The somewhat inauspicious home of the vast collection of art and culture that would one day be housed in the planned Fuhrermuseum at Linz was the basement and cellars beneath the Dresden Picture Gallery. An elderly curator armed with a clipboard, a pencil and dusty spectacles assured Hoffman that he would find the artefact requested.
‘Everything is logged and catalogued,’ he explained. ‘We have a card index system set up by Dr Posse himself.’
Hoffman made a point of looking impressed, though he had no idea who Posse was and even less interest in finding out.
‘Of course,’ the curator went on, ‘it will all be very different when we move to Linz. Let me show you. Come with me.’
He led Hoffman through a dimly lit passageway, past alcoves stacked with numbered crates and doorways that gave into more storerooms, all crammed with items on shelves and labelled boxes.
‘We keep it down here to be safe from the bombing. Ah, here we are.’
They had arrived at a sort of hub, an open area where several passageways met. It was better lit, and in the middle of the area, directly under a hanging light, was a large trestle table. On the table was a model, buildings and streets manufactured from plain white card.
‘Speer’s design,’ the curator announced proudly. ‘This is what it will look like when it is finally built.’
It was certainly an impressive complex. Hoffman thought he detected similarities to the Haus der Deutsche Kunst in Munich.
‘The railway station is on the site at the moment, so that will have to be moved, of course,’ the curator was saying. ‘Then here we have the monumental theatre, the opera house…’
‘And this?’ Hoffman asked, pointing to a third large building.
‘The Adolf Hitler Hotel.’
‘Of course.’
‘All surrounded by wide boulevards. Oh, and a parade ground.’
‘Will it take you long to locate the artefact?’ Hoffman asked. The old man seemed happy to spend the whole afternoon pointing out items of monumental folly. ‘It is rather urgent.’
‘Oh, of course, Sturmbannfuhrer. I apologise. I shall leave you to enjoy the model while I locate the item you are interested in. I shan’t be long. Ten minutes.’ He made a show of consulting his clipboard before hurrying off along one of the passageways.
Hoffman was left waiting for nearer fifteen minutes, but even so he was impressed. However the card index system worked, it was certainly efficient. There must be thousands of artefacts and paintings stored down here. Finding just one small stone axe-head amongst them in a quarter of an hour was remarkable.
‘I believe this is what you are looking for,’ the old man said.
He handed Hoffman a plain cardboard box. Hoffman lifted the lid. Inside, nestling on a bed of cotton wool, was the axe-head, exactly as it had appeared in the photographs he had seen at Wewelsburg. It was about four inches long, and half as wide. He brushed his fingers across the surface, feeling the rough texture of the stone and the precise indentations where the runic symbols were carved.
‘Will you want to examine it for long?’ the curator asked.
‘Examine it?’
‘I’m sorry, I assumed that was why you are here. To examine the artefact.’
‘No,’ Hoffman told him. ‘I am here to collect it. I shall be taking it away with me.’
The curator’s mouth was an ‘O’ of astonishment. ‘Oh no, no, no. I’m afraid that is not permitted. Nothing leaves here. We have pictures, of course,’ he went on quickly. ‘It was photographed for one of the Fuhrer’s albums. Every Christmas and on his birthday we present the Fuhrer with a volume containing photographs of some of the artefacts in the collection.’
Hoffman closed the box and set it down on the edge of the model of the Fuhrermuseum. He took a piece of folded paper from his inside pocket and handed it to the man. ‘Read this.’
The curator took the paper warily, as if afraid it might burn his fingers. He unfolded it, and his frown deepened as he read the letter.
‘You will see that I have absolute authority to take whatever I please,’ Hoffman said. ‘Be thankful I merely want an old piece of stone which no one will miss for a moment.’
‘But…’ the curator protested weakly. ‘But this is unprecedented.’
‘Perhaps you would like to take the matter up with the Reichsfuhrer-SS,’ Hoffman suggested, taking back the paper. ‘It is, as you see, his signature on this letter.’ That was a lie, of course. He had typed out the letter and signed Himmler’s name to it himself.
‘I’m sorry. Of course, the Reichsfuhrer must have the artefact if he so desires.’
