Yes, I had painstakingly memorized and redrawn eleven pages of schematics with Simon over the last couple of weeks, but there was still one page left to memorize.
I followed the boys to Gestapo headquarters, where they dumped the broken, blubbering body of Herr Professor Doktor Major Melcher on the floor in front of the SS officer on duty.
He bundled up the pages we had worked on together and tied a leather string around them. “It’s an incredible coup. I came to take pictures, and I’ll be going back with full-blown schematics. They’ll be waiting to pin a medal on you when you get back to England.”
“We’re narrowing it down to a list of targets—an American businessman visiting Portugal, a French Resistance fighter in Algiers, a member of the Danish monarchy,” Ma said. “But it’s all speculation at this point. We haven’t got a solid shred of evidence one way or another. But Davin and I will deal with that.”
The barrel of the gun was a long, thin shiny silver proboscis like a mosquito’s nose, sticking out of a stocky jumble of gray hydraulic pistons and levers and gears that could swivel the cannon in any direction and any elevation.
At optimum speed, we were supposed to be getting off fifteen to twenty rounds per minute, but because it was our first night—and because we were all thirteen to seventeen years old—it was probably more like five to seven rounds per minute.
My jokes were bombing more than the airplanes overhead. I had to admit, they might have gone over better if any of them understood English. I carried on undaunted.
of or relating to unnecessary procedures and red tape
The Nazis loved their Amtsschimmel. Their “bureaucratic mildew.” The stacks and stacks of government paperwork they used to document every little thing. In English we called it “red tape.”
But the chancellery still looked immaculate. I didn’t know how they did it. It was brilliant white in a city filled with dust and gray smoke, and covered in crisp, clean, red, white, and black swastika flags.
“This is a great day for you. A great day indeed. To meet me, and meet the Führer. I hope you all appreciate what an honor this is. You will tell your grandchildren of this day. I may be your inspiration, your mentor, your second father, but the superimposing leader of all desires of youth is Adolf Hitler.”
Created on Fri Jan 03 10:03:24 EST 2020
(updated Fri Jan 03 10:41:00 EST 2020)
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