“Any time.”
“My name is Tuy Xuan. It is pronounced swan—like the bird.”
“Chuck.”
Xuan looked at his screen, then at Kim, Frye heard the wind howl, then die, leaving only the low drone of the transport engines behind it. A stinkbug wobbled across the dust-caked linoleum.
“Has our friend been here?” she asked.
“No. But there’s no reason to wait. You are ready, Kim?”
She turned and kissed Frye on the cheek. “Thank you. I know your brother will want to talk to you soon.”
As I will to him, Frye thought.
Xuan was coming around the counter when his daughter appeared in the far recess of the empty terminal. Frye watched her approach: hair back in a ponytail, a yellow cotton dress, pumps. She carried a silver case, like Kim’s. She looked once at Frye and averted her eyes, just as she had at the Asian Wind. She brought the Halliburton to her father. They spoke in Vietnamese. Xuan opened the case—well away from Frye’s line of sight—touched something inside, then shut it and spun the lock. “Nha, this is Chuck Frye, the man who saved me.”
“Thank you,” she said. “I’m honored.”
“I didn’t do much but half choke him.”
“I read your articles before you left the newspaper,” Nha said.
Frye tried to catch her eyes with his, but they slid off of each other like magnets of the same polarity.
Xuan held open the door for Kim. A hot puff of air blew in. “Please wait here,” she said to Frye. “When the plane takes off, you can go. Nha will escort you to your car.”
She blushed, turned away and busied herself with the computer. The door slammed.
Frye went to the opaque, sand-scratched window and looked out. Kim’s hair swirled as she moved up the loading ramp with the silver cases. The wooden crates were gone. The two Vietnamese men closed the door behind her and pushed away the ramp. The pilot was obscured by headgear: All Frye could make out was his pale, Anglo nose and mouth. The overalled mechanic untied the ropes from the ground cleats, ran forward, and motioned the pilot toward the runway. A tumbleweed rolled across the tarmac and came to rest against the defunct tower. In the shimmering middle-distance, Frye could see the gaping entrance of the Sidewinder Mine—old struts leaning precariously, boulders covered by black spray-paint. When he turned, he caught Nha studying him. He smiled at her. “Paris, my ass,” he said.
Nha’s expression didn’t change. “Talk to Bennett.”
Like talking to a rock, he thought. “Pretty bad last night. You and your family okay?”
Nha nodded slightly. “Frightened. I stayed beneath a table with my hands over my head, holding one of my sisters.”
The droning of the plane engines rose to a higher key. Frye watched it crawl onto the runway and straighten into the wind. Tuy Xuan hustled across the tarmac and disappeared behind the tower. A moment later, Liberty Transport sped down the runway and lifted into the air, wings rocking, engines torquing, flaps extended.
Frye stepped outside with Nha. Her father joined them, a satisfied smile on his face. “Chuck, you have helped us. Would you honor our house for dinner tomorrow night? We all wish to thank you.”
Nha looked at him, then out to the runway where the cargo plane lessened into the vast blue sky.
“I’d like that,” he said. “What was in the crates?”
Xuan touched him lightly on the shoulder and smiled. Then his face stiffened and his eyes focused on something past Frye’s shoulder. He muttered something in Vietnamese. “Come in here,” he said, leading Frye and Nha back into the terminal building. Looking back over his shoulder, Frye could see the white car parked on a rise in the dirt road a hundred yards away. Someone was standing beside it. Xuan produced a pair of U.S. Government binoculars and kicked open the door. He gave the glasses to Frye.
The man was leaning against a white Lincoln, apparently at ease. A camera with a huge lens lay on the hood of the car beside him. Frye recognized him immediately, half expecting him to step forward with a briefcase full of money, as he had so often for Nguyen Hy. Red hair and mustache, polo shirt, thick arms and neck. Red Mustache lifted his camera again. Frye shrank back into the doorway. Xuan and Nha were talking again in Vietnamese. The camera lowered; Red Mustache got back into his town car. Xuan dialed the telephone.
“Who is he?”
