The Five Gates of Hell (47 page)

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Authors: Rupert Thomson

BOOK: The Five Gates of Hell
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He looked round. It was Maxie Carlo. Black hairs bristled in his nostrils. A damp top lip. No neck.

‘I would never have expected to see you here,' Maxie said. ‘How are you?'

‘Fine.' Nathan could feel the blankness on his face.

‘I'm sorry, Nathan,' Maxie said, ‘you don't remember me, do you? I guess you were kind of preoccupied last night.' Only his top row of teeth showed when he smiled. One of them was edged in gold, like a page from the Bible. ‘I met you in that bar on the promenade. You were with Neville.'

‘Neville?'

‘Oh dear.' Maxie laughed. It didn't make a sound. ‘Maybe you know him as Reid. That's what he calls himself when he doesn't call himself Neville. Except sometimes he calls himself Vince or Len. Or Eric. Once,' and he ran the tip of his little finger round the curve of his nostril, ‘once he called himself Irv.' That soundless laugh again. That gilded tooth.

Nathan didn't say anything. He didn't like this man leaning over him as if he owned him.

‘They're anagrams,' Maxie explained.

‘Anagrams?'

‘You know. Words you get out of another word.' Maxie looked down at Nathan and affected great concern. ‘Dear, oh dear,' he said. ‘I can see you've fallen for the whole thing.'

There was a slow turning in Nathan's stomach, a sense of unease that was massive and inexplicable, like the movement of galaxies. He felt slightly sick.

‘Well,' and Maxie took his hand off Nathan's shoulder and held it out, palm up, ‘the organ calls.' And with another soundless laugh he slid away between the tables as if he'd been greased.

One of the old women reached across and touched Nathan's arm. ‘You know Mr Carlo, do you?'

‘Not really,' Nathan said.

‘He's very good, isn't he?'

‘Yes, he is.' Nathan looked towards the dance-floor. A man of
about sixty stood in the spotlight, alone and blinking. He wore old brown chinos and a mustard-coloured cardigan.

‘Clive's going to sing for us now,' Maxie said, ‘aren't you, Clive?'

Clive ducked his head.

‘What are you going to sing for us, Clive?'

Clive mumbled something.

‘Clive's going to sing an old music-hall number for us.' Maxie raised an eyebrow at the audience. ‘I can hardly wait.'

The drum machine started up, the organ came in. Clive shifted, crouched, found the position. Legs apart, eyes closed, one hand splayed, waist-level, in the air. He had the gestures down. The only trouble was, he couldn't sing. It would've made a great comic act, Clive in his mustard cardigan, eyes closed, hand splayed, fucking terrible voice.

As Nathan walked back down the pier he heard a few whistles, some brittle applause. Clive must have finished his song. The ocean sighed and shifted under his feet. He'd only had three or four drinks, but his mouth felt loose and he was talking to himself.

He leaned on a railing. ‘It's an anagram,' he said. ‘An anagram.' He laughed. ‘You know.'

He stared down at the tilting black sheets of water. ‘Once he was Irv,' he said, and laughed again. When he stopped laughing he took a deep breath and called out, ‘George?'

He passed the gardens on the promenade. The strips of neat mown grass. The tight, bright symmetries of flowers. He walked on. There was a strange hollow rattling sound. A white car cruised by with a skeleton tied to its rear fender. The bones jumped and twitched on the road, as if possessed by fever. Then he was looking up at the façade of the Palace Hotel. He suddenly felt like talking to that man. Like being listened to. That man who acted like a priest. That man with all the names. He certainly didn't want to go home. He saw a phone-booth on the corner of the street. He'd try Georgia one last time.

As he walked towards the phone-booth, the phone started ringing. He stopped, looked around. But there was nobody in sight. The phone was still ringing. He ducked into the booth and picked up the receiver. He didn't say anything. He just listened.

‘You took your time.'

‘Who's this?' Nathan said.

‘One guess.'

Still holding the receiver, Nathan turned and looked up at the hotel. ‘Is that you?'

‘I saw you passing. Thought I'd give you a call.'

Nathan smiled. ‘Where are you?'

‘Where do you think?'

‘It's funny, but I wanted to come and see you. It's just I didn't know how.'

‘You don't remember?'

‘No.'

A laugh. ‘I'm not surprised. It's the fourteenth floor. Apartment 1412. Got that?'

