Tsing-Boum (26 page)

Read Tsing-Boum Online

Authors: Nicolas Freeling

From that day they hadn't looked back. There had been money in the bank. People had started coming, for lessons, flips. Conny had gone on, never looking back, never sitting still, never contented with himself. Charters, gliders, the gymnasium where the enterprising could learn jumps on the static line.

The flat too had been Conny's idea. He still slept in a cupboard affair behind the bar, along with the fuseboxes and the fire extinguisher, but he had insisted that Laforêt should have proper living quarters.

‘And this is not just to impress customers. This is needed for you. Hell, for every night I'm here there's one I can sleep in hotels, have a proper bath, go into the restaurant and pick up a menu. You have to have something to give you self-respect.' And the flat had been built, with its kitchen and bathroom, and the cleaning woman had been found. Laforêt drove most mornings into Hasselt to pick her up; by then she would have done the marketing, and would bring food, fresh vegetables and fruit. A wine merchant from Liège came out and stocked the bar. Conny knew how to get licences and permissions – never once were they held up with administrative paperwork. And now there was even a girl receptionist to keep accounts and plan schedules. Daisy thought she ran the whole place singlehanded … Conny's doing again. He knew how to manage women!

One could not let Conny down. He was puzzled, worried, and bit his nails more than he had in ten years.

Chapter Twenty-Six

He mentioned it himself, finally. And as soon as he had he saw from Conny's expression that he himself was just a simpleton. What had he ever been but the pick and the shovel? Conny Desmet was the brains. He had known how to flannel round regulations and how to wheedle ten thousand francs. He knew how to swing hardheaded business men off their feet, as well as how to put the girls floating horizontal. And above all, he knew how to be patient, never to hurry a deal, never to show himself anxious or nervous, never to appear pinched or crowded. A good business man, who will hold on to the slightest little thing that may turn out one day to have value. Stow it away and let it accumulate interest, and when you have a market for it you can hold out for a good bargain. Laforêt could never do that. He wouldn't know how.

When he did finally mention Esther's name he understood that Desmet had been waiting quietly for this moment, sure it would come, sooner or later. Had been playing with him the way a cat would with a mouse.

Has Conny then been playing with me all these years? Suddenly he did not know, and there was no solid ground any more at all.

They were drinking coffee together; a still morning of early autumn when the thin bony easterly has turned the dew to frost and sends long pale spears of sunshine through the white mist. Laforêt was grilling the day-before's bread on an electric toaster. Desmet, hairy across the shoulders, smears of talcum powder on his thick upper arms, was hunting clean things out of the laundry suitcase.

‘It amuses me occasionally –' Laforêt in a drawl, stirring his coffee – ‘the possibility – I mean it's remote but it can always happen – seeing someone from old times. Kind of funny sensation.
You know how much you've changed yourself, and how everybody else must have changed, and suddenly you see a face that was once familiar. Like when every now and then you hear someone talking French in Flanders and you wonder who the hell that can be – somebody out of a different world.'

‘You talking about Esther Marx?' asked Desmet nonchalantly, his thick fingers picking a sleevelink deftly from between his teeth and working it into the cuff. ‘Yeh, I ran across her up in Rotterdam a few days ago – she lives there along the coast some place. I was chinning with her a while on the parking lot, and “having a drink in memory of the good old days” – these old days you're always brooding about and which have about as much importance as a potato you chuck out because it's frozen.'

‘What's she doing now?'

‘There you are – all flustered and lamentable straight off.'

‘Chuck it, Conny.'

‘She's married to some bum in the Dutch army – I ask you.'

‘So what?' allowing irritation to creep into his voice – Conny's trick of always knowing everything about everybody invariably rasped, which was illogical – he wanted very badly to know …

‘Why, in that time – and no offence to you, old son, because I remember you escorting her about everywhere in Hanoi – nothing ever did for those girlies below the rank of officer. Things find their level like I'm always telling you – married to some technical sergeant – how dim can you get?'

‘You know she turned up here a week ago. Backed out when she saw me – that's natural enough. You're never embarrassed, but other people are.'

‘What about it? Yeh, Daisy told me. You mean you were embarrassed?'

