through one of the men on the rotation.â
âHis report?â
âThat the first shipment arrived from Halifax last week. Crates with significant weight. Probably the gold.â He paused, gestured uncomfortably; Karl could see the reflection of the movement in the dark window. âThe rest is really nothing but rumors.â
âWhich sayâ¦?â
âIt seems almost too fantastic to repeat, Herr General.â
âBe fantastic, Captain. Let yourself go.â The voice was dry.
âVery well.â He cleared his throat again. âMy man reports rumors that the freight includes theâerâwell, the British crown jewels.â A pause. âSir.â
There was a long silence. The longcase clock by the door ticked loudly; a log in the fireplace fell, sizzling. âThe British. Crown. Jewels.â
âYes, Herr General.â
âPerhaps not as fantastic as you think, Captain.â The younger man couldnât see him, but Karl was smiling. Everyone knew the convoys were there, and it was sheer bad luck that none had ever been caught as they made their limping way across the Atlantic.
But this ⦠this might be even better than sending the English gold to the bottom of the sea. This could mean a lot of things.
It meant the Englanders were scared. As well they should be.
It meant there was an opportunity for a boot on the neck of the damned island.
âGet my aide,â he said.
âYes, Herr General.â
The young soldier came in, snapped to attention. âHerr General?â
âGet me Reichsmarschall Göring on the telephone,â said the general. âWe have some very interesting news for him.â
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CHAPTER TEN
I stopped at a Provigo on the way home for some groceries; I shop differently when the kids are in town. Donât think for a moment that good behavior canât be elicited through a few well-placed bribes, including ones of an alimentary nature: it can. Iâm living proof.
There was, naturally, bad news at home.
âIâm sorry,â Ivan was saying. âI know itâs not convenient, but thereâs really never a time thatâs convenient, is there?â
I stared at him. âI donât understand. You have to go to Boston ?â
âJust for the day. Iâll be back Sunday, well before the kids leave.â
I felt bewildered. Ivan did, in fact, travel for his work, but the trips were usually planned quite a while in advance, and almost never at a time when Lukas and Claudia were in town; Margery was good at being flexible around our schedules. âWhy? I donât understand.â
âThereâs nothing to understand.â He clearly didnât want to talk about it. âMargery needs to talk to me without the kids around.â
âSo she can call. She can Skype. She can come here sometime during the week. Why do you have to go now?â I was sounding petulant, and didnât like it. But, seriously? I was dealing with an ancient murder, someone tailing Patricia, Jean-Luc about to have a coronary if he didnât get to crow about all this, and now I was going to have to be in charge of entertaining Ivanâs kids because Ivan decided to go to Boston and talk to his ex?
âItâs not that long,â Ivan said. âWe were going to go to the Insectarium tomorrow anyway, you can just do it without me.â He caught my look. âUnless you were planning on working,â he said suddenly.
I felt defensive. âPart of the day, anyway,â I said. âItâs only becauseââ
âSometimes,â he interrupted, âonce in a while, Martine, mine has to come first.â
âThatâs completely unfair,â I said. âI donât expect my stuff to always come first.â
âNo,â he said. âYou just have a hissy fit when it doesnât.â
âIâm not having a hissy fit!â Hereâs a thought:
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