Moon asked it. “What happened?”
“It was about a month ago,” the man said. “Maybe a little bit less. I work at night, at the sanatorium, and I was just going to bed when I saw him pull in over there and park. I was looking out and wondering where he had been, getting in just about dawn, you know. And they were waiting for him. Grabbed him just as he got out of his car.”
The man telling them this was standing barefoot in the doorway of the apartment just below the one Rice had occupied. He was a very skinny fellow in walking shorts and short-sleeved shirt. It seemed to Moon that he was enjoying the telling of his story. He stopped now and looked from Moon to Mrs. van Winjgaarden, waiting for another question.
“Who grabbed him?” Moon asked.
“Police,” the man said. “I counted five of them. Two in uniforms, and three of them looked like Marcos’s men. Suits on. Neckties. They took him upstairs, and I could hear them thumping around up there. Moving furniture.” The remembered excitement provoked a smile. “I thought it was political,” he said, “but it was just dope.”
“Just dope,” Moon said.
“Well, maybe it was politics; the Express said it was heroin. But with the Express, it’s whatever Imelda tells it to say. I think she owns it.”
“Is he in Bilibad?” Mrs. van Winjgaarden asked.
“I guess so,” the man said. “The paper said he got twenty-five years.”
Back in the taxi, Moon gave the driver the address of Robert Yager, a hotel in Quezon City. “He probably won’t be there,” he told Mrs. van Winjgaarden. “Castenada said he lives in Phnom Penh mostly. But that’s where he stays when he’s here.”
“Do you know how to go about talking to Rice in Bilibad?” she asked him.
“I’m not even sure I know what it is. A prison?”
“It’s the hard-time prison here in Manila,” she said. “I think they have another one way down south somewhere. They need a lot of prison space for all the political enemies Marcos is rounding up.”
“I guess I can call the Associated Press and ask them to find out if he’s in there,” Moon said. “And they’d know what the rules are for talking to prisoners.” And whether the charge was heroin smuggling. Heroin. How much heroin would fit in one of the Huey copters Ricky was repairing?
“I think you might try your embassy,” Mrs. van Winjgaarden said. “The U.S. government and the Marcos people are very friendly. Very close. Unless they think this George Rice is a Communist, they could get you in.” She laughed. “Heroin would not be as serious as politics. Unless maybe Mr. Rice forgot to pay whichever of Imelda’s cousins has the cumshaw concession for heroin.”
Heroin. It should be easy enough to tell heroin from ancestral bones if you looked into the urn Mr. Lum Lee was hunting.
Moon did not want to go to Bilibad and talk to George Rice. He wanted to go to Colorado. Tonight, if possible.
“Do you know this Rice? What did he do for Ricky?”
“I met him two or three times. He was a pilot for Ricky, and I think they were good friends too. I think he and Ricky were going to buy an airplane together. A little one. I think they both liked to fly around. Like a hobby.”
“Not heroin?” Moon asked, and wished instantly he could swallow the question.
She looked at him. “You know your brother. What do you think?”
“I think not,” Moon said.
She nodded. “Yes,” she said. “Not heroin. Not Ricky. Cambodia is full of it. And Laos too. And Nam. They bring it down out of Burma, the little Chinese armies that control the mountains. They say Ricky worked with your Central Intelligence Agency, and the CIA is tied up with the opium armies. But I think Ricky didn’t like drugs. He saw too much in Nam. In the army. He talked about how it ruined his crews. And he said once he hated working with the CIA because they worked with the drug traffickers. I think he hated heroin.”
“Yes,” Moon said. “I think he would have.” And when he spoke again it was to comment on the rain, which had started again. It pounded against the roof of the cab. They sat in silence, watching the windshield wipers work and the streetlights come on as darkness closed in on Manila.
The desk clerk at the Quezon Towers confirmed that Robert Yager kept an apartment on the twelfth floor. But Robert Yager was not now in residence there. Nor was he expected. He had sublet the suite through the end of April. But Yager might be reached, the clerk said, at the R. M. Air offices in Can Tho, Vietnam. That, the clerk said, was “Mr. Yager’s usual place of occupancy.” He had no other address.
That sent them back into the cab, down the glistening rain-wet streets to find the address of Thomas Brock on Cuenco Street in Makati. While they hunted that, they agreed that Yager could be checked off as impossible. Thomas Brock soon joined him.
Brock’s block had been a mixture of middle-class apartments and small one-story business addresses. Now the street was limited by a local TRAFFIC ONLY sign printed in both English and Tagalog. The side of Cuenco Street that bore his even-numbered residence hotel was now piled with the rubble of buildings smashed to make way for larger buildings.
Moon gave the driver the address of Mrs. van Winjgaarden’s hotel.
“Yes,” she said. “You must be exhaused. We can do no more today. Tomorrow-” She paused, not sure how to continue.
“I don’t know about tomorrow,” Moon said. “I want to think about it.”
“You said Castenada could give you nothing more? No better addresses? No more associates who might-”
“Three names. Yager, Rice, and Brock. Three addresses. He didn’t seem to know much about them, just that they’d had some association with
Ricky in the past. Worked for him or invested, or something.”
“You would think a lawyer would know more than just names,” she said.
“I could call Castenada in the morning,” Moon said. “I could ask him.” Could. But he didn’t think he would. If Castenada had any more information he would have offered it. It would just mean more wasted time. Tomorrow he would try to wrap up this business. Then he’d call Philippine Airlines and see if he could get on the day-after-tomorrow flight. He could be home when? He’d gain the day he’d lost crossing the international dateline. Make it three days from today, then. He thought of Debbie. Would she be there? Maybe, maybe not.
“And ask about Mr. Rice. I think you should. Find out how to see him in Bilibad.” Mrs. van Winjgaarden had been staring out the cab window at the rain, but now she turned to look at him. “I have been remembering,” she said. “Rice. Like what they grow so much of in the Mekong Delta. I remember him better now I have been thinking. He was supposed to be their best pilot. Always making jokes. A short man with a short beard. White. It made him look old.” She nodded. “Yes. Ricky said he could fly any of the helicopters.”
The cab was stopping.
“Here’s your hotel,” Moon said. But the driver had made a mistake. This crummy little place, jammed in between a generator rewinding shop and a service station, wouldn’t be where Mrs. van Winjgaarden would be staying.
She got out, shielding herself from the rain while she extracted cab fare from her purse.
Wrong again.
“I’ll pay him when he gets me home. We can settle up later,” Moon said, and watched her disappear into the crummy little place, leaving him with just the rain and the thought that his brother may have dealt with heroin.
SAIGON, South Vietnam, April 18 (UPI)- North Vietnamese troops began a furious tank, artillery and infantry attack today on Ham Tan, the capital of Binh Tuy Province and a 30-mile step closer to Saigon.
The Seventh Day
MOON HAD RISEN EARLY, HAD breakfast, called the Associated Press Bureau, got the day manager, identified himself and explained that he needed to know how to go about learning if a U.S. citizen named George Rice was held in Bilibad Prison and, if so, how to go about arranging an interview. The day manager had once covered Denver city hail for the Rocky Mountain News. He’d see what he could find out, but it would involve dealing with both the U.S. Embassy and the Philippine penal bureaucracy, so delay was unavoidable. He took Moon’s telephone number and said he’d try to get back to him by noon, but that might be optimistic.