Authors: Robert Wilson
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General, #Mystery & Detective
âModel?'
âPeugeot 505.'
âYou see, it's not so difficult if you play.'
âThe driver got out of the car and Felix...'
âNo Felix.'
âThe driver and I lifted a trunk out of the boot.'
âWhere did you put it?'
âIn the boot of my car.'
âNo, in the house. It's gold. I'm not going to let you drive around Grand-Popo with nearly a million dollars' worth of gold in the back.'
âWe put it in the house. It was very heavy.'
âDid Marnier tell you what was in it?'
âGold. Ashante gold bought in Togo from illegal mining operations.'
âHow much was there?'
âNearly a million dollars' worth.'
âNo. What do you know about gold?'
âIt's yellow, expensive and heavy.'
âSo you can't tell the difference between a million and five million,' he said.
âThe trunk must have weighed seventy kilos. More than a bag of cement.'
âThen what?'
âMarnier gave the driver a thousand CFA.'
âFive thousand, I'm not cheap.'
âThe driver left. Marnier and I drank whisky in the front room ... Ballantines.'
âWhat did you talk about?'
âA woman called Gifty.'
âThat was in the restaurant.'
âI told him I was going to be a father. He told me about his children who he doesn't see any more. We talked about unconditional love.'
âDon't talk to Franconelli about unconditional love.'
âWhy not?'
âIt's not his line of sensibility. He's a football man.'
âFranconelli's wife died in a truck crash, his daughter died of malaria. He might be ruthless but he's...'
âSentimental too ... like me.'
âSo we talked about unconditional love, about his wife, his kids and how she turned them against him because he was a man of
violence.
'
âCalmes-toi.'
âWe talked about my father, deathbed advice, how the English don't know anything about women and the French do.'
âWe do. I think we do.'
âWe talked about acting.'
âNo, you didn't. Franconelli is not subtle. You'll only set him thinking.'
âThen he said he was tired. I told him I'd go back to the bar. He asked me if it was the waitress. I said no. Then I went and had the drink with the waitress. She was English, called Adèle. She had red hair, corkscrew ringlets, freckles on her face and the top of her breasts, green eyes.'
âYou see?' said Marnier. âI know you.'
âShe was wearing a purple silk shirt, no bra, cut-off denims, leather sandals. She was sitting at a table when I arrived, with a beer and a cigarette watching some Australians playing with petrol bombs in a beach bonfire. I ordered a beer and watched with her until the Australians got bored and went in to start the disco. We talked about England. Not much. She'd been travelling for more than a year and I haven't seen the place for more than five. We talked about crossing the Sahara, the space out there, about time...'
âDon't talk too much shit, Bruce. Franconelli's like any guy. He wants the juice.'
âThis is important. We talked about the ground.'
âThe
ground. Vraiment les anglais.
It's a miracle you do it any more.'
âWe talked about the ground. The African ground. How the earth has its own pulse...'
âÃa c'est bon,'
said Marnier. âI can see where you're going now.'
âThen we bought a couple of bottles of beer and walked down the beach. A long walk beyond the hotel and campsite until it was just the sea and the palm trees. When it was completely dark we took our clothes off and swam in the sea. Then we started playing and we were holding on to each other and then we were kissing.'
âYou don't like Hemingway, do you?'
âHe's OK.'
âI don't want any of this “the earth moved” shit. I want everything. And when you've had her on the beach I want you to take her back to her room and have her again ... with the light on so I can see everything clearly. I want those pictures clear in my head.'
âWhose lie is this, Jean-Luc?'
âPlease.'
âWe got out of the water...'
âI just want to be sure, Bruce, that you will be doing it more than once. Because you know how it is with a new woman, you don't just fall asleep after the first time. You do it again and again and again until you can't...'
âCalmes-toi, Fean-Lue.'
He settled back down and closed his eyes.
âFe suis calme, maintenant.'
