Our Only Shield: A Novel of the Second World War
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About this ebook
Set in the desperate days at the outset of the Second World War, Our Only Shield brings back Rory Ferrall, the resourceful Canadian spy from Michael J. Goodspeed’s debut novel, Three to a Loaf.
Hastily recalled from a successful career in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Rory arrives in Britain only to find a war that is being prosecuted with political indecision and wishful thinking. The skills he displayed as a spy in the Great War are once again sorely needed by a small group of far-sighted but frustrated military planners.
Our Only Shield is a fascinating journey that takes us from an early wartime Britain still reeling from a string of catastrophic defeats into the once-peaceful Netherlands.
In 1940, Holland was a prosperous country where an industrious and innocent population simply yearned for peace and the chance to lead tranquil lives. Believing they could escape the havoc and violence of a world gone berserk, they awoke to find themselves governed by a new, terrifyingly brutal regime. Inserted into this shocked and traumatized community, Rory Ferrall soon finds himself caught up with two unforgettable characters: Annika Hammerstein, a gifted musician who refuses to watch passively as atrocities are inflicted on her family and her country, and Reinhold Neumann, a dangerously anxious but clever and ambitious Nazi policeman whose aspirations are unrestrained by conscience.
Our Only Shield is a meticulously researched story of how ordinary people marshal their talents to fight against ruthlessly efficient evil. Rich in historical detail, peopled with enduring characters, this powerful narrative gains steadily in momentum and tension and moves to a gripping conclusion. It’s an enthralling and satisfying story as well as a meditation on the timeless nature of organized violence.
Michael J. Goodspeed
Michael J. Goodspeed is a historian and novelist. In addition to a successful writing career he has been an infantry officer and a manager in high-tech firms. He has lived and worked across Canada and on several continents. He lives on an acreage in Harrowsmith, Ontario.
Read more from Michael J. Goodspeed
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Our Only Shield - Michael J. Goodspeed
inspiration
1
Pemmican Lake, Manitoba, October 1939
THE FAIRCHILD FLOATPLANE skipped and bounced twice as it touched down on the northern lake. The engine roar intensified as the plane slowed, and the cloud of mist thrown up around the exposed cylinder heads bloomed into a circular rainbow. To Chief Superintendent Rory Ferrall, sitting in the passenger seat, the instant rainbow looked as if some clever engineer had designed the aircraft to have its own good-luck charm with each landing. With his one good eye, he stared out at the shoreline of granite, jack pine, and birch, wondering if he would ever be lucky enough to see these north woods again. He shifted restlessly in his seat after the long flight. His life had changed dramatically in the last few days. Just a week ago he had been in charge of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in northern Manitoba. Now he was flying out to say his farewells before being posted overseas. This was his last stop on that parting journey.
Exactly a week ago he had received a brief and cryptic telegram from Ottawa advising him politely that if he should choose to volunteer,
the RCMP would second him to the War Office in London for unspecified duties.
Rory had a good idea what those duties would entail. He spoke fluent German and had served on clandestine operations within Germany during the Great War. With another war now declared, some desperate soul in an office had dug up his file and they wanted him back.
As the Fairchild neared the dock, a small crowd of handsome, cheering, copper-faced Indian children ran down the hill. In the isolated northern Manitoba village of Pemmican Lake, the unannounced arrival of a floatplane was still such an infrequent occurrence that it created a stir in the community. The children waved and shouted greetings in Woodland Cree; and while the happy mob applauded their village’s latest arrival, a small boy in a red-chequered flannel shirt triumphantly seized the mooring line.
Rory smiled at the children’s enthusiasm. There was something infectious about the way kids up here laughed and roared when a plane came in. There was a sense of genuine zest in their hilarity, and he loved it. But these days, laughter was something he had to work at. Ever since his wife had died four months ago, he found some days a struggle. On the good days, he thought he was getting over his loss. He had told himself that he was a fatalist, that he understood that life was inherently unfair. That kind of thinking got him through the Great War, and he supposed it helped make him a reasonably efficient policeman; but on the dark days, it wasn’t enough. He looked from the children on the dock down to the aircraft’s floor. He still wasn’t certain how he got himself through those dark times.
