Inspector Singh Investigates (6 page)

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Authors: Shamini Flint

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural, #International Mystery & Crime

BOOK: Inspector Singh Investigates
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The only other thing in the file was a CD. Chelsea held it in her hand, watching as the light caught the gleaming surface. Did she really want to see what was on this recording? Presumably, it was yet more evidence of Alan's adultery. She had always known and never needed proof. The courts had required evidence, so she had found it for them. None of it mattered any more now that Alan was dead. Reluctantly, Chelsea decided that she could not ignore it. It might contain something as simple as Alan tucking into a plate of
char siew
– roast pork –after his so–called conversion to Islam. It might eventually be good evidence, assuming one of the courts would actually look into the matter, that religion was purely a matter of convenience for Alan Lee.

She ran up the carpeted stairs lightly and soundlessly. She went into the spare bedroom and locked the door. There was a television and DVD player, rarely used, in there. The state of her marriage had not allowed for many guests. Steeling herself, she slipped the CD in, grabbed the remote controls and perched on the edge of the bed.

The images had been shot on a recording device with fairly low resolution – a mobile phone, Chelsea decided. She had no difficulty recognising her husband as he sat on a bar stool watching the dancers at a club. Chelsea could not tell if it was because of the quality of the recording but the air seemed smoky. Flashing lights in many colours punctuated the scene and she could almost smell the perspiring dancers. The sound was largely muffled but Chelsea could make out the persistent beat of loud music. She wrinkled her nose in disgust. Alan had been so pathetic, going clubbing to places where the average age was twenty years younger than him. She continued to watch, wondering if all there was on the tape was Alan sipping a cocktail.

A young woman walked up to Alan. She was exquisite. Tall and thin, with beautifully made–up features, she strode into the shot like a model. With a start, Chelsea realised that the woman bore a strong resemblance, in height and style, to herself. Alan had not seen her as she walked up to him. He was concentrating on the dancers. She slipped a long, thin arm around his neck and he swivelled on his stool. Standing over him, she leaned down and kissed him full on the mouth. It was a smooth, sensuous action – even on a phone recording. Alan responded by standing up and folding the woman in his arms. Chelsea felt her stomach muscles clench. Knowing your husband was adulterous and watching him were two different things. Public displays of affection – or lust, thought Chelsea dismissively –were not common in Malaysia. A few people had turned to look at the couple kissing so uninhibitedly. This was Sharifah, whose address was in the file, she supposed. The screen went blank. She wondered why Mr Chan thought she would be willing to pay two thousand ringgit for what he had provided.

The camera came back on. Perhaps he had been trying to conserve the battery. A young man had marched up to the couple. He was slim, dressed in black with short, dark hair. He grabbed the woman by the arm and yanked her away from Alan. She turned in surprise, and then seeing who it was, took a step backwards and said something – it was impossible to hear over the music. It was obvious that she knew the young man. He grabbed her by the shoulders and shook her – not roughly, almost pleadingly. It was clear to Chelsea what had happened. Alan had stolen this girl from the young man and he was desperate to win her back. Seeing the woman's face for the first time, Chelsea realised that despite her dress and make–up she was very young. She was not in Alan's usual style at all. He liked his women to be practised. No doubt she had been swept off her feet by an older man with money who knew how to be charming. Chelsea could almost feel sorry for the girl.

Alan had grown tired of the young man's impassioned pleading because he grabbed him by the arm and pulled him away from the girl. The girl put out a hand, a gesture of sympathy, an apology – it might even have been a sign that she knew deep down that her affections lay with him. Alan must have recognised the possibility because he put both hands on the stranger and shoved. The boy stumbled backwards, found his balance and would have charged forward to attack Alan if the girl had not stepped between them. She shook her head at the young man. He said something and she shook her head again, more firmly this time. The boy raised an angry finger – pointing at Alan over the girl's shoulder. Chelsea could just make out the words, 'I won't let you get away with this!'

And then he turned and almost ran away from the couple. But not before he had looked directly into Mr Chan's camera.

