He tried to lighten the mood, divert his worries. He looked at a young blonde woman, her big breasts barely contained by her sexy nurse costume, and he smiled at Felicia.
‘Don’t you have one of those outfits?’
‘Yeah, but it’s more the Kathy Bates type.’
‘You gonna hobble me?’
‘Believe me, some days I’d like to.’
He laughed, and the release felt good.
They walked to the end of the breezeway, where the mustering crowds thinned, and Striker was thankful for it. They paused at another square, and Striker milled about while Felicia searched for a directory. They needed to find the auditorium. That was where Grace Lam was speaking at the International Gang Conference.
Striker looked forward to seeing her. She was supposed to be a guru in the world of gang intelligence. From what Striker had learned from Meathead, Grace Lam had started her career in Los Angeles, studying the Grape Street Watts gang, then gotten herself an interview with the infamous Monster Cody Scott when no one else could. After that, she’d been mentored by some of the finest gangologists Los Angeles and New York had to offer. When she’d earned the distinction of being a certified gangologist, she’d started her own thesis, focusing on South Asian gangs. That work had landed her in Vancouver.
It was a telling statement of the underground activity that existed in Canada.
With this thought in mind, Striker approached a water fountain that sat nestled in between a concrete bench and a Japanese plum tree. Being the end of fall, the leaves were still red, but slowly turning purple and yellow and brown.
The area had a certain serenity. Striker wished he could enjoy it. He looked across the square. On the other side of the concrete expanse was a row of terminals at a coffee shop. Internet access. Thoughts of the nitric acid attack on Patricia Kwan returned. He crossed the breezeway and entered the shop. He sat down at one of the computers, then started up Google. He was into his sixth link, reading through the long article, when Felicia found him.
‘I located the auditorium,’ she said, then leaned down and stared at the screen. ‘Nitric acid — what did you find?’
He sat back in the chair, an uncomfortable plastic thing that groaned and stretched beneath his weight, and pointed at the photo of a disfigured woman on the screen. ‘This acid is the stuff of nightmares,’ he said. ‘It’s deadly. Turns flesh to jelly, mutates the hell out of it. If not treated immediately, the effect is permanent.’
‘Then you were lucky.’
He focused on a few jpegs on the screen — horrible images of mutilation — and continued explaining what he’d read: ‘Here in Canada, nitric acid is mainly used for industrial reasons — processing and manufacturing, stuff like that. But overseas, this shit has become the weapon of choice in some countries — for the humiliation that the disfigurement causes as well as the pain. And to inspire fear. It’s used quite commonly as a repayment for adultery… the list of victims just goes on and on and on.’
‘What countries?’
‘Hmmm. Mostly the Asian ones. Hong Kong. The Philippines. But the Middle East, too.’
‘Cambodia?’
Striker shrugged as if to say, who knows. ‘Did you find Grace Lam?’
‘One better,’ she said. ‘I spoke to her.’
‘And?’
‘She’ll be meeting us in twenty minutes. At Legal Grounds.’
Legal Grounds was a small but chic coffee shop away from the clatter of the university crowds, near the bottom of the Burnaby Mountain. The place had been built without a dime spared. The walls were oak, the floors were birch, and throughout the room were loveseats and high-backed armchairs — all of them supple burgundy leather.
Behind the counter was a young brunette, about twenty, dressed in an outfit that resembled a tuxedo. On the wall behind her was a large golden image of the Scales of Justice. Striker stared at it as he bought Felicia one of her fancy lattes — the Charter, as they called it. It was nothing more than an expensive vanilla latte with chocolate sprinkles. Striker bought himself an Americano, black. Then they took their drinks to a small secluded nook in the back.
‘Thanks for the latte,’ Felicia said.
‘Yeah, sorry it took so long, I had to sign a loan to get it.’
She smiled and sipped her drink, and Striker joined her after taking off his long coat and draping it over the back of the chair. They sat there, waiting and going over the case. To Striker, the moment felt surprisingly wonderful. It was the first respite they had had, even if it was forced.
Twenty minutes later, Grace Lam appeared. She walked into the lounge, and Felicia stood up and waved her over.
Striker had expected someone elegant and mature, someone professor-like. But Grace Lam was none of that. She was young, maybe thirty years of age, not an inch over five foot and easily two hundred pounds. Her body and face were equally round, like two perfect circles. In contrast, she had small, hard eyes and lips so thin she looked perpetually angry. Sweat trickled down the sides of her cheeks as she hurried in.
Striker looked from Felicia to Grace, then back again. ‘You could be sisters,’ he said.
Felicia gave him an unimpressed look. ‘You’re a bastard.’
Striker just smiled and sipped his Americano.
After Grace had bought a coffee — something sweet like Felicia’s; Striker could smell it — she sat down in a chair facing both Striker and Felicia. In her hands was a silver-and-black ToughBook laptop, which she placed across her knees, and a thick brown briefcase, which she set down beside the table.
‘So how did you come to find me?’ she asked. ‘I’m actually on leave.’
‘First off, thanks for seeing us,’ Striker said. ‘Especially on your leave.’ When Grace said it was no problem, he continued. ‘We found you through Meathead — I mean Hans Jager; he’s a part of the International Gang Task Force. He said you were the one to talk to.’
Grace got a strange look on her face, and Striker wondered how Meathead had managed to offend her, too.
‘And this is about?’ she asked.
‘The massacre at Saint Patrick’s High.’
The mention of the shooting made Grace’s expression tense up a little. It was a small change, barely noticeable, but all the easiness left her face.
‘Gangs?’ she asked.
‘Shadow Dragons,’ Felicia said.
From his coat, Striker produced some of the Ident photographs of White Mask’s body and showed them to Grace. ‘Here is a partial tattoo on the base of the neck, there,’ he said. ‘He also has a number 13. Crudely done though. A home job.’
Grace looked at the images for only a few seconds, before saying, ‘The partial tattoo is the tail end of a dragon.’
‘Dragon?’ Striker asked.
Felicia leaned forward. ‘How can you be so sure?’
Grace pointed to the photo. ‘By the colour and location. Red and gold are the colours of prosperity and good fortune; the left side is the sinister way, and the dragon looks backwards across the shoulder — a spiritual protector from one’s enemies.’
‘Sounds like superstition to me,’ Striker said.
‘It is,’ Grace replied. ‘In fact, I’m surprised that you found one at all — it’s a rather old tradition. New members never do it. In fact, they’re no longer getting tattoos at all nowadays — makes them too easy to identify that way.’
Felicia cut in: ‘I’ve never heard of this gang before today, not even once.’
‘That’s because the information is misleading.’ Grace opened her briefcase and sorted through a pile of manila folders. After some searching, she found the correct one, flipped it open and set it down on the table.