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Dawn of Liberty

Michael Phillips

Copyright

Dawn of Liberty
Secret of the Rose
Copyright © 1995 by Michael Phillips
Cover art to the electronic edition copyright © 2012 by Bondfire Books, LLC.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

See full line of eBook originals at www.bondfirebooks.com.

Author is represented by Alive Communications, Inc., 7680 Goddard St., Suite 200, Colorado Springs, CO 80920.

Electronic edition published 2012 by Bondfire Books LLC, Colorado.
ISBN e-Pub edition: 9780795326349

Contents

       Prologue

       PART I: Cold War—Treachery and Bravery 1979

    1 Interlude of Isolation

    2 Sisters of Danger

    3 Evil Chase

    4 Network Preparations

    5 Ultimate Test of Faith

    6 Hidden Change

       PART II: Outbreak of Freedom 1989

    7 Earthquake at the Border

    8 Outburst

    9 A Prodigal Daughter

  10 The Wall Comes Tumbling Down

  11 Knitted Prayer Strands of the Rose-Tapestry

  12 What Dangers Ahead?

       PART III: Reaching the Post-Cold War World 1992

  13 Destination: Berlin

  14 Reevaluation

  15 New World Order: Price Tag and Opportunity

  16 Sabotage

  17 Nefarious Transaction

  18 Honoring the Past, Looking to the Future

       PART IV: New Times… and Old

  19 New Age of Opportunity

  20 Old Times

  21 Suspicions

  22 Dead-End Inquiries

  23 Tracking Down an Old Photo

  24 Schemes

       PART V: Evangelism and Intrigue

  25 Arrival at Conference

  26 Defense Minister and KGB Boss

  27 Variations on a Great Truth

  28 Loyalties

  29 Changes

  30 Chancellor and Politician

  31 Questions

  32 Reflections

  33 A Talk over Dinner

  34 Night Meeting

  35 Lateness

  36 Looking Forward… and Back

  37 Pawn in the Hands of a Master

  38 Bedtime Discussion

  39 Musings

       PART VI: Disunity, Twentieth-Century Style

  40 The Approach

  41 Telethon Evangelism

  42 Berlin in Early Morning

  43 Journalist and Activist

  44 A Lively Talk

  45 Differences

  46 A Call to Roots

  47 Prayers and Reproving Thoughts

  48 A Call to Discernment

  49 A Surprising Call

       PART VII: From Out of the Past

  50 On the Run from a New Regime

  51 Feared Agent of the KGB

  52 First Pangs of Conscience

  53 Galanov’s Dilemma

  54 Where Does Conversion Begin?

  55 A Moment of Light

  56 Musings of a Russian Pragmatist

  57 Crushed Eavesdropper

  58 Dan Davidson

       PART VIII: Past Meets Future

  59 A Voice from the Past

  60 The Arrow Finds Its Mark

  61 Stool Pigeon

  62 First Instruction

  63 An Unusual Request

  64 Initial Contact

  65 Moscow Prayer Meeting

  66 Unbelievable Testimony

  67 Two Different Doors

  68 Out of Death… Life

  69 The Circle Is Completed at Last

  70 Where Does Responsibility Lie?

  71 Time to Head West

  72 Change of Plans

       PART IX: A Different Vantage Point

  73 How Is Life Spread?

  74 The Secret… Again

  75 Old Enemies

  76 Retracing Old Paths

  77 The Changes of Freedom

  78 The Warmth of Humble Fellowship

  79 The Plot Is Uncovered

       PART X: Which Direction Destiny?

  80 Coup Review

  81 Top-Priority Assignment

  82 Dreams of Destiny

  83 Acceleration

  84 Scriptural Clues

  85 The Polish Files

  86 Final Mission

  87 Tragedy

  88 Claymore’s Report

  89 Evil Breed

  90 Nabbed

       PART XI: Das Christliche Netzwerk

  91 The Summons

  92 Invitation of Danger

  93 Strange Byways

  94 Doc under Wraps

  95 Expanded Network

  96 Border Lodgings

  97 Remembering a Time of Peace

  98 Dominoes Begin to Fall

  99 The Rose Fabric Is Woven in a Circle

100 End of the Hunt

       PART XII: Climax of the Quest

101 Last-Minute Pressure

102 Uncertain Allies

103 A Lucrative Offer

104 Parting with the Past

105 At the Border

106 A Simple Prayer

107 Unexpected Reunion

108 Shocking Vote

109 The Wait

110 Come unto Me… I Will Give You Rest

111 Through the Border!

112 Red Herring

113 Getaway

       PART XIII: Penetrating Words of Truth

114 Did the Five Thousand Applaud?

115 Whose Responsibility?

116 Approaching Bombshell

117 Is It Hard or Easy to Be a Christian?

118 An Imperfect Vessel?

119 He Chastens Those He Loves

120 Safe in Berlin

121 Untoward Meeting

122 Top-Level Conference

123 New Friends of the Heart

       PART XIV: The Fragrance of the Rose Never Dies

124 Calling Drexler’s Bluff

125 Love-Blossoms from Long-Planted Seeds

126 Foiling of a Coup

127 A Bold Request

128 Roses Will Bloom Again

129 The Disclosing of Many Secrets

130 Return Flight

131 For Those Who Love Roses, the Story Never Ends

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Prologue

In all his purposes for the world, the Creator allows time to help accomplish them.

