Authors: Simon Kernick
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Murder, #Crime Fiction
I’d never liked Manila, and had avoided it during the three years I’d lived in the Philippines. In fact, I’d only ever stayed here the once, when I came to kill a paedophile – a contract job that had been organized by my old friend and business partner Tomboy Darke.
A bit of history here. Back in the old days when I was still a London copper, Tomboy Darke had been one of my top informants. He was a small-time career criminal, dealing mainly in stolen contraband, but even so, I’d always liked him. He was a gregarious character and good company, and we’d often gone out drinking together. He was also sensible enough to know that the kind of business he was in, particularly the informing part, was never going to be a long-term option, so when he’d saved up enough money from his various nefarious activities he’d upped sticks and disappeared to the Philippines. It was a testament to our friendship that we’d remained in touch, and once my world in London had finally fallen apart, I’d come here and looked him up.
And he hadn’t let me down, either. Tomboy had helped me when I’d needed him. He knew what I’d done and could easily have turned me in to the authorities in the Philippines, probably gaining a sizeable financial reward for doing so, but he hadn’t. Instead we’d gone into business together running a dive operation, first on the southern island of Siquijor, then after that in the resort of Puerto Galera, a few hours south of where I was now. It had been a lot of fun, too. We’d got drunk together, laughed at each other’s jokes, been almost like brothers, even if, now and again, he’d wanted me to kill the occasional bad guy to help raise funds for the business.
But then, six years ago, something had happened, something
that had changed my opinion of him for ever. The last words I’d ever spoken to him, made in a phone call from England after I’d gone back there to sort out some unfinished business, were a coldly uttered threat: ‘Just pray I never come looking for you.’
We hadn’t spoken since, and in the interim I’d tried to forget about him and the terrible thing he’d done. But, standing on that hot, polluted street, I thought about him now, and wondered whether he was even still alive.
Somehow I reckoned he would be. Tomboy had always been a survivor.
A wiry little guy in a scraggy T-shirt weaved through the traffic on a moped. As he saw me, he nodded and, without slowing down, pulled a satchel from his shoulder and held it out with an outstretched arm.
I took it in one casual movement and put it over my own shoulder, then I was walking one way and he was riding the other.
And that was it. A two-second exchange, and once again I was ready to commit murder.
I’d changed hotels, not wanting to stay too close to where I’d killed O’Riordan and his lover the previous night, and had booked myself into the Hilton on Roxas Avenue – the main thoroughfare through the upmarket bay area of the city. It was costing me a lot of money, but I figured that I’d be able to claim it back from Schagel as a justified business expense. After all, I was doing him a favour by hanging around a place where I’d just committed two murders.
On the way back to the Hilton, I stopped off at an internet café that promised fast broadband connections and air conditioning, and bought an hour of time from a kid with a funky haircut who didn’t even look up from the bowl of noodles he was vacuuming up. I found a spot in the corner, away from the two other surfers,
and logged into the hotmail account I shared with Schagel.
As promised, there was an email in the drafts section with a single jpeg attachment. I opened it and found myself looking at a photo of the head and shoulders of an attractive white woman in her early thirties. Her bleached-blonde hair was cut very short and gave her a confident, almost aggressive look that made me wonder, inappropriately, what she’d be like in bed. She was partly turned away from the camera, an expression of concentration on her face, and it was clear that she wasn’t aware the shot was being taken. It was still a good one, though, and I knew I’d have no trouble recognizing her again – especially with that hair.
I closed the attachment and returned to the body of the email, reading it through quickly. According to Schagel, the woman’s name was Tina Boyd and she was expected in Manila the following day on an as yet unspecified flight. As soon as he had the flight number and time, he would contact me. My instructions were to be at the airport when she arrived and to follow her to her destination. ON NO ACCOUNT (Schagel’s capitals, not mine) was I to lose her. I would then receive further instructions. He signed off the mail by telling me to delete both it and the attachment.
I did as I was told, but remained seated at the PC. Tina Boyd. The photograph wasn’t familiar but the name was. I’d definitely heard it before, a long time ago.
