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The Scopas Factor
The Scopas Factor
The Scopas Factor
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The Scopas Factor

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A Hmong "story cloth," a Revolutionary War battle flag, forged Picassos and a Russian drug dealer—finding the link between these disparate elements is the challenge Mike Hegan faces in The Scopas Factor, the latest mystery from Vincent Panettiere.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherBookBaby
Release dateNov 5, 2018
ISBN9781543947717
The Scopas Factor

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    The Scopas Factor - Vincent Panettiere

    © Vincent Panettiere 2018

    Print ISBN: 978-1-54394-770-0

    eBook ISBN: 978-1-54394-771-7

    All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

    Contents

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    CHAPTER ONE

    CHAPTER TWO

    CHAPTER THREE

    CHAPTER FOUR

    CHAPTER FIVE

    CHAPTER SIX

    CHAPTER SEVEN

    CHAPTER EIGHT

    CHAPTER NINE

    CHAPTER TEN

    CHAPTER ELEVEN

    CHAPTER TWELVE

    CHAPTER THIRTEEN

    CHAPTER FOURTEEN

    CHAPTER FIFTEEN

    CHAPTER SIXTEEN

    CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

    CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

    CHAPTER NINETEEN

    CHAPTER TWENTY

    CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

    CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

    VINCENT PANETTIERE

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    I am grateful to Joan Howlett and Walter Queren for their encouragement and support as each chapter emerged. They continued to believe when I floundered. And, a special note of appreciation for Geraldine Queren who was steadfast and tireless throughout.

    I was indeed very fortunate to have Susan Hughes edit The Scopas Factor with patience and precision. Her pursuit of excellence improved the text and helped the book grow.

    I am appreciative of Guylaine Bouchard’s diligence as she reviewed, and corrected, the French phrases and words sprinkled through the text.

    Most especially I am grateful to my wife, Penny, for her love and support, enabling me to pursue my dreams—many of which have yet to be fulfilled or imagined.

    CHAPTER ONE

    BAN VINAI REFUGEE CAMP, THAILAND - 1990

    No one knew the name or age of the person they called the Mud Woman. She seemed to have been a part of the Hmong exodus from Northern Laos since the first day of their journey. None could be certain. With her dun-colored bundle she was one of many solitary, nameless people on the trek. All were fleeing the Laotian army.

    Sometimes the bundle was balanced on her head or slung over her shoulder. If anyone paid her any attention, that was the only change they saw from the start of their hurried flight to their final settlement in Ban Vinai, located some 350 miles north of Bangkok. She was just another piece in a coagulated mass of humanity.

    The woman did not speak, and no one could engage her downcast eyes long enough to pose an inquiry. However, the depth of her soul-weary sadness did not require explanation.

    There were cots and washrooms to provide shelter and warmth in a longhouse awaiting the new residents at Ban Vinai. The woman preferred a patch of dirt near the outer perimeter of the camp and settled in under the tarp rolled up in her bundle. Not until the others saw her remove some branches that had been whittled into tent pegs did she appear to be an enterprising woman, prepared for hard times.

    She trundled her way to the chow line twice a day—in the morning for a breakfast bowl of porridge and later for a dinner of noodles and vegetables courtesy of some United Nations-sponsored refugee relief committee.

    Relieved of the burden she’d carried for hundreds of miles, the woman exposed her time-worn visage, allowing all to see the impact of the pain she bore on her diminutive frame. Still, there was a vestige of energy in her eyes that belied her physical being.

    In good weather, her days were spent outside her lean-to refuge, drawing in the dirt with a wooden stick. A joyous spirit emerged as she etched in the soil, even if her life contained more misery than pleasure. She was happy with her work, as though achieving a long-suppressed mission. When the runoff after a rain erased her drawing, she would recreate the sketch in the mud. The pleasure was less apparent in those times. Worry creased her broad forehead each time she feared the image would be lost. Then she hurriedly worked the stick in the ground to hold fast the picture in her mind.

    No one realized she drew to remember, trying to keep the images alive so that one day others would know.

    Occasionally, other camp dwellers would pass to observe her concentrated efforts at replicating the original dirt drawing. From that vantage she was referenced as the Mud Woman.

