Chapter Six

Croydon was thick with mist and a heavy rain was falling. There was plenty of activity for it was used as a fighter station in the defence of London, but nothing seemed to be landing or taking off as Genevieve peered out of the window of the rather cheerless Nissen hut they’d been taken to on arrival. The Lysander, a squat, ugly high-wing monoplane was standing outside, a couple of RAF mechanics working on her.

René was sitting by the stove drinking tea and Munro moved across to Genevieve as rain spattered against the window. “Damn weather.”

“Doesn’t look good, does it?” she said.

“Mind you, those things can fly in anything.” He nodded out at the Lysander. “Originally designed to carry a pilot and two passengers, but they can manage you four with a squeeze.”

René brought her tea in an enamel mug. She wrapped her hands around it for warmth as the door opened and Craig came in with their pilot. He was quite young with a fair moustache, dressed in RAF blue, flying jacket and boots. He had a map case in one hand which he dropped on the table.

“Flight Lieutenant Grant,” Craig said to Genevieve.

The young man smiled and took her hand. Munro said testily, “Are we going to be delayed, Grant?”

“It’s not the weather here that’s the problem, Brigadier. We can take off in pea soup as long as it’s clear up above. It’s landing, and visibility is limited at the Cold Harbour end of things. They’ll let us know as soon as there is a change.”

“Damn!” Munro said and he opened the door and went out.

“His liver must be acting up this morning,” Grant said and went to the stove and poured himself a mug of tea.

Craig said to Genevieve, “It’s Grant who’ll be flying you across on Thursday night. You’re in good hands. He’s done that kind of thing before.”

“Piece of cake really as long as one observes the formalities.” He stuck a cigarette in the corner of his mouth, but didn’t bother lighting it. “Flown before, have you?” he asked Genevieve.

“Yes, to Paris before the war.”

“Bit different, old girl, believe me.”

“Actually we could go over Thursday night’s timetable,” Craig said. “Fill in the time while we’re waiting. You’ve already got a flight plan worked out, haven’t you?” he said to Flight Lieutenant Grant.

“That’s right,” Grant said. “We take off at eleven-thirty from Cold Harbour. Estimated time of arrival, two o’clock our time. I’ll explain how it goes.” He opened the map and they moved in as he traced a pencil across the Channel from Cornwall to Brittany.

“Major Osbourne will be coming with us for the ride. Not much room in these things, but they’re good little kites. Never let you down.”

“What’s your altitude on the Channel crossing?” Craig asked.

“Well, some people like to go in low—try and keep under their radar, but I favour going in around eight thousand all the way. That keeps us well below any bomber formations, which is what those Jerry nightfighters tend to be looking for.”

He was so calm, so terribly offhand about it all, and Genevieve realised that she was shaking a little.

“We’ll be landing in a field about fifteen miles from St. Maurice. They’ll have a flare path ready for us. Pretty crude. Cycle lamps, but good enough if the weather holds. Recognition code, Sugar Nan in morse. If we don’t get that, we don’t land, flare path or no flare path. Agreed?”

He had turned to Craig who nodded. “You’re the boss.”

“We’ve lost two Lysanders and a Liberator in the past six weeks because pilots landed and Jerry was waiting. Our experience is that as their aim is to get their hands on everybody intact, they don’t start firing until a plane tries to take off again. Our latest instructions are to do the turnround as fast as possible. I’m not bringing anyone back, so the moment I land I’ll taxi to the end of the field, you get Miss Trevaunce out fast and we’ll get straight off again, just in case.” He folded the map. “Sorry and all that, but one never really can be sure who’s waiting out there in the dark.”

He went to the stove and poured himself a tea and Craig said to Genevieve, “The chap who’ll be waiting to take you in charge—Grand Pierre is his code name—is English. He’s never actually met Anne-Marie. They’ve only spoken on the phone. He knows nothing about what happened, so to him you are who you appear to be.”

“And the station master at St. Maurice?”

