I approached them without a word, put my arm round him -- it was like putting my arm round a skeleton -- and took his weight off Astrid. She looked at me and the brown eyes were sick with anxiety and fear. I don't suppose my sepia complexion gave her much confidence either.
'Please!' Her voice was beseeching. 'Please leave me. I can manage.'
'You can't. He's a very sick boy, Miss Lemay.'
She stared at me. 'Mr Sherman!'
'I'm not sure if I like that,' I said reflectively. 'An hour or two ago you'd never seen me, never even knew my name. But now that I've gone all sun-tanned and attractive -- Oops!'
George, whose rubbery legs had suddenly turned to jelly, had almost slipped from my grip. I could see that the two of us weren't going to get very far waltzing like this along the Rembrandtplein, so I stooped down to hoist him over my shoulder in a fireman's lift. She caught my arm in panic.
'No! Don't do that! Don't do that!'.
'Why ever not?' I said reasonably. 'It's easier this way.'
'No, no! If the police see you they will take him away.'
I straightened, put my arm around him again and tried to maintain him as near to the vertical as was possible. 'The hunter and the hunted,' I said. 'You and van Gelder both.'
'Please?'
'And of course, brother George is -- '
'How do you know his name?' she whispered.
'It's my business to know things,' I said loftily. 'As I was saying, brother George is under the further disadvantage of not being exactly unknown to the police. Having an ex-convict for a brother can be a distinct disadvantage.'
She made no reply. I doubt if I've ever seen anyone who looked so completely miserable and defeated.
'Where does he live?' I asked.
'With me, of course.' The question seemed to surprise her. 'It's not far.'
It wasn't either, not more than fifty yards down a side-street -- if so narrow and gloomy a lane could be called a street -- past the Balinova. The stairs up to Astrid's flat were the narrowest and most twisted I had ever come across, and with George slung over my shoulder I had difficulty in negotiating them. Astrid unlocked the door to her flat, which proved to be hardly larger than a rabbit-hutch, consisting, as far as I could see, of a tiny sitting-room with an equally tiny bedroom leading off it. I went through to the bedroom, laid George on the narrow bed, straightened and mopped my brow.
'I've climbed better ladders than those damned stairs of yours,' I said feelingly.
'I'm sorry. The girls' hostel is cheaper, but with George ... They don't pay very highly at the Balinova.'
It was obvious from the two tiny rooms, neat but threadbare like George's clothes, that they paid very little. I said: 'People in your position are lucky to get anything.'
'Please?'
'Not so much of the "please" stuff. You know damned well what I mean. Don't you, Miss Lemay -- or may I call you Astrid?'
'How do you know my name?' Offhand I couldn't ever recall having seen a girl wring her hands but that's what she was doing now. 'How -- how do you know things about me?'
'Come off it,' I said roughly. 'Give some credit to your boy-friend."
'Boy-friend? I haven't got a boy-friend.'
'Ex-boy-friend, then. Or does "late boy-friend" suit you better?'
'Jimmy?' she whispered.
'Jimmy Duclos,' I nodded. 'He may have fallen for you -- fatally fallen for you -- but he'd already told me something about you. I even have a picture of you.'
She seemed confused. 'But -- but at the airport --'
'What did you expect me to do -- embrace you? Jimmy was killed at the airport because he was on to something. What was that something?'
'I'm sorry. I can't help you.'
'Can't? Or won't?'
She made no reply.
'Did you love him, Astrid? Jimmy?'
She looked at me dumbly, her eyes glistening. She nodded slowly.
'And you won't tell me?' Silence. I sighed and tried another tack. 'Did Jimmy Duclos tell you what he was?'
She shook her head.
'But you guessed?'
She nodded.
'And told someone what you guessed.'
This got her. 'No! No! I told nobody. Before God, I told nobody!' She'd loved him, all right, and she wasn't lying.
'Did he ever mention me?'
'No.'
'But you know who I am?'
She just looked at me, two big tears trickling slowly down her cheeks.
'You know damn well that I run Interpol's narcotics bureau in London.'
More silence. I caught her shoulders and shook her angrily. 'Well, don't you?'
She nodded. A great girl for silences.
