âYou understand now,' Czerda said, âwhy I said you'd find the money within the minute.'
âI understand now. You'll find it â '
âWhat money?' Cecile asked. âWhat does that â that monster want?'
âHis eighty thousand francs back again â minus certain small outlays I've been compelled to make â and who can blame him?'
âDon't tell him anything!'
âAnd don't you understand the kind of men you're dealing with? Ten seconds from now they'll have your arm twisted up behind your back till it's touching your ear, you'll be screaming in agony and if they happen to break your shoulder or tear a few ligaments, well, that's just too bad.'
âBut â but I'll just faint â '
âPlease.' Bowman looked at Czerda, carefully avoided Cecile's gaze. âIt's in Arles. Safe-deposit in the station.'
âThe key?'
âOn a ring. In the car. Hidden. I'll show you.'
âExcellent,' Czerda said. âA disappointment to friend Searl, I'm afraid, but inflicting pain on young ladies gives me no pleasure though I wouldn't hesitate if I had to. As you shall see.'
âI don't understand.'
âYou will. You are a danger, you have been a great danger and you have to go, that's all. You will die this afternoon and within the hour so that no suspicion will ever attach to us.'
It was, Bowman thought, as laconic a death sentence as he'd ever heard of. There was something chilling in the man's casual certainty.
Czerda went on: âYou will understand now why I didn't injure your face, why I wanted you to go into that bullring unmarked.'
âBullring?'
âBullring, my friend.'
âYou're mad. You can't make me go into a bullring.'
Czerda said nothing and there was no signal. Searl, eagerly assisted by a grinning Masaine, caught hold of Cecile, forced her face downwards on to a bunk and, while Masaine pinned her down, Searl gripped the collar of the Arlésienne costume and ripped it down to the waist. He turned and smiled at Bowman, reached into the folds of his clerical garb and brought out what appeared to be a version of a hunting stock, with a fifteen-inch interwoven leather handle attached to three long thin black thongs. Bowman looked at Czerda and Czerda wasn't watching anything of what was going on: he was watching Bowman and the gun pointing at Bowman was motionless.
Czerda said: âI think perhaps you will go into that bullring?'
âYes.' Bowman nodded. âI think perhaps I will.'
Searl put his stock away. His face was twisted in the bitter disappointment of a spoilt child who has been deprived of a new toy. Masaine took his hands away from Cecile's shoulders. She pushed herself groggily to a sitting position and looked at Bowman. Her face was very pale but her eyes were mad. It had just occurred to Bowman that she was, as she'd said, quite capable of using a gun if shown how to use one when there came from outside the sound of a solid measured tread: the door opened and Le Grand Duc entered with a plainly apprehensive Lila trailing uncertainly behind him. Le Grand Duc pushed the monocle more firmly into his eye.
âAh, Czerda, my dear fellow. It's you.' He looked at the gun in the gypsy's hand and said sharply: âDon't point that damned thing at me!' He indicated Bowman. âPoint it at that fellow there. Don't you know he's your man, you fool?'
Czerda uncertainly trained his gun back on Bowman and just as uncertainly looked at Le Grand Duc.
âWhat do you want?' Czerda tried to imbue his voice with sharp authority but Le Grand Duc wasn't the properly receptive type and it didn't come off. âWhy are you â '
âBe quiet!' Le Grand Duc was at his most intimidating, which was very intimidating indeed. I am speaking. You are a bunch of incompetent and witless nincompoops. You have forced me to destroy the basic rule of my existence â to bring myself into the open. I have seen more intelligence exhibited in a cageful of retarded chimpanzees. You have lost me much time and cost me vast trouble and anxiety. I am seriously tempted to dispose of the services of you all â permanently. And that means you as well as your services. What are you doing here?'
âWhat are we doing here?' Czerda stared at him. âBut â but â but Searl here said that you â '
âI will deal with Searl later.' Le Grand Duc's promise was imbued with such menacing overtones that Searl at once looked acutely unhappy. Czerda looked nervous to a degree that was almost unthinkable for him, El Brocador looked puzzled and Masaine had clearly given up thinking of any kind. Lila simply looked stunned. Le Grand Duc went on: âI did not mean, you cretin, what you are doing in Mas de Lavignolle. I meant what are you doing here, as of this present moment, in this caravan.'
âBowman here stole the money you gave me,' Czerda said sullenly. âWe were â '
âHe what?' Le Grand Duc's face was thunderous.
âHe stole your money,' Czerda said unhappily.
âAll of it.'
âAll of it!'
âEighty thousand francs. That's what we've been doing â finding out where it is. He's about to show me the key to where the money is.'
âI trust for your sake that you find it.' He paused and turned as Maca came staggering into the caravan, both hands holding what was clearly a very painful face.
âIs this man drunk?' Le Grand Duc demanded.
âAre
you drunk, sir? Stand straight when you talk to me.'
âHe did it!' Maca spoke to Czerda, he didn't appear to have noticed Le Grand Duc, for his eyes were for Bowman only. âHe came along â '
âSilence!' Le Grand Duc's voice would have intimidated a Bengal tiger. âMy God, Czerda, you surround yourself with the most useless and ineffectual bunch of lieutenants it's ever been my misfortune to encounter.' He looked round the caravan, ignoring the three manacled men, took two steps towards where Cecile was sitting and looked down at her. âHa! Bowman's accomplice, of course. Why is she here?'
Czerda shrugged. âBowman wouldn't cooperate â '
âA hostage? Very well. Here's another.' He caught Lila by the arm and shoved her roughly across the caravan. She stumbled, almost fell, then sat down heavily on the bunk beside Cecile. Her face, already horror-stricken, now looked stupefied.
âCharles!'
âBe quiet!'
