Stan began cleaning up their room
so that the guards checking rooms that night would
not notice Sim had gone. He wanted to give Sim
as much of a start as possible. While he was
brushing the straw under Sim’s bunk the door
opened. Both boys turned quickly. In the
doorway stood Sim. His lips were parted in a
thin smile.
“Sim!” Stan took a step
toward the door. “We thought you had gone.”
“Quiet,” Sim whispered. “Come
with me.”
He turned and moved out into the hall
with Stan and O’Malley at his heels. They
walked down the hall and into a corner room. Sim
crossed the room and opened a window. They saw
a rope dangling over the sill.
Stan peered into the darkness below
but could see nothing. “There should be
a guard right under this window,” he whispered.
“He has been taken care of,”
Sim hissed. “You go down. We will follow.”
“Didn’t you get any guns or grenades?”
O’Malley asked.
“No,” Sim answered sharply. “Hurry.”
Stan climbed through the window and
slid down the rope. When his feet hit the ground
he wiggled the rope. A minute later O’Malley
was at his side. Sim arrived within another minute.
He caught the boys’ arms and began moving away
from the house.
Sim led them to the wall and along
it until they came to a gate. It was open; Sim
paused and Stan and O’Malley peered out.
A small light burned above the gate. The light
revealed a truck filled with cans. Stan grinned
in the darkness. The truck was a garbage lorry.
The night breeze carried that information to him.
The truck smelled very strong.
“We hide among the cans,” Sim whispered.
At that moment two men appeared carrying
a can. They heaved it into the truck. One
of them fastened a chain across the back opening, then
they moved toward the cab of the truck.
“When the light is snapped off!” Sim whispered.
From the kitchen of the house a voice
shouted something in German. The truck driver
answered. The light snapped off and Sim started
forward with the boys beside him. The truck was
sputtering and backfiring, pouring out rank smoke
as they reached it. They went into it as it lurched
forward. All of the cans came clanging back against
the chain, almost shoving the boys out.
Quickly the three moved cans until
they were up in the front of the truck next to the
cab. There they crouched down with their knees
pulled up. The cans made so much noise there
was no danger of the boys being heard.
“‘Tis a sweet smellin’ cab ye called,”
O’Malley observed.
“The smell will keep the Germans
from examining it very closely,” Sim answered
and Stan heard him chuckle. “When we come
to a lighted town we’ll each have to get into
a can.”
“They’re full o’ garbage,”
O’Malley protested.
“We’ll empty three cans,”
Sim said. “Might as well do it while we’re
on this rough country road.”
The truck was bouncing and the cans
were banging. The noise was terrific and the
darkness total. Stan got hold of a can. It
was heavy, but with O’Malley’s help he
was able to lift it up and tip it over the edge.
The contents poured out on the side of the road.
Two more cans were dumped.
“There goes a lot of meals for
the prisoners in the ghetto,” Sim said and laughed.
“You mean to say the skunks
feed prisoners garbage?” Stan asked.
“I’ve been told they let
the prisoners of the lowest class pick over the garbage,”
Sim answered.
Stan felt his stomach begin to turn
over. O’Malley said nothing. For once
he was stumped for words. They moved the cans
to the center and well forward and crouched beside
them.
The truck rattled on through the night.
Presently they saw lights ahead.
“According to my map,”
Sim said, “that should be a well-lighted inspection
post. We better get into the cans.”
The boys got into the cans. Stan
kept his head well up out of the can. He meant
to keep it up in the wind until it was absolutely necessary
to duck down.
The truck swung in under a row of
lights. Stan ducked down and held his nose.
There was much guttural shouting. Several men
moved around the truck. They poked bayonets among
the cans and against them. Stan felt a blade
strike the can he was in. The can gave out a dull
clinking sound, indicating it was full. Stan
grinned. Someone shouted an order and the truck
rolled on.
As soon as darkness closed over them
the boys popped out of the cans. O’Malley
was talking to himself in very rich Irish.
“If I’d known this was
goin’ to happen to me I’d have brought
along a blanket to wrap meself in,” he growled.
“We’ll smell so bad we won’t be
able to hide any place.”
Stan laughed. “They won’t
need blood-hounds to track us,” he admitted.
“We will get other clothing,” Sim said.
The truck rolled on, crossing a hill
and dropping down toward a town. Lights winked
ahead of them and the road became smoother.
