The Mao Case

The Mao Case Read Free Page B

Book: The Mao Case Read Free
Author: Qiu Xiaolong
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phone. When he moved back into the eatery, the noodles on the table were quite cold, the house special, greasy and gray on the surface of the urn, and the beer, stale and bubbleless. He had no appetite left.
    Auntie Yao hurried over, offering to warm up the noodles, which, having soaked so long in the soup, would taste like paste anyway.
    “No, thank you,” he said, shaking his head as he took out his wallet. Gang came limping over to Chen again.
    “Now I recognize you,” Gang said. “You used to live in the neighborhood, calling me Uncle Gang. Don’t you remember that?”
    “You are…?” Chen said, unwilling to admit he had long recognized him.
    “A successful man may not have a good memory,” Gang said with a fleeting gleam in his eyes. “I’ll take care of the leftovers for you.”
    “I’ve not touched anything — except the fish head,” Chen said.
    “I trust you,” Gang patted on his shoulder. “Now you’re somebody.” The smoked carp head stared at the two of them with its ghastly eyes.

TWO
    WHEN CHEN GOT BACK to his apartment, it was past eight.
    The room was a scene of desolation, as if corresponding to his state of mind: the bed unmade, the cup on the nightstand half empty, a mildew-covered orange pit in the ashtray looking like a mole — the mole on Mao’s chin.
    He pressed hard on the lid of the thermos bottle. Not a single drop of water came out. Putting the kettle on the stove, he hoped that a cup of good tea might help to clear his head.
    But what first came to mind was, unexpectedly, a fragmented image of Ling serving tea in a Beijing quadrangle house, her fingers breaking and strewing petals into his teacup, standing by the paper window in a white summer dress, silhouetted against the night like a flowering pear tree…
    The news of her marriage wasn’t entirely unexpected. She wasn’t to blame, he told himself again; she couldn’t help being the daughter of a Politburo member.
    No more than he could help being a cop at heart.
    He willed himself to focus on the waiting work, pressing a fist against his left cheek, as if battling a toothache. He didn’t want to conduct an investigation concerning Mao, even indirectly. Mao’s portrait still hung high on the gate of Tiananmen Square, and it could be a political suicide for a Party member cop to be even tangentially associated with the skeleton of Mao’s private life.
    Chen took out a piece of paper and was trying to scribble something down to help him think, when Party Secretary Li called.
    “Minister Huang told me about your special assignment. Don’t worry about your work at the bureau,” Li said. “And you don’t have to tell me anything about it.”
    “I don’t know what to say, Party Secretary Li.” The water began boiling and the kettle hissing. Li, at one time a mentor for Chen in bureau politics, had come to regard him as a rival. “I hardly know anything about it, not yet. It’s just that I cannot refuse the assignment.”
    “The minister told me that you are to have access to all the available resources of the bureau. So simply tell me what you need.”
    “Well, first, don’t tell anyone about the assignment. Instead, say I’m taking a leave for personal reasons.” He added, “Detective Yu should take over the work of the Special Case Squad.”
    “I’ll announce his temporary appointment tomorrow. I know that you trust Detective Yu. Are you going to tell him anything?”
    “No, not about the assignment.”
    “I’ll take care of everything at the bureau. Call me whenever you need anything.”
    “I will, Party Secretary Li.”
    Putting down the phone, Chen paced about the room for a minute or two before he went over to the boiling kettle, only to discover that the tea box was empty. Rummaging through the drawer, he failed to find any tea. No coffee either, which didn’t matter, as the coffee maker had been broken for weeks.
    He leaned back, stroking his chin. He had cut himself shaving this morning. It

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