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The Last Nazi (A Joe Johnson Thriller, Book 1)

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by Andrew Turpin




  The Last Nazi

  A Joe Johnson Thriller

  Andrew Turpin

  Contents

  The next book

  Prologue

  Part I

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Part II

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Part III

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Part IV

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Epilogue

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  Reviews

  Thanks and acknowledgements

  Author’s Note

  Background reading and bibliography

  About the author and contact details

  Copyright

  The next book — free chapters

  I am keen to build up a strong relationship with my readers. As part of this, I intend to send out occasional e-mail updates containing details of forthcoming new books, special offers, and perhaps background information on plots and characters.

  If you would like to join my Readers’ Group and sign up for the e-mail updates, I will send you, FREE of charge, the first few draft chapters of the next Joe Johnson novel, The Old Bridge, which will be published soon. It is another war crimes investigation, set in 2012 and this time looking back to the Yugoslav civil war of the early 1990s. Most of the action is set in Mostar, Dubrovnik, Split, London and New York City.

  Details of how to how to sign up for the Readers’ Group and receive the free chapters can be found at the end of The Last Nazi.

  Andrew Turpin, St. Albans, U.K., 2017

  To my brother Adrian, for all his help with this project.

  “The passage of time has in no way lessened the gravity of the crimes, and the perpetrators ought not be rewarded for their success in evading detection or concealing their misdeeds. And perhaps most important of all, justice must be sought in order to send an unmistakable message of deterrence to would-be perpetrators, namely: if you dare to commit atrocities, you will be pursued, however far you run and however long it takes to apprehend you.”

  — Eli Rosenbaum, director of the Office of Special Investigations, United States Department of Justice, 1994–2010, writing in Jewish News.

  Prologue

  Monday, December 18, 1944

  Nazi-occupied Southwestern Poland

  The tunnel roof collapsed with no warning. Tens of thousands of tons of dirt and rock fell almost as one, triggering a shock wave that threw all the men to the floor.

  The flickering lights that lined the tunnel wall went out instantly.

  Then came a series of smaller rockfalls, which clattered and rattled down like minor landslides over the impenetrable mountain of rubble that now entirely blocked the route back to the entrance.

  Finally, there was utter silence.

  Jacob Kudrow groaned and clawed at his face in the blackness.

  He propped himself up on his elbows and spat out a mouthful of sand and soil.

  Then he coughed and gasped, trying to suck in air.

  But this only brought in yet more earth and dust, dry particles that clogged his nostrils and stuck in the back of his throat.

  Then he realized he could no longer hear.

  No, not again, he thought.

  A wave of panic ran through him. It was the same sensation he’d had when he was ten years old, underwater and fighting for his life in the freezing Vistula River in Warsaw, long before the Nazis had marched in and changed his life.

  It’s over, it’s over.

  Jacob ripped open his filthy blue and white striped shirt and clasped the corner of the material over his nose and mouth. He coughed violently, then sucked in again, this time through the cotton.

  Now, at last, a fraction of oxygen came through. Again he coughed, again he sucked, his entire focus on his own survival.

  More air reached his lungs. “Breathe through your shirt,” he shouted to the others, unable even to hear his own words.

  Jacob turned to where he knew Daniel had been standing and reached out his hand, then stretched a little further. He found a shoe, then a leg, which moved and then moved again. His twin’s hand touched his.

  Thank the Almighty.

  Gradually, the dust settled, allowing Jacob to breathe more easily, and he began to hear again, too. First there were the grating coughs of those around him, all battling for air, and a few thuds as more rock fell from above.

  Finally, Jacob saw faint pinpricks of light coming nearer and nearer down the tunnel toward him. There were voices, quiet at first but getting louder.

  The first words he heard through the darkness were the unmistakable tones of the SS first lieutenant talking to one of the other guards in German. “The Führer will go mad when he finds out what’s happened here,” he said.

  Jacob immediately knew why. An hour earlier, he wouldn’t have. But now he did.

  “Get these damned prisoners down to the far end, away from this rock,” the first lieutenant shouted to the guards. “Make sure all the boxes come too. Go on, move. There should be twelve more boxes, so count them carefully.”

  The flashlights were now above Jacob, shining down on the prisoners on the floor. Jacob surveyed the damage. A miracle. The group of twenty-one prisoners, who had been standing less than forty meters from the roof fall, were covered in filth, faces black, but they had all survived.

  “Up, up, lift your boxes, then walk, single file, follow me,” the guard yelled.

