entirely objective and vastly knowledgeable advisors and friends. Three, although John wasn't nearly as objective.
'Make it work for you,' Jeffrey murmured, looking at the water. 'Easier said than done.'
Among other things, the increasing choppiness was going to degrade the effectiveness of naval gunfire support. Particularly from the lighter vessels. .
Decision crystallized. 'Message to Admiral Farr,' he said. 'I'm speeding up the evacuation schedule.'
The mission was certainly accomplished. He looked to his left at the remains of the plateau where the Land fortress had stood. The whole southern front of it had slumped forward into the sea, a sloping hill of rubble where the cliffs had been. Parts of it still smouldered.
'My compliments to the admiral, and could he please send some of the shallow-draft destroyers and torpedo boats alongside the emergency piers.'
That way the men could load directly; it didn't matter if the warships were crowded to the gunwales on the way back, since they wouldn't be fighting. He looked left and right along the long curving beach. More than three hundred barges on the shore, and more waiting out there with the tugs. If loading went on until moonrise, he was going to lose some of them.
'Well, they can make more than one trip,' he muttered.
'Message to regimental commanders,' he said. 'When they bring their men out of line and prepare for boarding, ditch everything but personal arms. Heavy weapons to be disabled or blown in place.' That would cut the tonnage requirements down considerably. 'We'll expedite loading; following units to-'
The tide was turning.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
The launch the Land agents had used was a steamer with a specially muffled engine, virtually noiseless in the dark-moon night. The prow knifed into the soft silt of the creek mouth with a quiet
John Hosten clicked the light that had guided the boat in one more time, then advanced with his jacket open to show the white shirt within. He walked slowly, not wanting some nervous Protege with better reflexes than brains to end his career as a triple agent.
A dark figure walked towards him. A woman, and a Chosen, the movements were unmistakable. Shortish for the Chosen, square-built. .
'Gerta!' he blurted.
She grinned. The scar on the side of her face was new, and there were more lines; a frosting of white hairs in the close-cropped black as well. She held a silenced pistol down by her side, and waved it in greeting.
''
'They don't tell
'Caught us sleeping,' Gerta agreed.
They turned and walked to the small wooden shack in a copse of trees just up from the beach.
'This area secure?'
'I own it,' John said. 'Officially it's for the hunting. Good shooting in the marsh here, boar, and duck in season.'
The Chosen woman nodded. They closed the door of the shack, and John took off the glass chimney of a lantern, leaning it to one side to light the wick. Tar paper made the windows lightproof. Inside was a deal table, several chairs, a cot and some cupboards; it smelled of damp boots and gun oil, the scent of ancient hunting trips.
'How are things in the Land?' John asked. He probably knew rather better than Gerta did, since his networks among the Proteges were more extensive than those of the Fourth Bureau and Military Intelligence put together, but one had to stay in character.
'Hectic. We're finally
'How's Father?'
'Tired. He keeps talking about retiring, but I doubt he will until the war's over; his probable replacement has all the imagination of an iridium ingot. The dangerous type-energetic, conscientious, and stupid. Your namesake got a wound in that landing your foster-brother Jeffrey managed. First-rate piece of work, by the way. I'd send my congratulations, if it were appropriate.'
John nodded. 'Johan's not too bad, I hope?'
'Oh, no, nothing serious. Fractured femur, in a cast for a couple of months. Erika's just passed the Test and is going out for pilot training. . I'd like to gossip more, but we're pressed for time.'
John reached into one of the cabinets and took out several folders, putting the kerosene lamp in the center of the table. Gerta swung her knapsack around and took out her camera, screwing on the flash attachment and setting out a row of magnesium bulbs.
'The first one's the report on the amphibious assault,' he said.
'Jeffrey's masterpiece. I nearly killed him during it, you know-sheer chance. I was there on inspection, bugged out when it started, and nearly ran him down.'
'That was you? He told me about it, but he wasn't sure.'
'Mm-hmmm,' Gerta said in agreement. The camera began flashing as she methodically photographed each page and diagram.
'Pity I missed. He's far too able to live; he should have been born among the Chosen. Ah, fifteen percent losses. Excellent work, we estimated half again that. The Gut's been pure misery for us every since, we can barely run a train within reach of the coast. Should get better now that we'll be producing more fighters and ground-attack aircraft and wasting less on Porschmidt's damned toys.'
'Here's the specs on the multi-engined tank. They're still working on it.'
'Glad to see we're not the only ones who waste time and money,' Gerta answered. 'Our model can do as much as three, even four miles between breakdowns now. Of course, if it did go further there isn't a bridge in the world that could hold it.'
The last folder was bulky, an accordion-pleated box of brown cardboard stamped TOP SECRET and bound with blue tape.
'That's a duplicate,' John said. 'I got a copy because my firms are involved with special equipment for it and because of my intelligence connections.'
'They let you make a
'They didn't
Gerta nodded grudgingly. 'Odd paper,' she said, opening the first set.
'It needs to have a special surface to take the powder when it's passed between the heated rollers,' he