    One day, as the Laotian refugees stood in the chow line snaking across the common area of the camp, they heard the word Nam burst through the low hum of conversation. Nam, Hmong for mother, did not surprise the camp residents, who were used to children calling for their mothers. No one reacted at first, being more concerned with moving forward toward the food.The word came at them again and again—Nam, Nam, Nam—containing more urgency each time, and those in line noticed the voice was not of a child, but of an older girl. This got their attention, and they turned to look while keeping their place in line.

    At last, a girl of fifteen was spotted running down a barren hillside above the feeding area. Every step she took blew up a puff of dust.

    With her arms flailing and legs splayed, the crowd of onlookers expected her to fall facedown and slide to the bottom at any moment, but the young woman stayed upright and reached the food line. Her journey was not finished, as she pushed her way through those in line with the same energy that propelled her downhill. Some thought she was deranged, and others knew she was scheming to get ahead of the line. The latter pushed back, resisting her advancement.

    Though impeded, she continued forward at a slower pace, yelling, Nam! Nam! Nam!

    The Mud Woman, until now, was absorbed in her own world. Something in the tone of those last words, whether their familiarity or anguish, caused her to turn and locate the sound.

    She dropped her plate of food. Mos! Mos! Mos! she yelled in reply.

    For several moments the others heard the staccato volley—Nam! Mos!—as the two called out to each other again and again. This continued until the young woman broke through the line and raced toward the older woman, who was running faster than anyone thought she could.

    They embraced and fell to the ground—laughing, crying, smiling, existing only for each other. The crowd was silent except for the rhythmic shuffling of feet toward the food. They realized the young woman called Mos was the Mud Woman’s daughter. Reminded that her name meant tender, they suppressed nervous laughter; the girl was anything but tender careering down the hill and plowing through the hundreds of bodies between them and the Mud Woman. One woman exposed the bruises Mos’s elbows caused as she pushed forward through the crowd.

    Several women in the camp brought plates of food to the Mud Woman’s lean-to. Others passed by and smiled at the reunited mother and daughter. Soon, Mos revealed to her mother how she had become separated from their village and hid for days from the Communist insurgents who were terrorizing and attacking any Hmong they thought had aided the Americans during the Vietnam War. Fifteen years after the war’s end, cleansing, as the repressive forces called it, remained a government priority. Mos told her mother that she had somehow managed to elude the Communist patrols and painstakingly discovered the trail to the relocation camp.

    Once the procession of well-wishers had receded, the Mud Woman began to recreate the drawing as she had practiced all these days in the camp. She wanted Mos to know of her secret.

    Over the next few months, aid workers from an NGO began an outreach program of sorts toward mother and daughter. Why did the two choose to live separate from the others? The camp was expanding with new longhouses being built. Why were they content to live outside, in all kinds of weather, by themselves?

    The Mud Woman insisted on their privacy, only venturing out into the swelling mass of refugees to stand in the food line or visit the latrine. One day she astonished an aid worker with her request for scraps of cloth and colorful thread. Mos, too, was surprised. What could those items generate? the young girl wondered.

    Soon after receiving the material, Mos’s mother began sewing. First came the green thread sewn into a series of inverted Vs. Beneath them came a blue, wavy line. Mos regarded the look of determination on her mother’s face and realized something important was being created.

    Occasionally, the Mud Woman would glance at her dirt drawing for reference. By the end of the week, Mos recoiled in horror at the message her mother had created. The young woman could not shake the image from her mind. She had lived it once. She had dreamed it daily and now saw it duplicated by her own mother!

    She was sewing an image of their old village. The inverted Vs represented the fir trees on the mountains set above the blue, wavy line of the river. This was not a landscape.

    But, why? We must not forget. But why? To make others remember.

    When Mos looked at the finished cloth, she saw the story of the massacre in her village.

    There were depictions of soldiers, their guns in black thread emitting streaks of red thread, simulating bullets tearing into villagers—both friends and relatives. She shuddered, despite the heat of the midday sun.

