The Tailor of Panama (3 page)

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Authors: John le Carré

Tags: #Modern, #Mystery, #Thriller, #Historical

BOOK: The Tailor of Panama
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But it was in the face which at forty he deserved that the zest and pleasure of the man were most apparent. An unrepentant innocence shone from his baby-blue eyes. His mouth, even in repose, gave out a warm and unobstructed smile. To catch sight of it unexpectedly was to feel a little better.

Great Men in Panama have gorgeous black secretaries in prim blue bus-conductress uniforms. They have panelled, steel-lined bulletproof doors of rain-forest teak with brass handles you can't turn because the doors are worked on buzzers from within so that Great Men can't be kidnapped. Ramón Rudd's room was huge and modern and sixteen floors up, with tinted windows from floor to ceiling looking onto the bay and a desk the size of a tennis court and Ramón Rudd clinging to the far end of it like a very small rat clinging to a very big raft. He was plump as well as short, with a dark-blue jaw and slicked-dark hair with blue-black sideburns and greedy bright eyes. For practice he insisted on speaking English, mainly through the nose. He had paid large sums to research his genealogy and claimed to be descended from Scottish adventurers left stranded by the Darién disaster. Six weeks ago he had ordered
a kilt in the Rudd tartan so that he could take part in Scottish dancing at the Club Unión. Ramón Rudd owed Pendel ten thousand dollars for five suits. Pendel owed Rudd a hundred and fifty thousand dollars. As a gesture, Ramón was adding the unpaid interest to the capital, which was why the capital was growing.

“Peppermint?” Rudd enquired, pushing at a brass tray of wrapped green sweets.

“Thank you, Ramón,” Pendel said, but didn't take one. Ramón helped himself.

“Why are you paying a
lawyer
so much money?” Rudd asked after a two-minute silence in which he sucked his peppermint and they separately grieved over the rice farm's latest account sheets.

“He said he was going to bribe the judge, Ramón,” Pendel explained with the humility of a culprit giving evidence. “He said they were friends. He said he'd rather keep me out of it.”

“But why did the judge postpone the hearing if your lawyer bribed him?” Rudd reasoned. “Why did he not award the water to you as he promised?”

“It was a different judge by then, Ramón. A new judge was appointed after the election, and the bribe wasn't transferable from the old one to the new one, you see. Now the new judge is marking time to see which side comes up with the best offer. The clerk says the new judge has got more integrity than the old one, so naturally he's more expensive. Scruples are expensive in Panama, he says. And it's getting worse.”

Ramón Rudd took off his spectacles and breathed on them, then polished each lens in turn with a piece of chamois leather from the top pocket of his Pendel & Braithwaite suit. Then settled the gold loops behind his shiny little ears.

“Why don't you bribe someone at the Ministry of Agricultural Development?” he suggested, with a superior forbearance.

“We did try, Ramón, but they're high-minded, you see. They say the other side has already bribed them and it wouldn't be ethical for them to switch allegiance.”

“Couldn't your farm manager arrange something? You pay him a big salary. Why doesn't he involve himself?”

“Well now, Angel's a bit lapsadaisy, frankly, Ramón,” said Pendel, who sometimes chose unconsciously to improve on the English language. “I think he may be more use not being there, not to put too fine a point on it. I'm going to have to screw myself up to say something, if I'm not mistaken.”

Ramón Rudd's jacket was still pinching him under the armpits. They stood at the big window face-to-face while he folded his arms across his chest, then lowered them to his sides, then linked his hands behind his back, while Pendel attentively tugged with his fingertips at the seams, waiting like a doctor to know what hurt.

“It's only a tad, Ramón, if it's anything at all,” he pronounced at last. “I'm not unpicking the sleeves unnecessarily, because it's bad for the jacket. But if you drop it in next time, we'll see.”

They sat down again.

“Is the farm producing any rice?” Rudd asked.

“A little, Ramón, I'll put it that way. We're competing with the globalisation, I'm told, which is the cheap rice that's imported from other countries where there's subsidisation from the government. I was hasty. We both were.”

“You and Louisa?”

“Well, you and me, really, Ramón.”

