made sense. Apparently your Nazis are learning as they go.” He took a last pull and let the cigarette fall to the floor. “The nephew’s dead. The SS took care of that themselves. I don’t imagine Bernhardt Senior was too terribly put out by it. But what
Hoffner drank as well. Things were coming clearer by the minute. “So the Hisma outposts in Cuenca and Tarancon-”
“And the one in Toledo?” Wilson nodded. “Bit difficult to ship in guns when there’s no one there to receive them. Amazing how you managed that. I hear Franco was rather upset. We, of course, were delighted.” He noticed the cigarette still lit on the floor and crushed it out under his boot. “You’ve slowed them down. Franco is actually going to have to earn this, which will keep our Nazi friends occupied for a bit longer and give us some time to work on our own aeroplanes and tanks.”
Hoffner couldn’t help a momentary bitterness. “How very nice for you.”
“Not to worry. Franco’s resilient. It’s all going to come through Morocco now, or Portugal in the next day or so. He’ll get his guns and tanks, and someone to fly in his men. He’s a pragmatist. Franco will make do.”
Hoffner sat with this for a few moments, and tried to piece it together backward in his head-Toledo, Teruel, Zaragoza. He had been right in Barcelona. It was a boy’s playground game. And he had been elected the class fool.
“Georg’s wire,” Hoffner said, “with the names and the contacts. He never sent it, did he? That was a little invention of your own.”
Wilson finished his glass. He took his time setting it on the floor. “We had to give you something to go on. Couldn’t have you wandering about without something real to draw their attention. I decided to give you the names. It seemed the best choice.”
“So where is Georg?” It was the most obvious question, and the one Hoffner had taken too long to ask. He stared across at both men.
Wilson stared back. He was about to answer when Vollman said, “You know, it’s less than three hours in a plane from Aragon to Morocco. If you can find someone stupid enough to make the flight.”
Hoffner took a moment before turning to Vollman. Vollman was almost through his second cigarette. He took a pull and waited while the smoke speared through his nose. He stared down at the plume.
“It’s not the landing or the takeoff that’s the difficulty,” Vollman said. “There are plenty of places you can do that. The real problem is holding on to the plane once you leave it on the ground. Best not to be around if and when the Legionnaires find it. Not that a single-propeller four-seater is going to bring the Army of Africa over to Spain, but that’s not really the point. So you have to hide the plane well, and that takes time and money-for some reason, the Republican loyalists in Morocco like their money-and you have to hope that the plane will be there when you get back. Luckily mine was.”
Vollman finished the cigarette and pulled out his next. His tone was more pointed when he spoke again.
“You see, by the time I flew down, your Germans were already doing most of the work, and a little four- seater was hardly worth their time. They had all those Junker 52s and Heinkel fighter-bombers sitting in Tetuan. And there was a fellow named von Scheele, nice enough, who came with a group of German tourists from Hamburg the week before. Except this von Scheele was a major in the Wehrmacht, and his tourists were the men sent to fly the planes.” He lit up. “So you can see how a boy with a camera and his devoted father might not have been our primary concern at that point.”
Hoffner watched as Vollman reached for the nearest glass. There was still a bit of whiskey in it, and Vollman tossed it back. He poured himself another and drank. Wilson was oddly quiet.
“So where is he?” said Hoffner. Wilson remained silent. “Did I manage to distract the SS well enough for you?”
Vollman said, “The SS wasn’t following this.”
“Really?” Hoffner needed one of them to look at him. “I saw two of them dead in the back of a truck in Barcelona.”
“Then they were the only ones,” said Vollman, still focused on his cigarette. “I would have seen them.”
“You’re wrong,” said Hoffner. His chest began to pound. “Alfassi mentioned a second German three days after you left Teruel. The man in Tarancon mentioned the same German. You must have missed him during all your flights back and forth to Morocco.”
“It wasn’t SS,” Vollman said. “The SS don’t kill a man the way Georg was killed.”
It was said with so little care, so little effort. It was said because it had been in the room all along.
Vollman took another pull and flicked his ash and his humanity to the ground.
Hoffner sat unmoving.
The taste of vinegar filled his mouth as images of the boy ran through his mind, stares of joy and disappointment and distrust. They vanished as quickly as they had come, leaving only a burning at the base of his throat. Hoffner followed the beads of sweat sliding down Wilson’s brow. He felt his own lips purse, his eyes grow heavy, but there was no hope of finding a breath. His chest suddenly collapsed on itself, and Hoffner gasped for air. He held it, waiting, until the breath slowly pressed its way through and out. There were tears, not his own, and he heard himself say, “You know this for certain.”
He felt Mila’s arms on him, her head against his chest, but there was no weight to her.
Wilson finally met Hoffner’s gaze. “Yes.”
Hoffner felt the blood drain from him. “You have the body?”
“Yes.”
“I need to see him.”
It was a room filled with ice, boarded-up windows, boxes and shelves. Wilson had said something about a church, the smell, this the only place to keep him. Hoffner had listened and walked and heard nothing. It was a room with breath in the air, and a boy laid out on a bier of planks and crates.
Hoffner stood over his son and looked at the chalk-white face. He placed a hand on Georg’s shirt and felt the scrape of frozen cloth, rigid and sharp. There was a single deep hole at the temple, the knuckles ripped and raw, the neck swollen and red. The blood on the face and shirt had gone black, with little ridges and mounds where it had caked from the freezing.
Hoffner leaned closer in, let his hand glide across the cheek-the skin was so cold and soft-and stared at the untouched face. Hoffner tried to hear words, recall the sound of his son’s voice, but it was already gone. How cruel, he thought. How cruel to stand so perfectly alone without even the comfort of memory. He imagined this was God’s great purpose, to hold off the solitude at moments like these. Perhaps Georg had died with that? Hoffner heard nothing.
His legs tightened, and his knees ached from the pain, but still he stared and knew there would never be anything beyond this room.
He saw a piece of grit at Georg’s ear and gently swept it away. He pressed his hand to the cheek again, held it, and then brought the cloth up and covered him.
Upstairs, Wilson and Vollman were standing and smoking in what passed for a kitchen. Mila sat at the table and drank from a chipped cup. It was coffee, and the sun was just coming up.
Hoffner took the last of the steps and moved through the doorway. All three looked over.
He pulled back a chair from the table and sat.
“I’ll take a cigarette,” he said.
Mila held his hand, and Vollman shook one from the pack. Hoffner reached for it and waited for a light. He barely tasted the smoke in his throat.
“When?” he said.
Wilson was leaning against a wooden counter. He finished his cigarette and dropped it to the floor. “Two days ago,” he said, crushing it under his boot. “He was left on the church steps.”
Hoffner stared.
Two days, he thought. Georg had been alive two days ago. The idea of it-sitting in his cell, the stupidity of having let himself get tossed away while the boy had been here-Hoffner had to push that torture from his mind. It was another few moments before he realized the strangeness of what Wilson had said.
“The church steps?”