The Widow Killer

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Book: Read The Widow Killer for Free Online
Authors: Pavel Kohout
Tags: Fiction, General, Historical, Thrillers, Mystery & Detective
which obliged Rattinger to him and secured his loyalty. The fanatical Kroloff watched their every misstep like a hawk, apparently convinced that they were the sort of people who were causing Germany to lose the war.
    With Meckerle’s backing, Buback would inflate the importance of the case by investigating the widow’s murder personally. This would force the Czech police superintendent to make the same gesture. Except Buback would move into their camp and engage his secret weapon: his knowledge of Czech. After years of experience in similar organizations, he felt sure he would be able to ferret out any Czech police conspiracies against the Third Reich.
    When the colonel had cut his senior minions down to size and then thrown them out, Buback was left alone with him in the room. As he had anticipated, Meckerle instantly calmed down and offered him a shot of surprisingly good cognac. He was uncharacteristically open with Buback.
    “Those swine.” The giant threatened the distant pilots with a fist. “Soon we’ll be the ones flattening their cities. Headquarters reports the Allies are on the brink of collapse. V-1 and V-2 are toys compared to our new weapons. And I wish the Allies would keep bombing so the Czechs would lose interest in stabbing us in the back.”
    At exactly 8:00 his aide came to announce that the Czechs had been sitting in his waiting room for some time. Meckerle let them cool their heels a while longer as he had two more cognacs. Melancholically he showed Buback photos of his luxurious villa, and when asked politely if at least the inhabitants had survived, he informed Buback gloomily that by sheer coincidence his wife had been in Prague. (Buback, like everyone in the building, had heard of the chiefs passionate liaison with a member of the temporarily closed German Theater.) For a short while longer the two men reminisced about their beloved Dresden, until finally Meckerle, purple with fury and regret, stood up sharply and swept the empty glasses off the desk.
    “So, let’s give it to them.”
    The trio entered. At first sight these representatives of the Czech Protectorate’s executive forces were less than impressive: the police commissioner, small and round, reminiscent of Pickwick; Superintendent Beran, tall and thin, a Don Quixote; and the kid from yesterday, broad-shouldered with small, pink cheeks. Just like Silly Honza, the hero of Czech fairy tales, whom Buback had loved as a child and therefore now especially disliked. He knew, though, that a Czech’s appearance is a sadly deceptive thing. Those innocent and harmless-looking Honzas were the worst sort of traitors, and their cunning multiplied their strength.
    The colonel had his own opinion about the Czechs. He did not acknowledge them or their lackadaisically raised right hands, and bellowed at them as if they were new conscripts.
    Once he had repeated what they had heard individually from him and State Secretary Frank, he concluded: “The Third Reich believes the brutal murder of Baroness Elisabeth von Pommeren is a signal from agents of the traitorous London government-in-exile. With this act, they are unleashing a wave of terror against all Germans in the Protectorate. The guilty party must be detained, and an appropriate punishment meted out. Otherwise the Reich’s retaliation will be even more severe and extensive than after the Heydrich assassination. The empire of Greater Germany stands on the brink of a decisive reversal in its all-out war against the plutocrats and Jewish Bolsheviks; we will annihilate them on their own territory! The empire will destroy anyone who even contemplates knifing it in the back!”
    Or perhaps slicing its stomach open, Buback thought.
    “We will drench the soil of Prague in rivers of Czech blood if doing so will save a single drop from German veins. It is in your hands, gentlemen.” (It was evident how little he meant by that word, Buback thought.) “Will you protect your countrymen from a calamity

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