As boisterous as this meeting with the native children was, it also left him with an uncomfortable twinge. The kids out there were like all the children who remained back in these isolated settlements: happy and energetic. The others, the majority of Indian children, those who had been sent to the residential schools, seemed perpetually dejected and tired, like transplanted flowers wilting in a neglected garden. Rory wrestled with the handle on the plane’s door. It seemed that all the new ideas after the Great War had proven to be catastrophic failures. Communism and fascism were the two colossal disasters. But even up here in the North, the great social engineering project to integrate native children wasn’t working the way it had been planned. He couldn’t put a finger on it. How else would you run schools for a population so sparsely distributed across tens of thousands of square miles of bush? Maybe it was the schools themselves, or maybe the way they ran the system. He wasn’t close enough to the project to know, but it was a problem begging for a solution. What was strikingly obvious to him was that the kids in this remote village were happy.
Happiness is a strange thing. Rory had always believed you had to cultivate it yourself. He had come back from the war highly decorated, but missing an eye and three fingers on his left hand – and with more ugly memories than he cared to think about. Happily, life had gotten steadily better for him. He joined the Mounted Police, and years later married a wonderful Chinese woman from a small prairie town; and despite the protestations of his father at both of his choices, Rory had found married life and his career in the police force deeply satisfying. It was true, there was something about police work. If you weren’t careful, it had the potential to turn some of the most optimistic men into cynics. Maybe that was true for other professions as well, but as he had seen some wonderful men become embittered, long ago he had deliberately set out to counter that.
By the time Rory’s duffel bag was unloaded, the boy in the red-chequered flannel shirt had established for everyone within earshot that he was to be the one carrying it to the Mountie’s cabin. As the procession got under way, Sergeant John McWilliams and a heavy, grey-bearded black Labrador jogged down the rock-strewn path from the village. Although McWilliams was several years younger than Rory, an extra twenty pounds, thinning hair, and a bushy grey moustache made him look much older. Unlike his commanding officer, McWilliams was dressed in a mixture of Royal Canadian Mounted Police uniform and Indian clothing. He wore a Mountie’s peaked forage cap, a buckskin jacket, regulation yellow-striped trousers, and moccasins; and as usual he was smiling broadly.
Got your radio message last night, sir. Didn’t expect you to come up for another month. Everything okay?
Everything’s fine, John. It’s a routine visit. I’ve brought some books and newspapers, and I’ve got some spices, books, and magazines for Angela as well.
Rory looked around him, drinking in the scenery with obvious satisfaction. I’m posted out of the division and they let me do one last set of rounds before I head off. The new divisional commander hasn’t been designated yet. Thought I’d come up and see you folks. I’m going to miss this part of the world.
Where are you going, sir? I was sure you’d be with us for at least a couple more years. It’s only been nine months. Is there some kind of problem?
No, no problems. It sounds like I’m going to England – something to do with the war. They’ve let me do one last circuit. I get to tidy up some loose ends, and then I go to Ottawa and then off to London. I suppose I’ll find out what’s in store for me later, but from what I can make out, they’re being tight-lipped about what’s going on.
Surrounded by a cluster of happy chattering children, the two men walked up the path from the dock. The birch trees were still a dying yellow and most of the scrub bushes had already lost their leaves, exposing a floor of pale green lichen-covered granite. There was more than a touch of autumn in the air, and it struck Rory that up here only the maples resisted this turn of the seasons with one last defiant but futile crimson flourish before winter’s iron frost.
At the cabin, McWilliams’s wife, Angela, a sturdy, black-haired woman with a ready smile, was tying a braid in her three-year-old daughter’s hair. Angela stood up and gave a mock curtsey, and then, instantly turning serious, hugged Rory. Rory, I was so sorry to hear about Ruth. It was all so sudden.
Thanks, Angela. Yeah, it was sudden. One week she felt ill and complained of stomach aches, and five weeks later she was gone. To be honest, I still haven’t gotten used to the idea of her being dead.
For a few seconds nobody spoke. It was a tacit moment of remembrance and commiseration. Rory shrugged. He felt choked, and despite these two being among his closest friends, he didn’t want to lose control, not now. He took a deep breath. Life has to go on, I guess. So tell me, how have you two been since I was up here in the spring? You both look great.
