( 16 )
The flight to Hong Kong was delayed, and Ava didn’t get into Chek Lap Kok until almost two o’clock. She left a message for Uncle on his cellphone, saying she couldn’t meet him for lunch. Then she went through the in-transit gate and headed directly to the Cathay Pacific business lounge. She didn’t turn on her phone until she was inside; she had missed three incoming calls, from her mother, Maria, and Uncle. She saved the first two messages without listening to them and went directly to his. He just said, “I got your message. Call me.”
“Wei.”
“It’s Ava. I’ve finally landed.”
“You missed a good lunch,” he said. “The flight to Surabaya is on time?”
“Yes, it is. Uncle, did Lourdes tell you I called the apartment earlier, before I went to the airport?”
“She did. I thought it was for the same reason.”
“No, I need some cover and I’d like to use the business card from Dynamic Accounting. Please call them for me and let them know I’m going to be in Surabaya trying to meet with Andy Cameron at Bank Linno. My story is that we represent a Hong Kong investor who is looking at putting some money into East Java and we thought it might be wise to hook up with a local bank. You never know, Cameron or someone from the bank might call them to confirm.”
“It won’t be a problem.”
“Great.”
“Is that all?”
No, she thought, I’d like to know what you were doing this morning. “Yes, that’s all,” she said.
“Be careful over there.”
“I’m trying to meet a banker, that’s all.”
“That is what Lam started off doing.”
“Enough said. I’ll be careful, and if I need Perkasa I won’t hesitate to reach out for him.”
“He is waiting.”
“That’s good to know.”
“Keep me up to date on things.”
“As always,” she said.
As Ava ended the call she thought about phoning Sonny and then decided against it. He’d said he would call her when he knew something. There was no need to pester him.
The Cathay lounge had a noodle bar, and Ava ordered a bowl of rice noodles with har gow. As she waited, she listened to her mother’s message. Marcus had called her with the news about the wedding, and Jennie could barely contain her glee. Ava’s presence and role at the wedding would be more public validation than their second family had ever received. “You may be the one standing next to the bride, but everyone at that wedding is going to know that you are my daughter. I might as well be standing there myself,” she said. Her father had obviously done a good selling job.
The voicemail from Maria was shorter. “I love you so much and I miss you so much. Hurry home.”
It was the middle of the night in Toronto, safe enough to call them both and leave messages without worrying about their answering. “Mummy, I am very proud to be your daughter, and when I’m at the wedding I’m going to make sure everyone there knows that.” Then, to Maria, “I miss you too.” Embarrassed by her display of sentiment, Ava said under her breath, “That’s enough of that for this trip.”
The flight to Indonesia was four and half hours, landing her at Juanda International Airport on time at seven thirty-five. It was another new airport, built for efficiency, and Ava could have cleared Customs and Immigration and been in a taxi within fifteen minutes if she hadn’t needed to buy a visa. Unlike most other countries, Indonesia made visitors buy visas when they arrived. It was a slow process but thankfully a short line. Still, it took twenty minutes before she had a seven-day visa stapled into her passport for a cost of ten U.S. dollars.
She stepped outside the terminal into a beautiful evening, temperature in the mid-twenties, a light breeze. She got into the taxi line and found herself surrounded by smokers. The smell of cloves wafted from their cigarettes — she had forgotten about that Indonesian habit. Ava bypassed one taxi when she saw the driver was smoking, and got happily into the next, which had a big no-smoking sign on its rear window.
“The Hotel Majapahit,” she said. “How long?”
“About thirty minutes.”
She waited for the usual caveat about traffic but there wasn’t any, because there wasn’t any need. The cab drove the entire distance at the posted speed. Ava began to wonder if she was actually in an Asian city.
