The Further Adventures of The Joker

Home > Other > The Further Adventures of The Joker > Page 27
The Further Adventures of The Joker Page 27

by Martin H. Greenberg


  “No need. I brought mine along,” the Joker said. “Made in the good old U.S.A., but with German cloth and labels. Wait until you see it. You’ll be falling all over yourself saluting me.”

  The Joker and Hans went back into the chalet. The Joker swiftly changed into an officer’s uniform. He said to Hans, “Are you sure you don’t want to come along? It’s going to be a whole new life for us in Brazil.”

  “No, Herr Joker,” Hans said. “There’s good work for me here, and you have rewarded me so well I will be able to buy a piece of land where Greta and I and the children will be able to farm. Perhaps in Sweden with our false papers. Then it’s an end of the life of crime for me.”

  “Well, you’ve probably chosen well,” the Joker said. “Now, let’s inspect these men. Once we pick up the treasure and reach the airfield, your duties are over, and I will have a little extra reward for you at that time.”

  The Joker inspected his men. It was amazing what a few uniforms could do. These men no longer looked like riffraff from the lowest slums. Instead they looked just like any Nazi officers. As for the Joker, he had come prepared to disguise his face also. A tight-fitting rubber-and-plastic mask went over his face. It gave him the look of a hardened combat veteran. With it he had a wig of close-cropped blond hair. Hans looked him over critically and declared that he was perfect.

  They piled into the limo. Hans attached the flag to the front fender showing that he had a general officer aboard. They set out for the Luftwaffe camp at Bad Fleishstein.

  The roads were almost deserted at that early hour. They did come upon one army convoy. Flashing their lights, they went past it.

  Half an hour’s rapid driving brought them to the air force depot at Bad Fleishstein. They pulled up to the sentry gate. The guard stiffened to attention when he saw it was an official German air-force staff car. When he peered inside and saw the tall austere shape of the general wrapped in his gray coat, Hans handed over the papers. The sentry glanced at them and snapped to a salute. The Joker touched a negligent forefinger to his cap as the car sped into the camp. So far, so good.

  They drove past row upon row of barracks. Hans drove with calm sureness, for he had memorized this route a long time ago. The depot, where the treasure was stored, was at the far end of the field not far from the perimeter fence. Hans pulled up in front of it. The two guards, who came out to check their papers, were of a sterner make than those at the front gate. They read the papers carefully, conferred with each other in low tones, and said, “This is most unusual, General. We usually receive advance warning when objects of value are to be transported out of here.”

  “In wartime,” the Joker said, in a harsh, grating voice, “only the unusual is usual. The Reichs Marschall did not want to alert anyone to the transfer of this treasure. Its destination is a top secret.”

  The guards were still unsure. One said to the other, “Perhaps we should call up the captain of the guard.”

  “Do so, by all means,” the Joker said. “And give me your names and serial numbers also, so I can remember the men who delayed an order from the second in command of the Third Reich.”

  Another conference. Then both guards saluted. The senior of them, a corporal, said, “Please proceed, Herr General. We do not wish to delay you. But it is not good for us to be remiss in our duties, either.”

  “Good,” the Joker said, “You have done well.”

  Hans stayed in the car as they had arranged. The Joker, at the head of his seven men, marched into the depot. It was an enormous wooden structure. As far as the Joker could see, it was heaped to the ceiling with loot captured from all over Europe. There was furniture from Denmark and Sweden—chairs, lounges, all sorts of things, enameled sideboards, an endless array of paintings. The German army was making a good profit out of the loot of Europe. In the distance before they entered, the Joker had seen other large buildings under construction. These would be to hold the art treasures of other countries as they fell.

  “Well,” the Joker demanded of one of the guards, “where is the Italian art treasure?”

  “Which Italian art treasure, General?” one of the guards asked.

  “The one that that crazy fellow brought in for that Joker.”

