Kidnap in Crete (22 page)

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Authors: Rick Stroud

BOOK: Kidnap in Crete
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Kreipe glanced up and began to smile, Leigh Fermor saluted and leant down, looking across the general at Fenske, asking: ‘
Ist dies das Generals Wagen
?’


Ja
,
Ja
,’ replied Fenske.

Behind the driver’s head Leigh Fermor could see Moss’s belt buckle glinting.


Papieren
bitte
,’ said Leigh Fermor, holding out his hand in a respectful manner. The general nodded and reached into his coat pocket for his identity card.

Instantly, Leigh Fermor and Moss tore open the car doors. The interior light snapped on flooding the driver and his passenger in dazzling white. The andartes leapt out of the ditches and dashed forward. Leigh Fermor grabbed Kreipe by the lapels, knocking off the general’s gold-braided hat. He jammed his automatic into the German’s chest shouting ‘
Hände hoch!
’ The driver twisted towards Moss, fumbling to drag his Luger from its holster. Moss grabbed the man’s collar and hit him as hard as he could across the temple with the cosh. Fenske sighed and slumped sideways, as if he had been hit with a hammer, blood streaming into his eyes from the gash on his head. Moss dragged him out of the car and Tyrakis ran up, hitting Fenske another hard blow to his head. Together they pulled the man’s body onto the ground, twisting his arms behind his back and snapping handcuffs onto his wrists. Fenske lay in the road, a moaning gurgle coming from his throat. Antonis Zoidakis knelt down and pulled the driver’s Luger from its holster.

On the other side of the car Kreipe bellowed in rage, trying to break free, cursing and lashing out with his fists and feet, hitting Leigh Fermor violently on the cheek. The Cretans fell on him, shouting and screaming, forcing him to the ground with their weight. Mitsos and Zografistos ran up just in time to join the fight. They too leapt on the general. As Kreipe lay pinned to the ground, Chnarakis handcuffed him and the others tied his legs with rope. The rear doors were wrenched open and they bundled him, head first, struggling and writhing, into the back of the car, forcing him to lie lengthways on the floor. Zografistos saw something glinting on the road, it was the general’s Iron Cross and he scooped it up, unnoticed in the confusion. Giorgios barged past him and leapt into the back, his feet trampling the general, Stratis and Manolis followed, their feet stamping on Kreipe’s chest and shins. They slammed the doors and wound down the windows, their Marlin sub-machine guns poking through ready to spray fire. Chnarakis and Zoidakis dragged the driver to the side of the road, out of the way of the car. Zografistos tried to help them. Fenske’s feet scraped along the ground, his head lolled forward, blood ran down his neck.

Moss leapt into the driver’s seat, checking that the handbrake was on and that the fuel gauge read full. Leigh Fermor thumped into the passenger seat, pulling Kreipe’s peaked cap onto his head. The general began to struggle again, heaving around; Tyrakis drew his long, sharp, silver-bladed knife and held the point against the officer’s throat, muttering threateningly in Greek. Kreipe stopped resisting.

By the ditch Zoidakis and Chnarakis tried to get the driver to stand up. At each attempt his knees buckled. Moss depressed the clutch, pushed the car into gear and got ready to take off the handbrake. Leigh Fermor gave his last instructions to the others. They were to go, at once, with Fenske, to meet up with Dunbabin at his wireless base. Micky pushed everyone aside, his face grotesque through the car window, screaming hysterically in a voice full of venom: ‘Long live freedom. Down with Germany!’ Leigh Fermor pushed him back, shouting at him in Greek to shut up. At the same time he smashed the interior light bulb with his Colt, shards of glass and plastic sprayed the front of the car, then darkness and dead calm descended. Moss released the handbrake, slowly let in the clutch and felt the powerful engine take the weight of the vehicle. Then he revved hard, the rear wheels skidded and they sped off, heading for Heraklion and its
1
5,
0
00-strong German garrison. In the mirror he could see some of the others dragging Fenske off the road and into the darkness. The ambush had taken less than ninety seconds.

