Authors: Henry Chang
Tags: #Fiction, #Asian American, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Police Procedural
At the wall edge of the table was a tin of Tea Time cookies, a bag of roasted Chinese peanuts. Almost covered by the bag of nuts was a can, which upon closer inspection turned out to be a can of abalone. “
Abba-lone-nay
,” Jack remembered Ruben saying in Spanish.
Abalone
. He dropped the can into one of the takeout bags, leaving it on the table for the time being.
He’d hoped to find a weapon, maybe contraband, and turned his attention to the bathroom.
The mirrored medicine cabinet held Tylenol and Band-Aids and an assortment of Chinese herbal treatments and liniments like
mon gum yow
and
deet da jao
.
He checked under the sink and toilet bowl.
Clean
.
There weren’t any weapons or drugs in the toilet tank.
He headed for the second room.
The middle room, with the little closet and the notch out, was the equivalent of a living room, a small area where you could sit down, watch the little TV, and have a drink or smoke a cigarette. A chill-out area before the last room, where you had sex or just went to bed.
Inside the closet was a lightbulb on a pull chain. Jack tugged on the chain and illuminated a line of clothing hanging off a rail. Shirts and jackets mostly.
Nothing in the pockets
. Above the rail was a shelf holding sheets and towels. He ran his latexed hands through the folds and along the shelf’s edges.
At knee level there was an empty piece of rollaway luggage. On the floor next to it was a stack of magazines. Some Hong Kong periodicals and mail-order catalogs. The periodicals had dog-eared pages featuring recent Triad violence; he couldn’t read most of the Chinese words, but the graphic news photos told the bloody stories clearly enough.
The mail-order catalogs, addressed to Gaw, had Golden Mountain Realty, Bossy’s office, as the mailing address. They also had dog-eared pages. The first one was a BadZ catalog of On the Edge knives, featuring all kinds of exotic, themed, and commercialized blades from tantos to tomahawks. He thumbed through the dog-eared pages, looking for a dagger or dirk that might fit the murder weapon. He found several: the Scorpion Dagger was a four-inch blade that was compact,
flat, and easily concealed. A second knife was also a dagger,
a 4.33-inch stainless-steel blade with a black rubber, water-resistant handle. Easily concealed nylon shoulder harness with sheath. $29.95
.
There was a
tactical
knife with plastic handles. It had a long blade, six inches, and the pierced handle allowed for a lanyard.
They were all cheap knives, thought Jack, probably made in China, so the steel wasn’t trustworthy. He picked up the next catalog, a thicker one with a slick cover that was headlined
Sporting Knives Annual
. Featured on the cover were high-end knives, collectors’ and enthusiasts’ blades from mostly American and European manufacturers.
Several selections had been dog-eared.
Böker USA offered a combat knife, a Colonel Rex Applegate model. The sheath system allowed for
nine
carry positions including boot, waist, neck, hip, pocket, and jacket-pocket carry. It had a fiberglass-reinforced Delrin handle with a forward-bending crossguard and a stainless-steel, drop-point blade.
Indentations in the handle provide a nonslip, firm grip. An ideal knife that weighs only 2.3 ounces
.
Murder weapon?
wondered Jack.
On order at $99.95
.
The second dog-eared choice was a cousin of the combat knife. The Buck Diamondback claimed the same quality steel on a shorter blade.
Tactile-patterned handle with quickdraw sheath
.
The last choice in the catalog was a Gerber knife. The Expedition IB offered a black-finished, 3.25-inch, highcarbon steel blade inside a glass-reinforced nylon handle.
Includes plastic, multidraw sheath. Available as double-edged or with stainless-steel finish. At $75
.
He bagged the catalogs and folded them into his jacket.
Turning to the club chair, he pulled it out and tipped it over.
Nothing underneath
. He bagged the pack of smuggled Marlboros on top of the television. The television itself was connected to a long extension cord so that it could be placed on top of the dresser.
Watch TV in bed if desired
. He ran his fingers under the TV stand.
Clear
.
He repositioned the club chair and went into the bedroom.
He flicked the wall switch, though the ceiling light was unnecessary. The bedroom, or front room, since it had windows overlooking Pell Street, was clearly lit and sparse, no clutter, the room of an orderly,
calculating
person. Jack conducted a sweep of the bed, behind the headboard, under the mattress, the box spring.
Nothing there
.
