Lane arrived at the Rock of Gibraltar in
October 1940. Because the proprietors were sensitive to any
interference by outsiders, he was listed as a temporarily inactive
airman sent for recuperation.
He would not be allowed to fly, and would not
offer any criticism of existing facilities or policies. He would
serve in whatever capacity to which it was convenient to assign
him, and when he completed his recovery he would return to England
to rejoin his unit. In short, he was represented as exactly what he
was: a disabled airman who needed to be parked somewhere away from
his unit until he was able to resume full activity. That way he
could not interfere with the efficiency of his unit, or endanger
his fellow airmen by being too eager to get back into the air.
The fact that Gibraltar was right next to
Spain was officially irrelevant. No one here knew Lane's personal
motive for being here. No one except Bader, who would not tell.
Lane smiled, thinking of that. Bader had done him an enormous
favor, and earned his lifetime loyalty thereby. But Bader had also
succeeded in making him take the inactive time required, willingly.
Bader had put it all together. That was his genius.
Gibraltar was impressive from the air. It was
geologically a "bill," or projection from land, the opposite of a
fjord or inlet. Lane, unused to being a passenger instead of a
pilot, nevetheless appreciated the chance to gaze at it with his
whole attention. The thing was like a sleeping two-humped camel,
its head down out of sight. The higher hump was to the north, to
his surprise; he had somehow thought the rock rose to its
southernmost extremity, then plunged into the sea. That was far
from the case; the rise was nearly vertical at the north, just
below the isthmus that connected it to the mainland, and tapered
down to the sea at the south. The east side was too steep for use,
but the west had roads and buildings all along its gentler slope.
Several great moles reached out from the west to enclose the
harbor.
They served as the port for Force H, the
British naval group consisting of the battle cruiser Hood, the
battleships Resolution and Valiant, the aircraft carrier Ark Royal,
several other cruisers, and fleet destroyers. The Eighth Submarine
Flotilla was also here. The fighter planes served to protect these
assorted ships. Lane had reviewed it all, and now was seeing it
come to life.
Had he likened the peninsula to a sleeping
camel? No, as the angle of approach shifted he saw the sharp ridges
at its top, and the slanted water catchments on the eastern slope.
The ridge was after all highest at the southern part, before
commencing its slant. The Rock was more like a great ship, a
monstrous three-mile-long battleship, no, a carrier ship, with its
superstructure off to one side to make space for the landing decks.
And that was what it was, essentially: a mighty dreadnought neither
battleship nor carrier, but a colossal attack ship docked for the
moment at the continent, about to set off for some unimaginable
voyage. If he had to be out of his airplane and on a ship, this was
the ship to be on.
Historically, he had learned, Gibraltar had
been reckoned as one of the Pillars of Hercules, the great rocks
guarding the entrance to the Mediterranean Sea. The other Pillar
was the Spanish Ceuta on the North African coast. The ancient
Phoenician mariners were said to have crowned the rocks with silver
columns to mark the limits of safe navigation. In the eighth
century A.D. the Moslems had fortified Gibraltar after invading
Spain. In the fourteenth century it was captured by the Castilians,
but soon regained by the Moors, who held it for more than another
century. It finally passed into the hands of the British early in
the eighteenth century, who had held it against all comers. Now
they had deepened theharbor and built a new airfield on it, making
it more formidable than ever. Spain had wanted possession of the
Rock for centuries, but was unlikely to get it.
So today the British held Gibraltar, Malta and
Cyprus, and effectively controlled the Mediterranean Sea from end
to end. The center of British strategy was Malta, but Gibraltar was
a staging area for the convoys to that island, and its
carrier-based Hurricanes protected those convoys. Oh, to be in one
of those Hurricanes!
But if Gibraltar were ever wrested from the
British, the others would follow, and the Axis would control the
region. That was why it was so important to defend the Rock; the
ultimate security of the region might well depend on it.
They circled around and came down on the
landing strip on the northern isthmus. It looked pitifully short;
he would recommend that it be lengthened if they want to do any
serious flying from it.
They drove into the town on the west slope,
where Lane reported to the residence of the governor. "Here you
are, sir,"
the driver said, pulling up at the south edge
of town. "The Convent."
"There must be some misunderstanding," Lane
said.
"I can't go to a convent!"
The man laughed. "That's the Government House!
It's always been called the Convent, because that's what it was
when it started."
So it turned out to be. Lane found the
necessary office within, registered, and was then taken to a
temporary residence elsewhere in town.
