Inspector Singh Investigates (8 page)

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Authors: Shamini Flint

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural, #International Mystery & Crime

BOOK: Inspector Singh Investigates
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'He might not have had much luck.'

'What do you mean?'

'Plenty of cronies around. The newspapers might have refused to publish.'

The inspector pulled at his beard, now flecked with grey. It was possible that Jasper had tried all these options first, failed and then decided to kill Alan. But something did not ring true. He was still not confident that Jasper Lee had killed his brother over such an abstract issue. He thought of the murderers he had caught over the years. Crimes of passion and crimes of greed. He had never come across an altruistic murderer before. He still thought the boyfriend a more likely suspect. But Ravi had not confessed. And Jasper had.

 

'I do not believe that he was a genuine convert so what is the use of trying to take the children from the mother? It is cruel.' The thin, ascetic man in white robes and thick glasses spoke in a measured tone.

'We cannot question the conversion. It will open the floodgates for friends and relatives to argue the real intention of a convert after he is dead. People will doubt every new Moslem.' A young firebrand with flashing eyes and a black beard thumped the table to emphasise his conviction.

'We have to pursue the matter. We cannot set a precedent where we choose if and when to uphold Syariah law. That is not Islamic justice,' he continued.

'If it was not a genuine conversion, Alan Lee will have to explain his actions to God. We are not the judges of what is in a man's heart. He went through the necessary steps. He professed to convert to Islam. He declared his children to be Moslem. We have a responsibility to see that his children are brought up in a Moslem household.'

This assertion was by the president of the Council. He was a venerable scholar and well respected by his colleagues even when they disagreed with him.

There was a small sigh from the ascetic as he saw which way the Council was leaning. He said, 'May Allah forgive us.'

 

Could she risk losing? The first hearing had been postponed. They were due back in court the following week. Chelsea sat in the waiting room of her Syariah lawyer's office – impatiently waiting to hear his advice. The waiting room was small and cramped. There were a couple of worn sofas –Chelsea could feel the springs through the floral fabric, yearning to break free. The carpet was stained with coffee or tea, perhaps tears too. There were a couple of Arabic phrases, she assumed from the Quran, framed and hung on the walls. A plastic ashtray with cigarette burn marks all round the rim sat in the middle of the glass–topped, cane coffee table. Next to it was a vase of cheap plastic flowers in those luminescent shades of pink and green which Chelsea, rightly or wrongly, always associated with poor manufacturing standards in China. She knew the lawyer was both senior and successful. Why couldn't he clean up the filthy waiting room?

Finally, she was shown in. It was another small, cramped room. This one came with a desk piled high with books. Gold–trimmed black court robes, fraying around the edges from years of use, hung from a coat stand in the corner. The lawyer himself was small, almost gnomic, largely hidden by the piles of paper on his huge desk. He had large, pointy ears poking out on either side of the white cloth cap worn by Moslems who had performed the Hajj in Mecca. He stood up as she came in and she held out her hand, expecting the usual handshake.

He shook his head slightly. 'As you know, Mrs Lee, my religion forbids me from having contact with a woman who is not my wife.'

Chelsea's hand fell to her side. She was embarrassed, immediately on the defensive.

As if to accentuate the cultural gap between them, her lawyer walked around the desk, avoiding brushing against her as he did so, and opened the door that she had closed behind her. He pushed a doorstop into place with a slippered foot. He was not allowed to be alone with a woman who was not his wife either, not behind closed doors anyway. The preliminaries dealt with to his satisfaction he smiled, baring large coffee–stained teeth, and said, 'May I offer you a cup of tea?'

She shook her head mutely. She needed to get down to business. This man was the most senior practising member of the Syariah bar. He came highly recommended and, despite the slippers and fraying gown, he was expensive. She was not interested in tea–breaks.

He understood because he said, 'I know the background to your case, of course.' Left unsaid was that he would have had to be a hermit to avoid the details of Chelsea's recent exploits.

Chelsea nodded. 'What are my chances? Can they take my children from me?'

She was not in a mood to beat around the bush and her lawyer looked a little pained at being put on the spot so quickly.

He said, looking thoughtful, 'This is a very unusual confluence of circumstances.'

Chelsea glared at him. Apparently it did not matter whether it was within the Syariah or civil jurisdiction, all lawyers charged by the hour and would not answer a direct question.

She asked, 'So what does "unusual confluence of circumstances" mean for me and my children?'

Her lawyer sighed and looked up. She saw a sincerity in him that reassured her for a moment. His answer however did not. 'I don't know. I don't know what the outcome will be.'

There was a tense silence between them as they both digested his admission of ignorance as if it was an unripe fruit, sour and unpalatable.