âBut Charles! My father â you said â '
âYou are a feather-brained young idiot,' Le Grand Duc said with contempt. âThe real Duc de Croytor, to whom I fortunately bear a strong resemblance, is at present in the upper Amazon, probably being devoured by the savages in the Matto Grosso. I am
not
the Duc de Croytor.'
âWe know that, Mr Strome.' Simon Searl was at his most obsequious.
Again displaying his quite remarkable speed, Le Grand Duc stepped forward and struck Searl heavily across the face. Searl cried out in pain and staggered heavily, to bring up against the wall of the caravan. There was silence for several seconds.
âI have no name,' Le Grand Duc said softly. âThere is no such person as you mentioned.'
âI'm sorry, sir.' Searl fingered his cheek. âI â '
âSilence!' Le Grand Duc turned to Czerda. âBowman has something to show you? Give you?'
âYes, sir. And there's another little matter I have to attend to.'
âYes, yes, yes. Be quick about it.'
âYes, sir.'
âI shall wait here. We must talk on your return, mustn't we, Czerda.'
Czerda nodded unhappily, told Masaine to watch the girls, put his jacket over his gun and left accompanied by Searl and El Brocador. Masaine, his knife still drawn, seated himself comfortably. Maca, tenderly rubbing his bruised face, muttered something and left, probably to attend to his injuries. Lila, her face woebegone, looked up at Le Grand Duc.
âOh, Charles, how could you â '
âNinny!'
She stared at him brokenly. Tears began to roll down her cheeks. Cecile put an arm round her and glared at Le Grand Duc. Le Grand Duc looked through her and remained totally unaffected.
âStop here,' Czerda said.
They stopped, Bowman ahead of Czerda with a silencer prodding his back, El Brocador and Searl on either side of him, the Citroën ten feet away.
âWhere's the key?' Czerda demanded.
âI'll get it.'
âYou will not. You are perfectly capable of switching keys or even finding a hidden gun.
Where is it?'
âOn a key ring. It's taped under the driver's seat, back, left.'
âSearl?' Searl nodded, went to the car. Czerda said sourly: âYou don't trust many people, do you?'
âI should, you think?'
âWhat's the number of this deposit box?'
âSixty-five.'
Searl returned. âThese are ignition keys.'
âThe brass one's not,' Bowman said.
Czerda took the keys. âThe brass one's not.' He removed it from the ring. âSixty-five. For once, the truth. How's the money wrapped?'
âOilskin, brown paper, sealing-wax. My name's on it.'
âGood.' He looked round. Maca was sitting on the top of some caravan steps. Czerda beckoned him and he came to where they were, rubbing his chin and looked malevolently at Bowman. Czerda said: âYoung José has a motor scooter, hasn't he?'
âYou want a message done. I'll get him. He's in the arena.'
âNo need.' Czerda gave him the key. âThat's for safe deposit sixty-five in Arles station. Tell him to open it and bring back the brown paper parcel inside. Tell him to be as careful with it as he would be with his own life. It's a very, very valuable parcel. Tell him to come back here as soon as possible and give it to me and if I'm not here someone will know where I've gone and he's to come after me. Is that clear?'
Maca nodded and left. Czerda said: âI think it's time we paid a visit to the bullring ourselves.'
They crossed the road but went not directly to the arena but to one of several adjacent huts which were evidently used as changing rooms, for the one they entered was behung with
matadors'
and
razateurs'
uniforms and several outfits of clowns' attire. Czerda pointed to one of the last. âGet into that.'
âThat?' Bowman eyed the garish rigout. âWhy the hell should I?'
âBecause my friend here asks you to.' Czerda waved his gun. âDon't make my friend angry.'
Bowman did as he was told. When he was finished he was far from surprised to see El Brocador exchange his conspicuous white uniform for his dark suit, to see Searl pull on a long blue smock, then to see all three men put on paper masks and comic hats. They appeared to have a craving for anonymity, a not unusual predilection on the part of would-be murderers. Czerda draped a red flag over his gun and they left for the arena.
When they arrived at the entrance to the
callajon
Bowman was mildly astonished to discover that the comic act that had been in process when he'd left was still not finished: so much seemed to have happened since he'd left the arena that it was difficult to realize that so few minutes had elapsed. They arrived to find that one of the clowns, incredibly, was doing a handstand on the back of the bull, which just stood there in baffled fury, its head swinging from side to side. The crowd clapped ecstatically: had the circumstances been different, Bowman thought, he might even have clapped himself.
For their final brief act the clowns waltzed towards the side of the arena to the accompaniment of their companion's accordion. They stopped, faced the crowd side by side and bowed deeply, apparently unaware that their backs were towards the charging bull. The crowd screamed a warning: the clowns, still bent, pushed each other apart at the last moment and the bull hurtled wildly over the spot where they had been standing only a second previously and crashed into the barrier with an impact that momentarily stunned it. As the clowns vaulted into the
callajon
the crowd continued to whistle and shout their applause. It occurred to Bowman to wonder whether they would still be in such a happily carefree mood in a few minutes' time: it seemed unlikely.
The ring was empty now and Bowman and his three escorts had moved out into the
callajon.
The crowd stared with interest and in considerable amusement at Bowman's attire and he was, unquestionably, worth a second glance. He was clad in a most outlandish fashion. His right leg was enclosed in red, his left in white and the doublet was composed of red and white squares. The flexible green canvas shoes he wore were so ludicrously long that the toes were tied back into the shins. He wore a white conical pierrot's hat with a red pom-pom on top: for defence he was armed with a slender three-foot cane with a small tricolor at the end of it.
âI have the gun, I have the girl,' Czerda said softly. âYou will remember?'
âI'll try.'