Love Songs From a Shallow Grave

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Love Songs From a Shallow Grave Page 23

by Colin Cotterill


  Z

  The following day, Dtui’s comment “someone must really hate him” was at the front of Inspector Phosy’s mind. The rains were holding back but Vientiane was a swamp of mud. All the citizens he passed wore clogs of red clay like Frankenstein boots. Bicycle tires swelled to tractor-tread thickness. Street dogs had become two flavored, caramel above, cocoa below. With all the slithering and sliding, everyday activities had turned to slapstick. The famous Lao sense of humor, bogged down in the socialist depression, found an outlet. Laughter could be heard all around the town. Bicycle skid victims sat in the middle of the road and howled with delight. Children giggled as they skated across Lan Xang Avenue in their flip-flops. Big-boned ladies held on to each other as they attempted to ford muddy lanes, screaming with merriment.

  Phosy witnessed this new mood as he drove back and forth across the city in his four-wheel-drive jeep. He recalled the days when laughter was as common as the chirrup of crickets and the clack of the wooden blocks of noodle sellers advertising their wares. He liked this Vientiane, and on any other occasion it would have cheered him up, but today he had a somber mission. He had to find another suspect in a case he’d considered closed. He had to put together enough evidence to prevent an innocent man from facing the executioner. In his note, Siri had asked about the morphine elixir. Who was taking painkillers and why? Neung had no obvious injury, but one man on his list did. Comrade Phoumi, the security chief. Could Phoumi have injured his wrist in the first attack and been taking morphine to deaden the pain? It was his left wrist so he could still use his sword hand.

  Then there was Major Dung, sword expert. He’d lied about his contact with épées. He was a ladies’ man. Didn’t like to be rejected. A career soldier, a trained killer. He didn’t have respect for women, Lao women in particular. The alibi for both of these suspects, impossible to verify without prime ministerial intervention, was that they were asleep in their respective dormitories at the time of all three murders. Phosy decided it wouldn’t have been beyond either of them to frame a Lao engineer for murders they’d committed. But again he was missing a motive.

  Then next on his list was Comrade Chanti, the husband of the first victim. A reply—long time coming—had arrived from Huaphan that morning. It was handwritten by the signatory at the military wedding of Chanti and Dew back in 1969. The writer was a colonel in the Northeastern Region Seven and a distant, and apparently not loving, relative of Dew’s. He wrote:

  No idea why they bothered. They couldn’t stand each other from day one. Definitely an arranged marriage. Parents wanted their kids to appear normal, I suppose. Put pressure on them to produce grandkids. Maintain the family name. Not sure how they ever got around to that. Wouldn’t be surprised if the boy was a fairy. Lot of them around these days.

  So Chanti: resentful at being forced into an arranged marriage, then deserted. Left with the responsibility of paying for the children’s upkeep. No mother around. The marriage obviously a facade. But how would that play out in a mass-murder scenario? Why would he need to frame Neung? Siri always encouraged Phosy to paint elaborate hypotheses. The accusation was only the view of an old soldier but how about this? Possible homosexual connection? Chanti meets Neung at the government bookshop and flirts with him? Neung mocks him and … Phosy always had a problem hypothesizing himself into homosexual relationships. He was old school. He had a hard time imagining that such tendencies were possible. They certainly weren’t natural. But in this permissive age, even such an unpleasant concept had to be kept in consideration.

  Who else did he have? He looked at the fringe players: Neung’s wife and his father, the bookshop clerk, other members of the security detail, other readers at the book-shop. He had to admit, with such a clear-cut suspect it wasn’t going to be easy to find anyone better. So he focused on Siri’s list. He began with the question Did Kiang see her affair with Neung the same way he did? He drove to Kiang’s house to talk to her mother. The woman was cheerful and open but she denied that she had ever heard the name Neung. She assured Phosy that if her daughter had been involved in any relationship, she would have been the first to know.