Chelsea collapsed backwards onto the bed. She buried her face in a pillow.

 

 

Eleven

 

'I killed him.'

The inspector said testily, 'Yes, yes! I've heard this part before. I am asking you why!'

'His job ... his business.'

'You wanted his business?' There was no disguising the puzzlement in the inspector's voice. 'But I thought you walked away from all that. Chelsea told me that you had no interest in money matters.'

Jasper said impatiently, 'Not to get his business, to stop Alan running it!'

'Why?'

'Everything he has ever done is illegal and destructive.'

'I'm not sure what you mean.'

'The family business is logging – my father was the original timber magnate. He built an empire cutting down trees from coast to coast.'

The inspector nodded to indicate that he knew the potted history of the Lee family.

'Alan was expanding operations to Borneo. That is where the best logging is – most of the old–growth hard wood on the peninsula is long gone. What is left is on nature reserves and fairly well–policed.' 'I still don't know what you're driving at.'

'He was logging illegally. Destroying the rainforest ecosystems. Driving species to extinction. Hounding the indigenous tribes and chasing them off the land they have used for thousands of years.'

Jasper Lee's voice was rising with anger – his genuine disgust at his brother's actions apparent in the reddening face.

The inspector's voice dripped with sarcasm. 'Are you trying to tell me that you're some sort of eco–terrorist?'

Jasper was stung into a reaction. 'I don't care what you believe! You asked me for an explanation and I've given you one.'

The inspector snorted.

'What do you want from me?' asked Jasper tiredly.

'The truth would be a good place to start.'

The self–confessed murderer stared past the policeman at the grimy walls of his cell.

He said, 'You ask me for the truth but you don't believe me when I tell you. I know it sounds farfetched, when you live your life in air–conditioned cities – shopping and going to the movies – that I could have killed my brother to save the rainforests.'

The inspector was silent. This did not seem the time to point out that he hadn't been shopping or to a movie in years.

Jasper continued, 'But if you're out there, in Borneo, you would understand.'

Inspector Singh raised one of his expressive eyebrows.

Jasper hung his head, refusing to meet the policeman's eyes.

Finally, the inspector said, 'All right – let's say I take your word for it – you killed your brother because of these ... jungle people. Why now?'

Jasper looked at him, brow wrinkled with perplexity.

'Presumably Alan has been up to no good for years. Why did you kill him now? Besides, I understood it was your other brother, Lee Kian Min, who was the brains behind Lee Timber anyway. Haven't you just made things worse? You killed the wrong brother.'

 

Kian Min was frankly mystified. He had no idea why his brother Jasper had confessed to the murder of Alan. Even if he had committed the murder, which Kian Min thought highly unlikely, Jasper wouldn't have had the balls, surely there was no reason to implicate himself by confessing so dramatically.

Kian Min had taken Alan's messy divorce and lengthy custody battle in his stride. When Alan had asked him to testify as to his good character, to nullify the damage Jasper had done by appearing for Chelsea, he had laughed out loud and then agreed to help – for a price. He remembered the occasion well. Alan had summoned him on the office intercom. Even when he wanted a favour, he still demanded that his brother come up to the big office to see him. Kian Min would have wagered money that Alan did not even know where, in the huge Lee Building on Jalan Raja Chulan, he had his modest office. But he had trotted up dutifully and agreed to help – if his brother would cease objecting to his big idea to expand the business.

He had never understood Alan's reluctance to adopt his most recent business development plan. Alan rarely got involved in planning and never had a view on prudent policy. Every now and then though, to Kian Min's intense irritation, he would step in and veto some plan. Or more rarely, as it required work, propose some seat of his pants idea to turn water into wine. Kian Min was certain that Alan did it just to yank his chain, stop him getting ideas above himself about where he belonged in the company's hierarchy, remind him who, by an accident of birth, was the boss of Lee Timber.