Ramón Rudd frowned and looked at his watch, which was what he did with clients who had no money.

“It's a pity you didn't make the farm a separate company while you had the chance, Harry. Pledging a good shop as surety for a rice farm that has run out of water makes no sense at all.”

“But Ramón—it was what you insisted on at the time,” Pendel objected. But his shame already undermined his indignation. “You said that unless we jointly accounted the businesses, you couldn't take the risk on the rice farm. That was a condition of the loan. All right, it was my fault, I should never have listened
to you. But I did. I think you were representing the bank that day, not Harry Pendel.”

They talked racehorses. Ramón owned a couple. They talked property. Ramón owned a chunk of coast on the Atlantic side. Maybe Harry would drive out one weekend, buy a plot perhaps, even if he didn't build on it for a year or two, Ramón's bank would provide a mortgage. But Ramón didn't say bring Louisa and the kids, although Ramón's daughter went to the María Inmaculada and the two girls were friendly. Neither, to Pendel's immense relief, did he find it appropriate to refer to the two hundred thousand dollars Louisa had inherited from her late father and handed to Pendel to invest in something sound.

“Have you been trying to shift your account to a different bank?” Ramón Rudd asked, when everything unsayable had been left thoroughly unsaid.

“I don't think there's a lot would have me at this particular moment, Ramón. Why?”

“One of the merchant banks called me. Wanted to know all about you. Your credit standing, commitments, turnover. A lot of things I don't tell anybody. Naturally.”

“They're daft. They're talking about someone else. What merchant bank was that?”

“A British one. From London.”

“From
London
? They called
you
? About
me
? Who? Which one? I thought they were all broke.”

Ramón Rudd regretted he could not be more precise. He had told them nothing, naturally. Inducements didn't interest him.


What
inducements, for heaven's sake?” Pendel exclaimed.

But Rudd seemed almost to have forgotten them. Introductions, he said vaguely. Recommendations. It was immaterial. Harry was a friend.

“I've been thinking about a blazer,” Ramón Rudd said as they shook hands. “Navy blue.”

“This sort of blue?”

“Darker. Double breasted. Brass buttons. Scottish ones.”

So Pendel in another gush of gratitude told him about this fabulous new line of buttons he'd got hold of from the London Badge & Button Company.

“They could do your family coat of arms for you, Ramón. I'm seeing a thistle. They could do you the cuff links too.”

Ramón said he'd think about it. The day being Friday, they wished each other a nice weekend. And why not? It was still an ordinary day in tropical Panama. A few clouds on his personal horizon perhaps, but nothing Pendel hadn't coped with in his time. A fancy London bank had telephoned Ramón—or there again, maybe it hadn't. Ramón was a nice enough fellow in his way, a valued customer when he paid, and they'd downed a few jars together. But you'd have to have a doctorate in extrasensory perception to know what was going on inside that Spanish-Scottish head of his.

To arrive in his little side street is for Harry Pendel a coming into harbour every time. On some days he may tease himself with the notion that the shop has vanished, been stolen, wiped out by a bomb. Or it was never there in the first place, it was one of his fantasies, something put in his imagination by his late Uncle Benny. But today his visit to the bank has unsettled him, and his eye hunts out the shop and fixes on it the moment he enters the shadow of the tall trees. You're a real house, he tells the rusty-pink Spanish roof tiles winking at him through the foliage. You're not a shop at all. You're the kind of house an orphan dreams of all his life. If only Uncle Benny could see you now . . .

“Notice the flower-strewn porch there,” Pendel asks Benny with a nudge, “inviting you to come inside where it's nice and cool and you'll be looked after like a pasha?”

“Harry boy, it's the maximum,” Uncle Benny replies, touching the brim of his black homburg hat with both his palms at once, which was what he did when he had something cooking. “A shop like that, you can charge a pound for coming through the door.”

“And the painted sign, Benny?
P ξ B
scrolled together in a crest, which is what gives the shop its name up and down the town, whether you're in the Club Unión or the Legislative Assembly or the Palace of Herons itself? ‘Been to P & B lately?' ‘There goes old So-and-so in his P & B suit.' That's the way they talk round here, Benny!”

