The car passed through a couple of military checkpoints before we parked and entered a temple-like portico. Behind this were some bronze doors and on the other side a capacious hallway with a large American flag, several American soldiers, and two curving staircases covered with sheet aluminum. In front of the paternoster elevator I was invited to step aboard and to disembark on the ninth floor. A little nervously—for I had never before ridden one of these intimidating elevators—I complied.
The ninth floor was very different from those below. There were no windows. It was lit from skylights instead of banded glazing, which probably afforded the security-minded inhabitants yet more privacy. The ceiling was also much lower, which made me wonder if one of the qualifications to be an American spy in Europe might be a lack of height.
Certainly, the man to whom I was now introduced was not tall, although he was hardly short, either. He wasn’t anything you could have described, being unremarkable in almost every way. He was, I suppose, like an American professor, albeit one who spoke fluent German. He wore a blazer, gray flannel trousers, a button-down blue shirt, and some sort of club or academic tie—maroon with little shields. The introduction was not, however, illuminating in that he appeared to have no name, just a title. He was “the Chief,” and that was all I ever knew about him. I did, however, recognize the two men who were also waiting for me in that windowless meeting room. Special Agents Scheuer and Frei—were those their real names? I still had no idea—waited until the Chief had acknowledged their presence before nodding at me with silent courtesy.
“Have you been here before?” he asked. “I mean, when this building was owned by I. G. Farben.”
“No, sir.” I shrugged. “As a matter of fact, I’m surprised to find it’s still here. Apparently undamaged. A building this size, of such importance to the Nazi war effort—I’d always assumed it was bombed to rubble, like almost everything else in this part of Germany.”
“There are two schools of opinion on that, Gunther. Sit down, sit down. One school has it that the Americans forbidden to bomb it because of the building’s proximity to the Allied POW camp at Grüneburgpark. The other school would have you believe that Eisenhower had this building marked out as his future European headquarters. Apparently, the building reminded him of the Pentagon, in Washington. And I suppose, if I’m honest, it does look a little similar. So maybe that’s the real explanation after all.”
I drew a chair out from a long, dark wood table and sat down and waited for the Chief to get to the point of my being there. But it seemed he hadn’t yet finished with Eisenhower.
“The president’s wife wasn’t quite so enamored of this building, however. She took particular exception to a large bronze female figure—a nude that used to sit on the edge of the reflecting pool. She thought it wasn’t suitable for a military installation.” The Chief chuckled. “Which makes me wonder how many real soldiers she’s actually met.” He frowned. “I’m not sure where that statue went. The Hoechst Building, perhaps? That nude always did look like she needed some medicine, eh, Phil?”
“Yes, sir,” said Scheuer.
“You must be tired after your journey, Herr Gunther,” said the Chief. “So I’ll try not to fatigue you any more than I have to. Would you like some coffee, sir?”
“Please.”
Scheuer moved toward a sideboard where coffee things had been neatly assembled on a tray.
The Chief sat down and regarded me with a mixture of curiosity and distrust. If there had been a chessboard on the table between us, it might have made things feel a little easier for us both. All the same, a game was in progress and we both knew what it was. He waited until Scheuer—Phil—had set a cup of coffee in front of me and then began.
“Zyklon B. I assume you’ve heard of it.”
I nodded.
“Everyone assumes it was developed by I. G. Farben. But they merely marketed the stuff. It was actually developed by another chemical company called Degesch, which came to be controlled by a third chemical company, called Degussa. In 1930, Degussa needed to raise some money and so they sold half of their controlling interest in Degesch to their main competitor, I. G. Farben. And, by the way, the stuff, the actual crystals that exterminated insects with the speed of a cyclone—thus the name—well, that was made by a fourth company, called Dessauer Werke. You with me so far?”
“Yes, sir. Although I’m beginning to wonder why.”
“Patience, sir. All will be explained. So Dessauer made the stuff for Degesch, who sold the stuff to Degussa, who sold the marketing rights to two other chemical companies. I won’t even bother telling you their names. It would just confuse you. So, in fact, I. G. Farben held only a twenty percent share in the gas, with the lion’s share owned by another company, Goldschmidt AG of Essen.
“Why am I telling you this? Let me explain. When I moved into this building, I felt kind of uncomfortable at the idea that I might be breathing the same kind of office air as the folks who developed that poison gas. So I resolved to find out about it for myself. And I discovered that it really wasn’t true that I. G. Farben had had very much to do with that gas. I also discovered that back in 1929, the U.S. Public Health Service was using Zyklon B to disinfect the clothes of Mexican immigrants and the freight trains they were traveling in. At the New Orleans Quarantine Station. Incidentally, the stuff is still being manufactured today, in Czechoslovakia, in the city of Köln. They call it Uragan D2 and they use it to disinfect the trains that German POWs have been traveling on. Back to the Homeland.
“You see, Herr Gunther, I have a passion for information. Some people call that sort of thing trivia, but I do not. I call that truth. Or knowledge. Or even, when I’m sitting in my office, intelligence. I have an appetite for facts, sir. Facts. Whether it’s facts about I. G. Farben, Zyklon B gas, Mackie Messer, or Erich Mielke.”
I sipped my coffee. It was horrible. Like stewed socks. I reached for my cigarettes and remembered that I’d smoked the last of them in the car.
“Give Herr Gunther a cigarette, will you, Phil? That was what you were after, was it not?”
“Yes. Thank you.”
Scheuer lit me with an armor-plated Dunhill and then lit one for himself. I noticed the shields on his bow tie were the same as the ones on the Chief’s, and I assumed they shared more than just a service, but a background, too. Ivy League, probably.
“Your letter, Herr Gunther, was fascinating. Especially in the context of what Phil here has told me and what I’ve read in the file. But it’s my job to discover how much of it is fact. Oh, I’m not for a moment suggesting that you’re lying to us. But after twenty years, people can easily make mistakes. That’s fair, isn’t it?”
“Very fair.”
He regarded my undrunk coffee with vicarious disgust. “Horrible, isn’t it? The coffee. I don’t know why we put up with it. Phil, get Herr Gunther something stronger. What are you drinking, sir?”
“A schnapps would be nice,” I said, and glanced around as Scheuer fetched a bottle and a small glass from inside the sideboard and placed it on the desk. “Thank you.”
“Coaster,” snapped the Chief.
Coasters were fetched and placed under the bottle and my glass.
“This table’s made of walnut,” said the Chief. “Walnut marks like a damask napkin. Now, then, sir. You have your cigarette. You have your drink. All I need from you are some facts.”
In his fingers he held a sheet of unfolded paper on which I recognized my own handwriting. He placed a pair of half-moon glasses on the end of his snub nose and viewed the letter with a detached curiosity. He barely read the contents before letting the note fall onto the table.