The Bavarian Gate By John Dalmas

“Jesus Christ, sarge!” Williams murmured, “that was the goddamnedest thing I ever heard of. Scared me out of five years growth! I don’t know which was the spookiest, you or the damned krauts. And fallschirmjager, for chrissake! That would have been a fight!”

“Thank your ass it wasn’t,” Macurdy growled.

Luoma chuckled. “With you around, sarge,” he said quietly, “I don’t worry too much.”

Macurdy grunted. If the Germans had spotted them, all the magic he’d ever seen or heard of wouldn’t have meant a thing when the Schmeissers started spewing 9mm slugs at seven or eight per second each.

With the pale light of dawn, Macurdy led them into a side draw, where there was cover-coarse brush and some small trees. There they ate a K ration each, then most lit up cigarettes, Macurdy lighting Von Lutzow’s with a finger. After that they made themselves as comfortable as they could, and settled down for a few hours of restless sleep. Only Macurdy slept warm. He awoke once to the sound of a plane, flying fast and fairly low, to pass without showing itself, hidden by a ridge. One of Cochran’s P40s, he decided. Not a Messerschmitt or the twin-engined P38s, or the Junkers they saw and heard from time to time. He could hear the difference.

Toward noon, with so little air activity he led them down to the road. They could travel faster, and there was intermittent tree cover along its edge. Several more times during the day they heard fighters, and once a P40 streaked overhead. An overcast developed, then thickened. Toward evening it began to drizzle, and they paused to put on their ponchos. Macurdy offered his to Von Lutzow, who refused it.

“Take it,” Macurdy ordered. “It’s my fault I didn’t bring an extra, and anyway, I don’t get cold.”

Von Lutzow peered at him with interest. “What do you mean, you don’t get cold?”

“Remember how I warmed you before we left the plane last night? I stay as warm as I want. My Aunt Varia’s a witch; she taught me.”

Von Lutzow half grinned, uncertain whether he was being put on, and accepted the poncho.

Dusk was thickening when the road reached a larger ravine, this one with trees numerous along the roadsides. Macurdy turned left and they kept hiking. The drizzle had charged to a light but steady rain. With no poncho, he was wet to the skin, and water trickled down the ponchos of the others. Von Lutzow had held up well-his conditioning was obviously excellent but they were due for more than a ten-minute rest. At the next break, he told himself, they’d stop for a couple of hours.

It didn’t happen, because half an hour later they heard a vehicle coming ahead. Macurdy sent the others off the road to cover, Mls ready, while he crouched beside a tree, pen light in one hand, .45 in the other. A minute later the vehicle came into sight, headlamps hooded–a jeep! As it approached, he stood up and waved the pen light. “Hey!” he shouted. “Going my way?”

The driver braked, tires grabbing wet dirt. “Macurdy!” The voice was Cavalieri’s. His party had met a patrol of French infantry in jeeps with machine guns. The French had radioed Gafsa for him, and the 26th Infantry sent a truck, along with an ambulance for the injured. Morrill was alive, but hadn’t regained consciousness. When Cavalieri got to Gafsa, he’d reported to battalion by phone, then grabbed a jeep and come looking for his buddies.

He picked up his mike and radioed Gafsa. Then, at Macurdy’s urging, Von Lutzow got in the jeep and headed for Gafsa with Cavalieri. Macurdy and his four troopers took an hour’s break in the rain, until a weapons carrier arrived to pick them up.

He never expected to see Von Lutzow again. Their very different paths had crossed, then diverged. It was so common in wartime, he never gave it a thought. Wouldn’t for months.

18

A Very Strange AWOL

Under heavy pressure by the British 8th Army, Rommel pulled his Afrika Korps entirely out of Libya that winter, but it was a strategic retreat. The Desert Fox saw possibilities in the west: Drive through Tunisia into Algeria, take the city of Algiers, and the situation would become much more favorable.

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