The Rodriguez Affair (1970)

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The Rodriguez Affair (1970) Page 15

by Pattinson, James


  Arilla himself received them in his study. He was a man of about forty, short but vigorous, with crisp black hair and bright, restless eyes. Even when still he seemed to give the impression of superabundant energy; one felt that at any moment he might spring up and dash away on some errand that had just occurred to him.

  He welcomed Cade with enthusiasm. “Roberto! How good it is to see you again. It must be at least six years. Much too long.”

  Cade introduced Juanita. Arilla was delighted to see her. He ushered them both to chairs upholstered in soft red leather, rather worn.

  “And what have you been doing since I last saw you?”

  “Working,” Cade said.

  “A regrettable necessity.”

  It was a large room with two tall windows looking out on to a lawn. On the lawn some children were playing under the supervision of a middle-aged woman. The sound of their laughter came in through the open windows.

  “You still have as many children here?” Cade asked.

  Arilla seemed to bounce in his chair. “More. We have no room, but we take them. What else can one do? Turn them away? Tell them to sleep in the streets?”

  “You have a soft heart, Alonzo.”

  Arilla looked fierce. “No, Roberto, I have a very hard heart. It is so hard that I would kill with my own hands anyone I found ill-treating a child. That is the kind of man I am. A villain.”

  Cade laughed. Juanita laughed too. It would have been difficult to imagine a less villainous man.

  Cade stopped laughing. He said: “Now let us get down to business.”

  Arilla looked surprised. “Business? What business?”

  Cade watched the children on the lawn; they were engaged in some intricate game that was a complete mystery to him.

  “You spoke to me once about your wish to build a swimming-pool. Have you ever done so?”

  Arilla smiled wryly. “Difficult enough to manage on the income we have without such projects.”

  “Yet you would still like to have a pool?”

  “Of course. But why talk of impossibilities?”

  “Is it so impossible?”

  “Without money, yes. And where would the money come from?”

  “Some rich man perhaps.”

  “Show me the rich man who would give so generously.”

  “Look at me,” Cade said.

  Arilla stared at him. “You?” He shook his head. “No, Roberto, do not joke on such a subject. It is not a thing to make jokes about.”

  “I am not joking,” Cade said, and he took the parcel from his pocket.

  Juanita was staring at him too. He got up and crossed the room to Arilla’s desk, a big mahogany table with a typewriter on it, some books and a pile of folders. There was a paper-knife too. Cade picked up the paper-knife and slit open the parcel. He unfastened the chamois leather bag and poured the diamonds out on to a clear space on the table. He heard Juanita gasp.

  “There is your swimming-pool, Alonzo.”

  Arilla stared at the diamonds. “These are genuine?”

  “They were valued by a cousin of mine who is in the diamond trade. He reckoned they were worth one hundred and forty thousand pounds sterling. I’ll leave you to work that out in pesos.”

  “And you are giving them to the orphanage?”

  “That’s it,” Cade said.

  He felt Juanita’s hand on his arm. “Roberto.” He was not sure whether she was reproving or applauding him. It could have been either.

  “But why, why?” Arilla asked. He seemed unable to believe that he was not dreaming.

  “In a way,” Cade said, “it’s only justice. But I won’t try to explain that now.” Perhaps he would explain it to Juanita some time. She would understand. “Just take it as so.”

  He wondered what Gomara would have said. And Harry Banner. Harry would probably have laughed; he had always had a sense of humour. And Della? Maybe she would have laughed too. Maybe.

  “There’s just one thing,” Cade said. “I’d like you to call it the Isabella Martinez Pool.”

  Juanita’s hand on his arm was tighter; it was squeezing him hard. This time when she breathed, “Roberto!” he knew what she meant. He knew because he could see the tears glistening in her eyes. And when he looked at Arilla there were tears in Axilla’s eyes too.

  “Listen,” Cade said.

  “What is it?” Arilla asked. There was only the sound of the children’s laughter.

  “Nothing,” Cade said. “Nothing at all. I just thought I heard some people turning in their graves.”

  THE END

  By the Same Author

  Freedman

  Soldier, Sail North

  The Wheel of Fortune

  Last in Convoy

  The Mystery of the Gregory Kotovsky

  Contact Mr Delgado

  Across the Narrow Seas

  Wild Justice

  The Liberators

  The Last Stronghold

  Find the Diamonds

  The Plague Makers

  Whispering Death

  Three Hundred Grand

  Crusader’s Cross

  A Real Killing

  Special Delivery

  Ten Million Dollar Cinch

  The Deadly Shore

  The Murmansk Assignment

  The Sinister Stars

  Watching Brief

  Weed

  Away With Murder

  A Fortune in the Sky

  Search Warrant

  The Marakano Formula

  Cordley’s Castle

  The Haunted Sea

  The Petronov Plan

  Feast of the Scorpion

  The Honeymoon Caper

  A Walking Shadow

  The No-Risk Operation

  Final Run

  Blind Date

  Something of Value

  Red Exit

  The Courier Job

  The Rashevski Icon

  The Levantine Trade

  The Spayde Conspiracy

  Busman’s Holiday

  The Antwerp Appointment

  Stride

  The Seven Sleepers

  Lethal Orders

  The Kavulu Lion

  A Fatal Errand

  The Stalking-Horse

  Flight to the Sea

  A Car for Mr Bradley

  Precious Cargo

  The Saigon Merchant

  Life-Preserver

  Dead of Winter

  Come Home, Toby Brown

  Homecoming

  The Syrian Client

  Poisoned Chalice

  Where the Money Is

  A Dream of Madness

  Paradise in the Sun

  Dangerous Enchantment

  The Junk Run

  Legatee

  Killer

  Dishonour Among Thieves

  Operation Zenith

  Dead Men Rise Up Never

  The Spoilers

  With Menaces

  Devil Under the Skin

  The Animal Gang

  Steel

  The Emperor Stone

  Fat Man From Colombia

  Bavarian Sunset

  The Telephone Murders

  Lady from Argentina

  The Poison Traders

  Squeaky Clean

  Avenger of Blood

  A Wind on the Heath

  One-Way Ticket

  The Time of Your Life

  Death of a Go-Between

  Some Job

  The Wild One

  Skeleton Island

  A Passage of Arms

  On Desperate Seas

  Old Pals Act

  Crane

  The Silent Voyage

  The Angry Island

  Obituary for Howard Gray

  The Golden Reef

  Bullion

  Sea Fury

  The Spanish Hawk

  Ocean Prize

  Copyright

  © James Pattinson 2006

  First published in Great Britain 2006 />
  This edition 2012

  ISBN 978 0 7090 9731 0 (epub)

  ISBN 978 0 7090 9732 7 (mobi)

  ISBN 978 0 7090 9733 4 (pdf)

  ISBN 978 0 7090 8179 1 (print)

  Robert Hale Limited

  Clerkenwell House

  Clerkenwell Green

  London EC1R 0HT

  www.halebooks.com

  The right of James Pattinson to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

 

 

 


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