Shanghai Redemption (4 page)

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Authors: Qiu Xiaolong

BOOK: Shanghai Redemption
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“You don't have to say that, Manager Hong. But what if I pay everything up front? Any additional discount?”

“If you pay everything at once, then I can offer you an additional ten percent discount,” Hong said in earnest. “Both on the maintenance and on the renovation of the tomb. Your satisfaction is guaranteed.”

Chen nodded. He wasn't that well-to-do, but doing this could put his mother's mind at ease—at least on this matter. After all, he didn't know how long he would be able to hold on to the position printed on the new business card and be able to keep paying the annual fees like before.

“Great. Then if you are able to take off another ten percent,” Chen said, “may I have copies of the designs to take with me? Back in Shanghai, I'd like to show them to my mother.”

“Of course. When would you want to start the project?”

“I happen to have a week off. So please start as soon as possible.”

“That's fine. We can get started on it tomorrow or day after tomorrow. Now, about the payment—”

Chen took out his credit card. But there was a credit limit on it, so he could only pay half the amount now.

“Can you charge half the amount to my card now, and I'll pay the remaining half in a day or two?”

“No problem. For a client like you, no problem at all!” Hong exclaimed, apparently impressed.

Chen signed the credit slip, and after pocketing the receipt, he got up to leave.

Outside, there was no one left at the bus stop. He'd stayed too long at the cemetery office and missed the return bus.

There was no sign of a taxi. The cemetery was too far out of the way. The bus driver had mentioned another bus later in the afternoon, but how long he'd have to wait, he didn't know. But there was no reason he couldn't wait, there was nothing pressing back in Shanghai.

And he ought to start economizing, having just paid a large sum. He didn't have to pay anything more for the return trip to Shanghai on the cemetery bus.

He waited for another half hour without a bus showing up.

“There are no more buses today!” a passing local farmer shouted out to him.

“Are there any other bus stops nearby?”

“Follow this road, turn left at the small creek, and then turn right. In about ten minutes, you might be able to see a bus.”

“Thanks!”

He decided to follow the farmer's suggestion, though he knew there was no telling how long he'd have to wait at that stop, either.

 

THREE

CHEN SET OFF ALONG
the trail in the direction the farmer suggested. In the countryside, a passing bus would sometimes stop for a possible passenger waving it down, just like the cemetery bus had on the way from Shanghai.

But the weather was beginning to change. A drizzle blew over from beyond the hills. He quickened his step, but in only three or four minutes the trail became slippery and treacherous. Chen was trudging along with increasing difficulty, splashing muddy water around. Unlike the road in the Tang dynasty poem, there was no Apricot Blossom Village in sight. He was probably lost, seeing nothing like the creek the local farmer mentioned.

His clothes were soaked by the sharper and larger raindrops, and he felt like a chicken dropped into an enormous pot of boiling water.

There was still no sign of any vehicles cutting through the rain curtain. At another bend in the trail, he saw something that looked like a shelter. He hurried over in that direction, but as he got close to it, he came to a dead stop. It was actually a large straw-covered chicken shed, abandoned.

Then a white car came speeding down the road past him. Up ahead, it made an abrupt U-turn, its tires screeching on the gravel, and rolled to a stop beside him. It was new Lexus.

Was it possible that he'd been followed all the way here to Suzhou?

The driver rolled down the window, sticking her head out.

“Where are you going?”

An attractive woman in her midtwenties, the driver had an oval face with delicate features. She was wearing a custom-tailored mandarin dress.

“It's raining cats and dogs.” She spoke with an unmistakable Suzhou dialect.

“I'm looking for a bus stop,” he said, “or a taxi. I've missed the cemetery bus.”

“You can never tell when the bus will come. You're from Shanghai?”

“Yes.”

“Let me give you a ride,” she said, her slender hand lifting the door lock.

“Oh, it's so kind of you, but—”

It was a luxurious car with a shining beige leather interior. He hesitated, afraid of making a mess with his wet clothes. She leaned over, pushing the door open for him.

