So we sat for a couple of hours. Finally, we got disgusted. So we dived in, swam a little, behind the rocks, we got out on the seashore. Somebody gave us a ride back to the hotel. And this time he really got angry. He made complaint to the government, and some of their officials came over to discuss it, and said that was just unintentional, it was another accident. The little island we thought was completely empty, not a soul on it, they had fortification on that island. So that is what happened to us in Yugoslavia.
When George told me the American people thought he was making sketches of something, I said I can understand the Yugoslavs thinking such things, but I said I couldn't understand about the United States Government.
Mr. Jenner. Well, they don't know at the time. They just see somebody doing some sketching.
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. Yes; just like in Haiti, every day—he went for a walk in the mountains, sometimes with me, sometimes with Nero.
Mr. Jenner. Nero is one of your pups?
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. Yes; he is the one that made the trip. So, of course, Haitians—they almost called him Longaron—that is a werewolf, Lougrow. So that could get him in trouble, too. But Haitians are very mild people. They just enjoyed it.
Mr. Jenner. When did you leave Europe on that occasion?
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. When—1957?
Mr. Jenner. Yes.
Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. I cannot tell you exactly. But it was in the fall.