“What is it she does?”
“A little bit of everything, I think. She’s been here forever. Knows everyone, knows what buttons to push and which asses to kiss.” Daeng smiled. “How old do you think she is?”
“I don’t know. Forty-seven, forty-eight. Something like that.”
“Sixty-one.”
“You’re
“Not kidding. I think she has a plastic surgeon on retainer, but don’t quote me on that. She’s been here since the war.”
“The Vietnam war?” Logan asked, surprised again.
Daeng nodded.
“She couldn’t have been much out of high school,” Logan said.
“The way I heard it, that would be about right.”
“What, exactly, did you hear?”
Daeng hesitated for a moment, then said, “Apparently she had a brother in the Army who’d gone MIA. She came here because it was the closest she could get to the war. She used to hang out in places where soldiers took R&R, trying to find someone who might have heard something about her brother. She even paid a few of them to try and find him. One guy did it for free. He was the one who found him. But by that point her brother was only dog tags and bones. After that, instead of going back to the States, she just stayed.”
“I wonder why she stayed.”
Daeng shrugged. “I heard this story from someone else. Christina never talks about her past, at least not to me. Maybe none of it’s true.”
A little further on, the driver slowed, then said something to Daeng. They talked back and forth for several seconds, then the driver moved into the right lane, and made a U-turn at the next break. Keeping his speed low, he moved all the way over to the left.
Daeng said something and pointed ahead, then said to Logan, “It’s just down that
At first Logan wasn’t sure what he meant, then the car turned on a small road—a
Daeng looked past him out the window. “That’s it.” He nodded at the building across the street.
All three of them got out and crossed over to it.
The apartment they were looking for was on the third floor. Logan was surprised when they got there to find three men waiting in the hallway outside the apartment’s door. There were several hushed greetings, and he quickly realized these men were with Daeng.
One of them rushed ahead, and instead of knocking on the door, he just opened it.
Daeng went in first with Logan right behind. They passed through a small entryway and into a living room. On a couch was a short, doughy man who couldn’t have been more than forty. He was dressed in a white T-shirt and a pair of boxer shorts, and looked nervous.
There were two more of Daeng’s men in the room. One was standing near the couch, while the other was in a doorway that led to the rest of the apartment.
Daeng spoke in Thai, and the man in the doorway answered. Seemingly satisfied, Daeng led Logan over to where the pudgy man was sitting.
“You speak English?” he asked the man.
“
“Okay, then we’ll talk in English.”
The man eyed Logan for a moment, then looked back at Daeng. “Please no hurt me. Me, my family, we do nothing.”
“No one’s planning on hurting you.” The guy looked like he didn’t understand, so Daeng spoke in Thai, translating what he’d already said, Logan assumed. The man responded in kind, but Daeng shook his head. “English, remember?”
Logan leaned over to Daeng and whispered, “His family’s here?”
“Wife and son in back.”
Suddenly Logan didn’t feel so comfortable about the situation.
“You have a van you rent?” Daeng asked the man.
“Have two van.”
“Okay, two then. You drive one of them?”
“Yes.”
“And the other?”
“My wife brother.”
“Which one of you picked up the group at the airport today.”