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Valhalla      Rising

​Book 2 of the Kissimmee Quartet
I. The Monster Scorpion
Kissimmee, Florida, 1953
It was night on Palmetto Lane, very late, very dark. Every bungalow was asleep, not a single light dotted the darkness. Such deep night, so silent, so absent of humans that the rats could amble relaxed and easy across the street. A balmy breeze sighed past the little houses. Even at night it was still almost hot. No sound, so quiet, so dead asleep, only the tiniest of creaks from the gate in a chain link fence.
 
Bobby Finster eased himself through the narrow opening he had made and remembered to carefully close the gate again so it wouldn’t bang in the wind. Even so it squeeeaked and made Bobby cringe, the sound bloomed enormously in the silent street. He glanced up at his house. All still. All good. He then took off at a run, barefoot.

They were there! They hadn’t been bluffing! Ralphy and Pete, Richie, Mark, and Dennis. He could see their dark lumps bunched together at the corner. He ran, drew near, and actually stopped at the smell. Bobby threw an arm across his nose. They hadn’t been bluffing about that either. A large, dead, flounder lay in the middle of the road.

Bobby crossed to the other side and approached the boys.
​
“Gawd a’mighty!” he said in a loud whisper. “That thing is stinking up the whole street!”

“Kept it in an old milk box for a week,” Richie proudly told him. The battered aluminum box sat modestly behind them.

“You oversleep?” Ralphy asked. “We’ve been here for ages.”

​“Then where is it?” said Bobby.

“We’re still waiting.”

“It’s my turn to hold the flashlight!” Dennis snatched it from Ralphy, the oldest and biggest, the ringleader. Bobby was impressed. He decided he would rather like to hold the flashlight.

Dennis switched it back on and trained the powerful beam on the storm drain. The boys waited. And waited.

Bobby yawned. The dead fish stench filled his nose and mouth, he felt sick, began to reconsider this whole adventure. Bed seemed appealing about now but… the other boys. It had been an honor to be asked, trusted with their group secret. But this was proving to be very boring. It was past two a.m. and he was standing barefoot on the sidewalk inhaling rotten fish. Maybe he could just sidle away… disappear into the dark.

Dennis sighed.

“It’s not coming,” he said.

“Oh, come on! Are you chickening out?” Ralphy demanded.

“That fish is making me sick,” Dennis admitted, “and I’m tired of holding this thing.”

“I’ll hold it!” Bobby cried.

“SHHHHH!” The chorus of boys shushed him.

“Pleeeease?” Bobby begged in a strangled whisper.

“Fine.” Dennis thrust it at him.

The large flashlight was surprisingly heavy, but Bobby aimed it with authority on the drain. He didn’t expect to see anything now, it was only a matter of pride and self-importance that kept him there. They were kind, really, these boys, allowing him to hold the flashlight.
Bobby stood, training the beam expertly, he thought. His pals would not regret asking him to come. But the flashlight was really quite heavy, his arms were getting tired… and that smell. But he would be strong, he was trusted with the flashlight. He would not falter.
Time slid by. No sound but for the boys’ breathing. Bobby could sense them getting bored.

“C’mon, give it back,” Mark finally said. “It’s my dad’s.”

Bobby went stiff. His stomach turned over.

“Bobby, c’mon.” Mark didn’t bother to lower his voice. “I’m going home.”

Bobby couldn’t speak. He could feel the back of his scalp prickling.

“Bobby!”

“SHHHHHH!” the other boys.

Ralphy moved to intervene and yank it out of Bobby’s grip.

“I – I – it’s there!” Bobby squeaked. He couldn’t move.

An enormous black claw protruded from the storm drain. Not just a claw, an arm, an arm as long as a man’s with a claw the size of Bobby’s head. The arm was bent like an elbow. The claw – pincers – were slightly open revealing jagged little teeth.

It was happening… it was real! It wasn’t just the ramblings of crazy old ladies and drunks, it was here!

The rumors were true!

One of the boys made a sound of fear, Bobby himself was paralyzed. He didn’t want to be here, he would run, not care what anyone thought but his body wouldn’t move. And some deeper, older instinct in him made him stay. What was this thing?

The boys were frozen, breathless. There was a scuffling in the depths of the sewer and a second claw slid into the light, a second long arm. The two pincers hovered a moment, half open as though testing the air, and all at once the head appeared, flat and armored, shiny and black. Little legs… two… six… eight, crooked like a spider. The thing showed no fear, pulled itself halfway into the street making clicking noises.

It kept coming… and coming, and coming, its armored black body sliding out of the drain, out of the sheltering darkness, into the drab reality of a little Kissimmee back street. It was huge. Bobby was shaking. He was holding the flashlight. He was the hero, no one could see the monster but for him. Then it emerged fully, all seven feet of it, shining in the white beam of the flashlight.

Now Bobby did begin to whimper. He broke into a sweat. The thing was a mere four feet away, it could be upon them in a moment. He had never been confronted with death, certainly never his own, but death stood before him now. The monster looked at the little group of juvenile hominids, its black, obsidian eyes were tilted like upside down commas.
Death… they would die. Bobby was terrified and resigned at the same time.

But then the thing turned and moved towards the dead fish. It actually sashayed, its long, thick body swaying like a long skirt. The elbowed arms bent above the stinking flounder, it ripped chunks off with its shearing claws and began to eat.

Bobby had followed the monster with the flashlight beam. The boys stayed rooted to the spot but their heads were turned as one. …They had done it. They… kids. Six boys. They had done what none of the scientists could do with their fancy traps and theorizing and college degrees. Six boys. Six boys and one reeking fish had brought the shadowy, enigmatic, mystery monster to the surface. They had done it!

The first shock was wearing off. The thing wasn’t going to kill them. It was no different, apparently, than any ordinary crab. Or seagull. It was just a huge scavenger. And it had a funny walk, like an old-fashioned lady in a bustled gown. It didn’t appear to have a coiled, poisonous tail, rather the long body ended in what looked like a flat, armored paddle.

Ralphy reached down and prized the flashlight out of Bobby’s petrified grip. He was in charge again. Now he trained the beam on the prehistoric creature, moving it slowly down the armored back. The thing appeared relaxed, resting on surprisingly skinny little legs and two large paddle legs behind. It ate the fish in a leisurely manner.

The boys were beginning to relax. A feeling that was almost giddy began to run through them. They had lured the beast from the depths. …Should they call the police? They should have brought a camera. No one would believe them.

