Alibi

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Alibi Page 7

by Sydney Bauer


  So, what had started out as a squabble between Japan and China as to the sovereignty of Korea, ended in the massive annihilation of the Chinese forces when the Qing Dynasty’s foolish belief that the Chinese “strength in superior numbers” would be enough to stop the driving force of a modern Japanese military. China’s inability to embrace change, her disdain for the pro-Japanese reformists in Korea, her refusal to acknowledge the need for modernization had seen her stuck in the Third World ditch she still found herself languishing in to this very day. Peter Nagoshi was no fan of the West, but like his astute ancestors before him, he had learned how to absorb their knowledge and discern the relevant from the refuse. He was a Nagoshi after all.

  Peter poured himself another cup of coffee before contemplating the irony of it all. The head of his Chinese operations, Mr. Kwon Si, told him it was the West who had forced this problem upon them in the first place, and in many ways he was correct. It was the modern world that demanded “productivity” and “profit” but also cried out for the principles of “solidarity” and “human rights”—two philosophies that do not always sing so harmoniously together. It was true the 300 workers at Nagoshi Inc.’s Guangdong plant were overworked and underpaid. These people were largely unskilled peasants who, in the scheme of things, were fortunate to have any form of employment at all. Peter’s reformist instructions six months ago to cut salaries and increase hours, to base pay on level of productivity and to remove any workers over the age of fifty-five were proving to be extremely profitable. Output was up fifteen percent and costs reduced by twenty, with all earnings going toward the launch of their new automobile initiative—an initiative he had argued should be based in China where land was cheap and labor was industrious.

  Now Mr. Kwon, who had seemed only too happy to incorporate Peter’s plans last May (with the promise of a small commission for every percentage point of growth—and a promotion to Senior VP of Operations once his father confirmed China as their major automobile manufacturing base)—had the impudence to suggest that his changes were a mistake, a shift in perspective that only materialized when a small group of American Solidarity Global militants had decided to use Nagoshi as their latest whipping boy.

  Peter had acted quickly. He had neutralized the threat by claiming their accusations that the Chinese workers were forced to toil for over twelve hours a day for substandard pay were false—even going to such lengths as allowing three SG activists to enter their plant and interview a controlled number of workers on a specified day and time, so that they might compile their much sought after “employees’ assessment report.” He had done so well, in fact, that his father knew nothing of it. All the senior Nagoshi was shown were the productivity figures to which he had responded with a forceful, “Well done, segare.” It was the Chinese growth that had secured him the promise of the company’s US presidency after all, and there was no way he would allow Mr. Kwon’s news of Solidarity Global’s latest requests to hijack his progress.

  According to Kwon, they had requested further information regarding the hours of night shift workers and confirmation of additional pay for overtime. They had also told the Chinese manager that their report would not be discussed with Nagoshi Inc. as previously suggested, but released on their website, in the form of an international press release, without warning. In other words, they were leaving Peter no room to negotiate, and the consequences could be devastating.

  For once his hands were tied. He had thought the problem died with her—but perhaps, that had been an unwise and potentially costly presumption.

  12

  I should have never said it, thought James Matheson as his paddle sliced through the smooth silver water of the Charles River, enabling his metallic blue kayak to slide over the glassy surface at record speed. I should never have lied about Barbara. It was a mistake and it will come back to haunt me, he told himself for the hundredth time. He had suspected it from the outset, and now he felt it for sure.

  He upped his rotation, pushing his aching arms even farther, forcing his screaming shoulders to rise to a new plane of pain where his picturesque surroundings slipped past him in a blur and the burn of lactic acid sent the self-admonishment away, at least for a while. He shot under the Anderson Memorial Bridge at record speed, leaving his fellow kayak team members far behind, before at last starting to slow. He could not do this forever and eventually he would have to face what he had done—or rather failed to do in the wake of her death.

  He had spent the past six weeks convincing himself that it did not matter—that Jess was gone and would never know what had come to pass. But deep down he knew that hiding from the truth was not the answer, and at the very least he should honor her memory by telling the police what he knew.

  James lifted his paddle from the water and allowed the kayak to glide. He closed his eyes and tilted his neck backward, feeling the icy wind bite at the perspiration on his brow and sting the reality of the situation into his brain. He went over that night again, wondering if anyone could have picked up their connection. If anyone could sense, feel, see what they had meant to each other purely by their proximity in a large but crowded room. The secrecy had been difficult from the outset, especially in those early days when he could think of nothing else. But it was as she wanted, and so he had obliged, for she was strong and beautiful and persuasive and in the end he knew she had been right.

  He took a breath, his brain now trying to focus on the one immediate priority he knew he had to face—that if the police came to question him, his alibi would not stick. He knew this and yet was still afraid to come forward and tell them the truth about what she had meant to him. For when it came down to it, he was honest enough to admit, he was terrified beyond all imagination that his “perfect” life would end.

