Patricia Highsmith - The Tremor of Forgery (21 page)

BOOK: Patricia Highsmith - The Tremor of Forgery
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And he

s not Kennedy, Ingham thought. Should he stick to his story and continue to be heckled by Adams (the alternative seemed to be to leave Hammamet), or tell the truth, suffer the shame of having lied, defy Adams to do anything about it, and at least have the satisfaction of having told the
truth? Ingham chose the latter course. Or should he wait
until
tomorrow? He

d had a few drinks, and was he making the right decision? Ingham said,
‘I’
ve told you what happened, Francis
.’
He smiled a little at Adams. But at least it was a real smile. Ingham was amused, and as yet he did not dislike Francis J. Adams. And his smile widened as a funny possibility crossed his mind: could it be that some very rich man

of Communist persuasion

was paying OWL his stipend for his weekly broadcasts just for a joke, a joke that he could afford? Some man who didn

t live in Russia? Because certainly OWL

s broadcasts helped the Russians. Adams

s earnestness made this possibility all the more hilarious to Ingham.


What

s amusing?

Ada
ms asked, but he asked it pleas
an
tl
y.


Everything. Africa does turn things upside down. You can

t deny that. Or are you

immune to it?

Ingham stood up. He wanted to leave.

‘I’m
not immune to it. It

s a contrast to one

s

home-spun morals, shall we say. It doesn

t change them or destroy them. Oh, no! If you would only realize it, it makes us hang on all the harder to our proven principles of right and wrong. They

re our anchors in the storm. They

re our backbone. They
cannot
be shed, even if we wished.

An anchor for a backbone! Was that one

s ass? Ingham had not the faintest idea what to say, though he wanted to be polite as he left.

You

re probably right
—I
must go, Francis. So I

ll say good night.


Good night, Howard. And sleep well.

There was no sarcasm in
the

sleep well

.

They shook hands.

 

 

 

15

 

 

The
next morning was Saturday, the day when Ingham could get his typewriter. Ingham was at the post office at a quarter to ten, and dropped Ina

s letter into the box. Then he walked to Jensen

s house, this time avoiding a glance at the spot where the dead Arab had lain.

Jensen was not up, but at last he stuck his head out of the window.
‘I’ll
open the doo
r!

Ingham walked into
the
little
cement court
‘I’m
going to Tunis to pick up my typewriter. Can I get anything for you?


No, thanks. I can

t think of anything
.’

Jensen had bought some painting supplies in Sousse, Ingham remembered. 1 was wondering if I could find a place like yours to rent in Hammamet. Do you know of anything?

Jensen took a few seconds to let this sink in.

You mean a couple of rooms somewhere? Or a house?


A couple of rooms. Something Arab. Something like you
’v
e got
.’

1 can ask. Sure, Howard.
‘I’ll
ask this morning
.’

Ingham said he would look in when he came back from Tunis. He wanted to tell Jensen about his conversation with Adams last night.

His typewriter was ready. They had kept the old frame, its brown paint worn at the comers down to the steel. Ingham was so pleased, he did not mind the bill, which he thought a bit excessive, seven dinars or slightly more than fourteen dollars. He tried the machine on a piece of paper in the shop. It was his old typewriter, as good as ever. Ingham thanked
the man in the shop, and walked out to his car, happily weighted again.

He was back in Hammamet before twelve-thirty. He had bought newspapers,
Time, Playboy,
tins of smoked oysters, potted ham, and Cross & Blackwell soups. Jensen was in the alley, straightening a bent garbage can, presumably his own, with a foot.


Come in,

Jensen said.
‘I’
ve got some cold beer for us
.’

Jensen had the beer in a bucket of water. They sat in his bedroom.

There

s a house a quarter of a kilometre this way
.’
Jensen said, pointing in the Tunis direction,

but there

s nothing in it, and I wouldn

t trust the owner to put anything in it, no matter what he says. There

s a sink, but no loo. Workmen still creeping around. Forty dinars a month, I

m sure I can get him down to thirty, but I think that

s out. Now the couple of rooms below me are free. Thirty dinars a month. There

s a little stove there, about like mine, and there

s a sink and a sort of bed. Want to see it ? I got the key from old Gamal.

Gamal was Jensen

s landlord.

Ingham went downstairs with Jensen. The door was just to the right of the hole-in-the-floor toilet, which projected from the wall. The
larger room was next to the street, with one rather high arched window on the street. A door opposite the street led into a small square room with two windows, both on the tiny court

which had the virtue of not being overlooked, Ingham had noticed. This room had a good-sized sink and a two-burner stove on a low wooden table. The bed was a flush door, or so it appeared, with a thin mattress resting on three wooden fruit crates. Presumably white, the interior was not really white but grey with dirt, and tan in patches where the paint had been knocked off. A crumpled khaki blanket lay on the door-bed. There was an ashtray full of cigarette butts on the floor.


