Blood Ties

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Blood Ties Page 15

by Quincy J. Allen


  “It’s good to see you, Jake,” Qi purred. She stepped up to him, put her arms around his neck, and pulled him down to her, kissing him passionately. Jake gave as good as he got, his body tingling with the sensation of her lips pressed against his. He barely heard the creak of boards from the upper level.

  “You gotta be kidding me,” Cole said loudly. “Seriously?” Jake heard more soft shuffling from above as Qi released him and stepped back. “Jake, I think you oughta take a look at this,” Cole added, dread in his voice.

  Jake turned to see Cole staring up at the second level. Skeeter also stared up at the second level, fear in her eyes. Jake’s eyes followed, and a sick feeling clutched at his insides. There were six Chinese men on each side staring down at him. Every one of the men above wore red silk pajamas.

  “Oh, shit,” Jake muttered. “Didn’t we just leave this party?”

  Chapter Fifteen – Tong for Two

  “The old man had seen more death than most, and it weighed on him like chains on a slave. I guess that’s why I liked him so much.”

  ~ Jake Lasater

  Jake turned worried eyes to the woman in his arms, his eyes framed by an apprehensive look of betrayal.

  “It is okay, Jake,” she said quietly. “They’re friends of mine.”

  “That’s great, Qi, but last time I checked, they weren’t friends of mine. I seem to recall the point of Hang Ah’s dagger damn near stuck between my eyes. I’m feeling a little set up here.”

  A soft, elderly man’s voice came smoothly from the back of the workshop, only a trace of a Chinese accent shaping the words. “There is no need to be concerned, Mister Lasater.” Jake turned and saw a small figure walking out from behind one of the mining rigs.

  The man was the same height as Qi, but where she was young and beautiful, he was old and scarred, carrying himself like he’d seen tenfold as much conflict as Jake. He wore gold silk pajamas, and the shirt had black dragons embroidered on both sides of the silver buttons. His head was bald, but he had long, gray streaks of hair that made three lines from his mustache and chin all the way to the middle of his chest. The right half of his face was covered in a beautifully etched gold mask that followed the contours of his face. The surface of it reflected the light like reptilian scales, and it had flanges and a fierce eyebrow that looked distinctly reptilian. The eye within glowed emerald green with an internal light of its own. Jake saw that his right hand wasn’t a hand at all. Made of the same golden metal, the well-articulated fingers ended in sharp claws. “I am Chung Lau Xing.”

  Qi stepped up beside Jake and placed her hand on his good arm. “Jake, this is my grandfather … the master of the Tong here in San Fran.”

  “Your … grandfather?” Jake asked incredulously. Jake suddenly felt very uncomfortable about the kiss he’d just given Qi … well, that she’d given him, which he would be quick to point out if the subject came up.

  The old man reached out his golden hand, its claws pointing at Jake’s midsection. Jake hesitated for a moment and then took the gleaming prosthetic in a firm handshake. The metal was cold, the handshake firm, but it was a natural motion, as smooth as Jake’s own left hand would be.

  “Mister … Xing?” Jake asked. He knew that the Chinese placed their surnames first, opposite of the way Westerners did. “Don’t y’all normally run your names the other way round?”

  “That is correct, Mister Lasater. But in an attempt to blend more effectively in this country, I decided to adopt at least some of your customs.” The man smiled in a genuinely friendly fashion and released Jake’s hand. “I hope my men did not startle you and your friends too much.”

  Jake hesitated. “Well, to tell you the truth,” he looked up at the men above, “I’m still not sure what to make of it. I figured Qi was going to be here on her own, and I sure didn’t know she was involved with the Tong.”

  The old man laughed lightly. “I can appreciate your trepidation. Certainly your first experience with my organization was less than civil. On behalf of the Tong, I would like to offer my apologies for the situation brought about by Mister Hang’s bad judgment. I was away at the time.”

  “Well, I guess I appreciate that. And if ya mean it, then apology accepted.”