‘It’s not a whim,’ Hoffman told him sternly. ‘This artefact could be vital to our future. By providing it so efficiently you have done the Reich great service.’
The curator blinked, his frown becoming a surprised smile. ‘Well, of course, we here at the gallery are always more than happy—’
‘As I shall make sure the Reichsfuhrer knows,’ Hoffman interrupted. ‘Now, as I say, my time is pressing.’ He picked up the cardboard box containing the stone axe-head. ‘Perhaps you can show me the way out of this rabbit warren?’
* * *
Now that he had the axe-head, Hoffman needed to decide what to do with it. When he stopped concentrating, when it lacked focus, his mind all too easily became a conflicting mass of ideas and possibilities. He needed to take some time to clear his head and think things through. He had discovered that alcohol, paradoxically, helped him to concentrate. It deadened the voices and images that pressed in upon his thoughts, freed him to think for himself – provided he didn’t overindulge.
There was a bar near the main station that senior officers frequented. It wasn’t really to Hoffman’s taste, but he could get a drink and remain undisturbed. The place was full of smoke hanging in the air like the dust in an ancient tomb. He pushed through a group of junior officers and made his way to an empty table against the wall. From here he had a good view of the bar, and of the stage. An elderly pianist was doing his best to disguise the tuneless voice of a young female singer. Since the woman seemed to be wearing only stockings and a short, tight jacket over a white shirt and bow-tie, the pianist needn’t have bothered. No one was listening.
A waitress came to take Hoffman’s drink. She wore almost as little as the singer but had compensated by slapping on a vast quantity of make-up which she presumably hoped would disguise her age. In fact she was probably only thirty, but glancing round the other women in the bar, that counted as elderly. Hoffman ordered schnapps, smiling and flirting with the woman briefly to make her feel better.
‘If there’s anything else you want,’ she said as she returned with his drink, ‘you know – anything at all. You let me know.’
‘Just the drink will be fine.’ He tipped her more than he needed to. ‘You don’t have to do this, you know,’ he said, seeing her surprise as he handed her the money.
Her painted expression didn’t change. ‘With two kids and a dead husband? Oh yes I do.’ She leaned closer. ‘You’d be all right, though. I wouldn’t mind with you.’
‘Maybe later. What’s your name?’
‘Helena.’
‘Thanks for the drink, Helena.’
He sipped at the schnapps, feeling it burn down the back of his throat. Her name probably wasn’t Helena, and he wouldn’t see her later. But he had no doubt she would find someone to subsidise her wages.
Helena sounded close enough to ‘Alina’ to make him think of home, of what he had left behind when he came to Germany and joined the madness. He pushed the thoughts to the back of his mind, and concentrated instead on what to do with the axe-head. It was a reassuring weight in his jacket pocket. But he couldn’t just walk round with it hidden there, could he?
Whatever happened, he knew he didn’t want the Vril to get it. What they needed it for was still only a vague impression in a corner of his mind. But if they wanted it, he wanted to keep it from them. Should he destroy it, he wondered? Could he destroy it? It had survived so long and in such pristine condition that somehow he doubted it.
So, his options were to keep it himself, to hide it, or to pass it on. If he kept it, he risked it being discovered on him and that could provoke difficult questions. If he hid it … Well, anything hidden might be found as he had proved himself today. But who could he pass it on to?
As he lifted it, he saw that his glass had left a wet ring on the table. He was seeing patterns everywhere now, he thought. He put the glass down, further across the table. Then he drew his finger through the ring, from the middle outwards. He did it several times, smearing the spilled liquid like a crude child’s drawing of a sun with rays of light coming from it.
What did it remind him of? He’d seen it somewhere before, that pattern. Not just in his head, but somewhere else. Somewhere real. Lines radiating out from a central point. A photograph of … something. Something physical, not like rays of the sun. More like …
He glanced round for inspiration. At the next table, someone struck a match and lit a cigarette. Yes, more like matchsticks laid out.
