Robert Ludlum – Rhinemann Exchange

The second man was to be expected under the circumstances. He was Howard

Oliver, Meridian Aircraft’s obese debater of War Department contracts.

‘You’re on time,’ said Walter Kendall curtly, sitting down in an armchair,

reaching for papers in an open, filthy briefcase at his feet.

‘Hello, Jon.’ Oliver approached and offered a short, neutral handshake.

‘Where are the others?’ asked Craft.

‘No one wanted to be here,’ answered Kendall with a furtive glance at

Oliver. ‘Howard has to be, and I’m paid to be. You had one hell of a

meeting with this Swanson.’

‘You’ve read my report?’

‘He’s read it,’ said Oliver, crossing to a copper-topped wheelcart in the

comer on which there were bottles and glasses. ‘He’s got questions.’

‘I made everything perfectly clear …..

‘Those aren’t the questions,’ interrupted Kendall while squeez, ing the tip

of a cigarette before inserting it into his mouth. As he struck a match,

Craft walked to a large velvet chair across from the accountant and sat

down. Oliver had poured himself a whisky and remained standing.

‘If you want a drink, Jon, it’s over there,’ said Oliver.

At the mention of alcohol’, Kendall glanced up at him from his papers with

ferret-like eyes. ‘No thank you,’ Craft replied. ‘I’d like to get this over

with as soon as possible.’

‘Suit yourself,’ Oliver looked at the accountant. ‘Ask your questions.’

Kendall, sucking on his cigarette, spoke as the smoke curled

67

around his nostrils. ‘This Spinelli over at ATCO. Have you talked to him

since you saw SwansonT

‘No. There was nothing to say; nothing Icould say … without instructions.

As you know, I spoke with Howard on the phone. He told me to wait; write a

report and do nothing.’

‘Craft’s the funnel to ATCO,’ said Oliver. ‘I didn’t want him running

scared, trying to smooth things over. It’d look like we were hiding

something.’

‘We are,’ Kendall removed his cigarette, the ash falling on his trousers.

He continued while slowly shuffling the papers on his lap. ‘Let’s go over

Spinelli’s complaints. As Swanson brought them up.’

The accountant touched briefly, concisely on each point raised. They

covered Spinelli’s statements regarding delayed deliveries, pe rsonnel

transfers, blueprint holdups, a dozen other minor grievances. Craft replied

with equal brevity, answering when he could, stating ignorance when he

could not. There was no reason to hide anything.

He had been carrying out instructions, not issuing them.

‘Can Spinelli substantiate these charges? And don’t kid yourselves, these

are charges, not complaints.’

‘What charges?’ Oliver spat out the words. ‘That guinea bastard’s fucked up

everything! Who’s he to make charges?’

6Get off it,’ said Kendall in his rasping voice. ‘Don’t play games. Save

them for a congressional committee, unless I can figure something.’

At Kendall’s words the sharp pain returned to Craft’s stomach. The

prospects of disgrace – even remotely associated – could ruin his life. The

life he expected to lead back in New York. The financial boors, the

merchants, could never understand. ‘That’s going a little far. . . .’

Kendall looked over at Craft. ‘Maybe you didn’t hear Swanson. It’s not

going far enough. You got the Fortress contracts because your projections

said you could do the job.’

‘Just a minute!’ yelled Oliver. ‘We . . .’

‘Screw the legal crap!’ countered Kendall, shouting over Oliver’s

interruption. ‘My firm … me, I… squared those projections. I know what

they say, what they implied. You left the other companies at the gate. They

wouldn’t say what you said. Not Douglas, not Boeing, not Lockheed. You were

hungry and you got the meat and now you’re not delivering…. So what else

68

is new? Let’s go back: can Spinelli substantiater

‘Shit,’ exploded Oliver, heading for the bar.

‘How do you mean … substantiate?’ asked Jonathan Craft, his stomach in

agony.

‘Are there any memorandums floating around,’ Kendall tapped the pages in

his hand, ‘that bear on any of this?’ ,

‘Well . . .’ Craft hesitated; he couldn’t stand the pain in his stomach.’

When personnel transfers were expedited, they were put into interoffice. .

. .’

‘The answer’s yes,’ interrupted Oliver in disgust, pouring himself a drink.

‘What about financial cutbacks?’

Oliver once again replied. ‘We obscured those. Spinelli’s requisitions just

got lost in the paper shuffle.’

‘Didn’t he scream? Didn’t he shoot off memos?’

‘That’s Craft’s department,’ answered Oliver, drinking most of his whisky

in one swallow. ‘Spinelli was his little guinea boy.’

‘Well?’ Kendall looked at Craft.

