He took two flashlights from a shelf, handed one to Cronley, and waited until the door had been opened. Then he started down the stairway. Cronley followed.
At the foot of the stairway, Cronley found himself in a small area, perhaps six feet by eight. To the left was a single heavy wooden door. It was closed with a piece of lumber jammed against it. Across from the door, the improvised floodlights rested against a brick wall.
The sergeant pointed to one of the men who had followed them down the stairs, gesturing for him to take the floodlights, and then to another man, ordering him to be prepared to remove the timber that held the door shut.
Then he stood by the door, unslung the carbine from his shoulder, and held it as if he expected to use it as a club if the prisoner tried to burst out of the room.
“Now!” he ordered.
The man with the floodlights moved to the door and turned them on. The man on the timber kicked it free and then jerked the door open.
Cronley could now see the cell and the man in it.
And he smelled the nauseating odor of human waste.
The NKGB agent, who had been sitting on a mattress, shielded his eyes from the light as he rose, sliding his back against the wall.
“Take your hand away from your face!” Cronley barked in German.
The man obeyed but closed his eyes.
That was involuntary, Cronley decided. That light really hurts his eyes. He’s not being defiant.
He could now see the NKGB agent’s face.
He was surprised at what he saw: a slight man, fair-skinned and blond, who appeared to be in his twenties.
A nice-looking guy.
What the hell did you expect? Somebody who looks like Joe Stalin? Or Lenin?
The NKGB agent finally managed to get his eyes into a squint. His eyes were blue.
“Get another waste bucket in there,” Cronley ordered in English. “And get that one out of there. This room smells like a latrine!”
The trooper who had kicked the timber out of the way said, “Sir, we were told—”
“Don’t argue with me, Corporal!” Cronley snapped. “Get that bucket out of there, and do it now. We’re not savages!”
“Yes, sir.”
“What’s your name?” Cronley demanded, first in English, then in German.
The NKGB officer didn’t reply.
“We believe him to be Konstantin Orlovsky,” Mannberg said softly from behind Cronley.
“Major Konstantin Orlovsky of the Peoples Commissariat for Internal Affairs at your service, sir,” the NKGB officer said in fluent English. “And you are?”
That’s not English English, but it’s not American English, either.
“My name is Cronley, Major. We’ll talk again.”
He turned to the sergeant.
“Major Orlovsky’s waste bucket will be replaced at regular intervals. The next time I come down here, I want to smell roses. Got it?”
“Got it, sir.”
“Thank you,” Orlovsky said.
Cronley turned from the door and went quickly back up the stairs. Mannberg and Bischoff followed him.
As soon as they reached the room behind the altar, Bischoff asked, “Am I to assume, Herr Hauptman, that you are taking over the interrogation?”
You’re really pissed that the naïve young American countermanded your orders, aren’t you?
And, Mannberg, to judge from the look on your face, you’re pissed that I countermanded the orders of your “interrogation specialist” and did so in front of the black American enlisted men.
Too fucking bad!
“The assumption you should be working under, Herr Bischoff, is that you are conducting the interrogation under my direction. So far as what happened down there just now, vis-à-vis Orlovsky’s waste bucket, what I had in mind was something Herr Mannberg told me, something to the effect that causing pain — and I think making Orlovsky sit in a blacked-out cell forced to smell his own waste caused him pain — is usually counterproductive.
“And if memory serves, Herr Mannberg, you also said that’s even more true when the person being interrogated is a skilled agent. I think we agree that Orlovsky is a skilled agent. I think that before he sneaked in here, he knew Kloster Grünau was commanded by a very young American. With that in mind, I told him my name. What good would it do to pretend otherwise?”
“Your points are well taken,” Mannberg said.
He means that.
But he is also surprised.
“And now, you’ll have to excuse me, I have to get on the phone.”
And I want to get away from you while I’m still ahead.
In other words, before I say something else stupid.
[FOUR]
Kloster Grünau was connected to a secure radio network that had originally been established by the OSS during the war. It used equipment — primarily Collins Radio Corporation Model 7.2 transceivers coupled with SIGABA encryption devices — acquired from the Army Security Agency’s Secret Communications Center at Vint Hill Farms Station in Virginia.
During the war, the network had provided secure communications between OSS headquarters in Washington and important OSS stations around the world. Deputy OSS Director Allen Dulles had had one when he had been stationed in Berne, Switzerland. David Bruce, who had run the OSS organization attached to Eisenhower’s Supreme Command in London, had had another. Lieutenant Colonel Cletus Frade, who commanded Team Turtle, the OSS operation covering the “Southern Cone”—Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay — had another. And there had been a very few other stations in the network.
Despite the demise of the OSS, parts of the network remained “up.” Instant, secure communication between Germany and Vint Hill Farms was still possible, but since the OSS had been “disestablished” was never used.
There were now two stations in Germany. One had been set up immediately after the war by Colonel Mattingly in what had been Admiral Canaris’s home in the Berlin suburb of Zehlendorf. Mattingly had moved the station he had had with OSS Forward to Kloster Grünau the day before the OSS had ceased to exist.
Communications between Germany and Argentina, because of Operation Ost, were frequent.
There were no secure communications links between Colonel Mattingly’s office in the I.G. Farben Building in Frankfurt, Major Harold Wallace’s office in the Vier Jahreszeiten Hotel in Munich, and Kloster Grünau. Or between any of them.
One of the reasons was the “antenna farm” that the Collins transceiver needed. Since Mattingly did not want anyone to know the radio network even existed, he could not order that antennae be set up on the roofs of either the Farben Building or the Vier Jahreszeiten.
And since the less known by anyone about Kloster Grünau the better, he could not go to the Signal Corps and tell them to install a secure — encrypted — telephone line there. They would want to know why one was needed. And even if he told them why he needed one and pledged — or threatened — them to silence, a platoon of Signal Corps telephone linemen installing the heavy lead-shielded cable necessary for encrypted secure lines would cause questions to be asked about what was going on at the supposedly deserted former monastery.
These problems would go away when the South German Industrial Development Organization moved to Pullach. But for the time being, telephone calls had to be conducted in the presumption that someone was listening to what was being said.
“Mattingly.”
“Cronley, sir.”
“Thank you for returning my call so promptly, Captain. It can’t be more than two or three hours since I asked Dunwiddie to have you call me immediately.”