No Right Way

It’s the fall of 2015. The civil war in Syria is at its peak. Forced to flee from her home town south of Aleppo, schoolteacher Rima Ahmadi longs to start a new life in Turkey. Instead she’s stuck in a crowded refugee camp, picking fruit for meager wages. Then Ahmadi’s tentmate Zada is murdered. Ahmadi is determined to seek justice—she knows Zada had wanted to help their fellow refugees. The one person she can turn to: Valentin Vermeulen.

The United Nations fraud investigator is in Turkey to make sure UN refugee aid is being used properly. Ahmadi’s plight proves it’s not. Oversight or organized crime? Vermeulen and Ahmadi team up to find answers, including what happened to Zada. While getting shot at goes beyond Vermeulen’s job description, he can’t walk away when someone is taking money from people who’ve lost everything. But the deeper he and Ahmadi dig, the smaller their chances of getting out alive…

Finalist—2020 Spotted Owl Award

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Praise for No Right Way

This is one fine thriller, loaded with good writing, interesting people, insider dope, and oblique humor that has one chuckling even as the tension mounts…This is a real winner.“—Booklist Online 9/9/19

“If you’ve been looking for crime fiction with a global twist, you’ll want to follow Valentin Vermeulen, the UN investigator featured in NO RIGHT WAY, the latest international suspense novel from Michael Niemann.”—Austin Camacho, Author of the Hannibal Jones mystries and the Stark and O’Brian adventures

“[O]nly by reading it will you get Niemann’s trademark thrills, and vicariously experience Vermeulen’s love of good food and drink (there is a drinking scene that particularly stands out), and of course, a good mystery.”—Alison McMahan, film maker and author of The Saffron Crocus.

“Niemann’s memorable fourth Valentin Vermeulen thriller…blends an unusual locale with an appealing, relatable hero while drawing attention to the plight of refugees. Readers will look forward to Vermeulen’s next assignment.”—Publishers Weekly 4/3/2019

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Getting rid of the woman’s body turned out to be harder than Yesim Yaser had expected. It wasn’t the size. She could have carried it on her own. It was a question of finding the right spot. She’d told her brother to drive to the edge of the vineyard, hoping they could dump it there between the grapevines. But, seeing how the road was closer than they remembered, she hesitated. Any car driving by the next morning would see the body. And the refugees picking grapes, they’d recognize her too.

Her brother, the driver, stopped the car, its headlights illuminating the scene. Half a row of grapevines had been cleared away and the dirt was churned already. A couple of shovels still lay on the ground. She told the young guy, Korun, to do the digging. He was none too happy about it, mumbling something about always ending up with the shit jobs. She ignored him. She was in charge and her brother thought manual labor was beneath him. The young guy grabbed a shovel. It shouldn’t take very long. The body was emaciated.

The first strike into the dirt ended with a premature thud. Not a rock. Something woody. Korun kicked away the dirt. A root. He moved a couple of feet and gave it another shot. Same result. After the third try he stopped. Whoever had removed the grapevines had just hacked the trunks off and left the roots in the dirt, figuring there was no reason to do all that hard work since they’d plant new seedlings and could let the old roots rot. That didn’t help Korun. The roots formed a subterranean web. He needed an axe instead of a shovel.

Her brother said something about using the backhoe they’d seen parked on the other end of the vineyard. Typical. Anything with a motor and he was on it. Yaser told him to stay put. Driving the backhoe here and digging a hole would make a big racket and wake up the refugees in their tents. Korun leaned on the shovel and watched them argue.

The woman had struggled, but it was nothing Korun couldn’t handle. Even if she’d been at her prime, she wouldn’t have stood a chance against the three of them. As it was, it only took Korun to finish the job. That’s how weak she was, picking grapes every day and not getting a whole lot to eat. She must have been pretty once. Back when she lived in Aleppo and did whatever women like her did in Aleppo. But those days were long gone. She’d looked gaunt when they grabbed her at the store. Her eyes were dull with resignation and fear, like those of the other refugees.

Yaser made a decision. It didn’t involve a backhoe or digging a hole, which improved Korun’s mood. They got back in the car, her brother behind the steering wheel, his usual spot, Yaser in the passenger seat. The young guy sat in the back next to the dead woman. They drove toward the border. An easy drive, a little less than five miles. The distance wasn’t the issue. It was the fighting on the Syrian side. Plenty of stray bullets landed in Turkey. Especially at night, when all kinds of patrols were afoot.

A mile before the border crossing, they turned east onto a dirt road. Her brother switched off the headlights. Which meant he hit every pothole. Even in a Mercedes, the bumpy ride tossed the dead body against Korun. She turned around. In the light from the dashboard, she saw him making a face. Strange. He had no compunction killing her, but he couldn’t stand sitting next to a corpse.

The car reached a narrow tarred road and they turned south again. They were close to the border now. The shadows of olive trees looming to their left. The border lay just beyond them. They stopped. Yaser told Korun to carry the woman across the border and drop her. Another dead refugee. Not a Turkish concern. Korun wasn’t so sure about that, saying that those stray bullets scared him. She told him not to get hit. He shrugged, pulled the dead woman from the car, took her by the wrists and dragged her past the olive trees.

He’d passed three rows when the tak-tak-tak of an AK-47 surprised them. She saw him dropping to the ground. She slid down on her seat. Her brother did the same. At least the Mercedes had enough steel in it to offer some protection. Korun disappeared from view. She was tempted to turn on the headlights to see where he was headed, but she didn’t. It’d only make them a target. The hellish firefight that broke out in the distance confirmed her assessment.

Next thing she knew, Korun was back in the car. She asked him if he’d brought the body across to Syria. He said yes. She had her doubts. He came back to soon. But she wasn’t going to check on it. Not with that fighting going on. With any luck, jackals would find the body and get rid of the evidence.

They drove back to Kilis. Yaser had a sense of accomplishment. The dead woman had been a threat. They had eliminated the threat. The only worry was the car they encountered right when they turned back onto the highway. She didn’t want any witnesses. But she couldn’t do anything about it. The other car stopped and its driver motioned out of the window for them to stop. Yaser told her brother to step on it. As they sped away, Korun watched the car through the rear window. He said that it was doing a one-eighty. Her brother sped up more. The other car’s lights faded away. Nothing to worry about.