THE ‘UNDER
THE CRESCENT MOON’ RAID by Sue Castle (with
apologies for any formatting weirdness with the German and Arabic phrases)


The mission
started off okay. Hit 'em fast, hit 'em hard, shells and grenades flying with
deadly aim, tanks exploding and krauts scattering. Then it hit a snag.
"Turn
around slowly, Sergeant. Sorry I missed you the other night at the oasis."
Not a voice
he expected to hear.
As usual
when he was caught dead to rights,
Maybe if he
pissed Dietrich off enough, the other man might make a mistake. It'd only take
one. "My apologies. Maybe your reception won't be as hot next time, Captain."
Dietrich
barely frowned at him. Damn, that had been a good attempt, too. Stony-faced,
the captain told him, "Now we relax. My men will be looking for me very
soon. Throw me your gun."
His eyes went
wide then squinted shut again, for just an instant, but he regained his balance
before
The Arabs
showed up. The day really went in the shit can.
"What
about your other friends?" That would be his luck, today. They'd be kraut
sympathizers. Dietrich's answer surprised him, almost as much as the little
grin he flashed.
"I too
have seen the American cinema, Sergeant." He looked really amused. Must be
the knock on the head from the car flipping over. Concussion could do that to a
guy. Make him almost human.
"All
right. Don't take my word for it." Carefully, respecting Dietrich's
trigger finger,
Instinctively,
The German
didn't look so happy now. Good, they must not be on his side. Of course, that
didn't mean they were on
Dietrich's
voice sounded a little shakier. 'They must have heard us firing."
The guy in
the white turban jabbered something at Dietrich. If it was possible, the
captain's spine stiffened even further than usual.
"They
want the guns." Dietrich sounded like he didn't believe it.
"Give
it to 'em." Self evident. Dietrich gave them one.
There was a
little more jabbering, then Dietrich gave them a dirty look and handed them
his, too.
Long
sucker. Big shackles at either end.
Dietrich
made a move that might have been a feint to draw the Arab's attention, or might
have been involuntary given his physical condition. Didn't matter either way;
the Arab swatted him with the end of the rifle and sent him over on his ass.
The Arab
locked a manacle around his wrist.
Without
further fuss, the Arab grabbed Dietrich's left arm and shackled the two men
together. Then he prodded with the barrel of his rifle until Dietrich pulled
himself to his feet. Not examining his reasons too closely,
The chain
was fucking heavy.
The sand
was fucking slippery.
The sun was
fucking hot.
And he
didn't like the look on Dietrich's face. Numb-eyed. Pale, under the sweat.
Too close
to passing out for comfort.
''Y'know,
in
Dietrich
gave a much put-upon snarl. 'Why don't you shut up?"
Well, it
was better than a kick in the teeth. At least the guy was perking up a little.
Didn't look
like he was gonna fall over and roll down the sand dune. That was an
improvement. Keeping a weather eye on his now thoroughly-irritated companion,
For almost
an hour. Then the silence really started to grate on his nerves. Besides,
Dietrich was looking like he was gonna fall asleep on his feet again.
''Y'know,
if you don't like
A pained
groan was the only reply he got.
They walked
for a day that lasted forever. No rest, no water, and only his running
monologue to keep them from going crazy with the heat and the quiet. Well, to
keep
Not that
they got anything to eat. Or drink, for that matter. But when the sun went down
the desert got colder than a witch's tit, and
Which left
him perfectly placed to see a strange thing. The Arab in the white hat brushed
The touch
bothered him. A lot. He'd seen men react like this to prisoners of war before
and it gave him the creeps. The whole thing scared him a little, and he didn't
scare easily. Strangely enough, he wasn't scared for himself.
He was
scared for Dietrich.
The Arab
leaned low over Dietrich's shoulder, fingers clenching in his hair, pulling his
head back a little. He muttered, too low for
'What'd he
say?"
"Nothing
important."
That wasn't
real helpful.
"Strong
backs and sun-drained hair." He went back to staring at the fire.
Dietrich
nodded and clammed up tight.
He asked
very quietly, 'What direction d'you think we're heading?" He said it like
he knew, but was getting a second opinion.
"South,
I think. Seems like we're heading deeper into the desert." He hadn't
expected Dietrich to chuckle at that. It was a bitter little sound.
"Precisely
what I thought. Sergeant, we are caught by slave traders."
Not what
he'd expected to hear.
The German
didn't bother looking at him. "Uh-huh."
Well, shit.
'Then we better get out of here."
Several
suggestions came right to the tip of
No use
wishing for a howitzer when all a guy had was a rock. He blinked. Rock. Fire.
Chain. Huh. Could work. He edged a little closer to Dietrich and dropped his
voice until it was barely a whisper. "Let's warm up first."
Dietrich
gave him another one of those quick sideways glances under his eyelashes. His
thigh shifted.
'When I
take a swing at you, return it," he instructed Dietrich under his breath.
The grin he
got, showing dimples and teeth, shocked him more than he wanted to admit, even
to himself.
'With
pleasure." Courteous words with a street fighter's enthusiasm under them.
''When he
comes over to break it up, we give him the chain."
It should have
gone like taking candy from a baby. Take a swing at Dietrich, Arab boss comes
over and makes like a hostage, chained enemies escape into the night.
Except it
didn't. His luck ran true to form for the day. Pure shit.
One of the guys
in the black turbans came from the left as the head guy came in from the right.
It took
Dietrich a couple seconds to realize what was going on and decide to stop
fighting.
The
campfire swung dizzily, or maybe it was him, but his hands were numb and his
knees had turned to water.
An
unexpected noise distracted him from the explosion going off inside his head.
With a
supreme effort he rolled his head to the side. The guy Dietrich had taken down
was now returning the favor, holding the German against the sand. The head Arab
was doing something with his hand down along the front of Dietrich's britches,
and
He didn't
know when he passed out. Just knew it wasn't soon enough. The last thing he heard
as the world went away was the last thing he'd ever expected to hear.
Dietrich's voice didn't sound right when it was making that dry rasping noise.
Couldn't be a sob. Wasn't quite a scream. It was enough to give
No more
raspy noises. He didn't know whether to be relieved or nervous. Peering out
from under lowered eyelids, he located Dietrich's body lying a few feet away.
He stared at the chest until he saw it rise and fall. Good. Be hard enough to
escape as it was. Dragging Dietrich's corpse along would make it impossible.
There was a
war on, after all.
Forcing his
meandering thoughts back to his first priority, escape, he rolled very slowly
from his side onto his belly. One of the Arabs twitched, but the movement died
down after a moment and
"Awake?"
he hissed. Dietrich stiffened against him and nodded once. "Good."
This time
when Dietrich said, ''With pleasure,"
Worked like
a charm. The Arabs came awake, muttering to one another, and the head guy came
over and crouched beside Dietrich. He stuck his hand into Dietrich's hair
again, pulling his head back a little, jabbering a few words of the local lingo
in his face. Dietrich spat something back that sounded insulting even to
That was
all the opening Dietrich needed. He came up faster than even
"Tell
him to bring the horses!"
Then it
became a moot point. Before Dietrich could translate, the lead slaver yelled,
and one of the other Arabs went screaming after the horses, scaring them off into
the darkness.
"You're
a fool," Dietrich snarled at the leader.
Yanking the
lead slaver up with the knife against his neck,
From the
smile on Dietrich's face as he translated that,
Maybe he wouldn't
be all that unhappy if they followed, either. The only problem was, a hostage
wasn't worth much as a corpse. Holding the knife steady, he forced the Arab to
his feet. Dietrich came around the other side, using the chain to keep the
slaver in place, and the three moved cautiously away from the camp.
They
weren't followed. That was a mixed blessing. Yeah, the hostage was alive, so
they were safe for the moment. On the other hand, the hostage was alive, and he
was close enough to dead weight as to make no difference. It wasn't very long
before the sun rose. Too damned soon, heat was radiating off the sand, and the
captive became more trouble than he was worth. The fifth or sixth time the Arab
collapsed,
The Arab
rattled something off at Dietrich, and the German's hand snatched for the knife
'What makes
you think I trust you with this?"
Dietrich
glared at
As
'What'd he
say?" As expected, the only answer Dietrich gave him was another glare,
directed equally toward
The chain
didn't get any lighter as the day dragged on.
There
wasn't a lot of wind, and hardly any sound, so when Dietrich fell over behind
him,
He didn't
hear Dietrich coming up behind him, but he heard the clinking of the links as
the German gathered the chain up to brain him with it.
''You kill
me, you're gonna have to carry me out of this desert on your back. And you
won't get two miles in this heat." He didn't have to call Dietrich 'stupid.'
It was easily read from the tone of his voice. Dietrich glared back at him.
"I'm
not going to carry you ten feet." The dark eyes blazing down at him were a
little glassy.
"How you
gonna dispose of me? Cut off my hand? With what?"
He glared
up at Dietrich until the sense of what he was saying finally sank into
Dietrich's sun-baked, explosion-rocked, Arab-fucked brain. It took a while.
Dietrich's
eyes dropped, and he dropped the chain too, staring down dully at the sand. A
pang of sympathy hit
Maybe.
Taking
advantage of Dietrich's momentary surrender,
He could
feel Dietrich's eyes burning holes in his back. Good thing the Arabs had taken
their guns, after all. Good thing he had the knife in his boot, too, and
Dietrich had apparently forgotten it. Unfortunately, he couldn't count on that
little bit of luck holding. He hated to do it, but he couldn't take the chance
that of him passing out and Dietrich getting hold of the knife. If that
happened, the German was apt to cut
Two
stumbles later,
After an
hour or so,
"Your
turn." He tried to hand the pebble off. Dietrich made a protesting noise
and turned his head away, as if he was afraid
Dietrich
didn't look too sure about that, but at least he didn't spit it back out again.
It was
amazing how god damned long a single day could take. By mid-afternoon, the air
was dancing over the sand, and everywhere
"Thanks."
He sounded exhausted even to himself. Dietrich still had some juice to him,
though. Probably 'cause he still had the pebble, the bastard.
"Don't
thank me yet."
Fierce
brown eyes stared down at him. "One condition."
"That
we keep each other alive, no matter what happens."
Dietrich
nodded in return. Surprisingly gently, he said, "All right, now. We've got
to find the trail. Because, Sergeant, if we don't, we'll never find my column.
All right? Let's go!"