  “Shen—the man you killed in the arena—deserved what you gave him. I do not tolerate behavior such as his in my organization. We are a community of businessmen, not murderous thieves. He dishonored the Tong when he and his men attacked you and stole your possessions. Your response was appropriate. I would even say restrained in your treatment of Mister Hang. When Hang compounded that dishonor by trying to kill you, he also got what he deserved. I know why he did it, but that does not negate the transgression.”

  “Why’d he do it? I actually liked Hang, right up until he stuck that knife in my face.”

  “Shen was his nephew,” Chung said sadly, “and his nephew was, how do you Americans say it … a rotten apple.”

  “I guess I understand,” Jake said slowly.

  Chung raised his golden hand and waved at the men above. With an almost silent shuffle they disappeared through the doors above. Chung then said something in Chinese over his shoulder, and a small Chinese boy came out of the shadows.

  “Come, Mister Lasater. Bring your friends. We have business to discuss. My great-grandson will see to your mounts. We have a stable behind the shop.”

  “Fair enough,” Jake said. He looked past Chung to the approaching boy, also dressed in gold pajamas identical to Chung’s. He addressed the boy gently. “The bull may be a bit stubborn. His name’s Lumpy. If you’ve got some sweet feed, use that. If you give him some, he’ll do pretty much whatever you want, and you’ll have a friend for life.”

  The boy nodded silently. He took the reins from Cole and grabbed Lumpy’s bridle while Skeeter dismounted. Cole grabbed the Thumper, slid it back into the sheath on Koto’s saddle, and stepped up next to Jake.

  “Mister Xing, I’d like to introduce my riding partner Cole McJunkins,” Jake said as Cole and Chung shook hands. “And this is my … daughter … Skeeter.” Skeeter looked up at Jake briefly with a strange expression on her face. “She’s kinda in the dog house right now on account of she’s not supposed to be in San Francisco.”

  Skeeter’s eyes returned to the gold metal of Chung’s face and arm. “It’s a pleasure to meet you, Mister Xing.” She reached out her hand and shook Chung’s claw slowly, leaning in and looking at the smooth joints of his fingers closely. “That’s amazing work, sir. Who did it? And is it all gears or has it got magic to move it?”

  “Skeeter, that can wait,” Jake said firmly, a little embarrassed.

  “No, Mister Lasater, it’s quite all right,” Chung said lightly and turned back to Skeeter. He held out the appendage for Skeeter to inspect more closely. “My daughter Qi made this for me, Miss Lasater, and this,” he motioned to the half-mask on his face, “after an injury I suffered.”

  Skeeter looked embarrassed for a moment. “It’s just Skeeter,” she said. “That’s what everyone else calls me.”

  “As you wish, Skeeter,” the man said smiling. “And the work is purely mechanical. My granddaughter is studying witchcraft but does not yet have the knowledge to bestow it upon the inanimate to such a degree.” Chung cast a stern eye upon Skeeter. “In the dog house, eh? Going places where you shouldn’t?” Skeeter looked even more embarrassed. The stern eye turned to a friendly one. “My granddaughter was headstrong, too. She was more than a handful.”

  “Grandfather!” Qi blurted.

  Chung laughed brightly and winked at Qi. “Come, please. Let us go upstairs and talk. We summoned you here for a job we require, and it is best that we move quickly. Time is of the essence.”

  The small boy led Koto and Lumpy down the corridor of the main floor while everyone else moved to a set of spiral stairs at the front of the shop. They made their way up two flights that opened onto a narrow hallway with doors leading onto the living apartments of Qi’s building. They entered the f
irst door and stepped into a dark room.

  Qi muttered something in a language Jake didn’t recognize, and there was a flash as hundreds of candles surround the room ignited simultaneously.

  Jake turned an impressed eye to Qi. “Looks like you learned a few new tricks.”

  “The Lady has been teaching me,” Qi responded a bit evasively.

  “The Lady?” Jake asked.

  “We will speak of her shortly,” Chung interrupted, “But first let us make ourselves comfortable.”

  They stepped into a large lounge with a long, black lacquer dining table in the middle and soft-looking sofas done in embroidered gold and crimson around the perimeter. Everything had been done in what Jake assumed was classic Chinese style, not that he’d really know the difference.