Whether it be in an individual heart, in the relationships of a family, or in the history of a nation, time teaches, time heals, time strengthens, time deepens roots and gives perspective. For time is an essential element of growth, and a necessary catalyst for the development of maturity and wisdom.

The best things are never arrived at in haste. God is in no hurry; his plans are never rushed.

When he fashioned time, the Creator divided it into segments. Night and day became its measured portions. Months were marked by the sequences of the moon, and the years by repeating quarterly spans of changing climate. He made all things to grow according to these patterns, passing ever and again out of dormancy into fruitfulness and back again, repeating over and over the growth cycle of life’s miracle.

Just as he created such natural phases to prescribe duration for growing things, he likewise defined by parallel intervals the progression of the earthly sojourn of his people The pilgrimage of one Baron Heinrich von Dortmann had now graduated through the fullness of its natural seasons. His days on this earth had been ones of learning, teaching, loving, and serving, that the bonds of his temporal life might in the end break into the freedom of eternal childness for which he had humbly prepared himself.

His God was not only his Creator but even more was his friend. His was a life whose single prayer was that he might know his God-friend more intimately, and that his life, his words, and his deeds might cause others to know him likewise. His was a life that must spread out, that must plant and nurture and reproduce, and which constantly poured itself into his wife and daughter first, and then all those around him.

He was a man who visibly evidenced the life-spreading, the life-giving, the life-creating character of the primary and foundational essence of the Trinity. For the purposes of the Creator are everywhere bound up in that highest aspect of his triune nature—Fatherhood.

The Fatherhood of God is one that must not merely create, it must continually imbue with life, it must generate his Own life.

In each tiniest corner of creation does the begetting of the Father’s substance and being continue every instant, impregnating new generations of seeds and trees, flowers and grasses, animals and men, with that mysterious yet delicate potency… to live!

The flourishing fruitfulness of creating Fatherhood invisibly fills every molecule, forever passing itself on and on—every apple containing the seeds to produce ten new trees, each of which is capable of growing ten thousand new apples, which can each produce ten million more in their turn.

In all growing things does this miracle of reproduction and proliferation show us the Father’s smiling face. “Look,” he says, “look around you. Life is springing up everywhere—because I put Myself into all I touch, into every atom of the universe.”

Men and women are drawn to the earth; many do not even know why. They cultivate gardens and tenderly care for its trees and flowers and shrubs. The wise among them, however, acknowledge what gives the garden its glory. Kneeling down to plunge their fingers into the moist earth, they recognize that the miracle of God’s very creation is before them. When they pluck a blossom from a cherished rose, to offer in affection to a loved one, they perceive their participation in the greatest truth in all the universe—that the goodness of the Creator has been lavished abroad upon the earth for his children to behold, discover truth from, and then enjoy… if they will but look up, behold his face of love, and learn to call him Father.

Such a man was Baron Heinrich von Dortmann, late of the kingdoms of Prussia and Pomerania, now child in the heavenly kingdom of his Father, a man for whom the earthly ground he cultivated served as but a foreshadowy likeness of that heavenly garden to which he was now giving his efforts, and the roses he so lovingly tended while here were but faint images of flowerage of a more enduring kind.

In truth, the baron’s life itself was a seed, placed in good soil and nurtured by heavenly purposed rains and sunshine, germinating, sending its roots deep and its trunk high, that in time it might bear its appointed fruit: those living blossoms, whose blooms were the radiant faces of others who had become the Father’s children by the death-energized sprouting of his life-seed.

Existence continually regenerates itself. Such is the life placed into the very universe by its Creator that it can do no other than propagate and rejuvenate. As growing things do not reproduce only once, but pass along not merely the capacity to exist and breathe and grow but the power likewise to renew that life, so too did the spiritual life-legacy of Heinrich von Dortmann now spread out and flow into those whom his life had touched, extending in ever-widening concentric circles to future generations, in outflowing ripples of purposefulness in God’s kingdom.

The autumn and winter seasons of his life, spent in prison and then in the mountains of Bavaria—though perhaps dormant to the onlooker—were years destined for eternal purpose, during which a multitude of prayer-seeds for family and nation were expectantly planted in the soils of heaven.

