Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
A Loyal Character Dancer

A Loyal Character Dancer

Titel: A Loyal Character Dancer
Autoren: Qiu Xiaolong
Vom Netzwerk:
easily dismissed. Li had said that they should celebrate the successful conclusion of the matter. ‘All’s well that ends well.’ The message was clear: there would be no further investigation of the gangs. Chen was in no position to do anything about it.
     
    Nor was Chen in a position to be elated about his remaining work.
     
    There was something never to be done, like a probe into corruption in the Fujian police or an inquiry into the source of Qian’s cell phone. There was something to be done, but never mentioned, like the parking lot deal for the karaoke club. And there was something perhaps never to be thought of, like the higher authorities’ possible involvement.
     
    And he wondered whether Internal Security would choose to disappear at the conclusion of the case.
     
    Inspector Rohn was carefully putting green tea leaves into the white cups, pinchful by pinchful, like a Chinese, as if concentrating on something far more important than the questions she was going to ask.
     
    As on the day when she first arrived, sitting in the car, so on the day she was going to leave, sitting in the cafe, he did not know what she was thinking.
     
    She picked up the thermos bottle, poured an arc of water into a cup for him, and then prepared another cup for herself.
     
    “I like the Chinese way of drinking tea, watching the leaves leisurely unfolding, so green, so tender in the white cup.”
     
    He gazed at her as she sipped her tea. For a second, she was merging into another woman, one who had accompanied him in another teahouse, in Beijing. She, too, had looked pale, with black circles under her eyes revealed in a flood of sunlight, with a green tea leaf in her white teeth.
     
    The tenderness of the tea leaf between her lips, / Everything’s possible, but not pardonable . . .
     
    “Li is not behaving like a Party Secretary today,” she said, meeting his gaze. “To encourage his hand-picked successor to have a t ê te- à -t ê te with an American officer!”
     
    “I don’t know how you get your information, but that is just like Party Secretary Li—politically correct, but not to a fault.”
     
    “So you will be like him one of those days?”
     
    “No one can tell, you know that.”
     
    “I know. What will happen to you, Chief Inspector Chen?” She gazed into her cup. “I mean, when will your next promotion be?”
     
    “That depends on a lot of unforseeable factors, factors beyond my control.”
     
    “You’re a political rising star, you cannot help yourself.”
     
    “Do we have to talk about politics until you take off?”
     
    “No, we don’t, but we live in politics, like it or not. That’s one of the modernist theories you have lectured me on, Chief Inspector Chen. I’m learning the Chinese way fast.”
     
    “You are being sarcastic, Catherine,” he said, trying to change the subject. “Ten days here will be enough. I hope, to keep up your interest in Chinese studies.”
     
    “Yes, I’ll go on with my Chinese studies. Perhaps I’ll take some evening courses this year.”
     
    He had expected she would ask more questions about the investigation. She was entitled to, but she did not.
     
    Actually, there were some things he had chosen not to disclose in the meeting room. For one, he had learned from Gu that the gangsters had been instructed not to carry guns while following the chief inspector and his American partner. According to Gu, because of Chen’s connections at the highest level, the gangsters did not want to make an enemy of him. Then, too, the Beijing government would never let the matter drop if an American marshal was killed in China. This might also explain a common aspect of the earlier accidents, which, though serious, had not been intended to be fatal. Not even the shot fired at Yu.
     
    Putting down her cup, she took a picture out of her purse. “I have something for you.”
     
    It showed a young girl sitting at a table in a sidewalk caf é , playing a guitar, her shoulder-length hair shining in the sunlight, her sandals dangling over a brass plaque on the sidewalk.
     
    He recognized her. “It’s you, Catherine.”
     
    “Yes, five or six years ago, at a cafe on Delmar. Do you see the brass plaque? There are more than a dozen there, like in Hollywood, except that these honor celebrities associated with St. Louis. Including T. S. Eliot, of course.”
     
    “Is that one of the celebrity plaques?”
     
    “Eliot’s,” she said. “Sorry, I did not
Vom Netzwerk:

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher