Storm Island

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by Ken Follett


  Canaris, got to his feet. A mere captain at the outbreak of war, he

  had distinguished himself with a superb report on the weaknesses of the

  French army a report which had been called a decisive factor in the

  German victory. He had become chief of the army intelligence bureau in

  1942, and that bureau had absorbed the Abwehr on the fall of Canaris.

  Rommel had heard that he was proud and outspoken, but able.

  Roenne said: "Our information is extensive, but by no means complete.

  The Allies' code name for the invasion is Overlord. Troop

  concentrations in Britain are as follows." He picked up a pointer and

  crossed the room to the wall map.

  "First: along the south coast. Second: here in the district known as

  East Anglia. Third: in Scotland. The East Anglian concentration is by

  far the greatest. We conclude that the invasion will be three-pronged.

  First: a diversionary attack on Normandy. Second: the main thrust,

  across the Straits of Dover to the Calais coast. Third: a flanking

  invasion from Scotland across the North Sea to Norway. All

  intelligence sources support this prognosis." He sat down.

  Hitler said: "Comments?"

  Rommel, who was Commander of Army Group B, which controlled the north

  coast of France, said: "I can report one confirming sign: the Pas de

  Calais has received by far the greatest tonnage of bombs."

  "3 Goering said: "What intelligence sources support your prognosis,

  von Roenne?"

  Roenne stood up again.

  "There are three: air reconnaissance, monitoring of enemy wireless

  signals, and the reports of agents." He sat down.

  Hitler crossed his hands protectively in front of his genitals, a

  nervous habit which was a sign that he was about to make a speech.

  "I shall now tell you," he began, 'how I would be thinking if I were

  Winston Churchill Two choices confront me: east of the Seine, or west

  of the Seine. East has one advantage : it is nearer. But in modern

  warfare there are only two distances within fighter range and outside

  fighter range. Both of these choices are within fighter range.

  Therefore distance is not a consideration.

  "West has a great port Cherbourg but east has none. And most important

  east is more heavily fortified than west. The enemy too has air

  reconnaissance.

  "So, I would choose west. And what would I do then? I would try to

  make the Germans think the opposite! I would send two bombers to the

  Pas de Calais for every one to Normandy. I would try to knock out

  every bridge over the Seine. I would put out misleading wireless

  signals, send false intelligence reports, dispose my troops in a

  misleading fashion. I would deceive fools like Rommel and von Roenne.

  I would hope to deceive the Fuhrer himself!"

  Goering spoke first after a lengthy silence.

  "My Fuhrer, I believe you flatter Churchill by crediting him with

  ingenuity equal to your own."

  There was a noticeable easing of tension in the uncomfortable bunker.

  Goering had said exactly the right thing, managing to voice his

  disagreement in the form of a compliment. The others followed him,

  each stating the case a little more strongly: the Allies would choose

  the shorter sea crossing for speed; the closer coast would allow the

  covering fighter aircraft to refuel and return in shorter time; the

  south-east was a better launch pad, with more estuaries and harbours;

  it was unlikely that all the intelligence reports would be unanimously

  wrong.

  Hitler listened for half an hour, then held up his hand for silence He

  picked up a yellowing sheaf of papers from the table and waved them.

  "In 1941," he said, "I issued my directive Construction of Coastal

  Defences, in which I forecast that the decisive landing of the Allies

  would come at the protruding parts of Normandy and Brittany, where the

  excellent harbours would make ideal beachheads. That was what my

  intuition told me then, and that is what it tells me now!" A fleck of

  foam appeared on the Fuhrer's lower lip.

  Von Roenne spoke up. (He has more courage than I, Rommel thought.) "My

  Fuhrer, our investigations continue, quite naturally, and there is one

  particular line of inquiry which you should know about. I have in

  recent weeks sent an emissary to England to contact the agent known as

  Die Nadel."

  Hitler's eyes gleamed.

  "Ah! I know the man. Carry on."

  "Die Nadel's orders are to assess the strength of the First United

  States Army Group under General Patton in East Anglia. If he finds

  that this has been exaggerated, we must surely reconsider our

  prognosis. If, however he reports that the army is as strong as we

  presently believe, there can be little doubt that Calais is the

  target."

  Goering looked at von Roenne.

  "Who is this Nadel?"

  Hitler answered the question.

  "The only decent agent Can-aris ever recruited because he recruited him

  at my behest," he said.

