Read The Death's Head Chess Club Online
Authors: John Donoghue
âGestapo.'
Sullenly, the prisoners glared at their tormentors.
âWe're looking for the Watchmaker. We were told he is in this block. Where is he?'
Neither prisoner spoke.
The Gestapo man pulled a cosh from his pocket and slammed it onto a table. âWe don't want to make life difficult for you. Just tell us where he is.'
The prisoners maintained their silence.
This time the cosh was waved beneath the chin of one of them. âOnly we haven't got too much time, see?'
âHe's in the Buna
Werke
,' one of the prisoners said. âThey're all in the Buna
Werke
. They'll be back tonight.'
There were chairs around the table. The Gestapo men settled themselves down to wait. âWhat have you got to eat?' one asked.
The prisoners shook their heads. âNothing. We had the soup ration at noon. There's nothing now until after roll call.'
âShit,' the Gestapo man said. âI'm fucking starving.'
Eidenmüller took the road from the
Stammlager
towards OÅwiÄcim. Meissner was deep in thought. At length he said, âThis friend of yours, Hoven â do you trust him?'
âI don't really know him that well, sir. He doesn't like Hustek, I know that much. He's frightened of him.' Meissner went back to his thoughts. âWhat are we going to do, sir? If Hustek gets hold of the Watchmaker, we'll never see him again.'
âYes, I know that,' Meissner said irritably, âbut I don't know what we're going to do. I'm trying to think of something.'
By the time they got to Monowitz, a plan was starting to form. The problem was one of organization. There was no way a prisoner could be hidden for more than a few hours: the twice-daily roll call would immediately reveal he was missing. No, if Hustek wanted the Watchmaker he would find a way to get him.
Hustek had to be distracted by something bigger.
When they arrived they went straight to Hoven's office. âShut the door,' Meissner ordered. The Unterscharführer looked alarmed.
âWhat can I do for you, sir?'
âWhere do you stand regarding the Watchmaker?' Meissner asked.
âThe Watchmaker? I don't know what you mean, sir.'
âHustek's men have come for him. You know what that means.'
âYes, sir.'
âDo you want to let Hustek get him? Or do you want to stop him?'
âYes, sir. I mean, no, I don't want that bastard to get his hands on him. But what can I do?'
âIt's very simple. Forget you ever saw Hustek's men. They were never here. Understood?'
Understanding registered on the Unterscharführer's face.
âButâ'
âNo buts, Unterscharführer. Just stick to your story. You never saw them. If you keep to that you'll be safe. If you waver, you're a dead man.'
The opportunity to get back at Hustek beckoned. It was now or never. âYes, sir. I never saw anyone, sir.'
âWhat next, sir?' Eidenmüller asked, when they were outside again.
âInto the camp. We need to find Brack.'
Brack was near the kitchens, watching a couple of prisoners tending the vegetable plot. The harvest looked bountiful: beans, tomatoes and cucumbers â luxuries the prisoners could only dream of.
Brack pulled himself to attention when he saw Meissner.
âDon't bother,' Meissner said, âthis isn't a formal visit, and you haven't seen us. Is there anywhere we can talk privately?'
Brack smiled and pointed to a nearby block. âIn there. I'll see you in five minutes.'
Brack had sent them to the camp brothel. It was empty. Meissner explained the situation, adding, âFor all we know, Hustek's men are in your block right now.'
Brack's dream of a fortune amassed in a Swiss bank started to dissolve. His face creased into an angry frown. âHustek is a pig. He won't get away with this. Not if I can help it.'
âI didn't know you knew Hustek,' Eidenmüller said.
âOh, yeah, I know him all right. I've got a score or two to settle with Hustek.'
Block 27 was on the northern perimeter of the camp, next to the wire.
2
It took little time for Brack to gather a few cronies, though Widmann was
nowhere to be found. In ones and twos they met behind the block, hidden from the guard towers.
âRight,' Brack said. âEverybody ready?' He waited for everyone to show a weapon. âNo knives, remember. And no messing about. Straight in. Right,' he said again. He was feeling nervous. This was new territory. âLet's get in there and do this.'
