The Tropical Issue (43 page)

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Authors: Dorothy Dunnett

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‘So you did,’ Johnson said. I have never heard such chilly dislike in anyone’s voice.

‘So you did, you squalid, unmentionable brat. You stood still and watched him without lifting a finger. He would be alive now, and so would your mother, if you had kept your mouth shut when you were told to.’

Porter started to speak. Johnson’s voice splintered his words like an ice-pick.

‘And if you found your grandfather’s end horrifying, spare a thought, won’t you, for Rita? She had to stand inside the crater, inside the cauldron, inside that hellish place.

‘She had to stand there and watch, as you did, your grandfather boil to death, as you so graphically put it.

‘Except that he wasn’t Rita’s grandfather. He was her father.’

 

 

Chapter 22

‘Rita’s father?
Joe Curtis
?’ Natalie said.

Her amazement was absolutely genuine.

She stared at me, seeing me, and then not seeing me, as the rest of what we had been saying took hold in her mind.

Then the amazement faded, and in its place came the look I now knew well. The look of the clever woman. The political observer. The syndicated journalist.

Natalie sat down gracefully, as was her habit. She crossed her ankles and, smoothing the terrible dress she had on, folded her hands equally gracefully in her lap. Then she looked at us.

‘Put me in the picture,’ she said.

Johnson left Raymond to tell her. While he did, Amy found a half-bottle of brandy, which she handed to Johnson before seating herself, and Johnson gave me half of it immediately, in a very large tumbler. Then he took a chair at my side, rather carefully.

I drank quite a lot of it quite quickly, and didn’t listen too hard to what Raymond was saying. I hadn’t got used, yet, to what I’d lost. What I’d never had, anyway.

I suppose Raymond knew it. He gave only the barest bones of the story, beginning with the boarding of
Dolly
and the lining of her bilges with dope, which the Customs had discovered in Marigot.

I didn’t know they had discovered it. I thought Amy had. But he went quickly on, and ended with Clive and Sharon finding a temporary home for the dope in Amy’s place, thinking her in Castries, or safely indoors in the storm.

Halfway through, I realised that Natalie didn’t know yet that Roger van Diemen was dead. I wondered what she would say, and what capital Porter would make of it all.

But Raymond had thought of that. He didn’t go back to Natalie’s affair with van Diemen. He left out Coombe’s altogether, and just said that there had been another man helping Clive, and that he had been shot dead.

Later, no doubt, someone would break the news to her. She would probably be quite relieved. And then, when she thought of the publicity, she wouldn’t.

All through, I could see Porter walking about, and picking up things, and putting them down with a thud, even though Natalie wasn’t looking at him. The police had been quite satisfied that Porter and his grandfather didn’t know of the smuggling. Raymond had told Natalie all that as well.

She wouldn’t forget, either. You could see the computer brain, filing and docketing. She hadn’t forgotten what Johnson had last said, either.

She looked with sympathy at me, and said helpfully, ‘And Rita was part of the family? How does she come into it?’

‘She doesn’t,’ said Porter. He walked past Dodo and Lenny and Raymond, and found a dog dish at his feet and flip-kicked it out of his way. It broke neatly, and he watched it with satisfaction.

Then he looked at me and flashed his perfect, spaced teeth.

‘You spinning some tale that Old Joe was your
father
?’ he said. ‘Boy, the lawyers’ll have some fun with that. Pity the old man isn’t here to take you to pieces himself.’

He received, full front, the Owner bifocals.

‘The famous old man?’ Johnson said. ‘Whose reputation you found so handy? Or the crazy old coot you weren’t going to risk your skin for? Whichever it was, I’d like to see his lawyers try. They’ll get a shock.

‘Rita is Joe’s legitimate daughter. Her parents were your grandparents. Your mother Sharon was her full sister. Your uncle Clive is her brother. So was your other uncle Kim-Jim, who died on Madeira.’

Natalie looked surprised. Natalie said, ‘I always rather thought Kim-Jim was her father.’

Sitting there, wearing Amy’s terrible dress, she still looked alert, and sociable, and intelligent. But when the coldness in Johnson’s face didn’t alter, moving from Porter to her, I saw her eyes narrow and open again.