She knew Surabaya had more than three million people and was the second-largest city in Indonesia. It just didn’t feel like it. First there was the relative lack of traffic, and they seemed to be driving through quiet residential areas. Ava kept waiting for the downtown skyscrapers to appear, for the wall-to-wall shops, the big hotel complexes. It wasn’t until twenty-five minutes into their drive that they began to appear, though in more modest forms than in many other major cities she’d been to.
The driver pointed out the hotel before she saw it. “The Majapahit . . . It’s a hundred years old,” he said.
It was already dark, and the floodlit hotel front, all white marble, glass, and dark wood, shone like something out of a dream. As they eased into the driveway, the sprawling gardens became visible. A uniformed doorman came down the steps to greet her. Ava tried to wave off his help, but he either didn’t speak English or didn’t care. He took both of her bags and led her into the lobby.
Everywhere she looked was marble and a mixture of rich woods. Ceiling fans churned overhead, more ornamental than functional, for she could feel the snap of air conditioning. A stairway carpeted in a deep dark blue slashed with bright gold flowers led from the lobby up to the second floor.
Ava loved hotels that had character, and the Majapahit’s elegant colonial style had as much as she had ever seen. She had a standard garden-terrace suite on the third floor. The room was immense, more than forty square metres, she figured, and there was a marvellous sense of balance between the furnishings, the decorative touches, and the gleaming teak floors. The furniture was made of a mixture of hardwoods, mainly mahogany, she thought. Two large windows framed the far side of the room, their wooden shutters opening onto the gardens below. A ceiling fan turned slowly above a giant bed with a large wooden headboard and a sea of crisp white linens and duvet. She threw herself on the bed and sank deep into the covers.
From the bed she could see the bathroom’s marble floors, sink, and tub, set off by gold faucets. And tucked in the corner was a modern shower stall with a head that looked as if it could adjust to multiple settings. She glanced across the room at a chest of drawers. On top there was a hot water Thermos, cups and saucers that had to be fine bone china, and an array of teas and instant coffees. No Italian espresso machine.
Perfect, she was thinking, when she heard her phone ring. She hadn’t even realized it was on. She leapt off the bed, grabbed her bag, and pulled out the phone. The caller ID showed the Indonesian country code. Perkasa?
“Ava Lee.”
“Ava, this is John Masterson.”
“Who?”
“John Masterson. I’m a friend of Johnny Yan and Henry Pang. Johnny emailed me that you were coming here and that you’re a good friend of his. He gave me this phone number.”
“Ah, yes.”
“I didn’t know when you were arriving, so I thought I’d check.”
“I’m here now. I’ve just arrived, actually.”
“Where are you staying?”
“The Majapahit.”
“Great choice.”
“Yes, I think it is.”
“Look, have you had dinner?”
She hesitated and then saw no reason to lie. “No.”
“Neither have I. I’ve been waiting for my wife to get back from a business trip to Jakarta, but it doesn’t look like she’ll be here for another hour or two. How would you like to get together?”
“Truthfully, John, I’m not sure I really want to eat.”
“A drink, then? I don’t get a chance to meet many other Canadians here, and certainly none that are friends of friends.”
He’s pushy, Ava thought, but polite pushy, Canadian pushy. And he’s a friend of Johnny’s. “Sure, why not?”
“Good. There’s a very good bar in the lounge at your hotel. Why don’t I meet you there? I only live about ten minutes away.”
“Call my room when you arrive and I’ll come down. I’m in 313.”
“See you soon.”
That was silly of me, Ava thought as she hung up the phone. All she had wanted to do was order room service, have a bath, and then start getting her thoughts into the day ahead. She looked at her clothes. She was still wearing her Adidas training pants and a Giordano T-shirt. I better change, she thought, as much out of respect for the hotel as for Masterson.
She washed quickly, unpacked her travel bag, and was just putting her cufflinks in when the room phone pealed. He hadn’t been kidding about ten minutes. “Be right down,” she said.
