The Water Rat of Wanchai (18 page)

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Authors: Ian Hamilton

BOOK: The Water Rat of Wanchai
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“Here it would probably be
or worse
.”

“So I need to know who they are.”

“Why?”

“So I can make them my friends, or at least disentangle them from Seto.”

“Just how much money does this guy owe?”

“About five million.”

“Wow.”

“So who do I need to talk to?”

He pushed himself to his feet, walked to the door, and closed it. “This is off the record — we are agreed on that?”

“I wouldn’t have told you what I just did if that wasn’t the case.”

He sat down, leaned back, and looked at the ceiling. “It’s called the Guyana Defence League. During the 1960s the communists were active here and Cheddi Jagan was prime minister for a while. At the time that made Guyana only the second communist government in the Americas, after Cuba, and the U.S. sort of went ballistic. They pushed — and financed —Jagan’s former political partner, Forbes Burnham, into going up against his old colleague; they had been allies in forcing the U.K. to surrender their colonial power. There were strikes, riots, boycotts, and a lot of random violence against Jagan and his people. The fact that he was East Indian and Burnham was black only made it worse.

“Anyway, Jagan ended up in jail and Burnham became prime minister, supported by the Americans. At the time there was only a small police force in Guyana. The Americans needed assurance that the communists wouldn’t be coming back, so they invested heavily in building an army and creating a clandestine special forces unit. Because the country is so small, they came up with the idea of grouping all these security forces together, creating the Guyana Defence League.

“The communists came and went. Burnham was in and out of office. Even Jagan — who was now a social democrat — got a chance to be the leader again. Through it all, the Guyana Defence League remained intact and developed methods of operation that are still in play today. Basically, the person who heads up the special forces is the top man. The military report to him, the police report to him. He moves officers back and forth at will among the various services. So when you’re dealing with the police, you aren’t really. Everything flows upstream.”

“Including money?”

“Especially money.”

“I’ve just left Thailand, but it feels like I haven’t.”

“I’m sure the scale is different,” Lafontaine said. “This is a small, poor country. There’s only so much graft to go around, and the politicians feed at the same trough.”

“Who heads up the Defence League?”

“Commissioner Thomas for the police, and General Choudray heads up the military. One’s black, the other East Indian, and that’s the way it always is: one of each. The strange thing is, they report to a white guy, the infamous Captain Robbins.”

“A white guy — that’s curious.”

“Isn’t it. When I arrived here, I met him at a High Commission function. He has two daughters at school in Toronto — Havergal College — and Canada is his country of choice in terms of making investments. I thought he was just a fat, jolly businessman until the High Commissioner pulled me aside and told me to be careful, very careful.

“He’s had the same job for twenty years. There isn’t a man in any of the forces who is not beholden to him for his job, and in this country, with unemployment at around thirty percent, that’s no small thing. He also knows where all the bodies are buried, and he’s probably responsible for a number of them himself. There isn’t a politician whom he doesn’t know inside out, and I can’t imagine there’s one who would defy him. It has been tried, though. Last year there was an East Indian minister of mines who decided the royalties that were going to the Defence League should end. His house was broken into and he, his wife, and his mother-in-law were shot dead. They never found the perpetrators.

“So, Ms. Lee, if Seto has protection, it emanates from Captain Robbins, directly or indirectly.”

“How do I meet Captain Robbins?” she asked.

Lafontaine smiled again. “You’re serious, aren’t you? I mean, really serious. I keep looking at you and thinking you’re pulling a practical joke on me.”

“Do you have a phone number for him?”

He opened a Day-Timer that sat on his desk. “Write this down, though I don’t think it will do you any good. He doesn’t take calls and he never returns calls unless he wants to talk to you, not vice versa.”

“Thanks for all this,” she said after writing down the number in her notebook.

“We’re here to serve.”

“That’s always been my experience with the Mounties. You’re a very professional group.”

He nodded in acknowledgement. “Where are you staying?”

“The Phoenix Hotel.”

