Barnyard Horror by Unknown

Barnyard Horror by Unknown

Author:Unknown
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: James Ward Kirk Publishing
Published: 2013-08-07T00:00:00+00:00


Necessary Cold Ruthlessness

Timothy Frasier

The large room assaulted the senses with its mixture of normality and horror. At one end sat a man at a small wooden table covered with a red-and-white checkered cloth. A variety of wild flowers from the fields surrounding the camp were stuffed into a cracked white vase that sat in the center of the table. Along the wall, there was a modern gas cook stove. At the other end of the room, hanging upside down by his ankles from a chain hoist fastened to the ceiling, was a naked man. A section of his thigh was missing. The slow trickle of blood from his wound was swallowed by a drain positioned directly beneath the hoist. The man was unconscious and near death. The sweet smell of cooked meat lay heavy in the room.

Dr. Karl von Heidel, a small, 32-year-old, dark haired man stared balefully at the emaciated prisoner seated at the table. The plate in front of the prisoner contained a large strip of meat with a few potatoes around the edge, which he picked at tentatively with his fork, but never lifted to his mouth.

“Go on,” von Heidel coaxed. “It is your only way to survive. If you refuse to eat, you will be sent to the gas chambers immediately!” He stared at the green triangle on the man’s coveralls. He was not just a common criminal, as the green triangle signified. He was a German common criminal. Surely, he had surmised, the “beast” would be strongest in the five German prisoners he had requested after his miserable failure with the Jews and Gypsies. Now, after the failure of the first four, his hopes were waning with this man.

“I can’t eat this,” the man stammered weakly. “It is a sin to eat another man.”

“You will suffer a horrible death! Save yourself!”

The man looked up at von Heidel with tears in his eyes.

“Take him away!” von Heidel ordered. Two of the four guards in the room grabbed the man and dragged him by the arms from the room. The other two guards removed the Gypsy corpse that hung from the chain.

Dr. von Heidel left the room and made his rounds before retiring to his quarters at 6 pm, where he ate a light supper. His assignment to Auschwitz had held the promise to be one of the milestones in his research career with its endless supply of humans available for research. Now though, it promised to simply highlight his failures. Dr. Josef Mengele had personally requested von Heidel. They had attended Munich University together and had become close friends there. Mengele had been fascinated with von Heidel’s theory of Man’s Inner Beast and the endless possibilities if it could be harnessed.

At 8 p.m., his rest was interrupted by a knock on the door.

“Dr. von Heidel, I have an important message from Dr. Frederick Krugar!”

“Enter.”

The door opened and in walked a young man personifying the Furor’s idea of perfection with his blond hair and pale blue eyes. Wearing black pants and a white shirt, his movement was precise, almost mechanical.



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