At the airport, the Luftwaffe honor guard waited patiently as darkness fell. The same group of officers who had greeted the field marshal on his arrival now presented themselves to say goodbye. The Storch was parked on the far side of the JU52, which awaited its illustrious passenger some fifty yards from the terminal building. Necker paced up and down anxiously, wondering what on earth was going on. First of all that extraordinary message from Heider at Mont de la Rocque about the mail plane and now this. Twenty minutes past eight and still no sign.
There was the sudden roar of engines, the rattle of a half-track on concrete. He turned in time to witness the extraordinary sight of the armored column coming around the corner of the main airport building, the field marshal standing up in the Kubelwagen at the front, hands braced on the edge of the windshield.
The column made straight for the Junkers. Necker saw the field marshal wave to Sorsa in the cockpit, who was looking out of the side window. The center engine of the plane coughed into life, and Rommel was turning and waving, barking orders. Soldiers leaped from the trucks, rifles ready. Necker recognized Heider and then saw a bandaged sailor being taken from the personnel carrier by two soldiers who led him to the Junkers and helped him inside.
The whole thing had happened in seconds. As Necker started forward, the field marshal came to meet him. It was noisy now as the Junkers’ wing engines also started to turn. To Necker’s further astonishment he saw, beyond the field marshal, Standartenführer Vogel and the French girl dismount from the personnel carrier and go up the short ladder into the plane.
Baum was enjoying himself. The ride up from the Silvertide had been truly exhilarating, and he smiled and put a hand on Necker’s shoulder. ‘My deepest apologies, Necker, but I had things to do. Young Heider was good enough to assist me with his men. A promising officer.’
Necker was truly bewildered. ‘But, Herr Field Marshal …’ he began.
Baum carried on. ‘The chief medical officer at the hospital told me of this young sailor wounded in some convoy attack the other night and badly in need of treatment at the burns unit in Rennes. He asked me if I’d take him with me. Of course, in the state he’s in we’d never have got him into the Storch. That’s why I need the mail plane.’
‘And Standartenführer Vogel?’
‘He was going back tomorrow anyway, so I might as well give him and the young woman a lift.’ He clapped Necker on the shoulder again. ‘But we must be off now. Again, my thanks for all you’ve done. I shall, of course, be in touch with General von Schmettow to express my entire satisfaction with the way things are in Jersey.’
He saluted and turned to go up the ladder into the plane. Necker called, ‘But, Herr Field Marshal, what about Major Hofer?’
‘He should be arriving any minute,’ Baum told him. ‘He’ll leave in the Storch as arranged. The mail plane pilot can fly him across.’
He scrambled inside the plane; the crewman pulled up the ladder and closed the door. The Junkers taxied away to the east end of the runway and turned. There was a deepening roar from the three engines as it moved faster and faster, a silhouette only in the gathering gloom, and then it lifted, drifting out over St. Ouen’s Bay, still climbing.
Guido had parked the Morris a couple of hundred yards along the airport road. Standing there beside it, they saw the Junkers lift into the evening sky and fly west to where the horizon was tipped with fire.
The noise of the engines faded into the distance and Guido said softly, ‘My God, they actually pulled it off.’
Gallagher nodded. ‘So now we can go home and get our stories straight for when all the questioning starts.’
‘No problem,’ Guido said. ‘Not if we stick together. I am, after all, an authentic war hero, which always helps.’
‘That’s what I love about you, Guido. Your engaging modesty,’ Gallagher told him. ‘Now let’s move. Helen will be getting worried.’
They got into the Morris and Guido drove away quickly, a Kubelwagen passing them a moment later coming the other way, driving so fast that they failed to see Hofer sitting in the rear seat.
At the airport, most of the officers had dispersed, but Necker was standing by his car talking to Captain Adler, the Luftwaffe duty control officer, when the Kubelwagen came around the corner of the main airport building and braked to a halt. They turned to see Hofer being helped out of the rear seat by the two soldiers.
