The Madagaskar Plan Read online

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  She leapt at him, clawing his face. Her nails came away red.

  Cranley shoved her back. Madeleine stumbled and fell; the baby bounced sickeningly inside her, like a stone.

  Her husband stepped forward, treading on the lists of drowned sailors. His fingers bunched into a fist. She caught the glint of his wedding ring: it would break her front teeth.

  “All the scorn I endured for you,” he said. “Jared Cranley, the man who could have had any woman he desired, yet married a Jewish domestic. Did it for love.” He reached for his handkerchief, let out a snort. “I’ve heard it said that I’m the most romantic man in London.”

  With a sob, Madeleine stood up, grabbed the case, and opened the door. She’d find Alice, flee to the farm.

  “This is Mr. Lyall,” said Cranley.

  A man with a squashed nose and thick beard barred her way. He was dressed in a black suit that looked as if it had been slept in. The stench of cigarettes around him was enough to make her wince.

  She tried to pass, but he blocked her path. Tried again, this time swinging the case at him. The clasp came loose, showering the room in clothes. Madeleine shoved past—then was on the floor, the small of her back stinging. She had no strength to stand up; she was crumbling inside with grief.

  Lyall brandished a truncheon. He prodded it against her mouth.

  “You always had a beautiful smile,” said Cranley. He looked at the garments strewn around the room. “Forget the case,” he said to Lyall. “I just want her gone.”

  As Madeleine was yanked to her feet, she heard her pajamas rip. “What about Alice?” she asked.

  “She’ll have everything she needs: a beautiful home, a doting father. I know Mrs. Anderson will make an excellent governess.”

  “Promise?”

  “You might be a Jewish whore, but Alice is still my daughter.” He dabbed the blood on his cheek with the handkerchief. “It would be better if there are no hysterics as you leave. I don’t want her upset.”

  “And me?”

  His tone brokered no reasoning, no pleading: “Better than you deserve.”

  “Come on, Mrs. Cranley,” said Lyall, gripping her arm.

  He dragged her into the hallway. At the bottom of the stairs, the front door was open to the fog outside. Waiting below, also in a black suit, was a pudgy man pacing back and forth. Over his arm was one of Madeleine’s fur coats; in his fist, a revolver.

  “Where are you taking me?” she asked.

  A memory shrieked in her mind: the time the Nazis came for her father in Vienna. The pounding on the door, the house swarming with uniforms and weapons. Her mother had asked the same question. Just some forms to fill out, soothed one of the brownshirts. Papa returned two days later, his tie missing, shirt filthy, unable to stop shaking.

  “It’s all arranged,” said Lyall. “Won’t take long to get there.”

  Madeleine dug her feet into the carpet. Made her legs rigid.

  Lyall forced her to the edge of the staircase. “My wife had a miscarriage once, silly old thing. Fell down some steps.”

  She struggled a moment longer, then went limp, hugging her stomach. As Madeleine was led away, she twisted round for a final look at her husband.

  Cranley was framed in the doorway of her room. He glanced at her for a second, then went back to examining the blood on his handkerchief. At his feet were the names of the dead.

  PART I

  BRITAIN

  All that he held dear—hearth and family, belief and belonging—had been taken from him.

  —ELEANOR COLE

  Letter to her sister, 1930

  CHAPTER ONE

  Schädelplatz, Deutsch Kongo

  26 January 1953, 06:30

  PANZER CREWS CALLED it Nashornstahl: rhino steel. It was supposed to be impregnable. A girder of it had been welded across the entrance.

  There was a crackling boom, like thunder heard from within a storm cloud, and the door exploded. Shards of metal and flame flew down the corridor. Before the smoke cleared, Belgian guerrillas poured through the barricade, kicking aside the mangled girder. Among the Europeans were black faces.

  Oberstgruppenführer Walter Hochburg felt a shudder of incredulity. Then the fury swelled in him, his black eyes glittering.

  No nigger, no breathing nigger, had ever set foot in the Schädelplatz, his secret headquarters. He raised his rifle above the sandbags—it was a BK44, the one Himmler had awarded him—and lashed the trigger. Waffen-SS troops fired alongside him.

