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Authors: Janwillem Van De Wetering

Outsider in Amsterdam

BOOK: Outsider in Amsterdam
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ALSO BY
JANWILLEM VAN DE WETERING

Tumbleweed

The Corpse on the Dike

Death of a Hawker

The Japanese Corpse

The Blond Baboon

The Maine Massacre

The Mind Murders

The Streetbird

The Rattle-Rat

Hard Rain

Just a Corpse at Twilight

Hollow-Eyed Angel

The Perfidious Parrot

The Amsterdam Cops: Collected Stories

Copyright © 1975 by Janwillem van de Wetering
All rights reserved.

Published by
Soho Press, Inc.
853 Broadway
NewYork, NY 10003

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Van de Wetering, Janwillem, 1931–2008
Outsider in Amsterdam / Janwillem Van de Wetering.
eISBN: 978-1-56947-825-7
p.   cm.
I. Title.
PZ4.W537180u3    [PR9130.9.W4]    813’.5’4 75-12579

v3.1

For Juanita

Preface

O
NCE, SOME TIME
ago now, I was a child and my parents would ask me what I wanted to be. I always gave the same answer. I wanted to be an Indian, and a cowboy in my spare time.

When fate, which according to Buddhist thought is the result of previous actions, brought me back to Amsterdam after a trip which took me to a large number of countries and lasted a long time, I received a letter from the army. The letter gave me an address and a name and a date and I found a middle-aged lady behind a desk who told me that I would have to be a soldier. I pointed out that I was over thirty years old but she wasn’t impressed.

A little later I received another letter from the army. It told me that I would have to consider myself to be in “extraordinary service.” The letter puzzled me and I put it in a drawer. Then there was another letter that told me that I would have to join the “civil reserve.” I saw another middle-aged lady and told her that I didn’t want to join the civil reserve, whatever it was. She told me to join the police. I told her that I already had a job. “In your spare time,” she said.

The idea staggered me. I never knew that one can be a policeman in one’s spare time.

But one can, and for several years now I have been a member of Amsterdam’s Special Constabulary and serve the Queen in the uniform of a police constable. I have been in a number of adventures in the inner city of the capital and some of them inspired me to write this story. My imagination has, here and there, carried me away and the result is that the police routine as described in this book is not, in every instance, based on established police technique.

Chapter 1

T
HE
V
OLKSWAGEN WAS
parked on the wide sidewalk of the Haarlemmer Houttuinen, opposite number 5, and it was parked the way it shouldn’t be parked.

The adjutant
*
had switched the engine off.

The adjutant hesitated.

He had arrived at his destination, Haarlemmer Houttuinen, number 5, and the high narrow gable house was waiting for him. He studied the gable house and frowned. The house had a body in it, a dead body, suspended. The body was bound to be turning slowly. Bodies, suspended by the neck, are never quite still.

The adjutant didn’t feel like doing anything. He didn’t feel like getting out of the car, running through the rain, watching a corpse move slowly, dangling, turning.

“Hey,” said Sergeant de Gier, who sat next to Adjutant Grijpstra.

“Hey what?” asked Grijpstra.

De Gier made a helpless gesture. Grijpstra could explain the gesture, the waving arm with its connected stretched-out hand, as he wanted.

But he still didn’t move and the adjutant and sergeant listened, peacefully and unanimously, to the fat raindrops patter from the heavy, juicy spring sky onto the tin roof of the Volkswagen.

“Yes,” the adjutant said, and got out of the car. De Gier had parked the car on the edge of the sidewalk and Grijpstra was forced to step into the street, a main thoroughfare, busy at all times of the day and the night. He didn’t pay attention and a large American limousine approaching at speed had to turn suddenly to avoid the door of the car. The limousine, suddenly indignant, honked its powerful horn.

De Gier laughed and shook his head. He got out of the car as well, on the safe side, and locked the door carefully while the rain hit him in the neck. In Amsterdam nothing is safe, not even a police car, and this Volkswagen didn’t look like a police car. No expert would recognize the VW as a means of transport reserved for officers of the criminal investigation department. Its radio set was hidden under the dashboard and the antenna was a mere twig, slightly rusty. No one would suspect that the backseat contained a well-oiled carbine, neatly wrapped in canvas and complete with six magazines, or that the harmless nose of the car was filled with a complete collection of utensils that police officers think they need during the lawful exercise of their duties, including such items as a small suitcase full of burglar’s tools, a powerful searchlight, a dredge, gas masks and a tape recorder.