Three steps
later
He didn't
know if Dietrich hadn't seen his hand, or plain ignored it. Maybe it was
payback for having to force the thing into Dietrich's mouth. Whyever he did it,
Even
filthy, he could still taste Dietrich. He growled to himself. Some thoughts
were better left ... unthought.
No time to
get distracted. Had to come up with a plan. Had to get himself out of this
corner. Had to have some options ready.
Had to stop
watching Dietrich's ass staggering along in front of him, and envying the fucking
Arab.
By the time
they crested the final ridge and saw the German column in the valley below, it
wasn't just sunstroke making
"My
column, Sergeant." Oddly enough, there was no triumph in his voice, simply
a matter-of-fact statement. "I'm afraid this war is over for you." He
actually sounded a little regretful.
"Congratulations."
He pulled the chain hard and dove head-first down the hill at the same time.
Dietrich didn't even have time to yell.
Dietrich
was unconscious.
It took the
last reserves of his strength, but
Then it ran
dry. Remembering his promise, after the first flush of near-lust the water had
induced had passed,
It wasn't
enough to bring Dietrich all the way around, but his survival instinct was
strong. He sucked at Troy's mouth with all the strength he had left, hands
coming up to grab hold of the front of Troy's shirt.
Dietrich's
color and his breathing were better, but he was still pretty much out of it.
Right. The
chain. Had to get out of the chain. Had a mission to complete. He had to stop
mooning over Dietrich like a teenage girl. Start acting like the soldier he
was. Stop wanting what he couldn't have.
A tire iron
made a handy spade to dig a trench for
Worked like
a charm. Dietrich was alive up to the chain getting cut, then rescued by his
men, so
From that
point on, his luck was back on track. The raid went like a dream.
~~~
The last
thing Dietrich remembered was standing on a ridge feeling an incredible rush of
relief as his column came into view. His head was swimming from sun, fatigue,
and the aftereffects of the Arabs' treatment of him, but he was a Wehrmacht
officer, and he did not allow his weakness to undermine his effectiveness. He
said a few words to
Then, as
was the norm where the Rat Patrol was concerned, the world slipped on its axis
and his control over the situation disappeared. The next thing he knew he was tumbling
head over heels down the side of the hill, then pain hit the back of his head,
then nothing.
The first
thing he realized when he regained consciousness was that someone had run over
him with a half-track. Or if they hadn't, perhaps he had been beaten with
sticks. His shoulders were on fire, his back was aching, his head was fit to
burst. He had sand burn from the middle of his back to his heels. His right arm
was bruised from his hand to his shoulder and his hand was numb.
At least
the manacle was gone.
His
adjutant was holding a canteen to Dietrich's mouth of the most blessedly
delightful water it had ever been his pleasure to drink, and it took all the
willpower he had left not to gulp like a dog at a puddle. He managed to restrain
himself and ask with a modicum of his usual dignity, ''What happened?"
The ensuing
tale of being dragged along the road like a bundle of laundry explained the
sand burn and the wrenched shoulders. Trust
Not a kiss.
A drink. He blinked. Images sharpened in his mind, and he wondered.
He wasn't
quite sure what to make of it all.
Dietrich
accepted a clean uniform shirt from an orderly and, after the medic cleaned the
worst of the grit and oil from his scrapes, shrugged very carefully into it. It
took much too long to climb into the observation post of the truck, but he
managed not to sway noticeably or actually faint. He would take what small
victories he could salvage from the fiasco.
The oasis
resembled paradise when they finally arrived. Dietrich used the excuse of
keeping a watchful eye on proceedings to cover the fact that he didn't think he
had the equilibrium or strength yet to climb back down from the truck without
passing out again. Unfortunately, it left him in a perfect position to see the
final act in his most current disgrace at the hands of the Rat Patrol play
itself out.
Young
Hitchcock came roaring out of the back of one of their own lorries, jeep wheels
spinning, as
Truly
amazing how much damage Dietrich could take and not be shot by his own High
Command for it.
The rest of
the long afternoon was taken up with triage for the wounded, salvaging what
little could be saved from the camp, and reporting to his superiors. After
turning off the radio, Dietrich slid carefully from the back of the truck where
the communication equipment was stored and headed off into the dunes. His
entire body ached, his pride was in shreds, and his ears were still burning
from the well-deserved scorn of his commander.
The cool
wind of the desert air helped him regain his composure. Somewhat. He walked
slowly, mindful of the wear his body had taken the past few days, and
eventually found himself atop a small ridge some way from the wreck of his
camp. The exercise had helped, loosening muscles tight from bruises and stress.
He raised his field glasses and swept the area.
Impossible.
Ridiculous. Dietrich glared through the lenses at the four members of the Rat
Patrol off a short distance from him, also staring down at the destruction they
had wrought. Conflicting urges swept through him. He wanted to shoot every one
of them. Punch Troy in the jaw. Crack their heads together.
Thank
Fighting to
keep his hands from either waving them over or drawing his pistol, Dietrich
curled his fingers into fists and planted his fists on his hips, letting his
glasses fall to his chest as he glared over at the Rats. His ferocious regard
must have somehow reached them, because he saw Moffitt freeze, then point to
him.
It was the
only way.
~~~
Several
weeks later, Dietrich stared at the innocuous white flag hanging limply from the
antenna of his staff car and wondered how he'd managed to irritate God this
time. Things had been going smoothly. A general escorted safely here, a supply
convoy delivered intact there. Very little activity from the Rat Patrol and a
commendation from his commanding officer.
Of course
it couldn't last.
He'd been
the one to contact
"I
have a letter here from Nurse Arno of the international Red Cross Red Crescent
organization. They have vaccine and are prepared to use it to combat this
epidemic. I propose a temporary cessation in hostilities until the crisis has
passed. All right?" He sat in the driver's seat of his staff car at
deceptive ease, his hand a fraction of an inch from the grip of his pistol.
"Truce?"
"That's
what I said."
"Okay."
The easy
capitulation should perhaps have surprised Dietrich, but in this case it
didn't. The approval shining at him from the hard eyes under the brim of the
ridiculous bush hat did. He was tempted to ask Troy what kind of monster he
thought Dietrich to be, that it should be such a shock for the German to
propose a humanitarian truce. He didn't ask it because he wasn't sure he wanted
to hear
Reaching
into his pocket, he withdrew the letter he'd prepared the night before and
handed it over to
Dietrich
shook his head, coming out of his memory of three days before and returning to
the present as
''What on
Earth-" Before Dietrich could finish his question,
'We had a
truce, Dietrich!"
''Yes, I
know. I proposed it-"
Dietrich
stared at him.
"Sergeant
Troy, I had nothing to do with what happened at the Rasa village!" It came
out closer to a shout than he would have liked, but at least
"It
happened.
Belligerently
stating the obvious. As usual. Dietrich pointed out, ''Those were SS, not
Wehrmacht soldiers."
"Tell
it to the people who'll die of typhus." Also as usual, pronouncing the
unanswerable.
Dietrich
gritted his teeth. Once again, he would have to clean up a mess. At least this
time it wasn't the Rat Patrol causing it. "How much time do I have?"
La Due
waffled.
"Twelve
hours."
Not
bothering to ask how
Attempting
to talk sense into an SS officer.
It was
difficult dealing with the Fuehrer’s pet dogs even in an official capacity.
This situation was much trickier. He spent most of the hour it took to track
down the SS group trying to figure out how the hell he could pull of the return
of the serum and the rescue of the nurse while still retaining his honor and
not getting shot. He'd met this particular SS man only once, at divisional
headquarters a week or so before, and he had not been impressed.
He hadn't
come up with a plan by the time he saw the trucks. Taking a deep breath, he put
on his calmest expression and decided to play it by ear. Since he'd first
encountered the Rat Patrol, he'd become rather adept at it.
"Hauptsturmfiihrer
Wansee. I'm afraid I must ask you to release the prisoners and the serum."
The opening made up in forthrightness for what it lacked in finesse. Since he
had no better ideas, Dietrich decided he might as well try the direct approach
and see if this one was as psychotic as most SS officers he'd had the
misfortune to meet.
"Truly,
I appreciate your position, Captain. But you must understand. I have a job to
do." The initially sincere-sounding plea degenerated with depressing
dispatch into a rant that confirmed Dietrich's lowest expectations. Wansee was
indeed mad as a hatter.
La Due
attempted to intervene, protesting that
"There
are no neutrals in war!"
Dietrich
had had enough. This was getting them nowhere. Time was running out and tact
had never been his strong suit. 'Which war, Captain? The African desert
campaign or your own private war?"
Wansee was
not to be stopped, however. He was no more impressed with Dietrich than
Dietrich was impressed by him. "I am not interested in your philosophy,
Hauptmann Dietrich."
He then
embarked on another, progressively more disjointed discourse on what
At Wansee's
order, two of his men pulled the Arab from the driver's seat of the truck and
dragged him over to stand in front of a now fuming Wansee. Dietrich clenched
his teeth so hard his jaw ached, knowing what was to come and unable to do a
thing to prevent it.
Wansee
leveled his pistol as if he was taking shooting practice and executed Hassam
with a single shot.
Wansee
stared at the corpse for a long moment, his face unreadable, then screamed, 'We
have no choice!" His words died away into an incoherent mumble before he
climbed down from his perch and walked over to look up into Dietrich's face.
Dietrich controlled the shudder that tried to climb up his spine with iron
determination. He had to play along or he would end up as dead as Hassam. But
it was sickening: Wansee was flirting with him.
Lowering
his voice from his previous near-howl, Wansee crooned, "Captain, I do not
enjoy the look of fear and hatred on the faces of the people, as though I was
some kind of monster."
Dietrich
carefully controlled his nod of agreement that Wansee was indeed some kind of
monster, and maintained a slightly interested, calm expression. It was a
struggle.
"But
we cannot all be dashing soldiers."
That,
perhaps more than anything Wansee had done up to that point, convinced Dietrich
that the Hauptsturmfiihrer was totally psychotic. "I understand," he
answered gently, not allowing his apprehension to show.
Wansee
smiled at him, a truly repulsive expression. "It grieves me to deprive the
people of the services of Miss Arno. Captain, it occurred to me that we might
strike a bargain."
This didn't
surprise Dietrich since he'd seen it coming a mile away. He only hoped the bargain
wouldn't compromise him completely or cause the slaughter of innocent
civilians. "Perhaps we could."
Wansee
beamed at him and climbed into the passenger seat, crowding him.
