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Lena knew she was lucky to have been assigned to the Schneiders. She could be in a factory in the process of being worked to death, or, worse, shipped off to Poland to those places of death that not even the Schneiders were certain existed. They talked of them in hushed voices, forgetting that even slaves have ears. Instead of dying in Poland, she was in a large house in a small village about fifty miles north of Innsbruck in what once had been Austria.

Nor was there any serious sexual burden imposed on her. Herr Schneider had entered her room on the first night at their house. He’d ordered her to strip and lie down on her bed. She’d complied without hesitation. He had fondled her in a perfunctory manner to arouse himself, placed her on her hands and knees and then mounted her. He muttered that he did it that way so he didn’t have to look in the face of a Jewess while he was fucking her. He’d hurt her and she’d whimpered. Schroeder had misunderstood and thought that her moans meant she was being pleasured.

After finishing, he’d been emphatic that a good Nazi would never lower himself to fuck a Jew, even one who was only fractionally Jewish and who had never practiced her religion. Before the Nazis arrived, Lena had never even known that her grandmother was Jewish. Herr Schneider said that he’d forced her to have sex with him to prove to her that her life was entirely in his hands. He’d even worn a condom. He said that he didn’t want to take the chance of her getting pregnant and bringing another Jew, if only a fractional one, into the world.

Herr Schneider coldly assured her that he had no intentions of requiring her to take him in her mouth.

When he left, the Schneider’s housekeeper, a nearly toothless old Pole named Olga came and helped her. “They are pigs,” she said. “But you will survive. You don’t have a choice.”

For several nights after that she’d slept on the floor, unable to sleep in the bed where she’d been humiliated and violated. After those few days, common sense returned and she realized that the only person she was hurting was herself. The senior Schneiders simply didn’t give a damn about her or where she slept. She returned to the bed.

This was not the case with the Schneider’s two children.

Astrid Schneider was a chubby and unlovely sixteen years old and wondering whether she liked boys or girls. On a couple of occasions, she had climbed into Lena’s bed and insisted that they play what Astrid called “games.” Lena went along. A bad word from Astrid might send her to a long slow death in a factory. And besides, it wasn’t all that much different than the games she and one of her girlfriends had played during sleepovers during happier times. It was endurable. And it made Astrid happy.

The problem was going to be Anton. He was fourteen and getting bigger and stronger. He was also getting very curious. She’d caught him looking at her smallish breasts and watching how she moved her body. On occasions, he’d contrived to pass her closely in a hallway and brushed up against her. Once, his hand had strayed across her bottom. She’d stopped him with a glare, but she was certain he would try something again. She was reasonably certain that his father had told him that he could not profane his pure Aryan Nazi body by copulating with a Jew, but what else might his father permit? And would an oversexed Anton pay any attention to his father’s rules? She tried to dress and behave in a manner that was sexless, but that was not practical. Anton was at the age where everything was sexual.

Lena did not cook for the Schneiders. Perhaps they didn’t want to accidentally eat something kosher, she’d thought with amusement. Olga prepared the food. That woman was a servant, not a slave, although she complained that she rarely got paid. Instead, Lena did all the cleaning and any chores assigned to her.

The house in which they lived had belonged to a Jewish merchant who had fled to England before the war. It was very large, opulent, and even had a wing for the servants. Thus, Lena had her own room. Her bondage might have been light, but it was still slavery.

Thanks to her father’s insistence on her getting an education, she was fluent in English as well as Czech and German. She recalled someone, possibly Abraham Lincoln, saying that to the extent a man is not free, he is a slave. Well, she was not free and she was always terrified. Not only were the Schneiders capable of turning on her like animals, but the Allied victories in the war represented a threat as well. What would happen to her as the Americans drew closer? Would the Schneiders take her south to the mountains like they were talking about or would they turn her loose to fend for herself? She didn’t think the Americans raped and murdered like the Russians did, but she wasn’t certain. And the French were known to take vengeance on German women for what the Nazis had done during their occupation. That she was Czech and not German would have no meaning to them.

