Singapore Sling Shot (26 page)

Read Singapore Sling Shot Online

Authors: Andrew Grant

BOOK: Singapore Sling Shot
4.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The only days I didn't train were those that made up the three-day weekend Simone spent with me. And no, there hasn't been another woman in my bed since Simone and I got things together. That's some sort of record for me. When she heard I was back, Mai Ling phoned. I lied to her and told her I was engaged. She wished me luck and genuinely sounded as if she meant it. There had been a wistful quality to her voice. Perhaps she was wishing she were engaged. Not necessarily to me, just engaged.

Was I engaged? It felt like it, I guess. I've never been engaged. My former wife, the stunningly beautiful Doctor Sylvia Dixon, and I had gone from meet, to bed, to marriage in record time. Big mistake! If we'd not tied the knot, we'd possibly still be sharing a bed, occasionally at least.

For the moment though, I am a one-woman guy.

It was Saturday morning. I'd been for a ten-kilometre jog and was cooling down on my patio. I was planning on spending the afternoon in the gym. The phone went. It was Sami, checking in as he did every other day.

“Lu is still in KL. Apparently he has been in constant touch with his people back here, but he's been very careful to ensure Michael doesn't get to overhear his telephone conversations. Michael thinks he's about to make a move of some sort.”

“What about Mendez?”

“He's happy with his Chinese investments and left for Colombia yesterday.”

“And not one drop of blood was shed.”

“Cynicism suits you admirably, Daniel,” Sami replied smoothly with a hint of a chuckle in his voice. “You will find your bank account has received a substantial injection of cash. I suggest you look for an investment or two and then come and work with me—just as soon as I take care of Lu, that is.”

With that, the phone went dead. I left the patio and went inside. The laptop was more or less a permanent fixture on the bar in the lounge. I fired it up and logged into my Cayman Islands bank account. How Sami had tracked that down, I have no idea, but track it down he had. When I checked the figures, I almost fell through the floor. As it was, I sank onto one of the barstools and tried to focus on the numbers on the computer screen.

There was now US$50 million in my account. That was over and above the two and a bit that had been loitering there, left over from Bernard's loot following my apartment purchase.

“Oh boy!” I muttered. Did the money make any great difference? I really have no idea. The two million and change that had been there would have kept me in luxury until my dotage. Now having a real fortune to play with, what the hell did I want to do with it? Sami was right, of course: invest it. As to going to work for him? Well, I bore easily, and when I'm bored, trouble sort of finds me. Life around Sami Somsak is never boring. Maybe I'll say yes to him.

Half an hour after my conversation with Sami, I was in the apartment complex's pool doing some serious laps. My good intentions were cut short when Nim, the pool girl, appeared holding a towel and a walky phone. I dried a hand and an ear and took the handset. It was Sami, again. There was no preamble.

“Tuk Tuk is dead! I'm on my way to the airport. I'm going home for the funeral.”

“Should I come?” Tuk Tuk Song, Sami's uncle, had been both a friend and an enemy to me. I had saved his life and earned his gratitude and friendship. That had survived until I killed his son, Arune. The moment I did that, all bets were off and I was enemy number one.

“I think not, Daniel. You will see Sakura in good time. She has to grieve or be seen to grieve first.”

“How did you know about Sakura and me?” I asked, completely dumbstruck. Our final conversation, the one in which she had invited me to come to her on Tuk Tuk's death, had been a whispered one between her and me in the Jeep I'd commandeered from the newly dead Choy Lee.

“Tuk Tuk told me,” Sami replied simply. “She told him!”

“That's crazy,” I replied. “You don't tell your dying husband that once he has popped his clogs, you'll be seeing the man who was his sworn enemy.” Even as I said that, I knew that perhaps it did happen that way. The relationship between the beautiful Sakura and Tuk Tuk was, to say the least, unusual, just as the relationship between Tuk Tuk and me had been. Then, of course, there was the female factor. I have to admit that when it comes to understanding women, I am a complete, abysmal failure.

“Uncle still regarded you as his friend, Daniel. The fact that he was honour-bound to kill you because you killed Arune was something that saddened him greatly. Perhaps he thought that when he was gone and you and Sakura came together, the balance would be restored. He loved her and he greatly respected you. He told me not long ago that he wished you had been his son rather than the idiot he'd bred.”