'Then if Jimmy didn't tell you, who did?'
'Oh God! Please leave me alone!' A whole lot of other tears were chasing the first two down her cheeks now. It was her day for crying and mine for sighing, so I sighed and changed 'my tack again and looked through the door at the boy on the bed.
'I take it,' I said, 'that George is not the breadwinner of the family?'
'George cannot work.' She said it as if she were stating a simple law of nature. 'He hasn't worked for over a year. But what has George to do with this?'
'George has everything to do with it.' I went and bent over him, looked at him closely, lifted an eyelid and dropped it again. 'What 'do you do for him when he's like this?'
There is nothing one can do.'
I pushed the sleeve up George's skeleton-like arm. Punctured, mottled and discoloured from innumerable injections, it was a revolting sight: Trudi's had been nothing compared to this. I said: 'There's nothing anyone will ever be able to do for him. You know that, don't you?'
'I know that.' She caught my speculative look, stopped dabbing her face with a lace handkerchief about the size of a postage stamp and smiled bitterly. 'You want me to roll up my sleeve.'
'I don't insult nice girls. What I want to do is to ask you some simple questions that you can answer. How long has George been like this?'
'Three years.'
'How long have you been in the Balinova?'
'Three years.'
'Like it there?'
'Like it?' This girl gave herself away every time she opened her mouth. 'Do you know what it is to work in a nightclub -- a nightclub like that? Horrible, nasty, lonely old men leering at you -- '
'Jimmy Duclos wasn't horrible or nasty or old.'
She was taken aback. 'No. No, of course not. Jimmy -- '
'Jimmy Duclos is dead, Astrid. Jimmy is dead because he fell for a nightclub hostess who's being blackmailed.'
'Nobody's blackmailing me.'
'No? Then who's putting the pressure on you to keep silent, to work at a job you obviously loathe? And why are they putting pressure on you? Is it because of George here? What has he done or what do they say he has done? I know he's been in prison, so it can't be that. What is it, Astrid, that made you spy on me? What do you know of Jimmy Duclos's death? I know how he died. But who killed him and why?'
'I didn't know he'd be killed!' She sat down on the bed-sofa, her hands covering ,her face, her shoulders heaving. 'I didn't know he would be killed.'
'All right, Astrid.' I gave up because I Was achieving nothing except a mounting dislike for myself. She'd probably loved Duclos, he was only a day dead and here was I lacerating bleeding wounds. 'I've known too many people walk in the fear of death to even try to make you talk. But think about it, Astrid, for God's sake and your own sake, think about it. It's your life, and that's all that's left for you to worry about now. George has no life left.'
'There's nothing I can do, nothing I can say.' Her face was still in her hands. 'Please go.'
I didn't think there was anything more I could do or say either, so I did as she asked and left.
Clad only in trousers and singlet I looked at myself in the tiny mirror in the tiny bathroom. All traces of the stain seemed to have been removed from my face, neck and hands, which was more than I could say for the large and once-white towel I held in my hands. It was sodden and stained beyond recovery to a deep chocolate colour.
I went through the door into the bedroom that was hardly big enough to take the bed and the bed-settee it contained. The bed was occupied by Maggie and Belinda, both sitting upright, both looking very fetching in very attractive nightdresses which appeared to consist mainly of holes. But I'd more urgent problems on my mind at the moment than the way in which some night-wear manufacturers skimped on their material.
'You've ruined our towel,' Belinda complained.
'Tell them you were removing your make-up.' I reached for my shirt, which was a deep russet colour all round the inside of the neck-band, but there was nothing I could do about that. 'So most of the nightclub girls live in this Hostel Paris?'
Maggie nodded. 'So Mary said.'
'So Mary said.'
'Mary?'
This nice English girl working in the Trianon.'
'There are no nice English girls working in the Trianon, only naughty English girls. Was she one of the girls in church?' Maggie shook her head. 'Well, that at least bears out what Astrid said.'
'Astrid?' Belinda said. 'You spoke to her?'
