The Gemini Divergence (50 page)

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Authors: Eric Birk

Tags: #cold war, #roswell, #scifi thriller, #peenemunde, #operation paperclip, #hannebau, #kapustin yar, #kecksburg, #nazi ufo, #new swabia, #shag harbor, #wonder weapon

BOOK: The Gemini Divergence
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“Anyway!” Von Sterbenbach cut him off, “I
asked Skorzeny to find me a doctor to deal with how space has been
affecting our health. We need to do something as soon as possible
before the affects are irreversible.”

*~*

The morning sun was causing a mist of fog;
condensing the water from the jungle vegetation into the Puerto
Rican sky.

Gus looked up into the sun. The armpits of
his uniform already drenched with sweat.

Volmer’s glasses were totally fogged up. He
had wiped them off several times already, but had finally
surrendered to having to face the direction of people’s voices
because he was unable to see them.

Gus was constantly watching to make sure that
Volmer didn’t trip over anything.

Volmer asked one of the technicians working
on the partially constructed radio telescope, “Does it work? Have
you found anything interesting?”

“Oh Yeah!” proclaimed the technician as he
shuffled through a file folder that he held in his hands.

When he found what he was looking for, he
handed it to Volmer.

Volmer realizing that it was futile for him
to see what it was that had just been handed to him called out,
“Gus”, as he held up the paper.

Gus grabbed it and looked for a moment and
asked, “Is this real? Or is this something that you created?”

“What is it?” asked Volmer.

“Oh its real,” commented the technician, “and
we found twenty three of them so far.”

“Twenty three of what?” begged Volmer in a
louder tone.

Gus paused and then answered, “It looks like
a pulp fiction space station.”

Volmer rambled, “Twenty three, oh my. How
many vectors of the sky have you been able to scan so far?”

The technician answered, “We haven’t even
completed a tenth of the sky yet, and we don’t know if there are
more. We don’t even know if they are moving and we have been
scanning the same one moving around, except that some of these
appear to be different in size and shape.”

The technician handed the whole file to Gus,
who then quickly rifled through the images.

“What do you think Gus?” asked Volmer.

“I think that General Lemay will be
barbequing my balls unless we find a government courier to fly
these images to him today.”

 

May 61

McNamara briefed President Kennedy about the
newly discovered space stations and showed him the images.

He also reported that it seemed futile trying
to replicate the German vril.

All of their brightest minds had taken a
crack at it, but none could make any headway.

It was so volatile that it defied analysis.
They had only been able to attain small traces of residue and even
the residue was almost impossible to contain, and when tested,
evaporated faster than any molecules known to science.

Kennedy asked, “What do we do?”

McNamara suggested, “Von Braun and Volmer
have recommended research on some nuclear propulsion theories.”

“Let’s look into that. Being that the only
means of transportation that we have into space is the one that the
Germans gave us, solely to mislead us.”

So the President had his aids draw up the
papers, and Kennedy administratively started the ‘Nerva’, atomic
propulsion, program.

 

4 June 61

President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev held
a summit meeting in Vienna.

While the world press was present, Khrushchev
displayed his great concern about the U.S. having far more missiles
than the Soviet Union and that the U.S. had missiles in Turkey,
near the Soviet border.

In private, after the press had gone away,
Kennedy thanked Khrushchev for covertly joining the alliance with
America against the Nazi threat. He then showed Khrushchev the
digitized images of the orbiting Nazi stations.

Khrushchev shoved the papers aside and called
them ‘American Disney Cartoons’, then he expressed his still
existing great distrust of America. He conveyed to Kennedy that he
trusted no one.

Khrushchev believed that all men have hidden
agendas, and that no man could be trusted until you knew what his
true agenda was.

He told Kennedy about his aid, Gennedy
Kasparov, and how Comrade Kasparov was one of the few aids that had
survived the transition from the Stalin regime into the Khrushchev
regime.

The reason was that Khrushchev had figured
out what his secret agenda was.

Kasparov was secretly a devout Russian
Orthodox Christian, and kept it secret from everyone in fear for
his life.

Khrushchev stated that as long as he knew
Kasparov’s secret, he could then be trusted, and had never let him
down.

The Premier then asked the President, “Why
should I trust you to help us thwart the Nazis from space? You are
the ones that seem to keep having secret meetings with them.”

Kennedy agreed that was an understandable
problem, and offered Khrushchev to send a Soviet representative if
America were to ever hold a meeting with the Raumsfahrtwaffe
again.

Khrushchev replied that he would think about
it.

 

21 July 1961

Mercury 4 was launched into space carrying
astronaut Gus Grissom inside of his Liberty Bell 7 capsule.

This time the Nazi capture craft was waiting
at the apex of Grissom’s sub-orbital trajectory.

The capture craft tried again in vain to
capture an American capsule; this time failing to hold onto Liberty
Bell 7.

They noticed that they had caused severe
damage to the capsule hatch as the Mercury craft began its descent
back into the ionosphere.

They didn’t have time to dispatch a fighter
saucer to destroy Liberty Bell 7, but thought that they may not
have to.

They were confident that because of the
escape hatch damage inflicted, that the capsule would depressurize
when it re-entered the atmosphere, if it had not done so already.
But luckily Grissom was wearing his pressure suit.

When Grissom landed in the ocean, water began
to fill the capsule through the inflicted hole before the rescue
helicopter could latch onto it, so he blew the hatch completely off
and swam out of the capsule to escape drowning.

The helicopter rescue team was unaware of
what had actually taken place, and reported that Grissom had
panicked and blown the hatch prematurely.

