Grijpstra shrugged.
"Are you a sexist now?" de Gier asked.
"Please," Grijpstra said. "We've gone through this before. I was New Age before the Age was New. Sexism means that one sex thinks it's superior to the other. That's negative. I'm definitive."
"You're negative," de Gier said. "I asked whether you like Aki and you say, 'She's lesbian.'"
"Not that way." Grijpstra stopped slurping noodles.
"I said,'She's lesbian.'"
"With that kind smile?"
Grijpstra stopped slurping again. He swallowed. "With that kind smile."
"So you like Akiapola'au?"
"I like Akiapola'au fine."
"And Beth?"
Grijpstra nodded. "I like Beth fine too." He pointed his fork at de Gier. "It's you I don't happen to care for right now."
"I care for you," de Gier said. "I hadmade arrangements. If I wasn't at the restaurant whenyou arrived—and I probably wouldn't be since I didn't know how long Ishmael would take to get you here from Boston—then Beth was to call the Kathy Three. If she couldn't raise Flash and Bad George, either Beth herself or Aki was supposed to drive you to the Point, and you could row yourself from there. Beth told you so. She was busy, she askedyou to wait a few minutes, but you wandered off, and then there you were rowing out into the bay, with a gale buildingupandlowtidesuckinglikecrazy.ShesentthesherifF after you, but he came back, saying you didn't want to be picked up, which she found hard to believe, so she eventually managed to raise the Kathy Three."
"So you're telling me I was in good hands?" Grijpstra reported on his meeting with the sheriffs powerboat.
De Gier was nodding.
"What are you nodding for?"
"Another complication I didn't foresee," de Gier said.
"There's drug traffic here. Maybe they think I'm interested.
Now maybe they think you're interested too."
"Who's they?"
"Probably everybody," de Gier said. "There's marijuana growing on all the islands and there's more coming in by boat, and there's probably hard stufftoo, being flown in all the time."
"And the sheriff is in on that?"
"Please," de Gier said.
"Please what?"
De Gier gestured. "Remember Amsterdam? Remember any possible drug being available at any possible time at any possible place and nearly four thousand policemen running around keeping the distribution going? You've heard of capitalism? Ofsupply and demand? If we don't do it someone else will? May as well be us? I mean, after all, who is in charge here?"
"Not all four thousand of them," Grijpstra said.
"Most all of them, some way or other."
"Not us."
"So the situation gets confusing," de Gier said. "If cops are supposedly against that sort of thing, but most of them are kind of all Hup Ho let's do it. . ."
"I almost got lost at sea because you told these killers here that you and I used to be cops?" Grijpstra asked. "That was brilliant. Were you trying to impress the ladies?"
"What should I tell the ladies?" de Gier asked. "That I was a needlecraft salesman? A former copper from Amsterdam chooses to live in the Twilight Zone. So what? What do Lorraine and Aki care? 'So where is Amsterdam? Amsterdam, Ohio?'"
"Where's Ohio?"
"Inland America," de Gier said. "They only know about their own country here. 'Europe? Europe where?"'
Grijpstra put down his bowl carefully, grabbed de Gier by the flaps of his neat bush jacket carefully, shook de Gier forcefully. "Why did you tell them you used to be a cop?"
There was an explanation, of course, wasn't there always. De Gier gently disengaged himself, served coffee, used his soothing voice, reminded Grijpstra that he, de Gier, had been to Jameson, Maine, before. To help out the commissaris to help out his sister, who, suddenly widowed, and being a helpless person, had to be repatriated forthwith. At the time de Gier had met some great people—the sheriff. . ."
"Hairy Harry?" Grijpstra asked. "You knew Hairy Harry?"
Another sheriff. Sheriffs come, sheriffs go. "Do you mind?" de Gier asked. "Can I go on? Can I explain this to you? You're a private detective now, you've taken on the job, you've got to protect yourself, you need all the information you can get. You're out in the open. Remember what the holy man said."
"All holy men are frauds," Grijpstra said.
"Why?"
Grijpstra shrugged. "Because there's nothing holy."
"This fraudulent holy man I refer to," de Gier said, "saw God, and he came back to tell us that things are the way they are because God is not a nice man. He said God is not our uncle."
