The Island Where Time Stands Still (18 page)

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Authors: Dennis Wheatley

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BOOK: The Island Where Time Stands Still
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‘Thanks a lot, Mr. Grace,' Gregory grinned, as he stood up and shook hands. ‘Your help has been invaluable.'

When he got back to the yacht he found the others all sitting on the after-deck waiting to hear the result of his interview. As soon as he had told them, Wu-ming said quickly, ‘I know Mr. Quong-Yü, so you had better leave this business in my hands. I will telephone this afternoon and ask when it will be convenient for him to see me.'

Kâo raised a plump hand. ‘Young man, you go too fast. I have known Quong-Yü for many years so I am much better fitted to come to an amicable understanding with him.'

‘I at the interview must be,' Tsai-Ping announced quietly.

‘Honourable One,' Kâo said, turning towards him. ‘Permit me to observe that agreement is always easier to reach when each side is represented by only one person.'

‘Whoever goes, I go also,' the Mandarin declared with a cold finality.

‘I have no wish to butt in,' Gregory remarked. ‘But surely you don't intend to offer Quong-Yü a whacking great ransom for the Princess when there is a good chance that you can frighten him into producing her for nothing. If he is to be threatened, though, as I am the only one among you who knows Mr. Edgar C. Grace only I can use threats effectively; so you'll have to take me with you.'

‘That is good sense,' A-lu-te commented. ‘And as the Honourable One desires to accompany either my Uncle Kâo or Wu-ming, why should not all four of you go?'

As the bottom had already been knocked out of Kâo's proposition that matters could best be handled by a single negotiator, her proposal was agreed to, and Tsai-Ping asked Kâo to arrange a meeting for them with Quong-Yü that evening if possible.

All of them spent the afternoon in the city, but returned to the yacht at tea time to learn if Kâo had been successful. He was still absent and did not rejoin them till nearly eight o'clock. He then excused his lateness by saying that he had been unable to get Quong-Yü on the telephone until half-past seven; and added that Quong could not see them that night, but would receive them the following afternoon between four and five o'clock.

Next morning, A-lu-te, Gregory and Wu-ming went ashore together as usual, but with much reluctance the latter excused himself from bathing and lunching with the others on the plea that he had to try to catch up with his business affairs. Then at a quarter to four the whole party met at the dock, A-lu-te returned to the yacht and the four men set off together for Quong-Yü's.

They had no great distance to go, as San Francisco's Chinatown lies down near the waterfront, and they were walking up its main boulevard before Gregory realised that
they had entered it. He had expected a warren of narrow twisting streets and noisome alleys, with cotton-clad celestials hawking vegetables on the pavements and furtively sidling into low doorways. In the past the quarter had presented just such a picture, but now it consisted of fine modern blocks. The shops differed little from those in other business districts, most of their signs being in English, and the great majority of its inhabitants were wearing American clothes. The only striking indication of its individuality was that the city council had tactfully adorned it with tall lamp-posts of Chinese design that had tops like small pagodas.

After walking a few hundred yards up Grant Avenue, they turned down a side street, then along a narrow canyon-like thoroughfare that was flanked on both sides by warehouses. Half-way down it the road was blocked by a lorry, into which several crates of bananas at a time were being lowered by means of a big rope attached to a pulley. Kâo and Wu-ming were walking side by side down the middle of the street with Tsai-Ping and Gregory behind them. To pass the lorry they took to the narrow pavement and split up into single file, with Kâo leading and Tsai-Ping bringing up the rear. It was just as they had done so that Gregory noticed that his shoe-lace had come undone. Halting, he stooped down to tie it up, while Tsai-Ping walked on past him. Next moment there came a cry and a rending crash. A net full of heavy crates had struck Tsai-Ping full on the head. Beneath them he was smashed to the ground.

As some of the crates burst, scattering their contents, Gregory threw himself backwards. In doing so he caught sight of a Chinaman framed in the opening three stories up in the warehouse from which the bananas were being lowered. The man was in the act of thrusting a long knife back beneath his jacket.

