‘And Freddie Copthorne? Was he the same?’
‘Yes. He lost his nerve. Henry had to do something. At least your father knows his duty.’
‘What do you mean?’
Oakford groaned again, and moved on the ground.
‘You heard him,’ said Constance. ‘He was willing to die for the cause of peace with Germany. Lloyd George is a very old man. It won’t be long before he steps aside for Henry, and then Britain will have a truly great Prime Minister. Don’t you see that with Germany as our ally and not our enemy, there will be nothing to stop Britain becoming great again? The French are pathetic; all the Americans are concerned about is money. Only we know how to rule. And the Germans.’
Oakford pulled himself to a sitting position and rubbed his skull. Then he looked at his one hand. There was blood on it. The hair on the back of his head was matted red.
‘Help your father into the back of the car,’ said Constance.
Conrad lifted his father to his feet, but Oakford’s knees buckled. So Conrad lifted him bodily and carried him to the Packard. He opened the rear door and eased his father into the back seat.
‘Did you hear that?’ Conrad whispered. ‘She did murder Millie in Holland. And once I have got you into this car, she will shoot me. Don’t you care?’
‘Don’t talk to him!’ Constance said.
Oakford groaned again. He was sitting on the car seat with his legs dangling down to the ground. He was trying to say something.
‘Yes, Father?’ If Conrad was going to die he may as well die hearing what his father wanted to say.
‘I do care,’ he whispered. ‘If she killed Millie, I... I cannot forgive her. There’s a pistol in my coat pocket. Use it.’
Conrad glanced at his father’s suit jacket. There was indeed a heavy weight on one side; Conrad wondered how he had missed it.
‘I said, don’t talk to him!’ Constance shouted.
‘All right,’ said Conrad. And he put his hand around his father, slipping it into the side pocket of his jacket, out of sight of Constance. His fingers closed around a small gun.
It was a revolver. No safety to worry about then. He extricated the gun from the pocket and cocked the hammer, all out sight of Constance. He kept his back to Constance and straightened up. His father, still groggy, looked at him with unfocused eyes and nodded.
Conrad spun around, crouched and fired. He hit Constance in the shoulder just as she pressed the trigger. There was a double bang, the shotgun’s drowning out the crack of the revolver. He heard his father yell from the car behind him, and Constance screamed, dropping the shotgun and grabbing her shoulder.
‘Leave it!’ Conrad shouted.
Constance whimpered in pain. Already blood was spreading over her white dress.
Behind him, Lord Oakford groaned.
‘Are you hit, Father?’
‘Just my leg.’
Veronica darted forward and grabbed the shotgun. She took a few paces back from Constance.
Constance’s eyes blazed. ‘You’re too late!’ she said. ‘You won’t be able to stop Henry.’
‘Donnez-le-moi,’ said Madame de Salignac to Veronica, hobbling towards her.
Veronica looked at the shotgun in her hands and passed it to the old woman.
Madame de Salignac took the gun, pointed it at Constance’s chest and pulled the trigger. They were only five yards apart. Constance’s whimpers stopped as she fell backwards, her chest a bloody mess. She was dead before she hit the ground.
‘Someone should have done that a long time ago,’ said Madame de Salignac.
Conrad stared at the body of the woman who had killed his sister. He didn’t feel any thrill of revenge, or even any pity, just wonder that a nice English girl could have such a poisoned soul.
Another scream. This time it was Veronica. She was looking at Lord Oakford, who was slumped on to the back seat of the Packard, blood pumping out of his leg.
‘Father!’
Conrad leaned into the car, and lifted his father out, laying him on to the ground. It wasn’t ‘just his leg’. His left thigh was peppered with shot, and his trousers were already soaked in red. Blood was streaming out on to the ground beneath him.
Conrad remembered when his comrade Lofty Bennett had been shot in the leg at Brunete. The medics had tied a tourniquet above the wound to try to stanch the flow of blood. It had worked, sort of. Lofty survived the loss of blood, but died of gangrene a week later.
