Read Dead in Hong Kong (Nick Teffinger Thriller) Online
Authors: R.J. Jagger
She smiled and said, “Good.”
Then she slid her dress off her shoulders and let it drop to the floor. She wore nothing underneath, other than a drop-dead gorgeous body.
“Do a session with me and I’ll help you,” she said.
“You don’t even know what I want you to do yet.”
“It doesn’t matter.”
Kong cocked his head.
“It might be dangerous.”
“Repeat, it doesn’t matter.”
“Now?”
She nodded.
“You’re the only one I trust enough,” she said. “I’ve been in the mood for a month.”
Then she laid on her back on the rack and stretched her arms over her head. Kong knew what to do, he’d done it before. He stretched her out, tight, so that she was barely able to move.
“Comfy?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“How long of a session to you want?”
“A half hour.”
The words shocked him.
The longest session to this point had been ten minutes.
“Really?”
“Yes,” she said, “and no matter what I do or say, don’t stop. I want the full half hour. Promise me.”
“If that’s what you want.”
“That’s what I want.”
Day Five—August 7
Friday Afternoon
______________
PRARIE MADE IT TO SHORE without drowning or getting killed by the rock star but couldn’t find Emmanuelle, so she headed back to the InterContinental.
Good thing, too.
Emmanuelle was there.
They hugged.
“That was too close,” Emmanuelle said.
True.
Very true.
“The laptop got a lot of water on it but it still turns on,” Emmanuelle added. “Unfortunately it has a security password so I haven’t been able to get in yet. Once we do get in, I have no idea whether everything will be in English or Cantonese.”
Prarie frowned.
Neither of them spoke Cantonese, much less read it.
Her hair was dry but felt like straw. She ran her fingers through it, headed for the shower and said, “I need to wash this salt off.”
“Go for it. Hey, it’s nice to have you still alive.”
“Likewise.”
WHEN PRARIE GOT OUT, Emmanuelle was pacing.
Something was wrong.
“I called that number the gallery guy gave us,” Emmanuelle said. “The thousand dollar number.”
“You mean the replica guy?”
Right.
Him.
“He’s willing to meet.”
“Good.”
“He sounded weird,” Emmanuelle said.
“Then forget him.”
“We don’t have that luxury. We’re just going to need to be careful.”
“When does he want to do it?”
“Tonight. Are you tired? Do you want to take a nap or anything?”
Prarie shook her head.
“I’m too wound up,” she said. “But I need food in the worst way.”
“Okay, but no swimming for thirty minutes.”
Prarie rolled her eyes.
“Not funny,” she said.
“A little funny.”
“Okay, maybe a little.”
THEY WALKED UP NATHAN STREET and ended up in a noisy noodle place with wooden floors and sturdy tables and throngs of people jamming food into their mouths as if they were on ten-minute timers.
They ordered.
Thei
r food showed up in two minutes, t
asty
and c
heap.
Prarie told Emmanuelle how she stayed under the water to avoid getting caught. “I was half ready to shoot him when your little episode over on the shore got him distracted. In a way, you saved my life.”
Emmanuelle stared at her.
“Shoot him with what?”
“The gun—didn’t I tell you about that?”
No.
She didn’t.
So she did.
“What did you do with it?”
“The gun?”
“Right.”
“I just left it there on the shore,” she said. “Why?”
“Do you think it’s still there?”
Prarie shrugged.
“I don’t know. Probably—”
“Let’s go get it.”
Prarie shook her head. “Guns are illegal in Hong Kong,” she said. “If you get caught with one, you’re going to jail, period, end of sentence. And the jails here aren’t nice.”
Emmanuelle chewed noodles and considered it.
Then she said, “I’d rather have it than not, at least tonight. If things go okay with the replica guy, we’ll dump it afterwards.”
Prarie shook her head.
“We got the knives,” she said.
Yes, t
hey did.
“Knives aren’t guns,” Emmanuelle said.
Prarie studied the woman.
“This guy really has you spooked,” she said.
“No, I’m just being cautious.”
Prarie rolled her eyes.
“Spooked with a capital S.”
Emmanuelle smiled.
“Okay, spooked, but not with a capital.”
THEY PAID THE BILL and then took the MRT to the Causeway Bay Typhoon Shelter. The r
ock star was nowhere to be seen but the gun was, r
ight where Prarie left it.
Emmanuelle brushed the dirt off and stuck it in her purse.
“Do you think it will still fire?” Prarie asked.
Emmanuelle nodded.
“It should, so long as the water didn’t get to the gunpowder.”
“How do we know if that happened or not?”
Emmanuelle looked around, saw no one close, stuck the tip of the barrel in the water and pulled the trigger. Water splashed into her face. She wiped it off with the back of her hand and said, “There’s our answer. We should clean it though so the salt doesn’t jam it up.”
Prarie tilted her head, i
mpressed.
“You’re such an organized little criminal.”