“Neighbours.”

“Sort of.”

“Tell me, would you like to have dinner with me while you’re here? You could keep me up to date on your progress.”

She looked over at the pictures of his children.

“I’m divorced,” he said.

Two propositions in one day
, Ava thought, and unless she was wrong, Jeff was a potential third. For reasons she didn’t understand,
gweilos
found her attractive. In Hong Kong she could stand on a street corner holding a sign reading PLEASE
TAKE
ME
OUT
TO
DINNER and not get this much action.

“I wouldn’t mind having dinner with you, but in keeping with our honesty policy I have to tell you I’m gay.”

“I did say dinner; I wasn’t assuming anything else,” he said, but the flush that crept up his cheeks told her differently.

“How about I keep in touch with you? Can I get your cell number?”

He handed her a business card. His title read ASSISTANT
TRADE
COMMISSIONER.

“I’ll let you know how it goes with Captain Robbins.”

( 21 )

JEFF WAS STANDING AT THE ENTRANCE OF THE PHOENIX
wearing slacks and a Polo golf shirt. He looked happy to see her, and she knew she was going to end up saying no to him as well.

“I have your SIM card,” he said.

“How much do I owe you?” she said as she took it.

“Twenty.”

She gave him thirty.

“Will you need me today? I have to make a run to the airport around one. After that I’m free.”

“I’m not sure. Call me when you get back.”

The room was way hotter than when she had left. The maid had turned off the air conditioning. She turned it back on and for good measure jacked it way down.

She undressed; her clothes were damp even though it was no more than a three-minute walk from the High Commission. She put on her running gear. It was really too hot to run but she needed to think, and running freed her mind. Before leaving the hotel she checked her emails at the business centre. Nothing from Seto. That was no surprise.

From the literature in the room she knew there was a walkway along the seawall. The path was grass, and running on grass was easy on her legs. Add the sea breeze to that and she thought maybe it wouldn’t be too tough, despite the heat.

The Georgetown seawall had been built during the nineteenth century by the Dutch, the original colonists, before the British ousted them. Georgetown, and in fact most of the northern coastline, was below sea level. The Dutch were experts at keeping the sea at bay, and they had constructed an impressive bulwark of stone about two metres wide and a metre high.

Ava began jogging towards the Atlantic. It was close to low tide, and between the wall and the ocean was a large expanse of sandy beach. On her right was Seawall Road, which was lined with embassies and consulates. There was hardly any traffic on the road and virtually no one on the path. Ava could see maybe two or three kilometres ahead. A woman was on the beach tossing sticks to a dog, and farther down she could see two figures sitting on the seawall.

She had run about a kilometre before the seated figures became distinct. They were two East Indian men, sitting maybe twenty metres apart. As she drew near she noticed she had attracted their attention. She thought about stopping and turning back, then told herself she was being silly. It was the middle of the day, and they were in a wide open area.

When she was five metres from the first man she saw him stiffen, and her senses prickled. She sped up to get past him. Just as she did, the second man jumped off the wall onto the path. She was trapped between them.

One of the men was about five foot ten and had to weigh at least two hundred pounds. He wore ragged blue shorts and a T-shirt that read DRINK
COORS. The other, who was a bit taller and not much thinner, was wearing soiled jeans and a singlet that exposed his chest and armpits. Ava noticed he had only one eye. It was fixed on her, and it wasn’t conveying kind intent.

She stopped and turned so that she was facing the wall and had a clear view of the two of them.

“This can be easy or hard — your choice,” the one to her left said, a knife now visible in his right hand.

Ava saw no reason to respond; the outcome would be the same. The other man didn’t seem to be armed, so she decided to take on the one with the knife first.

They inched towards her, trying to maintain equal distance. Ava moved left to bring her closer to the one with the knife. He waved it in the air until he was about half a metre from her. Then he reached down to grab her hair with his left hand, the knife held back, poised to strike.

