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Authors: William Osborne

BOOK: Winter's Bullet
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For Tygo was in the unfortunate position of being both hunted and held captive. Hunted by the Resistance for collaboration with the Nazis; and held captive in service to Oberst Krüger, the chief of the ‘Sicherstellung' department of the SS in Amsterdam.

The Germans had such a department in every city they occupied.
Sicherstellung
meant ‘safekeeping', but the locals had another name for it. They called it the Plunder Squad, for that was what it was.

Since the Occupation the Nazis had taken it upon themselves to steal anything and everything of value. They had started with gold, jewellery, precious works of art – stripping the banks, museums, and then the fine houses until they were taking literally anything they wanted. And they had used Tygo's father, the best locksmith in all of Amsterdam, to help them do it. His father had complied rather than watch the Gestapo execute his family, until he was himself shot as a collaborator by the Resistance almost a year ago.

And so it had become Tygo's turn to be Krüger's locksmith,
and dodge the ever-watching, ever-waiting Verzet.

Either way he knew he was damned.

He kept up his pace along the ice. The wind was easing a little, and he felt sweat running down his spine beneath the almost comical layers of clothing he was wearing: overcoat, jacket, sweater, shirt, vest. He was getting close to Euterpestraat, where the Gestapo had their headquarters and Krüger his comfortable warm office on the third floor. He would get as close as he could on the ice, then run the last few hundred metres to the building.

Tygo's stomach rumbled. He hadn't eaten anything yesterday except for some tulip-bulb soup from a soup kitchen, and that wasn't even food really. There was no food now, or light or gas or electricity, for anyone except the occupying Germans. At least the exercise was keeping him warm, he thought.

He wondered briefly what Krüger would make him do today. It had been quiet since the New Year and Tygo had been sent home most mornings after reporting in. Well, not home exactly. He no longer stayed there, not since the incident on Christmas Day.

He'd been asleep upstairs in the back bedroom above the shop. Unlike the previous Christmas, when they were still a family and there had been a little food, a few bits of coal for the fire and even a few paltry gifts to give to his parents and his sister, Tygo had been alone in the house, curled up under a heap of damp, fetid blankets trying to keep warm.

Luckily, he had taken the precaution of setting a metal bucket filled with rubble on top of the door at the top of the stairs.

A startled yell and the sound of someone falling had woken him. He had leapt from his bed and jumped out of the back window into the yard below, where he had left a rope secured to the high brick wall. He had sprained his ankle in the jump, but just managed to scale the wall and drag the rope over the other side before the Resistance fighters had burst out through the back door.

He had crept back the following day under cover of darkness and retrieved his tools, which he stored now at Gestapo HQ, but since then he had slept at a different location every night: empty basements, church crypts, always on the move.

‘You can run, but you can't hide!' one of the Resistance men had yelled after him.

Well, he'd keep running and just hope they'd never catch him.

Tygo turned off the main canal and followed the narrower Nordcanal to the point closest to Euterpestraat. He skidded to a halt on the ice, the skates making a satisfying screech, then climbed the stone steps from the landing jetty and sat down at the top to unlace his skates. They were beautiful: practically unused, black leather uppers with strong white laces looped through brass eyelets and shiny silver blades with sharp serrated edges at the toes. Tygo was ashamed to admit he had found them in a house he had been searching with Krüger on New Year's Day and had asked Krüger if he could have them.

‘If you like,' Krüger had shrugged. ‘But remember – you are only looking after them till the owners return.'

Tygo knew he was just joking. The house had had a
large yellow star painted on the front door, and everyone suspected that the Jews of Amsterdam would never return.

Tygo knotted the tops of the laces together and swung them over his shoulder. He pulled on his own boots, shabby and worn, that had been slung round his neck. Then he stood up and cautiously looked around. The coast appeared to be clear and he set off at a slow jog, the pavements too treacherous to allow a faster pace.

He was just passing an alleyway when a four-wheeled wooden cart, the sort used for foraging by one and all, shot out and caught the backs of his knees, pitching him forwards on to the street. Before he could roll over, the owner of the cart had jumped on his back and jammed something cold and hard behind his right ear.

‘Don't move a muscle!' It was a girl's voice. ‘We've got you this time, Winter.'

Tygo tried to turn his head to see his assailant, but she prodded the muzzle of the pistol harder into the soft part of his neck at the base of his earlobe. It hurt.

‘What do you want?' he asked, but he knew the answer. Was he about to meet the same fate as his father? He felt his stomach churn.

‘Shut up and do exactly as I tell you!' He felt the weight of the girl's body lifting off him. ‘Stand up.'

Tygo climbed to his feet, his heart pounding in his chest.

‘Turn round.'

He slowly turned to face his assassin in the murky light. Like him, she was bundled up against the cold, a fur
hat with flaps crammed on her head, a scarf covering her face like a bandit's. She held an old-looking revolver in her woollen-gloved hand.

‘Remember me?' she said.

Tygo stared at her, and after a moment she pulled the scarf from her face.

‘Ursula? Ursula Kugler?'

They had been in the same class at the beginning of the war. She had been a pretty girl with lots of freckles, who always wore her hair in pigtails. He remembered her flicking ink bombs at him, made from pieces of blotting paper. She didn't look pretty any more, just cold and starving and mean.

‘Look, just let me go.'

Ursula laughed, a short, hard sound. ‘Are you joking? There's a price on your head, and you're mine.'

Tygo looked about. If he made a run for it, would she really shoot? He doubted it – but just then, as if reading his mind, Ursula cocked the revolver and raised it, outstretched, so that it was pointing at his heart.

‘Step into the alleyway, stand against the wall and put your hands behind your back.' She kept her distance as Tygo did as he was ordered.

