Twenty-Five

As I’d suspected, Christmas Day was a write-off in terms of work. However, the full day off seems to have done me good because I’m feeling better. It might be time to renegotiate my two and a half hours a day with Dad. Plus, I’ve only got five days left before I officially start back at the office, and lots to do. I’ve got to work on Lee’s list, chase Rodriguez for the list of Chinese nationals, take a good look through the Gang Impact Team’s personnel files and draft the offender profile over the weekend, so I can brief everyone first thing Monday morning. And that’s not even taking into consideration the fact that I now know Jun Saito didn’t kill his girlfriend fifteen years ago. That he was on the run from someone else—not from the police and a homicide charge. But how am I going to present that possibility to the team?

“I’m feeling heaps better today,” I say to Mum and Dad over breakfast.

“That’s great news, honey.” Mum puts her hand on top of mine. “Your color’s finally returning.”

I nod slowly, and then start playing with my fruit salad. “I was thinking of popping into work. Or maybe just spending a little more time on the case over the next few days.”

“You’ll be back Monday. That’s soon enough. And it is doctor’s orders.”

“But, Mum, I’ve got so much to do.”

“You’ve been working from home, Sophie. Isn’t that enough?” She leans back in her seat and gives me a disapproving look.

“A couple of hours each day. That’s nothing. And I need to draft the profile. For that, I need a solid block of time.”

“We leave on Friday…can’t it wait until then?”

Good question. I guess the profile could wait until the weekend—I’d have it ready for my first day back. But I still need to work on Lee’s list, the info from the US State Department when it comes through and the mole. I want to get things moving faster, and increase our chances of getting Mee out from under the Yakuza’s guard. They may be protecting her, and I know Agent Dan Young is keeping an eye on her, but they’re still a violent organized-crime syndicate—Mee’s a rabbit in a lion’s den.

“We need to find the missing woman.”

She sighs but her eyes soften slightly. “I don’t know, honey…”

I give her my best smile, accompanied by a pleading look.

Another sigh. “I guess you are looking a little better.”

“I feel good, Mum. Honest. Why don’t you and Dad get some shopping in? You’ve only got a couple of days left and I know you’d love to buy some new clothes and shoes.”

Dad stands up. “Don’t encourage her, Soph.”

Mum gives him a whack on the arm. “You stay here. You can work on Sophie’s kitchen.” Dad’s not allowed anywhere near Mum’s kitchen.

“It’s a rental, guys. You can’t ‘work on it,’” I point out.

“I just want to put a new tea-towel rack in and fix that cupboard door. And the bathroom tap,” Dad says.

“Trust me, honey, it’ll keep him out from under your feet.”

I laugh. “Okay.”

 

Half an hour later, Mum’s gone and Dad and I are both tapping away—me on my keyboard and Dad on the kitchen cupboard’s hinges. Once I’ve transposed everything from Lee’s handwritten notes into my Excel spreadsheet, I log in to the FBI’s system, jumping through the Bureau’s security hoops. When I’m in, I start looking up each name to fill out my extra two columns: Criminal record and Fingerprints on file.

By 3:00 p.m. I’m just under a third of the way through the list, and I do have a few interesting names. Of the twenty-two names I’ve run to date, only four people have a criminal record. Two were for auto theft, one for small-time credit-card fraud and one assault charge. We have prints for these four men on file, plus prints on another ten in total—some are teachers and the others are government employees, including one ex-marine, one guy who’s currently a captain in the army, two police officers and two FBI agents. I note these down with a Yes in the Fingerprints on file column. It’s time to touch base with Petrov—and maybe the rest of the team.

“Hey, Petrov. It’s Anderson. How about a quick update meeting?”

“Not much going on this end.”

“I’ve got the names back from Lee. Thought maybe I should keep everyone in the loop.”

“Remember, Anderson. You’re not back until Monday.”

“I know. It’s just a list.”

