"It strays a little from the form and substance one expects from an official after-action report, wouldn't you say, Lieutenant Fischer?"
"Just a little, sir."
"Things like that tend to upset Director Donovan. So, what I'm going to do, just as soon as my secretary gets here, is dictate a synopsis . . ."
As if on cue, the office door opened and his secretary, a gray-haired middle-aged woman, walked in.
"Good morning, Colonel," she said.
". . . and send that to him," Graham finished. "Good morning, Grace. Would you get your pad and pencil, please?"
"Before or after I get you your wake-up cup of coffee?"
"Coffee won't be necessary. Lieutenant Fischer and I are going to have breakfast at the Army-Navy Club and put to rest those nasty rumors that the Army and Marine Corps don't talk to each other."
She backed out of the office and returned a moment later with a steno graphic notepad in hand.
"Interoffice memorandum, Secret, dictated but not signed, to the director," Graham dictated. "Subject: Major Cletus Frade, After-Action Report of. The Marine has landed, situation well in hand. Respectfully submitted."
"Do I get to see it?" Grace asked.
"Not only do you get to see it, but after you have it microfilmed and send that over to State for inclusion in today's diplomatic pouch to Mr. Dulles in Berne, you get to file it someplace where it can't possibly come to the attention of the director."
She shook her head, and said, "Yes, sir."
"Give the nice lady your briefcase, Len. And the pistol. We don't want to scare people at the Army-Navy Club."
V
[ONE]
Fuhrerhauptquartier Wolfsschanze
Near Rastenburg, Ostpreussen, Germany
0655 19 August 1943
Generalleutnant Graf Karl-Friedrich von Wachtstein--a short, slight, nearly bald, fifty-four-year-old--walked briskly down a cinder path from the Fuhrerhauptquartier bunker to the bunker in which Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm Keitel, Germany's senior military officer--he was chief of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht--had his quarters.
Wolfsschanze held fifty bunkers--ugly buildings with eight- and ten-foot-thick concrete walls and roofs. Wehrmacht engineers had begun--in great secrecy and on a cost-be-damned basis--the construction of "Wolf 's Lair" in 1940. A 3.5-square-kilometer area in the forest east of Rastenburg in East Prussia had been encircled with an electrified barbed-wire fence and minefields.
Next came the erection of another barbed-wire enclosure inside the outer barrier. Only then, within this interior barrier, had construction begun of the artillery-proof and aerial-bomb-proof bunkers. The compound had its own power-generating system, a railway station with a bomb-proof siding for the Fuhrer's private train, an airstrip (between the inner and outer fences), several mess halls, a movie theater, and a teahouse.
An SS-hauptsturmfuhrer and two enlisted men, all armed with Schmeisser machine pistols, stood outside the heavy steel door to Keitel's bunker.
"Generalleutnant von Wachtstein to see the generalfeldmarschall. I am ex pected."
The hauptsturmfuhrer clicked his heels and nodded to one of the enlisted men, who walked quickly to the steel door and pulled it open, standing to attention as von Wachtstein walked into the bunker.
Von Wachtstein found himself in a small room. An oberstleutnant, a stabsfeldwebel, and a feldwebel, who had been sitting behind a simple wooden table, jumped to their feet.
The oberstleutnant gave the straight-armed Nazi salute.
"Good morning, Herr General," he said. "You are expected. If you would be so good as to accompany the stabsfeldwebel?"
Von Wachtstein followed the warrant officer farther into the bunker to another steel door, which he pulled open just enough to admit his head. He announced, "Generalleutnant von Wachtstein, Herr Generalfeldmarschall."
"Admit him."
The door was opened wider. Von Wachtstein marched in, came to attention, and gave the Nazi salute.
Keitel, a tall erect man who was not wearing his tunic, had obviously just finished shaving; there was a blob of shaving cream next to his ear and another under his nose.
"Well?" he demanded.
"Reichsmarschall Goring, Herr Generalfeldmarschall, reports there is some mechanical difficulty with his aircraft, and there is no way he can get from Budapest here before three this afternoon, or later."
Keitel considered that a moment.
"In this regrettable circumstance, von Wachtstein, I see no alternative to you informing the Fuhrer. He will, of course, want to know of this incident as soon as possible."