“Don't worry about it. It's raining hard.”

It was a surprising offer, one he couldn't afford to turn down. He got in and slumped into the seat beside her.

Her generous offer to a stranger had come out of the blue, but she lost no time demystifying it. “I saw you at the cemetery office. What a filial son! Paying the eternal maintenance fee, all of it, there and then.”

“A filial son?” He then recognized her as one of the VIP customers seated on the sofa in the office.

“Well, I happened to overhear part of your conversation with the manager.”

“I haven't paid a visit to my father's grave in years. It was the least I could do for him, and for my mother, too. This way, whatever happens, she won't have to worry about that.”

That was the truth, which he blurted out at the spur of the moment, though its full meaning was beyond her.

“I see,” she said. “So you're going to the railway station?”

“Yes. If you could just take me to the stop for any bus that goes to the station?”

“Oh, don't worry about the bus. Let me just take you to the train station.”

“That would be extremely nice of you, but it's too much trouble.”

“No trouble at all—not for a filial Big Buck,” she said, not trying to conceal her curiosity. “Particularly one who doesn't have his own car. My name is Qian, by the way.”

“And mine is Cao. However, I'm neither filial, nor rich. I've just completed a well-paid job, so I decided to pay the maintenance fee now, while I still have the money.”

“It must have been quite a well-paid job!”

He wasn't in the mood for conversation, but since she'd rescued him from a long walk in the rain, he didn't think he had a choice. He took a pink napkin she held out to him and wiped his wet face and dripping hair.

“In a month or two, all that money may be gone. In fact, after today's payment, I might have to start cutting back.”

“What kind of job was it?”

That was a difficult question. There was no point in telling her that he was a government official, which was neither a popular profession nor one that matched the “well-paid job” he'd just invented. And he saw no need to reveal his real identity.

“Well, I'm—sort of a cop—for hire.”

He'd been a cop for so long, it was the first thing that came to mind.

“Oh—a private investigator?”

That was ironic. Old Hunter, Detective Yu's father, was helping out at a private investigator's office in Shanghai. For Chen, though, “private investigator” meant something else—an investigator who was independent of the Party's legal system.

“Well, you could say that.”

“That's really interesting,” she said., “You're based in Shanghai, aren't you?”

“Yes.”

“Now we meet, though not known to each other before.”

“Oh, it sounds like a line from ‘Pipa Song.'”

“I like pipa. And ‘Pipa Song' too.”

Pipa, a zitherlike musical instrument, had been popular in ancient China and was still commonly used in Suzhou opera. Bai Juyi, a Tang dynasty poet, wrote a celebrated long poem about a forsaken artisan playing pipa, entitled “Pipa Song.” It wasn't surprising that Qian, a native of Suzhou, liked the instrument. But the line she cited from the poem was a curious choice. The original couplet read:

Two pathetic souls adrift to the ends of world, / now we meet, though not known to each other before
.

She was apparently well-to-do, and she had taken him for some sort of Big Buck as well. So why did she choose those two lines?

He began to feel a bit uneasy about her and felt pressured to say something merely for the sake of saying it. He decided to change the topic. “Why were you at the cemetery office today?”

“I was there to pay the annual fee for my grandparents' grave.” She quickly changed the topic back: “Please tell me more about your business. I've only read about private investigators in foreign mystery novels.”

He shouldn't have said anything about his work. One fib, however well meant, inevitably led to another.

“Like the PIs you read about in those translated novels, I work for my clients. Unlike them, however, the profession isn't legally licensed in China. It's still a sort of gray area.”

“So you work like a cop—” she said, with a sudden glint in her eyes, “but for the client, not for the government.”

“That's a good way to put it. There's another difference. A Chinese PI has to stay away from anything involving high-ranking officials and politics. It's just as hopeless as pitting eggs against rocks.”

“That's so true. And so sad.”