"Flash Farnsworth is nice," Grijpstra said, "and Bad George is nice. And that dumb dog is nice too." He paused so de Gier could serve dessert. He spoke through a mouth filled with ice cream. He ate. "Who is not nice here? The sheriff. Who else?" He pointed his spoon at de Gier. "Who came here to murder girlfriends?"
"During my previous visit here," de Gier said "I met the hermit Jeremy. I thought he knew what I wanted to know. I didn't come here to murder girlfriends."
"Jeremy lives on this island?" Grijpstra asked.
De Gier smiled sadly. "As I said, God, not being my uncle, cannot be helpful. The search has to be chaotic. There are thousands of islands here. This is not Jeremy's island and Jeremy is long dead. Maybe he got it, maybe he lost it. What's for sure is that he was getting old and feeble and the town voted to place him in a home, so to escape he did what you almost did this morning . . ."
Grijpstra lowered his spoon. "Hermit Jeremy rowed away never to be seen again?"
"That's correct."
"Planned?" Grijpstra asked.
"Planned."
"What would it be like if you planned it?" Grijpstra asked. "I didn't plan and I saw lots of stuff."
"Hallucinating?"
"Nellie in a hat, waves by Hokusai swamping the bicycle shed, a dog-faced woman paddling a canoe."
"Farnsworth's mother." De Gier began to clear the table. "I live here for months preparing for the breakthrough and see nothing; you've hardly arrived, and you see it all."
"Not that you sent Ishmael to meet me," Grijpstra said. "Because I didn't see that and because Ishmael pretended the meeting was accidental so he could ask some questions. About you, for instance. He doesn't trust you."
"Ishmael knows nothing about Lorraine disappearing," de Gier said.
"Who is the detective here?" Grijpstra asked. "Fill me in on Ishmael. How long have you known him?"
"Ishmael met me last time I was here."
"What did he do then?"
"Drunk preacher?" de Gier asked. "That was the impression I got at the time. He said so himself too. Addicted to God and liquor. We met in Jeremy's cabin. Ishmael said he was giving it all up."
"Alcohol?"
"The securities," de Gier said. "As Ishmael saw them. Jeremy had to help him out." De Gier cheered up. "I tell you, Henk, that's where the way out has to be. Away with it all." De Gier looked pensive. "Including the guru, the guide, kick them over the precipice. But. . ."
"But. . . ?"
"The guide, the hermit has to show you where the precipice is."
Grijpstra looked stern. "So you can kick her off the cliffs? Lorraine was the guru?"
De Gier shook his head.
Grijpstra stared.
"Lorraine was a nice woman," de Gier said.
"Back to firmer ground," Grijpstra directed. "More about Ishmael. The man is too smart for his own good. Why his interest in what brings me here?"
"Ishmael?" de Gier asked. "Ishmael is okay."
"The plane was clean," Grijpstra said. "Since I quit BC smoking I can smell narcotics. Your sheriff also found nothing. Ishmael mentioned crossing borders. Bringing in aliens maybe?"
"You're accusing Ishmael of something?"
"You're being accused," Grijpstra said, "of murder. You're being blackmailed. Any connection with Ishmael perhaps?"
"You've got Flash and Bad George," de Gier said.
"They didn't ask me questions. They saved me."
"Ishmael," de Gier said, "flies his plane to see Mohawks in Canada and Mayas in Mexico, like Jeremy used to. Indians who practice shamanic wisdom."
"You visit Indians too?"
"I thought I no longer needed teachers."
"Organized shamanism," Grijpstra rubbed his thumb and index finger. "A profitable business these days."
"Ishmael doesn't care for money."
"Please," Grijpstra said. "Forget your nonsense for a moment. Do it for me, because we are friends. Pretend we're back in law enforcement. We study society's other side. We investigate those who profit by illegally taking from others. We concentrate on criminal untruth. Why didn't Ishmael tell me you sent him? Is he hiding a secret? What does he do for money?"
"Fixes marine diesel engines," de Gier said. "Does a good job, makes good money."
"Lots of kids?" Grijpstra asked. "A gambling habit? Uninsured ailments?"
"Healthy bachelor, lives alone," de Gier said.
"The past?" Grijpstra asked. "Molesting boys during Bible study?"
"He likes Aki."
"Who doesn't?" Grijpstra asked. "You two are pals? Ishmael visits here?"
