JOHN M. HARRISON 

THE NEON HEART MURDERS 

ALL DOWN THE WEST COAST of the island at night glitter the lights of a city 
five 
miles long, its towers like black and gold cigarette packs standing on end. In 
the malls fluorescent light skids off the surfaces of hard and soft designer 
goods: matte plastics, foams of lace and oyster satin, the precise curves of 
cars and shoes and shoulder pads. This city is well known for the scent of 
Anais 
Anais in its streets; stacked video screens in the cocktail lounges; and, down 
by the ocean front -- where men push past you smelling of sweat and seafood, 
and 
you can hear the soundtrack of your own life playing from the dashboard of a 
white car -- neon of green, red or frosty blue. Music pulses from the 
amusement 
arcades, clears its throat in the night clubs. In the jazz bars they serve 
only 
"Black Heart" rum, and you can hear the intricate bass lines twenty miles out 
to 
sea. 

The best of the bars is the Long Bar at the Cafe Surf, with its decor of 
strained contrasts. Marble pillars and designer blinds with thin aerodynamic 
slats. Cane tables and salt-blistered chrome bar taps. Forgotten movie stars 
crowd the walls in brushed aluminium frames. Exotic beers glitter from the 
shelves of the cooler. While under the red neon sign "Live Music Nightly," the 
Cafe Surf two-piece -- piano and tenor saxophone ambles its way through the 
evening's middle set. 

The pianist, a young man with a mobile mouth, plays the house Kawai with one 
hand while with the other he coaxes from a piano-top synthesizer the sound of 
a 
deceptively relaxed bass. Just now he is Relaxin' in Camarillo. He picked this 
tune up from a Spanish bootleg CD so cheap its cover showed not Charlie Parker 
but Johnny Hodges. The rhythms flick and rip across one another, tangle and 
separate. 

The saxophonist is an older man. White face, black rollneck, white hands. 
Years 
of music have tightened the muscles round his mouth into two deep grooves. 
Every 
so often he stops to watch the pianist take a solo. At these times his 
expression is one of puzzled admiration, as if he heard someone this good once 
before but -- because he has played so much music since -- now forgets who or 
where. (It was in a bar much like this one, somewhere less relaxed, on some 
bigger mass of land perhaps. Perhaps it wasn't in a bar at all.) This is the 
sole acknowledgement the old can give the young. Anything more would be too 
bitter; but so would anything less. He nods his head in time, pulls sharply on 
his cigarette, glances down at the saxophone in front of him. 

Possibilities cascade. 

A middle-aged man who looked like Albert Einstein used to come in during the 
middle set and buy a drink. He would stare round helplessly for a moment, then 
smile and light his pipe. He would sit down in a corner in his raincoats get 
up 

again to put a match carefully into an ashtray on the corner of the bar; sit 
down again. He used to do all this with a kind of meticulous politeness, as if 
he was in someone's front room; or as if, at home, his wife required of him an 
unflagging formal acknowledgement of her efforts. He would stare at his pipe. 
He 
would start a conversation with a girl old enough to be his granddaughter, 
getting out his wallet to show her -- and her friend, who wore torn black net 
tights and industrial shoes something which looked in the undependable Long 
Bar 
light like a business card; which they would admire. 

In fact he was not as old as he looked; he and his wife lived apart; and he 
was 
a detective. 

His name was Aschemann. 

Though he loved the city, Aschemann often complained to himself: 

"Phony music, cheap neon, streets which reek of bad money. Hands which make a 
big gun look small. All the burned-down rooms and lists of suspects. Crimes 
you 
might commit yourself, after a late night call. Those suburbs, you have to 
solve 
them like a labyrinth. And always some half empty hotel! Always someone luring 
the innocent down the curve of the street, but before you can investigate, 
before you can earn a blind dime, you have to find out what's behind that 
door. 

"The true detective," he used to warn his assistants (mainly local young men 
and 
women on one-month trials from the uniformed branch, neat and ambitious, 
fluent 
in three Pacific Rim languages), "starts in the center of the maze. Crimes 
make 
their way through to him. Never forget: you uncover your own heart at the 
heart 
of it." 