  Jacob reluctantly got up and strained to lift the heavy wooden box lying at his feet.

  “Quick,” shouted the guard. At the second attempt, Jacob hoisted it onto his shoulder and got into line behind his brother.

  “Are you okay?” Jacob whispered. Daniel nodded.

  They all shuffled to the end of the tunnel where the first lieutenant, his thin face and SS uniform also now covered in grime, stood and watched, hands on hips. The prisoners placed their boxes on the wooden pallets with the others they had stacked neatly earlier in the day.

  Other than the first lieutenant, there were only two guards now. The others must have been buried under the rockfall or left on the other side of it, where the Nazi train stood.

  Jacob heard the first lieutenant mutter to a guard about the tunnel engineers. “Damned amateurs, always cutting corners, taking too many risks, going too quickly.” He swore loud
ly and hobbled around the stack of boxes, counting them as he went.

  When he finished, the first lieutenant whacked his riding crop hard on the final stack. “Two hundred. Okay, get these prisoners down there and out. Move,” he ordered, pointing toward the back of the main tunnel.

  “The escape tunnel,” Jacob murmured to himself. “Of course.” In his panic, Jacob had almost forgotten the nightmarish eight weeks he and a large group of other prisoners had spent digging it earlier in the year. Less than half of them had survived to see it completed.

  A guard led the group into an opening at the back of the main tunnel and down a much smaller tunnel, barely high enough to stand in, with few roof supports, uneven walls with protruding tree roots and a narrow rocky floor covered with large puddles.

  The men carefully made their way for around a hundred and fifty meters along the tunnel, with only the two guards’ flashlights for illumination. They were forced to crawl for the final short stretch, where the roof was too low to remain upright, until they emerged into a dry concrete sewer.

  “Thank the Almighty that the sewer’s unused,” Jacob said to Daniel. They continued to crawl along a short section of the sewer before finally emerging through a snow-covered metal grill into the freezing blackness of some woodland. Daylight had long gone.

  The guards led them by flashlight to a narrow road that was blanketed in ice and snow and marched them down the valley to the Ludwikowice Klodzkie village railway station, where they had arrived early that morning.

  As they had been every morning and night for the previous few months, the prisoners were herded onto railway cattle cars that were still ankle-deep in pig and cow dung after being procured from a local farmer. Ten of the group were pushed into the front car, the remainder, including Jacob and Daniel, into the rear one.

  A guard climbed in and began to tie the prisoners’ hands behind their backs to a horizontal steel rail that ran along the inside of the car.

  He was about to tie Jacob when the guard from the front car called through, asking for more rope. The guard jumped out, and when he returned, Jacob had his hands ready on the rail.

  But the guard, whom Jacob noticed was sweating profusely but also shivering, his face ashen, moved straight to Daniel and tied him, missing Jacob.

  After he finished securing the others, the guard sat on a stool at the back and rested against the wall, his eyes closed, one hand on his sweating forehead. The train began to move up the valley toward Gluszyca, where the Wüstegiersdorf concentration camp lay—part of the Nazis’ Gross-Rosen complex.

  After a few minutes, the guard’s head nodded forward. He was asleep.

  Jacob inched his hand to his left until he touched his brother’s bound right hand. Daniel, who was sitting with his eyes shut, his head bowed, jumped as if he had been touched with a live power cable but recovered quickly. Jacob kept his eyes fixed in front of him, but in the gloom he began slowly to unpick the knot that held Daniel’s hands to the metal bar, his fingers struggling in the cold.

  Finally, the bindings came free.

  Jacob noticed a length of wood lying almost buried in the excrement on the floor, halfway between him and the guard. As the train crawled toward a bend, Jacob stood, his legs wobbling with fatigue and the motion of the train, and made his way toward the rear of the car. He picked up the wood and, with what remaining strength he had, slammed it into the sleeping guard’s temple.

  The guard opened his eyes just before impact but too late. He collapsed unconscious on the floor.

  Jacob beckoned Daniel, whose eyes were now wide with fear, and moved to the open door at the back of the car. As the train rounded the bend, Jacob made eye contact with the other prisoners.

  All of them, without exception, looked silently at Jacob.

  How he wanted to liberate them—these men with whom he had shared some of the most horrific experiences a human could possibly endure. They had spent months as slaves, digging endless underground tunnels for Hitler’s Project Riese in the Owl Mountains.