‘I've got it.' Nathan hung up. He left the booth and walked towards the hotel, the ocean crackling behind him like a policeman's radio, like the scene of a crime.

Yoghurt, Ice-Cream, Minestrone

Jed couldn't even swallow his own saliva. He had to keep a bowl beside the bed. He lay on his back all day, he saw the sun rise and fall in the window, he felt such anger that he hit the wall with his fist and burned the skin off his knuckles. He had to make that phone-call, and he had to make it soon, but he couldn't do anything till he had his voice back.

At about midday somebody knocked on the door. Jed quickly wrapped the scarf around his neck. Silence stood in the doorway, wearing a pair of pyjamas and his suit jacket. He handed Jed one of his cards: ARE YOU ALL RIGHT?

Jed nodded. ‘It's just a really bad cold.' He couldn't speak so he just mouthed the words. Not that it made any difference to Silence.

Silence produced another card: DO YOU NEED ANYTHING?

Jed shook his head. ‘I'll be OK.'

One more card: YOU SURE?

Jed nodded. ‘I'm sure.' Then he thought of something. ‘If you go out, could you get me some yoghurt?'

Silence looked puzzled. Maybe he hadn't understood. Maybe the word was hard to read.

‘Yoghurt,' Jed whispered. ‘Yog-hurt.'

After Silence had left the room, Jed lay back. He was curiously touched. Silence had prepared those three cards in advance. That was a lot of words for Silence. Maybe even a whole day's worth.

He turned his thoughts back to Creed and, reaching into his jacket, took out his wallet. Inside the wallet was a newspaper article. He unfolded it and laid it flat on the pillow. And though he knew the article by heart he began to read it through once more:

RIDDLE OF MISSING STUDENT

A medical student was abducted from his Los Ilusiones apartment last night by several armed men.

Mr Francis Gorelli, 19, worked as an intern at the Moon Beach General Hospital, and was due to take examinations later in the year.

One of the armed men was about 25, white, and he was wearing a black suit and a black top hat. A dark car was seen leaving the area and police are still trying to trace the vehicle.

The family of the missing man refused to comment today. The abduction of Mr Gorelli is only the latest incident in a wave of violence that has been sweeping the notorious eastern suburbs of the city.

A pretty accurate description, considering. But maybe the shock had burned his image into that girl's memory. Certainly he'd never forgotten her: her long black hair, her yellow dress; her screams. Creed had sent him into the building knowing that he'd be seen. Knowing also, possibly, that he'd be remembered. His face twisted in a sour smile. Even six years later it'd been something of a gamble, perhaps, to drive back to the city in a black suit and a black top hat, to drive back to the city in the same dark car.

Every time he read the article he had to admire Creed's strategy. Two things. One: the murder of Francis Gorelli had driven Vasco insane and insanity, surely, was a far more effective, far more exquisite punishment than death. Two: the killing (or, as the papers understood it, the abduction) of an innocent man was a crime with no motive. It forced the police to generalise. Their conclusion only scratched the surface of the truth. The crime was part of ‘a wave of violence'. Its context had become its cause. Nor had the body (or, for that matter, any other evidence) been discovered. Not even a murder then. Not necessarily. Just another missing-persons case. A poster in a police station. An appeal on the back of a carton of milk.

Jed dozed through the afternoon. By the evening he needed more pain-killers. When he left his room he noticed that all the videos had gone; Silence must've been busy. He heard voices in the kitchen, and went and stood in the doorway. Silence was sitting at the table with a man. There were small transparent plastic bags scattered all over the formica. Inside were watches, lighters, rings. Sensing something behind him, the man swung round. ‘Who the fuck's this?'

Silence showed him a card: FRIEND.

‘OK,' the man said, ‘OK,' and he turned to Jed and said, ‘Sorry about that.'

Jed nodded. He didn't want to risk speaking. Not yet. He shook
two tablets on to a piece of silver foil and began to grind them up with the back of a spoon.

The man had sandy-gold hair and tiny red veins below his sideburns. His hands shook. He was smoking menthol cigarettes. ‘What's this you've got?' he said, tapping a maroon box with one finger.

Silence snapped the lid open. He took out a gold pocket watch and handed it to the man. Jed saw the watch over the man's shoulder. Its face was ringed with gems.

The man nodded. ‘Nice piece.'

Silence reached over. He flicked the back of the watch open with his thumb and held it to the man's ear. It played ‘As Time Goes By'.