  “Please sit,” Chung said and then followed it with a loud command in Chinese towards a door at the back. Everyone settled in their chairs just as an elderly woman came in. She held a tray with a teapot and five small cups on it, each painted with a different-colored dragon. She silently placed a cup in front of each person and poured out a pale, greenish tea that steamed in the cool air of the room. “Green tea from my homeland,” Chung added. Everyone took a sip as Jake cast an eye at his host.

  “There’s something I gotta know, Mister Xing.”

  “Please, call me Chung.” He finished his tea with a long pull.

  “Chung,” Jake said, nodding his head, “If you’re not after me for killing Hang Ah, then who were the boys in black who jumped us around the corner. They were wearing black, so I’m assuming they were friends of his.”

  “Your assumption is correct, Mister Lasater,” Chung said, pouring himself another cup of tea.

  “Call me Jake.”

  “And you can call me Cole,” Cole added, raising his teacup.

  Chung nodded and lifted his teacup, staring at the dragon on it for a few seconds. “Hang Ah’s brother Ming did not agree with my decision that the matter was settled between you and the Hangs. I had sent a telegram directing them explicitly to leave you alone.” The old man ran the wrinkled fingers of his left hand over the glittering surface of the gold mask. “We had a … disagreement … that required my daughter’s rather dramatic additions to my body.”

  “I’m sorry, Chung,” Jake said, feeling at least partially responsible for the man’s prosthetics. “I know what it’s like to lose a pound of flesh and get stuck with ten pounds of gears.”

  Chung looked at Jake with appraising eyes, and it was clear that his respect for the gunslinger went up a few notches. “I can see why my granddaughter feels for you as she does, but my situation is not at all your fault.” Chung looked to his granddaughter and then back to Jake. “Ming is … an ambitious man, and he does not agree with my differentiation between what I consider to be legitimate business and the reckless murder and theft that seems to be his primary appetite. Shen was his son. He has sworn to see you dead, Jake.” The statement held no apology, merely observation.

  “Well, what the hell is taking him so long?” Jake asked and then took a sip of tea. “I been in Denver pretty much this whole time.”

  Chung nodded. “Ming had returned from China shortly after your disagreement with Hang Ah. When he learned of the death of his brother and son, we had our own disagreement. He has spent these last months building up his own organization. He has recruited many of my countrymen with promises of wealth and glory. He has even managed to steal away some of my own men, but only a handful. Where I garner loyalty in my men, Ming caters to greed and, once captured, keeps his men through fear of retribution.”

  “He sounds like a real charmer,” Cole added.

  “We all choose our own path in this life, Cole,” Chung said quietly, “and Ming has chosen his.”

  “I take it you boys are at war?” Jake asked.

  “Not formally. I am reticent to initiate an open war in the streets of Chinatown. I do not want the city government involved in this dispute.…” Chung took another sip of tea and then smiled and Jake. “Or to have them take too close a look at my business dealings.”

  Jake and Cole chuckled. “I think I understand,” Jake replied. “I’m pretty sure I don’t want to know too much about them, either.”

  Chung nodded. “But we did not come here to talk about Chinese politics.”

  “Politics?” Cole asked, thinking the term was a bit light for a pending war between rival gangs.

  With a smile Chung continued. “As you know, we have a job for you.”

  “Escort a package, right?” Jake prompted.

  “This is no ordinary package,” Qi offered. “It’s not something you can carry.”

  “How do you mean?” Cole asked.

  “It’s rather large … and heavy,” Chung said, looking very serious.

  “What’s in it?”

  “I am afraid I cannot tell you of its contents,” Chung said, sounding genuinely regretful. “I have made a promise to the owner of the package—the lady whom Qi mentioned earlier. I am honor-bound to keep that promise.”

  “Well,” Jake said, rubbing his beard thoughtfully. “That’s a little tricky, but it ain’t unheard of. And it ain’t a show-stopper, leastwise not yet.” He looked at Chung seriously. “Is it dangerous?” he asked.

  Chung hesitated and then spoke naturally. “How do you mean?” Jake was too good a poker player to miss the pause, and the question of Chung’s hesitation tickled the back of his mind.

