Empire and Honor

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Empire and Honor Page 2

by W. E. B Griffin


  “I can’t see a goddamn thing,” Hoffmann snapped.

  “The sun hasn’t come up, Herr Brigadeführer,” von Dattenberg said. “And there’s not much to see. As you know, this location was chosen because of its isolation.”

  Hoffmann did not directly respond.

  “But I can make out the shoreline,” he said. “Why are we so far offshore?”

  “If we move any closer to the shore, Herr Brigadeführer, we would run the risk of going aground and tearing our bottom.”

  “Then how are we going to get ashore?” Hoffmann asked.

  What you mean, you sonofabitch, is: “How am I going to get ashore without getting my shoes wet? Or drowning?”

  Von Dattenberg resisted the temptation to reply with what popped into his mind—I don’t really give a damn how you do, just as long as you bastards get off my U-boat—and instead said, “Perhaps we’ll get lucky, Herr Brigadeführer, and the people we’re trying to establish contact with will have a boat of some kind. Otherwise, I’m afraid it will have to be in our rubber boats.”

  “Don’t you mean, von Dattenberg, the people we’re going to contact?” Hoffmann asked.

  “I think we have to consider, Herr Brigadeführer, the changed circumstances.”

  Hoffmann took von Dattenberg’s meaning: Germany has surrendered and the war is over—there may not be anyone waiting for us to arrive.

  “The people who will meet us are SS. They will comply with their orders,” Hoffmann said.

  “Of course,” von Dattenberg said.

  He thought: And if there is no flashing light from the shore, then what do I do?

  Comply with that last official order from the Kriegsmarine to hoist a black flag and proceed to the nearest enemy port and surrender?

  Himmler’s order told me to ignore that Kriegsmarine order when it came and place myself at the orders of Hoffmann.

  Hoffmann and the other SS swine are not going to go docilely into internment. That would carry with it the threat of being repatriated to Germany to face whatever it is the Allies have in mind for people like them.

  So what do I do? Kill them all?

  I could wait until they’re in the rubber boats and then machine-gun them, “leaving no survivors,” as I was ordered to leave no survivors of the British and American merchantmen I sank and who had made it into their lifeboats.

  Nice thought, Willi, but you’re pissing into the wind.

  I could not order the machine-gunning of these swine in my rubber boats any more than I could order the machine-gunning of those sailors in their lifeboats.

  The dichotomy here is that while Hoffmann and the other SS slime aboard deserve to be shot out of hand, I simply cannot do that.

  I still am an officer bound by the Code of Honor.

  “So what do we do now?” Hoffmann asked, as he put his eyes back on the periscope.

  “The protocol, Herr Brigadeführer, is for us to come to periscope depth at oh-four-thirty for a period of thirty minutes, flashing the signal at sixty-second intervals during that period of time, while proceeding at dead slow speed along the coast . . .”

  As you should goddamn well know, Hoffmann.

  You’ve nearly worn out the protocol folder reading it over and over with all the attention the Pope would pay to the original version of the Gospel according to Saint Peter.

  “. . . and, in the event contact is not made, to submerge and wait until twenty-one-thirty, at which time we are to come again to periscope depth and repeat the process for another thirty-minute period.”

  Hoffmann grunted.

  “Would you like to look for a signal from the shore, Herr Brigadeführer? Or . . .”

  Hoffmann stepped back from the periscope.

  “Schröder,” von Dattenberg said, and gestured for Korvettenkapitän Erik Schröder, U-405’s executive officer, to take the periscope.

  “Maintain signaling,” von Dattenberg ordered. “Proceed dead slow at this depth for twenty-five minutes.”

  “Maintain signaling. Dead slow for twenty-five minutes, aye, Kapitän,” von Dattenberg’s Number One answered.

  “You have the helm, Schröder. I’ll be in my cabin.”

  “I have the helm, aye, Kapitän.”

  “Why are you going to your cabin?” Hoffmann demanded.

  “For my daily cup of coffee,” von Dattenberg answered. “Would you care to join me, Herr Brigadeführer?”

  “I’ll stay here,” Hoffmann said.

  “Very well.”

