Naked in Saigon (22 page)

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Authors: Colin Falconer

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Mysteries & Thrillers

BOOK: Naked in Saigon
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“Laos?”

“He flew to Vientiane three days ago. I have checked with immigration.”

“What the fuck is he doing in Laos?” But almost as soon as he had posed the question, the answer came to him. He was a strange one, that Reyes Garcia. “Thank you, Mister Loan,” he said and walked out again, feeling like he could rip the head off a chicken.

They had dragged him all the way out here for something they could have told him on the telephone. But never mind, he knew what he needed to know. And now he knew what he had to do.

 

 

Angel sat on the terrace, sipping from a balloon of Martell cognac, on a slow burn. He hated this damn country and he wanted to go home. He hated the freaky transparent lizards that crawled up the walls and he hated the way you put on a new shirt and ten minutes later it needed to go back to the laundry. He hated the food and he hated this damn house. It was like being back in Cuba but ten times worse. This morning he had found silverfish in his Ermegildo Zegna suit.

He just wanted to get the family property back and go home.

His eight keys of China White were still missing. At first he thought those three sergeants were in on the scam together, but he found out one had been in Hong Kong on R&R when his shipment went missing and the other one they tracked down hiding out in Cholon. He swore he didn’t have the briefcase, and his boys said they had been pretty damn persuasive. In fact they had persuaded him to death and he still kept to his story, so that left only one option.

That option had gone to Laos.

He played it through in his mind. That bum of a sergeant must have had his eight keys with him that afternoon when he walked into the
Nevada
. His boys had tracked down one of the Marines who had been in the bar that afternoon, he said he’d seen him with the briefcase just before the grenade exploded, said he was behaving weirdly and that’s why he remembered him.

So that meant someone took the briefcase out of the bar after the bombing. If they had tried to deal it he would have heard about it, which meant whoever it was still had it in their possession.

Reyes.

He told the boys to fetch him another brandy. He winced as another stomach cramp doubled him over. Christ, the food in this place was killing him. It would be a miracle if he got out of this country without catching some deadly fucking disease.

And will someone tell those fucking crickets to shut the fuck up!

A bat swooped in through the French windows. What the fuck?!

He called over to one of the boys. “Sal, gimme your piece.”

He watched it circle the room, following the whirling blades. What was this, it was like living in a
Dracula
movie. He fired and missed, fired and missed again, shattered the Louis Quinze mirror and the crystal chandeliers. He used up almost the whole magazine before he brought it down, and as it lay flapping on the floor he put three more rounds into it.

When he had finished he was panting with hate and there was glass and bat everywhere. Sal had his hands over his head,
that’s enough, boss, that’s enough
.

“I hate fucking bats,” Angel said, “They give me nightmares,” and he stalked out of the room and went up to bed.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 35

 

The Piper taxied back up the dirt runway and Bear jumped out. “Well, I didn’t expect to see you again, man!”

“What can I say? I’m unbreakable.”

“Did you find the guy you were looking for?”

Reyes nodded.

“He’s alive?”

“He’s knocked around but he’s breathing.”

“Man, you got to be kidding me.”

Bear followed Reyes across the airstrip towards the village. Already, Hmong men and women were running towards the plane with sacks of opium on their backs.

“We had a book running back at the club at Long Tieng, I got ten to one against you being here.”

“How much did you put down?”

“Ten bucks, man. Wish I’d laid out more now but I figured by now you’d be shot to shit. Hey, I heard someone tell me this guy was married to that film actress, what was her name, Marion Montes?”

“Madeleine. You remember her?”

“I remember seeing her pictures. Had them pasted all over my wall when I was in Alaska. That lucky bastard. If I was married to her I’d be home cutting the lawn and getting home at five o’clock every night.”

“That’s what I said to him.”

Connor lay on his back in one of the huts, doped out with opium. His cheeks were sunken and his face with grey. It had been a long night.

“Is this him?” Bear said.

“He’s pretty beaten up. We’ve been trying to keep him comfortable with opium. It’s a bad break.”

“Oh, Jesus. What a mess. Okay, let’s get him loaded and we’ll get out of here. If he wakes up, you make sure to keep his head down. I’ll be flying over Long Tieng.”

“What about the cargo, he’s going to smell it?”

“Tell him it’s molasses.”