Dietrich
watched him with the caution of a man eyeing a viper. He did his best to
maintain a stony exterior. He was sure that Wansee could smell any sign of
weakness, and he'd use it against Dietrich without hesitation. 'What kind of a
bargain did you have in mind?"
"As
you know, this whole area is infested with these desert scavengers."
Wansee actually sounded sane for a moment. "Perhaps we might engineer a
trade? Surely they would have far more interesting things to reveal than Miss
Arno."
The
high-pitched snigger that accompanied the suggestion gave lie to any indication
of sanity. Dietrich forced a small laugh, playing for time. The gears were
turning in his brain. There had to be a way to make this work.
"Captain,
how do you propose that we arrange this deal?" Perhaps he could get Wansee
to form his own noose, then Dietrich could hang him with it. As usual, his luck
was not that good.
"That
is your problem, Captain," Wansee told him merrily. Of course it was.
His mind
raced, and by the time the car arrived back in the village, he had the bare
outline of a plan. There was a great element of risk to all involved, but then
there always was with a rabid SS psychotic in the picture. As they pulled up to
the makeshift hospital headquarters, Dietrich turned to La Due and told him
quietly, "Find the nearest member of the Rat Patrol you see. Tell him you
have a Resistance leader with you and lure him here to me. If you fail or
betray my presence, Miss Arno will die. Understood?" A brief pause for a
comprehending nod, then, "Okay," and he gestured for the man to go to
his task.
Moments
later a familiar lanky figure ducked into the car. Dietrich had the barrel of
his handgun under Moffitt's chin before the Englishman could react.
"Don't
make a sound, Sergeant." Moffitt's expression froze, but he obeyed the
order without protest. Dietrich glanced back once, seeing a beehive of
activity. He recognized
Hopefully
before either Moffitt or Arno was murdered by a madman.
Less than a
mile out of town, a dispatcher on a motorcycle with a sidecar waited.
Dietrich
had his driver stop the car. Holding the gun steadily on the captive, he had
his driver tie Moffitt's hands securely behind his back and place him in the
passenger seat.
"I'll
make the prisoner exchange, Erich. Return to camp, take four men back to the
village with you, and prepare the hospital to begin dispensing vaccinations
when the serum is returned."
"Jawohl,"
his driver answered, jumping into the sidecar and roaring off. Dietrich turned
back to the car and settled into the driver's seat. He could feel Moffitt
staring at him, but he didn't say a word.
The heat rose
swiftly the further they went into the dunes, and Dietrich stopped the car an
hour into the drive. Pulling out a canteen he swallowed a deep draught.
Extending it toward Moffitt, he was displeased when the other man obstinately
turned his head away.
"Don't
be a fool," Dietrich growled. "You'll need your strength." He
reached out again, and Moffitt tilted his chin up, mouth clamped shut. Dietrich
sighed. Moffitt was as pig-headed as
Moffitt
glared at him but opened his mouth. Dietrich carefully tipped the canteen,
watching until Moffitt had enough, then capped it and put it back on the seat
between them. He put the car in gear and resumed their journey.
"Thank
you," Moffitt said grudgingly twenty minutes later.
"Of
course." At least they retained a veneer of civility. Even in the middle
of hell. 'Where are we going?" Careful disinterest in Moffitt's voice;
shrewd sharp eyes giving the lie to it. Dietrich glanced into the rearview
mirror. No sign of pursuit yet. That wasn't good.
"To
retrieve the serum for the villagers," he answered shortly. "And what
am I?"
"Payment."
Conversation
ceased.
A short
time later Dietrich began to deliberately push the engine. Usually a stupid
thing to do in the full heat of the desert sun, but he'd hoped by then to have
a sighting of the rest of the Rat Patrol. Since he didn't, he had to find a way
to ensure that they found their way to the exchange site. His timing was
excellent. The radiator began to steam as they reached a fork in the road.
Dietrich
expected Moffitt to attempt escape, so the engine covering slamming into his
skull wasn't a complete surprise. It still stunned him slightly. He shook off
the momentary ringing in his ears and heaved himself up, catching Moffitt under
the jaw with a right cross and knocking him up and over the bonnet of the car.
The Rat was still half-unconscious when Dietrich picked him up and stuffed him
back in the passenger seat.
Returning
to his task, he carefully hung the water bag pointing in the direction he
wished his pursuers to take. Hopefully the clue wouldn't be too subtle. Sending
a brief prayer up that
He'd seen
the sentry on the ridge, so he wasn't surprised that the SS group was waiting
for him. He saluted, mildly irritated to have his proper salute returned with
the standard Fuehrer arm-thrust. The Hitler salute had always reminded him of
would-be gladiators, and especially when given by weedy specimens such as
Wansee, it seemed exceedingly inappropriate. Not being a stupid or suicidal
man, Dietrich kept his opinion to himself.
Two of the
SS foot soldiers pulled Moffitt from the car and dragged him over to stand,
slumped and swaying, in front of the Hauptsturmfiihrer. The man was almost
salivating. 'What have we here?"
Moffitt,
ever the stoic, ignored him. Dietrich cleared his throat almost silently,
stepping in before Wansee could lose his composure and shoot Moffitt before
Dietrich could get the drugs and the aid worker away safely.
"This
is my end of the bargain, Captain," he announced. "Sergeant Moffitt
of the Rat Patrol."
Wansee
showed unseemly glee at the capture. "A scavenger. Truly a desert
scavenger? A member of the Rat Patrol?"
Moffitt,
either through stubbornness or still dazed from landing on his head, continued
to ignore him. Dietrich winced, knowing what would come next. Wansee,
unfortunately, didn't surprise him.
"I am
talking to you." What began as a command escalated quickly to a screaming
whine. "I am talking to you!"
As
expected, his temper quickly got the better of him and he began to hit Moffitt.
Dietrich
glanced around quickly, hoping
Keeping his
tone as gentle as possible, but not subservient, one officer to another,
Dietrich disguised an order as a request. "Captain, if you don't mind, I
would like to leave with the woman and the serum." He intensified his
stare, hoping to penetrate Wansee's mad haze. "Now."
Wansee
barely noticed. "Perhaps in a few days, Captain. That is if the lady can
survive the interrogation." He kept staring at Moffitt. "Into the
truck with him!"
The
headache Dietrich had been ignoring pounded through his temples, and he could
feel his teeth grinding together. Struggling to maintain his own temper, close
to losing it, he barked, 'Wansee, as a member of the SS you are supposed to
have a sense of honor. As you recall, we concluded the bargain."
Not that he
held out much hope that such an appeal would help, but it was the best he could
do for the moment. Wansee proved himself as lacking in honor as he was in
sanity.
"It is
fair in war. It is all fair in war." He repeated himself and began to
pound on the side of the half-track, his tirade growing louder and wilder with
each repetition.
Dietrich
shouted in a controlled, irritated manner, trying to break through the tantrum.
"For Heaven's sake, man, think about your sanity as a human being! Think!
Think!"
That,
perhaps, had been the wrong strategy. Wansee stopped gibbering and shrieked,
"You will leave me!" Then he turned and revealed a loaded, cocked
pistol pointed directly at Dietrich's chest. There was nothing but triumphant
madness in the blank eyes. No humanity, no reasoning at all.
Knowing
when he had reached the limits of his options, Dietrich watched Wansee with the
attention he'd give a rabid wolf and retreated back to his car. His hands were
clasped tightly behind his back in instinctive reaction to his desire to
throttle the crazy bastard, knowing if he gave in to the impulse the soldiers
around him would shoot him dead before his hands could touch Wansee's throat.
He watched
in the mirror as Wansee turned back to his men, then accelerated away from the
small cluster of trucks. Out of sight of the group and the sentry, Dietrich
circled behind a ridge directly east of the truck where he could see the
supplies and
Moments
after he left, all hell broke loose. Wansee was treated to the full fury of the
Rat Patrol in rescue mode. The SS men scattered, most falling dead as the two
jeeps attacked. Dietrich tensed as he saw Wansee dive away from the main area
of attack, heading toward the back of the truck. Wansee's gun was drawn and he
was reaching for the steps up into the truck. Dietrich saw movement inside and
watched through his rifle sight as Moffitt drew himself up to place himself
between Wansee and Arno.
Dietrich
squeezed the rifle trigger once. Wansee's body jerked, then crumpled over the
steps before he could shoot Moffitt.
One fewer
mad dog to sully the ranks of the German fighting forces, he thought sourly.
Moments after Wansee died,
~~~
"There's
got to be a way to get him off my back!"
Familiar
exasperation colored
"He's
in the way!"
Moffitt
allowed an eyebrow to rise.
"I'm
trying to pull a buddy's butt outta the fire, but Dietrich's messing it
up." The brow lowered, and
'What's so
important about this scientist?" Hitch broke in, saving Moffitt the
trouble.
"He's
got information on something called the Rotkapchen." Moffitt winced at the
mangled pronunciation, but
"And
Dietrich is getting in your way." Moffitt didn't say 'as usual' but he
knew
"Not
officially, but he's always there. Watching. I tried twice to approach, and
both times had to back off before Dietrich saw me. We're running out of
time."
A sudden
thought struck Moffitt, and he ignored the conversation to examine it, as
When there
was a break in the steady stream of complaint, he told
"How?"
Bright blue eyes skewered him.
"Hauptmann
Dietrich and I have a mutual acquaintance. An officer named Rommel."
Those blue
eyes now resembled dinner plates.
"No.
His younger brother."
"Oh
two hundred to oh four hundred Saturday."
The still
of the night. Perfect. "It will be my pleasure," he assured
~~~
If his
aberrant behavior continued much longer, his men would begin to wonder about
him. Dietrich stared down at the appalling camel piss that passed for beer in
the glorified water hole calling itself a town, and watched his prey from the
corner of his eye. He had nothing concrete with which to back up his suspicion,
but over the months his radar, when it came to the Rat Patrol, had been honed
to a fine instrument. Regarding Monsieur Barseau, he didn't believe it was mere
happenstance that would take the man within reach of
He sighed
and glared balefully into his flat weak beer. He had been made to look the fool
too often by the Rat Patrol. He'd lost secret documents, medical supplies,
tanks, radar stations, even entire encampments to the bastards. He'd even come
close, once, to hanging Troy, much as he'd discovered he really didn't wish to
do so. His concern had been moot. The Rat Patrol had outwitted him. Again.