Ralphy began to move away from the group. He crept down the sidewalk, quietly moving closer to the sea scorpion. Bobby wasn’t going anywhere. He was keenly aware that this thing lay between him and his house. There was no way he was going to pass it, even if it meant standing on the corner all night.

Raphy was fascinated, sweeping the beam back and forth over the beast. The scorpion appeared unbothered.

“Don’t touch it,” Mark said huskily.

For an animal that lived four-hundred million years ago, who had never known asphalt or sewers, it seemed remarkably at home. Already the boys felt proprietary, they had found it, they had lured it, it was theirs. Already they were learning its behavior, how it ate, how it moved. Slowly, the fear melted off them – not entirely – but curiosity began to take hold. The four other boys now inched down the sidewalk – not Bobby – and thrilled to the prickling feeling they got as they watched the long, long, pincered arms snip bites off the rapidly disappearing fish.

Then the fish was gone. Only a damp smudge in the street was left. The boys observed the scorpion do something with its front legs under the flat wedge of head, almost like it was licking them clean. Then it stood still.

Nobody moved. Not the boys, not the monster scorpion. What would it do next? Sachet around some more? Explore the neighborhood? They would follow it! They would watch its behavior. It was theirs!

But the scorpion just stood there, apparently digesting. Maybe it went to sleep. All the boys, except for Bobby, now stood clustered on the sidewalk near it. They couldn’t just leave it. The police station was far away and there was no phone booth nearby. One of them should go to his house and call but no one wanted to go. So, the silent standoff continued.
It was Pete who groped beside someone’s garden wall and found a stone.

“Pete?” Ralphy said. Pete moved to the edge of the sidewalk with the stone in hand. “Pete!”

“Are you insane?” Richie exclaimed.

“What are you doing?” Dennis cried. No one bothered to be quiet now.

Mark grabbed Pete’s wrist, but Pete merely switched the stone to his other hand and while the boys were tussling with him, he threw it.

It bounced off the scorpion’s back with a small crack. The arms came up. The pincers opened.

With one swish of its body the eurypterid turned to face them, and the boys had a final glimpse of the obsidian, apostrophe eyes before Ralphy dropped the flashlight. Its reflector shattered, the bulb broke, the street was plunged into darkness and the boys could only hear the rapid clicking of eight angry legs coming towards them.

Their screams burst like sirens. Now lights did come on all up and down the street. Windows opened and heads ducked out. Neighbors flung open their front doors to see vague, fleeing shapes pelting up the sidewalk, across front lawns, one appeared to leap into a tree. Mixed with the residents’ cries of alarm were the primal screams of boys coming from six different directions.

At 216 Palmetto, Mr. Abe Beasley marched down the stairs with his rifle tucked under his arm. Mrs. Beasley in pink nightgown and matching curlers trailed behind him. Abe thrust open his front door to take charge of the ruckus and in the light that spilled from his hallway, he saw a monster scorpion advancing across the sidewalk to his garden gate.

“Holy mother of – ” he breathed. “…Jesus… hell’s blazes…”

He aimed the shotgun and fired right between the tilting eyes.

Blam!... Blam!... Blam-blam-blam!

The head blew off. Armored exoskeleton scattered in bits. The creature flopped, twisted, on its side.

Abe’s ears were ringing slightly from the report. He was only vaguely aware of his wife fainting heavily to the floor behind him as he slowly advanced down his walkway. He barely registered the screams in the distance, the cries of dismay from his neighbors, didn’t see them begin to draw near and didn’t hear at all the approaching police sirens.

He stood over the dead monster, twisted in death, one bent arm hanging in the air. The thing’s legs were still twitching.


IV. Baroness Elizabetta von Blitz

3/4/2026

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He always went first to the House of the Desert Sun. It was an unassuming, respectable building in the Garden City district on a quiet, leafy street. At this time of day the house itself was quiet too, its busiest hours at night. The girls were clean there, and European. Having satiated his lust on Annette, he emerged into the shady street relaxed and cool.

The House of the Desert Sun always did wonders for his self-esteem as a man, making him believe he was irresistible to women. Traversing the sidewalk, calm and self-satisfied, he was sure it was his post-coital aura that made the neighborhood women brush softly past him, peek coyly from under their hats, like that bewitching jet-haired creature in the emerald dress, or this barely legal darling carrying her little dog, or the blond crossing the street. Women had always found him thrilling, he remembered, when he was the leader of the Reichsregierung squadron. No woman could resist a flyer.

Or they could be spies. Actually, this pleased him even more than if they were just ordinary women. It made him feel important. And dangerous. He was still at the center of things, still full of important information and knowledge. Oh, wouldn’t they all like to know the things he had done, was doing, the Russians, Americans, British, he had outsmarted them all! Wouldn’t all these women brushing past him on the sidewalk be impressed. He could just see how their eyes would widen, their lips part with wonder. If only he could tell someone but he dared not; not even Annette.

And so he sauntered, smoking a cigarette, admiring a breast here, a nicely turned ankle there, following the winding streets. It was cool under the palms whose great fronds brushed the facades of villas and apartment buildings. Everything, Baur thought, was so old, even here in the newer Garden City the buildings were all dusty, all tired, all seemed to be leaning slightly like half-melted sandcastles. The little balconies with curling balustrades staggered up sides of buildings, terraces spilling flowers, turrets and towers crowning edges, a hodgepodge of sandcastle wedding cakes all jostled together held no charm for him. It was hot. It was dusty. It was old.

Though meandering, Baur had a destination. He arrived presently at a great sand-colored pile of pillars and arched windows, scrolling balconies and striped awnings, palms and dripping ivy: the Hotel Magnifique. He stood for a moment before it. He thought it was ugly, a mishmash mess of architecture, nothing like the cool, austere, classical buildings the Fuhrer had built back home. He dropped his stub of cigarette and walked around to the back.

It was a different world here, with perspiring men in ragged clothes carrying heavy crates of every foodstuff imaginable through an alley. Lots of shouting and noise and smells. He didn’t see the police car. He felt a hand on his shoulder.

“Herr Baur?”

Baur spun around and groped for the gun under his jacket.

“I am Baroness Elizabetta von Blitz. Please help me.”
She wore a beige linen sheath with a beige and white-striped, big, floppy hat and black sunglasses the size of saucers over her eyes.

Still reflexively clutching the grip of his revolver, Baur ran his eyes down her figure, taking in the slim hips, long legs, trim ankles and then brought his gaze back up to her face.

