Stan lay on the cot for several hours,
looking up at the dangling light bulb. He had
been able to think of no plan of escape that seemed
likely to succeed. But after careful thought
he was convinced Colonel Glotz had been merely showing
off. Stan felt certain Glotz would have to wait
for orders from his superiors before he did anything.
Those orders, however, could come through very quickly.
His thoughts were disturbed by the
rattling of the iron bar across the outside of his
door. The door creaked open and a man in civilian
clothes entered. Stan heard the shuffle of feet
outside in the hall and knew armed guards were waiting.
The civilian was a slender man with a big nose and
a very small chin. He looked at Stan out of little
eyes set close together.
“Sorry to disturb your rest,
Lieutenant Wilson.” The man bowed stiffly.
“I am Domber.” He said it as though
Stan ought to know him once he had mentioned his name.
Stan nodded and remained seated on
his cot. Domber rubbed his hands together and
smiled.
“You will go with me,”
he said. “We will have a nice long talk.”
Stan got to his feet. Domber
stepped to the door. He frowned at the two armed
guards waiting for them.
“The military have odd ways.
They always have guards about.”
“They are funny that way,” Stan agreed
dryly.
They walked down the long hall and
entered a small office. Its one wide window looked
out upon a tree-lined street. There were no bars
on the window and one of its side wings stood open.
Stan saw people walking up and down the street.
An expanse of smooth turf lay between the window and
the sidewalk. Stan turned back to Domber, who
had seated himself at a desk.
The office had nothing military about
it. There were no war maps on the wall.
The only picture was one of Hitler, hung back of the
desk. There was an adding machine, two sets of
files, several large cabinets with steel doors, and
a desk with a typewriter on it. Stan smiled at
the little blonde seated before the typewriter.
She returned his smile with a severe and steady look
out of her gray eyes. No help there, Stan thought.
“Be seated,” Domber said,
pointing to a chair beside the desk. He fished
out a box of cigars, flipped the lid open, and extended
the box toward Stan. “Smoke?”
“No, thanks,” Stan said.
Domber selected a cigar after turning
several over. “Such poor cigars. I’ll
be glad when the war is over and I can again import
some of my favorite Tampa Perfectos.” He
snipped the end off the cigar with a gold clipper,
then jabbed a full inch of the end into his mouth and
rolled the cigar around as though tasting its flavor.
“Now,” he said, “we will get down
to business.”
Stan leaned back and waited.
“I went to considerable trouble
to get this chance to talk with you. The colonel
is a bloody old coot. All he thinks of is shooting
people. I have other interests besides killing
men. My hobby is planes.” Domber bent
forward.
Stan was instantly on the alert.
He noticed the stenographer had placed a sheet of
notes on a rack and was clicking away on her typewriter,
but he did not think she was copying from her notes.
He was sure she was going to record what he said.
“You have had a chance to work
with many new ideas. You’ll be with us
until after the war, so I see no reason why we shouldn’t
have a chat about new wrinkles.” He smiled
and rolled his cigar.
“I understood I was to be shot as a spy,”
Stan said.
“The military is bent upon it,
but I have much influence. I could have you designated
a prisoner of war. Tomorrow I will see the Fuerher
himself.”
“What do you want to know?”
Stan realized this was a chance to stay alive for
a time. If he could interest Domber without giving
away any secrets, he might be given a chance to escape.
“You were flying a P-51, a Mustang, the British
call it.”
“Yes.”
“This ship has some very interesting
equipment on it, some typically American improvements.”
“Just what features do you mean?” Stan
asked.
“I operate a plane factory.
We have been experimenting with a supercharger.
The one on the P-51 is something new. If you can
recall some of the details....” Domber
leaned forward.
“You haven’t captured one intact yet?”
Stan asked.
“No, and the possibility seems
quite remote. You Yanks have been very clever
in fixing it so that that particular piece of mechanism
is always smashed when a ship lands.”
“I’m not an instrument
man. I just fly planes,” Stan said.
“But I have had general instructions on the
new dual supercharger.” Stan spoke slowly.
“You might, perhaps, be able
to suggest repairs for one that is partly destroyed?”
Domber asked eagerly.
“I have patched together some
badly hashed ships,” Stan answered.
Domber rubbed his hands together.
“I think we shall have a very pleasant time
working upon a P-51,” he said.
“Don’t get your hopes
too high, I’m no expert,” Stan said.
“When one is sure to be turned
over to Colonel Glotz as a spy, one is apt to be quite
successful as a mechanic, what?” Domber beamed.
“If I don’t make good
on this I’m to be shot?” Stan looked Domber
squarely in the eye.
“I’m afraid so. It
would be very painful to me, I can assure you.
I do not like to see men shot. But we won’t
think of that. We’ll have lunch and then
we’ll get at the job.” He turned and
spoke to his secretary in German, then shot a glance
at Stan.
“He wants to see if I understand
German,” Stan thought. He did not show
any interest and Domber smiled broadly.
“We will go out to lunch now,” he said.
Outside the door the two guards fell
in behind them. Stan smiled as he thought of
the appearance they made. Domber was dressed in
a natty suit. He wore spats and carried a small
cane, which his secretary handed him as he walked
out. There was a red feather in the bow on his
snap brim felt hat. Stan was dressed in a wrinkled
and soiled outfit that was streaked with mud.
They walked out of the building and
entered a big car. The guards got in with the
driver and the car pulled away. Stan noted looks
of hate and fear on the faces of the Dutch people
in the street as they watched the car slide past.
