The Bavarian Gate By John Dalmas

A different cab sat at the curb, its flag down. When the driver saw them come out, he reached over and raised it. “Cab!” Geltman called, and the driver, getting out, opened the back. They climbed in, and a moment later the driver pulled away from the curb without asking their destination or being given one. Geltman said nothing; obviously their transportation had been prearranged, perhaps with the help of the Yiddish-speaking Cockney or Anna’s Scandinavian questioner.

For several minutes the cabby followed a seemingly random course, as if watching for a possible tail, then drove west for a mile or more toward the city’s heart, as always passing through or around bomb-shattered blocks and burned-out neighborhoods, the damage put to order, but awaiting less demanding times to be rebuilt.

Turning north, they entered a residential district and stopped in front of a flat, then went to the entrance, where the driver, not Geltman, pressed one of the buttons by the door. A round speaker grid sounded, the voice electronic, female, and British. “Who is it?”

“Miss Henderson,” the driver said, an obvious reference to Aunt Agnes. If there’d been any doubt before, Macurdy told himself, this killed it: Theirs was not an ordinary cabby. “Just a moment. Someone will be down.”

They waited. Inperhaps two minutes the door was opened by an oriental male. This one had curly, hair: part Chinese and part something else. The man also reminded him a bit of Roy Klaplanahoo–shorter, perhaps five feet nine, and even burlier, but giving a similar sense of physical strength.

The eyes were different though-slanted, hooded, suspicious. “Come in,” he said after a moment, his voice surly. Macurdy found himself surprised the man had actually spoken. Geltman and the cabby stayed behind, no doubt to leave in the cab, and Anna and Montag followed the oriental up flights of stairs, through the smell of old carpet, mildew and disinfectant, to the third floor flat, where he let them into a small foyer, then a sitting room. There they were met by an attractive young woman with wire-rimmed glasses.

“You are Anna Hofstetter?” she asked.

“I am. Though the cabby announced me as Miss Henderson.” The woman ignored the comment, and did not give her own name. Without looking at him she asked, “I take it then that this is Mr. Monday.”

“That’s right.”

“When did you arrive?”

Macurdy’s guts grabbed. This was a moment of threat.

“I might better ask why you didn’t,” Anna replied. “We were put ashore three nights back and spent several hours freezing on the beach while we waited. When dawn came and your people hadn’t, we walked to a road, caught a ride, took a room and slept.”

She paused, staring critically at her questioner. “The next night we walked back to the beach, which was not an easy task for Mr. Monday, with his war wounds. Hopefully you can appreciate the risk, going about like that so near the coast, with Mr. Monday speaking only German! No one came that night, either, so we returned to East Dunsford and called my Aunt. We’d have been quite stranded if it weren’t for her.”

The young woman had stiffened. “You must recognize the strain on operations here,” she countered. “Captain Streicher and two others were arrested last Wednesday, and operations were totally disrupted. We’d expected you some time, but didn’t know on what night. We never received the signal.”

Anna nodded. “Quite understandable. And I suppose one never knows if the-transportation-will get through the naval and aerial patrols.”

“Of course.”

It felt to Macurdy as if the two women had worked out a needed basis of mutual respect. For a moment he’d been prepared to cast a shock wave at the Oriental, if there were trouble. For at that moment he realized what had been missing in his lessons at the schloss: To cast an emotion effectively, he, at least, needed to feel emotion.

“You’ve eaten, I presume,” the woman said.

“Within the hour. After your Scandinavian questioned us.”

“Well then. You’ll have another bit of a wait, but it shouldn’t be extreme. Meanwhile I’ve work to do.” She gestured at the oriental. “Bahn will look after you. You’ll find magazines and newspapers. Don’t believe the news from the war fronts. It’s all lies.”

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