“I am Baroness Elizabetta von Blitz,” the woman repeated. “Please help me.”

She laid a gentle hand on his arm, the very arm that was attached to the hand that clutched the gun.

“They are after me, I have no place to go, your reputation precedes you, I know – I know that there are others. I know who you are. Please… they will kill me.”

Baur smiled, relaxed, and released his hand. She was no spy, she was babbling too foolishly. There had been many female spies – he was sure they’d been spies – sideling up to him in bars, restaurants, on the street, probably even at the House of the Desert Sun, but he’d always been able to spot them. They were smooth, polished talkers, obviously trained. This woman who stood before him now was trembling, sweating even. She was scared.

“How may I help you, baroness?” he asked pleasantly.

“Take me with you.” Her hand was still on his arm. She leaned toward him urgently. “I came to Cairo because – my palace in Saarbrucken was looted during the war. I lost everything. My husband is dead. And now, I’m being followed everywhere. I know there is a safehouse in the desert.”

“Why are you being followed, baroness?” Baur smiled and reached in his pocket for a cigarette. This was downright amusing.

“Well, because…” she leaned in very close now. Baur could smell her perfume.

“…Liebdehendenkleinenscorf.” She slid her sunglasses down her nose and looked at him significantly with big blue eyes. “You understand,” she said quietly.

“Of course.”

“I knew you would.” She seemed relieved. “And now I must get away from my enemies. I’m so glad I found you. You can help me.”

Baur smiled magnanimously just as the police car pulled up to the curb. Some of the perspiring men in the back alley started hollering, calling for someone, and immediately a waiter from the hotel lumbered out carrying a wooden crate.

Baur opened the back passenger door of the police car and the crate was placed inside with great care. He tipped the waiter. Holding the door open, he grinned at the baroness.

“Coming?” he said. The frightened blond woman ducked into the car without hesitation. “You have a bag or anything?”

“Everything I need is in here.” The baroness indicated a large brown handbag she clutched to her side.

Baur slammed the door shut. He then slid into the backseat by the opposite passenger door. The crate sat between him and this curious, new companion. He casually rested an arm on the crate while lighting another cigarette as the police car pulled away from the curb, siren wailing.

The traffic of Cairo, the ancient lopsided trucks, tiny, rusted cars, rickety horse-drawn vehicles, the occasional camel, all parted before the fast-moving police car. Baur smoked, slowly raising and lowering his hand to his lips, enjoying it all and particularly enjoying that Baroness Elizabetta von Blitz was bewildered.

What flew past the car windows was a phantasmagoria of images, inlaid brick and scarabs, Renaissance loggias, gothic towers, city blocks that melted into one another, wide boulevards shrinking into medieval streets so narrow the police car nearly scraped the sides of ancient houses whose balconies jutted so far out above they nearly met those opposite creating a tunnel effect with glittering minarets rearing behind. Men with donkeys, men with camels, so much shouting and horning blowing, a bridge guarded by giant bronze lions, then onion domes and minarets and brightly colored tiles. A flimsy shantytown, a bit of desert, and then the police car was wailing and screeching onto an airfield.

A little insect-like plane sat on the tarmac with two uniformed crewmen in attendance. They ran out to the car even before it fully stopped and deferentially pulled open the back passenger doors. The crewmen were only a little bemused at the appearance of the tall, blond woman.

The baroness stepped out, adjusted her sunglasses and looked about.

“The only way to go,” Baur indicated the plane. “You know what that is?”

The baroness raised her eyebrows questioningly above the sunglasses.

“It’s a Fieseler FI-156 Storch,” Baur informed her, “the very one that ferried Frau Hitler out of Berlin in ’45.”

“F-Frau – ?”

“Eva Braun,” Baur whispered to her, getting cozily close.

He was aware that she swayed a bit upon hearing the name.

“Yes,” he said, “she’s alive, alive and well. You’ll see. All kinds of things happening at the castle.”

“W-what castle?” She looked like she might faint.

“In the desert,” Baur said. “You’ll see.”

She actually reached out and grasped his arm, so overcome was she at the revelation that the Fuhrer’s wife lived, that she was going to meet her. Frau Hitler!

The two crewmen were now scurrying with the crate to the plane. They placed it inside with the same care as the waiter had done back at the hotel.

“Let’s go,” Baur said and escorted Baroness von Blitz across the tarmac.

He imagined that she looked at the little plane with wonder. Baur was filled with manly pride and looked forward to showing off his flying prowess. The gull wing door to the cockpit was open, the mysterious crate already loaded into the back. Baur gallantly held Elizabetta’s hand as she mounted the two steps and ducked into the tandem seat of the cockpit. The crate took up a lot of leg room so she had to sit slightly sideways. From a pocket on the back of the pilot’s seat, Baur pulled out a leather aviator hat and goggles.

“Better put these on,” he said.

He watched as Elizabetta removed her hat and pulled on the leather cap with ear flaps. When she removed her sunglasses, Baur openly stared at her face. She was older than he had realized, quite a bit older, at least forty. He felt a prick of contempt, but then… her legs were still good, they looked quite lovely they way she slanted them away from the crate.

Baur then climbed into his seat, left the gull wing door open, and began priming the cockpit. The ground crew was turning the propeller, there was a cough and a sputter and the machine started. The roar of the engine was very loud, it made conversation impossible. Baur wished the plane had a rearview mirror like a car so he could watch the baroness’ reactions. He let the engine warm up for a few minutes, checked the oil pressure and fuel pump, finished the engine power checks, then taxied onto the runway.
​
Baur throttled forward, the engine noise grew deafening, and after a short run the little plane was in the air, pulling up high and fast. Very quickly the buildings of the airfield shrank to the size of toys. Baur banked more dramatically than usual and began the flight over the desert.

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III. A Head Frozen in                    Ice

3/1/2026

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Former SS Commandant von Werther sat on the ramparts of El-Fiz Castle in the dying sun and watched the desert turn red. He’d been sitting there for hours, first in the shade, then when the sun moved, in the withering heat. They had forgotten about him again. No one knew what to do with him, this useless wheelchair bound former commandant, so they parked him out of doors thinking the fresh air would be good for him. The black handkerchief was stuck to his face, the lens of the dark glasses over his one good eye was fogged. But he could still see the vultures, the flock of enormous, black vultures that floated silently, circling… circling… circling endlessly.

