“Yes. He’s very logical... in his own way.” Burt frowned. “I wonder what valuables he had that he couldn’t take with him.”
Joss wasn’t listening. She gulped down her coffee and stood up. “I’d better go soothe Jata’s pride. See you at lunch.”
Burt breakfasted on soursop juice, fried breadfruit and red snapper. Boris was sorry, but the rats had stolen the eggs and the mongooses had eaten all the chickens and there was no way to get off the island until Mister Keener returned.
Burt felt a new twist of unease: “If he weren’t here how would you get off?”
“We would cut the glass, sir.”
“Cut the glass?”
“Take the mirror, go up to the piton, catch the sun and flash it to the fishing boats.”
“And if there’s no sun?”
“If there is no sun, then you wait. The sun always return.”
After breakfast, Burt climbed the steep stony path which had been hacked through the shoulder-high grass. By the time he reached the base of the three black crags, he had to stop and massage his aching leg. Maybe I’m pushing too hard, he thought, can’t afford to get crippled up at this point.
At what point? Well, before it happens, whatever Rolf is going to make happen...
A six-foot watchtower had been built on the highest crag, dating from the days when the French and English had been killing each other to plant their flags around the world. The eminence was a paved area no larger than a shot-put ring, with a waist-high parapet halfway around it. The rest of the parapet had fallen a breath-taking five hundred feet to the rocks below. Burt leaned his elbows on the parapet, breathing heavily as he scanned the horizon. The mist-laden wind cooled his flushed face. Clots of low gray clouds floated over the white-capped sea below, seemingly anchored by silver streamers of rain. To the north, the populus island of Bequia formed an irregular crescent, pointing a gnarled finger at the southern tip of St. Vincent. To the south, a score of smaller islands thrust up from the sea, some so close together that it was hard to see where one began and another ended. He had visited all of them in the past; he recognized the jutting red peak of Battowia, inhabited by a few native fanners; he saw the wooded, rolling hills of Cannouan, the twisting spine of Baliceaux, the yellow-green pastures of Mustique, and the jagged thousand-foot spires of Union. Most of the smaller islands were waterless and uninhabited except for semiwild sheep and cattle, and voracious sandflies. There were none of the usual fishing boats bobbing between the islands, and no sign of Rolf’s power cruiser.
He left the tower and strolled aimlessly around the island. At least, he thought he was strolling aimlessly; he realized his subconscious had taken charge when he found himself regarding once again the padlock on cabin two. There was nobody in sight. He walked around the cabin looking for a means of ingress. The windows were small and hooked on the inside. The padlock hung on a rusty hasp screwed into rotting wood; he could have ripped it loose but he wanted to leave no sign.
He stumbled over an accumulation of litter from the cabin: broken bottles, rusty cans, and charred newspapers, all damp and glistening. One small pile had not yet been burned; he supposed it included Mrs. Keener’s sweepings. He got a stick and poked through it. Several wads of lipsticked tissue. Funny, there were two different shades, one the dark red he’d seen in the purse, the other a pale orange. Mmm. Maybe women changed their lipstick according to mood. Here was a mass of tangled, knotted hair, filled with lint as though it had been cleaned from a comb. He pulled an end loose and examined it. A pale wavy hair, ash blonde. Not Rolf Keener’s, too long for that. Possibly from a woman guest who predated Mrs. Keener, fallen in a corner and swept out only recently. Have to ask Joss. He looked for something to keep the hair in. All the paper was charred and soggy; ah, here was one, wadded up into a tight little ball like a piece of popcorn. He smoothed it and found that there were two sheets of thin airmail stationery. It had been burned carelessly, and much of the writing remained legible. The salutation caught his eye:
r Rolf,
Three nights on this island
away from you have given me a
nk about all that has
ce I married you and
So, it was written by Mrs. Keener in a blunt vertical script totally without flourishes. He had not expected her to write in such a near-masculine hand. He spread out the second sheet and found only one and a half sentences intact:
no point in going on
dreading every tomorrow and regretting each
A coldness grew at the back of his neck. He’d read many suicide notes, and this had the ring of authenticity. Funny, he thought, folding the letter and shoving it into the pocket of his shorts; this was written by a quietly desperate woman who had decided to end her marriage, perhaps even her life. He couldn’t picture Mrs. Keener in that part at all.
Well, that settled one thing. He had to get inside. He circled the cabin again and saw that the bathroom was roofed with corrugated tin. Probably it had once been thatched, but moisture had rotted the grass. A ladder led up to a platform which held a barrel of water for the shower. Burt climbed up and found that the roofing had merely been laid in place and covered with heavy stones to keep it from blowing away. He moved the stones, propped the sheeting open with a stick, and crawled inside. Standing on the low stand which held the basin, he pulled out the stick and lowered the roof back in place.
Inside, he noticed that Mrs. Keener had the same habit of untidiness he’d found in many otherwise attractive women. Her robe hung on the bathroom door and a pair of black panties were draped over the shower head. He touched his fingers to the transparent, chiffon-like fabric. Little red lips were embroidered around the bottom. It was the kind of lingerie teenagers order from the little ads at the backs of true confession magazines.
And what did that prove about Mrs. Keener? Simply that she took pride in her sexuality and liked to adorn it as well as possible. All of which fit the woman he had — met was too weak a word: encountered, maybe, or engaged. Such a woman would hardly consider suicide; if she did, she would write a fiery renunciation of the world, then reconsider and seek renewed life in an affair with a new man.
He froze at the entrance to the bedroom. Had a window blown open or... what was that breath of coldness? All the windows were closed. Burt didn’t have Joss’s blind faith in the supernatural, but he’d run into things which couldn’t be explained any other way. There was a feeling which often came to him in a scent of past violence; it had been present in the jewelry store, it was here now. A residue of fear or pain, like an invisible mist weighting the air.
He shook off the feeling and made a quick, thorough search of the room. More feminine clothing and inexpensive jewelry — in rather garish taste, he thought — but only one overnight case which held male clothing. Inside the case was a box of thirty-eight caliber ammunition. He catalogued the fact without emotion; Rolf had a gun, no doubt he kept it on the boat. A paranoiac with a gun was a combination devoutly to be avoided under any circumstances, but he had no time to consider it now.
He found the olive-green purse, but the talcum powder and the wallet were gone. Curious; it was as though Rolf had known his cabin would be searched. After removing all traces of incriminating evidence, why had he padlocked the door? Because he knew that would titillate Burt’s curiosity? Damn, he didn’t like the feeling of being always one step behind the man...
He jumped at the sound of tapping on glass. “Sir! Sir!” He saw Maudie’s round face pressed against the window. “They comin back, sir.”
He hurriedly glanced around the room, satisfied himself that he’d left no signs of his search, and departed the way he had come. Maudie was waiting as he dropped to the ground. He saw no point in asking how she’d known he was in the cabin; she’d been following him, of course. Didn’t she always?