Order of Battle (9 page)

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Authors: Ib Melchior

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BOOK: Order of Battle
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Von Eckdorf was still smarting from Krueger’s insolence. He was scowling, tight-lipped, as he marched down the broad corridor. Soldiers and civilians were streaming back and forth in an unceasing flow of activity. The Werewolf school was closing down, preparing to go underground. Von Eckdorf slowly relaxed. That’s why he was here, after all. To observe. To calculate and evaluate. And to report. And that’s exactly what he would do. Accurately. Systematically. And with orderly precision. He felt better. He was on familiar ground.

The two men passed a doorway. Both the heavy carved oak doors stood wide open. Von Eckdorf glanced inside. It was the great hall of arms. An expanse of carved oak paneling; long, narrow, deep-set windows; two rows of old, colorful banners heavy with dust hanging under the opulently painted ceiling; a huge rectangular area of a lighter color on one stone wall, where once a priceless tapestry must have hung. The hall was empty, except for two men burning papers and documents at a blazing fire in a huge walk-in fireplace at the far end.

Von Eckdorf strode into the hall and walked to the fireplace. Willi followed. He said nothing. He’d decided to keep quiet until the Reichsamtsleiter spoke to him. Then play it by ear.

One of the men at the fireplace took a large sheet of cardboard from a pile on the floor. He bent it in half and threw it on the fire. He reached for another. Von Eckdorf held out his hand.

“Let me see it,” he ordered.

The man glanced quickly at Willi. Willi nodded. The man handed the cardboard to Von Eckdorf.


Bitte.”

Von Eckdorf turned it over. There were words printed on it:

RISE
ROSE
RISEN
RUN
RAN
RUN
SAY
SAID
SAID
SEE
SAW
SEEN
SEEK
SOUGHT
SOUGHT
SELL
SOLD
SOLD
SEND
SENT
SENT
SET
SET
SET
SHAKE
SHOOK
SHAKEN
SHALL
SHOULD
SHOULD
SHED
SHED
SHED
SHINE
SHONE
SHONE
SHOOT
SHOT
SHOT
SHOW
SHOWED
SHOWN
SHRINK
SHRANK
SHRUNK
SHUT
SHUT
SHUT
SING
SANG
SUNG
SINK
SANK
SUNK
SIT
SAT
SAT
SLAY
SLEW
SLAIN

He looked questioningly at Willi.

“What is this?” he asked.

“It’s from our classes in English, Herr Reichsamtsleiter,’’ Willi explained. “A lesson in grammar. The members of our intelligence group speak excellent English.”


So.”

Von Eckdorf threw the chart aside. With his foot he spread apart the others in the pile on the floor. He cocked his head to study a particularly colorful one. It showed the insignia of U.S. Army noncoms and officers with the corresponding ranks written in English and German. He was pleased. He approved of the charts. Orderly. He marched from the hall.

The two men reentered the corridor. A group of young girls walked past. Every one was pretty, with the natural, healthy, shiningly clean look of the German girl. They were all dressed in attractive dirndl dresses with provocative necklines, and they all carried a small piece of civilian luggage. Von Eckdorf and Willi watched them go by. Despite their charm and femininity they moved with precise military bearing.

Von Eckdorf looked inquiringly at Willi.

“They’re trained office workers, Herr von Eckdorf—in English. We expect they will work in American military government offices.” Willi grinned. “And they’ll make good girl friends for the Amis!”

“I see.’”

Von Eckdorf frowned. He did not entirely agree with that sort of thing. Sacrifices had to be made, of course, but was it quite necessary to—to defile German womanhood in that way?

Willi pointed to a bulletin board on the wall.

“There’s a list of the courses in English office work, Herr Reichsamtsleiter,” he said. “It might give you an idea of what we’ve been doing along those lines.”

Von Eckdorf turned to the bulletin board. The courses seemed well planned. Complete. He studied the list.

Willi stared after the girls disappearing down the crowded corridor. Even from behind they made an appealing sight. Especially the little blonde, who always looked at him with such brazen appraisal.

