Stefan hooked his arms over the periscope, slowly walked it around, and then he stopped. “Malmö,” he croaked at the sight of the lights glowing softly like a warm fire against the night sky to the east. He noticed the beam from the lighthouse just south of the city begin another sweep, probing almost all the way out to the Eagle, though she must be at least eight kilometers from the shoreline. The location of lighthouse confirmed it. There was no doubt. It was Malmö. And the Eagle had finally made the approaches to the passage at The Øresund.
Stefan pulled away from the periscope and found Eryk. Of course, he deserved all the credit. It had been his makeshift charts that had lead them safely west from Bornholm. If anyone was a hero, it was Eryk. But Stefan was too exhausted to offer him anything more than a wink and a nod of appreciation. Eryk seemed beyond any response, panting open-mouthed like everyone else because of the high levels of carbon dioxide, sprawled over his charts, trying to ignore the headache that threatened to split his skull in two parts. But he caught Stefan’s faint motion and, after a moment, smiled as best he could, and nodded back at his friend. If truth be told, Stefan’s recognition was more valuable to him than any medal he could ever receive. Of course, he could never say that to him. It wasn’t their way. And so a mutual exchange of nods would have to suffice.
Stefan glanced around the Control room. In the one faint red light that remained unbroken, it was a garish mess of shattered glass, cracked dials, insulation dangling from the bulkheads and ceiling like flesh from a partially skinned cadaver, a thin layer of fetid, blood-colored water gently washed back and forth across the deck as the Eagle swayed to the ever-present pulse of the sea. The air was thick enough to chew, and almost unbreathable, oxygen levels dangerously low and carbon dioxide levels too high. The men were all in various states of exhaustion, or worse. One of the helmsmen—Stefan couldn’t remember his name—had finally broke. He was curled up in the corner, moaning softly to himself. They had just left him alone.
And yet, remarkably, despite their current state, they had suffered no serious damage. They had been depth-charged almost nonstop for 22 hours, the destroyers taking turns flinging cans into the water until their supplies were exhausted, and then hurrying away only to be replaced by another ship.
Instead of running after escaping from the minefield, Stefan kept the Eagle resting on sediment at the bottom of the Baltic for most of the day. He suspected they were save by their proximity to the minefield. As the destroyers made their initial depth charge runs, they shied just far enough away from the field to keep the Eagle whole. Though not in any serious danger of being destroyed, she was trapped.
During one lull in the action, when the destroyer pack had moved off, their screws silent, Stefan decided it was time to make a run for it. But even after they partially blew the ballast tanks, suction kept Eagle glued to the bottom. Stefan tongue-lashed the weary crew to their feet, and then lead the exhausted, and near-dead stumbling and staggering fore and aft until their shifting weight finally broke the Eagle free. By that time, the men, many weeping and moaning, simply dropped in place.
They had headed southwest, through another night and another day, hugging the bottom, pausing at the sound of approaching ships, driven along at a dogtrot by their electric motors, the pounding of depth charges in the distance, and high-speed screws from destroyers and torpedo boats ebbing and flowing, but never disappearing entirely long enough so that they could sneak to the surface to recharge their batteries and air supply.
Until finally they had reached Malmö.
Stefan did another circuit with the periscope. Distant lights moved like fireflies, but nothing close.
“Take us up, all the way,” Stefan ordered, and then leaning into the speaker tube, said: “Rig for surface. Cooky to the control room.”
“Yes, sir?” Cooky said, poking his head through the hatchway a moment later.
“You know those bottles I had you hold under lock and key?”
“Yes, sir,” Cooky replied, puzzled.
“Break them out,” Stefan said slowly. “I want everyone on board to get a swig. Tell them it is courtesy of the great people of Poland.”
Cooky’s features disappeared into a grin. “Aye, aye, sir,” he said, saluting. And then he was off.
As was his habit, Stefan was first up the ladder, cracking the hatch, and then scrambling slowly out onto the bridge as the diesels rumbled awake.
