OSTAFRIKA 02


By KATZMAREK


--------------------------------------------------------------
Author's note.


This is a work of fiction. It cannot be used for gain without the
Author's express permission in writing.


----------------------------------------------------------------



Ostafrika 02 (Trudi)

Behind the General Store and Post Office of Herr Helmut Fleischer is
a collection of buildings that house the black 
African servants and the Storekeeper's supplies. At this time of the
day there's little activity for it's nearly noon. In 
the heat of the midday sun, not much is done and most of the workers
are down at the river. That is except for a 
boy of about 18 by the name of Angoni. Restless, he peers out of a
corner of the matting that serves as the door to 
the round hut.


From the main house, beyond the beaten gravel pathway, Trudi
Fleischer slips out of the cookhouse door and 
takes a quick look around before creeping down towards the native
quarters.


Her blond hair is tied in bangs; on her head she wears a green
bonnet, the wide brim of which protects her delicate 
skin from the African sun. Her dress is modestly long and buttons
right up to her throat. She hitches up the hem as 
she makes the final sprint to the hut. Angoni pulls the matting door
aside and Trudi slips inside. The boy looks 
agitated and pokes his head out again for another peek.


"Are you sure no-one saw you miss?" he asks Trudi.


"Relax," she reassures him, "Mutti's having her siesta, Putti's
drinking down at the hotel with the soldiers. All the 
servants are down at the river."


"I don't want a whipping, miss," the boy tells her nervously.


"No-one's going to harm you, Angoni, settle down!"


"Yes miss," the boy replies, looking at the floor.


Trudi goes to the oil lamp set on the table and puts a taper to it.
The dark windowless hut adopts a pale glow.


"Now," the girl says turning towards the boy, "show me!"


Reluctantly Angoni starts to undo the ties of his breeches. Pushing
them down, he steps out of the legs and stands 
naked from the waist down. Trudi walks up to the boy and gently
takes his flaccid penis in her hand. Angoni looks 
down as Trudi manipulates him, he breathes heavily in fear and
expectation.


"Tell me Angoni, have all your friends got such big ones?"


"Some," replies Angoni, still fearful, "some bigger miss."


She pulls on him, feeling it begin to stiffen in her hand.


"Now it's your turn," she tells him stepping back.


Angoni takes his growing cock in his hand and begins to stroke it up
and down.


"Good boy... good boy," Trudi tells him like one might talk to a pet
animal.


After a little while, with his cock standing straight up and slimy,
Angoni asks Trudi,


"Can I see... miss?"


I guess," she replies, considering, "I suppose you've been a good
boy."


Trudi undoes a few buttons of her dress and slowly, seductively
pulls aside the fabric to expose one of her little 
pale breasts.


"Here," she says, "but you mustn't touch, hear?"


"No miss," the boy answers and strokes himself faster.


Later, as Trudi slips back through the cookhouse door, she thinks he
HAD splashed a lot of his stuff. She knew 
Angoni adored her, but it was unthinkable for her to have an
'understanding' with a black, completely unthinkable. 
Indeed there was only one person to whom she could cheerfully give
her heart, the Kommandant of the town's 
defence forces, Hauptmann Wolfgang Ritter.


-------------------------------------------------------------------


Meanwhile, as Kommandant, I make it a habit of inspecting the sentry
positions each day. The duty Gefreiter and I 
ride over the area, assuring ourselves everyone is on alert. It's
been three days since von Lettow left with the main 
force to raid into Rhodesia, three days of nerve-racking routine. We
approach another post.


"Achtung, Offizier!" yells the Gefreiter.


An Askari leaps from his position under a large tree and snaps to
attention.


"Report, Soldier!"


"Nothing Herr Gefreiter, no enemy sir!" the soldier responds.


"Good... ah... Herman isn't it?" I ask him kindly.


"Herman Nyrere Herr Hauptmann!"


"There's a lot of you Nyrere's around, isn't there?" I ask him.


"Jawohl, Herr Hauptmann. I have 12 brothers and 9 cousins. We're
very loyal to the Kaiser sir."


I smile at the young sentry's reply. The Gefreiter confides,


"Fertile bunch, Herr Hauptmann. They're good soldiers too, sir."