  Kiang’s younger brother, Mung, was at home and Phosy found an excuse to talk to the boy alone. Once they were out of earshot of his mother, the brother admitted his sister was involved with a man. She’d sworn the boy to secrecy but even so, this confidence hadn’t allowed him access to details. The brother didn’t know the man’s name or anything about him. All he did know was that the lover was very much like her old boyfriend, Soop. It was as if the dead soldier had come back from heaven to be with her, she’d said. Kiang had never been happier. The boy didn’t know why his sister would want to keep the relationship a secret from their mother. Phosy did. He was certain the old lady wouldn’t have taken too kindly to her daughter flirting with a married man. Everything fitted. Kiang did have a crush on Neung. His version of events was accurate.

  Phosy mentioned another name, Comrade Chanti. The Electricité du Lao chief had denied knowing Kiang but he’d given them all the feeling he was lying. And, sure enough, he was. The brother recognized the name. Before his sister left for Bulgaria, Chanti had called several times at the house. Not quite the coincidence it sounded with so few educated women available to the large pool of unattached men. There had been a number of suitors, none of whom Kiang showed any interest in. Chanti had been very persistent in courting Kiang. But although the mother had liked him initially, she’d made the astounding discovery that the blackguard was married and had two children. She’d sent him packing with a few choice words and they’d never seen him again. One homosexuality theory out the window. One suspect struck off the list, one more climbing the charts. Things were looking promising.

  Phosy drove to Lycée Vientiane where he eventually found teacher Oum sneaking a cigarette behind the science building. She told him, although it was far from a hundred percent accurate, that the test she’d administered on the stomach contents from victim number three, Jim, suggested traces of morphine elixir. It was quite possible she had taken, or been administered, a large dose of the drug. This put paid to Phosy’s theory of Security Chief Phoumi using the morphine to deaden the pain of an old injury. It also opened the possibility that Jim had been drugged. Neither Phosy nor Oum had medical training and they didn’t know what effect a large dose of morphine might have on coordination or mental capacity. They needed Dr. Siri to answer that one and he was off having fun overseas.

  Phosy had reached the item on Siri’s list that asked, What was the timing of Neung and Jim’s respective arrivals in/ departures from Berlin? To answer that he needed to check the transcripts on his desk. It should have been a flying visit, but his return to police headquarters rendered all his other avenues of inquiry null and void. He would never get around to answering Siri’s question. Sihot was at his desk with a banana fritter suspended in front of his mouth between his stubby fingers. He was so engrossed by the book open in front of him that he’d apparently forgotten it was there.

  “Am I disturbing something?” Phosy asked.

  His voice would normally have alarmed Sihot but the sergeant’s head remained bowed over the text. The battered banana fritter hovered.

  “Sihot!” Phosy yelled.

  The sergeant looked up slowly.

  “Yes, Inspector?”

  “I trust what you’re reading has some bearing on the case?”

  “I don’t think there is a case anymore, sir.”

  Phosy approached the desk and saw what had taken control of Sihot’s attention. It was a thick exercise book whose pages were filled with small, neat handwriting.

  “This arrived from the East German Embassy just after you left, Inspector,” Sihot said. He flipped the notebook closed and Phosy stepped behind him to read the front cover. In Lao were written the words ‘MY GERMAN DIARY’ then something written in German followed by the name ‘SUNISA SIMMARIT.’ This was Jim’s journal.

  “Evidently it arrived a few days ago in
a box of personal items Jim had sent from Germany,” Sihot said. “She’d sent it surface mail addressed C/O East German Embassy, Vientiane. They didn’t realize what it was till they’d opened it.”

  “So why are we only just getting it now?”

  “Jim wrote in German. When he realized what it was, the attaché took the liberty of translating the lines he thought would be relevant to the case. I have to say they’re very into this investigation, the Germans. He said if there’s anything else they can do just get in touch with him. The diary starts off pretty basic, he said, but as she gets more confident with the language, she starts to write more about her thoughts. The lines they translated are nearer the end.”

  Phosy took the notebook to his desk and flipped through the pages. The first translation he found was about ten pages from the end. It was written in red ink. The corresponding German was underlined.

  “Z has asked me again. He’s very persistent,” it read.

