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“I think he’s a player, but I’m not sure in what game yet,” Jack added. How was he going to explain to ADA Bang Sing?

“A boat turned up abandoned near Harbor Island,” Nicoll continued. “There were a few drops of blood and a Vicodin pill on it but nothing else. We’ll see if there’s a blood match with the hand, and we’re canvassing the island for any witnesses.”

“They were triads, dodging a Red Notice,” Jack offered. “You’ll get a call from INTERPOL.”

“Yeah, okay. Plus we got this prosthetic hand. Bionic, real neat. Fingernails, knuckles, and creases even. Last made by a British company ten to fifteen years ago.”

“And a piece of red jade,” Jack added quietly. “Part of a broken bangle.”

“What is that? Some kind of voodoo?”

“It’s a Chinese thing,” Jack said. “I’m not sure you’d understand.”

“Well then, don’t worry about it, Jack.” Nicoll smiled. “Remember …”

“I know, I know,” Jack responded wearily. “It’s Chinatown.

Nicoll laughed, and Jack walked him back to his car.

“Look,” Jack apologized, “I know I dumped on you during a red ball, but—”

“Hey, Yu, you came to my turf,” Nicoll interrupted. “Dropped two bodies on my desk, and I closed it the next day. That’s kudos for me, so don’t sweat it, okay?”

“Thanks,” Jack answered, watching Nicoll get in his unmarked Ford and drive away.

He’d figured them wrong, Jack realized. The Seattle cops had expressed racism in their tone and content, but they had been up front with it, unlike in New York where they’d play you with a smile and a wink before stabbing you in the back. He’d never condone racism but knew in the end that actions spoke louder than words.

Nicoll was a cop’s cop above all, and Jack respected him for that. At game time, it was diligent police work by the Patrol Division that had brought about Eddie’s collar at Julio’s Place. And the SPD’s arrival at the terminal pier had definitely interrupted the abduction.

They were professionals, after all, working the job.

Jack felt grateful as a Harbor Patrol boat cruised by. He left the pier, walking south through the mist. Gradually, he found the place by the bus stop, the El Amigo, where he ordered up a six-pack of cerveza and assorted dishes, and thanked Carlos and Jorge for their assistance. He gave them his detective’s card and offered help if they ever needed it.

They finished the Dos Equis before the fajitas and enchiladas.

Back at the Sea-Tac Courtyard, Jack fell asleep thinking about cerveza frio and the icy waters of Puget Sound.

Swept Away

The full moon hung above the harbor and calmed the currents of the winter night. The freezing waters of the bay had welcomed her, embracing her in its tides and icy backwash, swirling beneath the piers and past the submerged pilings.

She’d held her breath into the murky depth, shock surrendering to numbness even as she saw the dim light above at the surface. In the whirling commotion of jetsam and wreaths of kelp, she imagined sea nymphs and sirens with beckoning smiles.

The gripping currents pulled her toward a stretch of pilings as she began her ascent from the bottom’s darkness. No bot gwa, no fung shui, no red jade of luck. She kicked furiously, reaching upward with desperate arm strokes, clawing toward the surface, toward kwoon yum, her lungs ready to burst….

Dead Man Flying

Eddie was quiet the whole plane ride back from Sea-Tac to JFK. Except once when he used the toilet and once when he was allowed to stretch his legs, Eddie stayed cuffed at his waist, braced in the window seat in the back section of the plane, blocked in by Jack.

Here was a guy, Jack thought, who showed no remorse for what he’d done, a guy who was looking at long-term lockup, and yet thought somehow his life was going to be normal again.

Jack remembered Ah Por’s clues taken off Eddie’s juvenile poster. Yuh, she’d said, rain. And lo mok, which he’d thought meant Negro. Rain was a symbol of Seattle, as in Mona’s case, but lo mok here meant the surname Mok, or Mak, the same in written Chinese. Willie Mak, lo mok, was one of the killers at the Wah Mee Massacre, Seattle’s worst crime ever.

Ah Por had pointed him in the right direction, though, of course, Jack didn’t realize it at the time. He’d focused on the red star and monkey tattoos.

They landed without incident.

Jack cabbed Eddie back to lower Manhattan, feeling oddly enough that both of them were home. Jack could feel Eddie scheming even as he was turned over at the Tombs for detention. By the time he’d get a public defender he’d be at Rikers, with the rest of the New York City bad boys. Maybe he’d get Punitive Segregation, for his own good, which, ironically, was where Johnny Wong was being held.

By the time he’d completed the transfer of custody at the Tombs it was 9 PM, too late to find Ah Por. Snow flurries filled the air. Captain Marino wasn’t at the Fifth and Jack already felt jet-lagged. He was hungry, and considered calling Alex like he’d promised, but it was very late for dinner and he thought better of dragging her out in the snow and cold.

He’d been gone a week and really wanted to get back to Sunset Park, eat some Shanghai dumplings, shower, and sleep in his own bed. He went down to East Broadway and caught a Chinese see gay. The driver whizzed him across the Brooklyn Bridge with the window down a crack. He watched the night colors playing across the river, the thousands of sparkling lights dancing between the snowflakes, and imagined everything calling to him.

Welcome home.

Legal Blows

Overnight flurries had left a sloppy inch of frozen snow on the ground, and Jack was glad to be wearing his Timberland boots and down jacket again. When he arrived at the 0-Five the captain was in a morning meeting. The door to his office was closed and the desk sarge groused, “It could be a while.”

Jack decided to get some hot tea and see if Billy Bow or Ah Por was around. He peered into the steamy window of the Tofu King and didn’t see Billy. Ah Por wasn’t on line for free congee at the Senior Citizen’s Center. He decided to give Alex a call.

She was busy preparing a case but they agreed to meet at the Golden Star later that night. Jack decided to visit Lucky at Downtown Hospital before coming back to see the captain.

In the captain’s office, Shelly Littman placed his silver Halliburton briefcase down at the short edge of Captain Marino’s desk. He leveled his blue shark eyes at ADA Bang Sing and announced, “I’ve had witnesses come forward lately who will swear that my client couldn’t have been at the scene, but that’s just more background. Now, it seems, Detective Yu has even less of a chance to make his case than before. If I have INTERPOL testify about the possible abduction of this woman, with witnesses, mind you, and the corroborating reports of Seattle PD, not to mention that Detective Yu shot and killed my legal assistant who was investigating this same woman suspect, there’ll be a ton of questions and a ton of doubt as to my client having been the lone shooter of Uncle Four.”

Captain Marino shifted uneasily in his seat behind the big desk, and ADA Sing twisted his mouth into a frown.

“You don’t have a case, Sing,” Littman continued. “I’ll tear your detective up on the stand. The jury will love it. Every conflicting statement that comes out of his mouth—and I don’t even have to mention the mess with Internal Affairs—allegations of corrupt behavior, etcetera—every word puts him deeper into the crapper. So here’s the deal: my client has already confessed to buying the gun and loading it. That’s all, guilty of stupidity. He cops to illegal possession of a handgun for time served. He’ll probably lose his chauffeur’s license, maybe his car.”