The story of the baron’s life is necessarily, therefore, one in which the roots from his plant passed on life to an ever-increasing number of human-plants after him, nourishing and enabling them to flourish and bear fruit—thirty, sixty, and a hundredfold. Some of the spiritual seeds planted as a result fell in unexpected places, and the life that would burst forth from them would astonish many. Such, however, is the Father’s way. He sends his sunshine and rain to fall on the just and the unjust. Nothing comes back empty. No word from his mouth returns void, but accomplishes the purpose for which he ordained it.

And so, as all life ultimately flows in that great eternal round back into the heart of its Creator, the characters of our saga advanced through the cycles of life. The baron, reunited at last with his beloved Marion, had ascended into the springtime of a happy new time that will know no winter.

Matthew and Sabina had now passed through that wonderful autumn when the bounty of harvest yields fruit from years of labor, and found themselves entering the restful, memory-filled winter years. Now had come the season to observe with glad expectancy the flowering spring and summer for a new generation, even as the country they loved prepared to emerge from its dormancy of separateness and embark upon a new national epoch of unity.

Generations pass that others may be born. The cycles of human life give no occasion to sadness, but rather rejoicing. Should winter’s death not come, no eternal springtime could follow. Heinrich and Thaddeus had faded from earthly view, and soon likewise must Sabina and Matthew accompany them beyond the mists of earth’s horizon.

Such passings are no end but rather signify completion, fruition, and fulfillment, necessary that new beginnings might begin. What appears to earthly eyes as life’s sunset is only the back side of the dawn opening into the greater life toward which we are bound.

God our Father, do we doubt that all things ultimately work for our good and to the growth of your kingdom, both here and in the life to come? Open our eyes to apprehend your designs, that we might fall ever more harmoniously in step with them. Accomplish your eternal purposes in the men and women around us, even those in whom we see no possible light of your presence. Strengthen our faith, Lord, to believe that you indeed love all men and women and are constantly sending rain and sun into the cold chambers where they live so alone with themselves, to soften the seeds planted there by a thousand circumstances of life and by the words and deeds of your people. Awaken the long-dormant hearts of those who have resisted you. Enliven the seeds planted in the human soils throughout the earth, and cause a hundredfold fruit to grow from the plants that spring forth from them. Cause fruit to grow and seeds to be planted from our lives, as we have witnessed in that of the baron and from his legacy. Make us fruitful progenitors of your life, our Father, we pray from the depths of our hearts.

And what is the season at Der Frühlingsgarten? What will the breaking of winter’s spell in this new German year hold in store for the posterity of the lineage of that ancient family Dortmann and its former estate?

The grounds south of the baron’s beloved Lebenshaus were not only an earthly garden. The flowers tended by his hand contained no mere temporal tidings. Verily the secret of the rose contains as many depths as does the Father’s life itself, for within its blossoms he has hidden his own messages of love for his children to discover.

The baron’s Garden of Spring now encompassed his whole nation, and a dawn of many awakenings was at hand.

PART I

Cold War—Treachery and Bravery 1979

1
Interlude of Isolation

East Berlin

What did it actually feel like, she wondered, that rough, thick vertical gray slab of stone and cement that so deeply represented life in this city and stood as the symbol of Europe’s division?

To her it had always been. It had existed right there, less than two kilometers from her home, every day of her young life.

Familiarity notwithstanding, however, Die Mauer yet remained to the impressionable eyes pausing a moment to behold it a compelling yet confusing enigma. Its proximity drew her in a way she could not understand, as a slumbering evil presence, awaiting some future moment of wakefulness.

Her parents told her often of the summer days when it had been built, when soldiers, dogs, and tanks patrolled every inch of the border, when escape attempts had been a monthly, sometimes a weekly or even a daily occurrence, and when many had been killed.

She had also heard the numerous stories of her father’s own involvement. Only eighteen years had passed. Yet for her, those were events of another era, another lifetime. She had grown up with the Wall and had known nothing else.

Most Berliners had managed to accustom themselves to the silent symbol of separation during the interlude since. Being whose daughter she was, however, she had also grown up with the conviction constantly reinforced that everything that could be done must be done to help people from this side get to the other. Her father was a leader in the underground network, and her family, and those like them, would never get used to the barrier. In what ways lay open to them, they would always, even if it cost their lives, resist the tyranny that Communism had imposed upon their countrymen. So at least said her father.

Between deserted buildings of Markgrafenstraβe she continued to stare down the two empty blocks at the somber stone barrier, whose height was strung with coiled and deadly barbed wire. Partially visible on her right stood one of the hundreds of guard towers, occupied by soldiers of her own race who now took their orders from Moscow.

