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The Survivor
  • Текст добавлен: 26 октября 2016, 22:35

Текст книги "The Survivor"


Автор книги: Sean Slater


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Текущая страница: 24 (всего у книги 29 страниц)

Seventy-Eight


Shen Sun Soone stood rooted to the spot. The sweet aroma of Chinese pork buns filled the air around him, but it did not stir his hunger. All he thought of was the Man with the Bamboo Spine.

The 14K assassin.

The Man with the Bamboo Spine was Dai Huen Jai, a former Big Circle Boy – one of the Vietnamese National Liberation Army soldiers turned mercenary. These men had a willingness to resort to unnecessary torture. And they did so in horrifically creative ways. Death by slow boiling; death by skinning; death by disembowelment – all procedures conjured up to inspire fear in their enemies.

And it worked with great success.

‘Take seat,’ the waitress said to Shen Sun. ‘You take seat. You order food. Eat much.’

Shen Sun left the restaurant, feeling divided. A part of him longed for Macau, where Shan Chu was located. If only he could go there and hold tea with Shan Chu, then there might be hope. But that was impossible. Shan Chu was Dragon Head, above even Sheung Fa. He did what was necessary to protect the syndicate. And because of that, the order for Shen Sun’s death was understandable. The Triad need for secrecy superseded everything else. So when Shen Sun’s photo started popping up on every TV screen around the city, his fate was sealed.

The news media had ordered his death, every bit as much as Shan Chu.

The door to the Jin Ho Café slammed shut from the wind, the glass rattling. It tore him from his stupor. Woke him to the harsh truth. There was no future – not for him. Perhaps there never had been. Perhaps he had died that day in the camps, and now he was nothing more than a shadow wandering this earth.

He stood on the corner of East Hastings and Hawks and stared at the cold expanse of sky. Moments ago it had seemed sunny. Now it was grey.

He reached under his shirt, pulled the Glock from his waistband and placed the barrel flush against his temple. His finger rested heavy on the trigger. The steel was cold. But there was an easiness now. Peace. He gently squeezed the trigger.

And stopped.

Something had caught his eye. Something across the road. It was subtle at first, like the softest change of wind. But it was there. It was undeniably there.

And it was magnificent.

Across the road, on the north side of Hastings, was the Sunshine Market. The store awning was old and yellow with a dozen golden pennants hanging down. Each one boasted a symbol – Peace, Strength, Prosperity, Wisdom. The wind tilted them all towards the west.

All except one.

In the centre hung a single red pennant. Triangular. And on its face was the character for Perseverance. Unlike all the other ones, this pennant tilted towards the east. Against the wind. And Shen Sun could not believe his eyes.

It was a sign, he knew. A glorious rescue. He stared at that red triangular pennant tilting towards the east, and felt his eyes turn wet. Soon tears ran down his cheeks, tasting salty on his lips.

‘Tran?’ he asked.

The wind died and all the pennants stopped flapping.

Shen Sun let the gun fall to his side. Smiled. He would finish the mission. And he would survive. Like he always had, no matter what came up against him, be it the Khmer Rouge, the Shadow Dragons, a Big Circle Boy. Or some gwailo cop chasing him down at every turn.

Nothing could stop him.

He looked east, in the last direction he had seen the Man with the Bamboo Spine marching. Only a few blocks away was Raymur Street. And that told Shen Sun the true destination of his newfound enemy. The Strathcona Projects.

The Man with the Bamboo Spine was going after Father.


Seventy-Nine


When the Man with the Bamboo Spine got the call, he was already walking under the Hastings Street overpass. The crossroad below the pass was Raymur Street, and it was home to most of the cross-dressers and transsexuals Vancouver had to offer.

The overpass was in shadow, not only from the overhang of the road above, but from the cloudless sky. A grey darkness had slowly crept into the city, smothering it like a giant slate cover.

