CHAPTER ONE

The gunshots could have gone unnoticed, could have been lost inside the clamor and confusion of the late afternoon rush. But they hadn’t.

A listless breeze blew across the Pearl River Delta, rolling in from the South China Sea, sluggish and humid as spring gave way to the oppressive heat of summer. Tourists strolled along the busy Rua da Praia Grande, clutching bags marked with the names of high-end shops, while workers pressed their way home through the bustling crowds. The air smelled of the waterfront, of the smoke from distant rubbish fires, spices from open food carts, and the ubiquitous musky odor of sweat.

Tai Man Duk stopped walking when he neared the entrance of the Lisboa Hotel. He watched another group of gamblers arrive for the evening, most of them fresh off the hydrofoil ferry from Hong Kong. For a moment he imagined himself as one of them, well dressed and elegant, smelling of fine soap and aftershave, no concerns for anything, least of all money. He eyed the slender and beautiful women, whose hairdos alone cost more than a month’s worth of the rice and dried fish that he and his sister could scrape together.

But all of that would change in time, he thought, now that he had become a “49” in the White Orchid Tong, a soldier on his way up through the ranks, a young soldier determined to be noticed by the lung tau—the Dragon Head—of the White Orchid. If he could only have the chance to demonstrate his worth, to let them see that he was no ordinary soldier, but a man of bold action. This was what had brought Tai Man Duk to Macau in the first place. Not yet nineteen, here was his chance to prove himself, pick a few tourist pockets, deliver some cash or maybe even a foreign passport and a fresh set of credit cards to Joey Soong, the underboss who ran Duk’s crew. Nevertheless, it was a delicate balance. Duk had been conditioned not only by his culture, but reminded by Joey Soong himself, about the ancient adage: The nail that sticks up gets hammered down. Even so, those reminders only served to roil the flame in Duk’s youthful belly.

Joey Soong was a man on the rise, a man who had earned the lung tau’s ear, and a growing measure of his confidence. It was Joey who’d arranged for Duk’s illegal transit to Macau, even though it was far outside Soong’s turf. Duk’s success tonight would bring him great respect, and be a slap in the face of the Green Snakes who acted as though they ran the whole of Macau. But within the next four or five years, Britain and Portugal had both agreed to transfer sovereignty of the entire territory back to China, and everything would be ripe for the taking. Even the Green Snakes had to know that.

If Joey Soong and his crew succeeded, it was said that he would be moved up inside the Tong, be given a territory outside of China: Chicago, Honolulu, maybe, or even San Francisco. Duk wanted nothing more than to ingratiate himself to such a rising star.

A rude shove from behind him shook Duk from his daydream, and put his mind back on business. He wanted to fill his pockets as quickly as possible, catch the eight o’clock ferry back to Kowloon and safely return to his apartment before his sister returned home from her work. She was only thirteen and, ever since the accident that had killed their parents, was prone to horrible bouts of panic if Duk wasn’t there when she finished her job cleaning and stacking fruit for the produce vendor at the open market on Shek Lung Street.

The sun was beginning to slip behind the jagged hills in the near distance, the last of its orange light glinting from glass and steel, and throwing long shadows across a street coming alive with the hum of neon. A pearl of sweat ran down his back, and he dried his palms on the front of his pants.

Duk scanned the sidewalk for a mark, selected a tall European man walking alone, the bulge of his wallet clearly visible in his back pocket. Duk threaded his way through the crowd, steadily working closer until he was an arm’s reach behind. He would do as he’d been trained and wait until they both became part of a tight pack of pedestrians waiting for the light to change, impatiently anticipating their turn to cross the busy street. It was then, in that crush of distracted and perspiring humanity that he would best be able to make his move unnoticed.

As usual, the street—designed two centuries earlier for horse and carriage, handcart and rickshaw was clogged to a near standstill. Cars, buses and trucks congested the lane and revved their throttles, filling the clammy air with noxious gray clouds of exhaust. The only vehicles able to move were the mopeds, tuk-tuks and motorbikes that threaded between the bumpers of unmoving traffic.

Duk felt the press of the growing crowd behind him and used it to maneuver himself closer to his mark, closer to the curb where he could make his escape.

The light changed.

At first, no one noticed the two Japanese motorcycles that glided down the adjacent Rua Salado, weaving through traffic as pedestrians stepped off into the crosswalk. Duk kept the European in his peripheral vision and pretended to watch the dapper Chinese man just then crossing the Rua from the opposite direction.

Duk reached for the mark’s wallet at exactly the same moment that an eruption of semiautomatic gunfire scattered the crowd and the scene dissolved into chaos. He watched dumbly as a hail of bullets tore into the Chinese man, standing him up like a marionette, jerking him about spastically and dropping him onto the dirty street. The thin leather briefcase he carried flew from his hands, skittered along the asphalt and bounced off the curb just a few yards away. Without hesitation, and with the training of the thief he was seeking so desperately to be, Duk moved against the wave of fleeing bystanders and snatched the man’s fallen attaché from the gutter.

