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White Ginger

Page 11

by Thatcher Robinson


  Bai fidgeted while the elevator seemed to take forever to descend. Her nails tapped nervously at the brass handrail. Their clicking was rapid, like the thumping of her heart. When she stepped out into the lobby, she paused just outside the shiny brass doors as they slowly closed behind her.

  Soft light filtered down from crystal chandeliers. Overstuffed, ornate furniture occupied the lobby in small groupings, anchored by artificial bamboo trees that sprouted from large ceramic vases. A bellhop, idly reading a magazine, leaned with his ankles crossed against the closed concierge desk. On the other side of the room at the reception desk, a young black woman in a red blazer typed at a terminal, clearly engrossed by the task.

  A nighttime maintenance crew vacuumed the carpet, polished the furniture, and wiped down the mirrors and glass. They were all Asian, all men. She watched them apprehensively as she angled across the room toward the coffee shop. Frayed nerves made her suspicious of everyone.

  A sign at the entrance to the coffee shop asked that patrons wait to be seated. She ignored the request and brushed past a hostess who approached with a stack of menus. Her behavior was rude, but she was past caring. She just wanted to find Jason and get out of there.

  Tall booths upholstered in a dark red material divided the room into sections. The stalls acted as barriers to obstruct her view. Pacing the aisles, she looked for Jason as she walked past booths filled with boisterous late-night diners. Waitresses hustled trays piled high with hot, loaded plates.

  Bai finally found him seated in the rear with his back to a wall. He waved to her. Her face must have telegraphed her mounting anxiety, because his lips dropped into a frown at her approach.

  She halted abruptly in front of the booth. “We need to leave.”

  “Sit,” he said, standing up to let her into the booth next to him.

  She didn’t want to sit and returned his frown while shaking her head. He took her by the arm and forced her into the booth then slid in next to her. Turning over an empty mug, he poured steaming coffee from a plastic carafe.

  “There isn’t time for this,” she objected, pushing the cup away. “I overheard Shan and Sammy Tu speaking in the stairwell. They plan to kill both of us.”

  He glanced at her, raised an eyebrow, and put the cup in her hand. “Drink.”

  She took a sip to appease him. The coffee tasted good. She took another sip.

  “How do you always manage to end up in the wrong place at the wrong time?” he asked. “You seem to have this gift. It’s almost like you’re an irresistible trouble magnet.”

  “So now this is my fault? Didn’t you hear me? They plan to kill us! We need to get out of here!”

  Raising a hand, he lowered it slowly to indicate she should similarly lower the volume of her voice.

  “Just tell me what you heard, and everything will be fine.”

  Bai stared at him. He seemed calm, unruffled. She felt like screaming.

  Taking another sip of the hot coffee, her gaze slipped over the room nervously. “They said something about killing me and making it look like collateral damage. Do I look like collateral damage?”

  He smiled. “What else did they say?”

  She scowled at him. “Sammy Tu didn’t expect you or Sun Yee On to be involved. Shan sees this as an opportunity to take your place and move up in the organization. I’m beginning to get the impression he really doesn’t like you.”

  He grunted in amusement and made a rolling gesture with his hand to indicate she should continue.

  “And he said he was going to make me scream and make you watch.”

  She took another sip of the coffee. Her hand trembled to betray her anxiety. The smile on his face vanished. His eyes veiled like a curtain being drawn. For a moment, she thought he might show his anger, but the moment passed.

  His hand moved across the table to rest on hers. “Relax. He won’t try to kill us here. There are too many witnesses. Reinforcements are on the way. They’ll be here soon.”

  “The cleaning crew,” she blurted. “I saw them in the lobby. Who are they?”

  Jason shook his head and bit down on his lip to hide his amusement. “They’re the cleaning crew. They clean the hotel. Don’t let your imagination get the better of you.”

  “I can’t help it. I’m new to this. People may not like me, but no one has ever tried to kill me. Being a nosy bitch never got me into this kind of trouble before.”

