Chapter 7

Somebody shook me and I opened my eyes.

Barbara had her coat on and was sitting on the side of the fold-out bed.

“Time is it?” I asked, turning on my side.

“Around 5.”

“You going into work now? Today’s my day off. I was thinking we could have some drinks and go back to bed.”

“No can do. I have to finish some reading before a meeting today.”

“When are you gonna get out tonight?”

“I’m not sure.”

“How about tomorrow?”

“Robert.” Her voice came out in a way that made me cross my legs and my arms. “Our time together has been really great. We really had a lot to get out of our systems. But I’m not ready to be in a thing now.”

She’d obviously put a lot of thought into this. Her presentation was pretty good.

“The good times never last, do they?” I said. I could feel my center of gravity shifting from my chest to the bottom of my stomach.

“We can still get together once in a while.”

“Once a week? Once a month?”

“Let’s not put restrictions on it, Robert.”

I leaned back on one elbow.

“I see how it stands,” I said.

“It’s not just me. It’s us. We both need to work on things.”

“Things? What are ‘things,’ Barbara?”

“Things like I don’t want to picture my husband when I’m holding you. Things like you don’t need to drink when you wake up in the morning.”

“You’re not a lightweight on the bottle, yourself.”

“Yes, but I’m not. . .” She shook her head and stood up. “I have to go now. You can let yourself out when you’re ready. I’ll see you later.”

The front door closing made a sharp, ugly metal sound like a bullet ripping through a can of Crisco. I couldn’t process being sad yet because my headache wouldn’t let me feel anything else.

I had dared to imagine that for once I wouldn’t be alone during the terrible period between Chinese New Year and Valentine’s Day. Those are the two weeks when the streets are filled with happy couples and happy families looking for fun fun fucking fun.

I poured myself some red wine in last night’s glass and threw it back. This apartment, which had seemed so endearing in its unfamiliarity only a week ago, now looked like a way station in someone else’s busy life. I was getting an unwelcome vibe.

I had to get my clothes on, go out the door, and nearly run down the stairs to get away from it.

On my way home, I stopped at a small store and went to the back to get some beer. The glass in the cooler was cracked and held together with frayed pieces of duct tape. The tape made it hard to see what was inside. I tried to slide it open but the tape stopped that, too.

“How you supposed to get anything out of this?” I called out to the front.

“Go fuck yourself!” was the reply. I stomped over to the cashier, but I soon discovered that the comment wasn’t for me.

The owner, about 50, medium frame, five six, was yelling at Yip.

“You killed your wife! I don’t want a murderer in my store! You should be in jail, you dirty bastard!” shouted the owner.

“Excuse me,” I told the owner. “A man is innocent until proven guilty.”

“Innocent — bullshit!” He was obviously new in the community. He didn’t seem to know who I was.

Yip’s face was sad and calm.

“It’s best that I leave, Officer Chow,” he said.

When he heard “officer,” the owner suddenly pointed at Yip and looked at me.

“You’re a policeman? Arrest that guy before he kills someone else.”

“We’re leaving,” I said.

We went onto the wet streets.

“I can’t go anywhere anymore,” said Yip, rubbing his eyes. “Something like this always happens. There’s no sympathy. Only blame.”

“People at your work like you, right?”

“They let me go,” he said. “They said I was hurting business.”

“If you know you’re right, that’s all you need,” I said.

“You know this is true, Officer Chow. You ought to know that Chinatown hates the police as much as the criminals. We have to stick together, you know?”

“You want to play the cop, tomorrow, Yip? I’ll give you a dollar to switch.”

“Ha ha! No, I couldn’t be you.”

I saw another small grocery ahead.

“I’ll see you later, Yip. I have to go get some steak sauce.”

I woke up tangled in the sheets, ready to resume my string of lonely days and weeks. I was more tired than usual so I got two iced coffees from Lonnie.

“Two today?” she asked. “You have another date or something?”

“Both for me,” I said. “I’m greedy.”

“Not greedy — selfish,” Dori muttered from the other end of the counter. “Don’t worry, Lonnie, I’ll bet that girl he was with is long gone.”

“I’m just feeling sleepy,” I told Lonnie. “Trying to stay awake.”

“You’re the hardest-working man I know,” said Lonnie.
Dori creased the top of a paper bag with a vicious scrape of her thumbnail.

I was about to leave when Lonnie stopped me.

