The '44 Vintage dda-8
Page 19
" Bravo, mon camarade! Bien joue!" he cried loudly, kissing the little man first on one cheek, and then on the other. "Jolly good show!" He released the little man and grabbed the hand of the man next to him, pumping it vigorously. " Je vous remercie—je vous remercie beaucoup. Au nom des armées anglaises et americaines je vous remercie—vive la Résistance! Vive la Libération! Vive la France!"
" Monsieur—" The man in the suit raised his hand to silence him, but Audley took not a blind bit of notice. Instead he gestured to include everyone in earshot.
" Mes amis—j'ai de bonnes nouvelles pour vous—de très bonnes nouvelles. Aujourd'hui des chars americains font le passage de la Loire, Le débarquement des puissances alliées au sud de la France a commencé. Les allemands sont finis. C'est la victoire!" Audley raised his arms to suit his words, his fingers giving the V-sign.
The Resistance men stared at him as though he was mad.
Winston stepped forward to Audley's side, stuffing his pistol into his waistband as he did so. "That's dead right—this is a big day. And I can tell you—General Patton's sure going to be glad to hear how you boys helped us. Yes, sir!"
Butler looked around despairingly. Audley could hardly have got less reaction from his listeners if he'd been speaking in ancient Greek—or if he'd been telling them that the war was not won, but lost.
There came a scraping sound from behind him, followed by a quick half-suppressed grunt of pain.
The young German officer stumbled forward, prodded from behind. The man in the suit looked at him in astonishment.
Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
"Yes . . ." Audley smiled ruefully. "Well, we don't seem to have got ourselves a general after all. And it does rather look as if we've actually released a prisoner, not captured one, eh?"
The Frenchman ignored him. " Sprechen Sie franzosisch?"
" Nein." The prisoner brushed at a lock of straw-coloured hair which had fallen across his face.
Audley gave a grunt. "But he speaks good English." He half-turned towards the German. "Name and rank?"
The German stiffened, abandoning the attempt to shift the hair. "Grafenberg, Hauptmann—captain," he said.
There were only two pips on the boy's shoulder strap—but that was right for a captain, Butler remembered. What was more to the point was that there was no other telltale badge, which meant he was straight Wehrmacht. It didn't surprise him that there were now captains just out of nappies in the German Army: back in 1940 there'd been plenty of flight-lieutenants like that in the RAF.
"Unit?" said Audley quickly. 'What unit, stationed where?"
Captain Grafenberg looked at him helplessly, rocking slightly on his heels as though the questions hurt him. "Grafenberg, Hauptmann," he whispered.
Audley grinned. "Of course! Just name, rank and number—and I'm not going to bother about that. I accept your surrender, Captain."
"No—" began the Frenchman.
"Yes. And in the circumstances I also require your parole— your word of honour"—Audley fired the words in a machine-gun burst— " immediately."
"No!" snapped the Frenchman.
"Yes!" said Captain Grafenberg. "Yes—my word of honour—I give my word of honour—"
"Good. I accept your word of honour, under the rules of war. It will hold good until I hand you over to the first Allied unit we meet, which will probably be one from the American Army—is that clearly understood, Captain?"
"Yes, lieutenant." Captain Grafenberg brushed the hair out of his face with his manacled hands. "I understand."
Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
"Very good." Audley nodded. "Corporal Butler!"
"Sir!"
"You will take charge of the prisoner, Corporal." Audley turned back to the Frenchman. "Now, m'sieur . . . you wanted a senior officer, but all we've caught is a junior one, who can't possibly be of any use to you —he'll just be an embarrassment—an encumbrance . . . un embarras, n'est-ce pas?"
The Frenchman gave Audley a very old-fashioned look, and then flicked a quick glance at Butler just in time to catch him lowering his Sten.
He watched Butler for a moment before speaking. "You are ... a rash young man, Lieutenant, I think."
"Maybe."
"Not maybe. Morte la bête, mort le venin— if they have no use they are better dead."
