The Bavarian Gate By John Dalmas

The second spy, an American, had gotten out of the plane and seen the drop. He was walking, which meant they wouldn’t have to carry him–at least not all the time-but he was also groggy, and his scalp was peeled half off. After cleaning both scalp and skull, the medic laid the flap back where it belonged, and fastened it in place with a bandage. Strongly built and about six feet tall, his patient wore a German officer’s field uniform, sharply tailored, with a captain’s insignia.

Macurdy, trying to get him into the here and now, asked him his name. “Vonnie,” the man muttered, then, in a monotone, “Captain William Von Lutzow.”

That he could give his name was encouraging. Macurdy shook Von Lutzow’s hand. “Mine’s Macurdy. Sergeant Curtis Macurdy. Can you remember what happened?”

Von Lutzow stood a moment without answering, and when he did, it was in the same monotone: “We got shot at, taking off. Bullet hit the gas tank; we could smell the gas. Another one hit the pilot, but he said he was all right.”

Concussion, Macurdy told himself, but not really bad, or he wouldn’t remember so much. “We’re going to get you out of here,” he said. Then, because the winter night was near freezing, and Von Lutzow shivering, he put his hands on him and flowed warmth, drawing on the Web of the World, while the medic got the unconscious spy and Lieutenant Shuler strapped onto stretchers. Macurdy would have taken the dead pilot, too, but that would mean carrying a third burden more than twenty miles through mountains, with the prospect of enemy fighter planes hunting them by day, and perhaps troops by night. He’d settle for taking out the dead man’s dogtags and wallet. Von Lutzow would hike out.

Macurdy checked once again; everyone was there. “All right,” he said, “let’s get going,” and led off. They’d follow the road as long as it was safe.

They’d gone about half a mile when they heard distant trucks grinding up a steep grade on the other side of the crest behind them. Germans, Macurdy realized. They’d reach the plane soon, and have to stop until they could drag the wreckage off the road. Meanwhile they’d search the plane, and look around for the missing spies. It wouldn’t take a genius to realize they’d been rescued, especially if the stashed chutes and stretchers were found.

The road took the troopers downward across the long slope, and when they reached the bottom, Macurdy halted them. Up on top, the trucks had stopped. Meanwhile the road turned southwestward, down the ravine. Macurdy took a topographic map from a tunic pocket and turned to the next ranking noncom. “Cavalieri,” he said, “I’m taking Williams, Montague, Cherbajian and Luoma with me. And Captain Von Lutzow. The rest of them are yours. I want to make sure we get at least one of these two guys out of here safely for debriefing.”

“I’ll keep going west down the road as long as the krauts let me.” Head one of the others hold a pen light on the map, and traced a route with his finger. “You head northeast up the ravine; they won’t expect that. In about half a mile, a draw enters it from the northwest. Take it; the grade looks pretty moderate, and it tops out in a saddle. Cross the saddle and follow down the draw on the other side. It opens into a wide ravine that runs west. The map shows a camel road down it, so it ought to be decent hiking. Eventually it’ll hit Road 163; you’ll see it on your map. By then it ought to be daylight, or close to it; you’ll probably want to hole up and rest.”

Cavalieri nodded, awed. It was, he thought, as if Macurdy had memorized the topographic map on the plane, and things fell into place for him as needed.

“Stay with 163 to the Gafsa-Tebessa Road,” Macurdy continued, “then use your own judgment. If we get out first, we’ll tell them to look for you there.” He took some of the extra K rations from his musette bag. “Turn around,” he said. Cavalieri turned, and Macurdy shoved the rations into the man’s musette bag. “For the limey,” he added, “in case he wakes up hungry.” Then he shook Cavalieri’s hand. “Good luck, partner. See you at Thelepte.”

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