Название: The Philatelist
Автор: D.H. Coop
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Зарубежные детективы
isbn: 9781646546688
isbn:
“I am dead serious, my friend.”
“How is it that you are telling me now?” asked Helmut.
“I was instructed to only tell those who needed to know. But if I am lost, you must carry out the mission. I am sorry, my old friend, that I was not able to tell you sooner.
“A handpicked skeleton crew is currently on board. The remaining members of our old crew should be arriving here as we speak,” von Holstein continued.
“This is unbelievable,” said Helmut, still showing signs that he was somewhat mystified by what he had just learned.
“Yes, this is unbelievable,” agreed von Holstein. “I hope that it will help the war effort, but I am afraid it is too late for us to claim victory now.”
“The only thing left is for us to do our duty,” replied Helmut.
“Yes! Our mission is one of evasion, not attack. The snorkel has been coated with antiradar materials and is fitted with radar search aerials. Our submerged speed is great enough to outrun any potential depth charge attack if we are detected. We also have on board an ultrasensitive hydrophone system, which will allow us to locate enemy ships up to fifty miles away. The supersonic echo will set the range, direction, speed, and number of targets,” von Holstein said as he paced the small room, hands clasped behind his back.
“All without surfacing,” marveled Helmut more to himself than his kapitän. “Furthermore, should we encounter an enemy destroyer, we will be able to switch the engines over to an electric motor with a belt drive system, which allows for silent running at under five knots. There has also been an improvement in armament capabilities, which include torpedoes able to fire at any angle from a depth of a hundred and fifty feet while still accurately tracking the target. A new zigzag and acoustic torpedo has been secretly developed. We will not be fooled by the British foxer decoys that emit sounds to foil our noise-detection torpedoes. Even the tactic of turning off the engines will not stop this new weapon.”
“Unbelievable!” Helmut paused in astonishment and then began speaking again. “After we have delivered our three pieces of luggage,” he said, motioning with his head toward the three officers in the next room, “will we have the opportunity to try our luck with these new devices?”
“Absolutely! But first, we must get them to the American West Coast without anyone discovering us. Now come, we must rejoin our guests in the next room.”
Chapter 9
Wehrmacht Series, Pioniere—issued March 21, 1943
March 17, 1945, at 2:50 a.m.—Santa Barbara, California
Looking at the scattered blinking lights of the California coastline, the kapitän could not help but smile. With the Allied armies closing in on Germany and Japan, the Americans had become overconfident of victory. So much so that they appeared to be totally unconcerned about the possibility of invasion. True, there was never a real possibility of that occurring. But they did not know that then and disregarded it now.
Even early in the war, sightings of U-Boats off the eastern coast of America were often exaggerated or untrue. Von Holstein even heard stories of Americans believing U-Boat crews came ashore to shop for food and clothes! What a simpleminded culture these Americans have, he thought.
Von Holstein did remember the easy pickings of merchant marine ships off the Atlantic coast that were made easier by the foolish American Atlantic Coastal Command. Believing that the East Coast was too densely populated to suffer an invasion, they had not ordered the blackout of the resort cities until May of 1942, and this illumination had provided a fine backdrop for the sinking of merchant ships. He laughed at the memory of the frightened American Coast Guard attacking large numbers of whales, thinking they were U-Boats. Well, they had gotten better since then, that was certain. It was this early success that encouraged the later exaggeration of the stories on both sides. If only Germany had the three hundred U-boats back in 1939, England would not have survived until America came into the war.
Von Holstein gave the signal to Helmut, who was down with the gun crew.
Helmut led the gun crew over to a small rubber boat, which they were able to quickly manhandle over the side. Once it was in the water, they secured it with holding lines next to the hull before Helmut turned to motion to the kapitän that it was ready. The kapitän sent one of the lookouts down the ladder, and a few moments later, three dark figures emerged on the deck of the U-Boat near the rubber boat. They turned and gave the party salute with their right arm outstretched before climbing into the rubber boat. After they were all securely in the craft, Helmut and the others released the lines and cast the boat loose.
The entire topside crew saluted. Then, just as quickly as they had arrived, the men disappeared, and the U-Boat slid under the waves. The tiny rubber boat and its passengers headed into the night on a secret mission to save Germany.
The kapitän and crew were happy. They had crossed two oceans undetected. Now they would see how well the U-Boat performed in combat on their return trip home. Meanwhile, their three passengers were heading toward the destination that could change the course of the war.
Chapter 10
Transpacific Airmail—issued November 22, 1935
Franklin Delano Roosevelt pointed out a mistake in the design: the clipper ship on the left had only two masts instead of three. In 1937, China was added to the route, and the name of the series became China Clipper airmail.
Warm Springs, Georgia—1939
The six-room cottage was finished in 1932 at a cost of $8,738, which included a garage, servants’ quarters, a guesthouse, and landscaping. The front of the cottage had a circular drive that balanced the grand entrance. A covered roof extended out from the building and was held in place by four white pillars. There was no porch from the drive to the front door. Each side of the door had two sets of windows that were rimmed with shutters. The architect Henry Toombs had done other work for the occupant of the cottage. He had designed the unusual floor plan so that it allowed the occupant, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, to move around in his wheelchair. Roosevelt had come to Warm Springs in 1924 with hopes of a cure for the effects of infantile paralysis he contracted in 1921.
The mineral waters at the Meriwether Inn had reputedly cured another victim of polio, a man who regained the use of his legs in the warm mineral waters. This expectation drew Roosevelt to buy twelve thousand acres of land close to the health spa and its healing waters for $195.
Then the governor of New York, Roosevelt began working on the cottage, which became known as the little White House when he was installed in the office of president of the United States in March 1933. The same year, Adolf Hitler assumed the position of chancellor in Germany and started his grab for complete power. He would have his escape home built later at Berchtesgaden called the Eagle’s Nest.
As the world seemed to be turning away from democratic governments and moving toward authoritarian strongmen, FDR was seen by many as the man to save the nation from collapse into dictatorship. His first days in office—called the Hundred Days—saw a rush СКАЧАТЬ