Order of the Black Sun Box Set 4 Read online

Page 14


  All Purdue could do now was to withhold important information on upcoming incidents to use as a bargaining chip to keep him from harm. He would have to give them only what they needed to see that he had knowledge of the immediate future and not an ounce more, otherwise he would become redundant. On the other side of the steel door the commotion died down and the voices steadily grew silent. Purdue guessed that it was just past 11pm now.

  “I think it is time for the evening prayer,” Purdue muttered to himself, going down on his knees on the floor. One last time he glanced to the door to make sure nobody was coming. He placed the BAT on the floor in the corner and took a deep breath.

  The steel door’s bolt made a loud clang and footsteps sounded shortly after the heavy door creaked open. Light weight moving swiftly on small heels told Purdue that his visitor was female before he even saw her. To his surprise it was Sigrun, not Maria. In her dark, silent way she stood staring at him for a few seconds before even speaking.

  “My God, you look just like her,” he said softly.

  “Who, Nina?” she asked confidently. It gave him chills how much she acted like Nina, that even her voice possessed that same intonation and challenge. He nodded and smiled, but she was not one to dwell on unimportant matters such as past lovers. Unlike Maria, Sigrun was more calculating, less emotional and all about getting to the point.

  “I need you to do as you are told, Herr Purdue,” she told him plainly. “Do not attempt to flee the men of the regiment you are going to accompany. It will derail the direction of what is to come.”

  “And what would that be?” he asked, intrigued by the mystery of her.

  “The assassination of Hitler,” she answered casually.

  Purdue went into a whisper, his eyes darting toward the door to check for unwanted company. “Sigrun, I hope you are not going to attempt this on your own?”

  She smiled. That very same smile haunted his memories of Nina Gould when she still used to be his lover. It was a sensual show of power and self-confidence.

  “Do you really think that women like us, women who cross dimensions and communicate across light years with only the force of our minds, would dirty our hands with the blood of a pig like Hitler?” she scoffed with that same smile, looking toward the door while her amusement dwindled again. “This afternoon late Helmut Kämpfe was kidnapped from his quarters and you are going with Sturmbannführer Diekmann to show them where he is held captive,” she informed him evenly. “They now cast their lot with your supposed wisdom, having no idea that their future is just a history text book to you.”

  Purdue listened intently, amazed at what she knew and how nonchalantly she addressed what needed to be done. She bombarded him with more information he fought to memorize as she spoke.

  “Listen, at the upcoming meeting with Himmler and Hitler to bring you into the Order, you must not protect yourself when the hit squad strikes. Your survival has indirectly thwarted our attempt on the Führer before – every single time, no matter how many times the incident had been repeated over different time frames.”

  “Jesus,” Purdue frowned. “What the hell are you talking about?

  “I am telling you to remain seated when they breach Wewelsburg, David Purdue,” she purred like a mountain lion. “I’m telling you to die. It is for the good of the Reich and the people.”

  Purdue was dumbstruck, but like a news cast, Sigrun related what he needed to know. “First you are going to help the Panzer Division retrieve Sturmbannführer Kämpfe, but you do not…I repeat, not…take the schematics from him. He needs to live, to pass it on to us so that we can construct the death ray Nikola Tesla designed. Do you understand?”

  Purdue’s mouth was agape, his eyes wide and his brain unable to compute all Sigrun was imparting upon him. In astonishment he slowly recovered his reason.

  “You want to use the death ray’s destructive capabilities to destroy the Nazi hold and end the war?” he asked. It was rather noble of the Vril Society to take on Nazi Germany and with self sacrifice he could help destroy the Third Reich and all its mobile forces.

  “No, you idiot!” she yelped just like Nina. “We want to topple Hitler and his High Commissioners, the SS and their propagators so that we can procure their armed forces. That is all we want to leave active. The Vril will use the armed forces of the Third Reich to utilize the super weapon designed by Tesla to conquer the nations.”