"Yes. I visit him too. He plays piano."
"Expensive hobbies?"
"Collects valueless objects he displays in a four-story former cannery, an ancient building on the Point that he got for free somehow. I say . . ."
"You say?"
"You did understand," de Gier said, "that I sent him to Boston to collect you?"
"Right," Grijpstra said, looking around. "Nice place you have here."
De Gier agreed. The pagoda seemed to be the best choice for a well-funded seeker of truth, out of several vacation homes rented out by Bildah Farnsworth. This temple-like structure was the work of Goldy Yamamoto, a New York architect, designed along neo-Chinese lines. Yamamoto also believed in supplying all comforts: pumped spring water, air-conditioning and oil heat, fireplaces, automated kitchen. And Yamamoto had finished it off nicely. The inside wainscoting was orange-tinged pine, the beams were redwood, the floors western oak. Tall windows with wide windowsills offered views of seascapes and other islands. The apparently simple furniture was Quaker inspired, expensive, labor intensive. Coffee tables were made from varnished driftwood. The rugs were Oriental. A large abstract painting, obviously inspired by the local coast, calmed the mind with easy strokes of green on gray, pale blues for water, a white splash for a sail.
"Money buys good art," de Gier said. "The place was custom-built for an investment banker, a practicing Taoist, a man who, by losing his ego, became the flow of money himself."
"Bankrupt and out of a job now?" Grijpstra asked.
"Right."
"Nice," Grijpstra said. "How much are you paying?"
"Five hundred."
"A month?"
"A week."
"To who?"
"To Bildah," de Gier said. "Bildah Farnsworth picked it up when junk bonds crashed. He'll make a bundle when the present slump is over and property like this becomes marketable again."
"You know about Bildah building Hairy Harry a palace at half cost?"
De Gier laughed. "Ishmael told you. Sure. Harry had his drug profits laundered. Bildah is The Man here."
"Local business wizard?"
"Local everything," de Gier said. "Puppeteer in chief of the Twilight Zone. Checks on the game Hairy Harry and Billy Boy are playing, owns most of the ground Jameson is built on, holds the paper on the fishing fleet, cashes in on whatever is going."
Grijpstra shivered. "Bad guy, this Bildah?"
"You cold?" de Gier asked. He got up to make coffee. Grijpstra followed him to the open kitchen. They watched the coffee machine perform. "Bad guy?" de Gier repeated. "I don't think so."
"Marital status?"
"Not married. Housekeeper for half days, bookkeeper a few days a week."
"Sex?"
"Housekeeper is old, bookkeeper has a relationship with Big Max."
"Describe Bildah."
"Peaceful?" de Gier asked. "Likes to hike beaches and trails. Bildah feeds the birds. Keeps a pet raven, name of Croakie, that flies around him." De Gier thought. "Haven't seen Croakie for a while."
"He who finances local activity with good collateral can enjoy his hiking," Grijpstra said. "Interest flows day and night. Subject do any work himself?"
"Rakes his paths," de Gier said. "Chops his firewood. Picks up shells on the beach. Talks to his raven. Croakie flies upside down on request."
Grijpstra sat down, nursing his coffee. He looked serious. "You know, you and I think we got this thing licked now but don't you believe we're still too busy? I keep thinking I am. I saw a little farm for sale the other day, close to the city. Derelict building, might fix it up a bit. Could rake the path maybe, keep a chicken or two, do nothing much else."
"You'd have nothing to keep you from facing the riddle."
"I'd get depressed?"
"Sure," de Gier said.
"Bildah doesn't mind facing the riddle?"
De Gier didn't think so. "The superior man?" de Gier suggested. "Could be, you know."
"Figured out the riddle?"
"Why not?" de Gier said.
"You really think anyone has?"
"Wouldn't surprise me," de Gier said. "There must be some around. Think ofit. They would be sly, live alone, be well off, be quiet, smile a lot, enjoy simple pleasures. We can't all be stupid."
Grijpstra shook off the image. "Okay. Bildah Farnsworth, relative of Flash Farnsworth?"
"Distant relative. There are not too many families here, the local structure is kind of incestuous. They all have the same names. Beth is a Farnsworth too. There are a few Scottish names, McThis, McThat. Bad George is a Spade, lots of Spades around too."
"Living off the proceeds of evil," Grijpstra said.