They are waiting for me to die, von Werther thought. Then they will float down and feast on my withered flesh, gouge out my only eye. A flock of them – no, wait, what was the proper word… a wake, that was it – a wake of vultures was already on the ground feasting unchallenged on the corpse of a decaying therizinosaur. That, at least, was something to watch, the savage fights among these resurrected beasts. Von Werther enjoyed the blood, even with his one dim eye at this distance he could see the therizinosaurs’ great claws slashing at one another, observe their brownish-green hides turning red. He loved how they fought to the death, the brute savageness of it he found revitalizing.

There the loser lay, its flesh corrupting day after day, even von Werther could smell the stink from his high perch. And the smell brought the vultures who circled… circled… until the flesh was soft enough, rotten enough, for them to land and plunge their bald heads in. Von Werther liked it, liked the helplessness of the dead dinosaur, liked the patient ruthlessness of the birds. They were always, in the end, rewarded.

Von Werther decided he liked vultures. This, he decided, would be a fitting way to go. He would someday die up here, high on the ramparts of El-Fiz castle with a view of absolutely nothing for miles and miles, a shriveled, slumped servant of the Fuhrer, completely forgotten by the other residents of the castle. What was the saying…dust to dust… violence to violence, survival of the fittest. Come to me, you violent birds of death, he prayed. Rip me, eat me, let there be blood!

Von Werther liked violence, it still roiled within him. And that was how he would end, forgotten, left dead for days before anybody noticed, but shredded in violence by huge black birds.
Until then, he sat, leaning sideways, his proud SS uniform bunching too big around his skeletal frame. He would watch, the sentinel of El-Fiz Castle, the keeper of the flame for the lost Third Reich.
 
                                                            *
 
The interior of the castle was cool and dim. Soft desert breezes wafted curtains in comfortable bedrooms, blew softly through uncarpeted stone passageways, drifted down through winding, stone staircases. Electric ceiling fans whirred soundlessly in luxurious staterooms where Persian carpets covered the stone floors and Moorish filigree filled the arches of doors. Enormous porcelain vases as tall as men stood in shadowed corners, pedestals bore golden statuettes, and Victorian velvet furniture lay plump and ready for reclining bodies.

Dotted about the myriad rooms, the endless corridors, here and there at the foot or head of a staircase were men in uniform. The SS uniforms of the soldier servants were faded and fraying, the faces were lined and tired, the eyes had the permanent imprint of having seen untold horrors, but their backs were straight and their demeanor unbowed. They were part of it still and the castle was its epicenter. These servant soldiers had been at the center before, in the bunker in Berlin, had watched it all go up in flames, but now, here, there was rebirth.

Far, far below, beneath the original medieval foundations, in the very dungeons, a man was pushing a squeaking, cast-iron tea trolley. Electricity had been installed even here, lights at regular intervals along the low, vaulted ceiling casting a weak orange glow. The man tried to move briskly but the unoiled wheels of the trolley turned stiffly, grudgingly. And the object that it bore was very heavy, covered in a cloth. The glass top of the trolley had been removed and a thick board put in its place. Even now, the man could see the board growing damp. He must hurry before it melted.

The dungeons were a warren of chambers. A large one had been chosen to accommodate the spectators for the unveiling. Heinz Linge reached the archway to the room and turned the tea trolley with great difficulty. It grated on the rough stone floor and made undignified grinding noises. Linge had to slightly lift the trolley to guide it through the arch, causing the precious cargo to precariously tip and Linge had to clamp his hand on it to prevent it from crashing and shattering on the floor. What an unspeakable horror that would be!

At last, the infernal conveyance was turned and Linge rolled it in with the expert nonchalance of a butler serving high tea. Ten people were seated around a long refectory table, eight men and two women. One woman was faded, thin and blond with a shabby fox stole around her shoulders to ward off the chill. The other woman was draped all in white and veiled in the manner of the local Egyptian women. The men wore uniforms, some too tight, others gaping around once robust bodies, uniforms lovingly cleaned and pressed but all patched and fraying.

Linge pushed the squeaking tea trolley to the table and drew forth a large set of ice tongs from the lower tray of the trolley. He grasped the shrouded object with the tongs and heaved it onto the center of the table. Then, he stepped aside.

A large man sitting opposite the mystery under the cloth, rose. He had a heavy face and eyes in a permanent slit-eyed stare. He wore the uniform of the SS-Grupenfuhrer, its black cloth now faded to slate gray. Slowly he moved his gaze over each occupant of the table, hard emotionless eyes that had watched the mass extermination of hundreds of Jews slaughtered at his command.

“Desert Wolves!” he suddenly barked. “My fellow survivors of the Battle of Berlin, it is time! We have survived our ordeal of trial and torture in the Soviet Union. We, the chosen few who stood by the Fuhrer in the Fuhrerbunker in those terrible final days are gathered together at last.  Today we begin our resurgence, our revenge! Frau Hitler has held the torch all these years, spirited to safety with the spark of our return.” He indicated the faded woman in the fox stole. “And now,” he continued, “we have assembled our team, we have the power to create anew that which our enemies tried to destroy. Today is the first day of Operation Valhalla Rising! Witness, fellow loyalists of the Third Reich, our return to glory!”

And Grupenfuhrer Rattenhuber leaned forward and snatched off the cloth.

The eight other men in the chamber gasped. The veiled woman in white screamed, screamed and pushed back from the table, staggered to the far wall where she sank to the floor, a hand clamped over her mouth.

A block of ice sat upon the table and encased within it was Adolf Hitler’s head.

The blond woman who sat at Rattenhuber’s right slowly rose. Her eyes filled with tears as she reached across the table and caressed the ice, lovingly running her hand down the front of it.

“Adolf…” she whispered. “…Adolf.”

Adolf Hitler’s eyes were wide open and his mouth gaped as though he’d been cut off in mid-holler. The eight remaining survivors of the Fuhrerbunker stared, unsure whether to feel horror or joy at seeing the Fuhrer’s face again. The veiled woman against the wall was shrieking behind her hand.

“Be quiet, woman!” Rattenhuber said sharply. “Get up! Look at him! This is why we brought you here. Get up!”

Whimpering, the woman swaddled in white dragged herself to her feet and shuffled to Rattenhuber’s side. She forced herself to look. Adolf Hitler… the Wolf of Europe, the most glorious Fuhrer gawped back at her, his mouth hanging open in silent protest at this indignity, as though he were trying to speak to her.

She fainted.

