登陆注册
10484700000004

第4章

An NKVD soldier brought the man into the office. Dimitrov sat behind his desk, the file open. The soldier placed the disheveled and dirty man in SS uniform in a chair in front of the desk. His rank was Obersturmbannführer, a comparatively high rank for someone still so young-looking. He was tall, blond, with cerulean blue eyes deeply embedded behind high cheekbones. Despite his condition, the man exuded arrogance. Cleaned up, he would look like the Aryan ideal.

"So you are an American," Dimitrov said in English.

The man nodded and smiled.

Dimitrov noted that his teeth were surprisingly white, his lips moist, and two dimples appeared at either end of his smile.

"Your English is quite good, General," the man said, as if it were the compliment of a superior.

"And yours equally, Obersturmbannführer," Dimitrov said, offering a soldier-to-soldier greeting. Normally, he would never address an SS officer by his rank. "But then, you are an American."

"By birth, not by choice, General."

Dimitrov studied the man, glanced again at his file, then lifted his face and grinned. He reached into the side pocket of his overcoat and offered him an American cigarette, a Lucky Strike, which had been taken from a high-ranking Luftwaffe officer.

"Well, well, this one has traveled far," said the American, pulling the cigarette from the pack and smelling it.

Dimitrov lighted it, and the American sucked deep and blew out a cloud of smoke.

"Nobody makes a better cigarette," the American said.

Dimitrov turned back to the file.

"Camp Siegfried, was it? Yaphank, Long Island. A summer camp for American Nazis, the German-American Bund."

"You people are good," the American chuckled. "I'll say that. You've burrowed right into the FBI." He shook his head again. "They confiscated the records, that I knew. So you found my name?"

"Franz Mueller."

"Just as I told you. I'm an American citizen. Born in Hoboken, New Jersey. My father was born in Munich. Came to the States in 1913. I was born in 1918."

Dimitrov made a quick calculation. Twenty-seven.

"A quick rise. You might have been a general. Too bad."

The American shrugged indifferently and took another deep draw on the cigarette.

"And your mother?"

"Why must you know the provenance of potential dead meat?"

"You are a pessimist, Mueller."

Mueller and Dimitrov exchanged glances. Then Mueller shrugged his obvious submission.

"I was five when she died in a car crash… some bastard Jew drunk. My father never remarried," Mueller said, blowing out another cloud of smoke, this one in the direction of Dimitrov.

"And now, you are still Franz Mueller. Why did you not change your name?"

Mueller smiled broadly.

"After… well, after…." Mueller hesitated, scratched his neck, and averted his eyes. "I came to Munich in September 1938. My uncle Karl, my father's brother, took me in. He had a son named Franz, two years younger. We were both named after my grandfather."

"Two Franz Muellers," Dimitrov said, amused by the story. "What happened to the other one?"

"Frail bastard. Died of pneumonia that same winter I arrived. I became him. Simple. So, you see, I was born under a lucky star. Besides, I was running, and I needed an authentic identity."

"Running?"

"Why the hell do you think I left America, General?"

Dimitrov observed him closely, admiring his brass.

"I killed two men." He mimed a pistol with his fingers. "No big deal these days, call it a vorspeise. It is now a common gesture."

The man baffled Dimitrov, the way he spoke, so open, so unruffled. He could see why his promotions had been rapid.

"Who were they?"

"Couple of Yids."

Mueller's eyes searched for contact with Dimitrov's, as if he were seeking confirmation of a similar attitude.

Dimitrov cautioned himself. Beria's sister was married to a Jew, and there were Jews of influence in high places. Stalin's late wife was Jewish. Trotsky was Jewish. Ilya Ehrenburg was a powerful Jewish writer, a favorite of Stalin, and his articles were considered fiery and patriotic rallying cries. Not that he mourned the Jews that had been destroyed by Hitler. Indeed, he had secretly marveled at the efficiency and scope of the destruction. Not a bad idea, he had thought it.

Nevertheless, he decided not to pursue the ethnic aspect of Mueller's admission. It seemed irrelevant to his purposes. Besides, a proper SS man was supposed to hate Jews and show them no mercy.

"Were you suspected of these murders?"

"I could never be certain. I didn't stay around long enough to find out."

"Why did you kill them?"

"We had this great spot in Long Island, Camp Siegfried. Trains of brown shirts came every weekend. We had brown uniforms, swastika armbands. We sang Nazi songs. The American flag hung side by side with the Nazi flag. It was great fun. We had rifle practice. I was a crack shot. We started a boycott of all the stores in the area. They had to display this certain label that designated that they were supporters, otherwise we wouldn't go in. The Yids didn't like that and started a counter boycott. There were two ringleaders, the Finkelstein brothers. Finkelstein."