The Man with the Bamboo Spine did not notice the sky. He marched along Raymur Street, staying close to the railroad tracks that ran on the east side of the road. The tracks were set slightly off the main path, on depressed land – decent cover if shooting started. And it probably would. For though he had not seen Shen Sun Soone in over two decades, he knew the kind of man he was. A survivor.

Much like himself.

The phone call he was waiting for finally came. It was inevitable, and had been ever since Shen Sun Soone’s face had been plastered on every TV set in every window. The Man with the Bamboo Spine picked up.

‘Yes,’ he said.

The voice on the phone was Sheung Fa, and his tone was unusually low, distant. There was regret in his words, and grief, so much it was palpable. ‘The situation has changed for the worse.’

‘Yes.’

‘There is no longer an alternative.’

‘No.’

‘Do what must be done.’

‘Yes.

The Man with the Bamboo Spine snapped the cell phone shut and put it away. He looked across the road into the Raymur projects and saw the townhouse address of 533. The man who lived here was Lien Vok Soone – the father of Tran Sang Soone and Shen Sun Soone. Judging by the photographs, he was an old man, short, thin and frail, and from the history in the package, he was the owner of a small convenience store. A simple but honourable man. Another survivor.

It changed nothing.

The Man with the Bamboo Spine was going to kill him first.

And then he would find Shen Sun.


Eighty


Once Striker had identified Red Mask as Shen Sun Soone, the information was sent to every district in every department. His name was flagged on CPIC, meaning the information would be shared not only in Canada, but the rest of the world. Everyone from border patrol to the coast guard was notified, and no less than fifty units were searching possible hideout locations. But so far the search had come up negative.

It made Striker take a different path.

It was five-thirty p.m. with no end in sight when he got on his cell and called up an old acquaintance – the Hall Eleven Fire Chief, Brady Marshall. Years ago, Brady had started his career as a cop before switching to Fire three years in. The hours were better, he had said, and the pay and benefits similar enough. Striker got along well with the man.

Brady answered on the third ring and Striker gave him a quick rundown on the situation, emphasising the Suspicious Circumstance call that had been linked to an Arson call on Pandora Street.

‘You gonna be there a while?’ Striker asked.

‘For this, of course.’

‘Be there in fifteen.’

Striker hung up, and Felicia looked over at him and raised an eyebrow. He offered her nothing and kept thinking over the events that had transpired. Moments later, he pulled out his cell and dialled Courtney’s number.

It went straight to voicemail.

‘She screens her calls one more goddam time, I’m gonna take away her cell.’

Felicia said nothing. It was for the best.

They sped down Hastings Street into the 1700 Block where a McDonald’s was located on the north side. Striker’s stomach growled at the sight, and he detoured. He cut through the Drive-Thru, ordered them a couple of Big Macs, fries and coffees. Five minutes later, they were back on the road, heading for the Fire Department.

Felicia sorted through the bag of fast food, handed Striker a burger. ‘Why Hall Eleven?’

He accepted it, tore off the wrapper. ‘I know the Chief there. Brady Marshall. He’s a good man, and he owes me one.’

Felicia removed her own burger from the bag. ‘How can he help us?’

‘He can give us paper on the Pandora call – the house fire. God knows, we can’t find any reports at the Vancouver Police Department, so we’ll get them from him.’

‘They’ll be different. Less detail. You know how Fire writes things up.’

‘If they have anything, I’ll be happy. They’re all we got.’

Striker ate while driving, careful not to spill anything on his suit. They turned left on Victoria Drive and drove south.

Felicia swallowed a mouthful of burger, grumbling, ‘We should be out there looking for Shen Sun, not visiting Fire Halls.’

Striker put his coffee into the cup-holder. ‘Fifty units are already doing that. What we need now is a good, solid motive. If we can find that, then we’ll be one step closer to solving this thing. All we’ve got right now is a mishmash of theories, none of which come together very well.’ He gave her a questioning look. ‘Unless you can connect it all.’