  “You get used to it,” he stated blandly.

  “What are you saying? I don’t want to get used to it. This is crazy!”

  He pursed his lips and pulled something out of his jacket. He slipped it under the table to her. She put her hand under the table to feel the plastic grip of an automatic pistol. It was still warm from resting against Jason’s chest.

  She pushed the gun away. “I don’t want it.”

  “Are you sure?” he looked surprised. “This isn’t the time to stand on principle. I have another.”

  “Yes, I’m sure. Besides, I don’t have any place to put it. In case you haven’t noticed, this jacket isn’t exactly cut to hide my assets.”

  The asymmetrical leather jacket hugged her curves. The garment was chic but left nowhere to hide a gun.

  Jason smiled and drew his hand back to place the gun back in his jacket. “Believe me, I’ve noticed.”

  He thought a moment and then reached inside his cuff before placing his hand beneath the table again. “If you won’t take a gun, at least take this.”

  He passed her a throwing knife, a finely balanced blade with razor-sharp edges.

  “You still know how to use one, don’t you?” he asked.

  She frowned at the insinuation. “Don’t be insulting.”

  She carefully slipped the knife into the sheath built into the sleeve of her jacket. The knife was reassuring. She hadn’t felt fully dressed without one.

  “Hopefully, you won’t have to use it,” he said. “I have my own people on the way. I’m just not certain how many of my brothers in Vancouver Shan has managed to turn.”

  “I don’t get it. Why would anyone follow him? He’s a bully and a fool.”

  Jason waved away the criticism. “He has his talents and his allies. There’s a faction in Sun Yee On, an old guard, who is determined to return to the ‘old ways.’ They believe in a lot of sentimental nonsense . . . like the ‘old days’ were really all that great. Shan’s even been talking to the Big Circle Boys about forming a new alliance of triads that would revert to drinking one another’s blood and vowing blind fealty.”

  Bai was mystified. “The Big Circle Boys used to be Red Guard. They’ve always been our enemies. What do they hope to get out of an alliance?”

  “They probably want nothing more than to start an internal struggle within Sun Yee On. Whatever makes us weaker makes them stronger. But Shan can’t see the danger. The man’s blinded by ambition. He’s also a bit delusional, if you haven’t noticed.”

  Jason grimaced. Bai was familiar with that look. It was regret.

  “Why does Shan hate you?” she asked.

  He let out a puff of air and seemed to gather his thoughts before answering. “Because I treat him like the fool he is, for one thing. And, I killed his sponsor, a man who challenged my authority as Hung Kwan. The death seemed necessary at the time.”

  “‘Kill one to warn a hundred’?” she asked, quoting an old proverb.

  His voice was sober. “Something like that.”

  Bai had difficulty sympathizing with Jason’s failed management style. She was more concerned with the present.

  “So, what do we do now?” she asked.

  “Now, we eat. This is the safest place for both of us. The longer we wait here, the longer my men will have to get in place. Besides, I’m hungry. Being with you gives me an appetite.”

  The smile returned to his face. She was tempted to let his reassurance lull her. Her better judgment kicked in to ward off the enticement. Jason was thinking on his feet and improvising as he went
. That he seemed to be enjoying himself didn’t lessen her anxiety.

  She didn’t return his smile but picked up a menu anyway. She ordered a salad and fettuccini with pesto; he ordered a steak. They settled on coffee and water. Given the circumstances, getting drunk seemed like a bad idea.

  When the waitress wandered off to see to other customers, Bai leaned into him to speak in confidence. “I thought the attempts to kill me had something to do with Sun Yee On. Now I’m not so certain.”

  “You may be right. A lot of unanswered questions still need to be addressed. It would be nice to have a word with Sammy Tu to get the whole story.” Jason’s musings seemed to be as much for his benefit as for hers. “Plus, we still need to find out if he has the girl.”

  The waitress approached with their salads. When she’d delivered the plates to the table and informed them, playfully, that she was just a shout away, she departed. Bai’s nerves were starting to settle and her appetite to return. Usually, her appetite was the last thing to desert her in times of stress.