  —

  Von Dattenberg made his way through the boat to his cabin. It was crowded, but not nearly as crowded as it had been when they left Narvik, or after they had been replenished at sea from a Spanish merchantman just about in the center of the South Atlantic.

  All the supplies with which they had sailed and with which they had augmented from the replenishment vessel—including fuel—were just about gone.

  And the odds are that the SS men in Argentina aren’t going to be on the beach looking for a signal from a submarine.

  Despite Hoffmann’s pissing-in-the-wind belief that they will “comply with their orders,” they will have decided that no U-boat is coming.

  What they are doing is desperately trying to hide themselves in Argentina.

  So, what do I do?

  Von Dattenberg pushed aside the curtain that served as the door to his cabin and stepped inside. He shared his cabin with Brigadeführer Hoffmann, which meant von Dattenberg slept on a mattress on the deck, his bunk being one of the privileges that went with Brigadeführer Hoffmann’s rank.

  He saw the steward had already stowed the mattress atop the bunk.

  He sat at his desk, opened a drawer, and took from it a small jar of Nescafé. Just as soon as the Swiss had developed the powdered coffee, which didn’t spoil and took up very little space, it had been enthusiastically adopted by the submarine service. That was in 1936, when von Dattenberg had been a twenty-three-year-old oberleutnant zur see in submarine training at a secret base in Russia.

  Von Dattenberg unscrewed the cap and peered inside the jar. He had enough coffee left for maybe a week, at a one-cup-a-day consumption rate. He wondered why Hoffmann had not stolen his coffee, and decided that Hoffmann, not wanting to unnecessarily antagonize him, had stolen Nescafé from one or more of his brother officers.

  Von Dattenberg put a scanty teaspoon of Nescafé into a china mug. As he then put water into a small electric pot and plugged it in, he decided that there was a silver lining in the black cloud that was his mission: Whatever happened, this would be the last time he would ever be off the coast of Argentina looking for a signal from shore.

  He had made eleven successful similar voyages. He had even smuggled other senior SS officers into Argentina, including SS-Brigadeführer Ritter Manfred von Deitzberg, who was Himmler’s first deputy adjutant.

  He was certain that that was the reason—no good deed ever goes unpunished—he had been selected to make this voyage, too. He didn’t know specifically what the swine he had aboard had done for the SS to earn themselves a place on U-405, but in addition to OPERATION PHOENIX, there was no question in his mind that it had a good deal to do with another operation—a nameless, shameful one—run by senior SS officers.

  By the time he learned of this operation, von Dattenberg thought he knew all there was to know about the despicable behavior of the SS and its senior officers. He had known, for example, that before joining the SS, SS-Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich, Himmler’s deputy, had been a naval officer whom Admiral Erich Raeder had forced to resign for unspecified “conduct unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman.”

  And von Dattenberg had known all about the SS’s role in the “Final Solution” and their administration of the extermination camps. But he had been shocked to learn that for a stiff ransom, Jews outside Germany could buy their relatives and friends out of certain death in the konzentrationslager and have them sent to Argentina and Paraguay. The only thing he didn’t know was whether
Himmler himself was involved in this obscene trade or whether it had personally enriched only such high-ranking officers as Hoffmann and von Deitzberg and their immediately subordinate swine.

  The water in the electric pot finally came to a boil. Von Dattenberg was carefully pouring it into his mug when a voice called through the curtain.

  “Herr Kapitän, we have a signal from the shore.”

  I’ll be goddamned!

  “I’ll be right there,” von Dattenberg said.

  After I finish my coffee . . .

  —

  The landing protocol went smoothly. Kapitän von Dattenberg was not surprised. It had been rehearsed dozens of times at sea, as much to give the men a chance to come on deck as because the relatively simple procedure needed practice to make its execution perfect.

  When the cabin cruiser—it looked to von Dattenberg to be an American-made Chris-Craft—approached U-405, everything was in place. A line of his men, securely attached to a cable running from the conning tower to the saw-like anti-submarine net cutter on her bow, were prepared to carry out their roles. They had already opened the number three hatch and taken the crane from it. The crane would be used to hoist the five heavy crates and load them onto the cabin cruiser.