HIS ORIGINAL VISITS to the Long Bar were made during the investigation of a 
series of crimes against women. First on the scene of the original killing, he 
had discovered two lines of a poem tattooed in the shaven armpit of the 
victim: 

Send me a neon heart Unarmed with a walk like a girl 

She was a fourteen-year-old prostitute from the Rim t a grown-up girl in 
box-fresh Minnie Mouse shoes. Forensic investigation proved the tattoo to have 
been made after the heart stopped beating, in the style of a Carmody tattooist 
now dead but popular a year or two before. 

"Find out how this is possible," he told his assistant. 

When Aschemann first walked through the door of the Cafe Surf, it was not 
night: 
it was late morning. The bar was full of sunlight and bright air. Taupe sand 
blew across the floor tiles, and a toddler was crawling about between the cane 
tables, wearing only a T-shirt with the legend SURF NOIR. Meanings -- all 
incongruous -- splashed off this like drops of water, as the dead metaphors 
trapped inside the live one collided and reverberated endlessly and 

elastically, 
taking up new positions relative to one another. SURF NOIR, which is a whole 
new 
existence; which is a "world" implied in two words, dispelled in an instant; 
which is foam on the appalling multitextual sea we drift on. 

"Which is probably," Aschemann noted, "the name of an aftershave." 

In his search for the tattoo murderer, Aschemann had himself driven about the 
city in an unmarked car. He sat alertly in the front passenger seat as the 
rose-red Cadillac descended each steep dogleg curve of Maricachel Hill, down 
through the Moneytown palms and white designer duplexes to the Corniche. He 
stood trying to light his pipe in the strong salt winds which scraped the 
harbor 
mole in the middle of the day. He watched from Suicide Point the 
late-afternoon 
sunbathers on Three Mile Beach, the evening windsurfers in the bay. 

Less in a search for clues than a search for himself -- for a detective 
capable 
of understanding the crime -- he visited his estranged wife, a 
thirty-six-year-old agoraphobe living in squalor in the "suicide suburbs" up 
the 
coast. When he arrived, boys in long gray shorts and singlets were 
skateboarding 
the concrete service road between her house and the beach. They looked tired 
and 
blank. Sand blew into Aschemann's face as he raised his hand to knock on the 
door. Before she could answer, he went back and sat in the car on the 
passenger 
side of the front bench-seat and explained to his driver: 

"There are kinds of agoraphobes to whom even the arrival of a letter or a 
telephone call is too much of the outside world. Someone else has to answer it 
for them. Yet as soon as you step into their houses they become monsters. It 
is 
less that they are uncomfortable in public than that they only feel in control 
on their own ground. Agoraphobia can be a very aggressive territorial 
strategy: 
refusal to go out is a way of forcing the outside to come in to where it is 
manageable. On the agoraphobe's home ground you must walk through the 
agoraphobe's maze." 

In his wife's rooms every inch of floor and furniture space was filled up, so 
that you didn't quite know how to get from the door to the sofa; and once you 
had got there you couldn't get up and move about except with extreme caution. 
All quick movement was damped by this labyrinth, where there was even a code 

three or four quick pulls on the cord--to get the lavatory light to go on. 
Therapy only confused her, her friends no longer came to see her, and she had 
retreated into a further labyrinth, of drink, fuddled political principles and 
old emotional entanglements. At Christmas he bought her a perfume she liked 
called Ashes of Roses. The rest of the time he tried to stay away. 

"Come over," she would encourage him. "I'll get the Black Heart Rum you like 
so 
much." She phoned him two or three times a week to talk about their lives 
together, to find out what the weather was like where he was, discuss the view 
from her window. "You see that boat out in the Bay? Do you see it too? The 
blue 

one? What sort of boat is that?" But when he visited he rarely had the courage 
or energy to make himself go in, because if he did she would soon sigh and 
say, 
"We had such times together, before you took up with that whore from Carmody." 