"You can't kill them all."
"But we can kill as many as we catch." The Frenchman's lips drooped at one corner. "You have not had four years of them."
"No?" Audley's chin lifted in that characteristically arrogant way of his. "You know, I could have sworn we'd been fighting them too."
Winston coughed. "Lieutenant," he said out of the side of his mouth, "we got some distance to make, remember?"
"I hadn't forgotten." Audley shook his head stiffly.
"And a job to do," Winston persisted. "A job, huh?"
Audley took the warning at last. "Of course . . ." The arrogance was gone from his voice. "Look, m'sieur
—if they have no use, you said. Give us one of the cars and we'll take him with us. Because where we're going we may find a use for him. I'll be responsible for him—personally."
This time the Frenchman's lips twisted in the other direction. "Oh yes? And when you are a prisoner—a prisoner under your rules of war— and he is free again . . . and I am dead—and we are dead . . . and our little town is like Oradour-sur-Glane, where the women and children are also dead—you will still be responsible? Personally?"
Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
"What d'you mean, 'when he's free again'?" Audley grabbed the German's handcuffed hands and lifted them up. "What the hell are these—charm bracelets?"
The Frenchman stared at the handcuffs for a moment. Then he shrugged. "So he has committed some crime. But he is still a German officer."
"Very true. But if they're taking the trouble to pull him out of the battle"—Audley dropped the German's hands and pointed to the staff car—"then he's in big trouble himself. And that makes him practically one of us."
Audley's voice was no longer arrogant—it was vehement.
"Lieutenant—" Winston started to interrupt again.
"Shut up, Sergeant!" snapped Audley.
Winston raised his eyebrows at Butler hopelessly.
"So you say ' morte la bête, mort le venin'—vous voulez qu'il tombe de Charybde en Scylla," went on Audley. "But I say that's the very reason why he can be of use to us."
Butler saw, out of the corner of his eye, that the Resistance men were clearing up around them: one of them was lugging a body up the hillside while another scuffed leaves and dirt into the pool of blood which the dead soldier had left. And as they did so one piece of his mind was obstinately attempting to translate Audley's French—"dead the beast, dead the" . . . what on earth was le venin?— while his finger lay on the trigger of the cocked Sten.
Madness!
"No, Lieutenant—"
Why did everybody else pronounce that rank differently? thought Butler irritably. To the American it was loo-tenant and to the Frenchman it was lyuhtenon—
"—because if his friends get him back—"
"Why should they get him back?" cut in Audley.
"Why?" The Frenchman sniffed. "Because the American tanks have not crossed the river. They are heading north and east past Orleans ... so if his friends get him back—and when he feels the muzzle kiss the back of his neck—then he will remember that he is a German officer. And then he will trade us in Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
exchange for his life—"
" No!" said the German.
The Frenchman looked at the German, at first impassively and then with a trace of pity. "Oh yes—there is your word of honour, I know—"
"No." The boy's shoulders sagged.
"What then?"
The lock of hair had fallen across the white face again, and the German's other eye had closed. The
ring under it was so dark as to look almost like a bruise: it was not just the face of defeat, but of disintegration.
" Ich bin ein Kind des Todes . . . aus dem Regen in die Traufe." The eye opened, almost defiantly. "There are not enough Frenchmen in France to trade for me. There is in the car ... a case . . ." He frowned. "A briefcase."
The Frenchman stiffened, looked quickly at the staff car, and then at Audley. " Un moment, Lieutenant . . ."
They watched him dive into the staff car and retrieve the briefcase. But when he'd ripped it open he showed no inclination to share its contents with them.
Winston leaned forward towards the German. "Captain . . . this had better be good."
Captain Grafenberg looked at him questioningly. "Please?"
"I mean"—Winston heaved a sigh—"I hope you've done something real bad—like surrendered half the German Army maybe. Or put arsenic in Rommel's coffee. Or given Himmler the V-sign."
"Please?" The captain looked as though he was ready to burst into tears.
