Disco for the Departed

Disco for the Departed by Colin Cotterill Read Free Book Online

Book: Disco for the Departed by Colin Cotterill Read Free Book Online
Authors: Colin Cotterill
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breaking her silence.
    "The only dark-skinned foreigners you're "likely to find up here are Cubans," Siri said. "Mr. Castro has been very generous with aid and personnel. There used to be a joint Cuban-Vietnamese hospital project not far from here."
    "They're still here," Lit told him.
    "Really? Is Dr. Santiago still in charge?"
    "He's managing the hospital aid money, I believe. I wouldn't say he's in charge of anything."
    "Ah, good. I know him well, or at least as well as two men can who don't share a common language. It might be a good idea to pay a social call on the good doctor and see if they lost any Cubans around the time the path was laid."
    "Then, er, I can leave that line of inquiry up to you, Doctor?"
    Siri thought it odd the security man would relinquish his role in the investigation to a mere coroner but didn't bother to ask why. He enjoyed a bit of detective work. "Certainly."
    "Good," Lit said. "Then I should get back to my office. I'll check in with you the same time tomorrow. I've arranged for the kitchen here to provide you with food three times a day. The staff won't have much else to do for another week." He stood and nodded.
    "Until the next batch of lackeys arrives," Dtui told Siri. If Lit heard her, he ignored the comment and walked away. Once his jeep reached the dirt road, Siri glared at Dtui and shook his head.
    "What?" she asked.
    "You haven't spent very much time around communists, have you?"
    "You're a communist."
    "There's a vast difference between being a paid-up member of the Party and being a communist. Real communists take life quite seriously. If you don't agree with their doctrine, then you're the enemy."
    "Their doctrine? Dr. Siri, you're one of them. It's your doctrine, too."
    "And there were long periods when I truly believed. In fact, I still think a well-run socialist system could rescue the world from its lethargy and selfishness. But it's something people should come to of their own accord, through common sense ..."
    "Not torture."
    "Correct. But it isn't a situation you're going to change by attempting to shout down people like Comrade Lit. Nobody shouts louder than a Red."
    "So how's it going to change?"
    "It'll burn itself out."
    "But before then a lot of people are going to suffer."
    "And I don't want one of them to be you. So keep that pretty mouth buttoned. And that's an order. You aren't going to make a dribble of a difference. You know what they say about loose tongues."
    "They fall out?"
    Siri laughed. He never had been able to maintain an effective show of severity for any sustained period. Dtui sulked but she understood. She knew Siri's views had been derived from years of trying to make changes from the inside and failing. His relationship with the woman he loved and was faithful to for almost forty years had brought him into the Communist Party and kept him there. But he'd been distant enough from it to see the Pathet Lao become the lapdogs of the Vietnamese, just as the Royalists had slobbered around the heels of the French and the Americans. He was resigned to the fact that his Lao brethren were destined always to be the fools of some bigger fools. He wasn't a terrific example of a man who knew when to keep his mouth shut, but Dtui knew he didn't offer advice lightly.

    That night, exhausted though he was, Siri still rolled sleeplessly from side to side on the lumpy mattress. So many ghosts were calling to him from the fields. Impressionable young cadres were among them. He'd put many back together in field hospitals after their encounters with the Hmong resistance. They were telling him, "Look at us. What good did it do? All you did was fix us up so we could go and be killed in the next battle." They were right. He didn't want to listen to them. He wanted to sleep, but in sleep he'd have to face the malevolent spirits who lurked in the dark alleyways of his nightmares.
    In the starless blackness of the chilly night, even with his eyes wide open, he could see none of

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