Michael Wenberg - The Last Eagle

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Forced into a neutral Estonian port for repairs during the chaos of the opening days of World War II, the Polish submarine, the “Eagle” and her crew are betrayed by their captain and captured by Nazi sympathizers. The crew, however, isn’t content to sit out the war. With help from unexpected sources—a naval attaché with the British Embassy and a courageous American reporter and her photographer sidekick—they overcome their captors, regain control of the “Eagle,” and escape. The German’s are convinced the “Eagle’s” crew has no stomach for a fight and will seek refuge in Sweden. But the Poles have something else in mind—join up with the British Fleet and continue fighting against their homeland’s Nazi conquerors. They face stiff odds. The “Eagle” has little food and water, few torpedoes, and no sea charts. And before she can rendezvous with the British somewhere in the North Sea, she must traverse the Baltic, which has become little more than a Nazi-controlled lake.
This story is inspired by the exploits of the Polish submarine, “Orzel,” during the early weeks of World War II.
Winston Churchill called her escape from the Nazis “an epic.”

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He found Sieinski behind the fourth door. He was face down across the bed, snoring pleasantly, wearing nothing but black, knee high socks and a soiled undershirt. A sweet smell tainted the air. The stench took Stefan back to his one and only visit to a Chinese opium den during a long ago visit to Hong Kong.

“How long has he been out?” he asked the woman sitting in a chair in the corner of the room, staring with a blank face out the window at the distant fires. She was naked, long black hair draped over her shoulders like a scarf, her skin pale as a newborn child’s.

The woman turned her head slowly and stared at Stefan with black eyes. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Why didn’t you say anything? I yelled.”

“Oh, was that what I heard?” the woman sighed, her voice soft, the words sounding as clear and musical as notes on a piano. “It just sounded like war.”

She saved him the effort of a response. “It has begun?”

Stefan nodded.

“Who?”

“Germans.”

“Again?” The woman took a long draw on her cigarette, hollows forming in her cheeks as she sucked the smoke deeply into her lungs. “And so, what is to become of us all?”

Stefan had never seen the woman before, knew he would he would never see her again. If there was a next time, she would be clothed, and that would provide enough of a disguise to make her unrecognizable. But as he stared at the woman, noting her perfect, heart shaped face, he was less taken with how she looked, and more curious about where she had learned to speak Polish. Her accent was almost flawless.

“French, in case you’re wondering,” she said, reading his mind. “My dear auntie was Polish. She raised me from an infant after my mother killed herself. And yes, it was my fault, they all said. Are you from his boat?”

Eagle ,” Stefan said.

“Ah, yes, and an Eagle needs her captain.”

When Stefan didn’t reply, the woman smiled. “I see,” she said. “Did you realize you are so transparent? The conflict of duty and desire. That is always a torment of a life afflicted by opposites. In the East, they call it yin and yang. It afflicts you, and also my Józef.” She gestured at the bed. “He has the same problem. Of course, for all of us, the names of duty and desire are different, but at their heart they are the same.” She took another greedy pull from her cigarette. “You know he hates that thing, that Eagle ? But his father expects it, and ever the dutiful son, he complies. But it will never end, these demands.”

The captain of the Eagle , his bare ass sticking like a surrender flag into the air, shifted position and farted.

“So much like a baby,” the woman said.

“I need to get him back to the ship,” Stefan said, rubbing his eyes, suddenly feeling wearier than ever before. Get him dressed. Please. I need to make a phone call. And then we will be off.”

“So polite, and you don’t look like a gentleman, but I see that looks are deceiving, at least in your case.”

“No they aren’t,” Stefan said, scratching his beard with a thick finger. He reached into his pocket, pulled out a hunk of bread, tore off a mouthful “I’ll be back to get him in five minutes. And I’ll take him then however he is.”

When Stefan returned, Sieinski was completely dressed, lying flat on his back on the bed, snoring softly. The woman had pulled on a robe, sheer enough that Stefan noticed her nipples hard against the fabric. For some reason, that was more erotic than when she was completely naked, and Stefan felt a response in his groin, surprised that the instinct to copulate could surface even under these circumstances. He noticed a sheen of perspiration on her forehead.

“What is your name?”

“Stefan…. and yours?”

The woman frowned. “It does not matter. We will never meet again.”

“Then why did you ask my name?”

The woman stared at him. “I wanted to remember you in my prayers to the Black Virgin of Czstochowa,” she said.

Stefan blinked, embarrassed now by what he had been thinking. “I’m sorry to say I can’t return the favor,” Stefan said. The shake in his voice was a surprise.

“You give up on God?” the woman said.

Stefan gave a wry smile.

The woman bowed her head briefly. When she looked up again, she was crying. “My name is Marie,” she said.

With that, they both knew there was nothing more to say. Stefan flung the captain over his shoulder. He felt a tug on his sleeve as he stepped through the doorway. Before he could turn, Marie brushed her lips against his cheek. “God be with you,” she said.

Stefan was stricken once again by the sweetness of her voice and her words.

“Promise you’ll take care of him,” she whispered.

“I’ll do what I can.”

The woman released him.

True to his word, the old man hadn’t left, despite the well-dressed crowd shouting in his face and the angry rings from the floors above and blow.

“Out of order,” repeated the old man, shaking his head back and forth like an obstinate ox. “Take the stairs.”

His eyes darkened with disappointment at Stefan’s approach. “Clear a path,” he bellowed, “Important business.” Then he stepped back into the elevator, followed closely behind by Stefan and the captain.

“I thought you said out of order?” one woman cried, clutching a fossilized poodle to her chest.

“Just fixed itself,” the old man chirped. He pulled the door closed, and gave everyone a gummy grin.

“Full speed ahead, Chief.”

“Aye, aye, Captain.”

On the return trip, the streets were even more chaotic. Soldiers with packs and rifles hustled to waiting trucks, engines roaring, headlights doused for fear it would attract more attacks from the air. Sirens continued to wail and nervous gunners occasionally probed the night sky with tracers. It had been at least a half an hour since the last Stuka had disappeared into the black sky.

“Did you hear the news, Navy?” cried an officer, standing on the running board of a truck, when he spied Stefan.

“Which one?” Stefan said, shifting his load to the other shoulder and slowing as he passed.

“Germans are attacking on the western front. There’s been a general mobilization.”

“Heard that,” Stefan quipped. While Marie had dressed the captain, he had managed to get through to Polish Navy headquarters at Hel, surprised when the phone had been answered on the first ring. Once he’d identified himself, he’d received a quick update from the senior officer on staff, one of the few he was actually friendly with. “Early reports are that the Germans attacking across a wide front. We’re trying to get everything out to sea. That’s all I know. What about the Eagle ?”

“We’ll be gone in a few hours,” Stefan had promised.

“How?” the officer had started to say, and then he caught himself. “OK, I don’t want to know how. Use a couple of fishing boats, and tow her out of the harbor for all I care.”

“That thought had crossed my mind,” Stefan quipped, eliciting a bark of laughter on the other end of the line. “Any word on the Reds?” Stefan asked.

“None. All quiet.”

Stefan heard a yell on the other end of the line. “At once, sir,” his friend said. “I’ve been ordered to do something important—get coffee for them.” The softness in his voice underscored the bitterness of his words. “Take care,” he said, and then the line went dead.

Stefan shook his head. If that was how Poland’s leaders were reacting to the crisis, then they were in more trouble than he dared imagine. “Heard anything about the Russians?” he called to the officer on the truck.

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