Read The Water Rat of Wanchai Online
Authors: Ian Hamilton
“How long do you think it will take?” she asked.
“You’re in a rush?”
“No, no, it’s just that I really need to make a couple of phone calls and I left my cellphone at the apartment.”
“You can use the phone here if you wish,” he said, pointing to the one on the conference table.
“They’re long-distance calls.”
“Ms. Lee, I think the bank can afford to pay for a few long-distance calls. Any line will do. Dial nine for an outside line, and then 011 and the country code.”
“Thank you, I really appreciate it.”
“And I’ll close my office door. When you’re finished, just open it to let me know you’re free.”
Bates put Seto’s passport and other ID into his file. Then he stood up and looked down at Ava. “I must say, this is a nice break from my usual routine,” he said.
She watched him leave the room, grateful that he hadn’t made her ask to use the phone. Conscious more than ever of the camera at work in the corner of the ceiling, she tried to look as natural and composed as she could.
Just pretend you’re calling Mimi
, she thought, as she punched in Uncle’s Hong Kong cellphone number, fervently hoping he’d pick up.
“
Wei
?” he answered.
“Uncle, it’s Ava,” she said.
“I don’t recognize this line. Where are you?”
“I made it. I’m in the British Virgin Islands,” she said, switching to Cantonese.
“Ava, I’ve been calling your cell. Why haven’t you been answering?” he said, matching her language choice.
“I’ve made it but I’m having a bit of trouble.”
“I thought Derek was there,” he said.
“He isn’t, and that’s part of the problem. But I don’t have time to get into all of it, so please listen very carefully to me.”
“I don’t like this.”
“Just listen, please.”
“Are you in any danger?”
“Nothing I can’t handle, so don’t get anxious, please.”
“All right, I’m listening,” he said slowly.
“I’m at the bank and I’m close to getting Tam his money back, and a sweetener for us. If all goes well today, I’ll be able to wire five million to him and two million to your account in Kowloon. Once the wires have left here, and that should be sometime in the next twenty-four hours, I’m going to send you an email asking you to send another $2.2 million by wire to the account in the Cayman Islands we’ve already sent $300,000 to — except I don’t want you to send the wire. What I want you to do is get your friends at the bank to dummy one up. When our accountant gets it, I want him to scan it and send it to me and to another email address I’ll provide.”
“Ava, this is all a bit more complicated than you expected, no?”
“Uncle, will you have any problem getting your bank to dummy the wire?”
“No, it is owned by friends of mine. But why are we sending more money to the Caymans, or pretending to, at any rate?”
“It’s a shakedown. I don’t want to get into the details right now. Just believe that it is something I need done.”
“I can get the bank to do it. That won’t be a problem,” he said.
“Great. When I send you the email requesting the wire, I’ll include the guy’s email address and fax number so you can copy him when it’s issued.”
“What makes you think he will accept the wire at face value?”
“Well, he has before. And he’s not Chinese, so I’m assuming he has some faith in banks.”
“That sounds thin to me.”
“Uncle, I don’t have time to explain everything. I’m using someone else’s phone because I don’t have mine, so let me finish what I have to say.”
“I’m listening, I’m listening,” he said.
“All I’m hoping the dummy wire will do is buy me the time I need to get out of here. As I said, I’m not going to ask you to send the dummy until I know for sure our money is secure. So if for some reason this guy doesn’t bite, we just might have to send him his share. The extra two million I got covers most of it, and Tam can eat the rest.”
“How will I know what is what if I can’t reach you?”
“When I send the first request — the one I want you to dummy up — I’ll sign off simply as Ava. If I really need you to send the money, I’ll send a follow-up email asking for confirmation that the money has been sent and sign off as Ava Lee. If you don’t see my full name, don’t send anything.”
“I don’t like this,” he said.
“Uncle,” she said quietly, still conscious of the recording device, “this guy is trying to take us for a ride. I don’t like it, and I’m not about to roll over and play dead. I want Tam to get his money, all of his money. And I want us to get our share and then some. I know you’re not taking a cut from Tam’s end, but there’s no reason you shouldn’t have half of anything extra we collect. I mean, you did front $300,000.”
“What if the guy there catches on?”
