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Last Liaison in Lyon

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31.

London, March 1943

Sam Goldman paced anxiously back and forth in Sir Geoffrey’s office. “Relax, Sam. You’re going to wear out the carpet and it’s an authentic Tabriz, 18th century. I bought it in the bazaar in Baghdad and brought it home myself in my younger days as a field operative,” Sir Geoffrey told him.

“I just can’t bear to think of Schumann making it safely to Spain and then being handed back to the Nazis,” Sam replied.

The British Embassy in Madrid had cabled London that the German Ambassador was demanding of the Spanish Foreign Minister that Reich citizen, Klaus Schumann be handed over to them. They claimed it was not an espionage affair, but a simple criminal matter of auto theft in Stuttgart and bicycle theft in Bad Rippoldsau-Schapbach. Of course, the Spaniards knew better, but, given the debt Franco owed Hitler, the Spanish authorities would be strongly inclined to co-operate with Berlin, it was feared.

“Don’t worry, Sam. Allenby is a solid chap and had Schumann on a herring trawler leaving Barcelona within an hour of his arrival,” Freddie interjected. “Of course, when the Spaniards protest to our Embassy, they will deny knowing anything. Worst they can do is kick Allenby out.”

“I hope you’re right,” Sam said.

“They should be docking in Gibraltar anytime now. The Commander there will cable as soon as they enter port. The HMS Newcastle is waiting to sail for Portsmouth as soon as he’s aboard. Hopefully, he’ll be sitting here in a few days.”

“Best thing we can do is have a Scotch while we wait to hear,” Sir Geoffrey advised. “Eighteen year old Macallan,” he added as he poured the amber liquid into three glasses.

“A very nice age,” Freddie said.

“Old enough to know better,” Sam said as he took a sip. It felt good as it went down. “And what about Moore?” he asked. “Still no word from her?”

“None.” Sir Geoffrey replied. “Schumann told Allenby that they split up in Lyon because she feared she would slow down his bicycle trip to the border and hike over the Pyrenees. Totally counter to SOE policy and her training, but there you go.” Sam bristled a bit at the implication that because she was American she couldn’t be trusted as much as one of their British agents.

“We can hope she used her smarts and knowledge of Lyon to stay underground and that she’ll surface soon, perhaps in Switzerland,” Freddie said. Sam wished he could believe that.

A few moments later, there was a knock at the door. “Come!” Sir Geoffrey shouted.

A rather attractive young woman entered, carrying a sheet of paper. “This has just been decoded, Sir Geoffrey,” she said. “Mr. Forbes said you would want to see it immediately.”

“Yes, thank you, Sybil,” he said, taking the paper and reading it aloud. “Coal has arrived at Newcastle”.

“So, he’s on the way,” Freddie said.

“Indeed,” said Sir Geoffrey. He raised his glass. “To Agent Moore,” he said. “May we soon be welcoming her back here, safe and sound.” He downed the fiery liquid. Sam and Freddie did the same.

***​

London, April 1943

It has taken nearly three weeks to debrief Klaus Schumann. First the SOE folks wanted to know all of the details of his interactions with agent Moore, their escape from the clutches of the Gestapo in Stuttgart and their odyssey to Lyon.

He recounted the bicycle journey to the Spanish border and his choice of an alternate route across the Pyrenees. The Brits were intrigued by his tale of having single-handedly killed two German soldiers. The whole thing sounded improbable to say the least, but the incontrovertible fact was that he was here in London.

Then the RAF and the aircraft designers had their go at him. The discussion was too full of technical details for Sam to follow, but he could tell that the engineers from the Gloster Aircraft Company looked rather downcast. It seemed their Meteor, the furthest advanced jet fighter the Allies had, was no match for the Me 262.

Sam could only hope that the engineers and Army Air Corps fellows who would debrief Schumann once they got to the States would be able to use the information he provided to speed their programs along.

Finally, they were done. Sir Geoffrey called Klaus and Sam into his office. There were four glasses set out. “Would you do the honours, Freddie?” he requested.