Riding on, I think a little about the Askaris. Their fierce loyalty
places a heavy responsibility on us. Having freed 
them from the deprivations of Arab slavers and warlike neighbours
through German arms, they look to us to 
provide the leadership to see them through this crisis. But how long
can we continue to prevail over our enemies? 
Every month our forces erode, while that of our foes grows stronger.
Germany is bleeding to death in France. And 
what will happen in America ever decides to join with the British?
It would be the 'coup de grace,' I think. 

What happens to the Tanganyikans then? Overrun by vengeful enemies
and delivered into the hands of the British, 
Dutch and Belgians? Their lands parcelled up for the convenience of
the victorious allies? Their only hope is a 
negotiated peace and with every month, that prospect grows dimmer.


------------------------------------------------------------------


In the afternoon, I must hold court over minor infractions of
military discipline, just like the Captain of a ship. Most 
of the reports deal with visiting the native village without
authorisation. Indeed, with Doctor Otto constantly prowling 
through the huts, the list of malefactors is getting tediously long.


"Three days loss of pay and privileges, next!"


It's a production line and the missionary is becoming irritating.
The good Doctor would have me lash the 
transgressors but I remind him there are standards of military
justice and I must conform to the code. I feel a 
hypocrite in delivering these sentences. While Hildegard von
Masurien continues to treat me like a husband, it's 
difficult looking these men in the eye. I hope, though, that they
understand it's my duty.


Fraulein Masurien is definitely 'not' looking for a husband,
however. She tells me she's doing fine on her own. 
When I reminded her of the inevitable consequences of our night time
activities she assured me that, 'everything 
has been taken care of.'


"You can be sure there'll be no little mariners suckling me nine
months hence," was all she said.


At the end of the 'Captain's list' I receive an invitation from the
shopkeeper, Herr Fleischer. He asks me if I'd care 
to have dinner with his family this Friday. I discuss the invitation
with Hildegard later that evening.


"Trudi!" she says.


"What?"


"The Fleischers are looking to marry her off," she tells me.


"But she's, what 15?" I remark in surprise.


"16, and, my dear, you're the most eligible bachelor in Rungwa. I
doubt she has many other prospects out here."


"But she's so young! She needs to be in a finishing school or..."


The Fraulein admits a throaty laugh.


"Where? In Daressalam? I hear it's in the hands of the British. You
think she should be sent back to Germany? 
How? By blockade-runner dodging mines in the North Sea? Or maybe the
Navy might send a U-Boat for her if you 
ask them nicely? Then what does she arrive home to? Food shortages?
This time, Leutnant, I'm in the Fleischer's 
camp I'm afraid. Better she finds a handsome Naval Officer now while
she still can."


"Are you trying to marry me off to her?" I ask in surprise.


"Why not!" she laughs, "this way, I can borrow your company from
time to time."


"That's outrageous," I tell her, smiling, "you'd keep company with a
married man?"


"I assure you, Lieutenant, it would not be uncommon in Rungwa."


------------------------------------------------------------------


The veneer of respectability pasted over a hotbed of immorality; and
then there's Rungwa, as I'm beginning to 
discover. There seem to be any amount of peccadilloes going on among
the whites to the dismay of their black 
servants. They are, of course, sworn to protect the privacy of their
masters, but naturally they gossip.


"Dr Otto accuses me of having unnatural tastes," Hildegard tells me,
"but he needn't look any further than his own 
household."


"Really!"


"I'll tell you this in absolute confidence, Leutnant. Frau Otto was
seen by one of her servants... with her maid's 
head between her legs."


"The Missionary's wife?" I exclaim, disbelieving.


"Yes... skirts hiked up, so." 


Hildegard demonstrates, giving me a fleeting glimpse of her bloomers.


"How was that?" I grin at her.


"Like this," she says slowly hiking her skirts back up, "and the
maid's head was here," she adds, pointing.


I get on my knees before her. Taking a leg in each hand, I lower my
mouth onto her silk covered mound and plant 
a kiss.


"Ooh Leutnant," she coos, seductively, "except I don't think she was
wearing anything underneath."


Her underwear lying discarded on the floor, she gasps,


"Yes... that's much more... like it... uh."


Placing her feet on my shoulders, she holds me around the head as I
push my tongue through her brown-fluffy 
folds.


------------------------------------------------------------------


That evening a boy comes to the door with a Telegraph message.