"Even though it is over between us," Aschemann told his driver as the Cadillac 
slipped away between the rag-mop palms and peeling pastel-colored beach houses 
on either side of Suntory Boulevard, "I sometimes seem to be the person who 
cares most about her. I am no longer in a position to look after her, yet no 
one 
else will. Because of this I feel not only guilt but an increasing sense of 
irritation with people I once thought of as `more her friends than mine.' They 
have abandoned her as completely as I have. This makes them no better than 
me." 
Thinking he heard the rumble of skateboard wheels on concrete, he turned to 
look 
out the rear window. Sand was blowing across the road in the purple light. "Go 
back," he said. 

The murders took him all over the island. The first evening he walked into the 
Cafe Surf and sat down, Aschemann noticed this 

The band was placed at the end of the Long Bar, near the lavatory door. People 
kept coming out of the lavatory while the band was playing, pushing between 
the 
piano and the bar. There were very fat women in jeans, very tall men wearing 
raincoats, thin boys like camp inmates with shaven heads, people crippled in 
small and grotesque ways. For a moment, as each of these figures appeared in 
the 
weird orange light, it seemed as if the music was squeezing them into 
existence; 
as if there was some sort of unformed darkness out there at the back of the 
Cafe 
Surf, and the band was squashing it like a fistful of wet mud into these 
shapes. 
It was that sort of music. 

While Aschemann was drinking his first glass of rum, the band squeezed out two 
or three thin boys in singlets, earrings and studded leather belts. As he 
ordered his second, and drank that more slowly, in little sips that coated his 
mouth with the taste of burnt sugar, it squeezed out some boots with pointed 
steel tips, and an old lady in a print dress; it squeezed out a suede cowboy 
hat. It began squeezing out people young and old, and people middle-aged. 
Surprisingly few of them were middle-aged. 

"Get back," whispered the saxophone, "get back. Get back to where you once 
belonged." 

But they never did. They bought drinks at the bar and then, laughing and 
shouting, wandered out into the lighted street. Were they in themselves a kind 
of surf or spray, brought into being where the powerful tidal forces of the 
music came into rhythmic contact with the fixed land of the Long Bar? 
Thoughtfully, the man who looked like Einstein watched them go. 

OTHER CRIMES came and went, but the murders continued, each one publishing new 
lines of the verse. There was nothing to connect the victims but their shaven 
armpit and Carmody-style tattoo. "And, of course," as Aschemann would remind 
his 
latest assistant, "the investigation itself." Aschemann had forbidden the 
detective branch to work the case. Track record as well as seniority allowed 

him 
to do that, sheer weight of cases solved, paperwork successfully filed. Word 
went out that it was his crime. "He can keep it," was most people's opinion. 

After perhaps six months, his own wife became a victim. 

Alerted by a neighbor, they found her sprawled among the broken furniture, 
boxes 
of clothes, the piles of local ad-sheets, fashion magazines and old record 
albums, which had divided the floor of the room into the narrow waist-high 
alleys of the maze. It was hot in there. Up from all the yellowed pages, 
stronger than the smell of the body, came a stifling odor of dust and salt. It 
got in your mouth as well as your nose. A rich yellow light filtered through 
the 
wafer-thin slats of the wooden blinds. She had fallen awkwardly, wedged 
sideways 
with one arm trapped beneath her and the other draped across a copy of Harpers 
& 
Queen, her left hand clutching an empty tumbler, her cheap sun-faded print 
dress 
disarranged to show a yellow thigh: but not one of those piles of stuff, the 
uniformed men remarked, had been disturbed by her fall. There were no signs of 
a 
struggle. It was as if her murderer had been as constrained in here as anyone 
else. Tattooed in her armpit were the lines: 

Send me a neon heart Send it with love Seek me inside 

When they turned her over, they found her other hand clutching a letter 
Aschemann had sent her when they were still young. Called to the scene by a 
reluctant junior investigator, Aschemann examined this letter for a moment -�giving less attention, it seemed, to what he had written than to the cheap 
airmail-quality paper he had written it on all those years ago -- then went 
and 
stood puzzledly in the center of the maze. The assembled police, sweating into 
their uniforms, spoke in low voices and avoided his eyes. He understood all 
this 
-- the coming and going, the flickering glare of the forensic cameras -- but 
it 
was as if he was seeing it for the first time. Outside, the afternoon 
skateboarders in their SURF NOIR shirts rumbled to and fro on the corrugated 
concrete of the beach road. If he peered between the slats of the blind, he 
knew, he would be able to see Carmody, Moneytown, the Harbor Mole, the whole 
city tattooed stark and clear in strong violet light into the armpit of the 
Bay. 
After a moment or two, he said, "Bring me the details in my office later." 