Bear went back out to the plane to supervise the rest of the loading. Connor opened his eyes. “What’s happening?”

“We’re getting you out of here. How are you feeling?”

“I need another pipe, Reyes.”

Reyes tamped some more of the black paste into the pipe and lit it. The more doped out he was during the flight the better.

“A man could get a taste for this stuff,” Connor said.

“A lot have.”

He gave him the pipe, watched him close his eyes in bliss as he breathed in the sweet, sticky smoke. “You know, I was thinking, if I get back to Saigon and she tells me it’s over, I won’t thank you for this.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean, if she leaves me, I’d rather you left me in the jungle. I love her like I’ve loved nothing before. If you did this just out of some misguided guilt trip then I’m going to come after you with a fucking gun, man.”

“Well you’ll have to shoot left-handed.”

By the time Connor finished the pipe he was pretty much insensible. Reyes and Bear carried him out to the plane on a makeshift stretcher and put him in the back, on the studded metal floor. He thanked the headman, and said a final goodbye to Tou.

He said he’d come back and bring him a New York Yankees cap but he knew that he never would.

He climbed in and Bear taxied to the end of the runway. The smell of opium was so strong it would have anaesthetised a horse; the pungent jelly like black paste was leaking out of the sacks and onto the floor.

As they took off Reyes reached into Connor’s knapsack and threw his camera out of the door. It was part of the deal he had made with Buzz:
we’ll help you get him out but you make sure he doesn’t get any pictures.

He had given his word.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 36

 

The opium was wearing off. Connor groaned and tried to sit up. “Easy, fella,” Reyes said. “We’re almost there.”

“What’s happening?”

“We’re headed back to Sam Thong. They’re going to fix your leg.”

Connor was awake but his mind was still wandering in his opium-fueled dreams. “Where’s Magdalena?”

“You’ll see her very soon.”

“When we get to Saigon?”

“Yeah, she’ll be there then.”

“We had a fight before I left.”

“Everybody has fights,” Reyes said, just wishing Connor would sleep, bird-dogging to look out of Bear’s cockpit, wondering how far before they reached Sam Thong.

There was just the endless canopy of green down there. They were flying low, barely skimming the treetops on the ridges, occasionally he could make out a poppy field blazing in the sun.

“Did I ever tell you how I met her?”

“She published your books.”

“It was at a publisher’s party. Before that we’d just spoken on the phone, just about editing, that was all. Then when I met her, I just couldn’t take my eyes off her. When I asked her out I thought she’d just blow me off and I’d lose the best editor I ever had. But she didn’t. I couldn’t believe a girl that beautiful would want a guy like me. I still can’t believe it sometimes.”

“So why do you keep risking your neck like this? Why don’t you stay home and have a thousand kids and a house with a white picket fence?”

“How can I, Reyes? This is who I am. I figured this is who she fell in love with. I stop being who I am, what’s left?”

“Yeah. I guess so.”

“Unless she never loved me in the first place. You think she did?”

“How the hell do I know, Connor?”

“You know her better than I do, right? You go back a long way, you two.”

“You’re her husband, I’m not.” Reyes wished he would shut up. If only he still had that opium pipe.

“I won’t let her go, Reyes. For you, she’s just another woman. But to me, she’s everything.” Reyes was going to sit up front with Bear but Connor grabbed him by the shirt and pulled him back. “I thought it would be so much easier for both of you if I just disappeared. And I did, but you still came and got me. I’ll never figure that out.”

“I can’t explain it to you, Connor. Don’t try to understand.”

“I could never leave her, you know that? She’s everything I ever wanted. I’m sorry, man.”

“Don’t be sorry.”

“I don’t even care if she doesn’t love me, as long as she doesn’t leave, that’s all I care about now.” Reyes tried to pull away but he hung on. “Don’t take her away from me. She’s the only thing that means anything to me in this whole fucking world. Please. Promise me.”

Reyes nodded. “When we get back to the world, I’m getting as far away from both of you as anyone can get. It’s up to you and her, now. I don’t want any part of it.”

“You mean it?”

“You got my word.”

He shook his head. “If it had been me, I would have left you in the jungle to rot.”

“No you wouldn’t.”

He tore himself away, crawled up front with Bear. “How far we got to go?” he shouted.

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