"You want me to tell you what we did do, don't you?"

With a complete change of manner, Dugan laughed out loud. "I am very inquisitive."

"Find it out for yourself, then, Major. I turned it over to the Navy and I am explicitly prohibited from telling anybody. Even you. It ought to be easy for you to do a little espionage on American personnel for a change."

"Don't think I won't," laughed Dugan.

Even formal young Sergeant Wilson thought that funny, which, in a curious way, it was. Dugan resumed dictating:

"Attached to the full-length report will be the technical papers which happened to fall into American hands. One of them is the Kuznets Syllabus, Section 204, which was stated by scientific personnel at the location to have high operational interest.

"The city is known as Atomsk. Sometimes it is referred to as Atomnii Gorod, or Atom City. German and Russian personnel work together. A German technical expert named Hundeshausen stated that there was only one pile in operation as yet.

"Location of four other Soviet atomic weapons installations was indicated in conversation by the same Hundeshausen. These are indicated on the attached map."

Dugan opened his eyes, sipped his drink, then leaned back in the chair again. He went on:

"The installation appears bombproof for its essential parts. However, human beings are used as experimental material and it is possible that trouble could be caused, in the event of war, by the dropping of a select force of parachutists.