The car swerved and pulled onto the main road. Almost instantly, the traffic became heavier, and the car was caught in a traffic jam. They slowed down to a dead stop. Chen looked out the windshield. A long line of unmoving vehicles stretched as far as he could see.

“I can't even see the end of the line,” she said apologetically.

“I'm so, so sorry. You wouldn't even be on this road if it weren't for me.”

“No, it's like this everywhere right now. It's just after lunchtime, and, particularly around Qingming, there are a lot of people like you, who are hurrying back to the railway station.”

“Yes, the traditional lunch in Suzhou. A lot of Shanghainese like to do that after finishing their duty at the cemetery. Well, I'm in no rush. There are a number of trains to Shanghai leaving in the late afternoon and evening. I can take any one of them.”

“Then how about having lunch here?” she said, casting a glance at a side road. “I know a couple of good local restaurants, not too far away. The traffic might be better when we're done.”

It was another surprising invitation from this young woman, but this one made sense. It was no fun being trapped in unmoving traffic. And there was nothing urgent waiting for him back in Shanghai.

Chen again looked out the window. It was still raining, though not as heavily as earlier. Off to the side of the road, he saw a black dog loitering under a pear tree, uninterested in the line of vehicles standing stock-still. It was reaching out a paw in tentative exploration of a pool of rain water, where white petals fell in occasional flurries.

“Good idea. But I insist that it be my treat. You are giving me a lift in the rain, and now you're taking me to a Suzhou restaurant. That's two favors, and the least I can do is to pay for lunch.”

“You're such a gentleman. I agree to your terms. Do you have a favorite place in mind?”

“It's your city, but in Shanghai, the best-known Suzhou-style noodle place is called Changlang Pavilion. It would be fantastic to eat at the original here.”

“The original Changlang Pavilion? I've been to that restaurant in Shanghai, but curiously enough, I don't know of one here in Suzhou. But there's a Changlang Pavilion garden in Suzhou, so perhaps there's someplace nearby named after the garden. Let's go there and ask the locals. Someone there will be able to help us.”

“Only if it doesn't take up too much of your time.”

“I don't have any other plans—not at the moment, anyway. If we can't find the restaurant we're looking for, I'll take you to another one. It's not as well known, but it's quite good.”

She maneuvered onto the side road, then onto another even narrower side road. An experienced driver, familiar with the back roads of Suzhou, she cut through a maze of secluded streets lined with old, dilapidated houses. They encountered very little traffic along the way, and it was less than ten minutes before they were in sight of the Changlang Pavilion garden.

They asked several locals about restaurants in the vicinity, but all shook their heads. They circled the area one more time, searching for a noodle restaurant, but without any success.

“Okay, let's just go to another one,” Chen said. “Any one you recommend.”

They drove over to a quaint street lined with ancient-looking boutiques and eateries. Qian pulled up in front of a tiny restaurant decorated in the unmistakable Suzhou style.

They picked a table with a view of a pleasant lotus leaf–covered pond.

“An ancient pond,” she said gazing at it with a wistful smile, “as old as the city of Suzhou, still reflecting the Song dynasty cloud and the Tang dynasty moon.”

“What?” Chen asked. He was surprised at her comment, even though he himself was inclined to speak in quotations.

“Oh, that was just something from Suzhou opera.”

Her wistful smile reminded him of the plum blossom folding into a paper fan as tall weeds swayed, as if to an inaudible tune. It was a fleeting memory, a touch of déjà vu. He shook himself out of the strange reverie and began to study the menu.

“In Suzhou,” she said, “you really can't go far wrong with noodles.”

Chen settled on the special of the day—crispy fried green onions and shredded pork. Qian ordered plain noodles with peeled shrimp fried with Dragon Well tea leaves, in across-the-bridge style.

“The local live shrimp are very fresh—caught just this morning,” the waiter recommended. “Every one of them is still jumping in the kitchen.”

They decided to split a special platter of river shrimp in saltwater, along with a couple of cold side dishes and a pot of fresh jasmine tea.

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