“A writer … and a former friend,” said Nha.
“He doesn’t look like a writer. Who does he work for?”
“I don’t know.”
“What do you mean, ‘former friend’?”
“Attitudes change,” Nha said. “Sometimes quickly.”
“What was in the crates?”
“Food and clothing for the camps in Thailand.”
Frye watched as the Lincoln backed down the road, rose over the hillock, and vanished.
“Vo couldn’t have done it.” Frye was looking at the oddly androgynous face of Detective John Minh. Minh had an office in Detectives, a desk buried in reports and Vietnamese business directories, a poster of Li on one wall, and a phone that kept ringing.
“Why not?”
Frye explained again how he’d seen him, sitting in the car.
Minh studied him. “He disappeared before the shooting, according to ten witnesses. No one saw him after, except for you. You were speeding past his car in the parking lot?”
“Not exactly speeding.”
“But you were looking through two windshields, late at night, driving?”
“I told you that.”
“You were certainly thinking of other things, weren’t you? Your heart was pounding. Your ears were ringing. But you now claim to identify a man you had seen exactly once before in your life?”
“That’s true.”
“We know he left before the shooting. We know it was his car used in the getaway. We went to his home to question him this morning, and he ran away. Why? He hasn’t gone to his record store all day. He’s a fugitive. He could easily have planned it and watched the execution. Did you ever think of that? Did you ever think that you may have seen his brother, or a friend who looked like him? How many Vietnamese gang boys have hair like that? A dozen at least, maybe more. Don’t sit there and tell me who did it, and who didn’t. It insults me and makes me angry.”
“I saw him.”
Minh smiled bitterly. “It doesn’t change anything right now. We need to find him, either way. Do you have anything useful for me?”
“The gunman had mud on his shoes. Gray. Dried.”
Minh nodded and checked his watch. “It’s in the CSI report. It wasn’t hard to notice, Chuck.”
“I took a walk downtown late last night. I remembered a few things I didn’t tell you before. First, two of the gunmen wore ski masks. The one who got shot had a hood, with the eye holes cut out. Looked homemade. Second, the one who dragged her out had on a pair of red tennis shoes. High tops.”
“We didn’t know that.”
“And the hooded guy grabbed the wrong woman. He went for one of the backup singers first. Then he helped drag Li off, jumped back on stage and started shooting. That’s strange.”
“Why strange?”
“Who in Little Saigon wouldn’t know Li?”
Minh brought out a tape recorder, nodding. “That’s true. Tell me again, exactly what you saw.”
Frye made his second deposition in two days. His account was interrupted by three phone calls and a visit from the chief, who told Minh that the press conference was set for seven o’clock. He looked at Frye with sleep-starved eyes, and tossed a stack of afternoon papers on Minh’s desk. “We got the search warrant ten minutes ago, Detective.”
Minh looked pleased.
“Press is hot on this one, John,” he said. “Do your best to cool them off. We’ve had half the department in Little Saigon the last ten hours, and I don’t want that fact unpublicized.” He walked away, sighing, checking his watch.
Minh regarded Frye placidly. He tapped his p
en against the desk. He looked at the poster of Li, then back to Frye. “Did Kim get into the sky okay?”
“Huh?”
“Kim, the woman you drove to the airstrip this morning. You know, the airstrip out by the old Sidewinder Mine.”
Frye just sat there, feeling stupid. He felt his ears turning red. “Is this one of those deals where I tell you everything and you don’t tell me jack?”
Minh switched off the recorder and offered a thin smile. “What did you come here to find out?”
“Was the dead guy a local?”
“We haven’t decided yet. It’s difficult. So many of the refugees don’t carry proper identification.”
“Eddie Vo’s friend talked about Stanley last night. Stanley who?”
“Smith. He’s connected to the university, popular with the gang boys. He’s one of those academics who thinks he knows everything—useful at times. We’ve already questioned him.”
Frye hesitated. “Then yeah … she got into the sky okay.”
“With the usual assortment of tapes?”
“I don’t know how usual they were.”