Angela spoke. We’re fine. We still love it, just like you did when you were up here with us. That seems like a long time ago now. I suppose some day John and I will have to go back down south, but until then, we’re happy here.
Anxious to change the subject from married life, Angela gave a small shrug. Just now, except for the three of us and the village grandmas, we’re the only adults within a hundred miles of here. Everyone else has gone downriver for the autumn goose hunt. They’ll be back in a week or so.
Later, followed by two shy, giggling girls and a puffing Labrador, Rory and John McWilliams strolled through the village. They were in no hurry and stopped to chat with the elderly women who sat in front of their cabins expecting to see their visitor. Although Rory could only remember a few words of the language, he was gratified to see how fluent his old friend had become in Cree and how he was genuinely accepted by the native elders. That wasn’t always the case with some of the officers up here.
When they returned, Angela had a simple supper laid out in their cabin’s front room. They talked cheerfully for an hour, then Angela excused herself to put their daughter to bed. She followed not long after.
Rory was pleased that the conversation meandered throughout the evening. In truth, there wasn’t a lot of police work to discuss up here. The Mounted Police functioned more as a steadying influence than as enforcers of the law in these truly isolated communities, a practical link to the more intensely settled world rather than the long arm of the outside world’s law. As it was, Rory probably didn’t have to come here. He could have said his official farewells by letter, but Angela and John McWilliams were special friends; and there was something in the North that exerted an irresistible pull on him. No matter what the time of year, he loved the rock, the lakes, and the woods. But it wasn’t just the outdoors. For those with the Northland in their soul, there was a perceptible sense of freedom and simplicity up here. On the Canadian Shield, life was lived to the unhurried rhythm of the seasons rather than the ticking of a clock and the shuffling of paper.
Late in the evening as the two men sat outside around a stone fire pit watching the flames, Rory grew serious. They had exhausted their small talk. For those who had spent many years living amongst the Indian communities, they understood that a trusting silence was a kind of conversation in itself. Have you heard anything about Tommy Many Dreams?
Rory asked. I guess I haven’t seen him for over a year now.
McWilliams stirred the coals with a stick. He’s gone downriver with his daughter and her husband and his grandchildren. He lives with them in the Eagle Lake band now. I think he’s doing quite well. Someone was telling me about him a month or so ago. His limp hasn’t gotten any worse, and he has no trouble keeping up with the others.
He winced at the heat from the fire. You know, you Great War veterans keep pretty close tabs on one another. I suppose that’s only fair. Come to think of it, one of the last things Tommy said to me was that I had to say hello to you for him when I saw you next.
They stared into the fire for a long time. John asked, Why are you going back, Rory? I can’t imagine you don’t have a say in this. You’ve already done your share. Anybody who knows you, knows you’ve done your bit.
Rory didn’t answer right away. He poked the fire with a stick, squinting as a draught of wind blew flame toward them. I suppose I could have said no. In fact, even though I’d prefer to stay here, I think I could have done some useful work if I went to Ottawa at the end of this posting in Manitoba. But this war just isn’t the same as the last one. We can’t lose it. I’ve no doubt: the Nazis are completely different from the Kaiser.
He stopped and gazed at the fire as if trying to read a pattern in the coals. If we lose this war, it really will be the end of our civilization as we know it. That’s not me repeating propaganda. I believe it. Not only do I believe it, it scares the hell out of me. So, I think I have to go where I’m needed. Besides,
he said with a wry smile, unlike you, I don’t have a family to raise. I can afford to be altruistic.
The log Rory had been poking suddenly collapsed in a crash of sparks and crackling. The fire’s dying and I suppose it’s time to go to bed; my plane’ll be back first thing tomorrow.
Rory was up long before the others. He made himself a mug of tea and went outside. The wind was rising and low clouds were driving in from the north. He put his mug on a rock, stretched his arms above his head, and twisted to the left and to the right, slowly stretching the muscles in his back as he looked out over the lake. He was surprised that the socket of his right eye felt so good. Normally, the lingering effects of a short night’s sleep and the smoke from last evening’s fire would have left his eye feeling irritated. His glass eye and the missing fingers on his left hand had been a constant reminder that he was a survivor of the cauldron that was the Western Front. Now, with the passage of time, his disfigurement served more as a reminder to be grateful for each day instead of a stimulus for the intermittent anger he had endured for so many years after the war.