  Purdue did not know what to say. With Nina’s beauty Sigrun bade him goodbye, “I shall see you at Wewelsburg, then. Wiedersehn.”

  “Like the Hydra,” he said softly as he watched her walk away. Her long dark ponytail swayed like a pendulum behind her sensual frame. “Cut off the head of a dragon only to beget eight more. A tyrant falls just to pave the way for one far worse.”

  24

  Healy cooked for a change. Ever since his employer had begun to invite people to her house by some miracle of mind, he had not had time to really prepare a good meal. There were so many things to take care of here since Dave Purdue, Sam Cleave and Nina Gould came to visit and help Professor Jenner with her obsessive experimentation. No longer did Healy only have house chores and errands to do. Now he had three rooms to clean and new flower arrangements to collect; he had to keep the kitchen stocked with more than just Lydia’s special protein shakes and the odd take away hamper.

  Shopping for groceries used to be a once a month thing and now it became a daily run for the eclectic needs of the guests. If he did not know better he would have thought that the always reclusive and anti-social Professor Jenner was actually enjoying having house guests. He had been in her employment for almost five years and not once had he ever heard her laughing and talking about trivialities with anyone as she did with Dr. Nina Gould. Usually she only had something to say when she was faulting someone less intelligent for an assumption or when she had to explain a scientific principal. He could not believe that she knew anything about fly fishing, cognac or the Dallas Cowboys.

  Every hour was a colorful change of discussion with Sam about headlining news in other countries, electronic equipment and UEFA league football. They had been here for no more than two days and already Healy felt the house light up with life, as if they were not guests, but boarders. In turn Sam and Nina spent time together during Lydia’s compulsory day naps. Healy wondered if they were an item, but butlers had no place in asking.

  He constantly stared at the fiery beauty Sam liked to argue with, listened to her astute manner when she vibrantly recounted old stories from history documents that would never be found in books to share with the world. Healy was always one for women a bit older than he, because he was raised by only his mother. Learning the value of respect, efficiency and discipline came from a feminine approach when he grew up. Perhaps this was why he managed perfectly to maintain his nurturing, emotional understanding while being perfectly capable of taking on the most ruthless bastards on God’s earth with his bare hands.

  Lydia chose his service and company because of just that – his ability to be both a strong character to lean on and a listener with gentle sensibilities.

  “Hard at work, Jeeves?” Sam jested as he walked past the kitchen to the toilet, slapping the doorway as he went. Healy smiled. It was refreshing to have someone like Sam to talk to. The journalist was always up for a wager, a beer and a challenge while having no problem busting Healy’s balls with playful insults that he thoroughly enjoyed.

  The thunder clapped just outside the back door. Stirring the gravy on the stove, Healy’s smile instantly disappeared. It was replaced by a wince of fear as he subconsciously hastened his stirring. Sam reappeared in the door a minute or so later.

  “You alright?” he asked Healy. The butler responded only by looking toward the window where the blue and white flashes lit up the curtain with pulses of light.

  “Ah!” Sam realized. “I don’t like it much either, actually. Was almost struck three times in my life. Being Scottish is hazardous. Golf courses, fly fishing, Highla
nd sword dancing…none of which is a good idea under Scottish weather conditions.”

  Healy chuckled, grateful for the distraction.

  “So, how is the beer in this town? I was thinking of getting us a six pack or two while we sit on guard at the chamber,” Sam asked.

  “Not bad, sir. I have a friend who owns a liquor store that stocks from Pilsen and Prague which is excellent. Not that pissy stuff, if you get my meaning,” Healy said, sounding out of place talking about heavy beer in his refined British accent.

  “Sounds good. Pull the pot on the other plate, my friend. You are going to escort me to said shop. If I have to spend one more hour drinking wine I’m going to kill myself,” Sam announced zestfully. “Come, my good man!”

  Healy reported to Lydia, asking her permission to accompany Mr. Cleave to stock up on beer before the next severe weather was due.