"Bildah, I mean. A superior man does not live off evil."
"Define evil."
Grijpstra put his mug down. "Pushing women down cliffs. What other evil did you get yourself into? I've been sending you five thousand dollars monthly. You've been spending all that?"
"I pay the rent," de Gier said. "I keep a car at the Point, a nice Ford, rented. I bought the dinghy I use for crossing the channel. That was two thousand. Groceries don't come cheap here, say a hundred a week. There's the sound equipment and the records I've been sending away for. Akiapola'au comes out to do the housework, she wants twenty an hour."
"We're talking dollars," Grijpstra said.
"Sure."
Grijpstra sighed. "I didn't bring any dollars. The Luxembourg bank didn't send your check this month because the manager there who knows my voice is on holiday. I was going to write them a letter to authorize the transfer but then you phoned. Got any cash?"
"A few hundred."
"Not enough." Grijpstra shook his head. "I'll have to get some."
De Gier laughed. "We are out of cash?" He prodded Grijpstra's chest. "But that's crazy."
"No dollars," Grijpstra said. "I brought lots of guilders. Hairy Harry went through my wallet. He seemed surprised." He rubbed his chin. "Ah. I almost forgot. The stewardess on the plane showed me a paper that said you can only bring in five thousand dollars in any currency and I brought eleven."
"The sheriff saw that?" de Gier asked.
"Yes."
"That's okay," de Gier said. "Hairy Harry only works for the county; federal regulations don't bother him much."
"It would be another reason to lean on us."
De Gier agreed.
Grijpstra kept rubbing his chin. "I'm supposed to leave by bus tomorrow." He reported on the Jameson Bay confrontation.
"You're right," de Gier said. "I should have kept a low profile here. I'll never learn. Drawing attention to myself and to you too. And now there's Lorraine."
"Now there isn't Lorraine," Grijpstra said. "Does Ish-mael know about that?"
De Gier didn't think so. "It's too early yet. L
orraine was a recluse herself, it'll be a while before she's missed. Want to do some site work?"
Grijpstra, wrapped in a towel, wearing a straw hat that belonged to de Gier and the slippers that Nellie had tucked in his bag, followed his host.
De Gier showed him the scene of the crime, a large granite cliff next to stone steps leading down to his dock.
De Gier was Lorraine, Grijpstra was de Gier. Grijpstra came, reeling and staggering, out ofthe pagoda's front door. De Gier stood, one foot on the highest step of the path, one foot on the cliff next to the path. De Gier, hungry for love, wanted to embrace Grijpstra. Grijpstra pushed de Gier away. De Gier fell over backwards.
De Gier held a black belt injudo. He rolled, jumped up lightly.
"But Lorraine hurt herself?" Grijpstra asked. He knelt near the spot where Lorraine, having been allegedly pushed, fell, and where, afterward, she had been allegedly kicked in the belly.
He did find a stain, not too clearly visible, a dried-up spot ofa different, deeper red than the granite's natural pink-and-red shades.
"Has it rained since this happened?"
It hadn't.
Grijpstta leaned against the pagoda's balustrade. "Now then, show me what you did after Lorraine disappeared from your view."
De Gier stood on the veranda. "I was here." He pointed at the top stone step. "Lorraine stood there. I do recall shoving her. Next thing she wasn't there. I didn't hear her scream. Maybe she groaned. I recall some sound but I might have thought she was talking while walking down the steps."
"Not a lot of blood," Grijpstra said. "Maybe her clothes soaked it up." He coughed. "Vaginal? Possibly."
De Gier coughed too.
De Gier's cough irritated Grijpstra. "Irresponsible movie sheik on the rampage, even here." He glared. "You have a nasty habit there, my boy. And it isn't getting any better."
De Gier looked away. "Bad George claims she miscarried," he admitted. De Gier sat on the steps, jerking the ends of his mustache, baring his teeth that way. His voice seemed higher than normal. "I didn't ask him to produce proof either. Didn't want to know. That would have been in the boat, and they would have thrown it overboard, yes?"
"Baby could be yours?"
"I used condoms."
"Any breaks?"
"Yes," de Gier said.
"You've been here four months," Grijpstra said. "You were intimate straightaway? When did you meet Lorraine?"
Just a Corpse at Twilight Page 7