He was hatless, wearing a pea coat thrust into his hands at he last moment by someone in the Control room. He raised his nose into the night air and breathed like a man starved. He couldn’t imagine anything so smelling so wonderful.
A chill breeze tousled his hair. Some part of him noted that there was a hint of rain in the air and realized like someone in a dream that that would be a good thing for them all this night. And fog, too, if there was a God in heaven watching over them. The fragment of a poem came unannounced to his mind. Something from Westling’s collection no doubt: The fog comes on little cat feet . . . He hoped it was true, the fog already silently padding across the channel ahead of them.
Stefan ordered half speed, set the new course, almost due north now. He felt the Eagle surge forward as if even the submarine had grown tired of creeping along underwater and was as anxious as the rest of them to get this finally over with. He glanced at his watch, the dial glowing faintly in the dark. Twenty-two hundred. The tide was rushing out of the Baltic right at the moment, carrying them along at another three or four knots. Instead of charging through the passage at flank speed, he planned to idle along, zigzagging back and forth across the channel to avoid any ships, keeping the diesels as quiet as possible. And if they were very lucky, they would be into the broad, deeper waters of the Kattegat by morning. Another day of hiding, and then time to contact the British Fleet, slip around The Skaw and out into the North Sea, hoping they didn’t run into a British minefield or get mistaken for a German U-boat by British aircraft before they had a chance to rendezvous with friends. He could see the ending in his mind, shimmering like a distant mirage. So close and yet, still, so many opportunities for failure in between.
He already knew what he would do if they were discovered. He wouldn’t let them be captured by the Germans. He would scuttle the ship first, or make a run for the shoreline—either Denmark or Sweden—and beach the Eagle in shallow water.
He felt a lump in the pocket of the pea coat. He slipped his hand inside and pulled out his pipe. Someone had had the presence of mind to put it in the pocket before handing him the coat. Only one problem. He had bitten off the stem earlier. Damn. He would have to be content with memory again. He set his legs apart, brought the binoculars up to his face. There were a scattering of running lights to the east and west, a few to the north. “Eyes sharp,” he said to the lookouts behind him, though the words weren’t necessary. They understood how important they would be this night.
“Here we are,” Kate announced, pulling herself up the ladder and walking gingerly over to Stefan. Following closely behind were Reggie and Squeaky.
Even in the dark, Stefan was shocked by the change in her appearance, wondering at the same time how he must look. The skin of her face seemed stretched over her skull. She seemed lost in her man’s clothes. Stefan was afraid the breeze would pick her up and blow her into the night. The only thing that hadn’t changed was the sound of her voice. If anything, it was more vibrant and alive than ever before.
She shook loose the bundle she held close to her chest. “Ta-da. Where do you want it?”
In the dark, it took Stefan a moment to realize what it was. “Isn’t that breaking the rules?” he said, chuckling dryly at the sight of the Swedish flag that was now flapping around Kate’s legs like a skirt.
“Oh, don’t be an old woman.” Kate replied with a giggle that was touched with just a hint of hysteria.
“You all right?”
“Hell no,” Kate said, her voice trembling. “I’ll never be the same again. …”
�
��Where can we put it?” Reggie interjected.
Stefan stared closely at their handiwork. They had done a nice job. It actually looked like a flag, large enough, and detailed enough to fool anyone from a distance. He couldn’t imagine where they had scrapped up enough cloth of the right color to do the job, but the proof was there before him.
“Who did the sewing?”
Squeaky pointed at Kate.
“Nice work. Handy with a pen and a needle.”
Kate’s laugh was brittle as ice. “It helped keep me from losing my mind when those damn ... damn things were going on, and on, and ... .” Her voice trailed off and Stefan didn’t doubt that she was telling the truth.
“Squeaky, have one of the men pry off the numbers. Pull down our colors, and the flag at the bow. Hang this over the edge of the conning tower, secure it to the sides. It might come in handy tonight. If we’re lucky and get the pitter-patter of fog, who knows, we might even make it.”
“Still the optimist I see,” Kate said. “And a poet, too. Pitter-patter? From the American poet Carl Sandburg. His poem was called, “Fog.” I didn’t know you were so widely read.”