Necker knew trouble when he saw it. ‘Hofer? What is it?’
Hofer slumped against the Kubelwagen. ‘Have they gone?’
‘Less than five minutes ago. The field marshal took the mail plane. He said you’d follow in the Storch. He took his own pilot.’
‘No!’ Hofer said. ‘Not the field marshal.’
Necker’s stomach contracted. So many things that had worried him and yet … He took a deep breath. ‘What are you saying?’
‘That the man you thought was Field Marshal Rommel is his double, a damn traitor called Berger who’s thrown in his lot with the enemy. You’ll also be happy to know that Standartenführer Max Vogel is an agent of the British Special Operations Executive. So is the girl, by the way. The wounded sailor is an American colonel.’
But Necker, by now, was totally bewildered. ‘I don’t understand any of this.’
‘It’s really quite simple,’ Hofer told him. ‘They’re flying to England in the mail plane.’ His head was suddenly clearer and he stood up. ‘Naturally, they must be stopped.’ He turned to Adler. ‘Get on the radio to Cherbourg. Scramble a night fighter squadron. Now let’s get moving. There’s no time to lose.’ He turned and led the way to the operations building.
The Junkers was a workhorse and not built for comfort. Most of the interior was crammed with mail sacks and Kelso sat on the floor propped against them, legs outstretched. Sarah was on a bench on one side of the plane, Baum and Martineau on the other.
The crewman came out of the cockpit and joined them. ‘My name is Braun, Herr Field Marshal. Sergeant observer. If there is anything I can get you. We have a thermos flask of coffee and…’
‘Nothing, thank you.’ Baum took out his cigarette case and offered Martineau one.
‘And Oberleutnant Sorsa would take it as an honor if you would care to come up front.’
‘You don’t have a full crew? Just the two of you?’ Martineau inquired.
‘All that’s necessary on these mail runs, Standartenführer.’
‘Tell Oberleutnant Sorsa I’ll be happy to take him up on his offer a little later. I’ll just finish my cigarette,’ Baum said.
‘Certainly, Herr Field Marshal.’
Braun opened the door and went back into the cockpit. Baum turned to Martineau and smiled. ‘Five minutes?’
‘That should be about right.’ Martineau moved across to sit beside Sarah. He gave her his lighted cigarette. ‘Are you all right?’
‘Absolutely.’
‘You’re sure?’
‘You mean am I going through hell because I just killed a man?’ Her face was very calm. ‘Not at all. My one regret is that it was Muller instead of Greiser. He was from under a stone. Muller was just a policeman on the wrong side.’
‘From our point of view.’
‘No, Harry,’ she said. ‘Most wars are a stupidity. This one isn’t. We’re right and the Nazis are wrong. They’re wrong for Germany and they’re wrong for everyone else. It’s as simple as that.’
‘Good for you,’ Kelso said. ‘A lady who stands up to be counted. I like that.’
‘I know,’ Martineau said. ‘It’s wonderful to be young.’ He tapped Baum on the knee. ‘Ready?’
‘I think so.’
Martineau took his Walther from its holster and gave it to Sarah. ‘Action stations. You’ll need that to take care of the observer. Here we go.’
He opened the cabin door and he and Baum squeezed into the cockpit behind the pilot and the observer. Oberleutnant Sorsa turned. ‘Everything to your satisfaction, Field Marshal?’
‘I think you could say that,’ Baum told him.
‘If there is anything we can do for you?’
‘There is actually. You can haul this thing round and fly forty miles due west until we are completely clear of all Channel Islands traffic.’
‘But I don’t understand.’
Baum took the Mauser from his holster and touched it against the back of Sorsa’s neck. ‘Perhaps this will help you.’
‘Later on when I call you, you’ll turn north,’ Martineau said, ‘and make for England.’
‘England?’ young Braun said in horror.
‘Yes,’ Martineau told him. ‘As they say, for you, the war is over. Frankly, the way it’s shaping up, you’re well out of it.’
‘This is crazy,’ Sorsa said.
