“Tommy talks too much. Enough with the cheap shots.”

“You know what I think?” Dulwich said.

“I don’t remember asking.”

“You once said pulling me out of that truck changed everything. Remember that?”

“Yeah. That’s about the same time I decided not to go to Afghanistan and to get out of the contracting business.”

“Peggy is eight months pregnant with their second,” Dulwich said of Danner’s wife. “She went hysterical when I told her he’d gone missing. She’s forbidden from flying. Stuck in Houston.”

Shit. Knox should have known about the pregnancy. Should have stayed in better touch.

“I can’t put any of our guys into China right now,” Dulwich said. “We’ve had inquiries-formal inquiries asking if one of our employees is missing. They’ll be watching Immigration. But since you do business there on a regular basis, you go in as you. Just another buying trip. You meet up with the woman and together you find the books, find Lu Hao and Danner.”

“I don’t babysit,” Knox said.

“You won’t have to. She’s former Red Army, very, very smart, and a looker.”

“Shit, shit and shit.”

“We have to leave tonight,” Dulwich said. Checking his wristwatch, he said, “Wheels up in ninety.”

Knox drummed his fingers on the rattan tabletop. “And what if they do kill him?”

“Then we deliver the wrath of God upon them. You and me. Whatever it takes.”

Slowly, Knox stood and stretched. “Do I have time for a shower?”

“God,” Dulwich said with a smile, “I sure hope so.”

4

5:00 P.M.

HUANGPU DISTRICT

SHANGHAI

The waiting area of the Guangdong Road PSB was a gray, tube-lit room with a poster warning of avian flu, hung thickly with cigarette smoke. The officer-of-the-month photo hadn’t been changed since June. A black-light bug- killer sparked randomly above the door.

Into the station strode a wide-shouldered Chinese man, Shen Deshi. He had cropped hair, a crushed nose and thin lips. He wore a black leather jacket, a gold chain around his neck and tinted glasses that partially hid searching, distrustful eyes.

He proffered his credentials to the receptionist, who worked to disguise her alarm. The People’s Armed Police was the most high-ranking, the most respected and feared in all of national law enforcement. An armored division of both military and police bureaus, PAP officers carried concealed weapons and were free to use them at their discretion. Officers of the elite corps were often referred to by the nickname “Iron Hand.”

Shen Deshi leaned onto his forearms on the countertop. His fingers were blunt, wide, and bent awkwardly, each having been broken multiple times.

“May I help you?” she inquired in Shanghainese to test his origins.

“I am Shen Deshi,” he said, also in Shanghainese. “I will speak with your most senior officer on duty. I do not wish to be kept waiting.”

She glanced toward the phone, but then thought better of it. “One moment please.”

Shen Deshi took a seat between two women waiting in chairs against the wall. He gave the younger of the two a slight smile as he appraised her from ankle to chest. Then he looked straight ahead, as if alone in the room.

The desk officer returned with a slight man in a captain’s uniform. He was in his mid-fifties, with hollow cheeks and cheap eyeglasses.

“Officer Shen,” the captain said, “this way, please.”

In the captain’s tiny office, Shen Deshi brushed off the chair, unnecessarily, before sitting.

“We are honored by your visit,” the captain said.

The two men exchanged business cards, proffering them held at the edges by both hands and with a slight bow of the head.

“The honor is all mine, I assure you,” Shen Deshi said flatly, wanting the formalities out of the way.

“May I offer you some tea?”

“I would be delighted but do not wish to trouble you or your staff.”

“It is no trouble at all, I assure you.” The captain worked the intercom and ordered some tea. There was no further conversation until the tea arrived some five minutes later.

Shen Deshi accepted the cup and immediately set it aside.

“Thank you,” he said.

“It is my pleasure,” the captain said behind clenched teeth.

“I need everything you have on the severed human hand that was fished from the Yangtze. You will withhold nothing.” He sat back, eyed the steaming cup of tea one more time, but did not reach for it. “I’m waiting.”

The captain worked the intercom to request the evidence and all documentation.

“An unusual case,” the captain said.

Shen Deshi offered only a disapproving look.

“We followed procedure, of course.”

“Then I am sure to write a glowing report.”

The captain swallowed dryly.

“Such discoveries are to be reported quickly,” said Shen Deshi.

“The skimmers-the trash skimmers at the mouth of the Yangtze-snag bodies on a regular basis,” the captain reported. “Maritime accidents.”

“Of course.”

A Utopian society did not foster suicide.

“I did not know how to report this severed hand,” the captain said carefully. “Its existence implied a violent crime or accident but one having taken place well upstream of Shanghai.”

“A difficult situation,” Shen Deshi said, though his face said otherwise.

“I checked the reports.”

“Of course.”

“Saw nothing that might connect.”

“Of this, I am sure,” Shen Deshi said. “The Ministry”-the Ministry of State Security, the Chinese intelligence agency-“is interested in this hand. A quick resolution to this investigation could benefit all concerned.”

“It has my full attention.”

“The movement of certain members of an American film crew are at the heart of it.”

“Indeed?”

“Let us say they may have strayed from the parameters set forth in their visas. The Ministry is intent on knowing where they have been, and more importantly, why.”

“To cancel the visas.”

“Perhaps,” Shen Deshi said. His eyes warned the captain not to get ahead of himself.

The minutes stretched out. The captain complimented his guest on the strength of his name: Shen, the family name, meant “don’t yield.” Deshi, “virtuous.” The combination of the two was outstanding. It had obviously brought the man much yunqi-luck.

Shen Deshi avoided pointing out the captain’s name was weak, his family name sounding too much like the number five, which was bad yunqi.

The captain reached for the phone as a knock sounded on his office door. A uniformed officer entered with a fogged plastic bag containing the human hand, along with an assortment of photographs and paperwork.

“We have kept it at a constant temperature of two degrees,” the captain explained.

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