He gazed out toward the west. The water of the
bay was dark, but there were lights along the moles and along the
mainland farther away. There were also small craft moving about
with searchlights playing across the water. It was pretty, but he
was sure they weren't doing it for fun. What were they looking for?
Then he heard muffled explosions, as if
fireworks were being detonated under the water. This merely
increased the mystery.
They were definitely up to something.
In the morning he returned to the Convent to
inquire about his assignment. He assumed that he would be put on a
work detail or something similar; it might not be fun, but it would
be useful.
He had no special illusions about the fate of a
grounded airman, and expected to be treated as something of an
outcast. He had in effect asked for it, by transferring away from
his home unit.
All he got was a bland assurance that
something would be found; he would be notified in due course. As
the days passed and no notification came, he realized that he was
in bureaucratic limbo.
"What's going on here?" he asked a bunkmate.
"Don't tell me there are no junk details on Gibraltar!"
"The minds of adminstrative officials are
inscrutible in their stupidity," the man said. "But my guess is
that they're distracted by the chariots."
"The what?"
"It's an Italian horror. We didn't even know
what was going on, until one of them washed up on the beach. A
chariot is a torpedo ridden by two men in diving suits. It's got a
large explosive warhead that they can detach and fix to the target
ship. Then the crew rides the torpedo away before the timer blows
it. Nobody's supposed to know they've been there, until it's too
late. Except that one of them got stuck in silt under the harbor;
it blew, and we knew something was up, and got on it and captured
the men and learned all about it."
Lane did not have to inquire why the Italians
had given the information.
Geneva conventions were honored by both sides
in word rather than deed. What was called torture when the enemy
did it was called interrogation when the home team did it. It was
better simply to answer the questions and come away with one's
health.
"So that's why the night motor launches, and
searchlights, and the small explosions," Lane said. "To get rid of
the chariots. Those small charges are just enough to kill any
personnel that might be down there."
"You got it. They're laying barbed wire on the
bottom, too, and adding torpedo nets. It's hell down there."
Lane believed it. The appearance of the
nocturnal bay was lovely, but the reality was ugly. The war was
being fought here out of sight, but was as serious as it was
elsewhere.
He settled in to the routine. There was
nothing for him to do, so he applied for a passport to visit Spain
and meanwhile explored the Rock. Could it really hold out against a
real attack?
The defenses were even more formidable than he
had thought.
The walls of the Rock were hollowed out,
forming galleries at various levels. In those embrasures were heavy
cannon and antiaircraft guns. Any frontal assault would be
tremendously costly, if it succeeded at all.
On the second day Lane walked the road that
circled the peninsula, searching for any possible weakness in the
defenses. He had already concluded that there was none, but he had
the foolish notion that he might make himself useful by spotting
something that had so far been missed. He enjoyed traversing the
tunnels that took over when the slope was too steep to support the
road.
One morning there was a solid fog, making
everything clammy.
"What is this, England?" Lane demanded
humorously.
"It's the Levanter Cloud," one of the workers
told him.
"The what?"
"The east wind, called the Levanter, prevails.
It sweeps across the warm Mediterranean. The warm air strikes the
rock and rises up the east face to maybe fifteen hundred feet,
where it cools and forms a cloud. It's worst in summer, up to
September, but it can happen anytime. Sometimes it shrouds us and
spreads right across to the mainland. When it's really heavy its
like living in a Turkish bath. We say the rock is wearing its hat.
Sometimes it generates gusting winds, and we
get little waterspouts."
Lane's irritation with the fog was replaced by
intrigue. This was a more interesting place than he had thought.
This was just as well, because without a regular job to do, and
without many of the amenities of civilian life, boredom was a more
immediate threat than the Axis. There were no women to speak of
here; they had been moved out because of concern that the rock
would come under siege. The men from the naval vessels that
constantly stopped here were loud in their objection to this
aspect. They expected to avail themselves of the pleasures of the
female flesh, as they routinely did in every port, and could not.
That meant considerable discontent, which found its own expression.
Fights were frequent, and drinking and gambling were heavy.
Lane climbed the heights. It wasn't as if he
could fancy himself the first man there, because Rock Gun was the
name of the highest point, with its gun emplacement: twin 9.2
inchers. On the other peak were the ruins of the old Moorish
castle, surely no match for that artillery. So there had been
plenty of action at these heights. Still, it gave him a certain
feeling of freedom and accomplishment, and the view was good.