He shot a glance in each direction, and watched as a cloud of pungent smoke poured from the pipes of the escaping motorcycles. Duk retreated into the refuge and anonymity of the frightened mob as the high-pitched whine of the engines died away. There was a peculiar moment of displaced silence, suddenly broken by the searing scream of a young woman as her eyes landed on the shredded body of the Chinese man whose briefcase Duk now clutched tightly to his chest. He walked as quickly and calmly as he could manage, in the direction of the ferry terminal, and the crowd began to panic in earnest.

Sirens wailed impotently in the distance as Duk chanced one last look behind him, into the street. The Chinese man lay at the center of a widening pool of blood as cars began to move slowly past. Duk’s breath was shallow, the skin of his face hot with the rush of adrenaline, heart pounding with excitement, altogether unaware that he had been observed.

Joey Soong closed his cell phone, allowed the faint smile to pass from his face before he returned to the study where the Dragon Head and the other two men waited for him to finish his call.

He bowed in the traditional way when he reentered the room.

“It is done, lung tau,” he said to the older man.

Three sticks of incense burned on an elegant altar at the far side of the study and filled the air with the sharp, earthy scent of sandalwood. Joey watched the thin trails of smoke intertwine as he waited for a response.

“The case has been recovered?”

Joey hesitated a moment before he answered. To succeed in killing the Green Snake sheung fa, but fail to deliver the cash the man had been transporting could prove to be extremely awkward. He chose his words carefully. I have been told it was retrieved by one of my crew.”

The Dragon Head gazed out the window that overlooked Hong Kong harbor. The lights of the tall buildings on the island side were beginning to glow as the sky faded from silver to black. He clasped his hands behind his back, and turned away from the night.

“You have an enviable future, Mr. Soong,” the lung tau said.

Joey bowed graciously-once more. “I will try to be worthy of it.”

The older man nodded. “Yes,” he said. “This you must always do.”

May Ling felt a stab of ice inside her chest when she reached the top of the stairs. The air in the narrow hallway of the apartment building was heavy, ripe with the odors of cooked vegetables, mildew and rodent urine. The dim light from the solitary window at the far end of the hall cast her doorway in deep shadow. Another stab of panic as she found the doorknob unyielding. Duk had always left it open for her once he got home. He knew well the depth of the fear she harbored at the prospect of being left alone. Her hands began to tremble as she reached into her backpack for the key she kept there, just in case.

May Ling opened the door slowly, craned her head into the tiny gap between door and frame, and peered into the unlighted room.

“Duk?” Her voice was barely a whisper.

Her pulse quickened as she withdrew the key from the lock and stepped inside.

Something smelled wrong, sour like rotting meat, so strong in the small apartment that it overwhelmed even the odor outside in the hall. Her mouth went dry as her hand fluttered blindly along the wall, searching in vain for the light switch. A tear slid down her cheek as she prayed for Duk to be home, prayed that he would not leave her in this place, on her own, after the night had come. How many times had she begged him?

Her frantic fingers found the switch, temporarily blinding herself with sudden light.

“Hello, May Ling.”

The voice rumbled like thunder inside the tiny apartment, startling her so badly that she wet herself as she dropped her backpack to the floor.

She heard two men laughing as she swiped at her tears with the back of her hands.

“This one leaks from both ends,” the big one said. He was standing close, his breath stale and overpowering, the skin around his eyes pitted deeply by the scars of childhood disease. He slammed the door behind her.

The smaller of the men had seated himself on the tattered couch that was situated beneath the room’s only window. His arms were outstretched along the seat back, fingers drumming an aimless rhythm on the faded upholstery, legs crossed casually at the ankles. He bore the arrogant air of a man accustomed to authority. “Where is your brother, May Ling?”

She licked her lips and attempted to speak, but words would not come.

The big one laughed again and came around from behind her. He made a rude show of looking her over, evaluating her young body. He reached out as if to run his hands along her cheeks.

She shrank back as he frowned at her, his eyes small and vacant. She caught the stench of his breath again as he made a move to grab her arm.

May Ling backed away from him until she had nowhere left to move, and found herself pinned against the wall.

“Please,” she said. “Stay away from me.”

He stared down at her, his face a rough, blank canvas, a void.

A rustling sound outside in the narrow hall stopped him, the sound of a key slipping into a lock. He threw a glance at the smaller man, who put a finger to his lips and whispered, “Shhh.”

A moment later Tai Man Duk opened the door, out of breath, his forehead varnished with perspiration. He had been running, trying to get to the apartment before May Ling.

Confusion flickered across his face when he saw Joey Soong sitting on his couch, but a fist seized his heart as the big, pockmarked “49” who Soong had long employed as his enforcer, came out from the shadows with his sister gripped firmly in his hands. May Ling lunged toward her brother, but Joey caught her arm, tore her from the grip of his enforcer, and pushed her roughly to the floor.

