by Robin Cook
At the Peninsula, the doorman opened the door for him, and he entered the lobby.
At that time of the morning, the lobby was relatively busy with international travelers checking in or checking out. Luggage was piled in heaps near the bellman's desk, where the bell captain was struggling to keep order. It was to the bellman's desk that Ned walked.
Ned singled out one of the younger bellboys and approached him as he was piling bags onto a bellman's trolley. Kelly had learned a smattering of Cantonese through his dealings with the Chinese over the years. In Cantonese he asked the young man for a favor. The boy seemed surprised to be addressed by a gwedo in his native tongue.
Ned slipped the boy a thousand dollars Hong Kong, more than many months' wages. The boy's eyes widened.
"Some friends are staying here," Ned said.
"I want to know their room so that I can surprise them. But I don't want them to know. Understand?"
The boy nodded, then flashed a broad smile.
"The names are Williams and Blumenthal. I don't know if they have separate rooms or a single."
The bellboy nodded again and dashed over to the bell captain's desk. Peering past the captain, who was busy on the phone, the bellboy perused the master guest list. In a flash he returned. Ned had lighted up a cigarette in the interim.
"Pleased to say that it is 604 and 606," the bellboy said with another smile and multiple bows. Ned reached out and stopped him from making a scene. Ned thanked him and walked over to the newsstand. While he leafed through the latest Time magazine with the flowers tucked under his arm, he kept his eye on the bell desk to make sure his dealings with the bellboy didn't arouse any suspicions. But they hadn't. The ecstatic bellboy had gone back to loading his cart as if nothing had happened.
Ned replaced the magazine. He switched the flowers to his right hand. With an expert eye, he picked out the hotel security people in the lobby. There were two, but neither one had particularly noticed him.
Walking directly to the elevators, Ned pushed the Up button.
Things were going smoothly. So far he was pleased. He anticiated giving Lester a call in about fifteen minutes. He was lookp ing forward to the substantial bonus Lester had promised him for a job well done.
By the time the elevator doors opened on the sixth floor, Ned's pulse was racing. Despite his conscious attempts to keep himself calm, when he got this close to action, he got tense.
Familiar with the customs of Hong Kong luxury hotels, Ned waited by the elevator once he was on the sixth floor. He gave the hall porter a chance to approach from his cubicle. Ned smiled broadly.
"Hello, friend," he said in Cantonese.
The hall porter was an elderly Chinese. He smiled weakly, confused as to who this man could be. He wasn't expecting any new guests that morning.
"I have a present for you," Ned said. He handed the man a thousand dollars Hong Kong.
The man's toothless jaw dropped.
Ned smiled again.
"I need you to help me for a moment," he said.
"I want you to open my sister's door. 604. It's her birthday."
Slipping the bills into his pocket, the hall porter led Ned down the corridor to 604 with a shuffling gait. He was about to knock, but Ned grabbed his arm before his fist hit the door.
"No," Ned said.
"It's a surprise."
The porter nodded, then fished in his pocket for his keys.
Selecting the proper one, he slipped it into the lock.
As the porter pushed in the key, Ned glanced up and down the corridor. Then he reached behind his back and extracted the long barreled gun.
The door opened a crack. The porter started to step aside, but Ned put his hands on the man's back and shoved him forward with as much force as he could muster. The porter's body collided with the partially open door, pushing it open with a bang. The porter sprawled head first on the carpet inside the room.
Instantly, Ned leaped into the room. He dropped the flowers and held the Heckler and Koch in both hands, elbows locked. His quarry was sitting on the bed with light from the window back lighting his sandy blond hair.
From Ned's position, looking down the sights of his automatic pistol, Tristan Williams looked confused as he sprang to his feet.
Ned shot him twice in the forehead, just above the eyes. The gun made only a spitting noise. Tristan went backward over the bed.
It was easy as pie.
Wheeling around, Ned looked for the Blumenthal woman. She wasn't in the room. Then he noticed the open connecting door.