A tall, thin man now stood up. He moved to get a full view of the frozen Fuhrer. No one said a word, not even Rattenhuber, former head of the Reichssircherheirsdienst. Even he deferred to Dr. S, a man with similar hooded eyes that had overseen even greater horrors, this man whose long, thin fingers had conducted experiments in the camps so monstrous he was wanted by every military tribunal in the world, his name could not be safe with anyone. He was Dr. S.

He was bald with a lizard face, did not wear a uniform, only a plain suit. Stepping over the unconscious woman on the floor, he looked evenly at the frozen Fuhrer.

“It must be defrosted slowly,” Dr. S finally said. His voice was like ice in the already cold room. “If he melts too quickly the tissue could start to rot. We cannot break the ice for fear of damaging the head. He must defrost here below ground where it is cool, gradually, and as soon as he is free of ice, the operation will be performed.”

“Can it really be done, Dr. S?” Rattenhuber asked in an undertone.

Dr. S. turned to him with an expression of stone.

“I would not be here, Grupenfuhrer, if it could not be done,” he said. “We are all here because it can and will be done.”

“How, Dr. S?” Frau Hitler asked. Only she could get away with such a question.

“The reanimation of the brain involves a process called ischemia/reperfusion,” Dr. S. explained.  “The Fuhrer’s brain will need an infusion of what are called fermentable fuels, that is, glucose. In this way, apoptosis will be avoided. It is an antioxidant defense. While frozen, protein levels of cytosolic superoxide dismutase will have risen. Mitochondrial chaperones will be up-regulated, cytoplasm levels will rise and be phosphorylated and ubiquitinated. In laymen’s terms, the brain tissue will be protected and the organ itself only needs a proper host.”

Eva Hitler blinked.

“The Fuhrer,” she said, “does not want to inhabit the fallible body of a man. It was his final wish to me before…”

“Yes,” Dr. S. said, looking at the frozen head with interest, “the decapitation was done very neatly.”

“I did it myself,” Rattenhuber said proudly, “with a butcher knife. The Fuhrer wanted to kill himself but I personally talked him out of it. I convinced him that he would be reborn.”

“Are we talking about Dinolebhaftigkeit?” Heinz Linge asked from the corner where he still clutched the ice tongs.

Dr. S. slowly turned to him with his cold, blank stare.

“A procedure such as Dinolebhaftigkeit,” he said, “is for dead tissue. The Fuhrer’s brain is alive. Every memory, every idea, his whole personhood is there. It only needs slow defrosting and in infusion of antioxidant defenses.”

Frau Hitler clasped her hands together and her eyes brightened. For a moment her faded looks glowed and there was a glimpse of the former doyenne of Obersalzberg.

“Has the host been chosen yet?” she asked.

“It has, Frau Hitler,” Rattenhuber assured her, “the largest, most ferocious one of them all. The Fuhrer will be mighty and terrifying to his minions. He will have the strength of twenty men, the ferocity of thirty lions, armed guards will no longer be necessary.

“Oh, thank you, Dr. S!” Eva reached for the doctor’s long, thin hand and kissed it.

“Only now we must wait,” Dr. S. said, slowly extracting his hand. “The melt will take a few days.”

“I will keep vigil,” Eva said passionately. “I want to look upon my Fuhrer’s face before it is gone forever.”

“Bring Frau Hitler a pot of hot tea!” Rattenhuber barked at Linge. The Fuhrer’s valet scurried through the doorway to do the Grupenfuhrer bidding. “You mustn’t catch a chill, Frau Hitler,” he told her.

Then, Rattenhuber clicked his heels and gave the Nazi salute to the frozen head.

“Heil Hitler!” he bellowed. Then he turned and strode from the chamber.

“Heil Hitler,” Dr. S. said more quietly, also executed a rigid Nazi salute. Then he too quit the room.

One by one, the other men at the table rose and approached the block of ice.

“Heil Hitler!” Martin Bormann, Hitler’s personal secretary.

“Heil Hitler!” Otto Gunsche, escort commander.

“Heil Hitler!” Erich Kempka, Hitler’s chauffer.

Heil Hitler!” Hans Baur, Hitler’s pilot.

“Heil Hitler! Heil Hitler!” Hitler’s two surviving SS soldier servants, Ewald Lindloff and Hans Reiser.

The underground chamber was now silent and empty. Frau Hitler pulled her furs more closely around her and settled in for a long vigil, watching the Fuhrer’s face as though meditating before a holy relic.

A moan emanated from below the table. With her one arm, the woman in white seized the edge and pulled herself up. Again, the sight of the frozen Fuhrer sent her into paroxysms of horror.

“Oh – !” she wept. “Mein Fuhrer!”

Eva was completely relaxed, she saw only the future. Her eyes were narrowed as she contemplated the glories to come.

“Make ready your laboratory, Dr. Rot,” she said. “It is time.”

“Yes, Fuhrerin.”

 “Just think, in two weeks I shall hear Adolf’s voice again, I will see the light in his eyes!”

“Such an operation has never been performed before, Fuhrerin. I couldn’t say exactly how long the recovery time would take.”

“Is there danger, Dr. Rot?”

Dr. Rot felt queasy at visions of Hitler’s brain being dropped on the floor, or worse, it going mad inside the host. She was not, in fact, entirely convinced of Dr. S’s sanity. As a scientist, Dr. Rot knew this was not proper procedure, a test brain should be used first, there must be extensive record keeping, results calculated, all before using the Fuhrer’s one and only precious brain. The risks were enormous. But Dr. Rot was not the one in charge.

“The procedure is quite safe,” she told Eva. Dr. Rot had learned that telling people what they wanted to hear was a way to stay alive.

Eva’s eyes gleamed with excitement.

“I can see it now,” she said. “Unter den Linden hung with flags, swastikas hanging from the Brandenburg Gate as my lover marches through it at the head of legions of men in Nazi uniform. It will be just like the old days. And you, Dr. Rot, will be given the Order of the Reich Eagle for your service to the Third Reich. No… it will be the Fourth Reich, won’t it?”

Eva Hitler, nee Braun, was an idiot, Dr. Rot thought. That vapid little blond had always been an idiot, useful to satisfy the Fuhrer’s urges but of little other use. I, Dr. Rot thought, I was his true friend. I was his equal. She could just imagine what kind of host she’d like to see Eva’s brain planted in… a Thuringian rotbunte cow…

“Thank you, Fuhrerin,” Dr. Rot said.

Heinz Linge reappeared carrying a tea tray. He placed it on the table before Eva, the tray laid with a cloth of Battenburg lace and set with flowered Dresden china.

