Read Arabesk Online

Authors: Barbara Nadel

Tags: #Mystery

Arabesk (26 page)

^Yes, sir.' Çöktin took the paper over to his desk and dialled the number on his telephone extension.

Until somebody answered Çöktin, neither Ìkmen nor Suleyman spoke. As soon as he got through, all that changed.

Lowering his voice in order not to disturb Çöktin's conversation, Ìkmen said to Suleyman, 'I have the feeling, or rather I gained the distinct impression downstairs, that Tansu Hanim knows who the culprit might be. She realised when she saw Cengiz do his limping impression.'

Suleyman sat and digested this until the click of a replaced telephone signalled the end of Çöktin's conversation.

'Resat lives in Besiktas 22/3 Misir Bahçe,' he said, looking at the piece of paper in his hand. 'Do you want me to go out there, sir?'

'No.' Suleyman leaned back in his chair and lit a cigarette. ‘I would like you and Tepe to perform some discreet observations regarding the comings and goings to and from Tansu Hanim's house.'

'Oh, but I thought that she—'

'Yes, Mickey Çöktin,' Ìkmen said with a smile, 'Tansu and all her retinue have indeed departed from this place, but we still have some doubts and so it would be as well for you and Tepe to remain vigilant'

'And I want to know everything,' Suleyman added sternly, 'including when Erol makes an appearance.'

'Oh, but that's not likely to happen now, sir,' Çöktin said before he had really thought his words through.

Suleyman frowned. 'Oh? And why not?'

Çöktin knew that his face was bright red. He also knew that he had to say something fast in order to save himself. If Suleyman suspected that he'd been talking to Erol, well, it didn't bear thinking about. 'Well, er, I thought it was common knowledge,' he said falteringly.

'Oh?' Suleyman reiterated suspiciously. 'And this knowledge comes from?'

'Oh, gossip in the bazaars, you know,' Çöktin said with a nervous laugh. 'Shall I go and get Tepe and—'

'If I find that you have been talking to Erol, you know that disciplinary procedure will follow, don't you?' Suleyman said gravely.

'Yes.'

Suleyman looked Çöktin deep in the eyes for just a second and then said, 'Off you go then.'

'Right.'And with that he left.

When Ìkmen could be certain that Çöktin was out of earshot he said, 'Do you believe him?'

'Not in the slightest.'

Ìkmen shook his head. 'It's a shame, he's a good man.'

'Who has changed considerably since being in contact with Erol Urfa.'

'Well, it could well be as I said,' Ìkmen expounded.

'They could well be brothers in religion. He's never been like this about any other Kurdish suspect.'

'Yes, well,' Suleyman rose to his feet and put his cigarette out in the ashtray. 'But now I must go out and speak to this Resat.'

'About his work and his cyanide?'

Suleyman smiled. 'Yes,' he said, 'and also about wasps. The Emins had a problem with wasps a little while back, I believe.'

'Mmm. And with Miss Latife, as Beikis told us, being so keen on gardening . . .’

'Oh, yes,' Suleyman said as he picked his car keys off his desk and put them in his pocket, 'she did say that, didn't she? Makes you wonder whether her interests extended to disposing of pests, doesn't it?'

Strangely, for Tansu, she had been very quiet during the journey back to Yeniköy. Yilmaz had thought that even with the lawyer in the car she might still rail at him. But she did not Perhaps she had come to terms now with the fact that Erol had deserted her -or maybe her interview with the police had been so horrendous it had robbed her of speech. He still felt bad about having been the cause of her ordeal in the police station. The Emins had always been staunch and faithful to each other - until now - and he had no doubt that at some point recriminations would follow. But for the moment he just sat back and enjoyed the fading of the fierce sunlight and the coming of the slightly cooler evening breezes. The Bosphorus was, he thought, probably at its most beautiful at this time of day, when its blues and whites were just touched by the gentle coppery tones of sunset If only he still had little Belkis to share such moments with, but there.

Latife and Ferhat Göktepe strode into the hall to . meet a tense-looking Galip.

Still silent, .Tansu then entered the house, followed by Yilmaz and, until the singer dismissed him, Adnan Öz.

'You can go back to your office now, Adnan,' she said as she mounted the steps to her front door. ‘I need to be. alone with my family.'

'Ah, but—'

'I will call you when I need you!' she said commandingly and turned on her heel and entered the house.