  “Ahjawohl, mein generell, it is right over here.” The guard led him to a pallet on one side. There, still wrapped in the original canvas that the Joker had put around it, was the entire mound of the Vatican art treasure. The Joker turned back a fold and looked inside to make sure: there was no sense getting the wrong stuff now. But sure enough, it was exactly what he wanted. He saw the stacked Raphaels, the Leonardos, the Titians, and the Reubenses, plus the statuary and all the rest of the good stuff.

  “Jah, jah,” the Joker said, “Dis is dass. Bring me a cart here, quick. We have no time to waste.”

  The guards hurried away and came back with a motorized hand truck. The Joker sent them back for a second one: There was so much good stuff lying around he saw no sense in leaving it. In fact, he thought, if he’d been aware of this, he could have saved himself all the trouble of raiding the Vatican and come straight here. But of course he had always wanted to raid the Vatican. It was one of the accomplishments he was most proud of. Outside, he had his men load the bags onto the roof rack of the limo. Everyone saluted everyone else and the Joker and his men got back into the vehicle. They sped off. But as they approached the gate they saw a sudden flurry of activity.

  “Oh-oh,” Hans said. “I don’t know what this is.”

  “Just stay cool,” the Joker said. “Don’t shoot until you see me do it first.”

  They stopped. One of the guards came running up. He was waving a piece of paper. “General!” he said. “One final thing. You forgot to sign for this!”

  “Ach,” the Joker said, “how silly of me.” He hastily scrawled a signature and thrust it back to the guard. The guard saluted. The gates opened and they sped out.

  “OK,” the Joker said, “so far, so good. Now. Hans, to the airfield, and don’t spare the horses.”

  Dawn was fully up by the time they reached the airfield. They piled out of the car. There was a captain on duty and he was suitably overawed by the Joker’s rank and medals, and general air of hauteur. The Joker was at his swaggering best, commandeering a good-sized military transport, an old but very sound Dornier with camouflage paint. At the Joker’s orders, extra tanks of gas were fitted to the wingtips. The gasoline was topped off. The propellers were spun and clearance was given. The Joker’s hired men scrambled aboard. Hans and the Joker shook hands.

  “Good luck, Herr Joker,” Hans said. “It has been a pleasure working with you.”

  “Thank you, Hans,” the Joker said. “The pleasure has been all mine. And here is a little parting gift for you.” He handed Hans a small chamois bag. Opening it, Hans found five perfect pearls.

  “Ah Joker, you are more than generous. It is too much! It is far greater than the price we agreed upon.”

  “That’s all right,” the Joker said. “It didn’t cost me anything. Good luck, Hans.”

  Hans got back into the command car and sped off. Aboard the plane, the soldiers had strapped themselves into the seats, all except one, Dietrich, who was an accomplished pilot. He was up in the nose of the plane, in the copilot’s seat. The Joker sat down in the pilot’s seat, tested the controls, revved up the engines. The four big props spun, coughed, spit blue exhaust, and then spun firmly. The Joker ran the engines up and signaled the tower for final clearance.

  “Yes, General, you are clear. But you have neglected to file a flight plan.”

  “Do that for me, old boy, all right?” the Joker said.

  “But where are you going?”

  “Eagle’s Lair!” The Joker said, naming the Führer’s mountain retreat in Bavaria. “The Führer is throwing the party of the century there.”

  “Jawohl!” the tower replied.

  The Joker pushed the throttles forward and the plane began to creep out onto the takeoff area. Then the
re was a crackle of static. The tower was calling.

  “Just a moment, General! There is something which is not in order.”

  “Oh? What’s that?” the Joker asked.

  “The guards from the depot have come. It seems that when you signed for the treasure, you signed yourself Herr General Joker.”

  “Just my little joke,” the Joker said, keeping the plane going toward the takeoff area.

  “We would like you to sign again,” the voice on the other end insisted.

  “Fool! You know I cannot keep the Führer waiting!” The Joker ran the engines up, released the brakes, and started to rumble down the field. There was a noise of confusion mixed with static. Then a voice said, “Ah well, good luck, General!”

  Then he was in the air.

  The Joker peeled off his mask. Grinning now, he came back to see how his troops were doing. “Everybody all right?” he asked.

