174946.fb2 Outsider in Amsterdam - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 2

Outsider in Amsterdam - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 2

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" Would you like some tea?" asked Van Meteren.

"Coffee," said de Gier and Grijpstra in one voice. They were facing him, sitting on a low bed, with their heads leaning against the wall. It was close to midnight now and de Gier was exhausted; he had visions of his small but comfortable bachelor's flat in the south of the city. He felt the hot water of his shower streaming down his back and the foaming soap on his shoulders. The old gable house with its endless corridors and nooks and crannies began to get on his nerves and the imitation Eastern atmosphere stifled him, although he had to agree that van Meteren's room exhaled a pleasant influence. It was a fairly large room, with whitewashed walls and the floor was covered with a worn but lovely Persian rug. On a shelf along the width of one entire wall van Meteren had displayed a number of objects that interested de Gier. He studied them quickly, one by one, the strangely shaped stones, the shells, the dried flowers and the skull of a large animal, a wild boar perhaps. Van Meteren sat on the floor, on a thick cushion, cross-legged, relaxed and patient, the black hard curls framing his flat skull silhouetted against the white wall, lit up by a light placed on the floor opposite him.

Van Meteren pursed his lips.

"I have no coffee here. The bar will be closed now. The bar is the only place where coffee is served. To drink coffee is really against the rules of the society. Piet always said that coffee excites."

He poured tea from a large thermos flask, decorated with Chinese characters. Grijpstra and de Gier were given a small cup each. They sipped and pulled faces. Van Meteren laughed. "It's an acquired taste. This is very good tea, perhaps the best we can buy in Amsterdam. It's a green tea, very refined, first choice. Tea activates but relaxes at the same time. To drink tea is an art."

"Art?" Grijpstra asked.

"Art. A man who know how to drink tea is a detached man, a free man."

"Detached from what?" asked de Gier.

"Detached from himself, from his greed, his hurry, his own importance. His own suffering."

"That's nice," Grijpstra said. "Did you hear that, de Gier?"

Van Meteren waved a small black hand. "Your colleague heard. He is an intelligent man."

"Thank you," said de Gier. "Could I have another cup of your delicious tea?"

Van Meteren poured another cup, showing his teeth in a wide smile.

"And now tell us," Grijpstra said. "What exactly are you doing in this house? Who are you? What does this Society represent? Who was Piet?"

"Yes," de Gier said, "and do you like coffee? Or are you only refusing to drink it because it is against Piet's rules?"

Van Meteren gazed at them. "You are asking a lot of questions at the same time. Where shall I start?"

"Wherever you like," Grijpstra said. De Gier nodded contentedly. Grijpstra was using their usual tactics. De Gier usually asked the unpleasant questions and Grijpstra acted "father," the kind force in the background. Sometimes they changed roles. Sometimes they left the room and only one of them would return, to be replaced by the other. They would do anything to make the suspect talk. The suspect had to talk, that was the main thing, and they could sort out the information as it came. And their tactics usually worked. The suspects talked, far more than they intended to. And very often they confessed, or served as witnesses. And then they would sign their statements and the officers could go home, tired and content.

But de Gier's contentment was shortlived. Van Meteren wasn't the usual suspect. And he didn't say anything. De Gier observed his opponent. A weird figure, even in the inner city of Amsterdam. Small, dark and pleasant. Dark blue trousers and a clean close-fitting shirt with vertical stripes so that van Meteren looked a little taller than he was. Self-possessed. Conscious even. Do conscious people exist, de Gier asked himself. People who know what they are doing and who are aware of the situation they are in?

Grijpstra observed too. He saw a man of some forty years old, small and graceful. He had also classified the suspect as a Papuan. Grijpstra had fought in the former Dutch Indies and remembered the faces of a couple of professional soldiers who had joined his unit for an attack in difficult mountainous terrain. Papuans, very unusual types, contrasting with the much lighter-skinned soldiers from Ambon who had made up the bulk of Grijpstra's men. The Papuans revered a colored photograph of the queen, pinned up in their tent. Very courageous they were, but he never got to know them well. They were dead within a few days. They had volunteered for a sniping patrol and the Javanese got them after a fight of a few hours. Two Papuans who had killed nearly fifty enemies with their tommy guns. The Javanese had caught one Papuan alive, they had "tjingtjanged" him, cut him up with their razorsharp "krisses," starting at the feet.