  Jacob’s friend Konstanty gazed at him with dark, shrunken eyes. There was Stefan, who had two children; Bronislaw, taken by the SS only a day after his wedding; Berek, Janusz, and the rest.

  But Jacob knew he had no time to untie the knots, no knife to cut their bonds.

  They knew it too. Konstanty just nodded, almost imperceptibly.

  Jacob turned, took Daniel by the hand, and they both jumped into the darkness.

  They landed on a pile of snow-covered gravel, then rolled over and flattened themselves to the ground. “They’re going to come back, they’ll come back,” Daniel said and buried his head in the snow.

  But they didn’t come back. The train kept going, around another bend and behind the silhouette of some trees.

  Jacob lifted his head. A short distance away was a narrow river. “Over there, the water,” he said. “We walk up it. It’ll stop the dogs from smelling us.”

  The brothers removed their striped pants and wrapped them around their necks, then shuddered with shock as they waded into the icy river.

  The riverbed was slippery and muddy and the brothers had only walked a short distance when they heard gunshots echo clearly down the valley. The blasts went on and on, a few seconds between each.

  Jacob stood still for a couple of seconds. The bastard had shot them. Every single prisoner.

  He met Daniel’s eye, but neither of them spoke. They already knew what they had both escaped from. Speaking the words aloud would change nothing.

  He shook his head and looked up to the sky for a few seconds, then back at Daniel. “Come on, quick, before they bring the dogs.”

  They continued to wade through the knee-high water, legs now numb, until thick rushes finally made stream impassable.

  “I know what’s in those boxes, up in the tunnel, and it’s not dynamite,” Jacob said, as he helped his brother out of the water and onto the snow.

  Daniel turned to him in the near dark, the whites of his eyes contrasting with the grit that still covered his skin. “You know?”

  “Yes. Konstanty tripped, not long before the tunnel roof fell in. He dropped his box and a plank splintered off. I helped him fix it before the guards came, but I saw inside.”

  Part One

  Chapter One

  Tuesday, November 8, 2011

  Washington, D.C.

  Joe Johnson strode past a row of parked Cadillacs, Buicks, and Lincolns, most of them black, stretching almost the entire length of Benton Place Northwest, a tree-lined street in one of Washington, D.C.’s smartest suburbs, nestled amid an array of embassy buildings.

  Halfway up the street was a three-story brick home, a grand affair with a fifty-yard frontage, three short flights of steps leading to the broad front door, and a porch bookended by stone pillars.

  A hint of drizzle fell from dark clouds that scudded in from the west and left water dripping from the ornate black metal fence in front of the property. It was only just after one o’clock, but the light from chandeliers in the downstairs rooms cut a clear swath through the gloom.

  Suited businessmen and women in navy cocktail dresses or cream pantsuits hurried in, all of them greeted by a tall man in the doorway.

  There he was: Philip M. Pietersen, the man who had invited Johnson. He was a bit thicker around the middle, without a doubt, and had a few gray streaks in his black hair, but otherwise was as he had been a decade and a half ago.

  Johnson walked up the steps and raised his hand in greeting as the man spotted him. “Philip, hello. I decided to come after all.”

  Philip held out his hand and they shook.

  “Been a long time, Joe,” Philip said. “Fifteen years or more, isn’t it?”

  “About that. Nice little place you’ve got here.” Johnson ran his hand across the short-cropped semicircle of graying hair that surrounded his bald patch.

  “Thanks. Go on in, we’ll chat later. I’ve got someone who’s keen to meet you to talk about your war crimes lec
tures,” Philip said.

  Johnson nodded and walked through the door into the vast hallway.

  An array of blue banners hung from the walls, all proclaiming the same slogan: David Kudrow 2012: Reviving America.

  Republican Party officials ushered guests into the ballroom and handed out fund-raising leaflets. Johnson took one and stepped to one side to read it.

  “David Kudrow: Your Best Chance of a Republican in the White House” it proclaimed in large letters, above a picture of the candidate.

  There was a brief biography and a reprinted New York Times editorial headlined “Kudrow Set to Sink Romney and Take GOP Nomination.”

  Flipping it over, Johnson noticed a small photograph of a smiling Philip at the bottom, captioned “Confident: Campaign Manager Philip M. Pietersen.”

  Johnson shook his head, crumpled the leaflet into a ball, and tossed it into a nearby bin.

  He accepted a glass of champagne from a server and meandered into the ballroom, which was furnished with rows of seats and a small platform at the front, bedecked with more Kudrow banners and the Stars and Stripes.

 

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