“The villa belonging to Lin Fan.”
“Oh, no, Mr. Ryan, I know that villa. Jefferson couldn’t possibly have afforded such a place. It would cost in English money at least four hundred pounds a month.”
“Right now the villa is rented by Harry Enright who lives there with his sister,” I said.
Wilcox nodded. His face showed sudden animation.
“That’s right. Enright took the villa over from some Englishman. I forget his name. Nice guy ... I mean Enright, and what a sister!” He leered. “Probably the most attractive woman in Hong Kong.”
“I understood the villa was empty before Enright took it.”
“Oh no. There was some Englishman there. I never met him.”
“Jefferson and this Chinese girl were really married?”
He stared at me.
“Of course. They were married here. I could show you a copy of the marriage certificate if you want to see it.”
“Yeah: I’d like to see it.”
He did some telephoning, then as we waited, he said, “I remember her well—a pretty little thing. I had the job of clearing her papers and despatching the coffin ... a sad affair.” He tried to look sad. “I was sorry for her.”
Miss Davenport minced in, gave Wilcox the certificate and then duck-tailed out. When we had got through watching her exit, Wilcox passed the certificate across the desk to me. I examined it. It did prove that Jefferson had married Jo-An a year ago. I learned that Frank Belling and Mu Hai Ton had been witnesses of the ceremony.
“Who is Frank Belling?” I asked, showing Wilcox the certificate.
He shook his head.
“I’ve no idea. A friend of Jefferson’s I guess. He must be English. We’ve no record of him.”
“And the girl?”
“I wouldn’t know. Probably a friend of Mrs. Jefferson.” He tapped his porcelain teeth gently with the end of his fountain pen and looked sideways at his desk clock.
I decided there was nothing further to learn from him so I got to my feet.
“Well, thanks,” I said. “I mustn’t take up your time.”
He said it was a pleasure to have met me. I could see it gave him more pleasure to see me go.
“You never met Herman Jefferson?” I asked at the door.
“Funnily enough I didn’t. He kept to the Chinese quarter. He seemed never to mix with my friends.”
I left the building and walked slowly over to where I had parked the Packard. On my way I had to sidestep two uniformed Chinese policemen who were dragging along a beggar woman and a screaming child. No one seemed to pay any attention to this little scene. When you have an influx of a hundred thousand refugees illegally entering this small island even,’ year, such a sight probably becomes commonplace, but it depressed me.
I sat in the car and turned over in my mind what I had learned. Not much, but perhaps I had a small lead to work on. I decided I wanted to talk to this Chinese girl, Mu Hai Ton, and also to Frank Belling.
I drove to the Central Police Station and asked to speak to Chief Inspector MacCarthy. After a little delay, I was shown into his office.
The Chief Inspector was cleaning his pipe. He waved me to a chair, blew through his pipe and then began to fill it.
“And what can I do for you this morning?” he asked.
“I’m looking for a man. His name is Frank Belling,” I said. “Can you give me a lead on him?”
MacCarthy lit his pipe and puffed smoke towards me. He would have made a poor poker player. Although his face remained expressionless, I saw his eyes become alert and hard.
“Frank Belling?” He removed his pipe and rubbed the warm bowl against the side of his nose. “Why are you interested in him?”
“I don’t know that I am. He happened to be a witness at Herman Jefferson’s wedding. Do you know him?”
MacCarthy stared blankly at the wall behind me, then reluctantly he nodded.
“Yes ... we know him,” he said. “So he was a witness to Jefferson’s wedding. Hmm . . . interesting. You wouldn’t know where he is?”
“I’m asking you that . . . remember?”
“So you are.” He leaned forward and straightened his snowy while blotter. “Belling is a man we are anxious to contact. He is a member of a very active drug-running organisation
here. We were about ready to grab him when he vanished. We’re still trying to find him. It’s my bet he’s either skipped to Macau or Canton.”
“Have you looked for him there?”
“We’ve made inquiries in Macau, but we haven’t any facilities to check on a man in Canton.”
