Bible of the Dead

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Bible of the Dead Page 26

by Tom Knox


  She gazed across the city. Again. Flashes of distant lightning zagged silently between the skyscrapers and the imperious Hitachi adverts: a storm over the South China Sea.

  Then at last the traffic parted and the taxi swooped left and over a disused railway track and they were in the florid and gristly urbanity of central Bangkok, with the streetside kebab stalls, the upmarket European shops, the amputees lying outside British pubs, sushi bars, Bookazine outlets, French restaurants, and enormous marble mega-hotels squeezed between Bangladeshi tailors and Chinese jewellery shops.

  ‘Soi sick! No soi eight? You sure? Sure sure?’

  The cab driver’s smiling Thai face was a wry question.

  She repeated her answer:

  ‘Yes, soi six.’

  The taxi swerved right, down Soi Nana: the commercial sex district. Middle-aged western and Japanese men sat with unfeasibly teenage girls outside bars pounding Rolling Stones and AC/DC into the twilit street. Female flesh exhibited itself – everywhere, languid, brown, sheened and exposed. Painted toenails. Vivid lipstick. Girls from Isaan ate fried cockroaches and fried beetles and sweetened coconut rice with chunks of fresh mango.

  It was dark now, and the streets were bright. Julia saw Coyote Bars. Man4man Massage. Lolita Sauna. Bangcockney Pub.

  Pachara Suites. Right in the middle of the red light district.

  ‘Here,’ said Julia, the tension accelerating with her pulse. She alighted, and tipped the taxi driver.

  Pachara Suites was a gleaming tall condominium, with elegant slate fountains and a wall-eyed man begging outside using a Yum Yum pot noodle jar as a cup. The man’s blind eye looked like a mung bean.

  The lobby of the building was deserted. Glossy and empty. She used the lift; she found the door; she knocked.

  A silence. An eyehole opened for a second. Was someone behind the door? Checking them? Had Barnier already fled? Was this the most absurd chase of very wild geese?

  Julia knocked again.

  The eyehole flipped clear, and then it shut.

  Finally the door opened, just an inch: the door was chained with three chains. An oldish intelligent face peered out. Julia recognized an aged version of the young smile in the Phnom Penh photo.

  It was Marcel Barnier.

  His wild liverish eyes looked at Julia. He was holding a long knife in his hand. But as he absorbed what he was seeing – he seemed to relax.

  ‘Fuck. You are Julia Kerrigan! The archaeologist? I Googled you. Yes. Yes yes. I got your emails. Forgive me for not replying but . . . Why the hell did the doorman let you through?’

  ‘Erm.’

  ‘Why? I told him not to? Was he not there?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Fuck.’ The face concealed behind the door swore twice, and sighed. ‘Fucking noodle head, Supashok. They shoulda kept the last doorman. Ai. Maybe he went for a pipi. OK . . .’

  Dropping the knife on a table to his side, he unlatched one chain, then two, then three. He opened the door and gazed at her creased jeans and jetlagged face.

  ‘You understand that I am being very fuckeeeeng careful. Come in.’

  ‘Thankyou.’

  Nervous, hopeful, quite terrified, she stepped inside.

  The apartment was in chaos. Cardboard boxes sat on the floor, full of books and paintings. Furniture was partly dismantled and stacked against the wall. Half empty bottles of Johnnie Walker and completely empty bottles of Jacobs Creek Grenache Shiraz stood on tables and in corners, next to copiously overfilled ashtrays.

  ‘I am moving. Yes. And yes I am an alcoholic. For reasons I am sure you understand. To escape, to save my life. I used to escape through fucking liquor, now I have to escape for real?’

  He looked in Julia’s eyes. She nodded and said:

  ‘I think I know why.’

  ‘That’s good. That’s good-good. Save a lot of horseshit talking.’

  His French accent had been entirely erased, and replaced by a kind of coarse, slangy, slightly bizarre Anglo-American-Oriental English; his breath smelt of whisky and cigarettes and garlic. Presumably, decades of living out here, speaking the only western language anyone understood – English – had beaten the Frenchness out of him.

  ‘You look stressed. We can have a fucking drink, no? The fridge will be the last thing I empty.’ He laughed, angrily. ‘But so what – I like a drink, it keeps me cheerful – what is it they say about the French, a Frenchman is an Italian in a bad mood? Hah. Ein bier, meine freunde? I will have wine!’

