In 1945, the female spy barely escaped from Auschwitz.
When Irina Ivanikova first arrived at the Auschwitz concentration camp, she was very envious of the elderly, children, and disabled people who were loaded onto trucks, thinking that the trucks were a special favor for them so they wouldn't have to walk back to the camp. However, Ivanikova gradually realized that the trucks were indeed very special; all the people on them never returned and disappeared without a trace. Later, she understood that these elderly, weak, and disabled individuals were directly taken to the gas chambers. More than six decades later, this former Soviet female spy, now living in Moscow, still cannot forget those unforgettable experiences.