He fairly leapt from his chair. “Sergeant Götz,” he boomed, happy to be back in command.
The door banged open behind me. “Sir!”
“Schnapps,” the colonel said.
And so the colonel and I drank together for a time.
He grew intensely nostalgic and even sentimental about the military action he’d seen, regretting having missed, because of his age, most of the wars of unification; cherishing the bit he had finally experienced as a freshly minted, nineteen-year-old lieutenant at the Siege of Paris; doing his most ardent fighting later on, in the African colonies. I listened quietly and he talked volubly and when I felt we’d secured our bond of uniform and rank and shared secret mission, I asked to see a little of the base.
He was eager to comply.
We stepped out of the administrative building.
“Our airship is only lately delivered,” Ziegler said. “The LZ 78. Modeled after the navy’s newest.”
And he led me first through a door in the freight-train-long row of contiguous lean-tos at the base of the near wall of the hangar — where maintenance supplies were kept and the ordnance and flying supplies were staged for the missions — and then through a sliding door into the hangar and into the presence of the Zeppelin itself, its long bullet-body darkly glowing from the massive bank of yellow-tinted windows in the ceiling.
The size of the airship staggered me even more than the hangar it sat in, as on the morning in New York a few months ago I was staggered by the Lusitania as I stood at the foot of its gangplank. These things were not simply vast, fixed objects. These things took you inside them and then raced upon the face of the sea or through the sky. This thing now before me, colossal as it was, actually flew. It was as if the Great Pyramid of Giza could suddenly lift up from the earth and soar away.
It seemed invulnerable, this Zeppelin. Even noble, somehow, intrinsically so. Apart from the terrible intentions its owners had for it, the airship itself seemed innocent. I was sad for what I had to do. And terrified that I might not be able to do it. I was tiny in the world of this thing. The bag on my shoulder — more importantly, the single device I intended to carry in it — was tinier still.
The air smelled of hydrogen. Even here. Even with the Zeppelin at rest. It was filled full already, its twilight-gray skin stretched taut with two million cubic feet of gas, anticipating this night. LZ 78 was ready to fly. And I had to find a way to destroy it at the very last moment.
51
The doors at the upwind end of the hangar were partly open, about the width of the central guiding rails. Ziegler walked us in that direction. He spoke of the ton-and-a-half bomb payload and the four latest-model Maxim guns in the gondolas. I noted heavy-duty branch valves along the floor, bespeaking the deeply buried hydrogen conduits; wheeled distribution tanks for gasoline with heavy-duty pumps and safety cocks, the fuel itself also buried underground; two-branched water hydrants every hundred feet; three dozen ventilating chimneys in the roof; signs everywhere with warnings about smoking, about matches, about sparks; the dampness beneath our feet, the floor kept constantly wet by a sprinkling system. Everywhere around us were markers of the fear of fire. Fear of the explosive flammability of hydrogen.
“Good,” Ziegler said. “Here’s Major Dettmer.”
We were passing the forward gondola, and ahead, standing in the center of the rails, arms akimbo, darkly silhouetted against the tall corridor of morning light at the open doors, was the commander of LZ 78.
We approached. He turned and took a step toward us, his face suddenly rendering itself, in the light from the windows, into clean-shaven, cleft-chinned stolidity.
He saluted us both.
Ziegler introduced me. And he explained me: “Colonel Wolfinger represents the Foreign Office. They have interceded about the civilian.”
Dettmer’s eyes cut instantly in my direction.
“He won’t be flying with you,” I said.
I patted my dispatch case, as if the written order for that was inside. I wanted the major to take note of the case so when I needed access to his airship, he would not question its presence over my shoulder.
I paused to let Major Dettmer reply if he wished.
He realized I was waiting.
He said, “It was not my idea to bring him, sir.”
I smiled at him. “I did not imagine it was.”
“I have clear instructions about his bomb,” he said. “We do not need his presence to drop it where they wish.”
To demonstrate my authority and validate my identity, I’d played the safest cards in my deck of deductions so far. I took a little gamble with one now.
“They do still light their theaters at night,” I said.
Dettmer smiled.
I was right about the target.
“I would like to see you off,” I said. “To see for myself that the bomb is secure,” I said.
“Yes sir,” he said.
“They have given you special handling instructions, I presume.”
“They have.”
“Have they told you why?”
I sensed Ziegler stiffen beside me. He’d answered this question already. I was checking up on him.
“We have speculated,” Dettmer said.
Ziegler said, sharply, “He asked if they told you its specialness, Major. Not if you have a speculation.”
Dettmer looked at his colonel and then back to me. “I’m sorry, sir. No, sir. They have told us only how to handle the bomb.”
I said, “But that clearly suggests something to you, speculative though your thoughts may be.”
He looked at his colonel once more.
I turned to Ziegler. I let him off the hook, mercy being as intimidating an assertion of power as severity. “You quite properly answered the question that I asked, Colonel. I am now asking for your speculation.”
Ziegler said, “We assume the bomb contains a poison gas.”
“Do you accept a war of terror upon a civilian population, Colonel?”
He straightened. But he was not composed. He had no idea what I expected him to say.
“I follow orders,” he said.
“And you, Major?” I turned to him.
“Yes sir.”
“Follow your instructions carefully with this device, gentlemen. We obey. We do our duty. All of us. As we must.”
Including myself in the invocation of duty, I was reminded of the weather. How its fickleness could test that duty. Once I’d dealt with Stockman and planted the bomb, the Zeppelin had to fly.
And then I had a thought.
I turned to Ziegler.
“This matter of the weather,” I said. “Once armed, this special bomb becomes even more dangerous. We should abort the mission only under extreme circumstances.”
Ziegler did not reply.
I looked at the major. He was standing at attention.
The burden, the dangers, of what I was suggesting would fall on him.
Too bad.
And then my brain caught up with a thing I had been shunting aside, a thing I’d learned some months ago to shunt aside. I thought of the men I have killed, the men I had yet to kill, in doing my duty.
Unless I failed in my own mission, the man standing before me would not have to brave a flight into bad weather this evening.
He would be dead.
He and his whole crew.
By my dutiful hand.
I shunted this aside again.
I said, “This special bomb is very volatile. We do not wish to poison the air base and all of Spich.”
“No sir,” Ziegler said, his voice thick with what sounded like misery.
I looked at him.
This did not resemble war as he’d known it, as he’d relished it, for his long career. Not in any way.