“Hey, don’t you want some hot-dog pastries?”

“Not today, Lonnie.” I hadn’t been finishing them, anyway. My appetite was slipping.

It was February 4. The opening ceremonies of the Winter Olympics were going to be on later that night. China was boycotting the games because Taiwan was competing as the “Republic of China.” I didn’t know if I was going to be able to stay up to watch Taiwan in the opening parade, the only event in which they wouldn’t come in last.

I was on the first lap of my footpost when I remembered my dream.

I was walking through waist-high elephant grass. Just ahead of me was an old woman. Sometimes she would turn around and gesture for me to follow her. No matter how fast I walked, I couldn’t catch up to the woman, despite her leisurely pace.

We walked through an empty village. It was getting darker. There were clouds coming in. The woman broke into a run. I chased after her. Then rain started to fall. I stopped and looked at my arms. They were covered in white paint.

I struggled to remember more, but nothing else came. The first iced coffee was bottoming out, so I took the straw and stabbed it into the second cup.

“Officer!” said a loud, shrill voice. I looked across the street.

“Lily!” I said, recognizing Wah’s supervisor.

She looked the wrong way for oncoming traffic on the one-way street and crossed over to my side. She had on a red coat that was made for someone shorter. When she got close, I could see that her eyes were twinkling.

“Officer, Yip told me you don’t have a girlfriend.”

“That’s by choice,” I said. “I could have one if I wanted to. Truth is, a lot of women love a man in a uniform.”

“Don’t talk to me like I’m a fool. I know a very pretty girl who wants to find a nice Chinese man.”

“Where do you know this girl from?”

“From my business contacts. This girl’s family had a five-story mansion in Shanghai and dozens of servants before the communists took over. They tore down the mansion and used the bricks to build houses for the servants.”

“She must be very pretty and eligible.”

“The family escaped to Hong Kong. They bribed some British sailors to take them over. The British took the gold but let them keep all the jade, which was far more expensive. Stupid white people!”

“They just didn’t know.”

“Of course they didn’t know! That family bought a textiles factory. Now they have six. This girl was born in Hong Kong, went to school in Switzerland. She speaks four languages. Mandarin, Cantonese, French, and English.”

“Why would she want a cop for a boyfriend?”

“She doesn’t want just a boyfriend. She’s very marriage-minded. She’d be proud to have a policeman for a husband.”

“Oh, I get it. She wants an American citizenship.”

“Of course she wants it. But she also wants a good man. The family would be very happy to make a large wedding gift. Do you want to visit her? The family would love to fly you to Hong Kong to meet her.”

I imagined myself back in Asia. Walking through elephant grass and villages, shooting people.

“You know I’m a Vietnam vet, don’t you?”

“Girls love soldiers, they’re so brave!”

“Did you make a statement at the precinct about Wah?” Lily acted like I had stepped on her big toe.

“Oh, Officer Chow! When you bring that name up, I feel physical pain!”

“Why don’t you go in and make a report?”

“Me make a report? You’re the policeman! It’s your job to do that!”

“Don’t tell me what my job is, Lily! Get in there and do it!”

I barked.

She gathered her coat at the collar and the fingers of her leather gloves squeaked.

“Officer, I don’t know anything,” Lily said, walking away like we were on Park Avenue and I was begging for change.

The next day on my footpost, I made it around the corner and saw that spiky-haired punk kid who would hang out sometimes in Martha’s with his buddies. He was trying hard to be a five-foot Fonz with his imitation-leather jacket.

He was smoking a cigarette but dropped it down the gutter when he saw me.

“Hey, Officer Ronald McDonald,” he said. “You’re a fucking clown. Tell me something. You ever actually arrest someone, or do you just go to banquets and store openings?” The other guys smirked, but they drew back as I approached. By the time the imitation-leather punk and I were face to face, his friends were across the street.

“How come you’re not in school?” I asked him quietly.

“How come you’re not a real policeman?”

“You want to shut up about that?”

“God, your breath stinks. Is that the only weapon they let you have? What kind of cop are you?”

“I’m gonna show you what kinda cop I am,” I said, grabbing him by the armpit seams of his jacket. They tore so I dug my hands in further and shook him by the straps of his tank-top t-shirt. I pushed him into an overflowing city garbage can and I didn’t let go.

“You want to talk shit with me, I’ll smear you face-down a few blocks! People will think someone dragged a dead dog through here when they see the blood in the street!” I didn’t realize how loud I was yelling until I felt my throat hurt.