‘A bit. After all – awkward situation. I suppose she was curious after seeing you. She was what d'you call it – disconcerted. You've got a brass gut; it beats me how you can be so insensitive.'

Desmet was drinking coffee placidly.

‘I've got weak spots, same as anyone else – but when I think them just damn stupid I try and get rid of them. A soldier second class or a general – all equal now, no? Look for the other fellow's weak spot is my motto – don't go about parading
your own. Give me some more coffee, would you?

‘Yeh, I got a laugh out of seeing little Marx – amusing girl. I was kidding about a bit over a drink, saying why don't you come down and show a few of our fat chemists here how to jump without getting their foot in their mouth. I didn't know she'd take it so seriously though. Must have a hankering for those good old days all right, when she was a sort of heroine.'

‘Now hell, Conny,' exasperated, ‘What did you do that for, knowing perfectly well I wouldn't be exactly delighted.'

‘Now Frankie,' mimicking head in the dust, mock apologetic, ‘I never meant to upset you. But snap out of it, brother. That old shindy … this little mare dropped you in the shit once – you've told me and I'd heard rumours once – but who cares now? Bit of ass's skin. You can't go round the world scared of meeting people. Look at you – climbing up steady, same as me. Are we respected by all? Sure. Despite having come from nothing? Not a bit; because of it, more like. Do we boast of the time we had nothing to eat but potatoes? Not specially, but we aren't bloody well ashamed of it either. What's this girl now? All these years gone by, and just the same tarted-up little fancypants with dreams about the good old days when you could tell who was the big guy by the number of his shoulderstraps. You wonder why she comes here? Just an attempt to pretend she isn't pushing forty by now. Recapture her youth. Going about begging for diversions. Gave me her address – here, you want it?' hunting in his pockets and producing an old envelope, ‘no good to me – I got other fish to fry. You could have her back tomorrow if it amused you. Fall off in your hand like a ripe plum. Ought to try it really – you never have enough confidence in yourself. Jumpy little trout still too – be a good joke to put horns on the Dutch army.' Desmet laughed at this gay thought, and finished tying his tie. ‘Ey, I got to get up on my toes. Did I tell you about that Piper Navajo? – fellow's hesitating still. I got him in my little eye. Going to appear a bit casual over in Aachen, and if the price is right – and I'll make damn sure it is right … Ey?'

The envelope had the result of Conny Desmet's detective work scribbled on it.

‘PX 7799-25. Zomerlust.' Under was scribbled ‘Tech sarg. Juliana Caserne Alphen'. Lower down was ‘Van Lennep 432'. Laforêt brooded about this for some days. Later, he would ask himself how on earth he could have been so astonishingly naïve. It simply never occurred to him that if Esther had really given Conny her address she would hardly have bothered to dictate her car number.

‘George,' shouted Desmet. ‘Hey, George!' It was one of his tricks when in an especially good mood to call people by imaginary names. ‘Come on out here 'n' I'll show you my new gun. Boyboyboy, what a sweet job. Fellow I met in Antwerp in a bar, one of these United Nations clowns, was a bit short on drinking money and offered to sell me a souvenir of Sinai. Israeli – Uzzi it's called. These Yids, they know how to handle Arabs – say that for them. Look, the trigger and the grip are synchronized, kind of a safety device. Have a good day? Say, at that, you were up in Amsterdam, did you think of giving Marx a bang on the way?'

‘No,' lied Laforêt stoutly. ‘No – you were quite right – the past has no importance. Good gun, this. You want to try and get one of these Chinese ones they're talking about – AK something. No: no, it doesn't matter to me; I've forgotten about it.'

‘I thought of it,' chuckled Desmet, handling the gun lovingly, taking it down and putting it together with a grunt of appreciation at the simplicity and cleverness of the mechanism. ‘Wish I'd had this – to poke her with, ha ha. Boom boom. Yeh, I flannelled her with “Aw, Esther, never meant to embarrass you”. Got her a bit pissed – likes her whisky. There never was anything easier – it's just not possible how easy she fell over. Don't need to point a gun at that one, I can tell you. Mmm – baby! Now look – see the old notice board – that's an Arab.' He fired an expert half-second pattern. ‘Dead Arab. What a little beauty. Christ – better clear that up all the same, or the Customs men will think I'm training to go out to Angola to fight for liberty, haw.'

