burgundy silk sheets, magenta cashmere blankets and a claret satin canopy. The walls were upholstered in scarlet velvet, which blended perfectly with the five-ply carpet.
It was with the bathroom that the Gestapo had hoped to outdo itselfâand outshine its competitors. Carrara marble, ivory white with slight bleedings of pink, covered wall, ceiling and floor. The sunken rose-marble tub was adorned with golden spouts, golden drain top and five solid-gold faucets. Two of the handles controlled bath water, two the shower, and the fifth steam. With the flick of von Schleibenâs wrist the marble room could be converted into a steam bath.
WVHA, the camp security group, had reached into its meager coffers and managed to have the exterior of the Chariot sprayed a rich vermilion.
The reason for all this concern and expense was a much-discussed secret: as director of the Council for Extreme Security, Hugo Thomas von Schleiben was one of the most powerful men in the Third Reichâs maze of police and intelligence networks. Every major organization was only too eager to contribute to the generalâs private transportation.
It surprised no one and delighted all that the Chariot became von Schleibenâs most prized and guarded possession. No one but the general himself and the maintenance staff had ever set foot, let alone ridden, in the vermilion railroad car.
Now, for the first time without von Schleiben aboard, the Chariot had been dispatched to the Belgian border for just one purpose: to transport Helmuth Webber, a mere colonel, back to Munich. The trip was classified Reich top secret.
The washcloth steamed. Webber held it tight to his face. He preferred Berlin water. You could always wash better in it. It improved your skin. Lather spread. Von Schleibenâs gold straight razor, a gift from Heinrich Mueller of the Frontier Police, deftly sliced away the two-day stubble. He replaced the monocle over his left eye. The triptych mirrors were wiped clear of steam. Webber examined the three-quarter profile of aquiline nose, sunken cheek, arched forehead and thin lips.
âYou know, dear fellow,â he confided to his triple image, âit was there all the time. Just waiting there, right in front of themâbut we were the only ones to see it. We were the only ones to make sense of it.â
Helmuth Webber was a member of SD-Ausland, one of Germanyâs most elite and effective foreign-intelligence services. Seldom, if ever, did SD-Ausland demean itself with problems of a domestic nature, such as concentration-camp security.
Escapes from concentration camps were a different matter. Even though the basic jurisdiction for such events fell to WVHA or, in more critical instances, to the Gestapo, there was always the possibility that some Allied operation had penetrated the Reichâs borders and had brought out not only prisoners, but information as well. Information concerning camp activities was a rather sensitive issue among Reich officials. Thus, SD-Ausland had always kept a watchful, though semiofficial, eye on these situations. As the incidence of assisted escapes began to accelerate, SD-Ausland had become more directly involved.
Webber slid into the hot water. The wall table was lowered over him, and a tray bearing gold dishes and a bottle of Dom Perignon champagne was set down. The covers were lifted. Malossol caviar. A vol-au-vent . Real butter. He began eating.
⦠ensuing confusion caused by explosions and subsequent blackout (second power failure), prisoner Vetter escaped from the compound through a hole cut in de-electrified west fence and fled to wooded area half kilometer beyond. Escape took place at approximately 0100 hours 9 January 1944.
(NOTE: Vetter is believed to have had one or more accomplices to this point. Investigation now in progress.)
On reaching tree line Vetter followed series of cloth markers which led him to truck believed to be driven by SPANGLER.
Tire tracks reveal