Gerti, he thought. Gerti Meissner. That’s who she looks like. The same round little ass moving so deliciously under the skirt. What was it? Two years ago? Almost. He’d still be in officers’ school.

He wondered about Gerti. And his son. He was sure it was a son.

He didn’t often think back to Bodenheim. He never had made up his mind about it—whether to be proud of it or regret it. He let his thoughts drift back. . . .

Willi was uneasy when his commanding officer at the officers’ training school summoned him to his office. He stood stiffly at attention. The CO had his service records on the desk before him. He was pleased with them, he said. Willi Richter was just the sort of young German the Third Reich wanted. Man to man he confided in Willi. They’d investigated his personal background thoroughly; his ancestry—all the way back to the eighteenth century, he told him; his entire medical history. They’d made certain he was of healthy, pure Aryan stock. And then he put the question to him. Would he like to volunteer to spend two weeks at Bodenheim?

It was quite a shock to Willi. Actually to be asked! He was excited. He knew about places like Bodenheim. They used to kid about them in the barracks. Stud farms, some of the men called them. There were several of them scattered through Germany, usually hidden away in the most secluded and beautiful surroundings. Bodenheim in the Schwäbische Alb near Stuttgart was such a place. A
Lebensborn
establishment—“Source of Life.”

Willi’s CO gave him the whole story. The Third Reich had long realized the vital necessity of keeping the German race pure. If you mated a brood mare of pure stock with a pure-blooded stallion the issue would be thoroughbred. It had something to do with chromosomes and things like that, which carried the hereditary traits, he explained. Germany needed such “thoroughbreds.” Perfect German children produced by two racially pure human beings of unmixed Aryan blood. A new race—the first generation of pure Aryans, pure Nazis—created in the womb for the Fatherland! In the
Lebensborn
the Führer made it possible. Here young German girls selected for their perfect Nordic traits were made available for young men of equally pure Aryan stock. There were no responsibilities. No obligations. The resulting offspring belonged to the Third Reich!

Willi felt vaguely disturbed by the clinical explanations and analogies, but his discomfort was easily swamped by his pride in having been selected. And the excitement. It was like a dream come true. Two weeks of bed calisthenics! he thought with enthusiastic anticipation. And at the state’s expense!

By the time Willi reached Bodenheim some of his high excitement had turned to apprehension. He wondered what he’d let himself in for.

Bodenheim was nestled in a wooded valley in the mountains. It was apparently a small village that had been taken over entirely by the
Lebensborn.
There was much new construction among the old houses. The headquarters of the establishment was in the former guest lodge, the only large building.

Willi felt the cold, impersonal atmosphere of the place. It clamped a further damper on his waning enthusiasm. A sharp-faced, indifferent woman in the uniform of a BDM noncom took his orders and filled out his card. Apparently the place was run by the Bund Deutscher Mädel—the female counterpart of the Hitler Youth. Probably most of the girls were BDM. He looked around curiously. He hadn’t seen any of his future bedmates yet.

He was assigned to a room in a little house close to the lodge. He’d stay there two weeks. It would be the scene of all his activities.

And then once more the inevitable medical examination.

When the doctor, an SS Stabsarzt, was finished with him, he was turned over to a hospital orderly, a coarse, disagreeable fellow with an unpleasant, perpetual smirk. Maybe he’s jealous because he’s not getting any, Willi thought with amusement. It would be a hell of a thing in a place of plenty like this! The man took a blood sample and a urine specimen from him for analysis.

Blood and urine, Willi thought. Blood and urine—the measures of a man!

Then the orderly handed him a little beaker already labeled with his name.

“Here,” he said “Give me a specimen of your semen.”

Semen? Willi looked at the man, perplexed. Suddenly understanding flooded him. He felt the blood rising on his neck. Semen! But how? How would he get it? Uncertainly he looked at the orderly.

“Well, you can’t piss it out,” the man snapped impatiently. “Jerk off!”

Willi stood rooted to the spot. The orderly nodded toward a door.

“In there. It’s all yours.” He leered at Willi. “There’s a couple of girlie magazines in there. Might help!”