An eerie feeling swept suddenly through her, as if foreshadowing a day when the sleeping gray serpent would wake, and when her destiny would take her closer to the Wall than she dared walk today.

For this moment, however, she could only gaze from a distance and wonder what it all meant.

With an unconscious shiver, Lisel Lamprecht jerked her head back in the direction she had been bound, and continued her way along Leipzigerstraβe with the package that had been the object of her errand. She continued occasionally to glance at the Wall down the side streets she passed, for its direction paralleled hers for another short while, before she veered left on Gertraudenstraβe.

But though she knew it not, events were approaching that would alter her outlook about everything and would eventually bring her—as something within her subconscious had just sensed—face-to-face with the Wall. When that day arrived, she would press her hand against the cold stone, challenging its presence. Perhaps she would even see the other side like those her father and mother now helped.

For today, however, she was but one German teenager caught up in the silent clash over ideology that overarched world events. She was of the next generation, those who had been taught of but did not remember the great war. Therefore she could not quite grasp the complexities and implications of the very different kind of conflict that had been being waged throughout the world ever since.

Though history is rarely neat, nor the cleavages into which events order themselves so tidy as pundits later organize them, that forty-five-year conflict in the latter half of the twentieth century known incongruously as the Cold War divided itself roughly into two uneven segments surrounding the assassination of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy in 1963.

This most dangerous war the world had ever seen produced but a handful of casualties, and those mostly accidental. Yet for nearly half a century the globe of humankind had stood poised on the brink of wholesale destruction the likes of which could only be imagined by the most pessimistic of doomsday prognosticators.

Prior to the Cuban missile crisis of 1961 and the shattering events on the streets of Dallas in November of 1963, much of the steadily mounting East-West tension was played out on the visible world stage, where diplomatic bravado and technological prowess were the criteria used to judge superiority. The late forties, fifties, and early sixties acted as a prelude, during which both sides postured and bluffed and threatened, developed and tested their bombs, increased their stockpiles of nuclear weapons, and then raced for the conquest of space. The Soviets pushed out their borders, and the Americans sought to eradicate Communism from their land.

Nineteen sixty-three was the year Lisel would always consider significant as that of her birth. The rest of the world would remember 1963 as the year when everything changed.

The two men who had squared off eyeball to eyeball over Cuba, and who had come to symbolize the essence of the new age of conflict, were gone—Kennedy cut down by an assassin’s bullet; Khrushchev shortly thereafter ousted from power.

As Lisel grew from infancy into childhood, the world’s attention turned elsewhere, to Southeast Asia, whose faraway jungles began to witness a cold war that was suddenly heating up. It was a localized clash between democracy and communism that, if the superpowers did not keep it contained, could escalate into World War III.

It was a time of change. The world was being reshaped at many levels and in a host of diverse ways.

The Beatles forever revolutionized pop music, Vietnam permanently mutated the American perception of war, and Watergate cynically altered the political climate of Washington. But the Cold War went on, its most serious battles being waged far from the public spotlight.

Lisel matured and began to cast her young gaze abroad upon her world. She lived in an environment of tension and danger. Subtleties of the conflict between Moscow and Washington increased. No longer did presidents and premiers yell and threaten. Détente replaced ultimatum, test bans replaced nuclear detonations, and congenial words masked hidden motives.

Indeed, the sixties and seventies had transfigured everything about how people looked at their world. But silently the behind-the-curtain theater of the Cold War continued unaffected by it all.

Foot soldiers of the conflict took over from world leaders—men and women like Lisel’s own parents, those whom in most parts of the world would have been considered an unremarkable citizenry. It was now these who waged an invisible war for that most basic of human rights and desires—that commodity known as liberty. Much of the Cold War turned silent and sinister, its battles fought in ones and twos, in neighborhoods and candlelit basements, from behind drawn curtains, along deserted byways, and in lonely prison cells, hidden from the public eye.

And now, during her sixteenth year, while the world anxiously watched the heated chess game playing itself out between Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini and President Jimmy Carter of the United States, this silent, unseen drama continued unaffected. The eyes of the world were riveted upon Tehran, yet it was still the Cold War between democracy and communism that remained the global dividing matrix between good and evil, between autonomy and servility—aligning nations, creating adversaries, separating families, and artificially disrupting long-established ethnic unities.

At the heart of this focal center still sat the divided nation of Germany, formerly the cause now the victim of events it could no longer control. As the superpowers played out their impersonal maneuvers on the game board of the world, nowhere did a rising postwar generation feel more helpless and ill-used by their gambits than in the figuratively and actually divided capital of Berlin.

It was a land where the Cold War made enemies of friends, family, and neighbors, where Stasi informants lurked everywhere, where KGB infiltrations had been effected at every level of life, and where treachery loomed always nearby. Desiring freedom too greatly, or helping others who did, was a lethal business. The blood that was often spilled in consequence, and the tears of those left behind, was all too real.

