The two Scholls had been caught distributing subversive leaflets. But even the Gestapo, despite all the methods of persuasion at their disposal, had not been able to make them betray their comrades. In the end they were, of course, all captured. The White Rose came to a well-deserved end, withering at the end of a rope….
Had the infection spread? Was a seditious
He was suddenly aware of what he was staring at out the window. A group of laborers unloading supplies from a train. He counted the SS guards. Mentally he nodded. Sufficient. He saw one of them inspect a worker's elbow. Good. They were following his orders to spot-check everyone who might fit the description of one of the enemy saboteurs. He suddenly frowned. It was not enough.
He turned back to Reichardt and Obersturmf¨hrer Rauner, who was watching him raptly.
“Very well,
He started for the door. He stopped. Rauner had sprung to his feet.
“Just one thing,
He turned on his heel and marched from the room.
2
Sig was deeply disturbed. He hurried down the street toward the Storp house It seemed to him that the whole mission was falling apart. What he had just seen did not dispel his foreboding.
They had not a prayer of destroying the reactor — and the Gestapo was hot on their trail, with information about them that was uncanny in its accuracy. Dirk's elbow. Obviously they knew exactly what to look for. The near-miss at Haigerloch two days ago proved it. It had to be Eichler. The man hadn't been at the railroad yard for his health. They had agreed on that. It was a relief to figure out how the Gestapo knew — but it did not make Eichler's betrayal less disastrous. It did, however, make it too risky for Dirk to be out more than was absolutely necessary.
But it did not stop him.
They had to have more information, he'd insisted. And more. Information is what makes the war go around, he'd said. And information is what'll give us the key to the job we have to do. Not only information about the immediate Project area at Haigerloch, but the whole damned complex supporting it.
Early that morning, he, Sig, had joined the stream of workers flowing through the streets of Hechingen. He pedaled along astride an old lady's bicycle with high handlebars. He had felt ridiculous, but he had not been alone in his undignified position. People used whatever was available. He'd had no other choice anyway. He couldn't walk, and their own bikes had long since been destroyed in the fiery truck crash. Dirk had lost Otto's bike at the railroad switching yard. The only one they could round up had been the old lady's bike kept in a shed at Anna's place.
He'd cycled all around the area, trying whenever possible to blend in with other riders bent on their own pursuits.
He had been enormously impressed.
The Haigerloch Project was backed up by a gigantic machinery of resources Seemingly unlimited manpower — housed in huge camps. Factories, tall chimneys, refineries and plants whose functions he could only guess at crammed the region. Motor pools, fields of storage tanks and depots filled with stacks of matériel….
How? How in the name of Joseph and Maria could they ever hope to counteract all that?
He felt depressed. The problem seemed insurmountable to him. Damn this whole lousy business anyway….
He rounded the corner into a side street. It was already late in the afternoon, but ahead he could make out the little park and across from it the Storp house. There were a few other pedestrians abroad. He walked quickly. Almost there….
Suddenly the nerve-grating screech of tortured tires knifed through the quiet. A Wehrmacht truck came skidding around the corner, sped to the middle of the block and careened to a halt. A dozen SS troops spilled from the back and immediately began to round up every man within reach, shouting and gun-gesturing.
Sig was taken completely by surprise. He found himself staring at a grim-faced soldier moving him toward the truck, a submachine gun pointed at his gut.
Stunned, he obeyed. His legs were leaden. All of a sudden a remark he'd heard back at Milton Hall leaped into his mind….