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There was a luxury sports car parked in the open-air parking lot that was entirely out of tune
with the surroundings. Near it was a cart selling takoyaki. The line stretched out for a dozen
meters like a dragon, truly an awe-inspiring sight.
Fei Du stuck out his head to take a look and gave it up, putting the car window back up,
chatting to Lu Jia next to him. “After the year-end bonuses have been paid out is a peak period
for handing in resignations. What plans do you have for next year? Are you going to keep
working for me, or are you planning to experience a different kind of life?”
These last few days, Luo Wenzhou had been working overtime at the City Bureau, so it had
been more convenient for him to drive his own car in and out. Fei Du had driven over in his
own. For Lu Jia, the sports car’s driver’s seat was slightly cramped. He didn’t quite have space
for his belly. Hearing the question, he looked up and leaned back. “President Fei, do you not
want to support me anymore because I eat too much and my engine capacity is too high?”
“Of course not.” Fei Du swept an eye towards the City Bureau. “I’m living off a mistress
myself.”
Lu Jia laughed silently for a while. The evening lights passed through the crack in the car
window that hadn’t been fully closed, falling into his long, narrow eyes, leaving a pinpoint of
light at their corners.
Then his smile became dimmer and dimmer, and he was silent for a while. Lu Jia said, “I’ve
heard someone say that those people who take drugs have the physiological structure of their
brains changed by the drugs—that sounds pretty horrifying. Think about it. If experience,
character, upbringing, and so on are all the body’s removable software, then the brain must be
the hardware. If your brain changes, the equivalent of changing from an Ultrabook to a Xiao
Bawang1, it’s like another soul has been reincarnated in your body. Even though you have the
same memories, you’re not the same person as before.”
“But actually I sometimes think that trauma is something similar.” Lu Jia’s tone changed. He
unbuckled his seatbelt and stretched in the confined space. “Trauma can also change a person
beyond recognition. Sometimes you look at other people, then look in the mirror, and you feel
hollow inside. You think, how did I become like this? I don’t even recognize myself.
1 Chinese company that makes educational games for kids and game consoles that run them.
4
“Ordinary people pursue things, nothing but houses, cars, careers, love, position, dreams.
They’re busy every day, each one of them holding a bellyful of worries and happiness. Their
worries are genuine feelings, and their happiness is sincere. They don’t know what
‘inconstancy’ is. They think that today is the same as yesterday is the same as tomorrow. They
won’t think, ‘I’m only an ant sitting on a dead leaf floating in the river that can overturn any
time.’”
Fei Du didn’t pass comment. With his chin propped on his hand, he made a noise and waited
for him to continue speaking.
“But you’re different. You can’t spend your days like that. You’re like a hen that’s had its
feathers scared off by a firework and can’t lay eggs anymore.—You look at other people and
think that all the things they’re pursuing are illusions. You can’t treat them as real. They can
vanish just like that. You have nightmares every day. Your head is full of vain hopes. You’re
irritable, worried, anxious for absolutely no reason… When someone gives you a second look,
you think maybe he has bad intentions. When someone stops you in the street to ask for
directions, you think he may be plotting something. Sometimes you’ll even see someone
feeling around in his bag too long and suspect he’s got a hidden weapon on him.”
Noisy, raucous voices came in through the crack in the window, their babble mixing with the
man’s voice, making him seem increasingly out of place, increasingly lonely.
“Trust in society and your environment is a cornerstone of a sense of security,” Fei Du said.
“Without that, you can only drift in a state of constant psychological stress. In fact, it’s very
painful. Even if the trauma passes…”
“It doesn’t pass. These things never pass. Even though they’ve caught the killer, it’s still the
same. ‘If you gaze into an abyss, the abyss also gazes into you.’ I don’t know whether you’ve
had that feeling.” Lu Jia shook his head. “Sometimes I feel like I have a mental disorder and
living is pointless.”
Fei Du silently reached over and patted his thick, broad shoulder.
Lu Jia waved a hand. “I love talking to you, even though you sit there the whole time and only
say a few words.”
“According to social etiquette, I should say something to console you. For example, something
like, ‘Everything passes. Time will one day make you lose your memories and intellect, so of
course it will also heal your wounds.’” At this point, Fei Du heard a car horn honk twice, briefly.
He didn’t look out the window, simply picked up his jacket and put it over himself. “But that’s
all nonsense. Even if you wanted hear it, I wouldn’t be inclined to say it.”
Lu Jia laughed in spite of himself. “President Fei, I think you’re simply discriminating based on
attractiveness? With me you aren’t inclined to say a single extra word, only the great truth, but
if there were a pretty young woman sitting here, then wouldn’t you carefully adhere to societal
norms?”
“Then it’s good fortune to be plainer looking. It’s not easy to hear the great truth from me,” Fei
Du said with a great show of earnestness. Then he suddenly turned to Lu Jia. “Lao-Lu, I’m not
inclined to say it to you, but I talked to a pretty little girl recently and have some words ready-
to-hand. Will you listen?”
5
Having suffered discrimination, Lu Jia helplessly took on a posture of being all ears.
“Each person can be molded by external things. Environment, luck, the people they like, the
people they hate…even a person like Lu Guosheng, who makes you want to peel off his skin
and rip out his tendons. Murderers use trauma to mold a part of your flesh and blood. That’s a
fact, whether you’re willing or not.”
“If it were me, do you know what I’d do? I’d cut off that piece of flesh, let out that bowl of
blood, then take an axe to the deformed bones underneath and smash them. I’m not the
person gazing into the abyss. I am the abyss.” Fei Du gave him a slightly bloody smile. But
before the smile could fully develop, the mood was ruined by another horn blast. Fei Du shook
his head helplessly and turned to open the car door and get out. “What’s the rush?—Drive this
car away for me. My parking situation’s tight over there. If you like it, then drive it around to
your heart’s content. Happy New Year.”
Lu Jia’s lips moved as he watched Fei Du open the door of the car temporarily parked next to
them without even checking the license plate. Luo Wenzhou lazily got out of the car and
switched to the passenger’s seat, waving a hand at Lu Jia. The two of them quickly left,
without a second thought for those left behind.
This wasn’t Luo Wenzhou’s first time living in the duty room for several days in a row. Before it
hadn’t been a big deal. Apart from finding someone to feed the cat, there’d been nothing else
to worry about. None of those times had been like this one. He felt like he’d been sleeping in
the duty room for half a lifetime. The first time he’d honked, he’d seen Fei Du respond by
starting to put on his jacket, so he’d known he’d heard. But Luo Wenzhou had watched him
take a full minute to put on that jacket and dawdle, talking to Lu Jia, and he’d finally been
unable to resist basely honking again.
Not seeing each other for a day was like being apart for three years—according to this
reckoning, when Fei Du had dawdled for a minute, it was as though he’d dawdled for 18.25
hours; who could endure that?!
As soon as the door closed, Luo Wenzhou was itching with impatience to assault the driver, but
considering that the environment was too noisy and there was an indiscreet fat guy behind
them watching them go, he resisted the impulse and, very unsatisfied, grumbled, “Were you
two plotting to overthrow the authority of the Milky Way? What was that meeting about that
you had to spend so long talking?”
Fei Du sighed, steadily turning the steering wheel, maintaining an even speed as he got onto
the main road. Then he freed up some time to pull out Luo Wenzhou’s groping hand, which was
feeling around under his clothes. “I’m going to crash into the guardrail by the road.”
While it wasn’t visible on Fei Du’s face, he was in fact rather at a loss, because the last words
Luo Wenzhou had said to him had been, “Fei Du, you prick,” truly not at all sweet. These last
few days it had been big things followed by little things, and there’d been no time for anyone to
pay attention to how anyone else was doing. Now that there was temporarily a free moment,
he felt like he was coming back requesting a reconciliation after a couple of days of cold war.
Fei Du had reached his present age having played with his life and played with fire, but he’d
never played a “reconciliation after cold war” game with anyone. The earlier “I am the abyss”
aura had long ago blown away along with the exhaust. He racked his brains for a moment.
“You…”
6
He hadn’t gotten out anything to follow the “you” when he saw Luo Wenzhou slowly withdraw
his scrounging hand, bring it close to his nose and sniff it, then lick his fingers.
This wasn’t the right context for either apologies or explanations. Fei Du tactfully closed his
mouth and stepped on the gas pedal, skirting the speed limit.
But maybe his driving was too steady or something; having finished his harassment maneuver,
the sleep god Luo Wenzhou turned his head and fell asleep. In a journey only ten minutes long,
he efficiently took a nap. When Fei Du shook him awake, Luo Wenzhou blearily stretched in a
manner stolen from Luo Yiguo, incidentally grabbing Fei Du’s arm and sweeping him into his
embrace, vaguely saying, “I’m so sleepy.”
“I don’t want to move.” Luo Wenzhou lay on him, playing dead for a while. Then, struck by
some brainwave, he whined, “Honey, why don’t you carry me up on your back?”
Luo Wenzhou saw him freeze and say nothing for quite some time. Thinking that the worldly
President Fei had been stunned by his shamelessness, he shook with laughter.
Then Fei Du suddenly buttoned up his jacket, got out of the car, and went to the other side.
Under Luo Wenzhou’s dumbstruck gaze, he opened the car door, turned, and half knelt down.
“Come on.”
Fei Du turned his head and glanced at him. There was a natural curve at the corner of his eye.
Swept by the cold wind, there was a trace of red spreading there.
Luo Wenzhou woke up and met his gaze, but he was still somewhat at a loss, as if he’d been
bewitched. Following Fei Du’s movements, he stepped out of the car and reached from Fei
Du’s left shoulder to his right shoulder as carefully as though he were testing for landmines. He
seemed to feel flesh and bone through the thick jacket. He didn’t dare to use any force, only
lightly laying an arm over Fei Du’s shoulders, half hugging him and thinking, half a beat late,
“What am I playing at?”
Then a cold winter breeze blew, and Luo Wenzhou’s head cleared with a start. He pulled
himself together and thought, “Isn’t it nonsense telling him to carry me?”
Luo Wenzhou gave a dry laugh and was about to awkwardly draw back his arm when Fei Du
grabbed his wrist and lifted him from the car.
7
Luo Wenzhou was frightened out of his wits and scrambled to hook his arms around Fei Du’s
shoulders—especially since the youngster had evidently underestimated his weight, trembling
somewhat as he stood up, stumbling.
Luo Wenzhou’s tongue tied itself into a knot with his teeth. “W-wait, wait a minute, put, put me
down, I-I, what do you call it, I have low-grade acrophobia.”
Fei Du got his footing and laughed. “Lock the car. The keys are in my pocket.”
Luo Wenzhou scrambled to fish them out. “Darling, if there’s anything to say, let’s say it, you
don’t need to be such a hero… Put me down… Hey, don’t rush! No ‘hold tight’ warning and
you’re already moving! Slow down, slow down!”
There were only a few steps from the parking space to the door, and Luo Wenzhou lived on the
first floor. It was only a little way. However weak Fei Du was, he still wasn’t so weak he couldn’t
carry him, but Luo Wenzhou was an expert at frightening himself. He was scared witless the
whole way, feeling his legs were hanging in midair, and he was lying on an antique vase; the
vase was normally kept under glass, and he still thought that wasn’t safe enough, and now he
was pressing down on it, shaking, not even daring to breathe deeply, afraid that if he took a big
breath he’d scrape off a piece of that precious vase’s glaze.
He could feel Fei Du’s somewhat rapid breathing as he exhaled a trace of warmth. The ends of
his hair were hidden inside his scarf, only one lock hanging out, softly falling on his collar. Fei
Du’s hard bones were pressing into his chest, stabbing, making him feel rather tender.
With that bit of tenderness, Luo Wenzhou couldn’t resist behaving badly. He drew close and
gently rubbed his nose against Fei Du’s hair, drawing in a deep breath at his collar. Then he
quietly said into Fei Du’s ear, “I’ve thought of an expression.”
“An ancient road.” Luo Wenzhou freed up a hand to point at the opening of the stairs, then put
it to his ear to feel the winter wind coming from Siberia. “A west wind…”
Then he poked Fei Du’s shoulder. “A skinny horse2… Hey, hey, don’t, don’t, I’m sorry, I was
wrong. My old bones can’t take a fall, take it easy!
“It may be genuine leather, but you’re still too skinny. My ribs hurt.” After a while, Luo Wenzhou
had to show off, grumbling, “I bet you’ve been eating badly while I wasn’t home. After this,
you’re going to exercise with me every day.”
Fei Du was a little out of breath and was annoyed into a laugh. “Yes, I’ve inconvenienced Her
Majesty the princess by not piling up twelve layers of mattresses.—How about we get up to
exercise at six in the morning?”
Jabbed in his vulnerable spot, Luo Wenzhou hooked an arm around Fei Du’s neck. “Little
whelp.”
2Third line of Ma Zhiyuan’s (Yuan dynasty poet and playwright, c. 13th-14th century) poem 秋
思 (Autumn Thoughts) about being melancholy because it’s autumn, as you do. Roughly, the
complete poem goes: “A crow searches for an old tree at dusk,/Houses lie along a small bridge
and running water./An ancient road, a west wind, a skinny horse,/The sun is setting in the
west./The heartbroken traveller wanders far from home.”
8
Hooking like this, he touched Fei Du’s chin. He couldn’t resist stroking that somewhat sharp-
cut chin. “Say, last time when we ate at Tao Ran’s, you wouldn’t even take a little coffeemaker
up the stairs. How come you’re so nice today?—Have you done something to let me down
these last few days? Huh?”
Fei Du took a slight break, then raised a foot onto the step. “I’ve adored you without
permission. Sorry.”
He was silent a moment, then suddenly reached out to catch the banister, forcing Fei Du to halt
his steps. Then without a word he struggled free and grabbed Fei Du’s scarf.
Fei Du went up the last two steps pushed and pulled by him.
Luo Wenzhou carelessly got out his keys and unlocked the door without even looking, relying
on instinct. Then he pushed Fei Du into the entrance hall and pinned him against the door.
Luo Yiguo heard the door, came out to have a look as usual, and unfortunately got its tail
stepped on by the oblivious Luo Wenzhou. Master Cat shrieked and leapt fully two chi off the
ground, bumping its head against the clothes rack.
The rather artistic tall and narrow clothes rack was unsteadily balanced and couldn’t withstand
the sudden attack of a fifteen-jin fat cat. It toppled over, sweeping between the two of them,
separating the lovebirds like the river dividing Chu and Han. Then, the curved long hook
scraped over the little wall lamp in the entrance hall. As the cat shrieked, the lightbulb and the
lampshade both fell to the ground in a household disaster.
The two of them looked at each other helplessly for a moment. Then Luo Wenzhou squeezed a
sentence out from between his teeth: “Today I’ll definitely stew that furry bastard.”
Hearing these words, Luo Yiguo’s rage became even more towering. It launched an attack from
atop the shoe cabinet, delivering a series of murderous paw swipes to Luo Wenzhou,
unfeelingly tearing up the seam of the sleeve of his jacket. Then it angrily stomped over the
ground covered in splinters, leapt up to the top of its cat tree, and sat up on high, seething.
Luo Wenzhou said, “Luo Yiguo, it’s a fight to the death between us!”
Luo Wenzhou glared at him for a while. He moved away his toe, which had been struck dead
on by the clothes rack. He couldn’t gather up a drop of temper.
9
He felt like he was the irresponsible emperor in a cautionary tale. Hearing this calamitous
demon’s rare laugh, even the total ruin of his country meant nothing, never mind a sleeve torn
up by a cat.
“So you’ve cheered up now that you’ve watched the cat pull down the house?” Luo Wenzhou
whispered irritably. “You didn’t say a word all the way here, and you agreed to everything I said.
My mind is a mess. I keep thinking you’re holding back some big plot again.”
“I was just thinking, if you came out again with some bullshit like, ‘We’re not suited for each
other, let’s break up,’ I’d kill you. You wouldn’t be able to get out of bed next year.” Luo
Wenzhou stuck his hand into Fei Du’s hair and viciously rumpled it. “Why? Is it…because of
what happened that day at the ecological park?”
“Think that you really weren’t any good?” Luo Wenzhou sighed. He leaned across the wreck on
the floor and pulled Fei Du by the collar, lips flitting over the tip of his nose. “You really were
kind of scary that day. You know what I thought?”
“It’s lucky that I’m here to keep an eye on you… Ah, as a man using his beauty to save the
world, the Nobel Committee really ought to issue me a Peace Prize.”
“I’m just teasing.” Luo Wenzhou let him go and bent down to pick up the clothes rack lying
wearily on the ground. “If I weren’t here, at your age, you’d still know what to do, isn’t that
right?”
Fei Du was looking at him without blinking, as if he wanted to use his gaze to make an imprint
of his outline and hide it in the deepest, darkest part of his heart, not letting anyone see.
“What are you looking at?” Even with his invincible face, Luo Wenzhou still felt somewhat
awkward being watched by him like this—and he’d thought that he’d removed the word
“awkward” from his lexicon. “You won’t help clean up, all you can do is stand there watching.
You have no sense of the situation. Who else but me would want you?”
On this last night of the year, the first thing the two of them did after coming home was to clean
up the trashed entrance hall.
Luo Wenzhou gathered up the shards of the glass lampshade and the lightbulb while Fei Du
began to torment the ruined corpse of the wall lamp left hanging on the wall.
He changed the lightbulb and got some iron wire from somewhere and bent it a few times with
needle-nosed pliers, turning it into a small frame to go over the lightbulb. Then he ran into the
basement and dug up a dilapidated bicycle basket.
When Luo Wenzhou had finished arranging the food and was using a small pot to stew some
red braised pork, he found that Fei Du had given the old basket a trim and propped it on the
iron frame over the lightbulb. The basket at once became a very suitable makeshift lampshade,
10
complimenting the “offending” narrow clothes rack next to it, as though the two of them had
come from the same set.
The water in the pot boiled and the smell floated out. On account of the meat, Luo Yiguo
condescended to forgive the litter box attendant, jumping down and turning circles at Luo
Wenzhou’s feet.
Luo Wenzhou leaned against the wall, calculating the cooking time and watching Fei Du with
his back to him, cleaning up the tools he’d just used as well as the cut off iron wire.
For a time, the demented suspects, the victims shouting themselves hoarse, the complex old
case, the unknown enemy agent…at once all of them calmly left his world on their own.
His mind was as peaceful as soup simmering over a low flame, slowly sending up steam, once
in a long while sending up a bubble. Each bubble was a full production, nothing hasty, only
popping when it was overflowing, the aroma assaulting the senses.
It was the aroma of home, which made a person feel a sense of perfect satisfaction when he
smelled it, desiring nothing, as if his whole life could settle into place like this.
Luo Wenzhou crossed his arms over his chest and tilted his head up, lightly closing his eyes.
This time, he felt that the opportunity was finally ripe. The hastily-spoken words came up to his
lips in the fullness of time, and he called to Fei Du, “Hey, Feishir3.”
Luo Wenzhou looked at the ceiling. Then he looked at the floor. He bent down and picked up
the generously-proportioned Luo Yiguo. Squeezing the cat’s paws, he asked, “When are you
planning to make things official with me?”
Fei Du paused. Then, without saying a word, he looked down and searched around among the
iron wire he’d cut off earlier, cut off a piece of the appropriate length, and very nimbly used the
needle-nosed pliers to twist it into a spiral ring with three circles. He blew off the filings,
brought it to his lips and kissed it, then turned and knelt down.
Luo Wenzhou and Luo Yiguo were both startled, backing up at the same time. Luo Yiguo
bumped into Luo Wenzhou’s shoulder, and Luo Wenzhou bumped into the wall.
Fei Du said, “The size is definitely just right. Will you put it on?”
That day, Luo Wenzhou personally demonstrated to him that the appellation “grandpa” was
mere provocation; in fact, President Fei didn’t get out of bed until next year.
Luo Yiguo was once again locked out of the master bedroom. However, the feline majesty had
attained a bowl of unseasoned red braised pork, so it magnanimously set aside the master
bedroom portion of its domain for the two humans, temporarily holding back from investigating
the matter.
3 Had this many a chapter back, but reiterating: puerile pun on Fei Du’s name, using a word
that means “troublesome.”
11
Xiao Haiyang left the interrogation room to the sound of Lu Guosheng’s snarls. The hysterical
curses seemed to hold some magic power, releasing light and heat, protecting against wind
and cold, making him feel light as a swallow. He rushed out onto the street in the howling cold
wind, passing the crowds of young people keeping the night watch in the squares and
shopping streets, then jumped onto a bus bound for the outskirts. He sat on it for over an hour
until it reached the last stop, then indefatigably walked for most of an hour, arriving at a remote
little graveyard.
Naturally the graveyard was already closed. Xiao Haiyang deployed his “agility,” which could
be compared to that of a black bear, and hopped the wall, getting inside the graveyard and
finding a simple and crude stone tablet.
Light from a nearby streetlight slanted down. Xiao Haiyang could clearly see Gu Zhao in black-
and-white on the gravestone. His appearance was what it had been in his prime, only his
expression was somewhat unnatural, because he’d been somewhat camera shy, getting
nervous as soon as a photograph was being taken. None of his pictures were as good-looking
as he had been himself.
Xiao Haiyang suddenly felt very aggrieved, like when he’d been very small and someone had
bullied him and he’d come all the way home forcing himself to keep up appearances, until he’d
seen this man and finally broken down, the grievance he’d endured backfiring even more
strongly, making him unable resist running to that person’s arms and bawling.
His glasses were blurred, steam evaporating from his nose and mouth and from the rims of his
eyes, the vapor rising into a ball as though he were a human-shaped steamer. The steamer
slowly walked a few steps, then bent down and hugged the ice-cold stone tablet, wanting to
unburden himself like he had so long ago.
Xiao Haiyang froze. Then he realized that the fragrance was coming from the gravestone, like
the smell of some cleaning solution. Xiao Haiyang hastily rubbed at his blurred eyes, turned on
a flashlight, and found that the gravestone had been very carefully cleaned. There wasn’t a
speck of dirt, even in the nooks and crannies. There was a bouquet of fresh flowers under the
gravestone.
Xiao Haiyang slowly frowned, saying to himself, “Uncle Gu, who was just here?”
Because his death hadn’t been at all honorable, Gu Zhao’s sick mother had dragged herself to
receive his body on her own. The unyielding old lady hadn’t told anyone. Coldly turning down
Gu Zhao’s colleagues who’d wanted to help in private, she’d quietly used her savings to buy a
cheap and remote plot of land in a graveyard, settling him here.
Relying on the fact that he was a child, Xiao Haiyang had shamelessly followed the old lady.
The old lady, seeing that he couldn’t be chased away, had let him follow as he pleased. Xiao
Haiyang remembered it clearly. Gu Zhao hadn’t had a funeral; his friends and relatives hadn’t
been notified; the day he’d been buried, only his mother and Xiao Haiyang had been present.
Then who had scrubbed the gravestone and arranged the flowers?
Today wasn’t the anniversary of Gu Zhao’s death, and there was no local custom of sweeping
graves at the beginning of the solar year.
12
Had the mysterious visitor just learned that Gu Zhao’s case would be reopened?
But it hadn’t yet been publicly announced…and even internally, only the personnel concerned
with Lu Guosheng’s case had heard anything about it.
On the TV, the female reporter’s lips flapped as though there were springs installed in them, her
speech as rapid as popping beans; the focus was on the news of Wei Zhanhong being
investigated.
At the same time, the word “assassination,” after temporarily enjoying the internet famous
treatment, had been classified as a prohibited word by all the major web portals and turned
into different sorts of mosaic.
Tao Ran was at the City Bureau working overtime. Xiao Haiyang, with huge dark circles under
his eyes, was sitting on the couch in Luo Wenzhou’s house, holding a cup in his hands. His
eyes were turned emptily toward the TV. He didn’t even notice Luo Yiguo sneaking a drink from
his cup.
“Uncle Gu didn’t have any other relatives,” Xiao Haiyang finally said without beginning or end
during the commercials. “I’m sure of it. So who would sweep his grave?”
Luo Wenzhou slapped Luo Yiguo’s butt, sending it running, then took Xiao Haiyang’s cup,
which was full of floating cat hair, and took it to the kitchen to wash it and refill it with water for
him. “Did you know his colleagues, informers, friends back then?”
Xiao Haiyang hesitated a moment, then slowly shook his head. “When the old lady was
arranging his affairs, there really were some people who came to the door one by one to see
her, but they were all turned down at the door. They came once or twice at most, like a
revolving horse lantern. I don’t remember any of them.”
Over a decade ago, he had after all been too little. Even though Xiao Haiyang’s memory was
outstanding and he could perhaps remember everything that had happened when he was a
child, it was still too hard to recognize someone he’d only seen once. As for what Gu Zhao’s
social network and informer network had been like, he wouldn’t have talked about that to an
eight- or nine-year-old child.
Luo Wenzhou muttered to himself for a moment. “Since it was a legally purchased cemetery
plot, there would have been a record left behind. If someone in the system had wanted to go
looking, it wouldn’t have been hard to find…”
13
“No, Captain Luo,” Xiao Haiyang said somewhat tensely. “That graveyard is pretty well-run,
under sealed management. It’s quite strict. Visitors coming to sweep graves all have to sign in.
During high-traffic times like Qing Ming, you have to make an appointment. But I went over to
investigate the visitor record first thing this morning and found that there hadn’t been any
visitors apart from me these last few days. So the person could only have gotten in by going
over the wall in the middle of the night, like I did last night. If it was one of our people, why
would he need to do that?”
Luo Wenzhou frowned.—Indeed, whether Gu Zhao had suffered an injustice or had truly
committed a crime when he’d been alive, a person’s death was like the extinguishing of a lamp.
The good and bad, right and wrong of his life all came to nothing. If his former colleagues and
friends had gone to see him out of old affection, there would have been nothing to criticize
them for. There really was no need to sneak around like this…especially at this critical juncture,
when the old case was about to be investigated anew.
“The planner A13 who Lu Guosheng described, the mysterious security guard who vanished
from the Longyun Center, and Wei Wenchuan and Feng Bin’s online friend—up to the present,
we have no traces of these people.” Xiao Haiyang pursed his lips, which were so dry they were
peeling, and drank half the cup of water like a donkey at a water trough. Then he went on
speaking with difficulty. “The whole thing gives me a feeling as though…as though…someone
was luring us into investigating the old case anew. I feel like…”
“Feel like they were doing it to avenge Gu Zhao.” Fei Du silently walked over to Xiao Haiyang,
startling the Little Glasses.
Fei Du’s face was rather pale, but for some reason his lips had more color in them than usual.
He frowned gently when he sat. His eyes never seemed to open fully. He nearly sank into the
soft couch cushion. “First they targeted Wei Wenchuan, quietly getting close to him using an
investigation of his mental state and the appropriate guidance.”
Luo Wenzhou said, “Including instructing him on how to lord it over that garbage school
Yufen?”
“Oh, Wei Wenchuan would have done that even without guidance.” Saying so, Fei Du reached
for the cans of beer arranged on the table to entertain guests; Luo Wenzhou tapped on the
back of his hand with a pen. Fei Du gave an “oh,” and even the preoccupied Xiao Haiyang
looked over.
Then, pretending that nothing had happened, he turned and picked the detailed materials
about Wei Wenchuan up off the table, very properly pushing at his glasses. “Lu Guosheng
confessed that Wei Wenchuan ran across him at the Beehive, so he must have been going with
his father Wei Zhanhong to that money squandering establishment since he was little. Likely
Wei Zhanhong didn’t hide what he was doing from his only son. If you look closely, you’ll find
that Wei Wenchuan’s body language is very like Wei Zhanhong’s. He’ll imitate his father in every
aspect, including the way he conducts himself in society—though it’s likely he learned the
means from this mysterious ‘go ask shatov’. This sort of systematic malice, backed up by
theory, seems more like the handiwork of an adult.”
14
“But…” Xiao Haiyang hesitated. “How could he be sure that Wei Wenchuan would follow his
lead to the point of killing someone?”
“To an ordinary person, assassination is a serious crime that there’s no coming back from.
They absolutely won’t make that kind of choice unless they have no way out. But to Wei
Wenchuan, it’s an advanced strategy reserved for adults only, his father’s prerogative.
Adolescents have an intense desire and curiosity towards the adult world. He’d do it if you only
gave him two things—the puffed up feeling of being grown up, and the ability to obtain the
‘tool.’” Fei Du’s fingertip drew a line over Wei Wenchuan’s photograph. “Single-handedly
establishing the order at school gave him that puffed up feeling, and having him conveniently
run into Lu Guosheng gave him the tool. He was like a child holding kindling. Sooner or later,
he wouldn’t be able to hold himself back.”
Luo Wenzhou paused and couldn’t resist letting his mind wander a little. He thought that what
Fei Du said made sense, and that was why it made him feel something was off.—At the age
when a small child like a blank piece of paper, he didn’t know the difference between good and
evil and would imitate his parents. His views towards some things would already be taking
rudimentary form while he was learning to talk; it would be very difficult for later education to
change them. So there was nothing remarkable about Wei Wenchuan growing up like this.
But thinking about it carefully, Fei Du had grown up in almost exactly the same environment as
Wei Wenchuan. What had made him resist Fei Chengyu so fiercely?
It was hard for Luo Wenzhou to imagine that it was merely because of his mother.
The reason that the majority of people thought of “mama” as a warm and sacred form of
address was that when they’d learned to pronounce it, they’d linked it to the parent who raised
and taught them; because they were filled with affection towards this person, they invested this
word with a special meaning. But from the few words that Fei Du had let slip, it seemed that his
earliest acquaintance with the word “mama” had been attached to a hysterical madwoman,
punished every day for doing the wrong thing, mentally unwell, her position not even as high as
a housekeeper’s.
Would the sort of woman who left that impression really have been able to use her life to
overturn the brand left by Fei Chengyu?
Luo Wenzhou couldn’t help remembering the day they’d been investigating Lu Guosheng’s
whereabouts, when Fei Du had made that strange and accurate inference about the employee
bus. He hadn’t had time to think carefully about it then, but now his misgivings floated up
again.
He must have been staring at Fei Du too long. Fei Du gave him a slightly dubious look, and Luo
Wenzhou suddenly discovered that the redness floating at the corners of his eyes still hadn’t
receded fully. His rigorously calculating line of thought staggered in its steps, nearly slipping
into the abyss flowing below. He hastily withdrew his gaze, coughed dryly, and sat up properly.
“When Feng Bin ran away with the others, he left a letter that was posted online and somehow
attracted interest,” Fei Du continued. “The school system and teenagers’ mental health are
always popular topics, so no one questioned it at the time. But thinking about it now, that wave
of enthusiasm was very unusual. It must have carried the trace of someone’s manipulation.—
And when people were about to forget this business, Feng Bin died. The schoolyard bullying at
Yufen immediately fermented, discussions of schoolyard bullying were everywhere, the level of
social interest was extremely high. And the killer was a criminal who had been wanted for
15
fifteen years, causing this murder plot, which should have been mentioned a few times and
then passed, to shift over to the City Bureau, becoming the focus of everyone’s attention.”
“Wait a minute.” Luo Wenzhou suddenly remembered something. “The day before Feng Bin
died, the business of the middle school students running away was inexplicably pushed over to
me—in other words, it’s likely that wasn’t coincidence!”
Fei Du shrugged. “When we accidentally alerted the enemy, even you thought we wouldn’t be
able to take Lu Guosheng alive—though actually, even if Lu Guosheng had died, the existence
of the ecological park would still undoubtedly have been revealed. The video record of Wei
Wenchuan meeting Lu Guosheng at the Longyun Center would have been sufficient basis for
the police to investigate the Wei family. Investigating following that thread, you may still have
been able to catch those people.”
“But someone ran the risk of changing the Longyun Center’s security camera records a second
time to delay Wei Zhanhong’s people,” Luo Wenzhou said quietly. “I suspect that even if we’d
been particularly unimpressive, not come in time even with green lights the whole way, that
mysteriously vanished A13 would likely have personally rescued Lu Guosheng.”
“Because only with Lu Guosheng living could he confirm in his own words in full public view
that the wanted criminal’s fingerprint fourteen years ago wasn’t made up at all, that it wasn’t
concocted by Gu Zhao in order to solicit a bribe, that there was an injustice involved in the fire
at The Louvre.” Fei Du knocked on the table. “I’ll get people to sift through all the aerial footage
from that day. That A13 must have been near the ecological park that day.”
Luo Wenzhou nodded, then said to Xiao Haiyang, “With investigating the case of Wei
Wenchuan plotting to kill his schoolmate as your reason, go to the police station that first
received the report and ask around. I want to know who pushed that case over to me.”
Xiao Haiyang pursed his lips, wanting to speak but stopping himself.
“The City Bureau’s forensics department personally performed the autopsy on Officer Gu. With
the eyes of so many colleagues and experts watching, the medical examiners couldn’t have
misidentified the deceased. The report concerning the autopsy is in the file.” Luo Wenzhou
seemed to have understood what he was thinking and very confidently said, “Xiao-Xiao, I don’t
believe in stories about souls coming back to possess others’ bodies.”
Xiao Haiyang looked at him with a complicated expression and sighed, in disappointment or
gladness. “Yes, I know.”
“As for who this A13 actually is, whether he secretly helped us, and what his final goal is, that’s
what we need to investigate next. But there is one thing.” Luo Wenzhou raised a finger and
said sternly, “He’s one of the suspects in Feng Bin’s murder. You understand?”
“Then get to work,” Luo Wenzhou said. “With a public security bureau about to be turned into a
sieve by all these snitches, there really aren’t many people we can trust. I’m going to see…”
He’d only gotten halfway through his words when his phone suddenly vibrated. There was a
group message on it. He looked down and saw that the sender was Yang Xin—Lao-Yang’s little
daughter.
16
Yang Xin said: “My mom had her surgery today. The doctor says it didn’t go well. She’s still in
the ICU. My thanks for the concern of all our relatives and friends. There have been too many
inquiries, so I’m replying all at once. I’ll do my best to take care of her. Growing old and falling
ill is normal. Everyone take care of yourselves.”
Luo Wenzhou’s heart lurched. He stared emptily for a long time. “I…I have something to do.
We’ll see each other in the afternoon.”
Luo Wenzhou was tactful, but his temper really was considerable, and he had some of the bad
habits of a young master in his bones. His affection for their shifu wasn’t any weaker than Tao
Ran’s; he’d always send something home with Yang Xin during the holidays. If the Yang family
had needed anything, Yang Xin could have summoned him to be pierced with knives from both
sides with one text message. But knowing that their shiniang Fu Jiahui didn’t like him, he
wouldn’t be like Tao Ran, enduring humiliation to go see her. Thinking of it, since shifu’s death,
he hadn’t had any contact with this shiniang.
He hadn’t thought that when he saw her again, there would be the hateful door of an ICU ward
between them.
When Luo Wenzhou reached the hospital, he first went to comfort Yang Xin, then went to chat
with the doctor. When he left, he saw from afar Yang Xin talking to a familiar person. He
paused, then went over to say hello. “Director Lu.”
Lu Youliang nodded towards him, then said warmly to Yang Xin, “It’s all right, girl, your uncles
are all here. If you need people or money, we have both. Don’t be afraid. I’ll have your auntie
stay with you for a few days. If you’re busy at school, don’t keep coming over here. We’ll help
you keep watch.”
Lu Youliang pointed at Luo Wenzhou and said, “Perfect. You can have your dage drive you
back. I’m hitching a ride today, too.”
Luo Wenzhou’s brow twitched. He said nothing. When he’d taken Yang Xin back to school, he
looked at Lu Youliang in the rearview mirror. There was deep weariness in Lu Youliang’s face.
He had his eyes closed, rubbing the center of his brow.
Luo Wenzhou remembered that when they’d parted yesterday evening, Tao Ran, pretending to
be playing around, had said something into his ear—he’d said, “I followed Director Lu the
whole time that day. I don’t think it was him.”
Lu Youliang released a trailer, then kept mum, sinking into his memories. Luo Wenzhou didn’t
hurry him. He slowly shuffled along the inner ring, which the traffic had turned into a pot of
porridge. He rolled down the window and passed Director Lu a cigarette.
Never mind the rest, Luo Wenzhou felt that Comrade Fei Du could take a large part of the credit
for his ability to have so much patience right now.
The car shuffled through the most stopped up part of the road at a speed of ten kilometers per
hour. When Luo Wenzhou could finally shift his foot a little off the brake, Lu Youliang sighed.
“You’ve been working hard lately. The load you’re carrying on your shoulders must be too
heavy?”
If it were someone else, no matter what, he’d have said, “All in the service of the people.” But
Luo Wenzhou wasn’t at all modest. Hearing these words, his eyes glittered. “Oh, yes, sir, and
since you’ve noticed, you could hurry up and raise my year-end bonus. It’s hard being a man.
Supporting a family is so stressful!”
“Jerk.” Lu Youliang’s heart, filled with grave matters, rebounded off of Luo Wenzhou’s
shamelessness, and for a time all his thoughts were gone. He unfeelingly said, “It’s what you
ought to do in the service of the people.”
“I could have relied on my talent to eat, but the organization is forcing me to rely on my looks.”
Luo Wenzhou shook his head, deeply grieved by his fate, like a beautiful woman coming to an
unhappy end. Then, when Director Lu was planning to slap him, he voluntarily returned to the
main subject. “Did you want to talk to me about Senior Gu?”
“Gu Zhao…Gu Zhao.” Lu Youliang repeated the familiar but strange name a few times, then
leaned back in his seat, tilting his face up, hesitating for a moment as though not knowing
where to start. “Your shifu was my shixiong. He was a class ahead of me. He was an influential
figure at school, too. Did he talk to you about that?”
“Are you kidding?” Luo Wenzhou picked up very naturally. “Lao-Yang was always bragging,
saying there were quite a few girls who liked him at school. I said that was impossible, Yan
Security Uni doesn’t even have ‘quite a few girls.’ He threw me out of his office.”
Luo Wenzhou seemed to be innately without reserve, whether he was speaking to his elders or
his superiors. A transient smile flickered over Lu Youliang’s face. “It wasn’t like it is now for us
back then. It was very hard to transfer into the City Bureau. While you had to be young, you
couldn’t be too young, and you had to have enough low-level experience to qualify to
participate in the exam. We all sharpened our brains, relying on our grades, relying on our
experiences. That year, for some reason, the City Bureau had an especially high quota. Gu
Zhao, Lao-Zhang, Lao-Pan and I all came in that year—oh, Lao-Pan you may not know, he
hasn’t been on the front lines in a long time. He teaches at Yan Security Uni now. He’s the head
of the Picture Album Project at the school this time around. He gives himself airs and hasn’t
come back to look in on us.”
Luo Wenzhou raised the car window. From Director Lu’s brief words, he seemed to have picked
up that old photograph arranged on the director-general’s desk.
“Gu Zhao and I were classmates. Lao-Pan transferred from out of town. Lao-Zhang was a little
older than us; he’d rendered a meritorious service and was named to come to the City Bureau.
There were many experts and elders on the Criminal Investigation Team then. Newly arrived
young people all did odd jobs. When the four of us first came, we were basically running
errands, taking notes, carrying tea. Everyone called us the ‘four great maidservants.’”
18
“Plus there was Lao-Yang—Lao-Yang was the ‘steward’ in charge of us ‘maidservants.’ He’d
just transferred back from Lotus Mountain a few months ago then.” Faint laughter lines
gathered at the corners of Director Lu’s eyes. “The five of us were all about the same age, and
we’d all started working at about the same time. We spent all day together, using every
moment we could get to follow the elders around learning from them, running errands together,
sorting records and files together… Aside from Lao-Yang, who’d ‘betrayed the organization’
early, we were all bachelors. Sometimes when one person was on duty and the others had
nothing to do, they’d bring food and come over to keep him company.
“Lao-Yang had the greatest wealth of experience. He was bold but cautious and had the
highest level of professional skills. Lao-Zhang’s family was in business. He had the greatest
means. When we went out to eat he’d volunteer to foot the bill. He got along best with people.
He was our old big brother. Lao-Pan was the most disgraceful, and his temper was the foulest.
He and I didn’t get along at all. We’d argue almost every day, but we never held grudges. As
soon as we were finished arguing, we’d be all right after a while, and then in another while we
might turn on each other again.
“Gu Zhao was the youngest. We called him ‘Number Five.’ He didn’t speak much, and he was
very good at taking care of people. He was clearly so poor he rattled, but if anyone so much as
told him they were having financial hardships, he’d be ready to help the needy for justice. And
he was very diligent, took the most careful notes, always had a book in his hand. Seven or
eight years after he graduated, he went back to the alma mater at his own expense to get a
graduate degree in his free time.”
Amiable, diligent, considerate, nervous when taking pictures… Lu Youliang’s words gradually
colored in the image of Gu Zhao. The “bicycle knight” lit by the setting sun that Xiao Haiyang
had described became flesh and blood, standing up out of the shallow and chilly CV on the
intranet.
“Later, a group of elders stepped back from the front line, and Number Five was promoted to
deputy-captain. We were all very satisfied, because really no one was as hard-working as him.
When you were with him, whether working or hanging out, you’d feel very peaceful. Looking
into his eyes, you’d feel you were too restless yourself and involuntarily calm your mind.” Lu
Youliang paused. “The 327 case was the first major case Gu Zhao handled after becoming
deputy-captain. It caused a sensation, and it was settled very tidily. The only fly in the ointment
was that Lu Guosheng had gotten away.
“You can imagine that because this wanted criminal was on the loose, the people around
National Road 327 were in a state of anxiety. As soon as it got dark, no one would dare to go
on that road. There was a nationwide wanted notice issued in order to catch him, and the
reward in the end went up to 100,000—and this was fifteen years ago. 100,000 really wasn’t a
small sum. At the time, an informer who’d gone into mortal danger to lure out drug traffickers
would only get three or five thousand when it was over, and sometimes their expenses
wouldn’t even be paid promptly. When they heard about this business, the informers all went
crazy. For a while there were always people staking out Lu Guosheng’s old address. But he
never turned up again. It was as though he’d vanished off the face of the earth. We couldn’t
find him no matter what.”
19
To make the government cough up 100,000 yuan, the people in charge would have had to call
in all their connections and talk themselves blue in the face. But for people like Wei Zhanhong
and Zheng Kaifeng, what did it amount to? They wouldn’t even bother to bend down to pick it
up if they dropped it on the ground.
Unfortunately, no one had known at the time whom they’d been up against.
“A year later, Lu Guosheng got himself drunk and accidentally left behind his fingerprint.” Luo
Wenzhou broke the silence. “Director Lu, could you tell me in detail how it all happened back
then?”
“The fingerprint was turned up by the forensics people below us, responsible for handling the
brawl at the bar. The special investigation team had already broken up then. When we found
out that Lu Guosheng was still in the area, we were all excited and immediately obtained the
bar’s security camera records, interviewed the witnesses and informers without rest. Lao-
Yang’s little child was sick, and the situation wasn’t very good, so he’d asked for his annual
leave and was absent from work. Gu Zhao was in charge of the business,” Lu Youliang said.
“The bar was irregularly managed. The security cameras were only for show. We staked out the
area for over a week, caught a couple of gangs selling ecstasy while we were at it, but we
didn’t see a trace of Lu Guosheng. We had to leave.—We guessed at the time that after
accidentally getting involved in the brawl and alerting the police, Lu Guosheng had been afraid
and had perhaps already left Yan City.”
“Not necessarily,” Luo Wenzhou said. “If he’d been going to run, he’d already have run. If he
was still around over a year after 327, there had to be something he was concerned about
keeping him in Yan City. The fact that he dared to go out drinking showed that he had a fixed
source of income and a place to hide, and his means were perhaps rather ample.—Didn’t you
go investigate at the transport company where he’d worked before?”
“Your surmises are exactly the same as Gu Zhao’s. If he were still alive, I figure you two
would…” Laugh lines flickered at the corners of Lu Youliang’s mouth. Then he fell silent again.
“We investigated the transport company, but Lu Guosheng’s affair with the boss’s wife was
very covert. If he hadn’t personally confessed it, we wouldn’t have known. Even his own
brother, who’d killed people with him, didn’t know.”
“He’d run off. I figure he’d heard of the 327 case, knew the police hadn’t caught Lu Guosheng,
and was afraid of his vengeance,” Lu Youliang said. “We didn’t know there was anything else
there at the time. We didn’t investigate carefully.”
Lu Guosheng’s fingerprint was like a stone that had raised a thousand-layer wave, but it had
only been a fleeting glimpse. Soon after, all trace of him vanished; the trail broke off.
