Daeng instructed his man who’d driven the car to stay on shore, then he and Logan stepped onto the boat.
“Two choices,” Daeng said, as he took the plank seat behind Logan. “Up river or down.”
“This is your city. What do you think?”
“Up.”
“Then we go up.”
Daeng passed on the instructions to the pilot, and they motored out onto the river.
Though the Chao Phraya was quiet, it wasn’t silent. There were a few boats moving up and down it. Most were smaller crafts with people fishing off the sides. But there was one group of three gigantic black barges moving down the center of the waterway toward the ocean, their progress guided by a small but powerful tugboat. Logan could also see black patches moving along the surface at a steady pace. They looked to him like clumps of vegetation, but were too far away to know for sure.
Their pilot followed the curve of the shoreline, keeping them no more than a hundred feet from land. Daeng had been right. The riverfront was packed with structures that came right up to, and sometimes over, the water. The buildings were mainly more apartments, some of them with what amounted to metal stacks hanging off the backs.
If Bangkok had been in the U.S., developers would have long ago bought up all the property, torn down what was there, and turned it into high-priced real estate with shops and restaurants and five-star hotels. Logan could see a little of that happening here. There were a few hotels that boasted their own piers, and looked like they’d set you back plenty of Thai baht for a night’s stay. But these he could count on one hand. Mostly, it was basic apartment living. Nothing fancy at all.
As they trolled along, the two men watched the shore, focusing not so much on the buildings themselves as on any out-of-place movements.
“How far up do you think they could have gone?” Logan asked.
“Technically, they could have gone miles.”
“I assume there are multiple piers?”
“Dozens.”
Logan frowned. “Then wouldn’t it make sense that they’d choose a pier closer to their destination?”
“To me, it would.”
“So, if that were the case, they’ve got to be pretty close.”
“If that’s what they did.”
“Yeah. If,” Logan said. “But we have to narrow things down. We can’t cover everything before it starts getting busy again. So that’s as good a target as any.”
Daeng pointed further up the river. “There are a couple of piers over there, harder to get to from the land side. So let’s say they could have gone as far as four piers away. After that, if it were me, I would have started somewhere else.”
“Let’s make it five just to be safe,” Logan said, “then we’ll swing around and hit the other side.”
As Daeng let the pilot know the plan, a thought came to Logan.
He looked at Daeng, and nodded toward the pilot. “Do you think Sathorn Pier’s his home base? I mean, he was sleeping there.”
“Probably.”
“You think maybe he was around when the others got onto their boat?”
Daeng looked at him, surprised. “That’s an excellent question.” He talked with the pilot for nearly a minute, then said, “He wasn’t there, but he says his friend told him about a group of farang that had rented a boat ahead of time, and left the pier early yesterday afternoon. He says they headed this way.”
“Does he know where they went?”
Daeng shook his head.
“At least we know we’re going in the right direction,” Logan said.
“If he’s talking about the same group.”
Logan was silent for a moment. “We’re playing with a lot of ifs here.”
“I wasn’t going to point that out.”
They talked very little over the next several minutes. Twice they saw people sitting at the back of buildings, smoking cigarettes, but neither instance appeared suspicious.
Daeng pointed at a spot about a couple of hundred yards ahead. “That’s the fourth pier.”
Logan tried not to think about it, but it was clear his plan wasn’t working. Chances were they’d already passed the place. And if he couldn’t find them, how was he ever going to—
“Do you hear that?” Daeng asked.
Logan listened. It took him a moment, but then he heard it. The sound was at almost the same pitch as their engine, but its rhythm was just slightly off.
“Another boat?” he asked.
Daeng nodded.
They scanned the river ahead.
“There,” Logan said a half minute later.
About a fifty yards ahead, and very tight to the shore, was the dim shape of a longboat. He watched it for a moment, then decided it was probably just another local out for some early morning fishing.
“I think he’s headed downriver,” Daeng said.
Logan returned to his search, wondering if they should just turn around and head back to the car.
Several seconds passed, then Daeng said, “Logan?”
He was staring at the other longboat. It was almost directly in line with them now, moving in the opposite direction, closer to shore. The building it was passing was all lit up, spilling its light onto the boat’s two occupants—a pilot and a solo passenger in the middle. And not just any passenger, either. A lanky and young farang passenger.
Ryan.
Logan turned away so he wouldn’t be spotted. “That’s one of them,” he whispered.
There was a moment of silence, then Daeng said, “Apparently so.” He shouted something at their pilot, and their speed suddenly picked up.
“Why did you—” Logan stopped himself.
The other boat had also picked up speed, and had turned toward them.
“Hold on!” Daeng yelled.
Their pilot took a sudden turn to the left toward the center of the river. Warm water sprayed over the side, hitting Logan in the shoulder and face, but he barely noticed. He was focused on the dark shape of the other boat as it continued to follow them.
Their pilot shouted out something, then Daeng yelled back. Whatever Logan’s new friend had said, the look on the pilot’s face went from looking pissed off to subservient in a flash.
Without warning, their boat swerved to the right then back to the left. Logan grabbed both sides so he wouldn’t fall out as they tilted through the turns. Glancing at the water, he could see they’d just gone around a wide patch of vegetation, this one a tangle of vines and leaves that actually seemed to be alive, and not just a flotilla of cast off branches rotting on the water.
Either the other boat had a better engine than theirs or a better pilot, because they were definitely closing in.
“We need to go faster!” Logan yelled over the sound of the motor.
Daeng shook his head. “The pilot said that’s all it’s got.”
Just then something hit the boat about four feet in front of Logan, creating a small hole in the sidewall.
He pointed at the damage. “Daeng! They’re shooting at us!”
Daeng leaned sideways so he could look around Logan, and see what he was talking about. But before he could say anything, his hand flew up and grabbed the side of his head. At the same instant, Logan heard something rip through the air a foot to his left.
Daeng doubled over, his face wincing in pain as he pressed his fingers against his head.
Logan looked back at their pilot, and pointed to the right. “That way! Now!”
He didn’t know if the guy understood his words, but the pilot got the gist of Logan’s motion. He shoved the steering pole around, sending up a rooster tail of water as the boat whipped through the turn.
“Back and forth,” Logan said, pointing in one direction, then the other. Up to that point, they’d been too much of a stationary target. They had to keep changing direction.