'Hauptmann, Detachment 'R'.'


'A loss for the British, one Short type 827 seaplane.'


'You may expect no more reconnaissance of your positions.'


'LV'.


It was some time later before the full facts come out. Apparently
the Britisher alighted near river steamer No.7, 
having mistaken the Rukwasee for Lake Nyasa. It just flew right over
the top, coming from nowhere to the utter 
dismay of the soldiers. Taxiing up to the beach, the two crewmen
waded ashore to be apprehended by the Askaris. 
They had, they said, landed to gain directions to their base and 'a
tin of petrol.' The Officer, a South African who 
'knew the land,' was most put out.


"How dare you let a Kaffir point a rifle at a white man!" he'd
berated von Lettow.


Unmoved by the South African's bluster, the General had given him
over to the care of Sergeant Savimba to the 
general amusement of the raiding party. The Dutch 'vortrekkers' had
driven the Sergeant's Ngoni people from their 
homes in South Africa.


----------------------------------------------------------------


Meanwhile, the fraulein is taking less and less care with her
reputation. It has become common knowledge here 
that the Kommandant is the shipping manager's lover. It is the
nature of social hierarchies, however, that nothing is 
mentioned. Indeed, it's almost as if it's expected that I involve
myself with one of the white ladies of the town. I 
wouldn't be a man, though, if I didn't cast an eye towards young
Trudi Fleischer.


It's obvious to the men here that she's in the full bloom of youth.
Week by week, she appears just a little more 
rounded in the hips, just a fraction more developed in the bust.
Daily she seems more confident out in public, 
adopting a swing to the hips whenever she passes by groups of our
soldiers. I fear she's growing into a little tease, 
quite a change since I first laid eyes on her.


In the context of her developing sexuality, it's understandable,
therefore, that her parents would want to see her 
safely married off to a suitable young man. With such a poor ratio
of women to men, the potential for her to fall foul 
of some smooth-talking attentions is great.


------------------------------------------------------------------


"We are doomed!" cries Leutnant Spangenburg, the Infantry Commander.


He has just brought the news that the railway from Daressalam to
Tabora is in enemy hands. This effectively 
divides the country in half, north and south. Puffing excitedly on a
cigar offered by Fraulein Masurien, he stalks up 
and down the drawing room as if looking for enemies.


"Calm down," I tell him, "we've had setbacks before. Remember,
territory is unimportant; we must keep in the field. 
The enemy hasn't won until the defence forces are defeated. The
British can't hold everything, there're not enough 
of them. They move south, we strike north. Attack where he's
weakest, you've heard the General's briefings."


"You're living in a fantasy, Wolfgang," he replies, "how many of us
have been carried off by Yellow Fever, 
Cholera... half of your own crew are down with Malaria! Soon
there'll be no one left to hold a gun! The British have 
100,000 men, 100,000 Wolfgang! What will happen if the Americans get
involved? There'll be simply nowhere to 
go!"


"Until then our duty is clear, Leutnant," I tell him stiffly, "we
obey our orders and do our best."


"I wonder," he says, sadly, "if anyone in Berlin really notices or
cares what we do here. Our dead are but a drop in 
the bucket compared to those in France. Who will remember Kettering,
Fischer, Josef Bauer and all the rest Herr 
Hauptmann? They were all friends of mine and now what? Lying,
mouldering somewhere out there for what 
purpose? One day there'll be no one left alive to remember the dead.
The British and Dutch will be pitching their 
tents over our muddy graves."


"Another brandy Leutnant Spangenburg?" interjects Hildegard.


The infantryman accepts the drink wordlessly and takes a deep draft.
Shivering from the fiery liquid, he nods to the 
lady before mumbling his goodbyes. Together we watch him shamble out
the door into the night.


"Will he be all right?" asks Hildegard.


"He'll sleep it off," I shrug, "he's just had a bit too much to
drink." 


When we enter Hildegard's bedroom, arm in arm, Diana, her maid, has
already turned back the covers. She gives 
a little curtsy before backing out the door, grinning.


"I swear that Diana is getting more and more impertinent each day.
I'll need to have a word with her about proper 
manners," the Fraulein tells me.


"What's she done now?"


"You saw that look on her face!"


Later, as we start to make love, Hildegard whispers to me, full of
concern.