“Bring another cup, Linge,” Eva commanded. “Dr. Rot will keep me company.”

Not for the first time, Dr. Rot was glad of the veil that covered her ravaged face. It had hidden many a grimace. Dutifully, she sat next to Eva.

Presently, Linge returned with another flowered teacup and Eva commenced their macabre little tea party. Eva daintily sipped the Koshary tea while Dr. Rot discreetly lifted her veil to drink hers.
​
And so they sat, the chill creeping into their bones, keeping watch over the melting Fuhrer. Each dripping rivulet that slid past his face brought them closer to rebirth and revenge. Drip by drip. Drip… drip… drip….
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II. Fort York

3/1/2026

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Dr. Elsa Gorman stood over the metal mortuary table in the dissection lab. Her heart was breaking. Her marvelous creation… dead. Shot to pieces. It was too cruel. The great, flat prosoma had actually been separated from the shining, black mesosoma. Decapitated. Guillotined by a rifle. Its legs lay flat and splayed. The fierce little eyes, once gleaming with intelligence were now flat and vacant. Tears filled Elsa’s own eyes.

“I can reanimate it,” she said, running her hands over the smooth, segmented tergites.

“You will not,” Colonel York told her. “You never should have reanimated this animal in the first place.” Though he tried to ignore it, a creepy-crawly feeling ran up and down his spine as he regarded this dead eurypterid which seemed more monster than animal to him. “You can’t control it.”

“It was completely harmless!” And now Elsa’s tears spilled over. She had been told how the execution happened, the sea scorpion peacefully ingesting a fish with children standing nearby. It had hardly even noticed the children, it wasn’t a predator. And yet some barbarian had found it necessary to kill it.

“It attacked children,” Colonel York reminded Elsa.

“It was only running because someone threw a rock at it,” Elsa said, wiping her eyes on her sleeve.

“It was loose for years in the sewers of Kissimmee, terrorizing the townspeople.”

“It wasn’t terrorizing anybody! Searching for food in sewers and drains is hardly terrorizing.”

“It would come out into the street at night. C’mon, Dr. Gorman, even you can see how a creature like this might frighten someone. I mean, if they had a weak heart, why – ”

“It could have been used as an education tool, educating people that just because something looks ferocious doesn’t mean it’s vicious. People shouldn’t judge by appearances. That’s something I think Americans could learn.”

“It ran amok at your press conference three years ago.”

“Only because everyone started screaming.”

“It escaped, Dr. Gorman. You couldn’t control it. For two years that thing’s been running loose.”

He remembered the news footage from that day at Camp Mesozoic, the televised press conference that had gone horribly wrong. Claws the size of his head raised aloft, how rapidly the giant scorpion moved, the screaming, fleeing journalists as Elsa stood by watching with interest, making no effort to stop the beast as it scurried into the brush. By the time its handlers gave chase, the thing had reached the stream and once the thing was in the water, there was no catching it.

“Mass hysteria…” Elsa was muttering. “It’s a bad thing.”

“I’m sorry, Dr. Gorman, but there had to be consequences. This is why the military took control of your research facility here.”
“Fort York,” Elsa said with just the tiniest drip of derision.

Colonel York cleared his throat. He could lie and say he’d had no control over the choice of name but… to be the post commander of such a place, it had been his secret dream.

Since the US army had taken over Camp Mesozoic two years ago, he’d built a house just west of all the research buildings and labs, a house on a slight rise shaded by cypress trees with a view of the corrals. Every morning in the early light he could see them through his bedroom windows, reptilian creatures with gracefully arching necks, scythe-like claws, grazing, socializing, shrieking into the dawn, big ones and little ones, veterans of the war who still bore the scars of battle on their hides, and smaller, newer ones, products of the breeding program.

Fort York. It was no Camp Mesozoic. Now it was a fully-fledged military base with its object to breed and train therizinosaurs for battle. There was some experimentation with other dinosaurs but there was less and less of this, much to the chagrin of the remaining scientists on the base. There were no more ornithomimus, no camptosaurs… and no t. rex.

But… even the days of the therizinosaurs might be numbered. Even before the debacle with the sea scorpion, there had been rumblings at the Pentagon. He was pulling strings, trying everything he could, and now he had a plan.
Colonel York cleared his throat again.

“Yeah, about that,” he said. “There have been some developments, Dr. Gorman, and I – ”

Elsa was handling one of the great claws, running her hand over it, caressing it. Now Colonel York got a prickly feeling all over his back and the creepy-crawly feeling was running up and down his arms and legs. He wondered not for the first time if Elsa Gorman – the old Elsa Wild, German émigré, master of Dinolebhaftigkeit, tyrannosaur trainer – was not a little mad.

“Dr. Gorman, why don’t we go to the canteen?” he said. “I could really use that terrific coffee of yours.”

Elsa sighed and gently laid down the claw.

She and the colonel left the dissection lab (Building #5) and traversed the main street past the buildings of Fort York to the canteen. Elsa was still morose and preoccupied. She filled two mugs at the coffee dispenser hardly knowing what she did.

“You may have already guessed what I’m going to tell you,” Colonel York said when they were seated.

“Oh?” Elsa said. “This sounds serious.”

Colonel York was silent a moment, trying to find the right words.

“The H bomb,” he finally said.

“Yes,” Elsa said quietly, “a terrible thing.”

“What I’m trying to say,” Colonel York continued, “the War Department is throwing its weight – it’s resources – behind this new weapon.”

Elsa gazed at the colonel.

“And – ?” she said.

“The kind of weapons being bred here, they’re becoming obsolete. The Korean war is over now, and while the therizinosaurs were very effective in combat there, the Pentagon wants to focus on bomb production. And testing. So… soon, not all at once, not right away… Fort York will be shut down as an active military base.”

Now Elsa understood. Her face went pale.

“No more funding?” she said.

“It won’t happen all at once,” Colonel reassured her, “but… ultimately, no more funding. There’s this thinking, you see,” he barreled on, “that with such a powerful weapon like the H bomb, war might be avoided all together. A weapon like the H bomb could actually keep the peace. That’s the thinking in Washington, anyway. And then, you know… the animal rights people,” he sighed, “the ethics of using animals in battle. The Pentagon feels it’s bad optics for the military.”

“I never wanted to use the dinosaurs for war,” Elsa said, “but it was the only way I could get the kind of funding I needed. And now… so that’s it? Just like that? All this?” She glanced around her. “Gone? Over? …What will I do?”