  Jason’s mood seemed annoyingly light. He grinned at her. “Anyway, getting back to your problem, I dispatched the money and phone to our headquarters here in Vancouver. We should know by tomorrow what bank dispensed the money. There’s no way to tell who the money was given to, but the sequential numbers will definitely point us to a specific region—if not a specific bank branch. The fact that somebody paid in sequentially numbered bills leads me to believe they don’t make a habit of hiring killers. It’s blatantly stupid.”

  Bai agreed with him but also knew it was dangerous to make assumptions. “That’s only if the money was in payment for the hit.”

  He raised his fork to emphasize his point. “That’s true. The money could be a red herring, but it never hurts to follow a lead. The phone is a burn phone, prepaid with only one number programmed into it. And, again, we won’t be able to trace who purchased it, but we will be able to find out where it was sold. If the money and the phone come from the same region, maybe those responsible are somewhere nearby. We also have the phone number, likely belonging to another burn phone. But it never hurts to call and let them know their assassin is dead, and we’re on to them. Might light a fire under them. Make them do something hasty, something stupid.”

  Bai was less than happy with that thought. She looked at him doubtfully. “Something ‘hasty’ like try to kill me again, you mean. Thanks, but let’s give that one a little more consideration. I’m not really sure I want to be bait. Besides, the trail may only lead back to an agent.”

  It was a given that contracts, more often than not, went through intermediaries. Lawyers had proven to be perfect go-betweens since client confidentiality provided a screen for the culprits to hide behind. Overseas agencies also provided a similar service for a fee. Assassination, like many businesses, had gone global.

  “If the contract has been processed through an agent,” Jason acknowledged, “we won’t have a problem.” He sounded confident in his statement. “We’re not the law or the government. If the agent doesn’t want to talk, I’m sure I can persuade him otherwise.”

  She stared at him. There he sat, blithely discussing using her as bait to draw out assassins and then torturing someone to find out who was behind the attempts on her life. She appreciated his efforts but wondered where the man she’d fallen in love with had gone.

  He must have seen something in her eyes because he put down his fork and reached for her hand. “I’m sorry.” There was genuine regret in his voice. “Sometimes I forget myself.”

  Returning his gaze, Bai searched his eyes for an innocence that wasn’t there anymore. It broke her heart.

  “I’m sorry, too.”

  Jason sipped his coffee as a thoughtful expression shaped his features. “The fear and anxiety that you’re feeling . . . you can control those emotions, even use them to focus.”

  “I don’t understand,” Bai replied. “I was pumped full of adrenaline when the woman at the airport attacked me. My body reacted even though I was scared and angry at the same time. But now that I know I’m being hunted, I’m a nervous wreck.”

  “You have to change your mindset. You’ve had too much time to dwell on the possibilities. We’re predators, animals at heart. You need to tap into that primal energy and use it. Don’t be the hunted, Bai. Be the hunter.”

  She wasn’t sure she could follow his advice. She’d spent all of her adult life attempting to become a better person. Being a hunter felt like a repudiation of everything she believed.

  “I’m not sure I’m that kind of an animal,” she replied tiredly. “I like to think of myself as more of a grazer—protect the young and helpless, help the aged and infirm. Being a predator isn’t my thing. “

  He leaned back in the booth and dismissed her qualms with a wave of his hand. “I know you. When the time comes, you’ll do what’s necessary to stay alive. You’ve already proven that.” His smile was a subtle taunt. “You have an amazing capacity for survival. It’s in your blood. You come from a long line of predators.”

  His assertion made her uneasy. She didn’t want to be a killer. Her first impulse was to deny his claim, but she knew it would be a waste of time. He wanted to believe she was like him. He wanted her to be a part of his world.

  “And what’s in your blood, Jason? What’s with this reckless thirst for danger? You knew, even before you came here, trouble was brewing, yet you walked into a trap and dragged me into it with you. And you’re enjoying it.”