I told Marnier how we came out of the sea locked together, how I'd fallen and she'd got astride me and reached behind her and taken hold of my penis and slotted it into her. Then she hadn't moved, only her nipples, swollen to raspberries, trembled. She'd held herself above me with just the head of my penis inside her incredible warm wetness until I was shouting at her. Then she'd slammed herself down time and again, her cool buttocks slapping my thighs, her pubis grinding into mine, until we both came loud enough to turn heads in the campsite.
âExcellent,' said Marnier, âabsolutely excellent.'
He talked me through every scene, milking each one for every detail until I was squirming. But by the end I believed that we'd seen the storm coming, grabbed our clothes and run up the beach to the small room she'd taken in the village and we'd continued having each other until we reached a brain-numbing, raw-genitaled standstill. I knew I believed all this because, as Jean-Luc insisted on the refinements to each scene, I felt a terrible weight settling on me, in fact not a weight, just the opposite, an emptiness. The emptiness of infidelity, of guilt, of self-disgust, of humiliation.
âThen,' said Marnier, after I'd fallen silent, having turned in a performance that would have left an Olympic athlete slack-jawed and trembling.
âThen nothing,' I said.
âNothing?'
âNothing else happened.'
âBut there has to be something. There has to be that something extra. That new...
frisson
to recharge your...'
âIt's finished, Jean-Luc, nothing else happened.'
âYou've left out one detail.'
âI don't think so.'
âYou've told me everything except...'
âThere's nothing left to tell.'
âExcept ... your cock. How big is your cock?'
âPiss off, Jean-Luc,' I said, the disgust strong as the taste of shit in my mouth.
âNo. It's important. It's the only thing left.'
I could tell he wasn't going to let it go.
âNot as big as those guys in the blue movies.'
âBut they are impossible. They are freaks.'
âNormal size, Jean-Luc. Normal size.'
His eyes opened. The good one nearest me was brim full.
âWhat is normal size?' he asked.
We drove into Cotonou's mobile phone footprint at around midday. Marnier called Carole and told her to bring a car to the Hotel Aledjo, organize a room. We got caught in lunchtime traffic coming across the bridge and arrived at the hotel at 1.30 p.m. Carole had taken a bungalow right out down by the sea, away from inquisitive eyes, and, being French, she'd arranged for some food and drink.
It was Carole and I who hefted the trunk out of my boot into hers and she made light work of it. All that gym time paying off for fifteen seconds. I wouldn't have minded talking to her, making some kind of connection, but I had no vocabulary for it, and her body language was coming across in Sanskrit, stuff, no doubt, she'd learnt from Marnier and his readings of the Upanishads and his greatest poet of the twentieth century.
We went back into the room and found Marnier cracking crab claws and slugging back the cold Chablis that sat in a bucket at his feet, one bottle already upside down in the melting ice. Carole sat by his side and I opposite to watch her give a passable rendition of âpretty French housewife welcomes home the bacon bringer'. This involved a little bit of shoulder stroking, some head kissing and the occasional morsel feeding. Marnier rewarded her with a constant view of the mash of seafood revolving in his mouth. I didn't eat so that I could put my full concentration into some Chablis drinking and I was still chugging it back while Marnier was sucking up thimbles of tar poured from a cafetière that never left Carole's hand. The Marniers' was an ordered household.
âYou owe me two hundred and fifty thousand CFA,' I said.
âOf course,' he said, closing his eyes at Carole, who produced an envelope and slid it across to me. I pocketed it. Marnier dug in his trousers and came up with a lump of something small and dirty which he laid in front of me.
âA bonus,' he said, âfor a good night's work.'
It weighed a good half pound.
âWhy should you want to give me a couple of thousand dollars' worth of gold?'
âI told you. I'm not cheap. And ... you made your choice. One that I'm glad you made, but it will cost you. This, I hope, will go some way to covering those expenses.'
