Sergeant Yongyuth agreed to Wichit's face-saving compromise to release Jayne on the condition she surrender her passport and present herself at the Krabi police station for an interview later that afternoon. Yongyuth also ordered the clothes she was wearing to be entered as evidence.
Siri came to her rescue on that front, the young secretary's hauteur giving way to remorse. â
Kor thort na ka
,' Siri said with a
wai
, bowing so low Jayne feared she might pitch forward and lose her balance.
âDon't be sorry,' Jayne said. âYou did the right thing by calling the police.'
â
Aie
,' Siri said, stooping even lower. âI only wish it were true.'
âYou mean, you didn'tâ'
The Thai woman gave her such a pained look, Jayne decided not to push it. Siri produced an outfit Jayne could only guess belonged to Bapit's late wife: a shapeless blouse with gold buttons in a lilac floral print that clashed spectacularly with Jayne's auburn curls, and navy blue flares with an elasticised waist. One hundred per cent pure synthetic. Regarding herself in a mirror, she looked only marginally less frightening than she did in the bloodstained clothes she'd bagged for Sergeant Yongyuth.
With Othong and Bapit occupying the two stretcher berths in the ambulance, Sergeant Yongyuth transported Rajiv to the hospital in his pick-up, while Jayne rode shotgun on the rented motorbike. Rajiv's nausea had subsided and he claimed to feel fine apart from a headache. But the doctor who palpated the goose egg on the back of his skull insisted on keeping him at Krabi Hospital for observation.
At the Police Sergeant's request, Jayne consented to a medical examination and had photographs taken of her injured neck. The bruises looked like a purple choker with a large thumbprint as a pendant at her throat. Apart from that, she'd come off lightly.
Cleaned up and still wearing Bapit's late wife's clothes, Jayne was sitting beside Rajiv's hospital bed when her phone beeped with a message.
âIt's from Paul,' she said. âHis bus has arrived and he's on his way to the guesthouse.'
âYou should be going to meet him,' Rajiv said.
âI want to stay with you,' she said.
âThat is not necessary.' He made as if to prop himself up higher on the pillows, winced and slumped back down again.
âAre you in a lot of pain?'
âWhen I move, it is not good. But if I am lying still it is okay.'
âWhat about speaking?'
âWhen I am not speaking, it is better.'
âSoâ' Jayne hesitated.
âSo you should be going and meeting this Paul fellow,' Rajiv said.
âAre you sure you'll be all right?'
He closed his eyes in lieu of a nod.
She stood up. âI'll be back before they discharge you.' She kissed his eyelids and his lips. âYou're a very brave man, Rajiv Patel,' she said.
Rajiv didn't feel like a very brave man. He felt like a fool. How could he have let Jayne convince him to pose as a security guard? Rajiv couldn't defend himself, let alone anyone else. Othong had swatted him away like a pesky insect. The skinny old man made a better fist of coming to Jayne's rescue than Rajiv did.
Rajiv knew Jayne didn't rely on him for muscle. He brought to their partnership business acumen, computer skills and a general knowledge Jayne professed to be in awe of. As recently as two months ago, he'd been smart enough not to intervene in a fight he stood no chance of winning. Why on this occasion had he chosen to throw himself into the fray? The result didn't surprise him, but the impulse did. Was Jayne's influence starting to cloud his better judgment?
Perhaps Rajiv wasn't cut out to be a private investigator, the profession too wild and unpredictable for a bookish type like him. It would be poor form to back out now, when he'd been the one pushing to formalise the partnership, but surely better than letting himself get killed.
He felt his head ache as if the weight of indecision was pressing against the lump on his skull. He told himself that lying in a hospital bed recovering from concussion was not the optimal circumstance for major decision making.
He was relieved Jayne had left. He needed to rest. He needed to think clearly, to examine the situation without her presence distracting him like sparks in his peripheral vision.