‘If it helps you to believe that the field marshal is proceeding to England as a special envoy of the Führer, why not?’ Martineau said. ‘Now change course like a good boy.’
Sorsa did as he was told and the Junkers plowed on through the darkness. Martineau leaned over Braun. ‘Right, now for the radio. Show me the frequency selection procedure.’ Braun did as he was told. ‘Good. Now go and sit down in the cabin and don’t do anything stupid. The lady has a gun.’
The boy squeezed past him, and Martineau got into the copilot’s seat and started to transmit on the frequency reserved by SOE for emergency procedure.
In the control room in the tower at Jersey Airport, Hofer and Necker waited anxiously while Adler spoke on the radio. A Luftwaffe corporal came up and spoke to him briefly.
Adler turned to the two officers. ‘We’ve still got them on radar, but they appear to be moving due west out to sea.’
‘My God!’ Necker said.
Adler talked into the microphone for a moment, then turned to Hofer. ‘All night fighters in the Brittany area were scrambled an hour ago for operations over the Reich. Heavy bombing raids expected over the Ruhr.’
‘There must be something, for God’s sake,’ Hofer said.
Adler waved him to silence, listening, then put down the mike and turned, smiling. ‘There is. One JU88S night fighter. Its port engine needed a check and it wasn’t finished in time to leave with the rest of the squadron.’
‘But is it now?’ Necker demanded eagerly.
‘Oh, yes.’ Adler was enjoying himself. ‘He’s just taken off from Cherbourg.’
‘But can he catch them?’ Necker asked.
‘Herr Major, that old crate they’re flying in can do a hundred and eighty flat out. The JU88S with the new engine boosting system does better than four hundred. He’ll be with them before they know it.’
Necker turned in triumph to Hofer. ‘They’ll have to turn back, otherwise he’ll blow them out of the sky.’
But Hofer had been thinking about that, among other things. If the mail plane returned, it would mean only one thing. Martineau and the others would be flown to Berlin, and few people survived interrogation in the cellars of Gestapo Headquarters at Prince Albrechtstrasse. That couldn’t be allowed to happen. Berger knew about Rommel’s connection with the generals’ plot against the Führer, and so did Martineau. Perhaps he’d even told the girl.
Hofer took a deep breath. ‘No, we can’t take a chance on their getting away.’
‘Herr Major?’ Adler turned inquiringly.
‘Send an order to the pilot of that night fighter to shoot on sight. They musn’t reach England.’
‘As you say, Herr Major.’ Adler picked up the microphone.
Necker put a hand on Hofer’s shoulder. ‘You look terrible. Let’s go down to the mess and get you a brandy. Adler will call us when things start to warm up.’
Hofer managed a weak smile. ‘The best offer I’ve had tonight.’ And they went out together.
Dougal Munro was at his Baker Street desk working late when Carter came in with the signal and passed it across. The brigadier read it quickly and smiled. ‘Good God, this is extraordinary, even for Harry.’
‘I know, sir. I’ve alerted Fighter Command about receiving them. Where do you want them to put down? I suppose Cornwall would be closest.’
‘No, let’s bring them all the way in. They can land where they started, Jack. Hornley Field. Let Fighter Command know. I want them down in one piece.’
‘And General Eisenhower, sir?’
‘We’ll leave him until Kelso’s actually on the ground.’ Munro stood up and reached for his jacket. ‘And we’ll have the car round, Jack. We can get there in just over an hour. With any luck, we’ll be able to greet them.’
In the mail plane the atmosphere was positively euphoric as Martineau left Heini Baum in the cockpit to keep an eye on Sorsa and joined the others.
‘Everything okay?’ Kelso asked.
‘Couldn’t be better. I’ve made contact with our people in England. They’re going to provide an escort to take us in, courtesy of the RAF.’ He turned and smiled at Sarah, taking her hand. She’d never seen him so excited. Suddenly he looked ten years younger. ‘You all right?’ he asked her.
‘Fine, Harry. Just fine.’