The lawyer spoke first. 'It is always unfortunate to be precedent–setting in a case that is in the public eye. All the parties involved feel that they have to adopt the harshest line because they don't want to be seen to be weak.'

She nodded. She had always lived her life on the front pages of the tabloid press. But now she had gravitated to the broadsheets and the reputations of powerful men were at stake.

He continued, 'My contacts at the Islamic Council inform me that they are split on whether to pursue this custody matter in the first place. Not everyone is convinced that your husband's conversion was genuine.'

'Of course it wasn't!' snapped Chelsea.

'Unfortunately, the Council does not want to set a precedent of doubting the authenticity of a religious conversion. You can see why that would be. Whenever any non–Moslem converts, objecting family members will turn to the courts. A matter of faith will become a matter of evidence.'

Chelsea slumped back into her chair. 'What are you getting at?'

'The court might not let us introduce evidence that Alan was not really a Moslem. He followed the legal procedures to become a Moslem. They might take it at face value. If they do that – well, then strictly as a matter of Islamic family law, the children should be brought up as Moslems ... and by Moslems. The court could take the children away from you.'

'What can we do?'

'There is one sure way to avoid losing your children,' the lawyer replied gently.

She looked up hopefully. 'What is it?'

'You could convert to Islam too.'

Chelsea said quietly, 'I've thought about that, of course.'

'Then why don't you do it?'

'Do you think that two conversions of convenience are really the solution?'

The lawyer steepled his fingers and looked at her ruefully. 'It's best if you don't reveal to me that any conversion to Islam by you would not be genuine. It is important that your adoption of the religion appears credible.'

Chelsea snorted. 'Like Alan's?'

The lawyer could not meet her eyes. He looked down, shuffled the papers on his table and sighed.

Chelsea spoke in a quiet voice. 'If I convert, it means Alan has won. He has reached out from beyond the grave to control what I do and how I live my life with my kids. I don't want to give him that victory ... '

'It might be the only way of keeping your children.'

She nodded. 'I realise that. But for now I am still hoping for some justice from the courts.'

 

 

Thirteen

 

Singh was not looking forward to his appointment with Chelsea. To ask this woman about her Achilles' heel would not be pleasant. He was forced to concede that he was shocked to discover that she had a boyfriend on the side. He would not have thought it would be in her character. He supposed he was just not in a position to understand a vulnerable woman. He had no doubt in his mind about Ravi. He was a slippery character on the lookout for women he could exploit. It was his job – the way he made a living. Singh had come across many of his ilk over the years. He would have assumed they were too cowardly to commit murder for gain. But Chelsea's potential wealth and anticipated gratitude, if her husband was removed from the picture, might have tempted Ravi to overreach.

There was another possibility. Perhaps Chelsea Liew had provided the backbone Ravi lacked to kill her husband. Singh wiped his face with a big, white handkerchief. He really did not want to contemplate Chelsea's involvement in the killing, whether she pulled the trigger or not.

Singh sat, wedged into a spindly, cushioned chair, waiting for Chelsea. He had turned down offers of refreshments, tea, freshly squeezed watermelon juice or coffee, from the demure, uniformed Indonesian maid. The best place to get honest impressions of people, as long as you could persuade them to talk, decided the inspector, was from the domestic help. Quarrels took place in front of them. Secrets were revealed as if they were not there. They were the most likely members of the household to pick up the phone when a boyfriend called, the most likely to discover the lipstick marks on a straying husband's shirt.

Singh decided to test his theory. 'Tell me about your boss, Alan Lee,' he said.

The Indonesian housemaid in her frilly apron was cagey, reluctant to speak.

She said at last, 'Nothing to tell, sir.'

'Nothing?' The policeman's tone was disbelieving.

She spoke more firmly this time. 'Nothing!'

In the inspector's experience, sometimes those who tried to help did the most damage. Their attempts to mislead often flagged new avenues of investigation.

He persevered. 'The whole family must be very sad that the boss was killed,' he remarked.

He could see her struggle between the desire to agree with everything he said and the temptation to say what she really felt about her dead employer.

Finally, she said, 'Sometimes he had a very bad temper.'

'I know, I know! I heard that he hit his wife, Mrs Lee. But maybe she asked for it?'

The domestic help was not about to lambast him for being politically incorrect. Instead, she assured the policeman in hushed tones that Chelsea was a wonderful wife and mother who had never done anything inappropriate that could have provoked her husband to anger.

The inspector knew this was not true because he knew about Ravi. The sheer emphasis in the Indonesian's voice as she painted a picture of a paragon who could do no wrong made him suspect that the maid knew about the boyfriend too. Her loyalty to Chelsea impressed him. She was prepared to lie to a policeman to protect her, a courageous decision for a foreign worker in Malaysia dependent on the goodwill of the authorities for her livelihood.

