Arenales 1623
Buenos Aires, Argentina
1750 24 September 1943
El Coronel Juan Domingo Peron was in uniform, but his tunic was unbuttoned and his tie pulled down, when he came out of his apartment onto the elevator landing. He was not smiling.
"Commercial Counselor" Karl Cranz was not surprised. The portero in the lobby of the building had told Cranz--as he obviously had been instructed to do--that Peron was not at home, and it had been necessary to slip him ten pesos--and, when that didn't work, ultimately fifty--before he was willing to forget his instructions and telephone Peron's apartment only when Cranz was on the elevator and it was too late to stop him.
"Mi coronel," Cranz said as charmingly as he could, "please believe me when I say I would not intrude on your privacy were it not very im - portant."
Peron did not reply to that directly. Instead, he said, "I didn't know you knew where I lived, Cranz."
"I went to the Frade house on Libertador, mi coronel. The housekeeper told me."
That was not true. The housekeeper in the Frade mansion across from the racetrack on Avenida Libertador had--and only reluctantly--told him only that el Coronel Peron no longer lived in the mansion and that she had no idea where he had moved.
It had cost Raschner two days of effort and several hundred pesos to get the address, which came with the information that he was sharing his new quarters with his fourteen-year-old "niece."
"That woman has a big mouth," Peron said unpleasantly.
"Mi coronel, I have to have a few minutes of your time," Cranz said.
"Why?"
"Another special shipment is about to arrive. We need your help."
The news did not seem to please Peron.
"Wait," he ordered curtly. He turned and went back into his apartment and closed the door.
Cranz instantly decided he was going to give Peron three minutes--180 seconds--to reopen the door before he pushed the doorbell. He looked at his wristwatch to start the timing.
One hundred and seventy seconds later, Peron pulled the door open and motioned for Cranz to come into the apartment.
Cranz found himself in a small foyer. Three doors--all closed--led from it. The only furnishing was a small table with a lamp sitting on it, and a squat jar holding two umbrellas.
"Well?" Peron asked.
"We had word from Berlin today--there was a Condor flight--giving the details of a new special shipment," Cranz said. "We need your help again; el Coronel Schmidt and his Mountain Troops."
"The last time I had the Mountain Troops 'help' you, Cranz, at Tandil, it was nearly a disaster. It was a disaster, and it could have been much, much worse."
"You're a soldier, mi coronel. You know as well as I do that things sometimes get out of hand. The SS officer who let things get out of hand at Tandil paid for it with his life."
"I almost paid for his letting 'things get out of hand' with my life," Peron said.
"It was a very bad situation, mi coronel. We cannot ever let something like that happen again."
"No, we can't. If you came here to suggest that I be anywhere near where the special shipment will be landed, or have anything to do with it, I must disappoint you."
"Mi coronel, it was not my intention--everyone recognizes how important you are to all those things we are trying to do, and that we would be lost without you--to suggest that you go to Samborombon Bay, or that the Mountain Troops go to the beach. We are prepared to handle the landing operation ourselves.
"But what I was hoping is that you would see the wisdom of authorizing another 'road march exercise' for Schmidt's Mountain Troops. In addition to the special shipment, there will be another SS security detachment. An officer and ten other ranks--"
"To be taken to San Martin de los Andes, you mean?"
"And we realize that both you and el Coronel Schmidt have expenses"--Cranz took a business-size envelope from his pocket and extended it to Peron--"which we of course are happy to take care of."
After a moment, Peron took the envelope and glanced inside. It was stuffed with U.S. one-hundred-dollar bills.
There were 250 of them, none of them new. They had come from the currency in the special shipments. The $25,000 in American currency was equivalent to almost 100,000 Argentine pesos, a very substantial amount of money. And American dollars were in demand. German Realm Marks had virtually no value in the international market.
For a moment, Peron appeared to be on the verge of handing the dollar-stuffed envelope back to Cranz.
"You will handle the landing operation itself?" Peron asked. "You can do that?"
"I believe we can, mi coronel. But looking at the worst-case scenario: Even if something went terribly wrong on the beach, this would not involve the Mountain Troops at all. They wouldn't be anywhere near the beach."
Peron considered that for a moment.
Then he slipped the envelope into his right lower tunic pocket. The deal had been struck. The Mountain Troops would take the special shipment and the SS men to San Martin de los Andes.
Cranz wondered how much--if any--of the $25,000 Peron would share with Oberst Schmidt.
Probably none.
"Tell me about the kidnapping planned for Senor Mallin," Peron said. "I should have heard about that; I should not find myself in the position of having to ask."
"Excuse me, mi coronel?"
"I think you heard me, Cranz."
"I don't know a Senor Mallin."
