Rudolf Hess: The Uninvited Envoy
By James Leasor
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About this ebook
Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s Deputy Führer, Leader of the Nazi Party, flew alone in an unarmed aeroplane, through a night of fire and ruin, on the most dangerous flight of his life. This is an amazing true story of his secret peace mission in 1941, with plans to end the war but on Germany’s terms. Leasor tells how Hess flew his Messerschmitt to Scotland, parachuting to safety seconds before his plane crashed. A dramatic reconstruction of Hess’ landing, his capture, his desire for an audience with the Duke of Hamilton and his interrogation are recounted here, concluding with the Nuremberg Trials of 1946 when he was sentenced to life imprisonment.
James Leasor
James Leasor was one of the bestselling British authors of the second half of the 20th Century. He wrote over 50 books including a rich variety of thrillers, historical novels and biographies. His works included Passport to Oblivion (which sold over 4 million copies around the World and was filmed as Where the Spies Are, starring David Niven), the first of nine novels featuring Dr Jason Love, a Somerset GP called to aid Her Majesty's Secret Service in foreign countries, and another series about the Far Eastern merchant Doctor Robert Gunn in the 19th century. There were also sagas set in Africa and Asia, written under the pseudonym Andrew MacAllan, and tales narrated by an unnamed vintage car dealer in Belgravia. Among non-fiction works were lives of Lord Nuffield, the Morris motor manufacturer, Wheels to Fortune and RSM Brittain, who was said to have the loudest voice in the Army, The Sergeant-Major; The Red Fort, which retold the story of the Indian Mutiny; and Rhodes and Barnato, which brought out the different characters of the great South African diamond millionaires. Who Killed Sir Harry Oakes? was an investigation of the unsolved murder of a Canadian mining entrepreneur in the Bahamas, He wrote a number of books about different events in the Second World War, including Green Beach, which revealed an important new aspect of the Dieppe Raid, when a radar expert landed with a patrol of the South Saskatchewan regiment, which was instructed to protect him, but also to kill him if he was in danger of falling into enemy hands; The One that Got Away (later filmed with Hardy Kruger in the starring role) about fighter pilot, Franz von Werra, the only German prisoner of war to successfully escape from British territory; Singapore – the Battle that Changed the World, on the fall of Singapore to the Japanese in 1941; Boarding Party (later filmed as The Sea Wolves with Gregory Peck, David Niven and Roger Moore) concerned veterans of the Calcutta Light Horse who attacked a German spy ship in neutral Goa in 1943; The Unknown Warrior, the story about a member of a clandestine British commando force consisting largely of Jewish exiles from Germany and eastern Europe, who decieived Hitler into thinking that the D-Day invasion was a diversion for the main assault near Calais; and The Uninvited Envoy, which told the story of Rudolph Hess' solo mission to Britain in 1941. Thomas James Leasor was born at Erith, Kent, on Decembe...
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Rudolf Hess - James Leasor
JAMES LEASOR
Rudolf Hess
The Uninvited Envoy
Learn, my son, with how
little wisdom the world is governed.
Pope Julius III (1487-1555)
Published by
James Leasor Ltd at Smashwords
81 Dovercourt Road, London SE22 8UW
www.jamesleasor.com
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
ISBN 978-1-908291-17-2
First published 1962
This edition published 2011
© James Leasor 1962, Estate of James Leasor 2011
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to give grateful acknowledgement to the many people who helped me with the preparation of this book. In particular, I would like to record my debt of gratitude to the following, who were kind enough to make available to me their recollections and impressions of this episode in history.
When several conflicting accounts have been given of some. incident, I have endeavoured to strike a mean between them. Any errors are my own.
JL
Mr Basil Baird
Mr William Burgess
Mr A Coles
Mr Richard Collier
Mr William Craig
Dr Henry Victor Dicks
Mr Harry Dinning
Sir Patrick J Dollan
Dr J Gibson Graham
Mr A W Gittens
Mr J Harding
Heinz Haushofer
Frau Use Hess
Herr Wolf Rudiger Hess
Dr Rainer Hildebrandt
Mr C Hill
Mr Tom Hyslop
Mr Max McAuslane
Mr David McLean
Mr J L McCowen
Mr Matthew Miller
Mr C H Mitchell
Mr H S Nadin
Mr Douglas Percival
Dr N R Phillips
Herr Karlheinz Pintsch
Mr Matthew Plender
Mr J R Raine
Dr J R Rees
Mr James H Ronald
Colonel A Malcolm Scott
Dr Alfred Seidl
Mr J J Shephard
Mr John Simpson
His Grace, The Duke of Hamilton
Herr Helmut Siindermann
Dr D Ellis Jones
Dr Maurice N Walsh
Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick
Mr Stephen Watts
I am indebted to Mr Richard Wiener for translating many German documents and letters, and to Mrs Joan St George Saunders for undertaking much of the research.
