“Do you think you could find out what Tisler was talking about?” Kalatis asked.
“Regarding the insurance?”
“Yes, of course,” Kalatis said with slight irritation.
“Maybe.”
“Find out,” Kalatis said. He stopped and looked down the curving wall of photographs. “I’ve seen enough,” he said. “This is depressing.”
The two men walked out of the main exhibition space, descending to the foyer, then to the lobby, and out the north entrance of the museum to Bissonnet Street. As soon as they were outside Kalatis stopped and lighted a cigarette. Without speaking they crossed Bissonnet and turned left along the sidewalk, passing scatterings of people strolling in the sweltering June night. They came to Montrose and Kalatis stopped. He looked to his left at the three lighted, circular fountains inside the traffic ellipse. South Main stretched straight off the ellipse, flanked by colonnades of massive water oaks, the underside of their canopies illumined softly by streetlamps that shrank to tiny, faint sparks as the lines of the boulevard converged in the distance. Kalatis looked at this scene a moment and then turned on his heels and walked in the opposite direction to the entrance of the Cullen Sculpture Garden.
They entered the walled garden which was laid out on the order of a small plaza with granite walkways, islands of emerald lawn, manicured shrubbery, and groomed trees. The sculpture sited variously within this environment was softly illuminated with special lighting that seemed to make some of the works hover in isolation out of the gray night.
Kalatis did not immediately stop to study these works. Still walking, though not so briskly, he swung his hand holding the cigarette in a generalized arc.
“A lot of modern stuff,” he said. “I’ve never liked the abstract What the hell is abstract anyway? Represents modern man’s confusion? His fragmented psyche? Shit The disorientation of the twentieth century? Alienation of modern man? Jesus Christ I don’t know.”
Burtell was patient He reminded himself that it was Kalatis who had contacted him. After a few turns on the pathways Kalatis suddenly stopped in front of a single, isolated sculpture bathed in a haze of warm illumination.
“‘Flore Nue,’ “he said, gesturing at the statue as though he were introducing Burtell. “Aristide Maillol.” His French pronunciation was fluid, subtle, perfect The bronze nude stood before them in uncontrived simplicity, her hands hanging straight down by her sides, one foot slightly advanced before the other, knee bent.
“This is real art,” Kalatis said.” Look at her. The way of her shoulders. The shape of her breasts, her stomach. The simplicity of the way she presents herself to me.”
To me? Burtell had been looking at the statues, but at these last two words he cut his eyes at Kalatis. The brute was almost salivating over the woman. He licked her with his eyes and smiled at her in a way that would have made a man who loved her want to kill him.
“Maillol knew how to shape a breast, and this little one… carries it very well.”
Kalatis studied the sculpture for a few more moments and then abruptly turned away, flicked his cigarette away into the dark, and began walking very slowly, his head down.
“I am worried about something from yesterday’s conversation, when we met with Faeber,” he said, his voice low.” The idea of Graver keeps crawling right up into my forehead. When something squirms into my thoughts that much I have to pay attention to it. I’m not satisfied, my friend, that Graver is going to ignore this… business of Tisler.”
He took a few steps.
“That’s one thing. Another thing: I know very well that you would like to be more, let us say, involved a little more in my business.”
Burtell’s heart jolted. Did this monster know more about him than he thought? Had he given himself away somehow?
“I am an astute observer of human nature,” Kalatis said. “For your information, I know that Faeber has… limitations, but what would the world do without such people? Think about it His intelligence is very narrow, but it is very uncommonly concentrated. He serves a purpose, that’s the most important thing. The second most important thing is recognizing when something does not serve a purpose… and getting rid of it. If something does not serve, don’t keep it around you. This is a very clean way to live.”
A few more steps, the rolled program still in his left hand, his right hand in his pocket.
“So,” he said, as if everything had been explained, “I want to make sure Graver stays away from me. You want to have a little bite of my business so you can make a load of money. It’s clear to me that we can serve each other well.”
Kalatis stopped talking as they passed other night strollers, all talking softly as though viewing art from out of the darkness was an act of inherent holiness.
“What I propose is this,” Kalatis resumed. “For the next five days I want to know immediately if Graver learns of my existence. After five days other arrangements will come into play, and it will not be so important. Now, if you do this… I will make it possible for you to retire… with a generous ‘pension.’”
As they continued walking, Kalatis reached into the breast pocket of his jacket, took out a small paper booklet, and handed it to Burtell.
“This is a Belgium bank account in your name. It is empty now. At the end of five days, if you have done as you were asked, it will contain five hundred thousand American dollars. Only three people in the world will know about it. Me, the Belgium bank officer with whom I opened the account, and yourself. After I make the deposit, only one person in the world will be able to touch it-you.”
Burtell was stunned. Unaware of the act of walking, he could only feel the weight of the little paper booklet in his hand, as heavy as thirty pieces of silver.
“I doubt that’s likely to happen,” he said.
“What?”
Burtell realized his mistake. “Graver-it’s not likely he’ll get that far in the investigation.”
“Fine, but if he does I want to know about it.”
Burtell was still wary. He thought he hadn’t yet seen the whole picture. Kalatis wanted something more for his five hundred thousand dollars.
‘This is a lot of money for such a small service. Just a telephone call,” Burtell said.
They walked a little farther together before Kalatis said:
“Well, some men think betrayal is no small thing.”
Burtell’s face burned. It was like Kalatis to be so cruel as to refuse to use euphemisms. He could have let it pass, but he wanted Burtell to know, to be reminded just what it was he was doing for his money. Burtell could live with it, but he hated Kalatis for being the kind of man who would go out of his way to corrupt another man, who would entice him with a fortune for only a moment’s effort, and then when the man took the bait, ashamed and groveling, would pull his head back and shove a mirror in front of his face. There was something carious at the very core of Kalatis’s dark life, something that brought out the worst in people who associated with him. Art Tisler had discovered that with tragic results.
Chapter 27
The dense foliage of the overarching trees that covered the serpentine street where Arnette lived reflected Graver’s headlights so that it seemed as if he was being drawn into a coiling green tunnel, a meander that led to the Sibyl’s cavern. If ever he needed a necromancer it was now, someone like Arnette to summon Tisler’s spirit for an interview or, failing that, to summon the next best thing, his former thoughts from whence he had locked them in a timeless silence, embalmed to perfection inside another kind of memory, not of man, but of man’s making, hundreds of thousands of words in a few minuscule coffins of silicone.
This time Mona Isaza answered the door. Graver had missed her earlier that day, so they embraced in the dark screened room as he had embraced Arnette earlier, and Mona called him “bah-BEE” and kissed him on the neck. She smelled, as always, of cooking, of something oniony and of the cornmeal masa she used almost every meal to make fresh tortillas. Mona was about the same height as Arnette, though heavier, despite which she was in many ways the more feminine and graceful of the two women. She was pure Zoque Indian from southern Oaxaca, with the finely defined lips, heavy eyebrows, and black eyes that were often seen in the sculptures and drawings of Francisco Zuniga’s beloved Indian women. Whereas Arnette wore her hair in one thick braid, Mona wore two long ones, each falling in front of her shoulders over heavy bosoms. She customarily wore simple, cotton dresses, thin from long use, as if she were a poor campesino.