‘Well … he sent numerous communications.’ Craft leaned forward in the

chair, as much to relieve the pain as to appear confidential. ‘I removed

everything from the files,’ he said softly.

‘Christ,’ exploded Kendall quietly. ‘I don’t give a shit what you removed.

He’s got copies. Dates!

‘Well, I couldn’t say. . . .’

‘He didn’t type the goddamned things himseo, did he? You didn’t take away

the fucking secretaries, too, did you?’

‘There’s no call to be offensive. . . .,

‘Offensivel You’re a funny manl Maybe they’ve got fancy stripes for you in

Leavenworth! The accountant snorted and turned his attention to Howard

Oliver. ‘Swanson’s got a case; he’ll hang you. Nobody has to be a lawyer to

see that. You held back. You figured to use the existing guidance systems!

‘Only because the new gyroscopes couldn’t be developedl Because that guinea

bastard fell so far behind he couldn’t catch UP !,

‘Also it saved you a couple of hundred million. . . . You should have

primed the pumps, not cut off the water. You’re big ducks in a short

gallery; a blind man could knock you off.’

Oliver put his glass down and spoke slowly. ‘We don’t pay you for that kind

of judgment, Walter. You’d better have somo. thing else.’

69

Kendall crushed out his mutilated cigarette, his dirty finger. nails

covered with ash. ‘I do,’ he said. ‘You need company; you’re in the middle

of a very emotional issue. It’ll cost you but you don’t have a choice.

You’ve got to make deals, ring in everybody. Get hold of Sperry Rand, GM,

Chrysler, Lockheed, Douglas, Rolls-Royce, if you have to … every son of

a bitch with an engineering laboratory. A patriotic crash program. Cross.

reference your data, open up everything you’ve got.’

‘They’ll steal us blind!’ roared Oliver. ‘Millions!’

‘Cost you more if you don’t … I’ll prepare supplementary financial stats.

I’ll pack the sheets with so much ice, it’ll take ten years to thaw.

That’ll cost you, too.’ Kendall smirked, baring soiled teeth.

Howard Oliver stared at the unkempt accountant. ‘It’s crazy,’ he said

quietly. ‘We’ll be giving away fortunes for something that can’t be bought

because it doesn’t exist.’

‘But you said it did exist. You told Swanson it existed – at least a hell

of a lot more confidently than anybody else. You sold your great industrial

know-how, and when you couldn’t deliver, you covered up. Swanson’s right.

You’re a menace to the war effort. Maybe you should be shot.

Jonathan Craft watched the filthy, grinning bookkeeper with bad teeth and

wanted to vomit. But he was their only hope.

70

5

SEPTEMBER 25,1943

STUTTGART, GERMANY

Wilhelm. Zangen stood by the window overlooking Stuttgart’s Reichssieg

Platz, holding a handkerchief against his inflamed, perspiring chin. This

outlying section of the city had been spared the bombing; it was

residential, even peaceful. The Neckar River could be seen in the distance,

its waters rolling calmly, oblivious to the destruction that had been

wrought on the other side of the city.

Zangen realized he was expected to speak, to answer von Schnitzler, who

spoke for all of I. G. Farben. The two other men were as anxious to hear

his words as was von Schnitzler. There was no point in procrastinating. He

had to carry out Altmiffler’s orders.

‘The Krupp laboratories have failed. No matter what Essen says, there is no

time for experimentation. The Ministry of Armaments has made that clear;

Altmiffier is resolute. He speaks for Speer.’ Zangen turned and looked at

the three men. ‘He holds you responsible.’

‘How can that beT asked von Schnitzler, his guttural lisp pronounced, his

voice angry. ‘How can we be responsible for something we know nothing

about? It’s illogical. Ridiculousl’

‘Would you wish me to convey that judgment to the ministryT

‘I’ll convey it myself, thank you,’ replied von Schnitzler. ‘Farben is not

involved.’

‘We are all involved,’ said Zangen quietly.

71

‘How can our company beT asked Heinrich Krepps, Direktor of Schreibwaren,

the largest printing complex in Germany. ‘Our work with Peenem0nde has been

practically nothing; and what there was, obscured to the point of

foolishness. Secrecy is one thing; lying to ourselves, something else

again. Do not include us, Herr Zangen.’

:You are included.’

I reject your conclusion. I’ve studied our communications with Peenem0nde.’

‘Perhaps you were not cleared for all the facts.’

‘Asinine!’

‘Quite possibly. Nevertheless . . .

‘Such a condition would hardly apply to me, Herr Reich official,’ said

Johann Dietricht, the middle-aged effeminate son of the Dietricht

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