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Operation Napoleon Part 23

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'A Swedish count acted as intermediary between us and the n.a.z.is,' Miller continued, ignoring her question. 'It may have been his idea, put to a handful of people. Or the n.a.z.is may have raised it first. Himmler wanted to do a deal with the Allies over fighting the Communists; he counted on becoming the new head of government. Meanwhile Churchill drafted a plan to attack Russia with German support and I believe the idea was hatched after that. The n.a.z.is couldn't dictate conditions but they could put in a request. I don't think the plan originated with the US generals but once they considered it, the idea didn't seem so preposterous. After all, there was a historical precedent. There was Napoleon.'

'What's Napoleon got to do with all this? Why Napoleon?'

But to Kristin's horror, Miller appeared to catch himself, to come out of the mist of recollection and confession into which he had drifted, and to regain some measure of control.

'I can't tell you anything else. I've already said more than enough.'

'You haven't said anything.'



'That's because I don't know anything for certain. I never saw the doc.u.ments.'

'What are you talking about?'

'The Operation Napoleon papers. I never saw them. Never saw what the final plan looked like.'

'Who drafted it?'

'I can't tell you any more. And you don't want to know any more. Believe me. You don't want to know. No one wants to know. It doesn't matter any more. It's irrelevant. It's all buried and forgotten.'

'What?'

Miller looked down at his brother without speaking, and Kristin saw tears welling up in his eyes. She did not understand what he was insinuating and was fast losing patience with his evasions; here he was, perched on the precipice of giving up whatever precious information he had guarded so jealously for so long. She fought back the instinct to shake the last shreds out of him.

'Ask yourself what became of Napoleon,' Miller said abruptly.

'What became of him? He died in exile on St Helena. Everyone knows that.'

'Well, they did the same thing.'

Kristin stared at the old man, forgetting to breathe.

'That's why they called it Operation Napoleon.'

'And Napoleon?'

'He was to be allowed to take his dog with him. A German shepherd called Blondi. Nothing else. I've wondered about this all my life but never had any confirmation. I don't know if the suggestion that his life should be spared originated as part of the negotiations with the German war cabinet, or if he was handed over to the Allies to smooth the way for negotiations, or if the British and Americans were competing with the Russians to get to him first. Perhaps there was another, more obscure reason. The Germans' last hope was to drive a wedge between the Allies, to encourage friction between them. After all, they knew Churchill was no friend of the Russians.'

Miller paused.

'My brother was supposed to fly him,' he said eventually.

'Your brother?' Kristin said, her eyes on the body-bag.

'He didn't know. Didn't know the real purpose of the journey, I mean. I was going to tell him when we met but I never got the chance.'

'But this is absurd!' Kristin said.

'Yes, absurd,' Miller agreed. 'That's the word for it. Can you imagine what would have happened if news had got out that the Americans had helped him to escape and kept him in detention?'

'But the Russians got him.'

'No. Somewhere near the bunker, in the chaos and wreckage of Berlin, the Russians found the burnt body of a man who could have been anybody. It suited them, and us, and everybody else to make certain a.s.sumptions, to draw conclusions. In any case they later mislaid the remains. That made proving his ident.i.ty impossible and allowed the s.p.a.ce for what were always written off as crackpot conspiracy theories to flourish.'

'So where is he?'

'I haven't read the doc.u.ments. I hardly know anything, really. It was only a plan.'

'Do you mean they never followed it through?'

'I haven't a clue. I don't know if they did. I don't think any one person was in charge. People were involved on a need-to-know basis.'

'But you mentioned Eichmann. You said the Americans had directed the Israelis to Eichmann when they stumbled across the trail.'

'I'm only inferring,' Miller said and Kristin could see that he was belatedly trying to backtrack, regretting having said so much. He had become wary now, unwilling to compromise himself any further. He looked vaguely ashamed of himself, somehow childlike. Even though the genie was out of the bottle, long-held habits of discretion were vainly doing battle with this newer taste for confession.

'Where is Napoleon?'

'I don't know. I'm telling you the truth. I don't know.'

'They put him on an island?'

But Miller had come to the end. His shoulders slumped, his head bowed, he looked physically smaller and more fragile, a husk of a man finally overcome by burdens of grief and concealment.

'Which island?'

Silence.

'After all these years, what are you scared of? Can't you see it's over?'

Before he could answer, if he ever meant to, the dim light of his flickering torch went out and they were plunged into darkness.