He shook his head and chuckled.

"I followed them home one day and shot them."

He made a gesture as if he were holding a rifle.

"Got them at one hundred yards-bang, bang-right through their Yid heads."

"Surely, there was an investigation?"

"Of course. But the cops, you see, loved us. We knew how to grease the skids. Problem was the Jews called in the FBI. You know the power they have. Control everything in America. Just like in Germany."

Dimitrov made no comment. What lingered in his mind was "crack shot."

"Only my father knew, you see, no one else. This was my own idea. Anyway, when the FBI stuck their nose in, I was shipped to Germany to my father's brother in Munich."

"And the investigation?"

"Came to nothing. I was gone. The rifle was at the bottom of the Atlantic. No witnesses. No prints."

"And you never went back?"

"I got into this, the SS, the real thing. No more playtime like the Bund in America. Hell, General." He seemed suddenly wistful. "…I loved it. We killed so many fuckin' Jews."

He sucked in a deep breath.

"And Russians, Obersturmbannführer," Dimitrov reminded him.

"Hate to say it, but the Führer fucked up. He should have hit England, left Russia alone. Am I right? Look at us. You've got us by the balls. We're over, General, kaput."

He curled his lips in a gesture of disgust.

"So why tell me you're American? What did you hope to gain by such an admission?"

"I'm still alive, aren't I? And here I am sitting in your office."

He lifted the nub of his cigarette, held it up like a specimen.

"You give me American cigarettes. Okay, General, I've had my jollies. Now, I'm in the survival business. I know what NKVD guys do, you're the cleanup squad, the executioners. Hitler is over. The SS was fun while it lasted. They catch Himmler, they'll tear out his balls. Fact is, General, our boys didn't measure up-all that hailing and goose-stepping, all that ritual. I was one good fucking SS man. I dug the whole thing. I loved it. And I still believe, in the end, we will win. But die for it now? I'm not ready. No, dying is not an option at present. You have a plan to keep me alive. I'll buy that. But die for it? That's another matter entirely."

"You call this loyalty, Mueller?"

This was a man after his own heart, Dimitrov thought, a brave, arrogant bastard with a survival instinct.

Mueller sucked in a last puff, then stamped out the nub before it burnt his fingers.

"You got to know when to hold and when to fold. You guys have been making your way across Eastern Europe and now into Deutschland. Here's the way I figure it: It's more than likely your next war will be with the Americans and their European stooges. Wouldn't be such a bad thing if you won. In America, like in Germany, maybe even like in Russia now, the Yids run everything. That's my war. Someday, you guys will get the message and start getting rid of your Kikes, like Hitler. Maybe we didn't finish the job, but someone will. I'm volunteering, General. Besides, it's my only chance to avoid being dead meat."

Dimitrov was astonished by the man's cheek. He admitted that some of the man's slang baffled him, but he had gotten the gist of it.

"Did your father know you were SS?"

"Proud of it. Only he's dead now; I'm a fucking orphan."

"Do you have siblings?"

He shook his head.

"I'm an only child. Poor me." He looked up. "Got another cigarette?"

Dimitrov offered him another cigarette from the pack of Lucky Strikes and lit it.

"And your uncle? Was there an aunt?"

"They're still in Munich."

Dimitrov's mind began to race with ideas and possibilities.

"Women? A wife? A sweetheart? Children?"

Mueller smiled.

"I've had my fair share," he chuckled. "Nothing permanent. I've been lucky." He inhaled and looked at his cigarette ash. "I hear your troops have fucked their way across the Continent."

It sounded to Dimitrov like an obvious accusation. He ignored it. He was on another track.

"Let me ask you, Mueller. Would you go back to America?"

Mueller's eyes narrowed.

Dimitrov noted a flicker of optimistic expectation.

"Why ask? You know the answer." He paused. "How would you get me there? You know, without complications."

"Never mind."

"What's the catch?"

"I don't understand."

"Quid pro quo, General. There's no free lunch."

Again Dimitrov was confused by the slang. Mueller apparently understood.

"I mean, what do I have to do?"

"I don't know, perhaps you'd be too much of a risk."

"Risk?" Mueller reflected for a moment. "I get it. I go back to America to do a job for you."

"Something like that."

Dimitrov observed him closely.

