'May I sit down? That is kind of you. My thanks…'
Hartmann hung cap and coat on the wall-rack next to Keitel's and seated himself in the chair facing the Field Marshal across the wide expanse of desk. Keitel had not replied. He re-folded the document slowly, pushed it across the desk surface, staring at Hartmann. The atmosphere inside the but had subtly changed. Hartmann sensed tension, unease.
'That document gives you plenipotentiary powers,' 'That's right!' Hartmann responded cheerfully. He Keitel observed slowly, crossed his legs and leaned back in the chair, the soul of relaxation. 'The right of interrogation, summary powers of arrest. Regard me as the agent of the Fuhrer…'
The Abwehr… No one liked them – because everyone feared them. It was unclear where their authority began and ended. That was the style of Admiral Canaris, their chief, Keitel was thinking. It gave the old fox infinite room for manoeuvre. He decided to test the Abwehr man, his manner now bluff and amiable.
'Of course it goes without saying that your brief does not extend to the upper echelons of the High Command. Colonel-General Jodl, for example…'
'Or yourself?' Hartmann broke in agreeably.
'Well, naturally…'
'Perhaps you had better read the movement order again,' Hartmann suggested jovially. "Regardless of rank"… Is that phrase not included? – Doubtless inserted at the Fuhrer's specific wish – since he himself signed the order.'
Keitel's mouth tightened. He would have liked to explode – was only holding himself in check with a supreme effort of will, the Abwehr Major noted. Again the Field Marshal glanced at the document still lying on his desk but made no move to re-read it. He went off at a tangent.
'Do you have to keep that beastly pipe in your mouth when you're addressing me?'
'As I said, it helps the concentration. We all need something. I notice this interview is something of a strain for yourself – you have not stopped fiddling with that baton since you sat down..'
Keitel stopped himself looking at his own hands but could not stop himself gripping more tightly the baton he had been revolving on the surface of his desk. Hartmann waited, amused. Keitel was unsure whether to push the baton away – which would have been some kind of concession to this bloody Abwehr creep – or whether to continue as before. Such tiny incidents were everyday stock-in-trade to Hartmann, who excelled in interrogation techniques.
'I find you insolent,' Keitel responded eventually.
'Others have found the same. It must be something in my manner – or in the job I have to do…'
Hartmann took out a notebook and pencil, perched the notebook at an angle so Keitel could not see what he wrote, his manner respectful and businesslike. His action created the impression there was no doubt that Keitel would cooperate. He asked his questions in rapid succession, concealing what he did not know – the normal technique for keeping a witness off balance.
'The Fuhrer takes all military decisions himself at the twice-daily conferences. You then see that these are carried out?'
'Of course. There is also Colonel-General Alfred Jodl…'
'Who again is privy to all decisions?'
'That is so…'. Keitel paused and perched the tip of his baton beneath his jaw. Hartmann waited, guessing something important was coming. Keitel was not the complete wooden dummy of repute – he was capable of verbal fencing. Which Hartmann found interesting.
'You should know that someone else is always present – always – at these military conferences. Martin Bormann
'But for years he has acted as the Fuhrer's secretary, Hartmann interjected as though he saw nothing significant in this comment.
While he spoke the Abwehr officer's pencil was apparently making notes. Keitel would have been startled had he been able to see the pencil jottings – which were nothing more than caricature doodles of himself. Hartmann was blessed with total recall of any conversation he participated in.
'So,' Hartmann. continued, 'we have yourself, Jodl and Bormann as the three men who always know the present – and near-future – order of battle of the Wehrmacht?'
'You have not included the other secretary,' Keitel remarked in a remote voice. Once again Hartmann had the strong sensation of shutters closing down, masking Keitel's real thoughts. It was a reaction he had not expected. He knew exactly who Keitel was switching his attention to.
'The other secretary?' he queried.
'I use the word secretary in a different sense, I am referring to Christa Lundt who personally notes down the Fuhrer's orders..'
'How old would Fraulein Lundt be?' Hartmann asked.
'Her early twenties, I suppose.' Keitel looked irritated and puzzled. 'What significance is there in her age?'
'Too young!'
The Abwehr officer closed his book after making a slashing motion as though deleting a name. In fact he had crossed out a doodle of Keitel decorated with a monocle. He put away the notebook and extracted his pipe again.
'I don't follow your reasoning,' Keitel protested. 'What has age to do with tracking down a hypothetical Soviet spy?'
'Hypothetical?' Hartmann enquired sharply.
'You have no proof of his – or her – existence..
'You are challenging the Fuhrer's unalterable conviction – I use his very words – that there is a Soviet spy passing details of our order of battle to the Red Army?'
Hartmann could not have been more genial as he stirred his bulk in the chair as though soon to leave. He could not have said anything more likely to throw Keitel on the defensive – the oblique suggestion that he was questioning the Fuhrer's judgement. Hartmann held his dead pipe and moved his fingers round the bowl while he watched his victim.
'I said nothing which could possibly be construed to have meant what you so outrageously suggested.. Keitel protested.
'Words are strange things, Field Marshal, especially when reported second-hand to a third party. I should know – I am a professional interrogator. Was it not Richelieu who said, give me six lines any man has written and I will hang him?'
`You were pointing the finger at Fraulein Lundt,' Keitel snapped.
'No – with respect, you first mentioned the girl. As to her age, my organization is convinced any Soviet spy who has penetrated this far must be much older – someone planted by the Soviet underground years ago in the hope that one day they would reach the dizzy heights. You suffer from vertigo, Field Marshal?'
'Certainly not, and this interview..
'Is now at an end,' Hartmann broke in quickly as he stood up and collected cap and coat from the wall- rack. 'I shall, of course, in due course inform the Fuhrer of our interview. May I bid you good night?'
It was the perfect note on which to take his leave, Hartmann reflected as he walked into the clammy cold of the compound outside and closed the door behind him. Keitel would remember most vividly the Abwehr man's last enigmatic remark – a remark calculated to disturb any man with a guilty conscience.
'Mein Fuhrer,' said Bormann, 'your predecessor has made arrangements for an Abwehr officer to be brought in from outside to check security here. The officer has arrived, a Major Hartmann. He is now prowling round the encampment..'
'Security here needs checking?' demanded Hitler. suggest we have this Hartmann flown straight back to Berlin,' Bormann said. 'He could be dangerous to you – he is the Abwehr's cleverest agent..'
It was one o'clock in the morning and the second Hitler paced back and forth inside his room listening without commenting – a favourite technique of the Fuhrer's until his guest ran out of words. He would then deliver his own views in a non-stop monologue.
'There have been rumours of a Soviet agent infiltrating the Wolf's Lair,' Bormann continued. 'Your predecessor intuitively sensed that something was wrong…'