Instantly Gregory realised that the pulley rope had not snapped but had been cut deliberately. Hard on the thought, another flashed into his mind. But for his shoe-lace having come undone, it would have been himself instead of Tsai-Ping now lying dead in the gutter.

8
The Real chinatown

Gregory's first impulse was to dart into the warehouse and attempt to seize the murderer, but he promptly checked it. The man had already withdrawn from sight and he was three floors up. This could be no case of personal malice so he had obviously acted under instructions. He was probably the ‘hatchet-man' of one of the Tongs. Anyhow, the other coolies would cover up for him and all say they could not remember who had been standing by the opening at the moment the rope parted. The deadly ambush must have been carefully planned and already the assassin would be making off by a pre-arranged escape route. Even if he could still be intercepted by a swift dash up the stairs, after only one brief glimpse it would be impossible to swear to his identity.

As Gregory ran forward to lend a hand in dragging the broken crates of bananas from on top of the Mandarin, another good reason occurred to him for refraining from any immediate attempt to pin the crime on its perpetrator. There seemed good grounds to suppose that he had been the intended victim. If so, and somebody was out to kill him, it would be to his advantage to continue to appear unaware that his life was threatened. Were he to proclaim his knowledge that the rope had been sliced through, it might be assumed that he had also tumbled to it that the murderous attack had been intended for himself. In that case any second attempt to bring about his death would be made by even more subtle means, so be more likely to succeed. Far better to say nothing, but make the utmost use of the warning he had been given, and hope by constant vigilance to foil an enemy made over-confident by believing him still ignorant of his danger.

Jabbering excitedly in a mixture of American and Chinese the little crowd that had swiftly gathered uncovered Tsai-Ping's grotesquely twisted body. His cranium had been smashed like an egg-shell, and he must have died instantaneously. A policeman shouldered his way through the crush and began to take notes. A few minutes later an ambulance drove up to collect the corpse. Wu-ming, who appeared quite distraught by his uncle's death, went off with it. Kâo had already been questioned by the cop, and when Gregory's turn came he said nothing to upset the general assumption that their companion had been killed as the result of an accident. Then, on Kâo whispering to him that it would not now be seemly for them to pursue their intention of interviewing Quong-Yü, they returned in silence to the yacht.

A-lu-te was much surprised to see them back so soon, and when she heard the reason her eyes opened wide with shocked dismay; but for a woman to have made any comment or asked questions in such circumstances would have been a breach of good manners; so, bowing her head in a token of respectful grief, she at once retired to her cabin.

Within ten minutes the whole ship's company was absorbed in the rituals of formal mourning, and Gregory learned that for the next twenty-seven hours no meals would be served in the saloon, or any conversation be entered upon apart from necessary exchanges among the officers concerning the running of the ship. His own narrow escape from death being so recent he was by no means averse to an evening's solitude in which to think matters over quietly; and, having made himself comfortable in his cabin, he began to cogitate on a variety of factors which might have contributed to Tsai-Ping's body having been so suddenly deprived of its spirit.

Gregory had one fact only to go on which he regarded as entirely beyond dispute. It was that, although he had not actually seen the coolie cut the rope, the man had done so. One glance at its end, as it lay where it had fallen in the gutter, had confirmed that. It had not frayed and finally parted after long wear. A sharp blade had sliced through
two of its strands; only a part of the third was ragged and ravelled from having snapped under the strain. That partially severed end had been evidence enough on which to call in the homicide squad; but, for what at the time had seemed good reasons, Gregory had refrained from pointing it out to the policeman.

He wondered now if they were good reasons. His decision to say nothing had been taken with the thought fresh in his mind that the attack had really been directed against himself. It had seemed so obvious that had he not stopped to tie up his shoe-lace the crates would have fallen on his head. But on calmer reflection he realised that there was no certainty about that. If he had walked on, the coolie, staring down from above to identify the man he had been posted there to kill, might have waited another few seconds before slashing the rope. Then, just as had happened, Tsai-Ping would have been the one to be struck down.

Gregory's thoughts turned to the unknown person on whose orders the coolie must have acted. If that person's identity were known it would make it very much easier to formulate a sound guess about whom he had planned to have murdered. Although it was pure speculation, for the part of ‘villain off' the first candidate to spring to mind was Quong-Yü.