Far off, out in the middle of the lake, whitecaps were forming. Rory walked down to the community’s small dock, made from rough planks and a log-and-rock crib. The wind was cold. As the sky in the east brightened and the waves lapped along the shoreline, he watched a large flock of geese rise and circle and then shake into their V formation before flying low out from the reeds at the end of the bay. There must have been a hundred of them. They were honking and calling out to each other as they winged their way southward. Staying far out from the settlement, they passed the cabins at the lake’s narrows – well beyond shotgun range. They were smart birds, no doubt about it. And their calls, whatever it was they said to each other, made for a lonely song. Nothing epitomized the sound of the north woods in autumn like the distant call of Canada geese on the wing. At the same time, Rory thought, they were an odd sort of bird. They lived in flocks, but it wasn’t unusual for several to join another flock if they couldn’t keep up, or if in their perpetual honking at one another they had some kind of falling out. In flight, they regularly rotated their leaders throughout their journey of thousands of miles in their aerodynamically efficient wedge. And unlike most birds, the big grey, brown, and tan geese mated for life. If one mate was killed on the migration, the other stayed in the vicinity until the days grew so short and the wind so cold that it absolutely had to go. Up here amongst these lakes, Rory had often seen grief-stricken Canada geese lingering around for weeks after their mates had been killed. The survivor would be there, out on the water or strutting up and down a rocky headland, day after day, alone, and always out of shooting distance; and then one day it would be gone. Rory didn’t need the food and had stopped hunting geese a long time ago.
Above the wind and the cries of the geese, Rory thought he could hear the faint drone of a floatplane. It was time to get his things and say his goodbyes.
2
REINHOLD, HURRY UP or you’ll be late. Everyone has to be seated at least forty-five minutes before the Führer arrives and we can’t leave the taxi waiting.
Reinhold Neumann smiled. Maida, always such a worrying little hen. Hadn’t he managed to become Austria’s youngest Major in the Schutzpolizei? Now he was well on his way to becoming the youngest Oberstleutnant in Greater Germany’s newly integrated Geheime Staatspolizei – more fearsomely known by their acronym, the Gestapo. Not to worry, he’d get them to the investiture on time. That wasn’t anything to fret about. His rise in the Reich’s police ranks wasn’t going to be slowed down by something as stupid as being late for the most important ceremony in the history of the Austrian police. Neumann thought that Maida, as pretty as she was, should stick to her three primary worries: their boy, Klaus; their baby daughter, Monika; and of course, anything to do with fashion.
Neumann adjusted the swastika on his pocket and smoothed his grey tunic in the mirror. He looked good: wavy, thick brown hair, a healthy complexion, and an aggressively downturned mouth. At twenty-six years old, he was eagle-eyed, fit, and ruthlessly efficient looking. He turned his head to catch the light. Not bad. Today he conveyed the precise sense of authority and vigour that such an occasion demanded.
In the last three years his situation had improved more than he could have imagined. Who would have thought? But then, his career path hadn’t happened by accident. He had made the right moves. Marrying Maida, the daughter of one of Vienna’s deputy chiefs of police, had given him legitimacy and status in some people’s eyes. He was well aware that a poor boy from a small walk-up flat on the seventh floor of a tenement in Vienna’s Simmering District would ordinarily have taken decades, and a lot of good luck, to attain that kind of social position. He never let on to anyone that Maida’s family didn’t like him; and although he never told Maida, the sense of hauteur her family exuded when he was around left him resentful and angry.
A year after marrying Maida, he’d boosted his career once again by joining the Austrian National Socialist Party, even though at the time it wasn’t something most people would have described as a clever move likely to result in promotion. Most of Maida’s family were quite cool with him after he became a National Socialist; and while he didn’t know it then, there were a few senior officers who tried to have him and his fellow Nazis run out of the police force. Happily, those days – and those officers – were long gone. Three years ago he had been a struggling police cadet walking a beat in a Viennese slum. His good judgment was paying off faster than he could have imagined. In 1936 he’d joined the party, a frustrated young man looking for a means of venting both his energy and his anger at the world. It had been the right thing to do. He’d shown courage and insight. He certainly had a knack for predicting how things would work out, and he knew it.