He said: "Do a good job here." 

Later, he found himself looking out from Suicide Point in the twilight. Behind 
him, a new driver sat in the rose-colored Cadillac, talking quietly into the 
dash radio. There was a tender hazy light, a warm wind at the edge of the 
cliff, 
the whisper of the tide far below. A few eroded bristle-cone pines, a patch of 
red earth bared and compacted by tourists' feet. An extraordinary sense of 
freedom. He walked back to the car in the soft wind. 

"I was only in their way there," he said. "Tell them I know they'll do a good 
job." 

That evening he visited the Surf again. 

He sat at the Long Bar and watched the band stroll through their second set of 
the evening. They were as amused, as meditative -- as guilty, Aschemann 
thought 
-- as ever. 

The pianist must always be setting one thing against another. Every piece he 
played was a turn against -- a joke upon -- some other piece, some other 
pianist, some other instrument. He cloaked this obsession with a cleverness 
which made it amusing. But even his generously cut summer suit, which 
sometimes 
hung from its own massive shoulder pads as if it was empty, was a joke on the 
old jazz-men; and you could tell that when he was alone in his room at night 
he 
was compelled to play one hand against the other. If no one else was there, he 
would play against himself, and then against the self thus created, and then 
against the next: until all fixed notion of self had leaked away into this 
infinite slippage and he could relax for a second in the sharp light and 
cigarette smoke, like someone caught fleetingly in a black and white 
photograph 
by Herman Leonard. 

The saxophonist, meanwhile, nodded his head in time, pulled sharply on his 
cigarette, glanced down at the saxophone in front of him. Possibilities 
cascaded: the saxophonist entertained each one with an almost oriental 
patience. 
Long ago he came to some understanding of things incommunicable to the young, 
the obsessed, the energetic, because to them it would seem bland and 
seamlessly 
self-evident: "That which is the most complex is the most simple," perhaps; or 
"It is only because no music is possible that any music at all is possible." 
The 
universe now remade itself for him continually, out of a metaphor, two or 
three 
invariable rules, and a musical instrument called -- for some reason known 
only 
to God -- the saxophone. 

That night the band squeezed out two dock-boys with dyed brushcuts, arm in arm 
with an emaciated blonde who kept wiping her nose on her pliable white 
forearm. 
Bebop golems, Aschemann thought, as he followed them along the Corniche in the 
soft warm scented darkness, then up Moneytown into Carmody: bebop golems. In 
Carmody, he lost them among the bars and transsexual brothels, the streets 
that 
stank of perspiration, oil products and lemon grass. One minute they were 
still 
distinguishable, the next they had merged with the life around ,them. They 
were 
gone, and all he could see was life. He could not really take in his wife's 
death, because all he could see around him was life. 

Every evening after that he visited the Long Bar. The band squeezed out its 
golems. After his second glass of rum Aschemann shadowed them into the warm 
air 
and black heart of the city. He could smell the guilt and excitement that came 
up out of the gratings to meet them. He could smell their excitement at being 
newly alive there, in Carmody among the sights! One night, standing 
momentarily 

thoughtful at 10th and Miramar, he was picked up by a Marilyn Monroe lookalike 
in a white wrap-bodice evening dress and tomato red stilt-heel shoes. She was 
thirty, beautiful. She only needed a brushed aluminum frame. She took him to 
her 
room in a fourth-floor walk up behind the bottled-milk dairy at Tiger Shore. 