The Greeks had believed that this was the end
of the world.
At least that was the implication of Homer's
description in the Iliad: "Styx in her glorious house, roofed over
with long rocks, propped up to heaven all around with silver
pillars."
St. Michael's Cave, here, contained a large
underground freshwater lake, ice cold and black, surrounded by
stalactites and stalagmites.
Water dripped from the rocks of the Rock,
freshened by its passage through the stone. Surely word of this had
reached the Greeks, perhaps by way of the Phoenicians, and it had
become part of their lore. Today that internally dripping water was
less romantic; aluminum Nissen huts and other prefabricated
shelters were erected inside the tunnels and caverns so that the
occupants did not get "rained" on.
The history of the Rock extended farther back
than that, however.
The first Neanderthal skull was discovered on
Gibraltar. It was female, and as the luck of the gender would have
it, was dismissed as not a serious find. They assumed that it was
merely a deformed modern skull. Nine years later there was another
discovery of the species at Neander in the Rhine Valley near
Dusseldorf, in Germany, and so it was named for this. Thus
Gibraltar Woman missed her opportunity for fame. With the women
gone from the Rock now, it was easy to suppose that it was because
of that neglect: the first woman was annoyed.
The first woman. Actually the Neantherthals
were not necessarily the ancestors of modern man; they might more
properly be considered close cousins. But the thought of a woman,
even a grotesque Neanderthal one (but who could say for sure? Maybe
she was cute) reminded him of his private reason for being here. It
was because of a woman.
Where was Quality Smith now? Her letters had
stopped, and that surely meant trouble. She would have written to
him if it were humanly possible. He had to find out what had
happened to her.
But it was evident that the Spanish government
was not rushing to issue him a passport. He had been warned that
the bureaucracy of such nations was horrendous. It might take
months, or it might be never. So what was he going to do?
He asked around, unofficially, and found out.
It was possible to visit the mainland. Twice a week knowledgeable
and nervy and desperate seamen bought rides with a local smuggler
named Jorge.
Their interest was the brothels of La Linea,
but the trader hardly cared what they did as long as they paid him
well enough.
Jorge was a Spanish given name, a common one,
the equivalent of the English George but pronounced more like
Hor-hee. Lane went to meet the man, understanding that news of any
of this must never reach the British officers. The officers surely
knew all about it, but did not interfere as long as things were
handled discreetly. Fortunately Jorge spoke enough English so that
they could communicate.
They bargained, and finally agreed on a price.
It was of course exorbitant, and it would leave his wallet thin,
but considering the value of such a trip, it was worth it. He would
pay half to take him safely out, and half to bring him safely back.
The trader's greed would keep him honest; this was a good
additional business for him.
He was ready on Jorge's next trading night,
dressed in Spanish peasant clothing. "More dirt," Jorge said,
rubbing some in. "You are the lowliest of workers, paid as little
as I can get away with."
They approached the boat. "I will get out and
take my money and empty boxes to my friend," Jorge said. He meant
his contact in the smuggling trade. "You will be my assistant.
You will carry for me. Then I will send you
back to watch the boat, but in the dark you will go where you wish,
and I will speak to you as I leave for my own house, as if you are
there. In four days I will be here again, and call to you to stay
with the boat; then you will go to it. But if you do not come, I
will not wait; I will pretend you are there, so no one suspects.
This is all I can do."
"If I am not there, it will be my own fault,"
Lane agreed.
"Now the money."
"Now half the money." Lane gave the man the
sheaf of bills. "My companion will meet us when we return in three
days, and he will have the other half. If I am not with you, he
will not pay you." Lane was of course not going to carry the money
with him; it had to be secure against betrayal.
The man nodded. It was fair.
They got into the craft, which was a stand-up
rowboat. Jorge showed Lane how to do it, and they took turns
rowing. There was a dim lantern hung on the bow, so that no one
would mistake the craft for anything else. This excursion might be
unofficial, but it was not secret; the guns of the British were not
kind to secrets near their shore.
"Now be properly servile," he said as they
approached the Spanish shore. "They must not suspect otherwise."
Then, as Lane rowed diligently, the trader
started exclaiming.
"No, no, dolt, that
way! Keep it moving! Must I do everything myself? Have you never
rowed a boat before?"
Lane smiled in the dark. He would have been
angry, were he anything other than a servant--or a spy. It was the
perfect camouflage.
They came to land, and a dark figure hauled
them in. "You bring a friend, this time, Jorge," he remarked.