She retreated backwards about half a step. When he tried to close the distance, she stepped forward. Her right arm rocketed towards him with the force of a piston. The extended knuckle of her index finger crashed into the bridge of his nose. She wasn’t sure which she noticed first, the crack of cartilage or the gush of blood. He sagged to the ground, dropping the knife as both hands moved to cradle his nose. She picked up the weapon and threw it over the wall.

The other man hadn’t moved as she put his friend out of action. Now he edged towards her, his fists balled. He didn’t move very well; his hips seemed to propel his legs. She knew she could avoid his swings but she wasn’t about to give him the chance. When he was within striking range, her right arm shot out again. This time she used the base of her palm to strike at the centre of his forehead. He reeled back and she leapt after him, her left fist driving into his Adam’s apple. He collapsed, his eyes rolled back, and his hands clutched his throat as he gasped for air. She had known people to die from that blow.

The whole incident had taken no more than thirty seconds. She looked around. There was no one in view, no cars on the road. She turned and began to jog back to the hotel, past the woman throwing sticks to her dog.

( 22 )

“HOW WAS YOUR RUN?” THE DOORMAN ASKED WHEN
Ava arrived back at the Phoenix.

“Okay,” she said.

She had bought two bottles of water to take to her room. She didn’t recognize the brand and then saw it had been bottled in Georgetown. She added a water purification pill to each of them. When the pills had done their work, she sat in the rattan chair and looked out at the ocean. She was ready to phone Captain Robbins. She didn’t expect him to take her call, but she did expect him to return it. That was when she would be challenged to capture his interest and get him to meet with her, or at the very least to send someone who had his trust.

She punched in the number and waited. Just when she thought it was going to flip into voicemail, a woman’s rich, cultured voice said, “The office.”

“I would like to speak to Captain Robbins, please,” she said.

There was a long pause, and Ava wondered if Lafontaine had given her the correct number.

“I’m afraid that Captain Robbins is not available.”

“Well, could you have him return my call, please? My name is Ava Lee and I’m affiliated with Havergal College. Do you need me to spell Havergal?”

“No, I know Havergal,” she said. “Is there anything I can help you with, or is there a specific message you would like me to pass to the Captain?”

“No, I need to speak to him directly.”

“He has the number for the college. He can call you there.”

“No, I’m at a conference and I’m using my mobile. Let me give you my contact information,” Ava said, and gave her Toronto cellphone number.

“Is this about either of his daughters?”

“I’m not at liberty to say. Please have him call me when he can.”

“I will pass on the message.”

Then Ava phoned downstairs to ask about laundry service. The front desk told her it could be back in her room by that evening. She left the bag outside the door for pickup and climbed into the shower. The water seemed less thick, less brown, and she stayed in longer than usual.

Her cellphone beeped when she emerged from the bathroom — a message.
Already
, she thought.

It was Captain Robbins’s receptionist, asking her to call back.

She dried her hair and dressed while reviewing her pitch in her head, deciding just how much she should or shouldn’t say. That was always difficult to determine when you were dealing with someone you didn’t know, and in this case, knew nothing about except that he just might be the most powerful man in Guyana.

“The office.”

“This is Ava Lee.”

“Just one second, Ms. Lee.”

Robbins was on the line almost instantly. “This is Robbins. What can I do for you?” He had an accent that sounded familiar but wasn’t like anything she had heard in Guyana.

“My name is Ava Lee and I’m afraid I’ve called you under some mildly misleading pretences. But I really need to speak to you and I was told that you’re a difficult man to get hold of.”

There was silence from his end.

“I am a Havergal graduate, by the way, and I’m in Georgetown on business, not Toronto, though that is my home. I apologize for taking this approach.” She waited for the sound of the phone being disconnected.

“Ms. Lee, who gave you this number?”

“The Canadian High Commission. I went to them for help and they said you were the man I should speak to.”

“That’s highly unusual. What kind of problem can you have that the Commission can’t help with?”

His voice was plummy, even richer than his secretary’s. His speech was slow, even, and full of confidence, in control.

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