"Because if you haven't, then I think you and the lieutenant there have got us into one hell of a mess."
Winston turned suddenly towards Audley, and Butler saw to his surprise that he was grinning. "Not that I don't go along with you, Lieutenant sir. It's just that I never thought I was going to die in the defence of the German Army, that's all. The British Army—I've just about gotten used to that. But the German Army ... I'd really like a little more time to adjust to that. What d'you think, Corporal Jack?" He tilted his head towards Butler.
Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
The question caught Butler by surprise.
"That's what I thought," said Winston. "Like The Charge of the Light Brigade, starring Enrol Flynn, you don't think—not until the lieutenant has passed on the thought to you—"
"Balls!" snapped Butler. "There isn't anything to think about. We just don't kill prisoners."
"You don't?" Winston raised his voice in scorn. "Well, I think you've got a lot to learn, Jack old buddy.
In fact—"
"Bloody shut up—both of you!" said Audley angrily. "Hauptmann Grafenberg . . . would you please tell us what it is you've done?"
Grafenberg straightened himself but didn't answer.
Audley waited patiently.
"I am sorry," said Grafenberg finally.
" You're sorry—" Winston exclaimed.
"Hush!" Audley paused. Then he pointed at Winston, without taking his eyes off the German's face.
"Sergeant . . . Frank Winston, United States Army." With the other hand he pointed at Butler.
"Corporal . . . Corporal Jack Butler, Lancashire Rifles." He tapped his own chest. "Audley, David . . .
second lieutenant, Queen Charlotte's Own Royal South Wessex Dragoons."
Chandos Force, thought Butler irrelevantly—the real Chandos Force, even though it had lost its way en route to its unknown target. But then Hauptmann Grafenberg could hardly be expected to know that.
But also he knew why Audley had made the introduction so formally: if we're going to fight for you, Hauptmann Grafenberg, at least we're going to know whyl
"I am sorry." Grafenberg looked at each of them in turn, lastly at Audley. "Second Lieutenant—"
Second Lef-tenant—
"—I have not done . . . anything at all."
"What?" said Audley. "Nothing?"
Grafenberg shook his head.
Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
"Well"—Audley's voice cracked—"what's in the briefcase, for God's sake, man?"
Winston nodded meaningfully to his right, past Butler's shoulder. "I think we're just about to find that out, Lieutenant."
Butler twisted round in the direction of the American's nod, to find the Frenchman coming towards them again. He was aware of the Sten in his hands, still cocked and dangerous. But now it felt curiously heavy
—heavy with the memory of the German machine-gunner who had been picked off with that first sniper's shot before he could squeeze his trigger.
The Frenchman faced Hauptmann Grafenberg. "Erwin Grafenberg, Hauptmann, 924th Anti-tank Battalion?"
"Jawohl."
"So!" The Frenchman turned on his heel towards Audley. "Where do you wish to go?" he asked.
"Where—?" Audley swallowed. "Yes . . . well, if you'd just give us one of these vehicles . . . then we'll follow our noses."
"What is the name of your Operation?"
"Our Operation?"
"Yes. Your Operation." The Frenchman's tone was polite but firm. "It has a code name, naturally."
"Oh yes—naturally. Of course, that is . . ." Audley nodded. "Yes, it has."
"Which is?"
"Which is none of your business, m'sieur, I think," said Audley firmly.
"Oh Jesus Christ!" murmured Winston. "Here we go again!"
"You want a vehicle, Lieutenant," said the Frenchman.
"No. I was promised a vehicle—by you."
"In exchange for a prisoner."
Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
They stared at each other obstinately.
Suddenly Sergeant Winston stirred restlessly, looking first to the right, then to the left, then behind him.
"Hell now . . . I've been thinking"—he looked seriously at Audley, then at the Frenchman—"do the krauts ever come this way normally?"
"M'sieur?"
"I mean—do they come this way if you don't steer 'em this way? Like, it seems a kind of quiet back road, I mean."
The Frenchman frowned. "No, they do not come this way. It is not the main road."
