she hasn’t yet figured out whether the case that’s just landed on her desk sounds like something of great significance, something vastly more important than what she usually gets, or an enormous pain in the ass.
She’s leaning toward the latter assessment.
The two women study her in silence, clearly tired but still combative. In the brief introductions that preceded getting down to business, they—the elderly Florentine lady and the young woman with the Roman accent—identified themselves as a retired mathematics teacher and a working veterinarian. Two normal women, involved against their will in something not even remotely normal. They’re the mother and girlfriend of a man who’s gone missing, who disappeared about a month ago. In Cambodia.
The prisoner, they say.
Her cell phone rings. Barbara looks at the screen and snorts: Marta again. The babysitter. Her third call, and it’s not yet noon. Barbara murmurs, “Excuse me,” and answers the phone. “No, they’re not allowed to watch television in the morning. I said no. Play a game with them, help them draw. Invent something, for Christ’s sake!”
The elderly Florentine lady doesn’t bat an eye; the younger woman shows a slight smile of measured sympathy. She clears her throat and says, “Signora Belli, we’d like to know if you think you can do anything.”
“But of course!” Barbara replies automatically, obeying the first commandment of such enterprises as hers: a client is a client; don’t send anyone away. “Of course we must do something,” she says to clarify. “It’s just that I have to have a good understanding of the case. I have to get into it a little more. I’ll need some further details….”
“I don’t think there’s much else,” the young woman murmurs, shaking her head.
“We’ve told you all we know,” says the older lady, summing up.
“Let’s go over it again.” Barbara’s gaze settles on the younger woman’s black eyes. Two wells of authentic trepidation. They can’t lie. “A little more than a month ago, you receive a telephone call from your boyfriend. He’s in Phnom Penh, right?”
“Right.” The young woman nods and sweeps her dark hair from her forehead. “Cambodia.”
“And he tells you…can you repeat it to me?”
“He tells me he’s leaving the city because there might be some problems.”
“Problems. What kind of problems?”
“He didn’t give details. He said he’d call again as soon as he could and told me not to worry.”
“That’s it?”
“Yes. He’s never been much for talking on the phone.”
“Your boyfriend owns a place in Phnom Penh, a bar called Sharky’s, right? His co-owners are two American friends, one of whom—a certain Clancy—supposedly left the city with him. Do you know this Clancy? Is that his real name?”
“Clancy’s his nickname, but everybody has called him that forever,” the young woman says, nodding. “They’re like brothers; they’ve been close friends for many years. I believe…” She pauses and lowers her eyes slightly. “I believe they’re prisoners together.”
“All right, now we come to the essential point. Yesterday, out of the blue, the second telephone call from your boyfriend. He tells you…”
“He says he doesn’t know exactly where he is. He knows only that he’s been taken prisoner by some special unit of the Cambodian army, one of their militias….They’re moving him around from one village to another, and he says they’ve taken all the money he had with him—”
“Seventy thousand dollars, right?”
“That’s the amount he said. Then he told me, ‘These guys want more money. That’s the only reason they’re letting me call you. If you don’t pay, they’ll kill me.’ ”
“And he also asked you to inform the Italian authorities.”
“That’s why we’re here. We were advised to…we thought it might be a good idea to engage a lawyer to represent the family. What we’re talking about here