A story inspired by Castello di Brolio - Episode 15
For a story that was conceived during those long boring hours flying in a steel cocoon, striving to keep away the thoughts that the plane and everyone in it could just simply disappear as planes have in the past, it has come a long way.
Whilst I have always had a fascination in what happened during the second world war, not the battles or fighting, but in the more obscure events that took place, I decided to pen my own little sidebar to what was a long and bitter war.
And, so, it continues...
Whilst I have always had a fascination in what happened during the second world war, not the battles or fighting, but in the more obscure events that took place, I decided to pen my own little sidebar to what was a long and bitter war.
And, so, it continues...
The new leader of the
resistance was the woman, Martina, best if I didn’t know her last name. Fair enough.
There had been a necessary restructure after the infiltration, and
untimely deaths of over half their number.
When I asked what
happened to the former leader, I learned that he, and all but five other
members were captured and taken to the castle.
They were now, for all intents and purposes, double agents, working for
the Thompson at the castle.
The remaining five, of
which Giuseppe and Martina belonged, had been forced to hide, dodging the men
sent from the castle to hunt them down and kill them.
It was both the lack of
reporting from the castle, followed by a message received regarding a possible
traitor inside the resistance we had received in London, that set everything in
motion, including my arrival to ascertain what was happening within the
resistance group, and also at the castle.
Until that information reached us, there had been no reason to suspect
that anything was wrong, and that the plans set in place to facilitate the
defection of useful German scientists and, in some cases, high ranking
officers, or that it had been infiltrated and to put it bluntly, original
members had been killed and replaced.
I hadn’t realised who was
in charge until the paratroopers had arrived and I’d become a prisoner. Part of my brief had also been to verify the
layout of the castle in accordance with old plans we had found using my
archaeology background as a front, and Id managed to explore certain areas
before Thompson had become suspicious and basically stopped me. I’d searched part of the lower levels of the
castle, but hadn’t got as far as the dungeons, where I eventually discovered
becoming one myself, they were keeping many more prisoners.
I hadn’t long enough in
the dungeons to discover whether any of the prisoners were part of the original
team sent, whether there were any defectors being still held there, except for
two that I’d seen, and definitely one I talked to, but there had to be more.
And, now that I’d found
the remaining members of the resistance, it was my intention to return to
rescue then, and retake the castle. What
was going to make it difficult, if not impossible, was the fact there were only
five, and they were all busy trying not to get caught. Still, I had to try, and I asked Martina if
it was possible to get everyone together for a meeting.
Martina just laughed. Whether it was my request or my plan to
retake the castle was the cause of her mirth.
“With what?” she said incredulously, “there are only five
of us left, and we spend most of our time keeping one step ahead of the
turncoats.”
“How many of
them are there?”
“Too many, led by that
bastard Francesco. He didn’t like taking
orders from a woman, thought we’d picked the wrong side, especially when the
Germans killed about fifty of the villagers when we refused to give ourselves
up. They killed his wife and mother after he refused to send them away.”
That didn’t seem right to
me, to align yourself with that sort of enemy, not after what they had
done. Except there was no telling what
anyone might do in the face of such an adversary, or circumstances. But I had to ask, “Why would they?”
“They’ve got hostages
from the village up there, in the dungeons.
That’s how they turned them.”
Damn. I was not going to be able to turn them back,
not when the lives of their friends, even family, was being threatened.
“Is that the case for
those who didn’t surrender?”
“No. Our relatives left when we could see what was
going to happen.”
“So, the problem we have
is, freeing the hostages, freeing the soldiers if there are any of the original
group, retake the castle, and get the pipeline working again.” And, I thought to myself, pull off seven miracles
in fifteen minutes.
I was putting forward what
was for all intents and purposes impossible.
“There’s more,” she
said. “There is a high-value scientist
coming, last advice was that he was in transit from Germany to here. We know, and they know, courtesy of
Francesco. They want him captured; we
want him safely delivered to the submarine waiting to take him to England. He’s due in three days, and he doesn’t know
the castle’s allegiances have changed.”
“Then we’ll have to
intercept him.”
“Yes, but we don’t know
what he looks like, but we do have a code name.
Francesco and the castle don’t have that, only his real name.”
A name I saw on a highly
confidential document on Forster’s desk the day he briefed me on my current
mission. Blackfoot. I thought it was an operation. I think that was the code name for the
defector.
“Blackfoot?”
“How did you know?”
“A lucky guess.”
The question I had was,
why didn’t he tell me about it? Did he
think I was going to get captured and tortured?
“Well, you’re right. But it means Francesco and his men are going
to be looking extra hard for us, because without that codename, as soon as they
fail to confirm their identity to him, he will kill himself rather than go
back, which I’m guessing will be their least preferred option. And to make matters worse, London’s orders
are quite specific, this man must be delivered alive. He has critical information they need, and
which will hasten the end of the war”
“Then I think we should
tell London the nature of our situation and see what they come up with.”
©
Charles Heath 2019
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