“Very sorry, Madame, we’ll get started right away.” Flick hurried into the next room. For a moment she listened, heart in her mouth, for an angry shout calling her back, but none came, and she breathed easier and walked on, with Greta and Jelly close behind.
At the end of the east wing was a stairwell, leading up to the offices or down to the basement. The Jackdaws were headed for the basement, eventually, but first they had preparations to make.
They turned left and moved into the service wing. Following Antoinette’s directions, they found a small room where cleaning materials were stored: mops, buckets, brooms, and garbage bins, plus the brown cotton overall coats the cleaners had to wear on duty Flick closed the door.
“So far, so good,” said Jelly.
Greta said, “I’m so scared!” She was pale and trembling. “I don’t think I can go on.”
Flick gave her a reassuring smile. “You’ll be fine,” she said. “Let’s get on with it. Put your ordnance into these cleaning buckets.”
Jelly began to transfer her explosives into a bucket, and after a moment’s hesitation Greta followed suit. Flick assembled her submachine gun without its rifle butt, reducing the length by a foot, to make it easier to conceal. She fitted the noise suppressor and flicked the switch for single-shot firing. When using the silencer, the chamber had to be reloaded manually before each shot.
She pushed the weapon under her leather belt. Then she put on an overall coat. It covered the gun. She left the buttons undone for quick access. The other two also put on overalls, concealing the guns and ammunition stuffed into their pockets.
They were almost ready for the basement. However, it was a high-security area, with a guard at the door, and French personnel were not allowed down there-the Germans cleaned it themselves. Before entering, the Jackdaws were going to create a little confusion.
They were about to leave the room when the door opened and a German officer looked in. “Passes!” he barked.
Flick tensed. She had been expecting some kind of security alert. The Gestapo must have guessed that Ruby was an Allied agent-no one else would be carrying an automatic pistol and a lethal knife-and it made sense for them to take extra precautions at the chƒteau. However, she had hoped that the Gestapo would move too slowly to interfere with her mission. That wish had not been granted. Probably they were double-checking all French personnel in the building.
“Quickly!” the man said impatiently. He was a Gestapo lieutenant, Flick saw from the badge on his uniform shirt. She took out her pass. He looked at it carefully, comparing the picture with her face, and handed it back. He did the same with Jelly and Greta. “I must search you,” he said. He looked into Jelly’s bucket.
Behind his back, Flick drew the Sten gun from under her overall.
The officer frowned in puzzlement and took from Jelly’s bucket the shockproof canister.
Flick disengaged the cocking lever of her gun from the safety slot.
The officer unscrewed the lid of the canister. Amazement dawned on his face as he saw the detonators.
Flick shot him in the back.
The gun was not really silent-the noise suppressor was not perfectly effective-and the shot made a soft bang like a book being dropped on the floor.
The Gestapo lieutenant jerked and fell.
Flick ejected the cartridge and pulled back the bolt, then shot him again in the head to make sure of him.
She reloaded the chamber and put the gun back under her overall.
Jelly dragged the body to the wall and shoved it behind the door, where it would not be seen by anyone glancing casually into the room.
“Let’s get out of here,” said Flick.
Jelly went out. Greta stood frozen and pale, staring at the dead officer.
Flick said, “Greta. We have a job to do. Let’s go.”
At last Greta nodded, picked up her mop and bucket, and walked through the door, moving like a robot.
They went from the cleaning store into the canteen. It was empty but for two girls in uniform drinking coffee and smoking. Speaking French in a low voice, Flick said, “You know what you have to do.”