  “Yes, Herr Joker!” They chorused.

  “I hope you packed plenty of sandwiches,” the Joker said.

  The men grinned. “Yes, we have packed sandwiches and beer, much beer!”

  “Good,” the Joker said. “Enjoy yourselves. The hard part of this is over.”

  But in that, he was very mistaken.

  The Joker’s flight plan called for him to fly due south. He wanted to get out of the war zone as soon as he could. It would be ridiculous to be shot down now. He flew over Switzerland, not bothering to respond to questions radioed to him from stations along the way. He continued south along the Tyrhennian Sea, with the mass of Italy on his left. When Sicily came into view, he made a right turn to fly west across the Mediterranean and then out into the Atlantic.

  It was at this point that a single-seater fighter appeared out of the clouds and quickly closed in on them.

  “Who the hell is that?” the Joker said. “Dietrich, can you make out any markings on his wings?’

  Dietrich looked long and steadily through binoculars at the pursuing craft. “Well, Herr Joker, it seems to have some sort of symbol on the wing but I can’t make it out.”

  “Italian Air Force?” the Joker asked.

  “No, I don’t think so,” Dietrich said. “It has none of their characteristic markings.”

  There was another crackle of static. Then a loud voice enquired in Italian, “What plane is that?”

  “German military transport,” the Joker replied, “on a special mission.”

  “Is that so?” said the fighter pilot. He came closer still and at last the Joker could make out the markings on the wing. The symbol was like nothing he had ever seen before. The insignia on the wingtips and side of the plane showed a heart with a dagger through it, lying atop a coiled noose.

  “What the hell is that?” the Joker asked Dietrich. “Must be some country I’ve never heard of before.”

  Dietrich cursed. “Ah! Herr Joker, it is the marking of the mafia!”

  “Since when have they got their own airforce?” the Joker asked.

  “The mafia always has what they need,” Dietrich said. “Especially in Sicily.”

  The Joker got back on the radio. “Stay out of my way! I’m on special orders from the Führer himself!”

  The fighter plane spun in and circled around them at close range. They could see a dark unshaven face staring at them. The Italian pilot said, “Aha! It is the Joker! Land your ship, Joker! You have what belongs to Italy and to us.”

  The Joker said to Dietrich, “Tell the men to man the machine guns.”

  The fighter plane circled them again, staying out of range. They could hear radio conversation in a Sicilian dialect, which none of them understood. Two more planes appeared out of the clouds and came toward them. When they were within range, the Joker said, “Open fire.”

  The three planes wove a pattern of death around the slow-flying transport. Machine guns chattered and were met by answering fire from the nose and tail gunners aboard the transport. Machine gun slugs ripped through the transport’s light covering.

  “Shoot them down!” the Joker screamed at his gunners.

  “But we can’t see them, sir! They’re diving out of the sun!”

  “Then shoot down the sun!” the Joker shouted.

  Meanwhile he was turning acrobatics in the plane, dodging and twisting, taking advantage of every vestige of cloud cover. One of the men scored a hit. One of the three fighters spun into the ocean in a plume of black smoke, crashing at last into the bright sea. The remaining two redoubled their efforts. Smoke began to pour from one of the transport’s port outboard engine. The Joker feathered the prop and shut down the engine. The Dornier flew on steadily. They gained more cloud cover. The fighters found them and bored in again. Then the Joker performed an unorthodox maneuver. He turned the plane on one wing, sweeping around like a scythe. He caught one of the mafia planes off-guard and shot it down, watched it explode in a trail of smoke and sparks. That left one airplane. It came at them this time head on. From the radio the Joker could hear Scuzzi’s voice, “I will catch you, Joker; I will kill you!” And then the plane dissolved into a fireball and plunged into the sea. The Joker resumed his course, west and south. “Hang on, boys,” he said, “We’re going to Rio!”

  Two of his own men had been killed. The Joker told the others to throw their bodies out through the hatchway. “It’ll be just that much more treasure for the rest of us to divide,” he told them. Soon they were eating smoked bratwurst sausages and drinking beer as if nothing had happened.

