- Unknown
- Prolog: Piers Anthony's VOLK
- volk006.htm
Of course Heydrich did not send Ernst straight
to Admiral Canaris. Canaris, as the head of the Abwehr, the military intelligence unit, was far too
canny to accept unknown personnel. Instead he was provided as a
routine assignment of personnel to Colonel Oster, Canaris's chief
of staff. Oster was a close friend of the Admiral's, and was also
under suspicion. Ernst was given the identity of Lieutenant
Osterecht, who was a real man but who seemed to have been lost in
some distant action; Ernst was in effect taking over the man's
career, assuming verifiable credentials. If the real Osterecht ever
turned up alive or dead, Heydrich would try to conceal the
information until Ernst could be withdrawn. Thus he traded his
black SS uniform for the gray Wehrmacht uniform.
The Abwehr offices were in a shabby apartment
house beside Berlin's Landwehr Canal. The building was officially
designated 72-76 Tirpitz-Ufer, but it was nicknamed the
"Fuchsbau"--the Fox's Den--because of its labyrinthine passages,
innumerable doors and gloomy offices. The Abwehr offices were on
the third floor of Fox's Den, and were shielded from unwanted
visitors by a folding metal grille.
Admiral Canaris's office was at the end of the
passage and had a small outer office maintained by his serious
secretary Wera Schwarte. Oster's office was down the hall, with his
assistant, the civilian Dohnanyi adjacent. Ernst was given a quick
tour upon his arrival, meeting the Admiral only to shake hands,
before being shunted down to what seemed like the smallest and
gloomiest of the available chambers where he would be working.
Ernst had of course done his homework, and
knew Oster's background. The man had been decorated for gallantry
several times during The War, and was a hero. But he was also
temperamental, volatile, arrogant and cynical. It was said that
Canaris believed that Oster's exterior concealed a serious-minded
man who subscribed to a simple and straightforward code of
soldierly and Christian conduct. But others considered him to be a
superficial careerist, irresponsible, careless, brash and
peremptory, who would not last a moment without the Admiral's
support. He seemed to be obsessed with women and horses, with an
insatiable appetite for new varieties of each. His womanizing had
led to the end of his army career in 1932; only Canaris's
intercession had enabled him to return to the service in 1937 as an
Abwehr officer.
But it was not Ernst's business to remark on
any of this. It was his business to do honestly and well anything
that he was assigned to do, and to make mental but no other note of
whatever he learned about the ultimate loyalty of those with whom
he worked. He was a little fish in an alcove of a pond which was
not enormous. At a later date he would report what was relevant to
Heydrich, his only concern being accuracy.
His actual assignment was in Abteilung II, the division of the Abwehr concerned
with Sabotage, Subversions and Special Duties. Within this he was
in Section II, under Lieutenant Colonel Erwin Lahousen, an Austrian
who had joined the Abwehr after the Anschluss.
Lahousen was glad to see him. "We have a lot
to do, and too few competent people." He lifted a brow at Ernst.
"You are competent?"
Ernst spread his hands. "I hope so. I have not
before done precisely this type of work, but am a quick learner.
I'm still not sure why--"
"We did put out a requisition. So your
training is not sabotage? That does not necessarily reflect on your
competence. It may be that someone saw such promise in you that he
could not let you miss this opportunity. Do you have any special
abilities?"
"Some. But I have to say that it may not be
competence that brought me here. I had what I prefer to term a
personality conflict with my commander."
Lahousen shook his head. "We know about that
sort of thing, here; if you follow orders you will be all right.
What abilities?"
"I have studied both American English and
Spanish, and believe I speak those languages well."
"Trilingual. That must be it." The colonel
signaled a man in the hall. "Fetch Heinz."
In a moment a somewhat stout man appeared,
evidently long out of training. "Heinz, we have here a man who
speaks American," the colonel said.
Heinz turned to Ernst. "Good morning,
comrade," he said in accented English.
"Don't call me 'comrade'!" Ernst snapped in
the same language. "That's a Communist."
Heinz smiled. "And you could pass for
American," he agreed. "You sound just like one, arrogance and all."
He turned to the colonel. "He is good, sir. Better than I am."
"Fetch Eva."
Soon a middle aged woman appeared. "Senora,"
Ernst said, standing.
"You are from Spain!" she exclaimed in
Spanish.
"No. I studied it, and i like to be competent
in what i do," Ernst explained.
She turned to Lahousen. "Like a native," she
said.
The colonel smiled. "We shall surely have good
use for you. But right now we are in need of a planner for commando
operations. You will be that."
"In what theater? It makes a difference."
"Polish."
"But I don't speak--"
"There will be those who do. You can get
started without them."
So it was that Ernst found himself studying
maps of Poland, and researching the German/Polish border. They were
planning to take Poland! He had suspected it, but had not expected
such abrupt confirmation.
Ernst did his work, and knew it was good. He
had organized outings as a Youth leader, and understood how things
fitted together. But one thing was missing. "I'll need to see some
of the terrain personally," he told the colonel. "There could be
things the maps and reports don't tell us. One road blocked by
temporary construction, and--"
"I anticipated that need," Lahousen said. "It
is time to consult with the Colonel."
He brought Ernst to Colonel Oster's office.
