It was possible my killer wouldn’t come over to me, wouldn’t make contact, that I’d stand at that bar for the next year or two, waiting for the war to end or armed Japanese soldiers to walk through the door, order a bottle of Black and White, and mow us down. But it didn’t happen that way. The door to Hijo’s opened, and a familiar figure walked in. My back was turned, but I saw the figure pause in the mirror, look around, spot me, and move in my direction.
I played with my glass, tried to realign whatever small dark things were at the bottom. Maybe I’d be able to read my fortune.
“Good morning,” the killer said.
“Good morning,” I answered without looking up. “What’s your pleasure?”
“If the glasses are reasonably clean, a gin and tonic.”
“The glasses are not reasonably clean,” I said, showing my glass.
“Then,” sighed the killer, “I’ll do without it. It is a bit early in the morning.”
“Right,” I said. Emmett Kelly had stood up. I could see him in the mirror, could see that he was going to come to me. I shook my head no. Kelly paused and then sat down.
“I see,” said the killer, leaning against the bar and squinting into the mirror. We were shoulder to shoulder, could have been taken for buddies. “I take it that our clown friend is the one you were to meet here. It was not a question,” said the killer, “but an observation. I was aware that the charade at my brother’s house was for my benefit. I have been around performers most of my life. I can spot a poor performance with no difficulty. Yours was not exactly terrible. It had some energy, but far from professional.”
Jean Alvero’s laugh broke through the other sounds. I turned to look at her. She was talking down the bar to one of the roustabouts. One-eyed Lope didn’t look too happy about the social possibilities.
“Then why did you come?” I said.
My killer shrugged. The bartender moved to us behind the bar, removed his cigarette and opened his mouth to let us know he was taking orders.
“A beer,” said the killer. “No glass, just bring the bottle.”
The bartender moved away.
“Good idea,” I said. “No contamination. Not that you should worry about contamination.”
“Are you going to insult me?” asked the killer with an amused smile.
“I don’t know,” I said. “There was a full moon last night, and someone tried to kill me.”
“That was me. You are remarkably heavy for your size. You are also remarkably durable. But perhaps we can remedy that.”
The bartender returned with the bottle of Gobel beer. It was open, and my friendly neighborhood lunatic took a deep drink.
“Warm.”
“House rules,” I said.
“I don’t really mind,” came the answer. “I grew accustomed to warm beer when I was in England. The taste comes through. Now, if you will just tell me who you are to meet.”
I turned around and put my arms on the bar the way Walter Huston had done in The Virginian. “Why should I tell you?” I said, looking at Kelly. The others had their heads together talking.
“Because I can simply pull the trigger on the gun I am holding under the eave of this bar and make a very large hole in your side.”
“And then you’d be caught,” I said reasonably.
“Yes, but if you don’t tell me, I’ll be caught anyway. This way I might be able to make an escape. I think I am being clear and logical.”
“La Paloma” burst out of the radio. It sounded like the same group that had sung it the first time I entered Hijo’s. Jean Alvero joined in, in a rather nice cracking soprano.
“You had me fooled,” I said with a shake of my head. “You really did, but how long did you think you could carry it off?”
I turned to look my killer full in the face now, and he looked back at me, putting down his empty bottle of beer. Something approaching a smile touched his face.
“Who would peg Alfred Hitchock as a murderer?” he said, showing me the gun beside his medicine ball of a stomach.
16
“You are one bedbug,” I said. “I saw a picture of the real Hitchcock in a movie magazine in a railroad station yesterday. Anyone could have spotted you at any time.”
The man I had known as Alfred Hitchcock hunched his shoulders up. “It was a risk worth taking,” he said. “If worse came to worse, and it has, it really has, I planned to confess that I was a circus buff and that I merely used Hitchcock’s name because of my resemblance to him to gain access to the grounds.”
An argument had started at the end of the bar. Lope and Carlos were part of it. Some of it was in Spanish. I had the feeling it was a debate over who was going to listen to the radio and who was going to listen to Jean Alvero.
“There isn’t any witness,” I said, turning away from the killer. “That was just to bring you out in the open.”
“I thought it might be,” he sighed, “but I couldn’t take a chance. Besides, all is not lost. You are responsible for my brother’s death. I’m the last of the family.”
“And he went like the others,” I said, picking at my teeth with a fingernail. “Mind telling me your name? I can’t keep calling you Mr. Hitchcock.”
“Marish,” he said, bowing slightly. “Miles Marish. My family were the Flying Marishes.”
He paused as if I was supposed to know who the Flying Marishes were.
“The Flying Marishes,” I repeated.
Down the bar, the bartender had intervened in the discussion by turning off the radio.
“The circus killed my family,” he said. “My father and sister fell from the wire in 1937. My brother was disfigured, and I was trampled by an elephant. Under these trousers is a disfigured leg.
“I wanted only to destroy the elephants, all the elephants,” he said. “The people were Thomas’ idea. There were no killings until the circus came to Mirador, where he had been living. It was I who had followed circuses, destroying and describing it to him. The circus is …”
“I know,” I interrupted, “he told me before he took his leap.”
“You are not a sympathetic man,” said Marish, all trace of English accent now gone.
“Some innocent people have been killed,” I answered. “They have my sympathy, along with their families.”
“The aerialist saw me electrocute the elephant. We had to do something. Then the woman …”
“Rennata Tanucci,” I supplied.
“She followed me to Thomas’ and threatened to have that elephant go wild. I hate elephants. She forced us …”
Shoving and the tense ramble of voices came from the end of the bar. The battle was about to begin. The circus had invaded Lope’s retreat, and his honor demanded satisfaction. Elder moved from his table to try to restore order.
“Do we have anything further to discuss?” said Marish evenly.
“One or two more things,” I said. “Can we retire to my office?” I pointed to the back of the saloon, where a painted green light indicated a toilet.
Marish nodded, put his gun in his pocket, and followed me toward the back. We had gone about five feet when Emmett Kelly stepped in front of me.
“Toby, you look …”
“I’m fine,” I said. “Just someone I ate.”
I pushed past him, and he eyed Marish, who gave him his Hitchcock grin. We moved past Elder, who was holding back his roustabout with one hand and talking furiously with Lope. Elder was speaking Spanish rapidly and comfortably. It seemed to calm Lope of the single eye. But I wasn’t calm as I pushed open the door under the green light and stepped in with Marish behind me. He locked the door and faced me.
There wasn’t much room, just a toilet, some toilet paper hung by wire from the wall, a small basin with a dripping faucet and a dirty brown sink. The small mirror over the sink looked as if someone had soaped it for Halloween and no one had bothered to clean it. A newspaper was on the floor. I caught part of the headline and realized that the British were either winning or losing in Burma.