doubtless non-lethal coffee and began going through the contents of his inbox.
“Like shit he doesn’t know,” said Detective Sergeant Wallace, a portly man with a thick mustache and bald head. As bad luck would have it, his desk was right beside the A/V cart. “Spider got in at seven-thirty, then got his ass yanked by the High and the Mighty.”
Ryker looked down at Wallace.
“What’s that, Cueball?” he asked, even though he already knew.
“Jericho came stomping in here at about seven-forty-five looking like he was about to piss himself. Went into Spider’s office and asked about you, then he and Spider went off someplace else.” Wallace leaned back in his chair, which creaked beneath his bulk, and interlaced his fingers across his round belly. “You piss someone off again there, Supercop?” he asked, his dark, porcine eyes locking with Ryker’s.
“The day’s too early for that,” Ryker said.
“Never too early to put your ass in a sling,” mused a short, thick black detective named Johnson. He sat at one of the desks in Wallace’s pod.
Ryker shrugged, nonchalant. He then motioned Chee Wei to put the DVD in the player.
“Let’s get the show on the road,” he said.
“Or on the tube, to be more precise,” Chee Wei said, sliding the disc into the unit. As he fiddled with the buttons on the player’s control panel, he asked, “Any idea what’s up?”
“I can only think James Lin,” Ryker responded dryly.
“That chink’s got a hard-on for you, Ryker,” Wallace said. Apparently Chee Wei’s racial status was outside his ability to detect, which made sense: Putting him in the field pretty much guaranteed a case would appear on television’s “Unsolved Mysteries” program.
“You’re a charming man, Cueball,” Ryker said. He noticed the hard set to Chee Wei’s jaw as he switched on the monitor.
“No offense, Fong,” Cueball said belatedly.
“No problem, Wallace. How’s the Weight Watchers coming along?” Chee Wei pressed the DVD unit’s play button, and stood up straight, hands on his hips.
“Hey, what’s this?” Wallace asked, curious.
“Surveillance from the hotel cameras,” Ryker said. “What the hell else would it be?”
“Don’t get testy there, Supercop.” Wallace’s phone rang, and his chair squeaked as he spun around toward his desk. He snatched up the handset.
The surveillance video was of the hallway outside the Taipan Room. It showed the door to the suite, and further down, the elevator bay. Ryker and Chee Wei also had separate footage taken from the elevators themselves, as well as the front desk. They’d already watched the front desk surveillance, which was how they’d established Xiaohui Zhu as being with Lin Dan before he died.
There wasn’t a lot in the video. It wasn’t full-motion action, but a series of stills taken every few seconds. They watched as Lin Dan and his “kept woman” entered the suite, and not much else. There was some of the expected activity, such as guests coming and going from other rooms, but nothing of note until Xiaohui left the suite in a hurry, dressed in the coat she had worn earlier. Her gait was fast and furious, but neither Ryker nor Chee Wei could determine if it was from fear of a sudden, grotesque discovery, or from fear of being caught and branded a murderess. After that, there was no further activity until room service arrived.
“So how did the killer get in the suite if it wasn’t her?” Chee Wei asked after a time.
“Great question,” Ryker said. “No one else approached the room at all, as far as I could see.”
“So it’s her, then,” Chee Wei decided.
Ryker shrugged, but said nothing.
Chee Wei popped the disc out of the player and looked back at him.
“What, you think someone else did it?”
“It doesn’t make a lot of sense, her doing it,” Ryker said. “Lin was her gravy train. He gave her everything she could have wanted, and all she had to do was lie on her back and take it for a few hours at a time. Even if they’d had a rip-roaring argument over something, where she was a couple of nights ago was a hell of a lot better than where she came from.”
“Come on, Ryker, she’s a dame who got pissed because the john wasn’t going to leave his wife for her,” Wallace opined. He’d spun around in his chair and watched the footage after finishing his phone call.
Ryker didn’t even bother looking at him.
“You got a case of your own, right Cueball? Why not solve yours and let the pros take care of this one?”
Wallace’s chair squeaked in protest and he spun back to his desk.
“Fuck you, Ryker,” he said.
“Now that
“So if not her, then who?” Chee Wei asked.
“What am I, a psychic?”
Chee Wei pulled out his chair and sat down.
“You know, sometimes things are
Ryker sat in his own chair.
“I don’t have a clue,” he said. “But this girl’s in it for the reward, nothing else. Certainly not love, other than the love of money.”
“That much is pretty obvious. So what do you plan on doing? Her DNA’s going to be all over the place.”
Before Ryker could do more than just shrug, Spider stepped out of his office. He pulled on his jacket.
“Ryker, let’s go,” he said simply.
Ryker nodded. He sighed heavily and pushed himself to his feet.
“Call the D.A.,” he told Chee Wei. “Tell him we need to hold onto Zhu as a material witness. And mention that may be revised once the lab work gets done. If we get something good, she could go from material witness to murder suspect.”
Chee Wei cocked his head to one side.
“Why not just go there now, and tell the D.A. she
“Because for some reason, I don’t think she is,” Ryker told him. “I can’t put my finger around it, but she’s not the killing kind of animal-even if she did think Lin was dirt.”
“Ryker,” Spider called again, impatiently. “We’ve got to get downstairs.”
“Coming, Lou.” Ryker looked down at Chee Wei. “Make the call,” he urged.
“She’ll just make bail,” Chee Wei said, “but all right, I’ll do that.”
Ryker shot him a thumbs-up and headed after Furino.
Furino wasn’t the most gregarious of sorts, but his silence during the time it took them to ride the elevator down to the second floor convinced Ryker he knew more than what he was letting on. But Spider was a stand-up kind of guy, the type of leader a cop could follow without too much trouble. In Ryker’s mind, if he wasn’t even going to give him a heads-up on what to expect, then whatever was coming was a done deal. No changes would be made, and if Spider had his orders, he had his orders.
There was quite a reception waiting for them in the conference room. Spider opened the door and stood aside, allowing Ryker to enter ahead of him. The first person he saw was Captain Jericho, of course. Almost four inches over six feet in height with dark hair that was going gray at the temples in the most distinguished of ways, he cut an impressive figure in his uniform. Ryker figured there was a lot more gray in Jericho’s hair than just at the temples; it had been that way for years, and the gray was as perfectly delineated as the day Ryker had first laid eyes on him. As he watched, Jericho squared his broad shoulders and smiled, revealing perfectly capped teeth. Obviously, he subscribed to the premium dental plan.
“Detective Sergeant Ryker, thanks for coming,” he said, his voice booming a bit in the functional conference room. “You of course know Chief Hallis?”
There were other people in the room, but all of them faded into the shadows when Ryker looked to his left and saw the Chief of Police rising from his chair. Chief Hallis had been a cop once, and a good one, rising from the