Jimm Juree 01; Killed at the Whim of a Hat
dramatic.”
“OK.”
“Well, he…the deceased, was lying facedown on the concrete path, feet pointing…it must have been east. His head was almost in the flower bed, blood puddled under him half a meter to either side.”
“What was his expression?”
“Couldn’t see it. His whole face was masked by his hat.”
“And his robes?”
“Normal enough. No wounds, no blood at the back. The major said he’d been stabbed at least a dozen times in the stomach.”
Chompu stabbed into the air in front of him.
“That sounds extreme.”
“We discussed that in the station once we were excluded from the loop. The frenzied stabbing ruled out a lot of small-time crimes. Unlikely to be a mugging, not that he’d have a lot of money on him. Unlikely the perpetrator was caught red-handed doing something he shouldn’t. Even a hired hit seemed unlikely. This was more a…a grievance. It was a hate killing, either of Abbot Winai personally or of what he represented.”
“Someone with a grievance against Buddhism?”
“It’s happened before.”
“What’s to hate about Buddhism? It’s the most nonviolent, forgiving religion there is.”
“You never can tell. A novice abused by a monk when he was young. Someone who believed his grandma was cremated before she was dead. An old feud. Land deeds. And, don’t forget, the temple’s quick to welcome ex-thises and thats into its fold without background checks. There are a lot of gangsters in saffron.”
“Was there anything in the evidence they took that might have pointed to a motive?”
“Nothing at all.”
“And that was the last you heard from Lang Suan?”
“Yes…well, no.”
“No?”
“There was a call asking if we’d picked up a piece of equipment they’d misplaced at the crime scene.”
“What type?”
A camera.
I had to laugh at that.
“That’s rich. Someone stole the police camera? Nobody’s safe. It’s a good job you took your own crime scene photos.”
“I imagine they’re accusing us of stealing it. We are just country policemen, you know.”
I stared out of the window and a landscape of thoughts panned in front of my mind. Mai was singing ‘I don’t want you to know’.
“When did they call?”
“Who’s that?”
“The people who lost their camera.”
“Oh, it must have been…Sunday.”
Perfect timing.
“Are you sure it was Lang Suan?”
“Why?”
That seemed like a fitting time to tell him about the attack on the guard at Feuang Fa temple on Sunday night. Given all he’d said about the lack of feedback, I wasn’t surprised he hadn’t heard. I reached into my shoulder bag and handed him a black plastic pouch containing an empty cigarette lighter. I told him where I’d found it and what my granddad had said about the likelihood of it being dropped by the attacker.
“Are you suggesting it was the killer who phoned to see if we’d found a camera?”
“It’s a theory.”
“And once he found out we didn’t have it…”
“He went back to the temple to look for it. He tore half the hedge down.”
“And, if your granddad’s right, his lighter ran out of fluid before he could find it.”
“Either that or he found it just as the lighter was running out, or after a fumble in the dark, in which case we’ll never know. But at the very least you might have the killer’s fingerprint on that lighter.”
“But if we didn’t find the camera, and he didn’t find it, that could mean someone else did.”
“The plot thickens. What are you going to do?”
“As soon as I get a moment I’ll call this in to the major. The first thing we need to do is confirm whether it was Lang Suan who phoned. Then we’ll see.”
We drove through the rich green hills of Phato, passed Pak Song in a blur and reached the west coast with hunger in our bellies. Before heading into Ranong we stopped off at the main intersection with highway 4 and ordered yellow rice and chicken and green curry soup and, although the lieutenant was on duty, I indulged in a small Chang beer. To my surprise it arrived so cold it poured like sleet from the bottle. The first sip froze my brain and loosened my tongue.
“Exactly how did you get into the force in the first place?” I asked him.
“How do you mean?” He smiled.
“I’ve seen the recruitment process. I’ve read the protocols. If you’d been this camp at the interview there’s no way they’d have let you in.”
I thought I’d overstepped. It wouldn’t have been the
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