When Ava exited the elevator, she almost ran into a man who turned out to be John Masterson. He was standing by the doors talking comfortably to someone who looked like security. He was of moderate height and build, with short brown hair and pale blue eyes. He was wearing jeans and a short-sleeved black linen shirt.
“Are you John?” she asked.
“And you must be Ava.”
“Pleased to meet you,” she said, extending a hand.
“And you,” he said, gently shaking it. “The lounge is right over there.”
They sat on either side of a small round table. Masterson leaned back in his chair and raised a hand over his head for a waiter. “I’m having beer. What would you like?”
“White wine — something dry, not too fruity,” Ava said.
“They have a great burgundy.”
“That will do fine.”
The waiter approached the table, his head slightly lowered. “Pak John, what can I get for you?”
“San Miguel, and a glass of the Boyer Martenot Meursault for Ibu Ava.”
“They obviously know you here,” Ava said when the waiter left.
“It’s one of the better places in town to hang out, and to meet girls. Before I was married I was a regular. The restaurant on the second floor, Sarkies, is also one of the best in the city. You’ll have to try it. It’s sort of a combination of Chinese and very good seafood.”
“He called you Pak, and you referred to me as Ibu.”
“It’s very common here, a form of respect. I could have referred to you as Bu, so expect to hear that as well. If you’re talking to a female friend or someone like the desk clerk, you’d use the more casual Mbak, and if it’s a man it would be Mas.”
“Thank you, that’s good to know. You’ve been living here for a while, I gather.”
“Seven years.”
“How did that happen?”
He shrugged and then smiled. “I sort of fell into it. When I graduated from the University of Toronto, I joined the Commonwealth Bank entry program. That’s where I met Johnny and Henry. I’d been with the bank for just about five years when I came to Asia for the first time. My older brother was running a party boat out of Phuket, and my intention was to help him a bit and have a hell of a holiday.” The smile turned into a big grin. “I never went back to the bank. In fact, I didn’t even go back to Canada for three years.”
“Johnny said you were in the crab business. How did you get from a party boat in Phuket to the crab business in Surabaya?”
Their drinks arrived; Masterson’s beer in a glistening bottle, a slice of lime wedged in its throat, and Ava’s wine in a glass filled almost to the rim. She took a sip. The waiter hovered, looking down at her. “It’s wonderful,” she said.
“The twists and turns of my business career in Asia are actually boring. I’m more interested in what you’re doing here,” Masterson said when they were alone again.
“Business.”
“We don’t get that many Westerners coming through here, and especially not many Canadians. Despite the city’s size, we are a bit of a backwater that way. Most of the Canucks I see are either on their way to Bali or coming back from Bali. You’re not going to Bali, are you?”
“I have no plans to.”
“It is gorgeous, and worth seeing if you can put up with the Australians,” he said, smiling again.
“Like I said, I have no plans to go to Bali.”
“Johnny wrote that you’re an accountant, like us.”
He was going to keep asking questions, Ava knew, and she decided she might as well rehearse the story she intended to spin to the bank. “Yes, I am. I’m here representing a firm out of Hong Kong that has a client who has an interest in expanding his investment portfolio.”
“In Surabaya?”
“No, in the Bali area, actually. The client specializes in tourist resorts — three- and four-star mainly, geared towards Hong Kong and Chinese customers. He has several sites in Thailand, one in the Philippines, and now he wants to look at Indonesia.”
“I thought you said you weren’t going to Bali.”
“I’m not. I’m here strictly to assess the investment environment and to help find him a local bank if he decides he wants to come here.”
“Do you have a bank in mind?”
Ava paused, the question left hanging. “Several,” she finally said.
“I bank at the East Java.”
“That’s not on my list. One that is,” she said, deciding it was time to stick her neck out just a little, “is Bank Linno.”
“Linno? They don’t have much of a presence here.”
“Our Hong Kong office said the president is a Brit. They have a weakness for British bankers.”
“Andy Cameron wouldn’t like being called a Brit.”
“You know him?”
