“I was just telling Willi, here,” Frade said, “that this is Switzerland, a neutral corner of the property where, under the benevolent eye of Father Welner, we’re all noncombatants. Willi, you know Father Welner, of course, and my Uncle Humberto.”
Humberto Duarte smiled and said, “Of course,” although he had never seen Fischer before.
“These gentlemen, Willi, are Major Freiherr Hans-Peter von Wachtstein, whose wife you just met, and Kapitän zur See Karl Boltitz, of the German Embassy. Gentlemen, this is Wilhelm Fischer, whom Humberto prevailed upon to come all the way here from South Africa to teach me how to grow better grapes.”
In turn, von Wachtstein and Boltitz clicked their heels as they offered Fischer their hands. And again Fischer remembered not to click his.
A maid walked up with drinks on a tray, interrupting the conversation. When Frade had taken a bourbon and water and Fischer a glass of red wine, and she left, Boltitz asked: “If I may ask, Mr. Fischer, is Afrikaans anything like German?”
“If you’re politely asking if Willi speaks German, Karl,” Frade said. “Yes, he does.”
“Then we can chat in German,” Boltitz said.
“He got his the same way Hansel and El Jefe got their Spanish,” Frade said.
“How is that?” Boltitz asked a little uneasily.
“He had a sleeping dictionary,” Frade said. “And even more interesting, you have a mutual friend. Claus something. What was your friend’s last name, Willi?”
Fischer met his eyes for a moment.
“Von Stauffenberg,” Fischer said. “Claus, Graf von Stauffenberg.”
“I don’t place the name,” Boltitz said.
“Nor I,” von Wachtstein said.
“Sure you do, Hansel,” Frade said. “You told me you visited him in the hospital.”
Von Wachtstein looked at Frade as if Frade had lost his mind.
“I was with Claus the day before he was . . . injured,” Fischer said.
“Cletus, what the hell is going on here?” von Wachtstein snapped.
“Just remember that this is Wilhelm Fischer, of Durban, South Africa, whom Humberto arranged to come here to teach me how to grow better grapes,” Frade said. “None of us can afford to have anyone—especially El Bitcho—looking at him suspiciously.”
“Cletus,” Boltitz said very seriously, “Delgano is paid to be suspicious, he’s very good at being suspicious, and it looks as if he’s about to walk over here.”
“Not a problem. He already knows who Willi really is.”
“And who might that be?” von Wachtstein asked more than a little sarcastically.
“Oberstleutnant Wilhelm Frogger, late of the Afrikakorps, Herr Major,” Fischer said. “And more recently of the Senior German Officer Prisoner of War Detention Facility at Camp Clinton, Mississippi.”
He let that sink in a moment.
“I saw it as my duty as a German officer to give my parole to Major Frade in order to assist him in dealing with my parents. And to assist however I can in that other project you and our friend Claus are involved in.”
Neither von Wachtstein nor Boltitz could keep their surprise—even shock—off their faces.
“We’ll all have to get together, and soon, to have a little chat,” Frade said, then turned to face a short, muscular man of about forty with large dark eyes.
“Ah, Gonzalo!” he said. “Willi, this is Gonzalo Delgano, chief pilot of South American Airways. Gonzo, this is Mr. Wilhelm Fischer, who has come all the way from South Africa to teach me how to grow grapes.”
“How do you do, Mr. Fischer?” Delgano asked. “Welcome to Argentina.”
[TWO]