In writing “Defying Gravity” Chapters 55, 56, and 61, Paul Schatzkin had little choice but to rely very heavily upon the account of events provided to him by “O’Riley” (aka “twigsnapper”).
These chapters chronologically cover the period from late April 1945 until sometime in the spring of 1946.
Chapter 55: Situation Normal
This chapter contains “O’Riley’s” account of how the plan for Dr. Brown to rendezvous with a German tank commander at a farmhouse and ‘vet’ a German scientist who accompanied him ended in calamity.
O’Riley tells us how it all unfolded:
Dr. Brown’s team arrived at daybreak after driving carefully through the night … All was quiet at this second farmhouse but I am sure the Arkansas kid’s back teeth were grinding. Dr. Brown walked right to the front door and simply knocked.
A German soldier opened the door and stepped back. A man behind a table reached for something that he was going to hand to Dr. Brown but the kid had stepped in by then and his senses went into overload. He drew and fired.
In the next instant a firefight erupted in the farmhouse, with German sentries adding fire from the periphery - a fusillade of chaos that was started by a “trigger-happy 18-year old from Arkansas” who would not have been there had Campaigne not forced O’Riley to sit out the mission.
When the shooting stopped, the German scientist - dressed as a common soldier - was dead, three Americans including the radio operator were dead, and Townsend Brown lay bleeding from the wound where a bullet had ripped through his shoulder and penetrated a lung before exiting out his back.
Chapter 56: All Flags Flying
This chapter contains “O’Riley’s” first-hand account of how Robert Sarbacher had blazed onto the scene with “all flags flying” and taken charge of the operation to rescue Dr. Brown and seize German cipher machines.
With “O’Riley” in tow, Sarbacher set off for the farmhouse:
The first shots had already been fired by the time Sarbacher and O’Riley pulled into the farmhouse yard. “It was all eerily quiet,” O’Riley recalled. “Sarbacher went in ahead of me and went straight to the corner where the tank commander lay sprawled,” his dead body providing cover to the barely breathing Townsend Brown. “He carefully and respectfully put the body to the side as I walked in. The fact that Dr. Brown was still alive came as a shock to me, actually. Sarbacher just pointed, and then went off to do whatever it was that he was originally planning to do with the cipher gear and related paperwork.”
O’Riley tended to Dr. Brown, “who was conscious enough to tell me that the tank commander had saved his life by keeping the German cipher team from shooting him. He must have gotten most of them. But of course when the Americans burst in the door it was all over for them - and the tank commander too. It looked to me like he had pulled Dr. Brown into a corner and had died protecting him from of the other German staff members. He was quite dead, unfortunately.”
O’Riley says he tended to Dr. Brown, “getting some medics to him.” Meanwhile, “Sarbacher sent another team to collect our jeep and radio and tend to the other men we had lost. … I slowly faded to black along with Sarbacher once our chores were finished."
(to be continued)