  Julia said yes. Barnier laughed again and slipped into his kitchen and returned with a beer and a glass. He looked at her inquisitively as she sipped the Tiger beer.

  ‘You want to know everything I know. Yeah?’

  ‘Well. As I also said, um, I have some ideas of my own. I wanted to see if I was . . .’ The beer was refreshingly cold. She drank. ‘See if I was right.’

  ‘The great mystery? Maybe we can inform each other. Trouble is, I do not know everything. You may know more than me.’ Wariness and mischief and anxiety mixed in his gaze. ‘But maybe not. Maybe I know quite enough already. And someone ought to hear my story, before I escape.’ He gestured at the boxes. He took a glass of red wine from somewhere and swallowed a huge gulp. He lit a cigarette and said:

  ‘So, ask me your questions.’

  ‘But. It needs time. And you seem, sorry, I mean – you must be very on edge. When are you going to go?’

  Barnier paused, and exhaled smoke, before he answered. He slurped once more at the wine. His hair was thin and brownish grey, his clothes were relaxed and youthful, though not in the embarrassing way of Ghislaine: just jeans and a grey tee shirt, stained with drops of red wine. Loafers. No socks. A suntan. A man keeping himself reasonably in shape apart from the alcohol. But the face was frightened and the lips were stained with red wine tannin.

  Then he said:

  ‘I’m going. Somewhere, very soon, where that witch of a killer, that krasue, won’t find me. I have read all the newspaper reports. I have read the shitty police emails, but not replied. I do not trust anyone. Fuck. Course I am on edge. She’s coming for me – here.’

  Julia said:

  ‘Do you know who she is? The killer?’

  ‘No. Not exactly.’

  ‘Do you know why she is killing all these people?’

  ‘Revenge!’ Barnier tapped ash, and stared at her, with a sudden expression of deep and existential fear. He was scared. He was really and visibly scared. But then the bravado returned. ‘Yes it is revenge – it is surely revenge – for the poor Khmer millions we helped to destroy. And I cannot blame them, you know? That is the poignancy. I cannot blame them. The fucking things we did, the Marxists, us, me, Danny the Red and the rest of us, all the reds now in socialist governments across Europe, we gave the Khmer Rouge succour, we told the world their lies, we were their useful idiots, maybe we fucking deserve to die. But if I am gonna die then I am gonna die happy. Do not go gentle into that good night, but rage rage and order some hookers and blow.’

  His eyes flicked around the room. ‘Come. You are right. If we want to talk, let us do it in a good place, somewhere safe, somewhere there are pretty girls. Naked. We can have lady-drink short time. You know you are not the first person to come and see me today. I am suddenly an attraction, a destination, a tourist honeypot.’

  ‘How?’

  ‘A girl from Cambodia. Chemda Tek. And her boyfriend, Jake . . . Jake something. A photographer. A Brit.’ He belched smoke. Profanely. ‘They found me this morning. They are frightened. They are also pursuing these mysteries. I told them to go away for a while cause I want to pack, and I told ’em I would meet them in a bar this evening, a nice busy bar with lots of witnesses. It’s at Soi Cowboy.’ He dropped his cigarette butt in his glass of wine. The cigarette sss’d and died. ‘I have a feeling no woman would ever just walk in this bar alone so we should be safe. C’mon, s’go. Because staying here feels like sitting, waiting to die, a target.’

  ‘Who ar
e they? These people, what do they want?’

  ‘I am not totally fucking sure. I was drunk when they told me. Hey it was eleven a.m. Let them explain, non? Come if we are to talk we might as well all do it together. Somewhere safe.’

  They took the elevator to the ground floor. It was a short walk around the corner, then ten minutes down thrumming Sukhumvit Boulevard, with Barnier gazing down each soi as if he expected to be run over – or attacked – at every junction; and then they crossed the Asok walkways, whereupon they were immersed in another sex districty strip of the most garish neon, with go-go bars and massage parlours and love hotels and small baby elephants carrying drunken western boys on a stag weekend who threw hopeful leers at the harlots enticing them into Sheba’s and Suzie Wong.

  The bar they apparently wanted was called Baccara. It was luridly advertized by scarlet neon, and inside it was dark and noisy and big and full of Japanese men staring at a central stage where maybe thirty or forty nubile girls were dancing in gauzy bras and equally transparent miniskirts.

