Bangkok Rules (9 page)

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Authors: Harlan Wolff

BOOK: Bangkok Rules
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Carl telephoned his man and told him he had a printed picture, a home address from the ID card record and an office address and when could he start? Boonchoo said he could start immediately. He always said he could start immediately. Carl paid well and he liked people who appreciated it; not many do.

 

Next Carl called the colonel. Colonel Pornchai always behaved towards Carl as if he was doing him a favour as opposed to doing business. The colonel dragged his feet and complained about every requirement and Carl pretended he didn’t know he was paying double what he should. That was how the game was played and the men in uniform always had it their way, or they simply changed the rules. Carl understood the rules and had learnt to play the game well.

 

He didn’t mind paying more money to the colonel instead of contacting his less expensive immigration contact directly. It brought the colonel into the game and that gave Carl access to a larger network that could be called on for protection if needed. They were not the types to let anything happen to somebody foolish and naïve enough to pay them double market price. They agreed on the inflated budget to check the immigration computer twice daily despite the colonel’s protestations of how difficult it was under the military government. Carl would be informed almost immediately the next time Somchai Poochokdee boarded a plane to Hong Kong or Macau.

 

Carl enlarged the target’s picture from the ID card record printout and hand wrote the relevant details, which he put in a brown envelope and took downstairs and gave to his maid telling her it was to be collected by Khun Boonchoo or his teenage son.

 

His maid was a hag and he allowed as little contact with her as possible. She had come with the rented house and as much as he wanted to get rid of her he assumed she had nowhere else to go. She had worked there for at least twenty years and was expecting to be there after Carl moved on. She took his tolerance as weakness and had become even more impossible to deal with. The thought of her sleeping under a bridge had started to appeal to him.

 

“You no nice to Thai lady. You no have wife you, because you no smile. You too old wait. Must marry. Thai lady very nice but only like man who smile.”

 

Although he was fluent in Thai she always spoke to him in her incoherent broken English. She was feigning concern for his lack of female company so she could act superior and remind him that all Thai people are better than foreigners. Carl did smile sometimes, just never when she was around.

 

He went back upstairs and spent the rest of Tuesday night lying on the sofa watching television. He fell peacefully asleep before midnight. He never remembered having bad dreams and had never been scared of the dark. A famous old Thai fortune-teller had claimed it was because the spirits enjoyed watching his antics and found him amusing, so they left him alone. Mind you; she also said he would be rich and famous after he turned forty. Nobody can be expected to be right about everything.

 

 

 

Chapter 7

 

Carl woke up Wednesday morning with the television still pouring out mediocrity. He turned it off and went quietly downstairs to the ground floor trying to avoid his maid and get his morning espresso. The maid was waiting for him. She told him that the taxi driver had collected the documents and gave him another irritating lecture on why he should learn to smile and adopt a whole rice farming community by marrying one of its daughters. Carl was pleased to hear that the target was already under surveillance. He almost smiled.

 

He went up to the sitting room on the second floor and carried the coffee and the laptop computer outside where there was a table and a couple of chairs. Carl looked around the garden and pool and saw that it was empty as usual. He looked at the buildings towering over the oasis and wondered why nobody seemed to use it except for him and George. Thai people typically spend their entire day hiding from the sun. This is not an easy thing to do as the sun shines almost all of the time.

 

The online news was mostly about Thailand settling down to its version of normal life under a military government. There was one story that got Carl’s attention, the grief of the mother of one of the murdered girls. She had lost her temper at police inactivity and struck out at an unsympathetic junior police detective and been arrested for assault. She had been let go hours later when wiser senior officers stepped in to appease the Thai language tabloids.

 

The old, not so quiet Americans had told Carl on his first visit to the bars of Patpong that if he was looking for sympathy in South-East Asia he could find it in the dictionary between ‘shit’ and ‘syphilis’. They told him that he had a fat chance of finding it anywhere else. At least some things could be relied on never to change. The family members of the killer’s young victims would be left permanently traumatized. There wouldn’t be any counselling and not much chance of any justice. They weren’t rich or important enough to justify any serious effort or expense.

 

Carl checked his email account and saw a confirmation mail from his Singapore bank telling him that twenty thousand dollars had been transferred from a bank in Latvia on behalf of a company called Victory Holdings. Apart from that glorious news all that he found in the inbox was the usual annoying advertisements and a pleasant message from an ex-girlfriend in creative advertising telling him that Alcoholics Anonymous had saved her and how it could save him too. Claiming she was still entitled to an opinion was her creative version of stalking.

 

All he could think of to say to her was how he belonged to a group he had created himself and had aptly named Alcoholics Unanimous. The solitary rule of this group was that, should any member not feel like having a drink, it was the responsibility of all of the other members to call him up and talk him into it. He didn’t write the email. He never responded to invitations from his past. Life is about moving forward, always forward. That was the theory anyway. He thought it commendable that she had given up drinking. He would have been more impressed if she had given up evangelism.

 

Carl went into the house to get his phone. It was his habit to leave it upstairs in his bedroom for a while every morning. He had always found it best not to attempt speech in any language until after his second cup of coffee of the day. There were no messages on the phone and he had already seen his emails. Carl called the client’s mobile but there was no answer.

 

Carl took the computer into the air-conditioned office and performed a deeper Google search of old newspaper stories. There was a story that stated the police were questioning fellow students in order to locate the latest victim’s ex-boyfriend, their prime suspect. They had not taken into consideration the fact that many students moonlighted as cocktail waitresses and massage girls to engage in prostitution as a way to finance a normal lifestyle.