The door opened and Chelsea came in. Dressed in a pair of white linen trousers, with an equally cool sky–blue shirt worn open over a white camisole, she looked fresh and well – a far cry from the trauma–tised woman of a couple of weeks ago.

She said now, as if theirs was a relationship of casual, gossipy friendship rather than a bond forged in the most unusual of circumstances, 'How are things going?'

He shrugged, bearded chin sinking against his chest as if he was trying to avoid speech.

She looked at him quizzically. 'Go on, you can tell me! I've had my fair share of difficult news in the past few months. Have you found some evidence against Jasper? I won't believe you if you tell me you have.' She smiled to rob her words of offence.

The inspector said heavily, 'Not as such, no. He says he killed his brother because he was cutting down the rainforests.'

'Really?' She shook her head, disbelief tinged with affection. 'I know Jasper takes these things seriously but surely that's a bit farfetched?'

Singh nodded. 'It strikes me as a bit odd too.'

There was an awkward pause between them. Singh tried to look competent and menacing at the same time, sitting up straight and stroking his beard.

She said, holding his glance, 'That's not really what you came to discuss, is it?'

He was the first to look away. He stared past her, looked at the ceiling briefly, tied a shoe–lace and then sat back up in his chair.

Chelsea said, half amused and half worried, 'For God's sake, how bad can it be?'

Singh said brusquely, 'We know about your boyfriend.'

It was her turn to sit back in her chair and avoid meeting his eye.

She said quietly, looking down at her hands, 'Ravi was the mistake of a woman with nowhere to turn ... and no one to turn to. He is not relevant.'

'On the contrary, aside from Jasper, he's the best suspect we have.'

Chelsea looked at him directly. 'I've told you –Ravi meant nothing then and means nothing now.'

'Have it your way. But that leaves Jasper in the frame – by himself.'

'You've forgotten someone,' Chelsea said.

'Who?'

'Kian Min, Alan's younger brother. He's taken over the company. It's been his life's ambition to do that. Who is to say that he didn't kill Alan to inherit Lee Timber?'

'It's interesting,' remarked the inspector, 'that you are so anxious to help one brother, Jasper, but have no qualms about pointing a finger at the other brother, Kian Min.'

'It's not interesting at all,' snapped Chelsea. 'Jasper is a kind, decent man. Lee Kian Min would make Alan look like the good guy.'

Singh put up a hand. 'Fine, I'll look into it.'

 

They hauled Ravi in for questioning. Sergeant Shukor was only too pleased to lend a hand. He did not even mention the possible reaction of his superiors or indulge in his usual angst about getting into trouble if he continued to help the Singapore policeman. Like the inspector, he was curious to see the man who had cuckolded Alan Lee.

Ravi was extremely good looking, the fat policeman acknowledged to himself a little ruefully. He was in perfect physical condition – strong without being excessively muscular. With his mixed Indian–Chinese parentage, he had even features, warm eyes and flawless skin.

Nevertheless, it did not take them long, either of them, to get the measure of the man.

Ravi started out blustering. 'How can you arrest me? For what? I haven't done anything!'

'You were having an affair with a wealthy woman whose husband has turned up dead,' pointed out Singh.

Ravi turned pale. His eyes shifted from one policeman to the other. He stammered, 'I ... I didn't do it. You can't go around accusing people of murder just like that. I want a lawyer. I won't say anything more until I have a lawyer! You're violating my rights.'

Singh suspected that Ravi's knowledge of police methods was derived entirely from American television drama.

Shukor said patiently, 'You've not been arrested. This is just a chat. You can walk out if you like.'

Ravi considered his options. The policemen watched him silently. Ravi decided belatedly on cooperation, no doubt afraid, thought Singh cynically, of the police proceeding to use the evidence of others without giving him a chance to put his side of the story forward.

'She pursued me, of course,' he offered as his opening remark in the cooperative phase.

Inspector Singh took a deep breath. He said, 'In what way?'

'We met at a party. I could see she was attracted to me.'

'How could you tell?' asked Shukor.

The inspector wondered whether the policeman was wasting valuable interview time trying to pick up tips about women from someone who fancied himself an expert.

Even in the company of two men, Ravi could not help running his fingers through his hair. A practised, flirtatious gesture.

He said, 'Well, she couldn't take her eyes off me. I noticed that right away. And when we were introduced and shook hands, she held my hand for just that bit longer than necessary.' He continued smugly, 'You can always tell, can't you?'

'Moving on,' said Singh brusquely, 'what happened next?'

'I gave her my phone number.'

'And she called you?'

'Not exactly, no. But we ... er ... bumped into each other a couple of days later at the Marriott and had coffee together.'