‘Ain't that something.' The man stared at Silence. ‘How'd you know it played a tune, Silence, you being deaf and all?'

Silence wrote, SOMEBODY TOLD ME.

The man guffawed. ‘And you trusted them?'

Silence wrote, DID YOU HEAR THE TUNE OR DIDN'T YOU?

‘I heard the tune.'

I MAY BE DUMB, Silence wrote, BUT I'M NOT THAT DUMB. Then he tucked the rest of his cards back into his pocket. Clearly that was all he was going to say on the subject.

Jed opened the fridge. There was a six-pack of plain yoghurt on the top shelf. Silence had come through for him. He stirred his crushed tablets into a yoghurt, then he found a piece of paper and wrote, THANKS FOR THE YOGHURT. On his way out of the room he handed Silence the message.

Silence smiled. YOUR'E WELCOME, he wrote.

‘You're weird, you are,' the man said. ‘Just plain weird, the lot of you.'

Jed went back to bed.

The next day he left the apartment at noon. He stood at ground-level and looked around. Heat rippled on the concrete, the horizon seemed alive with snakes. He walked past his car and out through the housing project. Smells came to him: warm garbage, tar melting, dead fish. There was nobody about. Days like this most people stayed home and stood in front of the fridge with the door open or something.

He was heading for the thrift stores in Mangrove South. He'd decided that if he walked he'd be less visible. It was only twenty minutes. He took shortcuts and kept to the shadows. Every now and then he spoke to himself. He was testing his voice. There was no danger in it. He was east of downtown and the only people on the streets were old men with bottles of sweet red wine. They talked to
themselves all the time. He fitted right in. Christ, it was hot, though. He could feel the heat of the sidewalk through the soles of his boots.

He was almost there when he heard somebody call his name. He ignored it. Then somebody came running out of the sunlight towards him. It was Nathan.

‘You sick or something?' Nathan said.

Jed touched the scarf at his neck. ‘Sick? Heh.' That was one way of putting it.

‘So how are you doing? Did you find a place?'

There'd always been something manic about Nathan. Behind those green eyes, that blond hair. Behind that tan. He was like a dog with training that nobody can use.

Jed nodded. ‘I found a place.'

‘Where is it?'

As if he was going to tell him that.

‘Round here.'

Then Nathan said, ‘I remember when you used to live in the Towers.' Straight out. As if he could see right into the hooded part of Jed's brain.

Jed stared at him. But Nathan's eyes had misted over; he seemed to have lowered himself into his own memory.

‘I went there once. I looked for you.' He smiled. ‘Couldn't find you, though.'

‘Must've been years ago,' Jed said, still watching him closely.

‘The place was like a maze,' Nathan said.

Still is.

Jed chipped at the wall with his boot. And began to smile, because he'd thought of something.

‘By the way.' He took out one of Mario's hundred-dollar bills and smiled down at it. He'd kept it as a kind of souvenir. But now he had a better use for it. He held the bill out to Nathan. ‘Here's the money I owe you.'

It was worth $100 just to see Nathan's face.

‘But,' he was stammering, ‘but I only lent you eight.'

‘Yeah, well,' Jed said. ‘You were so kind, letting me stay and all.'

And his smile began to twist on his face, he just couldn't keep the sneer out of it. ‘Well,' he said, ‘better be going.'

And just walked away.

When he reached the corner of the street he glanced over his shoulder. Nathan was still standing on the sidewalk staring at him. Had Nathan guessed where he was living? No, he was thrown by the
money. That was all it was. Jed shifted his shoulders inside his jacket. So he used to live in the Towers once upon a time. So what. He hadn't told Nathan anything, had he?

He walked on. Two blocks west he found the thrift store he'd been looking for. Inside he moved from rail to rail. He began to assemble a wardrobe. It wasn't easy. These were all dead men's clothes. Why was everyone who died so fucking fat? You'd think a few thin people would die sometimes, but no. It took him fifteen minutes just to find a pair of pants and even then they were three inches too big around the waist and he needed a belt to hold them up. Still, it was a start. In half an hour he was standing in front of a full-length mirror. This was what he had on: a pale-blue turtleneck (it hid the ghosts); a pair of chinos in a kind of rusty ochre colour; brown leather sandals with rubber soles (he'd learned a thing or two from that Sister in the hospital); a grey fake snakeskin belt; and a maroon leather jacket with black buttons and scoop lapels.

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