The following is a list of the principal published sources of this story. My thanks are due to The Britons Publishing Company for allowing me to quote from Prisoner of Peace.
To Dr J R Rees, William Heinemann Limited and David Higham Associates Limited for permission to quote from The Case of Rudolf Hess.
To Cassell & Company Limited for permission to quote from The Second World War by Sir Winston S Churchill.
To Mr Willi Frischauer to quote from The Rise and Fall of Hermann Coering.
To Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick and David Higham Associates Limited for permission to quote from Inner Circle, published by MacMillan.
To Stephen Watts and The New Yorker for permission to quote from his article The Ageing Parachutist'. It first appeared in The New Yorker on February 16, 1957.
I am also indebted to Her Majesty's Stationery Office for permission to publish certain papers which first appeared in Documents on German Foreign Policy, 1918-1945, Series D, Vol. XI, The War Years, September 1, 1940 - January 31, 1941, published by HMSO.
Jack Fishman, The Seven Men of Spandau (Rinehart & Co. Inc.,
New York). Winston S Churchill, The Grand Alliance (Cassell & Co. Ltd). The Ribbentrop Memoirs. Introduction by Alan Bullock
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson). Use Hess, Gefangener des Friedens (Druffel-Verlag).
Hans Baur, Hitler's Pilot (Frederick Muller Ltd).
Otto Dietrich, The Hitler I Knew. Translated by Richard and
Clara Winston (Methuen & Co. Ltd). Carl Haensel, Das Gericht vertagt sich (Claasen Verlag). Dr Alfred Seidl, Die Beziehungen Zwischen Deutschland und der
Sowjetunion. 1939-1941 (H Laupp'sche Buchhandlung/
Tubingen). Alan Bullock, Hitler. A Study in Tyranny (Odhams Press Ltd). Richard Collier, The City that Wouldn't Die (Collins). Dr Riitger Essen, Sven Hedin (Druffel-Verlag, Germany). Documents on German Foreign Policy, 1918-1945, Series D,
vols. I - IV (HMSO, London, 1949-1951). Documents on British Foreign Policy 1919-1939, 3rd Series,
vols. I - IV (HMSO, London, 1949-1950). Ciano's Diplomatic Papers, edited by Malcolm Muggeridge
(Odhams, London, 1948). Documents and Materials Relating to the Eve of the Second World
War, Vol. I, November, 1937-1938; Vol. II, The Dirksen
Papers, 1938-1939 (Foreign Languages Publishing House,
Moscow, 1948). Documents on the Events preceding the Outbreak of War. The
Second German White Book (German Library of
Information, New York, 1940). Dino Alfieri, Deux Dictateurs Face a Face, Rome-Berlin
1939-1943 (Cheval Aile, Geneva, 1948). Ciano's Diary, 1937-1938 (Methuen, London, 1952). Ciano's Diary, 1939-1943 (Heinemann, London, 1947). Herbert von Dirksen, Moskau-Tokio-London (Kohlhammer
Verlag, Stuttgart, 1949). The Goebbels Diaries, edited by Louis P Lochner (Hamish
Hamilton, London, 1949). General Franz Haider, Hitler as Warlord (Putnam, London,
1950). Sir Nevile Henderson, Failure of a Mission (Hodder and
Stoughton, London, 1940).
Peter Kleist, Zwischen Hitler und Stalin, 1939-1945
(Athenaum Verlag, Bonn, 1950). Benito Mussolini, Memoirs, 1942-1943, edited by R Klibanksy (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London, 1949). G Ward Price, / Know These Dictators (Harrap, London, 1937). Otto Remer, 20 Juli, 1944 (Verlag Deutsche Opposition,
Hamburg, 1951). Paul Schmidt, Statist auf diplomatischer Buhne 1923-1945
(Athenaum Verlag, Bonn, 1949). Joachim Schultz, Die Letzten 30 Tage - Aus dem Kriegstagebuch
des OKW (Steingruben Verlag, Stuttgart, 1951). William Shirer, A Berlin Diary (Hamish Hamilton, London,
1941). General Hans Speidel, We Defended Normandy (Herbert
Jenkins, London, 1951). Jean Francois, L'Affaire Rohm-Hitler, second edition
(Gallimard, Paris, 1939). Lindley Fraser, Germany Between Two Wars (Oxford University
Press, 1944). Arthur Rosenberg, History of the German Republic (Methuen,
London, 1936). Heinz A Heinz, Germany's Hitler (Hurst and Blackett,
London, 1934). Willi Frischauer, The Rise and Fall of Hermann Goering
(Odhams, London, 1951). My New Order (Hitler's Speeches, 1922-1943), edited by
Gordon W Prange (American Council of Foreign Affairs,
Washington, 1944).
