He sat back and almost lit the pipe. He hastily put it inside his pocket.
'You make it sound so very straightforward,' Bormann said.
'A decision must be taken!' Hitler jumped up, displaying one of his sudden bursts of energy as he began pacing back and forth, his hands clasped behind his back. 'Gruber is already on his way to Vienna with a fellow officer flown from Berlin. You will go, too – Jaeger and Schmidt forming a second unit. Major Hartmann will also proceed to Vienna…'
'All these personnel to catch one Englishman?'
Bormann was aghast. Always sure of how to proceed, the Reichsleiter was completely nonplussed by this development. The Fuhrer didn't even hear his mild intervention as he spoke briskly, his voice growing in power.
'This way we have three independent forces on their tails – the Gestapo, the SS and the Abwehr. If one of them cannot track down this subversive group we might as well pull down the shutters and close the shop! Bormann, you will furnish them with all the funds, facilities and weapons they need. Stay up all night if necessary!'
He stopped pacing, folded his arms and stared hard at the group of men listening in silence. This was no moment to interrupt the Fuhrer.
'I expect you all to be in Vienna before dawn – then you have all day to scour the city. And remember, gentlemen, the Gestapo is already there – one jump ahead of you…'
His arms still folded, Hitler waited with a stern expression as the men hurried from the room. Once alone with Bormann, his mood changed dramatically. Throwing himself into a chair he spread his arms wide and shook with laughter.
'Bormann, did you see their expressions! It's like a race – who will catch the Englishman first? Nothing gingers up men like competition. And you know who I predict will track down our target?'
'Gruber.'
'Of course not!' The idea sent Hitler into another paroxysm of mirth. 'Hartmann; he gasped out when he had recovered. 'That wily Abwehr type knows a thing or two – he even gave the others a clue and they were too thick to grasp it…' His manner changed yet again. His face stiffened, he sat up erect, his voice harsh. 'What are you still doing here? They will be waiting for you downstairs, Bormann! You are holding up their urgent departure…'
Bormann, short and stocky, a ridiculous figure in his jackboots when he skipped hurriedly across the polished floor, paused at the door.
' Mein Fuhrer, you said Hartmann gave them a clue?'
'The cases they left behind! The cases full of expensive clothes for a woman. Now, hurry!'
He listened to the fading scurry of Bormann's boots tip-tapping down the curved staircase and then relaxed in his chair with a broad smile. He spoke quietly to test her hearing.
'Eva, you can come in now, you little minx. They've all gone. You've been eavesdropping again, haven't you?'
It was 2 am when the Condor transport plane carrying Jaeger, Schmidt and Hartmann landed at the aerodrome outside Vienna. A car was waiting to take them into the Austrian capital. Bormann was a strange man, but his enemies – which included almost everyone except the Fuhrer – all admitted he was a superb organizer.
Schmidt sat in the front beside the driver while Jaeger and the Abwehr officer occupied the rear seats. During the longish drive into the city Hartmann remained deep in thought. His silence irked the more extrovert SS colonel.
'How are you going to set about this impossible task?' he asked.
'Where are you going first?' countered Hartmann. 'To SS headquarters, for a consultation with Kahr. You are welcome to attend our meeting.'
'Would you think it discourteous if I asked you to drop me off at the Westbahnhof?' Hartmann suggested. 'I imagine the luggage they left behind is still there?'
'I presume so. What can that tell you?'
'I won't know till I see it, will I?' Hartmann replied. 'You're a close-mouthed bastard,' Jaeger commented amiably.
'But, if I may say so,' Schmidt added, turning round in his seat, 'a shrewd one, too…'
Schmidt sensed a certain fellow-feeling with the ex-lawyer. His methods were not unlike those Schmidt had employed as a police chief in those far-off days in Dusseldorf. It all seemed a century ago.
Hartmann alighted from the car outside, the station. It was exactly 2.30 am. He made his way to the luggage store, extracting from his wallet a document he had obtained from Bormann. It gave him powers to question anyone, regardless of rank. By order of the Fuhrer.
'I'm just going off night duty,' the baggage store supervisor remarked and his manner was surly.
'This is my authority,' Hartmann told him crisply. 'Are you the man who received the luggage impounded by the SS?'
Yes, he was the man. Yes, he could provide a description of the passenger who had deposited the luggage. Hartmann smoked his pipe and listened in silence as the supervisor described the chauffeur. It was not a positive identification but he felt convinced Lindsay had been inside that uniform. He asked to see the bags.
Hartmann spent some time carefully sifting through their contents, being careful to replace things as he found them. He was naturally tidy and both cases contained a woman's complete travelling wardrobe. The clothes were smart, very expensive. He paused when his agile fingers touched a folded Astrakhan coat and matching hat.
An Astrakhan coat and hat…' The detailed report of the rescue group in front of the Frauenkirche had mentioned a man clad in just such an outfit, the 'man' in the rear of the green Mercedes who had hauled Lindsay inside. Except that it had not been a man – it had been a woman…'
'Found any clues, Major?'
Hartmann glanced over his shoulder and saw Schmidt standing behind him. The SS officer smiled and made a friendly gesture as he spoke.
'Jaeger sent me to find out what you are up to. I was nothing loath to come – I'm equally curious…'
'The Baroness Werther – her impersonator – was at the Frauenkirche massacre. This is the coat and hat she wore – the hat doubtless well pulled down over her head. Hence no one, realized she was a woman.
She has now abandoned all her finery. What does that suggest to you, Schmidt?'
'That she has no further use for it…'
'Carry that thought to its logical conclusion,' Hartmann pressed.
'I'm road-blocked…'
'We shall find the Englishman not by concentrating on Lindsay – we must out-guess the Baroness, as I shall continue to call her. A worthy opponent, I suspect. Schmidt! She is changing her level, moving on a different plane. So far she has travelled as an aristocrat. She may be going to the other extreme – to the peasant level.'
'To confuse us? So we have the wrong description…'
'Partly that,' Hartmann agreed. His dark eyes gleamed and he reminded Schmidt of a bloodhound who has picked up the scent. 'But this fact may point to her general destination – she may have to assume a new appearance because of her surroundings. You would not resent a suggestion?'
'My God! No.'
'Warn the watchers at all bus depots and the captains of all ships plying the Danube to look for a peasant group – three men and a girl. And there is another station here, I believe…'
'The Sudbahnhof. Trains to Graz – and Yugoslavia beyond…'
'Watch that station.'
Schmidt glanced at the huge clock suspended from a girder. It was 2.45 am.
Everything in the Sudbahnhof district was worn-out, derelict – or at best shabby if a building was occupied – when you could see anything through the sour fog which clung to the area like a plague. Gaunt wrecks of buildings like huge rotting teeth loomed in the dirt-laden mist. It reminded Lindsay of a no-man's-land abandoned long ago by battle-weary armies.
Paco and Lindsay had travelled in a taxi which sagged to one side, the Monstrous synthetic fuel attachment making the vehicle look distorted. She paid off the taxi in the middle of what appeared to be a desert of rubble and waited until it vanished in the grey pall.
'We walk the rest of the way,' she said briskly, 'then if the cab driver is picked up and questioned he can't lead them to us…'