There was a board bearing the proverb AN EAGLE EATS NO FLIES. Two
men were there: Oster, whom Ernst had seen but to whom he had never
spoken, and a civilian. Colonel Lahousen, realizing that there
could be awkwardness, made a quick introduction. "Sir," he said to
Oster, "I have brought Lieutenant Osterecht to confer with you and
Captain Dohnanyi about the next stage of our operation. He needs
authorization to inspect the terrain in person."
"Now that is an amusing coincidence," Oster
said. "My friend was just about to travel in that direction. The
Lieutenant can accompany him, in case he needs his shoes polished.
I will suggest this to the Admiral."
The colonel smiled, acknowledging the humor,
but Ernst could tell he didn't appreciate it. It was the type of
humor directed at underlings whose opinion didn't matter. Since
that was a fair description of Ernst at the moment, there was
nothing to be done about it. Oster lacked the authority to make
assignments, but did control access to Admiral Canaris; therein lay
his power. Ernst had quickly discovered how important personality
was, here; it seemed that almost every officer had to be polite to
an obnoxious superior.
Ernst did travel with Dohnanyi, and found the
man surprisingly compatible. He had a good car and a civilian
attitude. "I'm not a captain," he said as they drove. "I'm actually
an anti-militarist crammed into the unaccustomed uniform of a
wartime supernumary and assigned the rank of captain purely as a
matter of protocol. I feel quite out of place in an Abwehr
headquarters geared towards military order and efficiency."
"I am in the military," Ernst said. "But I
feel out of place in the Abwehr myself. It is quite different from
what I have known."
"To be sure! It must seem strange to you to
hear officers cursing the military."
"I have not heard any--"
"You are too kind. A number have been
cashiered from the service, and restored only because of the
Admiral. They hold grudges against the system. I understand you had
trouble in your prior unit; perhaps that is why you were sent to
this hotbed of dissention."
"No one has said that to me," Ernst said
carefully. Was the man fishing for some disloyal statement from
him? Testing him, the way they had tested him in his foreign
languages?
"And you do not know that many of us staunchly
oppose the Hitler regime?"
Ernst was shocked. "I can not believe that!
The Führer--"
"May be a madman. He is bringing us to a war
that can destroy us. Do you think this present mission is for
peace?"
This had to be a test! If Ernst failed to
protest, he would be turned in for disloyalty to the Fatherland.
Yet the man sounded sincere. "I think this mission is for war, yes.
Because a great nation must be prepared for anything. If Poland
attacks us--"
Dohnanyi laughed. "Scant chance of that! I am
sure you are not that naive."
"I do not question the decisions of my
superiors. If it is decided that Poland represents a threat
to--"
"Nor that naive, either. You know we are
preparing to put down Poland, which has been a nuisance for a long
time. And that we are even now preparing a nonaggression pact with
Russia, and will let them have the far side of Poland."
Ernst was amazed. "Poland, yes, I had gathered
that there would be action there. But the Führer would never make a
pact with the Communists!"
"But it is true. Hitler is doing it, and I
fear disaster for our nation. But it is the regime I serve, and so
like you I obey directives. Now we shall inspect the border, and I
shall get us across so that you can ascertain what you need of the
other side."
"Across?" Ernst asked blankly. "Just like
that?"
"Why did you think Colonel Oster had the
Admiral send me with you? I have connections in Poland. I am a
lawyer, and a good one; I do business there. I have a pass."
So it turned out to be. The border guards
allowed the car to pass, and they checked the necessary sites.
Ernst had assumed that they would have to sneak across by night
between roads, but they drove openly. He was amazed at the
sloppiness of the border security.
Meanwhile he pondered the man's words and
attitude. Was it possible that there was such a hotbed of treason
that its participants were open about it? If so, they were fools.
But as he talked with Dohnanyi about other things, he became aware
that the man was highly intelligent and possessed of a lawyer's
powers of reasoning. This was no fool.
That brought up the question whether this was
a trap. Did they suspect that Ernst was really Heydrich's agent? If
so, they might expect him to report Dohnanyi, and thus reveal
himself. That would cause the lawyer trouble, but would protect the
others, because Ernst would never get any evidence on them after
his report. But if he played along, pretending to harbor subversive
notions, Dohnanyi might report him, and
they would be rid of him. Either way, no important conspirator
would be endangered.
The more he pondered, the more certain he
became: Neither Admiral Canaris nor Colonel Oster was a fool, and
both well understood the mechanisms of secrecy and spying. They had
to be testing him, and his response would determine their
acceptance of them. This applied regardless whether they were loyal
to the regime or traitorous. So he had to find a way to reassure
them without getting himself in trouble. And gradually he worked
out a way to do that.
When they returned to the Abwehr, Ernst
reported to his immediate superior, Colonel Lahousen. First on the
terrain: he had learned what he needed to, and could now complete
the planning of commando missions to the region.
"And what of your companion?"
"Captain Dohnanyi was a pleasant companion,
but careless in his speech," Ernst said. "I could not take anything
he said seriously, for if I did, I would not have been able to
travel with him."
The colonel nodded. "Civilians tend to be half
crazy, sometimes," he remarked. "It is best to ignore them."
That was all. Ernst did not get in trouble.
That was in itself significant, because his proper duty should have
been to report Dohnanyi for speaking treason. Colonel Oster had to
know the nature of Dohnanyi's remarks--indeed, had probably
instructed the man to make them--and Ernst had elected not to
report them. Not quite. He had claimed not to take them seriously,
but actually he was covering up for the man. That suggested that he
had some sympathy. That would have been grounds to remove him from
the Abwehr--had they wished to do so. He had become their tacit
accomplice in silence.
