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Authors: John Gardner

Troubled Midnight

 

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Contents

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Author’s Note

Epigraphs

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Historical Note

Also by this author

Copyright

 

For Trish

Who lent me her name

And twice gave me her love.

Author’s Note

THIS IS THE fourth book in a series concerning a young Woman Detective Sergeant – Suzie Mountford – middle class, bright but inexperienced and, in the first instance, naive and vulnerable. The previous books are, at the time of writing, available through Amazon.co.uk and the titles are
Bottled Spider, The Streets of Town
and
Angels Dining at The Ritz.
Each is self-contained and all the reader has to know is that young Suzie Mountford has been attached to Detective Chief Superintendent Tommy Livermore’s Reserve Squad, at New Scotland Yard since 1940. She has also been Tommy’s lover, but has become somewhat disenchanted with him as the relationship develops.

I make no apology for the fact that the premise of this book has already been used by at least four – possibly many more – novelists. It is a good premise and it’s a starting point for the ingredients, the characters.

Also there never was a CO of the Glider Pilot Regiment stationed at RAF Brize Norton called Tim Weaving. Indeed I doubt if any of the Glider Pilot Regiment staff at Brize Norton in the final months of 1943 were named after the characters I have placed there.

I lived in the beautiful market town of Wantage from 1936 until I was married in 1952; I was more or less educated there; went off to serve my country from there in 1944 and spent vacations there during the three years I was up at Cambridge between 1947-1950. I still regard myself as Wantage born and bred, even though I wasn’t born there. In those days it was in Berkshire and I cannot think why Oxfordshire has now embraced it.

Most of my descriptions of Wantage at that time are accurate, but I have built an extra house. There never was a Portway House standing in Portway looking out across King Alfred’s School playing fields. Because there was no such house, there was, of course, never a murder there. There was never a Captain Bunny Bascombe VC, so there was never an Emily Bascombe.

If some old Wantage folk imagine they can see themselves in the odd character woven into this book they must be wrong because it is a work of fiction. The same applies to some of the names. There may well have been some people with names like Wilson Sharp, Christopher Long, Pete Alexander, Peter Mulford etc. etc. but they are not the people who appear in this book. How could they be?

 

John Gardner

Hampshire 2004

 

The difficulty of controlling the operation once launched, lack of elasticity in the handling of reserves,
danger of leakage of information with consequent loss of that essential secrecy.

 

Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke:
Diary
reflections on Operation
Overlord.
June 1944

 

Sometimes these cogitations still amaze The troubled midnight and the noon’s repose.

La Figlia che Piange

T.S.Eliot

Chapter One

RITTER CAME ALL the way from Hamburg, what was left of it, to see him: Nicholaus Ritter of the Abwehr whom he’d last seen in 1938 when he’d stayed in Hamburg and offered his services to the Nazis in the belief that Hitler was the strong man of Europe. It had been difficult in ’38 because you had to be a loyal Nazi to work for the Abwehr; you also had to be a German and the Abwehr were twitchy about an Englishman making such an offer. His first meeting with Ritter had been a preposterously clandestine affair at the railway station in the first class dining room. Of course they didn’t think they’d even be enemies of the English then. Nick Ritter worked in the Military District X Headquarters where he was really in charge of Air Espionage, but he had employed Sadler who now felt pleased that Ritter himself had come all this way, to central France, to see him.

“We have new offices,” Ritter told him. “Very smart and still standing. They used to be a Jewish Old People’s Home. No need for Jewish old people any more.” And he laughed.

On the Sunday morning Ritter was gone and he spent the day with the other two men. The sunshine was warm and he sat close to a stand of pine trees on the edge of a great lawn with a water garden in the distance. So Sadler, as he was now known, smiled his secret smile: the one that hinted of evil known only to him. Who would believe it: him, Sadler, sitting here, miles out in the occupied French countryside in the fourth year of the war?

“Sattler,”
the one with the buckteeth said. “In German,
Sattler.

“Ah. Yes,” he nodded. “
Sattler.
Sadler.”

He didn’t know exactly where he was: couldn’t pinpoint it or give a map reference because they had brought him by night. But he reasoned that he had to be between twenty-five and fifty miles south of Amiens because the train had stopped at Amiens on the way from the coast. The blinds of his carriage were down and he was locked in but he’d cheated and pulled back one side of the blind, squinted out and saw they were in Amiens station. After that they travelled for around fifty minutes, at steady speed, so he reckoned between twenty-five and fifty miles before they pulled into the siding and the one-platform halt. He thought in miles because England was his home; he couldn’t think in kilometres, and when they got to the house Ritter was already there and they had dinner.

