“What is the sex?” he asked.
The midwife ignored him. Her attention remained on the infant now cradled in her arms, the umbilical cord tracing a path back inside the womb. Braun had relaxed and appeared unconscious.
He could not see the baby clearly, so he moved closer.
“The sex. Tell me,” he demanded.
“A boy.”
Had he heard right? “Truly?”
“You sound amazed.”
He recovered his emotions. No one must know what he thought. “I only speak of the joy he will bring to the mother.”
“It is good to have a son.”
The midwife turned her attention back to Braun as the afterbirth was expelled. He stepped away. A son. Hitler’s son. He recalled what his former supreme leader had told him after Braun had revealed in the Führerbunker that she was pregnant. There had been no anger, no joy. Just a placid acceptance. But Hitler had wanted the baby to survive, harboring a dream that his issue would one day resurrect the movement. So he released Bormann from his duty and instructed him to ensure that both Braun and the baby survived. Bormann had accepted the charge only as a way of escaping the death sentence that was Berlin. He hadn’t wanted to stay in the first place and had urged Hitler to flee south to the Alps. The fanatical idiot refused. Hitler had actually thought that he could rally enough military might to thwart the advancing American and Russian armies.
He glanced down and noticed that the midwife had tied the umbilical cord and cut away the tissue. The infant started to cry, and the woman swiped the tiny face with a wet rag.
“He is a beauty,” the midwife said.
“No flaws?”
“None I can see.”
Not what he wanted to hear.
“Give him to me.”
The woman laid the screaming baby in his arms. Sparse wisps of black hair matted the scalp. He wondered what Adolf Hitler would have thought to be here, holding his son, admiring what he and Eva Braun had conceived. Most likely he would have felt nothing. Hitler had been drawn to children, but only because they represented the perfect canvas for his political image.
He laid the baby beside a still-unconscious Eva Braun.
He then removed the Luger he’d carried since leaving the Führerbunker and fired one bullet into the midwife’s skull.
The fat woman’s body slammed to the floor.
Eva Braun never moved. Exhaustion claimed her. She would be told that the baby died at birth and the midwife was killed for incompetence. There would be no argument from her. Why should there be? They were now bound together. Their lives forever intertwined.
And that was fine.
She wasn’t altogether unpleasant, and he realized that his ability to enjoy female companionship in the years ahead would be limited. He must be careful. He’d watched how a woman could undo a man. That was not going to happen to him. Eva Braun would do as she was told or he’d plant a bullet in her skull, too.
He carried the infant from the room.
Outside, in the shade of a porch that jutted from the front of the farmhouse sat a man. Bormann walked over and handed him the baby. “Raise him as your own.”
The man’s eyes were misty with pride. “He is his?”
“Absolutely.”
“I heard a shot.”
“The midwife’s duty.”
The man nodded. “There can be no witnesses.”
“Just you and I, old friend.”
“I will raise him well.”
“It is of no matter to me any longer. I have done my duty.”
A lie. He was supposed to raise the child himself. But he wanted no more reminders of Adolf Hitler.
The man rose from his chair and said, “Live long, old friend.”
“I plan to.”
And Bormann watched as his visitor headed for a car parked under the shade of a sprawling elm, the infant in his arms.
Schüb finished his story.
Voices broke the silence.
From behind where they stood.
Schüb ignored the sound and stepped forward, grasping a rope handle for the door.
They entered what appeared to be a funerary chamber, the spacious room lit by sconces. A far wall was lined with bookcases, illuminated by ceiling-mounted floodlights. The shelves teemed with odd-shaped volumes packed tight in rows. But what dominated the room were two sarcophagi, each flooded in a pool of blue-white light. The exteriors were of marble, one gray, the other pink, the pair similar in size.
“The pinkish tomb contains the mortal remains of my mother,” Schüb said. “Eva Braun. The other is Bormann’s.”
“Your brother was Bormann’s son, born in Africa,” Wyatt said. “You, though, were the baby born in Spain. You are the son of Adolf Hitler.”
Schüb’s face had a sad remorseful mien.
Then Wyatt saw the gold bars, stacked five feet high, at least six piles on pallets. “There must be several hundred million dollars’ worth of bullion there.”
“A fraction over a billion actually.”
“This is Hitler’s Bounty?”
“What is left of it.”
He’d never seen so much raw gold.
He stepped over and lifted one of the bars. Maybe thirty or so pounds. He studied the top, half expecting to see a swastika etched into the surface. But there was nothing.
“No links to Nazis remain,” Schüb said. “Those traces were removed long ago.”
“This is from the Reichsbank robbery? What was stashed in the Alps at the end of the war?”
“Some. Some more from the bounty. Other parts from unspeakable sources. Bormann took control of all those caches.”
He recalled what Isabel had called Bormann.
A quetrupillán. Mute devil.
“This is the devil’s gold?”
Schüb nodded. “A good way to describe it.”
“How did Bormann get it all here?”
“Simple, actually. Much of what was buried in the mountains were bags of iron bars and plain paper. The actual gold and currency was moved farther south into Austria, where it stayed for many years. The man who raised me from birth personally supervised its eventual transportation here in the early 1950s. It took several years to accomplish, but it was accomplished.”
“How was all that kept secret?”
“There were men who still believed in the Reich. They did their job and took what they knew with them to their graves. They understood their duty. But of course each one realized that he, or his family, would be shot by the others if he revealed anything.” Schüb paused a moment, grabbing a breath. “They were but a few of those men, and eventually they all died. Bormann, though, survived. He possessed a great hatred for the follies of man, and all who knew him, like the real Gerhard Schüb, were aware of that fact. No tolerance for frailty or passion, no pity for those who’d done him harm. He wished his enemies to hell, and put them there in his heart. He was, quite simply, a man of wrath.” Schüb paused. “Or a devil, as you put it.”
“Yet men served him.”
Schüb took a disconsolate stroll around the stacks of gold bars, eyeing the gleaming metal in the cool glow of the light fixtures. “That is true.” He motioned to bookshelves. “Toward the end of his life Bormann and my adoptive father communicated more frequently. Bormann started writing down his thoughts. He did this while serving Hitler also. He was obsessive about note taking. ‘The savior of the administrator,’ he would say. He created meticulous journals. Textbooks, he called them. Before he died he gave the journals to my brother. Braun, too, maintained private dairies, which Bormann gave to him for safekeeping. I’ve read all of them. Her thoughts were of Hitler, Bormann, and what fate had prescribed for her. Bormann’s journals are far more extensive. I have read those, too. That is how I know what I know.”
Wyatt glanced at the shelves, the volumes in varying shapes, sizes, and colors.