"I heard Jefferson only stayed here for three months," I said, "then he left his wife and lived elsewhere. That would be some nine months ago."
Wong looked surprised. He talked earnestly to the reception clerk, then he said, puzzled,
"He is quite sure the American gentleman remained here until he died."
If the reception clerk was telling the truth, then Leila had been lying'.
"Tell him Leila said Jefferson left here nine months ago. Tell him I think he is lying."
Wong got into a long huddle with the reception clerk, then suddenly, smiling, he turned to me. "He is not lying, Mr. Ryan. The girl was mistaken. Jefferson left early in the morning and returned very late. It is easy to see why this girl didn't meet him and imagined he had left." "Then why did Jo-An tell her he had left?" I demanded.
The reception clerk had no answer to that one. He drew in his neck like a startled tortoise and blinked at me. He began to fidget and I could see he was thinking he had given full value for money and he would be glad to be left in peace.
Wong said, "He does not know the answer to that question, sir."
"What did Jefferson do for a living?" I asked, shifting ground.
The reception clerk said he didn't know.
"Did any Europeans ever come to see him here?"
The answer to that one was no.
"Did Jo-An ever have any friends to visit her?"
The answer again was no.
I realised with a feeling of irritated frustration I was getting nowhere. I had come around in a full circle unless Leila had been telling the truth.
"Did Jo-An leave any of her things in her room when she left?" I asked casually.
This was a trap question and the reception clerk walked into it.
"No," he said through Wong. "She left nothing."
I pounced on him.
"Then how did she manage to walk out of here with her belongings and not pay her bill?" I demanded
Wong saw the fairness of this and he barked at the old man. For a moment he hesitated, then scowling, he said she had left a suitcase but he was holding it against the rent.
I said I wanted to see it. After some more talk, the old reception clerk got up and led me down the passage to the room next to Leila's. He unlocked the door and produced a cheap imitation leather suitcase from under the bed.
Wong, who had followed us, said, "This case belonged to the girl, sir." I examined the suitcase. It was locked.
"You two wait outside."
When they had gone, I closed and bolted the door. It didn't take me a couple of minutes to force the locks on the suitcase.
Jo-An possessed a slightly better outfit than Leila, but not a great deal better. I turned over the things I found. At the bottom of the suitcase was a large white envelope, its flap tucked. I opened the envelope and shook out a glossy print of Herman Jefferson: a replica of the photograph Janet West had given me. Across the foot of the photograph was scrawled: Fo
r
my wife, Jo-An.
I stared at the hard gangster face, then returned the photograph to the envelope and replaced it where I had found it.
I sat on the bed and lit a cigarette. I wondered how Janet West, miles away in Pasadena City, and Jo-An in Hong Kong could both have owned the same photograph. I told myself that Jefferson must have given it to them, but suddenly and far away, a note of interrogation started up in my mind.
I thought back on the conversation I had had with Leila. What the reception clerk had said didn't tally with what she had said ... one or the other was lying. Why should Leila have lied? After some more thought I came to the conclusion there was no point in remaining in this sordid little hotel. I would have to look elsewhere to find the clue to this mystery.
I got to my feet, crossed the room and stepped out into the passage.
Wong was leaning up against the wall, smoking a cigarette. He straightened and bowed as I came out. The reception clerk probably had gone back to his desk: he wasn't there. "I hope everything is satisfactory, sir," he said.
"I guess," I said. "I'm leaving here. Is there a hotel at Repulse Bay?" He looked faintly surprised.
"Why, yes, sir. There is the Repulse Bay Hotel: a very fine hotel. Would you like me to arrange accommodation for you there?"
"If you can fix it, I'd like to move in right away."
"You realise, sir, the hotel is rather out of the way. If you are thinking of seeing Kowloon, it isn't very convenient."
"That won't worry me. Tell the old guy I'm checking out and get my bill.''
"There are no further questions you wish to ask him?" Wong asked, his face showing disappointment.
"No. Let's get out of here."
Thirty minutes later we were in the Packard, driving along the beautiful road towards Repulse Bay.