***
Except for his secret existence. There was a
telephone in Berlin which was safe, and a time when special calls
were to be made, and he used that phone at the proper time for his
first report directly to Heydrich.
"The civilian Johannes Dohnanyi is
anti-military and says that he staunchly opposes the Hitler
regime," he said when Heydrich came on. "He speaks treason--but he
may be testing me. I have not reported him, and so I may be
compromised. As yet I lack evidence on Oster or Canaris."
"I know about Dohnanyi," Heydrich said. "Leave
him alone. Oster will trust you if Dohnanyi does--but Dohnanyi may
indeed be testing you. Stay with it."
Which was exactly as Ernst had expected. In
this respect he had done right.
He could not say that he really liked this
kind of intelligence work, but at least he was successful in it. So
far. If he became unsuccessful, he might wish he had remained in
America.
***
Early in May the Admiral's order came down:
prepare for "Contingency White." This meant that Abwehr I was to
increase espionage operations in Poland, to determine the strength
and dispositions of Polish army units, while Abwehr II was to
prevent the demolition of communications, industrial centers and
avenues of transportation which would be of use to the advancing
German troops. It was no secret now, within the unit: Poland was
the target. Invasion seemed incipient.
Ernst had helped identify two strategically
vital communications links: One was the bridge over the Vistual
River at Dirschau which carried all rail traffic from Danzig and
East Prussia to the Polish interior. The other was the Jablunkov
Pass in the Beskid Mountains along its southern border, whose
tunnels contained twin rail tracks and connected East Germany,
Southern Poland and the Balkans. Abwehr II was supposed to attack
these positions before the first shot was fired, and overwhelm
their defenders by surprise during peace.
But it had been ascertained that the Dirschau
bridge was set with explosives designed to destroy it. Since a
defender could detonate the explosives at the first sign of
trouble, this made the matter delicate. Ernst discussed it with
others, and they finally worked out a suitable plan: they would
infiltrate a combat team by barge at another place, whose members
would travel separately to a rendezvous, abduct prominent figures
among the defenders, and would force them to disclose the location
of the explosives. Then they would sneak in and defuse the
explosives before the overt attack on the bridge. This would
require fine timing and coordination, but should be possible if
they prepared well and had no unanticipated misfortunes.
The plan for the Beskids was simpler. This
relied on S-groups in the area. S stood for Spannungsagentun--agents already established in the
country. They would take the command areas, destroy the detonators,
and then occupy the tunnels and remove the explosives. After that
it would be a simple matter to defend the tunnels from Polish
intrusions. The Poles would soon be distracted by the main attack
on their country.
But there was more. There was a sizable
Ukraine contingent in Poland that chafed under Polish domination. A
third point of attention was to use this Ukranian element to mount
insurrections against the government as soon as formal hostilities
commenced. That would divert some Polish troops, possibly saving
many German lives.
Finally, there was a mysterious request by
Heydrich, Ernst's true superior, with the backing of Hitler
himself. This was for Abwehr assistance in carrying out a very
special operation for the Reichführer SS. This was for a hundred
and fifty Polish uniforms, with the proper weapons and paybooks to
go with them, and three hundred and sixty four men to be
temporarily attached to the SD. What was going on?
It was the civilian Dohnanyi who set Ernst
straight on the matter. The man was temporarily adrift while
Colonel Oster entertained a buxom young woman in his closed office.
"Our vegetarian leader is a dirty player. Didn't you know? Those
are the men and materials to be used in the pretense of a Polish
attack on the German radio station."
"But why do anything like that? It is
senseless."
"You retain a certain priceless innocence.
That will be the pretext for the outrage we shall evince. We shall
have to teach those vandalizing Poles a lesson. They will attack us
first, giving us leave to conquer their country."
Ernst was suitably appalled. He could not
believe it. But as the request was honored in detail, he realized
that it was. Germany was going to manufacture a pretext for war.
***
In July Ernst was given a ten day leave.
Perhaps the Abwehr still did not trust him, and wanted to see where
he went. So he did not go home. Instead he remained in Berlin,
where he happened to know that a certain group of girls who had
graduated from a female Youth Group were celebrating. He went in
civilian clothes and picked up a young woman he happened to see,
who he knew was now eighteen.
"Ernst!" Krista exclaimed, surprised.
"Better to pretend you don't know me," he
said. "I may be watched, and I am not supposed to be here."
"Then what are you doing here?" she
demanded.
"My hand still tingles from your touch. I
could not stay away."
She glanced down at her blouse, remembering.
Then her gaze lifted. "Exactly what kind of girl do you take me
for, stranger?"
"A pretty one."
After a bit of banter, she allowed him to
treat her to a meal at a restaurant. They sat as a small table in a
corner, and under the table, concealed by the overhanging
tablecloth, her legs twined around his. "Oh, Ernst, I have thought
of you every day! I would go with you in a moment, if I
could."
"And I with you," he agreed. "But I have other
duties I can not even tell you about."
"Training must be severe!"
"It must be. I wouldn't know."
She gazed at him, understanding that he was in
no regular unit. "When will you be able to marry?"
He spread his hands. "I fear our world will
change before that happens."
