...right. Send me what ya have, and I'll look over it.
westpointer6612@yahoo.com
Right now I'm teaming up with a lawyer from a neighboring city and my civics teacher to help refine my politico-military ideas (see the papers I've posted here)
Here's more of that one chapter- I know I'm giving you small bits, but what the heck.
Jackson looked at the screen- there was a file open in a text editor. The sergeant shoved aside Jödel’s body and let the corpse slump to the floor with a dull thud. He took the late prime minister’s office seat and laid his SOCOM on the table.
It was strange, slightly macabre, to occupy a dead man’s chair, but Paul didn’t dwell on it. The document open on the screen was a memo to a General Amadeus within the Bundeswehr, apparently a key figure in the higher echelons judging from the greetings. Nothing was unusual at face value. Jackson read on.
The first part of the memo contained little useful information- there was a reference to H&K and the Rhineland operation -word gets around fast these days; looks like Jödel’s in cahoots with Heckler and Koch in a big way- and how it would slow down production rates and cause a problem within the current supply demands. There was nothing unusual about this on the surface, just plain, simple facts, but Jackson got the feeling that there was something more, some secret urgency shared between the dead man at his feet and this General Amadeus.
Scrolling down through the document, Jackson found a large map of Russia (Russland, as the map indicated) with locations of Russian areas of interest.
That was unusual. Most of the locations were resource centers in the western Russo-Polish border. He saw the name Sigfried littered throughout the document.
Now, who the hell is this mysterious Sigfried? This is getting weirder by the second. Jackson’s mind drew a blank- Sigfried wasn’t mentioned in any documents he’d read before coming to Munich. However, he was spoken of as an “open negotiator” and “Savior” for the Russians. What was this enigmatic power player doing with Jödel? Could he have had anything to do with the PM’s body laying at the sergeant’s feet?
Foremost in his mind was the disturbing question: Does Sigfried have anything to do with Alexei Petrov?
“Othic,” breathed the sergeant, “Do you remember anything in the briefings about someone named ‘Sigfried’? He’s all over this document.”
“Nothing in the briefings, Jackson. Put it on disk and we can work with it later,” the captain replied after a moment.
Dead end- keep looking. Who the hell is this guy?
Jackson saved the file to a floppy and opened a few more at random. He stopped at another memorandum to Amadeus in case he should find the answer to the new Sigfried mystery. Near the middle of the memo was a sentence explaining the “administering of Sigfried” by the Bundeswehr.
Administer a person? What the hell? He read over the last few sentences; he found that his translation had been accurate. Towards the end of the document he found the very same map of Russland from the first memo. We have economic centers, military bases, and they’re all in eastern Poland or Western Russia. On the basis of Jödel being a neo-Nazi, that sounds suspicious. Probably a good thing the racist little prick’s dead.
Germany’s problems are within the state, not with the hardliners in Russia- but the eastern Silesia area is a hot spot for the fascists; we learned that much in the briefings. What was happening?
Nothing the Germans were doing with the Bundeswehr as described by the papers he’d read made any sense. It seemed as though Jödel was putting his home army smack in the middle of his support base, and right on the border of another country. A troubling thought crept across Jackson’s mind on that note- Could Jödel be trying to make a drive into Poland? Occupy Warsaw, or destabilize the East enough for serious reallocation of lands? Near the end of the second memo was a sentence praising the “future contributions of Sigfried” to “a new German people”.
That was when Jackson understood the mysterious Sigfried.