  “Oh absolutely. He has been driving us insane with his whining over beer, draughts, real beer, weak beer…” she told her butler while Nina nodded in agreement as she dove into another glass of whatever French wine Lydia had her sampling this time round.

  “Don’t take too long, you two,” Lydia called after Healy as he joined Sam at the door. “Purdue should report anytime in the next three hours.”

  “Trust me, I don’t want to take three hours to get back before I can hear that hiss of a newly opened beer,” Sam replied. “We’ll be back shortly.”

  After the men left, Nina finally had to satisfy her curiosity. “Lydia, what’s the deal with Healy and thunderstorms?”

  “Ha! I see you noticed that,” Lydia remarked. “From what I know about my darling butler - and I do not know half as much as I should about his clandestine past - is that he saw his mother struck by a bolt thicker than a tree trunk when he was a teenager.”

  “Oh my God! That is so sad,” Nina frowned with sympathy for the attractive man who always looked a bit lost or lonely under his painfully neat, stern exterior.

  “But I got that from his sister. She was here for a weekend with her husband once and we got talking while the men were catching a football match. That’s when she told me. But, you know, we all have our secrets and our fears. I don’t pry for more than what affects me directly and so I left it at that,” Lydia shrugged.

  The rain was ample, but light enough to navigate through the streets without too much trouble. Healy seemed nervous, Sam noticed, but with constant questions about places of interest he kept Healy’s mind occupied so that he would not hear the odd rumble of the skies.

  “Where did you work before the Professor burdened you with her insanity?” Sam asked, smiling. Healy laughed, but his anxiousness was obvious.

  “I was a security consultant for years after I left the military. My father was a colonel. His father was an admiral, so they expected me to enroll just after school so that I could complete my studies through the force. But I enjoy this job much more, even with the madam’s moods and that pedantic nature of hers. Under it all she is really a sweet woman.”

  Sam was impressed by how fond the butler was of the professor. Most of the nicest subordinates, as he learned through journalism, usually turned hostile given a moment of mock privacy to vent about their employers, but not Healy. There was an innate loyalty about the rigid butler who had now turned into a proper caitiff. Healy was downright edgy, clutching at the steering wheel as they turned from the riverside lanes into the parking lot of a very dilapidated looking shopping complex in a decent neighborhood.

  “No wonder they sell booze other places don’t stock,” Sam remarked. “I don’t imagine the fuzz likes to bother here.”

  “You are exactly correct, sir,” Healy agreed, looking around vigilantly. A clap of thunder had him shrugging, just about sinking into his seat. His eyes fluttered, but he recovered quickly. “Goddamn weather,” he mumbled as they parked in the back.

  “I’m sorry sir, but I don’t park on that side. Twice now they smashed the wind shield and the second time they almost stole the vehicle,” he apologized.

  “No worries, Healy. Let’s go get a yeast infection,” Sam smiled, tapping the lackluster butler on the shoulder as he got out.

  Dodging the shower, Sam never saw the enormous body of the man who struck him down with a crowbar. The journalist hit the gravely tar with a splitting headache so severe that he could not manage to open his eyes. While he tried with all his strength to sit up and find his bearings, his brain switched off. Healy raced around the car to catch Sam before his skull hit the dark grey tarmac, but the man who towered over him simply looked out for any witnesses.

  “Help me, Foster!” Healy told the giant with the crowbar. “I can’t believe you still wear that Christian memorabilia while you do what you do.”

  “Even God needs killers, Healy. And even sinners deserve mercy,” Foster delivered his sermon to the annoyed butler.

  “Where are you taking him?” Healy asked as Foster, who tossed aside the crowbar and picked up Sam’s limp body to hang him over his shoulder like a bag of potatoes.

  “That is not your concern, is it?” he told his old friend.

  “It is very much!” Healy insisted. “My job is on the line for this.”