  But then Julia realized the Japanese men in their sofas and armchairs were staring up: she followed the communal gaze: above them was a glass ceiling, on top of the glass ceiling about twenty more young girls danced languidly to Chinese pop music, naked apart from tartan school skirts, the girls were wearing no underclothes at all.

  ‘Biggest no panty bar in the world.’ Barnier’s laughter was like a vulgar heckle. ‘The Japs love it here, and the girls love them back. You know why? You wanna know what the girls call Japanese men? Mister Four. They call Jap punters Mister Four –’

  ‘I’m sorry –’

  ‘’Cause they pay four thousand baht for a fuck, they last just four minutes, and they are four centimetres long! Hah. Look, there’s our good friends. Let’s get some Tanquerays and Tonic and Talk. Corner left, nine o’clock.’

  Julia followed Barnier’s gesture and noticed a particular female figure sitting discreetly in the darkest corner, with her back to them. Her body language was uncomfortable; she seemed Asian judging by the petiteness, the dark bare arms, dark long hair. Julia empathized with any discomfort the woman might be feeling: they were virtually the only two women in the bar who weren’t half naked and dancing on a stage in no panties.

  The woman’s companion was a young white guy, tall, presumably Jake Thurby. Julia glanced back at the woman. Her profile, seen obliquely, was familiar in other ways.

  The shock of recognition was liquefying. This was no ordinary Asian woman. This was no coincidence.

  Julia swayed on the cliff edge of fear.

  Barnier was gesturing to a smiling bargirl.

  ‘Nong? Hello? Sawadee? We go talk-talk with friend over there? Gintonic. Bring three. Kapkap.’ He pointed at the table, then turned to Julia, ‘Let’s go over.’

  ‘No. Stop.’

  Barnier didn’t hear her; Julia whispered again. Urgently:

  ‘Stop.’

  She reached out a hand and pulled at the Frenchman. He was bemused.

  ‘What? Eh? What is it?’

  A pause. Julia hesitated. Maybe she was wrong. But no, she wasn’t wrong. That long dark hair, the stance, the profile.

  She was right.

  As she stood, immobile, and silent with shock, Barnier shoved on and walked to the tabled and said:

  ‘Chemda, Jake. Look. I have brought yet another exciting new friend. I am such a fucking wanted man.’

  Jake rose and offered a hand and said hello to Julia. But Julia’s focus was still fixed on the face of the Asian girl. Chemda Tek.

  Then Chemda Tek spoke.

  ‘Hello?’

  This was it. The final proof.

  She even had an American accent.

  Chemda Tek was the killer.

  Chapter 31

  Jake watched this woman’s reaction with astonishment: the Canadian woman, Julia, was refusing to sit down. She was muttering, half shouting, she was frightened and gabbling and staring at Chemda.

  Finally she managed to say.

  ‘It’s her. It’s her.’

  Barnier turned to Julia.

  ‘What?’

  Julia pointed directly at Chemda.

  ‘Her. That’s her. That . . . thing. It’s her.’

  ‘That’s who? She’s who? What are you saying?’

  Jake listened. Confounded.

  The woman stammered: ‘That is . . . the same person I saw in Paris. The woman who killed the archivist. The curator. That’s her, the killer –’

  Jake stood.

  ‘You fucking what?’

  Barnier was leaping away from the table, as if the bar stools had just been electrified. Chemda reached for Jake’s hand, her own hand damp and trembling. Jake was standing, and shouting:

  ‘How can you say this?’

  The Frenchman turned, he was shouting at the staff: demanding that they chuck Chemda out of the building, and instantly fetch police. Bar girls were gathering. Staring. And in the middle of the flashing lights and the thumping music Julia stood, still, gazing at Chemda, transfixed, appalled, terrified; Chemda was mute and pale. Bargirls hurried over.

  What the fuck was happening?

  Even the pantyless schoolgirls were motionless, peering inquisitively down through the glass ceiling, trying to work out the reason for the hubbub. Several Japanese punters were pointing, alarmed.

  Now Barnier ripped it all up: yelling at everyone.

  ‘Get that bitch out of here, nong! Papasan! Mamasan? Now! Get her out of here before she fucking knifes someone –’

  Chemda found her voice:

  ‘It’s not me! How can it be me. I have been in Cambodia. Jake tell them!’

