"That is what I like about you, Kurt. You have a sense of humor." He waved in the direction of a truck directly behind them. "Get something to eat and drink. There is a good bordeaux, I believe. And have someone look at that leg. It appears the Amis gave you more trouble than you let on. Oh, and something else. We captured one of their snipers."
Von Stenger looked up with interest. “Yes?”
“Not a soldier. A woman. French, by the way. The defiant sort of bitch you might expect. She made no secret of the fact that she was fighting with the American snipers. I am going to question her again in the morning and then have her shot, if I can remember it, ha, ha.”
“Do you mind if I ask her a few questions?”
“Go right ahead.”
At that, Friel roared off to manage one of the countless tasks facing a commander. He seemed to be everywhere at once, telling a limping soldier to get off his feet for a while and change his socks, even pausing to help push a stuck vehicle out of the mud. His men loved him for it. Some in the Kampfgruppe had been with him since Russia, and they would follow him to hell and back if it came to it.
Gratefully, Von Stenger climbed into the truck. Darkness would not be bringing the German advance to a halt. Friel was determined to cross the Meuse River and make a race along the better roads that led to the strategically important city of Antwerp, no matter what. The column crept onward through the cold, frozen night.
A medic sent by Friel cleaned and bandaged his wound. By then, Von Stenger had opened the bordeaux and was a little drunk. He ate some cheese and bread with the wine. For some reason, it made him think of Goethe: "If you've never eaten while crying you don't know what life tastes like."
The medic interrupted his thoughts by asking, "How far did you say you walked on this?"
"As far as I had to."
The medic shook his head in disbelief. "I will need to stitch these wounds.”
“Do your worst.”
First, the medic washed out the wounds, making them bleed anew. Von Stenger drank more wine. The medic worked deftly, pulling the edges of each gash together, then stitching them closed. He finished with a liberal dose of sulfa powder.
“You must keep off your feet for a while."
"Thank you for that advice, Herr Doktor. Perhaps you can write the enemy a note to that effect so that they go easy on me. Would you like some wine?"
"I am not a doctor, Herr Hauptmann. Just a medic."
"And I am not a sommelier, but I can pour you a glass."
The medic had to settle for a tin cup. He gulped it down and smacked his lips. "Thank you, Herr Hauptmann. I must go. Believe it or not, there are men with much worse wounds."
Von Stenger sighed. "I am sure there are. Take some of this bread with you. I cannot eat it all."
The medic left the flap open at the back of the truck. Though it caused him some pain, he climbed down and went in search of the captured sniper. He might not have bothered, except for the fact that Friel had described her as French. Something about that nagged at him. What was a French sniper — and a woman, at that — doing out here in the Ardennes? He took the bottle of wine along. If nothing else, he could offer her a drink.
One of Friel’s men pointed him in the right direction. He found her in the back of another truck. Nobody bothered to guard her, because her hands were tied together. No sooner had Von Stenger levered himself over the tailgate than the truck lurched forward. She was trying without much success to stay upright on a bench in the back.
He sat on the floor of the truck near the tailgate, and lit a cigarette. He was surprised when the woman gasped as the flame from the match illuminated his face. “So, you are a sniper,” he said in French.
“And so are you,” she said. “You are Das Gespenst.”
He was somewhat taken aback. “How do you know me?”
“We met once before. Near a little town called Bienville not long after the Allied invasion.”
Von Stenger flicked on a flashlight to study her face more closely. “Now I recognize you. I believe we shared a meal at that chateau. What I wouldn’t give for that fireplace now, eh?”
“You shot me in that field at Bienville. I was in a rowboat.”
“And yet here you are. My aim must have been off that day.”
“How I hated you,” she said. “I was in that hospital for months.”
“If the bullet had gone an inch in another direction, perhaps I could have spared you that trouble.”
How could he make light of what his bullet had done to her? She lashed out at him with the only thing she had: “The American sniper who was in the field that day is here now, in the Ardennes, and he is looking for you.”
“Yes, I know. I almost got him today.”
“But he got away?” she asked, all too quickly.
“Yes, he did. That’s more than I can say for you,” Von Stenger said. He held up the bottle of wine. “Where are my manners. Would you care for a drink?”
She shook her head and forced a smile. “Not if you don’t have a glass. It is unladylike.”
Von Stenger shrugged and took a swig from the bottle. “The Obersturmbannführer is going to have you shot in the morning. He may interrogate you first. Have you ever been interrogated by the SS? You may find it, how shall we say… unpleasant.”
“I have nothing to tell him that I haven’t already said, and nothing more to say to you.”
“I am sure that you do, but I think I have heard enough.” They sat for a while quietly in the back of the bouncing truck. “Hold out your hands.”
“What?”
“Do it!”
She extended her hands, which were tightly tied together at the wrists with rough cord. Von Stenger took out a folding knife, opened the blade, and sawed through her bindings.
“Why are you doing this?” she asked.
“Tell your friend the hillbilly sniper that I will see him later, and that this time, I will finish him off. I want him to have something to think about until we meet for the last time. Now listen carefully. Get into the woods and let the column go past. There is an American unit following in our rear. Make sure you put your hands up high when they come along so that they don’t shoot you. Now go!”
Without so much as a word of thanks, the woman slipped out of the truck and was gone, far more agilely than he had entered. She reminded him of a wild animal set free.
Von Stenger looked up at the sky. He could see stars for the first time in many nights. The clear sky cheered him, but only briefly. For it meant that the Allied planes could fly. The Luftwaffe itself had disappeared from the skies, so there was no hope for cover.
His leg throbbed, but he chose to ignore it. He hoped to have the opportunity to pay back this hillbilly sniper for the pain he had caused him. If the woman did survive and find the hillbilly sniper, she could give him that message.
He smoked a cigarette, finished the wine, and closed his eyes. The war would go on tomorrow, and the next day, and the next. But for how much longer, it was hard to say, especially if Operation Watch on the Rhine faltered.
The thought of the war ending made Von Stenger wistful. If he survived this end game, what would he do? Manage a factory somewhere? Teach Goethe to university students? There were whispers that some Nazis with the money to do so were leaving for Argentina or smuggling their families there. It was a better alternative than living in a defeated Germany. Something to think about.
He climbed out and returned to the vehicle where the medic had attended to him. Rocked by the lurching truck, Von Stenger slept.
CHAPTER 21
Just as Von Stenger had told her, the Americans came along in the wake of the German column. It was getting close to midnight when she stepped out into the road with her hands up. The American sentries were easier to convince than the German ones had been. Nobody clubbed her over the head. A few minutes later, she was reunited with the snipers.