“I’ll tell him there was a glitch in the system and send you the second email. All it should mean is that I’ll be stuck here for a few extra days.”
“You’re confident about this?”
“Enough to try it.”
“And I still won’t be able to reach you?”
“No, and don’t bother. I can’t use my cellphone or my computer on my own. Right now I’m in the banker’s office. I should be able to email you the wire request soon. If you don’t get it within the twenty-four hours and you don’t hear from me, send in some troops. I’m staying at the Guildford Apartments in Road Town. The room is booked in Derek’s name.”
“You know,” he said softly, “I wish I hadn’t talked to Tam’s uncle about taking this job.”
It’s a bit late for that
, she thought. “
Momentai
— no problem, Uncle. Now I have to go. I’ll email you when I can, and hopefully I’ll be talking to you sometime tomorrow.”
As she hung up she felt suddenly quite isolated. When was the last time she and Uncle had been out of touch through any reason not of their own choosing? What other option did she have, she wondered as she phoned Derek.
His cellphone rang four times, and she was preparing to leave a voicemail when he answered, his voice defensive, as Uncle’s had been. “Who is this?”
“Derek, it’s me, Ava. I’m in the British Virgin Islands. Where are you?” she said, again in Cantonese.
“I’m in Montreal. I’m catching a plane back to Toronto in a few minutes. Do you know what happened?”
“They told me your papers weren’t in order.”
“Bullshit,” he shouted.
“I know.”
“I walked through Customs with absolutely no problem, caught a cab, and stopped at a market near the apartment to load up on some food and drinks. I was in the room for barely ten minutes before they came knocking — two customs officers and a guy who looked like a walking mountain. I tried to argue with them but they wouldn’t listen. If they hadn’t been customs officers I would have resisted. Sorry, Ava, but I just didn’t see the sense in doing that.”
“No, Derek, you did the right thing, absolutely the right thing. No point in making things worse. They told me they shipped you back to Puerto Rico and then put you on a plane to Montreal. I’m glad you made it.”
“Hey, how about you? You okay?”
“Not so bad.”
“You need help?”
“That’s why I’m calling.”
She heard voices in the background noise behind him. “They’re boarding my flight,” he said.
“This won’t take long. Do you have a pen and paper?”
“No. Let me see if I can find something.”
“Wait, don’t bother,” Ava said quickly. “Turn off your cellphone when we hang up. I’ll call back and leave a voicemail with some names and phone numbers. Derek, listen to me — I need you to be completely available over the next twenty-four hours. I may need you to pick up something for me, so keep your cellphone charged and on. If I have to call in the middle of the night, I want to know I can reach you. Right now you’re my lifeline.”
“I don’t like that word,” he said.
“I’m just being dramatic,” Ava said with a light laugh.
“But you’re not joking about my being available.”
“No, I’m not,” she said.
“Shit, Ava —”
“Okay, Derek, enough. Go catch your plane and turn off your phone, and if you don’t hear from me, don’t worry and don’t be disappointed.”
She hung up and waited, giving him two full minutes. When she connected with his phone again, she was put right into voicemail. Ava explained, slowly and carefully, what she wanted him to do.
( 35 )
AVA SAT QUIETLY FOR A MOMENT, TRYING TO COMPOSE
herself, conscious of the camera tracking her every move. It was time to focus her attention back onto Jeremy Bates. The meeting had gone well, but she knew that was the easy part. There were still so many things that could go wrong. All it would take was one small doubt on his part and the words “I really do need to talk to Mr. Seto” and all the scheming in the world wouldn’t do her much good.
Why did I think this was going to work?
she thought. She shook her head, caught herself, and rubbed her eyes. It was becoming a struggle to stay in the moment. There were all the things that could go wrong with Bates, and then of course there was Robbins. Had she overplayed her hand by calling Uncle? No, she told herself, she at least had a backup plan now, and Uncle never failed her. The thought of Uncle reminded her of Tommy Ordonez. Uncle hadn’t had a chance to mention him during their talk, thank God, but now he intruded into her mind — the jinx that lingered. She pushed him away.
One thing at a time
, she thought.
Get off the chair. Walk to the door. Open it
.