‘Dinner at the Ritz tomorrow night,’ he said.
‘By candlelight?’
‘Even if I have to take my own.’ He turned to Braun, the observer. ‘You said something about coffee, didn’t you?’
Braun started to get up and the plane bucked wildly as a great roaring filled the night, then dropped like a stone. Braun lost his balance and Kelso rolled on the floor with a cry of pain.
‘Harry!’ Sarah screamed. ‘What is it?’
The plane regained some sort of stability and Martineau peered out one of the side windows. A hundred yards away on the port side flying parallel with them he saw a Junkers 88S, one of those deadly black twin-engined planes that had caused such catastrophic losses to RAF Bomber Command in the night skies of Europe.
‘We’ve got trouble,’ he said. ‘Luftwaffe night fighter.’ He turned and wrenched open the cabin door and leaned into the cockpit.
Sorsa glanced over his shoulder, face grim and pale in the cockpit lights. ‘We’ve had it. He’s come to take us back.’
‘Has he said so?’
‘No. No radio contact at all.’
‘Why not? It doesn’t make sense.’
The JU88S suddenly climbed steeply and disappeared, and it was Heini who gave the only possible answer to the question. ‘Every kind of sense if they don’t want us back, my friend.’
Martineau saw it all then. Something had gone wrong and it had to involve Hofer, and if that were so, the last thing he’d want was to have them back in Gestapo hands to bring down Erwin Rommel.
‘What do I do?’ Sorsa demanded. ‘That thing can blow us out of the skies. I know. I’ve been flying one for two years now.’
At that moment, the roaring filled the night again, and the mail plane shuddered as cannon shell slammed into the fuselage. One came up through the floor of the cockpit, narrowly missing Sorsa, splinters shattering the windscreen. He pushed the column forward, going down in a steep dive into the cloud layer below, and the Junkers 88S roared overhead, passing like a dark shadow.
Martineau fell to one knee, but got the door open and scrambled out. Several gaping holes had been punched into the fuselage of the plane and two windows were shattered. Kelso was on the floor, hanging onto a seat and Sarah was crouched over Braun, who lay on his back, his uniform soaked with blood, eyes rolling. He jerked convulsively and lay still.
Sarah looked up, her face surprisingly calm. ‘He’s dead, Harry.’
There was nothing to say, couldn’t be, and Martineau turned back to the cockpit, hanging on as the mail plane continued its steep dive down through the clouds. They rocked again in the turbulence as the Junkers 88S passed over them.
‘Bastard!’ Sorsa said, in a rage now. ‘I’ll show you.’
Baum, crouched on the floor, looked up at Harry with a ghastly smile. ‘He’s a Finn, remember? They don’t really like us Germans very much.’
The mail plane burst out of the clouds at three thousand feet and kept on going down.
‘What are you doing?’ Martineau cried.
‘Can’t play hide and seek with him in that cloud. He’d get us for sure. Just one trick up my sleeve. He’s very fast and I’m very slow and that makes it difficult for him.’ Sorsa glanced over his shoulder again and smiled savagely. ‘Let’s see if he’s any good.’
He kept on going down, was at seven or eight hundred feet when the Junkers 88S came in again on their tail, far too fast, banking to port to avoid a collision.
Sorsa took the mail plane down to five hundred and leveled off. ‘Right, you swine, let’s have you,’ he said, hands steady as a rock.
In that moment Martineau saw genius at work, understood all those medals the Finn wore, the Knight’s Cross, and a strange feeling of calm enveloped him. It was all so unreal, the lights from the instrument panel, the wind roaring in through the shattered windscreen.
And when it happened, it was over in seconds. The Junkers 88S swooped in on their tail again, and Sorsa hauled back the column and started to climb. The pilot of the Junkers 88S banked steeply to avoid what seemed like an inevitable collision, but at that height and speed had nowhere else to go but straight down into the waves below.
Sorsa’s face was calm again. ‘You lost, my friend,’ he said softly and eased back the column. ‘All right, let’s get back upstairs.’