"Your father came from Holland?" Grijpstra asked.

"My grandfather," van Meteren said. "My grandmother was a Papuan, a chief's daughter. My grandfather worked for the government, he was only a petty official, but a petty official is very powerful in New Guinea. My mother is also a pure Papuan, she is still alive and lives in Hollandia. I arrived here eight years ago. I had to choose in nineteen hundred and sixty-five whether I wanted to be an Indonesian or Dutch. I chose to be Dutch and had to run for my life."

"And what do you do for a living?"

"I am on the force," van Meteren said, and laughed when he saw surprise glide over the faces of his investigators. He had a nice laugh, showing strong, even, very white teeth under the small pointed mustache and the flat wide nose.

"Don't let it upset you," he said. "I won't arrest you. I am a traffic warden. All I can do is give you a ticket for parking your car on the sidewalk and you won't have to pay the fine anyway."

'Traffic warden?" Grijpstra asked.

Van Meteren nodded. "I joined the department five years ago. In New Guinea I was a real policeman, constable first class because I could read and write and my name was Dutch. I commanded thirty men. Constable first class is a high rank even there. But when I came out here they told me I was too old for active duty. I was thirty years old. They gave me a job as a clerk in one of their bureaus in The Hague. I kept on asking to be allowed to join the force and eventually they made me a traffic warden and assigned me to street duty. I have two stripes now and I am armed with a rubber truncheon. Every six months I apply for a transfer to the real police but they keep on finding reasons to refuse me."

"A traffic warden is a real policeman too," Grijpstra said.

Van Meteren shrugged his shoulders and looked at the wall.

"What exacdy was your job in the New Guinea police?" de Gier asked.

"Field duty. During the last few years I served with the Birdhead Corps, in the South West. We watched the coast and caught Indonesian commandos and paratroopers sneaking in by boat or being dropped. We caught hundreds of them."

De Gier looked at the large linen map of New Guinea that had been pinned on the wall. The map looked worn and had broken on the folds. There were two other maps on the wall, a map of Holland and another of the Usselmeer, Holland's small inland sea, now transformed into a large lake by the thirty-five kilometer dyke that stops the rollers of the North Sea. "Could I see your traffic warden's identification?"

The little document looked very neat. Van Meteren showed his New Guinea identification as well, yellow at the corners and spotted by sweat, its plastic cover torn right through.

Both Grijpstra and de Gier studied the documents carefully. A Dutch constable first class from the other side of the world. A memento of the past. They looked at the imprint of the rubber stamp and the signature of an inspector-general. They spent some time on the photograph. Van Meteren was shown in uniform, the metal strips had glinted in the light of the photographer's flashbulb. A strong young face, proud of his rank and his responsibility and of his Corps, the Corps State Police of Dutch New Guinea, part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

"Well, colleague," Grijpstra said, "and what do you think? Did anyone help Piet when he was being hung?"

Van Meteren's eyes were sad when he replied.

"It is possible. He may have fallen. I studied the room and I have thought about what I saw but it is always dangerous to come to a conclusion. Piet may have knocked his head against something. And there may have been a fight, it wouldn't be unlikely because he had a very short temper. His state of mind wasn't good, not lately anyway. His wife and child have left him and refuse to return. He has been depressed and he did mention the possibility of suicide. Man is free and has the right to take his own life, I have heard him say it at least three times. He knew he wasn't very well liked but he couldn't make himself likable. Perhaps someone came to see him, perhaps there was an argument, perhaps someone hit him and perhaps Piet was so upset that he hung himself after whoever it was left him."

"Who would have argued with him?" de Gier asked. "You?"

