Authors: Ron McMillan
When I returned to the room Lee was reaching for the telephone.
âNot that line. Use your mobile.'
I had watched the cop shows, and calling Chang from the room phone was not the smart move. Lee nodded, reached into his inside jacket pocket for a late-model Samsung, and hit a speed-dial number. While it connected, he took himself back to the bathroom, and from there I heard him talking urgently in a low voice laden with honorifics.
An hour later when Chang arrived, not a hair out of place, I was leaning back on a mountain of soft pillows, alternating sips of vodka with swallows of icy mineral water. A beer can sat in a pool of condensation on the cabinet beside me. It popped open with an angry hiss that startled Chang and Lee into momentary silence. They looked at me with contempt before going back to their conversation, voices low and speech so fast that I barely caught a word.
I closed my eyes and tried to answer two questions. Who could have done this to Miss Hong and, forchrissakes, why? I thought back to Lee's face when he realised what lay on the desk, a genuine look of spontaneous horror. Chang seemed much less affected but he was older, more experienced, and from the phone summons, had known what to expect. More importantly, his place in the chain of command dictated the cool exterior. I pried open eyes heavy with the blunt force of alcohol working its way through my system. It was nearly four o'clock in the morning and Lee and Chang were still deep in dialogue. I dozed off to the twin soundtracks of voices murmuring in the room beside me, and others shrieking at me from within my own head.
I awoke to set eyes upon a small video camera that nestled high in the upper folds of the heavy curtain. It had completely slipped my mind. I buried a look of horror in a bout of fake coughing and covered my face with my hands. Lee sat impassively in a chair at the end of the bed while three men in dark suits and latex gloves tore the room apart. Chang was gone. I sat up and fingered a mystery bruise over my ribs that I had first spotted early the previous morning. Maybe Miss Hong had played rougher than I remembered. I made sure it was covered by my shirt before I sat up. That made two things I hoped would escape their notice.
âWhat's going on?'
Lee rubbed life into his tired face and pointed to one of the three dark suits.
âThis is Detective Kwok. He and I went to high school together; we are old friends.'
Kwok was tall, painfully thin and for a man in his thirties conspicuously bald, with what little that remained of his hair cropped close, a fat black stripe above each pointed ear. His features were angular to the point of jaggedness, and from a dark mole on the edge of his jaw a half-dozen wiry black hairs trailed long.
âAre you ready to talk?' He spoke in casual, American-accented English.
I hesitated. He looked impatient.
âShould I have a lawyer here?' My tongue had trouble getting around the words.
Kwok pointed at the bloody mess, now ziplocked in a clear evidence bag. âTell me what you know about this.'
My mouth felt like it was coated with animal fur. I raised my hands in a âwait a minute' sign, and went to the bathroom to brush my teeth, but everything I owned, toothbrush included, had been bagged and tagged. I rinsed my mouth and drank metallic cold water straight from the tap before returning to where Kwok had set out a seat for me. He leaned against the desk, forcing me to look up at him. Basic interrogation techniques, paragraph one. A notebook and pen appeared in his hands.
âThree nights ago, on Sunday night, I met two women at dinner with Mr â '
âDetective Kwok already knows about that.'
Kwok silenced Lee with an angry glance and waved at me to continue.
âWhen I came back to my room, one of the women was waiting for me. Her name was Miss Hong. She had taken the room key from my jacket pocket and let herself in.'
âSo you arrived back at the hotel alone?'
âYes. I came in the front entrance at about eleven-thirty. I remember looking at the clocks above the Reception desk.'
âDid anyone see you with her?'
âNo, I don't think â wait a minute, yes. There was a security guard.'
I plucked at a memory of Miss Hong opening my room door from inside, wearing only a towelling bathrobe. She waved the whisky miniatures and expressed her breathy welcome just as a deep voice from behind made me jump with fright. A hotel security guard on corridor patrol, smiling indulgently. I related all of this to Kwok.
âAnd after you came into the room, what did you do?'
âWhat do you think?'
He frowned at the thought. âTell me about the tattoo.'
I explained how Miss Hong liked drinking games, how we ended up licking whisky from each other's belly button and, since hers was tattooed so distinctly, I wasn't about to forget it in a hurry.
âWas there any dispute between you and Miss Hong?'
âDefinitely not. We stayed up most of the night drinking and having sex.'
Kwok seemed to believe at least this much. He doubtless had already talked to the hotel's housekeeping department. If what happened to Miss Hong had taken place here, no room maid could have failed to notice.
âWhen did Miss Hong leave?'
âWhen I woke up, she was already gone. I was really drunk, so she could have left anytime.' I finally grasped what he was getting at. âBut nothing happened to her that night.'
âWhy not?'
âBecause she was here again on Tuesday, the night before last.'
âYou asked her to come here again?'
âNo, she just appeared. I bumped into her in the lobby and she invited herself up.'
âFor more sex?' He was taking notes as he spoke.
âWhen I woke up she was gone again. Same as the first time.'
âHow much did you pay her for the two nights?'
âWhat?'
âShe was surely a prostitute. When did you pay her, and how much?'
I knew before I even spoke how stupid I sounded.
âShe didn't ask for money.'
âHow about the first time?' He looked at his notepad. âSunday night.'
âI thought Mr Chang sent her.'
âYou're a photographer.'
âYes.'
âA professional photographer.'
âYes.'
âHow often do you spend days taking photographs for other people, free of charge?'
I shook my head.
âIs there something so special about you that a prostitute would spend two nights in your bed without cash changing hands?'
âI never paid her.'
