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Authors: Adena
Hambledon’s grim face relaxed a little, but he merely said “Go on” again.
“Though I must admit, sir, that all our efforts to decipher the code he uses have so far
failed completely.”
“I am glad I still retain a few secrets from my domestic staff,” said Hambledon.
“Yes, sir, certainly. On the other hand, there are a few things I could perhaps tell you, if
you would permit me. For example, is Your Excellency aware that you are followed wherever
you go by the orders of Herr Goebbels?”
“I am not altogether surprised.”
“There are two men outside the house now, sir, waiting in case you should go out again
this evening.”
“Do you know how long this has been going on?”
“I could not say precisely, sir, but it was shortly before you went to see that forger to get
the label for Herr Ogilvie’s portable gramophone.”
“So you know that too,” said Hambledon.
“Yes, sir. The man is one of our most useful, if not one of our most respected, members.
Yes,” said Franz thoughtfully, “it was just before that, about the time when Herr Reck took up
photography.”
“You know, Franz, I’m awfully sorry, but I’m afraid I shall have to have you painlessly
destroyed—as painlessly as possible. You know too much, you must see that.”
“On the contrary, sir, it is precisely because I know so much—not only about you—that I
could be of use to you.”
“What do you mean by ‘not only about me’?”
“To answer that, sir, I must tell you something about the Freedom League. When the
Nazi Party first received any notable measure of public support, some of us who remembered an
earlier Germany were not favourably impressed, and a careful study of
Mein Kampf
confirmed
us in our opinions. For after all, sir, it is all set down there, what he meant to do and how he
meant to do it, the only mystery is why so many people are surprised at what he does. Why did
they not simply believe him? Well, we did, and we regarded the future with such forebodings
that we formed a League to protect what we foresaw would be most endangered, our personal
freedom. That was in 1924, and since then, with the growth of the Nazi Party, the Freedom
League has also grown till now there are thousands upon thousands of us. It is a lowly and
inconspicuous organization, sir, we have no mass meetings and we carry no banners, but we do a
lot of good work-literally,” added Franz with a smile. “The ivy is an inconspicuous plant, sir, but
it has been known to pull down the forest oak.”
“Please go on,” said Hambledon, “I am most interested.”
“We thought you would be, sir. I may say that if you had not brought about this
éclaircissement
, I should shortly have initiated it myself. To return to the Freedom League. We
decided that it was necessary to install ourselves into positions of confidence in the Party without
having to take any share in its iniquities, so as most of us had fairly good manners and knew how
things ought to be done-I was a Captain of Uhlans myself—we readily became butlers, valets
and so forth. We were fortunate in obtaining situations with most of the Party leaders, I came to
you because from the earliest days it was evident that your outstanding capabilities and integrity
of character would carry you far—”
“Stop a minute,” said Hambledon, “you’re making my head ache. Do you mean to say
you have a whole network of-of supervision running through the Nazi Party?”
“Among all the more important members, sir.”
“And that you planted yourself on me on purpose to—er—supervise me?”
“Yes, sir. Of course, until recent years I thought you were as convinced a Nazi as any of
them, but when I discovered you were not, I was only all the more interested.”
“Naturally. Er-sit down, Captain—”
“Thank you,” said Franz, but not supplying his name. “I think perhaps I’d better not,
someone might come in. Thanks all the same, I appreciate that.”
“Tell me, who do you think I am?”
“To tell you the truth, I haven’t the faintest idea and I’ve never been able to find out. It
annoys me—it is a failure on my part,” said the man with a frank smile. “I think, however, that
you love Germany as we do, and loathe the Nazis as we do. We have seen you defending the
cause of simple, honest people against tyranny in power, that is our aim also. We mean to pull
down this foul regime which is making the name of Germany a stench in the nostrils of decent
men of all nations, and we will set up in its place a Government founded on justice, humanity
and peace.”
“If you succeed,” said Hambledon carefully, “you will no doubt receive a large measure
of support from, as you say, decent men everywhere.”
“We shall want a new President,” said Franz, his eyes kindling with the visions his mind
beheld, “a man who can be trusted, whose instincts are sound, whose heart is upright, whose
word is his bond.”
“Such men are scarce, Franz.”
“I think I know of one, sir. I have served him for some time and I should be glad, if he
would rescue Germany, to serve him till I died.”
Franz clicked his heels, bowed to Hambledon, and marched out of the room before his
master could find words to reply.
“Good Lord,” said the horrified Hambledon when he was alone, “that settles it. I must get
out, I couldn’t stand that. President—what a frightful thought. Franz looks quite capable of it—
oh, gosh! No more beautiful blondes, and I should have to live on cabbage. This is where I go
home.”
Though the days passed by without any overt attack upon Hambledon, he was always
aware of being watched and followed, and the thought of his fingerprints, neatly docketed and
filed, waiting in their proper place for Goebbels to ask for them, made him feel sick. The neatest
way to solve the problem would be simply to substitute somebody else’s fingerprints for his own,
but he had not the technical ability to do this, as he told Reck. “I don’t even know how they
photograph the dam’ things,” he said irritably. “They powder them, don’t they? What with?
Besides, how do they file them? Alphabetically, between Brain and Brawn?”
“No,” said Reck, “I don’t think so. I think they’re classified according to pattern, as it
were.”
“That’s what I’m afraid of. If I got the wrong sort of loops into that place, the experts
would spot it at once. That is, supposing I could get hold of it, or having got it could fake an
imitation. Besides, there may be two copies under a sort of cross-reference system. I wish I’d
taken an intelligent interest in the business earlier, I daren’t now. I only used them when
necessary and asked not how nor why. I’d like to plant a bomb in the place, but there are
technical difficulties even in such a simple scheme as that. Now Bill would have persuaded
Goebbels that it was in the Nazi interest to have the records destroyed, and Goebbels would have
beamed on him and asked him to attend to it himself.”
