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A Summer Revenge

Page 24

by Tom Callaghan


  But until then there was the procession of pretty girls and hopeful boys to watch, memories of my own time in the sun to recall, images of Chinara brought back as wistful pictures that brought a smile to my face. Death comes with such a final slamming of the door, the only way to continue is to look back, remember and then move forward, hoping to do your best by those who have left and those who remain.

  I thought of the nine hundred thousand dollars I’d left for Natasha to access. Not the ten million she thought she deserved, but enough to start a new life away from Tynaliev. Away from me as well, for that matter.

  I thought of Saltanat, how love seemed to elude us or just brush past us, close enough for us to turn as if the wind had touched our faces, our eyes watering as it rounded a corner and left. I hoped we’d meet again, but who knows, who ever knows for sure?

  I sat down on a bench, finding a spot where sunlight broke through the trees, felt its warmth on my face, tender as a kiss. I looked up at the mountains, their peaks wearing their usual covering of white, gleaming like freshly uncovered bones. I sat there for a long time, not moving. I was back home, with all its faults and flaws, and I knew there was nowhere else I could ever be.

  Finally, I stood up, hearing my knees creak, stretched, looked around, started to walk back to Chui Prospekt, to meet a money launderer I knew that I could bully into carrying out a criminal act for me. I had a hundred thousand dollars to send to an address in Ho Chi Minh City, an address I’d found in a dead woman’s handbag scrawled on the back of a creased photograph of an elderly couple standing behind two smiling, gap-toothed children holding hands.

  Acknowledgments

  As with A Killing Winter and A Spring Betrayal, the first two books in the Kyrgyz Quartet, A Summer Revenge owes much to many people.

  Those I’ve already thanked in earlier books, I’d like to thank once more.

  Again, Stefanie Bierwerth and her team at Quercus have given constant support and forbearance. In New York, Nathaniel Marunas and his people did the same. Encouragement came from Anthony Horowitz in London and Peter Robinson in Toronto.

  My Kyrgyz family and friends have played a huge role in helping me finish this book.

  My good friend Simon Peters has performed his usual exemplary role in pointing out all my flaws, spelling mistakes and grammatical errors: Spasibo, tovaritch!

  Finally, I want to thank my agent Tanja Howarth, whose constant work on my behalf has earned my gratitude and love.

  A note about Dubai. After almost two decades living in the UAE, I know Dubai is one of the safest, most crime-free cities in the world. Its rulers, police and people go to immense lengths to protect and serve everyone who lives there. No city, wealthy or poor, is entirely without crime, but Dubai serves as a model of safety and security. And of course this is a work of fiction.

 

 

 


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