Trudi was duly scolded by both van Gelder and Herta with that vehemence and severity that always cloaks profound relief, then Trudi was led off, presumably to bed. Van Gelder poured a couple of drinks with the speed of a man who feels he requires one and asked me to sit down. I declined.
‘I’ve a taxi outside. Where can I find Colonel de Graaf at this time of night? I want to borrow a car from him, preferably a fast one.’
Van Gelder smiled. ‘No questions from me, my friend. You’ll find the Colonel at his office I know he’s working late tonight.’ He raised his glass. ‘A thousand thanks. I was a very, very worried man.’
‘You had a police alert out for her?’
‘An unofficial police alert.’ Van Gelder smiled again, but wryly. ‘You know why. A few trusted friends but there are nine hundred thousand people in Amsterdam.’
‘Any idea why she was so far from home?’
‘At least there’s no mystery about that. Herta takes her there often – to the church, I mean. All the Huyler people in Amsterdam go there. It’s a Huguenot church – there’s one in Huyler as well, well, not so much a church, some sort of business premises they use on Sundays as a place of worship. Herta takes her there too – the two of them go out to the island often. The churches and the Vondel Park – those are the only outings the child has.’
Herta waddled into the room and van Gelder looked at her anxiously. Herta, with what might conceivably have passed for an expression of satisfaction on her leathery features, shook her head and waddled out again.
‘Well, thank God for that.’ Van Gelder drained his glass. ‘No injections.’
‘Not this time.’ I drained my glass in turn, said goodbye and left.
I paid off the taxi in the Marnixstraat. Van Gelder had phoned ahead to say I was coming and Colonel de Graaf was waiting for me. If he was busy, he showed no signs of it. He was engaged in his usual occupation of overflowing the chair he was sitting in, the desk in front of him was bare, his fingers were steepled under his chin and as I entered he brought his eyes down from a leisured contemplation of infinity.
‘One assumes you make progress?’ he greeted me.
‘One assumes wrongly, I’m afraid.’
‘What? No vistas of broad highways leading to the final solution?’
‘Cul-de-sacs only.’
‘Something about a car, I understand from the Inspector.’
‘Please.’
‘May one enquire why you wish this vehicle?’
‘To drive up the cul-de-sacs. But that’s not really what I came to ask you about.’
‘I hardly thought it was.’
‘I’d like a search warrant.’
‘What for?’
‘To make a search,’ I said patiently. ‘Accompanied by a senior officer or officers, of course, to make it legal.’
‘Who? Where?’
‘Morgenstern and Muggenthaler. Souvenir warehouse. Down by the docks I don’t know the address.’
‘I’ve heard of them.’ De Graaf nodded. ‘I know nothing against them. Do you?’
‘No.’
‘So what makes you so curious about them?’
‘I honest to God don’t know. I want to find out why I am so curious. I was in their place tonight–’
‘They’re closed at night-time, surely.’
I dangled a set of skeleton keys in front of his eyes.
‘You know it’s a felony to be in possession of such instruments,’ de Graaf said severely.
I put the keys back in my pocket. ‘What instruments?’
‘A passing hallucination,’ de Graaf said agreeably.
‘I’m curious about why they have a time-lock on the steel door leading to their office. I’m curious about the large stocks of Bibles carried on their premises.’ I didn’t mention the smell of cannabis or the lad lurking behind the puppets. ‘But what I’m really interested in getting hold of is their list of suppliers.’
‘A search warrant we can arrange on any pretext,’ de Graaf said. ‘I’ll accompany you myself. Doubtless you’ll explain your interest in greater detail in the morning. Now about this car. Van Gelder has an excellent suggestion. A specially-engined police car, complete with everything from two-way radio to handcuffs, but to all appearance a taxi, will be here in two minutes. Driving a taxi, you understand, poses certain problems.’
‘I’ll try not to make too much on the side. Have you anything else for me?’
‘Also in two minutes. Your car is bringing some information from the Records Office.’
Two minutes it was and a folder was delivered to de Graaf’s desk. He looked through some papers.
‘Astrid Lemay. Her real name, perhaps oddly enough. Dutch father, Grecian mother. He was a vice-consul in Athens, now deceased. Whereabouts of mother unknown. Twenty-four. Nothing known against her – nothing much known for her, either. Must say the background is a bit vague. Works as a hostess in the Balinova night-club, lives in a small flat near-by. Has one known relative, brother George, aged twenty. Ah! This may interest you. George, apparently, has spent six months as Her Majesty’s guest.’
‘Drugs?’
‘Assault and attempted robbery, very amateurish effort, it seems. He made the mistake of assaulting a plain-clothes detective. Suspected of being an addict – probably trying to get money to buy more. All we have.’ He turned to another paper. ‘This MOO 144 number you gave me is the radio call-sign for a Belgian coaster, the Marianne , due in from Bordeaux tomorrow. I have a pretty efficient staff, no?’
‘Yes. When does it arrive?’
‘Noon. We search it?’
‘You wouldn’t find anything. But please don’t go near it. Any ideas on the other two numbers?’
‘Nothing, I’m afraid on 910020. Or on 2797.’ He paused reflectively. ‘Or could that be 797 twice – you know. 797797?’
‘Could be anything.’
De Graaf took a telephone directory from a drawer, put it away again, picked up a phone. ‘A telephone number,’ he said. ‘797797. Find out who’s listed under that number. At once, please.’
We sat in silence till the phone rang. De Graaf listened briefly, replaced the receiver.
‘The Balinova night-club,’ he said.
‘The efficient staff has a clairvoyant boss.’
‘And where does this clairvoyance lead you to?’
‘The Balinova night-club.’ I stood up. ‘I have a rather readily identifiable face, wouldn’t you say, Colonel?’
‘It’s not a face people forget. And those white scars. I don’t think your plastic surgeon was really trying.’
‘He was trying all right. To conceal his almost total ignorance of plastic surgery. Have you any brown stain in this HQ?’
‘Brown stain?’ He blinked at me, then smiled widely. ‘Oh no, Major Sherman! Disguise! In this day and age? Sherlock Holmes has been dead these many years.’
‘If I’d half the brains Sherlock had,’ I said heavily. ‘I wouldn’t be needing any disguise.’
The yellow and red taxi they’d given me appeared, from the outside, to be a perfectly normal Opel, but they seemed to have managed to put an extra engine into it. They’d put a lot of extra work into it too. It had a pop-up siren, a pop-up police light and a panel at the back which fell down to illuminate a ‘Stop’ sign. Under the front passenger seats were ropes and first-aid kits and tear-gas canisters: in the door pockets were handcuffs with keys attached. God alone knew what they had in the boot. Nor did I care. All I wanted was a fast car, and I had one.
I pulled up in a prohibited parking area outside the Balinova night-club, right opposite where a uniformed and be-holstered policeman was standing. He nodded almost imperceptibly and walked away with measured stride. He knew a police taxi when he saw one and had no wish to explain to the indignant populace why a taxi could get away with an offence that would have automatically got them a ticket.
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