"Wolfie, you won't leave us, will you? To the British, I mean, you
won't go off and get yourself killed somewhere? If 
you leave, I'm coming too, I have my shotgun and I can shoot as
straight as any man."


"I... I don't know, honestly, what's going to happen. If the British
enter Rungwa, I'm sure they'll treat you with 
consideration... Perhaps you might find a Tommie Officer who..."


"Don't!" she spits, "don't patronise me! I'll be no-one's whore and
the English can go hang! Now get that thing of 
yours ready and do your duty!"


"Jawohl Fraulein Masurien!" I tell her smiling.


-----------------------------------------------------------------


In normal peacetime, Trudi Fleischer would probably have been sent
back home to complete her education. No 
doubt she would've stayed with some family who would supervise her
entry into society. Thus introduced, she 
could then pick her mate from the available suitors in a controlled
setting.


But these days, it's impossible to get back to Germany. Impossible,
even to travel far in East Africa. So trapped, 
she must find a protector soon or she'll have little chance of
finding a life independent of her parents. No one 
knows what will happen should the English take over. This I believe,
as I make my way to the Fleischer's for 
dinner.


Herr Fleischer is courteous but nervous as he greets me in the
atrium of their large sprawling home. 
Conspicuously wealthy, this little man with the waxed moustache
continuously fidgets in a most unsettling fashion. 
Terrified, possibly, that his riches will shortly all be swept away
by the British. Frau Fleischer, by contrast, is 
relaxed and gracious and extends me her ring-adorned hand in welcome.


"It has been too long a wait," she says, "we should have invited you
to dinner much sooner."


In her early forties, she's impressive in stature, tall and shapely
with a glittering of pearls and broaches draped 
about her. Herr Fleischer, on the other hand, seems weedy and fussy
by comparison. More like a junior bank clerk 
than a rich businessman. The source of the Fleischer's wealth has
been the black market. From small 
shopkeepers and traders the Fleischers have made an absolute fortune
since the beginning of the war and the 
British blockade.


"Helmut, perhaps the Herr Hauptmann might care for a Cognac before
dinner?" she tells her husband.


"Of course!" he replies.


The man fetches a decanter from a very well-stocked liquor cabinet.


"Perhaps later you might care for a Havana? My husband brought them
from Mombassa."


Herr Fleischer looks startled and stares at his wife.


"Before the war, of course," she adds, chuckling, to the definite
relief of her husband.


-----------------------------------------------------------------


At dinner, I'm placed next to Trudi. She's tense and agitated during
the meal. Her hands shake and she rarely 
looks up from the table. Her mother tries to explain to me the
qualities of the young girl as tactfully as she can. 
Trudi, however, seldom responds with anything more than a polite
smile.


A little exasperated by her daughter's shyness, her mother suggests
Trudi shows me the garden in the reddish 
sunset of the evening. The girl strolls alongside me, smoothing her
dress, and fiddling with her hair ribbons.


"You seem nervous, Fraulein Fleischer?" I open the conversation.


"Do I?" she shrugs.


"Is anything wrong?"


After a long pause, she replies thoughtfully.


"My mother wants you to court me."


"I know," I respond to her honesty, "and what does Fraulein
Fleischer want?"


She's again lost in thought.


"Why do I need a Naval Officer who's probably going to die soon
anyway..." 


She seems startled by her own outspoken-ness.


"I'm sorry, Herr Hauptmann... I... I say things sometime... I didn't
mean..." she apologises quickly.


I turn her slightly so I can see into her eyes. I sense fear,
mingled with excitement, something intangible perhaps.


"It's quite alright," I assure her, "you're quite correct, I may die
soon, who knows? But we must pretend that we are 
going to live long lives or give over to despair."


"And do you give over... to despair, I mean?"


"I greet each sunrise with happiness," I tell her, "content that
this day I'm alive in this beautiful country."


"Oh you liar!" she chuckles, "I bet you're scared out of your wits!"


"Fraulein, I started off with few wits to be scared out of."


Her laughter lights up this young girl. Replacing her nervous
expression is an impish grin that sizzles with the 
excitement of the game. It would do no harm, I think, to spend a
little time in this girl's company.


From the double French windows of their large house, Frau Fleischer
watches with satisfaction the banter among 
the roses. 'An Officer,' she thinks to herself, 'that can more than
take care of himself.'