  Two pages on were the lines, “I know that Z really wants me to be his lover here. He makes no secrets about it. He pretends to be interested in teaching me fencing but he makes comments often about my looks and my figure. I should be flattered but it makes me uncomfortable sometimes.”

  The next page. “I know he’s married but he comes to me almost every day now.”

  And the next. “What do I have to do or say to persuade Z I’m not interested? He was here again today.”

  Phosy looked up at Sihot, who smiled. The inspector skipped a few pages until he was almost at the last entry. The red ink was everywhere now, in the margins and above the original lettering. Z had clearly begun to dominate her life. The entries had become less girlish, darker.

  “Please stop. Please stop. Please stop. I can’t accept you. Your passion is killing me. I can’t think. I can’t study. Your shadow is darkening my life.”

  Then the last entry.

  “Z has taken my virginity. I am spoiled. He forced himself on me in the most awful way. He was inside me. I begged for him to stop but I was a delicate flower pressed beneath him. His strong muscular body was too powerful for me to resist. I still smell him on my skin, his aftershave, his sweat, his passion. It is all over. This country is stained with the memory of this event. I have to leave here. My soul can never be free as long as he is in my world. But what if he follows me back to Laos? How can I ever escape him? He is the devil and he has ruined my life. I fear what he has turned me into.”

  At the bottom of the next empty page was a signature and a note in red from the attaché saying that this was a certified translation and offering further help if there were any more questions. Phosy looked up and tapped his fingers on the page.

  “Bastard,” he said.

  “Her life must have been hell there at the end,” Sihot agreed with a mouth full of banana fritter. “And then he does that to her. A lot of sick people in this world.”

  Phosy looked at the piles of paperwork on his desk, the charts, the pages of hypotheses, the interview transcripts. Until this moment they’d been shards of pottery that didn’t fit together into any sensible shape. There was always one piece too many or one too few. But now, as he reread the last entry of an unfortunate woman’s diary, all those fragments clicked into place and formed a most beautiful solution. The case of the three épées was solved.

  Love Songs from a Shallow Grave

  When the unscheduled China Airlines flight touched down at Wattay Airport at two in the afternoon, the pilot was surprised to see a crowd of people waiting beneath a colorful copse of umbrellas in front of the dismal little terminal. If he’d known them, he would have recognized Dtui and Malee, Mr. Geung and Mr. Bhiku, Mrs. Nong and Madame Daeng. But he didn’t, so he was only left to wonder how news of the flight had made it around Vientiane so quickly.

  It was a Lao whisper that, unlike a Chinese whisper, becomes more coherent as it’s passed on. Somebody from Agriculture went home for lunch at K6 and was out feeding the chickens and mentioned to the neighbor that she had to hurry out to Wattay to receive a parcel from Peking. The neighbor was a secretary at Foreign Affairs. She knew that there weren’t any flights scheduled from Peking and guessed it might have been the representatives returning from Phnom Penh. She was a friend of Mrs. Nong’s, Civilai’s wife who had recently returned from a stay at her sister’s. The secretary rode her bicycle to Civilai’s house and told Nong that her husband might be arriving on a flight sometime after lunch.

  Mrs. Nong finished unpacking her suitcase, inspected a spotlessly clean kitchen and walked along the street to Comrade Sithi’s house. The maid knew her well and let her use the telephone. Mrs. Nong called the Mahosot Hospital and had the clerk pass on word to Dtui that her boss could be arriving on an early-afternoon flight from Peking. The message Dtui received said, “Siri arriving 2:00 pm Wattay.” And so it continued. It had been almost a week since the two old fellows had left on their Kampuchean junket. That wasn’t such a rare thing in the region. Flights were unpredictable and communication was poor. But it didn’t stop friends and family from feeling anxious.

  So there they stood in the rain, none of them really sure why they’d come. Siri and Civilai had flown back and forth, hither and thither countless times without so much as a crow on a fence post to see them off or welcome them back. But as they gathered, the welcoming committee agreed there was something different this time. None of them could explain what it was but they had all felt the same energy that inspired the decision to make the arduous journey through the mud to the airport.

