Beyond the Call (13 page)

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Authors: Lee Trimble

BOOK: Beyond the Call
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N
EAR DUSK, A
car pulled up at the edge of a stretch of lonely, snow-bound woodland. The solitary passenger got out, handed some money to the driver, and slammed the door. The ramshackle car drove off, rattling and smoking. As the tail-lights dwindled into the distance, the passenger hefted his heavy pack onto his shoulder and started walking
up and down beside the road, stomping his boots in the snow as if to shake some life and warmth into them. He pulled his fur-lined hat lower on his head and tugged the collar of his parka tighter. The sky was steel-gray with stored-up snow, and the first flakes were already nipping at his face.

When the car was out of sight, he stomped up and down a couple more times, then took one huge sideways stride away from the road; one more step took him under the boughs of the pines. Drawing a knife from an inner pocket, he cut a branch and, using it like a broom, brushed snow into the prints he'd just made. Walking backwards, obscuring his tracks as he went, he worked his way deeper into the wood. When he'd gone about 30 or 40 feet, he turned and walked on normally, throwing the branch away. The snow would start falling soon and do the rest of the work for him.

Back before the war, when Robert first left his mother's home in Camp Hill to join the Army, he'd dreamed of one day becoming a pilot. Without a college education, he knew it would be hard to get a transfer from the infantry to pilot training, but he'd had no trouble imagining it. What he could never have imagined in his weirdest daydreams was that he was setting out on a path that would end up with him creeping through a forest in the wilds of Poland, covering his tracks to throw off the Russian secret police.

As strange as it seemed, in some ways it was closer to his upbringing than most of what he'd been through since enlisting. Secret police were a novelty, but moving stealthily through a snowy forest was almost as familiar to him as strolling on a downtown sidewalk. The Polish countryside reminded him of his home country and the boyhood weekends spent stalking deer in the woods of the Juniata and Susquehanna Valleys above Harrisburg or fishing in their slow waters.

Robert glanced back toward the road. It would take a hell of a tracker to catch up with him. First they'd have to discover that he'd hired a ride from Lwów, then tail him to this spot, then notice that the car had stopped. With any luck, the tracker would see the pattern of
footprints and assume Robert had got himself another ride or walked on down the road.

Satisfied that he'd done a good job, he strode on. Before long he had vanished into the gloom among the trees, invisible from the road. Reaching the far side of the wood, he struck out across a field. In the gathering gloom, he could make out a farmhouse about a mile away, a dark patch against the white landscape. Taking a bearing on the house in case he lost sight of it in the dusk, he set out toward it.

The faint sound of an automobile came from the road behind. It was a quarter mile away, but Robert dropped to a crouch and remained motionless. The lights of a car moved slowly east to west, disappearing beyond the screen of trees. The glow seemed to stop at about the spot where Robert had left his ride. He waited, heart thumping. The bird dogs were even better trackers than he'd feared. After an agonizing couple of minutes, there was the faint sound of an engine revving, and the glow of lights moved on, fading into the distance.

Robert breathed again. Standing up, he located the distant outline of the farm once more and carried on walking. After about twenty minutes of crossing ditches and climbing fences, he came to a dirt road which led into the farm homestead. He climbed the gate and looked around. It was almost fully dark now. There was a glow in the window of the farmhouse. Off to one side were some outbuildings and a small barn. If his information was correct, this should be the place.

Not wanting to alarm the farmer, Robert made straight for the barn. Pausing to listen, he could hear a murmur of voices. The door was barred from inside. He thumped on the timber, and the voices fell silent. ‘I'm American!' he called hoarsely. ‘American. Open the door.'

There was a sound of a bar being withdrawn, and the door opened a little, revealing a dim glow of candlelight within. A face appeared – hooded, bearded, wary.

‘I'm an American. I'm here to help you,' Robert said.

There was a pause, then a clamor of surprised voices; the door opened wide, and he stepped inside. He felt himself being seized and embraced; his nostrils filled with a powerful reek of human filth.
Looking around, he saw a scene from a Victorian slum – haggard, unshaven faces illuminated by a candle, bodies wrapped in frayed, shapeless coats and mufflers – everyone looking at him like he was the Second Coming. Some stared dumbly, while the rest talked simultaneously, swearing in delight, smiles breaking out on the dirty faces.

Robert took off his pack and opened it up. First things first. Fending off questions about who he was and where he'd come from, he began sharing out the food he'd brought. It was mostly K-rations, from a supply that had come with him from Poltava – pocket-size packs of luncheon meat, pork loaf, tinned cheese, biscuits, malted milk tablets, oatmeal, and sugar. He had brought as much as he could carry, but it wasn't going to be enough. He counted 23 men, and there were only enough rations for about twenty decent-size meals. Anticipating the problem, he'd filled up space in his pack and pockets with extra D-ration chocolate bars, which he shared around.

There were ironic groans at the sight of the ration packs. As a flyer, Robert had no experience of K-rations, but they were a bugbear to combat infantrymen: always the same stuff and never enough of it. There wasn't a man there who'd thought he could ever be so deliriously glad to open up a K-ration pack.

As the men ate, Robert studied them and listened to their talk, occasionally asking a question of his own. Many of them scratched themselves intermittently; they were alive with lice. How could any honorable nation allow this suffering to happen to its allies' people? Some had escaped from forced marches westward when their camps were evacuated, and Robert heard stories of prisoners being used by the Germans as human shields. Much good that did the Germans against an enemy like the Red Army, who just fired regardless. Those who had been freed from their camps by Soviet forces told of incidents of Russian POWs being murdered by their liberators. American and British prisoners were either ignored or marched to the rear and abandoned. Some had managed to get rides on trains or trucks, but none had any real idea where they were going, or why.