Felicia shook her head and pulled out her cell phone. She ate her burger and went through her emails; Striker was grateful for the silence. He used the time to down his own food and go over all they had done, making sure they had all their bases covered.

He thought they had. He’d been precise.

Damn near everyone in Operations had been called out. Mandatorily. Both Strike Force Teams were set up on the fly – Team One on a possible location for the Shadow Dragons’ Headquarters, way down in the 4800 block of East Pender; Team Two on the suspected 14K Triad Headquarters up on Kingsway and Kerr. All four Emergency Response Teams were on scene as well: Team Blue on Shen Sun’s apartment on Hastings, Team Green at St Patrick’s High School, Team Grey at the Kwan residence, and Team Red at the only other known associated address.

Shen Sun’s father’s place on Raymur Street in the Strathcona Projects.

And that was to say nothing of the Investigative Units. Detectives had been pilfered from every section – Robbery, Assault, even DVACH, the Domestic Violence and Criminal Harassment section. They were sent to assist the gang squads with anything required, no matter how important or trivial the task.

The entire Department was on high alert, as were all the surrounding areas – New Westminster, West Van, Port Moody, Abbotsford and the RCMP. All were geared towards the same goal: finding Shen Sun Soone. He was arrestable for murder on multiple counts, and considered the highest level of threat. Flagged as a possible suicide-by-cop, because there was little doubt he intended to have police kill him in a gunfight.

Like leaves caught in a whirlpool, the thoughts circulated in Striker’s head. He drove past First Avenue and the Fire Hall came into view.

Fire Hall Eleven was located on Victoria Drive, just east of Commercial. Situated north of McSpadden Park, it was shrouded by the darkness of the forest overhang. When Striker pulled into the driveway, at just before six o’clock, the only light chasing away the charcoal greyness was that of the car’s headlights and the hall itself.

Striker parked in front of Bay Three and walked inside.

Fire Chief Brady Marshall was dressed in a creased white shirt. He looked like an average guy, five foot ten and maybe two hundred pounds. A bit of a belly. Harsh blue eyes that were partly hidden behind bushy grey eyebrows. He sat behind a large desk that was so clean it looked polished with wax. A half-empty bottle of apricot brandy sat on the desk in front of him.

Striker pointed at it. ‘I thought rum was your drink of choice.’

Brady smiled behind his walrus moustache. ‘It is, and it’s gone.’

‘We’d get fired for that,’ Felicia said.

‘So would we – if anyone knew.’

Brady let out a boisterous laugh and waved Striker and Felicia closer. His cheeks were ruddy, as if he’d been out shovelling snow all day.

‘I got the folder you wanted,’ he said. ‘Though I’ll tell you, it was a bit of work. Thing got filed in the wrong place.’ Brady reached into the drawer, pulled out a thick green file. He met Striker’s eyes, looked truly concerned. ‘Any luck out there?’

‘Yeah, all bad,’ Striker said tiredly. ‘We know the gunman’s identity, but we can’t locate him.’ He stopped talking for a second and looked at Felicia. She was standing there, playing with her phone. She flipped it closed, looked up.

‘This is my partner,’ Striker said. ‘Detective Santos.’

‘My pleasure,’ Brady said. He didn’t stand, but he did reach out and shake her hand.

‘Likewise,’ was all Felicia said.

Then Striker got down to business. ‘So what can you tell me about this Pandora Street fire?’ he asked.

Brady shrugged. ‘Kind of what you’d expect. Typical Suspicious Circumstance call that turned into an Arson. I’ve given the report a quick read. It’s not overly detailed, but it’s not lacking either.’ He flipped through the pages. ‘Why you so interested in this anyway?’

‘I think it’s somehow related.’ Striker circled the desk, looked over Brady’s rounded shoulders. ‘What are the specifics?’

Brady ran his finger down the page. ‘Accelerants were used, which is typical. White gas, most likely.’

