During the First World War, Clavin was in Berlin in 1916 to ascertain and check on business avenues.

"I was at the Reichstag and was watching the craftsmen packing up after a day of work. They had been carving some new words onto the building facade, Dem Deutschen Volke." Clavin looks over to Jonathon, "it means Of or To the German People."

Clavin looked over at the window, "Anyway, while I was standing there looking at it, I noted a German corporal not ten paces from me looking at it as well."

He looked down at his hands as he twisted them around each other. In a low tone as if only to himself "If I could have foreseen who he was to become."

Clavin continued "We struck up a conversation about the new engravings and their meaning to us each. He was vehemently against the representation of these words. He introduced himself to me Adolf Hitler. He was a small man with one of those huge handle bar moustaches that was completely idiotic looking on his smaller frame." Clavin twirled his fingers upward at the edge of mouth.

"He wasn't that impressive."

Clavin paused and walked to the window, looking down onto the darken streets, he continued, "Hindsight what it is, I should have killed that man at that moment. But I didn't and couldn't have known to do so."

A look of boredom washed across Clavin's face "Look at all of those humans down there. That is just a minute fraction of those that I have brought over to be offspring of Cain. So to continue, I left the very young Adolf to his musings and continued upon my way."

"After the War I had enlisted a man by the name of Anton Drexler to found a socialist movement. I sent him monies and instructions on this avenue. I had planned on building my post war holdings in the new Republic of Germany."

Clavin sat down across the desk from Johnathon and looked over at the notes and papers. Then looking up at Johnathon he continued "He encountered the very same corporal has I had. He contacted me about this man explaining how he had the gift of 'Gab'". "He and the other founders had recruited him to become a front man for the movement."

"A couple years later I was contacted by Drexler for additional funds, but I hadn't seen anything of progress in the instructions I had given him. But he was sincerely earnest in letter for me to meet with him and the other members of their executive committee."

Clavin leaned forward so that his elbows rested on his knees with his eyes downward he continued, "So I boarded a train to Munich on October 13th, 1919 with much disdain. Drexler met me with an entourage of assorted dressed business men and former army men. He introduced me to all of them order but one struck me as 'special'. You see has I have gotten a bit of age on me I seem to be able to read humans by a presence of light or aura around them."

Clavin looked up at Johnathon, "You see as for yourself I see an aura of simply red with blue lights moving around. I have come to see that most humans have that light. You are just one of a million or so, but every so often I see the reverse, a blue glow with red or yellow lights moving around them."

Clavin gestured around the room with his arms wide, "It even leaves traces like footprints in the snow where one of the offspring of Abel has traveled. But enough of that, this particular man was named Ernst Röhm. He was scarred and electric, whereas the rest of these cattle looked like it was time for their butchering."

"I struck a fast friendship with this battle hardened man of the Fatherland. But I was also careful not to betray the masquerade as yet. Surprise unto me he resisted my 'urgings and glamouring', so I continued our talks, very carefully. A few days later I was introduced to Adolf Hitler, again. This time he didn't look so much like a ridiculous walrus, but he had shaven his moustache down to the strip that most are familiar with now. He actually remembered our first meeting outside of the Reichstag building those years back."

Clavin stood and clasped his hands behind his back as he walked back to the large paned window, "I stayed that evening at the beer hall and was impressed at Adolf's speech. I conceded to the requests of executive committee and gave them 300 marks to help finance their movement again."

"The money was used to buy more advertising and print leaflets. The German Workers' Party now featured Hitler as the main attraction at its meetings. In his speeches Hitler railed against the Treaty of Versailles and delivered anti-Semitic tirades, blaming the Jews for Germany's problems. Attendance slowly increased, numbering in the hundreds."

"Hitler took charge of party propaganda in early 1920, and also recruited young men he had known in the Army. He was aided in his recruiting efforts by my friend Ernst Röhm, a new party member, who would play a vital role in Hitler's eventual rise to power."

"In Munich, there were many alienated, maladjusted soldiers and ex-soldiers with a thirst for adventure and a distaste for the peace brought on by the Treaty of Versailles and the resulting democratic republic. They joined the German Workers' Party in growing numbers. There were many other political groups looking for members, but none more successful than the Marxists. Genuine fear existed there might be a widespread Communist revolution in Germany like the Russian revolution. Hitler associated Marxism with the Jews and thus reviled it."

"He also understood how a political party directly opposed to a possible Communist revolution could play on the fears of so many Germans and gain support. The German Workers' Party name was changed by Hitler to include the term National Socialist. Thus the full name was the National Socialist German Workers' Party called for short, Nazi."

"By the end of 1920 it had about three thousand members. I was very excited at this, but again I was distracted by other events in London and New York. We had to deal with prohibition in the States and now we had suffrage to anyone over 21 in the U.K."

"But the hyperinflation within Germany was destroying my businesses, I had to act." "I contacted Adolf several times by telegraph and letter to enquire as to the goings on within the Nazi party. He needed monies to bring about this idea of a unified Germany, so after he made some promises to me, I sent team of retainers with gold and silver to Munich."