The Tong boss certainly had an obvious motive for preventing anyone from poking their nose into his affairs; and, even more significant in this matter, professional killers in his service who were bound by oath to do his will. Yet it seemed to be going a little far to resort to murder before he had even been questioned. Again, did he even know what the visitors he expected were going to question him about?

Of course it was just possible that Kâo had told him over the telephone that they were searching for Josephine Août, and that a Mr. Sallust had secured information from the F.B.I. that he, Quong, had snatched her; but for Chinese like Kâo—brought up in tradition of circumlocution, prevarication, and a fundamental belief in postponing rather than facing issues—to have done so, seemed most unlikely.

If Kâo
had
spilled the beans, and Quong was holding Josephine in some hide-out for his own pleasure, he would certainly regard Gregory as his most dangerous enemy. Therefore, should his passion for Josephine have decided him to hold on to her at all costs, it was against Gregory that he would direct his killers.

But no! That did not make sense. Unless Quong was stark staring mad, Gregory was the one person whom he would not dare to attack. Gregory was linked with the F.B.I. If he died in mysterious circumstances, knowing that Quong had a reason for wishing him out of the way the Tong boss was the first person they would pull in; and they would grill him until they had checked up on his every action for the past week. He would never be fool enough to take such a risk.

Perhaps then it really was Tsai-Ping whom Quong had planned to kill. But why? Against Kâo or Wu-ming, both of whom he knew, Quong might have had some old grudge; but he had never met Tsai-Ping, and the Mandarin had never even spent a night in San Francisco.

Another thing—if Quong was endeavouring to stall off a hunt for Josephine, what point would there be in his killing one of the investigating part when three others would survive to continue the inquiry?

Yet if Quong had not organised the ambush, who had? Kâo and Wu-ming had both had the opportunity to do so; and, as they had been walking side by side ahead of Gregory and Tsai-Ping, either could easily have ensured that the whole party took such turnings on the way to Quong-Yü's as would necessitate their passing the warehouse from which the bananas were being loaded. Quong, on the other hand, could not possibly have played any part in directing them down one particular street out of a choice of three or four; and that very fact now seemed to eliminate him from the rôle of ‘probable villain'.

Kâo and Tsai-Ping were undoubtedly antipathic personalities. Both were ambitious men, and, although it was never referred to openly, Gregory had learned from A-lu-te that in
secret the two of them had been waging a bitter struggle for power to influence appointments in the island. Could Kâo, knowing San Francisco and its Tongs, have taken advantage of this visit to the city to arrange for the liquidation of his rival?

That was certainly a possibility. But the word ‘rival' passing through Gregory's mind conjured up another thought. What of Wu-ming Loo? He too had a rival—not in the uncle whom he revered, but in the Englishman who had consistently come between him and the lady A-lu-te. Wu-ming also knew San Francisco and its Tongs. A Chinese of his wealth and influence would have known quite well how to set about securing the services of an assassin; and, on the excuse of catching up with his work, he had spent that morning alone in the city.

Visualising the scene of the crime, Gregory endeavoured to live again those few terrifying moments. While doing so he sought for any detail that he had registered then which might since have escaped him. Kâo and Wu-ming had been walking down the narrow street a good dozen paces ahead of himself and Tsai-Ping. As the two former fell into Indian file and stepped on to the pavement, to pass the lorry, he recalled now that he had noticed Wu-ming look upward. He had followed his glance and seen the rope net holding the crates of bananas slowly revolving a good thirty feet above the pavement. A moment later his shoe-lace coming undone had caused him to look down; then, on reaching the pavement, he had stopped to tie it up, while Tsai-Ping walked past him to his death.

When about to pass a lorry that was being loaded from above anyone might have glanced upward; so it was no proof of Wu-ming's guilt that he should have done so. Yet if a man had planted a murderous ambush there he would hardly be able to resist the temptation to assure himself that the trap was ready to be sprung. Perhaps, therefore, it was not altogether without significance that whereas Kâo had not looked up, Wu-ming had.

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