‘He has to be…’ Bagado’s voice faded, as he leant over the rail.
‘Come again.’
‘He has to go.’
‘And you think I’m the man for the job or I’m the man who can find you the man to do the job?’
‘Be serious, Bruce.’
‘So, what does “he has to go” mean? I assume you’re talking about into the ground six foot under or stuffed head first down a storm drain after heavy rain. He’s not the kind to take early retirement just because he’s upset a few of his detectives.’
‘That would be a very satisfactory outcome. The storm drain I think is the more likely…but you know me, Bruce. It’s just not possible for me to even think like that.’
‘Whereas I…’
‘Quite.’
‘…go grasping the wrong end of the stick,’ I said. ‘We used to be partners, didn’t we, Bagado?’
‘And very complementary ones too, I thought.’
‘I don’t remember getting any compliments.’
‘I can’t think why,’ said Bagado, his neck disappearing into the collar of his mac.
‘So what’s Bondougou’s game? What’s he done to…?’
‘He’s gone too far,’ he said, to the dense knot of his dark tie.
‘Well, I thought he must have done more than scribble over your prep,’ I said, wiping a finger across my forehead and dropping a hank of sweat through the metal grating of the platform floor.
‘Five girls have gone missing…’
‘In Cotonou?’
‘Schoolgirls,’ he nodded. ‘The youngest is six, the eldest, ten.’
‘And he won’t let you near it?’
‘He’s put one of his resident idiots on it.’
‘Any bodies turned up?’
‘No.’
‘You think all five are connected?’
‘Things like that are always connected.’
‘Why do you think this is Bondougou’s business?’ I asked. ‘Just because he won’t let you near it, or what?’
‘He’s on it. He reads everything that comes in. Takes all the reports verbally first. He’s very interested.’
Bagado started to snick his thumbnail against his front teeth, a tic that meant he was thinking – thinking and worrying.
‘How am I supposed to fit myself in on this?’ I asked. ‘If Bondougou finds me sniffing around he’ll hit home runs with my kneecaps. And the usual usual – I’ve got a living to earn somehow.’
‘I know, I know,’ he said, and stared down into the hold at the five dead men. ‘How are we going to get these men out of here?’
‘Put them in a cargo net and lift them out.’
‘Let’s go,’ he said. ‘Before I get morbid.’
‘You mean you aren’t morbid yet?’
We climbed back up on to the hot metal deck and leant over the ship’s rail, gulping in air cut with bunker fuel and some muck they had boiling in the ship’s galley – whatever, it was fresh after all that. The full weight of the afternoon heat was backing off now, the sun tinting some colour back into things.
‘I want you to help me, Bruce.’
‘Any way I can, Bagado,’ I said. ‘As usual I’m running this way and that, feet not touching the ground.’
‘Who’s that for?’
‘Irony, Bagado. Don’t go losing your sense of irony.’
‘I’m losing my sense of everything these days…because there is no sense in anything. It’s all non-sense. How did I get to this pretty pass, Bruce?’
‘This pretty what?’
‘Pass.’
‘Is that one of your pre-independence colonial expressions?’
‘Concentrate for me, will you?’
‘OK. You’ve been manoeuvred into a position by Bondougou and now you’ve decided to manoeuvre your way out and I’m going to help you.’
‘How?’
‘You’ve only just saddled me with the problem. Let me run around a bit, break myself in on it.’
‘No hit men.’
‘I don’t know any hit men. How would I know any, Bagado? Just because I mix in that…’
‘Irony, Bruce. I was being ironical.’
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