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Authors: Richard Rhys Jones

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"I was told that you are a loyal party member. How can you even mention defeat? I am duty bound to report this to
the Reichsführer SS. Don’t you


He was cut short by the only means Von Struck knew to gain attention, a sharp blow to the jaw. Rasch dropped like a weighted sack and looked up at Von Struck from the floor, his glasses askew and his lower lip trembling.

"I can mention defeat, Herr Doctor," Vo
n Struck said standing over him.
"
B
ecause I know what’s going on in the East. While you were kissing ass in Berlin, I was on the front line. Every day Ivan gets stronger and every day we grow weaker. Ivan sends in whole armies to attack and we can only answer him with under-strength divisions. We squander our manpower guarding concentration camps and our rear areas because the people we have conquered have been alienated to the point of revolt by our terror and arrogance. We are not the Master Race, Herr Doctor, and believe me when I say that the Soviets are not subhuman either. I once believed that we were, I admit that, but now I know that the Master Race is the race with the biggest guns and largest armies.” He squatted down in front of Rasch and put his glasses on him properly
.
"I can confirm to you, Herr Doctor Rasch, that we do not have the bigger guns and larger armies. So where does that leave us?”

Rasch stood up and, after adjusting his uniform, he silently turned to leave. He stopped as if he had remembered something and said hesitantly over his shoulder to Von Struck, "I also hold the rank of Standartenführer, I would be obliged if you would use my rank when you a
ddress me in front of the men

please.”

"No, Doctor Rasch, I will not. To use your political rank in front of the men would be an affront to them and to the Kammeraden who have given their lives for the Fatherland. I will not disgrace the title to suit your vanity. Now get out.” He turned and took another swig from the bottle. Rasch took that as his dismissal.

Later on, in the troop’s carriage, Von Struck outlined the plan and mission in more detail. "Basically it’s just as Wolfgang explained t
o you all. We’re to escort the d
octor to this
c
ount in Romania. It couldn’t be easier. Romania is an ally and the territory we’ll be in is peaceful. It’s our job to look
professional and smart for the c
ount so he thinks that the German army is still the best in the world and not the pile of shit that we all know it is." He looked round the troops as they laughed.

"So why did we get picked to do the job? I’m not complain
ing but it seems any fifty year-
old reservist could make a good impression if he shines his boots enough and marches in time," asked the younger of the two Bavarians, Nils Muschinski.

"Because our beloved Heini has ordered
it.
This c
ount has a
c
ompany of soldiers that specialise in night fighting. They’ve had a lot of success in the East and Heinrich wants to show that we’re taking him
seriously. It’s only a c
ompany now but,
if all goes well, it will be a r
egiment soon and t
hen a d
ivision." He added as an afterthought, “Don’t
be too hard on the Romanians, they’re brave and proud. Their failings as an army in the East didn’t lie in a lack of heart.”

He took in their stone-faced expressions. None looked convinced.

"They’ve had organisation and supply problems and we all know what that can do to an army. Their frontline soldiers have suffered from bad leadership just as much as ours have.”

The magic phrase ‘bad leadership’ brought on understanding nods from the old hands. They had all seen men die needlessly. The disastrous string o
f directives from the Führer’s h
eadquarters about holding ground at all cost and fighting to the last round had helped decimate one of the best-trained and motivated armies in the world. Bad leadership was a concept they could all understand.

"I'll tell you what
,
though. Our noble Romanian allies do have a flair for the theatre.”

"Why do you say that, sir?” ventured the Leipziger, Berndt Grand.

"Well, it seems that they’ve named themselves ‘The Vampires’ to spread terror into Ivan.” He smiled as he said it to communicate his amusement. "It might be a good idea. We all know how superstitious Ivan is, but I can assure you all now that we will not be changin
g our name to ’The Wolfmen’ or
’The Cannibals’ to frighten Joe Stalin’s boys. We’ll stick with German Lead. All agreed?”

"What about ‘The Banshees’?
" Rohleder put in
. "L
ike Wolfgang’s singing when he’s pissed.”

"I’ve seen you with a couple of banshees in my time," came back Henning, quick as a flash
.
"… and you pay ‘em too.”

The jokes seemed like a signal for the briefing to break up. Von Struck dismissed them and went to pay a visit to Rasch’s bunk.

Rasch opened the door in his pyjamas. "Is something wrong, Herr Standartenführer?" he asked, putting on his spectacles.

Von Struck smiled. "Not in the slightest. I just gave the men a briefing and I was wondering why you were not there.”

Rasch looked s
urprised. "Why I wasn’t there
?” He pondered for a moment. "Should I have been there? I mean whatever for?” he asked
,
nonplussed.

"Herr Doctor, we are travelling on this fine train, down to Romania, to carry out a mission in the name of the Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler. We are t
o make contact with a Romanian c
ount who will build and train a regiment for us, a regiment that can fight at night just as well as they fight by day, a secret weapon if you lik
e. So I ask myself why is this c
ount talking
to us and not to the Romanian
g
overnment
?
It just doesn’t make sense.” He leaned back against the carriage wall to study Rasch’s face. "There has got to be more to this than Heini has let on, is what I’m thinking. The Transylvanian Saxons come back to the fold story doesn’t smell right. So the briefing would have been a good time
to explain the rest of the mission. Don’t you think, Herr Doctor?”