His
superiors were starting to question his fitness to command. If he brought
unsubstantiated fears to them and nothing happened, or worse yet the Rat Patrol
managed to pull off another dazzling feat of infiltration and espionage right
under his nose, the SS wouldn't have to shoot him. He might as well shoot
himself.
He heaved
another, deeper sigh. A glance at the wall clock confirmed that it was barely
twenty one hundred hours and he still had six more to go before the
establishment closed and he could end his watch. Before he could sink into
gloom, his morose thoughts were interrupted by the thump of a magnum of
inferior champagne beside his elbow on the bar.
"I
didn't order this." The beer was awful enough. He wasn't sure his palate
would survive this further insult.
"My
apologies for the quality of the offering," a smooth British voice came from
behind him. He froze on the stool. "I didn't know your preference, but
this was the best the house could offer."
Schooling
his face carefully to maintain his trademark expressionless mask, he looked
over his shoulder. Sergeant Moffitt was patiently watching him. Dietrich
squinted up at him distrustfully.
'Why?"
He didn't bother asking where the rest of the motley crew were. They'd no doubt
show up soon.
"Services
rendered." For an instant, Moffitt's normal insouciance dropped away, and
Dietrich read appreciation and warmth in the Englishman's eyes. A hint of a
smile touched his mouth. ''True, you tossed me on my arse over the bonnet of
your auto, but you also kept a mad dog from finishing me off."
Understanding
flooded him.
'Would you
care to join me?" After all, it was only fair to inflict the gift on the
giver.
If he was
going to be verkatert from drinking this crap, he wouldn't be alone.
"Danke
schoën," Moffitt told him. Dietrich winced. Moffitt either
didn't notice or didn't care. He poured two glasses of the bubbly slop and
handed one to Dietrich. "Wenn ich Dich nicht hatte ... "
Dietrich
couldn't quite control his stunned look. Surely Moffitt hadn't meant that in
the way it had sounded. It was improbably affectionate. He blinked, then slowly
raised his glass to touch it lightly to the side of Moffitt's upraised glass.
"Prost,"
he responded wryly, "but perhaps we should continue our conversation in
English. I speak your language better than you speak mine."
Moffitt
looked torn between laughter and offense. "Didn't want to put you in the
soup with your fellows should anyone be listening."
"It's
neutral territory," Dietrich shrugged, swallowing most of the glass in one
gulp, trying to shoot it past his tongue without the liquid actually touching
it. He wasn't quite successful and was surprised to find the taste not as
objectionable as he'd feared. Too sweet and too raw, but not undrinkable.
Marginally better than the beer.
They sat in
silence for nearly half an hour, drinking, smoking, occasionally glancing at
one another. Dietrich had a sneaking suspicion Moffitt was there more to winkle
out of him the reason for his unusual inhabitancy of the bar than to show his
thanks for Dietrich saving his life, so he made his continued surveillance of
Barseau as unobtrusive as possible. Moffitt didn't appear to mind the silence.
When
conversation began, it was delightfully mundane. Nothing of the war, nothing of
tanks or troop movements or weapons specifications. In short, nothing
suspicious, nothing that would indicate Moffitt was attempting to extract
information from Dietrich. They spoke of archeology, ancient history, local
customs and flea eradication. Various uses of olive oil and Arabian music. An
hour later the bottle was nearly empty and Dietrich was more relaxed than he
had been in months.
Silence
fell, a calm pool unlike the tension of the first silence between them. Moffitt
cleared his throat, then straightened on his stool. The cynical voice in the
back of Dietrich's mind that had kept him alive for fourteen years in the
German army whispered, 'here it comes.'
It was not
what he expected.
"I
believe we have a mutual acquaintance. Oberstleutnant Rommel would no doubt
send his regards, if he knew we were here together."
Dietrich
stilled, glancing at Moffitt then looking away. Perhaps Moffitt had known what
he was doing with his original toast. Dietrich licked his lips unconsciously.
What he was considering, seriously considering, could get him shot. Noting the
way Moffitt fidgeted with his glass, Dietrich knew the trepidation was mutual.
Swallowing the last of his flat champagne, he poured another, carefully not
looking at his drinking companion as he spoke.
"How
was Oberst Rommel when last you spoke?"
"Happy,"
Moffitt answered softly. "Considering the circumstances." Dietrich
glanced over to find Moffitt staring intently at him. "Pfirsich told me
the Luftwaffe were treating him exceedingly well."
Dietrich
grinned, briefly. "So I've heard."
He stared
into his glass, made a decision, and drank it dry, wrinkling his nose only
slightly at the taste. Exposure had numbed him to it, for the most part. 'Would
you care to continue this conversation in private?" After all, nothing had
happened in all the time he'd been watching Barseau. If anything happened
tonight, he was too fuzzy to do anything about it anyway. Besides, it wasn't
often a ripe peach dropped in his lap, and he was hungry.
"I
have a room upstairs." Moffitt's hand brushed his as he picked up the
bottle.
Dietrich
put his hand out, fingers settling over Moffitt's, hidden from public view
between their bodies and the bottle.
"It's
almost empty." Removing his hold slowly, Dietrich looked over at the Arab
barman studiously ignoring them. ''Whiskey, if you have it." He managed
not to make it an insult, but it was a near thing. He reached for his
pocketbook, and Moffitt interrupted.
"My
treat," he suggested.
Dietrich
shook his head. ''You're paying for the room."
Moffitt
smiled at him, and Dietrich found himself smiling back.
Whiskey, or
a liquid that vaguely resembled it and had the kick of a mule, in hand,
Dietrich followed Moffitt upstairs. Survival instincts, belated but strong,
made him check the crowd one last time. There was no sign of the Rat Patrol,
other than the Rat he was following into a temporary den of iniquity. No one
anywhere near Barseau. No hint of trouble anywhere. As dead boring as the last
eight nights he'd sat fruitless watch.
Lust, and a
strong dose of bad champagne and worse beer, combined to convince Dietrich that
it was time to forget the war for a little while and live in the moment. The
moment hit him as soon as the door closed behind him.
All that fine
English restraint disappeared as soon as Moffitt had Dietrich alone.
Hands
framed his face, long fingers splayed along his cheekbones and temples, as
Moffitt held him still and kissed him. Too long with no contact other than in
combat nearly betrayed Dietrich into punching the other man, but sanity, or
perhaps the opposite of same, interceded. Instead of his fists, he met the
pseudo-attack with open arms and an open mouth.
Beneath the
cheap wine, Moffitt tasted of spearmint and tobacco. If he'd heard his own
moan, Dietrich might have been embarrassed, but he was too involved in meeting
Moffitt's advance with his own to notice. His hands came up, pressing the
length of the strong arms pinning him against the door, palming the shoulders,
sliding along the bunched muscles at the top of Moffitt's back, cupping the
nape of his neck and grasping him tightly. Dietrich's eyes closed, the better
to feel what was happening; giving up any claim to reality, the better to
experience the insanity.
It had been
much too long.
Then
Moffitt's hands were retreating from his face and attacking his buttons, and
his own hands were getting in the way, attempting to do the same to Moffitt.
The friendly rivalry ended abruptly when Moffitt latched onto the side of his
neck and started to suck the skin there, effectively sending all Dietrich's
blood rushing to his groin, leaving his brain temporarily paralyzed and causing
his coordination to evaporate. By the time he could breathe again, Moffitt's
mouth had left his neck to explore his chest, and Dietrich's hands were
scrabbling at the wooden door, trying to find a hold before his knees gave out.
"Bed?"
he croaked, fighting to keep his balance. Moffitt paused in the act of
unzipping his fly, and Dietrich couldn't quite hold back his groan of
disappointment.
"Bloody
well right," Moffitt informed him, his voice as choked as Dietrich's felt.
Then those
talented hands were guiding him across the room, and they were kissing again,
and he finally got Moffitt's shirt off him, only to be stymied by an
undershirt.
Unsure
whether his dizziness was caused by alcohol, heat, lack of oxygen, lust, or a
combination of all four, Dietrich growled and grabbed hold of the undershirt,
ripping it from neck to hem as he lost his balance and fell back onto the bed.
Caught by the unbreakable hold on the tattered remains of his vest, Moffitt
followed him down, barely managing to catch himself with his hands on either
side of Dietrich's waist before landing on him. The position was fortuitous to
the lust-addled portion of Dietrich's brain, since it tangled their legs
together and brought their erections into contact.
They made
short work of trousers and underpants with the incentive that single touch
provided. They moved together in an instinctive rhythm that escalated rapidly
into frantic need. The first time Dietrich climaxed was much sooner than he
would have hoped. Fortunately for what remained of his dignity, Moffitt wasn't
far behind.
Lying
there, wound together in a tangle of limbs, with sweat and semen splashed
between them, Dietrich felt oddly peaceful. He'd had nothing but death and
destruction for months. This mind-destroying pleasure was a welcome change. It
was good to simply drift, exhausted and sated, hearing heartbeats instead of exploding
shells, smelling musk instead of blood, the weight of his enemy holding him in
place, feeling decidedly comfortable.
Then
Moffitt kissed him again, and he realized his exhaustion was temporary as his
body reacted with gratifying swiftness. Long stretches of celibacy ended
explosively. The second time, Moffitt used his hands on Dietrich, touching him
in places he rarely even touched himself. By the time Dietrich had surrendered
to his climax, Moffitt was almost whimpering, and it was the work of a moment
to bring him relief.
It tasted
infinitely better than the champagne.
They slept
for a little while after that. It was still and dark when Dietrich awoke.
The present
was overlaid with the past for a hazy moment, and he nuzzled against the soft
dark hair at the nape of the man sleeping beside him.
"Breach,"
he whispered, still caught up in a dream that had taken him back to the last
man who'd shared pleasure with him. A man who'd turned his back on him, walked
out and left him, Catholic guilt eating him up inside at what they'd done
together.
"Eh?"
came the equally drowsy reply.
Dietrich
blinked, shaking the dream-haze from his head, smiling ruefully into Moffitt's
confused face as he rolled over to face Dietrich. "Sorry. Wrong
brunet." Moffitt opened his mouth to ask the question Dietrich knew was
coming. Before he could get the words out, Dietrich effectively aborted the
conversation by kissing him.
Moffitt was
quite willing to be diverted. This time it was Dietrich who had the pleasure of
being coaxed and teased and swallowed by an eager mouth. This time, as well,
one of the uses of olive oil they hadn't mentioned in their earlier
conversation was introduced. Face buried in the pillow to muffle his cries,
Dietrich couldn't help but be thankful that the previous occupant of the room
had apparently been Italian.