Inside the Opel, the kidnappers erupted into excited, relieved gabbling, punctuated by the moans of the general, muffled by Giorgios’s hand clamped over his mouth. Ahead of them were headlights, lorries driving towards Archanes. The three guerrillas in the back of the Opel ducked down, the lorries roared past, the soldiers in the trucks sitting bolt upright like toys, rifles between their knees.

 

See Notes to Chapter 16

17

Through the Checkpoints

Kreipe began to shout above the noise, repeating over and over in German: ‘Where’s my hat, where’s my hat?’ From his position on the floor, trampled under the feet of the three kidnappers, he could not see that it was on Leigh Fermor’s head.

After a few minutes they were flagged down by soldiers manning a checkpoint with no barrier. Paterakis, Stratis and Tyrakis crouched low. Giorgios once more clamped his hard mountain farmer’s hand, rough as sandpaper, over the general’s soft mouth, crushing his face between his fingers. Moss slowed down, giving the soldiers a chance to see the pennants on the wings of the car. Then, when they were within yards of the soldiers, he accelerated, passing the checkpoint, tensing in expectation of a rifle bullet blasting through the rear windscreen. The car cruised into a bend and the roadblock vanished behind them. The kidnappers knew that if the guards suspected anything they would telephone ahead to have the vehicle stopped.

From the floor of the Opel, Kreipe asked how long he was going to be forced to remain in his undignified position. Leigh Fermor lit a cigarette and spoke in German. He told the general that if he was prepared to give his word that he would not shout or do anything to attract attention, then he would be treated as a comrade in arms, not a prisoner. Leigh Fermor found it difficult to make out the general’s muffled reply, but assumed that he had agreed.

Another security point loomed up. The splendour of the staff car and the sight of the pennants worked the same magic; the kidnap vehicle was waved through, the guards snapping to attention and saluting. Seconds later they were speeding uphill. Ahead of them on the left lay the Villa Ariadne, where Kreipe’s staff were waiting to welcome him home and the kitchen was standing by, ready to serve dinner. The soldiers on the gate heard the car approaching and got ready to raise the barrier; one of them ran towards the house to be there to open the car door and usher the general up the steps. The car drew level with the orange and white security bar, Moss put his hand on the horn and drove past. To the delight of the kidnappers the guards saluted, ramrod straight, staring ahead. Leigh Fermor asked the general if he spoke any English.


Nein
,’ he replied.

Moss asked if he spoke Russian.


Nein.

‘Greek?’


Nein
.’


Parlez-vous français
?’


Un petit peu
 . . .’

The two Englishmen could not resist ‘the Cowardesque reply’: ‘I never think that is quite enough.’

After this interchange they talked to Kreipe in stumbling French which Leigh Fermor translated into Greek for the benefit of the others.

Moss drove fast through the deserted flax fields towards Heraklion. Houses began to appear along the sides of the road. On their right they passed a large, lavish building which had been requisitioned as a garrison post office. A few hundred yards further on was the officers’ club; outside were chairs and tables where members sat in the warm evening air being served by white-coated mess stewards moving about taking orders and delivering trays of drinks. Military traffic into the town was building up, forcing Moss to slow down. From somewhere on the terrace outside the club a voice shouted: ‘
Der Generals Wagen
’; officers and men on the crowded terrace rose to attention, saluting, barging into the waiters and sending trays of drinks flying. The Opel rolled on past Heraklion cemetery along King Giorgios II Street, towards another checkpoint and the centre of the city. The pennants saw them through, the barrier swung obligingly into the air. The silence of the fields gave way to the hustle and bustle of the garrison town.

Ahead Moss could see lights around the gardens of Liberty Square and throngs of soldiers milling in front of the huts which were the
Soldatenheim
,
the Wehrmacht’s equivalent of the Naafi. Through the huts a swastika billowed from the pillars of the Kreiskommandantur, where Moss would have to turn right into King Giorgios I Street. This was the riskiest part of the journey: the road was very narrow and full of German vehicles and soldiers, illuminated by pools of light spilling from cafes and bars. The car slowed outside the Kommandantur and the soldiers on guard saluted. Moss swung on to the main road through the town and headed towards the crowds coming out of the civilian cinema. Soldiers poured from the building, blocking the road. More flags bearing white-circled, black swastikas flapped in the evening breeze. Drunken German soldiers sang songs and walked with their arms round each other’s shoulders, shouting greetings and elbowing aside any local unfortunate enough to get in their way. Moss blasted the horn, sending uniformed men scurrying out of the path, saluting and stumbling as they as they cleared a way for the general’s sedan. The car was waived through checkpoint after checkpoint, Leigh Fermor muttering directions from the passenger seat.