Martineau pushed back the door and glanced out. The inside of the plane was a shambles, wind blowing in through innumerable holes, Braun’s blood-soaked body on the floor, Sarah crouched beside Kelso.
‘You two all right?’ he called.
‘Fine. Don’t worry about us. Is it over?’ Sarah asked.
‘You could say that.’
He turned back to the cockpit as Sorsa leveled out at six thousand feet. ‘So, the old girl’s leaking like a sieve, but everything appears to be functioning,’ the Finn said.
‘Let’s try the radio.’ Martineau squeezed into the co-pilot’s seat. He twisted the dial experimentally but everything seemed to be in working order. ‘I’ll let them know what’s happened,’ he said and started to transmit on the SOE emergency frequency.
Heini Baum tried to light a cigarette but his hands shook so much he had to give up. ‘My God!’ he moaned. ‘What a last act.’
Sorsa said cheerfully, ‘Tell me, is the food good in British prisoner-of-war camps?’
Martineau smiled. ‘Oh, I think you’ll find we make very special arrangements for you, my friend.’ And then, he made contact with SOE Headquarters.
At the control room at Jersey, Adler stood by the radio, an expression of disbelief on his face. He removed the earphones and turned slowly.
‘What is it, for God’s sake?’ Necker demanded.
‘That was Cherbourg Control. They’ve lost the JU88S.’
‘What do you mean, lost it?’
‘They had the pilot on radio. He’d attacked several times. They suddenly lost contact and he disappeared from the radar screen. They think he’s gone into the drink.’
‘I might have known,’ Hofer said softly. ‘A great pilot, Sorsa. An exceptional man. I should know. I chose him myself. And the mail plane?’
‘Still on radar, moving up-Channel toward the English coast. No way on earth of stopping her.’
There was silence. A flurry of rain drifted against the window. Necker said, ‘What happens now?’
‘I’ll leave in the Storch at dawn,’ Hofer told him. ‘The pilot of the mail plane can fly me. It’s essential I get to Field Marshal Rommel as soon as possible.’
‘And what then?’ Necker asked. ‘What happens when Berlin hears about this?’
‘God knows, my friend.’ Hofer smiled wearily. ‘A bleak prospect – for all of us.’
About fifteen minutes after Sorsa had changed course for the second time, Martineau received a response to his message.
‘Come in, Martineau,’
‘Martineau here,’ he answered.
‘Your destination Hornley Field. Fly at five thousand feet and await further instructions. Escorts will assist. Should be with you in minutes.’
Martineau turned to Sorsa who had his headphones on. ‘Did you get that?’
The Finn shook his head. ‘I don’t understand English.’
Martineau translated, then crouched down beside Baum. ‘So far, so good.’
Baum sat up and pointed. ‘Look out there.’
Martineau turned and saw, in the moonlight, a Spitfire take station to port. As he turned to check the starboard side, another appeared. He reached for the copilot’s headphones.
A crisp voice said, ‘Martineau, do you read me?’
‘Martineau here.’
‘You are now twenty miles east of the Isle of Wight. We’re going to turn inland and descend to three thousand. I’ll lead and my friend will bring up the rear. We’ll shepherd you right in.’
‘Our pleasure.’ He translated quickly for Sorsa and sat back.
‘Everything okay?’ Baum asked.
‘Fine. They’re leading us in. Another fifteen minutes or so, that’s all.’
Baum was excited. This time when he took a cigarette from his case his hand was steady. ‘I really feel as if I’m breaking out of something.’
‘I know,’ Martineau said.
‘Do you really? I wonder. I was at Stalingrad, did I tell you that? The greatest disaster in the history of the German Army. Three hundred thousand down the drain. The day before the airstrip closed I was wounded in the foot. I flew out in a good old JU52, just like this. Ninety-one thousand taken prisoner, twenty-four generals. Why them and not me?’
‘I spent years trying to find answers to questions like that,’ Martineau told him.
‘And did you?’