“We thought of every trick we could think of and tried them all, but it was like looking for a
needle in the ocean. You know it’s in the water, but you can’t find it. We trawled for a long time,
but it wasn’t like we didn’t have other things on hand, and which of the cases that come to the
City Bureau aren’t important? We really were at our wits’ ends. We had to move on. Only Gu
Zhao privately never abandoned it. I saw that he was very hard-up then. He wouldn’t tell you
anything if you asked about it. Other people thought he was carrying on a romance… Now that
I think about it, maybe he was privately paying his informers extra.”
Luo Wenzhou didn’t interrupt. He knew he was about to come to the critical part.
20
“I remember that day was the first time I went to visit my father-in-law. I had some drinks with
the old man. It was nearly ten at night when I left. I was a little drunk. I took a shortcut alone to
take a bus. On the way, I got a phone call from Lao-Yang. He said something had happened. I
didn’t understand precisely what it was. I just had some kind of dim feeling, gave a start, and
instantly sobered up.
“When I hurried over, I saw Lao-Yang holding someone by the collar, the veins in his neck all
standing out. He looked like he was going to hit him. A crowd of guys was desperately pulling
at him.—We all knew the person he was holding. His codename was ‘Old Cinder.’ He was a
professional informer. He’d been in the profession four or five years. He was on record at the
City Bureau’s Criminal Investigation Team, and he’d accompanied us on quite a few actions,
gone through fire and water with us. He was halfway to one of our own brothers.”
Luo Wenzhou considered his diction, then said, “I heard that there was a witness who escaped
the fire at The Louvre and accused Gu Zhao of being the chief culprit behind the fire—was that
this Old Cinder?”
“Yes. Lao-Yang was holding Old Cinder up with one hand, and he was howling and crying,
saying Gu Zhao was normally good to him, he couldn’t be like this, couldn’t say it.” Lu Youliang
quietly said, “As soon as I heard that and looked at Lao-Yang’s face, my heart went cold.
“Later, when we questioned him carefully a few times, Old Cinder finally admitted that Gu Zhao
had solicited bribes more than once, all under the guise of investigating. He’d made some of
the informers he was familiar with take molds of Lu Guosheng’s fingerprints, fix on a target,
figure out the environment, then place the fingerprint in the store. Gu Zhao would pretend to
have received an informer’s report and come over to search. He’d simply present a bill, and if
you didn’t shell out, he’d say that the place was harboring wanted criminals, that there were
fingerprints and ‘witnesses,’ and you wouldn’t be able to continue your business.”
“The dead can’t testify. You only had a one-sided account,” Luo Wenzhou said. “What was the
other evidence?”
“First there were the results of medical examiner’s autopsies. Gu Zhao really had had a
physical altercation with the manager at The Louvre before he died. All the details matched
with the witness’s account.
“Second, we found an identical fingerprint mold in Gu Zhao’s locker in the duty room.
“Third were the witnesses. With only Old Cinder saying it, we and Lao-Yang didn’t believe it.
But we found a notebook that hadn’t burned all the way among the wreckage at the scene of
the fire, the one Gu Zhao normally carried with him. Half of it had burned away. You could
faintly distinguish some names of places and people on it. The people’s names were all
codenames of informers, and the place names must have been businesses Gu Zhao had gone
to investigate recently.—We called all those people in for questioning. There was only one
business owner who was maybe afraid of stirring up trouble and wouldn’t answer any
questions, wouldn’t give evidence. Aside from him, everyone else agreed.”
Luo Wenzhou’s heart sank. “The witnesses were all professional informers on the record?”
There were many types of informers. There were the ones doing it for the reward, there were
the ones who hung around “doing odd jobs,” there were the ones atoning for their crimes with
good deeds, and then there were the professional informers. These people had records with
the police, had cooperated with the police more than once. Sometimes they nearly seemed like
planted agents. They were highly trusted and had very close relations with the police.
21
The evidence hadn’t been invulnerable, but he’d already been dead, and the witnesses had
been of this kind…
“Gu Zhao was loyal when he was alive. His good relations with his informers were well known,”
Lu Youliang said. “We had to take their statements seriously, whether we liked it or not. The
security cameras in the bar where Lu Guosheng’s fingerprint had first appeared hadn’t filmed
him. The bar’s employees didn’t have any memory of Lu Guosheng, but there was a bartender
who identified Old Cinder, and Old Cinder later admitted that he’d faked Lu Guosheng’s
fingerprint.—In other words, the fact of this criminal who had been on the run for a year
appearing in Yan City had been entirely fabricated and had no foundation.”
Thinking about it, the fact that a wanted criminal who’d brought about a sensational case
would be able to hide himself for a year without being found, and would openly go out drinking,
in itself filled you with misgivings. Adding in Gu Zhao’s unusual enthusiasm and dedication to
this work, as well as his solitary actions and even shifty conduct… Luo Wenzhou felt that
looking at it from an outsider’s perspective, he would have nearly been convinced of the
conclusion.
“But since they said he’d solicited bribes, where was the money from the bribes? Where was it
stored? What was it used for?”
“The money was in his house, cash, found under the bed, over five million altogether, more or
less matching what the informers had said.—His mother had cancer. The old lady herself didn’t
know. There were medical reports stacked on top of the money. Gu Zhao’s family background
was unremarkable. His parents were farmers, his father died early, and the family wasn’t
thriving. His mother worked at a department store in their town. It was temporary work, and the
company was improperly managed. No one was conscious of needing insurance then. With an
illness like that, that money still wouldn’t have been enough.”
The motive was obvious, the evidence was clear, the unshakeable witnesses spoke with
certainty.
Never mind that Gu Zhao had been dead; even if he’d still been living, it wasn’t clear what
would have happened.
“Societal circumstances weren’t as relaxed then as they are now, and the internet hadn’t been
developed. With such a big scandal coming out of the City Bureau and the person involved
dead, the leaders reacted by covering it up, forbidding it to be mentioned again. If you went to
the database to search now, you wouldn’t find it… Fourteen years.”
Luo Wenzhou was silent for a good while, then suddenly said, “Director Lu, there’s something I
think is very strange.”
Lu Youliang looked up, meeting Luo Wenzhou’s gaze reflected in the rearview mirror.
“Our rate of solving cases isn’t a hundred percent. There are always some cases that go
unresolved. As long as police manpower is limited, some things have to temporarily be put
aside according to their severity and urgency. But while the special investigation group had
broken up, the case was still there. As long as it didn’t violate discipline and didn’t interfere
with his other work, there would have been nothing wrong with the person in charge of the
case continuing to investigate.” Luo Wenzhou said, “Why did Gu Zhao have to act alone?”
22
Even if he hadn’t wanted to add to his colleagues’ burdens and had chosen to investigate
alone, when he’d made some progress or had some new ideas, he must have wanted to find a
colleague to accompany him—because according to regulations, evidence gathered by a
police officer without notifying anyone else was non-compliant; if he brought it back, it could
only be used for reference; it had no value.
Luo Wenzhou slowly stopped the car by the side of the road. The front of the car was aimed at
the City Bureau’s front gate. The enormous national emblem over the public security logo
reflected the afternoon light.
“Uncle Lu,” Luo Wenzhou said quietly, “it’s just you and me here. Whatever you say, it won’t
reach any third person’s ears.”
Lu Youliang lowered his eyes and at last spoke almost inaudibly. “Yeah. If Gu Zhao suffered an
injustice, there’s only one possibility. Our team is dirty.”
Inside the car, there was only the hum of the air-conditioning and the sound of Lu Youliang
tapping his own knee from time to time.
“The materials of informers on record are all kept strictly secret. Only our own people know
their identities,” Luo Wenzhou said. “A petty thief couldn’t come into a public security bureau
to pilfer. If Gu Zhao was framed, then only our own people could have put things into his locker
in the duty room.—Gu Zhao suspected that there was a rat in the City Bureau, so he chose to
investigate on his own. But he also knew the rules, so when he found The Louvre in the end, to
be rigorous about collecting evidence, he must have chosen a partner among the people he
trusted. And that person killed him.”
Luo Wenzhou turned his head to look at him. “Uncle Lu, is there anything else you want to tell
me?”
He had a feeling that there had to be something Lu Youliang wanted to say. But he waited a
long time, and Director Lu at last avoided his line of sight. “No. This is all that I know. All of us
old farts are suspects. This has to rely on you youngsters.”
Luo Wenzhou looked at him deeply, then drove into the City Bureau’s yard, considerately taking
Lu Youliang up to the office building.
When he’d seen him drive off, Lu Youliang sighed gently and reached into his coat pocket—
inside it was a miniature listening device that had run out of batteries.
Lang Qiao wrote down the date January sixth in the work journal, absent-mindedly examined it
for incorrectly written characters, then changed the incorrectly written year—during the first
quarter of each year, it was easy to write the previous year without paying attention. By the
time you’d managed to accept this year’s Gregorian calendar date, you had to once again start
getting used to the next year.
A colleague next to her poked her and quietly said, “Xiao-Qiao, do you think the Spring
Festival’s been suspended this year? Ah, and I’d wanted to go back to my hometown.”
“What’s the point?” Lang Qiao said without even raising her head. “It’s for the best if you don’t
have vacation, saves you having to bleed out your wallet for all your distant relatives’ brats.
And anyway…”
Everyone went quiet at once. In the corner, Xiao Haiyang’s back straightened too stiff; he
seemed to become one with the white wall behind him. Lang Qiao gave a start and instantly
closed her mouth.
Luo Wenzhou and Tao Ran walked in one after the other.
There was a rarely seen gravity on Luo Wenzhou’s face. He put the stack of materials in his
hands on Lang Qiao’s desk and motioned for her to hand them out, then spoke very
formalistically.
“In order to attain illegal goals, Wei Zhanhong used the Beehive and other high-end
consumption locations to harbor wanted criminals and illegally forged a great quantity of
identity information. He is suspected of multiple murders, illegal business transactions,
possession of firearms, organizing and leading an underground association, and other criminal
charges. A series of related suspects have now been formally placed under arrest. After further
investigation, this case will be submitted to the procuratorate for trial.” Luo Wenzhou paused,
his gaze passing over everyone’s faces. It stopped on Xiao Haiyang for a moment. Then he
said, “One of the suspects, Lu Guosheng, also one of the chief culprits in the National Road
327 case, confessed to the crimes of framing, fabricating a charge against, and murdering the
criminal policeman Gu Zhao in order to escape punishment.”
“There is finally a new lead in this unsettled case. Therefore, the bureau has determined to
formally reopen the investigation into the fire at The Louvre that took place fourteen years ago.
Our Criminal Investigation Team will take the lead, with the full cooperation of our colleagues in
other departments. I’ve requested the records for the old case over the last few days, but as
you can all see, we presently only hold this thin stack of information. We may have to
investigate afresh for more.”
A quiet buzz of discussion started up in the office. Investigating an old case, retrying an old
case, were two things that caused the most headaches. It was like returning half-cooked rice
to the pot—time had passed, and it didn’t taste right.
24
“I know,” Luo Wenzhou said, knocking on the table to indicate for everyone to be quiet, “that
over a decade has passed. The material evidence has long been destroyed. The person
involved and the witnesses have all died or left. It will be difficult to investigate. In the future
you may have to spend a long time traveling, and perhaps it will be dangerous. If it doesn’t go
well, we’ll spend this Spring Festival in the duty room. It’s the dead of winter, the days are short
and cold, everyone wants to bundle up and watch skits online. Ordinarily no one is willing to
drink the northwest wind and go to work—in this respect, as an ‘Emperor of Sleep’ who has
suffered from laziness disease for many years, I’m rather qualified to speak for everyone.”
Luo Wenzhou was rather good at giving himself up. He dared to stick a square meter of gold
over his own face, and he was also happy to make fun of himself. With a sentence he’d
cheered everyone up, but he himself didn’t smile. “The person involved has been dead many
years. No one knows who Gu Zhao is if you mention him. He doesn’t have any direct relatives
surviving him, and no one will come block the City Bureau’s gates waiting for us to give him
justice. Investigating this case, there’s no pressure, no impetus. When we’ve exerted our efforts
and finished investigating, there may be no reward apart from some overtime pay for working
during the holidays. No one is as indifferent to reputation as the dead. For a person already
buried in the earth, whether his position is criminal or martyr shouldn’t impact the quality of his
sleep—“
Luo Wenzhou’s gaze swept heavily through the brightly sunlit office. “But, everyone, The
Louvre burned, and Gu Zhao died, but we still have to live here. What kind of place do we live
in? If right and wrong are mixed and no one cares, if black and white get turned upside down
and no one helps, would you enjoy sleeping through the holiday?
Everyone returned silently to their posts. For a time, the only sound in the office was of pages
being flipped.
Tao Ran waited for everyone to finish digesting the limited information, then spoke: “The
Louvre, also called The Right Bank of the Seine, was a large-scale entertainment center, a
collaborative project between domestic and foreign investors. The majority shareholder came
from abroad and is difficult to investigate. The domestic shareholder, however, was a company
called Shitong Investments, written off long ago. It had no business at the time and was
basically a dummy corporation. By coincidence, the legal representative of this company that
no longer exists just happened to be the Wei Clan’s so-called ‘consultant’—the person we
arrested at the Longyun Center. Up to now, however, Wei Zhanhong has refused to
acknowledge that The Louvre was once his property.
“In the fire at The Louvre, twenty-six people in all lost their lives, and there were scores of
wounded. The damage was tremendous. One eyewitness escaped and accused Gu Zhao of
losing control and mistakenly killing the supervisor, becoming the chief culprit behind the fire.
This witness was the informer who had received orders to take Gu Zhao into The Louvre that
night. His codename was Old Cinder. His real name is Yin Chao. Male, Han ethnicity, fifty-six
years old this year, born locally. After the fire at the The Louvre, he broke off contact with us
and left Yan City many years ago.
“Apart from Old Cinder, there were six other witnesses in all. Three were professional informers,
and the other three were those professing to be businessmen Gu Zhao had extorted money
from.—Without exception, all of them have vanished off the face of the earth. I searched the
intranet. Some of them died, and some went out of the country.”
“Yeah,” Tao Ran said, “in one of the county towns under the city’s administration. He’s from
South Bend Town in South Bend County.”
“I’ve already invited over some of Gu Zhao’s former colleagues from the City Bureau. Prepare
to question them as they arrive. Apart from that, Tao Ran, get in touch with the South Bend
police station and find out whether Old Cinder still has any relatives in the area. If he’s still
living, he must be found. That’s critical.—Also, don’t put all your hopes on one person. We
have to try to find the ones who left the country as soon as possible.”
The whole Criminal Investigation Team reacted very quickly, beginning to act separately at
once.
Xiao Haiyang said, “Captain Luo, I’ll go to South Bend to investigate this Old Cinder.”
Luo Wenzhou looked at him and found that there were faintly discernible veins standing up on
his neck. If he hadn’t been wearing a human skin, he would have been showing his fangs,
ready to rip Old Cinder to shreds.
“No,” Luo Wenzhou said expressionlessly, “let Tao Ran go. Your communication effectiveness
is too low.”
Tao Ran understandingly picked up his phone at once and contacted the South Bend police
station.
Luo Wenzhou raised a hand to interrupt him and went into his office dragging Xiao Haiyang by
the collar. He quietly asked, “Have you found out who pushed the business of the Yufen Middle
School students running away to the City Bureau?”
Xiao Haiyang forced himself to focus. “Yes… I went to talk to the person in charge. The one
who sent the report was a civil policeman who’d started working not long ago. He didn’t have
any answers. I investigated his background and didn’t find anything wrong.”
“Call over Lang Qiao and investigate another very important matter for me,” Luo Wenzhou
interrupted him. Almost inaudibly, he said into his ear, “Go check through the last few years of
maintenance records for the security cameras. See which of our leaders approved the repairs,
which organization performed them, who the repairmen were, and who was in charge.”
“In your Uncle Gu’s case, who was behind framing him and which of his informers sold him out
aren’t the crucial questions. Do you understand?” Luo Wenzhou said a word at a time. “Hurry
up.”
Xiao Haiyang clenched his teeth, quickly nodded, then turned and left.
Tao Ran was just getting ready to say goodbye to Luo Wenzhou and go to South Bend when
he ran into someone familiarly walking into the office.
26
Tao Ran stared. “Fei Du? What are you doing here today?”
“My academic advisor came to cooperate with the investigation.” Fei Du looked him up and
down, grabbing a warm drink from the coffee machine and passing it on to him. “Tao Ran-ge,
it’s only been a few days since I saw you. How come you’re looking so weary? That won’t do.”
Before Tao Ran could speak, he heard a very elaborate dry cough come out of Luo Wenzhou’s
never closed office. Someone seemed to be a little unsatisfied with President Fei’s sequence of
paying respects.
These days were the peak time for booking tickets to go home for the Spring Festival. Tao Ran
had just politely declined Chang Ning’s invitation to help him book tickets so they could go
back to their hometown together. Not only was he physically weary, he was mentally weary, as
well. He really couldn’t stand looking at the two of them. He waved a hand feebly. “Get away
and stop showing off in front of me. I’m doing fine.”
Despite meeting with a rebuff, Fei Du didn’t find it at all uncongenial. He smile and strolled into
Luo Wenzhou’s office.
Luo Wenzhou’s ears had been pricked up long ago, but he was playing the big-tailed wolf.
Hearing footsteps approach, he didn’t raise his head, seeming very busy.
Fei Du familiarly picked up his cup, his fingers gently tracing the rim, then stopping on the
place where there was a trace of liquid. Looking at Luo Wenzhou with a smile that wasn’t quite
a smile, he tasted some of the tea under Luo Wenzhou’s gaze and pronounced, “It’s been
steeped too long.”
Captain Luo changed his sitting position a little unnaturally and, pretending to be in deadly
earnest, said, “What is it?”
“I found a trace of that person you asked me to look for.” Fei Du glanced out of the corner of
his eye at the office behind him, from which they were entirely unshielded, then pulled out a
folder stuck under his arm.
There were a few screenshots in the folder that must have come from the aerial footage taken
of the ecological park the day they’d caught Lu Guosheng.
They were of a middle-aged man of unremarkable appearance. His height was unimpressive,
he had a crewcut, his eyes were long and narrow, and he was a little dark. Both his clothes and
his features attracted absolutely no attention mixed among the crowd of villagers doing heavy
labor. “You can show the photographs to Lu Guosheng and see whether this is A13.”
Luo Wenzhou hastily forsook his base “ego,” equipping the industrious and hardworking
“superego,” entering into a truly earnest mode.
Fei Du went around his desk, using his back to block the gazes coming in through the wide-
open door.
27
“I went to that natural village to ask around. The people who were on the scene that day told
me that there was a village family that was just renovating their house. This person claimed to
be a new delivery person from the building materials market. He came with a truck full of roof
tiles and made himself at home,” Fei Du said. “Under the pretext of going to play mahjong with
some villagers near the gas station, he mixed in with them and kept an eye on the ‘sheepdog’s’
movements. The security installation at the ‘sheepdog’s’ door had been hacked, and there was
a listening device under the windowsill. If we’d been a step too slow then, he could have
eliminated the ‘sheepdog’ right away.”
Luo Wenzhou frowned. “He was keeping an eye on the sheepdog and could have prevented
against him taking desperate action and blowing up the ecological park, but I don’t think he
could have guaranteed that Lu Guosheng wouldn’t die. Everyone living in that ecological park
was a wanted criminal. Each of them had killed more than once. A long-range order could have
had them dispose of Lu Guosheng.”
Fei Du didn’t speak, looking at him with a smile at the corners of his mouth. Luo Wenzhou
stared, then immediately came around. “You mean that they also had someone inside the
ecological park!”
Fei Du said, “I think it was the person Lu Guosheng had the most contact with. What do you
think?”
Luo Wenzhou left energetically. A moment later, he turned his head and remembered
something, returning to the office. He took Fei Du’s arm. “Wait.”
They were facing at least two forces. One batch was Wei Zhanhong’s crowd, and the other
batch was hidden in between, possessing great powers and not revealing the key facts about
themselves. They seemed to want to excavate old cases, to settle scores with “those people”;
their goals seemed to be identical to those of the police.
But Luo Wenzhou couldn’t help tying together the major cases he’d gone through over the last
year—in the case of the Su family abducting and selling female children, who, after all, had
revealed Su Xiaolan’s method and “personal signature” to Su Luozhan, enticing her into
copying them? In Zhou Junmao’s case, who had revealed to Dong Xiaoqing the true reason
behind the responsible driver Dong Qian causing the collision? Then there was the mysterious
‘go ask shatov’ in the case of Feng Bin’s murder…and The Reciter, secretly forecasting
murders on that reading program.
When you thought about it, each case seemed to contain a trace of the mysterious force, and
that trace was shrouded in unspeakable gloom and blood.
They had twice switched the security camera records at the Longyun Center; while completely
fooling Wei Zhanhong, they had also showed that they’d already noticed Fei Du’s little
maneuvers.
“You wait for me here,” Luo Wenzhou said properly. “Starting now, it’s not permitted to act
alone. No matter where you’re going, no matter what you’re going to do, you have to let me
know.”
28
Just as Luo Wenzhou was thinking that he had something pressing to say to him in private and
was preparing to listen with open ears, he felt a touch on his face—Fei Du had used this
ambiguous position to kiss his cheek.
If he didn’t have the circumstances, this person could create the circumstances to take
advantage of him!
Fei Du watched Luo Wenzhou charge out, the words “just you wait” on his face. His smile
hadn’t faded yet when his phone suddenly vibrated. Someone had sent him a text message:
“You said that if I wanted to make some people pay, I could call this number.”
“It’s me.” Fei Du sat down next to the window. “You’ve decided to talk to me?”
Wang Xiao hesitated for quite a while, then with some difficulty quietly said, “What happened at
school, I…I have evidence.”
Fei Du leaned against the window sill with the office’s heating pressing against his back. He
didn’t speak to ask what the evidence was. He made no sound, even keeping his breathing
very low, quietly waiting for the girl to say it herself.
Like a dried-up tube of toothpaste, Wang Xiao had to squeeze her entire body between metal
sheets, use all her strength to force out some words. “It’s…clothes. Some clothes…from then. I
didn’t wash them…”
Fei Du sighed silently. “Where are you? I’ll send someone to pick you up.”
“Wang Xiao,” Fei Du said warmly but firmly before she hung up the phone, “can you tell me
why you suddenly came to this decision?”
One-Eye had known from the day he’d been brought in that there was no escape for him now.
Even if he kept his mouth shut, the crimes he’d committed before were enough to get him an
indefinite sentence at best, and there was no ceiling on the worst.
So he was fairly cooperative. There was no need to waste words to get him to talk to Luo
Wenzhou.
“I didn’t want to kill Lu Guosheng,” One-Eye said. “Officer, you saw, I was bringing him food.
We have rules there. If one person exposes the base, the people living in the same unit as him
all get it in the neck. That’s why they all hated Lu Guosheng. When they heard that he may
29
have exposed us, without waiting to hear from above, they took it upon themselves to tie him
up and were waiting to push him out to take the blame. But I’m different. I’m loyal. Am I that
fucking type of person…”
“Then what type are you? The Virgin Mary?” Luo Wenzhou interrupted him coldly. “Don’t give
me that. If you talk crap again, I’ll send you to eat lead.”
One-Eye curled his lip. His shoulders fell. He hemmed and hawed, then frankly confessed, “…
They promised they’d send me away.”
Luo Wenzhou looked up. “Who are ‘they?’ Send you away where?”
“Get me out of the base.” One-Eye sighed and quietly said, “Out of the country, or to some
place no one would recognize me.—From what A13 said, I know there are lots of their people
in the company. Don’t ask me who their boss is. I didn’t even know who my boss was until I
got brought in. All these fucking ‘important personages’ are like mice. They hide themselves
away. I’d had enough of living like that, anyway. Sometimes I thought that it wasn’t any
different from being brought in by you guys and sitting in jail. There was no telling when you’d
have to go out and be someone’s scapegoat.”
Hearing this, Luo Wenzhou was temporarily bewildered—this wasn’t much like his earlier
guesses.
This mysterious third-party force was unscrupulous, even though judging from their aims of
catching Lu Gousheng and revealing the base, it seemed that their goals were the same as
those of the police. He’d thought they played a role of the “vigilante police” or “avenger” sort,
and Xiao Haiyang had even brought up the suspicion that they had something to do with Gu
Zhao, but from how it sounded now…they seemed more like they’d belonged to Wei
Zhanhong’s group, only later they’d had some internal strife.
Was it getting popular among crime syndicates now to use the police in their internal strife?
“They asked that if someone notified me to take care of Lu Guosheng, I had to do everything I
could to preserve his life. As long as he had breath left in him, it was enough. It didn’t matter
whether he was crippled or seriously injured. When the time came, someone would come pick
us up and take us to a safe place.”
Luo Wenzhou immediately followed up, “Where was the safe place?”
Hearing this, One-Eye laughed. “Officer, when you take money to do something, whether you
get the money first or you do it first depends on who’s asking a favor from who. I was asking
the favor here, and I had to do what they were asking me to be able to get the ‘harvest.’ Before
that, they couldn’t have trusted me, and they couldn’t have told me where they were going to
take me… Anyway, before I had time to do anything, you caught me. I even thought A13 was a
police agent planted to mislead me.—Haha, now that I’m here, you could call this a safe place.
At least I can sleep well here without guarding against being stabbed in the middle of the
night.”
When he’d finished questioning One-Eye and walked out, pondering deeply, Luo Wenzhou saw
Fei Du waiting for him at the door.
Luo Wenzhou hadn’t yet come around from the information One-Eye had revealed. He froze.
“I just called her parents and found a female police officer to accompany her,” Fei Du said
seriously. “But there’s something very wrong here. When I left Wang Xiao my number in the first
place, it was actually just to comfort her. Your experiences growing up and your family
background mold your character. It’s very hard to be impacted by a few words from an
outsider, and even if you change, it’s still a slow process. For a time you can’t escape the
shackles of your instinctive notions. A girl like Wang Xiao, lacking close relationships from the
time she was little, accustomed to being overlooked, is very sensitive to other people’s gazes.
She’s not the type to dare to step forward bravely in her own defense, especially when she
hasn’t healed from her trauma.”
As soon as he frowned, Luo Wenzhou subconsciously frowned along with him. When he
noticed this, Luo Wenzhou pressed a finger to the center of Fei Du’s brow, forcing his pinched-
together brows to separate. He asked, “Where did her family get the money? Could it be the
school or the parents of the students involved wanting to use money to keep the peace?”
Fei Du tipped his head back slightly from the push, a little helplessly, but his expression
softened. “First take their hush money, then go to a public safety bureau to report them?”
“If it were me, that’s what I’d do. Trick the asshole out of his money, then make him call me
dad.” Luo Wenzhou sloppily put an arm over Fei Du’s shoulders and pushed him forward. “It’s
normal for Wang Xiao to want to change schools under the circumstances. The only problem is
the money.—What about this makes you think there’s something wrong?”
Fei Du lowered his voice and said into his ear, “I’d planned to cover the expense of going
abroad to study for her. I’d already notified the foundation’s people, but they didn’t have time to
get in contact with her.”
Luo Wenzhou narrowed his eyes and turned his head to look at Fei Du.
“Someone got there first—someone was closely watching this case and doing the same things
that I was,” Fei Du said almost inaudibly. “When you consider it, don’t you think that the
fundamental reason we were able to catch Lu Guosheng was that Wang Xiao mentioned that
Lu Guosheng had met Wei Wenchuan at the Longyun Center on November sixth?”
If not for that important clue, Wei Wenchuan and Wei Zhanhong may have argued their way
out.
If not for that clue, the police wouldn’t even have found the Beehive, never mind tracing back
from it to their base at the ecological park. By the time they’d slowly tracked down the clues,
the maggots on Lu Guosheng’s corpse would have turned into flies.
Of the students who had been at Wei Wenchuan’s birthday feast that day, not one had known
the details of Feng Bin’s murder.
And the people who had been shown Lu Guosheng’s picture and questioned because they’d
run away with Feng Bin wouldn’t have been invited to Wei Wenchuan’s private gathering—
these should have been two completely unrelated parallel lines, which had been tied together
31
because of the words Wang Xiao had overheard in the bathroom, a probability like that of a
comet hitting the earth.
An hour later, Luo Wenzhou and Fei Du arrived at Yufen Middle School and went through a
teacher to find the girls Wang Xiao had mentioned and question them.
Because of the earth-shaking scandal, the school had been forced to take a month-long
vacation to be investigated and had only recently started up again. Quite a few students had
changed schools, and their parents had collectively requested the school fees be returned. The
formerly ostentatious and domineering Queen Bee Liang Youjing seemed to have become a
different person. Her lips were dry and cracked, and she was wrapped in an ill-fitting uniform
jacket, looking like an awkward country girl who’d put on a sack. The girl with the wind at her
feet, doing her makeup as she walked through the corridor, seemed to have been only an
illusion.
Luo Wenzhou didn’t waste words. “On the day Wei Wenchuan invited you for lunch on his
birthday, do you still remember what time you got back to school?”
The girls looked back at him in bewilderment. One of them got up her courage and said, “I
don’t think we did go back to school.”
“Yeah, they brought wine, we got drunk and got rooms at the karaoke place.”
The expression of the teacher next to them looked absolutely dreadful—their students had
gone out to a place of entertainment, gotten drunk, and hadn’t come back to school overnight,
and the school hadn’t done anything about it.
“The likelihood that Wang Xiao lied isn’t great. It’s not very realistic to make an ordinary little girl
go fool the police. She may have been found out, but much more likely she would have
exposed herself.” After sending the dejected students away, Luo Wenzhou turned and said to
the stiff-faced teacher on duty, “Could you contact the security room for me and see if the
security camera records for the classroom building from November are still there?”
Normally the school’s security camera records were preserved for fifty days; but since so much
had happened lately, no one had dared to touch the backups that originally ought to have been
deleted, keeping them for future reference. That day’s records came to them very quickly. It
had been a day off, and the whole classroom building had been empty. It was very quiet.
On camera, Wang Xiao came out of the classroom alone and went to the bathroom in the
classroom building.
The teacher on duty who was accompanying them was nearly broke into gooseflesh all over at
these words. She fixed her eyes on the footage and saw an out-of-the-way staircase entrance
in the corner where a middle-aged woman with the look of a school custodian.
The teacher blurted out, “That…that doesn’t look like one of the school’s people!”
As though disclaiming responsibility, the teacher hastily said, “She really isn’t one of ours. I
patrol the classroom building daily and know all the staff. She’s not one of them!”
They saw the middle-aged woman follow Wang Xiao to the bathroom. First she looked all
around and saw that there was no one around; then she stuck her head into the bathroom and
took a look, likely determining whether Wang Xiao was in one of the stalls. Then she took
something out of her pocket and walked inside.
After about the time it would take to say a few sentences, the middle-aged woman came out of
the bathroom, lowered the brim of her hat, and quickly left.
A good while later, Wang Xiao somewhat nervously came out of the bathroom, walking
hesitatingly towards the classroom. She hung by the back door of the classroom, looking
inside. When she’d determined there was no one there, she seemed to breath a sigh of relief,
then opened the door and went inside.
“Wang Xiao didn’t lie.” Fei Du paused the video at the moment she was pressed to the glass
looking into the classroom. “She really did hear the voices of the girls who had bullied her.
Look here, she was worried about running into them in the classroom. That’s why she did that.
—It must have been a rather high-quality recording and broadcasting device.”
Luo Wenzhou took out his phone and sent a picture of the middle-aged woman to his
colleagues. “Investigate this person’s identity.”
At this time, Tao Ran had already very efficiently taken someone to go to South Bend County.
South Bend was clearly a later-developing area in Yan City’s environs. There were still many
low shacks and shantytowns. It was just in the process of changing its face, and everything
had been torn down into a mess. The roads were full of potholes. A civil policeman from the
South Bend police station came out to greet them, very enthusiastically leading the way. “This
Yin Chao’s family still lives here, though he moved away long ago. I just asked around for a
general picture. He didn’t even come back when their own house was demolished. His little
brother Yin Ping brought in his letter of authorization to collect the money.”
Tao Ran hadn’t expected to find a trace of Old Cinder so easily. He hurriedly asked, “So has he
always been in contact with his brother?”
“No,” the civil policeman said. “Sir, just you figure, I got your phone call this morning and went
to ask them. This Yin Ping was vague and evasive, and I thought something was off. I pushed
him some more, and found out that the letter of authorization was a forgery, so he could keep
the money from the demolition of the house all to himself! Hey, drive slower up ahead, the
road’s being repaired… It used to be that if they tore down your house, a whole family could
pass their days happily based on their crappy house, but now—well, parents aren’t parents,
children aren’t children, brothers and sisters are the same, scuffling every day over a bit of
fucking money. Lately when we’ve been dispatched it hasn’t been for anything else, it’s all
conflicts produced by this… It’s right up ahead.”
Yin Ping’s family had just moved out of their old home and were living in a temporary rental
apartment. The three members of the family lived together. The lighting in the home was poor,
and it seemed there wasn’t even any heat. It felt like a chilly and damp ice house. Yin Ping was
Old Cinder Yin Chao’s identical twin brother. He was also fifty-six years old and worked tending
a boiler. His thin face was drawn out long, and there was an extra decade of creases on it. He
had an unspeakable air of gloominess.
33
As soon as Tao Ran saw him, he froze—the records of Old Cinder left behind in the City Bureau
were from over a decade ago, but Tao Ran could still see the similarities between his features
and those of the old man in front of him; they really were identical twins. Having a shameful
deed on his conscience, Yin Ping cowered when he opened the door and saw the police. He
hurried to order his wife, as gloomy as him, to bring tea.
“Now you’ve been found out, you know you’re in trouble? How come you didn’t think of that
when you forged your brother’s signature?” The civil policeman’s face was harsh. “You broke
the law, do you understand?”
Yin Ping’s head drooped. He didn’t dare to make a sound. There was a pair of filthy wool
gloves on his hands, which lay on his knees, uneasily twisting the fabric of his pants.
“We haven’t come here primarily to investigate that question.” Tao Ran softened his voice and
put his work ID on the table.
Yin Ping’s gaze passed over his ID, and even his movements twisting his pants stopped. He
went stiff all over, for some reason afraid.
“Your brother Yin Chao was an important witness in one of our cases,” Tao Ran said. “We’re
looking for him. Do you have his contact information?”
Yin Ping’s chin was nearly touching his chest. He gently shook his head.
The South Bend police officer said, “Do you not have it, or do you not dare to get it out? You
have the guts to hog family property, but you don’t have the guts to talk to your brother, isn’t
that right? Your type of…”
Tao Ran waved a hand to interrupt him. “Yin Ping, when was the last time you contacted Yin
Chao?”
Yin Ping raised his eyelids and looked at him. Then he quickly dodged Tao Ran’s gaze. He
stammered for a long time. “About ten years ago… My brother said he’d offended someone in
Yan City and had to leave. At first my old mother was alive, and he sent money back often.
About eight or nine…ten years ago, my old mother died, and we couldn’t contact him. So I…I
went to the last place he’d sent money from to look for him.”
“T Province,” Yin Ping said. “I asked around everywhere and searched for half a month before I
found him. He looked like he had some money and was comfortable. He wasn’t willing to come
back, saying his enemy was too powerful and they’d kill him if he returned to Yan City. I…I
didn’t know where this enemy of his had come from, anyway. I lost my temper, said, ‘If you
don’t come back, it’s as though my old mother never gave birth to you! You’re an unfilial
scoundrel who’s forgotten his roots! Sooner or later you’ll meet retribution!’”
At the beginning, Yin Ping had been careful. By the time he came to the last sentence, he must
have stirred up his anger. The veins at the corners of his forehead stood out, and he began to
shout hoarsely.
Tao Ran paused. Without true feeling, it really wouldn’t be possible to put on such a lifelike
performance. “So you didn’t contact him again afterwards?”
34
“Why should I contact him? He didn’t belong to our family anymore. What qualifications did he
have to take a share in our family’s things?” With his neck straight, Yin Ping raised his head
and looked at the civil policeman who had spoken before. “I didn’t break the law, I didn’t do
anything wrong!”
Tao Ran suddenly interrupted Yin Ping’s dispute with the civil policeman. His eyes sweeping
over Yin Ping’s gloved hands, he asked, “Why are you wearing gloves at home?”
Saying this, as though he was afraid Tao Ran wouldn’t believe him, he carefully pulled off his
gloves a bit, laying the twisted burn scars on his palms bare in front of the police. Then he
quickly withdrew his hands and lowered his head, seeming to feel a sense of inferiority about
his hideous hands. He said haltingly, “Anyway…he was no good. I don’t feel guilty.”
Tao Ran frowned faintly. Then his gaze calmly swept around the shabby rental apartment—the
family was poor, but the home didn’t lack living energy. There was a full set of cookware, and
crochet covers spread over the table and the old TV, light-colored and very clean. It was clear
that the mistress of the house had exhausted all her capabilities to make life a little better for
her family.
Quite a few old photographs were hanging on the living room wall directly across from the front
door. There were individual shots, and there were family portraits. All of them were clustered
around an old-style certificate. On the certificate was written: “Student Yin Xiaolong has been
chosen as a triple A student in the first semester of sixth grade.” In one corner was a
photograph of a little boy who looked about seven or eight years old, holding a toy machine
gun, smiling widely towards the camera. This must have been Student Yin Xiaolong himself.
“Is that your son?” Tao Ran asked, pointing to the certificate and the photograph on the wall.
Yin Ping hadn’t expected him to ask this. He stared, then nodded dully. “Yes.”
Tao Ran approached and looked over the elementary school certificate. Judging from the date
that the certificate’s recipient had attended sixth grade, the boy Yin Xiaolong must have been
around thirty now.
“He got a certificate. His grades must have been pretty good?”
“No, they weren’t, that’s the only certificate he’s ever received. We couldn’t bear to throw it
away when we moved.” Yin Ping’s wife, who’d seemed to be only set dressing, spoke. Seeing
everyone’s gazes fall on her, she very uncomfortably lowered her head, picking at the chilblains
on her fingers.
“He’s called Yin Xiaolong, I see? Is he married?” Tao Ran asked idly. “What does he do now?”
35
“Oh, he doesn’t have a significant other yet. His educational record is bad, we don’t have any
resources, and he’s clumsy and bad at talking. The girls don’t like him,” the woman said
quietly. “He works at a 4S store doing manual work…”
“He was just being polite,” Yin Ping roughly interrupted her, “why are you talking so much?”
Tao Ran smiled at her. When he smiled, it was like a cleansing spring breeze sweeping over
you, bringing its own endless supply of approachability. “And what work do you do?”
“We work for the same employer.” Indeed, the woman relaxed slightly in front of him, saying
quietly, “He tends the boiler, and I wash up a bit in the dining hall.”
“Oh, you’re colleagues.” Tao Ran thought about it, then said, “Did the two of you meet at
work? How many years have you been married?”
“Over thirty years… Nearly thirty-two.” The woman smiled somewhat awkwardly. “It was our
boss who introduced us.—A few years back we were a ‘working couple,’ which sounds pretty
prosperous, but these last few years our employer hasn’t been doing very well, and we’ve had
to make do… So…Comrade Police Officer, my brother-in-law isn’t coming back. When the old
lady was alive, she said herself that she wanted to break off relations with him. So if the
relationship is broken off, and you can’t find him, then the house…the house has nothing to do
with him, so you couldn’t say we broke the law, right?”
“Enough,” Yin Ping scolded her. “Stupid womenfolk who don’t understand anything shouldn’t
interrupt. Go boil some water!”
The woman agreed meekly, shut her mouth, wiped her hands on her apron, picked up the
teapot, and went into the kitchen. Clearly she was accustomed to submitting to mistreatment
and taking orders.
A poor and lowly husband and wife, one ready to beat, the other ready to be beaten, living and
working together for over thirty years, with a son already grown up and living with them. Even
though their employer was declining rapidly, the old couple still had no intention of resigning.
Conservative, steady, weak, content with the status quo—it was a typical, rather old-fashioned
household, simply living on another planet from Old Cinder, an informer who wandered in the
gray areas. It seemed that no matter what there could be no connection between them.
Tao Ran exhaled silently. When he’d first come through the door and suddenly encountered Yin
Ping, who looked too similar to Old Cinder, a pile of vague doubts had arisen in his mind. He’d
nearly suspected that Old Cinder Yin Chao’s flight had failed, and he had blended in under his
brother’s name.
If it had been like that, it wouldn’t have been enough for these twins to look alike; there would
also have had to be a telepathic link and transplanted memories between them for one to be
able to seamlessly take the other’s place at a position he’d worked at for over thirty years.
Yin Ping kept glancing at him. “What else do you want to ask?”
36
“All right, it’s like this, could I trouble you to help me out?—Do you have anything left over from
when Yin Chao sent the money? If there’s an envelope with an address, that’s enough. Please
let me refer to it.” Tao Ran thought about it, then very tactfully said, “Also, he may have
contacted you, but you were at work or busy and didn’t pick up his phone call or something.
Just in case, as a formality, we’d like to screen your most recent e-mails and communications
records…”
Tao Ran didn’t get angry at being interrupted, only looked at him with a faint smile.
Yin Ping sat stiffly for a moment. Then, seeming to have finally accumulated enough force to
stand up and walk, he went wordlessly into the bedroom and searched through something.
After a moment, he brought a plastic-covered little notebook out of the bedroom, probably
used for keeping accounts, written full of all the necessities life demanded. There were many
things crammed into the covers of the notebook—IC call cards, souvenir postcards…and a
train ticket stub.
“This is all I have.” Yin Ping gave Tao Ran the train ticket and said, “This is the stub left over
from when I took the slow train to T Province to find him. The things he sent back… I didn’t
keep any of them. He doesn’t belong to our family anymore, what’s the use of his hypocrisy?”
A brother who’d cut off relations long ago, unwilling even to come back to attend his mother’s
funeral when she passed away—it did sound like any mutual affection was out of the question.
If Yin Ping had kept stubs from the bribe money Old Cinder had sent, that would have been a
little suspicious; but now…
Tao Ran and the civil police officer interrogated Yin Ping concerning his brother Old Cinder’s
whereabouts out of town. Yin Ping talked as he remembered; there was no knowing whether
he was accurate. It sounded as though this Old Cinder had wandered around over half of
China, never having a permanent residence. Getting no results here was within expectations.
While Tao Ran was disappointed, he could still accept this outcome. Seeing there really was
nothing he could get, they could only say goodbye to Yin Ping and leave to carefully investigate
all the Yin family’s communications records. If there really was nothing there, they’d go to T
Province and try their luck.
Before leaving, Tao Ran waved a hand to indicate there was no need for the couple to show
them out. “If you remember anything concerning Yin Chao, please contact us any time.”
Before Tao Ran could speak, he continued, “He didn’t live like a normal person. He wasn’t a
normal person. Him being born into this family was a burden from a past life. He only brought
us misfortune, never good luck. At his age, he didn’t have a wife or child. He only went out to
fool around, terrifying everyone around him. He’s been…been gone so many years, and he’s
still bringing us trouble.”
Tao Ran stared. As Yin Ping spoke, hatred sparked uncontrollably, like a ghost fire, in his
clouded, expressionless eyes. The tone of his voice changed when he pronounced the word
“gone.”
Right in front of him, Yin Ping shut the door and coldly said, “Don’t come again!”
37
The bad-tempered civil policeman from the South Bend police station leapt up and began to
curse, but Tao Ran frowned slightly.
It was only a household dispute. Not coming home when his mother died really would make
people nurse a grievance; anyone who had such a relative likely wouldn’t have anything good
to say about him. But why was Yin Ping’s hatred for Old Cinder so deep? It was almost
overflowing.
Tao Ran even felt that if Old Cinder had been standing in front of him, Yin Ping may have
simply attacked him.
He drove the civil policeman back to the South Bend police station, listening to his continuing
moral indignation. “Did you see that? That’s the sort.—Let me tell you, that was the expression
of someone with a guilty conscience!”
Tao Ran froze, looking in the rearview mirror at the civil policeman full to bursting with a sense
of justice.
The civil policeman said, “I’ve seen lots of that type of person. He’s clearly done some things
to wrong the other person, so he has to jump higher than anyone else, make more noise than
anyone else—but actually there’s a mirror in his heart. He knows he’s no good. The guiltier he
feels, the more he acts like that, as though he can crush his conscience by shouting. Heh, in
the end, wasn’t it all for the sake of hogging the family property?”
Just then, the colleague he’d brought with him to go pay a visit to Yin Ping said, “It’s finally
arrived. The internet is too slow.—Deputy Tao, they’ve consulted Old Cinder’s statement from
back then. It’s scanned, the signal was poor, so I just opened it… Ah, this person encountered
quite a bit of crime. Who’d have expected him to break faith and commit perjury? The City
Bureau and the elders treated him so well.”