Striker thought it over. ‘How long it take for your units to respond?’

‘We were on scene in less than ten minutes from the time the call was made.’

‘That about right?’

‘Depends on the night, but yeah.’ Brady picked up his coffee cup, snagged the bottle of brandy, and poured some into it. Striker could smell the booze. When Brady looked back up at Felicia, he smiled.

‘On my time now,’ he said in his defence. He offered them some, and they both declined.

Striker took the report from Brady’s hands and flipped through it until he reached a page with a header that read: Pertinent Structure Details. Reading through it, he found some interesting details.

‘Says here something about stasis-foam being used . . .’

Brady finished sipping his apricot brandy and made a smacking sound with his lips. He wiped his hand under his overgrown moustache and nodded. ‘Yeah, we lucked out on that one. The fire was going good when we got there – a real beast – but, thankfully, the house was filled with that stuff.’

‘Stuff?’ Felicia interrupted. ‘What exactly is stasis-foam?’

Brady looked up at her. ‘Well, essentially, it’s just insulation. But it’s a high-end quality product – kind of like a flexible, mouldable foam. We don’t see a lot of it, since it’s cost-prohibitive. Used mainly in high-friction areas where heat might be a factor.’

Striker noted this. ‘Such as?’

‘Well, hot machinery, for one. Super computers, too, because it’s also a fire-retardant.’

Striker flipped through the rest of the pages, then closed the folder and sat down on the desk. The entire structure squeaked and moved beneath his weight. He looked at Brady for a long moment, then asked, ‘You seen any other houses with this stuff?’

‘Not many. Like I said, it’s expensive. ’Bout ten times the cost of regular insulation. And not all that easy to get here in Canada. You got to order it in from the States, so you get stuck with the extra shipping costs as well.’

‘That’s what I thought.’ Striker held up the report. ‘Can I keep this?’

‘Sure.’ Brady raised his cup. ‘It’s a copy. But make sure you destroy it when you’re done.’

‘Thanks, Brady. It helps.’

‘Just find this fuck.’

Striker nodded. He and Felicia left the fire hall the way they’d come and hopped back in their cruiser. When Striker started the engine and drove onto Victoria Drive, he headed north this time, and Felicia gave him a questioning glance.

‘Where we going?’ she asked.

‘To where this entire nightmare started.’

She furrowed her brow. ‘But Saint Patrick’s High is west of here.’

‘We’re not going to the school,’ Striker said. ‘We’re going to that house on Pandora Street. All the answers are there.’


Eighty-One


Shen Sun hung up the pay phone. This was the third time he had called Father, but he was not home. Which meant he was at either the Chinese Society Social Club on Pender or playing Mah-jong somewhere in Strathcona.

His absence put Shen Sun at a disadvantage.

He slammed down the receiver and turned away just in time to see a patrol car drive by. Inside the cruiser were two young cops – a man and a woman. The woman cop gave him a long, hard look, said something to her partner, and the car immediately turned at the corner.

Circling the block.

Shen Sun cut into the north lane. His head felt swollen from fever and his legs moved like a pair of rubbery stilts. He passed through the industrial section to Raymur Street, below the overpass, where the she-males and transsexuals plied their trade. This was the so-called bad area, a place of drugs and sex and violence. Yet it was also a good place. A lot of honest hard-working people lived here. Poor people.

Like Father.

Shen Sun crossed the road and hurried across the train tracks, under the cover of shadow. On the other side of the gravel path, the ground swept upwards. It was steep, but Shen Sun climbed it. At the top, he followed the bush line a few hundred metres south to a small hollow. He crept inside. From this vantage point, he could see the valley below – the train tracks, Raymur Street and, most importantly, Father’s small town home.

Everything appeared calm.

Father’s unit faced onto Raymur Street. The front door was closed, the drapes were open. However, the living-room light was on, which was disturbing, because Father had grown up poor. Lost electricity was lost money. Leaving a light on was something he never did.