“We unload pretty soon,”
Sim said. “There will be a small farmhouse
on the right with tall trees. We get off there.
The farmer is a member of the underground.”
“Underground in Germany?” Stan asked in
surprise.
“They told me it was well established
and doing a big business. People are paying well
to get out of Germany before it collapses.”
Sim was swinging a leg over the side as he spoke.
The boys got out of the truck and
clung to the outside. They saw dark forms of
trees and a light in a window.
“Now,” Sim whispered as he swung away
from the truck.
Stan heard him land with a thud.
Stan jumped and landed in a hedge beside the road
and rolled on into tall grass. O’Malley
hit close beside him, and they crouched behind the
hedge watching the truck. It went rattling on
into the night. Sim called to them.
“Come on. We have to hurry.”
They moved over beside him and he
headed across an open field toward the lighted window.
As they neared the house, a dog began barking.
Sim halted and they stood waiting. A door opened
and a man shouted at the dog. Sim moved forward.
“Hello,” he called.
The door closed suddenly and Stan
heard the man walking over gravel toward them.
They advanced to meet him. Sim spoke as soon as
he was close.
“We were sent by Hans.”
“Goot. Come, I show you,” the man
answered.
They walked with him to the house
and he opened the door. “Quick,” he
mumbled. He began pushing them through the door.
There was no need to shove. The
boys dived inside and the German closed the door.
He moved to a window and pulled down the blind, then
he faced them. He was a short man with a beefy
face. His stomach rolled out over a wide leather
belt.
“I get you clothes,” he said gruffly.
Disappearing into another room he
returned after a time with an armload of clothing
which he tossed on a table. The boys changed into
rough shirts and dungarees. The clothing was
coarse, but it was clean. The German gathered
up their uniforms.
“These I burn,” he said and left with
them.
“We have to move on at once,”
Sim said. “This place will be searched
before morning. The Germans are very thorough.”
The boys seated themselves and waited.
Their host was gone for a long time. Finally
Sim got up.
“I’ll go hurry him along,”
he said. “You stay right here.”
He left the room hurriedly.
“Sim is no nut. He has
this all worked out,” O’Malley said.
“He certainly has,” Stan
agreed. He got up and moved to the door Sim had
just closed. Opening it gently he went into a
dark room. Feeling his way he moved to another
door. He could see a shaft of light under the
door. Halting with his hand on the knob, he listened.
Sim was talking with their underground agent in German.
Stan opened the door quickly. The two men whirled
about and faced him.
“I didn’t know you spoke German,”
Stan said.
“You should not be sneaking around,” the
German said sharply.
“I have always spoken German,”
Sim answered. “I learned it in school back
home. How did you think I managed to line things
up so well if I didn’t know German?”
“We got worried,” Stan
said. “Thought something might have happened
to you.”
“I just wanted to make sure
these uniforms were burned,” Sim said and laughed.
“German farmers are thrifty people. They
hate to burn good wool cloth, which can’t be
bought for any price here. These people have only
ersatz cloth.”
“We go now,” the German said and scowled
at Stan.
“Did he burn them?” Stan asked.
“He buried them in his orchard.
We don’t have time to waste having him dig them
up,” Sim answered.
O’Malley had heard the talking and joined them
in the kitchen.
“Everybody’s here, so
let’s go,” Stan said. He was trying
to remember if Sim Jones had ever talked to him about
his past. He could not remember the flier ever
having said much about himself.
The German took the lead and they
followed him out through a back door. They walked
down a path and came to a small barn. Stan heard
a horse snort. The German spoke softly to Sim
in German.
O’Malley answered the man in
German. The fellow jumped and O’Malley
laughed. Too late Stan kicked O’Malley warningly
upon the shin. Stan frowned. He should have
warned O’Malley. Now the man knew he could
speak and understand German. Sim looked at O’Malley
and laughed.
“It seems we will be able to
get on very well with two of us speaking the native
tongue,” he said.
“You talk Kraut?” O’Malley asked.
“Come, we waste time,”
the German said. He moved into the barn with the
boys at his heels.
The guide untied a horse and led it
out through a back door. There, by the light
of the stars, the boys saw a two-wheeled cart loaded
with hay. The German hitched the horse to the
cart.
“Hide in the hay,” he said.