C-17 TRANSPORT PLANE, ATLANTIC AIR s.p.a.cE,

SUNDAY 31 JANUARY, 0615 GMT

From the sudden popping of their ears they sensed that the plane was losing alt.i.tude. Surely it was too soon for them to be beginning their descent? They waited, listening. After a while a new noise began above the drone of the engines but neither recognised it. Kristin crawled cautiously through the wreckage of the Junkers' fuselage to the gap that Miller had cut in the sheeting. Inch by inch, her chest hammering, she craned her head out to see the vast ramp which formed the aft door of the plane slowly lowering. The night was moonlit outside and in the blue-white radiance she saw the silhouettes of figures standing by the opening. For a few seconds she feared she would be sucked into the black void before she realised that the cargo hold was not pressurised.

She squeezed through the gap and down on to the floor of the hold, stealing along the fuselage towards the men. There were three of them but trying to hear a word they were saying was hopeless; a freezing wind blew in violent gusts and the noise of the plane reached an ear-splitting level as the view of the night sky grew larger. Her back pressed against the struts of the fuselage, she crept along the left-hand wall, hidden among the shadows. The men were standing only a few feet in front of her. Now that she could make out their faces, she realised they were strangers. She was certain neither Bateman nor Ratoff was among them. She took care to keep at a safe distance, and was about to return to Miller when she saw a pallet emerge from deep within the dark bowels of the plane.

As it became more distinct she realised that there was a figure lying on top of it. He was flat on his back, lashed down, his arms splayed and his legs bound together, as if he were being crucified. His eyes were fixed on the opening which was slowly but inexorably drawing closer. It was Ratoff. Kristin saw that he was stripped to the waist; his torso smeared in blood, his face criss-crossed by lacerations. He approached the void at a snail's pace, struggling with all his might to free himself, straining at the bonds that tied him down, straining to sit up. But his cries of terror were drowned out by the overwhelming din of the engines and the boiling turbulence of the air, and his bucking, screaming progress was reduced to a mesmerising dumb show.

The three men completely ignored him, paying him no more attention than an item of freight. As the aft door completed its slow yawning, Kristin watched them take refuge at a point further inside the plane. She gazed and gazed, watching Ratoff rolling closer to the lip of the mechanised rollers, savouring the loathing which blazed up inside her. She felt once again the ache in her side where her flesh had been punctured, saw Elias in his clutches begging for mercy, saw Steve collapsing with a bullet in his face.

As Ratoff drew near, she rose up, forgetting herself so far as to step out of her hiding place and walk to meet the pallet. She could not take her eyes off the monster who had shot Steve without the slightest provocation; she was drawn to him as if magnetised.

A bone-chilling gust of wind battered and tore at her, the air frozen and thin, but she did not hesitate as she made her way to Ratoff and looked down at him while he writhed and struggled to free himself from his bonds. With horrified fascination she took in the ingenious cruelties they had inflicted on him: his fingers b.l.o.o.d.y at the ends where the nails had been extracted, both thumbs missing, his nose broken and black holes where several teeth had been kicked in, a patch of skin flayed from his chest. She felt not a single twinge of compa.s.sion. The rollers screeched relentlessly onwards.

Ratoff was staring at the approaching void in agonised horror when Kristin reached him. Seeming to sense her presence, he reluctantly tore his eyes from the door. His face twisted in a grimace. Disbelief, confusion and desperation could be read in his eyes. He jerked and winced as his body was racked by a spasm of pain, then seemed almost to laugh, before bursting into a trembling, shaking fit of coughing.

'Never cross Carr,' Ratoff whispered when she bent over him. Blood bubbled through his split lips. 'Take it from me. Do I look convincing? Never cross Carr.'

Kristin did not speak. The pallet crawled on as she watched.

'I must... Kristin, isn't that your name? I must say, you're...'

Kristin did not hear how the sentence ended. The noise was deafening now and Ratoff writhed in yet another hopeless attempt to break free.

'Help me!' he croaked at her. 'For Christ's sake, untie me.'

She looked down at him, followed him a little further, then stopped. She no longer felt anger or hatred towards him. She felt nothing. She was drained of all emotion. The pallet continued its measured progress, as a coffin might pa.s.s through a curtain, and she watched it tilt, pause, then fall as Ratoff vanished into the black void. When the aft door began to close again, Kristin remained standing as if rooted to the spot. Her strength had run out, she was on the point of collapse, overwhelmed by the full weight of all the nights without sleep, all the horrors she had witnessed. She no longer cared about anything any more and she flirted briefly with the idea of simply disappearing, of stepping into the black eternity while the opportunity presented itself. It would be so easy to let herself fall, to put an end to her ordeal, to the pain and exhaustion and guilt over Steve, to silence the accusing voices in her head, telling her over and over that it was her fault he had died.

The feeling pa.s.sed.