The global standoff continued year after year, nowhere symbolized more visibly than at the Friedrichstraβe border crossing known as Checkpoint Charlie, not far from the shop out of which Lisel had recently come.

All the while, the most recognizable symbol of this unseen drama remained the gray, malevolent, unbreakable, unscalable barricade slicing its way through the center of Berlin, separating a nation… dividing a world.

Yet if it was an era producing treachery, it also gave rise to bravery. For seasons of danger produce heroes as well as martyrs. Of the courage and selflessness of both, the world seldom hears. From time to time, however, individual stories become known… and those who hear them are changed forever after.

The energetic young East Berliner quickened her stride once the Wall was at her back, walked for another ten minutes through a drab neighborhood, then turned from the street along the uneven concrete of a broken walkway, and was soon entering her home.

2
Sisters of Danger

Do you have the package, Lisel?”

“Yes, Papa,” she answered.

“No trouble?”

“None, Papa.”

“Good,” replied her father, taking the small parcel. He unwrapped the paper hastily and began examining the book his daughter had apparently just bought. He did not pause long enough on any page to read, however, for he was uninterested in the content intended by the author. Rather he now leafed through the volume in order to piece together a cryptic communiqué from his shopkeeping contact.

Within five minutes he satisfied himself that he had thoroughly deciphered the message.

“We must bring an important man into Berlin next week,” he announced to wife and daughter as he rose from the chair where he had been sitting intently studying the book.

“How, Hermann?” asked Frau Lamprecht.

“The friend of my cousin will pass him off to us in the wood south of the city,” he replied.

“Can I go with you, Papa?” asked Lisel.

The big man did not answer immediately. “Hmm… perhaps it might be time,” he mused at length.

“May I visit Girdel?”

“There will be no occasion, Lisel.”

“I have not seen her for a year.”

“When we are about the business of the network, the safety of those who place themselves in our hands must be our only thought.”

Even as he spoke the words, Hermann’s thoughts trailed back to a time long past. It had not then been his own daughter’s safety he had been thinking about, but that of another.

So many memories, so many individuals—it all seemed from another lifetime. She now occupying his thoughts had been an important part of this work he was engaged in. She was one of its founders and most loyal members. She had finally used her own Network of the Rose to flee herself.

Hermann smiled at the thought of the successful escape to freedom through the cemetery.

Karin had tried so strenuously to convince him to accompany them. Now he wished he had confided in her the reason he had had to remain behind—that he was planning to be married soon. But at the time he thought the less any of them knew about one another the better.

He had been a different man back then. Smiles and tender thoughts had not been part of his nature. Having a wife and daughter had tempered his gruff exterior. He wished he could see Karin again, though he knew that was not her real name. He wished she could see him, now that he too was on intimate terms with the Master whom she had always served.

Hermann sighed. But he had not laid eyes on his former comrade since that day, though occasionally there were reports. He only prayed his own Lisel might become so brave a woman.

In the brief seconds while Hermann reflected on his former associations and what they had been through together, his daughter found herself likewise remembering the first day she had seen her friend Girdel.

The two girls could not have been more than four or five at the time, far too young to possess the slightest inkling of the import of the meeting that had brought their fathers and several others of like commitment together. While the men of God prayed and plotted together, Lisel and Girdel had played in the innocence of childhood.

Ever after, though the occasions of visits were not many—for the mutual work of their fathers was necessarily a clandestine one—they remained friends and grew as sisters, not realizing to what an extent theirs was a sisterhood of danger.

Neither were they aware of the parental discussions concerning how much to include growing boys and girls such as these in the secretive activities that bound them together. Like the baron, whom none had known but most in this region had heard of, the faithful men and women of the network desired that their convictions outlive their own brief mortal years. Thus they prayed to be able to inculcate in their offspring a vision of helping the larger family of God’s people, and they necessarily sought opportunities to teach them such work firsthand. But for the fathers and mothers in this particular part of the world, such was a dangerous legacy to pass on to their sons and daughters, and they did so with great soul-searching and prayer.

Seeds must be planted. Some must die in order that others might bear hundredfold fruit.

Girdel, a year older, had now been active in her own father’s affairs for some time. But Hermann, more cautious—brave enough yet newer to the life of intimate faith than Girdel’s father—had been reluctant to allow Lisel to participate quite so fully with him. Today’s thoughts of Karin, however, suddenly made him aware how quickly his daughter’s womanhood was approaching and that he could not prevent its coming.

He sighed, then took Lisel’s hand and led her out of the kitchen and to the worn couch, where he motioned for her to sit down beside him. She did so. They remained several moments in silence.

“Do you remember about the rose?” he asked.