Minh considered. “Your brother is a difficult man to deal with. He offers us little; his answers are short and often unsatisfactory. He behaves, in my opinion, like a man with things to hide.”
I’ve got things going backwards here, thought Frye. Find out what you can about John Minh. “I wouldn’t know.”
The detective dumped his pad and pen, answered the phone, listened, and hung up. He scribbled something on his blotter.
“What’s lại cái?”
“Homosexual.”
“What about the writing on the mirror?”
Minh’s pale-blue eyes narrowed. “That’s tampering with a police investigation.”
“I didn’t touch it.”
“You were a reporter once? That’s about what I’d expect from one of you.”
“I go with my strengths.”
“How would you like to take them to jail with you?”
Minh leaned back in his chair, an expression of appraisal on his face. He answered his phone, listened again, said he would be right there. “You don’t spend much time in Little Saigon, Frye. I know, because I do. I’m there. This is the situation. Everything in Little Saigon can be dangerous, every whisper and every move. People get shot for saying the wrong thing. There is much extortion and robbery. My personal opinion is that you should stay out of the affairs of the Vietnamese. My American half tells me you’re a nice guy. My Vietnamese half tells me that you are easily taken advantage of. If you have something to prove, you should prove it somewhere else. The best thing you can do for Li is to keep out of the way of my investigation.”
I’ve heard that before, Frye thought. He rose, feeling impaled by Minh’s sixth sense, glad to be free of his calmly prodding eyes. “My sister-in-law got kidnapped, and my brother’s hurting bad. Sucker or not, I’m going to do what I can to get her back. I learned a long time ago what happens when you do nothing.”
Minh stood. “I appreciate your coming here. If you have more information, please come again. It’s possible that I might be able to pass certain things back in your direction. I find your brother almost impossible to deal with, but you are not like him. We both want the same thing here.”
Frye stepped into the hallway. The man waiting to see Minh stood up and took a briefcase from beside the chair. He was bigger than he looked in the video, or through the binoculars at Lower Mojave Airstrip. He walked past Frye like he wasn’t there.
When Red Mustache was inside Minh’s office, Frye came back down the hallway, took a seat, bent down, untied his shoe and listened.
“Paul DeCord.”
“John Minh. You have about two minutes.”
“I have as long as I need, Detective.”
Minh’s hand appeared from the doorway. Frye didn’t bother to look up. The door closed. He finished with his shoelace, stood and walked out.
From a pay phone at the station he called his brother’s house and got nothing. Bennett’s secretary at work said he hadn’t been in all day. Hyla said he’d left at four.
Ronald Billingham was underwhelmed to see Frye walk into the Ledger offices. The editor eyed him from his glass-encased office. Frye grabbed a fresh copy of the day’s paper. The reporters acknowledged him with caution: such is the aura of the once-employed. Fingers tapped keyboards, monitors offered their dull green glows, a wire machine chattered in the one corner. Frye waved like a politician to no one in particular, then ducked into the morgue. He was halfway through the MASTER CHORALE—MUDWRESTLING file when Carole Burton burst in, all silk and perfume. She gave him a robust hug.
“Ronald’s going to kick you right out,” she said.
“I know.”
“Sure is good to see you, Chuck. How’s the family taking it?”
“Oh, just fine.” He slipped Minh’s clip file into his morning paper and folded it shut.
“Good God, I didn’t just see that,” Carole said.
“See what, Carole?”
Billingham strode in, shook Frye’s hand, and asked him to leave. He was a soft, fungoid man who always seemed ashamed of himself, especially when he smiled. He made the most of his minor authority. “You don’t have any business here, Chuck. I’m sorry.” Billingham reddened, looked down.
“As am I. I was just in the neighborhood and wanted to say hello.”
“To the morgue?”
“The memories still run deep.”
“Would you give one of our reporters a comment about last night?”
“No.”
“Get out.”
“Can do. ‘Bye, Carole.”
Billingham watched him leave with a proprietary air, victory written all over his face.
