CHAPTER 4
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Several months after the war ended, Rogan
had been flown from his VA hospital in the United States to U.S.
Intelligence headquarters in Berlin. There he had been asked to
look at a number of suspected war criminals to see if any of them
were men who had tortured him in the Munich Palace of Justice. His
case was now file number A23,486 in the archives of the Allied War
Crimes Commission. Among the suspects were none of the men he
remembered so clearly. He could not identify a single one, so he
was flown back to the VA hospital. But he had spent a few days
wandering around the city, the rubble of countless homes giving him
a measure of savage satisfaction.
The great city had changed in the years since then.
The West Berlin authorities had given up trying to clear away the
seventy million tons of ruins which the Allied bombers had created
during the war. They had pushed the rubble into small artificial
hills, then had planted flowers and small shrubs over them. They
had used the rubble to fill foundations for towering new apartment
houses, built in the most modern space-conserving style. Berlin was
now a huge steel gray rat warren of stone, and at night that warren
showed the most vicious nests of vice spawned by ravaged postwar
Europe.
With Rosalie, Rogan checked into the Kempinski
Hotel on the Kurfürstendamm and Fasanenstrasse, perhaps the most
elegant hotel in West Germany. Then he made a few telephone calls
to some of the firms with which his company did business, and he
set up an appointment with the private detective agency that had
been on his payroll for the past five years.
For their first lunch together in Berlin, he took
Rosalie to a restaurant called the Ritz that served the finest
Oriental food. He noticed with amusement that Rosalie ate a huge
amount of food with huge enjoyment. They ordered bird’s nest soup,
which looked like a tangle of vegetable brains stained with black
blood. Her favorite dish was a combination of red lobster pieces,
white pork chunks, and brown shards of nutmegged beef, but she
found the barbecued spare ribs and the chicken with tender snow
peas delicious. She sampled his shrimp with black bean sauce and
nodded her approval. All of it was accompanied by several helpings
of fried rice and innumerable cups of hot tea. It was an enormous
lunch, but Rosalie put it away without any effort. She had just
discovered that there was other food in the world besides bread,
meat, and potatoes. Rogan, smiling at her pleasure, watched her
finish off what was left on the silver-covered platters.
In the afternoon they went shopping along the
Kurfürstendamm, whose brightly lit store windows trailed off into
gray, empty storefronts as the boulevard approached the Berlin
Wall. Rogan bought Rosalie an expensive gold wristwatch with a
clever roof of precious stones that slid back when its owner wanted
to know the time. Rosalie squealed with delight, and Rogan thought
wryly that if the way to a man’s heart was through his stomach,
then the way to a woman’s heart was paved with gifts. But when she
leaned over to kiss him, when he felt her soft, fluttering mouth on
his own, his cynicism vanished.
That evening he took her to the Eldorado Club,
where the waiters dressed as girls and the girls dressed as men.
Then on to the Cherchelle Femme, where pretty girls on the stage
stripped as casually as if they were in their own private bedrooms,
with intimate wriggles and vulgar scratches. Finally the girls
danced before huge mirrors wearing only long black hose and saucy
red caps on their heads. Rogan and Rosalie ended up at the
Badewanne in Nürnburg Strasse. They drank champagne and ate small,
thick white sausages from large platters, using their fingers and
wiping their hands on the tablecloth, like everyone else.
By the time they got back to their hotel suite
Rogan was almost sick with sexual desire. He wanted to make love
immediately, but Rosalie, laughing, pushed him away and disappeared
into the bedroom. Frustrated, Rogan took off his jacket and tie and
started to mix a drink at the little bar that was part of every
suite. In a few minutes he heard Rosalie call, “Michael,” in her
soft, almost adolescent-sweet voice. He turned toward her.
On her blond head was a new hat he had bought her
in Hamburg, a lovely creation of green ribbon. On her legs were
long black net stockings that reached almost to the tops of her
thighs. Between the green hat and black stockings was Rosalie—in
the flesh. She came toward him slowly, smiling that intently happy
smile of a woman roused to passion.
Rogan reached for her. She eluded his grasp, and he
followed her into the bedroom, hastily pulling off the rest of his
clothes on the way. When he reached for her this time, she did not
move away. And then they were on the king-size bed, and he could
smell the rose fragrance of her body, feel the petal-velvet skin as
together they sank into an act of love that blotted out the hoarse
night noises of Berlin, the plaintive cries of the animals
imprisoned in the Tiergarten just below their windows, and the
ghostly images of murder and revenge that haunted Rogan’s
vulnerable brain.