A great stillness and quiet fell again inside the hold once the aft door had closed. Asking herself how much of this scene she should tell Miller, Kristin turned, only to find herself face to face with a tall, imposing, elderly man, wearing the uniform of a US general. Behind him stood three other men, the same three that she had just seen shepherd Ratoff out of the aft door. Miller too was standing beside the tall man, who now held out his hand to her.

'Kristin, I presume,' Carr said.

C-17 TRANSPORT PLANE, ATLANTIC AIR s.p.a.cE,

SUNDAY 31 JANUARY, 0630 GMT

Carr took a seat with Kristin and Miller in the C-17's cramped flight cabin. Kristin did not know what had become of the other men, nor how many other people were on board. No one had been introduced, n.o.body had a name; she felt she was in a world of nameless shadows.

A cup of coffee was handed to her. She could not remember when she had last eaten perhaps at Jon's farm, perhaps not. She had no idea what day it was, what week or month, nor how long she had been awake. All she knew was that she was on a plane somewhere over the Atlantic. And Steve was dead.

'Colonel Miller's trying to convince me that you know nothing about the sensitive contents of this German plane which we have gone to great lengths to retrieve,' Carr said. 'He says there aren't enough Icelanders in the world.'

'Who are you?' Kristin asked. She was too shattered and depressed to take in much about this man. He was just another in the string of shadowy figures she had encountered over the last forty-eight hours.

'That's of no importance.'

Never cross Carr, Kristin thought. Behind her eyelids burned the image of Ratoff lashed to the pallet.

'Are you Carr?' she asked.

'As far as we're concerned, the mission's over. We just need to tie up a few loose ends and...'

A man appeared at the door, entered the cabin and bent to whisper a few words in Carr's ear. Carr nodded and the man went out again.

'You s.h.i.+t,' Kristin muttered in a low voice.

'Excuse me?' Carr said.

'You f.u.c.king American s.h.i.+t.'

His grey eyes appraised her coolly from behind his gla.s.ses. She read nothing in his gaze neither amus.e.m.e.nt nor offence. 'I can understand how you feel,' he said.

'Understand?' she laughed. 'How could you understand anything?' As Kristin's indignation rose, she caught the look of alarm on Miller's face. He tried to caution her but Carr silenced him.

'You are murderers. You have violated every law and standard of decency. You disgust me so don't claim to understand how I feel,' Kristin went on.

Carr waited patiently until she was finished. 'For what it is worth, I regret what was done to your brother and his friend,' Carr said. 'It should never have happened.'

Kristin moved faster than Carr had expected but it was all over in seconds: she sprang out of her chair and struck him in the face so hard that his head rocked back. Miller shouted at her she had no idea what and two men materialised behind her and forced her down into her seat. Carr rubbed his cheek, which was already turning a mottled red.

'You saw what became of Ratoff, I a.s.sume,' he said calmly.

'Is that supposed to appease me? Seeing that s.a.d.i.s.t wheeled out of the plane?'

'He overestimated his usefulness and was punished. I didn't see you trying to help him.'

'You s.h.i.+t!'

'Don't, Kristin,' Miller warned. 'That's enough.'

'We'll see you get back,' Carr said. 'We'll send you home to Iceland. Of course, we'll have to wait until all our personnel have left with their equipment but after that you'll be free of us and we'll be free of you. You can say what you like: you can talk to the authorities and the press, to your family and friends, but I doubt anyone will believe you. We've already begun disseminating misinformation about the purpose of the mission. At the end of the day no one knows anything and that's for the best. Incidentally, there's a man on his way to Keflavik with the troops. His name's Julius. A friend of yours, I believe. Leader of the rescue team on the glacier. He's perfectly safe and will be set down outside the gates of the base. He'll be able to back up your story. And so will your brother Elias, isn't it? I gather he's safe, by the way, and has been admitted to a Reykjavik hospital.'

'You mean he's... alive?' Kristin gasped.

'Yes,' Carr replied, 'to the best of my knowledge.'

'You're not just playing with me?'

'Certainly not.'

The relief was overwhelming. It did not matter that the news had been delivered by a stranger, a man who, from what she could tell, bore the chief responsibility for what had happened to her. She had been unable to face up to the possibility that, despite all her efforts, Elias might die. Now, however, here was the confirmation that she had managed to save his life and suddenly all she could think of was that it was Steve who had paid the ultimate price. She ground her teeth in frustration.

'We can always send people after the three of you. It's up to you to make that clear to the others. And I do urge you to take me seriously, Kristin. Go ahead and tell who you like, but if Julius were to go missing one day, you'll know why.'

'All because of...' Kristin began.

'An old plane,' Miller interrupted. 'All because of an old plane.'

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