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Authors: Gregory Mcdonald

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“I mean, everyone needs a vacation from life. Don’t you agree?”

“A vacation from reality.”

She handed him the key. “I’m paying for a suite at The Hotel Jangada, and sleeping more or less on the beach in Botelho.”

Fletch said: “Topsy-turvy.”

Thirty-seven

“Did you enjoy your dinner in Botelho?” Teodomiro da Costa asked.

“It was excellent,” Fletch answered.

“Yes, that’s a good restaurant. I’m not sure it’s worth the ride….”

It was late when Fletch got back to Rio, by the time he arrived at Teo da Costa’s home on Avenida Epitacio Passoa.

When the houseman had shown Fletch into the downstairs family sitting room, Teo was looking sleepy in a dressing gown in a comfortable chair. He was reading the book
1887—The Year Slavery in Brazil Ended
. From under the reading light, Teo’s eyes traveled over Fletch’s various visible wounds, but he did not comment on them.

“Want a nightcap?”

“No, thanks. I won’t be here that long.”

Stiff from Carnival, from his wounds, from the long ride, Fletch sank comfortably into the two-seater divan.

In the little sitting room was a handsome big new painting by Misabel Pedrosa.

“And did Laura enjoy Botelho?”

“Laura has gone back to Bahia. Yesterday, I finally fell asleep. She couldn’t wake me up. She had to go back to begin preparing for her concert tour.”

“Yes,” Teo said slowly, “I gathered you might have cleaned up that mystery of who murdered Janio Barreto forty-seven years ago. There was a most peculiar report in
O Globo
this morning. A small item, saying Gabriel Campos, past
capoeira
master of
Escola
Santos Lima, was found on the beach, his throat slit. A woman from the
favela
, Idalina Barreto, is helping the police in its inquiries.”

“I pity the police.”

“Apparently she was found on the beach lighting matches, trying to set fire to the corpse of Gabriel Campos.”

“Did she succeed?”

“That’s what’s peculiar about
O Globo’s
report. It says that legend has it that no one has ever succeeded in lighting a fire in that exact spot on the beach in almost fifty years.”

“Teo, I’d like some of the money you’ve invested for me to be available for the education of the current young generation of the descendants of Janio Barreto.”

“Easily done.”

“Especially young Janio. He has a wooden leg. It will be harder for him to make a living without an education.”

“Yes.”

Fletch fingered the scar on his throat. “I believe he saved my life.” Then he chuckled. “He might even think of becoming a bookkeeper.”

Teo placed his history book on the table beside his chair. “And did you find your lady friend from California? What’s her name, Stanwyk?”

“Yes. She’s all right.”

“What happened to her?”

“She fell out of her cradle. She’s enjoying a few moments crawling around the floor.”

Obviously tired, Teo cast his hooded eye across the darkened room at Fletch.

“Brazil is the future,” Fletch said. “Who can see the future?”

“And you,” Teo asked, shifting comfortably in his chair. “Did you enjoy Carnival?”

“I learned some things.”

“I’d love to know what.”

“Oh, that the past asserts itself. That the dead can walk.” Fletch thought of the small carved stone frog that had been under his bed. “That the absence of symbols can mean as much as their presence.”

As if digesting all this, Teo blinked his hooded eye. He did not ask questions.

“Teo, driving so far today by myself, through the incredible Brazilian countryside, I think I settled on a plan.”

“No need to tell me what it is,” Teo said. “Any more than there is to tell your father what it is. As long as you have a plan.”

“I’ve decided to try writing a biography of the North American western artist Edgar Arthur Tharp, Junior. It seems an opportunity to get some things said about the North American’s view of the artist, the intellectual, of the North American spirit.”

Teo repeated, “As long as you have a plan.”

“It is the spirit of things which is important, isn’t it?”

Teo said, “Norival Passarinho’s funeral is tomorrow. Will you attend?”

Fletch hesitated. “Yes.” He stood up. “Why not?”

Teo stood up as well. “And will you visit Bahia before you leave?”

At the door, Fletch said: “To say good-bye.”

For a moment, Fletch sat quietly in the dark in the small yellow convertible outside Teodomiro da Costa’s home.

A few doors from Teo’s, a last Carnival party was in progress. It was Shrove Tuesday night.

A couple dressed as the King of Hearts and the Queen of Diamonds scurried across the sidewalk from a taxi into the house.

There was the sound of laughter coming from the house. Singing. Above all, the sound of a samba combo. Of samba drums
beating, rhythms beside rhythms on top of rhythms beneath rhythms. From all sides, every minute, day and night, came the beating of the drums
.


Bum, bum, paticum bum
.” Fletch started the car. “
Prugurundum
.”

Most people in the world Fletch had known had stopped hearing the melodies from the drums.

FIRST VINTAGE CRIME/BLACK LIZARD EDITION, OCTOBER 2002

Copyright © 1984 by Gregory Mcdonald

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published in the United States by Warner Books, Inc., New York, in 1984.

Vintage is a registered trademark and Vintage Crime/Black Lizard and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Mcdonald, Gregory, 1937–
Carioca Fletch: a novel / by Gregory Mcdonald.
p. cm.
1. Fletch (Fictitious character)—Fiction.
2. Private investigators—United States—Fiction.
I. Title.
PS3563.A278 C37 2002
813′.54—dc21
2002024986

Author photograph © Nancy Crampton

www.vintagebooks.com

eISBN: 978-0-307-51678-7

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