But nothing was suspected and the officers looked as innocent as their vehicle. Grijpstra is a fat man and de Gier neither thin nor fat—qualities they share with a large number of other men in Holland’s capital. Grijpstra wore a badly fitting suit made of expensive English striped material, with a white shirt and a dark blue tie, and de Gier a made-to-order suit of blue denim, a blue shirt and a multicolored scarf neatly folded
around his Adam’s apple. Grijpstra’s hair looked like a well-worn scrubbing brush and de Gier’s curls were beautifully cut by a proud and highly trained coiffeur taking an almost personal interest in the glamour of his clients. De Gier’s curls were so well shaped, in fact, that he could have been mistaken for a woman if viewed from the rear, and only his narrow hips protected him from attacks from that side.

A pedestrian, in a hurry to reach his parked car, bumped into Grijpstra and hurt himself against the large model service pistol that the adjutant carried under his jacket.

“Watch where you’re going,” the pedestrian mumbled ferociously.

“Yes sir,” said Grijpstra kindly.

An ordinary car was parked on the sidewalk and two ordinary men ran through the rain until they reached the porch of number 5 and tried to catch their breath.

Their object achieved, a new period of inactivity began.

“Bah,” Grijpstra said and read the sign on the door.

The sign said
HINDIST SOCIETY
.

Both men studied it. It looked neat, like the door. The text had been written in an unusual script as if the letter artist had tried to create a mysterious atmosphere. It seemed as if the letters had been drawn very quickly; the result was vaguely Chinese, far away.

De Gier produced a comb and arranged his hair while he looked about him.

The porch was old and magnificent in its Golden Age splendor. It had been designed in the seventeenth century for a gentleman-merchant who specialized in expensive timber imported from Africa and the Far East and stored in the first three stories of the tall house, while the merchant himself would have lived in the top three stories where he could see the harbor and his vast stocks of cheaper timber stacked in an area of perhaps a square mile. But that was long ago and
the stones of the porch were cracked now and the beams supporting the gable house sagged a little. But the well-built house still retained a good deal of its original stately beauty and the present owner had kept it in reasonable repair.

A small window showed a number of objects and de Gier studied them one by one. Glass jars filled with health grains brown and green tea, and a substance that de Gier, after some thought, determined to be seaweed. A sign in the window, showing the same sort of lettering as the main sign, informed the visitor that the Society went in for a variety of activities. Grijpsira grunted and read the sign in a loud voice.

“Shop, open from nine to four. Restaurant and bar, restaurant open to nine, bar open to twelve
P.M
.”

He looked at de Gier but de Gier was still studying the display.

There were several small cartons filled with incense and a gilded Buddha statue sitting on a pedestal, staring and smiling, with a headgear tapering off into a sharp point.

“A pointed head,” Grijpstra said. “Is that what you get when you meditate?”

“That isn’t known as a pointed head,” said de Gier, using his lecture voice. Once a month, when he taught the young constables of the emergency squad the art of crime detection.

“Not a pointed head,” de Gier repeated, “but a heaven-head. The point points at heaven. Heaven is the goal of meditation. Heaven is thin air. Heaven is upstairs.”

“Ah,” said Grijpstra. “Are you sure?”

“No,” said de Gier.

“You can ring the bell,” Grijpstra said. “You have a nice index finger.”

De Gier bowed from the hips and rang. His index finger was indeed nice, well tapered, thin and powerful.

Grijpstra, as if he wanted to avoid all comparison, had hidden his hands in his pockets.

The door opened immediately; they had been expected.

Both men braced themselves.

“Suspected suicide,” the police radio had said, a few minutes ago. “It seems that a man has hanged himself.” That was the message, and they had been given the address.

Grijpstra had repeated the address and had said that they would go there, and the female voice belonging to the constable first class of the radio room had thanked them and closed the communication.

And now they had arrived, but they knew no more than the radio had told them.

And now, of course, there would be a great commotion. Several people talking at once. White faces. Fearful eyes. Shouts and screams. Violence affects people.

But the face that looked at them, from the open space where the thick green monumental door had been, wasn’t white but black, and it wasn’t excited but calm.

The officers studied the man in the door.

“A Negro,” Grijpstra thought. “A small Hindist Negro. Now what?”

De Gier hadn’t drawn any conclusion. Like Grijpstra he had associated black with “Negro,” but he was in doubt. The man was no Negro. “Who else is black?” de Gier thought but the logic line of his thoughts was interrupted by the inquisitive expression on the face of the dark man.

“Police,” Grijpstra said and produced his wallet, a large leather wallet consisting of a number of plastic compartments and a notebook. He shook the wallet, the plastic compartments dangled and a small card hung in front of their host’s eyes.

The man came closer and concentrated on the document.

“That’s a credit card of the Amsterdam-Rotterdam Bank,” the small man said.

De Gier laughed softly and Grijpstra looked at his colleague. It was a heavy look, full of criticism.

“I’m sorry,” said de Gier.

Grijpstra dug in his wallet and after a while his square, fat fingers found his police identification with its blue and red stripes and photograph of a much younger Grijpstra dressed in uniform with the silver button of his rank on both shoulders.

BOOK: Outsider in Amsterdam
6.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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