  James Matheson’s privileged existence had started the minute he was born. He grew up the only child in a reasonably happy home, spent summers at the Cape and winters in Aspen and attended the best private schools his affluent parents could afford. His parents had an unusual relationship in that they were still together but had lived apart at various intervals to further their respective careers. In fact, when he was twelve he had moved to Australia with his mother who was offered the chance to study for a doctorate in psychiatry at the respected University of New South Wales.

  In Sydney he attended an exclusive boys’ school, lived in a harborside home and trained with some of the best swim coaches in the country. He spent his mornings at squad, his weekdays studying to get the grades required to gain international admission to Deane and his weekends catching waves, playing rugby, downing schooners and chasing some of the prettiest girls on the face of the planet. As soon as he finished his Higher School Certificate, scoring a near perfect 99.9, he made the trip back to his father’s home in Brookline where he took up residence in the renovated pool house. His mother stayed on in Sydney, making regular trips to the US, her career having soared to the point where she was currently considered one of the most experienced psychiatrists in the South Pacific region.

  Since graduating with an economics degree at Deane, he had breezed through the first two years of law, slid through three “appropriate” relationships with attractive, intelligent and “connected” girls, achieved regular personal best times in the pool and kicked ass on the river in his blessed blue kayak. His life was, in a word, perfect. It was as if his own personal screenplay had been written even before he was conceived. And he had made sure that it never wavered from the script; in fact he had embellished it with overachievements—personally, academically, athletically.

  And then he had met her, Jess Nagoshi, the girl who entered his world like an unexpected summer storm and changed his life forever. She was like no one he had met before—and most likely would ever meet again.

  James shut his eyes once again as he felt the anger well up inside him—the now familiar heat of rage rising from the dead weight in his stomach to constrict the breathing in his chest. It is the ultimate paradox, he though
t, the fact that on one hand he knew what he had to do—what a man such as he was meant to do—and on the other was hesitating for fear of upsetting the balance of his predictably flawless existence. A catch-22 with the best of them. A lose/lose when all he had ever known was win/win and win again.

  But in the end he realized there was only one answer, only one way to save himself from a life of never-ending regret. And so he turned his kayak around and headed back to the Deane University boat shed, wincing as his now stiff limbs cried out in protest. And then he picked up the pace . . . one, two, one, two . . . until his brain was doused in the comfort of the mind-numbing repetition and his body comforted by the growing sensation of pain.

  Six months earlier

  “Are you trying to set some kind of record?” she had asked. They were the first words she had ever spoken to him, in that calm, inquisitive voice.

  He had not even noticed her. It was early, before seven, and he had just returned to the boat shed following a solo paddle down the river.

  He loved this time of morning, the solitude of dawn, those moments between darkness and light when, somehow satisfied with their allocated allotment, the shadows gave way to a rising sun and the ever-promising possibilities of what lay ahead.

  “I’m sorry?” he said, squinting up the levee to where she sat, knees to her chest, a sketchbook and pencil discarded beside her. “You took it out pretty hard this morning,” she said, “like you were in a hurry, running to, or away, from something.”

  “It’s called training,” he said, placing his kayak and paddle on the rack before grabbing a towel from his gym bag. “The Compton Cup is in a couple of weeks so . . .”

  “So you like to win,” she interrupted.

  “I, ah . . . I suppose I do. Anything wrong with that . . . um . . . ?”

  “Jessica.” She smiled. “And no, there is nothing wrong with that, James Matheson, just so long as you gain more than the kudos. You know, so that it makes a difference,” she said bringing her palm to her chest. “In here.”

  He looked at her then, not knowing what in the hell to say. She was so still, so perfect that she might have formed the cen terpiece of some classic Asian masterpiece.

  “Do I know you?” he asked, realizing she had referred to him by name.

  “No. I come here mornings, you know, to sketch the dawn. I’m studying Renoir and he was a master at light and how it soaks the world in color and clarity.”

  “You an art major?” he asked, putting his towel around his waist from some instinctive need to cover himself in front of her.

  “No, pre-law actually, the art is a welcome diversion. My father is John Nagoshi,” she said matter-of-factly, like it was part of her makeup—just as she had black hair, brown eyes, straight teeth and long, porcelain-skinned legs.

  “Why do you like being alone so much?” she asked, surprising him again with her frankness.

  “Who says I like to be . . . ?”

  “Of course you do. That’s why you kayak and swim and spend so much time sitting in the back row at tutorials.”

  “Maybe all the front-row seats are taken,” he said, now walking up the bank toward her.

  “No. They’re not,” she said.

  And then she said nothing, as if waiting for him to go on.

  “I like the water,” he said after a time, perhaps trying to justify himself. “It makes me feel . . .”

  “At one with the world, I know,” she interrupted him again. “Did you know water is one of the five Japanese Godai, the great elements of life? It represents all things flowing, formless and constant—like our emotions, our adaptability, our suppleness and even our magnetism.”

  “Ah . . . no, I didn’t.”

  “Well, you do now.”

  He stood there for a moment, now right in front of her, the only sounds coming from the water that dripped from his body onto the fallen maple leaves that covered the levee in a choppy sea of red.

