THE KING OF MACAU (The Jack Shepherd International Crime Novels)

BOOK: THE KING OF MACAU (The Jack Shepherd International Crime Novels)
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WHAT THE PRESS SAYS ABOUT JAKE NEEDHAM

“Tight and atmospheric, Needham’s Jack Shepherd novels are thrillers of the highest caliber, a perfect combination of suspense and wit that will satisfy even the highest of standards. Jake Needham is a man who knows Asia like the back of his hand.”
– The Malaysia Star (Kuala Lumpur)

“In his raw power to bring the street-level flavor of contemporary Asian cities to life, Jake Needham is Michael Connelly with steamed rice.”
– The Bangkok Post

“Jake Needham is Asia’s most stylish and atmospheric writer of crime fiction.”
– The Singapore Straits Times

“Needham certainly knows where a few bodies are buried.”
– Asia Inc.

“Jake Needham has a knack for bringing intricate plots to life. His stories blur the line between fact and fiction and have a ‘ripped from the headlines’ feel…Buckle up and enjoy the ride.”
– CNNgo

“What you will not get is pseudo-intellectual new-wave Asian literature, sappy relationship writing, or Bangkok bargirl sensationalism. This is top class fiction that happens to be set in an Asian context. As you turn the pages and follow Jack Shepherd in his quest for the truth, you can smell the roadside food stalls and hear the long tail boats roar up and down the Chao Praya River.”
– Singapore Airline SilverKris Magazine

“For Mr. Needham, fiction is not just a good story, but an insight into a country’s soul.”
– The New Paper (Singapore)

JACK SHEPHERD IS THE
kind of lawyer some people call a troubleshooter. At least that’s what they call him when they’re being polite.

Shepherd is the guy people go to when they have a problem too ugly to tell anyone else about. He locates the trouble for them, and then he shoots it. Neat, huh? If his life were only that simple…

One of the world’s largest casino operators hires Shepherd to stop a massive money laundering operation targeting its casino in Macau, a tiny place on the South China Coast that is the biggest gambling center on earth. While Shepherd is looking for the source of the black money moving through the MGM Macau, a frightened man who claims to have detailed knowledge of the most secret schemes of the North Korean government approaches him. All Shepherd’s new pal wants in return for spilling all those secrets is political asylum in the United States and a house in Hawaii.

Plunged into a modern-day Casablanca on the South China Sea — a bubbling caldron of gangsters, gunrunners, money launderers, hustlers, gamblers, con men, and spies — Shepherd joins forces with the beautiful and enigmatic daughter of a man everybody calls the King of Macau to shut down the black money flow and bring his defector in alive.

Move too fast, and he’ll lose control of everything. Move too slow…and Macau just might kill him.

THE KING OF MACAU

A Jack Shepherd Crime Novel

by

Jake Needham

Ebook edition published by
Half Penny Ltd.
Hong Kong

Contents

BEGIN READING

BONUS PREVIEW OF LAUNDRY MAN

THE JAKE NEEDHAM LIBRARY

MEET JAKE NEEDHAM

TABLE OF CONTENTS

COPYRIGHT

 

Karl Marx wrote that history repeats itself
the first time as tragedy,
the second time as farce.

And the third time, he might have added, as North Korea.

– Fareed Zakaria, The Washington Post

Don’t matter how you do it,
just do it like you know it.

– Jerry Jeff Walker

ONE

ONCE UPON A TIME—

No, I can’t begin that way. You’re going to think this is a fairy tale. And this story is anything but a fairy tale, although I admit there are things here that might at a glance make it sound a bit like one.

It does, after all, take place in an exotic land you may not believe is real. Take it from me, Macau is real. It is a centuries old city-state occupying a tiny spit of land on the South China coast. Its name is sometimes spelled as Macao, and there’s your first clue about the place right there. When people can’t even agree on how to spell its name, you ought to know right up front that you’re pretty much fucked if you think you’re ever going to figure it out.

All of Macau taken together doesn’t add up to more than a dozen square miles, but it is still the biggest gambling town on earth. It already has thirty-three casinos including the massive Venetian Macao, the largest casino in the world, and new casinos are constantly under construction. Macau is closing in on $50 billion a year in gambling revenues, several times the gambling revenues of all of Nevada combined. The place is Las Vegas on steroids, and that’s no fairy tale.

But there’s something else, too.

AT THE HEART OF
this story is a man many people call a king, although Macau was never actually a kingdom, and Ho Hung Sun was never a real king.

After four hundred years as a Portuguese colony, the Portuguese sailed away in 1999 and Macau became a Special Administrative Region of China. At the time, Ho owned all the gambling casinos in Macau. Every single one of them. A bit of every dollar thrown on Macau’s tables and fed into its slot machines ended up in the pockets of Ho and his family, and all that money made Ho Hung Sun, who always introduced himself to westerners as Stanley Ho, nothing less than the king of Macau.

The power Stanley Ho’s gambling monopoly gave him over Macau was simply more power than the Chinese government was willing to allow anyone to wield in their new Special Administrative Region, but even the Chinese moved cautiously around Ho. It wasn’t until 2002 that they finally came to an accommodation with him and began granting new gambling licenses to big international players like the Las Vegas Sands, the Wynn Resorts, and MGM Mirage.