5
Repulse Bay turned out to be something very special and the hotel matched it. To my thinking the set-up with its mountains, its concealed bays with an emerald green sea looked better than most of the pleasure spots I'd ever visited, and in my time, I had been lucky to have visited a number of them.
Wong managed to get me a room in the hotel overlooking the bay. He left me the Packard and departed with much bowing, assuring me he was at my service should I need him again. I got busy as soon as I had unpacked by beginning on the telephone book and then talking to the reception clerk of the hotel probing for a lead to Herman Jefferson. Neither the telephone book nor the clerk had heard of Herman Jefferson.
I then asked the hall porter on the theory a hall porter of a good hotel knows everything. I asked him if he knew who owned a villa close by with steps down to the sea into a small harbour complete with boat.
He regarded me thoughtfully before saying, "You mean Mr. Lin Fan's villa, sir? It is now occupied by Mr. Enright and his sister: they are Americans."
"Did you ever hear if a guy named Herman Jefferson lived there?" I asked.
He shook his head. I could see he was getting a little bored with me. "Jefferson? No, I don't know the name, sir."
Later in the afternoon, I put on a pair of swim trunks and went down to the crowded beach. I hired a pedallo and took it out into the bay. After some hard, solid work, I got in a position to see the whole coastline. I quickly spotted Lin Fan's villa. It was situated on a promontory, isolated and very lush, with a terrace garden and winding steps leading down to a small harbour where a fast-looking speedboat was moored.
I propelled my boat towards the villa and when I got within two or three hundred yards of the harbour. I paused to study the place, thinking if Herman Jefferson had really rented this place as Leila had said he had, then he must have suddenly found the opportunity of making really big money. But had he? Had Jo-An told Leila he had rented this villa to save face? It was the kind of lie one woman might tell another.
I suddenly became aware of two tiny sparkling dots showing from a top window of the villa and I moved on. I had a sudden naked feeling. I propelled my craft along the coast for ten minutes, knowing someone was watching me from the villa through a pair of field glasses, the lenses of which were catching the sun. Then I turned my craft, still aware I was being watched and made my way back to the beach.
I glanced up at the villa as I passed it. The two sparkling dots remained focused on me. I tried to look like a tourist, and I asked myself why I was creating so much interest. I got back to the beach as the sun was going down, and I returned to the hotel, wondering what my next move should be.
I was still undecided the following morning. Around ten o'clock, I went down to the beach. After a quick swim, I stretched myself out on the sand and pushed Herman Jefferson, Janet West, old man Jefferson and poor little Leila out of my mind. I gave myself up to the sun, the sound of the surf and to the feeling of surrender that Hong Kong gives you which is hard to resist.
I lay there for maybe an hour, dozing and letting the sun soak into me. Then I became aware that someone had passed close to me and I lazily opened my eyes.
She was tall and slim "and burned a golden brown by the sun. Her salient points which were interesting were scarcely concealed by her scarlet bikini. I saw most men lying on the beach were staring at her ... so I stared too.
She walked across the hot sand towards the sea, swinging a big sun hat in her hand. Her hair was the colour of ripe corn. She was as intriguing and as beautiful as a motif from a Brahms s symphony.
I watched her drop her hat carelessly on the sand and then slide into the sea. She swam well with strong expert strokes that took her quickly out to the distant raft. I watched her hoist herself onto the raft and she sat with her feet in the water. She looked lonely out there all on her own and I had a sudden urge to keep her company.
I took a running dive into the sea and set out towards the raft with my best racing stroke which is impressive so long as I don't have to keep it up too long.
I broke water a few yards from the raft, and hoisted myself up onto it.
She was lying on her side, her breasts heavy in their slight support, her eyes looking directly into mine.
"Tell me if I'm spoiling a beautiful solitude," I said, "and I'll swim away."
She studied me. Now I was at close quarters, I could see she was a woman who had had plenty of experience with men. She had that air about her. She had inquiring, probing eyes of a woman who is interested in men.