Yilmaz shrugged at the rather taken aback lawyer and followed his sister who, now in the hall, was saying something very similar to Ferhat Göktepe.

'But Tansu, my darling,' the manager was saying, 'if you do need anything, anything at all, you must call me.'

'Yes, yes.' Distractedly, or so it seemed to Yilmaz, she patted her manager on the arm and gave him a small smile. 'But please go now, Ferhat,I need to be alone to

'Yes, of course, my soul,' he said as he kissed both her hands several times over. 'I do understand, I—'

'Ferhat, please!'

'I'm going! I'm going!' Which he did, blowing kisses to his most lucrative star as he went

Tansu, followed by Yilmaz, walked into the large, pale living room where Galip and Latife were waiting for them.

Tansu crossed the room in order to get herself a drink, then moved back to the door which she slammed on the outside world with some vigour.

Although Suleyman hadn't formally dismissed Ìkmen, he had not asked him to accompany him to Besiktas. So, try as he might, it was difficult for Ìkmen to carve a role for himself in the current round of activity. And besides, there was still Fatma to contend with; she would be furious at his breaking doctors' orders. There was also Madame Kleopatra Polycarpou's funeral tomorrow morning. Somehow he would have to try and persuade his angry wife or even one of his moody daughters to press his best suit for the occasion. Unlike Cohen, who was also due to attend, he did not have the luxury of still being in uniform.

As he made his way down to the reception area, Ìkmen once again pondered why Madame might have killed her husband, the eunuch. Sexual jealousy, surely, could not have come into it, and marital violence, another favourite when it came to homicide, was unlikely. Murad Aga, to his recollection, had always seemed to be completely under Madame's control. He always looked as if he adored her. Perhaps the motive was monetary. It was a thought, seeing as people always said that the hamam did in fact belong originally to Madame's husband who they now knew was none other than Murad Aga. Still, with all the protagonists in that little saga now well and truly dead, Ìkmen's thoughts upon this were more along the lines of interested speculation rather than active inquiry. And anyway, more pressing concerns were afoot now. His other cigarette packet, which he hadn't given to Cengiz Temiz, was completely empty - a situation that needed urgent attention.

At the front desk, however, something much more interesting from the point of view of the current case confronted Ìkmen. Erol Urfa, complete with baby Merih in a car seat plus someone who looked like an attendant drunk, was talking anxiously to the duty officer who was, in this case, Kaya.

'So how long is Inspector Suleyman likely to be?' Erol was asking as Ìkmen approached the scene.

'I have no idea, sir,' Kaya replied. 'Perhaps you would like to wait'

With the aid of a slightly disgusted sniff at the swathes of cigarette smoke that were emanating from a cloth-capped individual who was also waiting for somebody or other, Erol said, 'Well, I'd rather not really. Not with the baby . ..'

'Quite right' the drunk at his shoulder agreed somewhat volubly. 'Not one of your better ideas, my dear Erol.'

'I'd really rather you were quiet now, Ibrahim,' the singer said, turning, rather sharply on his companion.

As he drew level with the party, Ìkmen briefly made eye contact with Kaya before he said, 'Is there anything I can do for you, sir?'

For a moment, Erol Urfa looked at Ìkmen with a puzzled expression on his face. It made the inspector feel as if he were some strange type of fauna the singer had not previously encountered.

At length, Erol said, 'Who are you?'

'My name is Inspector Ìkmen. I work with Inspector Suleyman.' Ìkmen smiled. 'You are, of course, Erol Urfa, are you not?'

'Yes.'

Ìkmen offered his hand which Erol took.

'Is there anything I can help you with?'

'Well, I was really hoping to speak to Inspector Suleyman,' Erol said as he looked down at the baby who appeared to be stirring.

Ìkmen sighed. 'Well, he's likely to be some time. You are welcome to wait in my office if you wish.'

'Oh, I don't think we want to do that, do we, Erol?' the drunk said unsteadily. ‘I mean . . .'

'Well, you don't have to stay if you don't want to, Ibrahim,' Erol said, turning to the man with a taut expression on his face. 'But I would rather—'

'You know you're committing fucking professional suicide, don't you!' the man said loudly. 'In my—'

'And I think that you've had far too much to drink to be in a place like this,' Ìkmen said as he took hold of the man's arm and started to move him towards the door.