Although Stanley Ho still operates about half of Macau’s casinos, his power is not what it once was. Like King Lear, the king of Macau is old and knows his kingdom is slipping away.

But that is not the end of this story. It is really only the beginning.

Because here’s the thing…

Stanley Ho has a beautiful daughter, and her name is Pansy.

IT DOES SEEM RICH
material with which to contrive a modern-day fairy tale, doesn’t it? An exotic land, a once powerful king now grown old, and the king’s beautiful daughter.

Of course, there is still something missing. We need a handsome prince to ride in on a white horse and save the king’s beautiful daughter.

That, more or less, is where I come in.

NOW I’M NOT BAD
looking, although calling me handsome might be stretching a point or two, but I haven’t got a horse, not one of any color, and sadly I’m no prince. I’m only a lawyer. At least that is what I say when someone asks me what I am. The whole truth is rather more complicated than that.

I don’t research points of law or figure out tax codes or go to court. I solve problems. The sort of problems most lawyers don’t want to know about.

When people are being polite, they call me a troubleshooter. I’ve never been sure what that actually means, but I have to admit I rather like the sound of it. I find the trouble and I shoot it. Neat, huh? If things were only that simple.

This is what I really do: I fix the shit nobody else wants to touch. I work by myself, I keep a low profile, and I don’t get personally involved. I’m like a surgeon. I show up, cut the son of a bitch, patch him up as well as I can, and I’m out of there.

I am being glib, of course, something I have been accused of more than a few times in my life, generally by a woman. The things I actually do to earn a living aren’t nearly that straightforward. Here’s what I mean…

I GOT AM EMAIL
from a man named Gerald Brady. He said he wanted to see me about a matter of considerable importance. I had no idea who Gerald Brady was, and I learned nothing from doing a quick Google search other than that Gerald Brady was a far more common name than I imagined.

Mr. Brady asked me to meet him the very next day at the MGM Hotel in Macau, and he demonstrated his bona fides by having a bank check for ten thousand dollars delivered to my office in Hong Kong within an hour of my reading his email. That was pretty persuasive. So that afternoon I made the one-hour jetfoil trip across the Pearl River delta to Macau and checked into the MGM, where a very nice suite was waiting for me exactly as Brady said it would be.

I had no idea what he wanted to talk to me about, of course, but I doubted very much it would involve writing a memo on some point of corporate law. People don’t call me when they want a memo. People call me when they have a problem they have to fix, a problem that scares them so badly they can’t talk to anyone else about it. People call me when there isn’t anyone else they
can
call.

My name is Jack Shepherd.

You should keep that in mind. There might come a time when there isn’t anyone else you can call either.

TWO

THE FIRST SHOT WENT
wide and the second shot went high, and I have absolutely no idea where the third shot went.

By the time I heard it, I was flat on my belly behind a black Rolls Royce that someone had fortunately left parked in the driveway right where I was standing. The concrete smelled of rain and the car smelled of wax, and the silence that followed the three shots was so complete I could have counted the tiny ticks from the car’s engine cooling in the night air.

I could have, but I didn’t. I was too busy trying to figure out what was happening. And more important, whether it had anything to do with me.

I had been in Macau for only a few hours. Surely I hadn’t pissed anybody off that quickly, at least not enough for them to want to shoot me.

Then again, I’d been wrong about things like that before.

WHEN THE SHOOTING STARTED,
I was just standing there looking at the early February fog filling Macau’s narrow streets. The thin, wispy light made the whole place feel even more romantic and mysterious to me than it usually did. The upper half of the Grand Lisboa Hotel, a golden-hued monstrosity of a building that was supposed to resemble a gigantic lotus blossom, was gone, lost in the grey-white shroud lying on the city. Wrought iron balconies, cobblestone alleyways, flickering streetlights, and the indecipherable Chinese characters of the road signs were all rendered in feathery soft focus by the gauzy billows of fog. It was like walking into a black and white movie. I felt like Robert Mitchum waiting on a misty street corner for Jane Russell to appear.

I had spent the last hour or so killing the evening by strolling around the casino at the Wynn Macau. The brightly lit rooms, the crowds of Chinese gamblers, the haze of smoke over the tables, and the brittle anticipation breathed in and out by a thousand gamblers in near perfect synchrony had held me for a while, mesmerized by the great world of vice and dissipation. But I’m not a gambler myself, at least not when it comes to casinos, and I felt no personal tug from the tables, so after a while II lost interest and walked out through the Wynn’s east entrance with the vague idea of having a nightcap at the Lisboa Hotel’s famous Whiskey Bar.

Then I heard the sound of the shots ricocheting off the concrete and I wasn’t Robert Mitchum anymore. I was just a middle-aged guy trying to dig a hole in a driveway.

THE SHOOTER, WHOEVER HE
was, started firing again and I gave up the thought of risking a glimpse over the hood of the Rolls before it was completely formed. I could tell from the sound of the reports that the shots were coming from a handgun, probably a nine. At least the little creep wasn’t wielding an AK-47 on full auto like some LA gangbanger.

I heard five more shots. None of the bullets hit the Rolls, and I counted the pings as they ricocheted off the driveway. Either the gunman was the world’s worst shot or he couldn’t bring himself to put holes in a Rolls Royce. That’s what I’d bet on. In Macau, wealth and its display were about the only things most people thought worth defending.

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