“Henri Dubois. The same goes for him, too. Only René and the two men with him when he found her know what happened, and they’re a couple of mountain boys, way back in the hills by now. Grand Pierre will deliver you to Dubois before dawn. He’s holding Anne-Marie’s suitcases. You’ll have plenty of time to change while René checks out the car. The night train from Paris arrives at seven-thirty. It will still be dark at this time of year. Three-minute stop, then it moves on. Nobody in the village will think it strange, even if they don’t actually see you get off the train. It’s a hotbed of the Resistance movement in that area.”

He had spoken without looking once at her directly, apparently very calm and yet a muscle twitched in his right cheek.

“Hey,” she said and put a hand on his arm. “Don’t tell me you’re starting to worry about me?”

Before he could reply, the door was flung open and Munro roared in. “I’ve seen the Station Commander,” he told Grant. “He’s given us permission to leave now. If we can’t land when we get there we’ll just have to come back. You have enough fuel, haven’t you?”

“Of course, sir,” Grant told him.

“Then we’re off.”

Everything seemed to be happening at once and Genevieve found herself running through the rain to the Lysander. Craig bundled her up into the rear of the cabin and he and René crowded in beside her. Munro followed, taking the observer’s seat behind Grant. She was so busy strapping herself in that she was hardly aware of what happened after that, simply the deepening engine note and the sudden lurch as they lifted off.

IT WAS A bad trip, noisy and confusing, the roar of the engine making it difficult to conduct any kind of conversation. Outside there was slate grey rain dashing against the Perspex hood. The whole aircraft seemed to shake constantly and every so often they dropped alarmingly in an air pocket.

After a while, she was humiliatingly sick, although they’d provided a bag for that kind of emergency. René followed her soon after which was some kind of comfort. She must have dozed off, for she became aware of a hand shaking her and realised that her legs were covered with a blanket.

Craig had a Thermos in one hand. “Coffee? Good American coffee?”

She was very cold and her legs seemed to have lost all feeling. “How long?”

“Fifteen minutes if everything goes all right.”

She took her time over the coffee. It was just what she needed, hot and strong and very sweet and, from the flavour, there was something stronger in it. When she was finished she returned the cup and Craig refilled it for René.

Grant had the radio speaker on. She heard a crackling and then a voice say: “Lysander Sugar Nan Tare. Ceiling six hundred. Should give you no problem.”

Munro turned and said cheerfully, “All right, my dear?”

“Fine.”

She was lying because suddenly she was shaking like a leaf as they were going down; and then there was a sudden roaring as the Lysander rocked violently in the slipstream of a great blackbird that came out of the cloud from nowhere, passing so close that she could see the swastika on its tailplane.

“Bang, bang, you’re dead, old boy!” A voice crackled over the loudspeaker and the Junkers vanished as quickly as it had appeared.

Grant turned with a frown, “Sorry about that. Joe Edge even more crazed than usual.”

“Stupid young idiot,” Munro said and then they broke through the mist and cloud at six hundred feet before Genevieve could ask what it was all about. Below was the Cornish coast, the inlet of Cold Harbour, the cottages scattered alongside, the E-boat at the quay. The Ju88 was already skimming across the Abbey with its lake and dropping down on the grass runway with the windsock at one end.

“Right on target,” Grant called over his shoulder, dropped in over the line of pine trees and landed, taxiing towards the hangar. The Ju88 had already come to a halt where the mechanics waited with Martin Hare. Joe Edge got out of the cockpit to join them.

“My God, the uniform,” Genevieve said and clutched at Craig’s sleeve.

“It’s okay,” he told her. “We haven’t landed on the wrong side of the Channel. Let me explain.”

IN THE LOUNGE bar of the Hanged Man, still a little bewildered by it all, she sat at one of the trestle tables in the window with the Brigadier, Craig and Martin Hare, eating bacon and eggs cooked by Julie Legrande in the back kitchen and served by Schmidt. The crew of the Lili Marlene lounged around the fire, talking in subdued voices, some of them playing cards.