“Yes, Papa. I could never forget that.”

“We have not spoken of it in several years. Do you still wear the locket your mother and I gave you?”

“Of course, Papa. It is the most special thing I have. I am wearing it now.”

She reached up, pulled at the thin chain at her neck, and a moment later the tiny gold-plated locket appeared between her fingers. Hermann smiled at the sight. It was not an expensive piece of jewelry but a mere trinket. It was not its value that made it precious, but rather what he had placed inside the tiny chamber, and what they symbolized.

“Do you recall what I told you that day?” he asked.

Lisel nodded.

“The mystery of life is found in seeds,” began Hermann. “When they are planted with prayer…” He paused, obviously waiting.

“…blossoms of love will grow,” added his daughter, completing the sentence for him.

They laughed together.

“I’m happy you remember,” he said.

“I will never forget the seeds you have planted in me, Papa.”

They fell silent in the small room. The daughter’s soft hand still rested in the large, rough palm of the father, content as a newborn fawn in a spring wood, and showing no anxiety to take flight.

“You are growing older, Lisel,” said Hermann at length. “You are nearly a woman.”

Lisel glanced down, trying to keep back the blush of embarrassment she could feel rising in her cheeks. “I don’t know, Papa.”

“It is true, my child—and a lovely woman at that.”

Now came the red in earnest. Lisel said nothing. A long silence followed, but a comfortable one that neither was eager to break.

“Yes,” said Hermann at length, “I think you may accompany me, Daughter. The work must be carried on, and one day I will be too old to continue it myself.”

“Then may I visit Girdel, Papa?”

“Soon, Lisel… soon. Once we have the man safely in the hands of our people on the other side, I will make arrangements with our friends for a visit.”

“Oh, thank you, Papa.”

A moment more they sat, then stood. Lisel joined her mother in the kitchen.

Hermann’s mind was suddenly full of a melancholy mixture of thoughts and emotions concerning his daughter that he could never have put into words even had he tried. He was no philosopher, but a man whose life evidenced his convictions. Yet the sensations surging through him at this moment were no less profound that he did not possess the capacity to analyze them or formulate them into specific thoughts.

He turned and sought what solitude could be had in the confines of the small space they possessed behind the house.

The tiny plot of ground where there was room for but a few green things to keep alive was a far cry from that magnificent Frühlingsgarten where she whom he had known as Karin Duftblatt had spent the early years of her life. He walked out in the direction of the single rose plant that grew on the premises. She had given it to him twenty years before when telling him of the mystery of the seeds, a truth that, once he had fully apprehended it for himself after she was gone, he had later passed along to his own daughter.

Hermann Lamprecht was a humble man and could hardly have known that the tears now filling his eyes were tears from the universal Fatherhood of the world, the same tears that had driven Heinrich von Dortmann to his garden to pray—with words perhaps more eloquent but in substance identical—the same prayer upon many occasions years before. Nor could he have possibly foreseen how the two prayers, separated by more than a generation, were intertwined as they entered the eternal heavenly ear, and thus whose answers were destined to interweave as well.

Hermann lifted up to the heavens the strange burden that had so suddenly seized his breast, and uttered the simplest form of that profoundest parental cry in all the universe, that entreaty born in the very Abba-heart of God, which echoes back his own divine love that is continually calling the sons and daughters of his creation back to himself: God—take care of my child… protect her, watch over her, and keep her in your hands.

They were the only words Hermann could bring to his lips. They were enough. His Father heard and would use them to consummate his purpose.

3
Evil Chase

East Germany

With uncanny precision a large, dark Mercedes roared through the black and empty night.

The narrow, half-paved back roads through the Brandenburger Wald southeast of the city scarcely widened in some spots beyond the breadth of the vehicle itself. Though more than sixteen hundred kilometers separated him from his home, he still considered Poland and the DDR his turf. He had done duty here in the latter during his younger days, assigned to the Stasi office of the now-influential German politician Gustav Schmundt.

He knew all the escape routes like the back of his hand and had been tracking the moves of the network for two weeks now—from eastern Poland, across the border near Eisenhüttenstadt, and finally here—to the moment of final showdown. He knew they considered their present charge an important one. No old woman wanting to see loved ones in the West, no idealistic student hoping for a so-called better life.

This time they had a big fish in tow. The biggest! He was one of the leaders who had taken over when the Jewish rabbi had fled, and who had in the years since become the Moscow leader of the underground Christian organization, known by various names in different parts of Eastern Europe, sometimes Das Christliche Netzwerk, sometimes merely as The Rose.

He should never have let him go that day they met as young men on the streets of Moscow. But now at last the moment for his revenge had come.

Andrassy Galanov stood ready to drop the net over his arch rival who had evaded the rest of the KGB for more than fifteen years. At least he thought it was the same man. He would know for certain soon… very soon!