"I was rather hoping for company," she said and smiled. Her voice had that husky sexy tone you sometimes hear, but not often. "Who are you? You've only just arrived, haven't you?"
"My name is Nelson Ryan," I told her. "I was named after the English Admiral. My father spent all his spare time reading English naval history. He was nuts about Nelson."
She rolled over on her back and her hard pointed breasts thrust towards the sky.
"I'm Stella Enright," she said. "I live here. It's nice to meet a new face. Are you staying long?"
Just how lucky can a man be? I wondered. Here is the sister of the man who rents Lin Fan's villa. Then I recalled the sparkling dots of the watching field glasses. Maybe it wasn't luck. Maybe this meeting was a little more subtle than luck.
"I wish I was ... a week perhaps." I took from my waterproof pocket a pack of cigarettes and a lighter. "You're lucky to be able to live here. This place is pretty nice." I offered her a cigarette and we lit up.
"It's all right ... now is the best season, but the summer is bad." She blew a thin cloud of smoke into the still air. "My brother is writing a book on Hong Kong. I run the house." She lifted her head to look at me. "Are you staying at the hotel?" "Yes. You have a house?" "We have rented a villa. It belongs to a Chinese gambler." "Lin Fan?"
Her eyes showed surprise. "That's right. How would you know?"
"I heard." I hesitated, then decided to push it as far as it would go. "I thought Herman Jefferson rented that place."
She lifted golden eyebrows in what seemed to me genuine astonishment.
"Herman Jefferson? Do you know him?"
"He happens to come from my home town. Do you?"
"He's dead . . . killed in a car accident."
"I heard that. Did you know him?"
"Harry—that's my brother—knew him. I met him once or twice. So you know him? Harry will be interested. It was an awful thing the way he died . . . awful for his Chinese wife." "You knew her?"
"I wouldn't say that. I've seen her ... a lovely little thing." She flicked ash off her cigarette. "Some Chinese women are really attractive. She was. I could understand Herman falling for her. She was very intriguing." She said it the way most women talk about a woman who is attractive to men: a bitter-sweet touch I didn't miss. "She took his body back to America. I suppose she will stay there. After all, Herman's father is a millionaire. I guess he'll look after her." I resisted the temptation to tell her Jo-An was dead.
"Someone told me Herman came into money, left her and rented your villa."
She half sat up, frowning.
"What an extraordinary story! Who told you that?"
"Oh, someone," I said casually. "It isn't true?"
"Why no ... of course not!" She suddenly relaxed, smiling at me. "It's too ridiculous. Herman was. . . ." She paused, then shrugged her naked shoulders. "Well, frankly, Herman was a no-gooder. I didn't like him very much, but he amused Harry. He just wasn't any good. He went native. He never had any money. There were rumours he lived on this Chinese girl. He could never have afforded to rent Lin Fan's villa. The very idea is ridiculous. Whoever told you that?"
The sound of a fast-moving motor-boat made both of us look out to sea. Coming towards us was a speedboat, cleaving through the sea and throwing up a white spray.
"Here's Harry now," Stella said and rising to her feet, balancing herself on the rocking raft, she waved.
The boat slowed and then the engines cut. It drifted close to the raft. A tall, sun-burned man, wearing a blue and white sweat shirt and white shorts grinned amiably at Stella. His handsome face was a trifle fleshy from good living and there was a network of fine veins, well disguised by his heavy tan that told me he liked the extra drink.
"I thought I'd pick you up. It's lunch-time." He looked inquiringly at me. "Who's your boy friend?"
"This is Nelson Ryan. He knew Herman Jefferson," Stella said and looked at me. "This is my brother, Harry."
We nodded to each other.
"You knew Herman?" Harry said, "Well, what do you know? You here for some time?" "Not more than a week, worse luck," I said.
"Look, if you have nothing better to do tonight, why not come over to our place and have dinner with us? I'll pick you up in the boat... it's the only way to get to the place. Will you do that?"
"Why, sure I'd be glad to, but I don't want to trouble you to pick me up."