39
Jayne Keeney was a female detective not a femme fatale, but Paul's imagination had conflated the two. He'd expected someone glamorous, not the frump who met him at the guesthouse reception desk. If there was an opposite of mutton dressed as lamb, Jayne was it. She couldn't have been more than thirty-five, but her clothes were the sort his grandmother might wear. With so little regard for fashion, Paul wondered if she might be one of those evangelical Christians who gravitated towards countries like Thailand in the pursuit of souls to save.
âSorry not to be here when you arrived,' she said, extending her hand. âRan into some trouble. Shall we get a cold drink?'
Paul nodded and followed Jayne to the guesthouse restaurant, an open-sided, faux rustic affair fringed by a tropical garden. A young girl hovered while they perused the menu.
âChrist, I could do with a beer,' Jayne said. âYou?'
Not an evangelical Christian then.
Paul glanced at his watch, a habit he'd picked up from his father, who always made a show of hesitating but never said no to a cold beer. âSure.'
The waitress looked expectantly at Paul. Using his limited Thai language skills, he ordered two bottles of Kloster, neither the cheapest nor the most expensive of the local beers.
Jayne pulled a packet of cigarettes from her bag. âSmoke?'
âNo thanks.'
She leaned across the table for the ashtray.
âShit, what are those marks on your neck?'
She raised her eyebrows. âYou've been in Thailand too long, mate, pointing out my disfigurement when we've only just met. Next you'll be asking if I'm married and how much money I earn.'
âSorry.'
âI'm taking the piss.' She held a cigarette between her teeth to light it and exhaled. âWe caught the guy who killed Pla.'
Paul's heart skipped a beat. âPla was killed?'
âLike you said yourself, it never seemed right that she drowned.'
âBut who? Why?'
âYoung guy, real thug. He's the one responsible for the bruises.' She angled her neck to give him a closer look. âMotive's still not clear. I think he was trying to impress his uncle, a local businessman, big fan of the power plant. Might've crossed swords with Pla during the consultation process.'
The arrival of their beers gave Paul a moment to try to absorb the information. People in his social circle didn't die violent deaths, nor survive violent attacks, for that matter. He looked on Jayne Keeney with new respect. Beneath the frumpy clothing beat the heart of a tiger.
âCheers.' She touched her bottle to his and took a deep swig.
âSorry, but I'm having trouble getting my head around this,' Paul said. âAre you saying there is or isn't a connection between Pla's death and her work on the power plant?'
âI'm hoping you can tell me.'
âI already told you what I know over the phone.'
Jayne took a drag of her cigarette. âHow did you and Pla meet?'
âOn a tour. I was in Krabi for work and took a day off to see the sights. Pla was so smart, so switched on. I told her about my work in environmental advocacy and she wanted to be part of it.'
âShe worked for you?'
âShe volunteered. Like I do. I took her along to the first consultation because I thought she'd be interested. It was her idea to keep it up.'
He must have sounded defensive as Jayne held up a hand. âMate, I'm just trying to get a handle on what arrangements were in place. I know it's insensitive plunging you straight into shoptalk like this. I'm forgetting that you and Pla were close.'
âPla did great work,' Paul said carefully. âThe concessions the company has made are all due to Pla.'
Jayne eyed him as she sipped from her beer. âDo you know anyone in Krabi called Othong?' she asked.
âSorry?'
âDoes the name Bapit mean anything to you?'
âNot really. There are a lot of names in Pla's notes.'
âYou talk about Pla as a colleague. But the villagers we spoke with seem to think the two of you were an item. And the cleaning lady here at the guesthouse confirmed that you wereâhow can I put itâintimate.'
âWhat theâ'
âAnd since you're not coming clean about your relationship with Pla, I can't help wondering what else you might be keeping from me.'
âNow hang on a minute.' Paul felt his face redden. âMy personal life is none of your business. I don't have to tell you anything. I don't even know who you are.'
âDid I skip the pleasantries? How rude of me. Near-death experiences always make me forget my manners.'
Despite her bravado, Paul noticed her hands were shaking. He doused his anger with a swig of beer, took a deep breath.