For this confrontation his superior had sent him west three weeks ago with his own personal vendetta against the Christian leader hanging in the balance.

“You get him, Galanov, do you hear me?” he could still hear the furious voice shouting across the cornfield. “I want him! Don’t show your face again if you return empty-handed!”

A quick glance back revealed Leonid Bolotnikov, the top agent of the empire, pistol in hand, standing over a dead peasant’s body, fist lifted in rage, as the three men they’d trailed half the night disappeared into the surrounding wood.

Minutes later the revving of an automobile engine sounded through the trees.

They had been outmaneuvered. A night of pursuit lost!

Even as the escape vehicle sped away and the sound faded into the distance, in his ears echoed further angry shouts from his director. “After him! Don’t let him get to Berlin, or you’ll rot in Siberia!”

The kingpin of the underground network—the man they called Der Prophet—had eluded them, for the present.

Within an hour of the failed capture, an automobile bearing the thirty-six-year-old agent careened recklessly southwest toward Minsk. His uncle had liked to use Siberian threats too. When applied to his nephew, however, Andrassy knew they were mere empty tirades, and he hadn’t paid serious attention to them. But Korskayev was dead, and now Bolotnikov was head of the entire KGB, and when he spoke, even an experienced and self-reliant agent like Andrassy Galanov occasionally trembled. Bolotnikov was a man with both the power and the determination to carry out his threats.

Galanov crossed into Poland early the next afternoon and reestablished contacts in Warsaw, making use of some of Korskayev’s old files that night. It had taken several days to sniff out the cooled trail of Das Netzwerk’s moves. But there was a heavy and dedicated Christian element in the region of Bialystok according to his uncle’s records, and once he had picked up the unmistakable clues of their presence, everything confirmed that indeed his quarry was close to his grasp. He smelled the urgency in their movements immediately. After questioning his own operatives and a few of the Christians he’d been able to lay his hands on, he knew that only hours ahead of him they were passing Der Prophet from hand to hand along the very underground circuit that the fugitive himself, along with the two Germans for whom his former Stasi boss possessed such a fixation, had helped to establish.

Steadily across Poland Galanov drew closer.

This time no hole in the system would allow the man to escape. He would ensnare him! No foul-ups! Tonight destiny would shine its face upon him. He would deliver the hated and troublesome apostle into the hand of his chief. No one would get out—especially not the so-called Prophet.

Galanov would kill if he had to… he would not let the man into the West.

His headlamps danced about, sending luminescent beams into the thick clumps of pines bordering the way on each side. Like menacing eyes probing the blackness, with every bend and twist of the road they sought their prey with eerie divination.

Behind the wheel, foot nearly to the floor, sat the latter-day Saul who considered himself guardian of the reputation of the Committee of State Security, otherwise known as the KGB. His fascination with the Christian underground had begun during his brief stint in Berlin, and over the years, though he knew it not, it had grown to resemble his uncle’s deviant hatred. Truly did he carry on into the next generation the twisted vendetta of he who had been known in these regions as Emil Korsch.

Even as the lights of his car glared into the night, his own eyes glistened with the evil fire of their dark intent. If only he could do what his KGB chief himself had failed to do! Promotion would be his. Perhaps a position in the Kremlin—maybe as Bolotnikov’s top assistant or some other high post in Chairman Brezhnev’s government.

It won’t be long now, he thought as the automobile raced along.

No other noise sounded for miles. The night remained empty and black.

Respectable people had taken to their beds hours ago. In this region, so close to the borders of the partitioned city, nothing but trouble could come to one caught abroad after midnight.

4
Network Preparations

While the old adversaries of The Rose sped their way, Hermann Lamprecht awoke and began preparations for the night’s clandestine activity. He still harbored grave doubts about his daughter accompanying him. She had been involved around the fringes of the network and its people in minor ways for years. But this was a more important and more dangerous assignment.

But he had promised. And she was a stouthearted girl.

And he knew the time could not be delayed forever when he would have to start treating her like the full-grown woman she nearly was. He had sensed it before praying for her protection, and the feeling had grown even stronger afterward. Her younger brother was only eleven, and he too was anxious to become involved. Hermann could not shield them from the realities of life in this part of the world forever.

He dressed quickly, then roused his wife and Lisel from their few hours’ sleep. While Frau Lamprecht made coffee and put a few other items of food in a bag, Lisel excitedly dressed for the adventure.

Twenty minutes later they were ready, promising the anxious but faithful wife to be home before noon.

Hermann possessed the papers justifying his being out in the middle of the night, though he did not anticipate being stopped by the authorities. He had long ago learned what routes would avoid them.