‘If you did, I must say you concealed it very cleverly when Kim-Jim was found dead,’ Johnson said. ‘He was her full brother. As I’m sure you noticed, they were both dyslectic. And their colouring was the same. Rita, may I?’

He was indicating my filthy Bird of Paradise hair.

I had nothing to lose, the way I was looking. I took my wig off myself. Underneath, my cropped hair was still white at the ends. At the roots, the natural red had begun to grow in.

I have the skin to go with it. I always try to wear hats and cover myself up in sunshine, or else I blister.

Blister. My God.

Johnson went on telling them about the Curtises and I let him, because he was really telling me. Standing outside all the emotion and telling the straight facts, as they were, to let me see them.

Since this evening, I knew that he knew. Since Sharon made her mistake, and he saw me recognise her, and asked me, in four words, for permission to shoot.

He said, ‘What’s the age difference, Rita? More than twenty years between you and Kim-Jim? Less between you and Sharon, who was born at the very end of the Second World War.

‘Robina must have been in her mid-thirties then, and everyone thought, including herself, that she had completed her family with these three children: Clive, and Kim-Jim, and Sharon.’

‘Colin, and Kenneth James, and Robina. Sharon was called Robina, after my mother,’ I said. ‘They all changed their names in Hollywood.’

‘After your father made himself a great name in the new movie industry,’ Johnson said. ‘After the money began to come in, and the keeping up with the M.G.M.s, and the pretty ruthless ambition. You didn’t think much of your grandfather, Porter. But all that vulgar display was just a show of pride, because he’d risen from nothing.’

‘Barnum and Bailey,’ said Porter. He walked across to the brandy bottle, lifted it, and emptied it into a glass for himself. His hand was shaking. ‘Happens in the best families,’ he said. ‘What sort of bums did you have for parents? House painters?’

‘Don’t be childish,’ said Natalie. ‘Amy, is that all the brandy you keep in the house? I think we have all had a trying time. Although, of course, this is fascinating.’

Amy looked at her. ‘Glad you think so,’ she said. ‘Always try to put on an effing cabaret. When this is over, you can have some tea, if you want it. Meantime, I think you should effing shut up.’

Down, Fido. Back to the kennels.

Natalie’s expression was one of controlled patience, but her foot tapped. Johnson, rearranging his position, didn’t pay any attention to either of them.

I held out my brandy glass until he noticed, and looked at me, and then borrowed it, saluting me mildly.

I had seen him do that once before, when Ferdy had made a joke I hadn’t followed. It was different now, since I’d begun travelling. I took the glass back. He had left quite a lot. I said, ‘Next chapter?’

‘Next chapter,’ Johnson agreed. He still looked rather rotten. He went on.

‘The trouble was, that Joseph’s family had grown up accustomed to plenty, so that when the old man’s work slackened off, and there was more competition, and their tastes needed more and more money, they began to cast around for other ways of making the fast buck or bucks.

‘Hence dope. Hence a number of other dubious things. Their mother, Robina, saw the way things were going and tried to stop it in the early stages, but couldn’t. Her husband simply didn’t care. He had lost all interest in his family. He wanted to be accepted as the big man, and recognised. He expected his children to make a splash, impress people, throw money about, get their names in the papers.

‘Robina couldn’t do anything about it. She hated the life. She left, and came back to Scotland, and divorced Joe, and married someone else, a schoolmaster called Gordon Geddes.

‘Two of the three children she left behind in America were fully grown-up. The third, now called Sharon, was seven or eight.

‘Sharon never forgave her mother for leaving her. Old Joseph never forgave her for wrecking the great public image. He never wrote to her again. He never saw her again. So when Robina arrived in Scotland and found that, in her early forties, she was pregnant again, she didn’t send to tell Joe that they were to have a fourth child.

‘Rita was born in Scotland, and Gordon Geddes, her step-father, became known as her father. When she was old enough, her mother told her the truth, so that she could decide for herself whether to make herself known to the rest of the family.

‘Rita’s reaction was to take her mother’s part. Her step-father was, I think, a good man, though strict; and of course he couldn’t understand Rita’s word-blindness. Nor could the schools of that time. Until recently, it simply wasn’t recognised. He just thought her stupid, which she most emphatically is not.