----------------------------------------------------------------


It is some days before I have a chance to spend some more time with
Trudi. With the news of the capture of the 
railway we must presume that the enemy will march on us in a two-
pronged movement. Firstly, they'll probably 
sortie south from Tabora. Secondly, taking advantage of Lake
Tanganyika, they may try and advance to the north 
of Bismarckburg and cut off von Lettow's withdrawal. Knowing, as I
do, the Herr General's mind he will do precisely 
what the enemy thinks is least likely. That means, he'll advance
into British territory.


If that happens, we will be totally exposed and therefore we must be
prepared to evacuate Rungwa if necessary. 
The Commanders of von Lettow's forces are used to acting on their
own initiative. Indeed the key to our success 
this far has been our flexibility. I must be prepared, therefore, to
march at a moment's notice.


I recall all the river traffic I can get my hands on and assemble
them at the pier. It's my intention to use the River 
Rukwa to move out any of the citizens who believe themselves to be
at risk. Some people, like the Fleischers and 
Guy Martin the ivory trader, have elected to remain. Others, like
the Ottos, the police chief and Hildegard, want to 
move out with the army.


Spangenburg, despite his occasional lapses into melancholia, is a
good, reliable soldier. Trained as a cavalry 
officer he's firmly committed to the horse and is full of ideas on
raids on the enemy's communications and such 
like. He has trained a number of Askaris as mounted troopers,
calling them extravagantly his, 'Ost-Afrikanische 
Uhlan Abteilung.' Mustering less than 100 sabres, it's an optimistic
gesture.


------------------------------------------------------------------


Taking time out from my responsibilities, I call on Trudi one
afternoon. Frau Fleischer tells me that she has gone 
swimming and suggests she'll be at the reservoir about a kilometre
out of town. The small lake is reserved for the 
use of the Europeans. The surrounds are park-like and feature
colourful changing sheds down by the water's 
edge. Trudi is the only one swimming today, I spy her paddling
lazily around in circles towards the far end of the 
lake. She gives me a merry wave and invites me on in. I peel off my
khaki shirt and short trousers and park my 
white, peaked Naval cap on top of the bundle. Thus attired in my
underpants, I slip into the cool refreshing water.


Trudi is wearing a white cotton shirt and linen shorts that end at
her knees. The wet cotton clings to her in a 
revealing fashion, becoming transparent at it moulds around her
little breasts. She remains, however, modestly 
concealed below the water.


"I didn't think you'd call again," she tells me, a little petulantly.


"I have heavy responsibilities," I explain.


"Ah, and are the British coming yet?" she asks.


"Feel assured, Fraulein, they are more than 400 kilometres away."


"Good," she sighs, "then I don't have to learn English yet."


"'GOOD EVENING THOMAS, MY GOOD FELLOW'," I tell her in English,
approximating the accent of a British 
lord.


Trudi giggles.


"That sounds funny! You do it so well! Maybe you could pretend to be
an English gentleman and we could pass 
through their army!"


"Only," I tell her, "if all their soldiers are called, 'Thomas'."


Giggling some more, she asks,


"Do you know any more English?" 


"'A PINT OF BITTER AND 10 CAPSTANS PLEASE, GUV'," I reply, pretty
much exhausting my English phrases.


Trudi's laughing hysterically. She begs me to tell her what it means
in German.


"Beer and cigarettes, I think. I heard a British sailor say that in
a bar in Chatham when we called there before the 
war."


"You've been to England," she asks in surprise.


"Only a couple of times. Mostly for coal and a little relaxation."


"Funny isn't it," she considers, "you may have been shooting at some
of those same sailors."


"Entirely possible," I answer, "very nice people, the English, they
made us most welcome."


"So why are we at war with them?" she asks.


"Greed... as near as I can figure, theirs and ours."


"That seems such a waste," she replies, sadly.


"Yes, Herr Fraulein... it is!"


------------------------------------------------------------------


Later we rise from the water and go and sit on the bank. Trudi
insists I turn my back until she has wrapped a town 
around herself. Modestly thus attired, we stretch out on our backs
under a lean-to shelter erected for such a 
purpose. Even in the evening, the sun is strong enough to make it
unpleasant to be exposed for long periods 
without proper clothes. I place my service cap over my face and doze.