CONTENTS
1. A Plane Crash in Scotland
2. The Mysterious Hauptmann Horn
3. Hess, Haushofer and Hitler
4. Haushofer's Hopes
5. Hess borrows a Messerschmitt
6. Consternation at the Berghof
7. The Worm is in the Bud'
8. The Führer's Quandary
9. Conversations in a Castle
10. Psychiatrists for Company
11. Hess is Disowned
12. The Deceptions and Delusions of a Failure
13. The Nuremberg Trial
Appendix I
Appendix II
CHAPTER ONE
A Plane Crash in Scotland
'One A/C, no IF,' announced the WAAF radar operator to the plotting room in Inverness, reporting the passage overhead of one unidentified aircraft, as the single plane flew in from the east through the late evening mist above the North Sea. As it crossed the Scottish coast, near Berwick-upon-Tweed, men of the Observer Corps in their sand-bagged look-out posts reached first for night glasses and binoculars, and then for the telephone.
'A ME 110, flying at 180 miles an hour, due west,' they said, recognising its two engines, the blunt wing-tips, the distinctive rudders at the tail.
‘Take more water with it,' retorted the RAF officer sceptically at the other end of the line. He knew that no ordinary aeroplane of this type could fly so far from Germany and carry enough fuel to return. But this was no ordinary aeroplane; and it never would return.
It flew like a dark arrow on its strange and secret mission. Beneath the black crosses on its silver wings the coastline lay as quiet and peaceful as the waveless sea, in sharp contrast to the inferno raging around London, 350 miles to the south. There, throughout that Saturday night of May 10, 1941, bombs burned away 700 acres within hours - one and a half times as much as the Great Fire of London had taken weeks to destroy 275 years earlier. It was easily the war's worst raid on the capital. Despite this, within a decade the damage would be almost forgotten, yet the controversy surrounding this lonely aeroplane and the dedicated man who flew it would still burn on as fiercely as the flames that licked London on that summer night.
In its cockpit, cold and cramped after five hours' flying, despite his fur-lined leather overalls, the pilot flew with plans of peace; plans that could not only change the world but also mould the future of nations and millions yet unborn.
He was Rudolf Hess, Germany's Deputy Führer, Leader of the Nazi Party, Reichsminister without Portfolio, a member of Germany's Secret Cabinet Council, and of the Ministerial Council for his country's defence.
This man, above all others, had stood closest to Hitler for more than twenty years; frequently he voiced his leader's secret thoughts, always he knew his master's mind.
In the First World War, he had flown flimsy biplanes, raced lightweight aircraft in the years since then - even prepared to make a solo Atlantic flight after Lindbergh. Now he flew alone in an unarmed aeroplane, through a night of fire and ruin, on the most dangerous flight of his life.
He brought plans to end the war - and yet to extend it. His proposal was a riddle, an enigma that has ever since puzzled and perplexed the handful who knew of it; a conundrum with a fearful answer. Should his mission succeed, Russia would become a nation' subject to Germany. Khrushchev would have stayed unknown as a world statesman. He would be regarded as a competent fitter at the engineering plants and coal mines of Donbas; a Communist worker of local standing and reputation, a one-time locksmith who never found the key to world prestige. Mao Tse-Tung would have remained a Chinese officer who, according to his superiors, 'fought well' against the Japanese.
The Iron Curtain, as it now is, would not exist. Nor would many new nations which have found release from imperial rule or associations through the direct or indirect help and pressure of the Communists. The dreams of Nehru, Nkrumah, Soekarno, and a dozen others of becoming world statesmen and leaders of republics would still have been but dreams and nothing more.