He fell
asleep with a residual ache in his hindquarters, a smile on his face, and
Moffitt plastered along his back, snoring lightly. For one of the very few
times since arriving in
The
pounding head that greeted him when he awoke the next morning he was expecting,
along with the taste on his tongue that convinced him something had died in his
mouth the night before. The ropes were an unwelcome surprise. So was the chair
to which the ropes bound him. Tightly.
Staring
blearily down at his own midriff, then the fabric of his undershorts over his
lap upon which rested his tied wrists, followed by two bony knees and ropes
around his ankles, he didn't at first understand what had happened. Then
Moffitt, fully rigged out and looking disgustingly chipper, if one discounted
the bags beneath his eyes, cleared his throat. Dietrich glared up at him,
pulling ineffectually at the ropes holding him securely in place tied to the
unforgiving hard wooden chair.
'Why?"
he asked, more angry than hurt or disappointed. Angry at himself, in fact.
Once again,
the verdammt Rat Patrol had made a fool of him. Only this time he'd been an
enthusiastic participant in his own downfall.
'We do what
we must," Moffitt told him briskly.
"Including
whoring yourself?" Dietrich spat at him. Moffitt shook his head.
"Oh,
no. Last night was incredible. It's the tying-up-and-leaving part that's
unavoidable. "
"Dir
hat man wohl ins Gehim geschissen und vergessen umzuruhren!" Realizing
that screaming at the man that he'd lost his mind wouldn't help his case,
Dietrich took a deep breath and tried to be reasonable. "You cannot leave
me here like this."
Moffitt
stared at him for a moment, then shook himself like a dog ridding itself of
excess water. "No," he agreed slowly. "I don't suppose I
can."
Taking several
steps forward, slowly at first then more quickly, Moffitt stopped in front of
him and leaned down. He caught Dietrich's chin in his hand and kissed him as
hungrily as he had the night before. Before Dietrich could regain his
equilibrium and bite the bastard, Moffitt released him. Both men were breathing
heavily.
"Farewell,
then," Moffitt told him softly. ''You can't take it personally, you know.
There is a war on, after all."
He dropped
an object in Dietrich's lap and left the room hurriedly. Pausing at the door,
he said without looking back, ''The room is rented for the rest of the day. You
have until fifteen hundred hours before anyone comes looking." Then he
closed the door firmly behind him, pulling it to so that the latch caught and locked.
Dietrich
stared at the closed door, caught between laughter and screaming invective.
Contenting himself. with muttering curses under his breath, he looked down to
see with what parting gift Moffitt had left him. Gleaming against the rope
binding his wrists was an army dagger. His own.
Laughter
won out over screaming by a hair.
~~~
Moffitt was
balanced on the bonnet of his Jeep eating breakfast when the second Jeep roared
to a stop beside him.
"
Trying to
ignore the enticing mental image
~~~
A few
months after his unexpected tryst with the enemy, Dietrich mused that at the
rate he was going, by the end of the African campaign he wouldn't be able to
tell the difference between his enemies and his allies. His reverie was broken
by his adjutant informing him that they had visitors. Combing back his hair and
straightening his shirt, Dietrich turned to greet the two men stepping into his
tent. His expression froze when he saw the double lightning bolts on their
collars. His last confrontation with the SS had not been pleasant.
"Standartenfiihrer
Ulbricht," the stocky Untersturmfiihrer introduced his superior.
Dietrich
saluted, wondering vaguely why the colonel looked familiar, or if all SS
officers were poured from the same mold. The crisp salute he received in return
surprised him a little. Bright blue eyes stared intently at him. He frowned
back.
"Hauptmann
Dietrich. Generaloberst Rommel has told me good things of you." "I am
honored," Dietrich answered, referring to his mentor's opinion, since he'd
never cared much one way or the other what the SS thought.
"I
look forward to our working together." The stare softened and turned
genial.
Dietrich's
neck itched. His instincts told him that nothing good would come of this
meeting.
He sent
Ulbricht an inquisitive look. "I haven't received such orders,
Colonel." Ulbricht smiled at him. The itch intensified.
"That
is for the morning, my dear captain. It is late; I'm content to merely
introduce myself to you. Tomorrow at oh seven hundred I will brief you on the
details of our combined duties."
Lovely,
Dietrich mentally snarled, as he nodded with forced respect, saluted and
watched Ulbricht exit the tent as abruptly as he'd entered it. Dietrich sighed,
mentally cursing his luck. Just what he needed in the middle of a full-out
harassment campaign by the Rat Patrol... the SS harassing him from the other
side. Hassle every direction he turned, and him with a supply line to protect.
He was still seeking the cause for his presentiment of trouble when he fell
asleep.
~~~
Ulbricht
stared across the expanse of the desert he despised, mulling over the measure
of the man he had met. His spies who had survived had provided him with
excellent detail on the raid that had killed his nephew but no concrete proof.
Not that Wansee was much of a loss, slavering incompetent that he'd been.
Still, the boy had been his sister's child, and family honor did count for
something.
While he
hadn't been able to gather enough evidence to take Dietrich back to
Dietrich
had shamed the boy, then murdered him. The same would now be true for the
Wehrmacht captain. Rommel's time was nearly up; seeds were being sown to
convince the Fiihrer of the Desert Fox's treachery. Those who so clearly owed
their allegiance to him, such as this Dietrich, would have no protection when he
was gone. But Ulbricht wouldn't wait until the Fuhrer moved before taking his
own vengeance. There were those who would pay for the privilege, and still
others who were ripe for the blame.
He had a
professional stake in the situation as well. He'd promised the Fuhrer before he
left
An Arab
approached him, moving quietly over the sand. Ulbricht had been watching for
him and was prepared.
"Ensure
that he is never seen again."
"He
will be gone tonight." The Arab raised a hand, and four figures detached
themselves from the shadows, moving toward the darkened command tent.
"He
suffers before he dies." He'd better. They were being paid enough. ''You
will see to that."
The Arab
nodded once, teeth gleaming in a leer across the dark face. "As you
wish." The gold was heavy in his palm as he handed it over to the slave
trader. A filthy business, with a pleasant aftertaste. Ulbricht waved him away,
watching as the shadows came forth again from the tent, a fifth form adding
bulk to their little group. Ulbricht smiled and turned back to his own tent to
get some well-deserved rest. He had to be fresh in the morning. He had a
performance to give.
Shortly
before dawn the Rat Patrol played directly into his hands. Acting on
information Ulbricht had made certain they would get, they hit the camp hard,
aiming for supplies tents that didn't actually exist. In the midst of the
attack, it was easy for Ulbricht to duck into Dietrich's tent and slice through
the back canvas.
"Here!"
he screamed as soon as he'd stowed away his knife. Three of Dietrich's soldiers
tumbled in through the front flap, looking about wildly for their commander.
"An American! He knocked Hauptmann Dietrich unconscious and kidnapped him!
After them!"
Of course,
they returned empty-handed. By the end of the raid, not only were the Rat
Patrol empty handed, but they'd also collared the blame for Dietrich's
disappearance. An entirely satisfactory conclusion to his excursion. He could
go back to
Taking
command of the camp, he turned the search for their beloved Hauptmann over to
Dietrich's second-in-command. Oberleutnant Frevert would lead an all-out
campaign against the Rat Patrol, and Dietrich would soon be dead. Ulbricht
would stay until the Rat Patrol was eradicated. At that time he would
regretfully inform the High Command that Hauptmann Dietrich was a casualty and
that the problem of the raids had been settled. The Fuehrer would be pleased.
Rommel would not.
Excellent
results. For Ulbricht.
~~~
Dietrich
had slept lightly, but he was still taken by surprise. A rag was stuffed in his
mouth and his hands were bound behind his back before he was completely awake.
He kicked out desperately, trying to break his captors' grip, but a blow to the
head rendered him half-conscious. He was still groggy as he was tossed over the
back of a horse. Pounding off into the desert, his head bouncing against the
horse's ribs, air being driven out of his lungs with each jolt, he gradually
got dizzier until everything faded to black.
Impact with
the sand woke him up again. His head ached. He could see nothing but black
night with a blanket of stars that wavered as his vision faded in and out. A
shadow stooped over him, blocking out the sky, and his eyes widened. He knew
that face.
Memories
crowded out the present. A long hike under the blazing sun chained like a dog
with no water and the continual rambling of
Images
flashed forward, the next day, and escape. The Arab taunting him about the
sweetness of his flesh,
It would
appear that the Arab was a man of his word. God damn him.
The promise
returned to haunt him as the slaver reached down into Dietrich's trousers and
fondled him roughly. Dietrich froze, seeing a knife flash past his face as it
sliced downward. His shirt buttons fell away, his undershirt parted under the
sharp blade, and he shivered as the night air touched his bare chest.
Arabic
rumbled in his ear, praise and lust intermingled. More men came out of the darkness
as the others joined their leader, callused hands wrenching at his belt,
tugging his pants down to his ankles. The knife remained steady, just below his
testicles, and in response Dietrich didn't dare move. If it had been possible
he would have stopped breathing. The head slaver grinned nastily at him.
Dietrich kept his mouth shut and tried not to think about what was being done
to him.
Hands
tugged and pushed at him, forcing him over onto his stomach. He closed his eyes
and turned his face to the side, trying not to eat too much sand. The voices
above him were excited now, exclaiming over the softness and pale color of his
skin, the firmness of his buttocks. His teeth and eyes clenched tightly shut
and he wished fiercely that he could faint.
No one was
listening to his prayers.
They pawed
at him, pulling his flesh this way and that. One of them spat on him, as the
headman warned them against causing so much damage he could not be sold. His
mind was still mulling over the implications of that statement when the first
one entered him. The shock was almost as great as the pain, and he couldn't
stop the scream that ripped from his throat. Laughter and encouragement
followed on the heels of his cry.
His
defilement appeared to be great sport for the onlookers. Numbness spread
through his hips and up into his chest as the Arab pounded into him
enthusiastically, mitigating somewhat the tearing pain in his arse. After the
first scream he managed to hold the rest back, blood running down his chin from
his bitten lip. His muffled groans were barely discernible over the panting of
his rapist and the jeers of the audience. When the Arab finally bucked against
him and climaxed, Dietrich tried to take a deep breath and ignore the fire
searing his flesh.
