Frade correctly interpreted it to be more of a question than a statement.
“He was my father’s confessor and best friend,” Frade said. “Because my father was about as religious as I am, and had good reason to hate the Church—”
“‘Hate the Church’?” Gehlen parroted in surprise.
Frade paused before deciding to answer the question.
“My mother was a convert to Roman Catholicism,” he said finally. “After having been warned that a second pregnancy would be very dangerous, she dutifully obeyed the Catholic rules forbidding contraception and died in childbirth. After her funeral, the next time he entered a church was at his own funeral. You heard he was assassinated?”
“At the orders of the SS,” Gehlen said. “Otto told me. I’m very sorry.”
“On the day of my father’s funeral, Welner came to me. He said that whether or not I liked it, he considered himself my priest, my confessor, and hoped that he and I could become as close as he and my father had been.
“I didn’t know what his motives were, whether he was trying to put me in his pocket for the good of the Church or whether it really was because of the personal relationship he said he had with my father. I suppressed the urge to tell him to get lost. Over time, I have come to believe that it was probably a little of both. He and my father had been very close. And now I was sitting on the throne of my father’s kingdom. Jesuits like to get close to the guy on the throne. Anyway, truth being stranger than fiction, the wily Jesuit and I became, we are, good friends.
“When he was explaining to me how Argentina worked, he said the primary reason Argentina tilted heavily toward the Axis had less to do with their admiration for Adolf Hitler and National Socialism than it did with what they had seen in the Spanish Civil War. That had been a war, they believed, between the Christian forces of Franco and the godless Republicans, read Communists. The Germans made sure the Argentines knew the Republicans had murdered four thousand — odd priests—”
“And thirteen bishops,” Gehlen said.
“So you think that’s true, that the Republicans murdered priests and nuns out of hand?” Frade asked.
“And bishops. I saw evidence of one such sacrilege one beautiful spring day in 1937.”
“You saw it?” Cronley blurted.
Gehlen nodded.
“I think I missed the actual sacrilege by an hour. Maybe two. My team — I was then a brand-new major — and I were driving down a road near Seville. As we approached a picturesque little village, there was a priest hanging from every other telephone pole. And then when we got to the center of the little village, we found, lying in a massive pool of blood in front of the burned-out church, a dozen nuns who had obviously been violated before they were murdered. And a bishop tied to a chair. He had been shot in the back of the head. Our sergeant theorized that he had been forced to watch the raping of the nuns, but there is of course no way we could know that for sure.”
“Jesus Christ!” Cronley exclaimed.
“Captain Cronley gets the prize for today’s most inappropriate blasphemy,” Frade said darkly.
“I think that was an expression of disgust, rather than blasphemy,” Gehlen said.
“Possibly,” Frade said. “I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt. Before we got off the subject, I was about to say that I don’t think Father Welner will have any moral problems helping us turn an NKGB officer. I suspect he feels — for that matter, the Catholic Church feels — much the same way about Communists as General Philip Sheridan felt about the Indians on our Western plains.”
“Excuse me?”
“General Sheridan was quoted as saying that the only good Indian was a dead one,” Frade said.
“That’s a bit brutal,” Gehlen said. “But Communism poses the greatest threat to Roman Catholicism there has ever been, and I’m sure the Vatican is fully aware of that.”
“My grandfather,” Frade said, “who is the exact opposite of an admirer of the Catholic Church, says that to understand the Catholic Church you have to understand that its primary mission is its preservation.”
Gehlen didn’t reply to that. He said, instead, “Dunwiddie has recognized another problem: Unless we can get Orlovsky out of here and to Argentina without the wrong people learning about it…”
He left the sentence unfinished, but Frade took his meaning.
“Yeah,” Frade agreed. His face showed that he had both not considered that problem and was, without much success, trying to find a solution.
“Shoot him,” Cronley said. “And then bury him in the dark of night and in great secrecy, in an unmarked grave in the Kloster cemetery.”
Frade understood that immediately, too.
“That’d work. I presume, General, that despite Captain Cronley’s determination to conduct Orlovsky’s burial in the greatest secrecy it would not go unnoticed?”
“I think we could count on that, Colonel,” Gehlen said.
“And then,” Frade said, “you’re going to have to figure a way to get the corpse from its unmarked grave and get it onto a Connie in Frankfurt without anybody—”
“Without anybody,” Gehlen said, laughing, “dropping to their knees in awe at a second resurrection.”
“I’ll leave the solution to that problem in your capable hands,” Frade said. “Not that I think, with Sergeant Dunwiddie’s exception, that you’re all that capable, but because I really have to get to Rhine-Main now.”
“Thank you very much,” Gehlen said. “Your confidence in us inspires me.”
Frade chuckled, then said, “When I spoke with Admiral Souers last night, I told him we’d go wheels-up at noon. The admiral does not like to be kept waiting.”
“Do you want to see Major Orlovsky before you go?” Gehlen asked.
“Your call, General.”
“Chauncey?” Gehlen said.
“Sir, I think a brief visit. Shake his hand, tell him you’re off to Argentina and look forward to seeing him there. That’s it.”
“I agree,” Gehlen said.
“Then that’s what I’ll do. Jimmy, after you drop me at Rhine-Main, I want you to go back to Munich. You are authorized to tell Sergeant Hessinger that we’re going to take Orlovsky to Argentina. Only, repeat only, Sergeant Hessinger. Not Major Wallace. Make sure Hessinger knows he’s not to tell Wallace or Mattingly anything about this. I’m telling you this, giving you this order, before witnesses. My stated reason for this is that if this thing blows up in our faces, Mattingly and Wallace will be off the hook. Understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And if they don’t know about it, they can’t get in the way,” Frade added.
“You consider that a problem?” Gehlen asked.
“Colonel Mattingly,” Frade said, “is very skilled in the fine art of covering his ass. I’m just helping him do that.”
Gehlen shook his head and smiled.
“Let’s go see Major Orlovsky,” Frade said. “And while I’m doing that, Jimmy, you can top off the tanks in the Storch.”
“How about some breakfast first, and then top off the tanks?”
“Have the mess make us some bacon-and-egg sandwiches,” Frade ordered. “We can eat them on the way to Rhine-Main. We can’t make Admiral Souers wait for us.”
[THREE]
“Rhine-Main Ground Control, Army Seven-Oh-Seven,” Cronley said into his microphone. “Request taxi instruction to parking location of South American Airways Lockheed Constellation tail number Double-Zero-Five. If you can’t see me, I am a Storch aircraft on taxiway sixteen left.”