    Mos refused to be consumed by emotion and searched the cloth for one more image. Then she saw the massive star, stitched in white thread. Mos knew for certain that this was a true depiction of the event. Instead of an eagle on each of his shoulders, which could not be duplicated at such a scale, her mother had sewn a star, larger than any other figure on the cloth, to signify their oppressor.

    Mos knew why her mother had been relentless drawing in the dirt. It was a type of rote learning in three dimensions. She nodded in understanding as her mother rolled up the cloth.

    A few days later the older woman’s demeanor changed. While working on the cloth she seemed serene and determined; this day she was unusually agitated. Mos had never seen her mother this way during the entire time they had become reacquainted.

    Once the camp had settled for the night, the older woman opened a seam that had been added to the bottom of the tarp that served as a roof. She explained to Mos that this was a secret compartment she had created to hide the cloth. This must never be revealed to anyone, no matter the occasion or relationship.

    Even should something happen to me, her mother explained.

    Never? Mos said with teenage optimism as her mother sewed the cloth into the hiding place.

    The next day, while Mos was in the washhouse, a truck with no markings roared into the center of the camp. A white man, the gold eagles on his shoulders signifying his rank, was accompanied by six heavily armed men. They were not Thai soldiers, nor did they wear any identifiable insignia. The only distinguishing feature the men possessed was the size and lethality of their weaponry. They were mercenaries. They pushed past aid workers who tried to intervene. Villagers who happened to be blocking their path were beaten by the soldiers’ bamboo truncheons. They were a whirlwind of movement, circling the camp like a funnel cloud.

    And, like a tornado, they created havoc and were gone.

    Mos returned to the lean-to and found it flattened to the ground. The tent pegs were broken, and their meager possessions were strewn across the damp earth. She turned in a circle, squinting into the sun to see where her mother might have wandered.

    A woman about her mother’s age approached with a look of sorrow in her eyes.

    Mos learned her mother was gone, dragged from the latrine into the truck. Taken away by the man with eagles on his shoulders.

    Immediately, Mos tore through the wreckage of their campsite. Those who watched saw her examining the tarp with care. They wondered what could be important about the simple structure and wandered away before Mos found what she wanted. She was relieved to find the bulge in the seam of the tarp.

    Tom Fitzgerald was twenty-one when he first heard of the United Nations refugee aid program. Soon after graduating from a small liberal arts college in the Midwest, he discovered that a degree in sociology along with a bus ticket could get him a ride to New York City. His former college roommate, Lance Revell, held out the promise of a place to stay.

    We can bunk together. Be like old times, was the phrase Lance had written. It echoed in Fitzgerald’s head through the interminable bus ride, his beacon of optimism and encouragement. Visions of dorm life vanished as Fitzgerald made his way through the East Village section of Manhattan. Burnt-out buildings on Avenue A. Vacant lots filled with every sort of rubbish on Avenue B. By the time he reached Lance’s address, six drug dealers had stopped him with offers of narcotics he’d never heard of. In twenty minutes he’d experienced more than all his years living in his hometown of Weedley, California.

    His bunk in Lance’s place was actually a pallet on the floor of a tiny one-room apartment. There was a hot plate and a small ice box that required a block of ice every two weeks. The shower was in the kitchen sink. Lance instructed Fitzgerald on the procedure: stand in sink; pull curtain up from your feet and attach to ring in the wall; shower using the hose attached to the faucet. The idea of water containing dirt from his body parts trickling into the kitchen sink where he would go to get a glass of water convinced Fitzgerald to use the so-called French whore method: wash face, soap under arms, dab at his crotch and anus, and he was set for the day.

    The kitchen shower created a type of intimacy Tom had not known before. In the dorm, showers were down the hall, not in the kitchen. One day Lance stepped out of the sink while Tom drank a cup of coffee. Tom noticed the initials LR on Lance’s left bicep.

    What’s that? Tom asked, unable to look away.

    My initials.

    Tattoo?

    Branded.

    You mean like cattle?

    Yeah. Part of my fraternity initiation.

    Did it hurt?

    What the fuck do you think?