It was said that those who went to the Russian camps were as badly
off as they had been in the stalags, and there were rumors that the Russians would simply keep the liberated prisoners captive forever. Asked if the rumors were true, Robert had to admit that he didn't know. But he was here to do what he could to get them to safety. They'd soon be out of here and on their way home.

There were little packs of Camel cigarettes and matches in the ration packs, and soon the barn was filled with a fog of tobacco smoke and cheerful conversation – between them they dispelled the nauseating atmosphere of filth and despondency. One voice broke softly into song, and the others joined in. The only men who didn't enter into the jubilant mood were the sick and injured. Robert did what little he could for them, but he was no medic, and all he had was a few first-aid supplies and a bottle of vodka.

They would need to depart before dawn. Robert settled down to spend the night in the barn, feeling like a shepherd with his flock. So far, so good. Tomorrow the real test would come. Somehow he had to get this scarecrow band into Lwów. He had a plan worked out, but it was a risky one.

I
N THE HOUR
before dawn, Robert rose from his bed on the straw. Accompanied by the couple of men who seemed to be the de facto leaders of the group, he went to see the farmer. Communication was difficult, but the farmer agreed readily enough to Robert's request for a ride to the outskirts of Lwów. With a generosity that Robert would learn was common among the Poles, the farmer was only too glad to help the Americans on their way.

In the dark, he began hitching his horse to the cart, while Robert assembled the POWs. The sick were put aboard first, and the rest climbed in and settled down wherever they could. The cart, creaking under its unaccustomed weight, rolled out onto the farm track in the first glimmer of dawn.

It wasn't many miles to Lwów, and it was still early when they approached the outskirts. Robert was anticipating that any Soviet
sentries or patrols who were about would be hungover from the previous night's drinking, and wouldn't be inclined to question travelers. The Russians were addicted to the local liquor, a powerful brew made from beets, and he'd seen them consume large quantities of it – on duty and off.

At the edge of town, the farmer reined in, and the Americans climbed down from the cart. Robert offered the farmer money for his trouble, but the man smiled and waved it away. Then he bade his friends farewell, shook the reins, turned in the road, and trundled off the way they'd come.

Taking turns to support the weaker men, Robert and his party of fugitives walked the last quarter-mile into Lwów. It wasn't far to the main railroad station. Robert had visited it the day before to check the times of trains, and had bought two dozen tickets for Odessa, the main port city on the Black Sea coast.

Robert had learned from Moscow that the Soviets were establishing a transient camp at the port. The intention was that all liberated POWs (subject to being properly screened in Soviet camps) must be sent there to await evacuation by sea. There were to be no exceptions.

At Poltava, optimistic preparations to receive airlifted POWs were still going on.
12
The Americans objected to the Odessa plan. Odessa was a three-day rail journey from even the nearest Polish cities, and there was no telling what kind of facilities the Soviets would put in place, or what kind of delays and maltreatment the POWs would experience along the way. At the very least, the Americans argued, the sick must be evacuated by air via Poltava and Tehran, where they could receive proper hospital treatment.
13
The Russians refused.

General Deane cabled Colonel Wilmeth, who was still stuck at Poltava awaiting clearance to enter Poland with his contact team. Deane notified him that his mission had finally been approved by the Russians in Moscow, and that he would be permitted to go to Lublin to inspect the POW facilities there. Colonel Hampton applied immediately to General Kovalev, the Soviet commander at Poltava, for clearance for Colonel Wilmeth and his team to fly to Lublin.

The request was denied.
14

While his superiors protested, cajoled, and argued with the Russians, Captain Trimble walked into the suburbs of Lwów leading a ragged band of ex-prisoners. There was a guard post at the edge of town. Robert's pulse quickened as they approached it. There was nobody about. It looked like they might get through without being challenged. Then, just as Robert's hopes were rising, a soldier came out of a nearby house and challenged them. He was every bit as bleary-eyed as Robert had hoped, and blinked suspiciously at the crowd of men.

Without giving him a chance to speak, Robert held his passport in front of the soldier's face and said, ‘
Ya amerikanets
',
15
one of the handful of Russian phrases he had memorized for just such an occasion. ‘I am a representative of the Embassy of the United States of America,' he added in English.

Whether he understood it or not, the Russian seemed satisfied by the sight of the passport, but he gestured threateningly with his rifle at the POWs. ‘
Nemtsy
?' he said. Robert recognized the word – he thought the men were Germans. ‘
Yavlyayutsya li oni fritsev
?'
16
he added, looking decidedly hostile.

‘No, no,' said Robert. ‘
Amerikanskiy
. Like me. Americans. They were prisoners of the Germans.'

The soldier seemed to accept this, but didn't lower his rifle. One or two of the POWs were looking like they were bracing themselves to make a run for it. The soldier directed a stream of Russian at Robert. He didn't understand any of the words, but knew enough by now to recognize it as a demand for identification papers. Robert tried to explain that the men had no papers – they had all been taken by the Germans.

In a last bid to overcome the guard's resistance, he pointed to his watch and said, ‘
Poyezd
.' Train.

The soldier shook his head. Hangover or no hangover, this was one Red Army grunt who was determined to be awkward. He ordered them to stay where they were and turned, rather unsteadily, back toward the guard post. The next move would be a phone call to the
city commandant's office, followed by detention in the POW holding camp, and the end of their hopes of imminent freedom.

Casting around desperately for a way out, Robert spotted a bottle of beet liquor on a table outside the guard post. He called to the soldier, who stopped and turned back. Robert gestured to the bottle, indicating that he would like to have it. The soldier shook his head and snatched the bottle, holding it protectively against his body. Robert dug in his pocket and pulled out a wad of dollar bills. He fanned them out under the soldier's nose.

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