too much champagne and he was in no shape to deal with his conscience or his memories and here it was, dawn again, and every muscle in his body ached.
He scribbled a note to her and put it on the pillow beside her, then he covered her up and headed for the steam baths in the basement.
He had heard her whisper to him when she thought he was asleep. He, too, hoped she wasn’t falling in love with him.
She was a nice kid, Vanessa. Beautiful, charming. But in the two days he’d been with her, something strange had happened to him. He hadn’t been able to stop thinking about the singer, about Jenny Gould. Her voice haunted him, her eyes pierced him still.
He hoped
A burly blond sat behind the desk, dozing.
“Is Werner at work yet?” Keegan asked in German.
He was dozing when he heard the door open and close.
Through the swirling steam he saw the little man from the embassy party, swathed in towels to cover the unfortunate hump on his back, smiling across the room at him.
“Good morning,” the little man said in almost perfect English.
“I suppose,” Keegan answered.
Was he a guest in the hotel? Keegan wondered. What was he doing here at seven in the morning? Was he following Keegan? Or was Keegan’s hangover making him a little paranoid?
Keegan couldn’t have cared less at that moment. The hangover was now a thunderstorm in his head and he was trying to avoid any kind of movement or thought.
“Have you been in Berlin long?” the humpback asked finally.
“I move around a bit, but I spend about half my time here.”
“You like Berlin then?”
“I like the chaos. Reminds me of home.”
“Chaos?”
Keegan looked over at him. “You haven’t noticed?”
“The chaos is over,” the professor said. “The Fuhrer has the country under control.”
“Ah, that’s reassuring.”
“Are you one of those Americans who thinks Hitler is some kind of human devil?”
“I don’t think about it at all. Believe me, not at all.”
“You know what I mean.”
“Chancellor Hitler’s a bit radical for a lot of Americans, how’s that?”
The professor laughed and nodded vigorously.
“A bit radical, ja, I like that. That’s quite funny.”
Keegan leaned forward and stared over at the humpback. He wiped the flat of his hand across his flat belly, sweeping away the puddles of sweat that were collecting around the towel at his waist. He smiled faintly and the smile stayed on his lips.
“And how about you, do
“I told you, I don’t think about it. I’m your typical tourist. I spend money and give the economy a little boost, that’s all.”
“Your name is Keegan, is that correct? I saw it when you signed in at the desk.”
“Keegan. That’s correct. You are?”
“Vierhaus. Professor Wilhelm Vierhaus.”
“Pleased to meet you.”
“Keegan, Keegan. You are Ire?”
“Also correct. Irish-American. My parents both came from Ireland.”
“Ah, what part?”