He chews bullets for breakfast.”
“When he comes he won’t care if you’re Chinese or in a uniform. If you are in the way of his machine it will roll right over you.”
Meng studied Shan as if for the first time. “You speak like someone wise in the ways of Beijing.”
“I spent twenty-five years beside those who define those ways.”
The announcement seemed to worry Meng. “Everything I do is consistent with guidance from Beijing,” she quickly explained.
“Guidance from Beijing is kept intentionally vague. That way when some remote cadre makes that excuse she can be blamed for misinterpreting it, even abusing it.” He glanced at the distant mountains. Lokesh was up there. He had to keep Lokesh safe, had to keep Jamyang’s secret life safe. He gestured toward the market. “Of course, you can round these people up today. But that will just light the fuse. It will be weeks before the powder keg explodes, before the folly of it becomes apparent. Then more weeks of meetings, even secret hearings. I used to prepare scripts for such hearings. In the end it will be the field officer’s mistake. The senior local officer always should have known better.” Shan spoke in a slow, level voice. “You’re going to need political reeducation, Lieutenant Meng, at one of the big institutes back east. Living in a dormitory, reciting Party scripture for hours every day, sitting for more hours in criticism sessions, looking over your shoulder for the one who is going to make you the subject of the next session. You will be expected to volunteer for one of those patriotic brigades that wave banners in parades. Some cadres find it quite invigorating. Like taking an extended vacation with the Great Helmsman.”
She returned his steady gaze without expression then broke away to study the Tibetans once more. He was not sure he had scared her so much as piqued her curiosity.
“I need more,” she said at last. “I need a reason to talk to headquarters, a reason to change their orders.”
Shan nodded toward the Tibetans. “The market is where the truth gets told. You are doing your job, always sifting for local intelligence. You picked up a rumor. People know about the dead woman.”
“Know what? Whoever she is, she has been abandoned. No one has reported her missing. No one has asked about the body.”
Shan stared at her a moment. “No one told you? She was a nun.”
Meng’s hand crushed the bag of seeds. Her face clouded.
“Explain that it changes the entire interpretation of the crime scene,” Shan said. “The flag, the boots pressing down on the woman, the cap covering her short hair was all a pose for police photographers, a ruse of the killer to point suspicion at a dissident. You realize that now because no dissident kills a nun.”
After a long moment she rose and took several steps before lifting the small radio on her belt. The truck of armed police, still waiting in the street, drove away. The men in plainclothes began retreating back toward the grey vehicles.
The lieutenant watched the police drive away before turning back to Shan. “Fine. I have done what you asked. It’s going to cost me several unpleasant hours back at headquarters.”
Shan heard her expectant tone and cocked his head. “Is this a negotiation, Lieutenant?”
“Of course it is,” she shot back. “North. South. West. I need the fourth to go with the others. I’ve heard the prayer horns that mock us from the heights. They sounded again the night after the murders.”
“Now you are speaking riddles.”
“You’re going to tell me about that lama who slinks around the hills like some damned outlaw.”
CHAPTER FOUR
When Shan did not respond, Meng turned and pointed down the dusty street, toward the center of the town. They walked in silence, past another gas station, past a post office in a prefabricated building, then into the small structure that appeared to be Baiyun’s main food store. One of the Tibetan constables
Erin M. Leaf
Ted Krever
Elizabeth Berg
Dahlia Rose
Beverley Hollowed
Jane Haddam
Void
Charlotte Williams
Dakota Cassidy
Maggie Carpenter