I eased myself in the hard upright chair.
“He’s English?”
“Yes . . . he’s English.” MacCarthy tapped down the rising tobacco into the bowl of his pipe. “We know for certain he is part of an organisation here that is causing us a lot of trouble. Large quantities of heroin are being smuggled in from Canton. Up to a couple of weeks ago. Belling was playing an active part in getting the stuff into Hong Kong. We had been watching him for some time, waiting for a big consignment to come in.” He relit his pipe, then went on, “We had a tip from one of our informers that delivery was to be made on the first of this month. Then Belling vanished. It’s my guess he was tipped off we were readv to grab him and he skipped either to Macau or Canton.”
“The first of this month . . . that would be two days before Jefferson died?”
“So it would,” MacCarthy said, stared, then asked politely, “Does that mean anything?”
“I’m just getting the facts straight in my mind. The woman witness at the marriage was Chinese: Mu Hai Ton. That name mean anything to you?”
“No.”
I lit a cigarette while the Chief Inspector watched with disapproval.
“Do you think Jefferson was hooked up with the drug ring?”
“Maybe,” MacCarthy said, shrugging his shoulders. “We never got a line on him. I’ve no reason to think so, but if he was friendly with Belling, he could have been.”
“You can’t give me a line on the girl?”
“I’ll check our records. If I get anything I’ll let you know.” He stared quizzically at me. “You’ve moved to the Repulse Bay Hotel?”
“That’s right”
He shook his head enviously.
“You investigators have a nice life. Everything on the expense account I suppose?”
I grinned at him and got to my feet.
“That’s right,” I said. “Well, so long and thanks. I’ll be seeing you.”
I went down into the crowded Queen’s Road Central. The time was now half past eleven. I got in the Packard and drove to Wanchai waterfront. Leaving the car, I went into the bar where I had met the Madame who had drunk a glass of milk with me.
The place was empty of customers. Two Chinese waiters talked together behind the bar. They recognised me and one came over, showing gold-capped teeth in a wide smile of welcome.
“Good morning, sir. Very happy to see you again. A drink or perhaps lunch?”
‘I’ll have a Coke and rum,” I said. “Madame around?”
He looked at the clock over the bar.
“She’ll be here any moment, sir.”
I sat down and toyed with my drink. The Chinese woman didn’t appear for half an hour, but to the Chinese that was no time at all. I waved to her as she came in and she crossed the bar to shake hands. She sat down opposite me.
“I am very happy to see you again,” she said. “I hope all was satisfactory with the girl.”
I grinned at her.
“You pulled a fast one that time. She wasn’t Jo-An and you know it.”
One of the waiters came over with a pint glass of milk which he set before her. Then he went away.
“That was a mistake,” she said. “The girl was more pleasing than Jo-An. I thought you would not mind.”
“There is another girl I want to meet,” I said. “Her name is Mu Hai Ton. Do you know her?”
/> Her face was expressionless as she nodded.
“She is one of my very best girls. You will like her very much.”
“Only this time,” I said, “she will have to prove who she is. I have business to discuss with her.”
Madame thought for a moment.
“She will be able to prove who she is. What business do you want to discuss with her?”
“That need not concern you. When can I meet her?”
“I will try to arrange something. When would you like to meet her? Now?”
“Not right now. How about tonight? I’ll be here at eight o’clock. Will you arrange for her to be here?”
She nodded.
“If she is the right girl, and if she is co-operative, I will give you fifty dollars.”
“She will be the right girl and she will be co-operative,” Madame said, a sudden steely expression in her eyes,
I finished my drink.
“Then tonight at eight.” I got to my feet. “I will know if she isn’t the right girl so don’t pull another fast one.”
She smiled at me.
“You will be satisfied.”
I drove back to the Repulse Bay Hotel, feeling my morning hadn’t been wasted.
CHAPTER THREE
1
I leaned on the rail of the first-class deck of the ferry-boat and watched the third-class passengers fight their way up the gangplank onto the lower deck.