The boys climbed into the cart and
burrowed under the hay. Stan worked his way well
forward with O’Malley and Sim close beside him.
They were forced to lie very close together because
the cart was narrow. They worked an opening for
air and lay on the hard boards. The German spoke
to the horse and the cart moved off.
The cart joggled over rutty roads
for hours. Daylight began to show through the
straw opening. Stan wiggled over against the slats
on the side of the cart and poked a hole to look through.
They were moving along a country lane. The cart
turned out and a wagon passed. It was loaded
with farm workers. Behind the wagon came a motorcycle
and sidecar. A German soldier sat in the sidecar,
while another, with a rifle slung across his back,
drove the motorcycle. The driver shouted at the
German on the seat of the cart, but he did not stop
him.
O’Malley began squirming.
He was in the middle and could see nothing at all.
“Be still!” Sim snapped.
“You’ll shake hay loose and someone may
become suspicious.”
O’Malley lay still but he made
Stan tell him what he saw. They passed other
wagons loaded with slave labor going to the fields,
as well as many farmers, both men and women, on the
way to work.
The German kept on driving and no
one stopped him. Noon came and he still kept
on. The boys were getting hungry and thirsty,
but the driver did not halt. He pulled out a
bag from under the seat and munched a sausage sandwich,
washing the food down with draughts from a brown jug.
O’Malley was able to see this.
“Sure, an’ I’ve
a mind to reach up there an’ grab that sandwich,”
he said hungrily.
“Better not,” Stan warned.
O’Malley held his appetite in check, but he
kept on grumbling.
“Stop watching him eat,” Stan advised
in a whisper.
“Sure, an’ I can’t
take me eyes off that sausage sandwich. ’Tis
the most appetizin’ thing I iver seen,”
O’Malley said mournfully.
The cart rattled through a village
and moved on down another narrow lane. Presently
they came to a gate and the driver pulled up.
Stan ducked back.
“German soldiers,” he whispered warningly.
The soldiers were shouting at the
driver. He got down and began talking to them
excitedly.
“They’re looking for escaped
prisoners,” O’Malley whispered in Stan’s
ear.
Three burly soldiers walked over to
the cart and began thrusting their bayonets into the
hay. Stan stiffened. If he was stabbed he
meant to make no outcry. He felt the cold steel
move across his body a few inches from his chest.
It slipped back, then stabbed again. Stan was
glad the bed of the cart had a ten-inch high board
around it.
After more shouting and poking the
driver got back on his seat and the cart moved forward.
“Boy,” Stan muttered. “That
was a close shave.”
“I got a small cut,” Sim said.
“And you didn’t yell?” O’Malley
spoke admiringly.
“It would have been the end for us if I had
yelled,” Sim answered.
The cart continued to jog along slowly.
Long shadows fell across the road and the cart passed
many farmers returning from the fields.
“I could eat a boiled dog,” O’Malley
grumbled.
“We’ll eat later,” Sim assured him.
Darkness settled slowly. The
driver turned off the road into a narrower lane as
soon as it was dark.
“No traveling is allowed after
dark,” Sim explained. “We must be
near our second station.”
The cart halted and the driver called to them.
“Come out now.”
They climbed out and flexed stiff muscles. O’Malley
faced the driver.
“I’m hungry. Got any food?”
“Come with me,” the man said.
They entered a grove of trees and
walked up to a tiny house. The house was dark
but, with the aid of a flashlight, the guide located
a trap door under some loose straw. He pulled
it upward, revealing a stairs. The boys went
down into a cellar where their guide lighted an oil
lamp.
The cellar smelled stale but it had
boxes to sit on and a table. There was a box
on the table.
“Your food,” the German said, nodding
toward the box.
He turned away and went upstairs again.
They heard him close the door and rake straw over
it. O’Malley opened the box at once.
It contained a loaf of heavy bread, a few pieces of
cold sausage and three boiled potatoes. Also
there was a jug which contained milk.
Sim produced a heavy clasp knife and
cut the bread. The boys made sandwiches and munched
them. The jug was passed around and they drank
out of it.
“Sure, an’ this is not
a bad dinner,” O’Malley said. “It
compares favorably with the last roast duck dinner
I had in London.” He grinned at Stan.
After finishing their meal the boys
sat waiting for their guide.
“He has to care for his horse
and dispose of the hay,” Sim explained.