It was a funny business. Heydrich knew he could tear Himmler to pieces if he wanted to. Himmler was on the pudgy side. He’d never been very hard physically. The round, almost chinless face behind the pince-nez could have belonged to a chicken farmer or a schoolmaster. To the man who led the outfit that vied with Beria’s NKVD for deadliness? It seemed unlikely.
But it was true. And therein lay the rub. Himmler might not look like anything much. When he spoke, though, people listened. Having listened, they obeyed. If they didn’t, they quickly departed the land of the living. Himmler, the mild-mannered bureaucrat, had even bureaucratized death. And, because he had, he could intimidate an outwardly tougher man like Heydrich.
And Himmler had another hold on the
A bead of sweat trickled down Heydrich’s back. It seemed to burn like acid. He deliberately slowed his breathing. To his relief, his heart stopped fluttering. He couldn’t let Himmler intimidate him, not today. His mission was too important, not for himself but for the Reich.
Himmler steepled his fingers. “Well, Reinhard, what brings you up from Prague today?” His voice was fussy and precise, like a schoolmaster’s.
One more deep breath. Forcing his voice to steadiness, Heydrich asked, “
Himmler’s right eyebrow twitched-only a couple of millimeters, but enough to notice. Whatever he might have expected, that wasn’t it. He usually chose his words with care. He seemed especially careful now, answering, “In view of our, ah, misfortune at Stalingrad, this may not be the best time to ask.”
“It isn’t just Stalingrad,
“That will stop. The
“Yes, sir.” Heydrich’s agreement was more devastating than any argument could have been. After letting it hang in the air, he continued, “Our allies aren’t worth the paper they’re printed on. Hungary? Romania? Italy?” He snapped his fingers in vast contempt. “The Finns can fight, but there aren’t enough of them.”
“What are you driving at, Reinhard?” Himmler’s tone went silky with danger. “Are you saying the war is lost? Do you dare say that?”
“Yes, sir,” Heydrich repeated. This time, Himmler’s eyebrow didn’t just twitch. It leaped. Heydrich had put his life-not only his career, but his life-in the
“Is the castle in Prague haunted? You talk like a man who’s seen a ghost,” Himmler said.
“I wish it were,
“And how do you know that?” Himmler asked quietly.
“Because now we have to talk about it in the papers and on the radio,” Heydrich answered. “We can’t pretend it isn’t happening any more. Everybody knows it is. We’d only look like idiots if we ignored it.”
“Dr. Goebbels is many things. An idiot he is not.” Himmler spoke with a certain regret. The great lords of Party and State were rivals as well as colleagues.
Heydrich nodded. “I know. And so,
The leader of the SS didn’t answer directly. Instead, he said, “We can’t lose this war. We mustn’t. If we do, it will make what we went through in 1918 look like a kiss on the cheek. Bolshevik hordes storming into Germany…” He shuddered at the idea. “And I don’t imagine we could get terms before the enemy crossed our western border, either, the way we did last time.”
“No, sir. I wouldn’t think so,” Heydrich agreed. “And if we are invaded, if we are occupied-what do we do then?”
“I think I’d rather take poison than live to see the day,” Himmler said.
Heydrich looked at-looked through-him. He seldom held a moral advantage over the
“I don’t believe it. I won’t believe it,” Himmler broke in.
“Devil of a lot of Ivans. Devil of a lot of Americans, too,” Heydrich said. “And the Amis can bomb us, and we can’t bomb them. Too damned many Englishmen with them. And all the Jews in Washington and Moscow and London will want revenge on the
No one at that conference had come right out and said Germany aimed to get rid of all the Jews in the territory she held. Nobody’d needed to. The high functionaries had understood what was what. So did Himmler, of course.
“Can you imagine the circus they’d have if they took the
That turned out to be a keen shot, keener than he’d expected. Imagining, Himmler looked almost physically ill. “It must not happen!” he choked out. Maybe he was also imagining the circus the Allies would have if they took him alive. And maybe-no, certainly-he had reason to. Heydrich had had imaginings like that more often than he liked since the Czechs almost assassinated him.
“I hope it doesn’t. I pray it doesn’t,” he said now. “But this is war-war to the finish, war to the knife. Shouldn’t we be ready for anything, even the possibility of the worst?”
“What exactly have you got in mind?” the Reichsfuhrer asked. Himmler’s voice was almost back to normal. Almost, but not quite.
“You’ll know, sir, probably better than I do, how much trouble the Russian partisans have given the
“And the
“Yes, sir. And the
Himmler didn’t answer for some little while. He plucked at his lower lip with thumb and forefinger. That lip was oddly full, oddly sensuous, for the hard-boiled leader of an even more hard-boiled outfit. At last, he said, “This is not a plan I can deliver to
“I hope he’s right.” Heydrich knew he couldn’t very well say anything else.
“So do I. Of course.” By the way Himmler said it, he wasn’t optimistic no matter what he hoped.
“But don’t you think it’s something that needs doing?” Heydrich persisted. “It might not be something we could manage to scrape together at the last minute, with everything going to the devil around us. If we’d taken Moscow the first autumn and hanged Stalin in front of the Kremlin, what would the Soviet partisan movement be worth now?”
Himmler plucked at his red lower lip again. He let it spring back into place with a soft, liquid