The second
one mounted him before he could begin to recover from the first. His world
contracted to the pounding against and into his body, the gritty sand in his
face, and the helpless moans of his own pain echoing in his ears. Long before
they finished, he was granted his wish and lost consciousness.
~~~
Hitch
didn't know who they'd managed to piss off, but somebody somewhere really had
it out for them. Wheeling the jeep in a tight 360, squinting through the dust
and shrapnel, gun booming non-stop in his ear, he plowed through the fourth
fight in the last week.
The Rat
Patrol hadn't started any of them.
Most of the
krauts looked alike to him, but it seemed like the same ones kept cropping up
lately. The one person he expected to see, Dietrich, wasn't around. The only
thing he could figure was that the kraut commanders got tired of Dietrich all
the time losing, and put somebody else in charge. Somebody with a real bad
attitude and a grudge against the Rats.
Hitch
wasn't used to being the hunted. He was much more comfortable as the hunter.
Sarge was
yelling, but Hitch couldn't hear what he said. Then fire exploded under the
axle and the jeep flipped. He was flying through the air, then rolling in sand,
before the world stopped going around in circles. Looking up, he saw half a
dozen rifle barrels all pointed at his face.
They looked
six inches across. Each.
Before he
could so much as swallow, they grabbed him up and tossed him in the back seat
of a command car, pistol barrel nearly down his ear. Then they were tearing off
one way, and the second Patrol jeep,
"Shit,"
Hitch muttered, reluctantly turning back to face the front as the kraut beside
him prodded him in the neck with his pistol
A
dark-haired, blue-eyed man was glaring at him from the front seat like Hitch
was something he'd scraped off the bottom of his shoe. Hitch glared back the best
he could. He could count on the Sarge to come and get him, but that was only if
the Sarge survived. He surreptitiously crossed his fingers in his lap. He had a
feeling it was going to be a long wait, and even if it was a short one, it was
going to damned well feel long.
He had an
inkling how right he was when the first thing the krauts did was tie him to a
chair in the middle of a tent, and the second thing they did was start whaling
hell out of him before they even asked him his name. When they finally did
start asking questions, none of them made any sense.
"Where
is he?"
"What
did you do with him?"
"Is he
alive?"
Made it
easy to answer with his name, rank and serial number, since he didn't know what
the hell they were talking about. Until the dark-haired kraut who'd started it
all off backhanded him so hard across the chops the chair fell over backward.
With his lip split open and his jaw swelling up, he didn't even have to say
that much.
Frustrated,
the German who'd been yelling all the nonsense questions at him yanked the
chair back upright and stalked out of the tent. Hitch watched him go, wondering
not for the first time what the hell was going on. When the tent flap rose
again, a middle-aged man in a black uniform with silver flashes stepped inside,
and Hitch's belly flipped over. Just what he didn't need, SS nutcases starting
in on him. He put on his most belligerent look, to cover the butterflies flying
around in his stomach, and glared up at the SS officer.
Who smiled
down at him, confusing the hell out of him yet again.
"They
will ask their questions. I fear you have no choice but to plead
ignorance." He leaned forward, crowding Hitch, and Hitch couldn't stop
himself from cowering away. "Dietrich is far from here, undoubtedly dead
by now. His men firmly believe you are responsible. He is in slavers' hands,
and the Rat Patrol will hang for it. A tidy ending, for everyone, don't you
think?"
Hitch
glared mutely back at him. Dietrich? Slavers? Blamed on the Rat Patrol when it
was the SS? None of this made sense to him.
Moffitt
came across the tent floor from the newly-created slit in the back and knocked
the German out with one chop across the back of the neck. Kicking him hard to
make sure he was unconscious, Moffitt turned to Hitch and shook his head.
"Looks
like the Jerries have been having a little fun, here," he whispered as he
sliced through the ropes binding Hitch to the chair. Wrapping his arm around
Hitch's waist, he half-led, half-earned him out the back of the tent to the
jeep where Tully sat waiting. Hitch found himself deposited in the passenger
seat, trying to breath shallowly, hanging on to the frame of the jeep with both
hands.
"
"He's
all right. Waiting back at camp."
Then they
were on their way, and Hitch closed his eyes and tried not to throw up every time
they hit a bump in the dirt road. Eventually, hands tugged at his shoulders,
and he fell out of the jeep and staggered to a seat on a handy rock. He worked
his jaw gingerly and looked over at
''You okay,
Sarge?" Hitch mumbled.
"That
should be my question, Hitch." The grin disappeared. "Got there as
soon as we could. You all right?"
"Nothing
I couldn't handle," he quipped out of the side of his mouth that still
worked.
Hitch
nodded thanks and gulped them down before raising his own hand. "First,
gotta tell ya. I'm okay, and I think we got something to do first. I know why
the krauts been buzzin' like a beehive." That got everyone's attention.
Hitch nodded, carefully, feeling like his head might fall off if he moved too
fast. "A big cheese from the SS was there. Said the slavers had Dietrich
and we were gonna take the fall for it. Sounded like he set it up himself. You
got any idea what he was talking about, Sarge?"
From the
royally pissed-off look on
Deciding
not to make any smart-ass remarks about being busy at the time and not having
his glasses on to read name tags, mainly because his jaw was really starting to
ache, Hitch contented himself with shaking his head no. Then he squinted his
eyes shut and waited for the dizziness to stop. When it did, he noticed
"Didn't
get a name, but he looked familiar. Not just the uniform. Looked a lot like the
kraut who nearly killed Moffitt that one time when we were trying to get the
medicine back. Remember?"
''Yeah,''
''What are
you thinking we should do about it?" Moffitt asked. He didn't sound like
he usually did when the Sarge got a hair turned crosswise. He actually sounded
ready to go, no questions asked.
"Get
Dietrich back to his men before they finish what they started and hang us for
his disappearance." To Hitch's surprise, Moffitt was nodding before
"I
have some contacts in the area. Slavers aren't well liked amongst the Arab
populace, any more than amongst us. I'll see what I can find."
"Might
want to hurry," Tully put in.
''Yeah,''
Almost.
Moffitt
took off toward town while
~~~
The next time
Dietrich opened his eyes, he was draped back over the horse, tied in place with
a thick rope around his waist and ankles. Every muscle in his body ached, and
he was terribly thirsty, but his mind was clear, so at least he hadn't gotten
concussion earlier when he'd been abducted. With the number of times he'd been
knocked out since coming to
His uniform
was gone. In its place was a long, loose shillahat. The cotton felt soft
against his back and legs. There was an ache in his arse that extended halfway
up his back and down into his thighs, but there was no burn that would indicate
tearing or infection. His skin felt slightly oily as he shifted his weight, and
he deduced that sometime after they'd finished they'd cleaned and medicated
him. Otherwise he would be unable to move, probably off his head with fever,
and completely worthless to them. Whatever else they might be, the slavers were
businessmen. They would amuse themselves, but they wouldn't risk their profit.
Closing his
eyes, he tried to relax, attempting to ignore the headache from the blood
rushing to his head and the tight clench of thirst in his throat. The draperies
of his kaffiyah gave his face some protection from the heat of the sun. By
mid-morning he was in a half-asleep daze, rocking with the horse's gait. The
sudden cessation of movement jolted him awake.
Behind him
where he couldn't see what was happening, a new voice joined his captors'.
Hands pressed along the length of his thighs, squeezing his buttock, and he
yelped before he managed to bite his lip and control himself. Arabic flew fast
and thick around him, and he tried to concentrate on deciphering the local
dialect.
"Damaged?
The price falls for damaged goods, my friend."
"Only
a little bruised, Halim. He is a strong one. You will enjoy him."
The hand
patted his thigh and stroked the length of his leg, stopping at the rope
binding his ankles. "Spirited, too, it would appear."
The slaver
gave a filthy laugh and agreed. "Quite the fighter! Taming him will be a
challenge." Footsteps came around the horse, but Dietrich couldn't see
anything through the folds of his headdress.
"Do
you not think me capable, Argub?" The newcomer sounded more amused than
offended. Dietrich remained as still as possible when the kaffiyah was swept
out of the way and long fingers brushed through his hair. A second hand traced
his cheekbone, down to the corner of his mouth. ''Very well." The hands
left him and the cotton fell back in place, leaving him in diffused half-light.
'Take him to my bait sha'ar. Give him into
Dietrich
felt more relief than he cared to admit at the words. If this Halim was busy
feting his friends the slavers, then Dietrich might be able to escape while he
was
otherwise
occupied. If he could steal a horse--and actually be able to sit on it long
enough to get away-he might have a chance.
The horse
was led through the tents, and Dietrich heard voices gossiping about him. There
were no women or children that he could hear. It was either a group of hunters
or scouts, or a brigand band. The rope holding him in place was untied and he
was pulled off the horse. To his disgust, his knees collapsed out from under
him. The two slavers hoisted him up by the arms and dragged him forward into a
large, shady tent.
"Gently,
gently," a deep voice boomed. Hands the size of platters took hold of him,
lifting him away from the slavers as if he weighed no more than a child. "
"Aren't
you an exotic one, then," the giant murmured. Dietrich automatically shook
his head 'no.' The giant laughed, a low rumble. "Contrary as well as
beautiful! My master will like you."
Dietrich
kept his mouth shut, submitting himself to the indignity of being stripped and
bathed like a helpless babe. He had no choice. His arms and hands were numb
from being tied behind his back for over a day and night. His legs were dead
from having the circulation cut off by the horse's backbone all day and his
muscles were cramping all over his body from the mistreatment the night before.
"Tsk,
tsk,"
Draping
Dietrich face-down over a fleecy rug,
He felt too
relaxed and too exhausted to protest. A voice in his head was shrieking at him
that he had to ready himself for escape. His abused muscles were having a hard
time staying knitted to his bones, much less preparing to be used in any
fashion whatsoever. Peering up at the giant working him over, Dietrich decided
that he couldn't do anything while
"Ah!
Dark like rich sweet dates. Lovely."
Dietrich
tried to glare and fell asleep before he managed it.
When he
awoke, he felt incredibly better. The aches were gone from his muscles, his
head had stopped pounding, and his mind was working again. The only residual
effect from his ordeal was a raging thirst. He peered around the tent, trying
to locate a water bag, already working out the details of his escape. Darkness
had fallen, which was to his advantage. The only problems he could see were
that he had no gun, no knowledge of his present location, no water, and no idea
where the horses were kept. He was also stark naked, and he couldn't find
anything in the vicinity with which to cover himself other than the fleece rug.