"No," van Meteren said. "I don't argue with anyone. Whenever Piet had one of his moods I avoided him. This is a very big house, there is always another room."

"Were you friendly with Piet?"

"Yes, but I wasn't his friend. I don't believe in friendship. Friendship is a feeling of the moment. Moments pass. I have neither friends nor enemies. The people around me are the people around me, I accept them."

"What are you doing in this house?" de Gier asked.

Van Meteren laughed. "Nothing. I live here. Piet invited me in. I was living in a small room in a boarding house. A cheap place although the rent was high. In a narrow street on the fourth floor, very little light and you can breathe the fumes of the street. The nearest tree was a mile away. I spent most of my free time walking around and had my meals at Chinese restaurants, as often as I could afford to. If I couldn't eat in a restaurant I would have a sandwich in a park. This place has a restaurant and I tried to have a meal here but they wanted me to become a member. I had to go to Piet's office and pay him twenty-five guilders and fill in a form. That's how we met. He seemed to like me straightaway and offered me a room, two hundred guilders a month including as many meals as I wanted."

"That's very cheap," de Gier said.

"Very," van Meteren agreed. "But he may have had a reason. Perhaps he wanted a policeman in the house. I am not on the regular force but I do have a uniform and I am properly trained. There's a bar in the place, clients may be difficult at times."

"Did he ever make use of your services?"

"Once or twice," van Meieren said. "I have taken guests into the streets but I didn't hurt anybody. The grips we were taught are either defensive or merely meant to transport a suspect without causing him any undue pain."

Grijpstra smiled, he remembered the textbook phrase.

"Was Piet a homosexual?" de Gier asked.

It was van Meteren's turn to smile.

"You are a real policeman," he said, "always assume the lowest motive and you are usually right. But perhaps you are wrong this time. Piet wasn't a homo. I have thought of it for he often visited me in my room, he was interested in my collection of stones and shells and wanted me to tell him stories about New Guinea. He wanted to know what Papuans eat and what our religion is and whether we used any herbs or drugs and if we danced. But he never bothered me. Whenever he felt that I wanted to be alone he would leave at once. No, Piet liked women even if they caused him trouble."

"Did they?" de Gier asked.

"Always. He wanted to own them, to dominate them."

"I thought women liked to be dominated," de Gier said.

"Yes. But not by Piet. He had little charm and tried to make them ridiculous, especially when he had an audience. So the women became bitter and attacked him and hurt him in his pride. He had a lot of pride. And in the end they would leave him."

"You don't make him sound a very nice person," de Gier said.

Van Meteren shook his head. "No no. He wasn't all that bad. He meant well."

"No friend, no enemy," de Gier said.

"Yes," van Meteren said. "I try to be detached, to keep my distance. People are the way they are; it's hard to try to change them."

"And that's the reason you drink tea," Grijpstra said.

Van Meteren thought for a while. "I do other things as well."

"We are getting nowhere," Grijpstra thought, and asked for more tea. Van Meteren filled his cup, Grijpstra took a sip, breathed deeply and immersed himself again in the opaque sticky substance of an unexplained death of an Amsterdam citizen.

"And this Hindist business, what does it mean?"

Van Meteren felt through his pockets and found a pack of cigarettes. It contained one cigarette only. He offered it to Grijpstra.

"Grijpstra shook his head. "It is your last."

"Never mind," van Meteren said. "I have some more somewhere, and if not I can get some downstairs in the shop, I have a key."

"Hindism," de Gier said.