There was no one in the hallway, but she could see an open door halfway down the hall and hear Bates’s voice saying, “That looks just fine.” She turned and went back to her seat, her spirits improved already.
Bates wasn’t far behind her, the file folder in one hand, a clutch of papers in the other. “Here we go,” he said, putting the papers on the table in front of her. “I had everything done in triplicate. One set for Mr. Seto and you and two sets for me.”
Ava leafed through the documents. The two draft wire transfer requests looked perfect. All they needed was Seto’s signature. They had copied his passport, Hong Kong ID card, and Washington state driver’s licence. That meant fifteen signatures. She tried not to think about how difficult that would be.
“I’m hopeful I’ll be able to get these back to you within the next few hours,” she said.
“Ms. Lee —”
“Please call me Ava.”
“And I’m Jeremy,” he said with a slight smile. “What I was about to say, Ava, is that it would be ideal if Mr. Seto could accompany the documents in person.”
The fact that she was prepared for the request didn’t make it any easier to hear. “Jeremy, I’ll obviously do everything I can to make that happen. I just can’t predict what kind of shape he’s going to be in.”
“Well, we can wait, you know,” he said. “This doesn’t have to be done today.”
“Yes, it does,” Ava said matter-of-factly. “We can’t miss the closing. If we miss the deadline, the Chinese will see it as a sign of weakness. We’ll be forced into yet another round of negotiations and will probably face a higher cost.”
“This is quite difficult. From my end, I mean,” he said.
There was no threat in his tone, just a kind of sad resignation, but to Ava the message was clear enough. Jeremy Bates had drawn his banker’s line in the sand. No Seto, no money. She knew from Bates’s side that it was the right thing to do, and the only thing that gave her any comfort was the subtle way in which he had chosen to tell her. She respected him for his tact, and at heart she respected the fact that he wasn’t willing to discard his sense of duty — even for her. “I’ll get Jackson out of bed and over here if I have to carry him myself,” she said.
“That would be best, Ava,” he said.
She gathered the papers together and put them in her Chanel bag. “Well, I guess I should get going.”
“I’ll walk you to the elevator,” he said, standing up.
“That’s not necessary.”
“I insist,” Bates said.
They walked side by side, Bates more awkward than she. “Where are you staying, by the way?” he asked.
“The Guildford Apartments.”
“Nice.”
“Yes, nice enough.”
“When do you leave?”
“If we wrap up today, then tomorrow.”
He pushed the elevator button for her. “Now, would you let the bank buy you and Mr. Seto dinner tonight?”
“I can’t imagine he’ll be up to it.”
“Then how about just you and me?” he said, not missing a beat.
“I would like that very much.”
He paused, his eyes wandering away from her. “You’ll call me, I trust, when Mr. Seto has signed the documents. We can arrange another appointment then. My afternoon is quite open, so there won’t be any delay on my end.”
“I’ll call,” she said.
“Excellent, and when you do, we can confirm a place and time for dinner.”
“Of course,” Ava said, with more enthusiasm than she felt.
The elevator was still hot and still slow, but her mind was preoccupied with signatures and the very unconscious Jackson Seto.
The Crown Victoria was where she had left it, with Davey in the front seat, window open, bobbing his head to the sound of Neil Diamond’s “Cracklin’ Rosie.” It made Ava think of Bangkok and Arthon. How long ago was that? And what was up with all the Neil Diamond? Robbins was sleeping, his head flung back, his mouth wide open. As she stood on the sidewalk she could smell the aroma of fresh bread coming from a bakery across the street. She suddenly felt hungry and realized she had eaten only a bag of almonds since noon the day before. She looked up and down the street and spotted a fish-and-chip restaurant a few doors down from the bakery.
She walked to the front passenger side of the car and stuck her head in the window. “I’m going to eat at that fish-and-chip place. If he wakes up, tell him where I am,” she said to Davey, and then turned and left before he had a chance to say a word.
The restaurant was plainness itself — linoleum floor, plastic chairs and tables — but it was clean, and the smell of cooking oil was muted. “I’m surprised you’re open,” Ava said to a tall, skinny man dressed entirely in white.
“Cruise ship docks in about half an hour. We’ll get swamped.”