“I wanted you to know how specially pleased we are with your work,” Ritter told him. “The Führer doesn’t know your name but he is impressed and has asked that you be presented with this.” This was the Iron Cross First Class with Oak Leaf Cluster. After he had pinned it on Sadler’s breast, Ritter unpinned it and said he’d hang on to it, for safekeeping. “Rommel says we will destroy them on the beaches,” still holding the medal cupped in his hands, the box on the table. “That will be the end, when they are finished. Or, if not the end then the beginning of the end, or perhaps the end of the beginning as someone has already said.” He laughed. “I could never work out what Churchill meant by that.” He lifted an eyebrow and laughed again.

Later he told Sadler that he might not be in charge of things for much longer. “Our friends in the RSHA are making inroads. By the time it comes for you to do your duty for the Fatherland I think they will be in command and you’ll answer to them alone: to Schellenberg and his like.”

The RSHA was the Reich Security Administration, the Party intelligence service, the SD and its domestic partner the Gestapo. The thought did not make for easy sleeping.

In the morning Sadler had woken in a comfortable bed with a uniformed servant pulling back the curtains, letting sunlight into the room, bringing coffee and fresh rolls – real coffee and newly baked rolls with apricot preserve. These people did themselves well, which gave the lie to the stories doing the rounds in England. As far as England was concerned Germans fought for a loaf of black bread: rations in the Third Reich were meagre, but, Sadler told himself, not everyone would be as well fed as the officers here. Nothing in his world was ever really what it seemed.

They had changed his name to Sadler just after he arrived on the previous night; told him, in English, that they had to ring the changes. For operational purposes he would now be known as Sadler. One of them muttered a colloquial expression,
‘Wir brauchen ein Tapetenwechsel.’
Literally, ‘We need a change of wallpaper,’ and for a moment he didn’t understand. Then they laughed, the two majors from the Abwehr: German Military Intelligence, really funny men.

The jolly pair asking their questions: one calling himself Clauswitz and the other, a slight short man with protruding teeth reminding Sadler of a rabbit, called himself Hindenburg. Much laughter at that. Hindenburg indeed. That well-known double-act Clauswitz and Hindenburg, for one week only here at the Adolph Hitler Palace of Varieties.

He already knew their real names: Major Klampt and Major Osterlind, knew them well from when they were lieutenants back in the thirties when he had first made himself available to the Abwehr. Dietrich Klampt and Fredericht Osterlind: Dieter and Freddie, old amusing friends who had trained him in the house on the outskirts of Hamburg.

In the space of two weeks they had taught him rudimentary coding, using simple ciphers; they also set him on the way to learning the Morse Code; taught him the rules of surveillance, aircraft recognition, calculating the layout of military camps and airfields and from that deduce how many people were stationed there. He learned how to sift through local newspapers and find nuggets of information; ask leading questions from strangers. They played Kim’s Game to hone his memory and taught him how to throw someone who was shadowing him in a built-up area. From a tough nut-brown gnome of a
Fallschirmjäger
sergeant he learned the art of silent killing, a skill he was later to put to good use.

Now, on this summer Sunday afternoon they told Sadler of their appreciation for what he had done, and said they understood about him not being able to give them the facts concerning Siegfried, Jack and Josefine – where they were, how they were operating. Well they knew about Josefine they told him, but did he hear anything?

All three were reporting in regularly, they said, and the product was not complete rubbish. Some of their information was good. All the same, Sadler told them what he’d heard about Camp 20, just in case. One couldn’t be too careful. Sometimes it was just called The Twenty Committee.

In Roman numerals though Camp 20 was Camp XX.

Camp Double-Cross: where they turned captured spies, playing them back against their former masters.

He was trying to get more information, he told them, but it was difficult. If people were being held in Camp XX nobody was talking.

As for Sadler, originally known as Sparrowhawk, it was easier for him to evade the security services because he was a ghost, invisible, a born and bred Englishman. During that morning he started to wonder if he was the only agent they had in England: the only one sending them substantial information.

They got to the point quite quickly: there was
real
work for him now, and they spent most of the time going through what was necessary, suggesting ways he could go about the job, telling him what he knew already, that it wouldn’t be an easy job to get the minutiae of the Allied plans to invade occupied Europe. They talked inside the house, oppressive he thought, with old furniture, the kind of thing you expected in a house like this, heavy and unrelenting, highly polished with the scent of wax everywhere. The tables were particularly weighty with thick barley sugar twisted legs, sideboards that were so sturdy they would never groan under the weight of food. In the bedrooms there were headboards a mile high and wonderfully carved, making you think that possibly there would be grips on the footboards, shaped like male feet, just to give you purchase during the serious business of making babies for the Fatherland. There were solid dressing tables in the bedrooms as well, so functional you’d have second thoughts about letting the triple looking glasses glimpse a naked thigh, a breast or a man’s exposed genitals.

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