"And I fear you are not joking. Ernst, I know
a place. We can go there, tonight--"
"How I wish I could!" he said, meaning it.
"But others would know, and your reputation would be soiled. I will
not do that to you."
"How can anyone know, if we do not tell?"
"I met a man who--who knows too much. He told
me your secret."
She stared at him. "Secret?"
"Gypsy ancestry. But it can never be proved,
and it doesn't matter to me. Only if I wished to marry you, without
his approval--"
She continued to gaze into his face. "I can
tell you mean it," she said. "You do know, and you do want to marry
me, when you were unsure before."
He nodded. "I do. But only when it is right,
for both of us."
Her legs moved against his. "I know you mean
it, Ernst," she repeated. "I thank you so much for telling me. It
has been a burden."
"No need to be, between us."
"At least we must find a place where we can
kiss."
That much they managed to do.
***
On August 23 Dohnanyi's prediction about the
pact with the Communists came true: Germany signed a nonaggression
treaty with the Soviet Union. Ernst deeply distrusted the
civilian's politics, but the man had been right about everything he
had said. That suggested that he would continue to be right. But
what an awful thing: a deal with the Communists!
In this time of frenzied preparations, Ernst
was sent to brief the Admiral on the readiness of each aspect.
Canaris was a rather short man, white haired, with bushy eyebrows
and a ruddy face but a general air of frailty and shabbiness. He
did not look at all like a powerful Reich officer. Even before an
underling such as Ernst he seemed somewhat reserved. He was, Ernst
knew, a hypochondriac who would not tolerate a sick man in his
office. Colonel Lahousen had a cold, which was why he wasn't here;
Ernst was healthy.
The Admiral also disliked men who were too
tall. Ernst was no giant, but he was substantially taller than
Canaris. He tried to diminish his height so as to avoid giving
offense.
The man's desk was covered with papers. The
Admiral didn't sit at it; he preferred the couch, where it was said
he liked to take naps. It was clear that the stories about his lack
of interest and aptitude in the bureaucratic process were true.
Ernst wondered how the man had ever won the iron Cross First Class
he wore.
In addition, the admiral's two wire-haired
Japanese Dachshunds were in the office. Canaris loved animals.
Seppel and Sabine were the bane of the Abwehr staff, as they
regularly fouled the carpet. But woe betide anyone who spoke
harshly of the dogs in the Admiral's presence!
But Ernst suffered a change of awareness the
moment the Admiral came to grips with the details of the
assignments. He picked up on the key elements instantly. "How many
combat operatives do we have in place in Poland?"
"Thirteen hundred, sir. They are spread across
the country--"
"Yes, but not all are truly ours. You are
counting the forestry staff of Prince Henckel-Donnersmark? They may
be invaluable for local information and support, but they aren't
trained operatives. You have not given them more than minimal
information?"
"That is correct, sir. Only the operatives
trained here have real information, and of course even they do not
know our specific targets."
"At least they will know better than to waste
any bombs on forests. We do not want to harm any wildlife."
Ernst started to smile, then saw that the
Admiral was serious. He despised anyone who hated animals. He also
did not trust anyone whose ears were too small; fortunately Ernst's
were not.
His gaze strayed to the Admiral's model of the
light cruiser Dresden, his shelf of books, and the trio of bronze
monkeys: See All, Hear All, Tell Nothing. That was certainly the
motto, here.
"The Dirschau bridge--coordinating separate
groups may be impossible," the Admiral continued. "Too many things
can go wrong. The people we abduct may lie to us, and there will
not be time to be sure of their information. We must try to get the
information separately from two, then compare notes. If the two
stories differ, seek a third source. Don't risk it without
confirmation--we'll only get the bridge and ourselves blown
up."
"Yes, sir," Ernst said, impressed. He had
spent weeks working out this plan, and Canaris had spotted its
weakness without seeming to think about it.
They reviewed the other projects, and the
Admiral's commentary was similarly incisive. He suggested several
additional targets for sabotage which Ernst duly noted to relay to
Colonel Lahousen. He demonstrated the ability to juggle many
options simultaneously. Whatever doubt Ernst had had about the
man's competence evaporated; now it was clear why Canaris ran the
Abwehr.
In fact, Ernst found himself liking this
intelligent, energetic man. What did a sloppy office mean? It was
ability and dedication that counted, and Canaris had these
qualities in full measure.
"Well, I must go see about fomenting
insurrections in the British Empire," the Admiral said at last.
"There are Irish who are extremely unhappy with their masters. I
only wish Hitler hadn't made that deal with the Communists. Now we
have to abandon our support for the Ukranian independence movement.
At least we can help Ukranians flee the Russian advance. It is
terrible the way they suffer under that regime."
That was the end of the session. Canaris had
said nothing subversive, except for his criticism of the deal with
the Communist regime. Ernst could hardly fault that; he agreed. If
that was the worst to be said of the Admiral, the man was clean.
***
Everything was set for operations against
Poland to begin on August 26. But the evening of the 25th the
Führer ordered the attack delayed. This threw the Abwehr into a
spin. It was too late to convey the order to all of the operatives,
some of whom checked in only occasionally, for the sake of
security. The fake Polish attack on the radio station was halted,
but a related attack on a German border station did occur. There
was some gunfire but fortunately no loss of life. Radio contact had
been lost with one of the combat groups assigned to take the
Jablunkov Pass. The next day they learned that the unit had made
two unsuccessful attempts to take the pass, before retreating to
the Slovakian border under heavy Polish fire.