Sir Geoffrey took the glass from Freddie and took a healthy sip. “My understanding, Mr. Schumann, is that you wish to proceed to America.”

Klaus nodded. “Yes, Sir Geoffrey. I’ve enjoyed my time here in England, but I studied there and am familiar with the country, so that is where I wish to go to live.”

“His Majesty’s Government has no objections to that and I understand that the US Government is prepared to offer you assistance in establishing yourself there, as conveyed to you by Agent Moore.”

Sam Goldman opened the folder that sat on his lap. “Everything has been authorized by the big shots in Washington. You have temporary travel documents in here and we are booked to leave for New York tomorrow. I’ll accompany you there. You’ll be debriefed by our experts, who’ll be just as interested as the Brits in what you have to say about the Me 262.”

“Tomorrow?” Klaus asked. “But what about Barta? Or, should I say, Brenda? We fell in love and she said she would marry me here or in the US.”

“We don’t know where she is,” Freddie replied. “The fact that we haven’t heard from her in almost a month is not a good sign.”

“I don’t want to leave until I know what happened to her.”

Sam decided this had gone on long enough. He needed to let Schumann down gently, but firmly. “Look, Klaus, you’re new to this secret agent game, but I’ve been in it for a while, as have these gents.” He indicated Sir Geoffrey and Freddie. “Agents say whatever they need to say to get their targets to do what needs to be done.”

Klaus shook his head. “Not Barta. She’s not like that. She promised.”

Sam continued. “She was authorized to make promises on behalf of the US Government that you can come to America and that we will set you up with money and suitable employment there. Those promises will be kept-you have my word on that. But any promises she made regarding marriage and love and the whole shebang were strictly her doing and neither I nor the President himself can make her keep those, if she’s even alive.”

“Look, be a sport, Schumann,” Freddie said. “In case you haven’t noticed, there’s a war going on. Millions are dying and your little tryst with our agent doesn’t rank against that, I’m afraid.”

“But at least I want to know whether she’s alive or dead,” Klaus protested.

“So would we,” Sir Geoffrey said. “Unfortunately, some times that isn’t possible. Now you go with Mr. Goldman and have a nice dinner and tomorrow morning you’ll be on your way. And I do wish you all the best. A man who can outsmart the Nazis and make it across the Spanish border on his own will do just fine in America. There are certainly plenty of women there who would be happy to marry you, I’m sure.”

Sam nodded to confirm that. “A smart, good looking guy like you will have to fight them off.”

Klaus looked like he had accepted the situation as the best any one could do. As he and Sam were standing to leave, a knock came at the door. It was another young woman, equally as pretty as the one who had brought the telegram from Gibraltar.

“This arrived in the diplomatic pouch from the Embassy in Stockholm. It’s addressed ‘To Your Eyes Only’, Sir Geoffrey.”

Sir Geoffrey opened the envelope. There was a film canister and a single sheet of paper. He stared at the paper. “It’s from Klaus Barbie in Lyon,” he said. “It says, in German, ‘This is what became of your agent, Barbara Moore. If you send any more agents, the same fate awaits them. Heil Hitler!’”.

Klaus looked at Sam. “Barbara Moore? Is that her real name?” he asked. Sam nodded. He really wasn’t supposed to acknowledge that to someone who wasn’t in the OSS or the SOE, but he didn’t suppose it mattered now. Barbie wasn’t sending this film because he had treated Barb to a walk in the park.

“And this must mean they have her,” Klaus said, shaking his head. “Or had her, because she’s dead from torture or execution.”

“I’m afraid that’s the most likely scenario,” Freddie said.

“I want to watch it,” Klaus said.

“I don’t think that’s a good idea,” Sam replied. “It’s bound to be gruesome.”

“I realize that,” Klaus protested. “I was there in Stuttgart in the Hotel Silber. They were just getting started and they would have tortured me, too, I’m sure, if your RAF bombs hadn’t fallen. I risked my life to get here to help you, and Barta or Barbara has given her life to save me. I deserve to see what happened to her.”

“It’s your call, Sir Geoffrey,” Sam said.