'Hey! Erol is my—'

'Erol and the baby will be quite safe with me,' Ìkmen said to him firmly as he propelled him forwards. 'You just go and sleep it off somewhere, yes?'

'I'll wait for you in the car, Erol!' he said over Ìkmen's shoulder. 'Don't say anything stupid, will you?'

'I'm sure he won't,' Ìkmen said with a smile.

The man, now out in the street, wobbled off in several different directions before finally settling upon a chosen course.

As Ìkmen returned from the doorway, Erol said, 'He means well.'

Tm sure he does.' Ìkmen said, bent down to smile at the waking baby. 'Come on, let's get you to my office.'

He led the way across the reception area and up the two flights of stairs to the offices. As they mounted the second flight the sound of Ìkmen's coughing was augmented by small whimpers from Merih.

'I think she probably needs a feed,' Erol said.

'Uh,' Ìkmen replied, the grunt being the only noise his congested lungs could manage at this point

At the top of the second flight, while Ìkmen gasped painfully for air, Dr Ìrfan Akkale closed the door to the corridor behind him and made to descend the stairs. Until he saw Ìkmen. Peering closely into the inspector's greenish-white face, he said, 'What are you doing here, Ìkmen? If you have a coronary here when you should be at home, I take no responsibility.'

'Yes, Dr .. .' Ìkmen gasped.

'You're a very silly man!' And then with a brief 'Good evening' to Erol Urfa, Akkale descended the stairs.

When they finally arrived at Ìkmen's office, Erol asked, 'So are you sick then, Inspector?'

Ìkmen breathed in deeply and replied on this exhalation, 'I have a stomach ulcer, but it doesn't really bother me.'

Erol placed Merih's seat on one of the chairs in front of Ìkmen's desk and then riffled in the bag on his shoulder until he located a bottle of milk. Merih took the drink he offered to her greedily.

'You didn't look terribly well just now,' Erol said, feeding the child while looking at Ìkmen. 'If you will forgive me saying so.'

Ìkmen smiled. 'I just have a few problems with stairs sometimes,' he said as he shuffled various large piles of paper around on his filthy, beloved desk. He had missed all of this sorely - the disorder, the smell, the thrill of the chase ...

With a sigh of contentment, he flung himself down into the depths of his battered leather chair and watched the young man feed the baby across the top of a mountain of files. It wasn't that he suddenly came to the realisation that the combination of children and work constituted his own personal paradise, the sights and smells around him were just a reaffirmation of what he personally was about And that felt good. Now if he just had a cigarette or two ...

'So, was there anything in particular you wanted to see Inspector Suleyman about?' Ìkmen said as he threw his feet up onto his desk.

Erol sighed. 'Yes. But. ..'

'Oh, you don't have to tell me,' Ìkmen said in tones of one who really couldn't care less. 'I was just as you can imagine, a bit curious about the statement that man who was with you made.'

'You mean Ibrahim, my manager?'

'If that was the rather inebriated gentleman . . .'

'Yes.'

Ìkmen shrugged. 'It was what he said about professional suicide. Sort of piqued my interest. But no matter.'

They sat in silence for a while, the gentle sound of the baby's feeding interrupted only by the distant strains of Arabesk music from the street below. But there was a tension around Erol Urfa that Ìkmen felt signalled both a reluctance and at the same time an urgent desire to talk. At length, the policeman felt that the time had come to break the silence.

'So, if you don't mind my asking,' Ìkmen said’ 'did your late wife and Tansu Hanim ever meet?' 'Yes, once, at a party.' ‘Oh?'

'It was about a year ago,' he said, looking, Ìkmen felt, very sadly at his now motherless child, 'although to be honest they hardly spoke. But then they wouldn't would they?'

Ìkmen smiled. 'I suppose not'

'Although Latife, Tansu's sister, was very kind to Ruya, I must say. She sat and talked to her for quite some time. Ruya was very . . . very awkward in company.' He smiled once again at his child and made small cooing noises to her.

'Did Tansu or her sister ever see your wife again?'

'No. From then on Ruya was alone except when I was with her.'

That was the country way, Ìkmen thought recalling all those little towns he had visited as a young man, towns out east that were, to all intents and purposes, entirely populated by men drinking tea and smoking cigarettes. Which reminded him . . .