Stefan shrugged.
When he remained quiet, Kate asked: “Mind if I stay up here? I don’t think I could …”
“Stay as long as you like,” he said.
When Squeaky was done securing the flag, he turned to Stefan and said: “OK, what do we call her? Can’t be the Eagle anymore. She’s a Swedish sub now.”
“How about Ursula,” Reggie said, remembering the name of a woman he had met in a Chicago club a few years earlier. Blonde. Tall. Gorgeous. As he recalled, she’d said she was from Sweden, though with her accent it had been hard to tell. In fact, she had been so beautiful he hadn’t cared where she’d been born.
“Shut up, Reggie,” Kate said sharply. She knew him well enough to suspect what he was thinking.
“I think tonight,” Stefan said, “we’ll be the Westling after my old captain. Any objections?”
Reggie raised a finger, and then let it droop when Kate gave him a glare.
Just past midnight, Stefan’s wish was granted. The clouds began to lower, the lights on the shoreline softened and then disappeared altogether as everything was enveloped by fog.
The wind dropped as well, and in the quiet, the sounds began to echo strangely. At one point, they could hear a man singing softly in the distance.
“He’s singing in German,” Reggie remarked. He observation received a jab in the side from Squeaky, and a shush from Kate. There was the rattle of chains on a metal spool, the clang of a restless buoy, and always, the grumble of distant motors.
“Popular, aren’t we?” Kate whispered. “I think I rather like it the other way.”
The boats appeared suddenly in front of them, their stern lights winking dimly. Stefan caught himself before he issued the order to dive. It would have been useless anyway. The Øresund along most of its stretch was too shallow. And then he recognized them. Instead of fleet of German torpedo boats, they were, instead, a half a dozen fishing trawlers, heading out to sea. He almost laughed at the absurdity of it all: in the midst of a war, men were still going out to fish. It was a signal. Life would continue—men and women falling in and out of love, children singing, brothers and sisters quarreling—whatever happened to the Eagle.
“Quarter speed,” Stefan said quietly into the speaker tube, not wanting his voice to carry. The throb of the Eagle’s twin diesels slowed, and suddenly all of them could hear the sounds of the engines from the fishing boats. They didn’t seem to notice the shadow trailing in their wake. Their course never wavered.
“Angels,” Kate breathed.
“What?”
“They’re our guardian angels, sent to lead us to safety.”
“No, they’re just …” Reggie began, but then he noticed Stefan’s gaze and let it drop. “Yep, goddamn angels,” he said.
They followed the fishing boats past Skåne like a halfback following blockers. On half a dozen occasions, they dimly saw ships—or more accurately, saw lights—approach the trawlers. As Stefan whispered all stop, they watched as each vessel was inspected by powerful beams, and then released to move on.
On the last occasion, however, as they neared Helsingborg, one of the stray beams of light discovered the Eagle lurking in the rear. “Oh, shit,” Reggie exclaimed, smiling sickly into the light like a deer about ready to be shot. “Game’s up.”
As the light danced over the side of the Eagle, everyone held their breath. Everyone except Stefan. He gave a friendly wave, yelled something back at light. Instead of shouts of alarm, or the crack of gunfire or the boom of deck guns, the light suddenly flicked off, and they heard the vessel move off.
“Someone smack me in the chest to restart my heart,” Kate said. “What the hell just happened? Would somebody tell me?”
On impulse, Squeaky leaned over and kissed her unexpectedly on the lips. “I’ve been meaning to do that since I first saw you,” he said brightly. “I don’t think I’ll get another chance.”
“Try that again and I won’t be so friendly.”
“Don’t worry.” Squeaky was beaming proudly.
Then they all stared at Stefan. “What?” he said. “We’re the Westling. Remember? I was just acting friendly.”
“What did you say?” Kate asked.
“That was Swedish,” Stefan said. “I told them good luck finding any fucking Polish submarines in this soup. At least, that’s what I think I said.”
“I think it was the flag,” Kate said, nodding.