“During the fire at The Louvre, Old Cinder was there and nearly didn’t escape,” his colleague
said as he scrolled through the scan of the old file. “He was fairly clever. He didn’t get a
disfiguring burn scar, but he put his hands on a metal railing while he was escaping and burned
off his skin. They couldn’t even take his fingerprints then.”
Meanwhile, Luo Wenzhou and Fei Du had returned to the City Bureau.
“Captain Luo, we’ve found that woman you just sent over.”
The middle-aged woman who’d followed Wang Xiao into the bathroom had been wearing a
hat, her features not very discernible, and there had only been a screenshot from a video. She
would have been hard to find even for the police, unless…
“Zhu Feng, female, forty-two years old. Fourteen years ago, her newly-wedded husband went
out to buy groceries, had a dispute with someone, and that person suddenly pulled out a
melon knife and stabbed him eight times in the chest and abdomen. He died at the hospital. It
was later confirmed that the killer was mentally disabled. His family members said they took
their eyes off him for a while and he got away. It says that when the case was being tried, the
killer saw the deceased’s relation Zhu Feng in court and cheekily pulled a face at her. Later the
killer was taken to a mental hospital. Zhu Feng always thought that he was faking his mental
disability. Half a year after the killing, she took a knife and tried to break into the mental hospital
to get revenge, but she failed. The hospital caught her and called the police.”
“Mental disability?” Hearing about this case, Luo Wenzhou felt that it sounded familiar.
“One of the cases transferred for research for the first Picture Album Project,” Fei Du said.
“Apart from this one, the rest were all unsolved, remember? The mentally disabled killer later
died under unclear circumstances along with the other suspects whose crimes there wasn’t
evidence for.”
“I suspect something.” Tao Ran was driving terribly. Passing over a large hole, he simply
stepped on the gas and drove right over. The police car was nearly leaping and hopping along
the rugged little county road. “Wenzhou, I suspect that the informer who sold out Gu Zhao
wasn’t Old Cinder!”
Luo Wenzhou said, “If it wasn’t Old Cinder, who was it?”
“Yin Ping, Old Cinder’s identical twin brother.” As he spoke, Tao Ran had already hit the brakes,
stopping by Yin Ping’s house. “I don’t have evidence. It’s instinct, I can’t clearly say.—Yin Ping
seriously resents his brother’s position as an informer. He’s not afraid of the police, but when
he saw my work ID, his manner was very fearful. My guess is that it’s because he saw that I
was from the City Bureau. While we spoke, he was very careful to prevent his wife from
revealing their household circumstances. Also, his wife inadvertently said, ‘My brother-in-law
isn’t coming back.’ Yin Ping also said that his brother sent money home in the early years, but
the places he described were too scattered, and they covered a few years—even if Old Cinder
had been hiding from someone, could he really not have found anywhere to hide over the
course of a few years? That’s not how it normally goes…”
“A wily hare has three burrows,” but he still needs “burrows.” Changing to a completely
strange place every few days couldn’t have given the overcautious old informer a sense of
security.
It sounded as though one person had been playing two characters, and he hadn’t been doing it
well at all. It had ceased abruptly when the old lady died—it seemed that it had just been to
fool the old woman.
Old Cinder had lived on the edge; his relationships had been weak and shallow. If he’d
disappeared, it wouldn’t have impacted anyone. Likely the only person in the world who would
sincerely worry about him was his own mother.
39
Tao Ran rushed up the stairs two steps at a time. “And there’s the fingerprints—after coming
out of The Louvre, Old Cinder went right to the hospital. His hands had been seriously burned,
and his fingerprints weren’t recorded. You know that identical twins share the same DNA. The
only thing he couldn’t fake would be the fingerprints. I just saw Yin Ping wearing gloves, and
his hands have burn wounds on them!”
“Yin Ping, we’d like you to come back to the City Bureau with us to cooperate with our
investigation!”
Yin Ping’s wife timidly opened the dilapidated wooden door a little crack. “He…he just went
out…”
“Went where?”
“He said there was something at work. He got on his bike and left…”
Tao Ran turned and ran. “Notify the police station, the district sub-bureau, and the traffic
department to search for a red electric bike—”
Everywhere you looked was the turned earth and smoke of construction sites. The roads
familiar to the old inhabitants were separated and merged one by one; once you could have
used your feet to measure the land, but today you couldn’t even clearly roll over it with wheels.
This era was a bulldozer wrecking everything. All the secrets that miserable people thought
they had “buried deep” were in fact only covered in a layer of surface soil. A light blow, and
their unconcealed ugly shapes would be exposed.
At the moment that this vast and mighty process of tearing down houses had begun to disturb
the peaceful life of the little town, Yin Ping had known that there would come a day like this.
The dirt he had used fourteen years ago to cover up wouldn’t be enough to do the job; in the
end, it was paper couldn’t contain a fire.
The red electric bike with the motley paint job speeded along the iced ground. It rolled,
scraping the side mirror of a sedan parked by the road. The side mirror fell and shattered, and
the electric bike flew up.
Yin Ping climbed to his feet, limping. Without even taking the time to pat the mud off himself,
he picked up the handlebars of the fallen electric bike, mounted it, and fled. His torn gloves
revealed an expanse of burn scars. The owner of the car with the scraped-off side mirror came
out of a little supermarket by the road just then and chased a few steps after him. Seeing the
40
responsible driver leave him in the dust, he hopped and cursed, then took out his phone and
called the police.
News of this call propagated throughout the mighty internet; Yin Ping and his red electric bike
became a virus whose location had been fixed.
“We’ve located him,” Tao Ran quickly reported to Luo Wenzhou over the phone. “I’m going
over there right now.”
Luo Wenzhou seemed to want to say something, but Tao Ran interrupted him in a hurry. “Yin
Ping is very important, I know, don’t worry, I’ll definitely bring him back.”
The word “backup” hadn’t gone out over the signal when it was stopped by the phone being
hung up.
If Yin Ping was the person who had sold out Gu Zhao back then, then he might be the only
break they could find. He was too important; no one had expected him to turn up without
warning like this.
Yin Ping could almost hear the sounds of police sirens carried by the northwest wind. He felt
like a bug struggling in a spider’s web. The winter wind brought tears to his dry eyes. They
rolled down and mixed with snot. He remembered a night fourteen years ago, as bone-piercing
as this—
Yin Chao and Yin Ping4 were identical twins, like people made in the same mold.
But since they were little, their parents had played favorites. When they talked about them to
others, they always said that the one who was good in school was the big brother, and the one
who was obedient was the little brother.
When they grew up, their father passed away, and the two of them became the big brother who
went out into the world to seek success and the useless little brother who took on his father’s
job.
They were clearly exactly the same, but it seemed that one of them had stolen the other’s luck
and talent—even when it came to girlfriends. Yin Chao’s seemed to be of a much “higher
grade” than his.
But luckily, Yin Chao’s marriage later had fallen through, because during the engagement, the
girl had been killed on her way home from work. All the luck Yin Chao had “stolen” from him
seemed to backfire against him. From then on, the eldest son became a different person. He
left his job, didn’t take the world by storm; he was idle all day, doing who knew what, and then
simply broke off contact with his family.
At holidays, his mother always burned incense, asking for blessings from the gods and praying
to the Buddha, waiting for his big brother Yin Chao to drop out of the heavens like a prize.
4For useful reference: the chao (超) in Yin Chao means “surpassing” while the ping (平) in Yin
Ping means “ordinary.”
41
When things had gone wrong for his big brother, though Yin Ping hadn’t said it, he’d felt some
satisfaction at his misfortune. His years of suppressed resentment were like grass roots in the
wilderness; a spring wind blew over them, and in one night they grew beyond control. Each
time he saw his old mother’s desolate face, he wanted to asked her in satisfaction—aren’t you
always talking about Yin Chao? Don’t you say every day that he has talent, has courage? His
courage is so great he won’t even come home. In the end, aren’t I, the “useless” one, looking
after you in old age, you old fart?
But very soon Yin Ping discovered that it didn’t matter what his shadowy big brother became;
he was still dear to his old mother. It didn’t matter that Yin Ping conscientiously went to work
every day to support the family. In the eyes of their biased old mother, he was still only an
inessential extra child.
Then some freak had taken Yin Chao, and he’d moved back from the city to South Bend Town
and rented a house not far from home. On Yin Xiaolong’s birthday, in an unprecedented
occurrence, he appeared at their dining table; he’d bought a cake and cleaned himself up
unusually well.
Yin Chao said that he’d made some money recently and remembered that his mother had once
saved an advertisement for a luxury cruise ship. He hadn’t shown filial piety towards her in so
many years, and at last he had the ability to realize a dream for her. His little nephew was just
on winter vacation, so he’d made reservations for his old mother and his brother’s whole family
to go together.
Winter was the boiler room’s busiest period; Yin Ping thought that if he asked for vacation at a
time like this, his superior wouldn’t think it was justified. But Yin Chao, being deliberately off-
handed, said that if he really didn’t have the time, there was still nothing he could do; the
money had already been spent, 20,000 a person, and there was no getting it back.
The stupid old woman had flown into a rage after hearing the price—his big brother had laid
most of a hundred thousand yuan on the table. Was it fitting for a brother not to even be able
to get a week’s vacation? It was a scandal.
By this point, Yin Ping had already determined that his brother had bad intentions, that he
wanted to harm Yin Ping. But while he was enraged, he also thought something was off. At the
time, 20,000 yuan really was a great deal for an ordinary person. Would Yin Chao find it
worthwhile to spend so much money in order to make him lose his job?
For him to spend so much money could only mean he had designs on Yin Ping’s life.
So that night, full of misgivings, Yin Ping had stealthily followed his big brother Yin Chao all the
way back to the rental house in town where he was staying.
Yin Chao was frighteningly alert and careful. Yin Ping was nearly discovered over and over. But
luckily he was very familiar with South Bend Town.
Then, with his own eyes, he saw some people corner Yin Chao in the yard of the rental house.
Yin Ping didn’t even dare to take a deep breath, wishing he could get into the mouse hole in
the wall. He didn’t know himself what he was afraid of; he only instinctively sensed danger.
Yin Ping heard one of the people say, “Old Cinder, what’s this you’ve bought for your family? A
cruise? You want to hide, do you? Let me tell you, even if it was an aircraft carrier, it would still
42
go down. There’s not much time, let’s be frank. We’ll give you the night to think it over—do you
want five million in cash, or do you want your mother, your brother, and your nephew’s heads?”
Yin Ping didn’t understand much of this, but it was still as though he’d fallen through a hole in
the ice. He’d always appraised his big brother with the greatest possible malice, but he hadn’t
expected his big brother to surpass his imagination!
Yin Ping hid for a long time, nearly freezing into a human icicle in the cold deep winter night.
When those people had gone far away and a dim light came on in the little house, he came out
like a walking corpse.
Yin Chao looked grave and seemed about to go out. He opened the door halfway and saw Yin
Ping standing at the gate. He was stunned.
Yin Ping stopped Yin Chao and using both hard and soft tactics forced him to answer that he
was acting as an informer for a police officer, that “Old Cinder” was his codename. Yin Chao
said that they were investigating a very dangerous case and had alerted the enemy. There was
someone within the police force revealing secrets to the suspects, and now they’d somehow
found out that Yin Chao was also mixed up with this and had come to him with threats and
bribes.
Yin Chao didn’t tell him concretely what the case was or which police officer was involved, but
from these few words, Yin Ping was already scared out of his mind. He didn’t care about
anything else. Ignoring right and wrong, he knelt down, begging his big brother to take the
money, take the money at once. Yin Chao was terribly upset by his cowardly little brother and
told him, “I’d wanted to send you all away temporarily on the cruise. I didn’t expect they’d find
out about it. Don’t panic, I’ll think of another way… Stay here for now. I’ll go find my partner to
talk it over, see if we can find someone trustworthy to protect you.”
Yin Ping scrambled to hold him back. “Ge, this is the criminal underworld, isn’t it? You can’t
offend the criminal underworld. The police come and go, but these people linger. If just one fish
slips through the net, your family won’t live in peace! Mom is nearly seventy, and there’s
Xiaolong… Xiaolong is still little! You can’t—”
Yin Chao hastily threw him off. “Don’t make trouble. I’ll fix it.”
Seeing that he’d thrown him off and was about to leave, Yin Ping panicked. He snatched up an
ashtray next to him and brought it down fiercely on the back of his brother Yin Chao’s head—
He would never forget that scene. It was as though his soul had left his body, and also as
though he’d practiced this movement thousands of times. Seeing Yin Chao fall without making
a sound, Yin Ping, in his fright, also felt an unspeakable excitement.
It was as though he’d been possessed. He’d stared blankly for a moment. Then, his limbs not
following his instructions, he’d heavily hit his own brother on the head a few times, until Yin
Chao had entirely stopped breathing…
Then, taking advantage of the dark night and the high wind, he’d dug a hole at the base of the
big tree in the little back yard—the tree in the back yard was hundreds of years old, surrounded
by a metal railing. It was a protected old tree. There was a local policy that even if houses were
being torn down and roads were being repaired, no one would casually touch the tree. It was a
natural sheltering umbrella.
43
Yin Ping was frighteningly calm. He systematically cleaned up the bloodstains and the weapon,
then threw the nightmare of his life into the hole. Before he could relax and cover it up with dirt,
a phone ringtone suddenly came from Yin Chao’s pocket.
Yin Ping was so scared his hands and feet went cold. There was a moment where he thought
that the ringing of the phone was calling Yin Chao’s soul.
The first time, the phone stopped ringing before he could answer it. It was silent for half a
minute, and then it quickly rang a second time.
Moved by mysterious forces, Yin Ping jumped into the hole and took the old cell phone from
the dead man’s hand. “…hello?”
“Old Cinder!”
“…it’s me.”
The man on the phone said, “The Louvre, seven-twenty in the evening the day after tomorrow. I
have everything ready. Nothing’s changed with you, right?”
Yin Ping felt as if something was blocking his windpipe. With difficulty, he squeezed out the
word, “…right.”
He sat all night in Yin Chao’s rental house, staring emptily into space. His hands and feet went
numb. He seemed to have been frozen in a nightmare, and this all really did seem like a bad
dream.
When he heard the crows crying outside the window, a weak hope rose in Yin Ping’s heart,
thinking he was about to wake. But suddenly, the sound of motorcycle engines came through
the quiet dawn.
Yin Ping gave a start. Right, those people had said that he only had one night.
Did he want the money, or did he want his and his family’s lives? The answer couldn’t have
been simpler.
Dawn hadn’t broken yet, and perhaps the people who’d come to find him hadn’t been well-
acquainted with Yin Chao. They couldn’t see the slight differences between the identical twins.
When Yin Ping told them the time and location he’d heard over the phone, the person he was
talking to smiled, got out a phone, and gave it to him.
There was a smile in the words of the man on the phone. “Actually, I knew the time and place
you’d arranged. I just had my subordinates test whether you were telling the truth.—Old
brother, you’re in good faith, and so am I. How about it, you must know who I am by now? The
two of us are in the same boat.”
Yin Ping absolutely didn’t understand anything he was saying. He could only agree dully. The
other person presumably hadn’t expected his subordinates to get the wrong person. For a time
he didn’t suspect his identity at all. He casually told him, “Don’t be nervous. I’ll tell you what to
do, step by step. You can’t get it wrong.”
Fourteen years afterwards, Yin Ping himself didn’t understand it. He wore a human skin, but
there seemed to be a monster born from nothing in his heart. It had bitten his own brother to
death. For the sake of his life, he could only strengthen his nerve and continue on, carrying the
departed spirit beneath the big scholar tree.
The next day, Yin Ping asked for a vacation from work and fobbed off his family with “work is
busy, I can’t go.” After tricking both sides, giving as his reason that free was free, they may as
well give it to someone else out of human feeling, and that person could help take care of the
family, he found someone to carry his ID, make up the number, give the false appearance that
the whole family of four had gone on the cruise, while he himself stealthily went to Yin Chao’s
house, put on Yin Chao’s clothes, and picked up his props. Having dressed himself up like this,
he became “Old Cinder.”
The huge crisis forced out all of his wit and wisdom. During the fire, Yin Ping even remembered
reading in some tabloid the idea that identical twins had different fingerprints and allowed his
hands to be burned.
Afterwards, like the person on the phone had said, this business wasn’t investigated on a major
scale. He was only furtively called in for questioning a few times. The last time he went to the
police bureau, he ran into a police officer, and that person smiled meaningfully at him, greeting
him, “You’re here?”
These words had scared Yin Ping into a cold sweat, and he finally knew what Yin Chao had
meant when he’d said that there was someone inside the police revealing secrets—this police
officer was the person who’d called him!
Yin Ping had always been greedy for money, but this time he managed to be clever. He didn’t
covet the five million these people had promised. That night, without anyone knowing, he’d
shaved his head and become an ordinary and unremarkable boiler operator, taking Yin Chao’s
things into the wilderness and burning them, making Old Cinder disappear entirely from the
world.
He’d burned his hands again on the boiler, gotten himself covered in soot every day, kept his
head down and his shoulders slumped, thoroughly hiding in the identity of a blindly obedient
boiler operator.
For fourteen years, he’d fooled the whole world, passed his days perfunctorily, living a flat and
impoverished life.
The old died, children grew up, the big scholar tree weathered the elements, thickening by
another ring. No one knew there was a body buried at the roots of that tree. As time passed,
even Yin Ping himself forgot about it, as though that terrifying interval had been only a delusion.
He’d never had a brother he envied and hated; he’d never known that night when it had
seemed it would never be light—
But why couldn’t fate let him go in the end? Why, after so many years of calm, had renovations
and investigations come to South Bend like a demon? Why had the police even come to the
door looking for Yin Chao?
Why, when that person had already rotted to mud at the base of the big scholar tree, did his
soul still linger?!
Yin Ping’s little electric bike, nearly falling apart after the fall, hummed, each soldering point
trembling at the unbearable high speed. He passed crowds crying out in fear, ran right over
45
little stalls laid to air out by peddlers, turning a deaf ear to the screams and curses, desperately
heading for that place—there was still a row of antiquated houses there, now with the words
“to be torn down” written everywhere. Only the old scholar tree that had already been standing
there during the Qing Dynasty was calm, looking pityingly upon the people as they came and
went.
The sounds of approaching police sirens broke over the horizon. Someone called his name
over a loudspeaker. But all that Yin Ping saw was that tree.
There was a moment where he thought that he saw a human figure at the iron railing, the back
of its head bashed in, eyes gloomily and hatefully fixed on him—
Tao Ran had seen Yin Ping’s back. For some reason, he was on constant alert. He floored the
gas pedal, bringing all his ten years of driving experience into play, passing through the twisting
little streets. The civil policeman riding a motorcycle next to him waved to him, indicating that
he’d go on ahead. Just then, everything changed.
Two pickup trucks suddenly appeared, one on each side of Yin Ping!
Tao Ran didn’t have time to think carefully. He swiftly turned the steering wheel, forcing his
colleague on the motorcycle behind him, going on himself.
The police car drove between the two pickup trucks. A side mirror scraped against the
handlebar of Yin Ping’s bike. Then a sharp sound of braking sounded in the little alley. The
police car floated in, nearly overturning, quickly throwing Yin Ping’s little electric bike into the
air. At the same time, the three cars unavoidably collided. Broken glass crashed like a storm.
There was a huge sound—
Luo Wenzhou, just coming in, didn’t even catch a breath. He grabbed the landline phone’s
handset. “Hello?”
Fei Du’s chest tightened for no clear reason. Then, he heard Luo Wenzhou’s voice suddenly
change. “What? Say that again!”
“…there were inflammable and explosive materials in the two responsible pickup trucks, a fire
started when Deputy-Captain Tao’s car crashed into them. One of the responsible drivers died
on the scene, the other was severely burned and died halfway to the hospital. Boss, it was
deliberate…”
All the orderly threads in Luo Wenzhou’s head snapped midway. His head rang. “Wh-where?
What hospital?”
Five minutes later, the whole City Bureau had been alerted. All the Criminal Investigation
Team’s people, whether they were inside the bureau or out in the field, put down what they
were doing and flew to Yan City’s Second Hospital.
46
The car air-conditioning was very smooth. Warm, dry air constantly blew out towards the
occupants, but it seemed to float on their skin, not entering their pores.
When Luo Wenzhou had driven half the way, he grabbed Fei Du’s hand.
Fei Du’s hand seemed to have just come out of an icebox. It was so cold it hardly seemed
alive. He hadn’t made a sound since they’d received the news. Now, sitting in the car, he
wasn’t moving a muscle. Once in a while he would blink. It was as if he’d become a human-
shaped ornament. Startled by Luo Wenzhou’s little movement, Fei Du squeezed his hand
gently in consolation.
Luo Wenzhou looked at him. When he wasn’t afraid of Fei Du making trouble, he was afraid of
him not talking.—He held Fei Du’s hand tightly in his, and, forcing his soul, which had turned
upside down, to return its proper position, he dialed a number. “It’s me, I’ll be there in five
minutes, where are you at the hospital? What’s the situation?”
The criminal policeman who’d gone with Tao Ran to Yin Ping’s house to investigate Old
Cinder’s whereabouts was hoarse, his voice tearful. He struggled to hold himself back as he
spoke to Luo Wenzhou. First he explained in a few words where to go at the hospital. Then he
really couldn’t resist beginning to sob. “We were going to go back today, but Deputy-Captain
Tao said something was wrong with Yin Ping, and when we went back to find him, Yin Ping had
already run off on his electric bike. Then Yin Ping got into an accident on the road and ran
away, the victim called the police, so we fixed Yin Ping’s approximate location. I don’t know
why Deputy-Captain Tao was in such a rush, he didn’t wait for backup to arrive…”
Fei Du’s gaze fell on Luo Wenzhou’s phone, which was on speaker.—As soon as Yin Ping had
run, if they’d wanted to catch him, they needed to make a report, needed to follow procedure;
at least as long as they had absolutely no leads as to where Yin Ping was going, they had to
seek the help of a colossal number of cameras—they needed assistance and couldn’t avoid
alerting many people.
As soon as the report about the “responsible driver on a red electric bike” had gone out, it had
gone into someone’s ear. Tao Ran had perfectly understood the risk of information getting out,
so he’d had to plan for the worst; he hadn’t waited for anyone; he’d had to get in and snatch
Yin Ping away before the other side could react.
If the informer who had taken Gu Zhao into The Louvre truly had been Yin Ping under a false
name, then it was likely he was the last witness in this old case. Even if he wasn’t worth a
penny, he was still valuable enough to merit being put into a safe now.
Tao Ran’s handling had been very decisive, but why had the other side’s reaction been so
quick?
“We caught up to Yin Ping in a half torn-down urban village in the north of Sound Bend County.
It’s hard to drive there, there was a colleague from the police station who was riding a
motorcycle and wanted to go on ahead, but while they were going past an intersection, two
pickups suddenly appeared and Deputy-Captain Tao pushed him aside and went on ahead
himself…”
“The road was too narrow, the three cars crashed at the intersection and we couldn’t get
through. Luckily that colleague saw the pickup trucks catch fire, felt something was off, and
went over to break open the door. He’d just pulled Deputy-Captain Tao out when it all
exploded, if not for him…”
If not for him, they wouldn’t have needed to rush to the hospital now.
Fei Du suddenly put in a word, asking, “What about Yin Ping? Is he still alive?”
The criminal police officer on the phone was too worked up. He didn’t hear that someone else
was speaking, and immediately replied in the style of making a report. “Deputy-Captain Tao
threw Yin Ping aside, and he may have fallen not too gently when he was thrown. His lower leg
was fractured by the electric bike. He may have been impacted by the explosion. He’s been
unconscious this whole time. He’s also at the Second Hospital.”
Fei Du was frighteningly calm, his expression not moving a hair, as lifeless as his hand.
He looked up and could already see the hospital building not far off. Luo Wenzhou charged
over the speed bumps at the parking lot, the car trembling violently.
Fei Du grabbed the door handle, but his speech didn’t shake at all. “Find some trustworthy
people to keep an eye on Yin Ping, whether he’s in the inpatient department or in the
emergency room—twenty-four hours, don’t relax for a minute. Yin Ping didn’t die, so the
person who wants to silence him will come again.”
“Yes, sir!”
Luo Wenzhou had wanted to add something, but after he thought about it for a moment, he
decided there was really nothing to add, so he hung up without saying anything and stopped
the car.
“A cornered dog will jump over a wall. It seems that not only was Tao Ran’s suspicion that Yin
Ping was passing himself off as Old Cinder back then on the right track, the fake Old Cinder
may have come into direct contact with the key figure,” Fei Du said unhurriedly. “Since the
other side wasn’t this nervous when Wei Wenchuan and Wei Zhanhong were called in to the
City Bureau and then arrested, it shows that Wei Zhanhong’s disavowals all along may not
have been disavowals—he really did only hold a part of the shares in the Beehive. He’s been
using their ‘resources’ all these years, but he doesn’t know who the boss he’s been working
with behind the scenes is.”
Luo Wenzhou didn’t make a sound. He lowered his head and looked at Fei Du’s hand that he
was holding.
Fei Du’s pulse was very quick, so quick it was almost uneven, but the roiling blood was
constantly removing the warmth from his limbs. There was only a thin layer of cold sweat in the
palm of his hand.
Without feeling the physiological reaction of this hand, Luo Wenzhou nearly would have gotten
the mistaken impression that to Fei Du, Tao Ran was a stranger of no importance, the same as
the other people involved in cases, just another detail in a complicated case, not worth too
large an investment of mental effort and feeling. His logic never came to a standstill; he was
always objectively analyzing.
Fei Du’s body and emotions, even what he said, what he thought, all seemed to be out of
alignment. It was as if he ought to have been a unified precision instrument but had been
disassembled and reassembled too many times, and the gears, not interlocking well, wouldn’t
turn smoothly. As soon as there was an overload, there would be a subtle disharmony.
A few police cars, also hurrying, charged in. The people in them hardly waited for the cars to
come to a full stop before jumping out. They ran in too much of a hurry, not noticing that Luo
Wenzhou and Fei Du were in the parking lot.
Luo Wenzhou suddenly said, “Aren’t you in a hurry to go in and see Tao Ran?”
“I wouldn’t be able to see him even if I went in,” Fei Du said, his expression not changing. “You
can’t just wander into the emergency room. And even if I could see him, it wouldn’t be any use.
I’m not a doctor. There’s no difference between waiting in the hospital and waiting in the car.”
“At first, the people who framed Gu Zhao were in the same position as the victim, not knowing
that Old Cinder had been replaced by a cowardly old man who looked the same but had a
completely different temperament. Otherwise, it would have been too easy to kill Yin Ping. They
couldn’t have waited until now to act.” Fei Du unhurriedly unbuckled his seatbelt. He
continued, “And supposing that they only realized it after they were alerted by the crucial
information of Tao Ran requesting pursuit of Yin Ping, where did they get the two pickups to
silence him?”
Luo Wenzhou said, “Unless they just happened to have two pickups equipped with explosives
waiting in South Bend, which a bird wouldn’t shit on, they shouldn’t have been able to react
faster than the police, and they especially shouldn’t have been faster than Tao Ran, who
rushed on ahead of everyone.”
“So the point in time when they received the news must have been a little earlier,” Fei Du said.
“Tao Ran had a partner from the City Bureau with him at the time, and a civil policeman from
the South Bend police station leading the way. Also…”
“Also, he called me,” Luo Wenzhou said grimly. “Since we found the listening device in Tao
Ran’s bag, we’ve been very cautious. He called my personal phone. I can guarantee it with
most of a decade of professional experience, there 100% isn’t a problem with my phone.”
“Then the problem can only be with those two people and the car,” Fei Du said slowly. “The car
was a service car. There must be a record of stops and use.—Doesn’t that sound like a much
smaller scope of investigation?”
Luo Wenzhou’s teeth were tightly clenched. He got out his phone and called Xiao Haiyang.
Xiao Haiyang picked up after less than half a ring. He said somewhat incoherently, “I’ll be at the
hospital at once, Cap-captain Luo, I…”
“Don’t come here yet,” Luo Wenzhou said grimly. “There’s no lack of people standing watch in
the hospital’s corridors. I want you to go investigate the most recent whereabouts of two
people. I’ll send you their names and badge numbers. Also, the use record of the service car
Tao Ran drove today. I want to know where it’s been, which people have touched it—including
the staff who clean it and perform maintenance. Remember—everyone.”
49
Fei Du said, “If there’s something you can’t easily investigate, I’ll get Lu Jia and the others to
send someone to cooperate with you.”
Xiao Haiyang paused, blew his nose heavily, then hung up without even saying “yes.”
The two of them sat in mutual silence in the already turned off car for a moment. Having made
all the arrangements, Luo Wenzhou tilted up his face, closed his eyes, and leaned back in his
seat.
He hadn’t been able to think closely about what was happening with Tao Ran now, how the
rescue was going. He’d had to use all his willpower to ignore his anger and worry, take care of
the things he needed to take care of.
Fei Du hesitated a moment, then encircled his shoulders, turning to hug him, his lips gently
touching his hair. He quietly said, “It’s all right if you’re upset and need to get it off your chest.
There’s no one here but me, anyway.”
“Back at school…there was a female schoolmate who managed to work up her courage to ask
him out, and he looked at her eyeshadow and said, ‘I see you’ve got dark circles around your
eyes from staying up late. You should hurry home and rest. I heard the movie’s no good. It’s
only rated 50% online.’ …That’s the sort he is. For a while I thought he was gay like me,” Luo
Wenzhou said almost inaudibly. “Then I saw him get a girlfriend and found out that he wasn’t
gay, he was just an idiot. He had absolutely no game. He was totally earnest. The girl thought
he was cute at first, but later, when we were about to graduate, she found that in this mortal
world, a man needs to be more than cute. When they broke up, he slunk around furtively being
depressed for over half a month, even willingly shouldered the responsibility of helping the girl
move and carrying her luggage for her. When he was through, he took me drinking and spat it
all out in a muddle… I said, ‘It’s all right, brother, there’s fragrant grass at all the world’s ends,
you’ll marry someone a hundred times better than her, and I’ll be your best man.’ He said that
his hometown is particular about best men being unmarried, and that someone like me might
abandon the association any day. I couldn’t resist. I came out of the closet to him, said, ‘I’m
not going to get married, the marriage laws don’t allow it.’
“The upshot was, the fool’s reflex arc is about ten thousand li long, and he actually didn’t
understand at the time. About half a month later he finally worked it out and ran over to see me
in a fright, worried that my dad was going to beat me to death.” The rims of Luo Wenzhou’s
eyes were a little red. “If Tao Ran…if…”
“If Tao Ran…” The thought flashed through Fei Du’s mind, following Luo Wenzhou’s words. He
immediately nipped it off, along with all the memories associated with Tao Ran, like many years
ago, when he’d walked up the stairs following the music and seen the woman who’d hanged
herself behind the door.
This was what Fei Chengyu had taught him—always remain aloof; if he couldn’t, then he would
have to try a little harder to learn. If there were any gaps, Fei Chengyu would repeatedly teach
him over and over, until he’d “learned”; this had nearly become a reflex carved into his bones.
Every time he encountered something he couldn’t face, it would automatically switch on,
guaranteeing that he would make the most reasonable choices.
“I know,” he said, using just the right amount of warmth to pat Luo Wenzhou’s back. “I know.—
Let’s go.”
50
Tao Ran got on well with people. There weren’t enough benches in the hospital waiting room,
and quite a few people were sitting on the floor. Even Yang Xin, who’d been accompanying
shiniang in the hospital, had hurried over when she’d heard. As soon as they saw Luo
Wenzhou, everyone stood up.
By the time Luo Wenzhou came in, he’d already quickly adjusted his emotions. He waved a
hand at the crowd. He was just about to say something when a door suddenly opened inside,
and a somewhat grave-faced nurse came out and pulled down her mask. She didn’t seem like
she was coming like normal to notify the patient’s family and friends to come help push the
hospital bed. Her gaze swept over the crowd of people ardently watching her. “You must all be
from the public security bureau? Well… My apologies, our doctor really did everything he
could…”
Luo Wenzhou’s head buzzed. Fei Du put an arm around his shoulders.
The nurse braced herself and went on: “…the patient Kong Weichen’s neck was pierced by a
fragment during the explosion. Because of excessive blood loss before he was brought in…”
Kong Weichen was the civil policeman from the South Bend police station who had
accompanied Tao Ran. Luo Wenzhou had just sent that name to Xiao Haiyang; he was one of
the suspects.
After a good while, someone finally came around and asked with bated breath, “So…the other
one…”
“The other one most importantly suffered fractures and internal bleeding during the collision.
He was blocked by his colleague during the explosion. He’ll need critical observation
overnight. If his condition stabilizes, then there shouldn’t be danger to his life.”
When Tao Ran had found that those two cars had come with ill intent, his first reaction had
been to push aside the motorcycle, making his colleague, who was wearing a helmet, retreat.
And that colleague, realizing that an explosion might occur, had rushed over without thinking
and pulled him out…
After a long time, someone who’d come over from the South Bend police station let out a
suppressed sob.
Before those from the City Bureau had even had time to sigh in relief, the sound of that man’s
sobs provoked a feeling of sympathy for someone in a similar position.
“Captain Luo?”
“Have this…ahem.” Luo Wenzhou’s voice was somewhat strained. He cleared his throat, then
picked up what he was saying. “Have this colleague’s relatives been notified? Go…”
His words were again interrupted by some medical personnel quickly running over.
“Yin Ping—the one called Yin Ping was also brought in by you?”
“He must not have had a physical examination in years. His blood pressure is high, didn’t he
know it himself? His diastolic pressure is nearly 130. He had a stroke when he was hit. We
need to operate at once. Can anyone sign?”
The ancients said that there were gods above you, and if you committed a shameful deed,
sooner or later there would be retribution.
Just then, Luo Wenzhou’s phone vibrated again. In the midst of the mess, he lowered his head
and looked. He saw a message from “Retired Emperor.” The “retired emperor” Comrade Luo
Cheng never used punctuation marks when he texted. It was always one string—“investigation
team into gu zhao case established focused on investigating old people your lao lu has been
called in look out”.
“I see. You and Yin Ping are husband and wife. Are you acquainted with Yin Ping’s older
brother Yin Chao?”
“Do you know that Yin Chao may be dead, and the murderer may be your husband Yin Ping?”
The woman lifted her head in terror, looking at the criminal policeman questioning her. Her
eyes, pressed down by eyelids so limp only a crack remained, looked muddled and perplexed,
but there was no shock.
The police officer gazed fixedly at her, repeated the question, then raised his voice slightly.
“Hou Shufen, you’re being questioned.”
The woman’s hands were twisted together, carelessly digging at her chilblains. She said
falteringly, “He never told me anything.”
“I didn’t ask you whether he told you anything.” The criminal policeman questioning her had
seen everything. He could hear that she was avoiding the question. “I asked you whether you
knew that your husband may have killed someone. Think about it, then answer. This is a public
security bureau.”
The woman shook with fear, avoiding the criminal policeman’s gaze, lowering her eyes and
staring at her own stained cloth shoes. She shifted around from side to side for a moment,
unable to sit still. “…there was a time when he had a lot of nightmares. He’d always wake up
screaming in the night, yelling out nonsense…”
“Yelling what?”
52
“Yelling things like, ‘Don’t pester me,’ and, ‘Yin Chao, you lingering spirit.’ We used to live in a
house and had our own little yard. There were two big scholar trees by the gate, nearly grown
to full size. Like a madman, he insisted on cutting them down. And cutting them down wasn’t
enough. He found someone to dig up the roots, then sold off the wood for a trifle. No one
could talk him out of it… He said those trees were inauspicious, that they were constraining
him. I felt something was a little off then.”
“You only felt it was off?” the police officer asked in disbelief.
The woman’s chin touched her chest. Only the whorl at the top of her head showed. Her hair
was sparse and her scalp was deathly pale. There was ugly dandruff on the hairs. After a long
silence, she vaguely repeated, “He never told me anything.”
On the bench in the hospital corridor, Luo Wenzhou finished watching the record of the
questioning of Yin Ping’s wife. He expressionlessly closed the laptop on his knees. “He never
told me anything, so I’m not an accomplice, and I’m not responsible. I only closed my eyes,
stopped my ears, didn’t think of anything, steadfastly passed my days. Was I sharing my bed
with a murderer? Let him be whatever he likes. As long as he doesn’t get arrested, as long as
he can still go to work and earn his wages and carry on as usual, none of it matters.”
Lang Qiao stood next to him. She bent down and said quietly, “The area Yin Ping was
speeding towards has a few big scholar trees in it. We investigated each of them and found a
corpse at the foot of one of the trees. The medical examiners on the scene had a rough look.
They believe the deceased is male, in his forties, around a meter seventy-five tall. The back of
his head was struck several times with a blunt object before his death. Concrete information
will have to wait for detailed materials from the medical examiners, but judging from the
information we currently have, we all think that the person buried under the tree is most likely
Yin Chao.
The skeleton that had been buried deep under the tree had finally floated up to the surface and
once more seen the light of day along with the old case.
Lang Qiao looked at the low door of the hospital room and, suddenly lowering her voice, said
to Luo Wenzhou, “Boss, Director Lu…and some other deputy directors haven’t come to work
for the last few days. There’s a lot of pressing material that needs to be endorsed for the end of
the year. There’s only Director Ceng left, and he doesn’t know what to do now, I…”
Luo Wenzhou gently interrupted her. “I told you to investigate the City Bureau’s surveillance
system. Did you do it?”
“I was just about to tell you,” Lang Qiao said quietly. “While I was cleaning up, I broke the
camera in 203, and when I reported it and requested that it be repaired, two unfamiliar people
came with the director. The director told me to do what I needed to do, and I couldn’t stay on.
While I was shuffling over to the door, I turned back and saw the maintenance worker saying
something to the unfamiliar people. The whole atmosphere was wrong… And now the whole
City Bureau is being overhauled…”
It seemed that not only was there a problem, the problem was very big.
Lang Qiao’s palms were sweating. She wiped them on the hem of her clothes. “Boss, what’s
going on with Director Lu and the others? This can’t be happening because I was too rash?”
“It doesn’t have anything to do with you.” Luo Wenzhou shook his head. “Tell me what you’ve
determined.”
“All the repair records are there,” Lang Qiao said quickly. “Aside from the emergency situation
the year before last, the rest is all the factory coming over for regular maintenance… The
purchasing and installation were all according to procedure, and I can’t investigate procedure
for no good reason. I slipped in and had a look while the director of administration was out.
There’s a complete record of documents from the meeting concerned. The factory is a proper
factory, it’s not only the City Bureau that uses it. There were no problems on the surface, so the
problem could only be in the repairs during the emergency situation the year before last—I
investigated it. There’s a register of the maintenance worker’s credentials from back then, with
his work ID number and full name, but when I went to the factory to ask about him, they said
that he had resigned not long ago.”
Lang Qiao’s throat tightened somewhat. “The date he resigned was the very day we arrested
Lu Guosheng. I went to his recorded address and searched in the area. The house was rented
out to someone else two years ago. The address is a fake.”
When Lang Qiao had questioned the students in 203 that day, the contents had been leaked,
and Wei Zhanhong had received the information at once and then had been contained, it had
amounted to a revelation of the informer inside the City Bureau.
“Don’t search anymore. I figure you won’t find anything,” Luo Wenzhou said. “Was there a
problem with the report and request for repairs? Did anyone who shouldn’t have asked ask?”
“Not likely,” Lang Qiao said. “The request for repairs was made because 203 was just being
used to interrogate the boss of a looting gang. The colleagues in the observation room
suddenly found that they couldn’t use the cameras, and a lot of people reported it together.”
“Boss, we always used to be very peaceful, but ever since Director Zhang got in trouble over
Wang Hongliang and got transferred out, things keep going wrong one after another. First it
was Zheng Kaifeng getting advance information and running on the day he got blown up, and
now this…” Lang Qiao’s voice was growing quieter and quieter. At the end she was nearly
mouthing the words. “…they’re all saying it’s Director Lu.”
Before Luo Wenzhou could answer, Lang Qiao put both hands on her knees and took a deep
breath and said shakily, “It can’t be Director Lu.”
“It can’t be Director Lu, really, believe me.—When I was in elementary school, some drug
addicts gathered in a little park by my school, got high and went crazy. A crowd of maniacs
with knives charged into the school and injured a security guard. The school locked down the
classroom building, but my class was outside at PE. A lot of people were crying from fear. The
maniacs were screaming and shouting, like they were acting as monsters in a cartoon. The
police came very quickly. I remember it all very clearly. Director Lu was leading them. He had a
scar on his forehead, but he didn’t look scary at all. He caught all the bad guys very quickly. I
snuck off and ran after them. I wanted to give him a bottle of fruit juice. But he must have
misunderstood. He took it and opened it for me, then gave it back and quietly said, ‘Hurry and
54
run back now, I won’t tell your teacher.’ …Because of this, of the thirty-six people in our class,
four went into the public security system afterwards, and six are in related professions. That’s a
third of the class following in his footsteps just like me…. It can’t be him.
“Are they going to wrongly accuse him?” Lang Qiao’s eyes were open very wide. Her eyelashes
trembled slightly, and her tears ran down. “Officer Gu was wrongly accused, what if…”
Luo Wenzhou quietly swallowed down the words “people change.” He got up and pressed the
laptop into Lang Qiao’s arms. “There’s no what if. If there is, what are you getting paid for? Are
you still that elementary school student who can’t even open a bottle of juice?”
Lang Qiao subconsciously took the computer and looked at him in amazement.
“You’re in the City Bureau. You’re qualified to wear a uniform. You can request a sidearm, can
carry handcuffs and a truncheon. So if you want to know something, go investigate it yourself.
If you think someone’s being wrongly accused, then go arrest someone who isn’t wrongly
accused.—You were pretty slick taking down Wei Zhanhong in the men’s bathroom. How come
you’re going backwards the older you get?”
Luo Wenzhou pulled a stern face and glared at her. “Get to work. No vacation this year.”
Lang Qiao forgot about getting wrinkles from pulling at your eyelids. She rubbed heavily at her
eyes with her sleeve. “Yes, sir!”
Just then, the sound of footsteps came from the other end of the hall. It was the unique sound
of Fei Du’s footsteps, always walking to some rhythm. It seemed as though even if the sky fell
and the earth cracked, it still wouldn’t make him use his legs to run a few steps.
Fei Du first looked towards Tao Ran’s hospital room. Tao Ran, wrapped up like a mummy, was
still sleeping. Chang Ning, who’d come over when she’d heard the news, was watching at his
bedside. She must have been somewhat worn out. She had her forehead propped on one
hand, napping in her chair. Fei Du put a coat over her and put a warm cup of tea by her hand,
then withdrew, quietly closing the door. “Yin Ping’s surgery didn’t go well.”
“Since murdering his brother, Yin Ping hasn’t been doing very well. He’s had long-term
insomnia, and a drinking habit. His income is limited, so he’s been drinking cheap goods with
who knows what mixed in. His heart, liver, and kidneys all have different degrees of chronic
illness. The risk of a blood clot was very high. Even without this car crash, he may have fallen
over dead any day,” Fei Du said quickly. “The doctor said that even though the surgery is
finished, they don’t know when he’ll wake up, and when he does, there will definitely be after-
effects. The more optimistic outlook is that he’ll be half-paralyzed and have trouble speaking.
It’s also possible he simply won’t be able to recover an ordinary level of cognitive function.”
“Why does he get to lose his mind?!” Lang Qiao bristled as soon as she heard this, then
noticed that her voice had been too loud and hurriedly forced it lower. “If he loses his mind, I’ll
deal him another one and send him right to the other side to apologize for his crime!”
The City Bureau’s people were in a state of anxiety; they were a host of dragons without a
head, Tao Ran was lying in the hospital, his colleagues didn’t know who could be trusted…and
the only witness was dead to the world.
Luo Wenzhou paced a few steps in the oppressive corridor. He very much wanted to laugh
bitterly.—Since time immemorial, acting like a prick brought down a bolt of lightning. He’d just
poured some chicken soup into Lang Qiao, and now in the blink of any eye she’d rallied, just
like that.
Luo Wenzhou’s finger paused over his phone. Then he swiped to pick up. “Little Glasses, if you
don’t have good news, either, I’ll fire you.”
“…” His diversion knocked all the temper out of Luo Wenzhou. He choked for a moment, then
irritably said, “What do you want?”
Xiao Haiyang’s tone was rather grave. “Captain Luo, are you all still at the hospital? Don’t
leave, I’ll be there at once. I have to say this face-to-face.”