Both the personal appearance and home of Mr Resat Soylu came as no surprise to Suleyman. At around fifty, Soylu was a flat-capped, heavy-smoking brown nut of a peasant. And although he would probably have liked a little more material wealth out of life, the three-room apartment he shared with his veiled wife and severe-looking daughter was both clean and comfortable. Indeed, with the exception of the vast array of plants growing in old oil cans on the balcony and the hugely ornate chandelier in the living room, it was not unlike Cohen's place.

Once the preliminaries of assuring Mr Soylu that he was not actually in any kind of trouble were over, the peasant called for tea and sat Suleyman down upon the only proper chair in the room. This was directly underneath the chandelier which, the gardener told the policeman with some pride, had come all the way from Munich. When the tea arrived and Mrs Soylu had once again made herself scarce, Suleyman started to question her husband.

'I understand you garden for quite a few families in Yeniköy,' he said, 'including Mr and Mrs Ertiirk and the Emins.'

'I do have that honour, yes,' the peasant replied. 'Allah, in his goodness, has always favoured my poor hands with sufficient work.'

A little embarrassed by this effusive outpouring of religious largesse, Suleyman took a sip from his tea glass and said, 'Good.'

Mr Soylu, pleased that Suleyman appeared to approve of him, did what a lot of peasant men do and sank back into a state of contented, straight-faced silence. With a small string of plastic worry beads in his hands, he could just as easily have been sitting beneath a tree in Cyprus or in the corner of a coffee house in distant Erzurum.

'I understand,' Suleyman eventually offered as he sought to penetrate the clamorous stillness around his host, 'that you poisoned some rats for Mr and Mrs Ertürk. Is that correct?'

'Yes.'

The wife, all knotted and draped scarves, put in a brief appearance until the slow lizard-like gaze of her husband caused her to flee to another part of the property.

'Could you tell me then, Mr Soylu,' Suleyman persisted, 'what sort of poison you used for this purpose?'

'Cyanide.'

He might just as well have been talking about tea, ayran or some other totally innocuous substance for all the emotion that showed, or rather failed to show, on Resat Soylu's flat, brown face.

'And you obtained this very dangerous substance from where?'

For the first time the peasant smiled, large fissures appearing around his eyes and down his cheeks, like those great, dry cracks left behind by earthquakes. 'From my brother in Germany,' he said and then, amazingly, elaborated, 'like my chandelier. Germany is a great bazaar of all good things. I have never been, but my brother has lived there for ten years now.' Shaking his head against the sheer wonder of the thing, he added, 'He drives a BMW and has a German wife. Not that her people will speak to my brother.'

'Indeed.' For Suleyman, a one-word answer seemed the safest course of action at this point. Turks had been going to work in Germany for many years, and for many years had consequently come home with quality consumer goods and, occasionally, blonde-haired wives or husbands. These Europeans, although they did not always look down on their Turkish spouses themselves, usually possessed families who did that for them - people who found the Turks both primitive and backward. Suleyman's argument that the Ottomans were taking baths and writing courtly poetry when the ancestors of so many 'Hermans' and 'Dieters' were mere excrement-encrusted vassals of the Holy Roman Empire was far too vehement for the current situation, not to mention totally inaccessible to the likes of Mr Soylu.

'And your brother obtained the substance from where?' Suleyman asked, hoping to rouse Mr Soylu from his Bavarian ecstasy.

'He works at a steel plant,' Soylu said, adding proudly, 'in the Ruhr Valley. He brought it back with him because I asked him to. German cyanide kills far more pests than ours.'

'Right' Not wishing to continue with this theme of German superiority, Suleyman said, 'So does it work for other pests too?'

'I've used it for wasps, to kill their nests.' 'Was it you who killed the nest at the Emin property?'

Soylu smiled. 'Yes. That was a huge one. But I got it Tansu Hanim was very grateful.'

Suleyman took another sip from his tea glass and then placed it on the small table beside him. 'So when you eliminate these pests,' he said, 'do you ever have any poison left over at the end of the process?'

'Yes.'

'What happens to it? Do you bring it back here with you?'

Soylu smiled again and then got up and walked out into his kitchen. During the silence that wafted in in his wake, Suleyman regarded the posters of Rhineland castles that adorned every wall with a jaundiced eye. If these people would only take a little interest in their own noble past, perhaps they might be able to free themselves from, what to him, appeared to be the most awful cultural servitude.

When he returned, Soylu was carrying a large glass container that looked like something in which one might brew beer. It contained a darkish yellow liquid.