  Others had already dropped cushions over the port side to protect the hull of the Chris-Craft from that of U-405. Still others were prepared to put a ladder between the submarine and the cabin cruiser. When von Dattenberg looked down from the conning tower, he saw his passengers, all wearing life jackets and civilian clothing, waiting to cross the ladder.

  SS-Brigadeführer Hoffmann came onto the bridge.

  Without asking permission, of course.

  “Presumably everything is in order?” Hoffmann said.

  “Yes, Herr Brigadeführer, it is. Would you prefer to transfer to the boat before or after we move the cargo?”

  “Before.”

  “Very well.”

  “I wanted a final word with you, von Dattenberg.”

  Is the sonofabitch actually going to say “thank you”?

  “Yes, sir?”

  “I think you should wait twenty-four hours before you scuttle your ship.”

  It’s a boat, a U-boat.

  “The protocol, Herr Brigadeführer, calls for the immediate scuttling of U-boat 405 once I am satisfied that you have made it safely ashore.”

  “I don’t give a damn about the protocol, von Dattenberg. I’m telling you I want you to be twenty-four hours’ sailing time away from here before you scuttle it.”

  Scuttle her.

  “Whatever you wish, of course, Herr Brigadeführer.”

  Fuck you, Herr Brigadeführer.

  Von Dattenberg looked down to the deck again.

  “They are ready to move the cargo at your order, Herr Brigadeführer, and the ladder should be in place by the time you get below.”

  Hoffmann offered his hand. After von Dattenberg shook it, Hoffmann then shot his arm out in the Nazi salute.

  “Heil Hitler!”

  Do you really believe that, you asshole? Der Führer is dead.

  “Heil Hitler,” von Dattenberg parroted as he casually returned the salute.

  Hoffmann returned to the hatch and dropped through it.

  Von Dattenberg picked up a megaphone.

  “Commence cargo transfer,” he ordered. “Men first, then crates.”

  —

  Fregattenkapitän von Dattenberg waited until he could no longer make out faces aboard the Chris-Craft before issuing his next orders.

  “Secure from off-loading procedures,” he said. “And then take us to sea.”

  —

  “This is the kapitän,” he said to the microphone, his voice filling the submarine. “We have just completed our orders to land our passengers and cargo safely and secretly in Argentina. Accordingly, we no longer are under the orders of Reichsführer-SS Himmler, and are now going to comply with our last order from the Kriegsmarine.

  “We are, therefore, going to hoist a black flag and make for the nearest enemy port, where I then will surrender U-405. The nearest enemy port is the Port Belgrano Navy Base at Punta Alta near Bahía Blanca, about seven hundred kilometers south of Buenos Aires.

  “On our surrender, we will of course be interrogated by our captors. After some thought, I have decided the honorable thing for me to do as an officer of the Kriegsmarine is to forget who our passengers were and what our cargo was. Because I will no longer be in command, I can only ask all of you to go along with my decision.

  “As you know, Admiral Canaris was a prisoner of the Argentines in the First World War, and the crew of the Panzerschiff Graf Spee has been interned here since December of 1939. Both the admiral and the crew of the Graf Spee have stated that the Argentines are gracious captors, and that the food and women of Argentina are spectacular.”

  There then came the sound of the microphone clicking, and for a long moment the speakers—and the crew—were silent. Then the mic clicked again.

  “Korvettenkapitän Schröder,” von Dattenberg ordered. “Hoist a black flag. Set course for Mar del Plata. All ahead full.”

  [TWO]

  The Lafayette Room

  The Hay-Adams Hotel

  800 Sixteenth Street, N.W.

  Washington, D.C.

  1335 6 October 1945

  Cletus Marcus Howell—a tall, sharp-featured, elegantly tailored septuagenarian—walked briskly across the lobby of the hotel and into the Lafayette Room. He stopped before the headwaiter’s lectern.

  “Well?” he demanded.

  “Around the corner, behind a screen, Mr. Howell.”

  “How long has he been there?”

  “About ten minutes.”

  Howell reached in his pocket and came out with a thick wad of cash secured by a gold money clip shaped like an oil well drilling rig.