  “Well, that was the same concern Albert Tägtgren had before Sam killed him, Healy. That poor man lost more than his job that day,” Foster empathized. “Go home and tell his girlfriend anything you need to. Your money has been transferred, old boy. Adieu!”

  Healy stood in the rain, drenched. As the large SUV pulled away with Sam Cleave inside, he regretted agreeing to the subterfuge, but he direly needed that kind of money. He earned well enough under Lydia’s employ, but he was not about to give up a few thousand Euros for a stranger’s well-being. Still, he wondered exactly how far Foster was planning to take matters with the alleged murderer. It was a bit too hard to believe though, that Sam was a killer. Yes, he was a hardened investigative journalist in constant scraps with very dangerous organizations and deadly arms dealers, but he was not the kind who would kill.

  Healy stood still while in conflict about Sam’s just deserts, not even flinching under the shattering thunder that threw bolts of lightning in his direction.

  “Maybe I deserve to be struck, Mum,” he said under his breath. The ex-SAS man still struggled to see Sam Cleave as a murderer, but he also knew Christian Foster to be a man with an impeccable moral compass, one not to judge easily, nor harshly. If Christian was pursuing Sam for killing someone there was hardly any reason to doubt him. Never had Healy ever been this torn with a decision he thought he made perhaps too hastily.

  The thunder shook the windows of the liquor store where Sam was anxious to pick up his beer. It was open. Healy went inside to purchase it anyway, although he thought it was in poor taste to do so. While the weather grew worse Healy sat in the car, opening the container of brew. It felt nauseating and therapeutic at the same time to swallow away that first bitter mouthful to ease his guilt. One after the other Healy drank beer after beer in a miserable attempt at taming the cancerous remorse that infected his heart.

  “I’m so sorry, Sam. I had to. I had to,” he slurred after the fourth he tried to drown himself in. There had to be something he could do to purge him of this unfortunate position, because he had no idea how to explain his treachery to Lydia or Nina once he returned home.

  25

  10 June 1944 – 08.54am

  As the 2nd Panzer Division – Das Reich moved along through the countryside of Southern France, Purdue found himself in the leading Tiger S33 in the company of Sturmbannführer Diekmann and his men.

  The metal monsters tanked along the low hills, over the tall grass, decimating the smaller trees and brushed in their way. Under the sunny morning sky the convoy of the Waffen-SS roared slowly through the Haute-Vienne region. The night before was catastrophic for one of the commanders of the regiment, the very cause for the urgent advance toward Oradour-sur-Glane this day. Led by the blood thirsty commander of the ‘Der Führer’ unit the war machines
slithered to the sleepy little village where Purdue told them their commander was being held captive.

  “I am not going to lie to you, Herr Purdue,” Diekmann told his new advisor, “I am not at all thrilled to bring you with me to the front. I do not trust you and I aim to kill you the moment you even smell of deceit.”

  Purdue expected this hostility, but he hoped that Diekmann would have changed his mind by now. “I understand, Sturmbannführer. I really do. But I assure you that I am not here to mar your duties and I will stay out of your way until you have accomplished your goal.”

  “Good. I have no time to play nursemaid to some Allied traitor who cannot decide which side he is on. There is little as evident of cowardice as a man who defends nothing for fear of severing unfruitful alliances,” Sturmbannführer Diekmann clarified. “Now, I need to know where the French Resistance is keeping Sturmbannführer Kämpfe. You had better pray that we find him alive in the hands of your faction, or you will suffer a fate worse than death.”

  “I assure you, on my honor, that I am not affiliated with the French Resistance,” Purdue maintained. “I have this information because I have a special gift for foreseeing the immediate future.”

  “That is well to say, but you are wasting that rubbish on a man who believes in science and logic and reason. There is no such thing as psychic ability and energy manipulation by means of thought!” he exclaimed.

  “Yet your Führer has unquestionable faith in such a possibility,” Purdue retorted mildly.