His body felt thin through his clothes. I could have ripped him open like a bag of potato chips. I was aware of silent faces at open windows looking down at us.

“You hear me? Next time I see you, I’m gonna kick your face in! You’re gonna see out the back of your head!”

Someone came up and put their hand on my shoulder.

“Chow,” Vandyne said as if he were talking to a growling dog. “Let the boy go. C’mon. Just let him go.” Hearing that voice opened up a steam valve in my system. I relaxed my eyebrows. Then I slowly let go of the kid.

My hands were sticky with soda and tea from cans and cups that had tumbled out of the trash. And with blood. I blinked and looked at the kid. Both of his nostrils were bleeding and his face looked bruised. He was crying.

“I didn’t hit him!” I yelled. “I didn’t hit him once!” I wiped my hands off on my slacks and looked around. All the punk kid’s friends were gone.

“Have you lost your mind?” asked Vandyne, stepping

between me and the kid.

“He was making fun of me,” I said, feeling extremely stupid as soon as I’d said it.

“He was making fun of you? Oh, I’m sorry, big man, that this boy over here hurt your feelings. I’ll enroll him in the late-afternoon session of our etiquette class.”

“I just put him through etiquette class,” I said. The kid was leaning against a lamppost, pinching his nose and keeping his head down. He looked as vulnerable as a giraffe taking a drink, but I still wanted to hurt him.

“You okay, there, chief?” Vandyne asked the kid.

“Yeah, yeah, I’m fine,” the kid said. Funny how the most brazen delinquents sounded helpless and meek when they spoke English.

“What did you say to Officer Chow?” Vandyne asked.

“Nothing. I didn’t say anything,” he said. I wanted to step on his throat.

“Do you want to see a doctor?”

“No, no. Everything’s okay,” said the kid, scuttling away. He hadn’t looked at me once. Vandyne turned to me.

“What were you yelling about?” Vandyne asked me as we watched the punk slip into a crowd of unkempt black hair.

“Learn some Chinese, already, okay?”

“I don’t want to tell you what to do, Chow, but you’re getting seriously out of hand, taking it out on your own people.”

“That kid is not one of ‘my people,’ okay? My people had respect for elders. My people studied hard. My people did the right thing.”

“Okay, so maybe the kid is a little punk. Did you have to make him bleed?”

“He’s bleeding because he doesn’t eat right. I just shook him a little bit.”

“And that helped, I’m sure.”

“Helped me.”

“You watch it,” Vandyne said, holding up a warning finger. “It’s not funny. You know, you’re lucky Chinese people don’t file civilian complaints.” He kicked away a soda can on the sidewalk.

“Say, Vandyne, how often do you find kids like that shot to death?”

“Once every two or three months.”

“What’s better, that punk ends up getting shot or I shake him up a little?”

“You’re not that kid’s father, you know. Leave the belting to daddy — he knows best.”

We instinctively took inventory of the people around us.

“Vandyne,” I said, “you’re in the neighborhood early.”

“Had to see English.”

“What’s going on?”

“One of our new strategies.”

“Want to talk about it?”

“I don’t have all the details, yet.”

We left it at that. I drank some iced chrysanthemum tea, shook my head out, and continued on the footpost.

Outside the pharmacy on Elizabeth, a little girl sat in a battered ride machine that was a hybrid of copyright and trademark violations. It had the head of Mickey Mouse, the body of a tugboat that narrated a children’s television show, and a Daffy Duck tail. The girl was straddling the tugboat and her hands were grabbing Mickey’s ears where the paint was worn off. She rocked back and forth making train sounds even though the machine was off.

Her mother was inside the pharmacy looking at bottles of shampoo. She had on a long black skirt and a gray blouse. Her hair was up in barrettes. She was tired.

“Choo choo choo!” yelled the girl.

“Okay, kid,” I said. Here was a chance to prove I could do something nice. I plugged a quarter into the coin slot of the Mickey tugboat.

Nothing happened.

I checked the change slot, but found only a flattened bottle cap. I shifted my weight back and kicked the coin box.

“Choo choo choo!” yelled the girl.

I grabbed the coin box and rattled it. It sounded like my quarter was in there somewhere. I went inside the pharmacy, walked past the girl’s mother, and stepped up to the counter.