Alan's most recent effort had been to veto Kian Min's plans to turn the land they logged in East Malaysia into oil palm plantations. Kian Min firmly believed that the future of the business was in bio–fuels. And the company had a huge advantage muscling into the market because of the land concessions they had and could easily buy from corrupt government officials. But Alan had refused. He had asserted that Lee Timber was a timber company and he was not going to compromise on the legacy his father had left him. He had implied that he, Alan, had inherited the trade because his father had trusted him with the family business. In vain had Kian Min pointed out the advantages of diversifying and the dangers of staying hooked on a logging industry that was fast running out of trees. Alan was obdurate. Until, that is, he had needed his brother to testify at the custody hearings. Kian Min had spelt out the cost of his cooperation – setting up of the bio–fuels unit. Alan had agreed immediately.

'What happened to all your big talk about protecting Father's legacy?' Kian Min had asked snidely.

'I couldn't care less. I just love that look on your face when I screw up one of your pretty little business plans.'

Kian Min, standing before his brother's desk like a schoolboy summoned to see the headmaster, had grown pale with anger, but had not said anything.

Alan had waved his hand to indicate that his brother could leave the room.

His parting words were, 'Get out! That sour face of yours is going to put me off my lunch.'

 

Inspector Singh looked mournfully at his shoes. His snowy white sneakers were streaked with mud and covered in a fine film of grey dirt. In Singapore, where one could eat lunch off the pavements, he never had any difficulty keeping his footwear pristine. But Kuala Lumpur was a more challenging proposition. The density of cars on the complex network of roads, its location in an airless, windless valley and the largely sporadic tree cover meant that there was always a layer of grime on his clothes and footwear. He wondered whether the time had come to abandon this affectation and buy a pair of black, leather shoes. He scratched his chest through the white vest he always wore under his shirt. A bead of sweat rolled down from his turban and left a moist trail all the way to his collar.

He watched a young Malay woman with a baby under one arm try and heave a pram onto the high pavement. He got to his feet and went over, helping her lift the pram up. She gave him a grateful look and then scurried into the nearest air–conditioned shop, desperate to get out of the sweltering heat. The infant in the pram wore a full body suit, mittens and a cap over his head. His small face was red and dazed. Her toddler was dressed in jeans and a long–sleeved shirt. A mini–man with damp hair plastered to his forehead.

Inspector Singh shook his big head to himself. He knew what these observations were about. He was taking in detail, scrutinising his surroundings, immersing himself in his environment. All his detective skills and instincts were in overdrive. But he was impeded by his lack of status and his peculiar remit. He picked up a newspaper and settled back into his chair, waiting for his coffee and his guest.

Moving quietly as he always did, Singh did not notice the young sergeant until he was right in front of him. The older man gestured at a chair, inviting Shukor to sit down. He did not. He stood looking down at the inspector, a troubled expression on his face.

'What is it?' asked Singh.

'There's another man.'

'What do you mean?'

'Chelsea had ... has maybe, a boyfriend.'

'How do you know?'

Sergeant Shukor slipped a letter across the table. It was handwritten with looping juvenile strokes and much underlining for emphasis. The inspector picked it up gingerly and read the enthusiastic plans of a young man composed on the demise of his lover's husband.

'Where did you get this?'

'We were putting together the stuff we took from searches of the Lee residence after Chelsea was arrested. I came across this while I was tidying.'

'Alan Lee didn't know about this enthusiastic young man!'

'Why do you say that?'

'Well, I suspect it would have come up in the custody battle. It might even have stopped him from converting to Islam. Adultery is never viewed with enthusiasm by the courts. She might have lost custody without any of these religious episodes.'

Singh continued thoughtfully, 'In fact, if she was still in the dock for murder, this letter would have been the final nail in the coffin.'

'Are you going to ask her about it?'

Singh grimaced and gestured at the letter. 'I would very much prefer to know as little as possible about the repulsive creature who wrote this piece of epistolary art.' He picked it up again and looked at the signature. 'One Ravi, apparently. But you're right. We do have to make sure this has no bearing on the case. Chelsea may not be a suspect any more. But she seems very sure that Jasper did not do it. Maybe she knows something we don't about this boyfriend of hers! If his literary effusions are to be taken seriously, he is a creature of strong emotions.'

