recall.â
âYes. But I prefer flowers.â She took the sprig from behind her ear and gave it a sniff.
âWhat did you do with the mushrooms you found?â
âI threw them away, of course. Wild mushrooms can be very poisonous.â
âThen why pick them?â
âI like the sensation when nature loses its grip.â
Gottlieb uncapped the fountain pen, jotted another note in her file. He tried to make it look casual. He hoped the tremble in his hand didnât betray his unease.
A knock at the door derailed his train of thought. The door swung open. Standartenführer Pabst barged in.
âIâm with a patient now,â said Gottlieb.
The colonel glanced at Gretel. âLeave us.â
âAs you wish.â She stood. âGood day, Doctor.â Off she went, trailing mud and the scent of lavender.
Pabst closed the door. He said, âDr. von Westarp has been summoned to Berlin. Reichsführer Himmler wishes to know how we lost one of our most valuable test subjects.â
âIâm sure the doctor will give a thorough explanation.â
âHimmler isnât the only person upset about yesterdayâs fiasco. The doctor and I had a long talk before he departed. He blames you for Oskarâs death.â
The words pierced Gottlieb like an icicle to the heart. These days, the doctorâs disapproval was a death sentence.
âI had nothing to do with this,â he whispered.
âYes, you did. Your job is to hone their minds. Not to hold their hands and coddle them with Jew science.â He spat the words like venom.
âPsychoanalysis isââ
âDiscredited. Von Westarp has latitude to run the farm as he sees fit, and thus far, that has been to your benefit. But Oskar died from a failure to concentrate, to visualize, to anticipate. All things you were meant to teach him.â Pabst turned for the door. âThe doctor returns tomorrow. In the meantime, Iâd advise against trying to leave.â
Gottlieb sank into his chair, shivering. His gaze passed over the notes heâd made during Gretelâs session.
âStandartenführer, wait.â The colonel paused with his hand on the doorknob. Gottlieb said, âWhat if I told you Oskarâs death wasnât an accident?â
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
On the evening that Oskar died, Gretel had spent the afternoon picking mushrooms in the forest. Gottlieb knew this because heâd taken to using his bird-watching binoculars to track her solitary wanderings around the Schutzstaffel facility. He carried a notepad where he recordedâamongst excited notes of Bohemian waxwings and spotted woodpeckersâobservations of Gretelâs behavior and speculations about her state of mind.
Mushrooms were a new interest. Usually she picked wildflowers in the meadow behind the former orphanage, such as the corn poppies that dotted the field where unsuccessful test subjects had been buried.
The daylong thrum of spring rains had finally subsided, and now a setting sun emerged beneath the gunmetal gray clouds that had hidden the sky for several days. But the sun was too feeble to bake off the damp. The cleansing scent of rain still permeated the farm, along with a tang of ozone wafting from the shed where electricians made final adjustments to the new diesel generator.
Gretel cocked her head, as if listening to something faint. The corner of her mouth quirked up. She cast her sloe-eyed gaze across the campus of the Reichsbehörde für die Erweiterung germanischen Potenzials , the Reichâs Authority for the Advancement of German Potential.
Gottlieb slewed the binoculars. His magnified view panned across the training field where Hauptsturmführer Buhler buckled a leash on Kammler, the mentally deficient telekinetic. Past workmen erecting a new laboratory before the chemists arrived from IG Farben. Past the man hovering unsteadily a few inches above the earth.
It was,
Kevin J. Anderson, Rebecca Moesta