Read The Inscrutable Charlie Muffin Online

Authors: Brian Freemantle

The Inscrutable Charlie Muffin (8 page)

BOOK: The Inscrutable Charlie Muffin
9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘And you think you’re going to get that in Hong Kong?’ sneered Johnson, carelessly patronising.

‘I’m going to try.’

The large man rose from his desk, staring towards the window.

‘You’re a Westerner,’ he said, turning back into the room after a few moments. ‘A round-eye … even if there were anything more to discover, which I don’t believe there is, you wouldn’t stand a cat in hell’s chance of penetrating this society.’

The second time he’d had that warning in forty-eight hours, thought Charlie. It was becoming boring.

‘And if I can?’

Johnson shook his head at the strange conceit in the unkempt man sitting before him.

‘Come back to me with just one piece of producible evidence that would give me legal cause to reopen the case and I’ll do it,’ he promised. ‘Just one piece.’

He hesitated.

‘But I tell you again,’ he added, ‘you’re wasting your time.’

The 12 per cent premium on its own wasn’t evidence. Not without the reason to support it. It could wait until another meeting. And Charlie was sure that there would be one.

‘Have you asked the Chinese authorities for any assistance in locating the cook?’ asked Charlie.

‘There’s been a formal application,’ said Johnson. ‘But we don’t expect any assistance. There never is.’

‘So what will happen?’

‘We’ll issue an arrest warrant. And perhaps a statement.’

‘And there the matter will lie … still a communist-inspired fire?’

Johnson smiled, condescending again.

‘Until we receive your surprise revelation, there the matter will lie,’ he agreed. ‘Irrefutably supported by the facts. There’s no way you can avoid a settlement with Mr Lu.’

On the evidence available, decided Charlie, the policeman was right. Poor Willoughby.

He saw Johnson look again at his watch and anticipated the dismissal, rising from his chair.

‘Thank you again,’ he said.

‘Any further help,’ said Johnson, over-generous in his confidence. ‘Don’t hesitate to call.’

‘I won’t,’ promised Charlie.

Superintendent Johnson’s next appointment was approaching along the corridor as Charlie left. Politely, Charlie nodded.

Harvey Jones returned the greeting.

Neither man spoke.

The telex message awaiting Charlie at the hotel said contact was urgent, so although he knew it would be five o’clock in the morning he booked the telephone call to Rupert Willoughby’s home. The underwriter answered immediately, with no sleep in his voice.

‘Well?’ he said. The anxiety was very obvious.

‘It doesn’t feel right,’ said Charlie.

‘So we can fight?’

The hope flared in the man’s voice.

‘Impressions,’ qualified Charlie. ‘Not facts.’

‘I can’t contest a court hearing on impressions,’ said Willoughby, immediately deflated. ‘And according to our lawyers that’s what we could be facing if we prolong settlement.’

‘I know that,’ said Charlie. ‘There is one thing.’

‘What?’

‘Lu agreed to pay you a 12 per cent premium …’

‘I told you that.’

‘I know. What’s your feeling at learning everyone else only got 10 per cent?’

There was no immediate response from the underwriter.

‘That doesn’t make sense,’ he said at last. ‘We were the biggest insurers, after all.’

‘Exactly.’

‘So there
is
something more than impressions?’ said Willoughby eagerly. Again the hope was evident.

‘It’s not grounds for refusing to pay,’ insisted Charlie.

‘But what about the court deaths?’

‘The police chief is convinced he’s solved that … and that it doesn’t alter anything.’

‘What about the 12 per cent, linked with the deaths?’

‘I didn’t tell him about the premiums,’ admitted Charlie.

‘Why the hell not?’

‘Because there
is
no link. So I want to understand it, first.’

‘We haven’t the time,’ protested Willoughby.

‘How long?’

‘A week at the very outside,’ said the underwriter.

‘That’s not enough.’

‘It’ll have to be.’

‘Yes,’ accepted Charlie. ‘It’ll have to be.’

‘Have you seen Lu?’

‘Not yet.’

‘Surely he’s the one to challenge about the 12 per cent?’

‘Of course he is.’

‘Well?’

‘By itself, it’s not enough,’ Charlie insisted.

‘So what are you going to do?’

‘I don’t know,’ admitted Charlie.

‘That’s not very reassuring.’

‘I’m not trying to be reassuring. I’m being honest.’

‘I’d appreciate forty-eight-hour contact,’ said Willoughby.