"Of course, you could be the wrong choice."

"Your call, General. I'm game if you are."

"Game?"

"American talk," Mueller said. "You see I'm tailor-made to pass. I'm the real thing."

At that moment, a sharp knock sounded on the office door.

"Yes?" Dimitrov called.

A voice could be heard beyond the door: "The division awaits orders, comrade."

"Give the order to move them out. I will follow shortly."

Dimitrov got up from behind his desk and signaled to the American.

"Come with me, Mueller."

They moved through the dank, brick-lined corridors, and then to a stairwell, followed by four Russian soldiers with NKVD markings holding automatic weapons. Dimitrov led them to a large holding cell; inside were the forty-odd SS officers. They were seated, packed together with their hands tied behind their backs. The room stunk of feces and urine.

"What a bunch of pigs," Dimitrov said.

Mueller didn't answer, and his face's expression seemed neutral and indifferent.

"Hand this man your weapon," Dimitrov ordered one of the Russian soldiers.

He looked momentarily confused but handed the weapon to Mueller.

"You know how this works?" Dimitrov asked.

"My expertise, General."

"Shoot them, Mueller," Dimitrov ordered, pointing with his chin. "Shoot your SS shit comrades."

Mueller smiled and, without hesitation, sprayed the occupants of the cell with bullets. The men screamed and blood began to puddle on the floor. When the bullets ran out and some men were still alive, Dimitrov ordered the remaining soldier to hand over his weapon. Without missing a beat, Mueller continued the killing spree. Some men were still alive, writhing in pain.

Mueller carefully finished them off.

"Now them," Dimitrov said, pointing with his chin at the two NKVD soldiers.

Mueller promptly shot them both then threw the weapons on the floor, now rust-colored, pooling with blood.

"Like a Coney Island shooting gallery," Mueller muttered, as they moved into the corridor, tracking bloodstains on the stone floor. "Hell, they weren't worth shit. We were supposed to win."

This man has possibilities, Dimitrov thought. He would discuss it with Beria.

"Did I pass, General?"

"Not yet, Obersturmbannführer, not yet."

同类推荐
  • Kaffe Fassett: Dreaming in Color
  • Let's Get This Party Started

    Let's Get This Party Started

    Let's Get This Party Started is a guide to more than 15 parties you can throw for your kids that are inexpensive, wildly inventive, and fun. Each party includes two crafts, one game, and one recipeall of which you can put together with your child. Author Soleil Moon Frye also offers countless tips and ideas that will inspire you. Among the thematic parties featured in the book are the fairy party, the pirate party, the movie-on-the-lawn party, the camp party, the '80s party, the rainbow party, the Halloween party, the luau, and many more, captured in gorgeous and colorful images by Frye's brother, photographer Meeno. Timely and fun, this book is a must-have for parents who love entertaining with their kids. Praise for Let's Get This Party Started: Quality children's party books are high in demand, so this may be a welcome resource for families with young children … Recommended."Library Journal
  • Hebrew Myths

    Hebrew Myths

    This is a comprehensive look at the stories that make up the Old Testament and the Jewish religion, including the folk tales, apocryphal texts, midrashes, and other little-known documents that the Old Testament and the Torah do not include. In this exhaustive study, Robert graves provides a fascinating account of pre-Biblical texts that have been censored, suppressed, and hidden for centuries, and which now emerge to give us a clearer view of Hebrew myth and religion than ever.Venerable classicist and historian Robert Graves recounts the ancient Hebrew stories, both obscure and familiar, with a rich sense of storytelling, culture, and spirituality. This book is sure to be riveting to students of Jewish or Judeo-Christian history, culture, and religion.
  • The Children's Hospital
  • Count Belisarius

    Count Belisarius

    Threatened by invaders on all sides, the Roman Empire in the sixth century fought to maintain its borders. Leading its defense was the Byzantine general Belisarius, a man who earned the grudging respect of his enemies, and who rose to become the Emperor Justinian's greatest military leader.Loosely based on Procopius' History of the Justinian Wars and Secret History, this novel tells the general's story through the eyes of Eugenius, a eunuch and servant to the general's wife. It presents a compelling portrait of a man bound by a strict code of honor and unrelenting loyalty to an emperor who is intelligent but flawed, and whose decisions bring him to a tragic end. Eminent historical novelist and classicist Robert Graves presents a vivid account of a time in history both dissolute and violent, and demonstrates one again his mastery of this historical period.
热门推荐
  • 李世民管理日志