They drove on towards Lion Square. During the day the area was usually full and bustling with people bartering whatever they could lay their hands on. The white marble bowls and lions of the fountain were permanently covered in dust; the water that fed it had been cut off soon after the invasion. Ahead the road turned slightly to the left: this was where three years earlier Colonel Tzoulakis had lost his life firing at the first paratroopers to enter the town.

The kidnappers were on the last leg of the journey through the town. From the back of the car the general’s muffled voice burst out: ‘This is marvellous; where are you taking me?’

‘To Cairo,’ replied Leigh Fermor.

‘No. But now?’

‘We are in Heraklion.’

Kreipe was flabbergasted. ‘
Heraklion?

‘You must understand that we want to keep you out of sight,’ said Leigh Fermor. ‘We will make you as comfortable as we can later on.’

Leaving the centre behind they headed towards the biggest challenge of all, the heavily guarded West Gate, leading them out of the city and onto the road to Anogia. If things went wrong it was here that they planned to abandon the car and the prisoner. If forced to run they were going to blindfold Kreipe and leave him tied up in the car, using the vehicle to block the road. All around there were hundreds of narrow alleyways, flat roofs, cellars, culverts, skylights and the ruins of bombed buildings into which they could disappear. The band had hand grenades, automatic weapons, ammunition and rations enough to last until they could be smuggled out of the city. In their pockets they carried suicide pills.

Traffic approaching the gate had to turn left and was then funnelled between large concrete blocks, painted with broad black and white stripes. The Opel joined the short queue of military vehicles and drove slowly up to the massive stone arch, weaving between the anti-tank blocks. Now it was Stratis who clamped his hand round the general’s mouth, pressing his dagger against Kreipe’s throat.

Manolis and Giorgios slid back the bolts on their Marlin guns, holding them low and ready to fire through the thin steel of the car doors. Leigh Fermor and Moss cocked their pistols; Leigh Fermor held his ready to fire; Moss’s lay on his lap.

There were more soldiers than usual on guard at the gate, milling about on either side of the arch. A military policeman, holding a red torch, stood stock still in the middle of the road, silhouetted by bright arc lights. Leigh Fermor wound down his window and shouted out: ‘
Generals Wagen
,’ ordering the soldiers to kill the lights. Through the windscreen Moss could see the men passing the word back, ‘
Generals Wagen
’ and stiffening to attention. The military policeman hesitated, then stood aside and saluted, the barrier rose into the air, and the car swept through. Leigh Fermor shouted ‘
Gute Nacht!

and they were out of the city where there was one final checkpoint, and then they were heading west along a road that ran through moonlit fields.

Back at the kidnap junction, Micky and Ilias finished clearing away the evidence of the kidnap and then set off on foot for Heraklion, where they were planning to start a propaganda campaign against the general.

In the hills, Fenske the driver, had come round and was walking unsteadily under the guard of Nikos, Antonis, Chnarakis, Pavlos Zografistos and Antonios. They were making good progress and were two or three miles from the kidnap scene. Even so, Antonis decided that they could never make it: soon the Germans were going to send search parties and the driver would be a guarantee of their capture. They stopped for a rest; Antonis walked behind the German, taking out his knife and nodding to the others. He held Fenske’s hair, yanked his head back and slit his throat as if he were slaughtering a lamb. The man’s body jerked and arched in spasm, his feet drumming on the ground until after a minute they became still. Antonis ran his hands over Fenske’s tunic and removed his wallet, his paybook and his driving licence; finally he decapitated him, wiping the knife clean on the leg of his breeches. Together, the kidnappers threw the corpse into a deep hole and hid the head, leaving it to be collected later as a macabre souvenir. The abduction had claimed its first victim.

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