The Other Side of Silence

The Other Side of Silence by Philip Kerr

Book: The Other Side of Silence by Philip Kerr Read Free Book Online
Authors: Philip Kerr
Ads: Link
don’t know. Can that hold fifty thousand dollars?”
    â€œI should say so.”
    â€œIn which case, use it. Either way, have the money ready by seven o’clock. The meet is at eight. I’ll bring the negative and the photograph straight to the Villa Mauresque, as soon as I have them.”
    â€œFifty thousand dollars,” he exclaimed grumpily. “Must be the most expensive fucking photograph in history.”
    â€œA picture can tell a thousand words. Isn’t that what they say?”
    â€œChrist, I hope not. Otherwise I’m out of f-fucking work.”
    â€œLook, sir, it’s probably best that none of the words that this particular picture can tell are ever heard outside of a Turkish bathhouse or a novel by Marcel Proust. So you’d best reconcile yourself to paying up.”
    â€œThat’s easy for you to say, Mr. Wolf. Fifty thousand dollars is fifty thousand dollars.”
    â€œYou’re right. And I’ll admit, fifty thousand pictures of Washington are fifty thousand stories I’d love to hear. So, don’t pay him. Tell him to go to hell and take the flak. It’s up to you, sir. But sometimes, when it’s absolutely necessary, everyone has to eat flies.”
    â€œSuppose I give you the money and you drive straight for the Italian border? You could be in Genoa before midnight and on a boat to fuck knows where.”
    â€œAnd leave my wonderful job here at the Grand Hôtel? I don’t think so. Every man likes to delude himself that he has some moral standards. For years I told myself that I was the most honest man I’d ever met. Of course, that was easy enough in Nazi Germany. But why take my word for it? Mark a few bills. Take a few serial numbers. I’d be easy enough to trace. I daresay even the French police wouldn’t have too much of a struggle to find me or it. Come to think of it, do that anyway. You never know.”
    The rest of Sunday passed slowly as it often does, especially when there is an important task to be completed at the end of it. Hebel came back to the hotel just after lunch and went straightto his room without so much as a glance in my direction. He was a cool one, I’ll say that for him. I went out to his car and searched it; there was a brochure from the perfume factory in Grasse and I concluded that this was where he’d been. Meanwhile, the small of my back had started hurting, which is not unusual when I’ve been on my feet for much of the day, and I was keen to get home and have a bath. But first I had an important job to do. As soon as Hebel went out again—around six—I took his key and went upstairs to search the German’s room. I was nibbling around at the edge of his viperous person, keen to see what else he might have among his high-quality possessions that was potentially compromising to my vulnerable and easily compromised client. Letters, perhaps, or another photograph. It was my idea of room service. He had left nothing of value to him in the hotel safe, I knew, because I would certainly have known about it, and nothing in his car, either. That left his hotel suite and, perhaps, as I had suggested to Maugham, some local lawyer with a strong room and a weekly retainer. What I did find was surprising, although not in the way I might haveexpected.

ELEVEN
    I t was a nice suite atop the east wing of the hotel, just below a flagpole and the Tricolore, full of summer evening light and the smell of cut flowers, with a fine view of gently sloping lush gardens and, beyond, the deep blue sea. Anchored in the bay, the millionaire Greek shipowner Aristotle Onassis’s yacht, the
Christina O
, with its distinctive yellow smokestack and naval frigate lines, looked like a brand-new
Argo
in search of some more modern and profitable golden fleece, as devised by Charles Ponzi, perhaps, or Ferdinand Demara.
    I looked around the room. There was a big bed, a comfortable seating area, an en

Similar Books

The Willows and Beyond

Kenneth Grahame, William Horwood, Patrick Benson

Young Lions Roar

Andrew Mackay

The Dhow House

Jean McNeil

The Night

Felicity Heaton