 

Chelsea got up off the bed, walked to the bathroom and splashed cold water over her face. She took the soft bath towel and scrubbed herself dry. She looked at herself in the mirror. Her eyes were those of a cornered wild beast. She sucked in a few deep breaths. Everything she had ever done, she had done for the children. They needed her more than ever now. She did not know where she was to find the strength. She felt physically sick, cowed by what she had just discovered on the disc from the private investigator.

A pounding on the door distracted her.

Her youngest son was yelling for her to come out. He wanted to show her something. It was important. She unlocked the door and he came tumbling in, all excited about the grasshopper he had caught in the garden.

She said distractedly, 'That's very nice. Remember to be gentle with it. Mummy can't come to look at

it now. She has to go out for a while.'

The boy looked rebellious and Chelsea put her arms around him and hugged him tight.

She said, a little catch in her throat, 'I'll be back soon, honey.'

The chauffeur was outside but she waved him away and grabbed the car keys. She did not want anyone to know where she was going. She nosed the car out of the garage and into the street. She drove past the spot where Alan had been killed. The notepaper with the address jotted down on it lay on the passenger seat. She knew where she was going. She was not sure what she was going to do when she got there.

Rose Condominiums turned out to be an elegant, low–rise development some distance away from any main road. Chelsea took the elevator up to the fourth floor and hurried down a wide, well–lit corridor until she was outside apartment #04–04. She hesitated. She noticed the number four, considered unlucky by the Chinese as signifying death, and made up her mind. She put a finger on the doorbell and pressed firmly. She could hear the faintest of rings through the heavy door.

A few moments later the door was opened a crack and a young face peeped out. Her mouth rounded into a literal 'o' of surprise when she realised who it was. The older woman's recent notoriety meant she was instantly recognisable wherever she went. She stood there uncertainly. Chelsea took a step forward, signalling her intention to enter. The woman shrugged and stepped aside. Chelsea walked into the apartment. It was a pleasant, airy place with water–colours on the walls and Persian carpets on the floor. A very large, smoky cat twined itself around her legs, mewing softly.

Chelsea remarked calmly, 'Nice place. Did my husband pay for it?'

The girl, she was no more than a girl really, did not say anything but her guilty face spoke volumes.

Sharifah picked up the cat and hugged it to her cheek. She asked quietly, 'What do you want?'

Chelsea wandered over to the dining table. It was piled high with books and papers. The girl was studying – they were mostly science texts.

She asked, genuinely curious, 'Why in the world did you get involved with him?'

'I don't know really. He was so kind. He bought me so many things. He seemed so worldly.'

Chelsea could have screamed at the other woman for being so naive. The only thing that held her back was the knowledge that she had fallen into the same trap herself so many years ago.

Sharifah said defiantly, 'He said he would marry me. I believed him. He said he was divorcing you. It was all in the newspapers so I knew it was true.'

Chelsea shrugged. 'He might have done, I suppose.'

'He even agreed to convert to Islam because I'm a Moslem!' insisted Sharifah, stung by the disbelief in Chelsea's voice.

Chelsea looked up sharply at this. 'He did convert,' she said abruptly. Could it be that he had done it to marry this woman? If he had really intended to marry her, he would have had no choice. It was the law. Marriage to a Moslem in Malaysia required the non–Moslem to convert to Islam. That would destroy her case that the conversion was a cynical ploy to get the children, that Alan had not been a genuine Moslem and therefore the kids weren't either. The Syariah court would almost certainly take the kids away from her. She looked at Sharifah, trying to decide if Alan had really fallen in love with her. It was not impossible. There was no fool like an old fool. And she really was beautiful –young, fresh, with that gentle voice.

Sharifah said, 'I really believed he wanted to marry me. But then someone killed him. I heard at first it was you ... but then they arrested the brother.'

'Jasper confessed.'

'I see,' but it was clear that she didn't.

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