Joey’s eyes never left the item Duk held in his hand.

“You have the briefcase,” Joey said. “Very good. Bring it to me.”

Duk felt his knees go weak, and the room began to spin. He struggled for control of himself, and brought the case to Joey. May Ling flinched at the loud snaps of the shiny brass locks as Joey Soong thumbed them open. He lifted the top and gazed into it for long seconds before turning his eyes back to Duk.

“What is this?”

Duk felt the hot rush of blood throbbing at his temples. “I don’t know what you mean,” he said.

“Where is the rest?”

“The rest?”

Joey shook his head calmly, but his eyes betrayed his rage. He glanced down at May Ling still sprawled on the floor at his feet, face wet with tears, blank and uncomprehending. Joey gave her a vicious slap with the back of his hand, then returned his attention to Duk. A thin rope of blood and spittle dripped from her mouth as she turned to watch her brother.

“Where. Is. The. Rest?”

“I lost it.”

Soong’s face went hard. How was the Dragon Head supposed to believe that all that cash had simply been lost by an underling, and not merely pocketed by Soong himself? How could Joey possibly set this straight without looking like a fool? Or worse yet, an embezzler? Here he was, so close to becoming the head of his own branch of the White Orchid, so close to the Golden Mountain, and this fucking toad makes him look like a liar and a common thief.

“How did you lose it?” Joey’s voice was preternaturally calm.

Duk glanced at Joey’s enforcer, then at May. Ling. Blood ran freely across her plum-colored lips and stained the white collar of her blouse. Duk’s eyes pleaded for her forgiveness.

“At the tables.”

All he had wanted was to make some extra money for the two of them. He was supposed to have won. It was such a good plan. He would put the profits in his pocket, the original sum back in the case, and no one would have been the wiser. If he had won, he would have been a hero to both Soong and his sister.

“You gambled with White Orchid money?”

“I didn’t know this belonged to the White Orchid,” he said. “The man on the street . . . I’d never seen him before. I thought—”

“The man on the street was a Green Snake,” Soong interrupted.

“I didn’t know,” Duk rasped.

“The men on the motorcycles. They were White Orchid. You understand?”

Duk’s words all ran together now, tumbling out in a last-ditch effort to be heard, to be understood, to be forgiven.

“I didn’t know it was White Orchid money. On my mother and father, I didn’t know. I thought I’d just gotten lucky, picked it up from a dead man in the street. I went to the Lisboa to win even more. I wanted to come to you with a fortune. I was going to give it all to you, I swear.

Joey Soong examined the briefcase one last time before slamming it shut, snapping the latches. There was only one way he could think of that might, just might, appease the Dragon Head, and more importantly, help him requite an untenable loss of face.

“Stupid boy.”

He grabbed May Ling and pulled her to her feet.

Her eyes flew wide, and the look on her face felt like shards of glass in Duk’s heart.

“Please, no . . .’’ he whispered, tears filling his own eyes.

Soong shoved May Ling toward the big man, where she stumbled at his feet. Duk made a futile move for him, but the pockmarked man spun, landed a fist deep into his solar plexus and delivered two, three brutal kicks to his ribs and kidneys once he was down.

May Ling screamed and the enforcer clapped a callused hand over her mouth.

“Stupid, stupid boy. Do you have any idea what I have to do now?”

Joey shook his head in mock sorrow as Duk writhed and clutched his middle, felt the sharp grinding pain of his broken ribs as he rolled onto his side and retched. A moment later, Joey knelt down, pulled the belt from Duk’s pants, and used it to tie his hands behind his back.

“You know, of course, that the White Orchid must be repaid,” Soong said.

“No, please,” Duk breathed.

His sister cried out as the big man’s thick fingers squeezed tender flesh to the bone, pressing her into the couch cushions as he viciously tore at her clothing.

“This is how it begins,” Soong said.

Duk attempted to avert his gaze, but Soong took Duk’s head into his hands, held it in place through the agonizing minutes, the animal sounds and his sister’s unanswered pleas for mercy.

“It will not go well for her, stupid boy. She will come to wish she had as easy a road as you.”

With one hand, Joey grabbed a fistful of Duk’s hair and yanked back savagely, immobilizing him as he reached into his own back pocket with the other. The unmistakable twing of metal on metal as his sister wept in pain and humiliation only six feet away, the last sounds Duk was to hear, the last images he would carry with him before Joey Soong’s straight razor slid silently through muscle, tendon and vein.

May Ling was barely conscious when they finally carried her from the apartment, wrapped only in the soiled sheet they had ripped from her bed. Her brother’s body lay where they left him, motionless, his head twisted at an ugly angle, at the apex of a vermilion fan of blood opening slowly across the floor.