"You go too far, Standartenführer. Now is not the time for further briefings. You have read your mission objectives and you have no need to know more."
Rasch
paused and then added,

for
now. But you will eventually see why the Reichsführer SS is
so
impressed with this
… as you say …. ‘
secret
weapon.’
” Rasch’s face broke into a sardonic grin. "And you will also find out what we are offering and what I have been working on these last few months. The whole thing is quite unbelievable, trust me.”

Von Struck said nothing as he turned away from the
d
octor and went to his bed as the train steamed on into the blackness of the wartime night, before lying in his bed and contemplating the death of Herr Doctor Rasch.

 

 

Chapter 9

 

In the night,
Maria came to him. He had half-hoped, half-
feared she would, but when she knocked on his door and stole into his room, instinct took over. She closed the door and stood before him in a sheer nightdress that covered everything and yet hid nothing. He studied her athletic body, the rise and fall of her breasts, the dark triangle of her s
ex. She looked wild and untamed;
the hunger in her eyes banished all doubt as to her intent and he wordlessly strode over and took her in his arms.

They didn’t speak and their first kiss broke the dam of his lust. He ripped off the flimsy garment to expose her fully and he carried her to the bed. She pushed him back and hurriedly pulled his shirt off as he feverishly undid his trousers. He seemed overcome by an insane, animal passion and he ravished her as she lay passive under him.

They rutted like ferocious beasts, biting and clawing at each other, abandoning everything except their urgent needs. When it was over, they lay in each other’s arms panting and sated. Only then did he break the unspoken truce of silence to ask her who she really was.

She moved her head onto his shoulder and looked deep into his eyes to answer him. However, the question was unnecessary, for he knew who she was.

He had learnt things about his life that no rational man could comprehend. His whole existence had taken a new direction, a new meaning. All that he had understood about his past, about his very being, had been swept away from beneath him in a flood of disclosure. In the space of one night he had learnt everything about
who
he was and what his destiny was to be. It was fantastic and sudden but he knew
,
he just knew, that what the
c
ount
had told him was true.

 

*  *  *

 

The
c
ount
had shown no emotion as he had related his story. He had moved to the chair opposite to where Smith had sat, leaned back, crossed his legs and told the story of Smith’s life up to his being flown to the parachute drop site. No detail was spared and no quarter was given to the shock of the revelations that the
c
ount
now related.

"We were born to a dead woman

twins

one dark and one fair,” he started in accent-free English.
"She died while giving birth, as is traditional. Our father, Szoltan Dracyl the second, the seventh incarnation in the bloodline and the last name in the
Cronica Insangerata
, obeyed the
Book of Blood
and named you
the Son of Utu
before sending you away.”

Smith stared
,
dumbfounded
,
as he listened to the impassive, mono-
toned account. He understood what the
c
ount
, his new-found brother, was saying but he could not relate the story to himself.

"You were watched and protected, guided and moul
ded to be the man you are now

a warrior and a leader, a man of authority and bearing. Your whole life has been shadowed by men loyal to our father and our bloodline, the masters at the military school and your career in the army, all orchestrated by my mos
t faithful and trusted familiar


"The brigadier.

Smith finished for him.

"Indeed. His family has served our kind since the
Cronica Insangerata
was first scripted. It was he who took you to England and placed you at the orphanage as a baby and the school later on. It was he who oversaw your tuition and his followers who saw to your character development. Finally, it was he who had you placed in the military. He stayed in the shadows and used his rank and influence, all paid for by our fortune, to have you accepted into the officer corps.” He paused and looked to Smith before carrying on, relishing the shock on Smith’s face.

Smiling wolfishly, he continued
.
"How else could an orphan with no money and no connections come to be a member of one of the most exclusive and pretentious institutions in the British military, The Cavalry Officer’s Mess?”

A thousand questions flitted through his head. It was too far-fetched to be credible but, deep
inside,
he knew he was hearing the truth. It felt so right and, although it raised more questions than it answered, the questions that it answered were those that had followed him throughout his whole life.

"Your destiny lies here with me. You belong here and you are needed here, for the sake of our bloodline and our kind. I have so many things to show you, things that will leave you in no doubt as to your destiny.”

"Tell me," Smith whispered.
"
T
ell me everything. I need to know.”

"All in good time.
You’ve had a long day and you need to be rested and alert. Tomorrow, at eventide, I will reveal to you the rest. Believe me
, brother.

The word ‘brother’ electrified Smith.
"
B
elieve
me,
you are essential to our future. I alone cannot carry on our line
;
for that I need you. You are destined for great things." With that
he stood up and turned to Maria.
"Make sure he gets what he needs.” Then to Smith, "Till tomorrow ev
entide, sleep well." Then
he was gone, leaving Smith in the room with Maria.

Smith realised that Maria was looking at him. It unsettled him and he broke the silence by asking where he would be sleeping.

BOOK: The Division of the Damned
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