And then I frowned, because I remembered where. A cold winter’s night just over six years ago, back in London. The last time I’d been there. And I recalled all too well what it had been in connection with.
So a London-based police officer – a DS, if I remembered rightly – was coming to Manila, and her arrival had clearly ruffled the feathers of the wrong kinds of people. I Googled her name
and rank – which was when I learned she was now a DI – and skim-read the slew of articles about her that immediately came up.
My hour had almost run out when I finally got up, having found out plenty about Tina Boyd’s controversial, on occasions death-defying, career, but still no nearer to knowing why she had to die, or even whether she had any connection to Patrick O’Riordan.
But I was suddenly very curious to find out.
Omar Salic needed the reward money the
Manila Post
man, Pat O’Riordan, had promised him. He needed it badly. It meant he could leave Manila with Soraya and set up the carpentry business he’d been dreaming of back home in Mindanao. It meant escaping the malign influence of the men he’d been working with – men he’d thought initially were his friends, but who were now turning into devils. If he carried on with them, he’d be dead soon, there was no question about it, and Soraya – his beautiful Soraya – would be left all alone to bring up their unborn child. A child Omar would never see.
O’Riordan was the man who’d promised to help Omar escape, yet he hadn’t turned up at the meeting, and nor had the other guy he was supposed to bring with him, the American, Cheeseman. Omar had obeyed O’Riordan’s instructions and not written anything down but he’d memorized every last detail, and had waited for him and Cheeseman at the agreed location for more than two hours before finally, and reluctantly, leaving.
The walk back home had been one of the most painful of his
life. Every five minutes he’d tried O’Riordan’s mobile – a number the reporter had told him he could be reached on any time of day or night – and every time it had gone straight to voicemail. Omar hadn’t left any messages. He hadn’t seen much point. O’Riordan, the man who was going to change things for him and Soraya, had given up on him, even though Omar was sure that the information he had was worth thousands, maybe even millions, of dollars. The problem was, he was running out of time to find someone else willing to pay for it, and if this opportunity slipped through his fingers, as it now looked like it would, then there would almost certainly not be another like it again.
It was a quarter to six and the sun was beginning to go down amid the smog as Omar reached the grim apartment block in Manila’s Tondo district where he and Soraya had lived for the past three years while he scraped a living in this city they both despised. On the ride up in the elevator he told himself that he would find someone else to sell the information to, that he shouldn’t give up just yet. He also forced himself to cheer up. He didn’t want to worry Soraya, not in her current condition. She knew nothing of his double life, nor of the meeting with O’Riordan. As far as she knew, he’d been out with friends that afternoon, and that was how he wanted it to stay.
But the moment he stepped into the apartment he could see that it was too late for that.
Soraya was sitting in her favourite chair, but there was something terribly wrong. Her mouth was gagged and her arms and legs bound. Above the gag, her eyes were wide and terrified.
Omar gasped, unable to comprehend for a moment what was happening, but even in her terror, Soraya was gesturing behind him with her eyes.
Before he could turn round, he was grabbed from behind by
firm hands, and felt a knife being pushed hard against his throat. ‘On your knees, traitor,’ hissed a voice he recognized in his ear, and he was shoved roughly to the ground so that he was lying on his front. From the position he was in, only a few feet away from the chair, he could see, with a growing sense of dread, that Soraya’s black dress was wet with blood.
At least two men were holding Omar down, and though he felt a terrible rage at what was being done to his beloved wife, he knew there was no point resisting, not with the knife against his throat. ‘What’s going on?’ he gasped, trying to regain some control of the situation, even though he could feel his bowels turning to water. Because he knew what these people were capable of.
‘You know what’s going on,’ hissed the voice. ‘What have you said to the journalist?’
‘Nothing, I swear it,’ replied Omar, just about managing to make eye contact with Soraya, and giving her a look that said he would sort this out and stop these men from doing any further harm to her. ‘Please. Let my wife go. She’s pregnant.’