Munro said, “They’re extraordinarily well behaved this morning.”

“Ah, well, sir, that would be the company.” Schmidt put fresh toast on the table. “If you don’t mind me saying so, Miss Trevaunce here’s like a breath of spring, sir.”

“Bloody cheeky rascal,” Munro said. “Go on, get out of it!”

Schmidt retired and Martin Hare poured Genevieve another cup of tea. “All this must seem very weird to you.”

“You can say that again.” She had liked him at once on their first meeting up at the airfield, just as she had thoroughly disliked Edge. “You must feel pretty strange yourself sometimes when you look in the mirror and see that uniform.”

“She’s right, Martin,” Munro said. “Do you ever wonder which side you’re really on?”

“As a matter of fact I do sometimes.” Hare lit a cigarette. “But only when I have to deal with Joe Edge. A disgrace to the uniform.”

“To any uniform,” Craig said. “He’s totally unbalanced in my opinion. Grant told me a pretty unsavoury story that just about sums him up. During the Battle of Britain a Ju88 lost one engine and surrendered to two Spitfire pilots who took up position on either side and started to shepherd it down to land at the nearest airfield. It would have been quite a coup.”

“What happened?” Genevieve asked.

“Apparently Edge came up on his rear, laughing like a maniac over the radio and blew him out of the sky.”

“That’s terrible,” she said. “Surely his commanding officer should have had him court-martialled?”

“He tried, but he was overruled. Edge was a Battle of Britain ace with two DFCs. It wouldn’t have looked good in the papers.” Craig turned to Hare. “Like I said, the war hero as psychopath.”

“I heard that story too,” Hare told him. “The one bit you left out was that Edge’s commanding officer was an American. Ex Eagle Squadron, so I understand. Edge never forgave him and he’s hated Americans ever since.”

“Yes, well he’s still the best damn pilot I ever saw,” Munro told them.

“If that’s so, why isn’t he doing the drop on Thursday instead of Grant?” Genevieve asked.

“Because he doesn’t fly a Lysander, he pilots a German Fieseler Storch for that sort of flight and only on very special occasions,” Munro told her. “The Thursday flight is comparatively routine.”

The door opened and Edge came in, the usual unlit cigarette dangling from the corner of his mouth. “Everybody happy?” There was a sudden silence as he came across to the table. “Grant got away okay, sir,” he told Munro. “Back Thursday at noon.”

“Good show,” Munro said.

Edge leaned so close to Genevieve that she could feel his breath on her ear. “Settling in all right, are we, sweetie? If you need any advice, Uncle Joe’s always available.”

She pulled away, angry, and stood up. “I’ll see if Madame Legrande needs any help in the kitchen.”

Edge laughed as she walked away. Hare glanced at Craig with lifted brows. “Not fit to be out, is he?”

Julie was washing dishes, elbow-deep in the sink when Genevieve entered. “Madame Legrande, the breakfast was excellent.” She picked up a dishcloth, “Here, let me help.”

“Julie, chérie,” the other woman said with a warm smile.

Genevieve suddenly remembered that Hortense had always called her that. Never Anne-Marie, only her. She liked Julie Legrande at once. She picked up a plate and smiled. “Genevieve.”

“Everything all right?”

“I suppose so. I like Martin Hare. A remarkable man.”

“And Craig?”

Genevieve shrugged, “Oh, he’s all right, I suppose.”

“Which means you like him a lot?” Julie sighed. “An easy thing to do, chérie, but he carries the pitcher to the well too often, that one, I think.”

“And Edge?” Genevieve said.

“From under a stone. Steer clear of him.”

Genevieve continued to dry plates. “And where do you fit in to all this?”

“I run the house and this place. I’ll take you up there later. Settle you in.”

The door opened and the Brigadier looked in. “Craig and I are going up to the house now. Lots to do.”