 

6 August 1961

Soviets launch Vostok 2 into space carrying
cosmonaut Gherman Titov.

Once again the Soviet craft had to be
detected first before action could be taken, but once the capture
craft engaged and tried to capture Vostok 2, Titov radioed his
ground control and told them that he was taking manual control of
the craft.

The reason that he gave ground control, ‘My
heater is broken’, was code for, ‘I am under attack,’

Once again the Raumsfahrtwaffe thought that
they had damaged the craft to the point of destruction, but Titov
was barely able to survive re-entry by fully donning his space suit
before his craft completely depressurized.

His capsule was heavily damaged and Titov did
not know if the capsule parachutes would properly deploy, so he
blew the hatch and parachuted to safety with his own parachute,
returning safely to the earth.

*~*

Aribert Heim was a well known Nazi war
criminal also known as ‘Doctor Death’. Not to be confused with the
moniker, ‘Angel of Death’, given to Josef Mengele.

An Austrian born doctor, Heim served in the
concentration camps Sachsenhausen, Buchenwald and Mauthausen,
during the war.

He was the monster that was reputed as using
human skin to make seat covers and lamp shades, and found amusement
watching how long it took people to suffer and die by injecting
foreign fluids such as gasoline into their hearts.

Witnesses claimed that he used his victim’s
skulls as paper weights in his office, forcing other inmates to
boil the dead tissue from the severed heads to clean the skulls for
his use.

He had been accused of personally torturing
and killing over 300 people, not including deaths due to his
deliberate negligence or experiments.

Other witnesses claimed that he carried out
bizarre cross-breading and transplanting experiments.

He escaped prosecution at war crimes trials,
but was named so many times by holocaust survivors that a warrant
was finally issued for his arrest in 1961.

 

“General Schwerig I would like for you to
meet Doctor Aribert Heim. He is the doctor that Skorzeny has
recruited to solve our chronic health problems relating to living
in space,” boasted Von Sterbenbach as he patted the white coated
doctor on the back.

Schwerig smiled while secretly grimacing,
because he could instantly smell the doctor’s odor as being that of
a veterinarian or a farmer, “Delighted, Herr Doctor. What do you
think of our facilities here in space?”

“I must admit that I am very impressed. I
would never have imagined this place possible. I am excited to get
to work on your problems. I have many ideas already.”

Although Schwerig was at first turned off by
the doctor’s stench, he was impressed by his can do attitude.

“What do you have in mind?” asked
Schwerig.

“I want to try transfusing bodily fluids from
healthy earth dwelling people.”

“Will you be able to find enough donors?”

The doctor hesitated and looked at Von
Sterbenbach for approval before continuing, who then returned a
quick nod, “We don’t plan on asking for donors… We are planning on
abducting donors against their will and releasing them back into
their normal lives.”

Schwerig looked alarmed, “Won’t that cause a
panic? It may certainly draw unwanted attention upon us.”

Von Sterbenbach soothed, “Now, now, Herr
General. The doctor has already thought of that and plans on
drugging the abductees and then using film images during their drug
induced state, to convince them that they have been abducted by
Martians.”

Schwerig rolled his head in complete
disbelief, “My Führer, are we sure that this will work?”

“We have already tried it on some abductees
from rural Brazilian towns,” claimed the doctor, “after being
returned back to their homes, they carried on like nothing ever
happened and were only able to recall the Martian images when put
under hypnosis.”

“But how do you prevent them from seeing us
during their drugged status?”

“We use very bright lights, right in their
faces, while they are bound, until it is time to show them the
Martian images.”

Von Sterbenbach interjected, “Even if they
recall the abduction, the lights, the Martian images or the medical
experiments in a saucer. The combination of the experience will
cause anyone to look like a loon if they talk about it.”

The doctor confidently stated, “I want to
also start immediately on the reproductive organ damage problem
that people seem to receive in space by taking samples from the
abductees for comparison.”

Schwerig stood stoic and mute in
disbelief.

 

19 September 1961

Betty and Barney Hill were abducted from a
rural road in the vicinity of Groveton, New Hampshire.

They reported bright lights, missing time,
medical experiments including examinations of sexual organs and
fluid removal, and alien beings in a flying saucer.

The Hills were the first widely publicized
UFO abductees.

In the years after the Hill incident,
abductees’ reports grew into the hundreds within the first
decade.

By the 80’s abductees’ reports had
skyrocketed into the thousands, and were reported on every
continent.

*~*

Police showed up at Heim’s door the day after
his arrest warrant was issued, but he was gone.

A neighbor reported that he had been gone for
a while, “I have not seen him in months, is something wrong?”

*~*

“I know he almost gave the whole shootin’
match away in front of congress, but what am I to do?” proclaimed
Lemay, on the phone as he sat at his desk, “especially with aids
like that Ford financial fiasco McNamara helping him write his
speeches”

“I know.”

“Well I hope that son of a rum runner doesn’t
screw up and make any more Freudian slips about all the other
things within the damn plan.”

*~*

President Kennedy then gave his famous speech
at Rice University where he made the infamous quote, “We choose to
go to the moon… We choose to go to the moon, ‘and the other
things’. Not because they are easy, but because they are hard.”

 

 

~~~**^**~~~

 

 

The
Divergence / Operation Dominic

 

30 October 1961

The Soviet Union detonated the largest thermo
nuclear device ever tested in history at their Novaya Zemlya,
Arctic island test site.

It was reported at that time to have been 100
Megatons. It yielded a man made explosion that was ¼ the explosive
force of the Krakatoa eruption of 1883.

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