Frye drove down Bolsa and parked a block from Saigon Plaza. So, he thought: Paul DeCord hands Nguyen Hy a briefcase full of money, and DeCord goes to Minh. Who is it, then, that I’m hiding evidence from? DeCord, Minh—or both?
Benny knew the cops would come to his home sooner or later. FBI too. If the payoffs are illegal, that explains why I’ve got the tape. Then where’d the money come from? And where is it going? Maybe Paul DeCord got burned. He wants his money back. But he wouldn’t go to Minh if the payoffs weren’t legit. Did Nguyen rip him off?
The afternoon had begun to cool. He stopped to consider two marble lions, white, snarling, and heavy-manned, guarding the plaza entrance. Each stood on a black marble pedestal, with one paw resting on a ball. Behind them were four thick red columns supporting the elaborately crenulated archway. Two Vietnamese women hustled by, pushing a cart, then paused to read a CELEBRATE SAIGON DAYS banner hanging from a balcony. Outside the Bồng Lai Seafood Company, a rubber-booted worker hosed pungent, unspecific waste into a drain. In the window of Tǎng Fashions, a woman arranged a red silk dress on a mannequin. Two uniformed police came from the store and headed into the next one.
Outside Tǎi Lại Donuts and Hot Food, two more cops confronted a group of gang boys. Words were passed. A bulky officer spun one kid around, then handcuffed and pushed him into the back of his black-and-white. A man in a rumpled suit appeared from nowhere with a camera and started snapping pictures. The other cop moved in. Frye saw a press pass flash, watched the officer muscle the photographer off the sidewalk. The photog kept shooting. Give ’em hell, Frye thought. It’s all front-page stuff.
As if there wasn’t enough of it already. He stood in front of the news rack and read the headlines through the smudgy plastic: VIET SINGER KIDNAPPED IN ‘MINSTER NIGHT CLUB … CABARET SHOOTOUT LEAVES ONE DEAD … POP SINGER TAKEN AT GUNPOINT …
There were pictures of Li, pictures of the Asian Wind, pictures of Bennett hobbling out with Donnell Crawley behind him. He bought copies of everything and took them to Paris Cafe, where he sat outside and ate a heaping plateful of chicken and noodles. Looking out to the plaza, he saw another team of policemen going door-to-door. A network news crew was taping outside the Buddhist pagoda,
a colorful establishing shot.
Did Arbuckle crack the Dream Reader? Apply pressure … The best thing you can do is just stay out of my investigation … Paris, my ass … Everything in Little Saigon can be dangerous …
He slipped out Minh’s clip file and read the articles. The Ledger reporter on the Westminster beat was Rick Ford. Rick had an in-depth interview with Minh, a “day in the life of” ride-along deal, even a “detective at home” article. Rick Ford, Frye thought, is a good reporter.
Minh had joined the Westminster force just one year ago. He went through training at the L.A. Sheriff’s Academy, graduating high in his class. He was born in Saigon to an American employee of the CIA and a Vietnamese woman from a diplomatic family. During the war, he was commissioned, made lieutenant, and served in Intelligence Corps. He was evacuated during the fall, with his wife. They now lived in Westminster. During the eleven years since leaving Vietnam and joining the Westminster PD, he had earned a bachelor’s degree from Cal State Los Angeles, worked a series of odd jobs. His parents settled in Washington, D.C., where his father now worked for a political study “consortium.”
All fine and dandy, Frye thought, but how had Minh gone from officer to detective in less than a year?
He found a pay phone and called the Ledger.
“Easy,” said Rick Ford. “The department wanted to show him off. Call it extra equal opportunity. Vietnamese cops are tough to find, so Minh shot right up the ladder when they put him in Little Saigon. He’s the only guy on the whole force who speaks a word of Vietnamese.”
“What do the other cops think of him?”
“Not much.”
“That’s what I gathered from Duncan.”
“He’s gotten a lot of press. They’re jealous. He’s not a bad cop, I don’t think. He’s just kind of over his head. Why?”
“Just curious.”
Little Saigon Page 6