They proceeded by car through East Berlin, through Grünau and Müggelheim, past the city’s eastern border at Gosen, then southwest into the wooded region, where, within thirty minutes, he turned off the road and parked the car. Here they would wait for two hours before proceeding to the designated place of meeting on foot.

Once the handoff was made, he and Lisel would make their way back to the car with their delivery, drive him via side roads to Glasow, then retrace their steps homeward.

Meanwhile, in another part of the district of Brandenburg, two darkly clad individuals hastened along. They had left Fürstenwalde by foot, walking some three kilometers to a solitary barn far removed from any human abode in the middle of one of the wheat fields of an East German collective farm.

The man in front puffed from the effort, for they strode with long and quickly paced steps. He baked bread and rolls and sweets for the village by day, and in truth carried a few kilograms more around his midsection than was good for him. By night he did the network’s business and did it bravely in spite of the exertion—and the hazards.

Behind him followed a tall, strongly built man of some forty-five or fifty years, though darkness rendered certainty of age difficult. Herr Brotbacker had heard of Der Prophet and had even picked up vague rumors that hard times had befallen the Russian patriarch like the rabbi before him. A plan was said to be in place to get him out, but as to specifics no one in any of the neighboring fellowships knew anything. He had no idea that the man he now led across the grain fields to Brother Hugo’s old deserted barn was none other than he who had smuggled behind the Iron Curtain the very Bible the baker so treasured, stashed in his small apartment under the bed where his wife now slept.

Neither man had spoken since leaving the lights of town.

Finding their way inside the structure of the barn, now decaying from disuse under East Germany’s communal farming system, the German breadmaker assisted his silent Russian brother aboard an aging wooden wagon already hitched to a sturdy plow horse. Still without sound of human voice to disturb the sleeping night, he walked across the packed dirt floor and opened the large door, which was kept well-oiled and thus swung without so much as a creak in spite of its age.

Farmer Hugo, already waiting atop the wagon with leather reins in hand, clicked his tongue, urging his faithful equine collaborator into motion. The baker closed the door behind them.

As the clomping footfall of the horse and the groan of the wagon’s wheels faded across the field, he began the walk back to town. He would be able to catch about two hours sleep before the morning ovens and loaves of rye demanded his attention. Now the mysterious traveler bounced slowly along in the hands of the farmer, who would pass him on at the next rendezvous point to someone neither Brotbaker nor Hugo had ever met.

Thus did the Network of the Rose operate. No one knew much. Words remained as few as possible. A look, a brief smile, the scantest of necessary instructions, passwords having to do with flowers and growing things, perhaps a parting nod. Hardly any of those now involved knew anything about that daring young lady who had been so instrumental in helping establish the network after the war, nor how she and her father had eventually made use of it themselves to escape to the West. Nonetheless, carrying on the work remained the vital imperative—preserving the chain, keeping strong its links, protecting God’s people. The less each knew of what his brothers and sisters of the underground were about, the safer for all. The last decade had begun to witness a few changes and eased restrictions since the days of Khrushchev. But lives still could be lost. Shootings occurred at the Wall with continued regularity. Caution remained a matter of life and death.

Two and a half hours later, the lone pilgrim, a stranger in the hands of his brothers, weary now from night after night of intermittent and tedious travel, having slept but little in the back of the wagon before being passed along again several times from one silent accomplice to the next, approached a small clearing in the wood where two dirt roads intersected.

A faint flicker of light shone through the darkness, then disappeared. It was the sign by which the man who had the sojourner in tow—neither baker nor farmer this time, but in fact a converted local Communist official attached to the constabulary—knew that his leg of the clandestine itinerary had come to an end. He had never seen the face behind the brief flash of light, nor would he—for the protection of all. At this juncture came the final handoff save one, and vulnerability mounted the closer they came to the city.

“Come with me—quickly.” A hand reached across through the night to clutch that of the nomadic evangelist.

Turning to retrace his steps to his own home, the official heard but a few words more and did not hesitate in his return through the trees. They were on their own now. God be with them, the converted Communist silently breathed.

The transient Russian now noticed that two persons had come to meet him. The second, slighter of build and shorter of stature, stood a little behind the man who had spoken. The man’s daughter, seventeen and already active in the network’s activities for years—without knowing that her friend Lisel was also out with her father on this fateful night and awaiting them on the other side of the forest—had, like Lisel, begged to accompany him.

“There is always the possibility of danger, Girdel,” her father had replied to the request.

“Is it not you who have always taught me to fear nothing that we have placed in God’s hands?”

The man had smiled and nodded. He had indeed so taught her, and how could he therefore deny her request?

“Make haste,” whispered the German to the refugee. “We must get you to the safe house before dawn.”

With that, the three disappeared quickly from the rendezvous site, father and daughter leading the man for whose escape already so many had risked so much.