I grunted. My mind was racing, trying to sort out the implications of what the hell Sami was telling me. If I went to Sakura, was I fulfilling Tuk Tuk's dying wish? In reality, would I ever know if it had really been her wish that I go to her, or had it been Tuk Tuk's idea all along? Where the hell was my free will in this whole bloody mess? And what about Simone?

“Are you still there, Daniel?”

“Yeah. I'm just trying to figure out who the fuck is manipulating who here.”

Sami laughed. “The workings of the world, Daniel. Just relax and roll with the tide. When the time is right, go to Sakura. If things work out, you can take over some of Tuk Tuk's business interests and we can work as one. If you and Sakura do not work out, Anita is still waiting for you to call.”

Anita Somsak, Sami's sister, was a beautiful, intelligent woman and she had made it clear the last time we'd met that she would like it if she and I were to share more than her brother. Why the hell did life have to be so fucking complicated?

“Goodbye, old friend. I'll tell Sakura you'll call on her when Tuk Tuk has been laid to rest for a decent amount of time.” Sami was gone again and I hadn't even thanked him for the money. I debated calling him back, but in the end I just started back for the other end of the pool.

33

Thomas Lu was smiling again, despite the continual ache from his injured shoulder. Everything was finally falling into place. He was ready for his return to Singapore. While in exile, he had been busy, very busy. His business interests in Singapore and abroad had been taken care of by trusted lieutenants while he'd been out of the country.

Apart from the fallout of the Intella debacle, where he was definitely
persona non grata
as far as the other members of the syndicate were concerned, he had survived and his other businesses, both legal and illegal, were flourishing. Lu had no criminal charges against him. Officially, no one had pointed a finger at him for the slaughter of Stanley Loh and the others.

While the Intella Island syndicate members well knew Lu had been behind Stanley's killing, they weren't telling the authorities anything. So that particular case, the mysteries surrounding the battles on Sentosa, and the various building and warehouse fires were still unsolved. Chinese mainland gangs and drug wars were still the official explanations. However, for the past month, there had been no more gangland deaths or fires, and Singapore, it appeared, had returned to normal.

In preparation for his return and in order to defend himself against Sami Somsak, Thomas Lu had augmented his seriously depleted force of strong-arm men by calling on reinforcements from the Fang Triad. He had a plan for Somsak, one that would get the Thai drug lord out of his hair once and for all. That plan was already being put into action. He, Thomas Lu, would not even be in Singapore when stage one of it was executed, and no one would be able to connect him to it or anything else. At its conclusion, Sami Somsak and his entourage would be no more.

As for the Colombian threat, here Lu was less sure of himself. Those monitoring the movements of Carlos Mendez and his compatriots had reported that Mendez had left for home. Would he return to Singapore to exact revenge for his brother's death once he knew Lu was back in residence? Or had Mendez entrusted his death to the Thai gang boss? If so, when Somsak was finally dead, would family honour force Mendez to return?

“Michael?” Lu called. He didn't have the answer to these questions. His head was throbbing. He would have his beautiful lover massage his temples for him. They would go to bed together, and in the morning he would awaken to find that stage one of his revenge had been accomplished.

Early morning telephone calls are something that I have never, ever gotten used to. Something I guess most of us dread. When the phone wrenched me from my deep, bone-weary sleep at 04:30 on Sunday morning, I knew in my gut that this was going to be bad. It was Sami.

“Daniel, Simone is dead!”

“What?”

“Simone is dead,” Sami repeated, his voice little more than a whisper.

“How?” My head was spinning. If I hadn't been lying down I would have fallen. Total shock hit me like a meteorite.

“She apparently slipped, fell over the railing and down the void space in her apartment building late yesterday afternoon. She was dead when she was found. I found out when I landed.”

“Oh!” I whispered. Being killed in a car crash I had always thought was a stupid way to die. This was almost as bad. But the end result was that beautiful, bountiful Simone was dead, stupid accident or not!

“Tuk Tuk's funeral is tomorrow morning. I'll fly back in the afternoon. Simone didn't have any family other than a sister in Cape Town. I'm having my people take care of things. Her sister will be on a flight about now. You coming back?”

