The Kingfisher of Sendakan
PLOT PART II
Little did Jabil imagine that one day he would run into the friendship of a strange man, Carl Bancaoan and into the fearsome ire of the Sabahan Lords of Crime Umar Abdulla Ibriz and his counterpart, Chinese crime empire Lord Wong Tang San.
By coming to Sabah with her husband Jiki and nephew Jabil, Suhaida missed Kuala Lumpur. She started hating Jabil’s Uncle Jiki, but kept her reservations about despising Jabil too.
Eventually, Suhaida got the nerve to curse Jiki’s parents and instantly was able to convince a Sabahan Islamic high priest to give her a divorce from Uncle Jiki.
Being truly blessed with superior beauty and charm, Umar Abdulla Abriz and Chinese Wong Tang San were taken by Suhaida and individually pursued her in separate circumstances.
Suhaida, after her divorce, became free to look around Kota Kinabalu for places where she could entertain herself and pretend as if she were back in Kuala Lumpur where she could be found almost at any place wherever the lively and rowdy nightlife was. For a short period, she even took the role of waitress in an old hotel in downtown Kota Kinabalu close to a huge disco house but Jabil took ransomed her from the owner who was having lurid dreams about spending night times with Suhaida and was contemplating on selling her to Umar or Wong, whichever of the two was the highest bidder.
Despite what they run into in Kota Kinabalu, everyone in Jabil’s family literally missed Sabah, but most of all they truly missed Sulu and Zamboanga. Jabil and his clan were original Tau Sug and they never considered themselves as Malaysians. They called themselves proudly Malays, (never malaise), but never Malaysians. The distinction, they said, was that after they left the Old Malaysia, they became people of the Waters, Tau Sugs.
When their forefathers left the Philippines to settle in Sabah, then later in Kuala Lumpur, where the grass was greener as they say, none of their clan forgot who they were. To them, they will always be Tau Sugs, secondly Malays, but first, they were Tau Sug.
Jabil met Carl who was a colonel in the Philippine’s maritime police. Their lives would become entwined by events. After a while, the two men would become more close than brothers.
Carl Bancaoan encountered Jabil as the leader of a huge group of civilian volunteers interdicting smugglers, drug dealers, human traffickers and other kinds of illegals. He had no resources, he had few loyal men inside his government agency and he needed to earn a living. By arresting the illegals, going through the motions of filing criminal, economic sabotage, environmental, drugs and customs law violation cases against them, he placed these illegals in a position of weakness. Naturally, desiring to be set free, they offered money to Carl.
Carl would pretend not to be interested in the bribe offers but when he noted the insistence and willingness to make a pay-off, he immediately took the bribes and made them promise to pay him regular retainer in the coming days, in return for giving them advanced tips so that the illegals will no longer be harassed by his own people and the other government agencies any further in the future.
Since Carl maintained a large private army with battalion size, his income of P500,000 or sometimes more, per week, came down to only about P60,000 expenses for himself, his family and personal house staff every week, or about P240,000 a month. Not bad for a really, really hard day’s work, he’d say. When Carl met Suhaida, who was more than ten years his junior, he decided he wanted to marry the lady in Moslem ceremonies as his second wife. (His first wife, a Christian, lived in Manila. He decided to keep this fact a secret from his first wife.)
Carl arrested several of Jabil’s fishermen by overpowering them with his higher caliber weapons, all courtesy of the former Moro National Liberation Front or MNLF that used to fight the government but whose leaders signed a peace agreement with the Filipino government that never got to be implemented.
Finally, Jabil and Carl had a chance to sit down together about the arrests. When Carl and the civilians he commanded took down the largest in the fleet of fishing boats owned by Jabil and in retaliation Jabil prohibited Suhaida from consorting with Carl.
Suhaida was Jabil’s aunt, or former aunt as it were. Although very much junior in years than Jabil, Suhaida's parents were much older than even Jabil's grandparents, that thereby made her Jabil’s elder relation although she was really very young to be an aunt to him. In fact, it was Jabil that carried her in his arms and sing songs for her to sleep as a boy when she was a tiny little tot. But that did not make Suhaida less than his aunt.
The prohibition upon Suhaida, strengthened the resolve of Carl even more to woo her. He assiduously courted the young maiden in many secret ways and even closely befriended Jiki on the sly. When everything fell into place, he had the nice opportunity of cornering Suhaida and making her say yes to him.
In the Islamic faith, angels are servile to Man. As Mohammad wrote, Al’lah orders angels to be under Man’s commands Qur’an 2:34.
Jolo, Sulu, October 2008
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