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Bart took a pen out of his shirt pocket and wrote his phone number on the back of a beer mat, which he handed to Carl. Bart looked at him in the eyes and said, “You are all right Carl, that is our opinion of you in the Bangkok office. Some of us have known you since you were a kid. But Carl, it’s time for you to leave Thailand. These guys are out of your league and you are going to get yourself killed if you stay here.”

“Doesn’t sound to me like the CIA gives a fuck about civilians getting murdered. You know something Bart? They fucking well should.”

“I just obey orders.”

“I heard that excuse somewhere else. Just one more thing before I go. How is it possible that Art doesn’t know Inman is here?” Carl asked as he folded the beer mat and put it in the back pocket of his jeans.

“Art would have done something stupid, killed him or at least told his friends at the FBI. Inman had some of Art’s friends in Saigon killed and so Art wouldn’t have played along with us. We had him working on the Cambodia desk for his last ten years and kept local operations from him. He was always drunk by eleven o’clock in the morning so it wasn’t hard. Carl, you have promised me you can keep a secret. I don’t want you letting me down on this.”

“Take my call and I promise never to tell a living soul. I’ll take it to my grave. And Bart, in spite of popular belief, I assure you that I plan to live to a ripe old age.”

“I hope you do Carl. I really hope you do. We’re all rooting for you.” Bart turned his back to Carl to collect his bottle of beer.

George came through the door with a crash and flew down the bar towards them. “They’re here Carl, quick, is there a back way out of here?” he yelled as he slid to a stop in the middle of the bar.

Carl turned and moved quickly to the door into the toilet area. “I know a way out,” he told George who was right behind him already.

They crashed through the door to the toilet and found Mick Flynn in front of the mirror wetting his handkerchief with cold water and holding it up to his nose again.

Carl stopped dead as George ran into him pressing him against the wall. Carl turned, his face pushed uncomfortably against the cold rough cement, and shouted to Mick, “Narcs Mick, two of them, right behind us. Block this door and dump the coke before they can get in.” Then he grabbed George’s arm and said, “This way!” He pointed at the staircase that was to the right of the toilet area. He ran up the stairs to the second floor with George close behind. As Carl turned the stairs he looked down and saw Mick’s large frame pushing against the door as hard as he could. Staring at Carl he was yelling, “Yoo loyed, you knew dey was narcs. Oy can’t believe you loyed to me.”

At the rear of the building’s second floor, in a room with women’s clothing strewn over the bare concrete floor, was a large window that looked down on the grounds of a busy Buddhist temple. Carl picked up the solitary wooden chair and threw it through the window. “Now George!” They both took a running leap through the window, and after flying three meters through the air with their arms and legs going in all directions they fell a few feet and landed with a crash that put a serious dent in the tin roof of a hut that was part of the temple annex.

Their landing area was the temple’s toilet and shower. The massive percussion noises made by the two big men crashing onto the thin tin roof received fearful screams from inside where a novice monk had been squatting on a toilet. He was new to the spiritual atmosphere of his new environment and although his mind was readily open to all things he hadn’t anticipated the world exploding above his head, that had never been discussed, and so he had been taken totally by surprise.

They leapt down from the bent roof and into the temple grounds where they ran for the main entrance on the far side with Carl strongly outpaced by George but keeping up as best he could. The throngs of local people holding garlands and candles on their way into the sanctuary of the temple moved aside just in time as the two giant men came charging and yelling through their centre disrupting the calm joss stick infused air.

Once out on a street and well around the corner from Candy’s bar, Carl and George headed toward Silom and kept running for a good ten minutes. At this point they decided it was safe to flag a taxi. They climbed in the back of the car wheezing and coughing much to the amusement of the driver. Carl told him that an angry bar girl was chasing them and if he wanted a tip he should put his foot down.

George’s stolen car was not parked anywhere near Candy’s. They had put it in the car park of an office building around the corner from Patpong and walked the remaining distance to the bar. As safe as they assumed it probably was they decided it best to wait a couple of hours before collecting it or possibly not to bother. Carl needed a drink, as usual.

Chapter 22

It was around midnight and Carl was lying on the back seat of yet another stolen car as George drove him to the nightclub. When they arrived he sat up and looked around. Everything out on the street looked relatively normal. The queue of people leading up to the security area with its airport style metal detector and front desk was typical of that time of night. Carl got out of the car and walked under the building through the parked cars. He entered via the back door and through the kitchen. George stayed outside in the car.

The colonel was standing in his usual place at the bar surrounded by the usual suspects. By the time Carl had crossed the crowded floor the bar staff had a drink prepared and on the bar waiting for him. Colonel Pornchai hadn’t seen him come in so Carl tapped him on the shoulder. He saw Carl then took a quick glance around the busy nightclub to check for danger.

“You’re living dangerously,” he shouted above the music. “I didn’t expect to see you here.”

Carl leant forward and said in his ear, “I’m being as careful as I can. We should talk in the kitchen.”

They both picked up their drinks and walked to the kitchen, dodging the party people on the dance floor as they went. The kitchen had stopped serving food and the chefs and their helpers had gone home. Only the most junior of the kitchen staff were still there working and they cleaned up around Carl and the colonel. Carl put his drink down on a chopping board and turned to face him.

“I need something done,” Carl said to him.

“Does it involve you staying out of trouble?”

“Yes it does, after this I’ll be staying out of trouble,” Carl told him.

“All right, go on then.”

“There is a building on New Phetchburi Road.” Carl handed him a piece of paper with the address written on it. “I need you to get a couple of boys from the drug squad to go and talk to the neighbours. They must make lots of noise and ask lots of questions about that building, and I mean a lot of noise.”

“Is that all?”

“No. Then I want them to go to the local court and apply for a search warrant on the grounds that they have an informant that has told them the building is being used by youth gangs to store drugs and to host drug taking parties. However, and this is the important part, they must make a mess of the search warrant application. I need the application rejected and submitted continuously for not less than two full working days. They must also be very rude and angry so that they argue with everybody working in the office at the court. Everybody in that department must become aware of this application.”

“Are you sure this is necessary?”

“Totally necessary, and I need it done exactly the way I have asked.”

“Why the drug squad?”

“Even the big shots will not interfere and tell the drug squad to back off,” Carl told him. “Too much risk for them, by interfering they will go on the radar as possibly being involved in the drug business themselves. Under the present political climate that attention is something they will not want.”