This Little Glasses had some sense of time; he’d said “at once,” and five minutes later he
charged into the hospital, wrapped in a cold draft.
There were too many people and too much talk in the inpatient department. In search of quiet,
they went into the little garden out back and found a stone table. The little garden was for
patients staying at the hospital to use for taking walks. Now that it was the dead of winter, so
cold that water froze as it dripped, never mind patients taking walks, there wasn’t even a single
crow bringing its own down jacket.
Xiao Haiyang put two CVs and a printed out form on the stone table and sniffed hard. “Captain
Luo had me investigate the two people who were with Deputy-Captain Tao that day, and the
use record of the car. It’s all here, along with two CVs.—Of those who accompanied Deputy-
Captain Tao to visit Yin Ping’s home, one was our team's Wu-ge, and one was Civil Policeman
Kong Weichen from the South Bend police station…”
“I know Xiao-Wu. He’s been under my nose since he graduated. If my shifu hadn’t died, he’d
have become my little shidi.” Luo Wenzhou waved a hand. “There’s no need to talk about Kong
Weichen yet, either, the important point is…”
56
“No, there’s an important point to say about Kong Weichen.” With his frozen fingers, Xiao
Haiyang none too nimbly pulled out Kong Weichen’s CV. “Captain Luo, I suppose you know
that a few years ago the city had a ‘National Enterprises Alleviate Poverty’ program?”
This sort of activity was ordinarily larger in outer appearance than it was in substantive content.
Everyone basically got out some lunch money according to their rank, donated some funds,
then took a few pictures and finished it up by being written up in a news story. It didn’t mean
anything. The organization hadn’t done it these last few years.
“Last time, South Bend’s Hongzhi School partnered with the City Bureau. Some officials from
the City Bureau went to Hongzhi School to look around. Each of them got out two-thousand
yuan, each pair subsidizing a student with fairly good grades. Kong Weichen was one of them,”
Xiao Haiyang said, with the three other people surrounding the stone table looking back at him
helplessly.
Luo Wenzhou had a sort of inauspicious premonition, feeling that nothing good would come
out of Xiao Haiyang’s mouth. “So?”
“I went to investigate the school’s files. One of the people written down as subsidizing Kong
Weichen was Zhang Chunjiu.—Oh, that’s old Director Zhang, who transferred out of the City
Bureau half a year ago. Before Kong Weichen took Deputy-Captain Tao to Yin Ping’s house, he
called Zhang Chunjiu.”
Luo Wenzhou at once looked grave. “Xiao Haiyang, do you know what you’re saying?”
“I do.—I printed out the communications records.” Xiao Haiyang wiped his nose, absently met
Luo Wenzhou’s eyes, then pulled out a slip of paper. “I also verified with Wu-ge. Wu-ge said
that before they set out, he really did see Officer Kong make a phone call. He even asked
about it in passing, and Kong Weichen said, ‘My superior is rather concerned with this
business. I was reporting to him.’ Wu-ge thought that it was a superior at the station and didn’t
think much of it. I also found out that Officer Kong was first assigned to Qingyuan County, and
he was only transferred back to his hometown of South Bend when Director Zhang put in a
word.”
A cluster of thick clouds was involuntarily blown together by the wind, covering the sun. The
only heat source disappeared, and the surroundings at once became shady.
For a good while, no one spoke in the little stone pavilion. Lang Qiao suddenly felt that her own
fragile body heat wasn’t up to its current task; she hadn’t been able to warm the stone bench
by sitting on it all this time. The chill was still passing through her clothes into her muscles,
making her tremble from within.
After a long time, Lang Qiao at last slowly came around, and some indescribable rage
exploded like a tsunami. She was like a believer who’d seen someone splashing sewage on an
image of her god. She stood up swiftly. “Xiao Haiyang, are you crazy? Are trifles like getting a
57
subsidy and transferring work worth rooting around for? What are you, an NBIS special agent?5
When we’re all sitting around playing cards and bragging, do you memorize everything we’re
saying and go investigate it for secret codes? It’s really a waste of your talents that you weren't
born during the Qing Dynasty’s literary inquisition!”
Xiao Haiyang never watched people’s faces. His tone didn’t change at all. “When Director
Zhang was at his post, you could just about say that the county town police stations in the area
fit into his jurisdiction. Now that he’s been transferred away, South Bend doesn’t have any
connection to him at all. Can you explain why Kong Weichen would contact him at such a
time? I know he’s a hero, and I know that if the people from South Bend heard this, they’d give
me a beating—you also want to give me a beating. But whether you emotionally believe it or
not, these are the results of my investigation. These are the facts.”
“Nonsense!” Lang Qiao burst out. “If it was you, would you harm someone, then save his life?
Even throw yourself in to save him? Director Zhang has stepped back from the front lines, and
you still drag him in…”
Xiao Haiyang put his hands together and unwaveringly said, “Of course I wouldn’t, but each
person’s logic is different. I don’t know how other people think.”
Lang Qiao seized his collar. Xiao Haiyang was pulled forward by her, ribs bumping against the
stone table, the arms of his glasses slipping down below his cheekbones.
“Wait, hear me out.” Fei Du gently put his hand on Lang Qiao’s wrist. His hand had been in his
pocket all this time and still had some residual warmth from his coat. There was only a trace of
color in fingertips, and the cuff of a cream-colored sweater showed at his wrist. The back of
Lang Qiao’s hand, green and white with veins and bone standing out, relaxed involuntarily.
“First, there isn’t necessarily a causal relationship between Officer Kong calling Director Zhang
beforehand and him revealing information, unless you have a complete communications record
that has conclusive evidence showing that Officer Kong somehow sent word when Tao Ran
and the others returned to Yin Ping’s house for the second time.” Fei Du paused slightly.
“Second, even if the information really did come from him, he still didn’t necessarily do it with
intent—”
Fei Du plucked Lang Qiao’s hand from Xiao Haiyang’s collar, separating the two of them. “I’ll
make an unsuitable comparison. Haiyang, don’t be angry when you’ve heard it.—If Officer Gu
was still alive, was your elder and superior, and asked you to do something you couldn’t
understand in order to secretly investigate something, would you comply unconditionally?”
For some reason, there were some words that it was always easier for Xiao Haiyang to hear
coming from Fei Du’s mouth.
5National Bureau of Investigation and Statistics, military intelligence agency of the Republic of
China prior to 1946.
58
“What about the other police officer and the car?” Fei Du asked. “Did you investigate them?”
“Yes. The City Bureau is a mess today. I took the opportunity to snatch Xiao-Wu’s personnel
file. He’s local, hasn’t been working long. His CV and personal background are fairly simple.
For the moment I haven’t seen any suspicious points. I’ll investigate further.” Xiao Haiyang
expressionlessly fixed his crooked collar and glasses. “As for the police car, it was very
seriously damaged. It’s being analyzed now, the results haven’t come out yet. It hasn’t been
serviced recently, but it’s been used rather frequently. It hasn’t been idle since Lu Guosheng
and the others were arrested. Basically all field personnel have touched it.—If the problem is
with the car, then everyone on our team is suspect.”
Xiao Haiyang once again succeeded in using his words to silence everyone.
No matter when, investigating your own people was always the most painful thing. Probably
only an ass like Xiao Haiyang, who didn’t have any worldly wisdom, could undertake this
assignment so cold-bloodedly.
Xiao Haiyang’s gaze passed over their faces. Seeing that no one chimed in, he went on himself.
“I think that now…”
Luo Wenzhou was simply almost afraid of him. He hastily interrupted, “Ancestor, could I ask
you to shut your mouth and give it a rest?”
“I’m not finished speaking yet.” Xiao Haiyang pushed at his glasses. His lips kept flapping on
their own, whether others wanted to hear or not. “I think that now, as soon as possible, we
should investigate Director Zhang’s motive for paying close attention to this business, as well
as whether those two pickup trucks are connected to him.”
“Earlier this year, Director Zhang transferred out, so now the investigation team hasn’t even
come to him. But don’t forget, when the security cameras in 203 were repaired, he was still the
head of the City Bureau.” Xiao Haiyang raised his voice slightly. “How long was he at this post
of command? Even though he’s transferred out, his influence is still there. Do you know how
many people would reveal things to him, intentionally or not? Also, the system we use for field
work now was set up by him. When you caught Zheng Kaifeng, why did Yang Bo get a field
personnel roster that even our own people wouldn’t necessarily have known about clearly?”
Lang Qiao’s lips weren’t as nimble as his. She was speechless for a time, unable to resist
wanting to come to blows again.
“Evidence.—Xiao Haiyang, the person you’re accusing is the City Bureau’s former director-
general.” Luo Wenzhou spoke to interrupt their drawn swords and bent bows. “If you find
evidence, I’ll send it up for you. Otherwise, we can pretend we didn’t hear what you said today.
But when Officer Kong is buried, you’ll have to kowtow three times in apology to him, or else
Tao Ran won’t let you off.”
Hearing Tao Ran’s name, Xiao Haiyang at last stopped, pursing his lips somewhat nervously.
But Xiao Haiyang didn’t go. He stood where he was for a moment. His hands, so frozen they
were all red, hung by his sides, tightening and relaxing.
59
This Little Glasses had an unusual disposition. It seemed that whether he was among a crowd
or standing on his own, he always looked solitary, full of solitary doubts, full of mistrust even
towards the air flowing past his mouth and nose.
Tao Ran was kind, gentle, and patient. He seemed sloppy, his manner of living somewhat
crude, but he always looked after everyone who came into his line of sight. While his
appearance and temperament were entirely different, he still always made Xiao Haiyang think
of Gu Zhao. Starting from the time he’d still been at the Flower Market District Sub-Bureau and
had cooperated with the City Bureau for the first time to investigate He Zhongyi’s murder, he’d
had a natural feeling of closeness towards Tao Ran.
These sudden murder plots had nearly made time run backwards for him. He’d nearly turned
into a nervous hedgehog, all the spines on his body indignantly sticking up.
Luo Wenzhou said, “If you have something to say, say it.”
Somewhat hesitantly, Xiao Haiyang said in a quiet voice, “I…I want to go see Deputy-Captain
Tao, can I?”
Luo Wenzhou looked at him deeply, then nodded slightly. Xiao Haiyang quickly ran off.
After Xiao Haiyang left, Lang Qiao’s rage was gradually blown away by the winter wind. She
subconsciously pondered, following what Xiao Haiyang had said, and found to her horror that
she’d actually been convinced by him. “Captain Luo, when the surveillance equipment was
repaired the year before last, I, I think it really was…”
"Lao-Zhang was a little older than us; he’d rendered a meritorious service and was named to
come to the City Bureau."
"He got along best with people. He was our old big brother."
"Gu Zhao suspected that there was a rat in the City Bureau, so he chose to investigate on his
own. But he also knew the rules, so when he found The Louvre in the end, to be rigorous about
collecting evidence, he must have chosen a partner among the people he trusted.”
Why, when those people’s “business” extended all over the world, when they had the power to
launder money and commit crimes across borders, was their final major stronghold in Yan
City?
After what had happened to Gu Zhao, Yang Zhengfeng, as captain, had borne the
responsibility of being his direct superior. He’d been disciplined and had handed the City
Bureau’s Criminal Investigation Team over to Zhang Chunjiu, who’d had similar qualifications
and was steadier. In his hands, the Criminal Investigation Team had become increasingly
splendid; public order had been impossibly good during those years, as though all the city’s
criminals had collectively gone on vacation. During the period he’d held the position, both the
crime rate and the rate of solved cases had looked good. That was how he’d risen step by step
to a high position.
Lang Qiao was right. Nearly everything had broken out after Director Zhang had been
transferred away. This year’s workload at the City Bureau was nearly equal to that of the
previous ten years. Was it after all because when the stabilizing force of Director Zhang had
left, all the forces of evil had come out to wreak havoc?
Or take it in the opposite direction—with the all-encompassing protective umbrella gone, had
the demons and monsters under it been unable to hide any longer?
“Xiao-Lang,” Luo Wenzhou said, “stay in the hospital, keep a close eye on Yin Ping. Whether
he’s an idiot or a vegetable, no matter what, nothing can be allowed to happen to him.”
“Don’t go empty-handed,” Luo Wenzhou said, lowering his voice. “Go request a sidearm.”
A thin layer of gooseflesh rose on Lang Qiao’s neck. Looking at Luo Wenzhou’s expression, she
didn’t dare to waste any more words. She stood up and ran off.
Luo Wenzhou let out a long breath, grabbed Fei Du’s wrist, and rubbed the projecting bone
over and over. If the mole was a contemporary of Gu Zhao’s, then he had to be an elder of
good standing and reputation; Luo Wenzhou had known that perfectly well all along. But now
that it had come to this, his mind was still a blank.
To accept it, to suspect, to investigate, to use the manner he employed for dealing with the
most crafty, the most reprehensible criminals… It was too hard.
“There’s no evidence,” Luo Wenzhou said quietly. “Whether the investigation team takes
Director Lu or Director Zhang.—Xiao Haiyang does everything relying on imagination and
instinct. It’s all bullshit. Even Wei Zhanhong doesn’t know the mole’s identity. Unless Yin Ping
wakes up and accuses someone… Even if Yin Ping accuses someone, given his moral
character, if there’s nothing to back up his word…”
He also had nowhere to vent his grievances. Tao Ran was down, and Lang Qiao was
inexperienced; if she wasn’t panicking, she was making trouble, and all along watching for his
expression.
Luo Wenzhou was silent too long. Fei Du lifted his chin and looked him over for a moment.
“What’s wrong?”
Luo Wenzhou looked up at him and let his mind wander a little, thinking that Fei Du was unlike
any other person he knew.
61
The young and artless were like clear plastic bottles; you could see at a glance whether there
was juice or coke inside. The older ones with deeper thoughts meanwhile were like frosted
glass bottles, most with dark liquid in them; without opening them up and smelling, it was hard
to determine whether it was soy sauce or vinegar.
But Fei Du was neither. He was more like a kaleidoscope with a thousand linked-together little
pieces of glass inside it, all placed at different angles; the light going through was refracted
countless times. There was no way to trace it.
Even though he was squeezing this person’s hand, could touch every bit of his body without
restraint, he still often didn’t know what Fei Du was thinking.
In all of Luo Wenzhou’s life, of all the individuals he had met who gave him headaches, Fei Du
came out on top—both during the time they’d been mutually displeasing to each other, fighting
as soon as they met, and now, when he wished he could hold him in his mouth, carry him over
his head.
If a year ago someone had said to him that at the end of this year, he’d be this isolated and cut
off from help in a world of ice and snow, only finding temporary comfort in holding Fei Du’s
wrist, he definitely would have thought that a fuse had burned out in that person’s brain.
“It’s nothing.” Luo Wenzhou shook his head and smiled wryly. “Just feeling the grimness of an
early midlife crisis.”
Fei Du blinked, then suddenly drew close to his ear with an evil smile. “What, shixiong, do you
feel your abilities are unequal to your ambitions? Why didn’t you say so earlier? I’ll look after
you.”
Then he pulled himself together and squeezed Fei Du’s waist. “Are you looking for trouble
again? I haven’t settled the account with you yet after you were just playing around touching
people’s hands.”
Fei Du’s eyes wouldn’t open fully. His gaze came languidly from between his eyelashes. He
licked the corner of his mouth. “Oh? How do you want to settle this account?”
Luo Wenzhou didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. “Darling, Dad’s already very sick at heart.
Don’t do your little bit to help me on my way to my heart attack.”
Hearing that he could talk back, Fei Du slowly sat up straight and returned to the main subject.
“What are you worried about?”
Luo Wenzhou let out a breath, his smile dimming. “Do you know what feeling this gives me?”
“Yes. Kong Weichen’s connection to Director Zhang and him calling him beforehand are both
too easy to investigate and too obvious, like someone’s arranged the evidence,” Fei Du
answered without so much as looking up. “Your own people suspecting each other, the critical
witness dead without giving evidence, pieces of evidence appearing one after another in
sequence—you’re thinking that this is too much like the miscarriage of justice fourteen years
ago, just as though history were repeating.”
Luo Wenzhou said expressionlessly, “I was just asking. What are you answering so completely
for?—You’re going to make me lose my sense of security like this, you know that?”
62
Fei Du had a mind to humor him. Feigning astonishment, he said, “You’re with me, and you still
have a sense of security? Captain Luo, are you too confident, or is my charm decreasing?”
“All right, getting back to business,” Fei Du said, “if I recall correctly, back in May, during the
He Zhongyi case, when I went to your office to be interrogated—“
Luo Wenzhou laughed dryly. “To cooperate with the investigation. What interrogation? How
come you're making it sound so bad?”
“All right, to cooperate with the investigation,” Fei Du changed his wording obligingly. “I warned
you then that the case was attracting an unusual amount of attention. That there was someone
playing you.
“Starting from He Zhongyi’s case, someone called The Reciter has been frequently making
contributions to that radio program Tao Ran listens to. Following that thread,” Fei Du put his
hand into Luo Wenzhou’s coat, fishing a small notebook out of an inner pocket, “you can say
from the beginning what traces there are. I’ll help you remember.”
Luo Wenzhou was silent for a while, slowly pulling over the scarf hanging purely for decoration
around Fei Du’s neck and winding it around a few times, nearly wrapping it up to his chin. “Has
there ever been a time when you were very scared?”
Fei Du paused, thinking about what he’d said, some fragmentary memories flashing through
his mind like light, the blurred door of the basement and the sound of footsteps slowly drawing
near flying over his mind, touching down lightly, then at once disappearing without a trace.
He shrugged. Using the most apt lover’s tone, he said, “Yes, when I was afraid you were going
to leave me.”
Luo Wenzhou was so stirred up by his lines coming one after another that he really had no
ideas, feeling that if in his whole life he could settle one Fei Du, it meant he must have some
skill and dumb luck. Thinking this, he felt quite a bit easier in spite of himself.
“The reason that the City Bureau got involved in the case of He Zhongyi’s murder in the first
place was that we received a report at the same time, sent up by the murdered girl Chen
Yuan’s brother Chen Zhen.—You understand what I mean? It wasn’t sent to the City Bureau. It
was reported to the higher authorities, and the higher authorities ordered the City Bureau to
make a thorough investigation. We had to investigate, whether we wanted to or not.
“Chen Zhen had no regular work. He was a black cab driver. He was full of mistrust towards
me when we first met. I thought at the beginning that it was strange that he’d reported Wang
Hongliang himself, so why wasn’t he cooperating when someone came to investigate?
Thinking about it now, under the first impulse of rage, Chen Zhen must have tried reporting
Wang Hongliang more than once, but all the reports sank like stones into the sea. As time went
on, he didn’t believe anyone would come investigate.”
Fei Du nodded. “With no evidence that would stand up for such a sensational thing as a sub-
bureau taking part in drug trafficking, it would look at first like the ravings of a lunatic. All kinds
of reports come in every day like snowflakes, and Chen Zhen had neither status nor position.
No one would pay attention to deliberate provocation like that.”
63
“Right. When Director Zhang sent me to investigate this business, what he originally said was,
the things this report said definitely weren’t true, but it wouldn’t have come out of nowhere if
there was nothing wrong. Wang Hongliang was holding his position without doing a bit of work,
and it was likely there were other problems with his style. It was no wonder people were
messing with him. It’s easy to offend someone while investigating a sub-bureau official, and it
would be a delicate matter how to give an account to the person who’d made the report when
the investigation was over, so he wanted me to go personally. Only…”
“Only he didn’t expect that the report’s contents would turn out to be true,” Fei Du picked up.
“But reasonably speaking, Wang Hongliang knew you. If he was clever enough, when he saw
you and Tao Ran come, he should have understood more or less what you had come for. The
Flower Market District had been kept under wraps for so many years; why was he revealed so
easily?”
“It’s not that I’m especially great, it’s that someone was deliberately pushing this thing
outwards,” Luo Wenzhou said. “The killer Zhao Haochang dumped the body and inexplicably
attracted notice, and the place where he dumped it just happened to be their weak spot. That
was the first thing.”
“The average criminal couldn’t have guessed at that psychopath Zhao Haochang’s line of
thought. At the time, if Wang Hongliang’s logic had been normal, he should have energetically
cooperated with the City Bureau in investigating He Zhongyi’s murder, calmly gone to find
evidence that the Golden Triangle Lot wasn’t the initial scene of He Zhongyi’s death, as quickly
as possible directing your line of sight away from their drug trafficking location.—In fact, that
evidence wasn’t hard to find. Tao Ran and I both found evidence that the deceased had gone
to the Chengguang Mansion the night before.” Fei Du drew a line in Luo Wenzhou’s notebook
and wrote the name “Ma Xiaowei.” “But before that, something else unexpected happened.”
“Ma Xiaowei’s testimony was incoherent and seemed mentally handicapped, and it succeeded
in turning him into a suspect in He Zhongyi’s murder. At the same time, he was also like a piece
of double-sided tape, sticking our focus firmly to the place where there’d been a drug
transaction.” Luo Wenzhou recalled with some difficulty for a moment. “Right, now you say it,
I’ve remembered, the fuse for that was the dispute between Ma Xiaowei and the natives,
igniting the two sides’ accumulated grievances, and that’s why they started fighting and all got
brought in.”
“You’re saying that that mass brawl that attracted police notice wasn’t necessarily an
accident.” Fei Du paused, tilting his head slightly. “While Wang Hongliang was in an awkward
position then, he still had a chance, because Ma Xiaowei’s urine test showed that he really had
taken drugs, and it’s very normal for drug users to have confused intellects and talk nonsense.
Or he could have simply arrested a crowd of scapegoats, said that Ma Xiaowei had been
buying drugs from them that night, rendered meritorious service, and given you an accounting.
It wouldn’t have taken any particular effort to get themselves out of it. It would only have
involved silencing a few mouths.”
But just then, Chen Zhen, who hadn’t trusted the police, had acted precipitously and gotten
trapped in the Great Fortune Building. When Luo Wenzhou got word and rushed over, he
bumped into Huang Jinglian and the others murdering Chen Zhen. Then Huang Jinglian,
cornered and desperate, had even tried to kill Luo Wenzhou as well… It had been demented,
but it had been hard evidence, pulling the whole Flower Market District Sub-Bureau
underwater.
The only problem in all of that was that Huang Jinglian had neither planned nor needed to kill
Chen Zhen so hastily.
64
“Actually, there was also a suspicious point then.” Luo Wenzhou thought about it and said,
“When I charged into the Great Fortune Building, the girl at the front desk passed me a warning
note, and purposefully arranged a room for me with a hidden window, so if anything went
wrong, I could jump out the window and run right away—we were total strangers, briefly
meeting for the first time, and that girl risked herself to help me… Let’s say the world is kind to
attractive people, but it still seems like she knew ahead of time that Huang Jinglian and the
others would try to kill me. I went to investigate later, and that receptionist had vanished
without a trace.
“If Chen Zhen hadn’t died, Huang Jinglian wouldn’t necessarily have been so bold. But if Chen
Zhen wasn’t killed by Huang Jinglian, then who killed him?” After Luo Wenzhou had watched
Fei Du write “Chen Zhen” in the notebook, he went on, “The third critical figure is a mysterious
individual, the one who sent the text message to He Zhongyi’s phone. We thought at the time
that it was Zhao Haochang putting it on himself. But what if it really wasn’t Zhao Haochang? If
Zhao Haochang dumped the body in the West Flower Market District because this mysterious
individual showed him the way?—Those are the three crucial points in solving the case, and,
for Wang Hongliang, fatal coincidences.”
And because Zhang Donglai had unexpectedly been drawn in and Director Zhang, as a close
relative, had had to step back to avoid suspicion, he hadn’t had time to react throughout the
whole process.
“The first step was to make the crucial individual step down from the crucial sphere. The train
of thought is extremely clear from beginning to end.” Fei Du added a circle around what he’d
just written down. “The next time we heard a submission from The Reciter, it was in the case of
the female children being trafficked. Apart from being horrifying, that case wasn’t especially
complicated. The critical point was Su Luozhan copying Su Xiaolan’s signature, revealing all of
them, as well as the place where they disposed of the bodies. Su Luozhan is a natural sadist. If
she found out what Su Xiaolan had done to the victims’ families before, then there was no
doubt that she would copy it and would even escalate. The question is, who was the person
who revealed the details of the old case to her?”
“After that was the Zhou Clan. Zheng Kaifeng used Dong Qian to kill Zhou Junmao. The
strange thing was the package sent in Dong Qian’s name to Dong Xiaoqing. Because of that
package, Dong Xiaoqing stabbed Zhou Huaixin, and they were forced to kill her to silence her,
at the same time revealing the fact that someone had deliberately plotted the fake car accident
to commit murder. Someone hijacked Dong Xiaoqing’s phone number that day and sent a
message to Xiao Haiyang, luring the police into coming over, and they also set Dong Xiaoqing’s
house on fire.” Luo Wenzhou sighed. “Finally, there was Wei Wenchuan hiring an assassin.
According to Wei Wenchuan’s confession, he’s been in contact with this mysterious online
friend for a few years. This person used a lengthy plan and setup to lead us step by step from
the place in Binhai where the bodies were dumped, to the den of wanted criminals, until we
caught Lu Guosheng alive and found where he was hidden—”
After blowing away the confounding dust, the initially bewildering sequence was beginning to
be revealed; laid out in the old notebook, it seemed especially shocking.
“There are a few possibilities. First, like One-Eye said, there was internal strife in the criminal
organization, some powerful force doing what Fei Chengyu wanted to do but couldn’t
accomplish—squeezing out the other backers, controlling the whole gang himself. Or they’re
aiming at one particular person inside the City Bureau, and this is all for the sake of digging up
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Gu Zhao’s case.” Fei Du bent his frozen fingers and picked up his phone. “Like The Reciter’s
submission this week—revenge. Which do you incline towards?”
Just then, a phone call came from an unknown number, popping up over the reading software.
Fei Du looked at Luo Wenzhou and picked up. “Hello?”
“It’s me, Zhou Huaijin.” The man on the phone spoke in a low voice. “I’m in the country now.
Could you come see me?”
Fei Du put down the phone and turned to say to Luo Wenzhou, “Shixiong, there’s a strange
man who wants to meet me. Do you approve? You won’t make me kneel in penitence when we
get home, will you?”
This genuine heir to the Zhou Clan was wearing what could be called a simple stone-colored
coat. There was none of the pomade he’d used before in his hair. There was a giant piece of
luggage standing against the wall to one side, looking weatherbeaten. His face still counted as
good-looking, but he’d lost weight and looked somewhat skeletal. There was white at the
temples of his very trimly cut hair, giving him somewhat the appearance of old age.
If before Zhou Huaijin had looked like the young master of a powerful family, now, with his hair
white, wearing different clothes, he’d nearly become a tossed-about, down and out middle-
aged man. Clearly the youthful, graceful skin of the wealthy truly was as thin as a cicada’s
wing.
“I went gray young. Barely past twenty, and my head was grizzled. I always dyed it before, but I
haven’t been in the mood to fuss with it lately. You must think it’s funny, President Fei.” Zhou
Huaijin smiled at Fei Du. “Please sit. A friend and I privately opened this restaurant many years
ago. Even my family didn’t know. It’s safe to talk here.”
Fei Du’s gaze swept over an oil painting on the wall. It was a painting of a sunset, a rather
common subject, and the painting also conformed to social norms; there was nothing visibly
outstanding about it. The colors were rich and warm. While it didn’t have any artistic value, it
was still very much in accord with common aesthetic sensibilities.
“Huaixin painted it. I told him to paint a few landscapes I could hang in a living room or
bedroom, and he said he wasn’t a decorator… But in the end he held his nose and painted me
a few… Unfortunately he didn’t have time to come here.” Zhou Huaijin looked in the same
direction as him, his eyes dimming. “Will you have tea? Or some sake?”
Zhou Huaijin wiped his hands and poured tea for Fei Du. “Here.—Back then, I only wanted to
leave myself a fallback for when I left the Zhou family one day. It was a great plan, opening a
little eatery in a deep alley that only admitted a few tables of customers each day. The
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customers would be refined and few, the inside of the restaurant would be peaceful and quiet.
But it was only a dream. Can a livelihood be that easy? From the time this restaurant opened,
up to now, it hasn’t made a penny. I have to put up hundreds of thousands each year to prop it
up.”
Fei Du smiled, not answering. While Zhou Huaijin was an unloved “poor little boy” with no
family, he was still a “poor little boy” dressed in gold and silver; the mushrooms in the corners
of the Zhou family villa were bigger than the umbrellas in other people’s houses.
“All these years, I’ve hated the Zhou family, but I couldn’t give up the wealth and position and
kept dithering uselessly.—Such a large family property. President Fei, if it were you, could you
stand to give it up?”
“Zhou-xiong,” Fei Du said, looking at him, “go ahead and say what you have to say. If you
weren’t ready, you wouldn’t have called me.”
Zhou Huaijin met his gaze, soundlessly looking into Fei Du’s eyes for a moment. He nodded
and rather desolately said, “Wealth and rank are like floating clouds. If I could have put them
aside like you, Huaixin wouldn’t have died so young. I took the liberty of arranging to meet you
because I investigated some things after I left. Though the Zhou family has been discredited
domestically, it can still struggle to support itself abroad. But when I’ve said what I have to say
today, I’ll have to start from nothing afterwards.”
“I suppose you remember the package of expired medicine left in the safety deposit box when
my mother passed away? You’re the one who told me to pay close attention to it.”
Fei Du nodded—Zhou Huaijin’s mother was the same Mrs. Zhou who had killed her husband
and changed to another one who was also a scumbag. From Zhou Huaijin’s description, the
best-by date on her second marriage hadn’t been as long as that of soy milk you had to drink
as soon as you opened it.
But while a husband and wife could leave each other any time, an alliance that had conspired
to kill and rob didn’t dare to act so willfully. Therefore, aside from shared stock ownership, Mrs.
Zhou must have possessed something else that could deter Zhou Junmao. But when she’d
passed away and Zhou Huaijin had opened the safety deposit box she’d kept locked all her
life, he’d found that inside it was only a package of expired heart medicine.
“When I went back, I examined that package of medicine over and over for a long time. I really
couldn’t think what it was good for. I indulged in wild fantasies, thinking that it might be
evidence of Zhou Junmao killing Zhou Yahou, even asked someone to determine whether there
were bloodstains and DNA on it. But there was nothing there.”
“Even if there had been, it still couldn’t have been used as evidence. Anyone could have
smeared blood on the package of medicine at any time. If it had been evidence collected by
the police at the time, it might have had some research value, but now that Zhou Yahou’s
bones are cold, using that as evidence would be too lax.”
“Yes, I even suspected that my mom had kept this thing purely to scare Zhou Junmao—until I
inadvertently looked at the barcode on the box of medicine.” Zhou Huaijin picked up his phone
and opened a picture, showing Fei Du the mysterious package of medicine. “This is it.
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“I don’t know whether you memorized things like classical poetry or the digits of pi or other
things children don’t understand when you were little to improve your rote memorization skills.
When I was little, my mother made me memorize barcodes. I know that usually goods use EAN
barcodes. The first three digits indicate the country it belongs to. President Fei, look, this
package of medicine was produced in the US, but the first three digits on the barcode are
480.”
Fei Du enlarged the photograph and examined it closely for a moment. “But this barcode isn’t
thirteen digits, and there are small spaces printed between the numbers, so I guess it wasn’t
torn off of some product from the Philippines.”
“It wasn’t,” Zhou Huaijin said. “There are four numbers after the 480, and then a little space—
what does a four-digit number make you think of?”
Fei Du frowned. “Anything that can be numbered… How many numbers are in their postal
codes?”
“You’re right, postal codes in the Philippines have four digits.” Zhou Huaijin involuntarily
lowered his voice. “The numbers after that don’t correspond to any latitude and longitude in
the Philippines, so I guessed that they could refer to a street and house number in that
postcode—in other words, it wasn’t a product bar code, it was an address.
“I went to find that address—it wasn’t easy. After all, it had been decades. Some streets had
been torn down, some had changed. I changed guides three times. I really spent a lot of time
on it, then finally found out where the person who’d lived at that address before had moved to.
My mother had probably imagined that as soon as she passed away, Zhou Junmao would treat
me unfavorably, and I could take what she had left for me. But she didn’t expect that Zhou
Junmao wouldn’t have tried to harm me, and I’d still be passing my days in the Zhou Clan,
making no contribution at all, full of crooked means, not having looked carefully at what she’d
left behind.” Zhou Huaijin sighed. “But this time you could say my luck was good. The old
woman is over seventy, but she’s still alive, and her mind is clear. She remembers what
happened back then.”
Fei Du immediately followed up, “Who did you find when you investigated that address?”
“Her.” Zhou Huaijin opened his phone’s album and showed Fei Du a picture of himself with an
old lady. “This old lady. I had a vague memory of her. When I was very little, she helped with
the housekeeping at home. Then one day she suddenly disappeared without a trace. When I
found her, I learned that my mom had sent her away.”
“When Zhou Yahou had his heart attack, a cassette player in the house was playing music. He
accidentally pressed the record key in his struggle and recorded the dialogue between Zhou
Junmao and Zheng Kaifeng, who came after. My mom secretly took the tape and entrusted it
to this old lady. The original is in my bag. You can listen to the audio first.”
First there were disordered cries on the recording; you could hear how fiercely the person in
the recording was struggling, listening to the voice. It was indistinct and extremely disturbing,
only stilling after a long time.—Zhou Yahou must already have been dead. After a while there
came the sound of footsteps. A man’s voice said, “Relax, he’s dead.”
On the recording, Zheng Kaifeng laughed from thirty-eight years ago. “President Zhou, you
recoil at the crucial moment. Now that this bastard Zhou Yahou is dead, won’t the property and
the beauty all be yours? What are you looking so grave for?”
Another man’s voice spoke somewhat hesitantly. “I’m thinking whether we’ve left anything out.
If this attracts suspicion and the police are called to investigate, it’ll go badly.”
“What is there to leave out? Your sister-in-law’s gone to watch a movie, the housekeepers are
on vacation, and as for the two of us—we went fishing together this afternoon, did you forget?
Clean it up, and we’ll go!” Zheng Kaifeng gave a deranged laugh. “When I think that all of this
will be mine afterwards, I… Ha! This is my fate… Hey, Zhou-ge, I don’t care about the rest, but
you’ll have to give me the little villa.”
Fei Du tilted his head. “The little villa? What’s the implication there?”
“Zhou Yahou had a secret private villa.” Zhou Huaijin put down his phone. “I spent over a week
wheedling her and finally got her to talk and tell the truth about Zhou Yahou’s extramarital
activities that my mother couldn’t accept.”
Fei Du gently raised his eyebrows. “It sounds like this truth won’t be anything pleasant to hear.”
“Zhou Yahou liked underaged young girls.” Zhou Huaijin lowered his voice and spoke with
difficulty. “Especially…especially Eastern girls around thirteen or fourteen. Zhou Yahou had a
villa specifically for keeping these…these…”
Zhou Huaijin was silent for a while. “From orphanages. Zhou Yahou was very ‘benevolent’
when he was alive. He funded a number of orphanages throughout East Asia, including in this
country. He used them as a pretext so he could pick out the girls he liked.”
“Yes.” Zhou Huaijin opened the piece of luggage next to him, pulling out a kraft-paper
envelope from inside. There was a stack of old photographs in the envelope.
The old photographs were spread out on the clean, simple table. An unusual floral arrangement
hung out of a vase, the swirling shadows of the flowers falling along with Fei Du’s gaze on
these distorted old photographs.—These were four or five above-the-waist photographs of
young girls. They were all very pretty, and they all had some of the fragility of malnutrition. They
were dressed up in old-fashioned sexy clothing that would have looked somewhat kitschy to
the aesthetic sensibilities of the time. They wore makeup and looked indescribably strange.
“You can give them to the police if you want. Everyone involved is dead, anyway.—The girls’
information is on the backs of the photographs. These are Chinese. There are also Korean and
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Japanese ones. They’re all in the trunk. The old lady’s job back then was taking care of the girls
at Zhou Yahou’s villa. He kept the girls until they were around sixteen and had grown to about
the height of an adult, and then he’d lose interest and cast them aside, send them to
underground human trafficking markets. Generally…generally they died very soon…”
Zhou Huaijin couldn’t quite finish speaking. He averted his gaze, covering his mouth with one
hand and only going on after a long time. “Sorry… I used to think that Zhou Yahou was my
biological father. When it was very hard for me, I took him as my idol… Ahem, it’s rather
sickening.”
“There was no internet forty years ago. There’s certainly no way to trace the population files
and materials now, and these girls were orphans in the first place. It’s very hard…” Fei Du
spoke casually as he flipped through the pictures. Suddenly, he saw something; he sat up
straight at once and picked up one of the photographs.
On the back of this photograph was written: “Su Hui, Heng’an Orphanage, fifteen years old.”
Fei Du quickly turned the photograph over and looked closely at the girl’s face. He could faintly
see something familiar in the outlines of the features. He picked up his phone at once and took
a picture.
Luo Wenzhou wasn’t far from the little restaurant where they were meeting. He’d stopped the
car by the road. He’d just lit a cigarette when he received the photograph Fei Du sent him.
When he saw it, he froze, then sent it to a colleague at once. The efficiency of his colleague on
the Criminal Investigation Team was very high; he replied ten minutes later.
“Captain Luo, where did you find this photograph? Right, this must be that Su Hui—the
grandmother of the suspect Su Luozhan in the case of trafficking young girls. The work all
three generations of the Su family did started with her. Su Hui’s file shows that she really was
an orphan, though the orphanage she stayed at when she was little broke up long ago, and
after so many years, just about everyone involved is dead. It’s hard to investigate precisely
which orphanage it was. There is a record of her going abroad, though she returned a year
later. The facial features match, though there’s a bit of difference with the age. The age
indicated on her ID is two years older. We can’t eliminate the possibility that someone lied
about her age.”
In the restaurant, Fei Du held down Su Hui’s photograph and asked Zhou Huaijin, “Can you tell
me about this girl?”
“Yes, this girl is very crucial.” Zhou Huaijin pointed at the date on the back of the photograph.
“This was the last girl. Look, the date marked here is April, and Zhou Yahou died in June of that
year. The old lady remembered that this girl stayed at the villa afterwards with Zheng Kaifeng.”
“In the literal sense,” Zhou Huaijin said heavily. “Later my mother found out. She thought it was
very sickening and forced Zheng Kaifeng to send the girl back here, and she brought the old
lady back to work at the main residence.”
70
Fei Du for some reason wanted to sigh—later this orphaned and helpless victim had grown into
an adult and at last fulfilled her heart’s desire of rising to the top of that evil “industrial chain,”
becoming the victimizer.
She was like a girl embraced by a vampire in Western legend; forgetting the killer, she’d
become the killer.
“Last time when we parted you said to me that all our family’s tragedy came from the question
of who my father was. Concerning this, the old lady said that the rumor that I might be Zhou
Yahou’s child was spread among the domestic staff after Su Hui was sent away. This may
sound like a conspiracy theory, but given my understanding of Zheng Kaifeng, he was vicious,
greedy, and petty. He’d do anything.”
“You mean that because Mrs. Zhou sent Su Hui away, Zheng Kaifeng bore her a grudge and
created the malicious rumor that you weren’t Zhou Junmao’s biological child.” Fei Du asked,
“Is there any basis for that?”
“There is. You know this field advanced earlier abroad. If Zhou Junmao had doubts about my
lineage, why didn’t he have a paternity test done later? It’s very childish to rely entirely on
guesswork.”
Fei Du slowly said, “It really is out of keeping with normal practice.”
Zhou Huaijin quietly said, “Zhou Junmao left a will abroad before he died. In the appendix
concerning the distribution of his property, there was a paternity report, explaining why I wasn’t
his heir. The results of that paternity test from over twenty years ago are exactly opposed to the
one you police ran.”
Fei Du said, “You mean that over twenty years ago, when you were a teenager, Zhou Junmao
entrusted someone to do a paternity test, but the results were falsified?”
“Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? It’s exactly the same as my method with Yang Bo.” Zhou Huaijin
smiled bitterly. “It’s truly ridiculous. I went through a lot of twists and turns to find people from
the company who performed the paternity test back then. Zhou Junmao entrusted it to Zheng
Kaifeng.”
This wasn’t any kind of glorious business, and the tabloids were always looking to report
scandals about wealthy families. Of course Zhou Junmao wouldn’t have investigated out in the
open. If he’d wanted to perform a paternity test, he would have had to privately ask an intimate
confidant.
This intimate confidant had been Zheng Kaifeng, who had killed someone with him. Though
evidently the intimacy between him and Zheng Kaifeng had been somewhat one-sided.
“I told you last time that there was a period when I was very afraid and thought that Zhou
Junmao wanted to kill me. I only dared to close my eyes and sleep every day by taking Huaixin
to my room. I always thought it was because my mom was fading and Zhou Junmao had had
enough—until I saw the date on that paternity report. It was just that time.”
This would have been twenty-one years ago. Zhou Huaixin had been little, Zhou Huaijin had
been in a constant state of anxiety, and at the same time, it was when the Zhou Clan had been
making domestic inroads on a large scale.
To pave the way for himself, Zheng Kaifeng had created a car crash, killing their competitor…
71
Fei Du’s fingers tapped from time to time on the rim of the teacup.
Zhou Junmao had returned to the country very rarely; domestic affairs had mostly been
handled by Zheng Kaifeng. As soon as Zheng Kaifeng had returned here, he’d ganged up with
those people… Had that been when Zheng Kaifeng, a wolf who bit the hand that fed him
pretending to be docile, had started planning to bag the Zhou Clan for his own?
Fei Du had in fact wondered before how a company like the Zhou Clan, with basically all of its
bankrollers located outside of the country, would have ended up in those people’s boat.
Now it seemed that there had been a layer of connection with Su Hui.
Su Hui had used her daughter Su Xiaolan to abduct young girls, sold them, then killed them
and disposed of their bodies; who had helped this single mother and her daughter take care of
the bodies?
Before the dumping ground at Binhai had been established, had she already been working with
those people?
When Zheng Kaifeng had returned to the country many years later and found the already old
and faded Su Hui, had he turned around and become one of her “customers,” thus meeting the
people who dealt with the bodies?
The hidden threads passed through time, tying scattered events together, faintly revealing their
shapes.
But there was still a piece missing here. Fei Du could dimly sense that it was a very crucial
piece.
“What about Yang Bo?” he asked suddenly. “Have you looked into Zheng Kaifeng and Yang
Bo’s relationship?”
“I have. Yang Bo’s father died thirteen years ago. He was the responsible driver in a car
crash…”
Before Zhou Huaijin could finish, Fei Du’s phone suddenly began to shake uneasily.
“The hospital,” Luo Wenzhou said quickly. “Something’s happened to Yin Ping!”
Tao Ran was all wrapped up in splints and bandages, lying on his back and fixed in bed, a tuft
of hair still obstinately sticking up on his head; the image was somewhat funny. When Xiao
Haiyang came over to see him, the hospital room was very lively. Yang Zhengfeng’s little
daughter Yang Xin and Chang Ning were both there.
Tao Ran had been in the hospital for a few days and could already manage to speak a few
words, but he stuttered—at first the doctor in charge had been very nervous, suspecting that
72
this was a symptom of an injury to his brain, and had sent him for a round of examination. Later
he’d found that the problem wasn’t with his brain, it was with the young lady. If Chang Ning
wasn’t there, he could speak pretty fluently.
With Chang Ning there, even Xiao Haiyang somehow felt it wouldn’t be appropriate to stay
long. He sat for a few minutes, determined that Tao Ran wasn’t in any danger, then left along
with Yang Xin.
“Xiao-dage,” Yang Xin called to him. Because of Yang Zhengfeng, Yang Xin automatically felt
familiar with anyone wearing a uniform; they were all big brothers.
Yang Xin shook her phone. “I ordered a few boxes of fruit and drinks to be delivered to the
hospital door. Can you help me move them? I want to deliver them to the nurses’ stations, here
where Tao-dage is, and over there where my mom is.”
While Xiao Haiyang was rather weak and unaccustomed to manual labor, he couldn’t easily
refuse a little girl’s request. He could only silently follow Yang Xin to act as porter.
Drinks and fruit were both weighty things. After the few steps it took to get from the hospital’s
front door to the inpatient department, Xiao Haiyang felt that his pitifully scant muscles were
about to snap. All the veins in his neck stood out as he gasped for breath; on this midwinter
day, he was covered in hot sweat.
Watching this display, Yang Xin truly felt apologetic and helped him relieve some of the weight.
“Let’s cheat and take a shortcut.—Ah, Xiao-dage, how can you catch bad guys like this?”
Xiao Haiyang couldn’t spare attention to answer; he was so exhausted he couldn’t catch his
breath.