“Criminal hunter,” Emmanuelle said. “There’s a difference.”
Day Five—August 7
Friday Afternoon
______________
THE MYSTERY WOMAN walked east towards Central for five minutes and then hopped on a double-decker bus just as it took off.
Teffinger
looked for a cab, spotted one ten steps ahead and pounded on the passenger-side glass. Two people in the back recoiled to the opposite side. The driver shouted something and waved a fist.
Shit!
Then he ran
a
fter the bus
, w
eaving through bodies
and t
rying to not knock anyone over.
People stared.
He didn’t care.
They weren’t the problem. The problem was the heat and the humidity. The bus came to a stop a half block ahead.
People got on.
People got off, b
ut not the mystery woman.
It pulled away
when
Teffinger was twenty steps behind it
.
Damn it!
How far to the next stop?
Two blocks?
Three?
HE KEPT GOING.
He had to.
This was the person who was out to kill d’Asia.
This was
Teffinger
’s chance
, m
aybe his only chance.
He fought through the sweat
a
nd the pain
a
nd kept going.
At the next stop, the woman didn’t get off, and the bus pulled away just before he got to it.
One more stop, j
ust one more.
Don’t die first.
THE CROWDS WERE THICK and got even thicker as he got closer to Central. He wove through them the best he could but then—wham!—the inevitable happened.
A
woman ahead made a sudden left d
irectly in front of him.
He tried to stop but couldn’t
but
mowed her down from behind.
She hit the ground h
ard.
Two shopping bags and a purse flew.
Everyone in the area stopped.
The woman sat up
, d
isoriented
, h
olding her face.
Blood came from it
, t
hen tears.
That’s
when someone shouted something at Teffinger, s
omething mean.
He
bent down and helped the woman to her feet. “I am so sorry.”
Day Five—August 7
Friday Afternoon
______________
BY THE END OF THE SESSION, Kong was so horny that he took Kam Lee, right there on the rack, and took her hard even by his standards. Then they made drinks, headed for the pool out back, and sat in
crystal clear
water up to their chests.
It was c
ooler than a hot tub but not by much.
“I’m being blackmailed,” Kong said. “It’s in connection with Destiny Ng Jun.”
The shock on Kam Lee’s face was palpable.
“Destiny Ng Jun? She was what—a year ago?”
Kong nodded.
“July 18.”
She pressed for details.
Kong gave them.
The first call came two weeks after the fact, from a woman who said she was sitting in the shadows by the water watching the lights of Kowloon when a man and woman walked by. For some reason, things didn’t seem right, so she studied them. Then something terrible happened. The man looked around, saw no on
e, and slit the woman’s throat, j
ust like that.
The woman grabbed the wound, staggered for a second, and dropped to the ground. The man threw a knife in the water. Then he picked the woman up, raised her over his head and threw her as far out as he could. She splashed. He looked around one more time, saw no one, and got the hell out of there.
“I FOLLOWED YOU to the Causeway Bay Typhoon Shelter,” the caller said. “You got in a dinghy and disappeared into the night. Two days later, there was a newspaper article about an 18-year-old woman named Destiny Ng Jun who was found floating in the harbour. The paper didn’t say her throat had been slit, but I knew. That was wrong, what you did. Your prints are all over that knife. For your sake, I hope the police never find it. They won’t, of course, unless someone tells them where to look.”
Kong exhaled.
“WE NEGOTIATED over the next couple of days,” he said. “I tried to figure out who she was but got nowhere. Then I paid her. It was supposed to be a one-shot deal, after which she would go her way and I would go mine. She surfaced again out of the blue on Tuesday, demanding more money.”
“Did you pay her?”
He nodded.
“I had no choice,” he said. “She took me by surprise.”
Kam Lee wrinkled her forehead.
“You should have told me right away, back when it first happened,” she said.
Kong nodded.
That was true.
He didn’t deny it.
“I was stupid,” he said. “There was also another development, just a couple of hours ago.” He told her about the woman who broke into Dangerous Lady, and the other one on shore who got away with his laptop. “My guess is that the one who went on the boat is the same one who’s been blackmailing me. She was looking for more dirt. And now she has an accomplice, too. ”
“So what do you want me to do—help you kill them?”
Kong shook his head.
“No, not kill them,” he said, “just find them. I have a plan to figure out who they are, but I’ll need your help. Once I have them identified, I’ll take care of things from there. You won’t need to do anything else.”
Kam Lee clinked her glass against his.
“I’m in, but all the way, not just half,” she said. “We should bring ’em back here and show ’em how pain works before we kill them.”
Kong pictured it and didn’t mind what he saw.
They deserved it.
“Now that I think of it, I have a client who would love to take it all the way,” she said. “Maybe we should let him do it.”
“You think?”
She nodded.
“He’d probably pay big dollars, too,” she said. “You’d get your money back, or at least some of it. He’d take his time. I can already picture it. It gives me chills just thinking about it.”