From within, he could hear the sound of water running.
Ned turned and silently closed the door to the hall. Then he pointed the gun at the hall porter, who was frozen with fear on the middle of the carpet. Ned motioned with the gun for the man to move toward the closet.
Ned opened the closet door, then roughly shoved the porter inside. He softly closed the door behind him, then locked it.
Moving back to the connecting door, Ned listened. The water was still running. Slowly, he leaned into the room. It was empty, and the bed was stripped of its linens. But the bathroom door was ajar about four inches. Now he could hear the running water more clearly. The Blumenthal woman was filling the tub.
Without a sound, Ned moved across the room to the bathroom door. Sucking in a deep breath, he raised a foot and kicked it open. In an instant, he was inside.
The Blumenthal woman was kneeling by the tub. Her back was to the door. He had surprised her completely. She was beginning to rise to her feet when Ned pumped two bullets into the back of her head. She pitched forward into the tub, overturning a bucketful of soapy water in the process.
Ned looked at the bucket with confusion. Stepping over the soapy water, he grasped the woman by the hair and yanked her head back.
"Damn!" he muttered. It wasn't the Blumenthal woman at all.
It was a Chinese cleaning lady.
Ned let go of the woman's hair. She slumped lifelessly back into the tub. He went back to the first room. Going around the bed, he bent down for a closer look at Williams' body. It was tough to get a good look at him, since the body was jammed between the bed and the wall. With some difficulty Ned managed to straighten Williams out. Then he sifted through his pockets and pulled out the man's wallet. Flipping it open, Ned swore aloud. It wasn't Williams! It was a Robert Buchanan! Who the hell was Robert Buchanan?
Ned straightened up. What had happened? Had the bellboy given him the wrong room? he wondered. He gave the room a quick search. In a suitcase at the foot of the bed he found a packet of American Express travelers checks. The name on them was Marissa Blumenthal.
Going to the door to the hallway, Ned put his ear to it and listened. Not hearing anything, he opened the door. The hall was empty. Taking the "Do Not Disturb" sign from its hook, he draped it over the outer doorknob. Then he left, closing the door behind him.
Descending to the ground floor, Ned casually strolled around the lobby. He wandered through the breakfast room and several of the function rooms. Nowhere did he see anyone resembling Williams or Blumenthal. Finally, he gave up and headed for the door.
Just outside the hotel's entrance, Ned found Willy sitting in the Nissan with the motor running. Ned opened the door and got in.
Willy could tell that something was wrong.
"Williams and the woman weren't there," Ned said with irritation.
"Are you sure you didn't see them leave the hotel?"
"No way!" Willy said.
"And I've been here almost all night.
They didn't leave."
Ned stared ahead through the windshield. He shook his head.
"Well, they weren't in their rooms. And now I've succeeded in messing things up even worse than you did. I killed the wrong people!"
"Hell!" Willy said.
"What are we going to do now?"
Ned shook his head.
"One thing that we aren't going to do is collect that bonus. That's the sad part. I su
ppose we'll have to turn it over to the Wing Sin. Let's go."
"I hate to say this," Marissa said, "but I think I like this watch better than the last one. It's more feminine." Marissa was admiring her Seiko tank-style watch.
"Quite attractive," Tristan agreed. He looked at his own.
"Maybe I should have tried a different style- Well, maybe I'll get my chance. We're still in Hong Kong. So far it's been a watch a day."
They inched ahead a few more feet.
"How long is this tunnel?" Marissa asked. She was starting to feel the way she did when they'd been locked in the trunk.
"Beats me," Tristan said. He scooted forward and lowered the glass separating the back compartment from the driver.
"Hey, Bentley, how long is this tunnel?"
"A little less than a mile, Mr. Williams," Bentley said.
Tristan settled back.
"Did you hear?" he said.
"Unfortunately," Marissa said.
"At this rate, it will take an hour just to get over to Hong Kong Island. I've never seen traffic like this."
