Tomb of the Lost (36 page)

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Authors: Julian Noyce

BOOK: Tomb of the Lost
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Well then you can start with tending to my men.


Actually Doctor you can decide who needs to be treated first depending upon urgency. British or German. Priority cases only. Also Doctor as you are the most senior here I formally accept your offer of surrender. I Colonel Hans Koenig, commanding officer here under General Hans Jurgen Von Arnim.

Wurtz knew he was beaten. The first time he had met Koenig he had guessed the man was soft but each time Koenig had pulled rank.


Never mind,

Wurtz thought

Perhaps he

ll do something treasonable and I can arrest him.


Very well Doctor Sanjay your surrender is accepted,

Wurtz turned to Bonmann and nodded. Bonmann came forward with the Enfield rifle.


All except one,

Wurtz said holstering his Luger. He held the Enfield up.

The owner of this rifle

.

he said turning it over in his hand

Is to be hanged! There is no place in war for snipers. This disgusting art of murdering in cold blood.

Sanjay was furious.


You have accepted the surrender of these men Colonel. They can now consider themselves prisoners of war.


They can. Major I protest.


Colonel the man who owns this rifle has calmly and collectedly murdered German soldiers with it.


He was fighting his war the same as everyone else.

Wurtz took his Luger out and pointed it at Burroughs.


Perhaps you would prefer it if I just started shooting at random. Sooner or later I

m bound to get the right man.

There was absolute silence.


Very well,

Wurtz said cocking the pistol.


It

s mine.

Johnny limped forward supported by Tim.


The rifle is mine.


That

s very brave of you,

Wurtz spoke to Bonmann

Prepare a noose. I want this to be quick

.

Wurtz stopped.

There was a sound of squeaking. As they listened it got louder.


Tanks,

Alf said.

A German half track made its way into the square. Its back was full of Afrika Korps. It came around in a wide arc and pulled up in front of Wurtz and Koenig. Panzer mark IV tanks followed it and stopped at a distance. The injured soldiers laying down could feel the ground shake under so much armour. The passenger door of the half track opened and a man stepped out. A man of average height. He wore a leather hat and greatcoat. He was covered in dust and took his hat off and patted it. It was still dusty. Koenig recognised him and saluted. They had met once before in Berlin at the Fuhrers 50
th
birthday party. The man returned the salute and offered his right hand.


It is good to see you again Colonel.


Thank you Herr General it is always a pleasure to see you.

The General walked back towards the halftrack. Wurtz offered his hand but the man ignored it. The General began to unbutton his leather greatcoat. He shrugged it off his shoulders and threw it onto the front seat of the exposed halftrack cab. He irritably slapped his hat again.


This damned dust.

He rubbed dust out of his hair vigorously and then put his hat back on and placed it neatly. He strode back to the two officers.


Now perhaps you would like to explain to me exactly what is going on here.


Well we came into this town chasing two British

.

The general shut Wurtz up with one look.


I wasn

t talking to you Major.


Sir?


Do you not salute a Field Marshall when you see one?

Wurtz clicked his heels smartly together and saluted. He was seething.


Does this pompous bastard not realise that I am an officer of the SS,

he was thinking.


That

s better. Now. Colonel.


Herr General it is as the Major was about to explain,

Koenig began trying not to laugh at Wurtz

loss of face,

We are an expedition team sent here to locate and recover the sarcophagus of Alexander the Macedonian.


Ah yes Hitler

s dream.


Yes General. We were digging in the country near here when we realised that we were entirely in the wrong location. We should be digging east of this town not west. We were returning to Matmata when a British truck, the one that is shot up over there, when the truck came out of the desert at us. I think they were trying to get away. They made our car swerve sir and the Major ordered a pursuit which cost the lives of six of my men.

The General raised an eyebrow at Wurtz but said nothing.


The major insisted that we send a team into the town to capture these two and our group was ambushed, however they did overcome all opposition.


Have these men surrendered?

the General asked surveying them.


Yes sir.


Some of them look badly hurt.


Yes Herr General. Their commanding officer was killed. The Doctor over there is a warrant officer. He has assumed command of them. He and his team of medics have been treating the wounded of both sides on my orders. Under guard of course.


Yes that

s fine.

The General moved to a position where all could hear him.


You soldiers of the British forces. I will accept your surrender. You are now prisoners of war of the Axis forces. You will be given food and water and be taken to a German field hospital. I cannot promise that the journey will be pleasant but for many of you it will be safe. Some of you will probably die. I can offer no better than that at this time!