“Dr. Gorman – Elsa,” Colonel York laid a hand on her arm, “I have an idea.”

“I suppose I could teach…”

“Listen, let me – ”

“It’s a relief, really. I no longer have to send my animals to the slaughter. Robert will be relieved, too.”

“Elsa – ”

“Oh, I knew this day would come.” Elsa emitted a great sigh. “Nothing’s been the same since the war department took over Camp Mesozoic. It feels more like a factory now. I suppose it is time to pack it in. I’m too old for all this. I’m a mother and a wife, it’s time to put my focus on that.”

“What? No!” Colonel York protested. “I mean, you’re an excellent wife and mother. But the world still needs you, Elsa Wild.”

Elsa Wild… Elsa felt a certain tingling in her gut when she heard her former name. In an instant the forested mountains of Bavaria swam before her eyes, the smell of her old resurrection lab, the roar of the tyrannosaur. She had felt this tingling before, as a girl in Magdeburg, as a young woman at Kaiser Wilhelm University, the desire to make a difference, to create! She had almost forgotten the feeling, so much war, her work had become mere production. But she was still, secretly, Elsa Wild.

“Listen to my idea,” Colonel York was saying. “I don’t have to tell you that since your sea scorpion incident three years ago, your loyalty to America has been called into question. Not by me,” he hastily added, “I’m talking about the powers-that-be at the Pentagon. I hate to say it, Dr. Gorman, but – your sanity has been called into question too.”

“My sanity!”

“You just stood there smiling as your humongous eurypterid went ballistic on a bunch of journalists.”

“It did no such thing!”

“You have to understand how it looked, Dr. Gorman. Unfortunately, it’s all on tape. The government thinks you’re not fit to run a place like this unsupervised. And without any government funding, you’re out of business. But, Dr. Gorman, I have influence at the Pentagon. I can put in a good word for you. They listen to me. I’ve already floated the idea and I’m here today to see if you’ll accept. Or at least think about it.”

“What idea?”

Colonel York shifted in his chair.

“We have intelligence that the Nazis are regrouping in Egypt.”

“What?” Elsa was horrified.

“It’s no secret that Nassar has been welcoming them to his country. They’re training his military. Ex-Nazis training Egyptian military is one thing but – it’s believed there is another Nazi contingent there that is actually plotting a comeback; will possibly mount another invasion of Europe. They’ve been gathering men and resources.”

“An invasion?” Elsa said. “How? With what?”

“With therizinosaurs.”

Elsa’s face went pale again. All around her the clinking of cutlery and mingling conversation of her colleagues went on, oblivious to the looming horror that might soon be upon them.

“I see,” she said after a long moment. “So, the American military failed in its roundup after the Battle of Berlin.”

“They didn’t get them all, no,” Colonel York sighed. “There was so much chaos. Some fleeing Nazis got away with a few American therizinosaurs. And now there’s a breeding program in Egypt.”

Elsa covered her mouth with her hand and looked away. Nazi therizinosaurs, branded with the swastika storming through Israel, invading Turkey, spreading through eastern Europe once more, heading back to… Berlin.

“Oh god, no,” was all she could say.

“But you can help us, Dr. Gorman,” Colonel York said, leaning across the table.

“How can I when the American military is defunding me?”

“You can go to Egypt,” he told her. “You know what to look for.”
“What are you talking about?”

“Assess the situation. How serious is it? How many therizinosaurs do they have? How are they being trained? What is their condition? America needs this information.”

“You mean – ”

“If you do this, if you can provide valuable information, it will show Washington that there is no more loyal, patriotic American than yourself.”

“I have never been anything put patriotic! The entire Kissimmee Project was for America!”

“If you do this, you can keep Fort York. …Camp Mesozoic. You can do any research you like and you will be provided with government grants.”

“But – but I’m a scientist, not a spy. I wouldn’t know what to do. I’d get caught. I don’t think I’d be any use at all.”

“You would be provided with a new identity, you’ll get papers and everything. You speak German, you look, forgive me, Aryan. You just have to infiltrate these guys in Egypt.”

“…just…”

“No one will know who you are.”

“How can you be so sure?”

“You’ll be given a script, a backstory. Really, all you have to do is pretend to be a Nazi, say the right things, do the stupid salute. Just pretend. …You’ve done it before.”

1935… the SS commanders… the tyrannosaur…Schravenbach Castle… five dead SS commanders. Yes, she had done it before.
“But I’m older now. That was a long time ago.”

“Even better. No one will remember you. Or recognize you.”

“Because I’m so much older?”

“Well…”

“I’ve never been to Egypt. Before the war, in Germany, I was on my own turf, in my own laboratory, I knew exactly what to do. I had my own tyrannosaur.”

“We just need your eyes, Dr. Gorman. Just report back on what you see. That’s all. You don’t have to do anything, no sabotage, no assassinations, nothing like that. Just observe. You can do it.”

With a furrowed brow, Elsa turned this offer over in her mind.

“No,” she finally said. “I can’t. At one time, maybe, but I have a family now, they come first. I can’t risk my life, not even for America. The US should send in one of their professionals.”

“But – but it’s for Camp Mesozoic!” Colonel York cried. Several people at nearby tables turned their heads. “We can’t – you can’t – lose this research facility. Listen to me – Africa USA. You know it?”

“Africa – ? That place in Boca Raton?”

“It’s a park. It’s like a safari, it’s fantastic.”

“Yes, I’ve heard of it.”

“You go in and there are wild animals wandering loose. You take this little train thing – it’s pulled by a jeep – and you can drive right by them. It’s amazing.”

Elsa was looking at him oddly.

“So?” she said.

“Dr. Gorman, we could do something like that here. With the dinosaurs. We wouldn’t have carnivorous, predatory dinosaurs, but the plant eating ones, the species that wouldn’t attack anyone. It could be an incredible education tool for Americans. Just picture it! Herds of therizinosaurs, people would be enthralled, and we could explain how they were used in the war and – and maybe even offer rides on them!”

“Like ponies at the zoo?”

“It would be an invaluable contribution to American culture and science. Everything is already here, all we need is the jeep train.”

“We?”

Elsa was touched to actually see the proud military colonel blush.

“I’ll be retiring soon, Dr. Gorman,” he said. “We worked together in war. Now we might work together in peace. This place could double as a research facility and a valuable educational tool for the public. Heck, it could make you a lot of money. And – oh, why don’t I just say it. Dr. Gorman, I really, really want to drive the jeep.”

