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The text began: "The German Wehrmacht must be prepared, even before the completion of the war against England, to overthrow Russia in a rapid campaign."

Volodya found himself gasping for breath. This was dynamite. The Tokyo spy had been right, and Stalin wrong. And the Soviet Union was in mortal danger.

Heart pounding, Volodya looked at the end of the document. It was signed: "Adolf Hitler."

He scanned the pages, looking for a date, and found one. The invasion was scheduled for May 15, 1941.

Next to this was a penciled note in Werner Franck's handwriting: "The date has now been changed to 22 June."

"Oh, my God, he's done it," Volodya said aloud. "He's confirmed the invasion."

He put the document back into the envelope and the envelope into the magazine.

This changed everything.

He got up from the bench and walked back to the Soviet embassy to give them the news.

ix

There was no railway station at Akelberg, so Carla and Frieda got off at the nearest stop, ten miles away, and wheeled their bicycles off the train.

They wore shorts, sweaters, and utilitarian sandals, and they had put their hair up in plaits. They looked like members of the League of German Girls, the Bund Deutscher Madel, or BDM. Such girls often took cycling holidays. Whet

her they did anything other than cycle, especially during the evenings in the spartan hostels at which they stayed, was the subject of much speculation. Boys said BDM stood for "Bubi Druck Mir," "Baby, Do Me."

Carla and Frieda consulted their map, then rode out of town in the direction of Akelberg.

Carla thought about her father every hour of every day. She knew she would never get over the horror of finding him savagely beaten and dying. She had cried for days. But alongside her grief was another emotion: rage. She was not merely going to be sad. She was going to do something about it.

Maud, distraught with grief, had at first tried to persuade Carla not to go to Akelberg. "My husband is dead, my son is in the army, I don't want my daughter to put her life on the line too!" she had wailed.

After the funeral, when horror and hysteria gave way to a calmer, more profound mourning, Carla had asked her what Walter would have wanted. Maud had thought for a long time. It was not until the next day that she answered. "He would have wanted you to carry on the fight."

It was hard for Maud to say it, but they both knew it was true.

Frieda had had no such discussion with her parents. Her mother, Monika, had once loved Walter, and was devastated by his death; nonetheless she would have been horrified if she knew what Frieda was doing. Her father, Ludi, would have locked her in the cellar. But they believed she was going bicycling. If anything, they might have suspected she was meeting some unsuitable boyfriend.

The countryside was hilly, but they were both in good shape, and an hour later they coasted down a slope into the small town of Akelberg. Carla felt apprehensive: they were entering enemy territory.

They went into a cafe. There was no Coca-Cola. "This isn't Berlin!" said the woman behind the counter, with as much indignation as if they had asked to be serenaded by an orchestra. Carla wondered why someone who disliked strangers would run a cafe.

They got glasses of Fanta, a German product, and took the opportunity to refill their water bottles.

They did not know the precise location of the hospital. They needed to ask directions, but Carla was concerned about arousing suspicion. The local Nazis might take an interest in strangers asking questions. As they were paying, Carla said: "We're supposed to meet the rest of our group at the crossroads by the hospital. Which way is that?"

The woman would not meet her eye. "There's no hospital here."

"The Akelberg Medical Institution," Carla persisted, quoting from the letterhead.

"Must be another Akelberg."

Carla thought she was lying. "How strange," she said, keeping up the pretense. "I hope we're not in the wrong place."

They wheeled their bikes along the high street. There was nothing else for it, Carla thought: she had to ask the way.

A harmless-looking old man was sitting on a bench outside a bar, enjoying the afternoon sunshine. "Where's the hospital?" Carla asked him, covering her anxiety with a cheery veneer.

"Through the town and up the hill on your left," he said. "Don't go inside, though--not many people come out!" He cackled as if he had made a joke.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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