The Gestapo men were surprised when four men in prisoner garb came from the dormitory into the day room and took up positions barring the main door. More men followed. They were all carrying heavy wooden clubs.
A glance was all it took for the Gestapo men to work out what was going to happen to them. One of them, his face a mask of shocked disbelief, tried to bluster: âIf you know what's good for you, you'll leave now,' he said loudly.
âWell, that's the problem, isn't it?' Brack said menacingly, as he pushed the door closed. âI've never known what's good for me.'
The other Gestapo man pulled out a pistol. With an angry yell Brack brought his club down on the Gestapo man's wrist. There was a momentary howl of pain before a blow to the head silenced him.
The first Gestapo man held his hands up in a gesture of supplication. âNo!' he begged. âNo, pleaseâ'
It was over quickly.
âJesus,' one of Brack's men said, licking lips that had suddenly become parched. âYou realize what we've done, don't you?'
âStop whining,' Brack said. âThere's no going back now. I know Hustek. He's an evil bastard. If he gets wind of this he'll have us thrown into the ovens while we're still alive.' He pointed at the bodies with his bloody club. âThese two were never here. None of us knows anything about them.' He
glared at the two who had been caught in the block by the Gestapo men. âThat includes you. Unless you want to join themâ?'
For an hour they worked harder than they had worked in all their time at Auschwitz. The room was scrubbed and the corpses were stripped and swung into a handcart outside.
One of Brack's men looked longingly at the pile of discarded clothing. âPity,' he said. âSpecially the boots â almost new.'
âInto the stove with them,' Brack ordered. âI want no traces left.' The pistol could not be disposed of so easily. He would have to think about what to do with that.
âWhat about the bodies?'
âDon't worry, it's taken care of.'
Every day prisoners died in the Buna factory. They were hauled back by their fellow inmates to be counted in the roll call. Afterwards, their remains were thrown onto a lorry and taken to Birkenau for cremation. They were not counted again. Today would be no different, except that there would be two more. If anyone had bothered to look, they might have noticed two freshly cropped heads and physiques that were not skeletal. That might have aroused suspicions, and a closer examination would have revealed hands that were not calloused from hard labour, and feet that had not been rubbed raw by the wooden clogs that the inmates wore. But who would look? Two more among thousands were neither here nor there. Besides, the only people who would handle them were the Birkenau
Sonderkommando
, prisoners whose job it was to empty the gas chambers and put the carcasses into the crematoria.
They would have rejoiced to know they were putting the bodies of Gestapo men into the furnace.
*
Two days later, Meissner had a visitor.
He was announced by Eidenmüller. âOberscharführer Hustek to see you, sir.'
Meissner looked up from the papers that were spread across his desk. âTake a seat, Oberscharführer,' he said. âWhat can I do for you?'
âTwo of my men have gone missing,' Hustek said, as he sat down. âI was wondering whether you might know where they are.'
âMe? Why would I know where they are?'
âThey were here, in Monowitz. They were here on my instructions. They were here to pick up the Watchmaker.'
Meissner leaned back and steepled his fingers. âI still don't understand why you might think I would know where they are. I'm not in charge here: Obersturmführer Schottl is the Lagerführer. You should speak to him.'
âI already have. Nobody saw either of my men. Nobody. Don't you think that's strange? You would have thought
somebody
would have seen them.'
âI don't know.' Meissner concentrated hard on keeping his expression deadpan. âThere are always people coming and going, in and out of the camp. Someone might have seen them, but taken no notice of them. That wouldn't be so strange, would it?'
âLook, Herr Hauptsturmführer.' The Gestapo man tried giving a friendly smile, as if he were taking Meissner into his confidence. âI know we got off on the wrong foot, and I know you see yourself as the Watchmaker's protector, but I do have a genuine reason for wanting to question him.'
âReally? What about?'
âAbout the bombing raids on the Buna
Werke
.'
Meissner laughed. âYou think the Watchmaker is working for the Americans? Oh, that's priceless.'
