“No more a shame than after all these years, your best use is as a carpenter.”
“Do I have time to wash?”
“They're waiting now.”
“Of course they are,” said Klaus.
He followed Reinhardt to the farmhouse. They passed Heike and Gretel, who were whispering in the niche beneath the stairs. What ever Gretel's grudge against the statuesque blond woman might have been, it seemed to have passed.
Reinhardt leaned over the balustrade to blow a kiss at Heike. She turned her back to him, shuddering.
Klaus caught a snippet of the conversation as he followed Reinhardt up the stairs. “ ... disappointment is terribly profound,” Gretel said.
Heike said, “But my training. I've improved so much.”
“Perhaps. But in their eyes, it is not enough. They see only failure.” Gretel laid a hand on Heike's forearm. “It is unfair.”
“What will I do?” Heike moaned.
The little he heard of this exchange surprised and startled Klaus. He'd gathered that Pabst and the doctor were quite pleased with Heike's recent breakthroughs. He made a mental note to check on her later.
The second floor housed the rooms where Klaus and the others slept. It was emptier these days. The Twins were gone, and Kammler was off with the wolf packs, peeling apart the hulls of American merchant marine ships and their escorts. The staircase at the front of the building, for the doctor's official visitors, was wide and grandiose. But Klaus and Reinhardt took the former servants' stair instead.
The parlor hadn't changed since Klaus's last breakfast there, prior to Gretel's failure to warn the fleet. The gaps amidst leather-bound volumes on the shelves had moved around, and now a new set of scribbles covered the doctor's blackboard, but otherwise it was the same. The doctor's sanctorum, his workspace. Where his intellect reigned.
Pabst and von Westarp stood at the observation window, again speaking in hushed, urgent tones. Pabst turned when they entered. They saluted. He took a seat at the doctor's long dining table. Klaus and Reinhardt followed suit. The doctor remained at the window in his threadbare dressing gown, gazing outside with his arms crossed behind the small of his back.
Pabst spoke. “The two of you await new deployments.”
“I'm ready at any time,” Reinhardt said.
“So am I,” Klaus added. “I proved myself in England.”
Reinhardt laughed. “I proved myself long before that.”
“You torched a hotel in a fallen city. Any imbecile with a box of matches could do that.
“You went straight to the enemy's heart and went sightseeing! I would have known enough to strike while I was there. A killing blow, too, had it been me. I—”
“Enough!” shouted Pabst. “Your deployments have been postponed. We need your combined talents here.”
Klaus looked at Reinhardt.
Reinhardt was watching him, too. Probably doing a similar calculation in his own head.
Pabst said, “There are two issues.”
“What issues?” Klaus asked.
“The first comes from your sister. She has foreseen an assault upon the Reichsbehorde.”
Reinhardt objected. “Herr Standartenfuhrer. One must point out that neither the threat nor the source are particularly credible. It's hard to believe that anybody would be foolish enough to attack this place. But if they are? Let them,” he said. “And Klaus's lunatic sister is untrustworthy. To the point of treason, if I may say so.”
“She's done more to advance the Reich's war effort than any other single person,” Klaus said.
“Is that so? Remind me. How many men died during the attempted invasion?”
Pabst slapped the table with his open palm. “Quiet.” The doctor's tea service rattled on its platter. “You are here to listen.”
He collected himself. “Regardless of Gretel's recent performance,” Pabst continued, “we will take her warning seriously. You will stay here until the threat has passed. Kammler has been recalled from the North Atlantic.”
Reinhardt muttered his assent. Klaus acknowledged the order.
“After that, the doctor has special plans for the pair of you.” The significance of the standartenfuhrer's wording wasn't lost on Klaus, and he doubted Reinhardt missed it, either. As the head of the REGP, Doctor von Westarp outranked Pabst. If the doctor chose to exert his opinion on military matters, there was little Pabst could do.
The doctor spoke. “The Reichsbehorde,” he said, “is overdue for a recruitment drive.”
Klaus kept his expression neutral. He'd been expecting this, of course. The incubators and the new monstrosities meant the doctor expected a wave of test subjects in the near future. It was an open secret.
Pabst said, “The doctor envisions a second generation of the Gotterelektrongruppe.”
“My work has grown stagnant,” said the doctor at the window. “I wish to circumvent my previous mistakes.”
This, however, caught Klaus by surprise. He wondered what that meant.
“Forgive me, Herr Doctor,” Reinhardt said. “The war will be over many years before new subjects could be ready to join the Gotterelektrongruppe. It will take too long.”
Von Westarp grew still. A moment passed before he said in a flat, angry voice, “That remains to be seen.”
Pabst cleared his throat. “The doctor believes”—again, that phrasing, distancing himself from this decision —”that loyal families will gladly give up their sons and daughters when they see your magnificence on display.”
Klaus barely remembered how he'd first arrived at Doctor von Westarp's orphanage. He had one hazy, dreamlike memory of riding in a horse-drawn hay wagon. He wondered if they truly had been orphans, or if a mother and father had given Klaus and Gretel to the doctor.
The meeting devolved into a planning session. Pabst discussed preparations for the attack Gretel claimed to have foreseen. After that, the doctor explained in great detail a touring recruitment effort. The sun was low in the sky by the time Klaus and Reinhardt were dismissed.
Reinhardt followed Klaus down the narrow stairs. He asked, “He's not planning to replace us, is he?”
“I suppose that also remains to be seen.”
Heike's room abutted the stairwell on the second floor. Klaus heard sobs coming through the wall. So did Reinhardt.
He knocked on her door. “Liebling, are you well?” No response. Only sniffling. “I stand ready to comfort you.”
“Leave her alone,” said Klaus.
“Call when you need me,” said Reinhardt to the closed door. The sobbing resumed as they went downstairs.
Klaus took a simple dinner of stew and black bread while mulling the doctor's recruitment plan. He couldn't understand the expectation that parents would willingly give up their children to Doctor von Westarp. He and Reinhardt might have been strong arguments for greatness, but the wires attached to their skulls were bound to alarm parents and volunteers. Klaus's thoughts kept returning to the hay wagon. How had the doctor obtained his subjects the first time around?
He resolved to discuss these things with Reinhardt. The salamander was an arrogant ass, but he was no fool. And if he remembered how he'd come to be at the REGP, Klaus would want to hear that story. He didn't consider asking Gretel; no matter how much she knew, it would turn into a waste of time.
That night, Klaus dreamed of the hay wagon and a sickly tow-haired boy.