It was a colourful and interesting sight. Everyone, and they were all Chinese, acted as if the boat was about to sail immediately whereas it had at least a quarter of an hour before pulling away from the Star Ferry pier. Coolies, staggering under enormous burdens slung on bamboo poles, rushed up the gangplank, jostling and pushing as if their lives depended on getting onto the already overcrowded deck. Chinese women, babies strapped on their hacks, surrounded by sharp-eyed children in padded coats, pushed and shoved their way along the pier. Two slim Chinese girls in black coats and trousers came up the gangplank at a trot earning between them on a bamboo pole a large sausage-shaped wicker basket in which lay a full- grown and grunting pig. A half-naked Chinese youth, his right shoulder horribly deformed through carrying heavy burdens slung on his carrying pole, grinned happily as he bustled a group of tiny children ahead of him. Two smart uniformed Chinese policemen stood, their thumbs hooked in their revolver belts and watched the scene with a fatherly tolerance.
I shifted my gaze to look at the few first-class passengers who were coming aboard. There was no sign of Stella, but I was sure she would arrive at the last moment. She was the type who timed her entrance. She would never be either too early or too late.
A squat, heavily-built Chinese, wearing a black city suit, a bulky briefcase under his arm came up the first-class gang-plank.
Looking down at this powerful-built man, I had the image of a figure reflected in the mirror at Enright’s hired villa. I was suddenly sure that this was the man I had seen watching me from the darkened lobby.
I watched him come, studying him. He could be any age up to forty, but there was great strength and power in his squat limbs and he moved with the speed and ease of a gymnast.
I told myself all Chinese look alike and I was being cock-eyed to think this was the man who had been watching me in Enright’s villa, but the feeling persisted even when he walked past me without looking at me and sat down, opening a newspaper with a flick of his wrists and hiding himself behind it.
At one minute to sailing time, I saw Stella, wearing an apple-green cotton dress and carrying a straw basket, come along the pier. She paused at the foot of the gangplank and waved to me. She was the last passenger to arrive.
I went down the gangplank to take the basket from her to the irritation of two Chinese
sailors who were about to wheel the gangplank away.
“Hello,” Stella said. “Well, here I am ... as usual I just made it.”
We regained the deck and the ferry moved away from the pier. We sat on the bench seat and talked. The conversation was impersonal and Jefferson wasn’t mentioned. As we came in sight of Lantao Island, Stella asked casually what I had been doing all the morning. I told her I had been exploring the back streets of Hong Kong.
“Well, here we are,” she said as the boat nosed up to Silver Mine pier. “I’ve got to leave these things.” She waved to the basket. “I’ll have to talk to the old dear. I’ll be about an hour and a half. Why don’t you walk to the waterfall? It’s really worth seeing.”
“I’ll do that. Shall we meet here?”
“The next ferry back is just before six. I’ll be here.”
She let me carry the basket down to the pier, then she directed me the way to go.
“You follow the path around Butterfly Hill,” she said, “then you will come to a bridge. Keep on and you will come to another bridge. Beyond the second bridge is the waterfall.” She smiled at me. “It’s one of the most attractive sights here.”
“I’ll find it,” I said.
I watched her walk away to a row of poor looking houses festooned with gaily coloured washing. She moved gracefully, avoiding the jog trotting Chinese peasants and the well-fed, cheerful-looking children who swarmed around the skirts of her green dress.
I looked around for the squat Chinese, but he had vanished. I had seen him get off the boat, but now I had no idea where he had got to.
I had nothing to do until eight o’clock and I felt ready for a walk. It was a warm sunny day and I was in no hurry. I strolled along the path pointed out to me by Stella and after ten minutes or so, I left the waterfront behind and found myself walking along a deserted footway. After I had passed through a village I later learned was Chung Hau, I was suddenly alone with Butterfly Hill on my right and an expanse of open country to my left.