Singh had seen it so many times before. A man, little better than a gigolo, setting his sights on a rich, lonely, unhappy woman and engineering coincidences until he had wormed his way into her affections and her bed. He was just surprised that Chelsea had fallen prey to such a predator. He supposed that he had no idea what she had been through. And she was evidently an appalling judge of the male character. She had married Alan Lee, after all.

'Go on,' said Shukor brusquely to the boyfriend.

When discussing his successes with women, Ravi was not reluctant to talk.

'It was the usual story,' he continued, smirking slightly. 'She pursued me. We ended up having a relationship. I was reluctant because she was married, but in the end I could not say no.' Ravi stopped to admire the picture he painted of a moral man tempted too far by a determined woman.

'How much did you take her for?' asked the inspector abruptly.

Ravi looked pained. 'I have no idea what you are talking about.'

'How did you feel when she called off the relationship?'

'Who said she called it off?'

'She did!'

Ravi looked unsure whether to contradict this version of events, but decided against it.

'She was worried about the custody battle.'

'So how did you feel when your meal ticket was threatened?'

'She was not a meal ticket. She was the woman I loved!'

Sergeant Shukor snorted derisively. Ravi looked at him angrily and then, taking in the policeman's physique, decided that discretion was the better part of valour.

He said again in a quiet tone, 'I loved her. I would have married her and been a father to her children.'

Singh could not resist sarcasm. 'You mean you would have been willing to marry an extremely wealthy and beautiful woman? You amaze me!'

Ravi started to say something and then thought better of it. He slumped in the chair, looking sullen. This was not going the way he planned.

Singh asked, 'So did you kill him?'

'What?'

'Did you kill Alan Lee?'

'Of course not!'

'You had every reason.'

'I did not kill him. Anyway, I thought the brother confessed.'

The policeman did not answer him and he said again more plaintively, 'But I thought the brother confessed!'

Later, when the policemen were alone, Shukor asked, 'Could Ravi have done it?'

Inspector Singh shrugged. 'He strikes me as a coward, but people have surprised me before with the lengths to which they will go for a few bucks. He had an excellent motive. Without Alan in the picture he must have felt secure enough of Chelsea to think that he had found the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.'

Shukor said tentatively, 'But we've still got Jasper's confession, lah.'

Singh sighed. 'You're quite right. There is still that damned confession.'

 

The office was closed. Rupert leaned his forehead on the grimy wall and closed his eyes. He was too tired, too dirty and too worried to face another hurdle. Jasper Lee was his best hope. He needed someone with access and information. A conduit who knew the issues would have been perfect. Someone who he had worked with and trusted was an additional plus. But the door was locked and the place musty and damp. No one had been in for a while. He tried to peer through the tinted glass. It was dark inside the room. He could not even make out the silhouette of furniture. It was impossible to know when the office had been abandoned. There was certainly no way of knowing where Jasper Lee had gone.

Rupert suddenly wanted to be somewhere else. This narrow corridor at the top of a stairwell felt too much like a dead end. He ran lightly down the stairs. It was dangerous in the half–light cast by a single bare light bulb but he was determined to get back to the bustle of the street. Once down again, and feeling the safety of anonymity in a crowd, he walked into the coffee shop at the base of the building and asked an old crone chopping vegetables where Jasper had gone. She cackled at him, showing gold teeth sporadically protruding from red gums but did not answer. A harassed woman, sauteing vegetables in a big pot of boiling water and then deftly flicking them onto a row of plates while another worker squirted soy sauce and a spoonful of fried garlic on each, said, 'She no speak Engris one!'

He turned to her gratefully. 'Maybe you can help me? I am looking for Jasper Lee – the man with the office upstairs? He might have come here to eat.'

She looked at him curiously, pushing a strand of hair, damp with sweat, behind her ear.

'Why you want him?'

'He's an old friend of mine.'

'He not here any more.'

Rupert nodded encouragingly, willing her to continue. He could tell that Jasper wasn't around any more. He needed to know where he had gone.

Answering the silent question, she said, 'He go to jail!'

'Jail?'

Rupert's first thought was that somehow the police had guessed where he would be going and had deprived him of his one ally in the battle against the logging companies. Then he realised that was farfetched.

He asked, 'Why is he in jail? What did he do?'

'He kill his brother. He go to jail. They sure hang him!'

She seemed to relish this unseemly end to her neighbour's career. The pleasure in being the bearer of such unique news overcame any sympathy she felt for a man facing such an unpleasant fate – even one she had served in her coffee shop on numerous occasions over the last few years.

She continued, pointing to a small table, 'He always like to sit there and eat noodles.' For a moment she must have felt some pity for Jasper because she said in a soft voice, 'He always like my food.' But then she shrugged and went back to her task of scooping vegetables out of the boiling water, scowling when she saw that her thirty seconds of conversation had resulted in limp, overcooked greens.

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