life. “Now,” Schell said, “let’s see if Nazareth made the news today.”
For the umpteenth time since his arrest, Malenkoy asked himself why. How had he got involved in this terrible mess? All he had ever done was obey orders. He drew his knees up against his chin in an attempt to ward off the bitter cold in the basement of Branodz headquarters that was now his cell.
He heard footsteps. Then the key rattled in the lock. The door swung open and the nameless NKVD officer who had arrested him marched in.
“You will smarten yourself and come with me,” he said.
“Smarten myself? After half a day in this pigsty and with this round my wrists?” He held his hands up to show the rough hemp which bound his hands together. “Where is Major Shlemov? There’s been some mistake, you’ll see.”
“The major is outside and it was he, Comrade, who issued the orders,” the lieutenant said with obvious pleasure. He prodded Malenkoy in the back with his revolver to get him up the stairs.
Malenkoy blinked as they stepped outside into the dwindling sunlight. The complete shame of his incarceration hit him like a hammer blow as he took in his surroundings. A hundred pairs of eyes looked him over furtively, then went back to overseeing their work as preparation for the final battle continued around the headquarters at Branodz.
A short time after his incarceration, left alone with his thoughts in the basement, he had been roused by the noise of anti-aircraft guns. Then he had heard the aircraft roar over the HQ. Even though his own situation could have hardly been worse, Malenkoy felt bitter disappointment when the sound of the aircraft had faded and Branodz went quiet again. Despite his efforts at Chrudim, it sounded as if the Germans had found the real focus of the assault after all.
He looked over his shoulder at the Alpine villa, where only the day before he had proudly reported in to announce the completion of the maskirovka. From the balcony, the imposing figure of Marshal Konev looked down on him, a mixture of rage and disgust on his face. Then he turned his thick bull-neck and disappeared back into the operations room.
Malenkoy bowed his head. Things had happened so fast in the last few hours. He had been arrested at Chrudim, shortly after he had taken Shlemov to the radio tent. No explanations, just the sudden appearance of a pair of guards wielding their Sudayevs, which they pointed at his chest, and an automaton of a lieutenant as the lynching party. The lieutenant remained impassive to his pleas on the now all too familiar road between Chrudim and Branodz, where he was finally thrown into the basement beneath Konev’s HQ and left to think about his fate.