‘Not really. In the end, I decided there weren’t any answers. Also no sense and precious little reason.’
He pulled down the earphones as the voice came over the air again, giving him new instructions and a fresh course. He passed them on to Sorsa. They descended steadily. A few minutes later, the voice sounded again. ‘Hornley Field, right in front. In you go.’
The runway lights were plain to see, and this time Sorsa didn’t need any translation. He reduced power and dropped his flaps to float in for a perfect landing. The escorting Spitfires peeled away to port and starboard and climbed into the night.
The Junkers started to slow, and Sorsa turned and taxied toward the control tower. He rolled to a halt, switched off the engines. Baum got up and laughed excitedly. ‘We made it!’
Sarah was smiling. She reached for Martineau’s hand and held on tight and Kelso, on the floor, was laughing out loud. The feeling of release was fantastic. Baum got the door open and he and Martineau peered outside.
A voice called over a bullhorn, ‘Stay where you are.’
A line of airmen in RAF blue, each carrying a rifle, moved toward them. There were other people in the shadows behind them, but Martineau couldn’t make out who.
Baum jumped down onto the runway. The voice called again, ‘Stay where you are!’
Baum knotted the white scarf around his throat and grinned up at Harry, saluting him, touching the field marshal’s baton to the rim of his cap. ‘Will you join me, Standartenführer?’ And then he turned and strode toward the line of men, the baton raised in his right hand. ‘Put the rifles away, you idiots,’ he called in English. ‘All friends here.’
There was a single shot. He spun around, took a couple of steps back toward the Junkers, then sank on his knees and rolled over.
Harry ran forward, waving his arms. ‘No more, you fools!’ he shouted. ‘It’s me, Martineau.’
He was aware of the advancing line slowing and Squadron Leader Barnes was there, telling them to stay back. Martineau dropped to his knees. Baum reached up with his left hand and grabbed him by the front of the uniform.
‘You were right, Harry,’ he said hoarsely. ‘No sense, no reason to anything.’
‘Quiet, Heini. Don’t talk. We’ll get a doctor.’
Sarah was crouched beside him and Baum’s grip lightened. ‘Last act, Harry. Say kaddish for me. Promise.’
‘I promise,’ Martineau said.
Baum choked, there was blood on his mouth. His body seemed to shake and then the hand lost its grip on Martineau’s tunic and he lay still. Martineau got up slowly and saw Dougal Munro and Jack Carter standing in front of the line of RAF men beside Barnes.
‘An accident, Harry,’ Munro said. ‘One of the lads panicked.’
‘An accident?’ Martineau said. ‘Is that what you call it? Sometimes I really wonder who the enemy is. If you’re still interested, by the way, you’ll find your American colonel in the plane.’
He went past them and through the line of airmen, walking aimlessly toward the old aero club buildings. Strange, but he had that pain in the chest again, and it hadn’t bothered him once in Jersey. He sat down on the steps of the old clubhouse and lit a cigarette, suddenly cold. After a while, he became aware of Sarah sitting a few feet away.
‘What did he mean, say kaddish for him?’
‘It’s a sort of mourning prayer. A Jewish thing. Usually relatives take care of it, but he didn’t have any. All gone to the bloody ovens.’ He took the half-smoked cigarette from his mouth and passed it to her. ‘Anyway, now you know. Now your education’s complete. No honor, no glory, only Heini Baum out there, lying on his back.’
He got to his feet and she stood up also. Someone had brought a stretcher and they were carrying Baum away, and Kelso was crossing the runway on his crutches, Munro and Carter on either side of him.
‘Did I remember to tell you how well you did?’ he asked.
‘No.’
‘You were good. So good that Dougal will probably try to use you again. Don’t let him. Go back to that hospital of yours.’
‘I don’t think one should ever go back to anything.’ They started to walk toward the waiting cars. ‘And you?’ she asked. ‘What’s going to happen to you?’
‘I haven’t the slightest idea.’
She took his arm and held on tight and as the runway lights were switched off, they moved on through the darkness together.