Germany, instead of being split in two, would have become so swollen with power that no other nation in the world could face her on equal terms. In many countries Nazi gauleiters and German ambassadors and businessmen would wield political, economic and military jurisdiction. Britain might still control a vast Empire seemingly untouched by time and uncorroded by nationalism, but that would only be the outward view. The cancer of corruption would have eaten away the sinews of Britain's Imperial glory. Her apparent power would be dependent on Nazi favour.
But despite this, many in Britain on that Saturday night so long ago would still have welcomed the peace that Hess believed he could bring them as his silver aeroplane flew in from the sea across the patchwork fields. It would have meant an end to war; and to many at that time, rationed, bombed and alone, this seemed enough to ask. The future could look after itself.
Cold and stiff, the dim roar of the engines filtering through his leather flying-helmet, Hess glanced down at his dashboard compass. He had to turn sharply to the west from Holy Island lighthouse to maintain his route. Two compasses strapped to his thighs were evidence of his determination not to veer off course.
But still he stayed firmly on his line. Not bad for a man of forty-eight, he thought with pride. Still, accuracy in such a matter was only to be expected; it was what he demanded from others. As probably the second most powerful man in the world, he did not tolerate fools or errors; his life and Hitler's had touched at too many points for too long.
Hess was probably the only Nazi who called Hitler by the intimate 'du' instead of the formal, more respectful 'sie'; they had been friends for more than twenty years. When they had been imprisoned together in Landsberg fortress, in the early nineteen-twenties, for instance, Hitler typed out Mein Kampf slowly with two fingers on the prison governor's machine; Hess had added his views and corrected both the Führer's proofs and his spelling. In the years since then Hess had seen his personal star and that of the Nazi party soar to heights of power unimaginable at that time.
Behind him as he flew, the historic capitals of Europe - Berlin, Paris, Prague, Vienna, Oslo - lay in eclipse under German domination. Of all the proud and ancient states of Europe, only Switzerland, Sweden and Portugal stood neutral and uncommitted. Armies, nations, empires had fallen before the unprecedented, apparently unconquerable might of Germany, until now only one small, proud island kingdom remained.
Through his cockpit windshield, Hess could see the white waves beating along an empty coast that looked as rocky and uncompromising as its people.
Of course, Britain would be beaten; surely Churchill must realise this despite his brave words? But if only these stubborn creatures in their grey little island, even now drawing their blackout curtains in their pygmy semi-detached villas - if only they could also be made to see the obvious! Why, Britain and Germany had more in common with each other than any other two countries; even the British Royal Family had kept their German surname until 1917.
Further fighting was clearly without need or reason, and peace could at once be theirs - for a price. To persuade the British to pay this price was Hess' firm intention and the object of his journey. Was it possible for Hess to persuade Churchill and the War Cabinet that he came in faith and friendship? Could he persuade Churchill, the last antagonist, to come to terms - Germany's terms, Hitler's terms?
These thoughts hammered in his head; his face, naturally serious and saturnine, with deep-set eyes under heavy black brows, was now etched with lines of concentration.
Of course, he was really too old to make such a flight alone; there were so many instruments to watch, so many controls to know. Actions that had been half automatic when one was young became more difficult to remember in middle life. And it would be unthinkable now to miss his way and come down in the sea out of fuel after all his plans and months of careful preparations.
In addition to his three compasses, Hess had strapped a map of his course in a cellophane-covered case to his right thigh; radio guidance signals were also helping him. One was a Luftwaffe direction signal from Paris; the other, dance music being specially transmitted as an interval signal from Kalundborg, a Danish radio station under German control. By maintaining both these signals at a consistent strength throughout his flight, Hess could keep his plane on course and make allowances for drift and wind.
With these aids, plus the view of the British coast, along which he flew so closely that when he descended he could see waves breaking on deserted beaches littered with anti-invasion blocks of concrete, coils of wire and rusting wrecks of cars, Hess felt confident he would reach his destination.
As a final check, he had received a weather report from Goering's Air Ministry in Berlin earlier during the day. This report now caused him some anxiety, for it did not seem to be accurate. Hess feathered his propellers, and looked down at the desolate emptiness of sky and sea. A few small clouds far below him looked like thin strips of ice, remote and ethereal. Instead of this, he had expected to find what the weather report called 'a dense carpet of cloud at about 500 metres'.
