The waiter returned with some pickled vegetables, a plate of steamed vegetable dumplings, and

shui mai.

April poured herself another cup of tea. She'd lost her appetite. Poor Tovah had gone along with her mother's wish for her to marry a boy she didn't know in a big production. This was something only poor and hopeless Chinese women did these days. Independent people didn't marry to suit their parents. It wasn't as though April didn't

know

this.

'Querida?'

Mike wanted an answer. She owed him one. She wasn't a girl like Tovah with no will of her own, a wuss, a sop, a weakling afraid to defy her parents.

There were consequences for everything. So she decided to tell him and let him figure it out. She put her hand to her forehead and blurted her secret. 'I hold the mortgage on the house.'

'Your house?' Mike frowned. What did that have to do with anything?

'Yes.'

'That's it? That's your reason for not getting married?'

April pressed her lips together. Not qi*»te, but pretty much that was it.

'So ... you owe, what, sixty thousand dollars? Seventy?' It wasn't that great a property; how much could it be? Mike frowned, trying to figure it out. It was just across the bridge from Manhattan, but small, had no garage. They'd bought it before the Queens real estate boom. There wasn't even a dishwasher in the kitchen.

'Seventy-three,' April admitted. 'It has a thirty-year mortgage, and the house is probably worth more now.'

'Lots more now. I don't get this. You don't want to get married because you owe seventy-three thousand dollars?' He was incredulous. She made more than that in a year. Together they made more than twice that every year. He already had more than fifteen years in. He was being recruited to the private sector practically every day. Plenty of jobs out there for a lot more money.

'The house is probably worth two hundred now. Maybe more,' he said. What was her problem?

'I don't own it, only the mortgage.' April's bladder was bursting. She needed a bathroom.

'That's it?' he repeated, frowning some more.

'Yeah.' She lifted a shoulder. It was a lot of money, and she couldn't force her parents to sell. The way she saw it, Mike supported his mother. That was two rents in his column. Her father helped with the house, but not a lot, and Skinny Dragon not at all. Both of April's parents were tightfisted in the extreme. They were saving for their old age, afraid of an empty belly. April's head ached. Money and filial piety, and love for Mike. Those were her conflicts. She'd almost gotten over the whole ambition thing. Almost.

'I'll be right back.' She jumped out of her chair, charged to the bathroom, and peed copiously, sighing with relief. Then the case popped back in her mind. So much for lack of ambition.

Wendy may or may not have had a cigarette or a drink and then gone to pee during the ceremony. But she had opportunity. She was the manipulator here, the one who knew everything. April made a note to herself to have a word with Hollis to stay out of it and let her handle the questioning. She wanted to go over the client list, do her own background check of Wendy. There was something there, but she didn't know what it was.

When April got back to the table, Mike was sipping his beer, deep in thought. He picked up a dumpling with his chopsticks and smiled at her enigmatically. 'Pretty good,' he said about the food.

'I'm glad you like it.' April waited for his next words. But none were forthcoming. She gathered that the ball was in her court now. She poured her fourth cup of tea. Now for health she had only sixteen to go.

Nineteen

A

t eleven-thirty that night April picked up her home phone on the first ring. It was Ching.

'Ching. How ya doin'?' April was disappointed. She'd hoped it was Mike, calling to say he was sorry he'd been so tough on her.

Ching started wailing right away. 'Oh, God, April. This is a terrible thing. Who killed that poor girl? Ma saw it on TV and she's going nuts.'

'I don't know. It's an odd, sad case, but it doesn't have anything to do with you. Tell your mother.'

'I told her, but she thinks it's bad luck.'

April sighed. 'How can a stranger's murder be bad luck for you?'

'Well, not only me, April. You, too.'

'Oh, God,' April muttered.

'She thinks you'll never get married. Did you call Gao back?'

'Huh? Gao?'

'He's the chef you had lunch with yesterday.'

Oh, Jesus.

April closed her eyes. She didn't have dme for this. 'Sorry, Ching, I remember. You know I can't fix parking tickets. I have no 'in' with Immigration. He wants a green card, get a lawyer, whatever.

If he's been collared I'll check it out. But not right now.'

'He hasn't been collared,' Ching said.

'Good.' Anything having to do with a hostage or kidnaping she could get Special Case detectives on it. She didn't want to sound harsh, but her plate was full and her influence limited.

'No, no, it's nothing like that. He wants to better himself is all. He's a good guy, relative of a relative of Matthew's. And he's really good, trust me.'

'Ching, can't this wait?' April wailed.

'No, it can't wait. I know your father is slowing down,' Ching told her.

April groaned. She had to look at Wendy's client list, see if there was anything funny about any of the other weddings she'd done. She had to stay focused on finding Tovah's killer. But she couldn't resist the sore subject of her father slowing down. It would be a disaster if he retired.

'Who says?' she demanded. Her father looked pretty good to her. As long as she could remember he'd been bald and skinny, had worn thick glasses, and stumbled around with his buddies after drinking too much Johnnie Walker. As far as she could tell, he was still energetic on the two-P.M. to two-A.M. schedule.

'This is what I heard. You with me? Gao is interested in meeting him. He's very good. They come from the same area, you know, speak the same language. I thought it might help you out.'

April didn't see how it would help her out.

'April?'

'Yeah.'

'You're very stubborn, anybody ever tell you that?'

'Yeah.' Everybody told her that. Her parents, her bosses, Mike, now her sister-cousin. What were they talking about? She wasn't stubborn. She was the essence of flexible.

'Look, I don't want you to have bad luck. Be an old maid. Do I have to spell this out for you?' Ching was getting impatient.

'I don't have any idea what you're talking about,' April said huffily.

'Oh, come on, April. I wanted to marry an American. I

intended

to marry an American. My parents flipped; I'm not kidding. Boy, did we fight. Every time we talked it was a fight.'

'I remember. But you didn't marry an American.' End of argument.

'Where Matthew grew up, he was like the only Chinese in school, okay? He's as American as they come, hot dogs and pizza every day, no Chinese food at all, and he doesn't speak a word.'

'Ching, I have to get up early tomorrow.'

'And frankly, he didn't want to marry Chinese any more than 1 did. He thinks Chinese girls are bossy. Our falling in love was an accident.'

'Ching! Stop already.'

'You love fighting with your ma. Get over it. Just make it happen. Take control. Listen to the

I Ching,

Вы читаете The Silent Bride
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату