Patricia Highsmith - The Tremor of Forgery (5 page)

BOOK: Patricia Highsmith - The Tremor of Forgery
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Yours sincerely,

Peter Langland

John Cas
tl
ewood had killed himself. Ingham walked to the window with the letter in his hand. The blue shutters were closed against the augmenting morning sun, but he stared at the shutters as if he could see through them. This was the end of the Tunisia expedition. How had John done it? A gun? Sleeping pills most likely.
What a hell of a thing,
Ingham thought. And why ? Well, he hadn

t known John well enough to guess. He remembered John

s face

always lively, usually smiling or
grinning
, pale below the neat, straight black hair. Maybe a trifle weak, that face. Or was that an after-thought? A weak beard, anyway, soft, pale skin. John hadn

t looked in the least depressed when Ingham had last seen him, at that last dinner in New York with Ina in a restaurant south of the Square. It had been the evening before the day Ingham caught the plane.

You know where to go in Tunis for the car rental?

John had asked, making sure of the practical things as usual, and he had asked again if Ingham had packed the street map of Tunis and the
Guide Bleu
for Tunisia, both of which John had lent or given him.

‘F
or Christ

s sake,

Ingham muttered. He walked up and down his room, and felt shattered. An anecdote of Adams

s drifted into his mind: Adams fishing on a small river (Connecticut? Indiana?) when he was ten years old, and bringing his line up with a human skull on the end of it, a skull so old

it didn

t matter

, Adams had said, so he had never told his
parents, who he had feared wouldn

t believe him, anyway. Adams had buried the skull, out of fear. Suddenly Ingham wanted the comfort of Adams

s presence. He thought of going over now to tell Adams the news. He decided against it.


Good God
.’
Ingham said, and went to his kitchen to pour himself a Scotch. The drink did not taste good at that hour, but it was a kind of rite, in Castlewood

s honour.

He

d have to think now about starting home. Tell the hotel. See about a plane from Tunis to New York.

Surely he

d hear from Ina today. Ingham looked at the calendar. The weekend Peter meant was the
10
th
and
11
th
of June. What the hell was happening over in the great, fast Western world? It was beginning to seem slower than Tunisia.

Ingham went out and walked in the now empty driveway that curved towards the bar-caf6-mail-office-supply-depart-ment of the bungalows. The sand under his tennis shoes was powdery. He walked with his hands in the pockets of his shorts, and when he encountered a huge woman talking in French to her tiny son, who looked like a wisp beside her, Ingham turned aimlessly back. He was trying to think what he should do next. Cable Ina again, perhaps. He might stay on a day or so to get a letter from her

if she had written. Suddenly, everything seemed so doubtful, so vague.

He went back to his bungalow-which he had left unlocked against the advice of Adams who told him to lock it if he were away even one minute

took his billfold and set out, having locked the door this time, for the main building of the hotel. He would cable Ina, and take a look at the newspapers on the tables in the lobby. Sometimes the papers were several days old. There might be something about John in a Paris
Herald-Tribune.
He should look for a Monday June 12
th
paper, he thought. Or possibly a Tuesday paper, the 13
th
.

A series of broad, shallow steps led from the beach up to the rear entrance of the hotel. There was an open shower for swimmers at the foot of the steps, and some corpulent
Germans, a man and a woman, were yelling and screaming as they de-sanded each other

s backs under the water. On going closer to them, Ingham was irked to hear that they were speaking very American American. At
the
hotel desk, Ingham sent a cable to Ina:

HEARD
ABOUT JOHN FROM LANGLAND. WRITE

OR CABLE AT ONCE. BAFFLED. LOVE. HOWARD.

He sent it to Ina

s house in Brooklyn, because she would surely get it there, whatever was happening, and she just might not be at work if her brother Joey was having a bad spell and she had to look after him. Neither on the low tables nor on the shelves at the back of the lobby could Ingham find a paper of weekend June
10
th

11
th
, nor a paper in English or French for June 12th or 13th.


If you please,

Ingham said in
careful
French to the young Arab clerk at the desk, handing him a five-hundred-millime bill,

would you see that any letter that comes for me today is delivered at once to my bungalow? Number three. It is very important
.’
He had printed his name on a piece of paper.

He thought of having a drink at the bar, and decided not to

He did not know what he wanted to do. Oddly enough, he felt he could work on his novel this afternoon. But logically he should make plans about leaving, speak to the hotel now. He didn

t.

Ingham went back to his bungalow, put on swimming trunks, and went for a swim. He saw Adams at some distance, bearing his spear, but managed to avoid Adams

s seeing him. Adams always went for a swim before lunch, he said.

