His description of the two men had been familiar. Useless. The men were — average. Looked just like native-born Germans. Harbicht felt a twinge of annoyance. Ridiculous. What does a native-born German look like? He could be anything from pure Aryan to Jewish. But the idiot
He felt closer to his quarry as he pictured them. He thought of them almost with affection. He would make it impossible for them to do any damage to the Project — and they would provide him with an exciting chase….
Eichler…
Harbicht frowned. His first impulse had been to have the man taken through the streets of the town. Eichler might have spotted the suspects. But that worked both ways.
Meanwhile he would keep Eichler in detention. He would come in handy for positive identification at a later time.
Harbicht had no doubt that time would come soon.
22
Looking at the paper on the scarred wooden workbench before him, Dirk estimated he'd have to be on the air between ten and twelve minutes. It was too damned long. Especially since he'd have to stick around for another few minutes to receive instructions for a contact schedule from Corny.
He felt relatively secure. Oskar had been extremely helpful when it came down to picking a place from which to transmit in reasonable safety. The Storp house was out, of course. Had to remain their safe house. And so was Anna's shop. He needed a place with a power source, a place where he could rig an antenna that wouldn't stick out like Gable's ears — and one he could get in and out of before being tracked down by the monitoring trucks that were sure to get on to him.
The shack on the fringe area of the railroad hump switching yard seemed made for the job. A lot of rubble and damaged equipment lay strewn about, and his rig would not stand out. Moreover, the shack had power — having once been used as a minor-repair shed.
Oskar had given him Otto Storp's yard pass and his bike, and he'd had no trouble at all entering the work area. The transmitter was hidden in a burlap sack wrapped up in a heavy work jacket, sharing the space with a battered lunchbox, the whole load strapped to his bike. No one had paid it the slightest attention.
They had decided that Dirk should go alone. He'd followed Oskar to the yard and through the checkpoint — and then taken off for the shack by himself. Sig had stayed with Gisela. No reason to put all your aces on the line — however slight the risk.
The shack had turned out to be ideal. Isolated. Oskar had said that the only yardmen likely to come around would be foreign workers. All he had to do was shout at them in German to get the hell away and they'd obey. He had placed his bicycle on the ground among the rubble. It would be less noticeable from a distance that way. No reason to invite visitors.
It really had been a milk-run mission. They had obtained the information Corny wanted. In spades. And they had managed to get it without even raising an eyebrow of suspicion. He felt pleased with himself.
But — even so — he'd like to make his report as concise and brief as he could and be on the air as short a time as possible. No reason to tempt fate — however smiling a face she might present.
He reread the clear message. And again. It was the first transmission he would be sending to Corny and he had a hell of a lot to say. But there had to be something he could cut.
ARRIVED STOP OTTO DEAD STOP WORKING WITH SUB STOP HIMMELMANN CONTACTED STOP