  "I know his family a pillar of the Reich. Strong, loyal, upright

  Germans. And Die Nadel - a brilliant man, brilliant! I see all his

  reports. He has been in London since before the English started the

  war. Earlier than that, in Russia ' Von Roenne interrupted: "My Fuhrer

  ' Hitler glared as him, but he seemed to realize that the spy chief had

  been right to stop him.

  "Well?"

  Von Roenne said tentatively: "Then you will accept Die Nadel's

  report?"

  Hitler nodded.

  "That man will discover the truth."

  PART THREE

  THIRTEEN

  Faber leaned against a tree, shivering, and threw up.

  Then he considered whether he should bury the five dead men.

  It would take between thirty and sixty minutes, he estimated, depending

  on how well he concealed the bodies. During that time he might be

  caught.

  He had to weigh that risk against the precious hours he might gain by

  delaying the discovery of the deaths. The five men would be missed

  very soon: there would be a search under way by around nine o'clock.

  Assuming they were on a regular patrol, their route would be known. The

  searchers' first move would be to send a runner to cover the route. If

  the bodies were left as they were, he would see them and raise the

  alarm. Otherwise, he would report back and a full-scale search would

  be mounted, with bloodhounds and policemen beating the bushes. It

  might take them all day to discover the corpses. By that time Faber

  could be in London. It was important for him to be out of the area

  before they knew they were looking for a murderer. He decided to risk

  the additional hour.

  He swam back across the canal with the elderly captain across his

  shoulder. He dumped him unceremoniously behind a bush. He retrieved

  the two bodies from the well of the boat and piled them on top of the

  captain. Then he added Watson and the corporal to the heap.

  He had no spade, and he needed a big grave. He found a patch of loose

  earth a few yards into the wood. The ground there was slightly

  hollowed, to give him an advantage. He got a
saucepan from the boat's

  tiny galley and began to dig.

  For a couple of feet there was just leaf-mould, and the going was easy.

  Then he got down to clay, and digging became extremely difficult. In

  half an hour he had added only another eighteen inches of depth to the

  hole. It would have to do.

  He carried the bodies to the hole one by one and threw them in. Then

  he took off his muddy, bloodstained clothes and dropped them on top. He

  covered the grave with loose earth and a layer of foliage ripped from

  nearby bushes and trees. It should be good enough to pass that first,

  superficial inspection.

  He kicked earth over the patch of ground near the bank where the

  life-blood of Watson had poured out. There was blood in the boat, too,

  where the impaled soldier had lain. Faber found a rag and swabbed-down

  the deck.

  Then he put on clean clothes, made sail, and moved off.

  He did not fish or watch birds: this was no time for pleasant

  embellishments to his cover. Instead he piled-on the sail, putting as

  much distance as possible between himself and the grave. He had to get

  off the water and into some faster transport as soon as possible. He

  reflected, as he sailed, on the relative merits of catching a train or

  stealing a car. A car was faster, if one could be found to steal; but

  the search for it might start quite soon, regardless of whether the

  theft was connected with the missing Home Guard patrol. Finding a

  railway station might take a long time, but it seemed safer: if he were

  careful he could escape suspicion for most of the day.

  He wondered what to do about the boat. Ideally he would scuttle it,

  but he might be seen doing so. If he left it in a harbour somewhere,

  or simply moored at the canal side the police would connect it with the

  murders that much sooner; and that would tell them in which direction

  he was moving. He postponed the decision.

  Unfortunately, he was not sure where he was. His map of England's

  waterways gave every bridge, harbour and lock; but it did not show

  railway lines. He calculated he was within an hour or two's walk of

  half a dozen villages, but a village did not necessarily mean a

  station.

  In the end luck solved two problems at once: the canal went under a

  railway bridge.

  He took his compass, the film from the camera, his wallet and his

  stiletto. All his other possessions would go down with the boat.

  The towpath on both sides was shaded with trees, and there were no

  roads nearby. He furled the sails, dismantled the base of the mast,

  and laid the pole on the deck. Then he removed the bung-hole stopper

  from the keel and stepped on to the bank, holding the rope.

  Gradually filling with water, the boat drifted under the bridge. Faber

  hauled on the rope to hold the vessel in position directly under the

  brick arch as it sank. The after-deck went under first, the prow

  followed, and finally the water of the canal closed over the roof of

  the cabin. There were a few bubbles, then nothing. The outline of the

  boat was hidden from a casual glance by the shadow of the bridge. Faber

  threw the rope in.