The nightstand was empty, top and bottom.
The dresser, with its fake-wood finish, had three wide drawers. The top drawer held mostly shirts and knits, a couple of sweaters, winter fashions. Blacks and grays mostly, with a few red-colored items for Chinese New Year.
He checked the edges, the bottom of the drawer.
The second drawer held mostly T-shirts, underwear, and socks in a mash-up. He ran his fingers around the edges and under the drawer.
The bottom drawer held a few pairs of shorts—watersports prints, denims—and polo shirts and poolside flip-flops. Two pairs of D&G knockoff sunglasses. Jack didn’t know why, but he bagged one pair, putting it into his jacket. He thought he’d show it to Ah Por later.
He felt around the edges, the bottom of the drawer, fingering through the denim shorts, under the polo shirts next
to the flip-flop sandals. He suddenly felt something hard,
a lead sap
, he wanted to believe, but it wasn’t any bigger than a matchbook, though thicker.
Folding knife?
He gently spread back the shirts.
Lifting away the sandals, he saw that it was tarnished steel, a metal rectangle the size of a belt buckle.
A cigarette lighter
.
A cigarette lighter. An old one, not the modern, butane-injected kind.
He carefully took it out, stood it up on top of the dresser. It was an old Vietnam War–era Zippo lighter, the kind you could find in army-navy surplus stores on Canal Street or anywhere in the city. On one side was a grinning skull with wings. A screaming eagle decorated the other side, along with the engraved words
DEATH FROM ABOVE
.
Has to be Singarette’s lighter
, thought Jack, sucking in a breath while remembering the words of the China Village deliveryman:
Had a war eagle on it
. And cherry lady Huong,
with a
say yun touh,
a smiling skull, on it
.
Maybe Gaw had taken the lighter as a souvenir, a scalp, whatever. Proof, perhaps, for whoever put him up to killing Sing.
Jack remembered the Zippo lighters. They were still popular in the military during his short stint in the army. They routinely required a few squirts of lighter fluid into a fuel-sponging insert you pulled out of the casing. A refill could last a week or two. Gaw had apparently abandoned it anyway, maybe after the insert had dried out. There’d probably be fingerprints, thumb and index prints, probably Sing’s, on the insert. Hopefully Gaw’s and Sing’s fingerprints would turn up on the outside metal casing of the Zippo. He made a mental note to advise the lab techs about the insert.
There was nothing else in the room, but he felt sure he had enough evidence to tie Gaw to Sing’s murder.
Circumstantial, perhaps, but evidence nonetheless
.
He bagged the Zippo and took it, along with the bagged pack of cigarettes off the TV, as he switched off lights leaving the two rooms.
In the kitchen, he grabbed the takeout bag with the can of abalone inside, the carton of Marlboros off the doorknob. He clutched all the plastic bags together as he switched off the lights and left the apartment.
He knew he needed to get the evidence to the lab, where forensics could work it over. Since he was, so far, the lone link in the chain of custody, he decided to expedite matters by dropping the evidence off with forensics himself.
He ignored the fact that the stitches in his arm were throbbing again.
Flow
I
T WAS MIDAFTERNOON
by the time Jack got back to Chinatown. He was hoping that forensics would have some results on the overnight if they weren’t too backed up.
He finished and submitted a report at the Fifth Precinct, describing Gaw’s attack on him on the Pell Street rooftop.
Trying to kill a cop. That charge alone would keep Gaw on ice for a while
.
Singarette’s case file was still open, though new evidence was surfacing. He called the mail-order-catalog companies, identifying the police investigation, and referred to the account numbers on the mailing label. He
felt lucky that the supervisor was cooperative: customer 2288 (Gaw) had ordered from
Sporting Knives
—an Applegate combat knife and the Gerber Expedition. Both shipped to Golden Mountain Realty.
From the BadZ catalog he’d ordered a “Knockout” flat sap,
with five ounces of molded lead sewn into a leather shank
.
An old-school weapon
, thought Jack,
also illegal to carry in the city
.
The mailing address loosely linked Bossy to the killing deal. Gaw had had weapons delivered to the office. But proving Bossy knew anything about it was another matter.
At least he had Gaw on ice at the Tombs.
He tucked the catalogs back into his jacket, left the station house, and headed for the Senior Citizens’ Center, two blocks away on Bayard Street. He’d missed Ah Por the last time and wondered if she was around to apply her special touch.