"The vegetarian lost his nerve," Dohnanyi
remarked cynically, referring disdainfully to Hitler. Ernst wanted
to hit him, but kept his peace, knowing the man was needling him.
"At least it shows that we underestimated the Polish will to
resist. That must be corrected."
"Agreed," Ernst said. He talked to Lahousen
about strengthening the attack units wherever possible.
On August 31 the whole thing began again. This
time there was no reversal. They received the coded signal
Grossmutter gestorben, "Grandma's dead,"
and the invasion was on for the first of September.
On that day Admiral Canaris assembled his
senior officers and delivered an inspiring pep talk. Ernst was
present only as an unofficial doorman, to see that no unauthorized
personnel intruded. He was amazed at the Admiral's demeanor and
delivery. He pledged them all to unconditional loyalty to the
Führer, concluding with a rousing "Heil Hitler!"
Almost all of the Abwehr operations in Poland
were successful. Unfortunately the Polish defenders had been
alerted by the prior attack in the Beskids, so that it was
impossible to capture the tunnels before the explosives were
detonated. And the Admiral's cautions about the trickiness of the
Dirschau bridge mission proved to be well taken; the defenders were
able to blow the bridge. But Abwehr agents did manage to occupy the
rail junction at Kalthof, save many industrial operations, take
nearly all the coal mines of Upper Silesia, and take Katowice
before the German troops arrived.
There were further requests for Abwehr
activities, and the commandos received praise from many sources.
Canaris was very active. He traveled to the front every week, and
intensified his plans to encourage insurrections in Ireland, India
and Afghanistan. But the devastation of Poland, particularly
Warsaw, affected him deeply, and Ernst and the others were aware of
this. Canaris helped at least one Jewish dignitary to flee the
country, and a Ukrainian Bishop to do the same. He really did care
about the people.
But was this any signal of treason? Ernst
doubted it.
Meanwhile, Ernst had plenty to keep him
occupied. His work in the planning of commando raids put him into
contact with an ugly aspect of the Abwehr: the Geheime Feldpolizei,
or GFP. It had been established as a police force within the
Wehrmacht during the German involvement in the Spanish Civil War.
It worked closely with the Gestapo, and contained many members of
the SS. The Abwehr was cooperating closely with the SS, and some
units were virtually indistinguishable: a given soldier could have
crossed over between the SS and the Abwehr and hardly noticed the
difference. At times Ernst wasn't quite sure for whom he was
working, as he met with representatives of each.
In August the SS VT had gained power; some of
its units were assigned to the Wehrmacht to participate in the
invasion of Poland. They had not, in general, distinguished
themselves. The overall report from the Wehrmacht was that the SS
units were not prepared to function as part of a division, suffered
inordinately heavy losses, and that their officers were incapable
of commanding them in complicated operations. A spokesman for the
SS VT retorted that the Wehrmacht had starved them of supplies and
refused to allocate sufficient heavy weapons to their units. But
Ernst was privately pleased to learn that Steiner's units, where
Ernst had been training before Heydrich had taken him for this
intelligence mission, had distinguished themselves. Steiner was
being proved right!
But once Poland fell, the GFP began arresting
as many Poles for sabotage and insurrection as they thought fit,
and turning them over to the SS for execution. The practice was so
widespread that finally Heydrich himself had to intervene. "Carry
out your own executions," he radioed on the twentieth of September.
Ernst hoped that this would result in fewer executions, because
many of them seemed unwarranted, but it didn't. He was privately
disgusted with the thuglike GFP.
The SS commanders, stung by the less than
ideal performance in Poland, pushed for the formation of an SS
division with its own heavy weapons and supply services. But the
Wehrmacht, sensing competition, opposed this. Pressure was intense,
and finally Himmler authorized a doubling of the size of the SS VT
by incorporating concentration camp guards into it. On November 1
the SS Tötenkopf or "Death's Head" division
was formed. The whole was unified under a new name: the Waffen SS: the "Armed SS."
Then the relationship between the Abwehr and
the expanding SS was strained. On November 9 there was an attempt
on Adolf Hitler's life. This sparked a frenzied investigation. The
Führer was convinced that British intelligence was behind the plot,
though there was no evidence to support this. Admiral Canaris had
been trying to institute sabotage in England, and had been
establishing British connections; could there be double agents
among them? The SS thought there could be; Canaris vehemently
denied it.
Ernst believed the Admiral. There might be
those in the Abwehr who wished Hitler ill, but not Canaris.
Meanwhile, there were frantic preparations for
the next major project: the assault on France. Abwehr II was called
on to formulate plans for sabotage operations in Belgium and
Holland. France's formidable Maginot Line prevented a direct
assault on that country, but the defenses of the small nations were
much less significant and could readily be breached. Ernst had to
research new places and new personnel, and was kept busy for
months.
***
But he did get occasional breaks. He learned
that Krista had become a military secretary and was working in a
Berlin office. Having met her for the first time, in the guise of
Lieutenant Osterecht, he could now date her more openly; their
hometown connection was not obvious, and so would not give away his
nature as a person other than the one he claimed to be.
