Tomb of the Lost (34 page)

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Authors: Julian Noyce

BOOK: Tomb of the Lost
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Here he comes Tim.

Johnny weaved the truck across the road working at the steering wheel, pulling it this way and that trying to throw him off. The German held on tight. Tim was frantically trying to load his Sten one handed. He dropped the new clip on the floor.


Damn!

He dived down for it hurting his arm in the process. He could just about feel it with his fingertips. Then he was able to turn it into his grasp and pick it up. He jammed the Sten between his knees and loaded the clip. The motorcycle was keeping a safe distance. Now it surged forward again to try to add confusion.


Tim we

re going to have to swap places. I can

t shake him off. If you can drive I

ll deal with him.

Despite his pain Tim nodded.

Johnny stood up, his foot pressed firmly on the accelerator, both hands gripping the steering wheel. Tim slid over and under Johnny. The truck slowed for a moment while they exchanged places. The German moved towards them in the lull.. Tim stomped on the throttle and the Bedford roared on. They rounded a bend and in the distance they could see Matmata and safety. Alf and the others waiting for them.

Johnny opened the passenger door, climbed out and grabbed the Sten off the seat. He got a secure footing between the cab and the body and the moment the German appeared at the back of the cab he fired but missed. The German threw himself away, slipped, and nearly fell, holding on one handed. Tim afraid to weave the Bedford about now in case Johnny was thrown. Suddenly the Germans pistol nosed its way around the corner. Johnny saw it and ducked. The shot smashed the glass behind the driver. The shattered glass raining down on Tim. The German chose his moment and without warning lunged forward and jumped the small gap and landed by the drivers door. Tim saw him coming in the mirror but was unable to do anything about it. The German grabbed his arm and pulled it. The Bedford slewed around in a wide arc, left the road, turned one hundred and eighty degrees and jumping and jarring over the rough terrain bounced back onto the road. They were now heading back the way they

d come. The motorcycle also turned in pursuit. The German aimed his pistol at Tim and pulled the trigger just as the truck hit a pothole. The shot fired harmlessly into the air. Tim let go of the steering wheel and grabbed the pistol arm banging it down against the door until the German dropped the gun. The back wheels went over it.


Give it up! Give it up!

Tim was yelling.

Johnny climbed back down into the cab.


Tim duck!

Tim did as he was told. Johnny couldn

t get a clean shot. Then Tim pulled the door handle and kicked the door. It opened and swung out over thin air. The German

s legs flailing as he tried to hang on. The motorcycle raced forward to try to assist just as Johnny leaned behind Tim and fired the Sten. The bullets went through the door metal hitting the German numerous times in the torso. He fell, bounced in the road and went under the sidecar causing the motorcycle to cart wheel. Its rider was thrown and he landed heavily in the road sliding some way before coming to a stop.


That

s it,

Johnny said

That

s the last of them.

As if on cue, due to the loss of blood and exhaustion Tim slumped at the wheel. He managed to bring the Bedford to a halt. Johnny jumped down, ran round the front and climbed into the drivers side pushing Tim into the passenger seat. He looked into the mirror just as the motorbike exploded. Then he eased the truck into gear, turned it round and sped off towards the town.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

 

The Mercedes saloon slowed at the first wrecked motorcycle, steered around the crushed man in the road and soon arrived at the second destroyed motorbike.


It looks like that truck ran over this one,

Koenig said.

The third one was still burning. Its rider was laying face down some fifty or so yards past it. The car stopped. Koenig and Wurtz got out. Koenig turned the body over and saw the worst sight of his life. The mans face was gone. Where his eyes and nose should have been were just red holes, holes that bled. Koenig felt sick. Wurtz suddenly drew his Luger and emptied it into the corpse making the body jump. He threw his head back and roared with anger. Koenig stared at him open mouthed.


The man is insane.


You

re shooting at a corpse.

Wurtz rounded on him.


Get in the car!

It was an order. An order Koenig didn

t like.


Have you forgotten my rank Major.

Wurtz looked at him in recognition. When he

d given the order he hadn

t been focused on his surroundings.


I beg your pardon Colonel. I was angry. Yes. I apologise.

The rest of their vehicles were now approaching.


We must remember our mission and respect the Doctor

s wishes. I

m afraid Major Wurtz that we

ll have to let these men go,

Koenig said looking at the dust trail being kicked up by the Bedford.