Senior Secrets
H
E FOUND HER
right away, with a Styrofoam cup of
ha gwoo cho
tea by the side door. Free afternoon tea, enjoyed by all the seniors, sometimes included cookies that were near-expiration stock, donated by the local Chinese supermarkets.
He quickly slipped Ah Por the folded five-dollar bill, followed by the knockoff sunglasses from Gaw’s dresser. It took a moment as she touched them and said, “Canal Street.”
Sure, that sounds familiar
, thought Jack.
“
Som luk bot
,” she added.
Three-six-eight
.
Is she just regurgitating past answers now?
wondered Jack. It was the same number clue from the Yonkers racetrack program.
He slipped her another five, passed her the Golden Mountain Realty brochure. She looked at him thoughtfully and took a gulp of the
ha gwoo cho
before running her fingers over Bossy’s smiling, thumbprint-sized brochure photo.
“He will never see the rat,” she said so quietly he was unsure of what he’d heard.
What?
frowned Jack.
Does she mean Bossy’s going to hang Gaw out to dry?
“What?” he muttered aloud. He took a calming breath.
“His money,” Ah Por said with a sigh, “is
death
money.”
She means Bossy has money to burn?
he wondered.
Ah Por’s attention drifted, her eyes seemingly searching for someone in the crowd.
He couldn’t follow her words about Bossy, the
rat
and the
money
, but any clue that Ah Por repeated,
three-six-eight, Canal Street
, demanded attention.
He patted her on the shoulder of her
meen ngaap
jacket, smiled and nodded, and left the Seniors’ Center.
He headed for Canal Street on Baxter Way, imagining a gift shop or army-surplus store.
C
ANAL
S
TREET WAS
a slog, with the throngs of tourists dealing with the knockoff vendors: the Fukienese
designer handbag
ladies, the Nigerian briefcase or sunglasses posse, the Pakistanis with the fake perfumes,
cubana
jewelry store, the Vietnamese moving everything under the sun.
He went past the Burger King and Mickey D’s, tourist havens, past the electronics and odd-lot discount shops and surplus stores, almost to Church Street.
He was surprised.
Number 368 Canal Street was a newer Bank of America branch, a half-mile from the bank-crowded heart of Chinatown but very clear about its identity. A semicircular glass façade faced the street, like a moon gate. Inside, there were bright colors, Asian-friendly tones over a bamboo forest motif.
A flight of stairs led up to a wall of six teller stations, smiling Chinese girls behind bulletproof Plexiglas. A seating area, clean and mellow. A flight of stairs down to the safe-deposit vault. The assistant manager sat behind a desk and looked like a younger version of Bossy.
There weren’t any customers around.
Jack badged him, showed him Sing’s key, and asked, “Do you list Jun Wah Zhang as an account? This is a murder investigation.”
The assistant manager seemed unimpressed and spoke Cantonese with a Shanghainese accent. “Don’t you need a warrant or something for that?” he challenged.
“Sure, I can do that,” Jack said with a smile, “but that could take all night. In the meantime I’d have to post a uniformed officer here to make sure no one goes into any of the boxes. You’ll have to turn customers away. Tomorrow, too, if necessary.”
The man’s Adam’s apple bounced a couple of times.
“Think that’ll ruin your manager’s dinner, his whole evening?” Jack pressed.
The assistant manager wavered, swallowed hard. He reluctantly tapped up some names from his computer keyboard, frowned, and escorted Jack to a box in a wall of small slotted boxes. He matched Sing’s key to his master and
opened the little cast-metal door. He slid the thin, metal safe-deposit box out and flipped open the lid.
Jack saw there were two photographs: an old snapshot of a family of three, in the faded colors of the 1970s, of young parents and an infant son, in a rural Chinese setting. The mother, in village dress, cradled the child in her arms,
precious
, smiling. The father, smiling cautiously, held a miner’s helmet in one hand, resting the other on his wife’s shoulder. The simple Chinese notations on the back read “Ma and Ba, 1971.” The other photo was more recent, a tourist snapshot at the Statue of Liberty. Singarette, with Lady Liberty looming in the background, beaming a jubilant smile at the camera.
So happy to be in America!
The photo looked like it had been taken in the fall, November maybe, judging by the clothes worn by park rangers in the background of the picture. A posed-tourist Polaroid in a cardboard frame.