Mr. Chew was showing off his good standing posture in a crisp, white short-sleeved shirt. A cheap ballpoint pen jutted from behind his ear. Dark brown speckles danced on his cheeks as he talked to another customer, an old Chinese man in a flannel shirt and a Mets cap.

“I have a problem,” I said to Mr. Chew. He turned to me and frowned.

“What’s wrong?” he asked, leaning on the counter and looking up at me. He took a sniff. “Need some hangover remedies?”

“I lost a quarter in your ride outside.”

“I guess you didn’t see the sign that said ‘Play at your own risk.’ No refunds.”

“I think your machine’s broken and that’s why you should give me my quarter back.”

“No refunds,” said Mr. Chew. Then the girl’s mother came up to us.

“I told him I lost a quarter in the machine, too. He wouldn’t give me anything. This man is cheap.”

“I can’t do anything, anyway. I just work here. If I give money back to people, the owner is going to be upset.”

“Mr. Chew,” I said, “Don’t even pretend you’re not the owner. Maybe if this place wasn’t called ‘Chew’s Pharmacy,’ you’d get away with it.” Mr. Chew scowled.

“He’s got you there, old Chew!” said the elderly Mets fan, laughing. “I told you, you should have named this store after a garden!”

“The problem with you two is that you have no respect,” Mr. Chew said to the girl’s mother and me. He pulled two quarters from his pocket and dropped them on the counter.

“I don’t have to respect a liar,” I said. “You should put an ‘Out of order’ sign on your machine.”

“And you should use some mouthwash,” said Mr. Chew. I was out of Tic Tacs but I wasn’t going to buy them from him. Chew on that, Chew.

When we got outside, the mother thanked me and picked up her little girl.

“I don’t like Mr. Chew,” she said. “I only shop there because everything’s so cheap.”

“That’s because he sells old stuff.” I said. “That shampoo you got there, they don’t even make it anymore. That company went out of business.”

“But it still works, doesn’t it?”

“Sure, if your hair doesn’t fall out.”

The little girl got off the mouseboat quietly and stood by her mother. She was a good girl.

“Choo choo choo!” I said to her. She looked at me like I was crazy.

I ran into Vandyne outside the Five. We agreed to grab a bite. I was already out of my uniform.

“You look happier when you’re not in the bag,” said Vandyne.

“The world looks happier to me when I’m in plainclothes.”

“That’s ’cause they don’t know you’re a pig,” said Vandyne.

We went down Elizabeth Street and slipped into a below-street-level joint on Bayard.

“The chewy noodles that are wrinkly,” said Vandyne. “That’s the kind I want.”

I knew that when Vandyne ate by himself, he’d get fried rice, but with me, he would venture into noodles, some greens. I’d tell him all the time that today’s fried rice was yesterday’s leftover white rice, but he was stubborn. He grew up eating fried rice in Philadelphia.

“I know which noodles you want,” I told Vandyne. They weren’t really noodles, they were tofu skins, but I wasn’t going to bother to tell him that. “We can get that with pork and then get some mustard greens on the side,” I said. I called the waitress over and ordered. She brought Vandyne a fork.

“He didn’t ask for any fork,” I said sharply.

“Sorry, sorry,” she said, and took it away with nervous fingers. It fell to the floor with a clatter. She picked it up and scurried into the kitchen. Vandyne smiled and closed his eyes, rubbed his eyebrows.

“What did you say to her?”

“I told her we needed more Calgon.”

“You’re going to get us blacklisted at every restaurant in Chinatown.”

“What do you mean? We already are.”

“We’ve got to stop eating in Chinese places. Maybe we should go to Little Italy.”

“Little Italy’s doomed. It’s all going to be Chinatown soon. They’ll celebrate San Gennaro with lion dances.”

“Let’s just go to McDonald’s next time,” said Vandyne.

“Naw, let’s go to Sambo’s.” We both laughed hard.

“Oh, no! Don’t even joke about that shit!” said Vandyne, almost crying. The restaurant chain, based on the racist story of “Little Black Sambo,” was facing nationwide boycotts by prominent blacks. Vandyne’s wife was one of the main people on that campaign.

“How’s the job treating you?” I asked Vandyne.

“It’s all right, all right.” He sipped his Coke. “Kinda dead, not too much going on. I’m kind of a superstar here. Little Chinese kids touch my legs to see if I’m made out of chocolate. So Chow, who’s this girl you been seeing?”