Yang Xin familiarly led Xiao Haiyang through turn after turn of the inpatient department. Hearing
him nearly breathe out a mushroom cloud midway, she found somewhere that wasn’t in the
way and indicated for Xiao Haiyang to put the stuff down and rest a while. “It’s right up ahead.
Past this door, turn once, and you’ll be there. Go to my mom’s floor and say, ‘This was sent by
Fu Jiahui’s relatives.’ Go to Tao-dage’s floor and say, ‘This was sent by Tao Ran’s relatives.’
People keep track of which patient’s relatives send things, and they’ll be even more devoted to
taking care of them.—That’s what the elders taught me when my mom first got into the
hospital.”
The girl was just over twenty, and her father had already passed away. She and her mother
depended on each other for survival, and her mother was also not long for the world.
While attending school, Yang Xin also had to come to the hospital and learn to handle
everything. Xiao Haiyang had heard of her father Yang Zhengfeng. Looking at her now, he felt
somewhat saddened. He searched his guts and belly for a while, then very stiffly said, “I know
about your father. He was a hero.”
“Whether he was a hero or not, he doesn’t know about it himself, anyway.” Yang Xin lowered
her head, then displayed a somewhat bitter smile. “Thinking about it, heroes and villains
sometimes come to the same end. They both die, and when they’re dead they’re both piles of
rotting bones. Comparatively speaking, when they’re alive, villains have it a little better, living in
defiance of the laws.”
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Xiao Haiyang didn’t know how he should respond. Her few words had stirred up his emotions.
The two of them fell into awkward silence.
There was a stairwell door behind them, but very few people used it normally, and it was
locked. As Xiao Haiyang exercised his stiff wrists, he zoned out staring at the glass on the
stairwell door. Suddenly, he saw a person wearing the uniform of a nurse’s aide hurry past.
The stairwells on this floor were locked; Xiao Haiyang hadn’t expected someone would come
up that way, and he couldn’t resist taking another look—when he looked, he noticed that the
nurse’s aide was a man even taller than he was. There were very few men among the nurses
and nurse’s aides; when you occasionally met one or two, most of them were elderly men; you
almost never saw one in his prime.
But this man had wide shoulders and a strong build. His steps were quick and he seemed to
walk with the wind at his heels. From his physique, he certainly wasn’t over forty.
He wore the standard uniform of a nurse’s aide at the Second Hospital, and his face was firmly
covered up with a mask, leaving only his eyes visible. He briefly met Xiao Haiyang’s eyes, then
quickly averted his gaze, nodded slightly, and hurried away.
Xiao Haiyang frowned. It may have been his mistake, but he thought that this person’s gaze
had been somewhat shifty.
Before Xiao Haiyang could think carefully about it, Yang Xin suddenly tugged gently at his
clothes.
“I was just asking,” Yang Xin said, raising her chin, “isn’t that suspect who hurt Tao-dage and is
in the hospital now going to get out of the ICU soon? How long are you going to keep him in
the hospital? Hospital fees aren’t cheap.”
Xiao Haiyang’s expression was blank for a moment. “Yin Ping is getting out of the ICU soon?
Who did you hear that from?”
Luo Wenzhou and the others had just gotten word that Yin Ping’s surgery hadn’t gone well and
he may lose his reason…
“I heard someone commenting on it when I went to the dining hall to order food for my mom
this afternoon… Hey, wait a minute!” Yang Xin was sitting on a box of beverages. She seemed
to realize something. Suddenly somewhat nervous, she lowered her voice and asked, “Xiao-
dage, you aren’t keeping it a secret, are you?”
Xiao Haiyang stared at her for two seconds, then suddenly took to his heels and ran.
Xiao Haiyang turned his head and yelled to her, “Wait here, don’t run around!”
Where had the news that Yin Ping was going to get out of the ICU come from?
Why?
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There were plainclothes officers patrolling around outside the ICU, and further away Fei Du’s
people were hanging around. Because of Yin Ping’s special position, the hospital had arranged
for a criminal policeman to be on duty watching in the hospital room where non-medical
personnel weren’t normally permitted outside of visiting hours; they wore protective clothing
and took shifts around the clock.
There was still another half hour to go until the shift changed. The criminal policeman watching
inside had already been on his own for three and a half hours; he couldn’t avoid feeling
somewhat demoralized.
This was very painful work; there was absolutely no chance of chatting or playing on your
phone. You wore protective clothing and a face mask; never mind not being able to catch your
breath, you also had to make sure you were quiet, pretending as much as possible that you
were a wallflower, not hindering the work of the medical personnel. The third time the criminal
police officer looked at his watch, he was very short on oxygen. It was inconvenient to yawn
while wearing a face mask. He felt his eyelids could hardly withstand the force of gravity, nearly
falling to the ground.
Someone walked in. The policeman who could hardly keep his eyes open looked up, then
lowered his head in disappointment—the person who’d come in was a nurse’s aide, not his
colleague coming to change shifts.
The nurses on duty in the ICU came over every fifteen minutes or so to check on the patient’s
condition. A little nurse had recently left after making an inspection. Perhaps this nurse’s aide
who’d just come in hadn’t seen her; he walked right over to the policeman.
When he approached, the policeman discovered that this nurse’s aide was male. His face was
under a mask; his eyes were curved into two ingratiating smiles.
He came over and patted the policeman’s shoulder. It seemed that since the nurse wasn’t
there, he needed his help with something. He reached out to point behind himself.
The policeman on duty subconsciously looked the way he was pointing, and suddenly felt a
chill at the bit of skin on his neck left exposed by the protective clothing. This person had stuck
a syringe into him! He was horrified, but there was no time to struggle. This person was very
strong; he covered his mouth with one hand and firmly held his arms. The liquid in the syringe
quickly got into his veins, and the policeman’s struggles became weaker and weaker. After a
moment, he fell silently.
The male “nurse’s aide” expressionlessly helped him into a chair he’d pulled over, then turned
to Yin Ping’s hospital bed.
Just then, the nurse who’d wandered away came back. Seeing a nurse’s aide standing by the
head of the hospital bed, she stared, looking suspicious—the work schedules of the nurse’s
aides were fixed; they had to be arranged together by the nurses on duty. This clearly wasn’t
the time for him to be here.
The nurse’s steps paused slightly. Amid the din of medical equipment, she said, “Hey, you…”
The male nurse’s aide ignored her sudden cry, pressing another syringe to the neck of the
unconscious Yin Ping.
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The nurse on duty had already instinctively felt that something was wrong. She rushed a few
steps forward, saw what he was doing, and gave a start. She had no time to call anyone; her
first reaction was to throw herself forward. “What are you doing!”
Xiao Haiyang’s useless legs were purely for keeping his balance when he sat, but now he
brought them into play, surpassing their usual level, running in a gale to the ICU.
He startled a whole circle of stalking plainclothesmen. Xiao Haiyang had run so hard his vision
was going dark; he leaned against the wall, gasping for breath. “Has, has any outsider gone
in?”
“You have to swipe a card to go inside. Aside from our people, only the hospital’s have been
in.” Lang Qiao still felt somewhat angry at the sight of him, and her tone was very stiff. Then
she remembered something, and her tone changed. “Right, there was just a nurse’s aide…”
Xiao Haiyang’s pupils contracted instantly, remembering the strange male nurse’s aide who’d
come up by the locked stairwell.
A doctor making the rounds was passing by. Xiao Haiyang rushed at him, grabbing the doctor’s
card.
“Hey, what are you doing!” The patrolling doctor stared blankly. “You can’t go in there! Wait a
minute!”
The sound of the door bursting open mixed with the little nurse’s scream.
The nurse had thrown herself at the man’s hand holding the syringe; he roughly threw her off.
She stumbled, her hands still uncompromisingly pulling at the man’s arm. Seeing someone had
come, she hurriedly shouted, “Help! He doesn’t work here…”
Before the nurse could finish, she was pulled over, an arm hooking tightly around her neck, a
small knife pressing against her artery. “Don’t move!”
Xiao Haiyang’s steps stopped instantly. For a time the two sides were deadlocked.
When Fei Du received Luo Wenzhou’s call, he raised a hand to interrupt Zhou Huaijin. Zhou
Huaijin watched in bewilderment as his expression became graver and graver and couldn’t
resist asking, “What’s happened?”
Zhou Huaijin raised a hand at him. “I’ve just about finished telling you the important things. If
you have something pressing to do, then go ahead, we’ll meet another…”
“Zhou-xiong,” Fei Du interrupted him suddenly, “are you willing to come with us as a witness?”
“I know that the Zhou Clan has a small number of shareholders apart from you, and there’s
also your whole family,” Fei Du said slowly. “It was already hard for you to privately investigate
up to this step and to share the information with me. I understand that you don’t want to get
more deeply involved.”
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Zhou Huaijin’s lips moved, uneasily meeting his gaze in the clean, narrow private room.
“You’re very innocent, and Huaixin was also very innocent,” Fei Du said grimly. “But your
surname is Zhou. Starting from when Zhou Junmao and Zheng Kaifeng hired an assassin—
starting from when they murdered Zhou Yahou, you were automatically involved. Zhou-xiong,
at this stage, it’s impossible to think only of yourself.”
The corners of Zhou Huaijin’s eyes trembled nervily. After a good while, he whispered, “You’re
right. Some things are predestined.”
Such as him coming into the world at a very delicate moment, so even the person who bore
him couldn’t clearly say who his flesh and blood belonged to.
Fei Du said, “I have an intuition that the question of Yang Bo is very important.”
Zhou Huaijin sucked in a breath, his fingers nearly pressing into his teacup.
Under the guise of “tourism,” he’d gone alone, following the barcode Mrs. Zhou had left behind
to the Philippines, then quietly returning to the country. He hadn’t wanted to alert anyone. What
he’d found was horrifying, the origins of a whole series of scandals about the Zhou Clan, but it
had still only been to give himself an accounting; it had no other value—everyone in the story,
whether pitiful or hateful, was dead.—Zhou Huaijin had sought out Fei Du rather intending to
pour out his heart, so he’d arranged to meet him alone. He’d even booked a ticket to leave,
planning to go to the place where Zhou Huaixin had learned to paint and live in seclusion.
“You already know the previous generation’s secrets, but there’s still a question that hasn’t
been thoroughly answered,” Fei Du said. “Zheng Kaifeng arranged for Dong Qian to kill Zhou
Junmao, so why did Dong Xiaoqing ignore Zheng Kaifeng at his hotel and go to the hospital to
stab you?”
Zhou Huaijin stared. “Didn’t you say that when Zheng Kaifeng hired him, he did it under my
name to deceive…”
“The killers Zheng Kaifeng worked with have a strictly controlled membership. Not just anyone
can order them around.—Zhou-xiong, are you a member of the murder club?”
“If you aren’t, it’s impossible for Zheng Kaifeng to have used your name,” Fei Du said a word at
a time. “Especially since Zheng Kaifeng’s original plan was for Zhou Junmao to die in a car
crash without anyone being the wiser, making everything seem like an accident. This wasn’t his
first time doing this kind of shady business. He’d never slipped up before, so why would he
have prepared for his assassination to be discovered this time?”
Zhou Huaijin’s head was full of paste. His train of thought simply couldn’t follow Fei Du’s
words. He felt that the things he’d thought he’d understood after running around all these
months had once again become so confusing he couldn’t make heads or tails of them.
“Wait!”
77
Two minutes later, Zhou Huaijin had canceled his trip and was sitting in a car speeding towards
the Second Hospital.
“I…I looked into Yang Bo’s father’s death thirteen years ago,” Zhou Huaijin said. “He hit a
seven-seat business car. Riding in the car was a certain company’s work team heading to
compete for a land bid. They’d had it in the bag originally.”
“And it was treated as an accident?” Luo Wenzhou asked him as he drove rapidly. “It’s not
easy to kill everyone in a car with one hit, and for it to happen at just that time—weren’t there
any conspiracy theorists who thought it wasn’t natural?”
“No,” Zhou Huaijin said. “In fact, when this business was being dealt with, they knew it was
murder. But the media wasn’t well-developed then, and it was covered up. I was only able to
get to the bottom of it by going through a few business partners. Yang Bo’s father was called
Yang Zhi. When he hit the car, there was a protest slogan against forced evictions written in red
on his clothes—the target land was suspected of having been subject to forced eviction, and
the Yang family were among the victims. The company bidding on the land had sent a car to
inspect it more than once before this. Common people don’t have any idea that tearing down
and resettlement aren’t the same thing as development. Yang Zhi must have mistaken the
developer’s car for that of the chief culprit of the forced eviction. This was later resolved by
private indemnification, and it was announced as an accident.”
“But the delicate part is that after Yang Bo’s father died, his mother took the compensation
money and moved away to Yan City. She lived in a high-quality estate with very high rent that
reasonably speaking surpassed her spending capacity. And then she sent Yang Bo abroad to
enter an education program sponsored by the Zhou Clan.”
Luo Wenzhou said, “Yang Zhi’s car crash wasn’t in service to the Zhou Clan. Zhou Junmao and
the others didn’t need to pay additional compensation. Why?”
“A young man of ordinary abilities could probably only be used to threaten his parents.” Fei Du
whispered, “She moved to Yan City… What could Zheng Kaifeng use her for? Thirteen years
ago…”
Suddenly Fei Du thought of something, and his eyes, always half-opened, suddenly opened
wide.
“Thirteen years ago.” Fei Du’s voice was so faint it seemed to disappear as soon as it reached
his lips. He whispered, “The first Picture Album Project was also thirteen years ago…”
Zhou Huaijin and Luo Wenzhou, one not knowing what he was talking about, and the other,
while he did know, not understanding, questioned him simultaneously.
78
The always well-disposed Fei Du, with an answer for every question, for once ignored them.
With his hands propping his chin, he was silently lost in thought for a long time, as though
sinking into some remote memory.
Xiao Haiyang blocked the door, watching the nurse’s aide squeezing the nurse’s neck as
though he were lifting a chick.
“You can’t get away.” Little Glasses’ lungs, nearly exploding, expelled breath very unsteadily,
but his tone was firm. “Our people have this place surrounded. Even if you take a hostage and
manage to get out of here, you still can’t get away.”
The male nurse’s aide’s gaze spun around very unsteadily. There was sweat on his forehead.
“Go get me a car!”
“The Second Hospital isn’t far from the city center. The streets are full of surveillance cameras.
What’s the point of a car? You won’t make it out of the city before you’re stopped.” As Xiao
Haiyang spoke, he got up his courage and went forward a step.
Lang Qiao came over and saw that Xiao Haiyang’s legs were still shaking. She hastily grabbed
the back of his jacket and pulled him behind her.
Lang Qiao said, “If you kill her, you still won’t get away. Use your brain and think—if you
behave and get out here right now, your crime is only an attempt. There’ll be room to
deliberate. But if you dare to touch her, you’ll be a carved-in-stone murderer. Think about it!”
As she spoke, she glanced at her colleague behind her. At the same time, she very skillfully
plastered herself to the foot of the wall and went into the hospital room, heading directly
towards the criminal.
The male “nurse’s aide” subconsciously adjusted his position according to her movements,
violently yelling to her, “Stop! If you come any closer I’ll…”
“You’ve seen what state Yin Ping is in,” Xiao Haiyang interrupted him from the doorway. “Even
if I don’t tell you, you have eyes of your own. You can see it. His surgery wasn’t very
successful. They don’t know whether he’ll live, and if he does, he may become a vegetable.
And even if his luck is unusually good and he does wake up in the end, he still won’t escape
dementia and paralysis. Do you think he’ll be able to accuse anyone? For the rest of his life, his
mouth won’t be good for anything but drooling—if he even has a rest of his life.”
Xiao Haiyang said, “Heavens, do you still not understand? Who told you that Yin Ping was
going to make a full recovery soon? Clearly they lied to you.”
Lang Qiao only learned of this detail when she heard Xiao Haiyang’s words. She broke out in a
cold sweat of fright. “Is that true?”
79
“It is.” Xiao Haiyang’s gaze didn’t leave the criminal. “Would a living corpse be worth taking the
risk otherwise?”
The two of them stood one on each side, their words tightly joined; sometimes what they said
was completely unrelated, and sometimes it was a dialogue; it produced the effect of a babble
of voices, leaving the criminal forming the third corner of the triangle hesitating about which to
defend against first; his gaze vacillated back and forth, his attention dodging left and right.
“Shut up! Shut up!”
Xiao Haiyang quickly took another step forward. At the same time, a few colleagues who’d
come over as soon as they’d heard the news came in after him, pressing in on the “nurse’s
aide” with their momentum.
In his panic, the criminal instinctively turned in the direction where there were the most people
and retreated, holding onto the nurse. He howled, “Get out!”
“No,” Xiao Haiyang said, looking at his hand holding the knife. With his eyes fixed on that
fiercely shaking hand, he said, “It’s clear now that someone tricked you into throwing yourself
into the net. This business is so simple. Won’t you give up the liar and drag him under? Are you
still planning to kidnap and kill for him?”
The criminal’s hand shook more and more fiercely—he’d listened to what had been said,
acknowledged that what Xiao Haiyang had said was the truth.
Xiao Haiyang looked into his eyes with a naturally played sneer. “Are you mentally
handicapped?”
The “nurse’s aide” stiffened. Just then, the little nurse he was holding, who perhaps had
experience dealing with aggrieved patients and relatives, took advantage of his divided
attention, biting the webbing between his fingers with the boldness of consummate skill; she
had chosen the most opportune moment.
Faced on one side with Yin Ping, whose condition didn’t agree with rumor, and on the other
with Xiao Haiyang’s continuous verbal attack, the criminal’s mind was in turmoil; encountering
a skilled bite without warning, he cried out loudly and instinctively shook her off.
The little nurse stamped on his instep. Lang Qiao called to her, “Duck!”
The nurse bent her knees in response; almost at the same time, a tray crashed down from
above, knocking away the nurse’s aide’s knife. The nurse was scared into a scream by the loud
noise passing over her head. A few criminal policemen came up together—
Fei Du’s unusual-looking deep thoughtfulness was interrupted by the phone ringing. Luo
Wenzhou picked up the phone on the car. Over a very unsteady signal, Lang Qiao briefly and
succinctly reported how the suspect had already been taken into custody. “I’m sorry, boss. It
was my slip-up. Yin Ping’s condition is very unstable, they’re doing rescue work again for some
reason. The doctors are all saying the outlook isn’t good. There are lots of people going in and
out, like they’re fighting for his life, we didn’t…”
“Didn’t I say that Yin Ping was an important witness? As soon as I slink off, you all cook this up
for me.” Luo Wenzhou ground his teeth when he’d heard. “Just fucking great. I guess you
aren’t even thinking of your bonuses anymore? How come you’re all so good at saving the
state money?”
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Lang Qiao didn’t dare to defend herself. She obediently closed her mouth and took the lecture.
“Bring him in,” Luo Wenzhou said coldly. “Don’t think that I can’t keep an eye on you while the
old men are away. I see that all of you haven’t written enough self-examinations!”
When he’d said this, Luo Wenzhou hung up uncompromisingly and spun the steering wheel,
irritably shifting to the turn lane.
Fei Du didn’t respond. He untied his scarf, his fingers subconsciously rubbing back and forth
over his neck, his frown deepening.
As one of the important witnesses, Zhou Huaijin of course needed someone to receive him. At
the City Bureau, Luo Wenzhou first found someone to lead him in, then familiarly returned the
car to its parking space. When he’d cut the engine, he didn’t rush to get out of the car. In the
remaining warmth, he turned and pulled away Fei Du’s hand, which was about to break the
skin. “Tell me what you’re thinking.”
“I’m the key figure who framed Gu Zhao fourteen years ago,” Fei Du opened in a frightening
manner. “First, with Gu Zhao entirely unwary, I grasped which way his investigation was
trending, then started in on his informers. Informers live in the grey areas on the edges and are
doomed not to stay there long; they have their own plans. Whether they were threatened or
enticed, they could all be put to good use—but the risk in this process was great. What if
among them was one idiot who didn’t know what was good for him and told Gu Zhao about
this? As soon as Gu Zhao heard, he’d know who I was.”
“So what should I do?” Fei Du asked quietly. His fingers flitted over his upper lip. While there
was no expression on his face, there seemed to be a smile in the tail-end of his words, as
though he really was that monster hiding in the shadows, turning everyone over in the palm of
his hand. “I need to make my target betray Gu Zhao before I reveal myself.”
Luo Wenzhou thought about it. “For example, something like making the target informer think
that you were a villain from The Louvre and Gu Zhao’s investigation had alerted the enemy,
then forcing the informer to reveal Gu Zhao’s plans?”
“Yes. I’m Gu Zhao’s secret partner. Of course I know Gu Zhao’s plans. It would be very easy to
know whether they were telling the truth, and very easy to screen for traitors,” Fei Du said
gently. “As a police officer, of course I’m familiar with the informers closely related to the City
Bureau. While Yin Chao and Yin Ping are identical twins, they’re far apart in disposition, so…if
Yin Ping was impersonating Old Cinder, why didn’t I notice?”
“Because he likely didn’t have direct contact with Yin Ping at first, and his subordinates
wouldn’t necessarily be familiar with Old Cinder.” Luo Wenzhou’s eyes turned, and he quickly
said, “As for afterwards, because ‘Old Cinder’ became his partner in perjury and framing, even
if the mole noticed that his performance was peculiar, he wouldn’t think much of it.”
“Afterwards, to make this thing seamless, I’d quietly take care of the witnesses, send them to
other countries to lie low or simply kill them on the way… It’s all possible. Only the fake Old
Cinder was the fish who slipped out of the net. In other words, it’s likely that Yin Ping realized
the danger. When he had done the business, he wasn’t greedy. He immediately broke contact,
faked Yin Chao’s disappearance, and went back to being a sooty-faced boiler attendant
himself.” Fei Du looked up. “So the question arises, why would I allow Yin Chao to ‘disappear’
without going to investigate his family?”
81
Luo Wenzhou froze. “You mean to say it’s likely that the chief culprit behind framing Gu Zhao
may have thought that Old Cinder didn’t have any material evidence pointing to him!”
“It’s likely that Yin Ping hid himself because he sensed something, but if you want to say that
he had some material evidence, I’ve just been thinking about the whole process carefully, and I
think it would be very hard.” Fei Du had switched over which person he was speaking in and
had also returned to his ordinary tone of voice. “Then why is the person behind the scenes in
such a rush to eliminate Yin Ping? First he exposed his contact, and then he sent another one
of his people to the hospital to be caught by the police.”
Fei Du slowly said, “If I haven’t guessed wrong, then it’s likely you’ll be able to reach an
important suspect today. This person is undoubtedly in a high, powerful position. As soon as
something happens, it’ll create a major scandal impacting the system’s ability to win public
trust.”
At this delicate moment when the gaze of the investigation team was firmly fixed on the City
Bureau, the “nurse’s aide” who had snuck into the hospital confessed.
“I did used to be a nurse’s aide… I worked at the Second Hospital, so I was very familiar with
it. I needed money desperately, there was really no other way… I was…I was possessed. At
first they made me sneak into the Second Hospital to keep an eye on that Yin Ping… So today
I heard someone remark that he was going to wake up, and they said he may have killed
someone, so as soon as his condition stabilized a little the police would take him away. When I
found out, I thought of a way to notify my employers, and they told me to…told me to…”
“For money?” Lang Qiao closed her notebook, looking at the man with a disbelieving
expression. “Do you know what kind of crime murder is?”
Xiao Haiyang said, “Who told you to keep an eye on Yin Ping? Who ordered you to kill him?
Did you see this person?”
“Two guys came to my house with money. They said it was their boss. I…I saw a car stopped
outside.”
An investigator watching the interrogation over the security camera feed turned to Luo
Wenzhou. “Captain Luo, please coordinate this as soon as possible. We want the security
camera footage from around the suspect’s house transferred over.”
With matters at this stage, Luo Wenzhou could only follow instructions.—They turned up five
million in cash at the “hospital killers”’s residence, and, at the same time, a surveillance camera
nearby that had caught a luxury sedan appearing around the time and location the criminal had
told them; with the criminal’s identification, they determined that it was the car that had
stopped outside his building then.
The high-definition surveillance camera had caught the driver turning his head to speak to
someone sitting in the backseat. This person was leaning forward slightly, and his features
82
were clearly distinguishable—it was the City Bureau’s former director-general Zhang Chunjiu,
who had transferred to an advisory post at the beginning of the year.
And the car he was sitting in, worth six million on the market, was a business vehicle registered
in the name of his older brother Zhang Chunling’s conglomerate.
Zhang Chunjiu and Gu Zhao had started work at the City Bureau at the same time. The two of
them had always been very friendly. Zhang Chunjiu had been the backbone of the City
Bureau’s Criminal Investigation Team when Gu Zhao had come to grief; he would have had
every opportunity to place the fingerprint mold and the cash without anyone being the wiser.
After Gu Zhao died, Yang Zhengfeng had borne the principal responsibility as his superior and
had been disciplined, and Zhang Chunjiu had taken over Yang Zhengfeng’s position; he’d been
the ultimate beneficiary of Gu Zhao’s death. And the field work system that was suspected of
having been leaked and the tampered-with security camera equipment had all been put in
place during his term of office.
Most importantly, when they investigated his record, they found that the reason that an
exception had been made to transfer Zhang Chunjiu to the City Bureau was that he had
rendered a tremendous meritorious service in the jurisdiction he’d originally belonged to—he’d
arrested a gang of robbers and murderers who’d fled through twenty provinces. The above-
mentioned gang was very crafty; they’d been wanted throughout the country for half a year,
and each time they’d slipped away. But by some coincidence, they’d fallen into the hands of
Zhang Chunjiu, at that time a young nobody!
If he’d been so awesome when he was young, then why had he become more confused the
older he got? During the period he was in office managing the City Bureau, the Flower Market
District Sub-Bureau had nearly become a drug den, and he’d had no idea.
All of it could be explained; the investigation team was extremely excited. They sent two
people to personally go with Luo Wenzhou and his people to “invite” old Director Zhang from
his residence. And while you wouldn’t know without looking, once you’d seen, you’d be
astonished—old Director Zhang was living in a Yan City estate famous for its mansions. The
two cars parked outside were worth over ten million. Even the teacups in the house were from
some luxury brand, and there was a whole row of leather goods costing over a hundred
thousand a piece in a cabinet. It was poles apart from the low-key and plain lifestyle he’d
modeled at the City Bureau in former days.
What was all this “only wearing his uniform,” “carrying his own water,” “his private phone
wasn’t even a smartphone”… All of it now simply seemed like an over-the-top pompous joke.
“The house belongs to my older brother. My job transferred this year, and the place I go to
work at is a little further away. My older brother is getting on in years and was planning to move
to a more peaceful place, so he’s temporarily letting me use his residence in the city for two
years. I’ll be retiring soon, anyway.”
83
“Your older brother? There’s so much affection between the two of you?”
“My older brother is ten years older than me. He practically raised me. If you said he was like
my father, it wouldn’t be overstating it. I’m really on rather familiar terms with him. He went out
to work young, to do business and save up some resources… To my shame, I haven’t given
this business very careful thought. I only looked to what was convenient. Perhaps I’ve made a
somewhat bad impression—but I can guarantee that my brother’s business hasn’t come into
the slightest contact with my professional duties, and I’ve never used my position to do him
any favors. If the organization thinks that my private life is too extravagant and violates
discipline, I’ll accept that and reflect on returning to my home as soon as possible…but apart
from that, my conscience is clear in others respects.”
The investigator smiled. “All right, we’ll verify that.—I suppose you know why you’ve been
asked here?”
“I’m aware.”
Zhang Chunjiu sat upright in his chair. As before, he was lean; the leanness of middle age had
its own sense of severity. The outlines of his forehead were rather deep. Over time, a long
wrinkle had been pressed into it. In all ways, this severe face was hard to connect to the
generous, open, good-tempered old big brother in the memories of Director Lu and the others.
Looking at him, you couldn’t resist having misgivings—how much could a person change over
twenty years?
“I haven’t been able to get Lao-Lu on the phone these last few days, and I thought it wasn’t
right, so I tried calling a few other old friends and found that none of them could pick up. Even
Lao-Pan, who’s gone to school, is the same. So I’ve been thinking that it would be my turn
soon.” Zhang Chunjiu picked up a teacup and drank a mouthful. His expression didn’t change.
“I don’t know what I should tell you. Why don’t you go ahead and ask?”
“Then we won’t stand on ceremony.” The investigator’s smile was a needle in silk floss. “It
sounds like since you transferred away, you’ve remained in regular contact with your former
colleagues?”
“Not regular, but this period of time has been rather special. For one thing, there’s Gu Zhao’s
case being investigated anew, and for another, Lao-Yang’s wife—widow—is sick and staying in
the hospital, so we old men have been calling each other rather industriously.”
“Oh, yes, Gu Zhao’s case.” The investigator pushed at his glasses, overlooking the other part.
“Do you still remember the details clearly? It was fourteen years ago.”
Zhang Chunjiu was silent for a while. “Gu Zhao… Gu Zhao’s case was a thorn in all our hearts.
No one believed it then, but the evidence was conclusive. It wasn’t up to us to believe it or not.
To tell you the truth, I didn’t believe that Gu Zhao could do that sort of thing and went to talk to
my superiors many times, without daring to disclose it—my brothers were demoralized, and
the leaders were pressed on all sides. I was caught between them.”
At this point, an expression between weariness and indignation showed on his face. “It was
hard… I never expected that after so many years, it would be investigated anew one day. If
Lao-Yang knew…”
84
The investigator seamlessly interrupted him. “Director Zhang, if Gu Zhao didn’t solicit bribes
and commit a violent act back then, then who do you think is responsible for him being
wronged all those years ago?”
“I can’t judge my elders’ actions behind their backs, but Gu Zhao’s informers collectively
perjured themselves, so the other side must have known what he was doing inside and out…
That shows it’s likely someone was disclosing secrets here, setting him up…” The fold between
Zhang Chunjiu’s brows deepened. He was silent for a long time, then said, “I don’t know who it
was, and I’m not willing to suspect anyone. You can go ahead and suspect me—but if you
want me to say that any of my brothers from back then could have been a traitor, it’s the same
as wanting me to believe it’s true that Gu Zhao killed someone and solicited bribes. I can’t do
it.”
The investigator wasn’t at all moved by this “deep affection between brothers.” He unfeelingly
pulled out the main subject. “Director Zhang, do you remember an informer from back then
whose codename was Old Cinder, real name Yin Chao?”
Zhang Chunjiu nodded. “Yes, wasn’t he the one who took Gu Zhao into The Louvre? I
remember it clearly. Not long after it happened, he disappeared. I always thought something
was off about him. Some years ago I had a young colleague who was transferred to South
Bend for work. I knew that Yin Chao still had relatives there and asked this colleague to keep
an eye on him for me, and in case Yin Chao returned home to visit his relatives, to arrest him at
once.”
The investigator at up a little straighter and followed up, “What’s the name of your young
colleague?”
“Kong Weichen.”
“When this Kong Weichen took a few criminal policemen from the City Bureau to investigate
Yin Ping, he called you. What did he say?”
“He told me about Yin Ping forging Yin Chao’s signature to get the money from their house
being torn down, and that they were just going to investigate. He also said that if they got news
about Yin Chao, he would definitely notify me. But afterwards I’ve been unable to contact him.”
Zhang Chunjiu seemed to realize something was wrong. “What is it? What’s happened to Kong
Weichen?”
“We have reason to believe that the ‘Old Cinder’ who went into The Louvre with Gu Zhao was
in fact Yin Ping, and also that he held evidence about Gu Zhao’s case. But when they went to
find him, Yin Ping fled to avoid punishment. In the course of the pursuit, the Criminal
Investigation Team’s whereabouts were revealed, and two pickups loaded with explosive
materials suddenly charged out, wanting to silence—”
The investigator revealed the dagger inside the map, suddenly restraining the genial smile on
his face. “The other side acted faster than the police force. We have reason to suspect that
they received their information before Criminal Police Officer Tao Ran reported to his superior.
And among the people present at the time who knew the circumstances, only Kong Weichen
had made contact with the outside, and the person he contacted was you. Director Zhang,
would you like to explain?”
85
“You suspect that I…” At this point, Zhang Chunjiu suddenly bit his tongue, forcing down the
startled fury on his face. As calmly and evenly as possible, he said, “When Kong Weichen
called me, he only said that they were going to Yin Ping’s house. He didn’t mention that Yin
Ping was…that Yin Ping…”
Repeating this name twice, Zhang Chunjiu in the end couldn’t restrain himself. His expression
showed a trace of disbelief. "How could Yin Ping have become Old Cinder? When did he begin
impersonating him? Didn't anyone notice at the time? Who told you this? Is there a basis?”
The investigator met his eyes expressionlessly for a moment, trying to read something in his
face. “Director Zhang, did you really not know? Are you acquainted with this person?”
Saying so, he pulled out a photograph and placed it in front of Zhang Chunjiu.
Zhang Chunjiu seemed to still be immersed in the bizarre information he had just heard. He
quickly looked down and glanced at the photograph. “No.”
“No? Take a closer look.” The investigator leaned forward. “Yin Ping suffered a stroke because
of a collision. He was taken to the hospital for life-saving measures and still isn’t out of danger.
Yesterday afternoon, this person infiltrated Yin Ping’s hospital room disguised as a nurse’s aide
and attempted once again to kill him in order to silence him. He failed, and we arrested him—
the killer identified you as the one who incited him to do this.”
Zhang Chunjiu was stupefied. After a moment, seeming caught between laughter and tears, he
pointed to himself. “Me?”
“We found five million in cash in this killer’s residence. It was the money that paid for Yin Ping’s
life.”
“Five million.”
An indescribable expression suddenly flashed over Zhang Chunjiu’s face. After a moment, he
gave a bitter laugh and let out a long breath, his upright posture crumbling. He leaned heavily
back in his chair. “The evidence we found under Gu Zhao’s bed back then was five million in
cash… It’s been fourteen years. What, is it still the same number?”
The investigator carefully weighed his expression. “Where were you on the eleventh?”
“I’m not sure.” Zhang Chunjiu rubbed the center of his brow, rubbing a third fold into his
eyelids. The weariness in his face deepened. “Could I have a hint?”
“Around two o’clock in the afternoon on the eleventh, you were seen riding in a private car near
the Among the Poplars Estate. Is that right?”
“Among the Poplars Estate? I don’t know it.” Zhang Chunjiu’s face was suspicious. “The
eleventh…last Monday? My car was under the restriction that day, I borrowed a car from
home. I passed by Lu’an Bridge. I think there were some residential communities around, but I
didn’t notice what they were called.”
“First I was going to the Second Hospital to see Lao-Yang’s family. On the way I remembered
that I hadn’t bought anything, and that wasn’t suitable, so I had the driver get off the highway
at Lu’an Bridge. There’s a rather big shopping center there,” Zhang Chunjiu said. “I threw the
receipt somewhere, but you should be able to investigate the security cameras near the
checkout at the mall. When I’d bought what I needed, I went to the hospital. Lao-Yang’s widow
Fu Jiahui and his daughter Yang Xin can confirm it. You can go ask them.”
The corner of the investigator’s eye twitched slightly—the estate the hospital killer lived in was
called Among the Poplars, and it really was near the Lu’an Bridge, but it was very small, and
the house were old-fashioned. The signs on the buildings were mottled and unclear, and there
weren’t even any walls around the estate.
The investigator had asked the question this way on purpose, because ordinarily if a person
had just been passing by, it would have been hard for him to notice what a common six-story
building was called. If Zhang Chunjiu had directly answered, “I was just passing by,” then that
would have been very suspicious, but…
Was Zhang Chunjiu pretending? Then he was too cautious, and his deliberations too
comprehensive; it was frightful.
Having come to Director Zhang, the investigation wouldn’t be left to the Criminal Investigation
Team. This questioning was being carried on in secret. Only Luo Wenzhou had been specially
approved to come listen in. The investigator asked all the questions four or five times, full of
countless pitfalls; it took over three hours in all. Both the questioner and the one being
questioned were unbearably exhausted, and even Luo Wenzhou, listening from the sidelines,
couldn’t resist lighting a cigarette when he walked out the door.
Heavily weighed down, he focused and pondered amidst a cloud of smoke. Then he crossed
the street—waiting there was an SUV so tall it had no friends.
As soon as Luo Wenzhou pulled open the door, before he could get into the passenger’s seat,
Xiao Haiyang leaned forward impatiently from the back seat. “Captain Luo, I now think that this
matter is questionable. Director Zhang may have been framed!”
Luo Wenzhou glanced at him, brought his frozen hands close to the car air-conditioning’s warm
breeze, and slowly said, “Earlier, you were the one wishing you could push Director Zhang up
onto the guillotine, and now you’re the one saying he’s been unjustly accused… Little Glasses,
it’s fortunate you’re a commoner in the modern era. If you transmigrated into a prince in a
feudal society, how many wrongfully murdered spirits would there be on your hands?”
Xiao Haiyang took no notice of what Luo Wenzhou was saying to him. He lowered his head and
pulled a folder out of his bag. Pointing to two photographs inside it, he said, “Look, this is the
cash found in that killer’s house, and the other photograph is the five million found in Uncle
Gu’s house. I found it in the sealed old case file.—Large sums of money are usually piled up in
stacks of ten thousand to make it easier to check. Banks tie them in paper strips. But the cash
found in the killer’s house is all stacked together, exactly the same as the material evidence
from fourteen years ago!”
Lang Qiao, next to him, said, “Yeah, I asked the hospital killer about it, and he said the money
was like that when it came, and he spent ages counting it to be sure.”
Out of nowhere, Xiao Haiyang suddenly said, “Captain Luo, I’m sorry, I was wrong.”
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When he spoke, even Fei Du turned around from the driver’s seat. The six eyes of the three
people in the car all fell on Xiao Haiyang, as though marveling at the once-in-a-thousand-years
spectacle of an iron tree blossoming.
Xiao Haiyang nervily pushed at his glasses, lips pursing into a line. Whether nervous or uneasy,
he seemed to be shaking slightly all over. He opened his mouth and let loose a barrage. “I was
wrong. I shouldn’t have acted subjectively and rashly, reaching a conclusion after only getting a
bit of surface-level evidence, casually accusing a hero. And I shouldn’t have…”
Luo Wenzhou interrupted him. “Did you write that just now?”
When he’d said it, he realized at once that he’d done something stupid and immediately shut
his mouth. Lang Qiao snickered next to him. Xiao Haiyang, ill at ease, picked at the seam of his
pants, seeming ready to evaporate off the face of the earth.
“Our team doesn’t have a custom of reciting entire personal reflections from memory. When
this is over, just remember to invite some people to a meal.” Luo Wenzhou thought about it,
then added, “You have to cook it yourself. We’ll see based on what you’ve cooked whether
you’re sincere or not.”
Xiao Haiyang’s face was a blank. He seemed to want to season himself and jump right into the
steamer.
“I listened to Director Zhang’s statement. Though the evidence is very unfavorable to him, all
his explanations basically make sense.” Luo Wenzhou became stern. “Either he’s in a very high
class, or he’s been set up.—Anyway, if he really is so powerful, he shouldn’t have left behind so
many gaps in two unsuccessful attempts to kill Yin Ping.”
Lang Qiao asked, “So you’re saying someone set him up, and it’s the same method that was
used to set up Gu Zhao? Why? Who has he offended?”
Luo Wenzhou shook his head, indicating for Fei Du to drive home.
The file for Gu Zhao’s case had only recently been declassified when the investigation had
been reopened. Who would know the detail about the arrangement of the cash? And after
Director Zhang was investigated, the last person involved in the case would have been brought
in. The investigation team wouldn’t publicize how they were dealing with this, and it would be
hard for them to interfere…
Just then, Fei Du suddenly spoke. “The first Picture Album Project started about a year after
Gu Zhao’s case. The people in the Picture Album group had the right to request case files—did
those include Gu Zhao’s case?”
“The mysterious head of the project,” Fei Du said. “Did he really die?”
88
Luo Wenzhou looked at him deeply. Hindered by Lang Qiao and Xiao Haiyang’s presence, he
only perfunctorily said, “It’s been too long. We’ll have to ask when Director Lu and the others
get back.”
But faint misgivings rose in his mind.—On the surface, the Picture Album Project seemed to be
entirely separate from Gu Zhao’s case. Why did Fei Du keep mentioning it? Why was he unable
to let it go? Why had he even set aside his enormous family business to take part in the second
Picture Album Project?
In fact, Luo Wenzhou was also at a loss, but he couldn’t show it in front of his youthful
subordinates. He muttered to himself for a moment, then said, “That moronic hospital killer is
still in our hands. Keep interrogating him. Didn’t he say two men came to bring him the money?
We haven’t found a hair from either of their heads. Who knows whether he was making it up?”
Lang Qiao hurriedly got out a small notebook—it was the bad habit trained into her by
examination-oriented education; when she felt helpless, she’d passionately take notes,
creating the false impression that she was working hard, as though if she sat and waited it
would spontaneously become the truth.
“Also, find some guys to follow that driver of Director Zhang’s, plant some eavesdropping
devices on him,” Luo Wenzhou said as he arranged his thoughts. “Xiao Haiyang, keep waiting
for results from the material evidence. If it was Kong Weichen who leaked information when Tao
Ran and the others were pursuing Yin Ping, he wouldn’t have obviously called Director Zhang.
They’re both our own people. Of course they would know what we’d do if anything happened.
They wouldn’t have left such obvious evidence—so there must be some other plot involved in
Yin Ping’s car crash.”
This time, Xiao Haiyang at last had no dissenting views. He nodded affirmatively.
“Also, find an opportunity to go to the rehab center,” Luo Wenzhou added. “If you can, have a
chat with Ma Xiaowei.”
Lang Qiao and Xiao Haiyang were very confused by this request, looking back at him
helplessly.
Luo Wenzhou said, “The time when Ma Xiaowei appeared and the secrets he ‘inadvertently’
disclosed to us currently don’t look too likely to have all been coincidence. These major cases
have all happened since Director Zhang was transferred. If there’s premeditation involved here,
it’s likely it started then, and Ma Xiaowei was definitely a participant.”
“Where are you going? Visiting hours are over. Go tomorrow.—Have you thought about how
you’re going to question him? What’s the rush? Don’t you know that sharpening the axe won’t
interfere with cutting firewood?”
The criminal policemen who’d been prepared to work throughout the Spring Festival idly got off
work on time. Fei Du dropped Xiao Haiyang and Lang Qiao off at their respective homes, then
went to the hospital to bring the injured Tao Ran something to eat, dictating a few lines he
89
could use to appeal to girls; he was dragged home midway by Luo Wenzhou, who couldn’t
stand to listen to it.
Then, as though nothing were the matter, he undertook part-time work as a supermarket cart
pusher, porter, and wallet-carrier, accompanying Luo Wenzhou to the supermarket to buy
ingredients and cat food. His manner was calm and natural, just as usual.
Especially when it was time to go to sleep. There was for once no need for Luo Wenzhou to
coax and plead—he said it twice, and Fei Du turned off his computer.
Fei Du had rather bad living habits. He didn’t sleep at night and would also get up early in the
morning, citing the work schedules of people from Chicken Soup for the Soul such as “Buffett”
and “Jobs” and “Kobe.”
When he’d just gotten out of the hospital and didn’t have much energy it had been a little
better; he’d lie down after a little torment. But after some meticulous nursing by Luo Wenzhou,
it seemed there was another vigorous Luo Yiguo in the house—unless Luo Wenzhou suddenly
woke in the middle of the night, when he reached out on waking, eight or nine out of ten times
he’d come up empty. Fortunately, President Fei had a better disposition than President Guo
and could get himself up; he didn’t harm others by acting as an alarm clock.
Luo Wenzhou looked at him in surprise. “What’s wrong with you today? Are you feeling unwell?
Did you catch a cold? Or did you eat something that disagreed with you?”
“If I don’t listen to you, you resort to force.” Fei Du touched his face helplessly. “If I do listen to
you, you suspect that I’m sick… Beloved concubine, you’re too capricious.”
A trace of a smile floated at the corners of Luo Wenzhou’s eyes. Then he grabbed Fei Du’s
wrist and spoke with a double meaning: “Am I capricious, or is your lordship’s heart hard to
fathom?”
Fei Du stared. Luo Wenzhou looked at him with a slightly grave gaze. “Your mood hasn’t been
right these last couple of days. What is it?”
With a smile that wasn’t quite a smile, Fei Du avoided replying. “My mood’s not right? I’m
always ‘in the mood’ when I see you.”
A certain person was using lines on him that he’d just gotten through teaching Tao Ran, not
even changing a punctuation mark. Did he think he was so deaf he hadn’t heard?