âWe seem to have got off on the wrong foot. Can we start again? My name's Paul O'Donnell. I'm from Tasmania. I came to Thailand on the Australian Volunteers Abroad program to work with TEDO, an environmental organisation based in Bangkok.' He held out his hand.
She put down her cigarette, smiled, shook his hand. âJayne Keeney, from Melbourne. I work as a private investigator in Bangkok with my partner Rajiv Patel.' She handed him a business card.
âHow long have you lived in Thailand?'
âA few years. You?'
âI'm nine months into a year-long placement.'
She took a notebook from her bag. âDo you mind if I ask you about your work on the power plant?'
âGo ahead.'
âHow did it start?'
âMy boss at TEDO thought we should keep an eye on it. I'm not exactly sure why, to be honest. It seems pretty benign as far as power plants go, compared with the shit that goes down in the north-east with the damming of the rivers for hydropower.'
âThe stuff behind the Forum of the Poor protests?'
Paul nodded. The Thai farmers groups regularly staged peaceful sit-ins in front of Government House in Bangkok. He'd visited their makeshift village once, unable to do much other than smile and take photos.
âWeeratham, my boss, is active in an alliance of progressive NGOs who are pushing for greater scrutiny of the Environmental Impact Assessment regime. I think the Pakasai power plant was a way of flexing some muscle. I was asked to sit in on the community consultations to make sure the villagers were getting all the facts and being given the chance to express any concerns.'
âSo you speak Thai?' Jayne said.
âNot exactly. There were a couple of farang consultants involved so the company provided interpreters. I think my presence was largely symbolic. You know, like, there's a farang with an interest in this process so we'd better watch ourselves.'
âYou really think it works that way?' Jayne toyed with her cigarette. âI always thought farangs were fair game. The Thais can pull the wool over our eyes in a way they can't with each other.'
âYes, but we don't play by the same rules,' Paul said, putting his thoughts into words for the first time. âWe're not stopped by the whole
kreng jai
thing from asking impolite questions and pushing for answers.'
âAh yes, the
kreng jai
thing. Difficult concept to translate into English. Impossible to translate into Australian.'
âYou're not wrong.'
They clinked beer bottles again and shared a grin.
âSo was that your role, to ask impolite questions?'
âMore or less,' Paul said. âI relied on Pla to tell me how I could be useful. I brought her on board but, to be honest, I was more like her assistant than the other way around.'
âThe villagers seem to hold her in high regard.'
âShe was an amazing personâ¦' Paul felt a lump rise in his throat, and forced it back with beer.
âI only met her once, but feisty Thai women are pretty special.'
âSo how did you get involved in investigating her death?'
âIt's a volunteer job.' She butted out her cigarette. âLike yours.'
âSeriously? The detective business must be more lucrative than I thought.'
âBelieve me, there's no shortage of work for me and my partner.'
âAnd where is your partner?'
âAt the hospital recovering from concussion. I'll pick him up once I get clean and change out of these hideous clothes. The police bagged mine as evidence.' She gathered up her things.
Paul had hoped they might order another round and continue the conversation. He cast about for something to say. âWhat time's the funeral tomorrow?'
âNot till five, but we can go to the temple this evening if you like. Have you been to a Thai funeral before?'
Paul shook his head.
âThey go for several days. The cremation's tomorrow, but there will be chanting tonight. And food.'
âI'd like to go.'
âLet's meet back here around six and go together,' Jayne said. âYou've got your room sorted out?'
âYeah, thanks for that.'
âI'll put the beers on my tab,' Jayne said, standing to leave.
âMy shout next time,' Paul said. He put his hand on Jayne's arm as she turned to leave. âOne last thing. Can you tell me where Pla died?'
Jayne's eyes met his. âNo, only where her body was found. You know Princess Beach?'
He nodded.
âPla's body was found floating in the cave at the end of the cliff.'
Paul let her go, staring into space long after she disappeared.
Princess Beach had been the final stop on the tour of the Phi Phi Islands where he'd met Pla. He could still recall her excitement as the tour boat neared the shore.