I sense Trudi moving closer alongside. The back of my hand brushes
hers; her shoulder lightly touches my arm. I 
can feel the tension in her body; it prevents me from drifting into
unconsciousness. Under the edge of my hatband, 
I can just make out her blond hair. It flutters with movement as
Trudi shifts about. She props herself on her elbows 
and spends some time staring at me. Perhaps taking in the length of
my outstretched body.


"Hauptmann!" she calls softly.


I push my cap from my face and blink in the descending sun.


"I... I thought you had fallen asleep," she says.


"What is it Fraulein?" I ask her.


"I was wondering... um!" she speaks slowly.


"What?"


"... If we were married... we'd be lying like this... all the time,
wouldn't we?"


Grinning, I tell her that I dare say we'd get up from time to time
for meals. She laughs.


"I think that would be very nice," she says.


I reach up and stroke her sweet face. She shuts her eyes, sighing at
the contact. She lies back down and puts her 
head on my shoulder. I touch her cheek with my lips and she smiles
in contentment.


"Won't Fraulein von Masurien be cross?" she asks.


Drawing in air, I tell her the Fraulein is all for the match. I
didn't, however, mention that she hopes to have 
continued access to me.


"Really," she says, disbelieving, "I thought you and her... I mean,
I shouldn't pry, but I heard from some of the 
blacks that you and the Fraulein were sharing certain... ah...
comforts together?"


"Comforts?" I smile, "if by that you mean we sleep together... then
I guess... yes, we do share certain intimacies."


"Oh," she looks disappointed.


"I'm sorry if that disturbs you," I tell her, "you didn't expect me
to be inexperienced, did you?"


"Of course not," she says firmly, "no, I just wonder how I can
possibly be as... as agreeable to you as the 
Fraulein?"



The closeness, the very fragrance of this young woman is
intoxicating. I move my arm around her shoulders, my 
hand rests on her forearm.


"My dear," I try to answer her concerns, "some few years ago I was
standing on the fore deck of a cruiser smelling 
the salt air and watching the spray leap up from the bows. Then
suddenly I became an infantryman and instead of 
the brine, the smell of dust. I learnt my craft as I went along
until, now, von Lettow himself considers me sufficiently 
experienced for a separate command. You cannot displease me young
lady and anything you need to know can 
be learnt."


"That's a fine speech, Herr Leutnant. Are you telling me you shall
teach me?"


"As you must teach me, Fraulein Trudi."


"Teach you?" she arches her eyebrows.


"Yes, you must show me how you like to be... embraced."


"I see," she says.


"I'm sure, for instance, that there are certain things that...
please you? Perhaps something that you may have 
thought about?"


Trudi giggles in embarrassment putting her hand up to her face. As
if thinking about some private fantasy, she 
ponders for a moment before dissolving back into laughter.


"Is there something?" I persist.


"Maybe!" she says demurely, " but I couldn't possible tell you...
it's private!"


"Go on!" I insist, "if we are to be married, then surely I'd need to
know such things. Indeed, it must be so if I'm to be 
a good husband to you."


Trudi's shyness is enflaming. Already I feel a stirring in my loins.
Perhaps with a little prompting, this little nymph 
could be persuaded to reveal one of her intimate secrets. It's an
intriguing game!


"You won't be appalled?" she pleads.


"Of course not," I reassure her, "it's part of love."


"Oh... well... if you promise not to laugh?"


I nod my head firmly.






"Well... um... I think about a man... fondling himself in front of
me," she says before burying her head in her hands. 


Cuddling her head to me, I whisper in her ear,


"Rest assured, young lady, it would give me great pleasure to do
that... Providing, of course, I might return the 
favour?"


At my words she breaks out into tears of relief, holding onto me as
if I was a rock in a stormy ocean. I bend close 
and kiss her honey lips. Her eyes flick open in shock, and then
close again. I watch her face for a moment; 
breathing quickly her lips remain slightly parted in expectation. I
bend down again to savour her moist petals, but 
this time I remain longer.


----------------------------------------------------------------


To the northwest of Rungwa is a low flat hill. The local Africans
have some animal enclosures there. Standing just 
apart from the native pens is a grass shelter for the herdsman. It
is a simple structure with no walls, just a roof to 
protect the man from the hot sun. Frau Fleischer peers through her
binoculars at the distant lake. Lottie, one of her 
servants, stands beside her, directing her gaze. 