Marissa and Tristan were in the depths of the Cross Harbor Tunnel. They'd met up with their new driver that morning after '46_ leaving the hotel through the employee entrance. Tristan,had thought it wise to leave as surreptitiously as possible.
Bentley had turned out to be just what they'd hoped. Bentley Chang, their new driver, was all muscle and the size of a Sumo wrestler. In the language department, he could have qualified for work at the UN. He spoke the Queen's English in addition to Japanese, Cantonese, Mandarin, and some Hakka and Tanka.
He also convinced Tristan that he was knowledgeable in kung fu.
He inspired Marissa's confidence with the pistol he carried in a shoulder holster.
His car was equally impressive. It turned out to be an armored Mercedes normally reserved for visiting dignitaries. When Marissa asked Tristan what it cost, he told her not to ask. He'd made the arrangements the night before, calling the limousine company himself instead of using the concierge.
By the time they got to the lower tram station for the run up Victoria Peak, it was nine-thirty.
"And I was hoping we'd be early," Tristan said.
Before they got out of the car, Tristan went over the instructions he'd given Bentley earlier, namely that Bentley was to drive to the peak and watch from a distance. If anything went amiss, Tristan would signal by running his hand through his hair twice.
If Bentley saw that, he was to intervene as he saw fit. If everything went off without a hitch, Bentley would drive down to the dropoff point and wait for Marissa and Tristan to come down in the tram.
"Any questions?" Tristan asked the muscular Bentley.
"Just one," Bentley said.
"If you are involved with narcotics, please let me know."
Tristan laughed.
"No, we're not involved with drugs of any kind."
"I will be angry if you are not truthful," Bentley said.
"I wouldn't want you to get angry," Tristan assured him.
The ride up in the red tram, which was really a funicular railway, turned out to be a delight. Quickly they left behind the concrete of Central and rose up into wooded slopes filled with bowers of jasmine, wild indigo, daphne, and rhododendrons.
Even from the confines of the tram, they could hear magpies singing.
The peak itself turned out to be a disappointment. The morning mist still shrouded the mountaintop, and Marissa and Tristan could see nothing of the reputed view. The foliage, however, was quite beautiful, particularly the exotic trees still beaded with dew.
Trying to make their presence apparent, Marissa and Tristan circled the Peak Tower a number of times. The tower was a three-story shopping mall with restaurants, an ice cream stand, a drugstore, and evena supermarket. Marissa was intrigued by the stalls that sold Chinese handicrafts.
As they wandered, they kept an eye out for the three men who'd abducted them the day before. But they saw no one they recognized except Bentley. He'd arrived as directed. As agreed, he remained unobtrusively in the background. Neither he nor Tristan and Marissa exchanged so much as a nod.
By quarter after eleven, Tristan and Marissa were ready to give up.
"I suppose word of the to-do at the Peninsbla got to them," Marissa said.
"Damn," Tristan said.
"Now I don't know what to do. We're back to the beginning."
Slowly they ambled back toward the upper tram station, feeling depressed. After such high anticipation, this was quite a letdown.
"Excuse me," an elderly woman said, approaching them. She was wearing a broad-brimmed straw hat with black fringe. She'd been sitting on a bench near the tram entrance.
"Are you Mr.
Williams?" she asked.
"I am," Tristan said.
"I am to extend apologies from Mr. Yip," she said.
"He was unable to make your morning meeting. But if you would please go to the old Stanley Restaurant, he will be happy to see you."
"When?" Tristan asked.
"That is all I know," the woman said. She bowed and hurried off with a shuffling gait.
Tristan looked at Marissa.
"What does that mean?"
"I guess the man in the white suit is Mr. Yip."
"But when are we to go to the Stanley Restaurant?" Tristan asked.
"And where is it?"
"I would assume we should go directly," Marissa said.
"As for where, let's ask Bentley."
They descended in the peak tram. Bentley was waiting in the armored Mercedes by the time they got down. Marissa and Tristan piled into the backseat. Tristan asked Bentley if he'd ever heard of a restaurant called Stanley's.