  The railway line ran north-east to south-west. Faber climbed the

  embankment and walked south-west, which was the direction in which

  London lay. It was a two-line track, probably a rural branch line.

  There would be few trains', but they would stop at all stations.

  The sun grew stronger as he walked, and the exertion made him hot. When

  he had buried his bloodstained black clothes he had put on a

  double-breasted blazer and heavy flannel trousers. Now he took off the

  blazer and slung it over his shoulder.

  After forty minutes he heard a distant chuff-chuff-chuff, and hid in a

  bush beside the line. An old steam engine went slowly by, heading

  north-west, puffing great clouds of smoke and hauling a train of coal

  trucks. If one came by in the opposite direction, he could jump it.

  Should he? It would save him a long walk. On the other hand, he would

  get conspicuously dirty, and he might have trouble disembarking without

  being seen. No, it was safer to walk.

  The line ran straight as an arrow across the flat countryside. Faber

  passed a farmer, ploughing a field with a tractor. There was no way to

  avoid being seen. The farmer waved to him without stopping in his

  work. He was too far away to get a good sight of Faber's face.

  He had walked about ten miles when he saw a station ahead. It was

  half a mile away, and all he could see was the rise of the platforms

  and a cluster of signals. He left the line and cut across the fields,

  keeping close to borders of trees, until he met a road.

  Within a few minutes he entered the village. There was nothing to tell

  him its name. Now that the threat of invasion was a memory, signposts

  and place-names were being re-erected, but this village had not got

  around to it.

  There was a Post Office, a Corn Store, and a pub called The Bull. A

  woman with a pram gave him a friendly "Good morning!" as he passed the

  War Memorial. The little station basked sleepily in the spring

  sunshine. Faber went in.

  A timetable was pasted to a notice-board. Faber stood in front of it.

  From behind the little ticket window a voice said: "I shouldn't take

  any notice of that, if I were you. It's the biggest work of fiction

  since The Forsyte Saga."

  Faber had known the timetable would be out-of-date, but he had needed

  to establish whether the trains went to London. They did. He said:

  "Any idea what time the next train leaves for Liverpool Street?"

  The clerk laughed sarcastically.

  "Some time today, if you're lucky."

  "I'll buy a ticket anyway. Single, please."

  "Five-and-fourpence. They say the Italian trains run on time," the

  clerk said.

  "Not any more," Faber remarked.

  "Anyway, I'd rather have bad trains and our politics."

  The man shot him a nervous look.

  "You're right, of course. Do you want to wait in The Bull? You'll

  hear the train or, if not, I'll send for you."

  Faber did not want more people to see his face.

  "No, thanks, I'd only spend money." He took his ticket and went on to

  the platform.

  The clerk followed him a few minutes later, and sat on the bench beside

  him in the sunshine. He said: "You in a hurry?"

  Faber shook his head.

  "I've written today off. I got up late, I quarrelled with the boss,

  and the lorry that gave me a lift broke down."

  "One of those days. Ah, well." The clerk looked at hi swatch

  "She went up on time this morning, and what goes up must come down,

  they say. You might be lucky." He went back into his office.

  Faber was lucky. The train came twenty minutes later. It was crowded

  with farmers, families, businessmen and soldiers. Faber found a space

  on the floor close to a window. As the train lumbered away, he picked

  up a discarded two-day-old newspaper, borrowed a pencil, and started to

  do the crossword. He was proud of his ability to do crosswords in

  English: it was the acid test of
fluency in a foreign language. After

  a while the motion of the train lulled him into a shallow sleep, and he

  dreamed.

  It was a familiar dream, the dream of his arrival in London.

  He had crossed from France, carrying a Belgian passport which said he

  was Jan van Gelder, a representative for Phillips (which would explain

  his suitcase radio if the Customs opened it). His English then was

  fluent but not colloquial. The Customs had not bothered him: he was an

  ally. He had caught the train to London. In those days there had been

  plenty of empty seats in the carriages, and you could get a meal. Faber

  had dined on roast beef and Yorkshire pudding. It amused him. He had

  talked with a history student from Cardiff about the European political

  situation. The dream was like the reality until the train stopped at

  Waterloo. Then it turned into a nightmare.

  The trouble started at the ticket barrier. Like all dreams it had its

  own weird illogicality. The document they queried was not his forged

  passport but his perfectly legitimate railway ticket. The collecter

  said: "This is an Abwehr ticket."

  "No, it is not," said Faber, speaking with a ludicrously thick German

  accent. What had happened to his dainty English consonants? They

  would not come.

 

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