I reached the waterfall without meeting anyone, duly admired it, and then decided to retrace my steps. It was then that it happened. Something that could have been a large sized hornet zipped past my face. It was followed by the distant sound of a rifle shot.
I spread myself flat on the ground with the reflex action I had had drummed into me during my service in the infantry. As I rolled off the road, there came another rifle shot and the dust was kicked up about two yards from me.
I rolled into the thick grass on the side of the path as yet another rifle shot cracked in the still air. This time he nearly nailed me. The bullet zipped past my head alarmingly close.
Sweating, my heart thumping, I kept moving, rolling over, trying to dig myself into the hard ground. I finally came up against a large rock, and with speed, close to panic, I slid around it and lay flat and waited.
Nothing happened and I began to calm down a little. Whoever was shooting at me was up on the hill. He was probably using a telescopic sight. From the sound of the rifle shot, he was a good quarter of a mile away.
I cursed myself for not bringing my .38, but I was wearing a short sleeved shirt and a pair of slacks: no outfit for carrying a gun. He knew where I was. All he had to do was to wait for me to show. Very cautiously, I lifted my head to look behind me to plan an escape route. A rifle cracked and a bullet flicked past my face. I flatttened out.
There were two of them! The last shot had come immediately behind me. The sniper was closer than the other one . . . too damn close!
They must know by the clothes I was wearing I wasn’t armed There was nothing to stop them now they knew they had missed me with their opening shots to come down and make sure they didn’t miss.
I looked at my strap watch. The time was twenty minutes past five. Would Stella come to meet me when I didn’t show at the pier? Suppose she walked into these two? Would they kill her as they were trying to kill me?
I started a slow crawl away from the rock. My combat training was still alive in my mind. I slid through the long grass, snakelike, moving downhill. After five minutes of careful manoeuvring.
I was a hundred feet from where I had been. Then, inch by inch, I lifted my head to try to see where I was.
The hiss of the bullet by my face and then the crack of the rifle made me flatten into the ground. These two were either smarter than I thought they were or I was a lot less good as an infantry man.
I slowly shifted my position. It was as well that I did. Another shot cracked the silence and a bullet zunked into the earth just where I had been lying. I told myself it was a lucky shot. The guy had fired at where he imagined I was, but it was far too close for comfort.
I moved farther to my right, then I saw the long grass ceased to exist. Another four feet ahead of me would bring me to barren rocky ground which dipped sharply to a slope, probably to the side of the hill, running down into a valley.
I lay listening and waiting. I heard nothing. Without raising my head, I could see nothing.
I did the Indian trick of putting my ear down on the ground and listening intently. For several minutes I still heard nothing, then I heard him. I guessed he was about fifty yards to my right. He was crawling towards me, hidden in the long grass and he would be on me pretty soon if I didn’t do something about it.
I tried to judge just where he was, but that wasn’t possible. At least I knew from which direction he was coming. I waited a minute longer, then feeling naked and pretty scared, I rose out of the grass with a quick jinking movement, jumping first right, then left to throw the other joker’s aim off. I was aware of a distant crack of a rifle shot. The bullet went wide by yards. I saw a movement in the grass six yards from me and I started for it.
A Chinese, wearing a blue coat and trousers with a baggy black cap rose out of the grass and grinned at me. He was small, thin and wiry. The sun flashed on the knife he held in his hand. I didn’t give him a chance to get set. I dived for him, my right hand groping for the knife hand, my left hand for his throat.
I hit him in the chest with my shoulder and we went down into the high grass with a bone shaking impact. I had his wrist and him by the throat. He tried to get his fingers into my eyes, but I slammed the top of my head into his face. I heard him grunt. He didn’t stand a chance. He was half my weight and half my strength. I got the knife away from him, then I fastened both hands around his throat. He squirmed under me, but not for long. I squeezed into his skinny throat until I saw his eves roll up and felt him go limp. Panting a little, I heaved myself off him, keeping flat, wondering if the other joker was on his way down.
A COFFIN FROM HONG KONG Page 12