    李世民管理日志

    唐太宗李世民作为魏徵、王硅、房玄龄、杜如晦等一班名臣贤士的“老板”,是如何知人善用、运用团队力量共同奠定“贞观之治”的盛世之基?面对百废……
  • 数风流人物

    数风流人物

    1950年代初期,台湾特务机关窃取了我正在研制的导弹。市公安局二处反间谍人员复晴以敏锐的直觉和超凡的勇气,识破敌特的一个又一个圈套。  当她就要接近敌特组织的核心秘密时,她遇上了一个不仅涉及到与她自己的感情和命运相关,更与国民党军统机关十多年策划的恶毒阴险相关的难题……
  • 九圣斩仙图

    九圣斩仙图

    凡俗中的一粒尘,竟最终激起了万界浩劫,超凡入圣的旅途中,一次又一次被命运推上风口浪尖,身不由己。一个一心追求平凡的人,却最终以亘古未有的非凡落幕,欣然,还是苦涩,谁知,谁懂,任谁评说。。。
  • 多舛人生

    多舛人生

    司马鹭坐在镜前,仔细端详着自己与年龄不符、灰暗无生气的脸,丈夫任义伟恶毒刻薄的话又在耳边响起:“你看看你,成什么样子?十足的黄脸婆!哪个男人会对你有兴趣?
  • 月球岩石

    月球岩石

    高磊醒来的时候,研究所主管鲁宾斯仰面躺在三米外,身体底下流出一大摊暗红色液体。最初半分钟,高磊没明白是怎么回事,他的脑袋隐隐作痛,意识麻木呆滞,大概几小时前喝下的一整瓶威士忌还在起作用。他抬起胳膊抓住实验台的边角,勉力撑起身子,晃晃悠悠走到鲁宾斯身边,茫然观看。皮鞋踩在暗红色液体上,留下鲜明的脚印。
  • 末世凡仙录之前传

    末世凡仙录之前传

    我本世间一凡人,路遇天下不平事。谁说主角一定无敌,谁说路人不能成功。我不是主角,但我是故事里的主角……
  • 腹黑天王的小甜甜

    腹黑天王的小甜甜

    小时候的安然喜欢初淡之,因为他秀色可餐,老想着怎么能尝尝味道。等大了,人主动凑上来,她避之不及。他笑:“不想尝尝我是什么味道了?”安然舔了舔唇,还是禁不住诱惑,鬼使神差地点了点头:“……想。”于是她成了全民公敌。在外她对初淡之实行三个不,不认识,不清楚,不知道。直到有一次,前一秒还在电视屏幕里的人,下一秒众目睽睽下走到她面前,身旁的朋友呆住了,安然也呆住,直到面前的人向她伸出手来。“回家了。”“……”
  • 中学生必读的精彩作文(下)

    中学生必读的精彩作文(下)

    作文是经过人的思想考虑和语言组织,通过文字来表达一个主题意义的记叙方法。对于培养写作能力与思维能力有非常好的效果。本书精选了部分中学生的作文,以阅读来提高中学生的作文水平,加强文字表达能力,对于提高中学作文写作有很好的帮助。
  • 黑帮白道

    黑帮白道

    江山市黑恶势力猖獗。公安局长贺飞任职后,面对江山市错综复杂的社会矛盾,面对黑恶势力犯罪集团的严峻挑战,面对来自政界的黑恶势力集团保护伞的强大压力,他用自己的智慧和顽强的毅力勇敢地挺立起来,与肥姐儿黑社会犯罪集团和各种势力展开了生死的较量。较量中,贺飞用苦肉计把自己的信服弟兄打入黑社会犯罪集团内部,又利用王建超、冯路明等各色警界人物从不同角度对肥姐儿黑社会犯罪集团发动凌厉的攻势,最终,正义战胜了邪恶,以肥姐儿黑社会犯罪集团被成功打掉,身居高位的黑恶势力的保护伞现出了原形。 斗争中,敌中有我、我中有敌,不仅肥姐儿没有识破警方的卧底,而且贺飞本人对警察队伍里谁是内鬼也感到扑朔迷离难以把握……
  • 快穿之渣女从良记

    快穿之渣女从良记

    日更(1v1,虐渣向或攻略向,软萌易推倒女主)身为渣女,唯一的目的就是拆CP。看到秀恩爱,不满?拆!选秀遭阻,被同行挤兑?拆!家庭巨变,姐妹反目?拆。君妍说,身为渣女,这世上就没有我做不到的事……某男:有,那就是攻略我!读者群:126217588