Sir Geoffrey downed the remains of his Scotch. “Fine, Mr. Schumann. You can watch.” He called to have a projector and screen set up.

The film was as gruesome as advertised. Sam had to look away at times, but he noticed that Schumann watched the whole thing, tears streaming down his face.

They sat in silence for a few moments. Finally, Klaus spoke. “This is why I couldn’t stay in Germany any longer. That they could do such a thing to her is unspeakable. And so much more they are doing, just as bad and worse. We know it, but no one speaks of it. So, I am ready to go now to the US. I will do everything I can there to help defeat these evil people. Please, Mr. Goldman, may we go?”
That doesn´t sound good! Nothing to soothe my worries :(
 
“We can hope she used her smarts and knowledge of Lyon to stay underground and that she’ll surface soon, perhaps in Switzerland,” Freddie said. Sam wished he could believe that.

These Goldman men are such skeptics ... :rolleyes:

“Coal has arrived at Newcastle”.

Coal??? How about something a little nicer ... :mad:

“We don’t know where she is,” Freddie replied. “The fact that we haven’t heard from her in almost a month is not a good sign.”

Not even a complaint! :rolleyes:

Klaus shook his head. “Not Barta. She’s not like that. She promised.”

So gullible yet ... :confused:

Klaus looked at Sam. “Barbara Moore? Is that her real name?” he asked.

The light bulb finally is lit ... :p

The film was as gruesome as advertised. Sam had to look away at times, but he noticed that Schumann watched the whole thing, tears streaming down his face.

Awwww ... poor sod :oops:
 
Coal??? How about something a little nicer
It's a pun on a British expression, Moore. "Bringing coals to Newcastle" means bringing something to where they already have plenty of it (like posting more crux pics on CF:D). The SOE really needs to step up their training regimens...
Not even a complaint!
A VERY bad sign
Awwww ... poor sod
He's alive, you ????

For those wondering, this is not quite the end. Stay tuned for the Epilog, coming soon to an erotic educational site near you
 
It's a pun on a British expression, Moore. "Bringing coals to Newcastle" means bringing something to where they already have plenty of it (like posting more crux pics on CF:D). The SOE really needs to step up their training regimens...

Right you are. Those Brits have the weirdest sayings :rolleyes:
 
Ok. I am going to nail my colours to the mast here.......

The first time I read the account of Barb's execution, I thought Reichenbach had killed her. Now, this might be wishful thinking (see my comment above about finding the coup de grace incredibly hot!), but I think she is dead. On rereading both this and Windar's next instalment I agree there is still ambiguity (nicely done, guys!), but I am still standing by my original reaction!
 
Epilog:

After Klaus Schumann’s debriefing in New York, he went west, as far from Europe as he could get, and ended up in Southern California, which became a center of the US aerospace industry. He worked on the North American Aviation F-86 Sabre, the first US swept wing jet fighter. It was the workhorse fighter in the Korean War, in combat with the Soviet MIG-15 flown by the Chinese and North Koreans. It performed very well in dogfights, though it is not clear how much that had to do with the superiority of the aircraft and how much with the greater combat experience of the American pilots.

In California, Klaus met Bonnie, a nice Midwestern girl who had moved out there to work in the aerospace industry. They were married in Los Angeles shortly after V-J Day. Sam Goldman spent several days riding the train out to the West Coast to attend, because he knew that Klaus had no family left alive. He found that the bride bore a distinct resemblance to Barbara Moore. He remained in touch with them and their two children, eventually retiring to Southern California after a career in what became the CIA.

The Me 262 was the first operational jet powered fighter, faster and more maneuverable than anything the Allies had at the time. However, by the time it was ready for mass production, Germany faced serious shortages of raw materials and fuel. They were unable to get enough of the planes up in the air to overcome the massive numerical superiority of Allied aviation.

So did Barbara Moore’s sacrifice really matter to the war effort? We simply can’t say, as with many intelligence operations. The breaking of the Enigma cypher by Alan Turing and colleagues was probably the greatest intelligence coup of the war, yet it’s still argued as to how much practical effect it had. In many cases, though the British were tipped off to German operations by decoding communications, they often couldn’t act on the information for fear of the Germans suspecting that their code was broken.