  More guerrillas surged into the passageway.

  “Stand your ground,” roared Hochburg. His voice was a raw baritone.

  To either side of him, men were retreating to the next redoubt. Hochburg followed with a slack stride, certain of his invincibility, his rifle searching out dark skin. He reached the second wall of sandbags and dipped behind them to reload.

  “Oberstgruppenführer!”

  Before him was his new deputy, Gruppenführer Zelman: flat-faced, blond, unblinking. The buttons on his uniform were as untarnished as virgin silver. He had emerged from a side passage.

  “What news?” asked Hochburg.

  Zelman huddled low. “A thousand guerrillas, maybe more, including artillery. The main entrance and southern walls have been breached. We can’t hold out much longer.”

  “Where are my helicopters?”

  “You must leave, Oberstgruppenführer. Immediately. Your bodyguards are waiting to escort you to Stanleystadt.” Stanleystadt: Kongo’s great northern city.

  “And have the blacks in our sanctum? Never.” There shouldn’t be a single negroid within a thousand kilometers of the Schädelplatz. Hochburg slammed a fresh magazine into his BK44. “Get a rifle in your hand and fight. You, the auxiliary staff, kitchen porters, every last man.”

  “I didn’t come to Africa to die, Oberstgruppenführer.”

  “Then you have no right to be here.”

  Not for the first time Hochburg regretted dismissing Kepplar, his former deputy. Whatever his failings, there was a man who would have relished defending the Schädelplatz. Zelman was a cousin of Reinhard Heydrich’s wife and had been assigned to him after the invasion of Rhodesia faltered. To keep an eye on me, Hochburg told him the day he arrived.

  A grenade landed between them.

  Zelman grabbed Hochburg and yanked him into the side passage. The blast turned the entrance into a cascade of bricks.

  “I would have thrown it back,” said Hochburg as he got to his feet, swiping away the dust. When the attack woke him, he had put on his black dress uniform, the material straining against the brawn of his shoulders; now it was floured and torn.

  Zelman led the way through the stone corridors of the Schädelplatz, till they turned into the main thoroughfare. Hochburg stopped abruptly.

  He had been here fifteen minutes earlier, demanding the base at Kondolele get his gunships airborne. There should have been sentries by the door; instead, only the smell of the wind. He pushed his deputy to one side and stepped into the command center. The cloud-riddled dawn shone down on him, wands of orange and coral-pink light.

  Hochburg felt a shifting inside himself. “It can’t be…” he said. It sounded like his jackboots were treading on snails.

  The command center had taken a direct hit. In the middle of the room, the table map of central Africa was broken in two; above it, jigsaw pieces of sky. The black triangles that represented units of the Waffen-SS lay scattered on the floor. Hochburg stooped to pick one up, rolled it in his fingers as if it were a divining stone. Bodies were strewn on the floor, cables sparked. Only the telex machines seemed unaffected: they continued the merry chatter of war. By now he should have been the master of Northern Rhodesia, its copper mines serving the Reich, its cities and dusty plateaus cleansed of the negroid threat. His panzers had invaded the previous year and found British forces waiting for them. The swift victory he’d promised became a protracted retreat, the British eventually crossing the border and encircling Elisabethstadt,
Kongo’s third city. A pendulum siege of attack and counterattack had lasted ever since. With Hochburg’s army engaged in the south, the remnants of the Belgian Force Publique took advantage of the situation and launched a full-scale guerrilla war in the north. The Belgians, the previous rulers of Kongo, had been fighting an insurgency since the swastika was raised over the colony a decade earlier; now they were emboldened.

  A female radio operator was beseeching her mouthpiece. Hochburg buried the black triangle in his pocket and placed his hand on her shoulder. Her hair was thick with dust, the right side of her face burned. “Any word on the helicopters, Fräulein?”

  “We lost the line to Kondolele, Oberstgruppenführer.”

  “Reinforcements?”

  “Stanleystadt reports that a new offensive started against the city an hour before dawn. They can’t spare any manpower.”

  “You must leave,” said Zelman.

  Hochburg scraped his palm over his bald scalp. “No.”

  “With respect, Oberstgruppenführer, if you’re captured, they’ll parade you in the streets of Lusaka—”

  “You think I care?”