Neumann had always been inspired by the Nazi talk of a Greater Germany.
For him, it was inevitable; anyone could see that. If you believed in the survival of the fittest and the strengthening of species, then it was quite obvious that the German race, led by the Nazi Party, was destined to dominate inferior races. Sure, the party had more than its share of windbags, and it carried a certain amount of dead weight; but Neumann was certain that would change in a few years.
In a curious way, Reinhold Neumann had always felt at home in the party. It gave him a sense of solidarity and purpose; more than that, there was something about the concept of national destiny and racial hierarchy that appealed to him in a strange way. He thought it was the same sense of direction some people found in their faith, although even as far back as his first year in secondary school he had regarded the religiously devout as psychological weaklings. Religion was for those who needed something external to prop them up. National Socialism was for those unafraid to take responsibility for the future into their own hands. But there was more to it than that. The party, under the Führer’s leadership, brought a sense of order; it stood for things you could understand and see. The party knew what had to be done. In a few years it had returned Germany and the German people to a position of strength and respect. It had united Germany and Austria, and was in the process of bringing back all German peoples into a single and mightier Greater Germany. Who could argue with that?
In forging a new national consciousness, the party had unequivocally identified the nation’s enemies, the people who sucked the life blood out of the nation: Jews, communists, homosexuals, gypsies, capitalists, and farther down the scale, weak-kneed church leaders, the pseudo-intellectuals, and the liberal artists. It was a good, comprehensive list; it explained what was wrong with society and it provided an indication as to where action was required to fix things.
Now, this afternoon, he was off to attend Austrian Chancellor Seys Inquart’s reception for the Führer. Only a very few other police officers, and no others of his rank, had been accorded that honour; but then, none of the others had been in the party as long as he had.
Downstairs, Maida cast an appraising eye over him and coquettishly brushed imaginary fluff from his lapels. She reached up on tiptoes and kissed him ever so lightly on the nose so as not to brush off her lipstick. Do you really think when you’re promoted to Oberstleutnant that we’ll be posted to Berlin, Reinhold? I’d love to spend a few years there.
There’s a good chance of it. We’ll find out soon, so keep your ears open at the reception and do your best to flatter Scheidler. He’s close to Himmler and he’s the one deciding which Austrians to send on the new Reich Senior Security Officer’s Course. That’s the route to promotion, especially now that war has been declared.
* * *
AMSTERDAM WAS BASKING in the midst of a glorious late autumn warm spell, and to Annika Hammerstein it seemed that all the city’s young men and women were out this evening. Throngs of them in shirtsleeves and pretty summer frocks ambled aimlessly along the pathway beside the Prinsengracht Canal. She gave up trying to ride her bicycle, and in an aggressive stop-and-go manner pushed it determinedly through the crowds.
It was already a quarter to the hour. She had to be home by eight to take her husband, Saul, to a surprise birthday gathering at his sister’s. Tonight she was flustered. She was running behind schedule; twice she had almost had her violin case knocked from her bicycle’s basket. Annika’s string quartet had been late in starting practice and they were late ending. They could have used more rehearsal time. It bothered her that the quartet’s interpretation of Allessandrini’s Eighth Sonata
was nowhere near ready for their recital in two days time at the Institute.
But, as she told herself so frequently when she felt frustrated, she was a practical woman. She could cope with whatever hardships and anxieties life had in store for her. At thirty-four, she had weathered more than her share of misery and sorrow. When she became gloomy or impatient, she reminded herself that she had lived through hardships that were much more difficult. In her teens, she had been the sole support for her mother through a long fatal illness. And after her mother’s death, she had, entirely with her own resources, gone on to finish her degree with first-class honours in modern languages and music.
Now, she was a lecturer and research assistant in the Music Conservatory at the University of Amsterdam.