"Yes," van Meteren said. "Hindism. I have been curious too, but I have never quite understood what Piet meant by it. Something between Hinduism and Buddhism perhaps. Piet's own homemade religion. It's quite intricate and bound up with right eating and tea and meditation. The room next door is a temple. There are cushions on the floor and twice a week people sit still in it for an hour or so. Piet is, or was, the priest and had his own special cushion, richly embroidered. He sat closest to the altar. Perhaps he really thought of himself as a prophet, a teacher who had something to show to the new people, the young offbeat types of today. But he was losing interest and he was running short of disciples. Hardly anyone showed up for the meditations and he had to put up with a lot of criticism from the people who work here. Nobody stayed long. The ones you have met, the girls and Johan, and Eduard, whom you'll probably meet later, are all newcomers, they haven't been here for longer than six months at the most and I think they only stay because they can't think of another place they want to go. They'll leave as soon as something turns up. Piet wanted to create an oasis of peace, a quiet place where people can get strength and where they can forget politics and money-making. Find their souls, their real selves. He had invented a special routine, the whole house has been redesigned for that purpose. The bar is an entry, people go easily into a bar. But finally they'll land up in the meditation temple, at least that was the general idea. The bar-keeper would have to listen to the guests and direct them, tactfully and gradually to the higher regions, the restaurant with its clean food and pure fruit and vegetable juices, and the temple with its spiritual air. And Piet would be the divinity in the background, working through others and guiding them without showing himself much. Perhaps he really thought that way in the beginning but he must have lost faith and found himself weak. The arguments must have hurt him and his own lack of strength. I have listened to a long lecture he delivered once, the subject was that one should never eat meat. But afterwards he sneaked out and I saw him buying some hot sausages off the street stall around the corner."

"Ha!" de Gier said. "But surely he can't have been that much of a failure. This place looks reasonably successful. It is clean for one thing and the restaurant was almost full. He must have been making some money and some people must have admired him one way or another."

"Sure," van Meteren said, "and the atmosphere here is quite pleasant. I have always been reasonably happy here and it would be a pity if it's all over and done with now. And Piet's ideas were all right, but he wasn't the right man to put them into effect. Perhaps if he had admitted that he was a beginner himself and had lost some of his pride. He wanted to be a great master and it must have been a shock to him when people belittled him. His own wife called him a lesser nitwit when she left, the others called him other things. He has been walked over a lot lately…" He didn't finish his sentence.

"Who else lives here?" Grijpstra asked.

Van Meteren counted them off on his fingers. "His mother, eighty-three years old, second door on the right from here, not altogether sound in mind."

"Old age?" asked Grijpstra.

"No, not just old age. A bit mad I would say. Then there is me, you know me. On the next floor there is Therese, the girl with the pigtails. Annetje, the other girl, sleeps in the servant quarters, on the other side of the courtyard. She shares her room with Johan. Eduard lives in the little cabin at the end of the garden. He had his day off today but he may have been here this afternoon, you'll have to ask him. Johan has been working, he had the shop today and has been barman during the evening."

Someone knocked at the door. Van Meteren called "Yes" but nothing happened. He got up and opened the door and the detectives saw a very old lady, tall and angular, dressed in a gown set off with lace, a thick woollen scarf hung over her shoulders. Two glinting sharp eyes stared at them. The aggressive nose reminded de Gier of a sparrow hawk's beak.

"What's going on?" the old lady asked. "What are you all talking about? I have been listening to the grunting of voices for hours now. It is half past one, I want to sleep."

Van Meteren put his arm around the old lady. "Come in, Miesje. These gentlemen are police officers. That's Mister Grijpstra and that's Mister de Gier."

The detectives shook the thin hand, dotted all over with dark brown spots.

She sat down, with a straight back, on the edge of the settee.

"So what goes on?" she asked in a brittle voice. "Are they your friends, Jan? Traffic wardens?"

"No Miesje. They are regular police. There has been an accident. Piet has had a bad fall."

The old lady's eyes, which had been closing slowly, suddenly opened.

"He is dead?" she shrieked.

Nobody answered.

"He is dead," the old lady said and began to cry.

The sound of her sobs grated on the detectives' ears. Her mouth dropped open and Grijpstra shuddered when he saw her tongue flapping and trembling with each fresh howl.

Van Meteren had rushed out of the room and came back with a glass of water and a very small white pill.

"Swallow this, Miesje." The old lady swallowed. The sobs stopped abruptly. She responded to the brief snappy command.

De Gier was grateful; the sudden silence eased his nerves.

The old lady began to talk. She spoke slowly: it seemed that the pill had given her a dry mouth.

