Although relieved of his sudden fear that he had fallen into a trap, he was still on delicate ground; for he had yet to make certain that it was she who had sent the information about Peenemьnde to Sweden. So, having commiserated with her on her husband's death, he went on cautiously, `It is not for us to question the Fьhrer’s wisdom, but one cannot help feeling that the sacrifices he demands have become almost unbearable.'
`You are right, Herr Major,' she agreed bitterly. `Had my husband been killed while marching against France that would have been one thing; but for him to have died last winter in the snows of Russia is quite another. In Mein Kampf the Fьhrer declared that never again should the German people be called on to fight a war on two fronts, and in that he betrayed them.'
To declare that Hitler had betrayed his people was a very dangerous thing to do, particularly when speaking to a person one had only just met; so Gregory assumed that she was giving him a cue and replied:
`Hitler having gone into Russia before he finished with Britain can end only in our defeat. Personally, I take the view that anyone who now does what he can to thwart the Nazis, so that war may be brought to an end before Germany is utterly ruined, would be acting in the best interests of our country.'
His words amounted to unequivocal treason, and S.O.E.'s briefing was not always reliable. If, after all, she was not the source from which they had received information, and her outburst had been caused only by resentment at the loss of her husband, she might quite well denounce him.
The forged papers he carried were adequate for all ordinary purposes, but the identity he had assumed could not stand up to investigation. German thoroughness in keeping records would soon disclose that there was no such person as Major Helmuth Bodenstein. If she turned him over to the police his mission would be at an end before it had properly begun. But he had known that sooner or later in their conversation, if he were to get anywhere with her he must offer her a lead and take the risk that he had been misinformed about her. Having made his gamble, with his heart beating a shade faster, he waited for her reaction.
For a moment her grey eyes remained inscrutable, then she said in a low voice, `I was right then in assuming that you did not wish to meet me only to enquire about fishing?'
He nodded. `Yes. There are other matters of interest up here in Pomerania about which I am hoping you may be able to tell me.'
At that moment the waiter brought her drink. She swallowed half of it at a gulp, then asked, `Such as?
'Such as that about which some weeks ago you sent a report by a Polish officer to Sweden.'
She gave a little gasp and looked round nervously. `How… how do.you know about that?
'Through a certain Embassy.!
'In your letter you mentioned having friends in the Turkish Embassy, but it could not have been through them?
'No. I put that in only to act as cover for both of us should my letter have fallen into wrong hands.'
Fumbling for another cigarette she lit it from the one she was smoking; then her voice came in a whisper, `You are, then, a British agent?'
Gregory nodded. `Yes, I have been sent here specially to contact you and ask your help in securing more exact particulars about these, er, long cigars.'
With a swift movement she gulped down the rest of her brandy, then she said, `Can I have another? I must have time to think.'
Catching the waiter's eye, Gregory pointed at their empty glasses. Turning back to her, he said very quietly, `In this our interests are mutual. You cannot wish the war to go on until millions more Germans are killed on the battlefields or blown to pieces in their homes by bombs; and I, naturally, am most anxious to prevent millions of British men, women and children from being obliterated by these ghastly secret weapons. If the two countries make it a fight to the finish there will be nothing worth having left to either side. Hitler has made his great gamble and lost it, but for this one thing. If you and I can prevent his using it peace will come while both nations will be little worse situated than they were in 1918 and a few years should bring full recovery to them both. It is a choice of that or destruction so terrible that those of us who are left will be living like pariah dogs in the ruins for decades to come.!
'I know it,' she murmured, `but to secure this information you seek would be extremely difficult and entail great risks.'
`Naturally. But I have considerable experience in such matters; and, as far as risks are concerned, it will be for me to take the major ones. All I ask of you is to give me any lead you can and, if possible, provide a base from which I and the companion I have brought with me, who is posing as my soldier servant, can get to work.'
Her second brandy arrived at that moment. Taking it eagerly, she again drank half of it, then she said, `I should like to help you, but I cannot give you an immediate answer. I must first consult my father.' _
He gave her his friendliest smile. `Thank you. How soon can you do that?
'Petrol is precious. Having come in here I must not lose the opportunity to make a round of the shops for cigarettes. But if my father agrees, the sooner you leave Grimmen the better; so immediately I get back to Sassen I will speak to him then telephone to you.'
She finished her second drink and they went in to lunch. Over the meal, he learned that the von Altern estate covered several thousand acres. Before the war it had been farmed by her husband's cousin. When he had been called up she had taken over and still ran it with the assistance of one of the tenant farmers. It meant a lot of hard work, but had its compensations, as it enabled them to live very much better than people in the towns and cities.
Gregory tried to draw her out about herself, but she proved very reticent. All he could get out of her was that she had married von Altern during his first year in Turkey as Military Attachй, that to her great regret they had had no children and that her father, who was a doctor, had come to live with her at Sassen soon after the war broke out. For the remainder of the time they talked about the war situation, but exercised care not to express any opinions which, if overheard by anyone at the nearby tables, would draw unwelcome attention to them.
Shortly after two o'clock Gregory escorted his tall, somewhat
untidy looking guest to the entrance to the hotel and bowed her away.
At first he had been at a loss to decide what had attracted a Prussian aristocrat like von Altern, who also must have been a Nazi, to her; for she was both a non-Aryan and, he felt convinced, had had only a middle-class upbringing. But while sitting opposite her at lunch he felt still more certain that when a younger woman she must have been decidedly attractive.
During the meal she had eaten little but had chain-smoked all through it and, although he had offered her wine, she had stuck to brandy, even drowning her ersatz coffee in it; so he thought it probable that grief for her husband's death had caused her to take to drink. If so, that would account for the deterioration in her looks and her scruffy appearance. That she had proved intensely serious and. had shown not a trace of humour gave him no concern, for he knew it to be safer to work with such a woman than one who was inclined to be light-minded and flirtatious; but he could have wished that she had a more pleasant personality.