Annika was a thoughtful woman, and grateful for having been born and raised in a level-headed, comfortable, and safe country like the Netherlands. The rest of the world looked like it was once again in the process of disintegration, but thankfully this tiny oasis of neutrality and common sense would once more keep itself isolated from whatever calamities the rest of humanity was foolishly preparing for itself.
She wheeled her bicycle around a handsome blond couple in their early twenties. Both of them had their heads thrown back, laughing together at some private absurdity. In a way, she envied them. Not that she wasn’t happy with Saul, but this couple so obviously had their whole future before them. They would probably spend the rest of their lives enjoying this comfortable, civilized lifestyle and raise a family together. It seemed that Saul and she would never have a child now. For the last year this had been a source of wrenching unhappiness; sometimes, even the sight of happy couples without children brought this deep-rooted anguish to the surface.
It all seemed so unfair. She and Saul had overcome so much together. Theirs was a mixed marriage: she was a Christian, he was a Jew. Relatives on both sides had been aghast when they announced their intention to wed. For Annika, it was less of a problem than it had been for Saul. Annika was an only child and both her parents were dead, so she had fewer upset relations to deal with. There was of course her cousin Margrethe in The Hague, who had written her a long, scolding, arrogant letter, but she had ignored both the letter and Margrethe. Things were different for Saul. The Hammersteins were a large and close family. Many of them were not happy that Saul had flouted their traditions and their wishes, and married a gentile. Still, Saul and Annika had their own circle of friends, and tonight a number of Saul’s younger relatives as well as their mutual friends had quietly chosen to ignore their elders’ concerns. Even so, for two otherwise gregarious people, it meant now that their lives were effectively restricted to a smaller circle of close relatives and friends than would otherwise have been the case.
Although Holland was, by European standards, a very tolerant country, it wasn’t the same as being an accepting country. Not a day went by without both Annika and Saul being made in some small and painful way aware of that unpleasant fact.
Annika became more aggressive pushing her bike forward through the crowds. No point in wallowing in self-pity. What else was life if it wasn’t a series of obstacles to overcome? She felt a surge of energy. She wasn’t going to be late for something as simple as a birthday party.
3
London, 9 December 1939
GENTLEMEN, THANK YOU for coming here today. I know that some of you have journeyed very long distances and that you have been given precious little explanation as to what is expected of you.
Geoffrey Harris, a moustached and anxiously precise man dressed in the red collar tabs and khaki uniform of a British colonel, looked at the solemn faces staring back at him from around the government-issue oak table. The room was overheated and stifling. London’s late afternoon sunlight shone tenuously through dusty windows. Harris was doing his best to inject a sense of gravity into his briefing. His audience was a group of seven sceptical-looking middle-aged men dressed in conservative wool suits. The colonel was younger than most of the men before him, and he was conscious that the differences in their ages could stimulate resentment.
I’d like to be able to tell you with some certainty how the war is likely to turn out, but, I’m afraid, any of your guesses are likely to be as good as those from the experts here in the War Office.
Harris had a deep, crisp voice with a penetrating timbre that could have brought him success as an actor. Today, however, he was speaking softly, almost inaudibly. It could be intensely irritating to those he was speaking to, but it was a ploy he used frequently to command attention.
I’m afraid the problem we will soon be forced to come to grips with is that we shall have to prepare contingencies to deal with what happens when the war gets going in earnest. I think we’re in a period that we could safely call a phoney war. It’s true that we’re at war, but everyone is staying politely entrenched behind their lines and nobody is getting hurt. That situation isn’t going to last long.
Harris turned away from his audience and looked out the window into London’s hazy, refracted sunshine. He put his hands in his trouser pockets and jingled loose change, waiting a second for effect. There’s a small group here in London, soldiers and politicians, who believe that when things get nasty, as they inevitably will, we may well be pushed right out of Europe. That’s certainly our worst-case scenario, and it’s the one we have to plan for.
He exhaled loudly and wheeled about.
Frankly, I also think being pushed off the continent is the most likely possibility. Jerry has an army that is much better trained than ours. He has the initiative, and he has been earnestly equipping, preparing, planning, and exercising for exactly this scenario for the past ten years. For some of you here, what I’m saying will come as no surprise whatsoever. That’s one of the reasons, amongst others, that we have asked you to join us.