  “I have to go,” she said, grabbing her things and rising to her feet so quickly that his natural impulse was to take a step back. Which he did not do.

  She smiled at him then and he found himself studying her—her flawless skin, perfect narrow face and clear almond eyes. And then he opened his mouth to ask her something—a question he knew he needed to ask before his brain even registered exactly what it might be—only to have her cut him off again.

  “Don’t worry,” she said as she raised her slender right arm and flicked a random fallen leaf from his left shoulder. “I’ll be back. This was nice.” And then she turned and started walking up the hill.

  “I am glad to finally meet you, James Matheson,” she said without turning around. “You are just as I expected.”

  13

  “Jesus Christ, Frank,” said Joe Mannix, turning to face his detective partner who was bent over and seated next to him on the plush purple sofa just outside of Dean Brian Johns’ expensively decorated office. “What the hell are you doing?”

  Detective Frank McKay tilted his neck and looked up at his boss with his usual “no capisce” expression as he retrieved the red tartan lunch box from his faux leather briefcase and proceeded to open it up.

  “What?” said McKay, proceeding to undo the neatly applied cling wrap on his tuna salad sandwich. “Didn’t you hear the bell, Chief? It’s lunchtime. The Dean’s secretary said he’d be at least fifteen minutes. You know what I’m like if I miss a meal, boss. And tracking down this kid could take all afternoon.”

  “For Christ’s sake, McKay. The bell wasn’t meant for you. You’re a detective, not a freshman whose mom still packs his lunch in some quaint little carry case. And it smells like shit by the way. So just can it, okay?”

  “All right already,” said McKay. And Joe knew he had gone too hard on the annoyingly endearing detective who usually amused Joe with his unconventional take on “appropriate.” But he guessed Frank knew his short temper had more to do with this case than with the tuna because he packed up the fish and put it away without another word.

  They waited a full twenty minutes, listening to Brahms, Handel or one of those other European geniuses whose music seemed to go on forever. And then, when Johns was finally available, waited a further fifteen while he consulted once again with Deane’s legal advisors before giving his official permission for them to reenter the grounds and further question the students.

  Once that was done—and Mannix and McKay reinforced their promise not to “request that any student accompany them off campus without full permission from the school and the said students’ parents or guardians”—they were allowed to check with administration as to the whereabouts of one James Matheson who, it was soon revealed, was currently at kayak training and could most likely be contactable once he returned to the campus boathouse.

  “Do you want me to leave a message for him to come to the Dean’s office as soon as practice is over?” asked Johns’ administration coordinator, a tall, thin, pinched-faced woman whose hair was the color of a rusty drainpipe.

  “No thanks,” said Mannix, preferring to catch the boy off guard. “If you could give us directions we’ll save Mr. Matheson the trip and meet him at the boat shed.”

  “It’s a boathouse, not a shed, Detective, and you may proceed as you wish,” said the woman with a fresh squeeze of lemon on her lips. “Here’s a campus map. The boathouse is on the southern side of the campus past the Medical School and the College of Humanities. But if you intend on walking I’d hurry. Practice finishes at one, and Mr. Matheson will most likely want to shower before his afternoon classes.”

  “He lives on campus?” asked McKay.

  “No, in Brookline. But the sports complex on the western side of the campus has an extensive shower area where many of our athletes like to freshen up after training.”

  “Right,” said Frank. “Well, that’s a lot of helpful information Mrs. . . .”

  “It’s Ms. Humfries—with an ‘f,’ ” said “Lemons.”

  “Well, thank y
ou, Ms. Humfries with an ‘f,’ ” returned Frank with a smile. “It’s been a pleasure.”

  Humfries, perhaps taken a little aback by Frank’s impressive manners, also managed a smile—at least Joe thought it was a smile—barely one notch up from a wince.

  “Not a problem, Detective,” she said. “And please don’t hesitate to call if there is anything else you require.”

  “Will do,” said McKay who gave Ms. Humfries another appreciative nod before following his boss out of the office.

  “I think you might have made yourself a friend, Frank,” said Joe, now realizing he was smiling as well.

  “Nah,” said McKay. “I just figure a woman like that goes about her job professionally and efficiently, day in day out, without so much as a thank-you. She’s just looking for a little respect.”

  “Aren’t we all, Frank?” said Joe, himself now grateful for Frank McKay’s unique view on life. “Aren’t we all?”

  The kid was on a soapbox—literally, on a soapbox. It even had the branded logo of “Imperial Leather” on its side, and Joe guessed his elevated position was not so much so that he could be heard—because his bullhorn speaker was taking care of that—but more so that he could be seen.

  “What the hell is going on there?” asked Frank, who had talked his boss into grabbing two coffees and a matching pair of doughnuts at the campus canteen before striding south across the dewy emerald lawns of Deane.

  “Some sort of rally,” said Mannix, his breath blowing clouds of condensation into the chilly fall air. “Check out the master of ceremonies.” Joe stopped to look at the freckle-faced kid on the soapbox. “He can’t be more than . . .”

 

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