Shen Sun watched and waited. Inside the unit, there was only stillness. No one appeared to be home. And no one was on the streets either.

That bothered Shen Sun even more than the light being left on.

He had spent ten years living here. Never was Raymur Street so quiet. Since setting up in his vantage point, he had not seen one police car drive by. And that was highly unusual. It told him one important thing: undercover cops were around.

Minutes ticked by slowly. The stillness made him edgy, made him want to return home. But if Father had taught him anything in this life, it was the importance of patience.

And so Shen Sun waited.

Just as he had waited so many years ago, in the forest brush that flanked the east end of Section 21. The memory was hot, blending in with his fever, and before Shen Sun knew it, he felt as small as a child again.

As small as Child 157.


Eighty-Two


As Striker and Felicia drove towards the 1700 block of Pandora Street, angry stormclouds floated in from the north, threatening rain and turning the grey twilight a purplish black.

It was fitting for the area. Everywhere Striker looked there was nothing but square concrete building after square concrete building. Some were brown, some were grey, some were a dirty, time-stained beige. But all were the same ugly industrial design.

It was half past six, and there was little sign of life on the street. Just the odd hooker working her corner, and the binners and homeless camped out between the lots, scavenging what they could from the trash cans. Striker watched one girl take note of the undercover cruiser and drop back into the shadows.

When they reached the 1800 block of Pandora Street, the darkness deepened. There were only two sources of light: the streetlamp at the end of the road and the yellow neon glow from Tony’s Autobody Shop, on the south side. The shop was closed for the night.

Halfway down the road, Striker spotted the building he was looking for. It was the lone house – or what was left of it – sitting on the north side of the road. Nestled between a condemned warehouse and an empty lot.

As they drove nearer, the extent of the damage to the house became clearer. Half the exterior was damn near demolished. The other half, barely standing, was nothing but a burned-out shell.

Striker glanced at Felicia. ‘Looks like the last time you tried to cook.’

She smiled. ‘This coming from the man whose daughter makes his every meal.’

‘Point taken.’ Striker frowned. The mere mention of Courtney gave him pause. He tried her again, at home and on her cell.

Nothing.

‘Give it up,’ Felicia said, sensing his thoughts. ‘She’s a woman, she’ll talk to you when she’s ready.’

‘Which means never.’ He opened the car door, got out. The overpowering stench of chicken guts hit him immediately. The smell filtered down from the slaughterhouse which sat a half block to the east, and it permeated everything.

Felicia brought a hand to her nose and winced.

Striker moved on.

A narrow cement path led from the sidewalk to the remains of the house. By the time they’d reached the front porch area, the chicken smell had been overtaken by the reek of burned wood and insulation. Impressive, considering the fire had been out for weeks. The front door and frame were completely gone. On the floor, just inside the foyer, a leftover string of yellow police tape stretched horizontally from beam to beam. Hanging from the tape was a sign: Condemned by the City of Vancouver.

Striker ran his finger along the yellow tape, feeling smoothness and grit. He stepped into the hallway, the burned hardwood clunking and creaking beneath his boots. All around him, blackened pillars rose up like gnarled fingers. Some of the beams continued up past the first floor; others were burned so badly they’d broken and toppled over. Striker crossed into the room and found the one area that was least affected by the fire.

He stopped, studied the wall. Said: ‘Come here. Look at this.’

When Felicia joined him, he pointed to a series of hollows in the leftover, grey-foam latticework. He gloved up, reached out and took hold of the remaining shelf of foam. Despite the intense heat of the fire, the material had remained supple. It bent as Striker yanked on it, but remained firm.

‘This is it,’ he said.

‘It?’

‘The key to all this.’

This?’ Felicia looked at the burned-away insulation. ‘What is it?’

‘It’s the stasis-foam. What Brady was talking about.’

‘I don’t get it.’

He smiled. ‘You will.’

