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Ib Melchior

The Haigerloch Project

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The author acknowledges with appreciation the valuable assistance given him in researching this book by Mr. Siegfried G. Bart, wartime president of Bart Manufacturing Company, a prime contractor for the Manhattan Project; Colonel James C. Stowers, chief of the Manhattan Project, New York; Mr. William F. Heine, Atomic Energy Information Service; and Dr. Edwin L. Rodgers, Sherman Oaks Hospital, California.

The terms “atomic research,” “atomic bomb” and “atomic physics” have been used in The Haigerloch Project rather than the current “nuclear research” and “nuclear physics” because they were the terms in general use during the time the story takes place.

To the Ministry of War

Berlin

25.4.1939

We take the liberty of calling to your attention the newest development in atomic physics which in our opinion can produce an explosive that is many orders of magnitude more effective than any conventional ones…. That country which first makes use of it has an unsurpassable advantage over all others.

— PROFESSOR PAUL HARTECK
Hamburg

AUTHOR'S NOTE

Although The Haigerloch Project is fiction, the existence of the project and many of the elements and incidents of the story are based on actual events and upon the author's personal experiences.

I. M.

Vorgang: Schreiben vom 24.2.45, A. - Z, Bb.Nr 1523/45 g

Betrifft: Notprogramm: Energiegewinnungsvorhaben.

I.

Für die Endentwicklung des Vorhabens “Energiegewinnung aus Kernprozessen” ist voller Schutz erforderlich. Die leitenden Arbeitsstellen sind:

Arbeitsgruppen KWI (für Physik und Chemie) (Berlin, Heidelberg, Hechingen und Tailfingen).

des Bevollmächtigen in Stadtilm, Haigerloch und München.

Prof. Harteck (Inst. f. phys. Chemie, Hamburg, Celle und Anschütz & Co.)

Prof. Kirchner — Prof. Riezler (Phys. Inst. Köln, Zwst. Garmish-Partenkirchen)

Phys. Inst. Wien (Prof. Stetter)

Strahlenschutz und Dosimetrie (PTR und KWI Berlin-Buch.

Vorhaben SH 200 (bes. I.G. und Bamag-Meguin)

Spezialmetallfertigung (Auer, Degussa)

Zyklotron (KWI Heidelberg, Siemens-Halske) (

Bemerkung

: Materialbedarf gedeckt, nur noch Fertigmontage)

Elektronenschleuder (gemeinsam mit uK geführt.

Diese Vorhaben sollen den vollen Energie-, Material- und Personalschutz des Führernotprogramms entsprechend Führererlass von 31.1.45, 23 Uhr erhalten.

The Reich Marshal
of the Greater German Reich
President
of the Reich Research Council
The Authority
for Atomic Research

File:

Letter of 24/2/45 A.-Z.: Bb. No. 1523/45 g

Regarding: Emergency Program, Power Yield Projects.

I.

To accomplish the final development of “Power Yield from Atomic Action” full protection is imperative. The leading work sites are:

Work Group KWI (for Physics and Chemistry) (Berlin, Heidelberg, Hechingen and Tailfingen)

the authorities on Stadtilm, Haigerloch and Munich

Prof. Harteck (Inst. for Physical Chemistry, Hamburg, Celle and Anschütz & Co.)

Prof. Kirchner — Prof. Riezler (Phys. Inst. Cologne, intermed. sta. Garmish-Partenkirchen)

Phys. Inst. Vienna (Prof. Stetter)

Radiation Protection and Dosimetry (PTR and KWI Berlin-Buch.)

Project SH 200 (esp. I.G. and Bamag-Meguin)

Special Metal Processing (Auer, Degussa)

Cyclotron (KWI Heidelberg, Siemens-Halske) (Note: Material requirements covered, though only final assembly)

Electron Centrifuge (conducted in coaction)

These projects shall be afforded the full power, material and personnel protection of the Führer Emergency Program according to the Führer Order of 23 hours, 31/1/45.

/s/ Walther Gerlach

MAP

PROLOGUE

Fear clamped an icy vise on every nerve end in his body, threatening to numb his fingers as he tapped the worn Morse key— QSP… QSP… QSP…

He listened….

His earphones were filled only with static. There was no acknowledgment.

Urgently his fingers resumed QSP… QSP… QSP…

His eyes roamed the dark cellar room. His self-imposed prison.

His — crypt?

He knew he had been on the air too long. Any moment he would hear the motor of the monitor truck grind to a halt outside.

QSP… QSP… QSP…

Still no contact.

He clamped his jaws tight.

He could wait no longer. He had to take a chance. Perhaps they could read him — even though he could not read them. He'd send his message. Blind.

And hope…

Hurriedly he started his transmission. Call letters. Identification. Message in cipher. His fingers flew on the key. Groups of five letters…

IDUGS HBAFN RTJNV…

Finished. Almost finished…

Suddenly he stopped.

He tore the earphones from his head.

Too late.

He could hear the rifle butts battering the wooden door at the top of the stairs.

The dead-bolt would not hold for long….

Automatically he finished the last letter group of his message. He signed off—

EULE.

Owl.

A cry for deliverance…

He struck a large wooden match and held his hurriedly scrawled message to the flame. His hands shook. He let the paper flare until it singed his fingers, then let it drop to the cement floor next to his stool.

He watched it writhe into a black curl before grinding it to ashes with his foot.

He heard the hobnailed boots pound down the stairs.

He stood up. Leadenly.

He turned.

He knew what he would see.

There were two of them. Hard-faced. Jet-black uniforms. On the left sleeves the blood-red armbands with the angular black swastikas in their white circles. On the black caps the gleaming death-head emblems of the SS…

But his eyes were inexorably drawn to the muzzles of the two Schmeisser submachine guns pointed directly at his gut.

He knew he was dead.

He only hoped death would come quickly.

He also knew it would not.

Unless—

Suddenly, with a cry of despair, he lunged at one of the SS men….

He saw the all-devouring muzzle of the submachine gun jerk up, and—

PART I

The Month of

28 Feb 1945—28 Mar 1945

1

He had no doubt how it would turn out, and it annoyed the hell out of him. Still, he couldn't bring himself to capitulate without at least a show of rebellion. Any damned fish worth netting ought to do some struggling before being reeled in.