Fatherland
than a kilometer long and half a kilometer wide, with a single loop of road running one-way clockwise. To reach Buhler's property, March had to travel three quarters of the way around the island. He drove cautiously, slowing almost to a halt each time he glimpsed one of the houses off to his left.
The place had been named after the famous colonies of swans that lived at the southern end of the Havel. It had become fashionable toward the end of the last century. Most of its buildings dated from then: large villas, steep roofed and stone fronted in the French style, with long drives and lawns, protected from prying eyes by high walls and trees. A piece of the ruined Tuileries Palace stood incongruously by the roadside—a pillar and a section of arch carted back from Paris by some long-dead Wilhelmine businessman. No one stirred. Occasionally, through the bars of a gate, he saw a guard dog, and—once—a gardener raking leaves. The owners were at work in the city, or away, or lying low.
March knew the identities of a few of them: party bosses; a motor industry tycoon, grown fat on the profits of slave labor immediately after the war; the managing director of Wertheim's, the great department store on Potsdamer-PIatz, which had been confiscated from its Jewish owners more than thirty years before; an armaments manufacturer; the head of an engineering conglomerate building the great Autobahnen into the eastern territories. He wondered how Buhler could have afforded to keep such wealthy company. Then he remembered Halder's description: luxury like the Roman Empire . . .
"KP 17 , this is KHQ. KP 17 , answer, please!" A woman's urgent voice filled the car. March picked up the radio handset concealed under the dashboard.
"This is KP 17 . Go ahead."
"KP 17 , I have Sturmbannführer Jaeger for you."
He had arrived outside the gates to Buhler's villa. Through the metalwork, March could see a yellow curve of drive and the towers, exactly as the sentry had described.
"You said trouble," boomed Jaeger. "And we've got it."
"Now what?"
"I hadn't been back here ten minutes when two of our esteemed colleagues from the Gestapo arrived. 'In view of Party Comrade Buhler's prominent position, blah blah blah, the case has been redesignated a security matter.' "
March thumped his hand against the steering wheel. "Shit!"
" 'All documents to be handed over to the Security Police forthwith, reports required from investigating officers on current status of inquiry, Kripo inquiry to be closed, effective immediately.'"
"When did this happen?"
"It's happening now. They're sitting in our office."
"Did you tell them where I am?"
"Of course not. I just left them to it and said I'd try to find you. I've come straight to the control room." Jaeger's voice dropped. March could imagine him turning his back on the woman operator. "Listen, Zavi, I wouldn't recommend any heroics. They mean serious business, believe me. The Gestapo will be swarming over Schwanenwerder any minute."
March stared at the house. It was utterly still, deserted. Damn the Gestapo.
He made up his mind at that moment. He said, "I can't hear you, Max. I'm sorry. The line is breaking up. I haven't been able to understand anything you've said. Request you report radio fault. Out." He switched off the receiver.
About fifty meters before the house, on the right side of the road, March had passed a gated track leading into the woods that covered the center of the island. Now he put the Volkswagen into reverse gear, rapidly backed up to it and parked. He trotted back to Buhler's gates. He did not have much time.
They were locked. That was to be expected. The lock itself was a solid metal block a meter and a half off the ground. He wedged the toe of his boot into it and stepped up. There was a row of iron spikes, thirty centimeters apart, running along the top of the gate, just above his head. Gripping one in either hand, he hauled himself up until he was in a position to swing his left leg over. A hazardous business. For a moment he sat astride the gate, recovering his breath. Then he dropped down to the gravel driveway on the other side.
The house was large and of a curious design. It had three stories capped by a steep roof of blue slate. To the left were the two stone towers the sentry had described. These were attached to the main body of the house, which had a balcony with a stone balustrade running the entire length of the first floor. The balcony was supported by
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