"This afternoon Piet told me that I shouldn't complain so much and that the rhododendrons are in flower. But my eyes are so bad. What are rhododendrons anyway?"

Her voice was gathering volume again.

"Rhododendrons are flowers, Miesje," van Meteren said, still using his command voice. "Like tulips. And now you are going to your room and you are going to sleep. Tomorrow I'll come to see you before I go to work."

He pushed her out of the room.

"I can't stand old ladies," de Gier said, "and I most definitely can't stand them if they are mad."

"You'll have to learn to get used to them," said Grijpstra. "There'll be more and more of them. It's very difficult to find a doctor who'll let old people the nowadays. Haven't you been reading the papers? I wonder what was in that pill."

"An opiate," said van Meteren, who had returned. "It's called Palfium. The doctor prescribes it, she can get as much as she wants. She has been taking these pills for years now and she is hopelessly addicted to them. Piet knew but he didn't mind. It keeps her quiet. Without the pills she would have to go to an asylum and he preferred to keep her here. I'll telephone the doctor tomorrow; he'll probably have her taken away."

"Did Piet take those pills as well?" Grijpstra asked.

"Not as far as I know."

"But he could have taken them, his mother must have a bottle full of them on her bedside table."

Van Meteren nodded thoughtfully.

"I don't think so," he said after a while. "Those pills are very strong. According to the doctor they will stun a horse but Miesje can take two at a time and stay on her feet. She hadn't got much of a stomach left. She has been operated for ulcers and I suppose most of the stuff goes straight down. If Piet had taken a pill he would have had to sit down and he probably would have gone to sleep. I have never seen him like that. He did drink a bit lately, he would come down to the bar and have a few whiskies. Three glasses would make him drunk enough to be able to laugh and talk to people. I take it you are suggesting that he took a pill today and that the pill knocked him over and caused the bruise on his temple?"

"Yes," said de Gier.

"Perhaps," van Meteren said, "but it would have been the first time that he took a pill. In my opinion anyway."

"Why do you call her Miesje?" Grijpstra asked.

"Ach," van Meteren said, "it's just a trick. Whenever she is hysterical she screams. I thought I might make her calm down if I treated her as if she was a child. She was called Miesje once, when she was a child and wore laced boots and played hopscotch. When she behaves normally I call her Mrs. Verboom and when I think she will start one of her tantrums I call her Miesje. I take her on my lap and she'll talk quietly and sometimes I cuddle her a bit."

"Brr," said de Gier.

Van Meteren grinned. "Yes. It's quite ridiculous. Piet would do it too. I always laughed when I saw that tall skeleton sitting on his lap, he was such a small man. Perhaps it looks even funnier when she sits on my lap. But I have done other crazy things. I used to walk for miles with an Indonesian commando on a string. It was knotted in such a way that he would throttle himself if he tried to run away. I would hold the string with one hand and the carbine with the other. And now I have an old crazy lady on my lap and call her Miesje."

There was another knock on the door and a thin young man dressed in jeans and a T-shirt came in. De Gier looked at the long unwashed hair and remembered the barman.

"This is Johan," van Meteren said, and the detectives said, "Good evening." De Gier asked Johan to sit down and made room on the settee.

Grijpstra asked the usual questions but Johan could only shake his head. He hadn't seen Piet after he had given him the takings of the shop at four o'clock. Three hundred and fifty-six guilders and some cents. Piet had phoned him later on the house phone to tell him that there was a difference of some thirty guilders but Johan hadn't gone upstairs, he had been too busy getting the bar in order for the evening's customers.

"What do you think has happened?" de Gier asked.

Johan shrugged his shoulders and didn't reply.

Grijpstra grunted. He had been thinking that he had met the boy hundreds of times already. The inner city was full of duplicates of this boy. Well-meaning, unintelligent and knocked loose from their surroundings, full of protests and questions and wandering in a thin, almost two-dimensional thought-world where they could find no answers. "Maybe they don't really want to find anything," Grijpstra thought. "Maybe they wait for death, or a strong woman who will take them in hand so that they will find a daily routine again and start watching football on TV." He thought of his oldest son and studied Johan without much sympathy. Grijpstra's son wouldn't watch football either. He preferred to lie on his bed, dressed in a striped shirt and an embroidered pair of trousers and watch the cracks in the ceiling.