  “Germania* might, especially when you stand before a Negro court.”

  Hochburg sighed. “You would be more convincing, Zelman, if you weren’t so desperate to save yourself.”

  “You can’t command a counteroffensive from here. Stanleystadt is your better hope.”

  “This place is my home.”

  “There are no helicopters, not enough men. It’s already lost.”

  The radio operator put up her hand to speak. “The Schädelplatz is more than the walls around us. It is an ideal. A beacon for our hearts.” She was too shy to look at Hochburg. “As long as you survive, Oberstgruppenführer, so will it.”

  “The girl’s right,” said Zelman. “We don’t have to die.”

  Hochburg considered her words, unwilling to admit the truth. He patted her gently. “There’s nothing more you can do. Come with us—you’ll be safer.”

  “I shall stay, Herr Oberstgruppenführer. I’ll keep trying to reach the helicopters.”

  “You see, Zelman. Give me a battalion of girls and this war would already be won.”

  He stormed from the room, his rifle held ready.

  “Where are you going?” Zelman called after him.

  Back in the passageways, the lights flickered above Hochburg. There were sporadic snorts of gunfire, and the shouts of Belgian guerrillas echoed along the walls. He was disappointed not to cross any as he made his way to his study.

  The Leibwachen—his personal bodyguard—was waiting outside. He had dismissed them earlier as, goaded by Zelman, they fretted over his every move. All were dressed in dark combat fatigues with BK44 assault rifles. One held Fenris—his Rhodesian ridgeback—on a leash. Hochburg cupped the dog’s face in his hands, inhaled his gamey breath.

  The French windows of the study had been blown inward, showering the floor with glass. A spectral smoke clung to the air. “Bring me some gasoline,” said Hochburg, casting his eyes over the walls of books. “Then get down into the square and secure the area. Somebody carry the dog.”

  He flopped down at his desk, unlocked a drawer, and took out a piece of tightly bound sacking. Inside was a knife. There was a blink of silver as he withdrew it. This was the blade Burton had wanted to drive into his heart.

  Burton Cole.

  He was to blame for the death of Hochburg’s great love: Eleanor. Burton’s mother. She had chosen her son over him and, in doing so, condemned herself to a savage death. Hochburg would never forgive Burton. All these years on, his grief for Eleanor remained as raw as his need for retribution. His desire to watch her son burn—literally burn; to luxuriate in each crackling scream—quickened his blood more than ever. It was the itch of a phantom limb, beyond relief. Burton was dead: torpedoed and drowned off the coast of West Africa. Hochburg had issued the order himself. It was a decision he had come to lament.

  As the war in Rhodesia had spread back across the border to Kongo, he spent his nights imagining Burton’s final seconds. The boy’s panic as the ship began to list and fill with flames; the dilemma of surrendering himself to the fire or waves. A man would always throw himself overboard: the virulence of the human organism demanded that it preserve itself, if only for a few minutes longer. Inevitably, Burton would breathe salt water: that was the moment Hochburg regretted.

  He had been cheated of his final look into the boy’s eyes, its exchange of triumph and failure. Then Burton would descend into the darkness and oblivion, a release Hochburg had been denied. He knew who suffered the most: Hochburg lived with the pain of losing Eleanor every day.

  A Leibwache entered carrying a canister that sloshed with fuel. Behind him, Zelman stumbled into the room. “They’ve reached the command center. We’ve only minutes to spare.”

  “What happened to the radio operator?” asked Hochburg.

  His deputy went to the portrait of the Führer and flicked the switch hidden in the frame, doing so with a familiarity that made Hochburg bristle. The painting swung open to reveal a secret chamber. In the ground was a trapdoor that led to an underground passage out of the Schädelplatz.

  “I’m not slinking out of here,” said Hochburg, sheathing the knife.

  “Oberstgruppenführer,” implored Zelman. “We must go now.” His voice was sucked into the passage.

  Hochburg turned to the Leibwache with the petrol. “The books,” he said. It may have been too late to save the Schädelplatz, but his enemies would not make spoils of his precious volumes. He supervised the dousing of his library, then ordered Zelman to burn them; striking the match himself would be too heartbreaking.