"I have indeed, sir," Bentley said.
"Where is it?" Tristan asked.
"Why, it's in Stanley, sir," Bentley said.
Tristan slid back in the seat.
"Okay, Bentley," Tristan said, Let go to Stanley."
To Marissa's chagrin, the first leg of the trip was through another tunnel that was over two miles long. Until the experience of riding in the trunk of the car, she'd never known she'd disliked tunnels.
Thankfully the traffic moved relatively swiftly; although this Aberdeen Tunnel was longer than the Cross Harbor, the car went through it significantly quicker. When they emerged, the landscape had transformed from the urban sprawl of Kowloon and Central to an almost rural beauty. The beaches were rimmed with bright sand and the water was the emerald green Marissa had seen from the jet on their arrival from Brisbane.
As they motored along the attractive coastline toward Stanley, Tristan slid forward again.
"Bentley," he asked, "have you ever heard of a man by the name of Mr. Yip?"
"That is a common Chinese name," Bentley said.
"When we met this Mr. Yip he was wearing a rather distinctive suit," Tristan said.
"It was white silk."
Bentley turned to look at Tristan. The car did a little fishtail as he quickly redirected his attention to the road.
"You met a Mr. Yip in a white suit?" Bentley asked.
"Yes," Tristan said.
"Is that surprising?"
"There is only one Mr. Yip that I know who wears white suits," Bentley said, "and he is an enforcer."
"You'll have to explain," Tristan said.
"He is a 426," Bentley said.
"That means he's a red poll, which is an executioner for a triad. The executioner carries out all the triad's dirty work, no matter the activity: loan-sharking, prostitution, gambling, smuggling, anything like that."
Tristan looked back at Marissa to see if she'd heard what Bentley had to say. She rolled her eyes. She'd heard.
"We are going to the Stanley Restaurant to meet this Mr.
Yip," Tristan said.
Bentley braked and pulled over to the side of the road. He put the car in Park and turned off the ignition. Then he turned around to look directly at Tristan.
"We have
to talk," he said.
For the next fifteen minutes, Tristan and Bentley renegotiated Bentley's hourly rate. Going to a meeting with Mr. Yip was not something covered by his basic fee. Once the deal was settled,
Bentley started the car, and they again pulled out into the road.
"Do you know which triad Mr. Yip is with?" Tristan asked.
"I'm not supposed to talk specifically about the triads," Bentley said.
"Okay," Tristan said agreeably.
"I'll name the triad I think he's with and you nod. How's that?"
Bentley considered for a moment, then agreed.
"Wing Sin," Tristan said.
Bentley nodded.
Tristan sat back.
"Well," he said.
"That confirms our suspicions.
Obviously Mr. Yip knows what we want to know. The question is whether he plans to tell us or not."
"This whole business has an unnerving way of escalating," Marissa said.
"Mr. Yip scared me the first time we met him. Now that I know who he is, I'm even more frightened."
"There's still time to change our minds," Tristan said.
Marissa shook her head.
"We've come this far," she said.
"I'm not giving up now."
Stanley turned out to be an attractive, modern suburban town built on a peninsula with broad sandy beaches on either side. The vista out over the emerald sea was magnificent. The buildings themselves were less impressive, most being four-story, unimaginative, white concrete affairs.
Bentley pulled into a parking area along the shore line, then nosed the car around so that it was pointing out into the street.
He turned off the engine and nodded toward the building to the right.
"That's Stanley Restaurant," he said.
Marissa and Tristan inspected the restaurant. From the outside it was as nondescript as the other buildings in the town.
"You ready?" Tristan said.
Marissa nodded.
"As ready as I'll ever be."
Bentley got out of the car and opened the rear door. Marissa and Tristan stepped out into the bright sunlight. Before they could take a step, doors opened on a number of other nearby cars, and a half dozen Chinese men got out. They were all dressed in business suits. Marissa and Tristan recognized three of them.