“I've said it before, Harry boy, I'll say it again. You've got the fluence. You've got the rock of eye. Who gave it you I'll always wonder.”

His courage near enough restored, and Ramón Rudd near enough forgotten, Harry Pendel mounts the steps to start his working day.

2

Osnard's phone call, when it came around ten-thirty, caused not a ripple. He was a new customer, and new customers by definition must be put through to Señor Harry or, if he was tied up, invited to leave their number so that Señor Harry could call them back immediately.

Pendel was in his cutting room, shaping patterns out of brown paper for a naval uniform to the strains of Gustav Mahler. The cutting room was his sanctuary, and he shared it with no man. The key lived in his waistcoat pocket. Sometimes, for the luxury of what the key meant to him, he would slip it in the lock and turn it against the world as proof he was his own master. And sometimes before unlocking the door again he would stand for a second with his head bowed and his feet together in an attitude of submission before resuming his good day. Nobody saw him do this except the part of him that played spectator to his more theatrical actions.

Behind him, in rooms equally tall, under bright new lighting and electric punkahs, his pampered workers of all races sewed and ironed and chattered with a liberty not customarily granted to Panama's toiling classes. But none toiled with more dedication than their employer, Pendel, as he paused to catch a wave of Mahler, then deftly closed the shears along the yellow chalk curve that defined the back and shoulders of a Colombian admiral of the fleet who wished only to exceed in fineness his disgraced predecessor.

The uniform Pendel had designed for him was particularly splendid. The white breeches, already entrusted to his Italian trouser makers ensconced a few doors down the corridor behind him, were to be fitted flush against the seat, suitable for standing but not sitting. The tailcoat, which Pendel was this minute cutting, was white and navy blue, with gold epaulettes and braid cuffs, gold frogging, and a high Nelsonian collar crusted with oak leaves round ships' anchors—an imaginative touch of Pendel's own, which had pleased the admiral's private secretary when Pendel faxed the drawing to him. Pendel had never entirely understood what Benny meant by rock of eye, but when he looked at that drawing he knew he had it.

And as he went on cutting to the music, his back began to arch in empathy until he became Admiral Pendel descending a great staircase for his inaugural ball. Such harmless imaginings in no way impaired his tailor's skills. Your ideal cutter, he liked to maintain—with acknowledgements to his late partner, Braithwaite—is your born impersonator. His job is to place himself in the clothes of whomever he is cutting for, and become that person until the rightful owner claims them.

It was in this happy state of transference that Pendel received Osnard's call. First Marta came on the line. Marta was his receptionist, telephonist, accountant and sandwich maker, a dour, loyal, half-black little creature with a scarred, lopsided face blotched by skin grafts and bad surgery.

“Good morning,” she said in Spanish, in her beautiful voice.

Not “Harry,” not “Señor Pendel”—she never did. Just good morning in the voice of an angel, because her voice and eyes were the two parts of her face that had survived unscathed.

“And good morning to you, Marta.”

“I've got a new customer on the line.”

“From which side of the bridge?”

This was a running joke they had.

“Your side. He's an Osnard.”

“A
what
?”

“Señor Osnard. He's English. He makes jokes.”

“What sort of jokes?”

“You tell me.”

Setting aside his shears, Pendel turned Mahler down to nearly nothing and slid an appointments book and a pencil towards him in that order. At his cutting table, it was known of him, he was a stickler for precision: cloth here, patterns there, invoices and order book over there, everything shipshape. To cut, he had donned as usual a black silk-backed waistcoat with a fly front, of his own design and making. He liked the air of service it conveyed.

“So now how are we spelling that, sir?” he enquired cheerily when Osnard gave his name again.

A smile got into Pendel's voice when he spoke into the telephone. Total strangers had an immediate feeling of talking to somebody they liked. But Osnard was possessed of the same infectious gift, apparently, because a merriment quickly developed between them which afterwards accounted for the length and ease of their very English conversation.

“It's O-S-N at the beginning and A-R-D at the end,” said Osnard, and something in the way he said it must have struck Pendel as particularly witty, because he wrote the name down as Osnard dictated it, in three-letter groups of capitals with an ampersand between.

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