CHAPTER 16
When Rogan woke up on his final day in
Budapest, his first act was to destroy the dossiers he had compiled
on the seven men. Then he went through his belongings to see if
there was anything he wanted to keep. But there was nothing except
his passport.
He packed everything else and carried his bags to
the railway station. He checked the bags into an empty coin locker,
then left the station. Crossing over one of the many bridges in the
city, he casually dropped the locker key into the river. Then he
went to the consulate.
Vrostk had gathered everything he needed. Rogan
checked the items—the small jeweler’s drill and chipping tools, the
tiny wires, the timing device, the liquid explosive, and some
special electronic parts of tiny size. Rogan smiled and said, “Very
good.”
Vrostk preened himself. “I have a very efficient
organization. It was not easy to get all these things on such short
notice.”
“To show my appreciation,” Rogan said, “I’m going
to buy you a late breakfast at the Café Black Violin. Then we’ll
come back here and I’ll go to work with this stuff. And I’ll also
tell you what I’m going to do.”
At the café they ordered coffee and brioches. Then,
to Vrostk’s obvious surprise, Rogan called for the chess set. The
waitress brought it over, and Rogan set up the pieces, taking the
whites for himself.
Vrostk said in an annoyed voice, “I have no time
for such foolishness. I must get back to my office.”
“Play,” Rogan said. Something in his voice made
Vrostk suddenly quiet. He let Rogan make the first move and then
moved his black pawn. The game was soon over. He beat Rogan easily
and the pieces were dumped back into the set for the waitress to
carry away. Rogan gave a large tip. Outside the café he hailed a
taxi to take them back to the consulate. He was in a hurry now;
every moment was valuable.
In Vrostk’s office Rogan sat down at the table that
had the special equipment on it.
Vrostk was angry; it was the bullying anger of a
small-minded man. “What is the meaning of all this foolishness?” he
asked. “I demand to know.”
Rogan put his right hand into his jacket pocket,
pulled it out again clenched. He thrust it at Vrostk and then
opened it. Lying in his palm was the white king.
Rogan worked intently at the table for nearly
three hours. He drilled a hole in the bottom of the king, and then
took the bottom out entirely. Working very carefully, he hollowed
out the inside of the chess piece and packed it with liquid
explosive, wires, and the tiny electronic parts. When he was
finished he put the bottom back on, and then with buffing cloth and
enamel he hid all scratches and chips. He held the chess piece in
his hand, trying to see if the extra weight was too obvious. He did
notice a little difference, but he reasoned that this was because
he was looking for the difference. The piece would pass.
He turned to Vrostk. “At eight o’clock tonight this
thing will blow up in Pajerski’s face. I’ve got it fixed so that
nobody else will get hurt. There’s just enough to kill the man
holding the piece. And Pajerski always scratches his chin with it.
That and the timing device will set off the explosive. If I see
someone else holding it, I’ll interfere and deactivate it. But I’ve
watched Pajerski, and I’m sure he’ll be the guy who’ll have the
piece in his hand at eight tonight. Now I want you to have your
underground people pick me up at the corner two blocks from the
café. I’m counting on your organization to get me out of the
country.”
“You mean you’re going to stay in the café until
Pajerski is killed?” Vrostk asked. “That’s sheer madness. Why not
leave beforehand?”
“I want to make sure nobody else gets killed,”
Rogan said. “And before he dies, I also want Pajerski to know who
killed him and why, and I can’t do that unless I’m there.”
Vrostk shrugged. “It’s your affair. As for my
people picking you up two blocks from the café, that’s too
dangerous for them. I’ll have a black Mercedes limousine waiting
for you in front of the consulate here. It will be flying the
consulate flag. What time do you want it to be ready?”
Rogan frowned. “I may change the timing on the
explosive, or it may possibly go off ahead of time if Pajerski
keeps scratching his chin with it too much. Better have the car
waiting for me at seven thirty and tell them to expect me at ten
minutes past eight. I’ll be on foot, and I’ll just get into the car
without any fuss. I assume they know me by sight. You’ve shown me
to them?”
Vrostk smiled. “Of course. Now I suppose you and I
will have a late lunch and a game of chess at the Black Violin so
that you can return the white king.”
Rogan smiled. “You’re getting smarter all the
time.”
Over coffee they played the second game of chess,
and Rogan won easily. When they left the café, the booby-trapped
white king was safely back with its fellow chess pieces.
That evening Rogan left his small hotel room at
exactly 6:00. The Walther pistol was tucked under his arm and
buttoned securely into its holster. The silencer was in his left
jacket pocket. His passport and visas were in his inside jacket
pocket. He walked slowly and leisurely to the Café Black Violin and
took his usual small corner table. He unfolded a newspaper, ordered
a bottle of Tokay, and told the waitress he would order food
later.