    Lance was the first to escape from the Avenue C apartment. One afternoon when Tom returned from job hunting, he found two men plastering the wall that burglars had sledge-hammered wide enough for their entry. Inside, Lance was packing what major possessions remained after the recent break-in. The application he’d made before graduation was accepted.

    He was off to Langley, Virginia, and CIA boot camp.

    Why? The war’s over.

    Godless Communism hung in the air as he shut the door.

    An ad in the New York Times changed the course of Tom’s life. After a cursory interview, intent on proving the applicant had a pulse beating inside a warm body, he received the requisite inoculations and was sent to Thailand.

    Tom didn’t stay in Bangkok long enough to have a bowl of noodles. He was crammed inside a land cruiser with two other UN personnel and their gear. 350 miles and eighteen hours later, Tom found himself at Ban Vinai, hungry and exhausted.

    His arrival coincided within two days of the departure of the unmarked truck carrying away Mos’s mother. At first, many of the camp’s inhabitants kept their distance. He was considered a replacement for the white-man-with-eagles who everyone remembered had raided their camp and kidnapped an old woman.

    Through a translator, Tom learned that Mos was the woman’s daughter. She was reticent, and unwilling to acknowledge her mother was gone.

    In the days that followed, Tom found himself drawn to the young woman. Whether it was out of kindness or something deeper, he couldn’t determine. At least, he hoped that she would emerge from her grief.

    What Mos admitted to herself, not to Tom or anyone else, was that her mother’s work in depicting the massacre of her village represented her prize possession. She would revere it as if it was a sacred text.

    Some day in an unknown future, the story cloth would be revealed to the world. Then, her mother’s hard work and, she presumed, her sacrifice would not be in vain.

    CHAPTER TWO

    TWENTY-FIVE YEARS LATER - ARLES, FRANCE

    The late-model, dark grey Peugeot sped down a narrow country road as it wound its way through the environs of Arles in France. The road was a slender thread penetrating vineyards that covered the countryside in a sea of green vines. Looming ahead was the cathedral built to honor an obscure saint, a gift from the grateful paysans of the region.

    The Peugeot stopped in the cathedral’s parking area. David St. Pierre, its driver, got out and scanned the distance from his position to the imposing structure, accessible only by climbing what appeared to be hundreds of steps.

    A journey of a thousand miles, David thought, resigned to the trek. He set out, unaware of the mass of people traveling in the same direction. David was a handsome man. With the chiseled features and bearing of a magazine model, he looked to be younger than his fifty years. For what he was about to encounter, he appeared confident and calm.

    When he reached the first of many steps, he noticed the multitude flocking toward the cathedral. Religious pilgrims, entranced by their mission, paid no heed to David. They walked up the steps on their knees, pausing to pray on each level. He saw that some were deformed and others crippled.

    The sight of them made David realize the consequences of what he was about to confront. He lost some of his confidence but quickened his pace. Better to get on with it. Near the last dozen steps, as sunset approached, the shadow of the cathedral’s spire loomed, menacing David. It spurred him to reach the top, open the heavy door, and slip inside.

    Inside the dimly lit cathedral he made his way toward a side aisle. He was not prepared to discover all manner and type of brace, crutch, cane, and prosthesis hanging from the walls surrounding the auxiliary altar. He regarded them with more pain than hope, even though their purpose represented the hopes of the disabled to find a cure for their infirmities.

    As he fumbled for a pack of cigarettes, David heard a quick rustling noise that fractured his reserve. He was relieved to learn the sound came from two nuns, white aprons over black habits, carrying feather dusters. One of the nuns spotted the cigarettes and admonished him with a wag of her finger. The denial of a smoke made his nerves vibrate. Once the pair rustled off, leaving him alone, his eyes, by now adjusted to the dim light, darted along the aisle, watching and waiting.

    For a brief instant a shadow passed and obliterated whatever illumination he depended on to keep him grounded. He realized someone stood close by. When the figure moved, David’s pulse eased. He waited until a person of average height was revealed, though in partial shadow. All he could see was the silhouette of a hooded figure.

    That you? David asked the obvious question to take the initiative, gain the upper hand. The person remained silent. Absurd, David thought.

    Tell The Black I’ll need more time.

    The figure responded using the lower vocal register. Time is not a commodity you can buy, like cigarettes.