For a moment he thought of turning back, for it seemed impossible that with so little cloud cover he could escape the fighter patrols almost certainly prowling on the alert for German aircraft. It was easy to imagine the bristling muzzles of unseen anti-aircraft guns, taking his range. But if he flew back, he reasoned, even if he saved himself his aeroplane would probably be damaged beyond repair in his attempt at an unexpected night landing. Then, nothing would be secret, and if his mission were to have any hope of success, it must be conducted with speed and absolute secrecy.
It was for these imperative reasons that he was not using less hazardous ways of contacting the British Government, through technically neutral contacts in Geneva or Lisbon. Such negotiations had already been tried and proved fruitless. Also their nature made them slow and the risk of discovery considerable. Further, Hess had already made two attempts to reach Britain to present terms for peace and on each occasion had been forced back; once with engine trouble and the second time when his elevators refused to give him height. This time, he had to reach his objective.
Suddenly Hess saw that a thick veil of white mist draped a section of the coast ahead, reflecting the last rays of the sun so that it became opaque. Clearly, if he could not see the land through it, then no one on the ground could see him, although they might hear his engines. He dived on full throttle into the mist from a height of 2,000 metres, to within several hundred metres of the sea.
This action probably saved his life; at least, he has always maintained that it did. For behind him and quite without his knowledge a Spitfire on coastal patrol had given chase. Such was the power and speed of the Messerschmitt with its two engines, that as Hess says himself, 'I had outdistanced it before I was aware of its presence. I could not look behind; I was too enclosed in my cabin and too dazzled by the reflections. Had I not been tempted to dive for cover, but remained in the clear air at the pace I had been going, he could easily have shot me down.''
Below the white belt of cloud, Hess could see a village with stone and granite houses, some empty streets and people like ants going in and out of doors. It was Belford, a small town about five miles from the coast and roughly ninety miles from his destination.
The lighthouse now lay behind him; he was well past Holy Island. Hess glanced at the gold wristwatch which he wore on his left wrist balanced by a fine gold identity disc and bracelet on his right. He had his wife's Leica camera hanging by a leather strap round his neck; he had left a note for her explaining that he was borrowing her camera because it was loaded and he had no film for his own.
The time was shortly before 10 o'clock. The sun was setting ahead of him, but still, inexplicably to Hess, it was not yet dark. He could see the country beneath him as clearly as if it had been a coloured and raised map. This puzzled him, for by his calculations he should now be flying in darkness. He had planned to arrive at his destination, about ten miles on the west side of Glasgow, just after dark, when the German markings on his plane would be difficult to see and the plane itself hard to recognise.
No British lookouts would be expecting a Messerschmitt 110 over Scotland, for it was well known that no standard Messerschmitt 110 could carry enough fuel to fly so far and return to base. He gambled on any report of such a plane being treated with ridicule; and in this he was quite correct.
But one point that Hess had neglected in his calculations was that while Germany enjoyed one hour of summer time, clocks in Britain were set back two hours for double summer time. Hess was thus flying an hour ahead of his schedule; it would still be daylight when he landed.
In his surprise at the lightness of the evening, and still not quite accustomed to the speed of his plane, he came down lower than he intended arid roared above the sleepy streets of Wooler with his 2,000 horse-power engines on full throttle. Over their slate roofs and the fields that ringed them in, criss-crossed by hedges like some gigantic quilt of greens, yellow and gold, Hess swept on.
'At this level the visibility was surprisingly good,' he wrote later to his wife. 'I could see for several miles, but must have been invisible to my pursuer.
'I took care not to rise too high, but flew on at not more than sixteen feet from the ground - even less at times, skimming over men, trees, beasts and houses; what English airmen call hedge hopping
.'
Despite the strain of the lonely journey and the fearful consequence of failure, he was genuinely enjoying himself. He was doing something difficult and dangerous, and doing it well; such a combination of circumstances always gave him pleasure. Hitler's personal pilot, 'Father' Hans Baur, had often told him laughingly that the flying Hess liked best of all was skimming through barn doors, taking risks, revelling in the sensation of speed and power and flight.
Suddenly, beneath him, in the misty evening, the houses fell away and the ground rose to meet him; he had reached the foothills of the Cheviot range.
This was my guiding-point, as previously determined, and keeping within a few yards of the ground I literally climbed up the slope,' he recalled afterwards. 'Never before had I ascended a mountain so rapidly. The variometer told me I was ascending. Suddenly I was over my point of orientation - a little dam in a narrow range of hills. Here my course bent to the left.
'1 had no need to bother with a map; all the details of the course, points, distances, were already stored in my memory.'