  The Shaanxi Y-8 touched down at exactly 2:00 pm. It skimmed along the runway like a flat stone across a pond then turned abruptly and taxied toward the terminal. Everyone watched as a portly middle-aged man in a plastic jacket, shorts, and bare feet wheeled the portable steps to the plane. In an instant, the passengers began to disembark. A flock of Chinese somebodies alit first and were met on the tarmac by ministry people with umbrellas. Then came Lao and Chinese in dribs and drabs. Then a pilot with a small suitcase. And only then, once those waiting had all but given up, Civilai poked his head from the airplane doorway and walked down the steps.

  It took him thirty seconds or so to reach the terminal but, for the entire time, all eyes remained trained on the exit of the airplane. Even when Civilai stood directly in front of them, dripping, he still didn’t have the reception committee’s full attention. Madame Daeng hadn’t looked at him at all.

  “Welcome home,” said Mr. Bhiku.

  “Forget somebody, uncle?” Dtui asked.

  “What?” Civilai replied without looking surprised at the question. “Oh, Siri? There was a slight holdup. Diplomatic thing. He’ll be catching a later flight. Decent of you all to come out to meet me on a day like this, though.”

  His words were a little too rehearsed. His smile too politicianlike. His overacting seemed to chill the crowd more than the rain. It was as if he’d spent his entire time on the flight composing a light greeting.

  “They didn’t come to meet you,” said Mrs. Nong, stepping forward to brush raindrops from his shoulders. “I was the only one daft enough to come to welcome you back. This lot’s all here for the doctor. Now they’ll have to make the trip again tomorrow.”

  There was an awkward moment of silence.

  “No, Madame,” said Bhiku at last. “I am equally as joyful to greet elder statesman Civilai.” He handed over the lotus he’d been holding and somehow the evil spell that hung around them was blown away. They smiled and patted Civilai on the shoulder. They all milled around him and spoke at the same time but as they walked to the taxi stand, first Dtui, then Daeng looked back at the airplane.

  It was late afternoon and Civilai and Nong were sitting at their kitchen table sampling the sugared dumplings he’d been given before leaving Peking. Nong had described her sister’s attempts to grow straw mushrooms in her backyard. How the place smelled like a stable the whole time she was there and only two collar stud—sized mushrooms to show for all that manure. Civilai had tal
ked about their arrival in Peking and the food and their act for the hidden camera. He was delighted to see that his apology and promise to be a better husband had brought his wife home to him, but neither of them had been able to speak about the subject that smoldered in the background. Until suddenly there was no choice.

  “Anybody home?” came the unmistakable voice of Madame Daeng. Neither of them was surprised by this visit. In fact, they’d expected it earlier. Daeng’s gauzy figure stood outside the mosquito-wire door.

  “How did you get out here?” Nong asked.

  “Siri’s Triumph,” she replied, kicking off her shoes and pushing past the flimsy door. “The idiots made me leave it at the gate. That one walked me over here in the rain.”

  She indicated the armed guard standing at the front fence. He nodded to Civilai and went on his way.

  “They always get supervigilant after a bombing or a murder,” said Nong. She accepted Daeng’s bag of longan with a nod of thanks. “I suppose that’s always the way, isn’t it? Putting the lid on the basket after the snake’s out.”

  “Have you talked about it yet?” Daeng asked. There was obviously no space for preliminaries.

  “Not yet,” said Civilai.

  “Then where should we sit?”

  They opted for the outside lounge suite with a view of the gnomes and the two-foot windmill. A plastic sunroof overhead showed the faint outlines of flattened leaves. Rain clung to low clouds. Daeng refused both small talk and a drink. Her determined eyes bore into Civilai’s like steel drill bits.

  “I’m not supposed to …, “ he began.

  “I don’t care,” she said.

  “I know.”

  He leaned forward and rested his skinny elbows on his skinny knees. He began his story with their visit to the Lao Embassy in Phnom Penh. That was the last time he’d seen Siri. He reached the May Day reception without interruption. He hesitated then, not for effect, but more like a visitor at the devil’s front door. Daeng egged him on with her eyes.

 

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