And spend the intervening time working out figures on the backs of envelopes and praying, guessed Charlie.

‘I’ll keep in touch,’ he promised.

‘I’m relying on you,’ said Willoughby.

Charlie replaced the receiver, turning back upon it almost immediately.

‘Damn,’ he said. He’d forgotten to ask Willoughby to send a letter to Robert Nelson, assuring him of his job. Not that the promise would matter if he didn’t make better progress than he had so far. He’d still do it, though. The next call would be soon enough.

He was at the mobile bar, using it for the first time, when the bell sounded. Carrying his drink, he went to the door, concealing his reaction when he opened it.

‘I thought you’d be surprised,’ said Jenny Lin Lee, pouting feigned disappointment. Then she smiled, openly provocative, the hair which the previous night she had worn so discreetly at the nape of her neck loose now. She shook her head, a practised movement, so that it swirled about her like a curtain.

‘I am,’ said Charlie.

‘Then you’re good at hiding things,’ she said, moving past him into the suite without invitation.

‘Perhaps we both are,’ said Charlie.

Clarissa stood looking down at her husband expectantly when Willoughby put the phone down.

‘Nothing,’ he said, shaking his head. ‘Some inconsistencies, but nothing that positively helps.’

‘But the court murders?’

‘It doesn’t change anything, apparently.’

‘How good is this man you’ve got there, for Christ’s sake?’

The underwriter paused at the question. He knew little more than what he had heard from his father, he realised. Certainly the escape in which Charlie had involved him had been brilliantly organised. But then Charlie had been fighting for his own existence, not somebody else’s.

‘Very good, I understand,’ he said.

‘Little proof of it so far,’ complained the woman.

That was the trouble, thought Willoughby. Proof.

‘Give him time,’ he said unthinkingly.

‘I thought that was what we didn’t have.’

‘No,’ admitted the underwriter ‘We don’t.’

‘You won’t forgot, Rupert, will you?’

‘No,’ he promised. ‘I won’t forget.’

‘A week’s warning, at least.’

‘A week’s warning,’ he agreed. Why was it, he wondered, that he didn’t feel distaste for this woman?

10

Jenny Lin Lee had pulled her hair forward and because she sat with her legs folded beneath her it practically concealed her body. He was still able to see that beneath the white silk cheongsam she was naked.

She took the glass from him, making sure that their hands touched.

‘I got the impression last night that you didn’t drink,’ he said.

‘Robert needs a sober guardian.’

‘ Where is he now?’

‘At the weekly dinner of the businessmen’s club,’ said Jenny disdainfully. ‘One of the few places that will still let him in.’

Purposely she moved her hair aside, so that more of her body was visible. She looked very young, he thought.

‘There are some that don’t?’ he asked.

‘Apparently.’ She shrugged, an uncaring gesture.

‘Why?’

‘You mean he didn’t tell you?’ she demanded, revolving the glass so that the ice clattered against the sides.

‘Tell me what?’

‘The great embarrassment of Robert Nelson’s life,’ she intoned, deepening her voice to a mock announcement. ‘He’s in love with a Chinese whore.’

It was an interesting performance, thought Charlie. So it
had
been a professionalism he’d recognised the previous night. Why, he wondered, had it been so difficult for him to identify? He of all people. Not that he would have used the word to describe her. Because she wasn’t. Not like the girl in front of him.


Say hello to your uncle, Charlie, there’s a good boy … what’s your name again, love?

But not a whore. Never have called her that. Not now. She hadn’t even taken money, not unless it was offered her. And only then if the rent were due or the corner store were refusing any more credit or some new school uniform were needed. And she would always describe it as a loan. Actually put scribbled IOUs in the coronation mug on the dresser. He’d found fifty there, when his mother had died. All carefully dated. And dozens more in the biscuit tin, the one in which she put the rent money and the hire purchase instalments. One of the names, he supposed, had been that of his father. She wouldn’t have known, of course. Not for certain. She would have been able to remember them all, though. Because to her they hadn’t been casual encounters. None of them.

He didn’t believe she’d wanted physical love. Not too much anyway. It was just that in her simple, haphazard way, she couldn’t think how else it would enter, except through the bedroom door.

She’d tried to explain, pleading with him. She’d been crying and he’d thought the mascara streaks had looked like Indian warpaint.

He’d been the National Service prodigy then. Transferred because of his brilliance as an aerial photographer from R.A.F. Intelligence to the department that Sir Archibald was creating.