"Great! So you and the lieutenant—and the kraut—can sit here and argue, and no one's gonna disturb you . . . and me and the corporal can take the car ... and when the war's over we can come back and tell you who won it." Winston spread his hands in the manner of one modestly offering his answer to a difficult problem. "Or, if you like, we'll just tell you when it's over—then you can go on arguing . . .
about which of you won it, huh?"
Audley and the Frenchman both stared at him for a second or two, and then again at each other.
Suddenly the Frenchman raised his hands apologetically. "M'sieur— Lieutenant—you will understand that we have learnt to be cautious ... to ask questions. Perhaps too many questions. But it is how we have stayed alive, you see."
Audley nodded slowly. "Yes," he agreed.
"So . . . you shall have your vehicle—and your prisoner . . . and we will also help you find your way—I shall give you a driver to guide you . . . Pierrot!"
One of the Resistance men who had been working on the restoration of the plank bridge over the crater straightened up and turned towards them obediently.
Audley relaxed. "Well ... I suppose there are times when we're a bit too jolly careful for our own good, at that!" He glanced for a moment towards Butler. "Eh, Corporal?"
"Sir?" Butler had the distinct impression that the look Audley had given him had been for one fraction of a second much less friendly than his tone of voice. "Yes, sir."
Audley grinned at the Frenchman. "Bulldog—Operation Bulldog, that's us."
Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
The Frenchman frowned. "Bull. . . dog?"
Audley struck his forehead. "I'm an idiot! I mean Bullsblood, of course. Just got the wrong word-association—Bullsblood it is."
"Ah—Bullsblood."
"That's right. It's a road interdiction mission." Audley grinned again. "But if you don't mind, I'll spare you the details."
"A very proper precaution." The Frenchman nodded. "And now . . . Pierrot, mon vieux—"
"Hey, m'sieur, just hold it a sec!" Sergeant Winston pointed towards the German. "You never did get round to telling us what he did—was it real bad?"
"Bad?" The Frenchman gave Grafenberg a curious glance. "No, it was not bad. It was what he did not do that was bad . . . and that— that was very bad."
&n
bsp; "And what was it he didn't do, then?"
"He failed to kill Adolf Hitler, m'sieur."
15. How they encountered the Jabos
It was true what Dad had said, thought Butler: Germans smelt differently from Englishmen.
But then, to be fair, Captain Grafenberg was probably thinking much the same thing. And whenever the captain had last washed, he knew for a fact that he himself hadn't had anything like a decent wash for a week, so he must be ripening up a treat on his own account. In addition to which, since the captain was wedged between him and Sergeant Winston in the back of the staff car, he would have both American and British smells to contend with.
The car completed its backward passage up the road and swung sharply into the entrance to the track along which the other ambushed vehicles were hidden.
Butler caught a strong whiff of garlic on Pierrot's breath: that made, altogether, a pretty formidable Allied presence, he decided.
They backed up the track for ten yards. Then the Kübel backed in ahead of them.
Price, Anthony - [David Audley 08] - The '44 Vintage
"We gonna have an escort?" asked Winston.
Audley watched the Kübel set off ahead of them. "For the first ten kilometres, according to the schoolmaster," he said.
"The schoolmaster?"
"Yes. It seems that he's a schoolmaster when he's not killing Germans," said Audley. "Or that's what they call him, anyway."
"Like Bullsblood?" said Butler.
"Or Bullshit?" said Winston.
Audley turned towards them from the front seat "Now just hold it," he said warningly.
Pierrot put the car in gear and pulled onto the road a hundred yards behind the Kübel.
"We get to know where we're going, though?" said Winston.
Audley stared ahead of him. "To their headquarters. Then they're going to see if there's any information about the main party." He turned towards them again. "I said . . . hold it."
Winston frowned across the German at Butler.
Audley smiled at Pierrot. "Do you have the key to the handcuffs, m'sieur?" he enquired politely.
"Huh?" Pierrot looked at him quickly.