“Of course.”
“Of course?” Ava asked, starting to realize that leaving her room hadn’t been such a bad idea.
“Like I said, this is a bit of a backwater, and the expatriate community isn’t that large. We tend to run into each other and end up socializing. I mean, who do you think goes to a Robbie Burns dinner in Surabaya? Who do you think celebrates Christmas? Not the ninety-nine point nine percent Muslim population.” He lowered his voice and leaned closer to her. “And before I was married, I did the single-guy thing with Andy.”
“So Andy — Mr. Cameron — is single?”
“Forget the ‘Mr. Cameron.’ It doesn’t suit him, and yes, he is single. He wasn’t when he got here, but his wife lasted less than a year before heading back to Scotland with their three daughters. Andy fell into the Asian honey trap, and he’s still in it.”
“So he likes the girls?”
“Oh yes, he does indeed, and the girls like Andy. And why wouldn’t they? He’s got money, he’s a Westerner, and he’s single. He can take his pick, and he isn’t shy about enjoying a variety. They come and go about as often as he changes socks. Although I do have to say that his taste leaves something to be desired. In fact he stopped getting invited to some functions because of the girls he was bringing along. Not all cross-cultural encounters are successful, and no matter how badly you want it to work, an Indonesian working girl with her breasts half-hanging out of her dress, her skirt four inches above her knee, and tattoos on her shoulder blades doesn’t quite fit in at the British consulate’s summer fete.”
“Charming.”
“Actually he does have charm, in a sly kind of way. He’s quick to smile, Andy is, and the girls love that. And he’s very confident, to the point of being almost over-the-top cocky. He thinks a lot of himself.”
“How did he end up in Surabaya?”
“Who really knows? He says he was recruited, that he was working for a Scottish bank in Rome and was hired to come here.”
Ava had finished her wine. Masterson saw her empty glass and then drained his beer. “Another?”
“Sure.”
Masterson held his bottle in the air. The waiter was at the table in a flash, taking the bottle and picking up her glass. “Another round,” Masterson said.
“How old is Andy?”
“Late thirties, I would guess, though he’s starting to look older. He isn’t that tall, maybe five six. When he first arrived here, he was whippet thin, or maybe I should say ‘weasel thin,’ because that’s what my wife thinks he looks like. It’s his face — it sort of comes to a point, you know, and it’s a bit long for his body. He’s got a thin nose that sticks out as if he’s perpetually sniffing at something.”
“That doesn’t sound very attractive.”
“It wasn’t so bad when he was thin, but his lifestyle has wreaked havoc with his body. He’s developed this rather large, firm, round belly,” he said, patting his own wryly. “I have one too, but I’m tall enough that it gets lost in the shuffle. Andy isn’t so lucky. And what makes it worse is that he still insists on wearing tight shirts. He’s got a bit of an issue with his self-image. During the week he’s in banker suits, but on weekends and party nights he’s in ripped jeans and some damn designer shirt made for someone who’s fit and in his twenties.”
Another San Miguel and glass of Meursault were placed on the table. Ava felt her tummy rumble, and the idea of having dinner with Masterson suddenly became appealing. Before she could speak, his phone rang.
“Hi, babe.” He listened intently for a moment and then said, “Okay, see you at home.”
“Your wife?”
“Yeah, she’s back.”
Ava could feel that he was anxious to go. “Is she Indonesian?”
“Yeah. We’ve been married about three years. She runs an import business. I met her here actually, upstairs at Sarkies. Love at first sight. We were married in Toronto — not that we had a choice. Despite how tolerant this country is, it still wouldn’t have gone down too well, her marrying a Christian.”
“I’d like to meet her sometime.”
“You’re here for another day or two?”
“I think so.”
“Well, we can have dinner.”
“Okay. Just let me know where and when.”
Masterson took a deep swig of his beer, and Ava knew she wouldn’t have his attention for much longer.