Conrad needed a strip of cloth, fast. He flung off his jacket and unbuttoned his shirt, tearing it off as his fingers fumbled on the buttons.
‘Pass me that knife!’ he shouted to Veronica, pointing to the breakfast table. She grabbed it and gave it to him. He cut his father’s trouser leg above the wound and pulled it down, revealing a pulsing mass of blood-soaked flesh. He wrapped his shirt around the leg above the wound and pulled tight. Within seconds the flow seemed to slow, but not stop completely. He tried to adjust the shirt, but then the blood started streaming again.
Oakford had already lost a lot.
His father’s eyes were open as he watched his son. He seemed to be conscious, but not in pain.
Veronica offered Conrad a towel from the kitchen.
‘Well done,’ said Conrad. ‘Push that down on the wound.’
‘Conrad?’ his father whispered.
‘Yes?’
‘You know we never agreed on much, did we?’
Conrad couldn’t help grinning as he kept the pressure on the tourniquet. ‘No, Father, we didn’t.’
‘Your mother always says you are just like me.’ He was struggling to get the words out. ‘I’ve always done what I believed to be right. You have always done the same. My time is over now. So you do what you think you have to do.’
Conrad looked at his father sharply. What was his father saying? He wasn’t admitting that Conrad was right and he was wrong, that wasn’t Lord Oakford’s way. But he was giving him permission to stop Alston. His blessing.
‘All right, Father. But let’s talk about it later.’ Conrad didn’t want his father’s blessing at that precise moment. He just wanted him to live.
But Lord Oakford’s eyelids were closing. He made an effort to speak. ‘Conrad,’ he whispered.
Conrad bent down.
‘Sag deiner Mutter, dass ich sie liebe.’ Tell your mother I love her.
‘Don’t give up now, Father!’
But Arthur Oakford closed his eyes.
Guillaume, Cécile’s aged husband, had emerged from the keeper’s lodge by the gate to see what the fuss was about. Madame de Salignac sent him off at once to the village to fetch the doctor. But by the time he returned with the man, Lord Oakford was dead.
‘I think we need to call the police, Madame,’ said the doctor, surveying Constance and Lord Oakford, whom he had confirmed were both dead.
‘Let’s wait until my guests have left,’ said Madame de Salignac.
The doctor, a squat man of about sixty, raised his eyebrows.
‘That woman shot the gentleman,’ said the old lady.
‘And who shot her?’
‘I did,’ said Madame de Salignac. ‘In self-defence.’
‘And your guests? Are they not witnesses?’
‘I am sure they did not see anything, doctor.’
‘But, Madame...’
‘We have known each other a long time, doctor. You must trust me on this. For France, and for her ally.’
Conrad and Veronica were back on the road within half an hour, Conrad wearing one of his own clean shirts, and a suit belonging to the late Monsieur de Salignac, which was too short and too wide for him. His own was ruined with his father’s blood. They were heading back towards the main road.
‘I’m sorry, Conrad,’ said Veronica, who was driving.
Conrad closed his eyes, trying to sort out in his head what had just happened. ‘Do you think it was the head injury? Or the shotgun wound?’
‘The shotgun wound,’ said Ver
onica. ‘Without a doubt.’
‘How can you know?’ said Conrad. ‘How will I ever know that it wasn’t me who killed him?’
‘He was talking coherently, and he lost a massive amount of blood.’
‘I can’t be sure.’
‘Conrad, listen to me,’ Veronica said. ‘You have two choices. You can fall apart. Blame yourself. Blame your father. Or you can assume that Constance killed him. You can remember your father’s last words and do what you have to do.’
Conrad was listening.
‘Your father was right, this is a beastly war, and he was one of its casualties. But it’s a beastly war we have to win. So let’s win it.’
Conrad closed his eyes. Took a deep breath. Veronica had a point. He needed to focus.
‘All right.’
‘So, Lord Oakford, pull yourself together.’
‘Lord Oakford?’ Conrad was confused.
‘Like it or not, you are the third Viscount Oakford now.’
