thirty-two-inch tube with a swollen five-inch bulb at one end. “One shot and it’s all over.”
The firing up ahead picked up in pitch. Light flashed through the night.
“Goddamn. I didn’t want to end up in a goddamn hole with American tanks in front and SS tanks in back. Goddamn, not after what I’ve been through.” He began very softly to pry, and put his head against his arm at the edge of the trench.
The firing stopped.
“All right,” Repp said quietly. “Here they come. Get ready, old friend.”
The professor leaned back in the trench. Repp could see the wet track of tears running down his face, but he’d come to some arrangement with himself and looked at least resigned.
“We should have at least tried,” he said. “Just to die like this, for nothing, that’s what’s so shitty about all this.”
“I think I see them,” said Repp, peering ahead. He cranked back the arm on the trigger lever to arm his
“Here they come,” he said flatly.
“Jesus Christ, that’s the major. He just blinked.”
“Easy, men, the major’s coming in,” the sergeant yelled.
“Here they come,” said Repp. He was really concentrating. His two right fingers tightened on the trigger lever.
“Are you crazy?” the professor whispered harshly. “That’s the major.”
“Here they come,” said Repp. He could see the
Repp fired.
The
“Jesus,” said the professor in the moment of silence that followed, “those poor—”
Repp grabbed the professor savagely and pulled him close.
“Come on! Now’s the time. Stay close and you might live.”
He flung him back and slithered over the edge of the trench and began to crawl toward the bridge. The shooting mounted and he could hear the sergeant arguing with it, yelling, “Goddamn, you fools, cease firing!”
In the confusion Repp made it to the barricade, feeling the professor scuttling along behind him. He stood boldly and stepped between a
The firing died.
“Who fired?
Repp gestured “Come on” with his head and strode forward, bold as the
A trooper materialized out of the dark, rifle leveled at Repp’s middle.
“Where are you going, friend?” he asked.
Repp hit him with the shaft of his
The professor took off in lumbering panic and seemed to gain distance.
“There he is! There he is!” Repp shouted.
By that time several others had seen him and the firing started almost immediately.
As the blizzard of lead seemed to tear apart the world through which the professor fled, Repp eased down the incline under the bridge and made it to river’s edge.
He found the raft the demolitions detail had left tied to one of the piles, and threw in the pack and helmet, and then slipped into the icy water and began to drift through the blackness, clinging to the raft. He was almost across when the Americans arrived and the battle began, and by the time he got out of the water, shivering and exhausted, the Ami tanks had gotten the range and began to blow apart the barricade in earnest.
Repp crawled up the bank. Behind him, multiple small suns descended in a pinkish haze and tracers flicked across the water. But he knew he was out of range.
And that he was still on schedule.
21
“What are you doing here?” was all he could think to say.
“I work here. I’m with the field hospital.”
“Oh, God, Susan. Then you’ve seen it, seen it all.”
“You forget: I knew it all.”
“We never believed.”
“Now of course it’s too late.”
“I suppose. How did you end up
“A punishment. I made waves. I made real waves. I got publicly identified with the Zionists. Then Fischelson died and the Center died and the British made a stink, and they sent me to a field unit in a DP camp. British influence. It was said I didn’t appreciate London. And when I heard about Belsen, I tried to get there. But it was in the British zone and they wouldn’t have me. Then came Dachau, American. And my doc at the DP camp did think highly of me, and he knew how important it was to me. So he got me the orders. See? Easy, if you have the right connections.”
“It’s very bad, isn’t it.”
They were strange names to Leets.
“Haven’t heard of them. Haven’t been reading the papers, I guess.”
“I guess not.”
“Did you see Shmuel? He’s with us. He’s still fine. I told you he’d be fine.”
“I heard. An OSS detachment. With a Jew in an American uniform. That’s how I knew.”
“We’re still after him. After that German. That’s what we’re here for.”
“One German?”
“Yeah. A special guy. With a special—”
“Jim, there were thousands of them. Thousands. What’s one more or less?”
“No, this one’s different.”
“No. They’re all the same.”
But Tony was not filing a report to JAATIC. He was writing a letter to his older brother, in response to a letter that had finally caught up with him earlier.