    David, holding the pack of cigarettes like a talisman, stuffed them into his jacket pocket.

    Look, I’m being watched. The roads, ports . . . every mountain path is being covered.

    You know what The Black says. ‘As an eagle has sharp eyes, so the fox has swift feet.’ Use your feet or you will be praying here. The figure gestured toward the crutches.

    Maybe I can get another piece. Of equal value. Get me more time.

    You are stalling, which makes time tick by faster.

    The Hmong story cloth. Sabotka, The Black’s rival, will pay me a vast sum for the cloth. But I am loyal to The Black.

    You are a weasel. Too bad you can only be killed once.

    David hurried down the steps, unconcerned if he knocked one pilgrim to the ground or impeded the precarious equilibrium of another. He reached the car and, with trembling hands, dialed his cell phone.

    Thornie. Come down to my place at the beach. I’ll meet you there in two hours. I countered. Now I’m in danger.

    The beach is La Plage, a bistro on a side street away from tourists in Antibes, the classic French Riviera town between Nice and Cannes. A few couples remained, finishing their coffee as Thornie, David, and his wife, Alexis, sipped champagne.

    Thornie, about ten years older than David, appeared to be a proper English gentleman or a practiced poseur.

    My, what a splendid meal. Have to hand it to the French. They have a way with food,

    Thornie said, taking another sip and sitting back in his chair, assuming an avuncular pose. His reverie dissipated as he noticed the tension between David and Alexis.

    So good of you to help us celebrate. Isn’t it, Alexis?

    Twenty years younger, Alexis was the feminine version of David, with the looks of a socialite on the cover of Town and Country magazine.

    Of course. What a surprise. I never expected . . .—she searched for the right sentiment—to be celebrating our wedding anniversary with you. Such a delight.

    You’re both very kind. Nevertheless, I fear I’ve barged into your festivities.

    Nonsense, Alexis said. What brings you to Antibes?

    Nice office closed. Transferred. Thornie watched David as he seemed to fold into himself. I remember when David raved about this stunning woman he’d met. Turned out to be you, he said with faux enthusiasm.

    David raved about me? Doesn’t sound like him. When David didn’t respond, Alexis gulped some more champagne.

    Come now, Alexis. David can be quite involved when he tries.

    Thornie was concerned about Alexis’s drinking, but soon became distracted by an alluring Eurasian woman who was escorted to a nearby table by the maître d’.

    David was oblivious to his surroundings. He seemed to be wrestling with thoughts that could not be placated.

    You with us, Davey boy?

    Davey? I’ve never heard him called Davey, Alexis said.

    One of those earworms that can penetrate the obsessive mind, Thornie offered.

    You ought to know David is interested more in things than people. Works of art! Deeds of daring! Living life to the fullest! Isn’t that right . . . Davey?

    You need some black coffee, David said to Alexis.

    He is also very big at telling others what to do. Particularly me. Alexis grabbed the sleeve of a passing waiter. "Monsieur, un autre verre de champagne. Si’l vous plait."

    A waiter approached the table. Monsieur St. Pierre. Telephone for you. You may take it at the bar.

    Thornie watched David get up from the table and head for the bar. The exotic Eurasian woman’s table was empty.

    Who knew we’d be here? Alexis asked Thornie.

    The recession has not been kind to art galleries or artists for that matter. Business is a bit precarious these days. Be gentle with him, Alexis.

    I would, if he’d let me. Alexis looked for David and found him at the bar talking animatedly on the phone.

    The Black says your time has run out, the caller told David in French-inflected English.

    But . . . the other . . . surely—

    I told The Black of your bait and switch. He says the cloth is of no interest.

    David heard the dial tone and knew any further protest would be futile.

    There was an urgent need in his steps as David returned to the table. I’ve got to go away . . . out of town. On business.

    I don’t understand, Alexis said. Why are you leaving? Can’t this wait?

    For Christ’s sake, stop asking questions.

    David watched as Alexis rushed from the table in tears.

    It’s no good, Thornie. I’ve got to run. To hide and think.

    What about Alexis? Surely she’ll . . .

    David

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