Four of the civilians sat forward in their chairs. Although most of them had considered the probability of abject defeat at the hands of the Germans, this was the first time they had heard it expressed officially. No one had been forthright in speaking about the possibility of looming catastrophe on the continent. This kind of talk wasn’t heard in the House of Commons, in the newspapers, or even in the pubs. The atmosphere in the room changed noticeably from scepticism to rapt attention. None of them spoke.
Harris nodded almost imperceptibly and then went on. If that happens, the army we so hurriedly sent off to France on the outbreak of war might well be lost entirely. We’ve never had that happen to us before. But even if we lose that army, it won’t be the end.
He looked around the room determinedly. I need not remind any of you that whatever is said here stays here. All of us are bound by the Official Secrets Act.
He paused again.
We have failed to keep Germany in check diplomatically, and our military response has been sluggish, defensive, and ineffective. To make things worse, Prime Minister Chamberlain has effectively refused to consider military catastrophe as a possibility. Many of us at the War Office think he is still hoping that there can be some kind of negotiated settlement, and the war can be ended without too much bloodshed. I’m afraid it’s the curse of being perpetually optimistic.
He paused again for effect.
Unsubstantiated faith in the future is a wonderful trait in school teachers, but it’s a disastrous one in wartime prime ministers. There are many of us who believe that when they are ready, the Germans will go on the offensive. And, as more than a few of us in the army and elsewhere believe, we are now almost preordained to suffer a serious calamity. From that heretical perspective, which is both our worst-case and most likely scenario, no matter whether we sue for peace or not, sooner or later, we’ll find ourselves fighting for our lives again. Like many of you, I know the Germans and Corporal Hitler far too well, and neither Hitler nor the Germans intend to let us off easily. They’ll be at our throats again whether we sign a peace treaty or not.
There was an uneasy silence and more shifting of hard wooden chairs around the table.
First off, neither I nor the people I work with have any intention of acting overtly or covertly to influence Britain’s political outcomes over the foreseeable future. I hope to put your mind at rest on that account. We understand that we are here to protect democracy, not overthrow it or supplant it. However, we do have to be prepared to react to the worst possible scenario, and our worst possible scenario is a decisive German victory on the continent. And that, for reasons of wishful political thinking, is currently viewed as an heretical and unthinkable possibility.
Harris quickly scanned the room, looking each man at the table in the eye. I hope, gentlemen, that you will agree with me that it’s our job to think through the current difficulties as we see them, and then quietly and unobtrusively insert a degree of common sense into the political process. And if we can’t do that – and I might add, we have been entirely unsuccessful in doing that over the last five years – then we have to be ready with an alternative plan when all the unworkable alternatives have come crashing down on us.
Harris’s speech slowed and he began to sound somewhat uncomfortable. Secondly, although I’m in uniform, I’m not addressing you as soldiers. I see you gentlemen as the first of a new style of fighter. If you agree to fight with us, you will be the first of a new kind of shadow army. It will be the beginning of a civilian resistance unlike anything the world has seen before.
He paused again and stared out the window.
So what exactly are you coming to here, colonel?
The impatient question came from Rory Ferrall, the Canadian with the eye patch and missing fingers. He looked irritable, and to reinforce his point, he looked at his watch. Two other men at the table muttered agreement.
Harris fixed the Canadian with a penetrating stare. Yes, well, that’s precisely where we are going, Chief Superintendent Ferrall. If we’re driven off the continent, we fully intend to go back some day. With, of course, the help of the Dominions: nations like yours, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, and, of course, Empire troops – and I don’t know how, but with any luck, we have to get the Americans onto our side as well. But I fear that’s a long way down the road. Who knows? This could take decades. I personally agree with Churchill’s private assessment of the Nazis: they’re a scourge and it may take the world’s free nations generations to defeat them. So let me come to the point. If that’s the case, we have to start preparing now for a war that could last decades. If we get run off the continent, we intend to set up a network of behind-the-lines saboteurs: men and women who will wage guerrilla war, assassinate key leaders, harass the enemy, and provide us with accurate intelligence from which to base future operations.