He sighs. “Okay. I’ve given everyone the day off today, but I’ll organize a teleconference.”

“Sounds good.”

Twenty minutes later, we’ve all dialed in, ready to start. When the last beep announces De Luca has joined us, Petrov kicks it off.

“So, Anderson’s got a quick update for us.”

I thank Petrov and fill the team in on my progress with the list from Lee.

“Even though we believe the hit man is from overseas, we don’t want to develop tunnel vision on this thing.” Petrov’s in sync with my thoughts. I always consider that we’re the good guys, on the side of justice. But I know that sometimes law enforcement gets it wrong, imprisons the wrong person. There are lots of reasons this can happen, but tunnel vision from cops or other law-enforcement personnel working the case is one of the big ones. You end up convincing yourself that the evidence fits your suspect, even when it doesn’t. Or the case goes unsolved because you couldn’t open yourself up to other possibilities.

“It’s a pity we don’t have more on the guys that abducted you,” Williams says. “They may have been able to lead us to the employer or the hit man.”

“Dead men don’t talk.” Unfortunately.

“Who wants to help Anderson with the list?”

Hana volunteers.

“Okay, you two stay on line once we’re done and work it out.”

“Anything else? Any luck chasing down a connection between Li Chow and the killer, Williams?”

“Not so far. Although Li Chow did grow up in China—he immigrated here at age fourteen—so it’s possible he met or knew our hit man in his childhood.”

“Anderson, do you think that cop in Beijing could help us on this one?” Petrov asks.

“Sure,” I say. “I’ll see what he’s got on Chow.”

Petrov clears his throat. “It’s probably easier to work backward…once we have a suspect we can see if they crossed paths here or in China. But let’s see what Beijing can turn up.” He pauses. “The only other item then is Mee. I’m putting two agents with missing-persons expertise on her search. My gut still tells me she’s safe—if we can’t find her no one else can—but it’s also time to step up our search for her.” Another pause, then Petrov asks, “Anything else?”

We all respond in the negative.

“Okay, let’s enjoy the rest of the day off. Anderson, we’ll see you Monday and I’ll see the rest of you guys tomorrow.”

“I’ll stay on the line to find out about your list, Sophie.”

“Sure, Hana.”

We wait a couple of minutes until there’s silence.

“You there?” Hana asks.

“Yup.”

“Thanks, Sophie. For Mee.”

“No worries.”

“So, the list.”

If Hana’s the mole and knows who the killer is, I shouldn’t let her anywhere near this list. And if I do let her follow up the names, I can’t be sure the information she passes on to me will be correct. But this is the way we have to play it, at least for the moment.

“How do you want to work it?” she asks.

“Split it down the middle, I’ll take the first half and you can take the second.”

“Awesome.”

“Don’t get too excited. It’s pretty boring.”

“I don’t mind. I’d rather be looking for Mee, but it makes sense that Petrov’s assigned people with missing-persons expertise.”

“Yeah.” I talk Hana through my spreadsheet and the columns I’ve set up. “So all you need to do is look up each person, write up any criminal record they’ve got and put a Yes or No in the fingerprint column.”

“Sounds easy.”

“Yeah, just time-consuming.” I flick the ring on my finger. “I’ll split the spreadsheet in two and forward half on to you.”

“Great. I’ll get started on it today.”

“Thought you guys had the day off.”

“I don’t mind.”

“No, relax. It can wait until tomorrow. Besides, your folks are still there, right?”

“Yeah. They fly out early tomorrow morning. What about you? Are you going to follow your own advice?” Hana teases.

“I am, actually. You think my mother would let me spend any more time on this today?”

She laughs. “True.”

Although I’d normally never call it a day when there’s so much to do, today I find myself tired and my concentration waning. I guess this is the closest I’ve come to a full day’s work in nearly two weeks. I’d planned to spend at least a couple of hours flicking through the personnel files, but the mole will have to wait until tomorrow.