“Aw. . .” I said, feeling my appetite slide down into my shoes. The midget must have seen me with Barbara and told Vandyne. “It came to nothing.”

“Can’t find a Chinese girl good enough for you?” asked Vandyne. “You’re still young, you could. . .”

“I’m not young anymore. I’m 25. The game’s over. Anyway, my mother always said the whole convention of dating and marriage is the government’s way of keeping you too distracted by your personal life to see how they’re ripping you off.”

“They are ripping you off, all right. Only they’re gonna rip you off if you’re distracted or not. So it might as well be a pretty distraction.”

Both dishes came in at the same time. Vandyne took the serving spoon and scooped a steaming, greasy heap of tofu skins and pork onto my plate.

“Serving the other person first. Very Chinese of you,” I said.

“Naw, I just want to see you eat this stuff, see if you keel over.” Suddenly, his eyes bugged out. “What the hell are those?” he asked pointing at the plate.

“Just some soybeans.”

“Are those motherfuckers?”

“No, they’re not lima beans.”

“While I was in the Nam and I got ham-and-motherfuckers rations, I’d eat them all and wouldn’t complain. But only because I swore to God that when I got back to the world, I would never eat motherfuckers again. No way!”

“They’re not bad.”

“Then how come you’re not eating them?”

“Are you timing me? Just give me more than a minute to eat.”

“If they ain’t motherfuckers, they’re cousins of motherfuckers.” He was in genuine distress.

“Look, the only thing you need to be worried about is finding a piece of a plate in your food, especially if your serving plate doesn’t have any chips in it.”

“How come?”

“Because it means they dropped your original plate back in the kitchen. Then they scooped everything up and put it on a new plate. Only they missed picking out a fragment or two.”

Vandyne turned purple.

“That’s why he gave me that dish for free,” he said in a far-away voice.

“This food right here seems to be okay, right now.”

We ate for a while.

“So, yeah, I was seeing this girl for a little bit,” I said.

“Who was this girl?”

“It’s unbelievable in a way. She was the first girl I ever kissed.”

“Your mom?”

“Hey, we said no mothers!”

“C’mon, now. I’m kidding. What’s her name?”

“Her name was Barbara. Well, it still is Barbara. But she kinda broke it off with me.”

“What was the reason?”

I shrugged and pulled my lips tight.

Vandyne took a mouthful of food. He chewed and exhaled at the same time for a minute.

“Didn’t see her long?”

“Just a few days. That’s all.”

“So you don’t seem too hurt.”

“It just seems that, I don’t know. It was just so fast.”

Vandyne chuckled.

“Better too fast than too long, partner. Anyway, lots of Chinese girls in the sea.”

“Who says I want a Chinese girl?” I asked as I served Vandyne some more pork, keeping the soybeans at bay. “Maybe I don’t care what color she is. Maybe I want a black girl.”

“Please,” grunted Vandyne. “The real problem is you can’t care about anyone else until you care about yourself.”

“I care about you, man.”

“Yeah, I got enough people caring about me. Don’t you worry about me.” Vandyne twirled his chopsticks around clumsily. “I still remember how hard it was not having anyone to come home to.”

“I can’t argue with a married man.”

“I used to be a lone predator like you. Okay, a lonely predator. Thought I was too hardcore or whatever to settle down. Then I met that special girl.”

“Great.”

“Hey, what about that girl at the bakery? She likes you a lot.”

“Who?”

“That girl Ronnie, Bonnie, Connie.”

“Lonnie.”

“Yeah, Lonnie. She’s real nice and sweet.”

“Her? I’m like five years older than her.”

“Couple of years is nothing.”

“Vandyne, let’s talk about something else. Do you know anything about the old Chinese woman who was poisoned?”

He shook his head and wiped his mouth.

“It’s my case, but I’m not holding out on you when I say there’s not much to tell. I went over to Jade Palace with an interpreter. Nobody’s talking. Nobody knows anything. People don’t even remember Wah, even though she’d been there what, 30 years.”

“How far do you think you can take the case?”

“Not too far. In fact, I think they kinda stuck me with it because there’s no pressure or reason to find a resolution. Probably a natural cause, anyway.”

“Probably doesn’t mean for certain. Don’t you think you need a Chinese guy on the case, too?”

“Well, English says that experience solves crimes not race.”

“Nobody has more experience in Chinatown than me.”