"He is Cletus Frade's father-in-law," Peron said. "And Don Cletus apparently believes that someone is planning to kidnap him."
"Mi coronel," Cranz said after a just-perceptible hesitation, "I know nothing of an attempt to kidnap anyone."
Peron's eyes tightened; it was obvious to Cranz that Peron didn't believe him.
"I give you my word of honor as a German officer, mi coronel."
Peron looked into his eyes for a long moment.
"For lunch today, I went to the Yacht Club," Peron said. "As we drove up, I saw Senor Mallin's car. He drives a Rolls-Royce drop-head coupe--"
"Excuse me, a what?"
"Canvas roof," Peron explained impatiently. "It was parked on the curving drive leading up to the main entrance of the Yacht Club. Behind it was a Ford station wagon, of the Estancia San Pedro y San Pablo. In it were three men whom I recognized as former soldiers of the Husares de Pueyrredon. Inside the foyer, at the door to the main dining room, there was another. He recognized me from our service together. I asked him what he and the others were up to. He said, 'Don Cletus believes the goddamn Nazis are going to try to kidnap Don Enrico Mallin. If they try it, we will kill them.' "
" 'The goddamn Nazis'?" Cranz blurted.
"They believe 'the goddamn Nazis' assassinated el Coronel Frade," Peron said pointedly. He paused, then added, "As you well know, Cranz."
"Mi coronel, all I can do is repeat, again on my officer's honor: I know nothing of a planned kidnapping."
"Has it occurred to you, Cranz, has it occurred to anyone, that if something like that happened, Cletus Frade would certainly make good on his threat to ensure that the photographs taken of me at Tandil would be published?"
"Of course it has, mi coronel. And we will do nothing that would cause that to happen."
"If those photographs came out--and/or the photograph Cletus Frade has of the map of the South American continent after the Final Victory, which Brigadefuhrer von Deitzberg was kind enough to give me--not only would my usefulness to the cause end, but General Rawson would be inclined--almost be forced--to seriously consider declaring war on the Axis."
"Mi coronel, again, on my word of honor . . ."
"I don't think this kidnapping is a product of my godson's feverish imagination, Cranz. As we have learned, he is a very capable intelligence officer. He didn't move his wife to Mendoza so she could take in the mountain air."
"Well, I'll get to the bottom of this. You have--"
"I know, your word," Peron interrupted. "And tell Ambassador von Lutzenberger this, Cranz. I have taken certain actions to protect myself in the event something like this happens. The result of that would be more than a little embarrassing to everyone in the German Embassy. Understand this: Juan Domingo Peron is not expendable."
"I will get to the bottom of this."
"Once you tell me the date of the arrival of the special shipment, I will get word to you when and where the Mountain Troop convoy will be."
Peron pushed open the door to the elevator foyer and gestured for Cranz to go through it.
"Buenas noches, Senor Cranz. I will expect to hear from you shortly."
[FOUR].
Aeropuerto Coronel Jorge G. Frade
Moron, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
1205 27 September 1943
Cletus Frade was pleased but not really surprised to see SAA's Lodestar Ciudad de Mar del Plata taxi up to the terminal. Flight 107, daily nonstop service from Mendoza, was right on schedule; it was due at noon.
Five minutes one way or the other really cuts the mustard.
Neither, three minutes later, was he really surprised to see a visibly pregnant, truly beautiful blond young woman carefully exit the aircraft as the first deplaning passenger.
Now that he had time to think about it, when he had spoken with Dorotea on the Collins late the night before, she hadn't protested at all when he said there was really no reason for her to come to Buenos Aires to see him off. That should have told him she intended to come to Buenos Aires to see him off and was not interested in his opinion on the subject.
He stepped out of the passenger terminal as she walked to it.
"My God, you're beautiful!" his wife greeted him. "Now I'm really glad I came!"
Frade was wearing the uniform of an SAA captain.
"Humberto's idea," Clete said, kissing Dorotea. "They're going to take pictures. I feel like the driver of one of those sightseeing whatchacallums. . . ."
"What?"
"At the New York World's Fair, 1939-40, they had little sightseeing trains that ran all over. The drivers had uniforms just like these. Powder blue with gold buttons and stripes. They'd announce things like, 'And to your left, ladies and gentlemen, is the General Motors Pavilion.' "
"You're right," Dorotea said, and giggled. "They did. God, don't tell anyone."
"You were there?" he asked, surprised.
"Daddy took us," she said. "We could have met."
"In 1939, you were fourteen years old."
"We went in 1940, I was fifteen."
"In 1940, I was a Naval Aviation cadet en route to Pensacola. I wasn't interested in fifteen-year-old girls."
"Only because you hadn't met this one."