  “I said to tell me within five minutes, but that’s close enough,” he said, extracting a one-hundred-dollar bill from the clip. He handed it to the headwaiter.

  “Thank you, sir.”

  Howell marched into the dining room, found the screen, and stepped behind it.

  A well-tailored, barrel-chested, bald-headed fifty-year-old with a pencil-line mustache was sitting alone at a table.

  “Well, if it isn’t my old friend Alejandro Graham. What a pleasant surprise!”

  The man looked up from his menu.

  “Marcus, I knew damned well if I came in here, you would show up and ruin my lunch.”

  Howell pulled out the chair opposite Graham and began sliding into it.

  “Yes, thank you, I will join you. Very kind of you.”

  A waiter appeared almost immediately with a tray holding a pinch bottle of Haig & Haig scotch whisky, glasses, a bowl of ice, and a pitcher of water. Howell for years had maintained an apartment in the exclusive hotel across from the White House and delivering his tray was a ritual approaching a sacred custom.

  “Put his lunch on my tab, Charles,” Howell said. “I always try to assist the unemployed in our midst however I can.”

  Graham shook his head resignedly.

  “Been across the street, have you, Alejandro?” Howell said, nodding toward the White House. “Seeking employment?”

  The waiter prepared the drinks—hefty doses of whisky, equal amount of water, two ice cubes. Graham was no stranger to the Lafayette Room.

  They tapped glasses and took a swallow.

  “Well?” the old man asked.

  “Actually, I was talking about Howard Hughes,” Graham said.

  “Don’t change the subject, Alex.”

  “I must have missed something. What subject was that?”

  “You know goddamn well! The subject is my grandson: When do I get Cletus back?”

  “Well, actually, we were talking about Howard and Clete.”

  “I think you’re trying to weasel out of answering me, but go ahead.”

  “The President wanted to know the story behind the Constellations. In other wo
rds, how come, in the middle of a war, Howard got away with selling thirteen of the fastest transport airplanes in the world to Argentina.”

  “He didn’t sell them to Argentina. He sold them to Clete, who is not only an American but a Marine Corps lieutenant colonel with the Navy Cross.”

  “Really?” Graham said sarcastically. “I never knew that.”

  “I’m not surprised,” the old man said. “But the story I got was that Howard was just about ordered to sell—at least strongly encouraged to sell—them to Clete.”

  “Because Franklin Roosevelt thought he had been crossed by Juan Trippe and wanted to pay him back,” Graham said. “Harry Truman hadn’t heard that story.”

  “And you’re surprised? Roosevelt never told his Vice President about the atomic bomb either. How did the subject come up?”

  “Just before Truman went to Berlin, Howard offered him one, a specially configured VIP version intended for some general. The general suddenly remembered that Truman had made his reputation as a senator going after the brass taking care of themselves at taxpayers’ expense. So he canceled the order. There being virtually no market for a VIP-configured Constellation—Truman told me the inside of this one looks like a flying brothel—and wanting his money, Howard talked Admiral Souers into taking it.”

  “Who?”

  “Rear Admiral Sidney W. Souers. He’s a reservist, and Harry’s buddy. Good man. We went to the Naval War College in 1938 together. Anyway, he’s close to the President, duties a little vague. Truman flew to Berlin in the Sacred Cow and Sid, after picking up Clete, by the way, in New Orleans, flew there in the Constellation.”

  “Stop there and tell me about ‘picking up Clete in New Orleans.’”

  “Clete had business with the President.”

  “What kind of business?”

  “I can’t tell you, Marcus. Sorry.”

  “I’m not accepting that, but go on about Berlin.”

  Graham took a sip of his scotch, then said, “When Sid got to Berlin, he bubbled over with enthusiasm for the Constellation, which is really a much better airplane than the Sacred Cow, which is a converted Douglas C-54. Truman heard that Clete was flying back to Buenos Aires in an SAA Connie. He had other things on his mind—this was the day he told George Marshall to immediately shut off all aid to Russia—and he didn’t say anything. But he didn’t forget either. So today he asked me about SAA having Connies, and I told him what I knew.”

 

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