LAUNDRY MAN (A Jack Shepherd crime thriller)

LAUNDRY MAN (A Jack Shepherd crime thriller) Read Online Free PDF

Book: LAUNDRY MAN (A Jack Shepherd crime thriller) Read Online Free PDF
Author: Jake Needham
Tags: 03 Thriller/Mystery
but it pretty much was.
    Darcy stepped in and in a few clipped phrases related to Nata the high points of the story I had just told her about my call from the man claiming to be Barry Gale.
    “This guy wants to meet you
where
?”
    Nata’s question was addressed to me, but she was looking at Darcy when she asked it.
    “Took Lae Dee.” I said. “It’s in Foodland.”
    “The one on Sukhumvit Road? Down by the Ambassador Hotel?”
    I nodded. I didn’t much blame Nata for wondering about that part of my story. I was wondering a little about it, too.
    During daylight hours Sukhumvit Road was one of Bangkok’s principal arteries, four lanes jammed with vehicles and the Sky Train running on massive concrete pillars down its center. It slashed like a fault line across the part of the city where almost every foreigner in town lived. For miles it was lined with luxurious shopping malls, expensive restaurants, and many-starred hotels. It was generally thronged with people: well-heeled tourists, foreign residents, and those adventurous Thais who didn’t mind so much mixing with either.
    In the hours after dark, however, a different breed took over Sukhumvit Road. Even at its most benign, Bangkok was part Miami and part Beirut, and there was nothing benign about midnight on the fault line. In the late, late hours, Sukhumvit Road became Blade Runner country.
    I had always thought there had to be some kind of international network devoted to coaxing social rejects and dropout cases worldwide into coming to Bangkok, because come they did by the thousands. They walked away from third-shift jobs in places like Los Angeles, London, Sydney, Berlin, and Toronto, packed what they had, bought a cheap airline ticket, and made their way to the Land of Smiles. Some were looking for a cheap tropical paradise; others thought they’d found Sodom and Gomorrah; but almost every one of them was hoping in some way to make a fresh start on a life that up until then probably had little to recommend it. Many of these refugees from reality probably couldn’t have located the city on a map before they decided it was the place for them, maybe they still couldn’t, but now Bangkok had become their last, maybe their only hope.
    In the empty hours it was this army of the dispossessed that took control of Sukhumvit Road.
Tuk-tuks
, little three-wheeled motorcycle taxis, flew up and down the street most of the night ferrying carousers between the two clumps of go-go bars that anchored the neighborhood: Nana Plaza on the west and Soi Cowboy about a mile to the east. They were all there: the lonely, the frightened, the guilty, the depressed, and the psychotic. Soaked with sweat, they rushed back and forth from one bar to another, reeking of that peculiarly sour, metallic odor habitually given off by the emotionally overmatched and underachieving. It was this floodtide of the lost and abandoned that owned Sukhumvit Road after midnight.
    “So what do you want from me, Big Jack?” Nata asked.
    “Whatever you can find out for me about Barry Gale. If I’m going into Indian country tonight, I want to go well-armed.”
    Nata raised an eyebrow at me.
    “Metaphorically speaking,” I added quickly.
    Nata thought about that for a moment, her face a blank, then turned back to her keyboard and pushed a few keys. Boxes began appearing on one of the big screens in front of her. I watched her type Texas State Bank into a space in one of them and after ten or fifteen seconds a list rolled up on the other screen. She typed Barry Gale into another box and waited until a second list replaced the first. Then she typed something that appeared on the screen as nothing but a row of asterisks, hit the Enter key twice, and waited.
    After a few seconds an index of news stories appeared back on the first screen, each entry providing a headline, a newspaper’s name, a date, and the first few sentences from the story. Nata started working her way methodically through every item,
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