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"We need to get across the Meuse River before this weather breaks!" Friel said. "If the Allied planes catch us too soon, the whole operation will come to a halt."

Von Stenger caught his eye. "I would not mind a break in the weather," he said. "Nothing but snow, cold, and more snow."

"You won't be saying that when you have an American plane buzzing over your head." He turned to the others. "We must be across the river by morning! There can be no more excuses!"

Friel's voice had the force of an iron bar when he needed it to; his men seemed to bend under it. His eyes shined with intensity and energy. For all his urbane ways, it was no wonder that he was an SS officer. There had been rumors that Friel had suffered a nervous breakdown after returning from Russia, where his unit had earned the nickname The Blowtorch Brigade for its propensity for burning everything Russian in its path. Seeing him now, Von Stenger thought that maybe Friel had indeed suffered a breakdown, but not necessarily from any weakness of character. Just the opposite. Friel must have needed time to recharge. How could someone possibly maintain that level of intensity?

Von Stenger drifted away from the other officers, slung his rifle over his shoulder, and lit a Sobranie in the lee of the tavern. The thick stone walls served as an effective wind block against the icy air and snow. The walls were not thick enough, however, to block out the sound of the woman's scream that came from within.

He looked around with only passing interest. The woman who had been handing out sandwiches and beer was gone. Though she was well past her prime, that apparently had not stopped the soldiers from dragging her inside. He might have tried to stop them — he was an officer, after all — but these SS troops were verrückt. Crazy. He certainly felt like an outsider among them. And that foolish Sergeant Breger had been only too happy to shoot down the Americans. He might not have any qualms about dispatching a meddling Wehrmacht officer, either. Von Stenger had seen it happen in Russia near the end, when discipline began to wan. A bullet in the back, apparently by accident.

Trying not to be too obvious about it, Von Stenger adjusted his collar so that his rank insignia showed more clearly.

It appeared that the sergeant and his two thugs were not the only ones rampaging through the town. Another group of SS soldiers was going from house to house — ostensibly for a security check — but in the process they were carrying off anything of value. They were hardly more than boys, just eighteen or nineteen, from the look of them. Baby faces. But there was nothing childish in their demeanor. One of the boys had stuffed a pair of silver candlesticks into his pockets. Another had a bottle of liquor in one hand. The other hand held a pistol. Friel stood nearby, still obsessing over his map, apparently oblivious to what his troops were doing — or else he didn't much care.

The older man who had been waving the German flag earlier came out of the house that Von Stenger had been sheltering against. With angry eyes, he followed the progress of the marauding young soldiers. And then he started toward them, clearly intending to chastise them.

Von Stenger pushed away from the wall to block his path.

"If you know what's good for you, you'll leave them be, mein guter Mann," he said.

"You are an officer. Are you in charge here?" the old man demanded, speaking German.

"No, I am not," Von Stenger said quietly. "I think the devil himself is in charge. You had better go back inside and don't come out again."

But it was too late. The trio of young SS men approached. "Is this your house, old man? We need to go inside and see your papers."

The old man drew himself up. "I fought for the Kaiser in 1914! I was a good German before any of you were born! This is not how German troops should act."

The young soldier who was holding the liquor bottle slipped it into his pocket and aimed the pistol at the old man's head. His face was a blank mask and already he was turning his face slightly away to avoid the inevitable spattering of blood and bone that was about to take place.

Von Stenger spoke up. "I will look at the old man's papers. There are other houses here to search."

The SS boys looked at Von Stenger as if seeing him for the first time. Their eyes slipped over his rank insignia, but lingered at his throat, where his Knight's Cross was visible. Even if they did not respect a Wehrmacht captain, they would respect that bit of black metal.

Over at the Schwimmwagen, his driver had stopped chewing and was staring.

The boy with the pistol lowered it and shrugged. "Yes, Herr Hauptmann," he said. They moved on.

Von Stenger turned to the old man and gave him a shove — it was more for show, but the old man began to stammer indignantly. He shoved him again and got him inside the tiny house. An old woman and a very young boy, no more than eight or nine, stared at him wide-eyed.

"I must speak to the commanding officer!" the old man said. "I am a German citizen!"

"Listen to me," Von Stenger said. "These are SS troops. They do what they want. They will kill you and your family if you confront them. I will tell them that I saw your papers and that you are a good German. Maybe they will leave you alone — if you keep your mouth shut."

Smoke had started to rise from the tavern across the street.

"They have set fire to the tavern!” the old man shouted in alarm, moving toward the door. “I must go to help Madame Lemerand."

Von Stenger blocked his path. "There is nothing you can do for her. If the SS killed her, then that's that. Is that your grandson? You had better stay here and look after him."

For a moment, it looked as if the old man might try to push past him. And then just as suddenly realization seemed to come over him. His whole body sagged. "This war has gone on too long. I thought it was already lost until I saw these tanks arrive. Now, I wish I'd never seen them. Poor Madame Lemerand!"

"Stay inside if you know what's good for you," Von Stenger said.

The old man nodded. "I can see there are a few good soldiers left. Thank you, Herr Hauptmann."

Von Stenger stepped back out and shut the door firmly behind him, then lingered near the house. Most of the SS troops were leaving, but it wouldn’t hurt to hang around for a few minutes. It was silly, but he now felt obliged to protect the old man and his family.

His driver came over. "They were going to shoot him."

"Yes."

"I was not sure they were going to listen to you, Herr Hauptmann."

"But they did. That man is a good German. He fought in the Great War."

"Then you did the right thing, although it hasn't won you any friends."

To Von Stenger's surprise, the confrontation at the house had drawn Friel's attention. The SS commander dodged between the rolling tanks to cross the village street.

"What was that all about?" he asked.

"Just an old man who wanted to join up and help us win the war."

"Ha, ha! That's the spirit." Friel looked at the tavern, from which flames were just beginning to lick the sky, and then at Von Stenger. "I can see you don't approve. But let me tell you something. The last time I was in Germany a month ago, I was there when the Allies bombed Kiel. I saw little schoolgirls reduced to bloody smears on the wall. That is what war has become. So please save your silent judgments for someone else, Herr Hauptmann."

Friel had cold blue eyes. Von Stenger met them. He had dismissed Friel previously as just another believer, a Nazi fanatic. He could see now in those eyes that Friel was not only fiercely intelligent, but that he had the soul of a glacier. Von Stenger knew he had better be careful from now on. "No one needs to tell me what war has become, but that does not mean one has to enjoy this kind of excess. A good soldier does his duty."