Kwok looked sceptical, and asked about the delivery of the package. I explained that it was very dim in the hotel corridor, and that I didn't get a good look at the delivery man. I could only remember was that he was Korean and that he wore a dark suit, not a hotel uniform, with a baseball cap pulled low. Kwok spoke softly to one of his colleagues, who stepped out into the corridor. A few seconds later he was back, murmuring in Kwok's ear. He glanced at me.
âWhat?'
âLight bulbs outside your door have been removed.' He changed tack:
âCan you remember anything else about what happened between you and Miss Hong that might help us?'
âNot really. The obvious thing is right there in the bag.'
âAren't you forgetting something?'
My stomach lurched. Maybe he knew.
âI don't understand.'
Kwok picked up the clear plastic bag that held the green Fuji instant film box that the package had arrived in.
âThe serial number on this matches the boxes in your camera case.'
Without looking away, he plucked yet more evidence bags from a folder and laid them out in front of me. Ten of them. Ten instant photographs of Miss Hong and a visibly pissed Alec Brodie, naked and in a variety of pornographic poses. One of them showed me holding a whisky miniature and pointing gleefully at her tattooed stomach. We were sitting at the bottom of the bed and she took the photograph by pointing the camera at the mirror. In bedrooms the world over, digital cameras were used to the same ends, but I liked the tactile experience of shooting Polaroids and sharing the wait for the results. We had shot all ten and laughed together at the blurry square frames. Our fingerprints had to be all over the pictures in the evidence bags.
âAre you aware, Mr Brodie, that in my country the penalty for murder is death?'
I leaned down, hand on forehead, hiding my face and trying to keep their attention on me. I prayed that they didn't look up.
When Kwok and his colleagues left I gave them twenty minutes to be sure they were not going to return and, after checking the deserted corridor, slipped back into the room and double-locked the door behind me. From the chairs that flanked the small coffee table it was impossible to credit how lucky I had been when Kwok and his boys failed to spot the little video camera clamped amidst the ruffles at the top edge of the heavy curtain. I had watched, frozen with panic, while one of the juniors pulled back both curtains, gave a cursory glance at the empty window ledge, and roughly tugged the drapes back into place, the overlap almost entirely concealing the camera from view. For two solid hours, I lived in fear of them spotting its lens peeking from within the curtain fabric. Now, it took me twenty seconds to unfasten the little bracket and bring it back down.
I slipped back out to the corridor carrying only a package wrapped in a laundry sack. Two scary minutes of jiggling at a time-worn lock got me into a chambermaid's store-room. I leaned back on the door and lit up the bare bulb suspended by a cord from the ceiling. Metal shelving covered three walls, the fourth taken up by a long stainless counter and double sink. High in one corner looked good, a pile of linen tied in neat bundles, still in fine condition, but in the pampered world of the deluxe hotel, already too well-used for a spoiled clientele. I worked my package deep within the folds of towels coated in dust that looked undisturbed in months.
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Pre-dawn in a five-star hotel lobby is a setting I have often enjoyed, whether sitting half-pissed and sucking on an ill-advised nightcap, or ahead of an early morning flight, perking up my senses with caffeine.
I lounged close to horizontal in the plush armchair, cup and saucer on my chest. Six o'clock in the morning and sleep was the last thing on my mind. A low table supported my feet and beside them sat a large pot of strong coffee. Enough of that and I might out-run the cloud of fatigue that threatened to smother me like a heavy blanket.
The cathedral-sized lobby hummed with the muted din from an electric floor polisher swung around by a cleaner in a dark green boiler suit ironed so lovingly it had knife-edge creases down the sides of the arms and legs. Waxy doughnuts passed in sweeping arcs from polishing pad to marble floor, bringing it to a sparkling state worthy of the big-bucks customers upstairs. Guests whose heads had yet to stir from over-sized feather pillows.
Down below them, my head was a mess. Arriving in Seoul four nights ago felt like a homecoming, but right now, I never felt further from home.
Being allowed to sit here was confusing enough. A short while ago, when I thought I could be facing months behind bars while Korean justice sat locked in the mire of bureaucracy, Detective Kwok only advised me to âstay close to the hotel'. They took my passport, but they didn't even fingerprint me, and I couldn't work out why I was getting the kid-gloves treatment. Maybe it was all down to the power of Chang's money. With K-N Group on the verge of an investment drive that might pluck the entire corporation out of the debt fire, the last thing Chang needed was bad publicity. Dining out with a whore who wound up mutilated after spending a couple of nights screwing his contractor would not be great PR. If so, I hoped he could keep this under wraps until the real murderer was found. Wrapped up in that thought was the assumption that Chang already knew I didn't kill Miss Hong. This in turn might mean something else: that he knew who did.
I drained the coffee cup, signed the tab and walked out into the pre-dawn cool.
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With over ten million inhabitants, a million-plus vehicles, hundreds of thousands of oil and coal-fired heating systems and a ring of factories around its perimeter, the city of Seoul never sees too much in the way of fresh air. Before the sun rose and the traffic revved up and the factory chimneys cleared their throats, there was an illusion of clarity about the city skies.
I used to live not far from here in a flat that backed onto a high school music room that students invaded before dawn, throwing open the windows next to their pianos and hammering out scales and arpeggios with robotic precision. It took me a long time to realise that I was the only person in the neighbourhood who took offence at this, and after that I used the thundering pianos as my alarm clock. It was around this time that I developed a liking for early morning walks.
At the exit of the Hyatt car park I stood on what for me was once a well-trodden path. Turning right, I crossed the near-empty road and headed west towards a gateway to the inner-city parklands of Nam San. Pedestrian traffic was already beginning to pick up, sociable clusters of elderly men and middle-aged women chatting happily, brightly-polished hiking boots clumping in near-unison.