She was beautiful, as always. It was a genuine
pleasure to be with her. He knew she had arranged to work here in
Berlin so as to be near him, and that both flattered and pleased
him. His lingering doubt about marriage with her was fading; he had
encountered no other woman as appealing. Yet a tiny reservation
remained, and it did not relate to her possible Gypsy taint. There
was something that made him unwilling to let himself go and love
her completely.
So their series of dates were pleasant, and he
enjoyed them. But he was for the moment satisfied that marriage was
not feasible. Not until he completed his mission, and had
Heydrich's leave.
***
In January 1940 reports from Abwehr I
convinced Hitler that the British were planning to occupy Norway.
Abwehr II was therefore charged with readying commando operations
in Scandinavia. Ernst was suspicious that Colonel Oster was not in
sympathy with this, and wished to warn Britain or Norway, but he
had no sufficient evidence.
Ernst traveled with Johannes Dohnanyi again,
because the lawyer had the necessary connections. He learned that
the man was into various subversive endeavors, such as smuggling,
illegal art deals and graft. But these connections were ideal for
the Abwehr's purpose, because they were hidden. Dohnanyi was adept
at covering his tracks. So Ernst reminded himself again that this
was a little fish, not worth bothering with, and kept silent.
But the man was happy to talk about himself as
they spent tedious hours on the highway. It was almost as if he
were proud of the defects in his character. He was a brilliant
lawyer (others had confirmed this) who at the age of thirty six had
become a personal adviser to the Reich Minister of Justice during
the Blomberg-Fritsch case. This had occurred while Ernst was in
America, so he had not learned of it at the time. Blomberg had been
accused of having relations with a prostitute, and Fritsch had been
accused of something done by another man with a similar name; he
had been cleared, but had lost his position by then. Since Fritsch
had adamantly opposed the expansion of the SS VT, his removal had
cleared the path for what it was now becoming. Otherwise there
might have been no SS unit for Ernst to join. So he listened with
flattering attention.
Dohnanyi had been assigned to review the case
and recommend that the charged generals be tried by either a
special court, which was Hitler's preference, or a court-martial,
which was the military's desire. As it happened, he was an opponent
of the Hitler regime, so he recommended for the military. That had
brought him into contact with Admiral Canaris and Colonel
Oster.
"But why did you oppose Hitler?" Ernst
asked.
"I became an enemy of Hitler in 1936, when a
rival in the Ministry of Justice discovered that I had a non-Aryan
maternal grandfather," the man replied bitterly. "With
extraordinary effort I was able to obtain a ruling from Hitler that
I should receive no detriment from the doubts surrounding my
grandfather's pedigree." Ernst, listening, felt a thrill of nervous
agreement; this was what Krista suffered! "That experience made me
hate National Socialism. For centuries Germans have been free to
have what ancestry we please. Why should some bigoted demagogue
come and decide otherwise? What is wrong with being non-Aryan? Are
we not all the people we are? To be condemned because of nothing we
have done in life, simply because an ancestor had a different
belief or came from a different land--this is unconscionable." He
glanced at Ernst. "You argue the other case?"
Ernst knew better than to try to debate a
lawyer! He also had doubt of his own, because of Krista and the Jew
he had known in America. "I neither argue nor endorse the
case."
Dohnanyi smiled briefly. "You are smart. Why
imperil your career foolishly? But I am committed; I am the one who
was challenged. I began keeping a chronicle of the injustices and
abuses of power which came to the attention of my office. As the
list grew, I deciphered a system of corruption which I traced
ultimately to one man: Adolf Hitler. Read Mein
Kampf!"
"I have," Ernst said.
"Then you know how he blames everything on
Jews. Do you really subscribe to his logic?"
This was dangerous territory! "I prefer not to
comment."
"Smart again! Bigotry has been with us always,
but he made it fashionable. Now it is institutionalized. It is not
merely the Jews; Gypsies too, and others. Anyone who is not a
perfectly pedigreed Arian. Is this fair? Is this sensible?"
"No comment," Ernst repeated, thinking again
of Krista. He could be getting himself into trouble by not
denouncing Dohnanyi, but he had come to know the man well enough to
doubt this. The man was not trying to trap him; the man was
genuinely outraged. The man was also making insidious sense.
"By 1937 I was convinced that the only way to
end this insidious corruption of values was to eliminate its
source. I examined several possible sources of assistance for my
plans before deciding that the Wehrmacht was the only force
capable, and perhaps willing, to destroy Hitler's power."
"You go too far," Ernst said, now quite
nervous. "You know I cannot give even tacit consent to such a
notion."
Dohnanyi glanced sidelong at him. "I speak
merely what I once thought. I am not advocating such a thing now.
You are consenting to nothing."
Ernst was uneasily silent. Could this after
all be a test? Did Canaris doubt him, and was pushing him more
firmly?
"I found it difficult at first to work with
the military," Dohnanyi continued. "I believed that there were
ardent soldiers and ardent civilians, and I was one of the latter.
I condemned the military men for their narrow outlook and cadet-ish
conceptions of honor and patriotism. I was a firm opponent of war
as a means of settling disputes, but not a pacifist. I was an early
advocate of assassination as a means of dealing with Hitler."
"Assassination!" Ernst cried, shocked.
Dohnanyi smiled. "Now you can turn me in and
have me executed. I have spoken treason."
What a dangerous game this man played! "You
have spoken of the way you once felt," Ernst said carefully.
"Obviously you no longer feel that way, as you are now working with
the military in support of Hitler's objectives. At this moment we
are on a mission to facilitate what the Führer desires."