‘I don’t like it,’ Conrad muttered.
‘No,’ said Veronica. ‘It’s absolutely beastly. Look! We are coming up to the junction. Do we turn right for Paris, or do we turn left for Biarritz?’
‘I need to get back to London to do what I can to stop Alston,’ Conrad said. ‘But we also need to prevent the duke from returning to Britain. Now my father is...’ He hesitated. ‘...is gone, Alston might send someone else. Or he might persuade the duke over the telephone.’
‘I’ll go to Biarritz,’ said Veronica.
‘But how can you stop him?’
‘I’ll think of a way.’ Veronica smiled. ‘I can always think of a way.’
Conrad examined the map and, after judging that the chance of him getting a seat on an aeroplane in the current chaos were nil, decided that a boat from Bordeaux was his best bet. So when they hit the main road, they turned left.
Pall Mall, London
It was a pleasant stroll across St James’s Park to Alston’s club. Britain, or at least the British ruling classes, were panicking, and Alston was relishing it. The news from France was bad; no one believed anything would come of the British and French counter-attacks which were supposed to nip off the neck of the advancing German panzer divisions. According to the Newspaper Proprietor, it would be only a matter of days before the panic seeped down to the general populace. There were rumours that the General was about to get the sack: dismaying for him, no doubt, but it would leave him angry and free to help the cause. Alston had heard from Constance two days before in Paris that she had caught up with Arthur Oakford, but that the duke had left for Biarritz. They would follow him there in a borrowed car. No sign of de Lancey yet. Alston needed to arrange for an aeroplane to fetch the duke from Biarritz back to England.
The timing should be just about perfect. In a few days the pressure on Churchill would become intolerable, and the duke’s sudden appearance in Britain demanding peace would break him. Alston and his colleagues would be ready.
But Oswald Mosley would not. He and Maule Ramsay had been arrested the day before under the new Regulation 18B, leaving Alston and his friends a clear shot at power.
Alston greeted the porter at the lodge. His guest was waiting for him in the library, and there was also a message for him. The message was from Lindfors. Both your requests have been accepted. Good luck.
Alston smiled. That meant Hitler had agreed to give the BEF some breathing space to allow peace negotiations, and that he would refuse to do business with a government including Churchill.
He climbed the stairs to the club library, where the Civil Servant was waiting for him with the latest information on the War Cabinet meetings.
Not long now.
53
Extract from Lieutenant Dieter von Hertenberg’s Diary
25 May
Boulogne captured. 10th Panzer fighting in Calais. Asked British to surrender, but they refused: ‘The answer is no, as it is the British Army’s duty to fight, just as it is the German’s.’ Fair enough. Perhaps I am getting overconfident, but I don’t give them more than a couple of days.
Still forbidden to advance on Dunkirk.
Biarritz, 25 May
Theo identified a choice of two cafés opposite the Hôtel du Palais, Biarritz’s grandest hotel, where the British royal family always stayed on their visits to the resort. He had had little difficulty with the French officials at Hendaye on the Spanish frontier – there were very few travellers entering the country, and a mass of unruly people of all nationalities trying to leave it. They hadn’t searched his luggage, so the pistol he had stowed in the false bottom of his suitcase had remained undetected. Biarritz was only twenty kilometres north of the frontier. It was much easier to get a seat on a train heading north than south.
Once in Biarritz, Theo had solved the problem of whether the duke had arrived by asking English tourists leaving the hotel. He had, in fact, joined his wife the night before. What English tourists were doing in Biarritz in the middle of a war, Theo had no idea, but they were there in some numbers, and willing to chat to a friendly young Yugoslav.
So Theo was too late to divert Otto Langebrück with his story that the duke and duchess were actually on their way to Antibes. But it was possible that Otto had not yet had a chance to speak to the duke himself. Theo’s plan was to find a seat at a café and watch out for him.