Such a vision was irresistible to him and really a perfect fit. Who better than himself, an ex-military man who had overseen the victorious therizinosaurs in war, to drive his fellow civilians through the peaceful Florida countryside telling stories of the dinosaurs’ daring-do, peppered with scientific nuggets? He would be so good at it.

Elsa was touched and not a little intrigued.


“I have never been to Africa USA,” she said.

“It just opened this year,” the colonel said. “Take Heidi, she would love it.”

Colonel York was right, Elsa thought. Converting Camp Mesozoic into a park – at least part of it – might make money she could use for research, to fund more archaeological digs. It would benefit Robert and his work. And if she went on this mission to Egypt, executed it successfully, it would silence once and for any lingering doubts about her loyalty to America.

If she agreed to do it.

“I’ll think about it,” Elsa finally said. “I have to talk it over with Robert.”

Colonel York ran a hand over his bristly, buzz-cut hair.
“Dr. Gorman, I have the greatest respect for Dr. Gorman – Robert. Your husband. But – well – you and me both know he’s kind of a purest.”

“He has integrity,” Elsa said.

“Yes,” the colonel agreed, “a man of great integrity. But he might feel a little funny about tourists trailing through Camp Mesozoic. I mean, it might take him time to come around. And we don’t have time, Dr. Gorman. Look, honestly, I’ve got to know today.”

“Today!”

“I have to let the Pentagon know right away.”

“Why?”

Colonel York tried not to show his impatience. No, he didn’t have to let the Pentagon know right away but he wasn’t going to allow that uptight Robert Gorman lousing things up just when Elsa seemed to be coming around. The colonel was all for traditional family values but Elsa Gorman – Elsa Wild – was too valuable an asset to be hemmed in by a busybody husband.

“These guys are cooking up something!” he burst out. “These Nazis! In the desert at a place called El-Fiz Castle!”

“El-Fiz…?”

“We just don’t know the numbers!”

“Of Nazis?”

“Of therizinosaurs! Elsa, I’m not exaggerating, they might have the numbers to launch an invasion of Israel tomorrow.” This was true. “I’m sorry but we just don’t have time to dither. Now, I’m a traditional family man but this isn’t the time to be asking your husband for permission. We’ve got to get started!”

“I wasn’t going to ask permission.”

“You’d be there for two weeks,” Colonel York said. “A month, tops. You don’t write anything down, you don’t take pictures, you don’t meet up with any double agents. Just get in, look around, and get out.”

Elsa sighed.

The colonel pulled his last card.

“You were there,” he reminded her, “in Berlin. 1945.”

“I remember.”

“Then you remember the hell. There’s no other word for what consumed Berlin that day, what consumed most of Europe. Hell. Fire and death, cities raised, populations decimated. It could happen again. Easily. Even the United Nations can’t hold it in check, not marching legions of dinosaurs. No one’s going to drop an H bomb on Egypt. And it’s hard to vaporize a moving target like a division of therizinosaurs. And even worse – I hate to say it – but despite everything, the Nazis still have their sympathizers, those who long for the ‘good old days’, so to speak. There are places and people that wouldn’t put up too much resistance. That’s why this stockpile of dinosaurs can’t be allowed to leave Egypt. And once we know what’s going on there, then America, the United Nations can take appropriate action. But it we’re left in the dark, Dr. Gorman, that’s where the danger lies.”

Elsa sat with lowered eyes. Colonel York gave her a moment to let it all sink in.

“There’s also Heidi to consider,” Elsa said.

“Then,” Colonel York said quietly, “do it for Heidi’s future.”

For years, Elsa had managed to tamp it all down, the trauma, the flashbacks, the smell of blood, visions of dead bodies in the streets, some blackened by fire, others riddled by bullets… body parts, a dirty leg with the sock and shoe still on it. Her country, her proud, noble Germany, destroyed by propaganda, hubris, and lies. No one ever thought it could happen again. Germany had learned its lesson. … Hadn’t it?

Rage began to boil up in her, rage that it wasn’t over, it would probably never be completely over. It was like a never-ending forest fire. You could extinguish the main blaze but there would always be little pockets of flame. Left unattended, a new inferno would burn.

It was supposed to be over, it was never supposed to happen again. No one should ever have to live through that, not Elsa herself, not Americans, not Germans, and no – never! – not Heidi.

“I’ll do it,” she heard herself saying.

Colonel York’s mouth dropped open in surprise and his stomach turned over with excitement.

“Leave with me now,” he said, getting up from the table. “We can be in Washington by tomorrow.”

“On one condition.”

“Yes?”

“My family is coming with me to Washington.”

“What? No! It’s too danger – !” Colonel York caught himself.

“Dangerous? Yes, I’m sure this mission is extremely dangerous. That’s why Robert is coming with us to Washington and Heidi with him. She will be safer with no one else. And Robert will be safer with no one but the Secret Service agents you will provide to protect him. The war may be over but Hitler’s minions may still be lurking even here in America. If I’m to go on this hairbrained spy mission, my family will need protection.”

Colonel York was defeated. But Elsa had said she would do it. Just get her in the car. Get her to Washington, bring the whole blasted family. Elsa had said yes.

“Get in the car,” he said.

“I have to pack a few things,” Elsa said calmly, rising from the table.

“You don’t need to pack, you’ll be provided with everything.”

“Heidi will need her toy Buppy, she won’t sleep without it.”

Colonel York struggled to maintain patience.

“Dr. Gorman, we really shouldn’t be bringing – ”

“Buppy? You ever try to calm a screaming seven-year-old? Believe me, Buppy will be the most integral part of this Egyptian mission.”

Colonel York emitted a ragged sigh.

“Fine,” he said.

Elsa and the colonel exited the canteen. Now that Elsa had accepted the mission, her cool, logical mind was already calculating what she would need to do, how she would present herself to the enemy in this castle in the desert, what she would wear, how she would carry herself, the things she would say. She remembered long ago, luring a string of SS commanders to their death with the Nazi salute. She never thought it would ever be necessary to do that again.

“A month, you say?” she said aloud as she and the colonel made their way towards the archaeology lab and Robert.

“Tops,” Colonel York grumbled, still unsettled by Elsa’s terms.

“Don’t worry, colonel,” Elsa reassured him. “It will all be in hand. You say the Nazis have their sympathizers? I suppose this is true. But remember, their source has been cut off.”

“Their source?”
​
“Adolf Hitler is dead.”


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