Seeing that Fei Du once again refused to speak properly, Luo Wenzhou suddenly raised his
arms and grabbed him around the waist, lifting his feet off the ground.
Hearing movement, Luo Yiguo saw an opportunity and leapt over, picking up Fei Du’s dropped
slipper in its mouth like a rare toy, letting itself go happily tearing and biting at it.
Luo Wenzhou uncompromisingly closed the bedroom door, pressing him against the door in
midair. “Your shixiong isn’t so old yet he’d make you dirty your feet walking on the ground.
What do you want shoes for?”
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President Fei’s amorous history didn’t include any direct practical experience with this position.
He was a little flustered. While he knew that if he fell it wouldn’t kill him, he still very insecurely
reached out to support himself against the doorknob, forcing a smile. “Could I ask you to
switch to something not so stimulating? I’m afraid it’ll be tiring for…”
Luo Wenzhou narrowed his eyes at him. Fei Du was good at reading expressions; he wisely
swallowed back the word “you.” His throat moved. Displaying adaptability, he abandoned a
man’s self-respect and corrected himself: “…me.”
Luo Wenzhou looked up and met his eyes for a moment, then slowly drew near, gently rubbing
the tip of Fei Du’s nose.
Fei Du lowered his head to kiss him, but Luo Wenzhou dodged back, unfeelingly saying, “Let
go of the doorknob. You can’t put your hands anywhere but on me. Who told you to
demonstrate chin-ups?”
Fei Du was normally very indulgent towards him. He didn’t have the heart to spoil his fun.
Choosing the lesser of two evils, he made the position as secure as possible, holding Luo
Wenzhou’s shoulders and clamping his legs around his waist.
Luo Wenzhou slowly used the tips of his teeth to pull open the bathrobe hanging loosely in
front of his chest. “What am I to you?”
Fei Du feigned astonishment. “Are you disappointed I didn’t formally buy you a diamond? How
about I go order a pigeon egg now?”
Luo Wenzhou said, “You can’t get full eating a pigeon egg. I want chicken eggs, two of them.”
He really was a true man who only wanted to eat and sleep his fill.
“Since I’m worth two chicken eggs—” Luo Wenzhou’s gaze roved around Fei Du’s chest. He
was young, after all; some time had passed, and the electric shock scars were hardly visible.
Without the messy scrawl of a stuck-on tattoo to cover it, his chest was thin and fair, with
almost an alluring trace of youthfulness.
When Luo Wenzhou had looked enough, he finished his long drawn-out sentence: “—can you
trust me?”
This question was a softball. Fei Du answered without thinking: “How could I not… hss.”
Luo Wenzhou had a premonition that the conversation might not go smoothly; consequently he
ground his teeth against him.
The activities of his lower body normally didn’t rise above Fei Du’s neck. His brain was very
clear; he immediately realized that Luo Wenzhou was implying something, and thoughts spun
through his mind. Looking down from on high, he freed up one hand to raise Luo Wenzhou’s
chin. “What, do you feel uneasy because I haven’t been speaking so much lately and forcing a
stack of ideas into your ears?”
The tips of Luo Wenzhou’s eyebrows moved. “I feel like you’re hiding something from me.”
This sort of phrase is usually an omen of domestic crisis. Fei Du earnestly recalled for a
moment. “When I’ve assigned tasks to Lu Jia and the others lately, it’s all been right in front of
you. I haven’t secretly plotted against anyone’s life, and I haven’t wanted to go pull out Fei
Chengyu’s breathing tube. I’ve observed the law and discipline, haven’t touched a drop of
alcohol, oh, and I’ve acceded to your every plea. I don’t think there’s anything I’ve been
hiding?”
Luo Wenzhou held him with one hand, the other hand very improperly reaching under his
bathrobe. He touched somewhere that made Fei Du stiffen all over. Suspended in midair,
feeling neither here nor there, he was nervous and impatient. “Shixiong, are you…planning to
use torture to extort a confession?”
“That’s right,” Luo Wenzhou said slowly. “When Zhou Huaijin mentioned ‘thirteen years ago,’
you said, ‘the Picture Album Project.’ Today in the car when we were discussing whether
Director Zhang was framed, you mentioned the Picture Album Project again. Even when you
were getting close to me from ulterior motives, your ostensible motive was restarting the
Picture Album Project.”
Fei Du laughed. “When I was getting close to you from ulterior motives, my motive was your
good looks.”
“…” Luo Wenzhou choked. “Are you stealing my lines? You pick up bad influences quickly.”
“The Picture Album Project planned to establish a record of criminals. Though it was led by the
school, if you pay attention to the list of participants, you’ll find that they were nearly all
frontline police officers who took part in Gu Zhao’s case—that is, they were suspects.” Fei Du
gasped; at the end of his endurance, he grabbed Luo Wenzhou’s groping hand. “…Darling, if
you keep doing that, I won’t be able to keep talking.”
“I remember, too,” Luo Wenzhou interrupted him. “The first time, you told me that you had an
intuition that your mom’s death was connected to Fei Chengyu, and you wanted to know why
you’d have that intuition, so you wanted to trace back your memories from when you were
little. The second time, you told me that actually you knew your mom had killed herself, and
you knew why she’d done it, and that you faintly suspected Fei Chengyu was involved in some
shady business. The third time, when we went after Lu Guosheng, in the basement of your
house, you repeated to me what Fei Chengyu had said. You remembered what had happened
thirteen years ago with perfect clarify. You didn’t need to trace anything back.”
Fei Du stared blankly. He hadn’t expected Luo Wenzhou to remember every word of nonsense
he’d said with perfect clarify.
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Luo Wenzhou struggled free of his hand, clutching the tender flesh between Fei Du’s legs,
grinding back forth. Gritting his teeth slightly, he asked, “Can you tell me now what the truth is
among your self-contradictory words?”
Fei Du was a silent for a good while. Then he suddenly grabbed the back of Luo Wenzhou’s
head, lowered his head, and kissed him. He seemed to naturally know how to stir up emotion;
the kiss wasn’t intense, but it made a person have the feeling of being deeply loved by him.
But just as a succession of coincidences couldn’t be accidental, this always perfectly precise
expression couldn’t be a natural revelation. Luo Wenzhou suddenly flared up a little, tearing
away the loose clothing hanging on Fei Du’s body, changing zero distance to negative
distance. Only when he felt Fei Du’s pulse change sharply did he have some sense that he was
truly holding him in his arms.
Fei Du seemed about to fall asleep when he carried him to bed and laid him down. Luo
Wenzhou kissed the center of his brow. His intellect returned, and he thought, “I still haven’t
gotten an answer.”
Just then, Fei Du suddenly spoke. “Not everything I told you those three times was made up.”
His voice was a little hoarse, gently rubbing the eardrums. Luo Wenzhou paused, made a
sound, and stretched his legs out onto the little armchair next to the bed.
“I really am investigating the Picture Album to trace back to things from when I was little. I
don’t remember completely what happened in the basement, and I have an intuition that the
part left out is very important.”
Luo Wenzhou said, “I thought your memory wasn’t any worse than Xiao Haiyang’s.”
“I don’t have an eidetic memory.” Fei Du smiled quickly. “Actually, I went into Fei Chengyu’s
basement without permission twice. The first time it was entirely by chance. I dropped
something and went to get it, and he hadn’t locked the door. That time I got in and saw the
Picture Album Project roster. While I was flipping through it, Fei Chengyu returned. I hid in the
little cabinet under his bookcase, and luckily he didn’t find me.”
Luo Wenzhou for some reason felt there was something wrong with these words, but before he
could think closely, Fei Du continued, “Little boys naturally seek stimulus, are curious and
rebellious. Having gotten in once, I wanted to do it a second time, so I tried by any means
possible to get the code to the basement.—It wasn’t easy. Fei Chengyu was very careful. So it
was half a year later that I succeeded in getting into that secret basement a second time. I saw
the research paper concerning the victims of vicious crimes arranged on his desk.”
Luo Wenzhou said, “The paper written by Fan Siyuan, the head of the first Picture Album
Project?”
“Yes.”
Luo Wenzhou frowned.—The first Picture Album Project had gone wrong midway. It hadn’t
been long after Gu Zhao’s case. The City Bureau really couldn’t have taken another scandal. As
soon as they’d found something was wrong, they’d urgently called it to a halt, and all the
personnel who’d participated had been investigated. It had been handled very quickly—
93
“I think that it was less than half a year from the time the first Picture Album Project launched
to the time it was called to a halt,” Luo Wenzhou said. “Why did Fei Chengyu’s interest last so
long?”
“I turned on his computer. The code was the same as for the door. I saw a file on the desktop
called ‘Picture Album,’ but I couldn’t open it, because the door code didn’t work.”
“You mean that the Picture Album project is connected to Fei Chengyu?” Luo Wenzhou asked.
“And then what?”
“Then I don’t recall very clearly, but…” Fei Du suddenly felt his throat tighten. He turned his
head away and coughed twice. “But…ahem…”
At first Luo Wenzhou thought that he’d choked while speaking, but he very quickly noticed
something was wrong—Fei Du couldn’t stop coughing.
He quickly went to hold Fei Du up, patting his back. “What’s the matter? Did you catch a chill?
What did I tell you!”
Fei Du was coughing so hard he couldn’t catch his breath, the veins nearly standing out at the
corners of his forehead. It only calmed after a long time. Luo Wenzhou brought over a glass of
warm water. “Drink a little. Don’t be in a hurry to take medicine for a cold. It may work to wait it
out. We’ll see if it gets worse.”
“I only roughly remember that Fei Chengyu suddenly returned home for some reason and
found that I was in his basement. I think he was very angry. After a huge explosion, he emptied
the basement,” Fei Du said with some effort. “But…when I think about it, it seems that that’s
when I started to have a concrete idea of what he was doing. I must have accidentally seen
something very important in the basement that day.”
But Fei Du’s condition was obviously unsuited for further questioning. Luo Wenzhou could only
temporarily lay down his arms, checking his temperature, suspecting it was him going too far
fooling around earlier that had made Fei Du catch a chill. Though the current temperature
display showed that the temperature in the room was nearly 27°; you wouldn’t feel cool
wearing short sleeves. Luo Wenzhou couldn’t come up with an answer after thinking it over and
in the end had to sum it up in one cause—Fei Du, perhaps belonging to the category of tropical
fish, was weak.
But when his body was tired after excessive activity, Fei Du’s mind was never willing to behave
and rest inside his motionless outer form. It wandered around at random while he slept.
First he dreamed that he’d taken out a can of cat food but had forgotten to open it for Luo
Yiguo. Then he dreamed that Luo Wenzhou was displeased for some reason, not paying
attention to him no matter how he coaxed. Finally, he seemed to return to the day Tao Ran had
94
been brought to the hospital—the strange thing was that in the real world, when Fei Du and
Luo Wenzhou had arrived, Tao Ran had already been in the emergency room, and they’d only
gotten a quick look at him when his condition had stabilized and he’d been taken to an
ordinary hospital room.
But in his disordered dream, Fei Du thought he saw Tao Ran covered all over in blood, bones
with torn flesh on them bursting from his body. Tao Ran’s face was flushed purple, and his eyes
were protruding. It was a horrifying appearance of death.
His eyelids felt heavy, but in the instant it took for him to open his eyes, his wild thoughts were
instantly forced back into place through thorough training. Frowning, Fei Du remembered the
dream he’d just had, feeling it was a little wrong, because Tao Ran had been injured in a car
crash. So why had his dream given him the appearance of being suffocated?
But probably even Stephen Hawking couldn’t have asked for all his dreams to be logical. The
doubt flashed through Fei Du’s mind, and then he felt somewhat unwell, something like the
ache of being in the same position for too long. Fei Du gently pulled away Luo Wenzhou’s
arms, which were clinging a little tightly. He turned over, but the usually soft and comfortable
mattress seemed to have turned into a cement floor. However he turned over, he felt that it was
pressing against his bones. Covered only in a light-weight quilt, he felt it was pressing down on
him so he couldn’t quite catch his breath. No matter what, he couldn’t find a comfortable
position.
When Fei Du was very carefully turning over for the third time, Luo Wenzhou, who normally
couldn’t be shaken even by thunder, suddenly turned on the bedside lamp. “What’s wrong?”
Fei Du didn’t feel like talking. He buried most of his face against the pillow, avoiding the
lamplight, shaking his head.
Luo Wenzhou reached out a hand to feel, then sat up with a start. “You’re burning up like a
radiator, and you’re still shaking your head!”
Fei Du half opened his eyes somewhat vaguely, seeing Luo Wenzhou rush out to find fever-
reducing medicine.
When Luo Wenzhou had lived alone, he’d mostly used things like safflower oil and Yunnan
white medicinal powder6. He had a hoard of band-aids and iodine, but the rest was basically all
expired medication. He rifled boxes and turned over drawers, working up a sweat. Next to him,
Luo Yiguo was unwilling to be tranquil, dragging over an unopened can from somewhere,
clawing and biting at it on the floor, the can making banging noises as it fell.
Luo Wenzhou shushed it, quietly reprimanding, “If you keep making a fuss, I’ll lock you out on
the balcony!”
Luo Yiguo pushed the can with its feet, raising its head and glaring indomitably at him,
evidently meaning to fight him to the end.
Luo Wenzhou wasn’t in the mood to pay attention to it. He finally found a box of fever-reducing
medicine, scanned the directions and manufacturing date, discovered that it actually hadn’t
expired, and quickly took it to Fei Du.
As he gave Fei Du the medicine from his hand, he couldn’t resist wanting to sigh. “President
Fei, let’s talk it over. Can we exercise a little starting tomorrow, set up a routine?”
Fei Du didn’t have the energy to joke with him. He only vaguely said, “Tomorrow’s fine.”
He forced himself to drink half a glass of water, unsteadily pushed the glass away, and patted
the back of Luo Wenzhou’s hand twice in thanks, then curled up and didn’t move. Fei Du was
usually adept at making trouble, but after belatedly realizing that he was sick, he behaved
himself, seeming to take orderly stock of his limited forces and intelligently lower all his life
functions as much as possible, allocating all his strength to his immune system.
Luo Wenzhou watched him very uneasily for a while and found that this patient could entirely
take care of himself; he didn’t have the bad habit of throwing off covers and tossing around.
Suddenly he rather tenderly touched his hair. “Who took care of you before when you got
sick?”
Fei Du wanted to say, “Minor illnesses were nothing to worry about, for big ones I went to the
hospital,” but in reality his lips moved and he said nothing. The soporific effect of the fever-
reducing medication bore down. The sound of Luo Wenzhou walking around seemed to come
through a layer of something, further and further. Soon it had turned into a haze. Fei Du,
holding on to the unsaid answer, was forced into sleep by the medicine. The unsettled question
escaped his consciousness and seeped into his dreams.
In his dream, he saw his bedroom when he was little—the whole villa was decorated according
to Fei Chengyu’s preferences, including the woman and the child’s rooms. The richly-colored
pieces of furniture had their own atmosphere, pressing down on the youthful inhabitant’s
personality until not a sliver remained. Everything was cold…only fortunately the window faced
south, and the light was good.
Fei Du vaguely remembered one time he’d leaned at the head of the bed, the sun falling on his
body, restricted to bed because of a sudden cold and fever.
While Fei Chengyu wasn’t home, he’d secretly taken out a strip of paper from his pencil case.
There were three strings of digits on the strip. Secretly entering a forbidden place was the sort
of thing you had to do a second time. Fei Du had spent nearly half a year quietly watching Fei
Chengyu’s every move, secretly collecting all the other codes Fei Chengyu used in his daily life,
making a simple summary and count of the encoding rules, producing a few principles from
this analysis, trying to determine the code to the basement.
He had no chance to make a wrong attempt, because entering the wrong code would raise the
alarm. No matter where Fei Chengyu was, he would receive a notification at once. Fei Du had
finally fixed on three possible combinations Fei Chengyu may have used, but he really couldn’t
determine which one of the three it was.
Just then, someone knocked on the door. Fei Du had just stuck the “treasonous and heretical”
slip of paper back into the pencil case in a flurry when his mom came in carrying cold medicine
mixed with water.
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She gently changed the soaked and scalding towel on his forehead, then used a towel soaked
in cool water to wipe him down. Throughout the process, she was like a robot, doing
everything attentively and methodically, but unwilling to make any eye contact with him, as
though any extraneous contact would bring calamity down upon them.
Fei Du wanted to call out “mom,” but when the word came to his throat, it stuck. He only
opened his mouth.
When the woman had finished cleaning him, she seemed less gloomy than before. There was
even a bit of briskness in her step. Little Fei Du wanted to say something to her, but he didn’t
know where to start. Seeing she was about to leave, he hastily reached out an arm to catch
her. The unzipped pencil case on his knee fell, and the strip of paper with the codes written on
it slipped out.
After a good while, the woman bent down and picked up the pencil case and the little slip of
paper. Fei Du subconsciously held his breath. The woman at last looked up and met his eyes.
Her gaze was so complicated and hard to read that the boy couldn’t tell what she meant. He
nervously clutched the quilt.
As his apprehension increased, the woman, as if she hadn’t understood, put the slip of paper
back into the pencil case and gently put it back in his lap, kissed the top of his head, then
turned and left.
After he’d heard the door, Fei Du hesitantly pulled out the strip of paper he’d written the codes
on. He saw that there was a fingernail mark under one of the codes.
Three days later, when he learned that Fei Chengyu had gone out of town, he used that code to
open the basement’s thick door. The basement was like a forbidden area. The stairs were
narrow and winding; you couldn’t see the end from the top. Dim lights flickered in the gloomy
wall lamps, lighting up the malevolent dragons on the wallpaper. There seemed to be a
monster hidden inside, darkly opening its mouth wide.
In the dream, Fei Du thought that as he walked down step by step, his mom was watching
from the second floor. When he opened the door, there seemed to be a faint black mist
screening the desk and the cupboards on all four sides. He hesitantly approached the desk
and saw a stack of printed treatises.
Then the dream turned into chaos. The characters printed on the paper suddenly grew,
spreading on the paper like bloodstains. The space around him heaved as though it was about
to crumble. The floor and ceiling shattered. There were the mixed sounds of shattering glass,
the terrible footsteps, and a woman’s screams. The feeling of suffocation suddenly attacked,
making him unable to catch a breath. At the same time, he seemed to hear a man saying by his
ear, “My Picture Album Project can also launch…”
Fei Du was covered in cold sweat. He suddenly sat up. Then, feeling the world spinning around
him, he fell back and was embraced by Luo Wenzhou.
“Don’t throw off the covers yet.” Luo Wenzhou pulled him back and wiped the sweat at the
corners of his forehead. He was very gratified to feel that his temperature had fallen and softly
kissed his temple. “Did you have a nightmare? It’s easy to have nightmares when you’ve taken
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fever-reducing medicine. I’ve been waiting here all night for you to throw yourself into my arms.
Come here and let me comfort you.”
The fierce ringing in Fei Du’s ears subsided. He hesitated, then said, “It wasn’t really a
nightmare. It was only a very fantastic plot.”
“…A fantastic plot?” Luo Wenzhou said. “Like riding a train into the sky?”
Clowning around with a sick person first thing in the morning really was low. Speechless, Fei
Du poked him with his elbow.
“Like how when I worked out Fei Chengyu’s code on my first try, it was actually because my
mom gave me a hint,” Fei Du said. “Also…I think Fei Chengyu said something to me about ‘my
Picture Album Project…’”
Luo Wenzhou paused. “You don’t remember how you opened that door?”
“I do, I remember I worked out a few possibilities, then went to try, and very luckily the first
code I tried worked…” Fei Du’s words suddenly paused. He’d noticed something off. Looking
at his childhood mental state from an outsider’s point of view, he thought that no matter what
he wouldn’t have run the risk of making Fei Chengyu angry by hastily going to try out some
codes he was entirely unsure of.
Luo Wenzhou covered his eyes. “Go back to sleep. We can talk about sad things when you’re
better.”
When he’d gotten Fei Du settled down, Luo Wenzhou quietly got up, heated up breakfast, and
put it in a heat-preserving container. Then he left a note and went alone to the records room.
Asking for a transfer of files required going through formal procedures, especially sealed
records, but this was a very particular time; if he’d gone through the formalities, he still
wouldn’t have found anyone who could sign for him. The person in charge of the records room
had smoked countless packs of his cigarettes, so he turned a blind eye and let him in.
Luo Wenzhou searched around; as expected, he couldn’t find anything of value. There was
only a thin book on the Picture Album Project with some very surface-level introductory words
in it. There were also a few superficial treatises that all looked like they’d been copied and
pasted from all over. The head of the Picture Album Project had been Yan Security Uni’s
professor Fan Siyuan, but among the papers included in the end, his signature didn’t appear
on any of them as either author or academic advisor.
The contents of Fan Siyuan’s personal file were also pitifully scant. Only his work experience
and publication history were collected; they came to an abrupt halt thirteen years ago, but his
recorded death, very strangely, was ten years ago.—Lao-Yang had vaguely mentioned him,
saying that he’d died. He’d always thought that it was something like killing himself to avoid
punishment after the Picture Album Project had been exposed or a mishap while being
apprehended. He hadn’t expected to find it was nothing like that.
It was first thing in the morning. The person in charge called to Luo Wenzhou and went to the
bathroom. Luo Wenzhou took the opportunity to quickly copy all the collected files that had
been used in the first Picture Album Project, proficiently taking a turn as a thief.
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Before leaving, his gaze fell momentarily on Fan Siyuan’s work record, and a divine light
suddenly flashed through his mind—
Yes, Director Lu had said that after starting work, Gu Zhao had gone to Yan Security Uni to do
a postgraduate program!
Meanwhile, Xiao Haiyang had gone to the rehab center first thing in the morning. A rehab
center wasn’t like a public park where you could just show up. He sat waiting uneasily for an
age before finally seeing Ma Xiaowei. Xiao Haiyang secretly sighed in relief—so many things
had gone wrong lately, he’d been afraid that when he’d just found a bit of a lead he would be
informed that Ma Xiaowei had also been silenced.
Ma Xiaowei had gained some weight and no longer had the look of a drug addict, but his
mental state was rather listless. The listlessness vanished as soon as he saw Xiao Haiyang. He
tensed all over.
He had to abandon the amiable route. In a businesslike manner, he flashed a frosty look like a
shop sign. “Do you remember me?”
“I’ve been transferred to the City Bureau,” Xiao Haiyang said. “I came here today to ask you
about a few things.”
Ma Xiaowei laced his hands together. Sitting uneasily, he lowered his head, looking as though
he’d been dragged in for interrogation again.
Xiao Haiyang watched him closely for a moment. “You’ve worked with us. We saved your life
and helped clear you of suspicion of murder. I’m not saying you should be delighted to see me,
but at least you shouldn’t be so nervous.—Ma Xiaowei, you actually know what I want to ask,
right?”
Xiao Haiyang said, “On the night of May twentieth of this year, you took He Zhongyi’s cell
phone and sold it to drug dealers. Then He Zhongyi was murdered, and his body was dumped
at the sight of the drug transaction. The next morning, a passerby discovered He Zhongyi’s
corpse. And while the police were making visits and investigating this case all over, you had a
dispute with the local residents and were taken with them to the Flower Market District Sub-
Bureau. You made a slip of the tongue that let us know that you were on the scene around
when the murder was committed, and that something else had happened, which you couldn’t
talk about at the sub-bureau.”
“I know.” Xiao Haiyang’s gaze watched intently from behind lenses like the bottoms of bottles.
“What I want to ask you is whether you made a slip of the tongue yourself, or did someone
instruct you on what to say?”
Ma Xiaowei trembled.
“You’re timid, cowardly, and a liar,” Xiao Haiyang said, hitting the nail on the head. Seeing Ma
Xiaowei open his mouth as though planning to defend himself, Xiao Haiyang interrupted him.
“You don’t need to deny it. Stealing and lying are typical characteristics of drug users.—Didn’t
you confess yourself at the time that you’d stolen He Zhongyi’s phone and then lied to him?
“So here’s what I don’t understand.” Xiao Haiyang leaned back lightly. “You aren’t some kind of
honest person who doesn’t know how to lie. Why did you slip up when the police casually
asked you a few questions? Is it very hard to say ‘I don’t know’ to everything? You clearly knew
that Wang Hongliang’s people had been there that night. Deliberately being ambiguous like
that, weren’t you afraid they’d silence you?”
“Did the person who instructed you give you a guarantee that Wang Hongliang and the rest
would soon reap the consequences of their evil, so you didn’t need to worry?”
Ma Xiaowei’s eyes widened slightly. He was after all an underage child. His momentary
astonished expression immediately gave him away.
When Xiao Haiyang had gotten home last night, he’d considered all night how he should ask.
The hard-working are rewarded; seeing Ma Xiaowei’s expression, he methodically said the
weightiest words: “I’ll tell you something. You remember when I took you to the City Bureau? In
fact, that night, Wang Hongliang’s people had sent a message to their co-conspirator on duty
at the sub-bureau, telling him to get rid you, the eyewitness, as soon as possible. If I hadn’t
been keeping an eye on them and snatched you away before they could act, you’d be a pile of
ashes by now.”
All the blood drained out of Ma Xiaowei’s face. “That, that can’t…”
“In fact, you weren’t useful anymore then.” Xiao Haiyang pressed on step by step. “The police
had already found definite leads and would soon find video evidence of Wang Hongliang’s
crimes. You dying in the sub-bureau wouldn’t make any impact. At most it would be another
criminal charge for Wang Hongliang. They didn’t care about you at all. They just left you to run
your course.”
It was as if Ma Xiaowei had been struck by lightning. Xiao Haiyang quickly followed up, “So
who instructed you?”
Ma Xiaowei’s lips trembled. A good while later, he forced out a few words. “It…it was Zhao…
Zhao-ge.”
“Which Zhao-ge?” First Xiao Haiyang stared; then he quickly recalled. “You mean the Zhao-ge
who lived in the same apartment as you and said he came from the same province as He
Zhongyi? Called Zhao Yulong?”
Xiao Haiyang frowned.—He remembered how Wang Hongliang had been ready to let Ma
Xiaowei carry the can, acting the part of the criminal suspect, hastily giving the City Bureau a
solution to the extremely strange case of He Zhongyi. But he’d known there was something
fishy about this, so he’d gone with Tao Ran, who’d also had doubts, to privately visit a few of
He Zhongyi’s acquaintances, Zhao Yulong among them.
He hadn’t been a crucial figure at all, because at the time of the crime, he was supposed to
have gone to his hometown to attend a funeral. He’d only learned of He Zhongyi’s death when
Xiao Haiyang had called him, then hastily returned to Yan City. Actually, he hadn’t even counted
as a witness; you could only say it had been an ordinary visit to understand something of the
victim’s background.
Apart from him and Tao Ran, it was possible the others didn’t know such a person existed.
But thinking about it carefully, the clues this Passerby A-like Zhao Yulong had supplied had
been rather key—the origin of He Zhongyi’s white cell phone and He Zhongyi’s altercation with
Zhang Donglai had both come into the police force’s line of sight only after talking to him. Most
importantly, He Zhongyi had dressed rather formally to go to the Chengguang Mansion to meet
Zhao Haochang, and the shoes he’d been wearing had been borrowed from Zhao Yulong, so it
was likely that he had grasped what He Zhongyi was doing.
Actually, the first person whose investigation had reached the Chengguang Mansion at the time
had been Fei Du, because he’d chanced to encounter He Zhongyi asking the way. But thinking
about it, given Zhao Yulong’s statement, even without Fei Du’s chance encounter the police
would very naturally have turned their line of sight towards the Chengguang Mansion, then
realized that the “scene of the crime” Ma Xiaowei had been unwilling to talk about in his
babbling hadn’t in fact been the “scene of the crime,” and other secrets were involved.
In an instant, countless thoughts flashed through Xiao Haiyang’s mind. He pursed his dry lips
slightly. “Didn’t you say that this Zhao Yulong had gone to his hometown to attend a funeral on
the night of the crime?”
“He said he was going back to his hometown, but the next morning, before it got light, he
suddenly came back. Zhongyi hadn’t come back, the others weren’t there, so I was alone in
the apartment,” Ma Xiaowei said in a sobbing tone. “He suddenly shook me awake and
showed me the photos online that you guys hadn’t had time to delete yet, asked me what was
going on… As soon as I opened my eyes I saw…saw Zhongyi-ge… I…I…”
As soon as he remembered this, Ma Xiaowei couldn’t quite get his words out. He talked
babbled for a while, then simply covered his face and began to cry dully.
He sat stiffly for a while, maintaining the indifference of an objective onlooker. Then, thinking of
something, he suddenly furtively reached out and cautiously patted Ma Xiaowei’s shoulder with
his fingertips. After a light touch, he drew back again, as though Ma Xiaowei were a human
hedgehog and would prick his hand.
“Zhao-ge asked me what was going on, and he said that Zhongyi-ge was downstairs and there
were police all over outside. I didn’t dare to believe it, pulled open the window and looked out,
then I knew that it was true. My mind buzzed, and then I heard Zhao-ge next to me saying, ‘It
looks like they found Zhongyi in that triangular piece of land.’ When I heard that, I was scared
to death—that was the place I’d bought the stuff the night before, why would Zhongyi-ge have
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anything to do with them? He never touched that stuff, I knew that… My first reaction was, Oh
no, this definitely happened because I sold that phone.”
“You thought that He Zhongyi had seen you sell his precious new phone and had gone up to
argue with the drug dealers, trying to take his phone back, and so had gotten killed by them?”
Xiao Haiyang asked. “Did you think so yourself, or did someone mislead you?”
“All right,” Xiao Haiyang said helplessly. This silly child had no idea he’d been used. “And then
what?”
“Zhongyi-ge was nice to me, if I wasn’t so… I wouldn’t have stolen his stuff! I was scared, so I
told Zhao-ge everything and asked him what to do, but Zhao-ge said, ‘If Wang Hongliang and
the others killed him, then Zhongyi-ge died for nothing.’”
Xiao Haiyang noticed something and said grimly, “You mean that Zhao Yulong also knew about
Wang Hongliang and the others.—Did he take drugs?”
Ma Xiaowei shook his head. “He wasn’t like us. But Zhao-ge had been there a long time, longer
than anyone else. He knew everything.”
Xiao Haiyang frowned again—because when they’d spoken to Zhao Yulong, they hadn’t
noticed that he was the sort of great person of vast resources who “knew everything.” Not only
that, he’d pretended he’d just come from out of town and knew nothing about the cause of He
Zhongyi’s death!
Xiao Haiyang’s spine suddenly felt cold. “What did he make you do?”
“Zhao-ge snuck a look outside and said there was a police car he hadn’t seen before and
some grunts looking around, and he said he’d seen the head of the police bureau bowing and
scraping to someone,” Ma Xiaowei said quietly. “Zhao-ge said this thing had definitely made a
big noise and someone had come from above to investigate, and maybe we had a chance to
get justice for Zhongyi-ge.”
“You’re saying Zhao-ge could even tell which police car didn’t come from the sub-bureau?”
Xiao Haiyang asked in disbelief. “And he recognized Wang Hongliang?”
Ma Xiaowei nodded matter-of-factly. “Zhao-ge knew lots of people. He could find out all about
anything.”
Xiao Haiyang had nothing to say to this. These little boys who came into chaotic contact with
the teeming world before they’d grown up had a cult-like superstitious faith in “connections.”
For them, there was nothing that couldn’t be explained with “having people above,” and if it
couldn’t, then all it took was adding “having brothers on the inside.”
“Zhao-ge said that reasonably speaking the police would come to the place Zhongyi-ge lived
to ask questions, but since the people who’d killed him were the same as the ones
investigating, their questioning would only be walking past so their bosses would see. If we
wanted to redress the injustice, we had to make the people above hear it, had to go to the sub-
bureau and make a stink. But the sub-bureau was their territory, it would be the same as
informing on them right in front of their faces. Zhao-ge asked whether I dared. If I did, then I’d
do what he instructed. He guaranteed it would be all right, at most I’d be locked up for a
couple days and then let go, there would definitely be someone above protecting me. And if I
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didn’t dare, that was all right, after all, Zhongyi-ge wasn’t a relative or a friend, and I hadn’t hurt
him on purpose.
“Zhao-ge said a lot of other heartfelt things to me, said he’d seen lots of young people like me,
and all of them ended up rotting in the dirt, getting rolled up in a mat and taken out of the city
to be burnt. For the luckier ones, their families were notified. Some were handled like vagrants,
their parents and relatives didn’t know anything. He said that if I did what he said, if I could
make it count as meritorious service, all the petty pilfering and ‘doing snow’ could be written
off. I wouldn’t be arrested, and I could go to rehab for free and be like a normal person when I
got out. No one would know I’d gone the wrong way.”
Ma Xiaowei wiped his tears, looking aggrieved. Xiao Haiyang developed some unpracticed
compassion, for once biting back the true and unfeeling words, “He just wanted to trick you
into being cannon fodder.”
Xiao Haiyang spent over an hour going back and forth with Ma Xiaowei before he felt he
understood things, then said goodbye and left. Upon leaving, he suddenly remembered
something. Pushing at his glasses, Xiao Haiyang asked, “Though Zhao Yulong told you a pack
of lies, he didn’t instruct you to break the law in any way. Why did you seem kind of afraid
when I first came in?”
“Ma Xiaowei said that on the way from the City Bureau to the rehab center, a car was following
him, then showed him a message that said he’d done well. The person in the car was wearing
dark glasses, and it definitely wasn’t Zhao-ge. This scared him. Ma Xiaowei thought the words
were ironic, sort of like, ‘Well, haven’t you done a fine job.’ He thought someone had found out
about what he and Zhao Yulong had talked over privately, and that someone from Wang
Hongliang’s party had slipped through the net and was threatening him.” Xiao Haiyang was
sitting upright on Luo Wenzhou’s couch, formally reporting.
The couch in Luo Wenzhou’s house was very soft. You sank in as soon as you sat down. But
Xiao Haiyang was unwilling to go with the flow; it seemed as though he had three hundred
more vertebrae than other people, sitting on the couch as though it were a cold bench, making
a stark contrast with Fei Du next to him.
Fei Du had his hand propped on the arm of the couch and his head down, sprawling
bonelessly, with Luo Yiguo next to him doing the same, leaning on his leg with its neck askew,
sleeping like a cat cake, having rubbed fur all over President Fei’s fashionable pants.
Fei Du, Xiao Haiyang, Lang Qiao, and Luo Wenzhou were sitting around a little coffee table,
temporarily using Luo Wenzhou’s living room as their stronghold. The phone on the table was
connected to Tao Ran, who was still in the hospital.
“I remember Zhao Yulong,” Tao Ran said over the phone. “Never mind Xiao-Xiao, even I didn’t
notice there was anything wrong with him. If it’s true, then that’s too frightful… Hello? Is the
signal bad? Why is there so much static?”
Luo Wenzhou stood up and wordlessly picked up Luo Yiguo, snoring as it leaned against Fei
Du, and put it into the cat bed.
“I investigated the identity information the two of us recorded at the time,” Xiao Haiyang
continued. “A person called Zhao Yulong does exist, and he did come to Yan City, but he went
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back to his hometown five years ago. His Mandarin is very bad. He’s completely different from
the person we met. And apparently he lost an ID once.”
“The people who live in the little houses there are all poor young workers, newcomers, empty-
handed. Though this Zhao Yulong wouldn’t stand out in a crowd, looked at on his own, he was
actually pretty different from those youngsters. How to put it… He had a sort of tidy dignity,”
Tao Ran said over the phone. “This is my fault. I didn’t inquire deeply at the time because he
may have been having a hard time at home.”
“So what was this fake Zhao Yulong doing here?” Lang Qiao asked. “Secretly gathering
evidence of Wang Hongliang and the others taking part in drug trafficking, volunteering to rid
the people of an evil?”
Fei Du said, “From what Ma Xiaowei says, it sounds like this person had already been lying low
a long time. If he’d really wanted to rid the people of an evil, then he’d have done something
other than…”
“Just being an unused chess piece, watching others’ mortal peril and doing nothing,” Luo
Wenzhou picked up, glaring at Fei Du. “Don’t talk when your throat aches, it hurts me to listen
to you.”
She felt she’d asked a very wrong question and that there was nowhere for her gaze to rest.
She could only turn towards Xiao Haiyang, who was as extraneous as she was. “So who was
this fake Zhao Yulong?”
“But I have some idea,” Luo Wenzhou suddenly put in. “That’s another reason I called you in.
“While investigating Wang Hongliang, I went to the Great Fortune Building to try to save Chen
Zhen and met a fake front desk receptionist. Then, in the Yufen Middle School case, after Feng
Bin was killed at the Drum Tower, Fei Du and I were investigating along the path those kids had
taken…”
“Oh?” Lang Qiao acutely seized the key piece of information. “The two of you went to the
Lovers’…went, uh, there to—to investigate the case?”
When she’d said this, there was silence all around.—Xiao Haiyang had no idea what she was
talking about. Fei Du, head propped on his hand, was looking at her with a not-quite-smile like
a demon looking for a chance to suck out a person’s soul, frightening Lang Qiao so she didn’t
dare to meet his gaze and silently averted her line of sight.
Luo Wenzhou, however, was more “benevolent.” He only took out an ancient file and whacked
Lang Big Eyes on the forehead in a very practiced motion. “Aren’t you clever!”
Luo Wenzhou rolled his eyes at her and flattened out the old folder, which was about to fall
apart. “In the spot where Feng Bin met the killer, we ran into a fake patrolman going under
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someone else’s name. While we were pursuing Lu Guosheng, the security tapes at Beiyuan’s
Longyun Center were swapped, and the security guard ‘Wang Jian’ disappeared afterwards—a
fake security guard. Later, when we investigated Wang Xiao again, we looked through Yufen
Middle School’s security camera records from November sixth and found that the female
schoolfellows mentioned in Wang Xiao’s testimony hadn’t returned to school, and the person
who’d followed her into the bathroom had actually been a janitor.
“A fake janitor.” Luo Wenzhou paused. “Add in another fake Zhao Yulong, and it sounds like a
pattern, doesn’t it?”
“They’re all minor figures, their surface identities either solitary out-of-towners or temporary
workers in jobs with a high turnover where it’s easy to disguise yourself.” Xiao Haiyang came
around at once and picked up. “And they all seem to have prototypes. For example, there
really is a Zhao Yulong. The place of birth, name, age, even part of the work history matches.
This way, even if someone investigates, as long as they don’t investigate in depth, it would still
be hard to find a gap!”
“You’ve left one out,” Fei Du said very lightly. “We also haven’t found the fake delivery person
Dong Qian had direct contact with before he killed Zhou Junmao. Without considering the
motive, I think it’s appropriate to classify that case in the same category.”
“A service worker, a patrolman, a security guard, a janitor, a delivery person…” Lang Qiao
shuddered, finding that she couldn’t think too much about this; thinking too much, it would be
easy to get paranoid—service workers could easily drug food and drinks, patrolmen and
security guards were nearly symbols of safety, janitors were like invisible people in any setting,
not raising suspicions anywhere they went, and delivery people could knock on the doors of
countless unsuspecting homes.
But the trouble was, these service professions, while being endowed with exceptional faith,
were sometimes also the ones with the highest turnover, the most changes in personnel, the
least rigorous entrance and exit examinations.
“Taking on a fake identity, being able to stay concealed over a long period of time—it’s likely
this is all the same gang.” Luo Wenzhou pulled out a photograph from the file. “Luckily, we’ve
found the end of one thread.
“This woman is called Zhu Feng. She’s the fake janitor who snuck into Wang Xiao’s school. We
were able to determine her identity because she has a criminal record. Fourteen years ago, Zhu
Feng’s newlywed husband was killed. The killer was later judged to be mentally challenged and
incompetent, so he was spared from criminal punishment. Zhu Feng didn’t accept this and
snuck into the mental hospital and attempted to get revenge. She failed. Later this case was
part of the first Picture Album Project.” Luo Wenzhou paused, pulling seven thin case files out
of the folder and handing them around. “You may not know that there was a mishap during the
first Picture Album Project.”
“The first Picture Album Project collected unresolved cases where the suspects couldn’t be
apprehended for all sorts of reasons. Those are the ones you’re holding. All old cases, some
because of technological limits, some because time had passed and the evidence was
insufficient…all kinds of reasons that the suspect hadn’t paid the price—adding in this case of
the mentally disabled suspect spared criminal penalty, there were seven cases altogether. I
only got these materials by deception. It was against discipline and has to be kept strictly
secret. The materials don’t leave this room.—And after being collected in the Picture Album
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Project, the chief suspects in each case who hadn’t been arrested due to insufficient evidence
died unusual deaths one after another.”
“The causes of death were very delicate.” Fei Du scanned the old case files. “For example, in
the case of the mentally disabled killer who was shut up in a mental hospital, his death was
very similar to that of the victim he’d killed before being placed in the hospital. They were both
stabbed in the chest and abdomen by the same style of knife, and the distribution of wounds
was almost identical. On the day this mental patient was killed, the power was suddenly cut in
the hospital he was staying at, and a portion of the security cameras stopped working.
Someone knocked out the nurse on duty and pried open the lock on the door.—And in the end
the weapon he was stabbed with was found in the next room along with bloody clothes. The
fingerprints of the patient in the next room were also found on the weapon…but this patient
was very seriously ill. He could hardly communicate. They couldn’t get anything out of him.
Even if he’d really killed this person, there was nothing to be done about it.”
“A mental patient kills someone and then gets killed by another mental patient?” Tao Ran said
over the phone. “What do you call that? Karmic retribution?”
“Once is karmic retribution. If it happens this many times in a row, then the ‘retribution’ isn’t
purely natural.” Fei Du smiled. Then he thought of something, and his smile immediately
vanished. His gaze was grave.—Using some means to secretly gather the victims of vile
crimes, arranging them like chess pieces, weaving a net with unremarkable minor individuals…
If he hadn’t been born about a decade too late, Fei Du nearly would have suspected he’d done
this himself; he couldn’t resist turning his head and coughing a few times.
“Didn’t I tell you to talk less?” Luo Wenzhou frowned, pushing a cup of warm water in front of
him. “If you interrupt again I’ll tape your mouth shut.”
“Is this why the previous Picture Album Project was called to a halt?” Lang Qiao asked. “So
who killed these people?”
“The person in charge of the Picture Album Project then was a senior professor at Yan Security
Uni, named Fan Siyuan. I looked into it, and Lao-Yang, Director Lu, Gu Zhao—all of them
studied at Yan Security Uni and were his students at one point. He later vanished without a
trace, and his status was only changed to ‘dead’ two or three years later.”
Hearing the name “Gu Zhao,” Xiao Haiyang’s brain had short-circuited. He asked directly,
“What does that mean?”
“That means it’s likely this Fan Siyuan first disappeared, and only ‘died’ a few years after
disappearing.” One word at a time, Luo Wenzhou said, “It’s likely he only ‘died’ in the legal
sense.”
“But why? What’s his motive?” Lang Qiao said. “Boss, I’ll use your catchphrase—on what
basis?”
“We won’t know the motive until we catch him, and the basis is up to you to find. What else did
I call you here to do?” Luo Wenzhou spread his hands. This was one benefit to being a leader;
you could be strict with others and lenient with yourself, reach out and openly ask others for
basis, then order your subordinate grunts to go investigate when others asked you for basis.
“I’ve given you the theory, comrades, it’s up to you to verify it!”
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“Go investigate each case one by one. Go excavate the victims’ close relatives and any people
with close relationships. Don’t overlook any lead. If this series of ‘fake people’ really are all
connected to the old cases, then the identity of the person behind them goes without saying.—
Xiao Haiyang, what is it now?”
Xiao Haiyang’s chest was undulating fiercely. He raised somewhat blank eyes. “Captain Luo,
since this Fan Siyuan has obtained so many people’s trust, is it possible…is it possible he was
the person in the know fourteen years ago? When Uncle Gu suspected there was a mole in the
City Bureau and couldn’t determine who to suspect, would he have sought someone else’s
help? His teacher’s, for example? Isn’t it possible that the person who sold out Uncle Gu
wasn’t from the City Bureau at all?”
Luo Wenzhou froze. Before he could speak, his phone suddenly rang. He gestured at Xiao
Haiyang and picked up. “Yes… Yes? What, today? Fine, got it, thank you.”
With everyone looking at him, Luo Wenzhou put down the phone. “The investigation team has
determined to stop the investigation into Director Lu for now.”
Lang Qiao first stared blankly, then beamed with joy. “Director Lu has been cleared of
suspicion!”