“Yes! Of course I'm coming back!”

“I'm sorry, Daniel. I know you two were close.”

“Yes we were,” I replied, almost absently. I was still trying to fully absorb the fact that Simone was gone from my life. In a flash I was suddenly alone again. Emotionally, I think what had been happening between us was a catharsis for my jaded emotions. I had been changing, no doubt about that. Now she was gone.

I felt a surge of something approaching anger, irrational anger, and it was anger at Simone for leaving my life. Of course it was childish. Of course it was unfair. Of course I was being selfish. From now on, I wasn't going to get close to anyone, I silently promised myself.

I sat there, phone in hand, emotions out of control. Part of me knew I had reverted to being the lost, scared kid. The other part of me simply didn't care that I was, internally at least, acting like a spiteful, snotty-nosed little toe rag.

Whenever I got close, people got hurt. People died. For a moment Simone's face was gone from behind my eyes and in her place was the face of Babs, the beautiful redhead from another time and another place. She and I had gotten close and she'd ended up with her head propped up on my coffee table while her body lay metres away in a pool of blood.

“Sorry, Daniel. I have to go.” Sami was dragging me back to the present.

“I'll fly back in the morning.”

“I'll see you then. Take care, my friend.”

“You too.” I hung up and lay there in the dark, staring at the invisible ceiling, wondering how a stupid fucking accident had changed everything. I still don't know if Simone and I would have got together as a normal couple, but things had been heading in that direction. I hadn't strayed once since meeting her, and that was some sort of record. Now it didn't matter. None of it mattered anymore.

“Ain't nuthin'!” I snarled. “Ain't nuthin' at all!” That damn catch phrase from an old war said it all.

I closed my eyes but she was there, and so were Babs and Geezer and a whole bunch of others. People who had been in my life but were there no more, except in my mind. I got up and left the bedroom, flicking on lights as I went. I didn't want the darkness anymore.

There was an almost untouched bottle of Jack Daniels on the shelf behind the bar. I sat on a stool and looked across at the bottle for a long time before I stood and retraced my steps. That was too easy! I pulled on a tracksuit and runners and went out into the night to punish my demons.

Michael Sun, Thomas Lu's lover, retrieved his cellphone from the pocket of a jacket he had hanging in his closet. This phone wasn't his usual one. This was one supplied by Sami Somsak. Sun had overheard Lu using his own phone. They were about to return to Singapore, quietly. Lu's driver was coming to collect them. Instead of the distinctive Bentley, he would be driving a relatively inconspicuous Volvo.

Sami's phone was switched off, so the young man decided to leave a message. It was often this way. He called Sami when he had news. Sami never called him.

“Mr Somsak, it's Michael. We are returning to Singapore in the morning in another car. He is very pleased with himself, but I have no idea why. He's planning something. When I find out, I will call again.”

Michael flipped the phone shut and slipped it back into its hiding place. He didn't notice the figure on the patio outside of his room. Lu was standing beside the open sliding door. He had been about to enter the room. He had an expensive gift for Michael and had been wanting to surprise him. Now the realisation that he had been betrayed seared its way into his brain. Lu's breath hissed between his clenched teeth as the red mist of his rage swirled around him.

“Betrayed!” he whispered. Michael had left the room; undoubtedly he would come looking for him. Lu weighed the small package in his hand. The beautiful, gunmetal grey Breightling had cost several thousand dollars. In his rage, Lu turned and hurled the gift-wrapped package away into the night. On the street far below, an old man was about to make a discovery that was worth a king's ransom to him.

“Thomas, where are you?” Michael was calling from the living room of the rented penthouse apartment. Thomas Lu moved along the patio and entered his own room. He suddenly smiled. It was a ghastly smile. He would see that beautiful, young Michael would no longer be able to work his magic on anyone. Certainly not anyone who could see!

Other books

Leverage by Joshua C. Cohen
The Dukes by Brian Masters
Match Play by Poppe, D. Michael
Suddenly Last Summer by Sarah Morgan
Mimi's Ghost by Tim Parks
Sons, Servants and Statesmen by John Van der Kiste
Fighting for You by Sydney Landon
Bitterwood by James Maxey
Osprey Island by Thisbe Nissen