Felicia made a face, and Striker gestured for her to follow. He led her from one room to another, through the empty pockets of blackened framework. This second room looked no different than the first, except in the far corner. A warped metal box lay on the ground with piles of what looked like melted wire surrounding it. Striker picked the box up, forced it open and studied the inside. Most of the inner panel was a clean grey colour, except the bottom half, which was blackened.

‘Fuse box. Source of the fire.’

Felicia furrowed her brow. ‘Brady said they used white gas.’

‘They did – for the second fire.’

Second fire?’ Felicia looked at Striker, then at the destruction all around her. ‘You think there were two fires?’

‘I’m betting on it.’ He walked to the window, where no glass remained, and stared outside, down into the north lane of Pandora. Outside, a series of industrial garbage cans lined the lane.

‘Follow me,’ he said.

They tried to go out of the kitchen door down into the backyard, but the stairs were all but burned away, so they cut back through the house, went out through the front door and took the sidewalk around the house. Once in the rear lane, Striker flipped open the first of five huge garbage containers. He looked inside, but could see little in the darkness.

‘Lot of garbage cans for one place,’ Felicia noted.

‘Exactly.’

Striker continued flipping open the rest of the lids. When done, he took out his Maglite and shone it inside the garbage cans, one at a time. The first two were empty. At garbage can number three, he stopped, reached inside and pulled out three empty plastic cups and the remnants of two very large fans. The fan blades were covered in soil. He held one of them up and muttered, ‘Jesus Christ, could it be that simple?’

Felicia frowned. ‘I’d say no, since I have no idea what the hell you’re talking about.’

He threw the box back into the garbage can and met her stare. ‘It was a grow-op, Feleesh.’

‘A pot palace?’ She looked doubtful. ‘There’s no record of a grow-op ever being here.’

‘Exactly. So why not? That’s the million-dollar question, ain’t it?’ He looked at the array of plastic cloning cups in the next garbage can and shook his head. ‘There has to be documentation somewhere.’

Felicia got out her cell. She called Info and requested an Incident History Location on the address. After a couple of minutes, the operator got back to her, and she hung up the phone.

‘Nothing new,’ she said. ‘All that’s listed here is the first Suspicious Circumstance call, and then, a few hours later, the Arson.’

Striker walked around the far side of the house, searching through the burned refuse. When he found nothing of value, he hiked back to the front. Analysed the devastation the fire had caused. Saw the Condemned by City sign.

‘With a fire of this magnitude, they’d have to shut off the power first,’ he said. ‘Get an engineer to attend. Electrical and Structural. I know some people at the City – you got any contacts with the electric company?’

‘Yeah, I got one at BC Hydro. Just up the road from here.’ She looked at her watch. ‘But it’s getting late though. She might not even be there.’ She flipped open her cell again. ‘Hold on, I’ll see what I can get.’

As Felicia made the call, Striker walked back to the roadside. Once there, he scanned the street for any video cameras, found none, then spotted the only other house that still survived on this block.

Sitting under the lone working streetlamp was a rickety old two-storey, covered in blue-painted stucco. A rusted iron fence ran around the yard, which was covered mostly by crabgrass and other weeds. Out front of the yard was a collection of old metal garbage cans, most of which had no lids and were dented.

Striker detected movement in the upper window of the house. Peering out from between the curtains was a thin, old woman. The moment Striker met her eyes, the curtains swished shut, and she was gone.

Felicia came up the walkway. ‘Okay,’ she said. ‘I’ve got someone at Hydro who’ll help us, but we’ve got to go now.’

Striker kept his eyes on the house across the street. He hesitated. Something about the old woman struck him as odd – no doubt, she was one of the many fruitloops in this area; everyone down here was wing-nut crazy – but the way she had ducked out of view told him something was up. He turned to Felicia and threw her the keys.

‘Meet me back here when you’re done.’

‘You’re not coming?’

‘No,’ he said, and flashed her a grin. ‘I think I just found us a witness.’


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