But as he spoke he saw a third man come out of the tiny kitchen, a nail gun in one hand and a butcher’s knife in the other. It was Anil, and he looked perfectly calm. But then he always did. Even when he was killing.
‘Please Anil,’ whispered Omar, feeling the knife cut his skin as he spoke. ‘Let Soraya go. She has done nothing.’
‘But you have, haven’t you, Omar,’ said Anil slyly. ‘Who have you told?’
‘No one.’
‘What about the journalist?’
Omar had no idea how they’d found out about O’Riordan. He’d covered his tracks with extreme care, and the only reason he’d approached O’Riordan was because he thought that a
journalist with his experience would have done the same. But in the end none of this mattered. Because the point was,
they knew
. Which meant that Omar was going to have to tell the truth. He was finished, he knew this. But if there was any chance of getting Soraya out of this alive, he had to take it.
‘Look, we just arranged to meet. That’s all. But the journalist didn’t show up.’ He pushed his head up from the floor, ignoring the pain from the knife, so that he was looking at Anil man to man. ‘I know I’ve done wrong—’
‘You have, Omar. You have.’
‘But Soraya has done nothing, and she’s pregnant.’
‘So you keep saying.’
‘Please don’t hurt her, Anil. I swear no one knows the details. No one.’
Anil looked at Omar with distaste, then signalled to the men holding him.
Suddenly, Omar gasped as he felt a knife being inserted deep into his side. At the same time the knife at his throat was removed and a piece of duct tape was slapped roughly against his mouth. He felt no pain, just shock as his blood dripped down on to the dirty tiles of the floor, and he thought that if this was dying, it was a great deal less painful than he’d imagined.
Except it wasn’t death. It was just the beginning.
Because after that they made him watch as Anil went to work on his wife.
And by the time he’d finished, the anguish Omar was experiencing was so great that he would have rather died a thousand times over.
After I left England at the end of 2004, having burned my bridges with Tomboy in the Philippines, I headed back to the Far East, unsure of what I was going to do next. Although my relationship with him was finished, Tomboy still owed me money – more than twenty thousand dollars to be exact – and I needed it to start over again somewhere else.
That somewhere else turned out to be Thailand.
Stopping in Bangkok, I’d bought a tourist book, read through it and decided to head down south to the island of Ko Lanta in the Andaman Sea. I chose Ko Lanta because it was comparatively underdeveloped, with no airport, and could only be reached by ferry. It was also less popular with Brits, who tended to congregate in the more touristy destinations like Phuket and Ko Samui, so I was less likely to be recognized. What swayed it for me was the quality of the diving, which was supposed to be some of the best in the country.
As a qualified instructor with more than fifteen hundred dives under my belt, I quickly found work at a small operation, the owners
of which were also in need of some investment to buy new equipment. I emailed Tomboy and, luckily for him, he didn’t kick up much of a fuss when I asked him for the money he owed me. I got it transferred over, pumped it into the business, and immediately became a part-owner.
And so, within a few months, I’d settled down once again, put the past behind me, and was enjoying life under the assumed identity I’d been using for the previous three years, that of Marcus ‘Mick’ Baxter. No one questioned my past. In the Ko Lanta diving community, people were only interested in the here and now. It suited me perfectly, and I could probably have lived like that for the rest of my days.
But life has a way of throwing up surprises, and the surprise for me was that I fell in love.
I met Emma Pettit when she came down from Bangkok with a female friend for a long weekend to do some diving, and chose our outfit to go out with. The boat rides from Ko Lanta to the best dive sites were typically between two and four hours, which left plenty of time for the dive staff and their guests to get talking, and Emma and I just seemed to gravitate to each other. She was a real livewire, with twinkling eyes, a huge smile, and a host of tales to tell. Although originally from Somerset, she’d been living overseas for most of the previous five years, teaching English as a foreign language in various locations in Africa and Asia, and was now based in Bangkok, where she taught at a private school. She loved to travel and sample other cultures, and she talked of all the places she wanted to see both in Asia and beyond. She was also interested in me, wanting to know my background and how I’d ended up where I was.