And there he was! Sitting at a table outside one of the two cafés himself, checking the entrance to the hotel. Theo strolled past. Otto spotted him, smiled and stood up. The amateur! Theo caught his eye for a second and then looked away. It was unlikely that he or Otto were under surveillance, but not impossible, and Theo wasn’t about to abandon his most basic tradecraft, even though it was clear Otto had never been taught it.
But Otto was quick enough to realize what Theo was doing – out of his peripheral vision Theo could see him looking down at his coffee. Theo walked slowly past and strolled along the beachfront road. The hotel was a grand building of red and white plonked on a little headland between the town’s two beaches. Theo walked the length of the southernmost beach towards the cliffs at the end. He found a path down to the sand, checking behind him to make sure that Otto was following. He was, at a discreet distance, but not really discreet enough if he were under professional surveillance. Oh, well. There was nothing Theo could do about that.
It was still too early in the year to swim, but there were a number of holidaymakers strolling along the beach, although none at the far end by the cliffs. The tide was almost in, and Theo felt out of place dodging the waves in his businessman’s suit and shoes. He reached the point where the cliffs jutted out towards the sea, and clambered on to the rocks. He was looking for a cave or a small crevice in the cliff face that would put him out of sight of the people on the beach, and he found one. It stretched only a few metres in, but that was enough. He climbed in, sat on a rock and waited. The Atlantic waves lapped the shore just a few metres in front of him. In an hour or so, the sea would be in the cave.
A minute later, Otto joined him. He grinned and shook Theo’s hand. ‘I’m sorry I showed I recognized you back there,’ he said. ‘That was foolish.’
‘Never mind,’ said Theo.
‘What are you doing here? Is something wrong?’
‘Have you had a chance to speak to the duke yet?’
‘Not yet. I was just writing a note for him asking him to meet me.’ Otto pulled a sheet of paper out of his jacket pocket.
Theo examined the young diplomat. He had found out quite a bit about him in the few days they had spent together. Like Theo, he had trained as a lawyer. He had spent some time in France and a little in England. Although he wasn’t from one of the close-knit Junkers landed families like Theo’s, Theo could imagine being a friend of his at university. Otto wasn’t Gestapo, and although he may well be a member of the Nazi Party, he didn’t strike Theo as a fanatical supporter at all. During the plans for the coup in 1938, Theo had had to approach a number of men in important positio
ns to sound out support. He had been surprised how even long-term Party members had listened to him favourably.
Otto was worth a try.
‘I don’t think you should approach the duke,’ Theo said.
‘Why not?’ said Otto. ‘Surely if he became king again and presided over peace talks with Germany, it would be good for us.’
‘It would be good for Hitler,’ Theo said.
‘Of course it would,’ Otto agreed. Then he frowned. ‘Are you suggesting what I think you are suggesting?’
‘What’s good for Hitler is not necessarily good for Germany,’ Theo said. ‘Or Europe.’
‘But we would win the war, Theo! That’s certainly good for Germany.’
‘Is it?’ said Theo.
Otto stared at Theo. He nodded slowly to himself. ‘Yes, Theo, it is. And to suggest otherwise is treachery against the Fatherland.’
‘I don’t believe it is,’ said Theo.
‘Well, I do,’ said Otto. ‘I don’t agree with everything Hitler does or says, but he has made Germany a great country again, and as a German I am proud of that.’
With a heavy heart, Theo realized he had misjudged Otto Langebrück.
‘Look, Theo, I like you,’ Otto went on. ‘I’m not a member of the Gestapo, and I won’t tell them what you have just said to me. But I will go and speak to the Duke of Windsor and persuade him to return to England. There will be thirty million francs held for him in Switzerland and we will promise that him becoming king and Wallis queen will be a precondition of peace talks no matter what the British government says. With those assurances and Lord Oakford’s invitation, he will return to England. And you won’t stop him.’
Otto turned to leave the cave.
Theo had retrieved his pistol from the false bottom of his suitcase, which he had left at the station. Now he pulled it out of his jacket. ‘Otto?’
Otto turned. His expression changed when he saw the gun. His eyes opened wide in fear. ‘Theo? No, Theo.’
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