Stefan couldn’t restrain the laugh any longer. “I think you’re right,” he said. “My Swedish isn’t that good. They ignored me, saw the flag, and thought we were a Swedish submarine.”
“Someone will have hell to pay,” Reggie said, nodding. “What a mistake. I’d hate to be in his shoes when they find out.”
“Me too,” Stefan growled happily. He whispered into the speaker tube, and the Eagle resumed her course. The rest of the night unfolded as if they were all held captive in a dream. As the fog began to lighten, the course ahead opened up, the shorelines on either side curving away to the east and west, and the Eagle cruised out into the Kattegat. Stefan ordered the decks cleared, listened to the dive klaxon begin to pulse, took one last look around, and then slipped below.
Chapter Forty-Six
“What did you say?” Ritter exclaimed.
He was in the dining room, finishing breakfast, listening to the clump of officers at the other end of the table relate the night’s activities.
“Excuse me, sir?”
“I want you to repeat what you just said.”
“You mean, about the Swedish submarine?”
“Yes, that one.”
“Nothing to tell. We came upon some trawlers, inspected them per orders, and then noticed a Swedish submarine behind them. We check them out, too. Saw the Swedish flag, talked to their captain …”
“You talked to the captain?”
“Yeah. He yelled something at us in Swedish, waved all friendly, like. And that was that. Nothing more to tell.”
Ritter flung his plate across the dining room, scattering eggs and potatoes in every direction. “You fools,” he shrieked. “The one time I’m not looking over your shoulders and you let it go by. Why didn’t someone get me? Or the captain even?”
“It seemed routine,” retorted the young officer, his face suddenly white.
“There were no Swedish submarines out last night. That was the Eagle. We had her, and you let her go!”
Ritter raced out of the dining room, up the steps to the bridge. The captain was nowhere to be seen. “Helm, bring us about. Take us into the Kattegat. Flank speed.”
The man at the wheel looked confused. He didn’t move. “Sir, the captain? …”
“To hell with your captain. Do as I say now, or you’ll spend the rest of your career on a barge.”
The helmsman nodded, spinning the wheel counterclockwise. R
itter gestured at a nearby seaman standing at attention. “You, come here!” He hurriedly scribbled a message on a scrap piece of paper he pulled from his pocket. “Have this sent to Admiral Dönitz immediately. Schnell!”
The seaman wasn’t about to argue. He dashed off, barely stepping aside at the doorway in time as the captain stormed onto the bridge from the other direction. The front of his uniform was dark with coffee. The ship’s sudden turn had spilled most of a cup of coffee, along with a forkful of eggs, down his front.
“Ritter, what the hell is the meaning? …”
“The Eagle slipped by last night,” Ritter said sharply, cutting him off. “She’s probably hiding somewhere in the Kattegat by now. I’ve sent a message to Dönitz requesting spotter aircraft and additional vessels. If she surfaces, we still have a chance. In the meantime, we should wait for her off The Skaw. We won’t get another opportunity.”
The Eagle surfaced after dark, water streaming from her deck. The engines coughed awake, and she immediately surged ahead like a salmon heading for home. She had made nearly 40 kilometers submerged during the day, Stefan deciding to press ahead after Cooky announced they were out of food and would be out of water by nightfall.
Unlike the chokepoint of the passage at The Øresund, the Kattegat was nearly 80 kilometers wide and nearly twice that long. Even though the Kriegsmarine had fifty ships looking for the Eagle and dozens of airplanes patrolling the skies overhead, that still left plenty of places for the Eagle to hide, and deep water to run.
Stefan scanned the horizon and then the waters ahead of them, half listening as the gun crew and the lookouts scrambled into position.
He already knew that Kate was staying below. She wanted to finish her story before they met up with the British. Stefan took it as a good sign.
There was a steady breeze whistling out of the north, already roughing the water into 10-foot swells. Stefan didn’t need a weather report to tell him there would be no fog this night. But there was a black line along the horizon ahead. The wind was being pushed along by a storm front. He sniffed the air again. More help was on its way.
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