  The smile drifted from his face. “You’re right about my dragging you into this. It was a mistake to bring you here. When I realized Sammy Tu was headed for Vancouver, I should have found a way to leave you behind. But I wanted to be with you. I can feel you slipping away.”

  She could see the pain in his eyes. She looked down, unable to meet his gaze. “We’re not kids anymore, Jason. Maybe this isn’t the time or place, but the fact is, as much as I love you, I can’t go on like this. You drop in and out of my life without warning. I want more. I want to come home to a husband who loves me and warms my bed every night. What we have isn’t enough for me.”

  He opened his mouth to respond but was interrupted by his cell phone. He put the device to his ear. His widening smile seemed to indicate good news.

  “I have to leave now,” he said brusquely. “Keep those thoughts on hold. We’ll finish this conversation later.”

  He glided out of the booth in one fluid motion, stopping only long enough to put his hand on Bai’s cheek and caution her. “Stay here. You’ll be safe in the café until this is over. If someone is stupid enough to come in here and threaten you, don’t hesitate to use the knife.”

  Grabbing hold of his hand, she looked up at him. “Don’t be in a hurry to die. You have a daughter who needs you.”

  Jason stopped and looked at her, his smile vanishing as his features took on a more serious expression. He nodded once, turned, and walked in the direction of the lobby. She sat at the table and watched his retreating back.

  As Jason walked out of the restaurant, four men, one of them Shan, emerged from a booth on the other side of the room. Their eyes followed Jason. Bai’s heart skipped a beat. She found herself scrambling out of the booth, her fear forgotten. Four against one was too many even for Jason. She needed to even the odds.

  Her voice carried across the restaurant. “Shan!”

  Shan turned her way with a surprised look on his face. He hesitated, his head swiveling between Bai and Jason as indecision knotted his features. She strolled toward Shan, smiling, while sweat trickled down the small of her back and fear wrenched her gut.

  Turning abruptly, Shan gestured to two of his men. They peeled off to follow Jason while Shan and another man waited for Bai. Her smile broadened. She’d managed to split the opposition and give Jason a fighting chance. Now all she had to do was survive her own reckless ploy.

  Shan forced a smile onto his face as she approached. His contempt bled through the brittle grin. Bai had to sque
lch the instinct to run in the other direction.

  He extended his hands, palms up. “How fortunate. I was just looking for you.” His tinny voice ingratiated. “I tried your room, but no one answered. I have the man, Sammy Tu, you’ve been looking for. But we have a problem. He says he’ll only talk to the souxun.”

  There it was—a deadly game of cat and mouse. She studied his face for any sign of compassion. His cold expression regarded her as if she were a different species, a bug to be squashed. She could see he meant to kill her.

  “That’s good news,” she replied, working hard to maintain her smile. “Where is he? Do you know if he has a girl with him?”

  “We have him in a room on the seventh floor. I didn’t see a girl, but Mr. Tan, here,” Shan gestured to the man standing deferentially at his side, “will take you to him. I, unfortunately, have other duties to attend to.”

  On cue, Tan stepped forward and bowed slightly. The tenuous bow was too shallow to be a sign of respect. Bai’s grandfather had always advised, “If you’re going to bow at all, bow low.” It was obvious Tan had never met her grandfather, by virtue of the fact that he still breathed.

  Bai stared him in the eye with an unrelenting gaze. Her scrutiny seemed to unsettle him. He looked away and then down at his shoes.

  “I’ll be happy to accompany Brother Tan,” she said.

  Tan turned his head away as what might have been guilt flickered across his features. He might follow Shan’s orders, but he didn’t appear to be especially happy with the situation. She hoped she might use Tan’s shame to drive a wedge between him and his boss.

  Shan flicked his hand at Tan and turned away from Bai, a rude dismissal. Tan took the cue to usher her toward the lobby. She went willingly. If nothing else, she reasoned, she’d finally get the chance to meet Sammy Tu.

 

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