 

Carl assumed that the police were aware that a lot of the students sold sex. He would have been shocked if they hadn’t known. Most of the policemen he had met over the years had slept with enough of them. Unfortunately, if the choice was to have an unsolved murder versus making an admission of the existence of such a sex industry in Thailand, then the decision was preordained. Thailand was not in the habit of peeling back the shiny silk cloth that covered its underbelly and allowing a peek at the eczema underneath.

 

The next thing he did was type in Somchai Poochokdee. There were no pictures of him, which didn’t surprise Carl. He found a few press releases describing expanding real estate markets and charitable donations. It was an annoyingly superficial portrait of a respectable businessman. One positive find was a business article that included his office address, which Carl had already, and his mobile phone number, which Carl didn’t.

 

Carl immediately sent a message to the colonel asking for a billing record of the phone number. This would take a few days, as the police would have to send an official request in writing to the phone company before they would release the information. He then sent him another message suggesting they meet at the club at midnight. He didn’t suggest an earlier time as nobody went there early.

 

George had entered the house through the door on the ground floor, which was where the kitchen was and the maid and the espresso machine lived. The maid liked George so he always climbed the stairs to the second floor with an espresso in his hand. Carl noted that George’s coffee had a perfect head of brown foam, unlike the ones Carl usually got. He sat down in the armchair beside Carl’s desk in the small office and sipped his espresso. He pointed at an eight by ten picture on the bookshelf behind Carl’s chair. The photograph was mounted in an expensive wooden frame. It was a professional shot of an attractive black woman standing in front of a grand piano singing into a microphone.

 

“How is that going?” George asked.

 

“Not so well. I call that picture Bye Bye Blackbird.”

 

“You don’t want her to hear you saying that,” George told him.

 

“Therein lies the problem.”

 

“You think it didn’t work out because she was black?” George asked.

 

“No, not that. The reason it didn’t work out was because she was American.”

 

“So you are still against political correctness?”

 

“Of course I am, it is a con. Fake politeness is not flattering, it is patronizing. If a black person walked in here now are we supposed to put a governor on our conversation? That, George, would make us racists by default.”

 

“It’s America, Carl. The way things are.”

 

“I don’t have to behave like that and I sure as hell don’t have to agree with it.”

 

“Bye Bye Blackbird is actually quite funny,” George said with a smile.

 

“It would be even funnier if it didn’t need to be analysed and dissected before we dared reach that opinion.”

 

“Do you miss her?” George asked. Carl didn’t answer.

 

Carl brought him up to speed on the case details and the recent developments. George gave him a rundown on what he knew about the CIA in Vietnam, which turned out to be a lot. He said that he had met some good ones. He called them ‘America’s Dream Team’ due to their high educations and strong beliefs.

 

He also spoke of a different sort. Men who’d turned the American dream into a nightmare. George said, “They were the corrupt leading the corrupt. Zealots for an imperial Christian America, with the sole purpose of making them and companies back home lots of money.”

 

George looked around at the old books, oil paintings, worn Persian rugs, and the loudspeakers the size of wardrobes and amplifier from the industrial revolution. He squinted his eyes appearing embarrassed, then looked at the woman in the picture and asked, “She always asked me why you surround yourself with old things, I always wondered about your addiction to nostalgia too.”

 

Carl pondered for a while and then said, “My theory, for your ears only, is that when a man doesn’t know who he is then he goes back to the time when he thinks he did.”

 

“Looking around this room, that would make you over a hundred years old.”

 

“I hope you are not listening to the maid’s theory of reincarnation. She thinks I am a born again arsehole.”

 

George smiled, finished his coffee, and left by the door from the sitting room to the swimming pool area. Carl spent the rest of the day listening to music and reading the history of Beirut. Recently he listened only to classical music as his passion for jazz was not working any more.

 

A few kilometres from where Carl lived, Anthony Inman alias James Peabody alias Somchai Poochokdee was not having a good day. He was watching his prey taking her final tortured breaths but he had not enjoyed the process. This was the first time he was not excited by the metallic smell of bloody death or the faeces and urine smell of terror. The bitch had been too courageous and he had not felt the total control over her that would have been the climax of his art.

 

The little slut had still been spitting blood at him up until a few minutes before she had collapsed. She would die without total capitulation and that had made him very angry. “Fucking little cunt,” he shouted at her loudly but she could no longer hear him.

 

She had called him pathetic so he had stuck a stiletto blade in her soft belly and she had screamed even louder. Somehow, between the screams, she had told him he was a limp-dicked sexual inadequate. All in perfect English too. So he had cut off one of the cunt’s tits and she had spat blood on him, like a wild animal. She must have bitten off part of her tongue from the agony.

 

Then he had lost his temper. That was wrong. He’d never lost his temper before. He had gone a little crazy and stabbed her several times with the stiletto. That was why she was dying too quickly and he had wasted hours on her for nothing. “Fuck that,” he said aloud again. Nobody was there to hear him and she had died, she was quiet now. He looked down at her with disgust. “Useless fucking cunt.”

 

He left her on the floor and went to the bathroom to take a shower. He was covered in blood, her blood, that cunt’s blood. He would leave her there and go home. He could come back the next day and clean up. Nobody would find her in the meantime. This was his safe place.

 

He hated her so much that he couldn’t stand the thought of being in the same car with her. Never mind, he told himself. Tomorrow he would be better able to deal with it.

 

He put on some clean clothes and combed his hair with pomade to smooth it and allow a neat side parting. He would go home to tell his wife and daughter that it had been a very bad day. He would tell them how an awful tramp with a tattoo and without the good manners to wear a bra or dress decently had said offensive things to him, and how he had nearly lost his temper.

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