Chapter 559
Himmler handed Nauyokos a handwritten radio transcript, Nauyokos just glanced at it, and at the moment he was concerned with a detailed question someone had asked him.

"But what about the body?" he asked.

"There is someone who is responsible for this matter." Himmler replied coldly, "One is enough. Muller will send you the body to the scene of the accident at the right time."

Having said that, as soon as the door opened, Müller appeared in Himmler's office on time.

"My dear Nauyokes," said Muller, taking Naoyokes's arm affectionately, "I have heard many people express their appreciation for your action plan. It should be said that one person who can complete this task has been selected from above." The most suitable person."

Muller sat down on the big leather sofa at the back of the office, invited Nauyokos to sit down again, and said to him: "All I have to do is to provide you with incriminating evidence." He smiled and continued, "May 5 On the evening of the 20th, 2 minutes after the start of the battle, at 19:30, I will place a dead body at the entrance in front of the radio building. The body has just been killed, and of course it is in the uniform of a Polish soldier. I know, you are in Before proceeding, wait for a radio signal. You will receive it as soon as I announce that the body is in place. I wish you luck, Nauyokes, that everything is well arranged for you. And, Please don't worry about the victim. He was chosen from among the prisoners of the concentration camp, and he was a Jew."

At last the time came at 5:20 pm on May 4, when Naujoks gathered his men together in Room 7 of the Upper Silesian compound.

"Our men are all here. 2 boxes are in my car. The first contains 1 sets of Polish military uniforms. Tonight at 7:19 we are going to the Ladipur woods a few kilometers away from our target , we change clothes there."

Later, he said to the radio expert Himmler sent to him: "Karl, you put the radio in another box through, and wait for the signal for us to start and move before 19:30. After a while , I tell you the wavelength, at 19:30, we change clothes on time, remove all objects and traces that indicate our identity, and then go to occupy the station and control the personnel of the station. Don't say a word, try to make the station people believe us It's the Poles. Once inside, Karl and Heinrich went with me." Heinrich, the Polish-speaking broadcaster, was also appointed by Himmler for the operation.

Naujocks went on: "Karl, you have to get in touch with Berlin in advance. Heinrich, I will give you a broadcast transcript from there, and you will read it into the microphone. While you are speaking, I will broadcast Fire the guns. A few minutes after we occupy the station, a black 'Auber' sedan will pull up at the station's main entrance, and a dead body will be thrown on the steps. Don't mind it, it's Another department did it, at the radio station, we stay at least 5 minutes, hope we don't encounter hostilities. If the police show up, you don't hesitate to shoot. No matter what happens, we will try to get away. If one of you is arrested, say you are a Pole. The Berlin headquarters has taken this into account and will ask the police to hand over the prisoner to the headquarters. Remember: at 19:30 tonight, you will be Poles ;Anyone who tries to obstruct you, shoot him, no matter who he is, even if he is killed by you, you will not be held accountable. This is an order!"

To break the tense silence, Nauyokos took from his pocket an envelope containing a speech.He handed the envelope to Heinrich, who immediately read it, then asked a few more questions, and the meeting came to an end.

As to what his associates thought about the operation, Nauyokes had no idea.He told them to meet again at the hotel at 18:30, and then he went downstairs to drink a glass of wine to cheer himself up.

In the evening, the 7 people returned to the hotel to gather again.They chatted enthusiastically, and all of them looked very happy.The prospect of the action relieved them of the tension of waiting.

Naoyokes checked to see if everyone had had a drink, but he drank two himself and ordered, "Let's go!"

The seven people walked down the stairs and boarded two cars respectively, trying their best to pretend to be calm and natural.

Naujocks and Karl and Heinrich traveled in the first car, the others in the second.The two cars were not far apart, and they drove quickly towards the Radipur woods and the border.They took the side road to the right of Gleiwitz Station into the woods.The car stopped in a clearing in the forest, which was so hidden that the car could not be seen from the road.Naoyokes got out of the car first and signaled his accomplice to be silent.He removed two boxes from the car and opened them. In the first box were seven new "Ruzel" pistols with greased barrels, and seven sets of Polish uniforms.They changed quickly and silently.While they checked the pistols, Karl switched on the radio in another box, put on his earphones, and waited for a signal from Berlin.When the signal was received, he looked at his watch, the time was 7:7.