  “It’s not nitro or dynamite or anything like that is it? Something that could blow up and get me and my crew killed?”

  “I assure you it is nothing like that. The contents of the package are not explosive in any way. They are not even illegal,” Chung added, reassuring Jake and Cole with a comforting smile.

  “What’s the job pay?” Jake asked.

  “Two thousand now and three thousand upon safe delivery,” Chung said calmly. Jake raised his teacup to his lips in an effort to keep from giving away his avarice. Cole and Skeeter’s eyes showed white. “The first payment will be in U.S. dollars and the rest of it in gold,” Chung concluded.

  Jake’s resolve broke as he almost spit his tea across the table, causing Cole and Skeeter, sitting across from him, to flinch.

  “Hmmmm,” Jake almost purred as he licked his lips, eyeing the old man.

  “I’d say you have a deal, Chung,” Cole said, chuckling.

  Jake grinned at Cole. His partner knew him well. “There would have to be a couple of conditions,” Jake added, setting his teacup down.

  “I would have been surprised if there weren’t,” Chung said smoothly.

  “If the owner of this package is around, I’d like to meet him.”

  “Her,” Qi corrected. “The Lady.”

  “Oh, yeah, her,” Jake corrected himself.

  “I am certain she will agree to that, as she had already required that she meet whomever we hired to transport her … property.”

  “Fair enough,” Jake agreed. “I’d also like to get an idea of who might come at us between here and Denver.”

  “Well, it is possible that Ming and his men may come after you, but not because of the package,” Chung said quietly. “Beyond that, you would have to ask Lady Dănești yourself.”

  “Lady Dănești?” Cole asked.

  Chung nodded his head.

  “When will we be meeting her?” Jake asked. “Is she here now?”

  “I’m afraid she will not be available until this evening. We have a dinner planned for you all, and the Lady will arrive during or sometime after. You may ask your questions then. I’m sure she will have many for you as well.”

  “Can you tell me anything about her?” Jake finished off his tea and poured more, wishing it was coffee. “The name sounds a bit foreign, and not many American folks start their names with lady,” Jake added smiling. He was thinking about the Morse message in his pocket. And Szilágyi.

  “Indeed. She is not from this country. In fact, she’s only just arrived. My orga
nization helped in her passage from Asia to San Francisco.”

  “Her name don’t sound Chinese,” Cole pointed out.

  “Correct,” Chung replied quietly. “She has been in my country for … a number of years … and only recently decided to come to the U.S. and settle in the West. Hence our request.”

  “Where’s she from originally?” Skeeter asked.

  “I’m afraid you would have to ask her that. Lady Dănești is very cautious about whom she trusts. She has had a difficult life.”

  “Well, we won’t pry, so long as I’m comfortable with who I’m working for. Money ain’t everything,” Jake added. “If it turns out you need a ‘no-questions-asked’ sorta deal, I can certainly recommend a guy for you. He’s even in town.”

  “I hope that won’t be necessary,” Qi chimed in. “Do you have any plans for today, Jake? You’re welcome to stay here until you’ve arranged passage back to Colorado.”

  “Well,” Jake said. “I’d kinda like to split the difference, if that’s okay.”

  “Split the difference?” Chung asked.

  “Considering that Ming’s boys are likely to be gunning for me, I sure as hell don’t want Skeeter to get caught in a crossfire. There’s a fair chance things will get complicated. Knowing who Qi’s grandfather is now, I suspect that this building is one of the safest in town. Besides, Skeeter is still in the doghouse.”

  “But Jake!” Skeeter exclaimed. “I’m already here and all! Can’t I see some sights?” Jake turned a stern eye at Skeeter and held it there, giving her his best gunfighter stare-down. She did her best to hold it for a few seconds, but she knew she was in Dutch. She finally cast her eyes down. “Yessir,” she mumbled.

  “Besides,” Jake said, his voice going a bit soft, “I suspect there’s plenty around here that you can stick your nose into if Miss Qi is willing.” Jake looked at Qi, pleading in his eyes. He desperately wanted something to occupy Skeeter’s attention until they could get on a transport back to Denver. There was just too much heat for him to be confident he could keep his ward safe.

 

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