They should have been because, for nearly a year, Hess had prepared for this flight, rehearsing every move, memorising every landmark he would see. Night after night he had lain awake in his bedroom in his home in Harthauser Strasse, a wide, grey, cobbled road in the most expensive residential suburb of Munich. On the wall at the foot of his bed he had pinned a giant map of his journey. For hours he would lie, propped up with pillows, a single reading light directed like a spot-lamp on this map, the rest of the room in darkness, while he soaked all the details in his mind, and worked out allowances for possible head, side or tail winds.
Each night, when he finished memorising the visual landmarks of his journey, he would shut his eyes and repeat aloud the distances, the course, the time at which he would have to veer to the left or the right, according to his speed. Then he would pull a loose-leaf notebook to his side on a bedside table, direct the reading lamp on its pages, and within minutes reproduce a rough sketch of the map with its main bearings and degrees.
Since he did this several times every week and often made a number of copies when he discovered errors in comparing this hastily pencilled map with the original, he lived in some fear lest a servant, or his wife, should discover them and draw the wrong conclusions: that he was planning to desert his Führer and betray his country. For this reason Hess purposely drew only vague outlines of the British and Dutch coasts which he would cross, and marked his point of departure with an 'X' and his destination with a "Y. And, as a further safeguard, instead of writing Nordsee for the North Sea, he wrote Ostsee for the Baltic.
He could not imagine that his wife would actually discover one of these carefully disguised sketches and read into it an entirely different conclusion: that he would fly not North or East, but South to see his old friend Marshal Petain with a view to improving the relationship between France and Germany.
Hess flew on over Coldstream, Peebles and Lanark. By half-past ten, he was over the stone mansion, Dungavel House, the Scottish home of the Duke of Hamilton, Premier Duke of Scotland, whom Hess called 'my quite unconscious future host'.
Hess now felt he was right on target, for he had studied the largest map of the area available in Germany, and Dungavel was the only house of this size to be marked. There should be a level field or small landing ground on one side, according to his information, for the Duke was a distinguished aviator and, with a companion, had piloted the first aeroplane to fly over Everest eight years earlier, in 1933.
The moon was rising now, and Hess could plainly see a cone-shaped hill which he took to be Dungavel Hill; at once he remembered that it was 458 metres high. But partly because he had come so far without any hitch, and also because of the importance of his mission, he was suddenly seized with doubt; what if this were not the house? What if he had somehow flown off course, if he had miscalculated the wind drift as obviously he had miscalculated the time of his arrival?
On a sudden impulse, Hess decided not to circle round the mansion, but to fly on out over the west coast - only a few minutes away - to take his bearings and then, reassured, to return. The sea soon lay beneath him again, calm and cold as a mirror, lit by the rising moon like a lake of glass, and seemingly without a wave. Off the mainland a huge reddish rock, about 122 metres high, stood like a sentinel, pale in the early moonlight. Hess suddenly felt as though he was flying beyond the confines of time in some strange twilight world of dreams; he might be the last man alive.
'Never shall I forget this picture,' Hess said afterwards. He throttled back his engines, flew down the coast for a few miles, searching for a small spit of land like a mole, which he knew from his map should be there if his readings were accurate. Soon the expected thumb of earth appeared beneath him; he was right.
For his 850-mile flight from Augsburg, near Munich, in South Germany, Messerschmitt technicians had fitted the aeroplane with a cigar-shaped auxiliary petrol tank which could be jettisoned when it was empty. Hess saw from the green-lit gauge on the dashboard that the fuel this tank contained had already been consumed. He moved a lever by his seat which released it. The tank fell lightly away behind him into the sea, like some strange silver balloon. On the following day a British drifter recovered it from the Clyde.
Thus unencumbered, Hess banked and turned to fly back to Dungavel House and to land. His journey was nearly over; now the hard part and purpose of the flight would begin.
He did not know, as he flew back over the coast, picking up the railway lines that glittered like two silver snakes in the moonlight, watching for a lake south of Dungavel as a further landmark, that he was following the daily routine flight of British RAF pilots under instruction: they would leave Irvine air-base near Prestwick, fly north to Renfrew, then south-east to Dungavel and, using the hill as a landmark, turn south-west again for their base.
Although Hess believed that a landing strip or at least a wide lawn where he could land quite safely lay near Dungavel House, he intended to parachute. His plane was still on the secret list in Germany; it was, in fact, a prototype, immensely more powerful, more manoeuvrable, and swifter than any Messerschmitt in service with