Julie said, “I’ll bring Genevieve up later.”

“Fine.” He took a letter from his pocket and handed it to Genevieve. “This is for you. I sent Carter round to Bart’s first thing this morning to explain to the Matron that your leave would have to be extended because of family bereavement. She’d not forwarded that letter because she’d expected you back any day.”

It was open, slit neatly along the flap. “You’ve read it?” Genevieve said.

“Of course.” He went out, closing the door behind him.

“Isn’t he sweet?” Julie said sarcastically.

Genevieve put the letter down and carried on drying the dishes. “Before. What were you doing before?”

“I was in France. My husband was Professor of Philosophy at the Sorbonne.”

“And now?”

“He is dead. They came for us one night, the Gestapo, and he held them off while I and the others made our escape.” She was lost for a moment, staring into space. “But Craig went back for him. Saved his life. Helped us get out of France.” She sighed. “He died of a heart attack last year, my husband.”

“And it was Craig Osbourne who saved him?”

“That’s right.”

“Tell me about him,” Genevieve said. “Everything you know.”

“Why not?” She shrugged. “His father was an American diplomat, his mother French. As a child he lived for years in Berlin and Paris which explains his fluency in the languages. He was working for Life magazine when the Germans took Paris in 1940.”

“Yes, that’s when he knew my sister. Did you ever meet her?”

“No. He became involved with an underground ring engaged in smuggling Jews out through Spain and only got out by the skin of his teeth himself when the Germans discovered what he was up to. That’s when he first came to England and joined their secret service. What they call SOE. Later, when the Americans joined in, they transferred him to OSS.” She shrugged. “Names only. Everyone does the same thing. Fights the same war.”

“He went back to France?”

“Twice they dropped him in by parachute. On the third occasion, a Lysander was used. He operated a Maquis sabotage unit in the Loire valley for several months before they were betrayed.”

“Where did he go?”

“To Paris, a café in Montmartre, a staging post on the underground route out to Spain …” She paused.

“And?”

“The Gestapo were waiting. They took him to their headquarters in Rue de Saussaies at the back of the Ministry of the Interior.”

“Go on!” Genevieve turned pale.

“He was photographed, fingerprinted—all the usual things, including an interrogation that lasted three days and involved considerable brutality. Notice his hands sometime. His fingernails are misshapen because they were torn out at the time I describe.”

Genevieve felt slightly sick. “But he escaped?”

“Yes, he was lucky. A car in which he was being transferred was involved in a collision with a truck. He got away in the confusion, hid in a church. The priest who found him got in touch with my husband who was leader of the underground movement in that part of Paris.”

“And who held the Gestapo off while you and Craig got away … ?”

“Let me explain, chérie,” she said patiently. “Craig could hardly walk because they’d done things to his feet also.” She held Genevieve’s right hand tightly for a moment. “This was not some film made in Hollywood starring Errol Flynn that you go to see at your local cinema on a Saturday night. This was real. This is how it is over there. And things like this—they could also happen to you. This you must face now. After Thursday night it will be too late.”

Genevieve sat there staring at her. Julie carried on. “We were taken to Amiens in a market truck. After three days they sent a Lysander.”

“What happened to Craig after that?”

“They made him a Commander of the Legion of Honour, his own people gave him the DSC and made him join OSS. The irony now is that he is back in Dougal Munro’s clutches.”

“What’s wrong with him?” Genevieve asked.

“He is, I think, a man who looks for death,” Julie said. “Sometimes I think he would not know what to do with himself if he survived this war.”

“That’s nonsense,” Genevieve told her, but shivered all the same.

“Perhaps,” Julie shrugged. “But your letter—you haven’t opened it.”

She was right, of course, and Genevieve did so. When she was finished reading, she crumpled it into a ball.

“Bad news?” Julie asked.

“Invitation to a party this weekend, so I couldn’t have gone anyway. An RAF boy I met last year—a bomber pilot.”