This time Dohnanyi was silent. He knew that he
had gone as far as he could without forcing Ernst to report
him.
The man's contacts got them into Belgium
without trouble. Ernst made his notes. Then they went on to
Denmark, and from there to Norway. It was a successful mission.
Ernst hoped that the man's actions in facilitating Hitler's wishes
belied his treasonous dialogue. That way he, Ernst, was justified
in not reporting him. But it remained extremely nervous business.
***
On the first of April, Canaris was promoted to
full admiral. Thereafter Oster became a general. On the ninth of
that month the invasion of Denmark and Norway proceeded with great
success. Abwehr II distinguished itself. Ernst's work had helped
facilitate the smoothness of the operation, though he was one among
many.
The pace did not abate. On the tenth of May
the German armies invaded Holland, Belgium and France. Once again
Abwehr II received praise for its successes. But it did receive a
setback in Holland. And a more subtle, but worse one in
France.
Because someone had tried to warn France of
the attack. Telecommunications monitoring had discovered attempts
by a German officer to betray the date of the invasion. The French
had been too muddled to respond to the warning appropriately;
otherwise it could have been a serious matter.
Adolf Hitler himself called upon Heydrich and
Canaris to join forces and determine the traitor. Lieutenant
Colonel Joachim Rohleder, head of Abwehr IIIF, which handled
counterespionage, was given command of the investigation. Admiral
Canaris was visibly upset; he was either acting, or he had known
nothing of the betrayal.
Ernst remained clear; he had other business to
attend. But he kept track of it as well as he could, because if
Canaris himself should be implicated, the Admiral would of course
do his best to conceal it. Since he was active in the
investigation, he could probably succeed in such concealment. So
Heydrich wanted to know the truth, and he was depending on Ernst
for it, not the official investigation.
The intercepted telegrams pointed to Müller,
Oster's agent to the Vatican in Italy, as the possible courier of
the treasonous information. However, it took Colonel Rohleder some
time to run this down, and in the interim Müller returned to Rome
and probably removed incriminating evidence and covered his tracks.
Nevertheless, Rohleder pursued the matter competently, and did
determine Müller's guilt. But that was only part of it; Müller was
not one who should have known the date of invasion. Who had been
the source of his information?
Rohleder was both a believer in the
traditional Prusso-German military ideal, and a brilliant
intelligence officer. He was appalled both by this betrayal of the
German homeland, and by its amateurish execution. He satisfied
himself as to the identity of the traitor, and acted in forthright
fashion.
He went to Abwehr headquarters in Berlin and
confronted General Oster in his office. Johannes Dohnanyi was there
too. There he coldly presented his facts and gave his conclusions:
Müller and Oster were the traitors. "Now I am going to present my
findings to Admiral Canaris," he announced. "I invite you to
accompany me, in the interest of defending yourself."
Oster and Dohnanyi protested, but Rohleder was
firm. He did make his report to the Admiral.
But Canaris did not accept the findings. "The
evidence is inconclusive," he told Rohleder. "It is insufficient to
warrant pursuing the matter further."
"But it is
conclusive!" Rohleder protested. "Some evidence was destroyed, but
my documentation indicates--"
"It is not strong enough to allow the good
name of the Abwehr to be soiled," the Admiral said firmly. "Would
you have us all suffer because of such a suspicion?"
"Sir, I insist that this is a blight on the
Abwehr which must be cleansed! It is the Abwehr I am trying to
protect! What is to stop this man from betraying us again?"
"I will order Müller to immediately sever all
contact with the Vatican," Canaris said. And that was it; he
refused to take stronger action.
Rohleder stalked out of the office. He was
incensed at this behavior, and he expressed himself freely to
others in the unit. This was how Ernst learned the details. The
Admiral had to call him back on another day, because there was so
much talk and conjecture about the affair. It was apparent that
Canaris was not going to act against his friend Oster.
But this was the last time Canaris aided
Colonel Oster, and the two were no longer as close as they had
been. After this affair, the Admiral became morose and fatalistic.
He gave no encouragement to any opposition to Hitler, and threw
himself into his duty. But he seemed to have lost his
vitality.
"Oster is guilty, but not Canaris," Ernst
reported to Heydrich. "He covered for his friend, but he was
severely disappointed in his friend, and they are friends no more.
Oster betrayed him personally as well as Germany."
"I am not sure," Heydrich replied. "It may be
that he values his reputation more than he values his Fatherland.
He spared himself embarrassment by covering up."
"Then should he not be relieved instead of
depressed?" Ernst asked. "However, he did
cover up, for whatever reason, so he is guilty too."
"Guilt is not so readily adjudged," Heydrich
said. "I am satisfied neither that he is clean nor that he is
dirty. I need a clearer indication. Stay with it."
Ernst was glad to oblige. He had done what he
had to, and made an honest report, but he liked the Admiral, and
saw how the man had been hurt by his friend's betrayal. It was,
technically, a crime to protect a traitor, but understandable when
the traitor was a friend. The Admiral had done what he believed he
had to, and was suffering grievously for it.
Ernst mused on that. It had become known that
Hitler himself had halted the attack on the British troops massed
at Dunkirk in northern France, allowing them to cross the channel
to Britain and escape destruction. It was said that this was
because Hitler had respect for the British, and wanted to spare
them if he could, hoping they would later choose to join Germany.