"Just to the left of that tree, Frau Fleischer, I saw them there
when I was out walking," Lottie tells her employer.


"Ah, yes... I see them... they're in the shelter," she replies.


"Shall I fetch Herr Fleischer?" the servant asks.


"It won't be necessary, Lottie. The Herr Hauptmann is a gentleman,
I'm sure he wouldn't take any liberties with my 
daughter."


Trudi's mother continues to watch as the two figures merge.


"I shall remain here for a while," she tells the girl, quickly, "you
may return, thank you."


The girl curtsies and walks back towards her employer's house.
Transfixed by the sight of the two lovers, Frau 
Fleischer continues to stare into her British-made Binoculars. A
smile begins to stretch across her face. 'My, the 
Hauptmann is a fast worker,' she thinks to herself with satisfaction.


------------------------------------------------------------------


Trudi and I roll together on the spread towels. Her arms encircle my
chest; her hands feel the contours of my back. 
As my kissing grows ever more passionate, she starts to whimper with
emotion. Gradually I find myself in the 
superior position, my leg slips between hers. A skilled student,
she's soon working her lips fiercely against mine. 
When I come up for a gulp of air, her eyes are wide open with
excitement. Heaving, her nipples press through the 
cotton of her shirt.




"Show me?" she breathes heavily.


Her eyes indicate downwards. I grin as realisation dawns on me.
Rolling to the side, I undo the buttons of my 
underpants and ease my stiff member loose for her inspection. She
stares wide-eyed at my manhood.


"It's nice," she says, thickly.


"You can touch it if you like," I advise her.


She reaches out with her fingertip and drags it up the underneath.
It pulses in response, eliciting a slight smile. 
Boldly, she curls her hand around it and squeezes lightly.
Concentrating, she starts to work me up and down.


"Show me!" I tell her, starting to release the buttons of her shirt.


She nods uncertainly, but allows me to continue. I pull aside the
front of her shirt, revealing two, pale, cone-like 
little breasts. She starts as I gently cup one in my hand, pressing
a nipple between my fingers. She looks at me 
desperately and pushes her head forward for some more kissing. Her
hand, though, continues to play with me.


She is, though, not yet skilled in finishing. I suggest that I take
over to which she readily agrees. Fatigue is 
inhibiting her efforts. Taking myself in hand, she watches
fascinated while I finish what she started. For my benefit 
she displays herself, holding her shirt apart. Inexperienced as she
is, she appears to understand the delight men 
take in the sight of a young girl's breasts.


Later we walk hand in hand back to town, strolling together as near
to Rungwa as it's prudent to do so. She takes 
my leave on the outskirts, thus avoiding setting tongues wagging.


From the hilltop, Frau Fleischer is returning home too. She's
pleased with her daughter's efforts. Pleased too, that 
she did not appear to give herself away too readily. 'To keep a man
interested,' she believes, 'one must unwrap the 
gift, a little at a time.'


She's aware, of course, of her daughter's curiosity. It's entirely
natural and, providing she maintains strict 
discretion, she believes a little familiarity with the male physique
is perhaps a good thing. Flushed a little, and not 
entirely as a result of the weather, she thinks she wouldn't mind
unwrapping that young Officer herself. She tingles 
at the sheer outrageousness of the thought.


-----------------------------------------------------------------


Later, at my headquarters at the police station, I peruse the latest
reports from our intelligence. Spangenburg's 
mounted scouts have brought in no evidence that the enemy is the
least bit interested in Rungwa at present. The 
British seem more alarmed at the deprivations wrought by von Lettow
between Lakes Tanganyika and Nyasa. The 
General has just ambushed a fairly substantial convoy of military
materiel from which he's been able to replenish 
his own stocks. The besiegers of Bismarckburg have broken camp and
are endeavouring to bring him to book. 
They deduce, correctly, that the German field force is the main
obstacle to their ambitions in the area.






For most of this conflict our enemies have clung to the traditional
dictum that one must capture and hold territory to 
win a campaign. Indeed, they assumed that besieging and capturing
towns was the key to their success. Von 
Lettow demonstrated that, in this part of the world at least, you
only possess your own shadow. As Napoleon found 
to his disappointment, Moscow is a fool's chalice if one can't
destroy the enemy's will to fight. When faced with 
overwhelming might, this is the only way to defend one's liberty.