“No, it’s only temporary,” Luo Wenzhou said quickly. “The investigation is still ongoing, he can’t
leave the city for now.—Look, you guys go investigate. Fei Du, don’t run around while you’re
sick, stay home and summarize the information. I’ll go see Director Lu, ask him in detail about
the Picture Album while I’m at it.”
The investigator politely asked Lu Youliang to the door and sent for a car to take him home.
“Director Lu, are you going to your post or your home? There’s really quite a lot of work that
needs to be managed at the City Bureau now.”
“Of course I don’t mean see him in private. You can send someone to be present,” Lu Youliang
said. “Lao-Zhang and I worked together for many years. Emotionally and reasonably, I won’t
believe he’s done anything wrong. Let me say a few words, maybe we can remember
something that’s been overlooked.—Why don’t you ask your superiors for guidance?”
The investigator looked deeply at him, then picked up his phone and stepped to one side.
An hour later, Zhang Chunjiu and Lu Youliang were received in a simple visiting room. The two
of them faced each other helplessly, both showing wry smiles, feeling that they had been cut
off from the world for a long time.—Zhang Chunjiu seemed even thinner. The white hair at Lu
Youliang’s temples had doubled over the last few days. It was clear they’d both been quite
roughly tormented.
“I haven’t managed the charge you left me well. Less than a year, and all this has happened.
I’ve even dragged you in,” Lu Youliang said.
Zhang Chunjiu put up a hand towards him, somewhat impatiently interrupting his words. “Lao-
Lu, it wasn’t me back then.”
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Lu Youliang hadn’t expected that they would even skip the stage of polite remarks, going right
into the main subject. He looked involuntarily at the investigator next to him. The investigator
silently pressed a button on a mini-recorder.
“I know it wasn’t you,” Lu Youliang said, sighing. “We’ve been brothers so many years. We
know each other thoroughly.”
“I wasn’t in the know about Gu Zhao privately investigating The Louvre. He must have chosen
the person he trusted most.” Zhang Chunjiu lowered his voice. “You know who the person he
trusted most was!”
“Listen to me, while I’ve been cooperating with the investigation these last few days, they’ve
gone through all the arrangements of my last few years of work. Among them, one person
asked me why I requested for the Picture Album Project to start up a second time,” Zhang
Chunjiu said quickly. “I was stupefied at the time, I said, ‘What Picture Album Project?’ They
showed me a report I’d submitted.—Lao-Lu, I really did submit a report. You know I always
wanted to perfect our internal electronic file management. Aside from the smart field work
system, I also wanted to classify case files, and add theoretical research results to consult for
later cases. I only mentioned those things in the report. I didn’t give the project any code name,
and I especially didn’t say it was called the Picture Album Project!”
Lu Youliang instantly opened his eyes wide, subconsciously tightening the hand he was
holding in his pocket.
“This project was only passed down after I left my post,” Zhang Chunjiu said. “Lao-Lu, who
called it the Picture Album Project? Why did they call it that?”
Lu Youliang opened his mouth. After a good while, he said with difficulty, “If it wasn’t you, then
it must have been someone at…at Yan Security Uni.”
“Is Fan Siyuan really dead?” Zhang Chunjiu said, one word at a time. “Who wanted to revive
this specter? Who wanted to frame me—us? Who’s been hiding in our ranks secretly passing
information outward? Lao-Lu, make those children under your command go investigate. Only
arresting this person can clear my name!”
Lu Youliang was nearly distraught when he got into the car. He knew that while the driver was
ostensibly seeing him home, in reality he was secretly watching him. Meanwhile, what Zhang
Chunjiu had just said was going back and forth by his ear.—You know who the person he
trusted most was!
When Gu Zhao had been doing graduate studies at Yan Security Uni, he really had been on
very good terms with his advisor, Fan Siyuan. If he’d thought there was a mole at the City
Bureau, that no one was safe, would he have chosen his advisor?
The City Bureau didn’t assign compulsory partners, but in practice, there were people who
were in the habit of working together, for example Luo Wenzhou and Tao Ran now—and Gu
Zhao and Yang Zhengfeng then.
The first time Lu Guosheng’s fingerprints had been discovered, Yang Zhengfeng had been
away, but what about later? If Gu Zhao had suspected someone had been leaking information,
then wouldn’t Yang Zhengfeng, who’d been absent at the time, have been cleared of suspicion
by being out of it? He and Gu Zhao had been captain and deputy-captain, had worked
together the most, were most familiar with each other…
If Yang Zhengfeng hadn’t given up his life three years earlier, then now, with Gu Zhao’s case
reopened, suspicion would definitely have been concentrated on him.
Lu Youliang gave a start, pulled himself together, and forced a smile at the driver. He got out of
the car and nearly tripped over the curb.—There was cold sweat covering his back. He quickly
went upstairs and, from a secret compartment in his bookcase, pulled out a listening device
that had run out of batteries.
Lu Youliang stared at the listening device for a long time, then put it in his pocket. While going
out the door, he told his worried wife, “I’m going to the hospital.”
Then, ignoring his wife’s repeated questions, he left home in big strides.
At the Second Hospital, Tao Ran had finished attending the telephone meeting filled with
explosive information. Before he’d had time to straighten out what he’d just heard, a visitor
came to his hospital room—Xiao-Wu, the criminal policeman who’d gone with him to
investigate Yin Ping, came over carrying various bags of fruit and nourishment, piling the
hospital room’s windowsill full.
“What are you doing?” Tao Ran said quickly. “Bonuses haven’t been distributed yet. Don’t you
want to live? Have you bought your parents stuff for the Spring Festival? Take that stuff back,
use it to pay tribute to your elders.”
Xiao-Wu rubbed his hands together and sat down next to him. “Deputy-Captain Tao, let me
pay tribute to you first, I was following right behind you that day, if I hadn’t been too slow… I…
I’m such a… I gave Kong Weichen’s family some money, too—not a lot, I don’t have much on
hand, I just thought that I’d feel a little easier this way.”
Tao Ran examined his expression, thinking his little shidi’s face was very weary, the black
circles around his eyes nearly hanging down to his chin. He sat uneasily, looking like he wanted
to say something. “Xiao-Wu, what’s wrong?”
“Ge,” Xiao-Wu managed to say after stammering for a long time, “there’s something I… I don’t
know how to say it… I really fucking…”
Xiao-Wu’s eyes were red. He seemed about to start crying. He looked up at Tao Ran, wrapped
up in bandages and casts, then bent over and buried his face in his palms. “When we went to
arrest Yin Ping and they came to silence him before we’d finished coordinating, they’re all
saying now that it was Kong Weichen calling someone… I don’t know the details, I heard from
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Lao-Kong’s family that people came a few times to investigate at his house, maybe even a
‘martyr’ would…”
Xiao-Wu slowly took a small evidence bag from his pocket. Inside it was a listening device the
size of a button. Tao Ran’s pupils instantly contracted.
“I found it in my bag,” Xiao-Wu said hoarsely. “The day before yesterday my sister’s children
asked me for New Year’s money, so I went through my bag. It’s out of battery, I still don’t
know… I don’t…don’t know who to talk to about this, I really don’t know, ge, it’s all my fault…
it’s all my fault!”
Tao Ran’s gaze fell on the miniature listening device—it was exactly the same as the one Luo
Wenzhou had found in his bag. Something flashed vaguely through his mind. “Enough, what’s
the use of crying? Where have you been recently? Who have you met?”
Xiao-Wu looked at him blankly. “I…haven’t gone anywhere, I was working overtime, I only went
back and forth between work and home…”
No, it couldn’t have been put there at the City Bureau. After they’d found the listening device
on Tao Ran, they’d overtly and secretly screened their internal personnel countless times.—
Thoughts spun quickly through Tao Ran’s mind. And why hadn’t there been a listening device
on Luo Wenzhou? Luo Wenzhou’s scope of authority was much greater, and his information
was much more complete. Could the person eavesdropping on them really have thought Luo
Wenzhou was more perceptive than any of them and would be hard to bug?
“Aside from work, where else did you go?” Tao Ran lifted his half-immobilized body, nearly
getting out of his hospital bed. “Xiao-Wu, think carefully.”
“I really didn’t… In the days before we investigated Yin Ping, I really…” Xiao-Wu’s brow
furrowed tightly. “Apart from going to the kindergarten to pick up my nephew once, and going
once to the hospital to see shiniang…I haven’t even had time to pay attention to my girlfriend,
I… Deputy-Captain Tao!”
Xiao-Wu jumped up in fright. “Ge, what are you doing? Lie—lie down… Lie down quickly, I’ll
call…”
The edges of Tao Ran’s forehead were soaked in cold sweat. His misaligned bones collectively
voiced their protests. His soaring heart rate made him gasp for breath, but he had no attention
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to spare to cry out in pain. Tao Ran gripped Xiao-Wu’s sleeve firmly with his swollen hand.
“When did you…when did you go see shiniang?”
“Shiniang?” Xiao-Wu was all at sea, not understanding why he would ask this. “Well,
shiniang…shiniang has cancer, doesn’t she? So I had to go. When she came here to the
Second Hospital for her surgery, I was the one who drove her. I’d wanted to stay to help take
care of her after the surgery, but then this happened—what’s the matter?”
Tao Ran didn’t answer. His heart was like the Arctic Ocean in a storm—perilous, full of snow
and ice.
When they had been eating hotpot at Luo Wenzhou’s house and had found the listening device
in his bag, they’d discussed how it was very possible it hadn’t been put there by someone on
their team; everyone Tao Ran had seen going out on his own, witnesses, informers…even
victims’ families, could have placed it.
When he’d lain down that night, he’d tossed and turned, unable to sleep, inwardly reviewing all
the people he’d seen alone. There really had been a moment where their shiniang Fu Jiahui had
flashed through his mind—shiniang had called him to the Yang house and handed Lao-Yang’s
testament over to him. And Lao-Yang’s testament had just happened to mention the then very
mysterious-seeming Gu Zhao and the National Road 327 case.
Hardly any time had passed after they’d gotten hold of that top secret testament, with Lao-
Yang’s shocking statement that some people had changed, when before they could digest it,
the main character of the National Road 327 case had entered the arena, killing Feng Bin at the
Drum Tower.
While they’d been discussing listening devices, moles, traitors, and other filthy subjects,
thinking of her for an instant would have seemed to be profaning her.
And why had she wanted to hand over Lao-Yang’s…unverified testament to him?
Tao Ran clearly remembered the day he’d gotten shiniang’s phone call. He’d quickly picked up
a box of cured meat and gone to answer her invitation. Lao-Yang’s home was in one of those
old-fashioned six-story buildings. There was no elevator. The cured meat had been homemade
by his relatives back home, and the box was insecurely wrapped, nearly falling apart as soon
as you picked it up. He’d had to strain to prop up the bottom of the cardboard box in order to
heave the thirty jin plus of stuff up to the sixth floor. His hand had trembled when he’d knocked
on the door.
Then, with the distinctive smell of cured meat on his hands, he’d received the grievous news
and the truth like a thunderclap.
When Fu Jiahui had seen him out the door and given him the testament, her expression had
been very complicated. It had seemed pained, but there had also seemed to be a strange light
flashing in her eyes.
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But he hadn’t recovered from the hit yet. When he’d taken the testament, his hands had still
been shaking uselessly. He hadn’t been able to understand the heavy meaning behind her
words.
Lao-Yang had said, “There are some people there who have changed.”
“I have to go out,” Tao Ran suddenly said directly. “I have to go out and see someone, right
now. I must go. Xiao-Wu, help me!”
Xiao-Wu looked at Deputy-Captain Tao’s dried fish appearance, then looked at his expression,
and nearly blurted out, “Are you crazy?”
Luo Wenzhou, who’d wanted to pick up Director Lu, was a beat too slow. Learning that
Director Lu had already gone home, he really didn’t want to wait even a minute. He wanted to
find out everything there was about Fan Siyuan at once. So he very annoyingly drove to
Director Lu’s address, not expecting to come up empty again—
“The hospital?” Luo Wenzhou looked helplessly back at the equally bewildered Mrs. Lu.
“Auntie, did Uncle Lu say why he was going to the hospital?”
“No.” Mrs. Lu shook her head. “From the moment he walked in the door, he seemed
possessed. He charged right to the study without even taking off his jacket or changing his
shoes, stayed less than two minutes, then suddenly ran out again. I don’t know what he’s up
to.”
Director Lu had just come back from the investigation team. Instead of staying with his alarmed
wife or going to the City Bureau to take charge of the general situation, he’d gone to the
hospital alone—where was the reasoning in that?
Luo Wenzhou walked slower and slower. He stopped with one hand propped on the roof of his
car for a good while. Suddenly he thought of something, opened the car door, and got in,
ramming the gas pedal and howling towards the Second Hospital.
Lu Youliang walked into the inpatient building empty-handed, at odds with the visitors carrying
bags of all sizes. When he came to Fu Jiahui’s door, he stared at the doorplate with a
complicated expression for a long time, took a deep breath, then knocked.
The woman in the hospital bed slowly turned her head to look at him. She was emaciated and
pale, so white she almost blended with her hospital gown. There was no color in her lips. There
was an IV in the back of her almost transparent hand, which was purple from being used as a
pincushion by successive IVs. She looked horribly frail.
When Fu Jiahui saw him, she didn’t speak or smile. Her face was still unchangingly cold, her
gaze haughty and indifferent, paring away the power and position of the middle-aged man in
front of her. She only said, “You’re here? Sit.”
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Lu Youliang pulled over a little stool and sat down, curling up his legs. “Is your daughter not
here?”
“No need for small talk. You haven’t come to visit the sick,” Fu Jiahui interrupted him without
answering. “You don’t come without even a piece of fruit when you’re visiting the sick.”
Lu Youliang only then came to himself and lowered his head somewhat abashedly to look at his
empty hands. “I…”
“Say what you have to say,” Fu Jiahui said dully. “I don’t have long to listen, so spare me the
extraneous bits.”
Lu Youliang was silent for a good while, fingers lightly tapping on his knee. Using all his
deliberation, he spoke: “I only found out about your diagnosis last month. I was startled and
afraid that a widowed mother and her daughter wouldn’t be able to deal with all the petty
business that comes with treating an illness long-term, and I didn’t know how much money a
major illness like this would cost and how much insurance would cover. I was afraid your
means would be straightened and rushed over to bring money to your house.”
Fu Jiahui pursed her lips; it might have been a smile. “Director Lu, I thank you for that.”
“But while I was on the balcony smoking, you put the money back into my bag.”
“I’ve been quite well-off these last few years. I have no use for your money,” Fu Jiahui said.
“What, was there any missing?”
“There wasn’t.” Lu Youliang looked at her with a sorrowful and bewildered expression, gently
saying, “There was something added.”
Fu Jiahui realized something and immediately closed her eyes. The two of them, one sitting
and one lying down, were like two not especially aesthetically pleasing human statues, each
frozen in the passage of wearying ages. Then Director Lu gently took out the little listening
device and put it at Fu Jiahui’s bedside.
“I knew someone had touched my bag, but I wasn’t overly suspicious, because I knew at a
glance that it had been you secretly putting the money back. I wasn’t going to carefully go
through it because of that.” Lu Youliang’s eyes were a little bloodshot. He said, “Sister-in-law,
when Lao-Yang was alive, when he talked about you, he always said you were bold but
cautious, that there was nothing you wouldn’t dare to do. We all joked and said he was crazy
about his wife. I believe it now.”
“I’m an open book. If you’re willing to listen, then listen. Anyway, I’m an unprepossessing old
man. I’m not afraid of anyone taking advantage of me, and I have nothing to be ashamed or
angry about.” Lu Youliang looked down, tightly clenching his fists, and took a deep breath.
“Sister-in-law, let me ask you something—that day when Luo Wenzhou and the others went to
arrest Lu Guosheng and the information nearly got out ahead of them, was that…was that
you?”
Luo Wenzhou, standing at the door of the hospital room with his hand raised to knock, froze.
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Suddenly he heard the sound of a wheelchair next to him. Luo Wenzhou stiffly turned his head
and saw that Chang Ning had gotten a wheelchair from somewhere and was pushing over Tao
Ran, who ought to have been in bed. Luo Wenzhou blankly met his eyes, then suddenly felt
that he’d returned to the day three years ago when he’d learned of Lao-Yang’s death. His ears
had heard it and delivered it to his central nervous system, and his central nervous system had
been unable to handle it, leaving him looking on helplessly at himself.
After a long time, a light laugh came from the hospital room. Fu Jiahui said, “Director Lu, you’re
infinitely perceptive. Don’t you know everything?”
“Why?” Lu Youliang had come emotionally prepared, but when he heard these words, his chest
ached. He spoke almost a little incoherently. “I don’t understand, it’s… Did someone coerce
you? Huh? It must be the child—it must be… You can tell us, I’ll send people to guard her
twenty-four hours a day, if we can’t even protect our brother’s wife and child, how the fuck can
we have the face to continue in this profession…”
Fu Jiahui interrupted him. “Lao-Yang himself didn’t know who killed him, what do we amount
to!”
“What, did I say something strange?” Fu Jiahui sneered. “Hey, Director Lu, haven’t you just
gotten through being investigated? Don’t you know how Gu Zhao died, how Lao-Yang died,
too? Lao-Yang even wrote a testament, made all his preparations, but as always evil advances
faster than good. Could you save him? Were you in time?”
“I’ll be gone soon,” Fu Jiahui continued, completely ignoring him. “I’ll be dead soon… Lao-Lu,
they didn’t only find this illness at the end of the year—there were signs long ago. When you
reach this stage, you know that people can get premonitions of the time they’ll die. So I said to
my brothers and sisters, I may not be able to wait.”
“Brothers and sisters with the same fate as me.” Fu Jiahui’s voice lowered. “Those who have
met with the greatest injustice in the world. The police have no way to catch the criminal for
you, the law has no way to give you justice. You raise a cry, everyone looks at you and accords
you a few tears and says you’re pitiable. You think the whole world will support you, but times
change, and you find that people forget you as soon as they’re done pitying you, and you have
to deal with it yourself. If one person can’t deal with it, then all of you join hands—isn’t it
effective? You’ve finally started ferreting out the mole, reopening the old case.
“As for leaking information, I’ll apologize to you for that. All of this was rushed because of my
health. Some details weren’t perfectly prepared. Our enemy is sinister and cunning, and very
dangerous. During the business of the Zhou family, we already put them on alert, and even
more so during the time with Wei Zhanhong. They seized one of our brothers and got our
communications record from him, but luckily it didn’t impact the grand scheme.”
Lu Youliang heard something in her few glancing words. His ears hummed. “The Zhou Clan…
Wei Zhanhong… Lu Guosheng committing murder, it was led by you people, planned by you?
The ‘go ask shatov’ in the Lu Guosheng case was one of your people? You knew ahead of time
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that that little boy was going to die, and, and you sat there waiting and watching? Sister-in-law,
that child was younger than Xinxin, are you…are you crazy? Does Xinxin know about this?”
Fu Jiahui didn’t answer him. She calmly said, “Haven’t you heard? ‘Bad people are carved out
of the good7.’”
In a flash, Luo Wenzhou remembered—Xiao Haiyang had mentioned that he’d only noticed
something was wrong because he’d heard Yang Xin “inadvertently” mention the gossip she’d
heard in the dining hall. Had she really inadvertently heard the gossip? Or had she known that
someone was putting on a performance of a murder attempt on Yin Ping and had purposefully
prompted an obtuse performer into position?
Yang Xin knew. Not only did she know, she had taken part. Only she was young and her
performance was a little stiff. She couldn’t be as smooth as an adult… but it had been enough
to fool Xiao Haiyang.
This was a little girl he had watched grow up. When she’d been in junior middle school, Luo
Wenzhou had taken some people to beat up a delinquent who’d been pestering. In senior
middle school, he’d helped her contact teachers for makeup lessons. Every time she’d
succeeded on a mock exam before her university entrance exam, Lao-Yang had given him an
earful about it…
Luo Wenzhou heard Lao-Lu ask loudly, “Who are you people? Who’s leading you? Who’s
planning this?”
Fu Jiahui said almost inaudibly, “We are…the people who…bring past stories…one after
another, without error…in front of you once again. We are the reciters of the stories. We…”
The hospital room was suddenly silent. Then came Lao-Lu’s voice, a mixture of anger and
shock: “Sister-in-law!”
Luo Wenzhou pushed open the door and saw that the ashen-faced woman in the hospital bed
had her eyes closed. There was a trace of a smile at the corners of her mouth. While it was
cold, it wasn’t mocking. It was almost serene.
In all these years, Luo Wenzhou had rarely gone in front of her to invite a snub. It had been a
long time since he’d had a good look at her. Even since she’d come to the hospital, he’d
always hurriedly called in with others. For a moment he nearly thought she was a stranger he
didn’t recognize.
When he’d just run out of the hospital room, he saw a human figure flash by in the corridor. It
had looked like Yang Xin!
Luo Wenzhou turned his head and hurriedly said to Chang Ning, “Call someone!” Then he took
to his heels in pursuit.
Fei Du was ensconced in the couch in Luo Wenzhou’s house, staring at the clock on the white
wall going forward bit by bit. He was frowning as he pondered something.
Suddenly, there was a clatter in the kitchen, interrupting Fei Du’s train of thought.
He turned his head in time to witness Luo Yiguo’s “heroic bearing” after falling on its butt from
somewhere.
When Luo Wenzhou’s parents had come at the end of the year and bought too many snacks
for Luo Yiguo, the cat of their own flesh and blood, they hadn’t all fit into the original place, so
Luo Wenzhou had freed up a special cupboard to put President Guo’s cat products into. The
cupboard was in the kitchen, up by the ceiling. There was no handle on the door. A human had
no trouble opening it, but it was rather difficult for a cat’s paw.
Normally, as long as it wasn’t locked, Luo Yiguo could easily open the door to any room or
cupboard; it was rather skilled in the profession of sneaking food. Adding in that it had recently
been ordered to watch its weight, its gluttony had become towering, and it couldn’t resist using
its own paws to assure it was well fed. First it leapt from the top of the fridge, hitting the
cupboard door with matchless precision, attempting to pull the cupboard door open. Not
expecting there to be nowhere to grab hold of on the smooth door, Luo Yiguo smacked itself
into a wedge of cat, then slipped down, flailing its claws and baring its fangs.
Fei Du unsympathetically looked on as Luo Yiguo suffered a crushing defeat, his gaze falling on
an empty can in the trash, which hadn’t been taken out yet.—Right, he really had taken out a
can for Luo Yiguo that day and had later been distracted by other things and forgotten about it.
He hadn’t expected that he would remember it in his dream.
He opened a notepad on his phone and looked at the vague notes he’d left himself that
morning—the can of cat food, Luo Wenzhou angry, Tao Ran injured, suffocation, the origin of
the code, the woman’s scream…
Fei Du hesitated. Out of consideration for a certain person’s toil, he couldn’t bear to clean it. He
flipped the whiteboard over, picked out a marker, and drew a coordinate plane with the x-axis
showing time and the y-axis showing source of stress.
Compared to things that had happened recently, more distant memories were more malleable,
with a greater likelihood that the brain would suitably vary and revise them.
And compared to immaterial little matters, the greater an impact a source of stress had on a
person, the greater the feeling of indisposition it would great. It was also more likely that they
would be distorted when reflected by the unconscious in a dream.
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Not opening the can of cat food was a minor event that had just happened to Fei Du that day.
It was a very shallow memory. He thought that instead of saying he’d dreamed it, it was better
to say that he’d remembered it while half asleep. He drew a slash at the origin of the coordinate
plane.
Then there was the circumstance of Luo Wenzhou being angry and himself not being able to
coax him out of it.
Luo Wenzhou really had been a little fretful that night, Fei Du had felt it, but it hadn’t amounted
to anger. But in the end Fei Du hadn’t clearly worked out whether he’d really coaxed him out of
it. Because of this, perhaps he’d kept thinking it over in his dream, and his dream for some
reason had made a big fuss over a minor issue, enlarging this slight concern.
Fei Du was dubious, feeling that he’d recently had less to worry about, so trifling matters could
all take up space. He pondered a moment with his head tilted, then went down along the
“source of stress” axis and drew a second stroke.
Next was “Tao Ran injured” and “suffocation,” two entirely separate things that had been
mixed into the same scene.
At this point, Fei Du put down the marker and frowned deeply, pacing a few steps in front of
the whiteboard, not quite able to complete his analysis.
People’s consciousness and memories hid very complicated projections and very subtle
distortions. Surface logic and unconscious logic seemed to use different languages. Although
Fei Du considered himself very open towards himself, it was still hard for him to objectively
decipher that day’s series of dreams, which was stuck like a fishbone in his throat.
Generally speaking, a dream that could startle someone awake must have touched some
deep-seated anxiety and fear.
But Fei Du had examined himself, and he believed that he didn’t have anxieties; fears were out
of the question. For him, “fear” was like a celebrity on TV—he knew such a person existed,
could see them every day on the screen, but as for how they looked in reality and what their
temper and disposition were like…he had no way to judge.
He hadn’t felt that he’d been in any way not calm when he’d heard the news of Tao Ran being
taken to the hospital. The car crash had already happened, and only the doctors could remedy
that; it had nothing to do with him. Fei Du remembered he had only spent the whole journey
considering the sequence of events.
Could it be that “Tao Ran being injured” had been a huge source of stress for him, going so
deep that it had touched some deeper and more intense thing in his memories?
In his dream, Tao Ran, who had been hit by a car, had appeared with his face showing signs of
asphyxiation. So following that line of reasoning, an asphyxiated face was something else in his
memories…but where had he seen it?
Luo Yiguo had tried a few times without being able to open the pestilential cupboard and could
only run over with its tail stuck up to beg Fei Du. It fawningly rubbed Fei Du’s pant leg with its
round head and patted Fei Du’s lower leg with its front paws.
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Fei Du bent down and lifted it in front of his eyes, holding its front paws. Luo Yiguo was always
very docile when it was in search of food. Its tail waved back and forth under it as it tried to
force a delicate and charming expression of perfect innocence out of its fierce-looking features.
It made a thin, pitiful cry.
Fei Du considered the cat’s face for a while, thinking he wouldn’t have superimposed the faces
of those suffocating, struggling little animals onto a human face; the difference in the structure
of the features was too great.
Luo Yiguo thought there was some game and meowed elaborately at him.
“Nope.” Fei Du unfeelingly put Luo Yiguo back on the ground and proclaimed, “Luo Wenzhou
is the only animal I can’t pick up, and that’s enough.”
Fei Du considered, wiped away the writing on the whiteboard, and sent a message to Luo
Wenzhou that said: “I’m going home to get something,” then put on his jacket and went out.
He’d determined to return to his old house to have a look at the basement. He had passed a
lightless childhood there, borne the correction of electric shock and medication countless
times, even witnessed his mother’s death. Fei Du truly couldn’t understand why there would be
a flaw in his memory of the time he’d snuck into the basement.
Luo Wenzhou had no time to look at his phone. He was chasing after the barely-glimpsed Yang
Xin.
When he came to the door of the stairs, Luo Wenzhou encountered a large crowd of family
members, presumably some patient’s extended family turning out in full force; there were some
elderly ones who’d come leaning on canes. They were firmly blocking the door of the stairs,
separating him from Yang Xin.
Luo Wenzhou looked at the trembling old men and women. He really didn’t want to push his
way through a crowd of grandpas and grandmas who needed looking after, but Yang Xin had
already vanished in the moment he’d been hesitating. Urged by the emergency, Luo Wenzhou
bent his head and pushed open a window in the corridor. While a passing nurse’s aide yelled in
surprise, he stepped up on the windowsill and climbed down from the third floor, using the
second floor’s slightly projecting windowsill as a buffer. Then he leapt right down onto the
artificial lawn below, rolled, and ran off before the surrounding crowd could lift their cell
phones.
The main hall was overcrowded but could still be called orderly. Luo Wenzhou charged in
ferociously, startling all the medical personnel on duty. A hospital guard immediately went over
to question him. Luo Wenzhou carelessly shoved his work ID at the guard. “Police. Did you see
a girl around twenty coming downstairs just now?”
Before the guard could speak, Luo Wenzhou glimpsed Yang Xin out of the corner of his eye,
having just come down the stairs at the other end of the corridor. Yang Xin, taken unawares,
met his eye. A complicated expression appeared on her tidy little face, like she was holding
back from expressing pain and rage. Then she resolutely ran for the back door.
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Luo Wenzhou was so angry his lungs were about to evaporate out of his head. “Stop right
there!”
There was a little road at the inpatient department’s back door, across which was the large
hospital parking lot. The distance between Luo Wenzhou and Yang Xin was constantly
decreasing. Just then, a sedan suddenly drove out of the parking lot and came right at him.
Luo Wenzhou looked at the driver’s face—it was the fake patrolman he and Fei Du had run into
at the scene of the murder by the Drum Tower!
In a moment of desperation, he leapt up onto the hood of the car and rolled to the other side.
Luckily the driver hadn’t planned to run him over; the car window was half rolled down, and
there seemed to be a trace of a smile at the corners of his mouth. He nodded urbanely to Luo
Wenzhou, then floored the gas pedal, practically vanishing from the parking lot in a puff of
smoke. Meanwhile, Yang Xin had jumped into a car and disappeared without a trace.
Luo Wenzhou’s thighs had been painfully scraped by the collision just now. He couldn’t resist
letting loose a curse: “Motherfucker!”
Fu Jiahui had been taken in for emergency treatment. Chang Ning, meanwhile, had very
considerately withdrawn, going out to buy them some drinks. Lu Youliang and Tao Ran were
waiting in the oppressive hospital corridor in mutual silence. They looked up together when Luo
Wenzhou, covered in fury and soil, returned.
Luo Wenzhou found a corner and patted the soil off of himself. “She got away. Two cars, one
VW Bora, one Jinbei. I took down the license plate numbers and called for them to be
stopped.”
Lu Youliang didn’t answer. He tilted up his head and leaned heavily against the wall.
Tao Ran was silent for a while. “When we were investigating Feng Bin’s death, shiniang called
me to come to her house, gave me shifu’s testament, and…and while I was distracted put a
listening device in my bag, exactly as the same as the ones on Director Lu and Xiao-Wu. When
Xiao-Wu told me today, I…I actually…”
Tao Ran couldn’t quite finish. He stared wide-eyed at Luo Wenzhou for a while, then continued
with difficulty. “When I finished reading shifu’s testament, there was a period where I actually
felt a little gratified, thinking that shiniang’s frostiness towards us all these years hadn’t been
her own doing. She didn’t hate us, didn’t disdain us, it was only that shifu had told her to
distance herself from us.”
But thinking about it now, if it had only been the distance of secret troubles, would they,
criminal police officers who relied on their piercing observation skills for their next meal, really
have had no idea? If it hadn’t been genuine hatred, could it have kept Luo Wenzhou from
coming to her door for three years?
“Xiao-Wu? You mean that Yin Ping being hit was also their plan?” Luo Wenzhou’s brain, boiling
with fury, gradually cooled, and he sat down a little wearily next to Lu Youliang.
“Yes. I suspect shiniang was tricked,” Tao Ran said hoarsely. “The person plotting this behind
the scenes was the one who framed Gu Zhao and killed shifu. If Old Cinder really was Yin Ping
under a false name, then it’s likely he had an important lead, so they wanted to kill him to
silence him. He didn’t die, so they wanted to use him to frame Director Zhang again… It would
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be easy to explain to shiniang and the others, you’d just have to say that Yin Ping didn’t have
any evidence, and even if he got out and testified, his testimony wouldn’t be credible. It was
better to use him as a prop.”
Luo Wenzhou had his elbows on his knees and his hands lightly pressed together, propping his
chin. “Uncle Lu, I actually came here today to ask you about someone.”
Lu Youliang was silent for a long time before quietly saying, “I guessed… Her tone talking to
me and her diction made me think of him.”
“Fan Siyuan was my teacher, too… He must have taught Lao-Yang as well.” Lu Youliang
considered, then slowly said, “He was young then, only a few years older than us, but he was
very charming. Sometimes you thought that when he looked at you he knew what you were
thinking. He was talented, too, widely learned, with a powerful memory. He’d published many
articles, and he taught extremely well… It wasn’t the fashion to grade your teachers then, or
else he would have been the most highly rated teacher among the students. When there were
difficult students that the academic departments or the ideological and political teachers
couldn’t handle, they’d call him in and get a guaranteed result. There was one in our dormitory
who got called in for a chat with him for an hour. I don’t know what he said, but when he got
back, he cried his eyes out, wanting nothing but to start afresh and do right.”
“And Gu Zhao came in contact with him, too, right?” Luo Wenzhou said. “I looked at his
resume. When Officer Gu did his graduate program, it was under him.”
“Yes.” Lu Youliang nodded. “Gu Zhao was sincere. He didn’t go back to school to get a
graduate degree in order to win promotion, he really wanted to learn. He put in a lot of time,
took notes on all the books he read, never rested on weekends. If he didn’t understand
something, he’d keep asking until he got it clear. For a while every time he opened his mouth it
was to talk about Teacher Fan. At his graduation he invited some guests, and we all went,
along with Fan Siyuan.”
“Very good…” Lu Youliang hesitated, then said, “Oh, very good. Gu Zhao actually wasn’t a very
lively or outgoing person. He treated close friends and distant acquaintances very differently.
You could tell he really got on pretty well with Fan Siyuan. But who knows what that person
was thinking?”
“He launched the first Picture Album Project?” Luo Wenzhou asked. "What actually happened?
Uncle Lu, is Fan Siyuan really dead?”
A doctor hurriedly went by. Lu Youliang looked uneasily towards the end of the hallway, as
though worried some bad news would come from that direction.
“When you read them afterwards, some of the papers he published already had symptoms of
extremism,” Lu Youliang said. “We just weren’t paying attention back then. Psychological
profiling was just getting popular in this country at the time. Fan Siyuan took the lead in
requesting this ‘establishing a record of criminals’ psychological profiles’ project, wanting to
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research old files, reexamine some unsolved cases, find new breakthroughs. He rounded up
some frontline criminal policemen at the City Bureau… The research project was a political
assignment, outside of daily work, of course whether you participated or not depended on
whether you were willing, but we all participated—because the National Road 327 case, where
the main culprit hadn’t been brought to justice, was also part of it. It had been less than a year
since Gu Zhao’s death then. We still hadn’t been able to take a breath and get past it. I knew
many of our brothers were still privately making inquiries.”
“But psychological profiling can’t serve as evidence in court,” Luo Wenzhou said. “All the
unsolved cases in the Picture Album Project in fact had suspicious parties without effective
evidence against them. Unless they’d made false confessions under torture…”
“That couldn’t have happened.” Director Lu smiled bitterly. “One of the charges against Gu
Zhao was abuse of police power. We had people watching every move we made. We all kept
our tails between our legs and behaved ourselves, not daring to take a single step out of
bounds… I accompanied Fan Siyuan on visits for one of the cases. After we got back, he
suddenly said to me, ‘Sometimes when I think about it, I really don’t know who the law is
meant to protect. The people restricted are always the ones who observe laws and disciplines.
It’s unfair.’ I thought something was off about him then, but I didn’t make too much of it… But
then, everything started to go wrong.”
Luo Wenzhou said, “You mean the suspects dying one after another in unusual
circumstances?”
“Yes. The means were exactly the same as the deaths of the victims in the corresponding
cases, and there were many details about the cases that we hadn’t made public. So the Picture
Album Project was immediately called to a halt, and all the personnel concerned were
suspended and submitted to investigation,” Lu Youliang said. “Fan Siyuan vanished when the
investigators went to find him. He wasn’t at home or at school…or anywhere. He was under
heavy suspicion at the time, but it was only suspicion. There was no evidence. The bureau
debated for a long time between setting him down as ‘missing’ or ‘escaped suspect.' Then, in
consideration of the City Bureau’s image, they only announced that he was ‘missing.’ All the
cases in the Picture Album Project were either handled or sealed. The search only continued
privately.
“Three months later, one of his relatives received a testament. At the same time, the bureau
received a report that said Fan Siyuan had appeared in the Binhai District. Binhai was even
more desolate then than it is now. We went over following the report and nearly caught him.”
“Nearly?”
“Fan Siyuan jumped into the ocean in the course of the pursuit,” Lu Youliang said. “There were
bloodstains on a reef, but his corpse was never dredged up. He remained missing. But from
then on, it was as though he’d vanished off the face of the earth, and there weren’t any similar
cases… You know that as soon as a serial killer starts killing, it’s very hard to stop. So gradually
everyone began to think that he was really dead. A few years later his family had a problem
with their house being torn down. For the sake of the property, his relatives came to request a
declaration of death. On the record, Fan Siyuan is officially ‘dead.’”
The driver looked at him a good number of times in the rearview mirror and accidentally met
Fei Du’s eyes. He froze, then displayed a rather fawning smile. “It’s all rich people living over
there. I can only stop outside. I can’t go in.”
Taking a break from scrolling through his phone, Fei Du nodded to him. “Fine.”
The end of the year had come, and the better part of the population of Yan City, like migrating
birds, had flown off; the streets had emptied at once, making a taxi’s business more difficult.
The driver had probably been driving around on his own for a long time; he didn’t notice that
his passenger wasn’t especially willing to chat. He kept attempting to make conversation. “Do
you live over there yourself, or are you visiting friends or family?”
At the same time, a request for instructions came over Fei Du’s earbud: “President Fei, there’s
a car following you. We chased, and it looks like they just noticed. They’re trying to shake us.”
“Follow the one that came to the door,” Fei Du instructed lightly. Then he looked up at the
rearview mirror at the front of the taxi.
The driver met his eyes again and inexplicably felt a chill climb up his spine, like a frog with the
gaze of a viper fixed on it.
Fei Du looked at him, not quite smiling, and civilly said, “Sorry, I didn’t quite hear, what did you
just say?”
The driver didn’t dare run off at the mouth anymore. He kept quiet as a cicada in winter the
whole way, periodically looking in the review mirror, quickly and steadily taking Fei Du near his
old house. He pressed a button on the fare meter. “There you are, we’ve arrived. Would you like
a receipt?”
The driver turned his head to look at him. Perhaps the heating was turned up too high; there
was some sweat at the corners of his forehead. Sweating, he smiled at Fei Du. “Sir, I can only
come this far. This estate you live in doesn’t let outside cars drive in at random.”
“The estate I live in? Did I say that I live here?” Fei Du had his legs crossed and his elbow
propped on the car door in a very relaxed posture, but there was a dangerous light seeping
from his eyes. “Do you read people’s fortunes in their faces, sir?”
The driver’s eyes flashed, and he forced himself to add, “Going by the way you’re dressed, you
seem to belong to the class of people…”
Fei Du laughed silently, his eyes seeming to stay over the surroundings. The driver
subconsciously followed his line of sight and saw a small-scale SUV driving from the other
direction, going slower and slower, and then stopping by the side of the street. All the muscles
in his body tensed rigidly, and one hand subconsciously went towards his waist.
“I always thought that they would be the first to come see me,” Fei Du said unhurriedly. “I
hadn’t expected them to be more composed than I imagined, and much more cautious. To the
last they’ve only dared to take a roundabout path, not meeting me face to face before Wei
Zhanhong was ferreted out and my ill intent towards them was unfortunately revealed. Now, at
the heart of the struggle, I figure they would love nothing better than to bury themselves deep
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underground and not come out. It won’t be possible now to make them contact me
voluntarily… But I really didn’t expect that you people would be the first to appear in front of
me.”
Fei Du had his head propped on his long, slender hand, tapping his temple from time to time,
the frequency setting off the driver’s nervous breathing—each time he took a heavy breath, Fei
Du would tap the side of his forehead once, as though pursuing his breaths with a forceful
tempo, so the driver at once felt even more panicked and short of air.
“I’ve been considering it this whole time—what intersection do I have with you? I don’t think
there is any. Or has the great individual behind you suddenly been inspired to come see me?
Oh, yes, what do you call him?”
“We call him Teacher.” The feigned oiliness and flattery vanished from the driver’s face. In the
midst of his tension, there was also some unspeakable grimness in his expression. “Since
you’ve gotten involved in this business, you can’t say you have no intersection with us. Besides
that—President Fei, I’m only an errand runner, a useless nobody. Even if you capture me, you
won’t get anything useful out of me. But you’re different. No matter how great your resources,
right now you’re still sitting alone in my car. Won’t your people hold back for fear of involving
you?”
The finger at Fei Du’s temple slipped downward beside his lips. Without batting an eyelash, a
joking expression appeared at the corners of his eyes, as though he were restraining a laugh,
as though the threat he’d just heard had been adorably childish. The driver was inexplicably
drawn in by his not-quite-smile, for a moment nearly suspecting he’d said something idiotic.
He tightly clutched the weapon at his waist, the veins climbing up his neck.
Meanwhile, in the hospital, Luo Wenzhou was carefully considering the past events Director Lu
had just told him about.
He couldn’t help thinking, why was it Binhai again? The members of the Su family had buried
the bodies of the kidnapped girls in Binhai, Fan Siyuan had even chosen to jump into the sea in
Binhai, and that patch of land in Binhai belonged to the mysterious Guangyao Fund—they’d
investigated the Guangyao fund, arranged to talk to the company’s representative, but just as
Fei Du had said, it was only a frail shell, a tentacle that could be cut off any time.
Perturbed, Luo Wenzhou pulled out his phone to look at the time, and found that there was a
notification light flashing, showing there was a missed call or unread message. He opened it
and only then saw the message Fei Du had sent.
Ordinarily, Fei Du occasionally went back to the office, and before winter vacation had started,
he’d gone to school almost every day. While he no longer went out to fool around with his
drinking buddies, he still had some indispensable social engagements. He wasn’t always
home. But he did things very considerately. No matter where he was going, he’d tell Luo
Wenzhou, both when he was leaving and when he was coming back. And once he’d told him,
he would take it seriously, punctually keeping to the times he’d said.
“Going home to get something” didn’t fall into the category of “running around”; Luo Wenzhou
ought to have read that and let it go. But perhaps because the hospital felt oppressive to him,
Luo Wenzhou was suddenly uneasy. By the time he pulled himself together, he found he’d
already called back.
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Luo Wenzhou thought he was being kind of annoying. While he brought the speaker to his ear,
he searched for an excuse to cover up his clingy behavior. Then he heard a mechanical female
voice come over the phone: “The number you have dialed is busy…”
Luo Wenzhou paused, hung up, absently waited two minutes, then dialed again—it was still
busy!
Fei Du wasn’t the sort of person who talked endlessly on the phone. Luo Wenzhou knew his
habits. Normally when he picked up the phone, he’d exchange a couple of polite remarks at
most, then say whatever he had to say. If more than a minute passed and he couldn’t say it
clearly, he’d arrange to talk in person; he’d very rarely keep talking unimpeded.
Luo Wenzhou stood up. Just then, a nurse came over in haste. “Where are Fu Jiahui’s
relatives? Who can sign? The patient’s condition isn’t very good.”
Tao Ran’s expression altered at once. Lu Youliang leapt up. Luo Wenzhou’s phone suddenly
rang; he thought it was Fei Du and eagerly picked up without looking, but it was a colleague’s
voice that came over the line: “Captain Luo, we’ve found one of the cars, but the person in it
ran away!”
Luo Wenzhou took a deep breath, hearing the nurse saying to Director Lu, “That won’t do, it
has to be a relative who signs…”
Luo Wenzhou’s gaze turned to Director Lu, hastily saying something to the nurse, then went
past them to the opaque door of the operating room—he didn’t know whether Lao-Yang was
conscious in the underworld, whether he was watching, or how he would feel when he had
seen.
Luo Wenzhou said, “Call for reinforcements, search all the surrounding surveillance cameras,
contact the traffic advertisements, the nearby shopping centers, and the subway. Put out a
missing person notice. Find Yang Xin and tell her…”
“Tell her her mom’s dying and get the hell back to the hospital to sign!”
When he’d said this, Luo Wenzhou hung up the phone and gently pressed on Tao Ran’s
relatively intact shoulder.
“Go on if you have something to take care of,” Tao Ran said quietly. “It’s no use staying here. I
think if she gets the chance, she won’t want the last thing she sees to be the two of us… Go
on.”
The beep of someone trying to call in came over Fei Du’s earbud for the third time. He ignored
it. As though humoring a child, he said entirely insincerely to the driver, “All right, your threat is
a great deterrent—will that do? Do you think you should tell me why you came?”
“Someone gave me some words to pass onto you, President Fei,” the driver said very tensely.
“He said that you’ve seen him before, and he regrets being unable to come in person this
time…”
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The driver didn’t answer, only relayed the message with dedication: “Some things seem
confusing, but it’s because that person is too crafty. But while the net of heaven has large
meshes, it lets nothing through. There are no walls in the world that air can’t pass through, and
hands that have been stained with blood can never be clean. He must already be at his wits’
end—there’s one important clue you ought to know.”