He had drunk half the bottle when Wenta Pajerski
came roaring into the café. Rogan looked at his watch. The giant
Hungarian was right on schedule; it was 7:00 p.m. He watched
Pajerski pinch the blond waitress, yell to his waiting friends, and
have his first drink. It was about time for him to call for his
chess set, but he ordered a second drink. Rogan felt himself go
tense. Would this be the first night that Pajerski would pass up
his chess games? For some reason it seemed to have slipped his mind
this evening. But then, without his calling for it, the waitress
brought the chess set to Pajerski’s table, waiting expectantly for
the pinch that would reward her forethought.
It almost looked as if Pajerski would wave her
away. But then he grinned, his warty piggy face becoming a mass of
joviality. He pinched the blond waitress so hard that she gave a
little scream of pain.
Rogan called to the waitress and asked her for a
pencil and a piece of notepaper. He looked at his watch. It read
7:30. On the rough brown notepaper he wrote: “I will turn your
screams of pleasure into pain. Rosenmontag, 1945, in the
Munich Palace of Justice.”
He waited until his watch read 7:55; then he called
a waitress over and handed her the note. “Give this to Mr.
Pajerski,” he said. “Then come right back to me and I will give you
this.” He showed her a banknote that was more than her weekly
salary. He didn’t want her standing near Pajerski when the booby
trap went off.
Pajerski was scratching his chin with the white
king when the waitress handed him the note. He read it slowly,
translating the English audibly, his lips moving. He raised his
eyes to stare directly at Rogan. Rogan stared back at him, smiling
slightly. His watch read 7:59. And then as he saw the recognition
slowly dawn in Pajerski’s eyes the white king exploded.
The explosion was deafening. Pajerski had been
holding the chess piece in his right hand under his chin. Rogan had
been staring into his eyes. Then suddenly Pajerski’s eyes
disappeared in the explosion, and Rogan found himself staring into
two empty bloody sockets. Pieces of flesh and bone spattered all
over the room, and then Pajerski’s head, its flesh shredded,
slumped over on flaps of skin that were still holding the neck to
the body. Rogan slipped out of his seat and left the café by the
kitchen door. The screaming, stampeding crowd took no notice of
him.
Out on the street he walked one block to a main
avenue and hailed a taxi. “To the airport,” he told the driver;
then, just to make sure, he said, “Take the street that goes past
the American consulate.”
He could hear the whine of police car sirens
speeding to the Café Black Violin. In a few minutes his taxi was on
the broad avenue that led past the consulate. “Don’t go so fast,”
he told the driver. He leaned back so that he could not be seen
from the street.
There was no Mercedes limousine waiting there. The
street was empty of all vehicles, which was in itself unusual. But
it had a hell of a lot of pedestrians, waiting to cross at corners
and window-shopping. And most of the pedestrians were big, burly
men. To Rogan’s experienced eye they had secret police written all
over them. “Speed it up to the airport,” he told the driver.
It was then that he noticed what seemed like a
physical coldness in his chest. It was as if his whole body were
being touched by death. He felt the chilliness spread. But he was
not cold. He did not feel any real physical discomfort. It was
simply as if he himself had become some sort of host to
death.
He had no trouble getting on the plane. His visa
was in order, and there was no sign of any special police activity
at the airport. His heart beat swiftly when he boarded the
aircraft, but again there were no complications. The plane took
off, climbed, and then it leveled off and headed for the German
border and Munich.
That night Rosalie left her job as nurse’s aide in
the Munich Palace of Justice at 6:00 p.m. The young doctor who
worked with her insisted she have dinner with him. Afraid of losing
her job, she agreed. He made sure the meal took a long time by
ordering several courses. It was after 9:00 p.m. when they
finished. Rosalie looked at her watch. “You must excuse me; I have
an important engagement at ten,” she said, and started to gather up
her coat and gloves.
The young doctor had a disappointed look on his
face. It did not occur to Rosalie that she could miss meeting the
plane one night and keep her escort company for the rest of the
evening. If she missed meeting the Budapest plane even one time, it
would mean she thought Rogan was dead. She walked out of the
restaurant and hailed a taxi. By the time she got to the airport,
it was nearly 10:00. By the time she ran through the terminal to
the Budapest plane arrival gate, passengers were already coming
out. Out of habit, she lit a cigarette as she watched them. And
then she saw Rogan and her heart nearly broke.
He looked dreadfully ill. His eyes were sunken, the
muscles of his face were rigid, and there was a fearful stiffness
in his body movements. He had not seen her, and she started running
toward him, calling his name through her sobs.
Rogan heard the clicking of a woman’s heels on
marble, heard Rosalie calling his name. He started to turn away,
then turned back to catch her as she rushed into his arms. And then
he was kissing her wet face and her lovely eyes as she whispered,
“I’m so happy, I’m so happy. I came here every night, and every
night I thought you might have died and I’d never know and I’d be
coming here for the rest of my life.”
Holding her close, feeling her warmth, Rogan felt
the icy chill that had been part of his body begin to melt away, as
if he were coming alive again. He knew then that he would have to
keep her with him.