"Suicide, I suppose," Johan said after a few minutes of silence, which hung heavily in the room. "Who would want to murder Piet? He was a bit of a bore but he didn't hurt anyone. He couldn't if he tried."

Grijpstra changed his opinion. The answer had been cleverer than he had expected.

"You don't seem to be very upset," de Gier said.

"No," Johan said. "I am sorry. Perhaps I should be upset, but I can't generate any feeling. Annetje and I would have left next week anyway. This is a commercial enterprise where the goal is money. Piet wanted to make a profit and he wanted the profit for himself. He was the owner of the business. We intended to leave him and find some other place with a bit of idealism behind it, or maybe start one of our own. Piet crooked us. I don't really hold it against him. It's my own stupidity, I should have seen it. He made us work for the great purpose but all we worked for was his wealth. Did you see the gold strap on his wristwatch?"

Grijpstra nodded.

"There are other things as well. There is a new station wagon parked outside. We earned it for him. He was a capitalist but he didn't tell us."

"You don't like capitalists?" de Gier asked.

"I don't mind them," Johan said. "It's a way of life. Free enterprise is a philosophy. It isn't mine. I am against fascism and I would fight it if I had to, but I wouldn't fight capitalism."

"So you think it was suicide?" de Gier asked.

"Yes."

"Enough," Grijpstra said. "You need some sleep. All of us do. Tomorrow is another day. Try and remember anything that may be relevant and tell us about it tomorrow. The peace of the citizens has been disturbed and we, criminal investigators of your police department, have to repair the peace again. And you have to help us. Such is the law."

He grinned, got up, and stretched his aching back.

Within a few minutes the detectives were walking toward their car. A late drunk came swaggering toward them, and de Gier had to jump aside.

"Out of my way," the drunk shouted and grabbed a lamp post.

"Bah," Grijpstra said. The drunk was pissing on the street and all over his own trousers.

"Watch it," de Gier shouted. The drunk had fallen over and rolled off the sidewalk into the street.

Grijpstra, who was getting into the car, grabbed the microphone.

"An unconscious man on the sidewalk of Haarlemmer Houttuinen opposite number five. Please send the bus."

"Drunk?" the voice of Headquarters asked.

"Very," Grijpstra answered. "No need for an ambulance, the police bus will do."

"Bus coming," the voice said. "Out."

"We better wait," de Gier said. "I have pulled him off the street but he may roll over again. He is fast asleep."

"Sure. We've got nothing else to do."

They waited in silence for the small blue bus with its crew of two elderly police constables who dragged the drunk inside, cursing and sighing.

"Nice job," de Gier said, waved at the constables and started the engine.

"So have we," Grijpstra said, "nice and complicated. Murdered innocence dangling from a piece of string, surrounded by dear sweet people of which one is a black cannibal trained in guerilla warfare and another a crazy old female bag of bones."

"I hope his mother has done it," de Gier said.

"You love people, don't you?"

"I don't like jails," de Gier said. "I had to visit some of our clients in their cells this week. Cold, drafty and hopeless. Jail will get you if nothing else does. A day in jail means a year of crime."

Grijpstra turned his heavy neck and stared at his colleague.

"Well, well," he said, "have you forgotten how many people you have directed to the cold, drafty and hopeless cells?"

"Yes, yes," de Gier said and lapsed into silence.

The silence lasted until they entered their office and he had to help Grijpstra to phrase the exact short sentences that framed their report and that they both signed, mentioning in cool print that everything the report contained was the truth as they, officers of the Queen's law, saw it. Grijpstra typed, slowly, with four fingers, without making a single typing error.

De Gier didn't speak when he left but Grijpstra didn't mind. He had been working with de Gier for a number of years and they had never really fallen out.