‘So, academic training being out of her reach, she turned to the thing that was in her blood. Show business, or the branch of it that the family did best of all. She became what she is, a superb make-up artist.

‘Her step-father hated it. It’s a pity, perhaps, that he died before she got to where she is now, on the verge of making it to the very top. She would have got there long before now except that she had given herself an embargo. She would never move out of Britain. She would never go where she might meet and compete with the Curtises.’

‘It’s quite a case history,’ Natalie said. She was listening with real attention. I could see the syndicated articles fattening up inside her clever mind.

She considered further. ‘So Rita stayed in Britain until she went to work on a joint-production film, and came across Kim-Jim, her brother. Of course. And was Kim-Jim in the drugs business?’

So clever. So stupid.

Johnson said, ‘Don’t you really know what he was like, after all these years? Rita knew who he was. After hearing her mother, she probably expected a monster. After the kind of beastly childhood she’d had, she didn’t trust people much anyway. All that, Kim-Jim overcame simply by being a genuine, decent, rather simple man, who had the same disability she had.

‘You knew what it was, although his family didn’t. He was dyslectic. It runs in families.’

‘My mother, too,’ I said.

All the T.V. sets. All the video tapes. We were experts on old films, in my family.

‘So that was the first bond,’ Johnson said. ‘But you liked each other from the start. You kept in touch. You couldn’t write to each other, but you exchanged tapes. And then, when he knew he was ill, and not going to get better, Kim-Jim wrote and told you that he was thinking of retiring, and suggested that he should arrange for you and Natalie to meet, and work together.’

‘Bloody traitor,’ said Porter. ‘There’s a car.’

I didn’t want to know about cars.

There had been movement outside since we came in, as the police worked in the storeroom and yard. I thought of them unloading, laboriously, all those bags of cocaine. I had tried not to think of the stretchers coming out of the jeep, and my sister Sharon being carried away, and Roger van Diemen.

Clive was the only one left untouched, somewhere in a prison in Castries. Like the survivor of the Martinique earthquake. About to hit the news, a freak for the rest of his life.

Clive, and me, and Porter. A great monument to Old Joe.

Johnson flicked my hand. ‘Let it be,’ he said. ‘Look who’s come, and look what they’ve brought.’

And when I turned my head towards the bustle at the door, I saw it was Maggie, laden with bottles, her Vidal haircut stuck to her skull with fright and salt, and her eyes beaming.

And Ferdy behind her, his arm in a sling, and flapping a large square of cardboard. A large square which, reversed, turned out to be a ravishing photograph, in colour, of a small fat bird with this great fancy tail.

‘Bird of Paradise, darling!’ he said. ‘Forgot to give it to you. My God, nearly never got the chance. Dear Jesus, what the hell have you done to your hair?’

Ferdy was back.

And after that, it was great, because Amy went and got all the food she and I had made while the others were resting, and Raymond opened all the new bottles and told the story all over again, and Porter, because he was forgotten, managed to give his temper a rest, and settled down to drinking himself steadily senseless.

Natalie got her drink first. She had quite a good story to tell, of how she had been stripped of her dress and left outside in the darkness, so that Clive and Sharon could create themselves the perfect non-existent hostage.

She hadn’t seen who they were. Remembering Dodo and the ham radio, she had got herself taken directly to Amy’s.

She didn’t thank Ferdy for the drink, which wasn’t surprising considering the explosion when he’d left her because of me.

From the moment he and Maggie had come in, Natalie had been restless.

She sent Dodo outside to ask the police if they had a transmitter. She enquired of Amy when the telephones usually came back into service and badgered her several times into sending messages on the ham radio. She tried, and failed, to persuade the emergency centre to put her in touch with New York via the Miami Hurricane Centre.

Hurricane centres having, naturally, other things on their minds, she continued to get the brush-off, to her annoyance.

It was, of all people, Dodo who at this point stared Johnson in the bifocals and said, ‘You were going to tell us. How the girl and Mr Curtis moved in on Miz Natalie.’

Then Ferdy said, ‘What?’ and all eight of them, from their various positions of sloth, looked at Johnson, who had stayed rather rooted in the chair next to me, while I still reclined on my couch like Not Tonight Josephine.

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