But had any other person made that disastrous decision, he would
have been deemed a traitor to the Fatherland. Was Admiral Canaris
different in principle?
Ernst received promotion to Captain Osterecht.
He knew he owed it to Admiral Canaris. That made him feel even more
guilty, ironically.
***
In July, not long after the surrender of
France, a new and interesting project was initiated. It seemed that
Jodl had proposed to the Führer that he undertake a bold new
strategy, taking the rock of Gibraltar and closing the
Mediterranean Sea to the British. Admiral Canaris was intrigued,
for this gave him a chance to work once again in Spain, a country
he loved.
On July 5 Canaris proposed that the assult on
Gibraltar might be accomplished by the Brandenburg Regiment, which
was an elite military commando unit within the Abwehr.
This was placed under consideration.
Meanwhile, it was necessary to reconnoiter the situation. Ernst was
dispatched to the Abwehr post in Algeciras, near Spain's
southernmost point, near the British peninsula of Gibraltar. He
travelad "civilian," with an assumed identity. This made him three
layered, as he thought of it: the lowest layer was Ernst Best, the
middle was Captain Osterecht, and now the top was a vaguely Spanish
civilian.
Indeed, his instructions were to evince no
interest in Gibraltar. He was to conduct himself in the manner of
an officer on vacation. He was not even supposed to report to
Algeciras right away, as if he were routinely checking in, almost
as an afterthought. But on his way he would check the route the
main party was to take, and make note of any potential
problems.
He called Heydrich, because this represented a
change in his locale for a while and he would be out of touch until
he returned to Berlin. "So I will tour the country--I will rent a
car in Spain--and then be at Algeciras to help on the mission. I
will report to you when I return."
"While you are down there, you can do an
incidental chore for me," Heydrich said. "There is an operation in
Spain run by foreigners. They are probably harmless, but if we are
to get involved in Spain, we need to be sure there are not spies
among them. They have centers in Madrid and Barcelona, and contacts
with the British which predate General Franco's victory."
"They could have Republican sympathies," Ernst
said, remembering how other countries had generally favored that
side. "But surely they have been investigated."
"Surely they have--by the Spanish," Heydrich
replied with inherent contempt. "You will not have time to do much,
but you can inspect their operation."
"But with only three days at the most, I will
hardly be able to get started," Ernst protested. "They will know I
am German."
"Of course they will know. You will tell them
you have been sent directly from Adolf Hitler to learn what they
are doing."
Ernst laughed. But it turned out not to be a
joke. Then he realized what Heydrich was up to: Ernst would make an
obvious, clumsy investigation, which would set this group's fears
at rest--while some other agent, hidden from their knowledge, would
do the real investigation. Ernst was a mere decoy. It would be easy
enough for him to do.
"I have a contact in Barcelona," Heydrich
said. "He will provide you with authority to investigate.
"But the Admiral will know that something is
happening."
There was a pause. "True, He is not stupid.
Very well, you will do this mission for him. I will have word sent
down."
Sure enough, soon Canaris summoned Ernst to
his office. "Someone got wind that we had a Spanish-speaking
operative going to Spain," he said, disgruntled. "It turns out that
Himmler himself has a concern there, so Keitel has directed me to
do a spot investigation as long as my people are in the area." He
grimaced. "As if my work counts for nothing! As if my people are to
be borrowed for trifles. But it must be. You must do some work on
your idle time after all."
"I am ready to serve in any capacity, to
further the good of the Fatherland," Ernst replied.
"Go first to Barcelona. There is a contact
there who will provide you with a car and tell you something about
these Quakers there."
"Quakers?" Ernst said, surprised. "I have
heard of them. They are in America." For his American friend Lane
had a Quaker fiancee named Quality Smith. A really nice young
woman.
"They are in Britain too. And in Spain. I have
been aware of their activities. They are harmless. It is a waste of
time. But Himmler may not be denied. Do this job and report to
Algeciras. At least it won't interfere with our real work. It may
even help conceal it."
***
So it was that Ernst took the train through
Vichy France and came to Barcelona, in northeast Spain. There he
made his contact, and got his car. Then he drove to the Quaker
Relief station and introduced himself.
They seemed genuinely perplexed. "We are
merely feeding the hungry children," their director explained. "We
receive supplies from England."
"Show me," Ernst said. "Assign a guide to me,
who will also take me to the field. To see your various routes, who
will explain each part."
"But we have no extra truck to spare! Two are
broken, and we are having trouble getting parts. It is all we can
do to keep up as we are."
Some token of exchange would facilitate
things, Ernst realized. "Perhaps I can be of assistance. I have a
car; your man can ride with me. Oblige me in this, and I will put
in a word for your parts."
They were quick to appreciate his meaning.
They knew how much good or evil the right or wrong word could do.
But there was one more complication. "We can best spare one whose
truck is down. But that is a woman."
Ernst smiled. "Do you think me a barbarian? I
will not molest your woman."
"Of course not," the director said without
complete conviction. "But she may not wish to ride with you, even
so. She is American, though she speaks Spanish, and does not
appreciate Germans."
"Speak plainly," Ernst said. "You know I am a
Nazi SS officer in civilian guise. It is my government she
opposes."
"That is true."
"Introduce us. If she declines, we shall have
to seek some other person."
And so Miss Smith made her appearance.
"Quality!" Ernst exclaimed, astonished.