“You fell in love?”

“Not really. I don’t think I ever have, not in a lasting sort of way. It makes one feel like a lifelong wanderer.”

She laughed. “At your age, chérie?”

“We went around together for a while. That’s all there was to it. Mutual loneliness, I think, more than anything else.”

“And then?”

“He asked me to marry him, just before he was posted to the Middle East.”

“And you wouldn’t?”

“He’s just back. On leave at his parents’ house in Surrey.”

“And still hoping?”

Genevieve nodded. “And I can’t explain. What a rotten way to leave it.”

“But you don’t really care, I think?”

“Yesterday morning, perhaps yes, but now,” Genevieve shrugged. “I find there are things in me I never knew existed. The possibilities are suddenly somehow limitless.”

“So, you are saved from what would have been a very bad mistake. You see, out of every unfortunate situation, something good always comes. And you will understand Craig a little better now, I think.”

The door opened before Genevieve could reply and Edge came in. “Women at the kitchen sink. A lovely sight and so proper.”

“Why don’t you go away and play with your toys, Joe. That’s all you’re good for,” Julie told him.

“Plenty to play with here, darling.” He moved in behind Genevieve and slipped his arms about her waist, holding her close. She could sense his excitement as he nuzzled her neck and ran his hands up to her breasts.

“Leave me alone!” she said.

“Look, she likes it,” he taunted.

“Like it? You make my flesh crawl,” Genevieve told him.

“Really? Oh, that’s good, sweetie. I’d like to make your flesh crawl.”

She continued to struggle and then Edge gave a cry of pain and Martin Hare was there, had him by the arm, which he continued to twist even after Edge had released Genevieve. “You really are a worm, Joe. Go on, get out of it.”

Schmidt appeared from nowhere, darted around him and got the back door open. Hare simply threw Edge through it and the pilot fell to one knee. He got to his feet and turned, his face contorted.

“I’ll pay you back for this, Hare and you, you bitch.”

He hurried away. Schmidt closed the door. “A real bad boy, if I may say so, sir.”

“Couldn’t agree more. Get out to the boat and find Miss Trevaunce a pair of sea boots.”

“Zu befehl, Herr Kapitän,” Schmidt said cheerfully and went out.

Genevieve was still shaking with rage. “Sea boots?” she demanded. “What for?”

“We’ll go for a walk.” He smiled. “Salt air, the beach. Nothing like the beauties of nature to get things into perspective.”

AND HE WAS right, of course. They followed the narrow beach beyond the end of the quay where the inlet widened into the sea in a maelstrom of white water, spray lifting high into the air.

Genevieve said, “God, this is wonderful. Every breath you take in London at the moment is tainted with smoke. The whole city stinks of war. Death and destruction everywhere.”

“The sea washes things clean. Ever since I was a boy vacationing at Cape Cod, I’ve sailed,” Hare told her. “No matter how bad things are, you leave everything behind on the shore at your point of departure.”

“Your wife?” Genevieve said. “Does she think the same way?”

“Used to,” Martin Hare said. “She died of leukaemia in 1938.”

“I’m so sorry.” She turned, hands thrust into the pockets of the Kriegsmarine pea jacket Schmidt had given her. “Have you any children?”

“Not possible. She was too frail. Struggled against that damned disease from the age of twenty-one.” He smiled. “Left me some of the best water-colours I’ve ever seen. She was a fine artist.”

Instinctively, she took his arm. They had rounded the point now and the beach was much wider, following the cliffs. “It’s been a long war for you, I think.”

He shook his head. “Not really. I take it day by day and that’s all I expect—today.” He smiled, suddenly looking immensely charming. “Night-by-night, I should say. That’s when we operate most of the time.”

“And afterwards, when it’s all over?”

“No such time. I’ve told you. Only today.”

“And Craig? Does he think in the same way?”

“You like him, don’t you?” He squeezed her arm against him. “Don’t. There’s no percentage in it. There’s no future for people like me and Craig, so no future for you.”

