"Of course."
"Then you know what they're capable of. They're fanatical about surveillance. Every house in this compound has a camera and microphone trained on it. You see that lump at the bottom?"
"It…it's a nut."
"Of course it's supposed to look like a nut. It's a closed-circuit camera lens. The images are all fed back to a central console behind the scout hut. You're a TV star, my boy."
Siri was holding his poker hand — six high — and he was calling. There followed a tense moment of silence.
"I just wanted a quick look," the soldier confessed. Siri sighed but kept quiet. "I wanted to…you know? I was curious. I didn't…I didn't do anything."
"But you removed the towel from her lap."
"I just slid it down a little bit, that's all. And it slipped between her legs. I was about to put it back but I heard you all coming along the street. I barely made it out in time."
"It was on her lap when you went in?"
"Yeah, covering her…you know."
"Yes, I know. Thank you."
Siri sent the man back to the queue. He'd heard exactly what he was hoping for. If the towel had been on her lap when she was killed it would have been as bloody as hell. It would have soaked up several litres of blood. But it hadn't. The only explanation was that the killer had placed the towel across her lap after he'd killed her for modesty. It was a polite, very Lao gesture at the end of an horrific, very un-Lao murder. And it left Siri with no idea of what kind of killer he should be looking for.
The doctor returned to the sauna and processed this new information as he sat on the wooden bench. He felt a presence in the little room, not vivid enough to be described as a visitation and several layers away from communication as if it stood behind five plates of opaque glass. But he was sure Dew's spirit was there. The girl who had died with a smile on her face and a question mark above her head was trying to get in touch but neither he nor she knew how to go about it.
"If you have anything to tell me," he said quietly, "now would be a really good time."
But, if she did, she kept it to herself and Siri, as frustrated by the spirit world as ever, walked out of the sauna and into a deluge of rain that darted accusingly like index fingers out of the black clouds. He could have taken shelter beneath the carport but it was full of soldiers so he jogged with blind conviction out of the gate and into the street. By the time he reached the house opposite he was already two kilograms heavier from the water soaked into his clothes. Beneath the porch roof a man in his early fifties sat on a breeze block with a broom leaning against the front door of the house beside him. Siri joined him and they both laughed.
"Looks like it might rain," the man said. He was slight but muscular, with skin as brown as lacquered teak. A weather-beaten Vietnamese peasant hat sat on the balcony in front of him.
"Rain? Feels more like ball bearings," Siri corrected him. They laughed again. Siri sat on the front step beside the man and squirmed in his wet underwear. "Been busy?"
"Can't get much done in this weather," the man said. "The radio seems to think there are monsoons queued up like bicycle taxis just over the border,"
Despite his appearance, the man spoke with a certain refinement and an almost unperceivable tinge of an accent. Siri recalled a conversation he'd had with the king before he was sent north. This man had a similar way about him, a modest class.
"Is this your house?" Siri asked. It was an unnecessary question because the extended buttocks bushes were overgrown and knocking at the windows and the lawn grass was taller than the average goat. The man laughed.
"No, sir," he said. "I work here at K6. I'm Miht. I look after the verges and the trees. Cut the odd lawn every now and then. I'd need a chainsaw for this one, mind."
To Siri's ear, the word 'sir' had come reluctantly from the man's lips.
"Been working here long?" he asked.
"More than ten years now."
"That long? So, you'd remember the good old American days."
"That I would."
"I thought that generation of Lao servants had all left along with the USAID people."
"And you'd be right. The cooks, the housekeepers and drivers, most of them fled. But, to tell the truth, I didn't have anywhere to go. I was just a handyman around the place. I didn't work specifically for any family. I imagine the Pathet Lao didn't see me as a threat. There are half a dozen of us old-timers still working here."
"They pay you?"
"Rice ration, sir. Free room to sleep in. Can't complain."
They chewed on sweet stems of grass and watched the restless Vietnamese soldiers opposite.
"What a performance, eh?" Siri said.
"You're with the police?"
"No, brother."
"Really? I thought I saw you arrive with the police."
"And so you did. I'm the coroner, Siri Paiboun. They had me look at the body."
"I see."
"Did you know the people who lived in that house?" Siri asked.
"A few passed through in my time."
"Do you recall who it was that put up the sauna?"
"Of course, the last couple, the Jansens. I was the one who found the wood for them."
"What were they like?"
"Nice enough. Husband was very keen. He was working on education projects, I seem to recall. She was just a housewife but she was kind, you know? Some of the wives of the experts got stuck into the gin but Mrs Jansen got involved with projects too. She helped out with scholarships, that kind of thing."
"You seem to know a lot about them."
"I got most of it from their house staff. I'm not much of a one for English language. I'd be out front trimming the trees and the houseboys and maids would come trotting down the driveways with all the latest gossip. I wasn't that interested but it passed the time."
"How many staff did they have?"
"They had a fellow that cooked for them. His wife would come in three days a week to clean. And there was a gardener who doubled as their night watchman."
"Why do you suppose they built a sauna in the middle of the tropics?"
"Mr Jansen was from Sweden or Iceland. Somewhere like that. He believed you couldn't get all the poison out of your system unless you had a good steam."
"And everyone knew it was here?"
"In those days they did. You couldn't keep a secret then. They tried to get the Lao staff to sample it but nobody was game. It seemed like a silly idea if you ask me. I can't imagine what a Lao girl was doing in there in the middle of the night."
"Do you know if anyone else has used it since the Americans left?"
"I can't remember seeing anyone over here at all. They didn't put any of their people in these houses by the external wall. They were afraid it'd be too easy to lob a hand grenade over. Not safe, they said. So they let all these places turn to jungle. As far as I know, none of the new regime people had any idea what it was. Just thought it was a box, probably."
"Is there any way in and out of the compound apart from through the main gate?"
"There used to be, brother. Just before the Americans left there were more holes than a mesh stocking. The staff used them to smuggle out equipment and furniture; parting gifts from the Americans before they were kicked out. But when the Pathet Lao boys moved in they patched up most of them."
"Most of them?"
"The old hands know of one or two places you could still get under the wall."
"So it would be possible for someone without a pass to get into the compound."
"Technically. You'd have to be careful to avoid the security patrols. Trigger-happy bunch. They'd probably shoot you before they asked who you were."
5
The interviews hadn't taken as long as Sihot and Phosy had imagined. The answers had all been so pat it was as if everyone had memorised them from an official circular.