"No, I bring a British spy!" Jorge retorted.
"What do you think?"
The man laughed. "Well, don't let him steal my
treasures!"
Jorge loaded Lane with boxes and led him to
the house. The light inside was dim. He set them down on the table.
Now Jorge would settle with his supplier for the value of the goods
he had moved, and make a deal for more for the next trip. "Go back
and watch the boat," Jorge snapped at Lane. "I will call you when I
want you."
Meekly, Lane obeyed. He left the house and
walked toward the shore. No one went with him; it was all a pose in
case any Spanish authorities were near. When he was reasonably sure
he was unobserved, he strode away from the boat and lost himself
among the bushes near the shore.
He waited, and in due course the trader
emerged from the house.
He walked to the boat. "Push off, idiot!" he
cried.
"Do you think we have all night?" And it did
seem as if there was a separate figure there with him. Jorge's
voice continued as the boat moved away, giving insulting
instructions to his assistant. The man had done his job--if he
hadn't secretly betrayed Lane to the Spanish.
No one came out searching. It seemed to be all
right. Lane moved out cautiously. When he found a more secure
place, he opened the pack he had carried in the form of a large
belly and took out the Spanish civilian worker's suit. Spain was
still suffering from the ravages of its civil war; there were many
men looking for work. He would be just one more of them.
First he had to rent a car. Jorge had told him
where to go for black market business of any type. He went there,
and got a battered but sound car. He familiarized himself with its
controls, and set off. With luck he might make Barcelona in a day,
and with further luck be able to run down the address of the Quaker
center there. Then if he could find someone who spoke English, who
knew Quality-
He closed his minds to all the luck he might
need. He simply had to find out. Quality was his fiancee!
But it was a hellish drive, because of the
delays. Why couldn't the Spaniards keep up their roads better! He
kept having to reverse and backtrack to avoid untenable routes.
Meanwhile the night was passing.
Then it got worse: on one of his backtracks,
he saw another car parked sidewise across the road, blocking it.
Someone was after him! But who could know he was here? Even Jorge
the Smuggler hadn't known where he was going. So it was more likely
some kind of highway robber, hoping to clean him out.
Lane came to a stop, turned out his lights,
drew his pistol, checked it, and tucked it under his jacket where
it wouldn't show.
He did not want to have to use it, but he had
no intention of being robbed or killed. Had something like this
happened to Quality?
She had been doing a lot of driving, her
letters said.
He got out and approached the figure standing
by the other car.
The man saw him in the early light and called
out a query in Spanish.
"I don't speak Spanish," Lane responded in
English.
He put his hand inside his shirt, grasping the
pistol. If there were any threatening gesture-
"Lane!" the man exclaimed. Lane was astounded.
He knew that voice. It was Ernst Best!
Amazed, they embraced. Then they talked,
getting things straight.
As it turned out, this was a stroke of luck for
each of them, because Ernst needed to make a report to his
superiors on the defenses of Gibraltar, and Lane needed someone he
could trust to check on Quality. So they made a deal of sorts, and
separated friends. Lane was relieved. Quality and Ernst had not
gotten along well together, but Ernst did know her, and would do
his best for her.
***
When Jorge set off again, Lane was there. He
got on the boat without event, and helped row the boat back.
They were met at the other landing. Jorge was
paid the other half of his fare, and was well satisfied.
Time passed. Lane's passport never did come
through, though that no longer mattered. Neither did his transfer
back to England.
Apparently his orders had gotten lost in the
shuffle of the war, and so he remained where he was. Finally he
went to the Convent on his own and asked to be assigned to
something useful for the duration.
"It shall be taken under advisement," the
clerk informed him. And of course nothing happened. Lane had to be
content with doing a lot of reading at the library. He also gave
the newspapers thorough perusal. He learned a tremendous amount
about the history of Gibraltar and the current progress of the war,
as well as getting quite sharp on the daily crossword puzzles.
In January 1941 the German 10th Air Corps was
transferred from Norway to Sicily. Lane knew that meant trouble for
Malta, because it was close to Sicily and the German pilots were
highly experienced in naval warfare. They were going to try to take
out that island stronghold, and stood a fair chance of doing it.
Lane had a lot of respect for air power, but wasn't sure the
British forces of the Mediterranean theater had enough respect for
it, yet. They thought they could just shoot down any plane that
came over.
They were apt to receive a hard education.