It wasn't
quite big enough.
A chuckle
from the entryway to the tent stopped him as he was trying to find a way to
wrap the recalcitrant rug around his middle. He looked up to find a stranger
staring back at him. The Arab was over six feet, broad shouldered, with long
arms crossed over his chest. Curly hair framed his face and sherry-colored eyes
laughed at him.
If it
weren't for the fact that the man had bought him as a slave, Dietrich might
have found him attractive. As it was, Dietrich really wanted a gun. And some
clothes. And a horse. Preferably a panzer division out on the look-out for him.
"Leaving
so soon? Before we have even had a chance to introduce ourselves?" The
Arab shifted away from the tent wall and strode over to stand next to a small
table on which rested a decanter and two goblets. Dietrich glared over at him.
Their eyes were level.
"I am
Halim. This is my home." He filled a goblet and handed it to Dietrich.
"As sala'm alaikum!"
Even at a
disadvantage, Dietrich's manners didn't fail him. Automatically returning the
greeting, he thanked Halim for the wine. "Salaam ideek," blessed be your
hands, although he was certain he wouldn't be blessing them by the time Halim
got through with him.
Halim
smiled approvingly. "You have taken the time to learn our language. More
civilized than most of your kind."
Dietrich
sipped the wine, blinking as the flavor exploded across his parched tongue. He
managed not to gulp, but just barely. "I try. My name is Hauptmann Hans
Dietrich." He drank more of the wine, running the tip of his tongue across
his lips to catch a few drops that had escaped. Halim watched him closely.
Dietrich felt himself blush. "Perhaps, as civilized men, we can discuss my
... captivity. A ransom might be arranged?" The last of the wine was gone,
and Dietrich turned to replace the goblet on the table.
The world
tilted.
His hands
flew out to catch himself and Halim was behind him, an arm curled about his
waist, holding him upright. Dietrich's head fell back against Halim's shoulder,
suddenly too heavy to hold up. "Oh, no, my dear Hauptmann," Halim
said softly into the side of his neck. "For if I were to release you, your
previous captors have been paid to kill you. And that would be such a waste of
fine flesh." Long-fingered hands stroked his hair back and warm lips
nibbled at his jaw line, then trailed down his throat. "I will partake of
what you have to offer, and you will live. Everyone wins, yes?"
Teeth
worried lightly at the juncture of his throat and shoulder, the sensation
sending a shiver down Dietrich's spine and preventing him from growling 'no!'
as his mind insisted he must. 'Wine?" he slurred.
"Drugged,"
Halim confirmed merrily. "Not much. Merely enough to ensure your
cooperation. For I find the act of love so much more enjoyable when there is no
battle involved, don't you?"
Dietrich
was nodding yes as Halim walked him over to the cushions in the corner of the
tent and dropped him gently down on them. By the time Halim lowered himself
over him and began to make a feast of him, Dietrich, still nodding yes, had no
idea what he was agreeing to or why. The world was swimming again, he was warm
and relaxed, and a talented mouth was driving him to the brink of insanity.
The night
spun away as Halim seduced him, mouth and hands and body molding him as desired
for mutual enjoyment. The present melted into a sensual haze, and Dietrich
forgot where he was and who was pleasuring him, focusing solely on the mouth
tracing fire along his body and the strength driving him into the soft
cushions. He bucked back against the insistent intruder, moaning out his
pleasure as he climaxed, hands working at the thick silk beneath him as he
writhed lazily against the warm weight along his back. Halim's breathless
encouragement wove into the background, the Arabic dialect translating into
Oxford-accented English, as hazel eyes replaced sherry in his dream world. If
Halim wondered who 'Moffitt' was he didn't ask.
Dietrich
was too preoccupied with falling to pieces to worry about it. The next few days
passed in a haze. Nights were taken up with drugged pleasure, days he slept,
was tended by
Feigning
sleep after
"Halim!"
the guard called.
Dietrich
closed his eyes and waited to have his throat slit. Halim left the fire and
came over to the horses, several of his men on his heels. When he saw Dietrich
he started to laugh. Dietrich clenched his teeth and glared at him.
"Argub
warned me of your spirit, Hauptmann! I should have taken greater heed of his
caution. Good catch, Mifleh! You will be rewarded for your vigilance."
Halim reached out and cupped Dietrich's tense jaw. ''You are mine," he
said quietly, meeting Dietrich's fierce glare with an intense look of his own.
"Until you realize this I will simply have to keep you drugged.
The giant
came out of a nearby tent, bottle already in hand. He handed it to Halim with a
bow, and Halim placed the lip of the bottle against Dietrich's mouth.
"Drink,"
he ordered. When Dietrich continued to glare at him and made no attempt to do
so, he sighed. "Sabah," he nodded at Dietrich and
The guard
holding Dietrich took away his knife, and
He drank.
The world
went hazy again, and the next time he was cognizant, he was lying on his back
with Halim between his legs, his heels over Halim's shoulders. He stared up at
the roof of the tent, accepting Halim inside him, the hands on his body coaxing
a response he was too drugged to deny. Closing his eyes, he took refuge the
only way he could, and in his fantasy, Halim became Moffitt and the pleasure he
couldn't escape became bearable.
After that,
he wasn't left alone or sober long enough to try again. It didn't stop him from
thinking about it, though, in a disconnected, wishful way. When it happened, he
nearly didn't recognize rescue for what it was.
~~~
It took a
day of following whispers, but Moffitt caught the right rumor at last.
Blending in
with the Badw in his native dress, he listened carefully. One name caught his
ear.
"He
was bragging about it. Got paid twice, once to bag and kill the devil, once to
hand him over to Halim."
"Halim?
Devil must have been a pretty one. I'm surprised he survived long enough to
sell him off. Argub isn't known for being easy on them."
"Not a
very smart one, is he?" a third voice piped up. ''Trying to pass off
damaged goods. He cheats Halim, he'll end up with his eyes put out and his
tongue cut open."
The first
man laughed. "Better to cheat the devils than Halim. Take their gold and
do what you wish, that's what I say!"
Moffitt
huddled in his corner, kept his head down and his ears open. By the end of a
very long night, he had the information they needed.
"The
slaver's name is Argub," he reported back to the rest of the Patrol.
"He's from a village not far from here, but he's not particularly popular,
since when he can't find foreigners to sell he preys on the locals. The word is
that he was offered a large bounty by a foreigner last week, to capture a
particular man and kill him. Instead he sold him to a raider operating south of
here. With a little digging I found out where they were last seen."
The Rat
Patrol came upon the camp mid-day a week after Dietrich had disappeared.
Five tents,
two cook-fire pits, a string of horses. The largest tent was to the far north
of the camp. They'd have to circle around and come in from the opposite side.
Cover would be a problem. They'd have to hit fast, preferably while the
majority of the men were still sleeping. Which meant early morning hours.
Moffitt nodded.
Scuttling
back down the dune, they got in their respective jeeps and worked their way
slowly into position. No sentries were kept so far from the main camp with such
a small band, and they were able to creep within hearing distance by the time
dawn was breaking.
The first
guard fell to
The flap
moved on the main tent and a tall man in a dark flowing kaffiyah, the one
they'd marked as the leader during their earlier reconnaissance, strode out.
Moffitt
took him down with his first shot.
The jeeps
wheeled in from opposite sides of the camp on the heels of the first shot.
Screams and
cries filled the air as the raiders leapt for their rifles and were cut down
before they could untangle themselves from their blankets. As Tully slung the
jeep to a halt next to the largest tent and Moffitt flung himself down to go in
after Dietrich, the largest man he'd ever seen in his life came roaring out at
him. Moffitt barely threw himself to the side in time to escape being crushed
by the platter-sized fists heading his way.
Tully
grabbed up his rifle and swung it around, firing as he drew. Moffitt kept his
head down as the bullets flew over him, slamming into the huge man and cutting
him nearly in half. When the spatter of bullets stopped, Moffitt scuttled
around the side of the giant corpse and dove into the tent.
Dietrich
was there, all right. Sound asleep and starkers. Moffitt swallowed with a mouth
that suddenly went as dry as the sand. "Dietrich?" he croaked. The
tousled head against the bright silk pillow moved restlessly.
"Moffitt?"
The normally crisp voice was slurred. Moffitt cursed softly. Drugged, no doubt.
He glanced around, grabbing up a discarded shillahat and moving over to the
pile of cushions on which Dietrich lay sprawled. Dazed brown eyes peered
blurrily up at him.
''Yes, here
to get you out. Can you sit up?" He was reaching to help even as he asked.
Dietrich's skin felt impossibly smooth under his hands, and Moffitt bit his
lip, fighting the temptation to linger. 'We haven't much time. Bloody
he1l!" The curse slipped out as he noticed the fine chain running from a
manacle around Dietrich's left wrist to a peg hammered into the ground. He
yanked at the chain but the peg didn't shift. "No time for this!"
Dietrich's right hand was running drowsily up and down Moffitt's sleeve.
Moffitt swallowed again and scowled ferociously at the chain, trying to ignore
his body's reaction to Dietrich's roaming fingers.
'What's the
hold-up?"
"
"Got
it!"
The link
slid apart far enough for
There were
no survivors to follow them, but
"How's
he doing?"
"No
fever that I can detect, but he's been thoroughly drugged." Bleary brown
eyes opened and stared at them for a moment before drifting closed again.
Moffitt exchanged a glance with
"Tanked
off his ass,"
"Looks
like it." Moffitt absently fiddled with the manacle still encircling
Dietrich's wrist, trying to find a way to open it.
"Leave
it,"
Nodding his
understanding, Moffitt dropped Dietrich's hand back into his lap. The long
fingers curled into a loose fist, looking oddly defenseless. A surge of fury
ran through him that Dietrich's own people should do this to him. True, it was
the SS, not the Wehrmacht, but they were still Germans, and that they should do
this to one of their own infuriated him. That, and the fact that in the end,
he, Moffitt, was the root cause of this. Had it not been for saving Moffitt's
life, Dietrich would never have shot Wansee, and none of this would have
happened. Moffitt wasn't aware his hand had tightened into a fist until
"You
okay?" The concern under the gruff voice brought Moffitt back to himself.
'Yes. Only ... angry."
Moffitt
nodded, then leaned forward to wrap his arm around Dietrich's waist.