Is any one sleeping here now?

Ingham asked.


Oh, one of Gamal

s nephews or something. He

ll throw
him out quickly enough, because he isn

t paying anything. Is this all right or

is it too tatty
?’
Jensen asked with a facetious swish.

1 suppose it

s okay. Is there any place where I could buy a table? And a chair
?’

‘I’m
sure I can get something. I

ll put the people next door on to it.

So the deal was on. Ingham was optimistic. The bedroom door had a padlock that could be switched on a chain from inside to outside. His front door key would be the same as Jensen

s. They

d have the same awful John, but as Jensen pointed out, it had at least a door, which Jensen had put on himself. Ingham felt a little safer being so close to Jensen. If something went wrong, if he had an invader, at least he had an ally within shouting distance. Ingham said he would like to move in on Monday, and he gave Jensen fifteen dinars to give Gamal to clench the thing. Then Ingham drove on to the Reine.

It would be just his luck, Ingham thought, to run into OWL as he was taking his typewriter from the car to the bungalow. He even wanted to look around, from his car, and if he saw OWL to postpone removing the typewriter, but he felt ashamed of his queasiness, and at the bungalows

parking place stopped his car, and without a look around at all, opened the other door and took his typewriter out. He locked his car, then walked to his bungalow. OWL, evidently, was not around at the moment.

Monday would leave time, he thought, to give the hotel decent notice, to find a table and chair, and to write, perhaps another ten pages on his novel. Last night, oddly enough after his disturbing conversation with Adams, Ingham had thought of a title for his book,
The Tremor of Forgery.
It was much better than the two other ideas he had had. He had read somewhere, before he left America, that forgers

hands usually trembled very slightly at the beginning and end of their false signatures, sometimes so slightly the tremor could
be seen only under a microscope. The tremor also expressed the ultimate crumbling of Dennison, the dual-personality, as his downfall grew imminent. It would be a profound yet unrealised crumbling, like a mountain collapsing from within, undetectable from the outside for a long while

in fact
until
the complete crash

because Dennison had no pangs of conscience which he recognized as such, and hardly any apprehension of danger.

Ingham went over and spoke to the hotel, and asked them to make up his bill through Sunday. Then he went back to his bungalow and answered, in a rather gay tone, Reggie Muldaven

s letter. He said he didn

t know what
In
a was up to, and that she had shown a strange disinclination to write to him. He said he had started a novel. And of course he expressed regret at
Castlewood

s suicide. Then Ingham worked and did eight pages between three and six o

clock, when he went for a swim. He felt, for some reason, extremely happy. It was pleasant, first of all, to have a little money, to be able to send a cheque for a rather expensive apartment in New York every month, to be staying at a comfortable hotel here, and to think nothing of the cost. Money wasn

t everything, as OWL might say (or would he?), but Ingham had known the mind-pinching torment of being even slightly short of it.

He met Jensen by appointment at the Plage around eight o

clock, and they had a drink before going to Melik

s. Jensen said the family next door had promised to find a table by tomorrow. A chair was a little more difficult, and they might have to scout the souk or buy or borrow one from Melik. Jensen had only one.


Don

t sit next to any English
.’
Ingham said as they climbed the steps to Melik

s terrace.
‘I’d
like to talk to you
.’

They shared a table with two shirt
-
sleeved Arabs who talked constantly to each other.

Ingham said,

What do you think? Adams went on with it last night He said the people in the bungalow behind me
heard the yell, plus a clatter, plus a door being shut. Slammed, Imagine OWL going to the trouble to quiz the neighbours? Like Inspector Maigret?

Jensen smiled.

What do you call him?


OWL. Our way of life. The American Way. He

s always preaching it, or haven

t you noticed? Goodness, Godness

and democracy. They

ll save the world.

The
couscous
looked better than usual, with more meat.


Last night, I denied hearing anything except the yell,

Ingham went on.

I denied having opened my door.

Jensen so patently took Abdullah

s death as no more important than a flea

s death. Ingham found that he could speak more l
ightly
of it himself now, even practically lie about it with ease.

Jensen smiled, and shook his head as if in wonderment that anyone could spend so much time on such an unimportant matter.

Ingham tried to amuse Jensen further.

Adams is trying the soft treatment,
&
la Porfyrivitch

or the English investigators.

I see that you

re not telling the whole truth, Howard You

ll feel better if you do, you know.
”‘


What do the French people behind you say?


They

ve left. A pair of Germans there now, man and wife, I presume.

And you know, Anders, last night I was on the brink of telling OWL the truth? As you say, so what? What could he do? Gloat? Because he

s solved a mystery? I don

t think it would bother me.


He couldn

t do a thing, not a thing. Are you talking about the machinery of justice? Bugger it. The last thing this country wants is to bring the thieves and the tourists face to face

in a court, that is.

Americans are funny.

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