He blushes.
“It wasn’t that good a kiss.”
“It was to me.”
Later, he sits on the bed and watches me dress, which makes me feel self-conscious. I keep my back to him. He reaches across and cups my breasts before my bra embraces them.
“I volunteer for this job,” he says.
“That’s very noble, but you’re not holding my breasts all day.”
I gently push his hands away and continue dressing.
“You really like me, don’t you?” he says. His big goofy grin is reflected in the wardrobe mirror.
“Don’t push it,” I warn him.
“But you do. You really like me.”
“That could change.”
His laugh isn’t entirely convincing.
We breakfast at a café on Paleisstraat near Dam Square. Blue-and-white trams clatter and fizz past the window beneath humming wires. A weak sun is barely breaking through the clouds and a wind tugs at the clothes of pedestrians and cyclists.
The café has a zinc-topped counter running the length of one side. Arranged above it is a blackboard menu and barrels of wine or port. The place smells of coffee and grilled cheese. My appetite is coming back. We order sliced meats, bread and cheese; coffee with frothed milk.
I take Dave through everything that’s happened. Occasionally he interrupts with a question, but mostly he eats and listens. This whole affair is laced with half-truths and concocted fictions. The uncertainties and ambiguities seem to outweigh the facts and they nag at me, making me fretful and uncomfortable.
I borrow his notebook and write down names.
Brendan PearlYanusPaul DonavonJulian Shawcroft
On the opposite side of the page I write another list: the victims.
Cate and Felix BeaumontHassan KhanSamira Khan
There are likely to be others. Where do I list those who fall in between, people like Barnaby Elliot? I still think he lied to me about Cate’s computer. And Dr. Banerjee, her fertility specialist. It was more than a coincidence that he turned up at my father’s birthday party.
I’m not sure what I hope to achieve by writing things down. Perhaps it will give me a fresh slant on events or throw up a new link. I have been searching for a central figure behind events but maybe that’s too simplistic a notion. People could all be linked like spokes of a wheel that only touch in the center.
There is another issue. Where was the baby—or the babies—going to be handed over? Perhaps Cate planned to take a holiday or a weekend break to the Netherlands. She would go into “labor” tell everyone she had given birth and then bring her newborn home to live happily ever after.
Even a baby needs travel documents. A passport. Which means a birth certificate, statutory declarations and signed photographs. I should call the British consulate in The Hague and ask how British nationals register a foreign birth.
In a case like this it would be much easier if the baby were born in the same country as the prospective parents. It could be a home birth or in a private house, without involving a hospital or even a midwife.
Once the genetic parents took possession of the baby nobody could ever prove it didn’t belong to them. Blood samples, DNA and paternity tests would all confirm their ownership.
Samira said Hassan was going to the U.K. ahead of her. She expected to follow him. What if that’s where they plan to take her? It would also explain why Cate gave Samira my name in case something went wrong.
“Last night you said you were giving up and going home,” says Dave.
“I know. I just thought—”
“You said yourself that these babies belong to Samira. They always have.”
“Someone killed my friend.”
“You can’t bring her back.”
“They torched her house.”
“It’s not your case.”
I feel a surge of anger. Does he really expect me to leave this to Softell and his imbecile mates? And Spijker doesn’t fill me with confidence after letting Yanus go.
“Last night you were crying your eyes out. You said it was over.”
“That was last night.” I can’t hide the anger in my voice.
“What’s changed?”
“My mind. It’s a woman’s prerogative.”
I want to say, Don’t be a fucking jerk, Dave, and stop quoting me back to myself .
What is it about men? Just when you think they’re rational members of the human race they go all Neanderthal and protective. Next he’ll be asking me how many partners I’ve had and if the sex was any good.
We’re drawing stares from other patrons. “I don’t think we should talk about it here,” he whispers.
“We’re not going to talk about it at all.” I get up to leave.
“Where are you going?”
I want to tell him it’s none of his damn business. Instead I say that I have an appointment with Samira’s lawyer, which isn’t entirely true.
“I’ll come with you.”
“No. You go and see Ruiz. He’ll appreciate that.” My voice softens. “We’ll meet up later.”
Dave looks miserable but doesn’t argue. Give him his due—he’s a quick learner.
Lena Caspar’s waiting room is being vacuumed and tidied. Magazines sit neatly stacked on a table and the toys have been collected in a polished wooden crate. Her desk is similarly neat and empty except for a box of tissues and a jug of water on a tray. Even the wastepaper basket is clean.
The lawyer is dressed in a knee-length skirt and a matching jacket. Like many women of a certain age, her makeup is applied perfectly.
“I cannot tell you where Samira is,” she announces.
“I know. But you can tell me what happened yesterday.”
She points to a chair. “What do you want to know?”
“Everything.”
The lawyer places her palms flat on the desk. “I knew something was wrong when I saw the interpreter. Samira’s English is perfect, yet she pretended not to understand what I said to her. Everything had to be translated back and forth. Samira volunteered no information without being prompted.”
“Did Yanus spend any time alone with her?”
“Of course not.”
“Did she see him?”
“Yanus took part in a lineup. She picked him out through a two-way mirror.”
“He couldn’t see Samira?”
“No.”
“Did Yanus have anything in his hands?”
She sighs, irritated at my pedantry.
I press her. “Did he have something in his hands?”
She is about to say no but remembers something. “He had a blue handkerchief. He was pushing it into his fist like a magician preparing a conjuring trick.”
How did he find Zala? Nobody knew she was at the convent except the nuns. Sister Vogel wouldn’t have given her up. De Walletjes is a small place. What did the lawyer once say to me? The walls have mice and the mice have ears.
Mrs. Caspar listens patiently while I explain what I think happened. Zala is not her concern. She has four hundred asylum seekers on her books.
“What will happen to Samira now?” I ask.
“She will be sent back to Afghanistan, which is I think a better option than marrying Yanus.”
“He is not going to marry her.”
“No.”
“He is going to find her and take her babies.”
She shrugs. How can she blithely accept such an outcome? Leaning on the windowsill, she looks down at the courtyard where pigeons peck at the base of a lone tree.
“Some people are born to suffer,” she says pensively. “It never stops for them, not for a second. Look at the Palestinians. The same is true of Afghanis and Sudanese, Ethiopians and Bangladeshis. War, famine, droughts, flood, the suffering never stops. They are made for it—sustained by it.
“We in the West like to think it can be different; that we can change these countries and these people because it makes us feel better when we tuck our own children into their warm beds with full stomachs and then pour ourselves a glass of wine and watch someone else’s tragedy unfold on CNN.” She stares down at her hands as if she despises them. “Unless we truly understand what it’s like to walk in their shoes, we should not judge people like Samira. She is only trying to save what she has left.”
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