Collins, Max Allan - Nathan Heller 07

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much of it. Obviously he was paying his condolences and asking what he could do to help.
    And at least three times he asked her (and this I could hear—he was insistent) to have his wife, Nancy, get in touch with him as soon as possible.
    De Marigny hung up the phone and looked at Christie, who turned his back on the Count and headed toward the hallway, and me.
    “Why wasn’t I called, Harold? Why did I have to hear about this on the street?”
    Christie mumbled something, brushing past me. De Marigny was on his heels.
    “Count de Marigny,” Lindop said.
    The Colonel was positioned in front of them like a traffic cop, as if to make them stop.
    They stopped.
    “I regret to inform you that Sir Harry Oakes is dead. Foul play is indicated.”
    “When exactly was the body found?” de Marigny asked.
    “At seven this morning.”
    He scowled. “My God, man! It’s almost eleven o’clock—this is my father-in-law who’s been murdered! Why wasn’t I contacted?”
    “No slight was intended. We’ve been busy. A crime has been committed.”
    De Marigny’s wide lips pressed together sullenly. Then he said, “I demand to view the body!”
    “No,” Lindop said, softly but flatly. “I would suggest you go home, Count. And make yourself available, should we have any questions.”
    “What sort of questions?”
    “I can’t say any more.”
    “Why in hell not?”
    “I’m afraid my hands are tied.” A pained expression crossed Lindop’s hound-dog countenance. ‘The Governor is calling in two police detectives from Miami, who should be here shortly to lead the investigation.”
    What was that all about? Why call Miami cops in on a murder in a British colony? That “Governor” Lindop was referring to was none other than the Duke of Windsor, England’s ex-King himself. That was the phone call that had interrupted us upstairs….
    As I was thinking this through, two splendid-looking Bahamian officers came down the curving stairway with a stretcher bearing the bedsheet-covered body of Sir Harry Oakes. Other officers held open the door while they carted him out to a waiting ambulance.
    De Marigny watched this, frowning, nose twitching like a rabbit’s, and followed them out, as if to press once more for the right to view the body.
    I stood on the porch and watched the Count pull his gleaming Lincoln across the rain-soaked lawn to avoid the parked cars blocking the drive. He even passed the ambulance, on his way out the gate.
    “You may go,” Lindop said, tapping my shoulder. “Those officers over there will drive you. Where will you be?”
    “At the British Colonial.”
    “Fine. We’ll contact you there, later today, for a more formal statement.”
    Then he shut the door.
    What the hell. It seemed like a good time to leave Westbourne, anyway. After all, Sir Harry wasn’t home.

 
    By noon the overcast sky had transformed itself into something pure and blue, with a bright but not blazing sun, a reprieve that sent sunbathers scurrying in surprise to the white beach of the British Colonial. During the early morning hours, minions of the hotel had obviously cleared the branches and debris from the sand; the beach was pristine again, shimmering in the sun. The emerald sea rippled peacefully. It was as if the storm had never happened.
    Davy Jones’ Locker, the hotel café overlooking the beach, was stone-walled, low-ceilinged, slate-floored. A black bartender in a colorful shirt mixed drinks before a mural of Davy himself, fast asleep while nubile mermaids and a school of quizzical comic fish gave him the once-over.
    I got myself a hamburger with rare, sweetly marinated meat, a side of conch fritters and an orange rum punch the smiling barman called a Bahama Mama. Then out on the patio, I found a round wooden table under a beach umbrella and ate my lunch and watched the pretty girls on the beach. Occasionally one would even venture into the water.
    “You must be in heaven, Heller,” a high-pitched, sultry voice

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