‘Come on, Ursula, we used to like each other.' He remembered how he would catch her looking at him in Geography.

‘Like
you
? A stinking collaborator? Let me see your hands!'

Tygo glanced back; she now had a length of rope in one hand and the revolver in the other.

‘I don't have a choice, Ursula, you know that.'

‘We all have a choice; you made yours and I made mine. I hope they string you up with this rope from the nearest lamp post.' That was now the most common form of execution for collaborators; bullets had become too precious to waste on them.

Tygo felt her edging closer to him. He tried to control his breathing, felt every muscle in his body tense.

‘Put your hands together, on top of each other . . .'

Tygo pivoted fast, spinning to face her. So fast that the skates flew off his shoulders and the blade of one hit Ursula square across the bridge of the nose. She fell back on to the floor, blood pouring from the deep cut the skate had opened, and lay on the cobblestones groaning with pain.

She had dropped the gun in the fall. It was a couple of feet away. They both saw it at the same time but she was faster, managing to grab hold of it and bring it up to bear on Tygo. Tygo leapt forwards and landed on top of her, both his hands wrapping around her wrist. He slammed her hand down on to the cobbles – once, twice, three times – and the gun fell. She was crying, the blood blinding her now.

Tygo's heart was hammering, a terrible rage filling his head. He grabbed the skates and jammed one of the blades against the girl's neck. Her face was crimson, so much blood . . .

‘I hate you, Tygo,' she spat.

Tygo pressed the blade down harder. ‘I hate you too.'

Ursula suddenly jammed her knee up as hard as she could. Tygo felt an intense, agonizing pain flood his
groin; he cried out and rolled off her. Ursula was on her knees searching for the gun, desperately mopping the blood from her eyes with her scarf. Tygo gritted his teeth against the pain, on his knees now too. He swung at Ursula, but she blocked the blow with her forearm. He swung again, and for a moment he thought they must look like two dwarfs boxing in the alleyway. Finally one of his punches struck the girl's chin full force, and she went down and stayed down.

Tygo pulled himself to his feet, retrieved his skates and the revolver, and left his old classmate lying where she fell.

He jogged the rest of the way up Euterpestraat, the knuckles on his right hand red and swollen, stopping only to stash the gun and skates in a street culvert he used as a hiding place, close to the Gestapo headquarters.

He sat down for a minute or two on the snow-covered pavement and gazed up at the imposing red-brick building with its clock tower, at the windows draped with Nazi banners. The entrance was heavily sandbagged and bristling with armed guards. Tomorrow he would have to use another route to get here. He didn't want to run into Ursula again, that was for sure.

His heart slowed, and suddenly he felt close to tears. That stupid girl had made him do it, made him hurt her. Why couldn't she just have let him go? Why couldn't all of them just leave him alone?

He got up and brushed the snow from his coat. It was all so unfair. But as Krüger liked to remind him: in the world they now inhabited, nothing was fair.

CHAPTER 3

J
ust after ten Oberst Krüger emerged from his office. He had been meeting with a local man, Han van Meegeren, an influential artist and dealer in the city. He was reputed to have sold several Vermeers to Hermann Goering, the head of the Luftwaffe, for millions of guilders. Tygo was pretty sure the Oberst used him as a source of information for the whereabouts of hidden loot.

The two men parted company in the corridor with smiles and handshakes before Krüger turned his attention to Tygo. ‘Don't just sit there, Frettchen, we have work to do!'

Tygo jumped up from the hard chair opposite Krüger's
office door where he always waited. Today he had a small plug of potter's clay in his pocket to pass the time.

‘Frettchen' was the nickname Krüger had given Tygo soon after he had conscripted his services. It was German for ‘ferret'. Krüger thought it suited him perfectly: like the animal, he was used to seek out treasure for his master. It also suited him physically, he said, with his thin lanky body, shock of black hair and burgundy eyes. Watchful, always alert. The name had stuck, and now everyone in Headquarters called him by it. Tygo had grown used to it now, and had decided to think of it as a badge of honour. Ferrets were born survivors, he told himself, and they had very, very sharp teeth.

Tygo followed Krüger back into his office and watched as he slipped his black leather Gestapo greatcoat off its hanger on the coat stand, put it on and buttoned it up. He was fastidious about his appearance: his nails were always manicured, his hair slicked down with pomade, a straight parting down the middle, the sides clipped close. He crossed to his desk and opened the top drawer, extracting a black leather belt with a holster attached. He strapped that on over the coat, checked that the pistol was loaded, and slid it back into the holster. It was a Sauer 38K, hammerless. Krüger preferred it to the Walther PPK that was standard issue for the Gestapo: you could carry it in your trouser pocket, he said, without the risk of snagging the hammer and shooting yourself in the foot.

Behind him was a large safe with the door still open. Tygo edged closer, trying to see inside. He had found
plenty of plunder in the time he had been working here, and he was pretty sure the Oberst had failed to pass it along to Berlin. Krüger kicked the door shut with the heel of his boot before Tygo could catch a glimpse.

‘No peeking, Frettchen.' He turned the handle and twisted the key. It was attached to a little leather key case, which he snapped shut and put, as he always did, in his left trouser pocket. He glanced at himself in the mirror above the fireplace, tilting his black cap with its death's-head badge to a slightly rakish angle. Satisfied with his appearance, he marched out of the office.

Tygo followed.

They drove south, out of the city. Out into the suburbs where the canals were longer and straighter, the houses grander. Even here, though, the poplars and lime trees that once lined the streets had been cut down for timber and fuel. Nothing moved, the ground was frozen solid – and so, it seemed, were the people who were almost motionless on the streets, like statues.

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