He had a hunch Domber was known to these people; he
also had a hunch the plane maker was hated and feared
by them. They stopped outside a big house where
four guards stood watch over the entrance. The
guards saluted as Domber got out. He puffed up
like a pouter pigeon and shouted:
“Heil Hitler!”
They walked up the steps and entered
the house. A man met them in the vestibule.
He took Domber’s hat and cane and stared at Stan.
“See that Lieutenant Wilson
is furnished a complete outfit of clothing. Show
him to the east room.” Domber spoke in English.
“Yes, Herr Domber,” the man said and bowed.
“Run along with Herman,”
Domber said. “I’ll be having a brandy
in the library.” He turned away at once.
Stan followed Herman up a wide stairway
and into a large room. It was furnished in a
luxurious manner. Herman bowed at the door.
“You will wish me to draw hot
water for a bath?” he asked.
“Thank you, Herman, I will take
a hot bath. See that there’s plenty of
soap.” Stan grinned.
Herman drew water in the bathroom
and laid out snowy towels. Coming out of the
bathroom, he said:
“I will lay out clothing for you.”
Stan lost no time in getting into
the tub. He splashed and built up a mountain
of suds, then wallowed in them. As he lay there
he suddenly began to laugh. This was the oddest
experience he had ever had. Yet there was something
sinister about it. Domber had a fishy coldness
about him that was chilling. Stan decided it
was the way he looked out of his little eyes.
There seemed to be a smoldering hate back of the light
in those eyes.
Herman had laid out clothing, a business
suit which was very close to Stan’s size, fresh
linen, a shirt, a tie and a pair of dress shoes.
Herman was nowhere in sight.
Stan dressed slowly. The shoes
fit well and so did the shirt. Herman was an
expert man’s man. He had sized Stan up correctly.
As he knotted the tie, Stan walked to a wide window
overlooking a garden. There were no bars on the
window and the garden was deserted. No guards
paced back and forth. Stan began to wonder if
he was not supposed to escape again.
Walking to the door he opened it.
The hallway was empty. Stan walked toward the
back of the house and found a balcony with a flight
of steps leading to the garden below. He wondered
what would happen if he walked down those steps and
into the garden. With a grin on his lips he did
just that.
Stepping off the last step he strolled
into the garden. No one challenged him, so he
walked around the house. He was standing looking
out into an alley lined with trees. Suddenly a
man stepped out from behind a wall and bowed to Stan.
“Luncheon is ready,” the man said in perfect
English.
Stan noticed, as the wind whipped
open the man’s coat, that he was wearing a heavy
shoulder holster. He smiled. The man reminded
him of a Chicago gangster he once had seen captured.
“I was just going in,”
he said. Turning about he entered the house.
Herman appeared at once and bowed. Stan followed
him into Domber’s library. A table had
been set before an open fire. Domber was seated
in an easy chair, puffing on a cigar.
“Have a pleasant stroll in the garden?”
he asked.
“You certainly requisitioned a nice place for
yourself,” Stan remarked.
“Oh, I have owned this for years,” Domber
said. “This is my home.”
That accounted for the hated looks
the people on the street had given Domber as he passed.
He was a Dutch Quisling, a traitor to his own country.
Domber seemed to read Stan’s thoughts.
“I always have been credited
with having brains enough to take care of my business
and my own comforts,” he said dryly. Then
he smiled. “But sit down. We will
see what we have for luncheon.”
The common people of Germany might
be eating poorly and tightening their belts, but Herr
Domber’s table gave no hint of lack of supplies.
There was real coffee, strong and black, fruit, fish,
fresh vegetables and a roast squab for each diner.
Stan put aside all unpleasant thoughts and ate heartily.
While they ate, Herr Domber kept up
a steady conversation. He talked about fighter
planes. Stan was surprised at the things Domber
revealed in a casual way. He gave a very good
description of the new secret rocket which was doing
so much damage to the Forts and Libs, even telling
Stan how it was handled. Once in a while he would
ask a question. Each time Stan matched wits against
the traitor to keep from telling him anything important.
After a while Stan was convinced Domber
was so sure he would never live to repeat what he
had heard that he felt no need to be careful about
what he told the Yank.
“I have had many guests, Dutch,
Norwegian, British and now an American.”
Domber beamed. “I have enjoyed each of them,
and I am sure they never complained of my hospitality.”
Back of the genial manner Stan felt
the cold threat of death lurking in the way the traitor
looked at him. Domber was very sure of himself
and of his power. Stan resolved that he was going
to be one guest who fooled the Dutch Quisling.
After dinner Domber showed Stan his
collection of war trophies and his laboratory and
workshop. The laboratory was far more elaborate
than the workshop. Stan was fascinated by the
plants and animals Domber kept there. Domber
laughed softly.
“I experiment much,” he
said. Then he added, “I have done much with
poison gas as well as with rare drugs.”
“You plan to use poison gas?” Stan asked.
“If our plans work out well,
yes,” Domber said frankly. “If Minter’s
work is well done and we are able to smash a large
part of the British and American air power, we will
launch gas attacks upon the principal English cities
and later make an invasion.” He smiled slightly.
“You have the planes?” Stan asked.
“For one big blow. First
we smash the air power, then we attack. We have
endured much bombing to save air power for this.”
Domber had ceased smiling and for the first time his
hate came to the surface. He shrugged his shoulders
suddenly. “But we waste time. We will
have a look at the P-51.”