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Authors: Eric Ambler

Tags: #Jewel Thieves, #Turkey, #Criminals, #Fiction, #Athens (Greece), #Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Espionage

The Light of Day (23 page)

BOOK: The Light of Day
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It was a four-foot drop to the roof of the terrace and I made scarcely any noise getting down. I had more trouble at the end of the terrace. I am really not built for climbing, and I tried to use the trellis-work as a step-ladder. It gave way, and I slithered to the ground, clutching at the branches of an espaliered peach tree.

I managed to get to my room without anyone seeing the mess I was in. When I had cleaned up and changed my shirt, I went down to the car and put it away in the garage.

If I had noticed then that the door panels had been taken off, things would have turned out very differently for Harper, Lipp and Miller, but I didn't notice. It didn't even occur to roe to look at them. I was still too flustered to do anything except try to behave naturally Garaging the car was just a way of showing myself outside and on the job.

I went back into the kitchen There was nobody there I found a bottle of Geven's brandy and had a drink and a cigarette. When I was quite calm again, I went out and walked down the drive to the road.

The Opel was parked near the fishing-boat pier I strolled across to it and saw the men inside watching me. As
I passed, I said: ‘
Tufan.'

When I had gone on a few paces I heard a car door
open
A
moment or so later a man fell in step beside me.

What is it?' He was a dark, hard-eyed police type in an oatmeal-coloured shirt with buttoned pockets. He spoke in French.

'Something dangerous is to be attempted tomorrow,' I said. 'I do not know what.I overheard part of a conversation. Major
Tufan
should be informed '

'Very well. Why did you not drive today?'

‘They told me I
wasn't needed Where did they go?'

‘To Istanbul, Beyoglu. They drove to a garage by the Spanish Consulate. It is a garage that has spare parts for American cars. The driver, Fischer, remained there with the car for ten minutes. The other two men and the woman walked to the Divan Hotel. They had lunch there. Fischer joined them there and also had lunch. Then they walked back to the garage, picked up the car and returned here. Major
Tufan
says that you are to report on a chart later.'

'If I can. Tell him I made a search of the bedrooms while they were out, but could not find the chart. I will try to search the living-rooms tonight. It may be quite late before I can report. Will you be here?'

'Someone will be.'

'All
right.'

As we turned and walked back towards the Opel. I crossed the road and re-entered the drive. I had something to think about now. From what I had overheard in the courtyard the night before, I knew that Fischer had some special task to perform that day. Had he already performed it, or was it yet to be performed? Driving the car into Istanbul so that he and the others could have some eatable food didn't seem very special. On the other hand, it was odd that I should have been told to stay behind, and odd about that visit to the garage. There was nothing wrong with the car and it needed no spare parts. And why had Fischer not walked to the Divan with the other three? Why had he stayed behind?

It is obvious that I should have thought of the car doors first. I didn't do'so for a very simple reason: I knew from personal experience how long it took to remove and replace one panel, and Fischer had not been at the garage long
enough to empty one door, let alone four. The possibility that his function might have been to give orders instead of doing the actual work didn't occur to me,
then.
And, I may say,
it
didn't occur to
Tufan
at
all.
If it had, I should have been spared a ghastly experience.

Anyway, when I went back through the yard to take a look at the car, my mind was on spare parts. I looked in the luggage compartment first to see if anything had been stowed away there; then I examined the engine. You can usually tell by the smudges and oil-smears when work has been done on an engine. I drew a blank, of course. It wasn't until I opened the door to see if anything had been left in the glove compartment that I saw the scratches.

Whoever had taken the panels off had made the very mistake I had been so careful to avoid; he had used an ordinary screwdriver on the Phillips heads. There were scratches and bright marks on the metal as well as cuts in the leather where the tool had slipped. Of course, nobody would have noticed them on a casual inspection, but I was so conscious of the panels and what I had seen behind them that the slightest mark stood out. I went over all four and knew at once that they had all been taken off and replaced. I also knew, from the different feel of the doors when I swung them on their hinges, that the heavy things which had been concealed inside were no longer there. Presumably, they had been removed in the garage near the Spanish Consulate. Where they were at that moment was anybody's

I wondered whether I should go down to the road again immediately and report to the surveillance car, or wait until I reported later about the map. I decided to wait. If the stuff was still in the garage, it would probably still be there in the morning. If, as seemed more likely, it had already been moved somewhere else, men the damage was done and two or three hours would make no difference. Anyway, I didn't
want
to go back down to the road. I felt that I had run enough risks for one day already; and I still had to go looking for that damned map. I think I did the sensible thing. I can't stand people who are wise after the event, but it must be obvious now that it was
Tufan
who made the
real
mistakes, not me.

The trouble with Geven began while we were in the kitchen eating our dinner; or, rather, while
t
was eating and he was putting away more brandy. It was about seven o'clock, and he had been drinking steadily since six. In that hour he must have had nearly a third of a bottle. He wasn't quite drunk, but he was certainly far from sober.

He had made a perfectly delicious risotto with finely chopped chicken livers and pimentos in it. I was on my second helping and trying to persuade him to eat what he had on his plate, when Fischer came in.

'Geven!'

Geven looked up and gave him his wet smile.
'Vive la
compagnie,'
he said convivially, and reached for a dirty glass.
'Un
petit
verre, monsieur?'

Fischer ignored the invitation. 'I wish to know what you are preparing for dinner tonight,' he said.