And so very impressed with the accents and the attitudes of the university entrants. Impressed with everything, in fact. And so anxious to belong. He hadn’t challenged them, of course. Not yet. That had been the time when he was still trying to ape their talk and their habits, unaware of their amusement.

And been frightened that the sniffling, sobbing woman who didn’t even have the comfort now of any more uncles would endanger his selection because of the security screening he knew was taking place.


Can’t you understand what it’s like to be lonely, Charlie … to want somebody you can depend on, who won’t notice when you’re getting old …

He’d grimaced at the mascara. And called her ugly. The one person who could have given her the friendship she’d wanted, he thought. And he hadn’t understood. Any more than he’d understood what Edith had wanted from him, until it was too late. Why had he never been able to dream Edith’s dreams?

How long, he wondered, would it take Robert Nelson?

‘Strayed outside the well-ordered system,’ he quoted.

She nodded.

‘The Eleventh Commandment,’ said Jenny. ‘Thou shalt fuck the natives but not be seen doing it.’

‘And you don’t love him?’

‘What’s love got to do with being a whore?’

‘Very little.’

‘He’s convenient,’ she said. ‘And the bed’s clean.’

‘Do you really despise him?’

‘I despise being paraded around, to garden parties where people won’t talk to me and to clubs where I’m ignored, so he can show me off like someone who’s recovered from a terminal illness.’

‘Why don’t you tell him that?’

‘I have. He says I’m imagining it and he wants me to be accepted.’

‘Why not leave?’

‘Like I said,’ she sniggered, ‘the bed’s clean. And the money is regular.’

‘But not enough?’

‘There’s never enough money … that’s one of Lucky Lu’s favourite expressions.’

Charlie slowly lowered himself into a chair facing the girl, feeling the first tingle of familiar excitement.

‘I hadn’t heard that,’ he encouraged.

‘You’d be amazed, with all the publicity, at the things people haven’t heard about Lucky Lu.’

The entry into the society that everyone said would be denied him? Charlie frowned. He’d always suspected things that came too easily.

‘Like what?’ he prompted.

‘You got money?’ asked the girl.

‘As much as you want,’ offered Charlie, misunderstanding the demand.

She stood, smiling.

‘You spend a lot and you get a lot,’ she promised, walking towards the bedroom.

Charlie remained crouched forward in the chair, momentarily confused. Before Edith’s death, there had been many affairs, the sex sometimes as loveless as that being offered by the woman who had disappeared into the bedroom. But for almost two years there had been a celibacy of grief. He’d always known it would end. But not like this. Mechanically almost. But she had hinted a knowledge about Lu of which even Nelson seemed unaware; a knowledge he’d never learn if he rejected her.

‘I don’t believe you can reach from there,’ she called.

He grimaced at the awkward coarseness, then stood hesitantly, walking towards the bedroom. There was nothing, he realised. No lust. No feeling. Certainly not desire. Just apprehension.

She’d discarded the cheongsam and was sitting back on her heels, near the top of the bed. She’d swept her hair forward again, covering herself except for her breasts, which pouted through like pink-nosed puppies.

‘You only keep your clothes on for short-time. You don’t want a short-time, do you?’

Rehearsed words, he thought. Like prompt cards in a child’s classroom. Would his mother have ever been like this? No, he decided. She wouldn’t have even
known
the expressions. He was sure she wouldn’t.

Reluctantly he took off his jacket and tie, edging on to the bed.

‘What do you know about Lu?’ he asked. He wouldn’t be able to make love to her, he knew.

She put her hands on his thigh, feeling upwards, then gazing at him, pulling her mouth into an artificially mournful expression.

‘That’s not very flattering for a girl,’ she complained. Immediately there was the prostitute’s smile.

‘We’ll soon improve that,’ she promised.

She moved her hand up, reaching through his shirt, then stopped.

‘What’s that?’

Charlie looked down.

‘String vest,’ he said.

‘A what!’

BOOK: The Inscrutable Charlie Muffin
9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Lying on the Couch by Irvin D. Yalom
Mary Brock Jones by A Heart Divided
La era del estreñimiento by Óscar Terol, Susana Terol, Iñaki Terol
The Alchemy of Murder by Carol McCleary
Drawing Blood by C.D. Breadner
Arsenic and Old Armor by May McGoldrick
Zeely by Virginia Hamilton
Brink of Chaos by Tim LaHaye
Multiplayer by John C. Brewer