Fresh corpses are hard to maneuver. It takes me more than ten minutes of clumsy clutching and sliding before I can get her onto the side of the Jacuzzi. The best I can do is to lay her out respectfully with her arms crossed and to cover her with a silk sheet from the bed.
By the time I reach the door, depression has set in which quite eclipses fear. I am profoundly sorry to have been the cause of her death. When I emerge into the central area where the nymphs are still hanging out in the pool, they observe the expression on my face.
“What happened? Did you come too soon?”
Without answering I take the elevator down to the ground floor. The footman, I’m thinking-he must have told Tanakan what she was up to.
In the back of a cab I call the FBI. “At least we know where the crime took place,” I tell her. “Damrong’s death was filmed there-I recognized the reclining jade Buddha.”
“What are you going to do?”
“Nothing.”
“A woman’s murdered in front of your eyes, and you’re not going to do anything? Why don’t you arrest Tanakan?”
“Vikorn wouldn’t let me,” I explain. “He’s blackmailing him already.”
“He’s that corrupt?”
“You don’t understand. It’s a question of honor-that’s why Tanakan is playing along. So long as he does, Vikorn is bound to protect him. Even though it’s expensive, it’s actually to Tanakan’s advantage to accept the squeeze.”
“You’re right, I don’t understand.”
“Just think Wall Street,” I say, and close the phone.
Standing on the sidewalk outside my hovel, I think about making a second call. It’s two forty-five a.m., but the person I’m thinking of calling is notorious for her insomnia. She answers on the second ring, not a note of sleepiness in her voice. Because it’s so late and the street so silent, I whisper, “Sorry if I woke you.”
“Sonchai? It’s okay, you didn’t wake me. But why are you up so late?”
“Sometime today a corpse will be delivered to you. It will be of a young woman whose nickname is Nok. Her throat will be cut just below the Adam’s apple.”
A long pause. Something in her tone tells me this is not the first time she has received this kind of call. “What do you want me to do? Please don’t ask me to cover up.”
I’m overwhelmed by a flashback: Nok, naked, floating facedown, a pale pink stream from her neck like a gossamer scarf undulating in the water. “The opposite, Dr. Supatra,” I say. “I want to know who is in charge of the cover-up.”
I’m exhausted and wired both. The processing unit between my ears is buzzing like a hornet’s nest, but my limbs are so weary I can hardly move them. I know I’m not going to be able to sleep whatever happens; why put off until tomorrow the humiliation that could be mine tonight? The only precaution I take is to enter my hovel silently, careful not to disturb Chanya and the Lump, take my service revolver out from under the mattress where I left it, and go out again into the street. When a cab stops, I tell the driver to take me back to the Parthenon. I get out about a hundred yards before the club, though, pay off the driver, and wait. It is four twenty-three by the clock on my cell phone. The last of the girls are leaving, wearing jeans and T-shirts, saying goodnight to one another in tired tones. The men who work mostly behind the scenes are going home too. From a dark corner I wait until everyone has gone; almost everyone. A tall, closed van of the kind used for wholesale food deliveries draws up. In the blaze of the Parthenon’s entrance lights I recognize the doorman, who has changed out of his uniform and is now in shorts and singlet. The arrival of the body bag from out of the building and its delivery into the back of the van takes less than twenty seconds. Now the van is gone, and only the doorman is left, staring after it. He fishes a cell phone from his pocket, listens to it for a moment, then stares down the soi in my direction.
Suddenly the hunter is hunted. I wait like a scared rabbit while he unhurriedly walks down the soi until he has found me. I know that the distortion in the right pocket of his shorts is caused by the cell phone; a gun would be bigger. Nor does he look especially lethal in his physique: a couple of inches shorter than me, about forty-five with a potbelly.
Now he is peering curiously at me. “Are you going to assassinate me tonight?” he asks. He reaches out with both hands to pull me by the lapels of my jacket. It’s not an aggressive move, and I wonder what he has in mind until I realize he is dragging me toward a streetlamp. He positions us so that I can get a good look at his face. It is twisted in spiritual agony. He prods at the gun in my pocket.
“Why don’t you kill me? I would consider it a favor.” I stare into his anguish. He swallows hard. “My wife and daughter are both servants in his mansion. He treats them well. They’re not beautiful, so he never lays a hand on them. But I’m his slave. I hope you understand.”
20
“A body fitting the description you gave last night arrived at the morgue at six this morning,” Dr. Supatra says. She has called while I’m getting dressed. Chanya is at the wat begging the Buddha to overlook her former profession and provide a healthy, happy, and above all lucky baby.
“Who brought it?”
“Detective Inspector Kurakit.”
“Where did he say the body was found?”
“At an apartment rented by the deceased.”
“You were not invited to investigate the scene?”
“No.”
“Thanks,” I say, and close the phone.
I call Manny, Vikorn’s secretary, to ask her to put me through to the boss. I can tell by her tone that she’s been primed already. “He’s out at a meeting.”
“No, he’s not.”
“He’s very busy, Detective. I’m not sure he’s got time for you today.”
“I want to know why I’m not on the new murder case that came in this morning.”
“Do you want me to ask him for you?”
“No. He’ll say it’s because I have my hands full already. I want to speak to him.”
“I’ll see what I can do.”
No call comes, of course. Our protocol is of such rigidity that he might as well have taken a trip to the moon-there is no way of getting to him if he doesn’t want to see me. I guess I’ll have to try to deal with Kurakit. It would have to be him, of course.
We don’t hate each other, for the simple reason that to hate another person you have to understand them on some level. Kurakit is as baffled by me as I am by him. From his point of view, I’m an idiot who should never have been recruited in the first place. A devout Buddhist and a former soldier, to Kurakit and millions like him, life is very simple: find a billet, identify the boss, do whatever he tells you to do, and accept the promotions that follow. To him, my complicated psychology is a sure sign of insanity. He has, of course, been warned that I might call.
“How are you?” I ask with as much bonhomie as I can muster.
Suspiciously: “Okay.”
“I hear a new case came in early this morning.”
“Who told you?”
“Is it a secret?”
“It’s my case. Colonel Vikorn called me at home at four o’clock this morning. You’re too busy to deal with it.”
“I’m not trying to steal it from you. It might be connected to something I’m working on -maybe we should brainstorm together.”
“Brain what? What are you talking about? It’s not connected to anything you’re working on.”
“How do you know?”
“Vikorn said so. He said if you called, I was to tell you it’s not connected.”
“Did he tell you who did it?”
“No.”
“But he told you who didn’t do it?”
“Maybe.”
“Did he tell you a certain senior banker named Tanakan had nothing to do with it?”