‘It’s really quite simple.’ Friemel turned to the table behind, rummaged amongst a pile of charts, found the one he was looking for and opened it across the desk.
Gericke leaned over. ‘Falmouth?’
‘That’s right. The Royal Navy’s Fifteenth MGB Flotilla operating out of Falmouth has been causing havoc on this entire coast recently. To be perfectly honest, it’s made any kind of naval activity impossible.’
‘And what am I supposed to do about it?’
‘According to your orders, go into Falmouth and lay mines.’
‘They’re joking, of course.’
Friemel held up a typed order. ‘Dönitz himself.’
Gericke laughed out loud. ‘But this is really beautiful, Otto. Quite superb in its idiocy, even for those chairbound bastards in Kiel. What on earth am I supposed to do, win the war in a single bold stroke?’ He shook his head. ‘They must believe in fairy stories. Someone should tell them that when the tailor boasted he could kill seven at one blow he meant flies on a slice of bread and jam.’
‘I don’t know,’ Friemel said. ‘It could be worse. There’s a protecting curtain of mines plus a blockship here between Pendennis Point and Black Rock and a temporary net boom from Black Rock to St Anthony’s Head. That’s supposed to be highly secret, by the way, but it seems the Abwehr still have an agent operational in the Falmouth area.’
‘He must feel lonely.’
‘Ships in and out all the time. Go in with a few when the net opens. Drop your eggs, up here in Carrick Roads and across the inner harbour and out again.’
Gericke shook his head. ‘I’m afraid not.’
‘Why?’
‘We may get in, but we certainly won’t get out.’
Friemel sighed. ‘A pity, as I’ll be going with you. Not out of any sense of adventure, I assure you. I have orders to report to Kiel and as the land routes to Germany are cut, my only way would seem to be with you to Bergen.’
Gericke shrugged. ‘So, in the end, all roads lead to hell.’
Friemel helped himself to one of the French cigarettes and inserted it in his holder. ‘What shape are you in?’
‘We were strafed by a Liberator in Biscay. Superficial damage only, but my engines need a complete overhaul. New bearings for a start.’
‘Not possible. I can give you four or five days. We must leave on the nineteenth. Ramcke tells me he can hold out for another week at the most. No more.’
The door opened and the young lieutenant entered. ‘Signal from Kiel, sir. Marked most urgent.’
Friemel took the flimsy from him and adjusted his spectacles. A slight, ironic smile touched his mouth. ‘Would you believe it, Paul, but this confirms my promotion as Rear Admiral in command of all naval forces in the Brest area. One can only imagine it has been delayed in channels.’
The lieutenant passed across another flimsy. Friemel read it, his face grave, then handed it to Gericke. It said: CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR PROMOTION IN THE FULL AND CERTAIN KNOWLEDGE THAT YOU AND YOUR MEN WILL DIE RATHER THAN YIELD ONE INCH OF SOIL TO THE ENEMY. ADOLF HITLER.
Gericke passed it back. ‘Congratulations, Herr Konteradmiral,’ he said formally.
Without a flicker of emotion, Friemel said to the lieutenant, ‘Send this message to Berlin. Will fight to the last. Long live the Führer. That’s all. Dismiss!’
The young lieutenant withdrew. Friemel said, ‘You approve?’
‘Wasn’t that Lütjen’s last message before the Bismarck went down?’
‘Exactly,’ Rear Admiral Otto Friemel said. ‘Another drink, my friend?’ He reached for the bottle, then sighed. ‘What a pity. We appear to have finished the last of the Schnapps.’
It was still raining heavily in London at eight-thirty on the following evening when JU 88 pathfinders of Gruppe 1/KG 66, operating out of Chartres and Rennes in France, made their first strike. By nine-fifteen the casualty department of Guy’s Hospital was working at full stretch.
Janet Munro, in the end cubicle, curtain drawn, carefully inserted twenty-seven stitches into the right thigh of a young auxiliary fireman. He seemed dazed and lay there, staring blankly at the ceiling, an unlit cigarette hanging from the corner of his mouth.
Janet was being assisted by a male nurse named Callaghan, a white-haired man in his late fifties who had served on the Western Front as a Medical Corps sergeant in the First World War. He strongly approved of the young American doctor in every possible way and made it his business to look out for her welfare, something she seemed quite incapable of doing for herself. Just now he was particularly concerned about the fact that she had been on duty for twelve hours, and it was beginning to show.
‘You going off after this one, miss?’
‘How can I, Joey?’ she said. ‘They’ll be coming in all night.’
Bombs had been falling for some time on the other side of the Thames but now there was an explosion close at hand. The whole building shook and there was a crash of breaking glass. The lights dimmed for a moment and somewhere a child started to wail.
‘My God, Jerry certainly picks his time,’ Callaghan remarked.
‘What do you mean?’ she said, still concentrating on the task in hand.
He seemed surprised. ‘Don’t you know who’s here tonight, miss? Eisenhower himself. Turned up an hour ago just before the bombing started.’
She paused and looked at him blankly. ‘General Eisenhower? Here?’
‘Visiting those Yank paratroopers in ward seventy-three. The lads they brought over from Paris last week. Decorating some of them, that’s what I heard.’
She was unable to take it in, suddenly very tired. She turned back to her patient and inserted the last couple of stitches.
‘I’ll dress it for you,’ Callaghan said. ‘You get yourself a cup of tea.’
As she stripped the rubber gloves from her fingers, the young fireman turned his head and looked at her. ‘You a Yank then, Doctor?’
‘That’s right.’
‘Got any gum, chum?’
She smiled and took a cigarette-lighter from her pocket. ‘No, but I can manage a light.’
She took the cigarette from his mouth, lit it and gave it back to him. ‘You’ll be fine now.’
He grinned. ‘Can you cook as well, Doc?’
‘When I get the time.’
Suddenly, the effort of keeping her smile in place was too much and she turned and went into the corridor quickly. Callaghan was right. She needed that cup of tea very badly indeed. And about fifteen hours’ sleep to follow – but that, of course, was quite impossible.
As she started along the corridor, the curtain of a cubicle was snatched back and a young nurse emerged. She was obviously panic-stricken, blood on her hands. Turning wildly, she saw Janet and called out – soundlessly, because at that moment another heavy bomb fell close enough to shake the walls and bring plaster from the ceiling.
Janet caught her by the shoulders. ‘What is it?’
The girl tried to speak, pointing wildly at the cubicle as another bomb fell, and Janet pushed her to one side and entered. The woman who lay on the padded operating table, covered with a sheet, was obviously very much in labour. The young man who leaned over her was a corporal in the Commandos, his uniform torn and streaked with dust.