“Yeah, I know that and you know that, but that’s not gonna fly in the detective squad. Anyway, people aren’t gonna be more open to you because you’re Chinese. In fact, they’ll probably be even more closed.”

“There’s that ‘probably’ again.”

“You don’t have any investigative experience.”

Well, how the hell am I going to get any if they don’t let me do the job?”

Vandyne suddenly jumped as a wad of noodles slipped down the front of his shirt, leaving a slime trail. I put my hand up and waved at the waitress.

“We’re going to need that fork, after all,” I said.

The next day was sunny and in the 50s, warm enough for old men to bring their birds out to the park. Some brought out canaries or parakeets, but the most popular bird had black feathers that looked like oily hair. In the sun, their bodies reflected back green, blue, and purple, like street pigeons, only better.

Birds are always kept one to a cage because the pretty ones are male and there’s nothing male birds like more than tearing up other males. Put two males in one cage and you’ll end up with one on the floor with its feet sticking up and the other one mortally wounded.

I slowed down as I walked by the bamboo cages set up in the grass. They were partially covered by burlap sacks to provide shade and keep the breezes away. All the birds faced north in their individual cages and chirped together, though none of them could see each other. The owners sat on benches, their backs to the cages, their hands flapping wildly as they told each other bird stories.

Yip came up out of nowhere and asked me, “You know how to make birds sing the sweetest song?”

I looked at the loaded wire laundry cart he was dragging at his side. It only had three wheels.

“How do you get birds to sing the sweetest song, Yip?”

You take a slice of dried chili pepper and stick it down the bird’s throat,” he chuckled. “The bird will sing like an angel.”

“You did that to your birds?” I asked, picking up my walking pace.

Yip had memorized my footpost and he waited for me along the route like a puppy that wants to play all the time. A slow-walking puppy that talked too much and reminded me of all the disappointments I was having on the job.

His never-ending presence brought so many things to the surface, I almost couldn’t see straight. There was my visit to my mother’s, getting dumped by Barbara, the dinner with Vandyne where he basically shrugged off on helping me get onto the detective track.

Of course I couldn’t forget that Yip himself had told his pal Lily that she could do some matchmaking for me. I couldn’t stand being around Yip anymore, but I did the Chinese thing by frowning at him a lot without telling him what was bothering me.

“You bet I fed my birds chili pepper!” said Yip, stepping quicker to keep up with me. A grating sound came from the laundry cart as another wheel threatened to break off.

“Maybe you should get a new laundry cart,” I said.

“This one’s good enough.”

I waved to the midget as we walked past the northern boundary of the park. He nodded and popped something in his mouth.

“That’s kind of mean, treating your birds like that,” I said.

“I never killed any of my birds. It’s like a little kid eating hot food for the first time. Some of them even started to like it.”

“I never had birds.”

“Maybe you should get one! Birds are the best pets. They sound beautiful and they’re nice decorations, too. You don’t need to walk them, and they’re so easy to feed.”

“Where are you going?” I suddenly asked Yip.

“To Bayard. That way.” He pointed down the street.

“Do you need a hand?”

“No, no, no! I’m fine!” He set the cart down and his eyes went teary. “These are Wah’s clothes. I’m going to donate them to charity. I can’t have them in the apartment anymore.”

I looked at the laundry cart. Everything had been stuffed in a dirty plastic garbage bag. If that was Wah’s entire wardrobe, it couldn’t have filled three dresser drawers. I had more clothes than her when I was a kid.

“Where are you going to donate them?”

“I was hoping you could tell me.”

I took a deep breath. “How about taking them down to the church?” I asked.

“That’s a good idea! Which one?”

“Any church,” I said.

He had a lost look on his face.

“I’ve never been to a church. I don’t know which one to go to,” he said, biting his lips.

I felt a little bad for being so sharp with him. I looked at his little noodle arms. “How about the Lutheran church at the end of the park? I’m sure they have some sort of needy program.”

“The one with the tiny windows?”

“By the bend in the street.”

“I know that one! I walk by it every day!” He walked by it every day because I walked by it every day.

“Okay, Yip, I have to keep walking here.”

“Okay, Officer Chow! I’ll see you later!” He picked up the handle to his laundry cart again.

“Yeah, see you later, Yip.” I watched the cart slip out of his hands, smash against the curb and fall over. I turned and walked away before he could ask me for help.

If I didn’t watch myself, I’d end up taking those clothes down to the church myself. After that, I’d be carrying Yip up and down the stairs.