Taking the
unresisting weight along his side, he draped Dietrich's arm around his neck and
held tightly to his hand, walking him over to the jeep.
"Moffitt?"
Dietrich asked quietly again, rousing slightly and struggling against Moffitt's
hold.
"Right
here," Moffitt assured him quickly. Dietrich calmed down immediately,
leaving Moffitt to wonder about the man's response. As he lowered Dietrich into
the passenger seat, the manacle caught on his collar, and he paused, crouched
over Dietrich, to untangle the metal from the cotton. Soft breath against his
cheek caused him to turn his head and meet Dietrich's gaze, less cloudy now but
still not completely coherent.
"'Bout
bloody time. Du bist ein Schatz," Moffitt grinned at the unexpected
compliment.
"Holzkopf,"
he returned affectionately. Dietrich nodded sleepily and collapsed against the
seat. Moffitt shook his head. By the time Dietrich slept this off, Moffitt was
going to have so much ammunition with which to tease him, Dietrich wouldn't
stand a chance. He was rather looking forward to their next truce.
They made
camp early that night. By the time the fire was built, Dietrich was sitting up
under his own steam, albeit listing slightly to starboard. They were holed up
in a small series of caves along a cliff wall, an excellent defensive position
should any of the dead bandits' brothers come looking for vengeance. Moffitt
glanced over at Dietrich, staring mindlessly into the fire, and sidled over
beside
"I'll
watch over Dietrich," he offered quietly. ''There's a smaller cave
branching off this one, just behind us. It would be easier to contain him if
he's sequestered in there, should he get any odd ideas of running off."
"Okay,
take him back and put him to bed. Tully," he raised his voice and Tully
looked up alertly from where he'd been cleaning his rifle, "you take first
watch. I'll take second and Hitch third. Moffitt's got the prisoner."
Dietrich
watched him through his lashes as Moffitt helped him stand. They staggered
slightly on the way into the smaller cave, but neither made comment. Once
inside, the heat from the fire in the main cave bled away quickly. Moffitt
noticed Dietrich shivering and sat about making a small fire for the two of
him. He had a merry little blaze going before he looked up to catch Dietrich's
brooding gaze on him. He settled back on the sand and raised a questioning
brow.
"Am
I?" Dietrich asked quietly. Moffitt cocked his head to one side, staring
back. "Are you what?"
''Your
prisoner." Dietrich didn't sound particularly concerned about the answer.
Moffitt shrugged.
"Not
really. We rescued you."
Dietrich
shifted on the sand, ending his movement with his knee pressed against
Moffitt's thigh. 'Who paid the slavers?"
'We don't
know," Moffitt admitted. His voice echoed oddly in the tight quarters and
he lowered his voice. "All we know is that we didn't, but your men blamed
us for it. Determined buggers, they are." That earned him a tired smile
from Dietrich. Moffitt returned it and tossed another twig on the fire. 'We had
to get you back for them, if only to get them off our backs."
"Oberleutnant
Frevert is a capable and loyal officer. He would do his best to find me, or to
punish those he thought responsible for my disappearance."
"That
he did," Moffitt admitted, shifting himself so that he and Dietrich were
sitting side by side, shoulders touching. Dietrich didn't shift away. Moffitt
took that for a promising sign.
''What
next?" Dietrich's voice dropped, and Moffitt found himself leaning closer
in order to hear the words. Whatever his captors had used on his skin gave him
a wonderfully spicy smell, and Moffitt breathed deeply as unobtrusively as
possible.
"We
take you back to your lines and give you back." He hadn't been consciously
aware of it, but sometime during the conversation Moffitt had picked the
manacled wrist back up and was playing with it. Dietrich's palm turned under
his, and their fingers caught. Moffitt stared at their entwined hands.
"Thank
you," Dietrich said softly. Moffitt turned his head to stare into Dietrich's
face. His expression was neutral, but his eyes were haunted.
"Are
you all right?" The question was out before he could stop it. Dietrich
smiled, a singularly humorless stretch of his lips that bared his teeth in a
snarl.
"No,
but I will be." Dietrich raised his left hand and brought it up to
Moffitt's face, tracing the shadows the fire painted under his cheekbone. ''You
saved my sanity."
Moffitt sat
completely still under the questing fingers, but had to ask, "How? By
getting you out of there?"
'Yes,'
Dietrich answered vaguely, "and before." He leaned forward and
covered Moffitt's mouth with his own before Moffitt could ask what he meant.
Since his
lips were parted to speak, the kiss caught him off-guard, pressing deeply
before he could adequately prepare for it. His tongue rose to meet Dietrich's,
and in an instant they were kissing as hungrily as the first time they'd held
one another, in a tiny room above a bar months before. It took several moments
before Moffitt gathered his senses enough to break the kiss. By that time both
men were panting lightly.
"This
is not a good idea," Moffitt muttered. Dietrich simply looked at him.
Moffitt took a deep breath and tried to regain his self-control. "Before
we got sidetracked, I was about to check your injuries."
He made a
movement with his hand toward the small medical bag he'd brought with him,
stopping when he realized his fingers were still wound tightly with Dietrich's.
With more care than was warranted, he unwrapped their hands and scooted until
there was an inch of sand between them. Dietrich sat silently and watched him.
Grateful
that the neck-opening on the shillahat was wide, Moffitt eased over until he
was behind Dietrich and slid the garment off his shoulder. There were a few
bruises along his shoulders and ribs, some nearly-healed abrasions scattered
along his skin, but for the most part he looked remarkably healthy for having
been a slave for the past several days. Of course, given that he'd been chained
to the bed when they found him, Moffitt wasn't too surprised at his condition.
"Doesn't
look too bad from here," he pronounced. Dietrich glanced up at him over
his shoulder.
"That
wasn't where the damage was done," he informed Moffitt tonelessly. Moffitt
licked his lips and swallowed, trying to moisten a mouth gone inconveniently
dry again.
"Oh?"
he assayed with as much nonchalance as he could muster. Dietrich closed his
eyes briefly, and when he opened them again, he looked more himself than he had
since they'd rescued him. Mischief warred with command in his expression. His
hands dropped to the hem of his caftan and he raised it until his legs were
bare. Moffitt found his eyes glued to the skin slowly being uncovered.
"Oh,"
he said again, in a completely different voice. In an instant he was moving,
toppling Dietrich over in a controlled fall, hands roving up under the cotton
fabric until they were cupping Dietrich's arse. "Here, perhaps?" His
voice was husky. Dietrich nodded, his face solemn but his eyes sparkling.
Then
Dietrich's hands were working on the fastening of Moffitt's trousers, and
Moffitt's brain shut down. They moved carefully, mindful of the cramped
quarters, the fire beside them, the others just beyond the rock wall. Mouths
muffled cries while hands worked tender flesh until neither could stop. It was
nothing complicated, simply fingers sketching the stretch of muscles under
skin, the press of a thigh, the heat of long arms wrapped around one another as
their bodies moved together. But it was gentle, and it was enough.
Morning
found them dressed again, sitting side by side, silently.
"Everything
okay?" His eyes as he looked at Moffitt made it perfectly clear he knew
exactly what he was asking. There was nothing but warmth in them. Moffitt gave
him a quick smile. He nodded, and
As easily
as that, they were on their way.
By
mid-afternoon of an uneventful ride back, Hitch sighted a scouting group
bearing Wehrmacht insignia. Dietrich sat upright and peered ahead intently.
Moffitt was content to note no discomfort in his bearing, as he himself stood
up to man the gun. They swerved off to the side behind some dunes before the
Germans could spot them, then shadowed them all the way back to their camp.
Dietrich muttered to himself about incompetence for several miles before
Moffitt leaned forward and asked him sweetly, "Care to share?"
The glare
he received in return nearly fried him to a crisp. He whistled under his breath
the rest of the way in. It was even more enjoyable than he had anticipated to
tease Dietrich. Tully grinned but kept his mouth shut.
As they
came in close to the German lines, all sound ceased, and everyone tensed up
slightly.
"Here's
where it gets tricky."
Dietrich
stared up at him. 'Why not simply leave me here and allow me to return to my
troops?"
Moffitt
looked over him at
"'Cause
somebody already tried to kill you once. When whoever it is figures out that he
failed, he'll try again. This time he could finish the job, and we'd be right
back where we started. Blamed for something we didn't do, with a personal
vendetta getting in the way of business as usual."
Dietrich's
stare changed to wry acknowledgment. ''Vengeance cannot be allowed to get in
the way of the war." He nodded to show he agreed. "Besides, I don't
know who my enemy is-this way, at least, he will be flushed out."
Moffitt and
'We don't
know precisely who is behind your abduction, captain, but we know what he
is."
Dietrich
froze.
"I
take it you know who we mean?" Moffitt asked, watching him closely.
"Ja,
but why?" Dietrich shook his head. 'This makes no sense."
"Does
the SS ever make sense?"
Dietrich
shut his mouth and nodded.
At the side
of the command tent,
Oberleutnant
Frevert stood beside a table, caught mid-word arguing about pursuit paths to
get his Hauptmann back. Standartenfiihrer Ulbricht sat, exuding arrogance,
telling Frevert flat-out that Dietrich was dead and their primary goal was to
exterminate the Rat Patrol. The sudden entrance of nearly everyone under
discussion stopped the argument in its tracks.
"Brought
ya something,"
"Hauptmann
Dietrich!" Frevert had his pistol half out of the holster when he stopped
in place, staring at his apparently-unharmed captain in shock.
"Verdammt
noch mal!" Ulbricht spat, scrabbling for his own gun and surging from his
seat.
Dietrich
jumped forward and knocked his adjutant out of Ulbricht's sights.
"Kotzbrocken!" he snarled at the SS officer, reaching
for a gun he wasn't carrying.
"Down!"
yelled Moffitt.
Moffitt's
bullet took Ulbricht dead-center in the heart. The colonel was dead before he
hit the ground.
'Welcome
home, Captain," Moffitt sang out cheerfully, then he and Troy gave
Dietrich, still sprawled atop young Frevert, jaunty salutes before ducking back
out of the tent.
"Danke,
damn you," was the last thing Moffitt heard clearly as they made tracks
back to the jeeps. Frevert's voice was babbling questions, and Dietrich was
trying to answer them, as the Rat Patrol sped off into the night.
~~~
Moffitt
never told
The next
time he had to fire at Dietrich, Moffitt aimed for his gun hand, not his heart.
Dietrich
returned the favor.
finis