It was bare: gray board floor, bare bulb, a single bentwood chair. On the wall 
opposite the window, the shadow of the slatted blind falling across a poster. 
SURF NOIR. "Hey," she said. "Why don't you sit here --?" When she bent forward 
from the waist to undo his raincoat, the white dress presented her breasts to 
him in a flickering light. She knelt, and he could hear her breathing. It was 
placid, rather catarrhal. Later she lifted the hem of the dress and positioned 
herself astride him. So close, he saw that her gait, the shadows round her 
eyes, 
the foundation caked in the downy hairs by the corners of her mouth, had 
conspired beneath the undependable Carmody neon to make her seem older than 
she 
was. She whispered when he came: "There. There now." She was young enough for 
that act of generosity. She was a victim. With or without costume, she was one 
of the city's highwire artists. He had no idea what she was. He paid her. He 
returned to the Long Bar, and, resting in the music and light as he drank a 
third glass of rum, he thought: 

Does it matter who she is, when every night here the world is somehow touched? 

Eventually, Aschemann too was murdered. 

No one knew what happened. Two of his staff, called to the Cafe Surf at three 
o' 
clock in the morning, found him not inside but out at the back on the wet sand 
beneath the pier. The air was warm and soft. Aschemann had squeezed some of 
the 
wet sand up into a kind of fist near his face. Had he been close to a killer? 
Or 
had he simply come down to look at the shallow water lapping almost 
tentatively 
at the base of each rusty pillar, the water a tepid purple color fluorescing 
suddenly in little flickers and glimmers as a response to the headlights 
sweeping along the Corniche above? 

When they found him, Aschemann was alive but unspeaking. Unsure about 
procedure, 
his latest driver had alerted the uniform police. They walked about on the 
beach 
with torches. They called an ambulance and tried to make him comfortable while 
they waited for it to arrive. But the ambulance was held up on 14th and 
warbled 
its way down through Moneytown too late. Aschemann raised himself suddenly and 
said, "Someone must tell my wife." After that, he was silent again. The 
detective branch arrived. 

"Can you hear us?" they asked. "Can you tell us who did this?" 

They advised one another tiredly, "Forget it, Jack." 

In fact he was conscious until he died. He listened to all their soft talk. He 
smelled the smell of their cigarette smoke. But he made no attempt to impart 
the 
secret he knew. Instead, he thought about the band at the Cafe Surf. He 
thought 

about the black surf along the island's beaches at night, black surf with an 
oily violet sheen on the swell as it mounts. Wave after wave of new 
inhabitants. 
"Life in the breaks," he thought of saying to the assembled detectives. 
"That's 
what surfers call them. Look there, in the breaks." He thought of the poem. He 
thought about his crime. He thought about his wife waiting for everyone to 
come 
to her in her minotaur's cave; and the Carmody whore, who went out along the 
highwire from her room to everyone. 

"We can never see the truth," he thought: "But does that matter at this level 
of 
things, when all that counts is sight itself?" Even though he was dying and 
could barely lift his head, he looked out across the bay at the lights on the 
other side and thought, "For instance: I've been here and seen this." 

What if the city is itself a surf, of buildings and people and consumer goods? 
What if the motives that power it are tidal? What if unpredictable winds play 
against masses of water, currents too complex to understand? What if crimes 
are 
whipped off the crest of events like spray, with no more cause than that? 

At this time of night, halfway through the middle set, the lights of the Cafe 
Surf go dim. There is a smell of food and, between numbers, laughter and 
shouting. But the tables closest to the musicians are empty, as if an arc of 
fallout has cleared them. These tables are cluttered with empty Giraffe Beer 
bottles and crumpled serviettes. At the Long Bar they serve a cocktail called 
"Ninety Percent Neon." Marilyn Monroe leans out of a brushed aluminum frame, 
upper body bent forward a little from the waist, head tilted back to laugh, so 
that her breasts are offered to the paying customers wrapped in silk, jazz, 
red 
light from the neon sign. It's a life, the saxophonist often thinks, with a 
sagging twist of lemon left at the bottom, like an empty glass. 

But what does he know?