On the face of it, Rungwa IS German East-Afrika for it's the only
town the enemy cannot freely enter. Hauptmann 
Wahl's detachment is still active in the vicinity of Lake Victoria,
but we have not heard from him in weeks. He holds 
no towns unless he chooses to shelter from the rain awhile. He takes
all he needs from the enemy's supplies and 
attacks their patrols and communications. Von Lettow does the same
in the Southwest. Always on the move, often 
at night when near the enemy, moving in silence and skirting their
superior forces. Then, when the enemy 
becomes complacent, he strikes in their rear to their utter
consternation.


The enemy respond by sending in more soldiers, garrisoning more
towns and strong points. But this is a vast 
territory and can quickly swallow 100,000 soldiers in one gulp. When
they march, their supply train follows behind 
for 20 kilometres or more. The dust from this huge rolling mass of
men can be seen from every available hilltop.


The British brought in an armoured car squadron. Their Daimlers
bogged in the sticky mud and their elaborate dust 
filters became clogged. The cars couldn't cross rivers without
special rafts being constructed and they were so hot 
inside the drivers suffered from heat stroke. Hauptmann Wahl pulled
one out of the mud near Ikoma last year. Its 
exasperated English crew had merely walked away from it, leaving its
valuable Vickers Guns to the Viktoriasee 
Abteilung. Its engine, sadly, couldn't be restarted because it had
seized solid.


Such a way of fighting, however, imposes a heavy strain on the
soldiers. From our initial force of 14,000, the 
Schutztruppen has dwindled to less than half that total. For every
man that takes a bullet, we lose perhaps another 
5 from disease.


----------------------------------------------------------------


Afterwards I return to my billet. It seems such a bubble of
normalcy, this town, hitherto unaffected by the chaos 
surrounding it. Hildegard plies me with questions about my meeting
with Trudi. It seems strange to be discussing 
age-old peaceful affairs at such a time.


"Did you ask her?" she enquires eagerly.


"Not yet," I reply, "but I assume she's not averse to the idea."


"Well of course she's not!" she replies, "are you willing? That is
the more important question."


"I've barely had time to think," I tell the Fraulein, "this is all
rushing on so fast, I feel I have little control over it. Like 
one of Spangenburg's heroic cavalry charges."


"Well just stay in the saddle and enjoy the gallop," she advises,
"it's not everyday you're the centre of attention of 
such lovely ladies."


"There's something I can't quite understand, Hildegard," I explain,
"Trudi is packaged and presented to me on a 
platter by her parents, no?"


The Fraulein nods.


"I can't quite see what the hurry is. Surely at 16 she can afford to
wait. This war will end, sometime, and then there 
must be opportunities for the young lady to seek a husband. Why me,
Hildegard?"


"I think you must look at yourself, handsome one," she says,
"perhaps Trudi is not the only one to recognise your 
qualities?"


"I don't understand," I tell her.


"That's because you've spent too much time in the company of men,"
she replies, cryptically.


I shake my head, still puzzled by her words.


"Sometimes I think women speak in a foreign language," I mutter.


"Oh we do!" she agrees, 'and now you must take me to bed and tell me
all that happened between you and Trudi 
Fleischer."


"Fraulein you are incorrigible."


"Yes, I am! And don't spare any details," she says, taking me by the
hand, "I want to know everything... minute by 
minute."


Some time later, as we lay together catching our breath, Hildegard
whispers,


"I rather think, Hauptmann, that your Trudi is not totally the
innocent maid."


"Yes," I agree," replying, "I rather think she's not unfamiliar with
a man's body."


"Does it concern you?" she asks.


"I guess, should I become her husband, I'd prefer to be able to look
my fellow gentlemen in the eye."


"Ah," she says, "you assume then it was with a gentleman?"


"What? Then who?" I ask her in surprise.


Hildegard displays her enigmatic smile as if she can communicate by
very thought alone. Suddenly realisation 
begins to dawn on me. I look into Hildegard's smiling face with alarm.


"You don't mean... surely not... she'd never..."


"My dear," she laughs, "and you accuse we women of speaking in a
foreign tongue."


(C)Katzmarek