Those of the British that could gave a small cheer.


Use their trucks to transport them. Don

t mix the wounded,

The General was instructing his right hand man.

Sanjay approached.


Herr General on behalf of the men and myself thank you.

He saluted smartly. The General returned the salute.


Good luck Doctor. May God watch over all of you.

They watched him climb into the half track and leave. Some of his troops remained to make up the numbers of those lost. Koenig and Wurtz were left looking at each other.


Did you hear that Johnny? We

re going to get nice clean hospital beds to sleep in,

Tim said excitedly.

Johnny could barely raise a smile.


Who was that old

un?

Tim asked.


That was the desert fox himself my son.


Who?


Field Marshall Erwin Rommel.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

 

GERMAN FIELD HOSPITAL, BEHIND THE MARETH LINE,TUNISIA DECEMBER 1942

 

Alfred Dennis tried to sit up. He had been on his back in bed now for nearly a month. He gasped at the pain such action caused. Four weeks ago to this day he had been shot by a German sniper in Matmata, Tunisia. The wound was healing well. He was lucky the bullet was a high explosive and had punched a hole in his left shoulder a fingers thickness. It had travelled through his body, luckily for him missing organs and blood vessels and exited through his back. Leaving a wound six times greater than the entry point. Alf thanked his lucky stars again that it had happened in winter and not during the hot months when most wounds would fester. He had seen many men die from infection, men with body parts missing, faces burned beyond recognition, their skin

.


Stop it!

he commanded himself.

Sometimes laying here in a hospital bed a man

s imagination could run away with him and they began to think of what could happen to them.

Alfred struggled to an upright position. He looked down at the near white dressing. It was too early to tell if he

d broken the scab just yet. He swung his legs over the edge of the bed and put his bare feet on the floor. He wanted to stretch his aching muscles. He tried stretching the good shoulder but it pulled on the bad one and hurt. He looked at the bed next to him.


Are you awake?

he called gently.

Johnny Larder was laying on his side, his back to Alf. He rolled over. His face was a mess. The Panzerschreck had left splinters of steel and stone in his face. The surgeons had removed almost all of it but one piece of metal lodged in his skull. It had been decided that unless the fragment moved it wouldn

t kill him. The risks of trying to remove it in the primitive conditions of the field hospital were too high the Doctors had decided. Johnny was lucky. The wound had healed around it, trapping it in place. He knew it was there though, he could feel it. Like an invader.

The swelling was now starting to go down. In its place the bruising was coming out. Johnny

s face was black and blue.


Yes I

m awake old

un.


I

m going for a walk. Do you want to come?

Johnny got up. He felt giddy and swayed and almost fell. He put a hand out on the bed to steady himself. Instantly a medical orderly was there grabbing Johnny by the arm, pushing him back towards the bed, talking to him in German.


We

re going for a walk,

Alf explained.

The German orderly was shaking his head. He tried again to get Johnny into bed.


What is going on here?

a voice said in English with a heavy German accent. The orderly let go of Johnny and moved out of the way.


We wish to go for a walk Herr Doctor,

Alf replied.

The Doctor looked from Alf to Johnny.


This patient has a severe head injury.


I know. That is why I

m going with him.

The Doctor thought about the options. He was a Doctor. He had a responsibility to save lives. This included the British under his care.

He remembered his meeting with Rommel. He had been treating German soldiers since the outbreak of war. He had been listening to a patient

s breathing with a stethoscope when he had been summoned away urgently. He had stormed through his hospital muttering all kinds of threats if this was a waste of his time. He burst into his office, which was just a desk surrounded by canvas screens, to find Field Marshall Rommel waiting for him. The Doctor stopped, sensing danger. His eyes inadvertently going to the iron cross, 1
st
class, around Rommel

s throat. The oak leaves with swords on his shoulders.


You are the Chefartz?


Yes Herr General.


I am Erwin Rommel, Feldmarschall, supreme commander German forces, North Africa.

The Doctor saluted.


Yes sir of course sir,

he suddenly felt very sick himself.


I have taken eighty one British prisoners of war. Many of them are injured. Some seriously. Those that are injured are being brought here. They should arrive tomorrow. Enemy aircraft permitting of course. The rest are to be detained here. I am leaving twenty of my men with you and tents and supplies. They will assist you in any way possible. They will erect the tents for the prisoners and surround it with barbed wire. You Doctor are responsible for their welfare do you understand?

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