The café was the model of all Dutch cafés, with its polished nickel, Oriental-pattern woolly tablecloths, Heineken beermats in a regimented square. The place was nearly empty in mid
afternoon, and the neat grey-haired cafékeeper quite ready for gossip.

‘Gimme a beer, would you? … Get a lot of soldiers I dare say, with the barracks opposite?'

‘Not really – I don't encourage that noisy crowd. Get the permanent staff – they're quiet. Come in for a beer at knocking-off time – they all live out, you follow me.' He polished the spotless coffee machine carefully.

‘I've an idea I know one of the sergeants – Zomerlust.' Nod, indifferent.

‘Quiet chap – nice fellow. Belgian, aren't you? Never rains but it pours, as they say. Was a Belgian chap in the other day who knew Zomerlust – been in Korea together I do believe: they were having a beer together.'

‘I was in Korea myself.'

‘Old soldiers talking over the campaigns, what. I was in the Resistance myself. Another beer?'

‘No thanks. Got to be moving.'

‘On the way through to Utrecht? See quite a few Belgian cars on the road – one of these big American sleighs this other chap had. One guilder – I thank you kindly. Good road to you.'

He hadn't needed the confirmation of the car – Desmet beyond doubt. Trust him, to check up on the husband before going on to the wife! He stood for a moment looking at the barracks. It seemed to him that he lost all sense of time, and that past and present and future were all there mingled in one thread. Desmet … taking his little pleasures in Holland … Esther … ‘That is a bad man' … Zomerlust, who had been in Korea. Been in France – another to enjoy Esther's favours. Who hadn't, after all? Probably a well-known bicycle for half the camp. Odd – the soldiers there in fatigue uniforms, cleaning up the half-track … their berets were wrong. Not French soldiers.

He shook his head out of its daze. Idiot – for a moment he had thought this was France. Or was it Hanoi? He looked around the big cool café as though expecting to see Esther in uniform sitting waiting over a whisky. Waiting for him … And a couple of Indochina captains in the corner, laughing across the Ricards. Silly …

Trust Desmet. The little bastard.

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Desmet was helping himself to more whisky. Was it the fifth, or only the fourth? Van der Valk had lost count. It didn't matter much, with the size they were!

‘Biggest load of bullshit I ever heard,' said Desmet contemptuously.

‘I quite agree,' said Van der Valk with great politeness. ‘You would reply, I gather, that he has mixed all this up together in his mind. Brooding over it has blurred the outlines between fact and imagination. Now he's telling a pack of lies but he doesn't realize that himself. He believes in it all. That about it?'

He had been studying Desmet quietly for some time, while the recital of grief and bewilderment went on in Laforêt's dulled monotone. He had talent, the fellow! Would make a good policeman – of the kind that takes bribes … He could see the crafty sod though, spreading persuasive warmth through a café, finding, with that odd instinct of his, the right words, the right tone to palm a man like Zomerlust, who had exactly the innocence, the peculiar military purity, that made him vulnerable to a man like that. Desmet could have sold him insurance, a secondhand auto – anything …

‘The interesting thing about all this,' he began gently, almost pedantically, ‘is that of course either of you could have killed Esther Marx.' His turn to get a contemptuous look from the lounging Desmet. ‘We have no material proof.'

‘Don't be a fool, man – he admits it!'

‘Dramatics,' said Van der Valk coldly. ‘It's commonplace. He feels guilt, as he always felt guilt. Now that he has found something to confess to – something he finds fitting and properly tragic – he's only too pleased.'

‘You mean you don't believe him?' incredulous.

‘Mr Desmet, you are a man of some intelligence, and experience.'

‘I'm that all right.'

‘But if you had heard the number of false confessions I have you would be less confident.'

‘Christ, man, he was there.'

‘So were you. Both of you knew where to find her, knew enough of Zomerlust's movements, could plan a little assassination without any real technical, snags. Both of you knew about the gun, could handle it, had access to it. There is no strong material probability either way.'

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