âThen you
are
being cheap,' I said, getting up from the table, leaving the lump.
âDon't be like that,' he said. âYou're well prepared.'
âWhat if I tell Franconelli what really happened? That you brutally murdered his two men and...'
âIf you think that's a risk worth taking...' He trailed off. âIt's not me sitting in front of Franconelli telling him that.'
âIt won't be me either. I'm not going to
see
Franconelli.'
âYou will. I can assure you of that. He will demand it.'
âI won't go.'
âDon't be a kid about this. He'll make you go.'
âHe hasn't been able to make
you
go.'
âI'm not so vulnerable. I keep moving. I'm used to it.'
âWhat did you do to Franconelli that he had to send Gio to ... rearrange you like that?'
Marnier was instantly furious.
âYes, exactly my point. What crime did I commit to deserve such a penalty? Did I kill his wife? Did I thin his daughter's blood with malaria? No. None of these things. I merely spat in his food. Not what you would call a serious offence.'
âDepends how much he liked what he was eating.'
Carole stroked Jean-Luc back down from the towering inferno.
âCalmes-toi, chéri, calmes-toi.'
âYou did more than gob in his
stracciatella,
Jean-Luc. Come on. Let's have it.'
âAll I did was a little churning.'
âButtering your own bread, not his.'
âIt was small change. All local currency.'
âAnd you did some local investment for him up and down the coast?'
âI always gave him a good return.'
âAnd you turned his money round for your own account.'
C'est normale.'
âHow did he catch you?'
âHe asked for his money back. It was otherwise engaged in tyres in Ghana at the time. Tyres weren't moving.'
âJust tyres?'
âThere were other things.'
âHow much was out?'
âHalf a million.'
âHalf a million what?' I asked. âNot cedis. He wouldn't have done that to you for a few hundred quid.'
âDollars. Half a million dollars.'
âThat's not spit, Jean-Luc,' I said. âHow long was it out?'
He didn't reply. I looked at him hard and saw something at the back of his dark little peepers.
âYou're lying.'
âThat's right,' he said. âYou'd never have known if I hadn't given it away.'
âThere's not much point talking to you, is there?'
âThen ask Franconelli. He'll tell you. He's a man of
honour.'
âLooks as if I'll have to.'
âAnd when you do,' said Marnier, âwatch him. Look into his eyes. See if you can see
his
lies. He's not as good as me, he never had the training, but he's better than Carole. I always know when she's lying. She always looks up into her head to select the lie. Useless. But I'm grateful for it.'
âPerhaps she has other talents which she's more proud of.'
âShe's a talented manipulator. Women are. Do you think a man is capable of creating an intolerable atmosphere in the home? No. But lying. Men lie for a living.'
âSpeak for yourself.'
âNow, M. Medway, don't come talking to me in your pristine white communion gown. You would have had me killed if I hadn't squeezed the truth out of you.'
âYou knew they were coming. You didn't need me to tell you.'
âA matter of intelligence, greatly lacking in the Italians.'
âHow
did
you know?'
âCharbonnier has girls who work for him out of La Verdure. The slap on that Nigerian girl's leg still hadn't gone down the day after.'
I looked down at the lump of gold on the table.
âTake it,' said Marnier.
âMaybe you should be using this to get your face fixed up.'
âMy face has gone. I don't want a rebuilt face. I want my own, not some surgeon's idea. And anyway, what can I use it for now?'
I walked to the door, leaving the gold.
âSomething to remember about your night with Adèle,' he said.
âThere
was
no night with Adèle.'
âThat
is a bad sign, Bruce. You must believe me that for Franconelli to believe you ... you must believe it yourself. And if you are to believe it yourself, then others close to you must believe it of you too.'
âWhat the hell is that supposed to mean?' I said, the booze tanking up the anger quicker than usual.
âYou've been unfaithful, remember that.'
I went back to the table and leaned over it to within an inch of Marnier's ghastly face.