sick and wounded beasts, finding fodder, and catching runaways. One such company had now been billeted on Kirstenslot.

It was the worst possible stroke of luck for Harald. The officers were living in the castle, and about a hundred men were bedded down in the ruined monastery. The old cloisters, adjacent to the church where Harald had his hideout, had been turned into a horse hospital.

The army had been persuaded not to use the church itself. Karen had pleaded with her father to negotiate this, saying she did not want the soldiers to damage the childhood treasures that were stored there. Mr. Duchwitz had pointed out to the commanding officer, Captain Kleiss, that the junk in the church left little usable room anyway. After a glance through a window-Harald being absent, warned away by Karen-Kleiss had agreed to its remaining locked up. As a quid pro quo, he had requested three rooms in the castle for offices, and the deal had been struck.

The Germans were polite, friendly-and curious. On top of all the difficulties Harald faced repairing the Hornet Moth, he now had to do everything under the noses of the soldiers.

He was undoing the nuts that held the buckled wishbone axle. His plan was to detach the damaged section, then sneak past the soldiers and go to Farmer Nielsen’s workshop. If Nielsen would let him, he would repair it there. Meanwhile, the intact third leg, with the shock absorber, would hold the weight of the aircraft while stationary.

The wheel brake was probably damaged, but Harald was not going to worry about brakes. They were used mainly when taxiing, and Karen had told him she could manage without them.

As he worked, Harald kept glancing up at the windows, expecting at any moment to see the face of Captain Kleiss looking in. Kleiss had a big nose and a thrusting chin, which gave him a belligerent look. But no one came, and after a few minutes Harald had the V-shaped strut in his hand.

He stood on a box to look through a window. The eastern end of the church was partly obscured by a chestnut tree that was now in full leaf. There seemed to be no one in the immediate vicinity. Harald pushed the strut through the window and dropped it on the ground outside, then jumped after it.

Beyond the tree, he could see the wide lawn in front of the castle. The soldiers had pitched four large tents and parked their vehicles there, jeeps and horse boxes and a fuel tanker. A few men were visible, passing from one tent to another, but it was afternoon, and most of the company were away on missions, taking horses to and from the railway station, negotiating with farmers for hay, or treating sick horses in Copenhagen and other towns.

He picked up the strut and walked quickly into the wood.

As he turned the corner of the church, he saw Captain Kleiss.

The captain was a big man with an aggressive air, and he was standing with his arms crossed and his legs apart, talking to a sergeant. They both turned and looked straight at Harald.

Harald suffered the sudden nausea of fear. Was he to be caught so early? He stopped, wanting to turn back, then realized that to run away would be incriminating. He hesitated then walked forward, conscious that his behavior looked guilty, and that he was carrying part of the undercarriage of an airplane. He had been caught red- handed, and all he could do was try to bluff it out. He tried to hold the strut in a casual way, as he might carry a tennis racket or a book.

Kleiss addressed him in German. “Who are you?”

He swallowed, trying to remain calm. “Harald Olufsen.”

“And what’s that you’ve got?”

“This?” Harald could hear his own heartbeat. He tried desperately to think of a plausible lie. “It’s, um. .” He felt himself blush, then was saved by inspiration. “Part of the mower assembly from a reaping machine.” It occurred to him that an uneducated Danish farm boy would not speak such good German, and he wondered anxiously whether Kleiss was subtle enough to spot the anomaly.

Kleiss said, “What’s wrong with the machine?”

“Er, it ran over a boulder and buckled the frame.”

Kleiss took the strut from him. Harald hoped he did not know what he was looking at. Horses were the man’s business, and there was no reason why he should be able to recognize part of the undercarriage of an aircraft. Harald stopped breathing, waiting for Kleiss’s verdict. At last the man gave him back the strut. “All right, on your way.”

Harald walked into the woods.

When he was out of sight, he stopped and leaned against a tree. That had been an awful moment. He thought he might vomit, but managed to suppress the reaction.

He pulled himself together. There might be more such moments. He would have to get used to it.

He walked on. The weather was warm but cloudy, a summer combination dismally familiar in Denmark, where no place was far from the sea. As he approached the farm, he wondered how angry old Nielsen was that he had left without warning after working only one day.

He found Nielsen in the farmyard staring truculently at a tractor with steam pouring from its engine.

Nielsen gave him a hostile glare. “What do you want, runaway?”

That was a bad start. “I’m sorry I left without explanation,” Harald said. “I was called home to my parents’ place quite suddenly, and I didn’t have time to speak to you before I left.”

Nielsen did not ask what the emergency had been. “I can’t afford to pay unreliable workers.”

That made Harald hopeful. If money was what the mean old farmer was concerned about, he could keep it. “I’m not asking you to pay me.”

Nielsen only grunted at that, but he looked a shade less malign. “What do you want, then?”

Harald hesitated. This was the difficult bit. He did not want to tell Nielsen too much. “A favor,” he said.

“What sort?”

Harald showed him the strut. “I’d like to use your workshop to repair a part from my motorcycle.”

Nielsen looked at him. “By Christ, you’ve got a nerve, lad.”

I know that, Harald thought. “It’s really important,” he pleaded. “Perhaps you could do that instead of paying me for the day I worked.”

“Perhaps I could.” Nielsen hesitated, obviously reluctant to do anything helpful, but his parsimony got the better of him. “All right, then.”

Harald concealed his elation.

Nielsen added, “If you fix this damn tractor first.”

Harald cursed under his breath. He did not want to waste an hour on Nielsen’s tractor when he had such a short time to repair the Hornet Moth. But it was only a boiling radiator. “All right,” he said.

Nielsen stomped off to find something else to grumble about.

The tractor soon ran out of steam, and Harald was able to look at the engine. He immediately saw that a hose had perished where it was clamped to a pipe, allowing water to leak out of the cooling system. There was no chance of getting a replacement hose, of course, but fortunately the existing one had some slack in it, so he was able to cut off the rotten end and reattach the hose. He got a bucket of hot water from the farmhouse kitchen and refilled the radiator-it was damaging to run cold water through an overheated engine. Finally he started the tractor to make sure the clamp held. It did.

At last he went into the workshop.

He needed some thin sheet steel to reinforce the fractured part of the axle strut. He already knew where to get it. There were four metal shelves on the wall. He took everything off the top shelf and rearranged the items on the three lower shelves. Then he lifted the top shelf down. Using Nielsen’s metal shears, he trimmed off the flanged edges of the shelf, then cut four strips.

He would use these as splints.

He put one strip in a vise and hammered it into a rough curve to fit over the oval tube of the strut. He did the same with the other three strips. Then he welded them in place over the dents in the strut.

He stood back to look at his work. “Unsightly, but effective,” he said aloud.

Tramping back through the woods to the castle, he could hear the sounds of the army camp: men calling to one another, engines revving, horses whinnying. It was early evening, and the soldiers would have returned from their day’s duties. He wondered whether he would have trouble getting back into the church unnoticed.

He approached the monastery from the back. At the north side of the church, a young private was leaning against the wall, smoking a cigarette. Harald nodded to him, and the soldier said in Danish: “Good day, I am

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