  He stepped to the veranda. Below, the square was empty except for his men creating a perimeter. Streaks of light blazed on the hallowed ground as the bombardment continued overhead. There was one final object he had to save.

  The most prized thing of all.

  * * *

  Beneath his boots was an expanse of human crania. Twenty thousand nigger skulls, as Hochburg thrilled to tell visitors. This was the place that gave the Schädelplatz its name: the “square of skulls,” the ground cobbled with bone.

  In the rosy dawn mist, he allowed himself to savor the square one final time. It was the fortress of his heart: a vast quadrangle, the perimeter covered by cloisters, with guard towers on each of the corners, from which soldiers were firing into the jungle beyond. The northern wall was obscured in scaffolding where they were repairing the damage wrought by Burton and his team of assassins the year before. Burton had been hired by a cabal of Rhodesian industrialists and British intelligence; when Burton failed, Hochburg used this attempt on his life to justify his attack on Rhodesia. Flanked by the Leibwachen, Hochburg ransacked the workmen’s equipment for a tool, then strode into the center of the square. Fenris bounded after him.

  Hochburg raised the pickaxe above his head and brought it crashing down—once, twice—spitting mortar and chips of skull.

  One of the guard towers vanished in a balloon of fire. There was a second blast and a section of the wall was punched wide open. A tank rumbled into the square; behind it came Belgian fighters, one of them carrying a banner of yellow stars against a peacock-blue background: the old flag of Belgian Congo and now a symbol of resistance. They wavered as they saw the ground.

  “Where does a guerrilla army get a tank?” said Hochburg. It was an old British Crusader from the desert war against Rommel.

  He redoubled his work, swinging the pickaxe with a fury, vigilant of the skull at the dead center of the square. The tank swiveled in his direction, fired, the shot reducing his study to a smoking wound. More SS troops emerged onto the square.

  Zelman appeared at his side, clutching a Luger that reeked of packing grease. “Oberstgruppenführer, there’s no time for this.”

  Hochburg shoved him away. The Leibwachen were a corona of gunfire around them. The pickaxe struck the ground again—and the skull at the cente
r was free.

  Fenris edged forward and sniffed as Hochburg carefully picked it up. He brushed flakes of cement from it, never believing that it had been disturbed, and stared into the hollows of its eyes. After Eleanor had chosen Burton over Hochburg, she’d fled into the jungle and been murdered by savages. Hochburg had hunted them down. The skull in his hand belonged to the first black he’d killed, a deed that saw the beginning of his mission to transform Africa. He had laid the square in Eleanor’s memory.

  His dreams, his ambitions for the continent weren’t supposed to end like this.

  Hochburg wrapped the skull in the sack he had taken from his study. He would defeat these insurgents: drive them into the jungle till the trees dripped scarlet. Then raise a new Schädelplatz, grander, more awe-inspiring than anything before.

  The square was being overrun by Belgians.

  “My garden,” said Hochburg. “That can be our escape.” He made a chivalrous gesture to his deputy. “Show us the way, Gruppenführer.”

  Zelman remained within the huddle of Leibwachen, unblinking.

  Hochburg ran from the center of the square, Fenris at his heels, the Leibwachen struggling to keep pace. They reached the cloisters as another tank broke through the far wall. It trundled toward them, shielding more guerrillas, the Belgians concentrating their fire on the small band of Nazis beneath the colonnade. Hochburg’s Leibwachen were falling around him. He fired his BK44.

  “Save a bullet for yourself,” said Zelman. “You mustn’t be taken alive.”

  Hochburg ignored him: his final rounds would be for blacks. He grabbed Fenris by the leash and raced toward the garden gate. Close behind he heard the slap of Zelman’s boots.

  The second Crusader was armed with a flamethrower. A jet of orange and ebony roared through the quadrangle. Skulls that had been gathered from all six provinces of German Africa were reduced to cinder.

  Shielded by the cloisters, his lungs charred, Hochburg reached the archway that led to the garden. It was his sanctuary. He tended it personally: dug the soil till his back ached, propagated every plant with his own fingers, the way Eleanor had taught him.