“Ask Franz to attend to it,” suggested Reck lazily.
Tommy Hambledon looked at him much as Balaam must have looked at his ass, and
walked thoughtfully away.
The next evening, when Franz came into the study as usual to switch on lights and draw
curtains, Hambledon said: “By the way, I have no desire to meddle in any way with that
organization of yours, but I did hear a piece of news to-day which might interest you.”
“Indeed, sir?”
“Your emissaries scattered quite a large number of leaflets about in most of the larger
towns of Germany some time recently.”
“That is so, sir, and not one of the distributors was caught in the act.”
“No, Franz, but most of ’em left their fingerprints behind.”
“I warned them,” said Franz anxiously, “to be careful about that—having been careless
myself.”
“Yes, but you can’t separate papers in the dark with gloves on. The fingerprints have
been collected and filed, Franz, and if any one of them can be identified he will either be dropped
on and persuaded to talk, or watched to see who his contacts are.” This happened to be true,
which, as Hambledon remarked to Reck, was convenient, because he’d probably have said it
anyway. “I can’t do anything, this is the Gestapo’s work.”
“It looks as though some steps should be taken in the matter, sir.”
“I leave it to you, Franz, with the utmost confidence,” said Tommy blandly.
Franz fidgeted about the room for some moments. “It would be very wrong, sir, of me
even to wonder what advice you would give.”
“It would be positively immoral of me to offer any,” said his master.
“Yes, sir. Would it be inconvenient to you, sir, if I were to go out for an hour to-morrow
afternoon? It is not my usual day.”
“Not at all, Franz, by all means go. There is a very exciting film being shown at some of
the cinemas, it is called, I think, ‘Flames of Desire,’ or some such title.”
“Sir?” said the surprised servant.
“It is, of course, well known to everyone that photographic records are inflammable,”
said Tommy patiently.
A slow smile spread across Franz’s face, and he left the room without replying.
A few days later Franz came to Hambledon and said without preamble, “There are certain
men, sir, who are prepared to burn the fingerprint records in possession of the Government, if
they could obtain access to the building.”
“It so happens,” said Hambledon, “that I know the place fairly well. At night it is, of
course, always locked up and the night caretaker will not open to anyone. If any person in
authority should want to turn up a record after the office shuts for the night, he would have to go
with one of the three principal heads of Departments, who would take him there, let him in with
his own key, stand over him while he transacted his business, and convey him out again. The
outer doors have an ordinary lock which opens by turning a handle like any sitting-room door,
and in addition, a Yale lock or something very like it. You know, it locks itself automatically
when you pull the door shut after you and you can’t open it again unless you have a key.”
“Are the doors locked all day, sir?”
“No, the catch of the spring lock is held back by a snib, which you slide up to put the lock
out of action and pull down again to release the catch. By day, the lock is not working, it’s only
after office hours that it is used.”
“If one could get—” began Franz, but Hambledon interrupted him.
“So you see, if one night someone were to come out of the door and absent-mindedly slip
up the snib as he went, any man who happened to be outside at the time could merely turn the
handle and walk in.”
Franz nodded eagerly. “And the night caretaker?”
“He’s a very decent old fellow named Reinhardt, a veteran of the war, a Saxon; he fought
at Ypres in ’16, he tells me. Reinhardt must be got out of the way somehow.”
“If the gentleman who was going home would send him for a taxi,” suggested Franz.
“Gentlemen,” corrected Hambledon. “There will be two of them, because one will be an
official with a key.”
“Of course, you said so just now. If Reinhardt were sent for a taxi, the taxi would come.”
Hambledon nodded. “To-day is Tuesday. Friday night about 10 p.m.? The side door, not
the main entrance.”
“Yes, sir,” said Franz, suddenly becoming the servant again. “Certainly, sir. Very good,
sir.”
“I must really apologize,” said Hambledon to the Records official, “for dragging you
away from your family like this. A man should have his evenings undisturbed.”
“Not at all, Herr Polizei Oberhaupt. Besides being my duty, it is a pleasure to serve the
Herr.”
“You are too kind,” said Hambledon, as the other man put his key in the lock. “I only
heard to-night that this man has been traced, and tomorrow—to-morrow is Saturday, is it not?-he
is going to Holland and it will be too late. Good evening, Reinhardt.”
“Why do you not arrest him at once just in case?”
“It is not a political offence,” explained Hambledon, “it is a case of private blackmail, a
crime which I hold in such abhorrence, Herr Gerhardt, that I would not even accuse a man of it
unless I were morally sure of his guilt.”
“It is evident that the Herr has the scales of justice implanted in his soul,” said Gerhardt
with poetic, but confused, metaphor. “The dossier you require should be in this folder—here it
is.”
Hambledon spent some time making notes from the dossier of a gentleman who had
indeed been convicted of blackmail in the past, and then glanced at his watch to discover to his
horror that it was five minutes past ten.
“I have completely ruined your evening,” he said. “What will Frau Gerhardt say to me?
On such a night, too, there is rain beating the windows again. I’ll send Reinhardt for a taxi and
drop you at your house on my way home. Reinhardt! Are you there? Oh, get me a taxi, would
you?”
“I beg the Herr Polizei Oberhaupt not to inconvenience himself—”
“It is no inconvenience, it is a pleasure—”
“The Herr is too polite—”
“Besides, I owe you a little return—”
“On one condition, then, that the Herr will deign to come in and take a little something.
Frau Gerhardt will remember the honour all her life.”
“I shall be glad to make my peace with the gracious Frau,” said Hambledon, who had the