“John, tell me, what would be the best way for me to approach Andy Cameron?”
“You really want to do business with his bank?”
“The Hong Kong client will be upset if I don’t at least make the effort to meet with him.”
“I’ll call him for you.”
“You would?”
“Sure.”
“That would be great. Where are their offices?”
“Just around the corner from here, near Tunjungan Plaza. No more than a five-minute walk.”
“What will you tell him?”
“What do you want me to tell him?”
“That I’d appreciate a meeting — informal or formal, it makes no difference — and the sooner the better, of course.”
“Okay, I’ll handle it. I’ll call him first thing in the morning and then get back to you.”
“Thanks.”
“My pleasure.”
Masterson finished his second beer and then raised his hand towards the waiter, making a signing motion.
“No, please, let me look after the bill,” Ava said.
“Okay,” he said quickly, and stood, ready to leave.
Ava wasn’t used to men letting her pick up a cheque without some fuss. She also wasn’t accustomed to their running out on her.
“So you’ll call me in the morning?” she asked.
“You got it,” he said as he headed for the exit.
The Scottish Banker of Surabaya
Ian Hamilton's books
- As the Pig Turns
- Before the Scarlet Dawn
- Between the Land and the Sea
- Breaking the Rules
- Escape Theory
- Fairy Godmothers, Inc
- Father Gaetano's Puppet Catechism
- Follow the Money
- In the Air (The City Book 1)
- In the Shadow of Sadd
- In the Stillness
- Keeping the Castle
- Let the Devil Sleep
- My Brother's Keeper
- Over the Darkened Landscape
- Paris The Novel
- Sparks the Matchmaker
- Taking the Highway
- Taming the Wind
- Tethered (Novella)
- The Adjustment
- The Amish Midwife
- The Angel Esmeralda
- The Antagonist
- The Anti-Prom
- The Apple Orchard
- The Astrologer
- The Avery Shaw Experiment
- The Awakening Aidan
- The B Girls
- The Back Road
- The Ballad of Frankie Silver
- The Ballad of Tom Dooley
- The Barbarian Nurseries A Novel
- The Barbed Crown
- The Battered Heiress Blues
- The Beginning of After
- The Beloved Stranger
- The Betrayal of Maggie Blair
- The Better Mother
- The Big Bang
- The Bird House A Novel
- The Blessed
- The Blood That Bonds
- The Blossom Sisters
- The Body at the Tower
- The Body in the Gazebo
- The Body in the Piazza
- The Bone Bed
- The Book of Madness and Cures
- The Boy from Reactor 4
- The Boy in the Suitcase
- The Boyfriend Thief
- The Bull Slayer
- The Buzzard Table
- The Caregiver
- The Caspian Gates
- The Casual Vacancy
- The Cold Nowhere
- The Color of Hope
- The Crown A Novel
- The Dangerous Edge of Things
- The Dangers of Proximal Alphabets
- The Dante Conspiracy
- The Dark Road A Novel
- The Deposit Slip
- The Devil's Waters
- The Diamond Chariot
- The Duchess of Drury Lane
- The Emerald Key
- The Estian Alliance
- The Extinct
- The Falcons of Fire and Ice
- The Fall - By Chana Keefer
- The Fall - By Claire McGowan
- The Famous and the Dead
- The Fear Index
- The Flaming Motel
- The Folded Earth
- The Forrests
- The Exceptions
- The Gallows Curse
- The Game (Tom Wood)
- The Gap Year
- The Garden of Burning Sand
- The Gentlemen's Hour (Boone Daniels #2)
- The Getaway
- The Gift of Illusion
- The Girl in the Blue Beret
- The Girl in the Steel Corset
- The Golden Egg
- The Good Life
- The Green Ticket
- The Healing
- The Heart's Frontier
- The Heiress of Winterwood
- The Heresy of Dr Dee
- The Heritage Paper
- The Hindenburg Murders
- The History of History