Nevertheless, we salute the bravery of the men and women who undertook these operations, though it was not until 2018, more than 70 years after the war, that the OSS was finally honored collectively with the Congressional Gold Medal.

Klaus Barbie made his way to Germany when France was liberated and lived there in obscurity after the war. In 1947, he was recruited by US Army Counterintelligence Corps (CIC). There were various reasons given later, among them that he was knowledgeable about French Communists who were quite influential in French politics at the time.

Eventually, he fled to Bolivia, where he lived under the alias Klaus Altmann (Barbara Moore isn’t the only one who likes aliases that are close to her real name). He served various dictators there and was rumored to have worked with cocaine trafficking organizations. He was finally exposed by the Klarsfelds, a French couple dedicated to hunting down Nazis, but the Bolivian government refused to extradite him.

Eventually, in 1983, a democratic government was elected in Bolivia and he was extradited to France, where, in 1987, he stood trial in Lyon, in the Palais de Justice in Vieux Lyon on the banks of the Saône. His lawyer, Jacques Vergès, took the “others do it, too” defense, arguing that French war crimes in Algeria meant that Barbie shouldn’t be convicted.

Despite this highly convincing argument, Barbie was convicted and sentenced to life. He died in prison in Lyon four years later, of cancer. A case, certainly, of justice not done, though his crimes were so horrific, it’s hard to imagine how justice could ever have been done.


FIN
 
And thus ends our tale and its perilous journey through Germany, France and Spain by car (learn to drive, Moore!), train, bicycle and foot. We hope you've enjoyed the trip. Is Barbara Moore dead as some have wondered? Probably, but then she does have 9 lives, like a cat (though she may be on #73 by now!!!). All comments, favorable or not are welcome.
 
For Moore tales of Barb’s thrill-packed encounters with those awfully nasty Nazis, try ... if you haven’t already read them ... my stories “Das Fallbeil”, “8 Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse”, Berlin Diary”, and the as-yet-unfinished “Barbarossanova”.
 
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I was rushed over to the post, uncuffed and relieved of the Wehrmacht shirt Fritz had draped over my shoulders back in the cell-block ... but oddly not my shoes.
Hideous... shoes?:roto2palm:

And thus ends our tale and its perilous journey through Germany, France and Spain by car (learn to drive, Moore!), train, bicycle and foot. We hope you've enjoyed the trip. Is Barbara Moore dead as some have wondered? Probably, but then she does have 9 lives, like a cat (though she may be on #73 by now!!!). All comments, favorable or not are welcome.

In reality, Reichenbach staged the execution. The firing squad was silenced by threatening them to be sent to the Russian Front for missing Barb at point blank. The cameraman had no idea that Reichenbach's coup de grace was aimed behind Barb's neck, and that she actually not died but simply fainted when the shot was fired. Reichenbach secretly transferred Barb to Hopferau, a peaceful peasant's village in Allgau, Southern Bavaria, where they married after the war and got seven children. Once the war was over, Reichenbach set up a succesful local brewery ('Reichenbrau') giving his family a good living. When the children grew up, they started a Fremdenzimmer, that was reputed well by tourists, underway to Austria.

There was one moment of tension, when, on an evening in May 1971, a guest signed in, a somewhat elder American, named Sam Goldman. He was underway to Austria, but delay of his flight on arrival at Munich, had made him to decide to find a place to sleep instead of driving on through the night. Barb, fluently speaking German now, kept her calm. One moment, she suspected he had recognised her, but she used all her tricks she had learned on SOE training, to avoid behaving suspicous. The next night, she could not catch sleep. She feared that Goldman would investigate her identity and she left the service that morning to her eldest daughter. The encouter left her worried for several months, but she never heard of Sam Goldman again.

Except for some trips to Munich or Vienna, or a few hiking and ski holidays in nearby Tyrol, Barb never left her village anymore. She died in 2009, and lays buried under a simple cross, on the cemetery behind Hopferau's Sankt-Martinskirche.
 
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