Willi walked into the little examination chamber. He closed the door behind him. There was no lock. He sat down. He knew he couldn’t do it. Not on command. The whole thing was impossible. He couldn’t even get a hard on.

He squirmed on the chair. I’ve got to try, at least, he thought. He fumbled his pants open. Christ, he thought. No good. All he could think about was that obnoxious orderly right outside.

He saw the magazines lying on a glass-top table. Well, anyway, they’ve thought of everything, he mused. He picked up a magazine. He started to thumb through it. The pictures were fantastic. Not merely suggestive. Graphic. The women were delectable. Sexy as hell! Willi looked closer. He became interested. To his surprise he suddenly felt the familiar swelling in his groin. He looked down. I’ll be damned, he thought.

Tentatively he put his hand down. Gently he stroked. He chose a picture of a voluptuous blonde in a transparent negligee lying invitingly on a sofa, and concentrated on her. After a short while he was actually enjoying himself.

It took him much less time than he’d thought, before he had the specimen in his beaker for the orderly. He looked at it curiously. He held it up to the light. He’d never really examined the stuff before. Millions of perfect little Aryans, he thought wryly. Half of them anyway.

He buttoned himself up. Now that it was all over he felt vaguely ashamed, degraded. It was a hell of a thing to have to do for one’s country!

He saw the girl in the social hall at the lodge the next evening. She was standing by herself at the little juice bar sipping a lemonade. She looked very young—and somehow vulnerable. He thought she was lovely. His tests had all been positive—or was it negative? Anyway, he had been instructed to mingle and get acquainted. The quicker and the more intimately the better.

He started over to the bar, making his way through the couples dancing to the gramophone music. There were at least twenty couples on the dance floor; others were sitting around in the comfortable room, talking. The young men were all in uniform. Most of them were SS, but there were uniforms from every branch of the armed forces. The girls wore a variety of attractive dresses.

As Willi neared the bar, a young man in a Luftwaffe uniform stopped and spoke to the girl.

Willi felt a pang of anxiety. Would she go with him? He was surprised at the intensity of his feeling. He hadn’t even met the girl yet. But she shook her head, and the Luftwaffe soldier walked away.

Her name was Gerti Meissner. She came from Nürnberg. She was just eighteen.

They were attracted to one another right away. Months of getting acquainted, of dating, of discovering each other seemed to be telescoped into a few hours. Of necessity, of course. But they chose to ignore that.

It was late. Many of the couples had left the hall. Willi and Gerti were dancing. He held the girl close. She was soft and yielding in his arms. It had happened so fast, he thought, but he knew she was the one he wanted. He thought how it would be with her. He dwelt on it. He felt his excitement grow. He held her tightly. He couldn’t help himself. His fantasies, the soft girl body pressed against him, controlled him. He felt the swelling, the rising hardness. Suddenly he was frightened. They were so close. She would feel it against her. He pulled away a little, but Gerti moved to him. She held on to him, desperately. He could feel her soft thigh between his legs. He knew she must be aware of his erection. And he strained against her.

She looked up at him. Her eyes were big.

“Willi,” she said softly. “You will be the first. Ever.”

Hand in hand they walked from the hall. They were crossing the reception foyer, when a strident voice called to them.

“You there! Just a minute!”

It was the sharp-faced BDM noncom. She came up to them. She glared at Willi.

“Are you booking her?” she asked.

Willi felt himself go cold. “Yes.”

“Let me see your card,” the woman ordered. “Yours, too, girl.”

Dumbly they handed her their cards.

“Haven’t you read the instructions?” the woman asked irritably. “You can’t just walk out of here and hop into bed without going through the proper procedure!” She turned and marched toward her desk. “Come here!”

Automatically Willi and Gerti followed her.

“Your cards have to be stamped.” With a flourish she banged an official-looking rubber stamp on each of their cards. Then she quickly wrote in a large brown ledger. “The union has to be recorded.” She looked at Gerti. “
She
has to be checked out of the dormitory.”

She fixed Willi with a baleful eye.

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