In February, before the German airmen were
fully established in Sicily, Force H left Gibraltar. It looked like
another convoy operation, but Lane hoped it was going to make a
pre-emptive attack on the Sicilian installations. Instead it
avoided the Italian battle fleet, which tried to intercept it, and
attacked the north Italian city of Genoa. The battleship bombarded
the city with fifteen inch shells. It blasted aircraft factories,
marshaling yards, and port installations, while the carrier
Ark Royal loosed its aircraft along the shore,
and mined the entrances to several ports. The operation was a huge
success, and there was a tremendous ovation as Force H returned to
Gibraltar.
Almost immediately after
that, Force H moved out again, this time into the Atlantic to
harass the German fleet. Then it settled down to work to keep the
supply convoys coming. Lane wished he could have a fighter plane
aboard the carrier, but he remained grounded and ignored.
The battle of Malta
commenced. A hundred and fifty German bombers attempted to blast
the island into rubble, while force H struggled to keep the
defenders supplied. Now they had respect for air power! German
bombers and Italian torpedo planes came at it, but the Ark Royal's
fighters broke up the attack formations in much the way Bader's
fighters had done in England.
On April 6, Germany
invaded Yugoslavia and Greece. Suddenly it was getting even hotter
in the Mediterranean. But Force H
fought its way through, and
the supplies were delivered. Malta survived.
On May 14 General The
Viscount Gort assumed the Governorship of Gibraltar. He had been
the commander of the British Expeditionary Forces in France, and he
stressed the need for full wartime preparedness.
Lane seized his chance. He
reported to the Convent again, demanding one minute with the
General. "I served in France,"
he said. "I saw what lack
of preparation cost us. Then I served in England, with Bader. I
have experience! If I can't fly, at least let me do something
useful."
Gort nodded. "We can use
you, Airman." The interview was over.
This time there was
follow-through. Lane was assigned to the group studying the
situation of the northern runway. "This thing is way too short," he
said. "Sure, your planes can use it now. But it's a different
matter when they have to scramble in a hurry. You need more parking
space to the sides, and efficient access, so that you can get full
squadrons up without delay. The Germans can come without much
warning, and then every second will count. The fighters have to get
out fast!"
They agreed, and General
Gort was advised. At last Lane was feeling useful again. He had
told Ernst that the Rock was virtually impregnable, but this was
one of its chief weaknesses: inadequate facilities for fast
scrambling. Now he was doing something about it.
Meanwhile, the war
continued. Force H went out again, to the Atlantic, and took on the
great German battleship Bismarck.
A torpedo from one of the carrier's planes
finally jammed the German ship's steering gear, crippling it so
that it could be dispatched May 26.
In June Germany invaded
Russia. Lane and the others were amazed.
It had seemed that the
thrust was to be against England. Germany had signed a pact with
the Communists! Why was it taking on a new enemy when it didn't
have to? Adolf Hitler seemed to have shot himself in the
foot!
In October General Gort
received authorization to extend and pave the runway. The project
turned out to be far more extensive than Lane had hoped. They
extended the runway out west into the bay. This required a
tremendous amount of fill material. Some of it came from rock
tunneled from the interior, but most of it was taken from the
slopes of the North Face. There was quarry blasting, and powerful
hoses were used to bring down the sand, gravel and rock.
The work continued for a
year, and the runway kept lengthening.
Finally it was just over
fifteen hundred yards long, and a hundred and fifty feet wide, with
extensive parking areas on either side.
Lane had urged better space
for aircraft, but this was phenomenal.
What was the general up
to?
Meanwhile the German
aircraft disappeared from the Mediterranean theater. There was no
mystery here: they were being used in the invasion of Russia. Force
H no longer had any difficulty reinforcing and supplying Malta. But
when winter stalled the offensive in Russia, the German planes and
submarines returned to the Mediterranean.
This time the siege was to
be worse than before.
The German General Rommel
was moving in Africa, driving for the Suez Canal in Egypt. It
seemed that Hitler was determined to destroy British power in the
Mediterranean, so that Rommel could complete his mission without
British harassment. Now the fury of a competent campaign
manifested, in contrast to the Italians'
somewhat fumbling efforts.
On November 13 a German submarine sank the Ark Royal as Force H was
returning to Gibraltar from a patrol. Suddenly the folk of the Rock
felt the full consequence of war.
On December 11 Germany
declared war on the United States of America.