  But Jake was staring at Julia’s face, the pale soft face of the Canadian archaeologist, and her face spoke some kind of truth. The woman really believed what she was saying, she really believed this outrageous accusation.

  Jake swallowed his next words. Momentarily, he was dumbed. Chemda flung his hand away.

  ‘You believe them, Jake?’

  ‘No of course not!’

  ‘But you do. You do! I see it in your face!’

  ‘I don’t. Sorry. A moment. Only – Chemda –’

  But it was true, she was right, even though a few seconds’ consideration told him that the accusation was absurd, he had let the shadow of a doubt pass across his face: thinking of her odder behaviour, inviting him to the Sovirom compound –

  His Khmer girlfriend was staring his way, with royal fury.

  ‘Don’t ever speak to me – ever again –’

  Chemda pushed aside his protesting arms; she stepped down from the table and she ran through the parting crowds – through the g-stringed dancers and the Taiwanese punters and the trio of fat and chortling white businessmen just coming through the doorway curtains.

  The curtains rustled and closed. Chemda was gone. The bar returned to life. Ladydrinks were fetched. Someone ordered short time. Once again, the punters stared up at the glass ceiling, where the girls in plaid miniskirts and no underwear resumed their bored and languid shuffle.

  Jake was momentarily paralysed by anger, and guilt. Run after Chemda? Phone her? Give her space? Why had he let the doubt even enter his mind? The idea that she was the killer was beyond absurd, it was physically impossible – how could Chemda have been flying to and from Europe to kill people? Just surreally ridiculous. And then there was the moral impossibility: Chemda. Of all people. No. Not Chemda.

  But then why did Julia appear so genuinely shocked and convinced?

  The Canadian woman was tentatively approaching, she put a hand on Jake’s shoulder.

  He shrugged it off. Snapped in her face.

  ‘You are wrong. She’s been with me in Asia for the last weeks. Every minute of every day. What you said was grotesque.’

  Her answering expression was pained.

  ‘Mister Thurby. Jake . . . I’m sorry, but I thought it was true –’

  Barnier was behind her.

  ‘So you thi
nk, Julia, it might not be true? Then why did you fuckeeeng say it?’

  ‘Because it was the same woman, only with darker skin! I’m not joking. I wouldn’t joke. Not about this! Chemda is the same only with much darker skin. But the same age same eyes same face same stance same everything else.’ Julia frowned. ‘Jake, does she have any siblings? Close in age?’

  Jake shook his head. ‘No.’

  ‘Then I don’t understand. An identical killer? Maybe they are cousins . . . or what?’

  ‘Who cares. Let me through.’

  He shoved between Barnier and Julia, pushing himself into the sordid bustle of Soi Cowboy.

  The streetlife of Cowboy was blithely ignorant of the turmoil in Baccara. Freelance whores were eating sausages on sticks outside Rawhide, fake monks were begging sorrowfully at the corner by the Dollhouse.

  Where was Chemda?

  Jake tried the phone three times. Nothing. Voicemail. He went back, walking up to the doorman of Baccara.

  ‘Did you see a girl? A Khmer girl, running out of here?’

  ‘Nnn?’

  ‘A dark girl? Please, which way did she go?’

  The doorman grunted, and shrugged – and pointed at another bar. Jake demanded:

  ‘Lucky Star? She went in there?’

  A shrug – then another curt, but directed nod.

  ‘Girl.’

  Pushing urgently through the Cowboy crowds Jake entered the indicated bar.

  Lucky Star. It was dark, he squinted, two naked girls were on a stage, one was wearing a pelvic harness and a strap-on dildo and she was penetrating the other, time and again. The girls writhed and moaned, robotically. The music was Debussy. Clair de Lune. Men in the shadows were silently throwing fifty baht notes on to the stage.

  Jake ran right out. Despairing, depressed, desperate. Evidently the doorman had thought Jake had just wanted girls. Girls on girls.

  It was all disgusting. Soi Cowboy disgusted him. Meeting here had been some kind of joke by Barnier, a repulsive joke by a sick and frightened man.

  He was never going to find her. Maybe they would kill her. Whoever they were. His anxiety surged. Raged. A monster from the swamp. At the corner of Soi Cowboy by the Dutch pub, he anxiously phoned his hotel on the off chance, as a last chance – but the receptionist had not seen her either and that was that.

 

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