'I have all I need here,' he said as he held the vessel aloft for Suleyman to see.

The policeman walked over to the man and, taking the cork out of the top of the bottle, sniffed at the liquid inside. Bitter almonds, unmistakable.

'I take it' he said as he replaced the stopper firmly in the neck, 'that you don't carry this with you to and from your various jobs.'

'No. I decant it into smaller bottles. Raki are the best'

Suleyman went back to his seat while Mr Soylu put enough cyanide down on the floor to kill most of the inhabitants of that district.

'So when you've killed the rats or wasps' nest or whatever, if there is any poison left over . ..'.

'I leave it there,' Soylu said simply. 'All my people have greenhouses. I leave it there.'

'In old raki bottles.'

'Yes.'

Suleyman rolled his eyes to heaven in disbelief. 'Doesn't it worry you that someone might mistake it for drink?'

Soylu shrugged. ‘I hide it well and at the Emin house it is clearly marked what it is.'

A frown creased Suleyman's brow. 'Only at the Emin house? Why only there?'

Although he was obviously not terribly bothered about what he said next, Soylu exhibited just a little shame when he lowered his eyes briefly to the ground. 'I can't read or write so Miss Emin writes the labels for me. None of my other employers take as much interest in the garden as she does.'

Suleyman felt the hairs on the back of his neck rise as he asked his next question. "This is, I take it, Miss Latife Emin and not her sister Tansu?'

Soylu grinned. 'Yes,' he said, 'she just loves to tend the plants and trees, you know. A proper country girl.'

Suleyman felt the gravity of expression that overtook his face as he asked, 'And is cyanide at the Emin house now?'

'Oh, yes. Enough to kill another nest if need be. They do have a lot of problems with wasps and so that's quite possible.' He lit a cigarette and then threw the dead match down beside the bottle of cyanide. 'Just not worth bringing it back here when I've got all this lot anyway, is it?' he said as he patted the side of the sinister receptacle.

Suleyman watched, fascinated, as the gnarled peasant stroked his gently lapping personal lake of death.

Orhan Tepe, whilst not having anything against his colleague, Ìsak Çöktin, was not exactly his best friend either. And although the man was pleasant enough to pass the time of day with, being incarcerated in a hot car with him was not easy. As the sun began to set over the distant fortress of Rumeli Kavagi and both men started to contemplate a long night together, conversation finally came to a standstill.

It was impossible to deduce from Çöktin's fixed, blank expression anything of what he was thinking but Tepe's far more mobile face eloquently illustrated the strains and boredom inherent in long stretches of observation. Quite often such work would, once those being observed began to move, involve some sort of action on the part of the officers looking on. Pursuit of those moving on was quite common, as was the investigation of the property recently vacated. But not this time. The task at hand was merely to watch, take note and call in any outside activity or unusual occurrence within the property. To say that it was dull was an understatement After all, a person can only look at an old Ottoman gateway and ugly house beyond for so long.

'So what's Tansu Hanim actually like, then?' Tepe asked, for want of anything more interesting to say.

Çöktin, his eyes still fixed on the gateway, shrugged. 'I don't know.'

'Well, you met her, didn't you?'

'Yes.'

A little aggravated by his partner's short and uninterested answers, Tepe said, somewhat aggressively, 'And so?'

Turning briefly to look at the dark, annoyed man at his side, Çöktin replied, 'So she's a middle-aged woman who has a young lover, what do you want me to say?'

'It's said she's got a bad temper, that she's controlling.'

‘I met her only briefly,' Çöktin said. 'What would I know?'

Çöktin's tone, which was decidedly sulky, finally got to Tepe, who raised his voice. 'I don't know why you're so hostile about it!'

'I'm not hostile!' Çöktin said as he turned a very hostile face on his colleague. I'm as tired and bored as you are! Plus, considering the fact we've allowed Tansu Hanim to go because we have no reason to detain her, I don't actually see the point of all this.'

'But if Suleyman ordered it—'

'He ordered it under the direction of Ìkmen and we all know,' he said, his face resolving into a scowl, 'what he's like.'

Tepe frowned. 'What do you mean?'

'I mean he goes off onto his own private missions.'

'Which frequently prove to be very valuable. And if I do eventually get to work with him I will feel very honoured.' Tepe eyed Çöktin closely. 'Anyway, I thought you liked him, I thought you got on well.'

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