Lane had been in this war
all along; now he knew that all his countrymen were in it too. He
hoped that Quality was not in further trouble because of it; if she
had been taken by the Germans, she would now be an enemy prisoner.
But he tried not to think about Quality, because there was only
pain and emptiness there. It was getting harder to convince himself
that she remained alive.
Had he not been confined to
a place of no women, his constancy might have been tested.
The opening of the Pacific
theater was similarly grim. The Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor,
inflicting devastating losses and effectively destroying American
sea power there. In February 1942 the British lost Singapore, and
then Burma. There seemed to be no good news anywhere.
But it was the Second
Battle of Malta that concerned the personnel of Gibraltar. General
Gort was transferred to the command of Malta. Force H left to
escort the force that seized Madagascar in a preventive action so
that the Japanese could not establish themselves there. Force W
came to the Rock instead, and it included the American carrier USS
Wasp, equipped with spitfires. It was like a taste of home, for
Lane.
Several convoys fought
their way through to Malta during the spring and summer of 1942.
That was the appropriate description: fought. The Germans were
doing their best to close off that sea, and inflicted heavy losses
on the merchant ships and their escorts.
In one case, the American
tanker Ohio finally made it through--crewed by British sailors,
held up by a destroyer lashed to either side, the sole survivor of
that convoy.
But now America was
mobilizing her considerable resources, and her presence was being
increasingly felt. The Allied counteroffensive was developing. The
plan was first to attack the soft underbelly of Europe through the
Mediterranean. North Africa would be occupied, and used as a
springboard to drive Italy out of the war. But before the American
forces entered the Mediterranean, they wanted to be sure that
Gibraltar, the guardian of the Straits, was secure.
That remained the linchpin;
had the Germans been able to take out Gibraltar, none of this would
have been possible, and the German situation would have been
virtually impregnable.
Gibraltar was also to
provide air cover for the invasion fleets.
Now the reason for the huge
expansion of the runway became clear: Gibraltar was to be the base
for Operation Torch, the invasion of North Africa. It would provide
air cover for the troopships, as well as being the major port for
the fleets. Nearly four hundred aircraft of various types were
crammed into the dispersal areas around the Gibraltar runway.
Fighters had been shipped in crates and were assembled on the
airfield. One hundred sixty eight American pilots came to be housed
in the RAF messes at North Front. Lane felt a curious ambivalence:
he was American, but he had flown for the R.A.F., so did not really
identify with his countrymen.
But he was able to help
orient them, because he knew the American slang and could cut
through misunderstandings.
Meanwhile it seemed that
the Allies were watching Spain somewhat apprehensively. Lane knew
why, thanks to his background research done during his extended
idleness. Spain was officially neutral, but leaned toward the Axis,
and Spain could cut off the Strait at any time. They did not want
to give Spain any pretext to enter the war. They knew that the
Germans would be urging General Franco to do just that, cutting the
Allied line and attacking Gibraltar.
Spain had once had a great
empire, and Spanish Morocco was the last remnant of it; if Franco
thought that was threatened, he might indeed act. So the Allies did
several things to discourage this: they made the Americans the
major partners in the effort, because America had no territorial
ambitions here; they encouraged a more generous flow of food and
commodities to Spain through the Allied blockade; they attempted no
occupation of Spanish territory; and they proceeded without seeming
hesitation with overwhelming force. Lane knew that these were
signals General Franco understood, and he did elect to remain
neutral. Still, it was nervous business.
But there was one more
concern. Intelligence had learned that Hitler did have a plan for
marching through Spain, called Ilona.
If Franco allowed that, then the Nazis
themselves would control the Strait, and Gibraltar would be under
immediate siege. So they tricked the Nazis by making it seem that
the buildup at Gibraltar was for another major effort to relieve
Malta. Also, Franco had agreed to enter the war only if Rommel
reached the Suez Canal, which would virtually assure the axis
victory in the Mediterranean.
But Rommel had not reached it, so Spain did not
allow the Germans to march through Spanish territory. Since the
Germans did not want to invade Spain--why antagonize a
friend?--they let it go.
That was to make all the difference.
Force H returned. Then in
November America's General Eisenhower arrived and took over command
of the Rock. On the following days the landing on the Algerian
coast proceeded. The counteroffensive had begun, and Gibraltar was
its key. Lane, his records seemingly lost in the bureaucratic
morass, remained in the war after all.
But what had happened to
Quality? Had Ernst found her, and if so, what had he been able to
do to help her? This concern almost nullified Lane's satisfaction
with the progress of the war.