Hustek compressed his lips into a sneer. âIt's only recently that Buna has become a target. We're convinced the Polish underground have passed information about it to the Allies. But they must have had someone on the inside to tell them about the factory in the first place. The Watchmaker works in one of the instrument shops. He speaks to Polish workers every day. He's an obvious suspect.'
âFor God's sake, man! Buna is full of Polish workers. Thousands of them pass through the factory gates every day. They don't need the Watchmaker to tell them what's going on inside. Besides, if you knew him as I do, you'd know it couldn't be him.'
âWhy's that?'
âBecause the only thing that interests him is chess. Nothing else matters to him any more.'
âBut I still have two men missing.'
âThey're bound to turn up eventually. Men go absent without leave all the time, even in the SS.'
âNot in the Gestapo.'
âI take it you've checked with their families?'
Hustek responded with a disdainful look.
âI'm afraid I really can't help you.'
âCan't or won't?'
Meissner ignored the question. âIf there's nothing more, I have work to do.'
Hustek stood and strode to the door. Putting his hand on the handle, he turned back. âDo I have to play against the Kike?'
âIf you don't, you lose by default.'
Hustek nodded, with a look that said he had known that this was how it would be. âWell,' he said, âfar be it from me to be the one who saves a Yid from the gas chamber.' A sinister smile formed on his face. âYou know, Herr Hauptsturmführer, you should pay a visit to Birkenau yourself sometime, see what it's like. It's quite something to see the gassing â hundreds of people so alive one minute and so still, like a tableau in a waxworks, the next. And the screams, you should hear the screams. Gives you a real sense of a job well done.'
The mask of impassivity that Meissner had been wearing fell away. âI wouldn't know,' he replied, his voice tight with suppressed rage. âThe only death I've ever seen is the kind where men get blown to pieces or roast to death in a burning tank. And the more I think of it, the more I realize what a fitting end that would be for you.'
Hustek was determined to have the last word: âA word to the wise, Herr Hauptsturmführer. That journal of yours . . . I would keep it in a safe place if I were you. You wouldn't want the wrong people to know what was written in it.'
âHow do youâ?'
But Hustek had gone, leaving Meissner with the answer to a question that had been eating at him for months.
1962
Kerk de Krijtberg, Amsterdam
âI realized then,' Meissner said, âthat I could not put off applying for my transfer any longer. I immediately wrote to my comrade, Peter Sommer, in my old regiment. By then they were back on the Eastern front, so it took nearly a month before I got his reply.'
âWhat did he say?' Willi wanted to know.
âThat the fighting was as brutal as ever, that he had been promoted again, and that yes, if I wanted it, there was a place for me as an adjutant in the staff HQ.'
âWhen would that have been?' Emil asked.
âEarly October, perhaps a week before your game with Hustek. I had thought he would have been back for you, but he never came near. And then there was the uprising in Birkenau.'
âAn uprising? By the prisoners?'
âYes. The
Sonderkommando
at one of the crematoria rebelled. There was a small battle. They killed several guards and NCOs, and blew up the crematorium. Then they broke through the wire and ran off.'
âWhat happened to them?'
âI don't think many of them escaped. Those who were caught were brought back and executed. But the question on everyone's lips was how could Jewish prisoners in Auschwitz have managed to get hold of weapons and explosives? It was inconceivable. Bär was apoplectic with rage, and Hustek bore the brunt of it. He'd been so distracted by his determination to neutralize Emil that he'd completely missed what had been going on under his very nose. He was told in no uncertain terms to get to the bottom of it. I think he even forgot about his missing men.'
âSo everything went quiet in the run-up to the game?'
âNot quite. Oberscharführer Hustek still had one roll of the dice left.'
1
Sankt Georgen an der Gusen was very close to the Mauthusen concentration camp.
2
The Monowitz camp was divided into two sections, north and south. Between them, a service road ran east to west, bordered by a double fence of barbed wire, with the inner fence electrified for good measure, and a gate at each end. The service road did not extend all the way to the eastern perimeter, so at this point it was possible to walk between the sections.