  The plane flew on through the rest of the day. Night saw them well out into the Atlantic. They left the Azores behind them and finally made their turn to go due west across the shortest part of the South Atlantic. Rio lay dead ahead and about a thousand miles away.

  Morning found them still making good time. But a second engine was beginning to miss. More seriously, the plane had begun gradually to lose altitude. Checking, they found that the machine bullets had cut through one of the gas tanks. Hasty calculations showed they were not going to have enough fuel to make it all the way in.

  The Joker fought with the big plane, taking advantage of stray bits of wind and thermal updrafts, edging for altitude. But he could see it was not going to be enough.

  “Dietrich,” he said, “we’re going to have to throw out the statuary. Order the men to do it. Then tear out the seats, anything extra you can find. We must lighten the ship. There’s no way to turn back. Between here and the landing field at Rio there’s nothing but water.”

  Priceless Michelangelo marbles went tumbling out of the aircraft and into the sea. Equipment followed. It was helping, but it was still not enough. The Joker put the ship on autopilot and went back into the main cabin. He said to his men, “Well, you’ve all been really good and you’ve been a great help. I hate to do this but I’m really afraid that I have to. You, you, and you. Throw out life rafts and continue after them.”

  They protested. “Surely you are not serious, Herr Joker? We would stand little chance of survival, even with the life rafts.”

  “You will stand no chance at all,” the Joker said, “if you stay here. All there is for you here is a bullet in the head.”

  With submachine gun at the ready he herded them toward the open hatchway. One of them tried to jump him. The Joker shot him. Then at gunpoint he made the others jump out one by one. He watched as their parachutes opened.

  He was left now only with the lightest of the treasures. He was prepared to die before throwing anymore of it overboard. Only he and the remaining treasures were left in the plane. And Dietrich.

  He became aware of Dietrich as the man opened fire on him from the cockpit. The Joker, with his special sixth sense for danger, had been waiting for this and clung to the open hatch high over the steel-gray sea moving below to escape the barrage of bullets from Dietrich’s gun. In fact it helped him solve a problem. He was fond of Dietrich, who had done well by him. But the man weighed at least two hundred pounds. That would be weight well saved.

  Bullets crashed
around him. The Joker fired once, and caught Dietrich square in the forehead. The man went down and stayed down. The Joker pulled his body to the hatch and threw it overboard. And then he was alone on the plane, just him and the treasure, on a wounded German transport that was still losing altitude, though slower than before.

  But even though it was slower, it was enough. He was no more than fifty feet above the wavetops now, and the plane was bucking hard. It had taken so many hits, both from the attack by the mafia planes and the combat that had gone on inside, that the plane was threatening to come apart.

  At last the Joker could see, far ahead, a dim dark line on the horizon. Brazil! He was almost there!

  The plane rushed on, its engines misfiring. He was skimming the wavetops, but the land was coming up strongly. He saw a stretch of beach and, behind it, green jungle. Quickly he checked his position. Yes, there it was! There was the landing field built out to the water’s edge, just to his left. But he didn’t know if he was going to make it. He was almost in the water now; water was splashing up through the bullet holes. If he’d had his landing gear down he would have been dragging his wheels in the water. Now the landing field was dead ahead. He could see people standing in a little crowd, waving at him. One of them was a blonde. He looked more closely. Yes, it was Petra! She had come! She was waiting for him! How sad it would be, the Joker thought, to have come this far and die just before reaching Rio.

  By sheer strength of will he forced the nose up. The plane’s tail was already starting to touch down in the water as he swept across the beach and finally brought the plane down belly first on the edge of the tarmac.

  He stood up, unbuckled himself from the seat. He had made it! It was all his! He’d done it! The greatest caper of the century, maybe of all time! And he was safe. And Petra was down there waiting for him.

  He ran down the bullet-pocked aisle, pushed open the door. As he began to step out there was a blinding flash of light. White light bathed him and suddenly, for a moment, he lost his orientation and had to close his eyes to keep from being blinded.

 

‹ Prev