Hoffman drained his glass and waved to one of the waitresses. It wasn’t Helena, but a younger girl. She was nervous, pulling at the hem of her short jacket, her lip trembling slightly as she came to ask him what he wanted. Her relief was obvious when he told her it was just another drink.
What about Pentecross and Davenport? They knew about the Vril. Hoffman didn’t know much about the Allied organisation they worked for. But he had more confidence that they would not try to exploit the axe-head for their own purposes than he did that Himmler and Nachten wouldn’t.
The girl was returning with his drink. On the way over, a man in a colonel’s uniform grabbed her, pulling her over. His hand snaked its way inside her blouse as he whispered in her ear. She managed to extricate herself and hurry over to Hoffman. Her hand was shaking as she set down his drink.
‘You should get another job,’ he told her.
‘There are no other jobs.’
‘Find one anyway. What did the Herr Oberst say to you?’
‘He said…’ She swallowed. ‘He said he’d see me later.’
‘Go home. As soon as you can, go home.’ He paid for the drink, and more. ‘I’ll make sure the Herr Oberst doesn’t see you later.’
‘Why?’
Hoffman wasn’t really sure. ‘Because you’re young and he isn’t. Because you have your whole life ahead of you, and he doesn’t. Because although so many terrible things have happened, if I can make sure just one more doesn’t then I’ll feel a lot better.’
She pursed her lips and frowned. ‘Do you want to see me later? Is that it?’
‘I would love to. But sadly I have other things to do.’
She turned to go, then changed her mind and turned back. ‘Thank you. I’m not used to kindness.’
He raised his glass. ‘None of us is. Stay safe.’
The colonel looked up in surprise as Hoffman pulled up a chair beside him. He looked annoyed, but struggled to hide it as he saw Hoffman’s SS uniform. The colonel might outrank Hoffman, but he knew who had the real power.
‘Herr Oberst, a word, if I may?’
The colonel nodded. ‘Sturmbannfuhrer, what can I do for you?’
‘The girl. The young one.’
‘You noticed her too?’ the man licked his lips.
‘I think everyone has noticed her. Unfortunately for you – and, I have to say for me too – one of her admirers is my commanding officer. Gruppenfuhrer Streicher, perhaps you know him? He has quite a reputation amongst his SS comrades.’
The colonel shook his head. ‘My apologies to the Gruppenfuhrer,’ he stammered. ‘I never intended, that is – I didn’t mean…’
Hoffman waved his hand. ‘Don’t worry. You were not to know. Can I buy you another drink to compensate you for the loss of your evening’s entertainment?’
‘You’re very kind.’
‘Not at all.’ Hoffman called over the nearest waitress.
‘I am not usually…’ the colonel said as he accepted another drink. ‘That is, tonight is my last night here in Dresden. After that…’ His voice tailed off.
‘After that?’ Hoffman prompted.
‘My unit leaves tomorrow. We have been deployed to the Eastern Front.’
‘I see.’ Hoffman nodded sympathetically. ‘I hear things are quite difficult there.’
‘You have been to Russia?’
‘Oh yes,’ Hoffman admitted. ‘One way or another I have spent quite some time there.’
‘Our armies are making great progress, huge advances. But you hear stories – about the winter cold, the summer rain and mud, the barbaric fighting of the Russian scum. And it’s such a long way from home, of course.’
‘Yes,’ Hoffman echoed. ‘Such a long way from home.’ He drained his glass and signalled for another. ‘So what unit are you with, and when are they leaving?’
He listened carefully as the colonel told him the details. He could have the man court-martialled for revealing such information. But that wasn’t Hoffman’s intention.
He had decided what he had to do. He’d been playing this deadly game for too long now. It was partly that he’d been away from Alina for too long – he didn’t even know if she was still alive. But partly, he remembered where he had seen the pattern before, the radiating lines. It was indeed on a photograph. A set of photographs, spread across Stalin’s desk when he sent Hoffman into Germany. If Stalin knew, then perhaps Hoffman’s reports had not been ignored. Had he helped? Was someone in Russia aware of the Vril and, like the British, working to stop them? He had to know.
The axe-head could wait. He would work out what to do with it on the way. But first, Werner Hoffman – although that wasn’t his real name – was going home.