'It is prepared.' Geven gave him a dismissive wave of his hand and turned to me again.

Then can you tell me what it is.' At that moment Fischer caught sight of my plate. 'Ah, I see. A risotto, eh?'

Geven's lip quivered. ‘That is for us servants. For the master and his guests there is a more important dish in the manner of the country.'

‘What dish?'

'You would not understand.'

'I wish to know.'

Geven answered in Turkish. I understood one word of what he said:
kuzu,
baby lamb.

To my surprise, and to Geven's, too, I think, Fischer answered in the same language.

Geven stood up and shouted something.

Fischer shouted back, and then walked from the room before Geven had time to answer.

Geven sat down again, his lower lip quivering so violently that, when he tried to drain his glass, most of the brandy ran down his chin. He refilled the glass and glowered at me.

‘Pisliki'
 
he said.
'Domuzi.’

Those are rude words in Turkish. I gathered that they
were meant for Fischer, so I said nothing and got on with my food.

He refilled my glass and shoved it towards me. 'A toast,' he said.

'All
right.'

‘There'll be no promotion this side of the ocean, so drink up, my lads, bless 'em
all!
'

Only he didn't say 'bless'. I had forgotten that he had been educated in Cyprus when it was under British rule.

'Drink!'

I drank. 'Bless 'em all.’

He began to sing. 'Bless all the sergeants and W.O. ones, bless all the corporals and their bleeding sons! Drink!'

I sipped. 'Bless 'em all.'

He drained the glass again and leaned across the chopping table, breathing heavily. 'I tell you,' he said menacingly, 'if that bastard says one more word, I kill him.'

'He's just a fool.'

‘You defend him?’ The lower lip quivered.

'No, no. But is he
worth
killing?'

He poured himself another drink. Both lips were working now, as if he had brought another thought agency into play in order to grapple with the unfamiliar dilemma my question had created.

The Hamuls arrived just then to prepare for the service of the evening meal, and I saw the old man's eyes take in the situation. He began talking to Geven. He spoke a country dialect and I couldn't even get the drift of what he was saying; but it seemed to improve matters a little. Geven grinned occasionally and even laughed once. However, he still went on drinking, and, when I tried to slip away to my room, there was a sudden
fiare
of temper.

'Where you go?'

‘You have work to do here. I am in the way.'

‘You sit down. You are my guest in the kitchen. You drink nothing. Why?'

I had a whole tumbler full of brandy in front of me by now. I took another sip.

'Drink!'

I
drank and tried to look as if I were enjoying myself.

When he wasn't looking, I managed to tip half the brandy in my glass down the sink. It didn't do much good. As soon as he noticed the half-empty glass, he filled it up again.

Dinner had been ordered for eight-thirty, and by then he was weaving. It was Mrs Hamul who did the dishing up. He leaned against the range, glass in hand, smiling benignly on her while she ladled the loathsome contents of the stewpot on to the service platters. Dinner was finally served.

'Bless 'em all!'

‘Bless 'em all!’

'Drink!'

At that moment there was an indistinct shout from the direction of the dining-room. Then a door along the passage was flung open, and there were quick footsteps. I heard Miss Lipp call out 'Hans!’

Then Fischer came into the kitchen. He was carrying a plateful of food.

As Geven turned unsteadily to confront him, Fischer yelled something in Turkish and then flung the plate straight at his head.

The plate hit Geven on the shoulder and then crashed to the floor; but quite a lot of food went on to his face. Gravy ran down his smock.

Fischer was still shouting. Geven stared at him stupidly. Then, as Fischer flung a final insult and turned to go, a most peculiar expression came over Geven's face. It was almost like a wide-eyed smile.
'Monsieur
est servi'
he
said. At the same instant, I saw his hand dart out for the chopping knife.

I shouted a warning to Fischer, but he was already out in the passage. Geven was after him in a flash. By the time I got through the door, Fischer was already backing away and yelling for help. There was blood streaming from a gash on his face and he had his hands up trying to protect himself. Geven was hacking and slashing at him like a madman.

As I ran forward and clung on to the arm wielding the chopping knife, Harper came into the passage from the dining-room.

'Senden
illâlla!'
bawled Geven.

Theo
Harper hit him in
the
side of the neck and he went down like an empty sack.

Fischer's arms and hands were pouring blood now, and he stood there looking down at them as if they did not belong to him.

Harper glanced at me. 'Get the car around, quick.'

I stopped the car at the foot of the steps and went in through the front of the house. It did not seem to be a moment for standing on ceremony.

Fischer was sitting in a marble-floored washroom just off the main hall. Harper and Miss Lipp were wrapping his hands and arms in towels; Miller was trying to staunch the face wound; the Hamuls were running round in circles.

Harper saw me and motioned to Hamul. 'Ask the old guy where the nearest doctor is. Not a hospital, a private doctor.'

'I will ask him,' muttered Fischer. His face was a dirty grey. ^

I caught Hamul's arm and shoved him forward.

There were two doctors in Sariyer, he said, but the nearest was outside
Bülyükdere in
the other direction. He would come to the villa if called by telephone.

Harper shook his head when Fischer told him this. 'We'll go to him
,'
he said. We'll give him five hundred lira and tell him you tripped over an electric fan. That should fix it' He looked at Miss Lipp. 'You and Leo had better stay here, honey. The fewer, the better.'

BOOK: The Light of Day
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