A ruddy-cheeked gentleman with a Scottish accent steepled his hands and spoke before Harris could continue. So, colonel, I just want to be clear. Have you brought us here to organize some kind of resistance for you? A resistance for which there isn’t a legitimate or a politically sanctioned need; or are we somehow to be involved in exerting this political influence you speak of?
I don’t want you to do anything just yet,
Harris said. What I am asking of you is to start thinking about what we might do when we lose on the continent. Please bear with me. Each one of you has been brought here after a very careful selection and vetting process. Two of you had direct experience in the last war in military intelligence operations in Germany. Three of you have been selected for your demonstrated organizational skills, and two for your knowledge of the German security services. All of you have been carefully vetted for your common sense, trust, and loyalty. Despite such qualifications, we haven’t been authorized any money, people, or equipment to prepare for this kind of eventuality. Given what I’ve just said, that’s not surprising. But that should not stop us from thinking about how we shall proceed, if and when we find ourselves with our backs to the wall.
Harris clasped his hands behind his back. So, yes, I’m not asking anything of you just now, except for you to think about how we are going to do this. I’d like you to stay right where you are. Remain in your jobs until such time as we need you. And we will be contacting you, trust me, on that score. But for some of you, we need your help to convince a number of those in key decision-making positions that we should be planning actively for the desperate situation we’re going to find ourselves in. And, yes, for all of you, I’m seeking your support in creating a resistance to a possible Nazi occupation of Europe.
* * *
REINHOLD, YOU MUST ADMIT that the Führer is even more impressive in person than he is on the radio or when you see him on the movie reels,
said Oberst Scheidler, sipping enthusiastically at his glass of sekt. Oberst Scheidler, of the Schutzpolizei, was one of Vienna’s three deputy police chiefs and an influential man who was clearly going to continue to rise in both the Nazi Party and the Reich’s police ranks. I had the impression tonight that we were witnessing history being made: the Führer giving a speech that was being broadcast to all Germans, describing for us his vision of the future. Mark my words, this is a man who holds destiny in his hands.
Major der Schutzpolizei Reinhold Neumann nodded and smiled, but unlike Scheidler and the other senior officers at Vienna’s Imperial Hotel, Reinhold Neumann hadn’t been impressed by the Führer and his speech. And for that matter, he wasn’t much impressed by his police Oberst either. He had always thought of Scheidler as being somewhat stupid. And worse, Scheidler was often naively obsequious around his superiors. Neumann was well aware that Scheidler wouldn’t have made it to the rank of Oberst if he wasn’t a Nazi. But since the Anschluss – the union of Austria and Germany – his rise had been meteoric. Aside from his demonstrated skill in flattering the right people, Scheidler was an unremarkable policeman, an indifferent plodder who barely got the job done; there was no real spark that distinguished him from other senior officers. But Scheidler had one talent, and that was an unerring ability to get close to and stay close to the right superior. So, even though Scheidler might be a plodder, Reinhold Neumann was shrewd enough to appreciate that Scheidler’s single strength was the one he needed to exploit and cultivate in himself if he were to rise.
I think you’re right, Herr Oberst,
Neumann said, smiling.
In truth, Neumann thought the Führer was much more impressive on the radio than in person, although he certainly wasn’t going to admit it here. Scheidler would never understand. The Führer was wooden, his entire performance predictable. Neumann had heard it all before: the themes of sacrifice and hardship and the inevitable furious crescendo aimed at Germany’s enemies. It wasn’t that Neumann disagreed with what Hitler said; he was impatient with the Führer’s theatrics and wanted to see the Third Reich’s expansion sooner rather than later.
Neumann was wise enough to keep those thoughts to himself, and smiled self-deprecatingly. He said to Scheidler, Oh, there’s no question that the Führer understands where he’s taking us, Herr Oberst. I’m just delighted that I’m alive now to serve him.
He rocked back on his heels and looked down at his wine glass as if he was unsure of himself. I’m glad to be a part of the Reich, even if it’s just in a small way.
"Your part may not be quite as small as you think, Reinhold. You and I were amongst the first police officers to join the party. This story, as we heard tonight, has a long way to go yet. And you know, being in the police is going to