That afternoon, Ingham found he could write only one paragraph. He was too anxious for a word from Ina, which he felt positive would come in the afternoon post that arrived at any time between four-thirty and six-thirty. But nothing came except something from the U.S. Internal Revenue Department in a windowed envelope, forwarded by Ina. The government wanted three hundred and twenty-eight
dollars more. Ingham

s accountant had made a slight mistake, apparently. Ingham wrote the cheque and put it in an airmail envelope.

To satisfy himself, Ingham looked first in the bungalow headquarters

office

eight unclaimed letters, but none for him

then walked to the main building. Nothing there for him, either. He walked back barefoot, carrying his sandals, letting the little waves break against his ankles. The declining sun was behind him. He stared at the wet sand at his feet.


Howard
!
Where

ve you been?

Adams stood a few yards away, his nose shiny and brown. Now he reminded Ingham of a rabbit.

Come and have a drink
chez moi!’


Thanks very much
.’
Ingham said, hesitated, then asked,

When did you mean?


Now. I was just on my way home
.’


Did you have a good day?

Ingham asked, making an effort.

They were walking along.


Very fine, thanks. And you?


Not too good, thanks
.’


Oh? What happened?

Ingham gestured towards Adams

s house, a vague forward gesture which he had, in fact, picked up from Adams.

They walked on over
the
gritty cement path, past the bungalow headquarters, Adams on neat bare feet, Ingham with his heel-less sandals on now, because of the heat of the sand. He felt sloppy in sandals or slippers without heels, but they were certainly the coolest footgear.

Adams hospitably set to work making Scotches with ice. The air-conditioning felt wonderful to Ingham. He stepped outside the door and carefully knocked the sand from his slippers, then came in again.


Try this
.’
Adams said, handing Ingham his drink.

And what

s your news?

Ingham took the drink.

The man who was supposed to join me killed himself in New York about ten days ago
.’


What
?

Good heavens! When did you hear?


This morning. I had a letter from a friend of his.


John, you mean.

Why did he do it? Something wrong with a love affair? Something financial?

Ingham felt grateful for every predictable question.

I don

t think because of a love affair. But I don

t know. Maybe there

s no reason at all

except anxiety, something like that
.’


Was he a nervous fellow? Neurotic?


In a way. I didn

t think
this
neurotic
.’


How did he do it?

‘I
dunno. Sleeping pills, I suppose
.’


He was twenty-six, you told me
.’
Adams

s face was full of concern.

Worried about money?

Ingham shrugged.

He wasn

t rolling, but he had enough for this project. We had a producer, Miles Gallust. We were advanced a few thousand dollars.

What

s the use wondering? There

re probably a lot of reasons why he did it, reasons I don

t know
.’


Sit down
.’

Adams sat down on the sofa with his drink, and Ingham took the squeaky leather chair. The closed shutters made the light in the room a pleasant dusk. A few thin bars of sun came in near the ceiling above Adams

s head.


Well,

Adams said,

I suppose without John you

ll be thinking of leaving here

going back to the States?

Ingham heard a gloominess in Adam

s tone.

Yes, no doubt. In a few days
.’


Any news from your girl?

Adams asked.

Ingham disliked the term

your girl

.

Not yet. I cabled her today
.’

Adams nodded thoughtfully.

When did this happen?


The weekend of June tenth and eleventh. I

m sorry I didn

t see any papers then. I think the Paris
Herald-Tribune
might have mentioned it
.’


I
can understand that it

s a blow
.’
Adams said sympathetically.

How well did you know John?

Platitudes.

Adams made them both a second drink. Then Ingham went to his bungalow to put on some trousers for dinner. He had fatuously hoped for a cable from Ina to be lying on the corner of his work-table when he walked into his bungalow. The table was empty of messages as usual.

Melik

s was lively that evening. There were two tables with wind instruments, and one guitar somewhere else. A man at another table had a well-behaved German police dog who put his ears back at the noise, but did not bark. It was too noisy to talk comfortably, and that was just as well, Ingham thought. The man with the dog was tall and slender and looked like an American. He wore levis and a blue denim shirt. Adams sat with his pouchy smile, giving an occasional tolerant shake of his head. Ingham felt like a small silent room

maybe an empty room

within a larger room where all this din came from. The American led his dog away.

Adams shouted, for the second time,

I said, you ought to see more of this country before you take of
f!

Ingham nodded his emphatic agreement.

The moon was almost full. They walked a
little
on the beach, and Ingham looked at the beige, floodlit fortress whose walls sloped gently back, looked at the huddled, domed white Arab houses behind it, heard the still balmy breeze in his ears, and felt far away from New York, from John and his mysterious reasons, even far away from Ina

because he resented her not having written. He hated his resentment and his small-mindedness for having it. Maybe Ina had good reasons for not having written. But if so, what were they? He was not even close to Adams, Ingham thought with a slight start of fear, or loneliness.

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