Naoyokes immediately got into the car and softly closed the door, and everyone else got into the car.The two cars returned to the road and tried to be as quiet as possible.Not long after, the car stopped in front of the radio building amidst a sharp car tire rubbing sound.

It was getting dark, and on the six steps leading to the large glass door, Nauyokos saw a light in the glass window on the right.Which was great, because from that he knew there was a watch on the inside.

Naoyokes gently opened the door, and his two accomplices followed closely behind him.At this time, a man in a blue navy uniform came out of the inner cabin. He stopped immediately when he saw them. Before he could yell out, Heinrich grabbed him tightly and held him He bumped his head against the wall twice, and the man passed out without a sound.

Nauyokes turned to the right corridor again, looking for the man he had spotted through the window.He saw the man in the second small room, leaning over a filing cabinet.Before he could turn around, Nauyokes gave him the butt of his gun, and the man fell instantly.

At this time, from the end of the corridor, there was a burst of shouts and footsteps from the other end of the hall.Nauyokes hurried out of the small room and ran into Karl.

Carl said to him: "Quick, go this way!" The two hurried to the green door, where the word "Quiet" was written on the green door.By this time Heinrich had already entered the sound booth.

This is a small room with some light gray office furniture. In the middle of the room is a workbench with a microphone on it.On the wall opposite the door, there were two windows of thick glass, which opened into another, smaller room.The station that will be broadcasting in Polish to Radio Breslau and throughout Germany is located in this small house.

Heinrich sat in front of the workbench, holding the microphone in one hand and the crumpled broadcast script in the other, waiting for orders.Through the glass window leading to the dispatching room, Naujocks and Heinrich saw that Karl started the machine first, and he pulled up and down the joysticks one by one, looking very flustered.Naoyokes cursed, walked up to him and asked, "What's going on?"

"Can't find the handle to connect to the Breslau radio station." Karl replied angrily.

"Idiot! You should get on the line! Do you understand? I thought you should know your business!"

Karl replied angrily: "It should be like this, but if you want to manipulate it, you need to find it first."

No matter what, I want to send out the news tonight, but things are not going well.On the other side of the window, Heinrich also looked agitated, his hand holding the broadcast script trembled, and cold sweat broke out on his face.

"At least you can broadcast to the local area first?" Naoyokes asked a little discouraged.

"Yes," he replied, "but only on long wave, which is not enough, because it cannot be heard anywhere except in the nearby village."

"Okay, let's do this! In short, this manuscript must be broadcast!" Naoyokes then returned to the sound-enclosing room and asked Carl to move the handle again.

"When you see the signal, start reading," he said to Heinrich. "Be louder, because I'm about to shoot and cause chaos."

Two or three seconds before Carl connected the line, Nauyokos thought to himself, Fortunately, there was no external interference.

Heinrich then started broadcasting.His voice was so loud that it was close to a roar, and Naoyokes didn't even want to listen to him.He had read this speech a few times. The content was that the leaders of Germany wanted to push Europe into war, that peaceful Poland was threatened and humiliated, and that they wanted to eliminate Hitler at all costs. Danzig belonged to the Poles.

Nauyokes wondered: Who wrote this?Probably Himmler, possibly Hitler himself.It was too late to think so much now, he started to shoot at the ceiling, fired 3 shots in a row, and howled.

Heinrich, who was waiting for the signal to cooperate, still held the microphone tightly when he heard the first gunshot, but he misread the script because of panic.Under Naoyokes' angry gesture, he immediately corrected himself.Nauyokos fired another shot at the wall, then motioned for Carl, who was standing by the window, to turn off the phone.

A few seconds later, the three left the smoky studio and ran towards the gate of the radio station.At the door, they found two of the other four accomplices, and they all fled with guns.

Messed up this time!While running, Naoyokes thought, he could already imagine the astonished faces of the high-ranking officials. They must be sitting by the radio at this moment, waiting anxiously.They were witnesses to Hitler's nefarious plot.He imagined the two engineers of Radio Breslau frantically flicking their joysticks in their control room, and Hitler in his office, swearing and spitting.

Thinking of this, Naoyokes felt cold sweat running down his back, and he seemed to see that the rope had been put around his neck, and he was hung up together with his six accomplices like "a Jewish dog".

(End of this chapter)

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