'I passed the time of day with her. Not very profitably, I'm afraid. She wasn't communicative.' I told them briefly how uncommunicative she'd been, then went on: 'Well, it's time you two started doing a little work instead of hanging about nightclubs.' They looked at each other, then coldly at me. 'Maggie, take a stroll in the Vondel Park tomorrow. See if Trudi is there -- you know her. Don't let her see you -- she knows you. See what she does, if she meets anyone, talks to anyone: it's a big park but you should have little difficulty in locating her if she's there -- she'll be accompanied by an old dear who's about five feet round the middle. Belinda, keep tabs on that hostel tomorrow evening. If you recognize any girl who was in the church, follow her and see what she's up to.' I shrugged into my very damp jacket. 'Good night.'
'That was all? You're off?' Maggie seemed faintly surprised.
'My, you are in a hurry,' Belinda said.
'Tomorrow night,' I promised, I'll tuck you both in and tell you all about Goldilocks and the three bears. Tonight I have things to attend to.'
CHAPTER SEVEN
I parked the police car on top of a 'No parking' sign painted on the road and walked the last hundred yards to the hotel. The barrel-organ had gone to wherever barrel-organs go in the watches of the night, and the foyer was deserted except for the assistant manager who was sitting dozing in a chair behind the desk. I reached over, quietly unhooked the key and walked up the first two flights of stairs before taking the lift in case I waked the assistant manager from what appeared to be a sound -- and no doubt well-deserved -- sleep.
I took off my wet clothes -- which meant all of them -- showered, put on a dry outfit, went down by lift and banged my room key noisily on the desk. The assistant manager blinked himself awake, looked at me, his watch and the key in that order.
'Mr Sherman. I -- I didn't hear you come in.'
'Hours ago. You were asleep. This quality of childlike innocence -- '
He wasn't listening to me. For a second time he peered fuzzily at his watch.
'What are you doing, Mr Sherman?'
'I am sleepwalking.'
'It's half-past two in the morning!'
'I don't sleepwalk during the day,' I said reasonably. I turned and peered through the vestibule. 'What? No doorman, no porter, no taximan, no organ-grinder, not a tail or shadow in sight. Lax. Remiss. You will be held to account for this negligence.'
'Please?'
'Eternal vigilance is the price of admiralty.'
'I do not understand.'
'I'm not sure I do either. Are there any barbers open at this time of night?'
'Are there any -- did you say -- '
'Never mind. I'm sure I'll find one somewhere.'
I left. Twenty yards from the hotel I stepped into a doorway, cheerfully prepared to clobber anyone who seemed bent on following me, but after two or three minutes it became clear that no one was. I retrieved my car and drove down towards the docks area, parking it some distance and two streets away from the First Reformed Church of the American Huguenot Society. I walked down to the canal.
The canal, lined with the inevitable elm and lime trees, was dark and brown and still and reflected no light at all from the dimly-lit narrow streets on either side. Not one building on either side of the canal showed a light. The church looked more dilapidated and unsafe than ever and had about it that strange quality of stillness and remoteness and watchfulness that many churches seem to possess at night. The huge crane with its massive boom was silhouetted menacingly against the night sky. The absence of any indication of life was total. All that was lacking was a cemetery.
I crossed the street, mounted the steps and tried the church door. It was unlocked. There was no reason why it should have been locked but I found it vaguely surprising that it wasn't. The hinges must have been well-oiled for the door opened and closed soundlessly.
I switched on the torch and made a quick 360 traverse. I was alone. I made a more methodical inspection. The interior was small, even smaller than one would have guessed from outside, blackened and ancient, so ancient that I could see that the oaken pews had originally been fashioned by adzes. I lifted the beam of the torch but there was no balcony, just half-a-dozen small dusty stained-glass windows that even on a sunny day could have admitted only a minimal quantity of light. The entrance door was the only external door to the church. The only other door was in a corner at the top end of the church, half-way between the pulpit and an antique bellows-operated organ. I made for this door, laid my hand on the knob and switched off the torch. This door creaked, but not loudly. I stepped forward cautiously and softly and it was as well that I did for what I stepped on was not another floor beyond but the first step in a flight of descending stairs. I followed those steps down, eighteen of them in a complete circle and moved forward gingerly, my hand extended in front of me to locate the door which I felt must be in front of me. But there was no door in front of me. I switched on my torch.