And if the Schneiders took her with them, then she was condemned to that much more slavery along with the ever-present threat of death.

No, what she wanted to do was run and hide until the tide of war passed over. Then she would emerge and try to begin a new life.

CHAPTER 2

Tanner took his first tentative steps without crutches. Doctor Lennie Hagerman watched him tolerantly. “Not bad, Captain. You won’t make the ’48 Olympic track team but you’re otherwise going to be all right. Of course, there might not be a ’48 Olympics unless this war winds down.”

“How long will I need a cane?”

“That’s up to you. I would use it for a couple of weeks. Your leg and foot are still weak and sore and, besides, people will feel sorry for you and might give you a break, or even a seat on a bus. Seriously, you don’t want to fall down and hurt yourself worse.”

“I don’t want anyone giving me a break. I want to have another chance to kill the Nazi bastards who murdered my men.”

“Understood. However, it is unlikely that you will be assigned to a line unit until your leg is totally up to par, and maybe not even then. Can’t have a crippled captain leading troops, now can we?”

Scott had been in worse shape than he’d thought when he got to the hospital just outside of Celles, Belgium. The otherwise lovely but undistinguished village had been the high-water mark of the German’s Ardennes invasion. He’d had pneumonia along with a bad case of trench foot that had taken a couple of weeks to clear up. The medics had given serious thought to amputating his right foot after stabilizing his badly twisted left knee. The knee had been easy. It just needed rest. The foot, however, raised concerns that it might turn gangrenous.

Hagerman continued. “You were very fortunate that your foot did heal. The traditional treatment of keeping the foot dry and letting the dead skin slough off and new skin grow back actually worked. We also tried you with some of that new drug, Penicillin. I have no idea if it worked or not or just made me feel better. You are now very unfortunate in that you might be susceptible to it happening again. Ergo, it is highly unlikely that you will be cleared to be in a situation where your feet could become wet and cold for a prolonged period of time.”

“What if I promise to bring extra socks?”

“As they say, Tanner, put a sock in it yourself. Keep your socks and your powder dry or you’ll wind up being a cripple. That’ll get you out of the army but won’t do a damn thing about you’re urge to kill the Nazis who murdered those two men. Not that they were the only GIs who were executed like that.”

Tanner nodded thoughtfully. There had been other massacres of American prisoners. A particularly terrible one had occurred near the Belgian town of Malmedy where almost a hundred American soldiers had been butchered. There would be a lot of Germans facing trials and the firing squad when this war was over.

“Any idea where I’m going to be assigned?”

“Do I look like God? There are ugly rumors that the Krauts are pulling up stakes and heading south to the Alps. That means that this part of the war is going to wind down and the next phase will be up to Devers and the Sixth Army Group. Is that where you’d like to be? I do have some friends in low places who would do me a favor.”

“Do that, please.”

“Then get into a uniform and we’ll go out to dinner. Your treat, of course. After all, you do owe me a foot.”

Tanner laughed and agreed. The only place to eat around the hospital was the army’s mess hall.

* * *

Staff Sergeant Billy Hill sat in the last vehicle in a ten jeep convoy and tried to keep warm as the snow-flecked wind hit him in the face. He would not show the rest of the men that he felt the cold. He would not show the platoon that he was human. After all, he was the platoon sergeant. He would also never let them call him Hillbilly Billy Hill.

If the officer commanding the platoon thought that being last in line was his punishment for being outspoken, the young and inexperienced second lieutenant was very, very wrong. This was the safest place to be as the officer led his platoon from the front down the paved two-lane highway. It wasn’t quite the Autobahn, but it was nicer than anything Hill had seen in or out of his small town home in Opelika, Alabama.

According to the maps, the American army was getting ever closer to the Alps, as were the Germans they were chasing. The land was hilly, not mountainous, but there was the idea that the terrain was going to get more difficult. There were many great places for an ambush.

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