“That’s a terrible thing to say.” She turned to face him and he put his hands on her shoulders.

“Listen to me, Genevieve Trevaunce. War, played the way people like Craig and I play it, is like going to Monaco for a weekend’s gambling. What you have to remember is that the odds are always against you. The house wins—you lose.”

She pulled away. “I can’t accept that.”

But he ignored her now, looking beyond her, a frown on his face. She turned and saw a man in a lifejacket a few yards away, bouncing around in the surf. Hare ran past her and she followed, pausing at the water’s edge as he went in waist deep, secured a grip on the lifejacket and returned, towing the body behind him.

“Is he dead?” she called.

He nodded. “Oh yes,” and pulled the corpse up on the beach.

It was that of a young man in black overalls with the German eagle on his right breast. His feet were bare. He had fair hair and a thin beard and the eyes were closed as if in sleep. He looked remarkably peaceful. Hare searched the body and found a wallet, sodden with water. He took from it an identity card, wet so that it was already falling apart.

He examined it and stood up. “German seaman. Off a U-boat. Name of Altrogge. Twenty-three years of age.”

A seagull swooped overhead, cried harshly and flew out to sea. The surf washed in. Genevieve said, “Even here, in a place like this, the war touches everything.”

“The house always wins, remember.” He put an arm around her. “Come on—we’ll go back and I’ll arrange for some of my crew to bring him in.”

THE ROOM JULIE Legrande had given her was very pleasant. There was a four-poster bed, Chinese carpets on the floor and an excellent view of the garden at the rear of the house from the bow window.

She stood there now, staring out, and Julie put an arm around her as Hare had done. “You’re sad, chérie?”

“That boy on the beach. I can’t get him out of my mind.”

“I know.” Julie went and turned down the bed. “It’s gone on too long, this war, but we have no choice. To you, he was just a boy, but to people like me …” She shrugged. “If you could see what the Boche have done to my country. Believe me, the Nazis must be beaten. We have no choice.”

The door opened and Craig Osbourne came in. “Ah, there you are.”

“You didn’t bother to knock,” Genevieve said. “Don’t I get any privacy around here?”

“Not really,” he said calmly. “In effect we’ve got two full days so I thought I’d let you know what to expect.” He sat on the window ledge and lit a cigarette. “Number one, from now on we only speak French. Just to get you back into the habit. That includes me.”

He seemed different, a hard tough edge to him and she was annoyed. “Are you sure you’re up to it?”

“Whether I am or not doesn’t really matter, but you sure as hell better be,” he told her.

Julie Legrande put a hand on her right shoulder and squeezed. Genevieve said in French, “All right. Anything you say. What’s next?”

“As Munro pointed out, we’ve no intention of trying to make a professional out of you, there isn’t time. There are three main tasks and we have two days to cover them. Number one—to familiarise you with the present situation at the Château, the staff, both French and German, and so on. This will involve some lengthy sessions with René and we’ve also got a lot of photographic material to show you.”

“Then?”

“You’ll need to fully understand the purpose of your mission and its background so that you know not only what to look for, but what’s relevant and what isn’t.”

“That sounds complicated.”

“It won’t be. I’ll take care of it and Munro will help.”

He started to get up. She said, “You did say three main tasks, didn’t you? You’ve only mentioned two.”

“Quite right. The third is of a more practical nature. No need to worry about radio and communication because René and his Resistance chums will take care of that, but there are one or two things which could be important from a survival point of view. Can you shoot?” She stared up at him. “Hand guns,” he said patiently. “Have you ever fired a pistol?”

“No.”

“Don’t worry. It’s easy when you know how. You just make sure you’re standing close enough and pull the trigger, but we’ll go into that later.” He glanced at his watch. “I’d better get moving. We’ll start in the library at eight.”

He went out. Julie made a face. “It begins, chérie.”

“So it would appear,” Genevieve said, turned and looked out of the window.