 

Johnny brought the truck to a complete stop in the square. The squeal of brakes brought Shaw, Rogers and Alf out. Alf took one look at the state of the truck.


Christ what happened to you?

Johnny jumped down onto the road. He nearly collapsed from exhaustion but he found the strength to run round to Tim. Others were already there lifting him out of the Bedford. They helped him to where Sanjay had set up a temporary sickbay. The conditions were extremely poor but the best they could manage in the circumstances.

Alf looked at the truck. The passenger door had bullet holes in it and was streaked with blood. The drivers door wouldn

t close properly due to bent hinges. One rear tyre was hissing from a puncture. Both windows were smashed and the windscreen was cracked.


That explosion sir,

Johnny said not knowing whether to talk to Rogers or the Major who was unknown to him,

It looks like it was a German motorcycle. It must have hit a mine because they were using metal detectors on the road.

Johnny coughed and someone offered him a cup of water.


How many are there?


There were more motorcycles, about six trucks similar in size to ours, one saloon car. Don

t know how many men in the trucks. There were some in one, they

re the ones that chased us.

Major Shaw spoke.


Private?


Larder sir.


Private Larder I am Major Basil Shaw of the 4
th
Indian army. I shall be assuming command here. I

.


But you

re English

.

Johnny stopped realising his slip.


Yes I

m English. That is not unusual in the Indian army.

Shaw replied not minding Larders rudeness under the circumstances,

It sounds like you

ve had quite an eventful day.

Johnny told him what had happened.


Come gentlemen,

Shaw said to Rogers and Alf

we must prepare ourselves for attack.

 

The first of the German trucks nosed its way quietly into Matmata. The saloon car with the two officers and Doctor von Brest, the three remaining motorcycle sidecars and the trucks with the archaeologists all waited just outside town.

Wurtz and Koenig stood in the road peering through binoculars. The town looked deserted.


Maybe they

ve gone,

Koenig said.


No they

re there.


Perhaps we should just leave and go about our business.

Wurtz lowered his binoculars to look at Koenig who still had his pressed to his face.


They

ve killed six of your men Colonel. Six of the fatherland

s men. As an officer of the SS I cannot allow this to go unpunished. We

ll find them. I

ll see their bodies hang by sunset.


You killed two yourself.


That was different. Those men were deserters. You would have done exactly as I did.


I would have seen to it that those men had received a fair trial.


I gave them a summary trial and a summary execution.


By cutting their throats?


This is a war Colonel Koenig. Bullets cost money. A knife in the throat costs nothing.


I will be reporting the matter to General Von Brockhorst who will undoubtedly report the matter to General Von Arnim.


You don

t like me Colonel, it

s all right,

Wurtz said with a smile.


I didn

t say that.


It matters not. We don

t have to like each other to work together but may I remind you that I was sent here personally by Reichsfuhrer Heinrich Himmler.

It wasn

t that Koenig didn

t like Wurtz. He didn

t like what he stood for, the uniform of the SS, their methods. But there was something else, he couldn

t put his finger on it, but he had a strange feeling that they

d met before, but for the life of him Koenig couldn

t think where.


Elsa

s husband is an officer in the SS

he was thinking

but her name is Von Wurz.

He tried to remember if he

d ever heard her refer to him by name. he was sure she hadn

t nor could he remember ever seeing a photograph of him but they were always turned down. He cursed himself for never having turned one over but he

d never wanted to see a picture of the man whose wife he was bedding. Then suddenly he became paranoid.


Did she not call out the name Otto once in her sleep? Otto?

He felt himself breaking out into a sweat. He slowly lowered his field glasses to look at Wurtz. He let his hand fall casually to his side and felt the reassurance of his holstered Luger.


Are you married Major?

he asked nervously.


That

s a strange question to ask at a time like this.


You said I didn

t like you. I

m just trying to get to know you.

Wurtz stared at him for a few moments. Koenig found it difficult to hold his gaze but he managed it. Wurtz was trying to read the other mans thoughts. Finally he put his binoculars back to his face. To Koenigs relief he said.


No I

m not married Colonel.

Koenig let out a silent sigh.


My wife is dead,

he took his field glasses away and stared at the Colonel again.


She was murdered.

Koenig was shocked.


He said it as if he doesn

t care,

he was thinking. Then he remembered the deserters, Klaus Stuck dying in the road, the corpse he shot. Perhaps the man has no feelings.

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