One telephone call later, the FBI started a minute inspection of the life of Emilia Beatriz Perlo and her family. Others re-examined all the letters exchanged between the family. By that evening, the Agent in charge realised that serious mistakes had been made and, even though some information was still to come from the renewed friendly contact with Spain, there was enough proof in hand to arrest Victoria Calderon and Emilia Perlo.
Recriminations could come later.
Chapter 15 – THE GERMAN
Fall seven times, stand up eight
His name was Uhlmann and he was Waffen-SS.
He had soldiered from 1940 through to the difficult days in early 1945 and had the scars to show for his endeavours in a losing cause. Had he not had his personal effects removed by his captors over the weeks, then the casual observer would have noted that he held his country’s highest decorations for bravery, from the Iron Cross second class he had won in Northern France, through to the Knight’s Cross placed around his neck for his actions on the Russian steppes. He started as a soldier in the Leibstandarte-SS “Adolf Hitler” and ended his days as an officer commanding a panzer battalion in one of Germany’s cream SS formations, namely the 5th SS Panzer Division ‘Wiking’.
He was thirty-three years old and his time soldiering had not sat too heavily on him, apart from the occasional stiffness of an old wound, of which he had received more than his fair share. Particularly, an unusual thigh wound would often trouble him but the story of how he had sustained it earned Rolf many a drink, so he endured it with good humour.
In his younger days his 1.88m frame, blonde hair and blue eyes would have put him on any Waffen-SS recruitment poster and, in truth, he still cut a dashing figure.
Being Waffen-SS meant he got special treatment from the guards. Because he could speak Russian and therefore valuable also meant he didn’t get that special treatment as badly as some other SS officers, although rarely a day went by without some new insult or injury being visited upon him by the Bulgarians who policed the camp at Edelbach. There had been some two hundred and fifty-six officers at its peak but a combination of execution, disease, abuse and escapes had reduced that number to two hundred and seventeen. Exactly two hundred and seventeen Rolf knew, for it was his job to know these things, and the Germans have never been accused of being inefficient.
It had been two hundred and nineteen at breakfast time but Maior Nester had succumbed to his devastating infection mid-morning and Leutnant Lindemann had been shot at 1136 hrs. The memory of that was too fresh. Murdered was more the truth, for no reason other than he was the closest prisoner to that damned NKVD officer who just wanted to show his girl how powerful he really was.
They all knew Kapitan Skryabin was a psychopath and an asshole but to do that? His absence on home leave had been a period of relative calm for the inmates but now he was back. No rhyme or reason, just pistol out, trigger pulled and handsome young Lindemann, former art student of Leipzig, was no more. Another senseless death in a decade of senseless deaths.
The trouble with Skryabin, one camp guard had previously confided in a comrade and was overheard by Rolf, was that he was connected in Moscow and was pretty much fireproof. Uhlmann had no idea who or how highly connected as it was not the sort of thing you would just up and ask a guard, certainly not the guards in this camp anyway.
He had discussed Skryabin with a few of his fellow officers but there was a general feeling of apathy and depression about many comrades, which excluded in-depth thought and conversation unless it was talk of escape, home and family. Perhaps understandable, given what had happened over the last six years.
Edelbach was a former German POW camp for the incarceration of Allied officer prisoners, mainly French with a smattering of Poles, previously known as OFLAG XVIIa. In 1943 it was the site of the largest mass escape of allied prisoners in World War Two when one hundred and thirty-two men made a bid for freedom through a tunnel on the nights of the 17th and 18th September, escaping in two groups a day apart, with only two men making the full escape to their native France.
Now the sole occupants of this miserable place were its former proprietors and their new custodians. The previous inmates of Edelbach had been marched away to Linz before the Red Army captured the site, with many failing the harsh physical test and dying right at the end of the war. Most of the barracks were damaged and unoccupied, and solely the five blocks that housed Rolf and his fellows remained inhabited from the thirty or so that had been home to thousands of unfortunates.
There were all sorts in Edelbach now, from Nazi political animals through to frontline regulars like Rolf who cared little for politics and who had fought for country when called, regardless of the regime in charge. Most were from the regular army, the Wehrmacht, with a considerable number of Waffen-SS, some Luftwaffe, and even one Kriegsmarine Officer. As was the case with a number of SS officers, Rolf was, or rather, had been a Nazi party member until Germany’s collapse, but would confess his membership derived from him being caught up in the euphoria of the early years rather than any fanaticism or dedication to the cause.
Evidence of the presence of military personnel from France and Poland was to be found in the unusual graffiti in some of the separate blocks. Overall, the forty plus buildings had occupied a site of about a quarter of a hectare in the Austrian Waldviertel. Barbed wire and guard towers surrounded the whole camp with solely the one way in and out. Dated it may be after its facilities were already abused in four years of service but it was still very effective at keeping people just where the watchers wanted them. Each remaining hut sat on a concrete plinth above which it was raised three feet so inspections could be done to ensure no tunnels were being dug. German efficiency was turned against them and had caused many a wry smile in discussions. A single central wood-burner provided heating for the whole hut. That was not a problem as the European summer visited them but would undoubtedly lead to deaths as 1945 drew to a close. Beds were straw paliasses and blankets and it seemed there was never enough of either to go round.
Meals were two a day. Early morning was a small ration of bread with a thin vegetable soup and evenings brought the delights of more thin soup and the hope of some meat floating in it. The question had been raised a number of times as to what the meat was, so Rolf had enquired but hadn’t translated it literally, preferring to keep his comrades in the dark about what they were enjoying so heartily.
Of course, there was constant talk of escaping the camp and going home, but only recently had the talk of escape been harnessed to a genuine fear of safety at the hands of the guards. Treatment had been strangely reasonable initially, when their guards were from a combat infantry division.
Now it was a very different kettle of fish with the new Bulgarian bunch that had not fired a shot in anger,and had much to prove. Of course, Ostap Shandruk, the ever-cheerful Ukrainian, had more reason to fear than anyone else did. If his identity were to become known he would be summarily shot. His papers said he was German and that had not yet been investigated. His Ukrainian SS insignia had long ago been discarded and the mastery of the German language, which had guaranteed his promotion in the Galician Division, now helped to keep his identity secret.