Hearing this bewildering message, Fei Du frowned and asked, “What ought I to know?”
“I don’t know that.—He also said, he hopes that this case can be resolved openly and clearly,
in strict accordance with the rules, not leaving any points of suspicion, so in the end there can
be an entirely unflawed accounting.” The driver slowly asked, “President Fei, can I leave?”
Fei Du’s gaze swept his tense shoulders. “A knife? A narcotic? A taser? Or…a gun? This is my
first time running into someone holding a weapon asking me whether he could leave.”
Then, without waiting for the driver to speak, he laughed, pulled a hundred yuan bill out of his
wallet, and threw it on the seat, opening the door and getting out of the car. “I don’t need a
receipt, and there’s no need for change.”
Then, hands stuck in his pockets, he crossed the street to the villa estate without a look back.
The driver’s back was covered in cold sweat. He turned his head and saw a furious girl getting
out of the SUV parked across the street, angrily brandishing her handbag at the side mirror,
hopping and cursing. Then a guy hurriedly jumped out of the driver’s seat. Without even
locking the car, he trailed after the girl, explaining something.
The driver let out a heavy breath. He hadn’t expected that the car that had filled him with dread
would contain unrelated passersby, a couple of young lovers who had stopped by the side of
the road to argue. Fei Du had tricked him!
The driver realized he’d been taken in, smacked the steering wheel, and angrily shifted gear. He
stepped on the gas pedal, and drove away…not noticing a low-key luxury sports car slipping
out of the villa estate behind him, following him at a middle distance.
It was cold outside, and it was also cold inside. Outside was the unobstructed cold of a
howling winter wind, inside a silent cold of bone-piercing gloom.
The front door creaked when he went inside. The furnishings inside the room, like specimens
that had been disturbed, sent up a thin layer of dust. Fei Du wiped away the dust left on his
palm by the doorknob. His still cold gaze swept the “withered” fake flowers in the vestibule.
The person who he’d been in contact with the whole time reported over his earbud: “President
Fei, I have my eyes on that taxi from just now, don’t worry—this car of yours is really good.”
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“When you’re through, you can drive it away,” Fei Du said, added a “be careful,” and only then
hung up the phone.
Each time he came here, his mood was unhappy. He felt that while the things inside the house
were inanimate, they still let off a thick, particular smell. Home had the smell of perfume
coming from the room of the exquisite lady of the house, the clean smell of sunlight filling the
industrious room of the master of the house. Luo Wenzhou’s home, meanwhile, had a special
aroma of high-quality red wine—though the liquor cabinet that had been locked for thousands
of years contained no such thing; it made a person want to fall down drunk there as soon as he
came in.
Here, however, there was a foul odor, like those medieval European lords who never bathed.
Tons of perfume couldn’t cover up its putrid smell.
Fei Du silently puffed out a cold breath, which quickly produced frost visible to the naked eye.
He remembered the string of missed phone calls trying to cut in earlier and carelessly looked
down at his phone.
Fei Du took one look and went silent. The President Fei who had scared the stalking villain into
wanting to pull a knife twitched the corners of his mouth; his first reaction was to stick his
phone back into his jacket pocket, pretending that nothing had happened. But on the other
end, Luo Wenzhou seemed to have a gaze that extended thousands of li. While the phone was
still warm, he called again.
Fei Du’s hand shook. In the chilly villa’s living room, a bit of sweat broke out on his back. He
took a deep breath, then answered. “Hi…”
There was a brief pause on the other end. Then Luo Wenzhou said heavily, “You were just on
the phone for at least twenty-five minutes.”
Though Fei Du didn’t say anything, Luo Wenzhou seemed to be able to tell what had happened
through some miraculous instinct. “Where are you?”
“What are you doing there on your own?” Luo Wenzhou made some association that suddenly
changed the tone of his voice. “Wait there for me!”
Before Fei Du could answer, Luo Wenzhou hung up in exasperation. Fei Du rubbed the chilled
tip of his nose, feeling that the nearly sentient putrid stench inside the room had been blown
away by Luo Wenzhou’s clamor; it was only that the room hadn’t been aired out in a long time
and had a somewhat oppressive feeling. He turned on the heating and the air purifier. After
warming up a little, he went right into the basement.
The coiled dragon pattern on both sides of the stairs was subtly different from the grim horror
in his dream, likely because he was taller and his point of view had changed. Looking closely,
these dragons’ faces had monolids and auspiciously rounded cheeks, each with two freely
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floating carp-like mustaches and a pair of short horns on its head; there was something
charmingly naive about them.
Fei Du looked helplessly at the charmingly naive coiled dragons, then familiarly walked down to
the basement and opened the door.
The code was his own, showing the great shift in the universe. Half the territory was filled up by
the electric shock chair and the home theater setup that Luo Wenzhou had thrown sheets over.
There were no similarities to the room Fei Chengyu had used.
Fei Du aimlessly paced three circles around the basement without awakening his memories. He
could only return to the living room and sit down, pinching the center of his brow from time to
time, faintly feeling that he might need a hypnotist to resolve this matter.
Unfortunately, hypnotists weren’t all-powerful, because there were some people who couldn’t
enter a hypnotic state. Fei Du didn’t think he could relax in front of others…unless the hypnotist
was even more handsome than Luo Wenzhou.
Just then, an evil wind blew in from somewhere. The high window frame shuddered, and a
withered tree at the door was bowed by the northwest wind, the dry branches holding dead
leaves hitting the glass of the second floor corridor window. It was like a horde of demons
cavorting. Fei Du was startled by the movement and looked up, something suddenly streaking
across his mind.
He stood up at once, grabbed a decorative crystal ball from the table, then pulled out a tie and
blindfolded his eyes, once again going to the top of the basement stairs.
When the wind blew again, Fei Du gently opened his hand, letting the crystal ball roll down the
stairs. The dull sound of the ball rolling mixed with the sound of the tree branches hitting the
window frame. It hit the door of the basement with a click. Fei Du, his eyes blindfolded,
breathed deeply a few times, then put a hand on the ice-cold wall of the stairwell.
He remembered… The first time he’d snuck into Fei Chengyu’s basement, the weather had
been like this, the rolling marble echoing the howl of the north wind, and in the air had been a
smell of…a smell of what?
That usually meant that Fei Chengyu was home. That was why the simple action of picking up
something he’d dropped down the stairs was full of terror. But Fei Chengyu had for some
reason walked out then. Fei Du had stood in the stairwell, hesitating for a good while, then
couldn’t resist going down.
When he took the first step, a strange feeling like a lightning strike suddenly hit him. Fei Du
paused, subconsciously turning his head to “look” at a certain place upstairs, feeling that there
was someone there watching him. Then he seemed to hear the auditory hallucination of a door
opening.
Fei Du pulled down the tie over his eyes and found that he was looking towards the second-
floor bedroom—the one that had been his mother’s when she was alive.
But the silent door of the room couldn’t answer him, and Fei Du suddenly found that apart from
the portion he couldn’t remember at all, all his uncertain memories seemed to be connected to
his mom. He kept walking down, picked up the crystal ball he’d dropped, blindfolded his eyes
again, and fumbled to push the half-opened door.
The cold crystal rubbed again his palm. Fei Du remembered he had stood for a good while
facing this “forbidden area.” Then he hadn’t resisted the “Bluebeard allure” and had gone in.
When this basement had belonged to Fei Chengyu, the furnishings had been more plentiful,
more exquisite, and there had been the smell of cleaning solution everywhere. There’d been a
thick carpet covering the floor and a round couch on two sides. There’d been a row of
bookcases on the wall that Fei Du used for the home theater screen, and a safe set into the
corner, which Fei Chengyu had used a painting to block; supposedly it could have withstood
up to an 8 on the Richter scale.
In front of the bookcases, meanwhile, had been a large rosewood desk. Following his memory,
Fei Du went in front of the nonexistent “desk” and reached his hands into empty space—he’d
seen the particulars of the Picture Album Project on this desk.
Zhang Chunjiu, acting captain, the younger brother of the majority shareholder of the Chunlai
Conglomerate; Lu Youliang, Zhang’s deputy, whose fiancée worked in the senior middle
department of the Ninth Middle School; Pan Yunteng, whose parents lived in a certain
business’s residential quarters; Yang Zhengfeng, whose daughter was attending elementary
school, in grade…
After covering his vision with the tie, his thinking seemed to have become sharper; all the
details of the information he’d seen on this table returned to Fei Du’s mind, and he had a
sudden thought—yes, the list of the participants in the Picture Album Project had been too
complete, including everyone’s positions and information about their relatives. Only the mole in
the City Bureau could have provided this… So, reasonably speaking, the mole himself must
have been someone outside of the people in these materials, or else, when he was in collusion
with Fei Chengyu, why would he have needed to superfluously add in his own information?
But the list of names encompassed nearly all of the frontline police officers at the City Bureau
then. If it had been someone outside of the list, he’d have been too distantly connected; could
you call that a mole?
So…
Fei Du suddenly raised his head—there seemed to be only one possibility remaining. The mole
who’d killed Gu Zhao was among these people, but Fei Chengyu hadn’t known which one it
was!
Just then, the sound of rapid footsteps suddenly came from outside. Fei Du, his eyes
blindfolded, was still sunk in the Picture Album Project roster and for a time didn’t come
around. The footsteps coincided with his childhood memory—Fei Du gave a fierce start. Back
then, he’d also read halfway through in bewilderment, then had suddenly heard Fei Chengyu’s
footsteps returning, approaching the basement like now.
He’d been talking on the phone as he walked, his tone cold and brutal.
128
Thirteen years later, Fei Du’s pulse and blood pressure reacted accurately. All of his skin went
cold, and his mind was enshrouded in some peculiar emotion. His limbs seemed to be filled
with ice. Thin sweat came up on his palms. His breathing speeded up involuntarily.
There was only one door to the basement, one exit. If he’d run out then, he’d have been caught
red-handed by Fei Chengyu!
Fei Du remembered he’d had no time to hide. Out of desperation, he’d returned the files he’d
gone through to their original places, relying on his memory, then ducked into a little cabinet
under the desk, taking advantage of being short.
The footsteps pressed closer and closer, seeming to have already come to the door. Fei Du,
with the tie covering his eyes, subconsciously backed up a few steps to the bookcases in his
memory, but there were no bookcases now. He bumped right into the little cabinet next to the
home theater screen. The cabinet fell to one side, and the emetics and tranquilizers inside it
scattered over the ground with a clatter. At the same time, someone kicked open the door he
hadn’t closed.
For an instant, there seemed to be a string in Fei Du’s mind that was heavily plucked. It
reverberated, exploding earth-shatteringly by his temples. A fragment of memory passed
through the bones of his skull like a bullet—the little cabinet falling coincided with some sound
in his memories.
Luo Wenzhou, charging in, took one look at the fallen bottles of medicines rolling at his feet,
thought of Fei Du’s prior record, and was scared out of his wits.
Luo Wenzhou ran over and hugged Fei Du. “What’s wrong? What’s wrong? Are you touching
those drugs again? Fei Du? Fei Du, talk to me!”
The momentum of Luo Wenzhou charging in had interrupted his memories. At first Fei Du was
still at a loss, his pale lips trembling slightly. Then the tie over his eyes was pulled away. As if
afraid of losing him, Luo Wenzhou’s arms encircled him tightly enough to hurt.
Luo Wenzhou nearly hauled him out of the basement, then pressed him onto the couch where
the sunlight was best. Fei Du raised a hand to block the light. The color in his face seemed to
have been drained away by that demonic basement. Luo Wenzhou dragged away his wrist and
held his chin, turning his face towards him. Expression overcast, he said, “Didn’t I tell you not
to run around?”
Fei Du stared at him in silence for a moment, then suddenly pulled over Luo Wenzhou’s collar,
pressed him against the couch, and bent his head to kiss him.
Luo Wenzhou didn’t know where this sudden favorable treatment had come from. He paused,
then quickly embraced Fei Du, feeling his difficult to express fretfulness as he nearly
submerged him inside the couch. Luo Wenzhou held the back of Fei Du’s neck with one hand,
stroking lightly, then with difficulty turned his head away a little. “I…I can’t catch my breath,
darling.”
Fei Du’s movements slowed. Then he gently kissed Luo Wenzhou’s earlobe. Luo Wenzhou
sucked in a breath, feeling himself go limp at the waist. He raised a hand to pull back Fei Du,
who was about to move away from him. “Were you just going to nibble?”
Luo Wenzhou fixed his eyes on him and licked the corner of his mouth.
“Take it.” Fei Du waved very magnanimously. “Body and heart, buy one get one free, no need
to look for change.”
Luo Wenzhou was speechless for a moment, carefully reflecting on these words. The roots of
his ears unexpectedly went hot.
The bottled water in the villa was all expired. The two of them had to find a kettle and boil some
water. Fei Du found a brick of Pu’er tea somewhere, used an awl to knock off a few pieces,
then brewed it.
“I just remembered. The first time I inadvertently got into Fei Chengyu’s basement, he came
back midway. I got into a little cabinet at the bottom of the bookcase, but he didn’t actually
come in, because when he’d just come to the door, my mom started going crazy upstairs,
knocking something over. Fei Chengyu cursed and hurried away.” With practiced movements,
Fei Du washed the tea and poured the first brew, the tea quickly sending up a rich scent. He
put in a sieve to filter out the tea leaves and poured a cup each for himself and Luo Wenzhou.
“And I ran away.”
Fei Du was silent for a while, fingers circling the scalding teacup. “I don’t know. I hid in my
room and didn’t dare to look.—Didn’t you go to pick up Director Lu? How did it go?”
As soon as he mentioned this, Luo Wenzhou felt that it was a long story. He tilted up his head
and leaned back. After a good while he feebly explained this worldview-changing day. “It’s not
clear what’s happening now. If anything happens, Tao Ran will send word. No news is good
news.”
“The Reciter…” Fei Du thoughtfully shook his cup. “So the one who came to find me just now
must have been one of their people.”
Fei Du was pondering his own matters and didn’t notice Luo Wenzhou’s expression. He said
somewhat carelessly, “When I went out, I encountered a taxi driver who must have been
waiting for me on purpose…uh…”
Luo Wenzhou grabbed his collar and inspected him from head to foot, finding that there wasn’t
even a single thread out of place. As he sighed in relief, anger burned up from the arches of
Luo Wenzhou’s feet to the top of his head. “I told you to be a little more careful, and you
fucking treated it like the wind blowing past your ear! Fei Du, I’m telling you, if you…if…”
Fei Du, stunned, blinked his eyes, then took Luo Wenzhou’s hand with the veins standing out
on it in both of his hands, brought his palms together, and curved his peach blossom eyes in a
roguish manner. “Shixiong, I love you.”
Each time it was the same line. He didn’t even bother to change the routine!
130
Then Fei Du became a little more businesslike. “My people were following. That driver told me
that I’d seen his ‘Teacher’ before, though.”
“I heard something while I was on the way here to find you,” Luo Wenzhou said. “Director
Zhang said that he didn’t order the second Picture Album Project. Now the investigation team
has turned its attention on Yan Security Uni, and especially…”
“Do you remember I told you about Chen Zhen’s report?” Luo Wenzhou said. “Someone who
could deliver it right upstairs must have had a channel of communication. Teacher Pan used to
be a criminal policeman, and then he became an authority in the field. His contacts are
considerable. He has the channel—and he’s shown an unusual interest in some projects left
behind by Fan Siyuan, even written teaching materials in them…”
Luo Wenzhou paused slightly and shook his head. “Could the person you’ve met be him?”
“No, I don’t think so.” Fei Du considered. Then, as if he’d come to a decision, he raised his
head. “Lao-Luo, I may need your help with something.”
The civil policeman chased away the big yellow dog studying the cripple’s walk. “I remember
what happened then. The old Sun family had two sons. The second son had a little girl, and the
eldest gave them a precious grandson, the only heir, unbearably spoiled. The rotten kid did it
because of the business of the home repairs. Maybe he didn’t like that his uncle wouldn’t give
any money and thought that he was real reason. He thought everything the family had should
be his. Anyway, a bunch of relatives partying as they celebrated the New Year also had him
pretty unhappy, and not two days passed before the second son’s girl fell through a hole in the
ice and drowned. She was only three. She didn’t even look human when they pulled her out.”
The civil policeman led Xiao Haiyang to a little police station. There was no private office for the
household register, just a little space portioned off with a sign hung up. Inside, a female police
officer was on duty. There was an old man sitting across from her who’d come for some
certificate.
The civil policeman said hello and walked right in, getting out an already prepared file. Pointing
to a photograph in it, he said, “This is the dead girl’s dad, the Sun family’s second son, called
Sun Jian.”
Xiao Haiyang had no attention to spare to wipe his running nose. He breathed in deeply and
took a close look, then found a photograph of Beiyuan’s Longyun Center’s fake security guard
“Wang Jian.” “Could you look at this for me? Is this the same person?”
The fake security guard “Wang Jian” looked like he’d aged more that a decade or two. The
bones of his cheeks had changed shape. Lacking support, the flesh of his face had collapsed.
131
The bridge of his nose meanwhile looked unnaturally high, the protruding cartilage nearly
breaking through the skin, making his eye sockets look even deeper, giving him a somewhat
sinister appearance.
Xiao Haiyang consulted an expert; this fake security guard’s face had likely gone under the
knife.
One was a somber middle-aged security guard you could tell at a glance wasn’t to be trifled
with; the other was a refined and cultured young father. At a glance, no one would connect
them.
The civil policeman stared for a long time. “There’s some similarity, especially the mole on the
chin… Ah, he’s changed his appearance too much, I wouldn’t dare to say.”
“Well, now, we really don’t have that.” The civil policeman shook his head. “It’s been too long.
We weren’t so advanced then. Though the parents insisted that it had been their nephew
who’d done it, no one had seen, and there was no evidence. He himself wouldn’t admit it no
matter what. There was nothing we could do.—Such a little child who couldn’t even walk
steadily, reasonably speaking she wouldn’t have run out by herself on a frozen day. Her death
really was odd, but you still couldn’t point to anyone. In the end, after a long investigation, we
had to let it go… Oh, yes, he signed a statement then, we should still have it. Do you have a
use for that?”
This person’s original name was “Sun Jian,” and the false name was “Wang Jian.” One
character between them was identical. Security guards at the Longyun Center had to sign in
every day when they were on duty. Xiao Haiyang quivered. “All right, let me see it!”
The civil policeman quickly found the signed document from back then and gave it to him.
Relying on his naked eye, Xiao Haiyang judged that the two signatures had probably come
from the same pen. “I need to have a graphologist give an expert opinion. Thank you.”
The civil policeman saw him to the door very warmly. “You’re welcome. If you have any
questions, come ask any time.”
Just then, the old man getting a certificate suddenly turned his head and looked at Xiao
Haiyang, widening his clouded eyes. “That little asshole from the Sun family threw that three-
year-old girlie into a hole in the ice and drowned her. You didn’t do anything about it and let him
go, but what happened next? The joker fell into a frozen river himself and drowned. Retribution!
Ha!”
The civil policeman made a face and went to educate the old man on the law, but Xiao Haiyang
stared, not knowing how to answer. Just then, his phone rang. He pulled himself together and
hastily walked out of the police station.
Lang Qiao spoke quickly over the phone: “How are you doing? I’ve found a lead on the fake
front desk receptionist over here. Her real name must be ‘Wang Ruobing.’ She had a big sister.
Over a decade ago there was a case of a remedial class teacher molesting female students.
This business made a pretty big fuss at the time, but none of the victims would stand up. There
was insufficient evidence, and he had to be let go. Wang Ruobing’s sister was one of the
victims. She committed suicide over it.”
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“I found the fake security guard.” Xiao Haiyang stretched out his frozen hands with difficulty
and opened a file. “His original name may be ‘Sun Jian.’ His three-year-old daughter was
pushed into a hole in the ice. The location is rather remote, but it was in Yan City’s jurisdiction
at the time. The file was transferred to the City Bureau… No need to look for the fake Zhao
Yulong. In one of the unsolved cases, the victim’s husband signed when he recognized the
body. He must have also had plastic surgery, I found an expert to take a look. Apart from the
jawline, nose bridge, and forehead, the other facial characteristics match.”
“For the fake delivery person and the fake patrolman we only have small photographs from
their fake IDs. Especially for the fake patrolman; the boss took a picture of the fake ID in night
mode, it’s hard to tell anything,” Lang Qiao said. “But I went and looked through the rest of the
files for the unsolved cases and found relatives of the victims that seem to match… Ah, Little
Glasses, can’t we basically determine now that these people who have been acting as go-
betweens and stirring shit up are victims from the unsolved cases recorded in the Picture
Album Project?”
Xiao Haiyang’s mind was still full of the memory of that old man’s teeth-gnashing “Retribution!”
He gave an absent-minded affirmative.
“What are they playing at?” Lang Qiao asked. “Righting wrongs in accordance with heaven’s
decree?”
Xiao Haiyang was silent for a while. “Wait, I’ll contact Captain Luo.”
But Luo Wenzhou couldn’t be contacted. His phone was in his jacket pocket on silent.
Luo Wenzhou stood with his hands crossed over his chest, watching Fei Du writing and
drawing on a piece of paper, hesitantly saying, “I hear that getting memories back needs an
expert hypnotist. I feel like I may not be any use in this respect. After all, looking at a warm,
lively, beautiful youth like me is more likely to make you treasure the present and look to the
future.”
“I don’t need a hypnotist, and I don’t need to have my memories reawakened. I need to
deduce the truth,” Fei Du said without looking up. “The brain sometimes automatically
constructs fake memories, but the fake memories have confused details, trying to obscure the
inherent logic of events. I need you to raise questions from an outsider’s point of view and help
me find what’s been obscured by my memory.”
Luo Wenzhou frowned. “Do you believe what that driver said?”
“They call themselves ‘The Reciter.’” Fei Du tossed the pen at his fingertips onto the table and
paused. “Honestly, shixiong, don’t you think this Reciter is a lot like me?”
Fei Du smiled, paying him no mind, and continued: “I always thought that my pattern of
gathering together victims and using their disadvantaged material and emotional situations to
get things done was imitating them, but now I think that my way of doing things is more like
The Reciter—if two things, two people, seem to have a connection, then it’s likely they in fact
do have some connection.”
“That driver told me that their leader, who they call Teacher, can’t come see me now—there are
two possibilities. First, he’s concerned that my people will immediately betray him to the police.
Second, it’s in the literal sense that he himself can’t come see me. Maybe he isn’t at liberty, or
maybe the problem is with his health. In the message the driver passed on, the words he used
were that he ‘regrets being unable to come in person,’ so I incline more towards the latter.”
Luo Wenzhou paced two steps. “Teacher Pan is currently the main focus of suspicion. He can’t
even return home. He isn’t at liberty. And then there’s…shiniang. She’s at the hospital. That’s a
problem with her health. Which of them do you suspect it is?”
“Money,” said Fei Du. “Creating fake identities, providing for a group of subordinates,
eavesdropping, stalking, purchasing illegal weapons—each of their plans, each of their actions,
requires a great deal of capital. It’s not a bit cheaper than taking care of wanted criminals.
Either he’s rich himself, or there’s someone financially providing for him. That makes the scope
of suspects very narrow. If we’re only talking about within Yan City, you could count them with
both hands. I’m one of them.”
“Fei Du, if you have something to say, say it.” Luo Wenzhou turned his head and for once
looked at him seriously. “I don’t like this way of speaking.”
Normally, when he was grumbling and swearing, he himself often didn’t take it seriously. Once
he was really angry, his expression would become increasingly calm and cold.
Fei Du didn’t answer, avoiding his gaze and continuing, “…Fei Chengyu would also be one, if
he weren’t down.”
Luo Wenzhou looked down none too happily at his temple for a moment. “Thinking from a
paranoid point of view, if you could bribe a hospital worker, it wouldn’t be unfeasible to pretend
to be in a vegetative state.”
Fei Du smiled. “When Fei Chengyu was first in the hospital, I sent people to follow the doctor in
charge around the clock. The aides changed every week. I have all their biographical notes
starting from birth. When the hospital told me he had irreversible brain damage, I had him
transferred to other hospitals a few times under the guise of seeking other treatment options.
Only when they gave the same diagnosis did I move him to the sanatorium. Even so, I still kept
him under watch for over a year, until I’d gotten a firm grip on his conglomerate.”
Luo Wenzhou said, “…Why didn’t you simply pick up a quilt and smother him?”
“I considered it, but then I thought that smothering him wouldn’t have any use but revealing
myself ahead of time,” Fei Du said. “I wanted to seize the shadow behind him. Leaving him one
breath would be like leaving a fishbone stuck in that person’s throat.”
“The first time I went into the basement, by a fluke, I wasn’t discovered,” Fei Du said dully.
“Half a year later I snuck in again, but that time my luck wasn’t as good, and I was caught.
Then Fei Chengyu emptied his basement… That’s about how it happened, but my impressions
about how I got in and what happened after I was caught have always been very vague.”
134
Luo Wenzhou thought about it, then said, “Let’s start with how you got in.—How many
possible codes did you have to try from?”
“Your basement sounds the alarm if the wrong code is entered once. In other words, your
chance of success was a little over thirty percent,” Luo Wenzhou said. “If it were me, I may
have gone to try, so what if my dad gave me a thrashing—but from my understanding of you,
you would have been more cautious.”
Even if Fei Du hadn’t innately been such a cautious person, the environment he’d grown up in
had doomed him. He was much more cautious than other people in minor matters. Being
caught by Fei Chengyu, after all, wasn’t a question of getting a thrashing or sitting at the door
writing a self-reflection.
“You wouldn’t have done it, unless someone had given you a hint. It’s not very likely that it
would have been Fei Chengyu, and it couldn’t have been the housekeepers who passed
through your house. As for other outsiders… I think it’s likely you wouldn’t have easily trusted
them. By process of elimination, supposing someone really did give you a hint, it could only
have been your mom,” Luo Wenzhou said. “That matches what you dreamed that day.”
“Now for the second question. You just said that the first time you got into the basement, you
felt that she was watching you, and later she covered your escape. Then the second time, she
gave you a hint about the code, so she must have known you were going to sneak into the
basement. Why didn’t she have time to cover you then?”
Fei Du put his elbows on his knees and propped his chin on his fingertips, frowning
involuntarily—his memories became increasingly blurry here. He really couldn’t remember.
“All right,” Luo Wenzhou said after waiting a moment. “Before you were discovered by Fei
Chengyu, what were you doing? What was the last thing you saw?”
“…the computer?” Fei Du pondered for a long time. “It must have been. The computer’s code
was the same as the basement’s.”
Luo Wenzhou said, “While you were looking through his computer, Fei Chengyu suddenly came
in?”
Fei Du’s brow furrowed more tightly. After a while, treasuring words like gold, he said, “…I don’t
think so.”
He didn’t think so—even hearing such a scene described filled him with terror. If it really had
happened like that, Fei Du thought he’d have some reaction every time he turned on a laptop
of a similar model.
“Definitely not.” Fei Du continued thinking along those lines. “I think I may have heard
something before that and hid somewhere.”
135
Luo Wenzhou wasn’t a specialist, after all. He didn’t know what he should say now. He could
only wait for Fei Du to slowly think about it. He suddenly thought that when Fei Du recalled Fei
Chengyu, he didn’t seem like a boy who feared his father, didn’t even seem like he was
recalling an abusive scumbag. It was simply like he was recalling a monster—a teeth-gnashing,
blood-sucking monster in a nightmare.
Why?
Luo Wenzhou clutched his teacup. The bottom of the cup scraped against the table, letting out
a few gentle sounds.
Fei Du suddenly fixed his eyes on the teacup. “Porcelain… I heard the sound of porcelain
clicking together, and Fei Chengyu said…”
There seemed to be a splinter at Fei Du’s temple. His pulse went faster and faster, about to
explode.
“‘No need,’” Fei Du said quietly. “He said… ‘No need, we aren’t having any.’”
“He said ‘we aren’t having any,’” Luo Wenzhou quickly followed up. “In other words, he had a
guest with him, and your mom brought them tea? Who was the guest?”
A faint figure appeared in Fei Du’s mind, but he couldn’t remember who that person was, as if
he was taking a test and reaching for information he didn’t quite have—he’d clearly seen it,
clearly remembered every word and sentence around it, but he couldn’t remember the thing
itself.
His chest hurt, and he coughed as though unable to catch his breath.
This reaction again. Luo Wenzhou’s pupils contracted. He asked grimly, “What did Fei Chengyu
do to you?”
Luo Wenzhou grabbed his shoulder. “Fei Du, you’re the expert. You tell me, what is post-
traumatic stress disorder, and what symptoms does it have?”
“Any what?”
“Trauma.” Fei Du noticed that his voice was hoarse and cleared his throat. He said, “Fei
Chengyu really didn’t hit me, didn’t cause me any bodily harm. Or else wouldn’t I have had to
go to the hospital? If other people had gotten involved, I couldn’t not remember it.”
Luo Wenzhou looked at Fei Du in astonishment. “Since when does ‘trauma’ mean bodily harm?
Student Fei Du, tell me the truth, did you pass your final exams?—It’s all right, I won’t make fun
of you if you have to make them up.”
136
“I don’t have a problem with psychological trauma.” Fei Du leaned back slightly and raised his
eyebrows a little. “You must have felt it. My capacity for fellow feeling is very poor. I have
practically no empathy or sympathy. I lack a sense of shame, my feeling of fear is slower to
react than that of other people, and my autonomic responses concerned with anxiety are weak
—if you add in a high level of aggression, it’s basically no different from Fei Chengyu. I didn’t
especially want to be like him, so I used electric shock to forcibly correct myself.”
Luo Wenzhou felt he’d finally touched the core of his problem. For a time he stared dumbstruck
at this delicate-featured young man. Before this, he’d thought that Fei Du’s occasional vile
appraisal of himself was sulking, was nitpicking, was even a means of venting his unhappiness
when he was in a bad mood. But he hadn’t thought that for Fei Du, what he said wasn’t a vile
appraisal; it was an objective statement, like asserting his name, sex, age, and ethnicity.
Fei Du met his eyes. For some reason he suddenly regretted making Luo Wenzhou help him
remember. Fei Du abruptly stood up. “If I really can’t remember, then forget it. I’ll go ask
whether they’ve caught up to that driver. Since The Reciter has come to the surface, there’ll be
traces to follow. We can also use other means…”
Luo Wenzhou pulled him back. At the same time, Fei Du’s phone rang.
Luo Wenzhou pulled him, making him stumble, encircling his waist from behind, holding down
his hand, which was ready to pick up the phone. “You said that the first time you got into Fei
Chengyu’s basement, your mom distracted him. After you ran away, why didn’t you dare to
watch how he treated her?”
Luo Wenzhou pressed down on his chest. “You didn’t save her, so were you ashamed? Upset?
You’ve been upset all this time, isn’t that right? So you’ve never thought about it, nearly
thought you’d forgotten. Fei Du, have you really forgotten?”
“Didn’t you say that when Fei Chengyu abused her, he made you watch?” Luo Wenzhou said
quietly into his ear. “If you closed the door, you’d still know what would happen to her, right?
Tell me—“
The music of Fei Du’s phone’s ringtone seemed out of tune, out of tune the way he’d heard it
that weekend when he’d come home from school and seen her cold body. In an instant, he
remembered a dream he seemed to have had over and over: a woman with a suffocated face,
ashen, lying on the ground, asking him, “Why didn’t you save me?”
Without knowing it, he struggled fiercely, knocking the tea set off the coffee table. The little
porcelain cups rolled all over the solid floor, scattering in pieces along with the hot water. The
sound of them shattering combined with his memories—
He was dragged out of the little cabinet at the bottom of the bookcase. Then he heard a
woman’s scream, and costly porcelain breaking. Fei Chengyu pulled her by the hair across a
floor littered with shards. Beside them was a person indifferently watching this farce.
137
He instinctively used this tall guest as a shield, ducking behind him. The person looked down
and smiled at him from on high, even gently stroked his hair. He said, “You can’t just hide, boy.”
Fei Chengyu seemed to notice him. His bloodshot eyes turned to him. Fei Du felt as if his
heartbeat had been interrupted.
The familiar feeling of suffocation rushed up. Fei Chengyu had closed that metal ring over his
neck.
But this time, on the other end wasn’t a little cat or dog like he usually “trained” with; it was—
Fei Chengyu buckled the other end of the metal ring around the woman’s thin neck, crouched
down, and very softly asked him, “Darling, who gave you the code?”
The boy’s deathly pale face was like a ghostly porcelain doll’s. He seemed to have lost the
ability to speak.
He’d been so cowardly, so powerless, his limbs merely ornamental. He couldn’t grasp his own
fate, and neither could he walk out of another’s prison.
“What did you hear?” Fei Chengyu’s blood-scented hand passed through the boy’s hair. “Good
children shouldn’t eavesdrop on adults talking. I know you didn’t do it on purpose.—You didn’t
do it on purpose, did you?”
Why had he shaken his head? Fei Du thought that if people could go back in time and face
their past selves, the first thing he’d do would be to wring that boy’s neck.
Of all the deep negative feelings in the world, hatred for your own cowardice and
powerlessness was always the most intense, the most bone-piercing. It was even often
unendurable, making it necessary to find a way to turn it around and blame it on other people
and things.
Fei Chengyu saw that slight shake of the head and smiled. Pointing at the woman covered in
shards of porcelain, he said, “The child didn’t do wrong on purpose. If he did wrong, he must
have been lured into it by an ill-meaning adult. Should we punish her, then?”
Fei Du didn’t dare to look into her eyes, but he was forced to look. Her gaze was as dim as
usual, as numb, like a corpse’s. The woman with the brisk step who’d kissed him that day
seemed to be only a product of his imagination.
Fei Chengyu beckoned to him, but Fei Du kept retreating, until the man got impatient and
closed the metal ring over the boy’s neck—two rings buckled on two necks. One end would
only loosen a little when the other tightened, and the controls were in little Fei Du’s pale,
helpless hands.
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If he only clenched his fists, he could escape the unbearable feeling of suffocation. And over
the course of countless forced trainings, that movement had nearly become instinct.
Why had he blurred out all his memories concerned with his mom?
Why could that suffocated face, transposed onto any other person, always disturb his sleep?
Fei Du was trembling unnaturally. Luo Wenzhou shook him, and Fei Du suddenly came around.
Then there seemed to be someone squeezing his neck. He coughed so hard he couldn’t catch
his breath.
Luo Wenzhou hadn’t expected that his questions would get such a major reaction. For a
moment he was so frightened he couldn’t move. Hearing that tearing cough, Luo Wenzhou
suspected he was about to cough up his lungs. He couldn’t resist touching his throat. But at
that light touch, Fei Du gave a start and pushed him away, stumbled a couple of steps, and fell
to his knees among the fallen teacups.
There was a moment where Luo Wenzhou thought there was a shadow in those light-colored
eyes, like a long-sealed monster seeing blood and emerging.
Luo Wenzhou held his breath and carefully crouched down along with Fei Du, reaching out a
hand towards him in terror, shaking it in front of his eyes. “Darling, it’s me.”
Fei Du’s eyelashes were longer at the corners of his eyes. Slightly dampened by cold sweat,
they made the corners of his eyes look unusually pitch black and slender, as though they’d
been carved with a knife. His gaze also seemed to have been carved by a knife. It fixed on Luo
Wenzhou’s approaching hand for a moment, and Fei Du’s soul seemed to return to its position.
He lowered his eyes slowly and allowed Luo Wenzhou to put his hands on his shoulders.
Luo Wenzhou stroked his arms gently, feeling the muscles of those arms he usually didn’t
bother to raise rigidly tensed. “Talk to me.”
Fei Du opened his mouth and tasted blood in his throat. He couldn’t make a sound.
“I’ll…” Luo Wenzhou felt helpless. Then his gaze fell on Fei Du’s bloodless lips, and he blurted
out, “I’ll kiss you, is that all right?”
When he’d said it, he himself felt that these words sounded pretty disgraceful, but this wasn’t
the time to take it back. Acting on his own initiative, he simply grabbed Fei Du’s arms and
pulled him over, stopping when they were extremely close together, looking into Fei Du’s eyes.
His pupils were slightly enlarged. Then he seemed to recognize him and quickly struggled to
calm down.
Luo Wenzhou sighed, roving around his forehead, nose, and lips.
Fei Du closed his eyes and forced his rapid breathing to become extremely quiet, extremely
slow. This was his habit. He was always reserved, always controlled; he never minded what he
was feeling but judged how he should behave based on others’ reactions.
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He even tried to smile at Luo Wenzhou. The smile frightened Luo Wenzhou even further.
“Fei…uh, Fei Chengyu came with someone. He headed right for the basement when he got in.
He was too fast. My mom tried to stop him, but she failed,” Fei Du said hoarsely. “I heard a
movement and quickly put everything back in place and hid in that cabinet. I thought I could
get through it again, but I’d overlooked something.”
“What?”
“I’d touched his computer. Fei Chengyu felt it and discovered that the computer was warm.”
Luo Wenzhou thought this sounded like a spy movie. He massaged Fei Du’s wrist and quietly
asked, “What did you remember?”
“I was only ten. Fei Chengyu didn’t believe that I could have worked out the code myself, and
my mom had tried to stop him outside the basement, so Fei Chengyu thought that she’d urged
me to get into the basement, that she was ‘misbehaving.’” Fei Du pressed on his throat. He
seemed to want to cough again, but he forced himself to hold back. “His pet had rebelled in
front of an outsider. Fei Chengyu was very angry that day. He nearly killed her.”
“In front an outsider…and you?” Luo Wenzhou asked quietly. “And that’s why you forgot this
segment of memory?”
Fei Du didn’t want to lie to him, but neither did he want to talk about it, so he didn’t answer.
Forcing the subject away, he said, “The person Fei Chengyu brought home was very tall—Fei
Chengyu was over a meter eighty, and this person was nearly half a head taller than him. He
was in his thirties or forties, wearing glasses, with a teardrop birthmark at the corner of one
eye. I only saw him once.”
There were a thousand questions clogging Luo Wenzhou’s mind, but hearing this, he could
only make them wait in line. “Wearing glasses, a birthmark at the corner of his eye. You’re
sure?”
Saying so, he hurriedly got out his phone. Not paying attention to the pile of missed calls, he
pulled up a file he’d photographed with his phone, enlarging a blurry ID photograph on it. “Was
it him?”
Fei Du looked at the characters clearly written on the CV next to the photograph: Fan Siyuan.
“While I was going through the files, I found one with a photograph and secretly took a
picture.” Luo Wenzhou paused. “Wait—didn’t you see a roster and detailed materials about the
people taking part in the Picture Album Project? You even knew which school Lao-Yang’s
daughter attended. You didn’t see Fan Siyuan’s photograph?”
“No.” Fei Du slowly shook his head, countless thoughts spinning quickly through his mind. “No
—the materials had detailed information about Director Zhang’s older brother, Director Lu’s
fiancée’s place of work, even Teacher Pan’s parents’ address…but there was nothing about
Fan Siyuan. I think that name only appeared on the line where the head of the Picture Album
Project was introduced.”
In other words, the mole who’d given Fei Chengyu the materials had only dispensed with the
formalities when it came to Fan Siyuan!
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“You said it was winter,” Luo Wenzhou followed up. “You’re sure of the season?”
“I’m sure. I was on winter vacation.” Fei Du looked up. “When did Fan Siyuan ‘jump into the
sea?’”
“At the end of the solar year.” Luo Wenzhou sat right down on the floor. “In other words, Fan
Siyuan really didn’t die, and he was in contact with Fei Chengyu!”
This organization had collected countless vicious wanted criminals like Lu Guosheng, and at
the time Fan Siyuan had been a wanted suspect!
“If you want total control over them, it won’t be hard,” the man wearing glasses said casually.
“You know how you train a hawk? If you want to tame it, you first have to weaken it. You can’t
be kind. It’s necessary to starve it appropriately.”
“If you overfeed it, President Fei, over time, it will become greedy. If a tool doesn’t obey, it has
to be honed. What kind of knife honer is afraid of breaking the knife?” The man’s laughter was
cold. “You know I have some manpower, but not much. If you want me to help you with this,
you’ll have to give me more support.”
Fei Chengyu laughed. “Your manpower… How do I say it? The people you ‘rescued’ while
upholding justice?”
“You’re ridiculing me, President Fei.” The man smiled. “But you’re right. They’re useful, and
they’re obedient. Hatred and trauma are excellent resources. They can make people recognize
a favor and want to repay it, and you can use them.”
“Fei Chengyu must have found out that ‘they’ had other backers and became unsatisfied. He
wanted total control over them,” Fei Du said quietly. “Fan Siyuan was his ‘consultant.’”
Luo Wenzhou’s brain revolved at high speed. “They gathered wanted criminals who had
nowhere to go, including Fan Siyuan, a serial killer who was cautious and understood the
police. But in fact, Fan Siyuan had been in contact with Fei Chengyu beforehand. He was
going to act for Fei Chengyu, get involved, place his people everywhere…”
Fei Du picked up his words. “Establish ‘The Reciter,’ a revenge league, and use them to trap all
the financial backers apart from Fei Chengyu, seriously injuring the organization, bringing it to
its wits’ end, in the end bringing it under Fei Chengyu’s sole control.”
All of Fei Du’s ideas, even some of his own actions, hadn’t been invented out of nothing. The
seeds of these thoughts were deep in his consciousness.
There was also money—carrying out this plan required a large quantity of capital and energy,
and now there was a source—only the source hadn’t come now, but over a decade ago. This
plan covered a longer period of time than imagined, and The Reciter, an independent third
party force, had been carrying out an infiltration of the organization’s interior for over a decade.
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The Binhai graveyard, the Zhou Clan, Wei Zhanhong, the Beehive… Like Fei Chengyu had
wished, all these lairs and sources of capital had been dug out and cut off one by one. If Fei
Chengyu had still been conscious, his wishes would have been fulfilled.
“Wait a minute.” Luo Wenzhou waved a hand. “Wait. Didn’t you tell me that Fei Chengyu has
been in a vegetative state for three years? A vegetable is the one manipulating this from behind
the scenes?”
Luo Wenzhou instantly seemed to feel what he was going to say. He stood up at once.
One word at a time, Fei Du said, “Fei Chengyu is a vegetable, but I’m still alive.”
“Who told you that Fei Chengyu was in a vegetative state?” Fei Du ignored him, and he was
indifferent to the tea soaking the hem of his jacket. “It was me.”
“I’m in close contact with the police, and I’ve done everything I could to participate in the
second Picture Album Project. I can monitor the progress of each case in real time, help you
reach the ‘ideal’ resolution to each case,” Fei Du said. “And I have my own people. My train of
thought was identical to Fan Siyuan’s.—Perhaps Fei Chengyu is only faking, and I’m his
accomplice. Perhaps I simply committed patricide and became his sole heir…”
Luo Wenzhou pulled him up off the floor. “I told you I don’t like it when you…”
“Shixiong.” Fei Du sighed and patted the back of his hand. “I’m only saying what the most
reasonable possibility is now. I didn’t say I really did it. Tricking people out of money but not
into sex is the quality villain’s basic principle of personal integrity. If I’d had a goal in getting
close to you, I wouldn’t have let things develop to this stage between us.”
“That would be too contemptible, and out of keeping with an appreciation for beauty.” Fei Du
pulled his collar out of Luo Wenzhou’s hand and straightened the creases in his lapels. Then he
picked up his phone. The missed call displayed was from “Binhai Sanatorium.” Fei Du looked
at Luo Wenzhou, turned the speaker on in front of him, and dialed back.
As soon as the call connected, the person on the other end hastily picked up. “President Fei!
President Fei, I’ve called you three times, and you haven’t picked up! I’ve been so worried.—
Your father has disappeared!”
“I, I don’t know. The security cameras were cut off. Everything was fine when we checked on
the room last night, but first thing this morning he was gone!”
Fei Du hung up. “It seems the script they’ve chosen is rather gentle. They don’t want me to
commit ‘patricide.’”
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At the Second Hospital, Lu Youliang saw someone and suddenly stood up. It wasn’t easy for
Tao Ran to move, and he couldn’t turn around at first. He could only hear a series of hurried
footsteps approaching.
“Director Lu,” said one of the newcomers, “we just learned that the Criminal Investigation Team
is currently pursuing two suspicious cars, including one containing a person named Yang Xin,
whose mother Fu Jiahui is suspected of taking part in illegal eavesdropping and leaking
secrets. We believe she’s a suspect in the murder of Yin Ping.”
Tao Ran, using the one arm he could force to move, finally turned the wheelchair around and
saw that a host of investigators had come to the hospital, and Xiao-Wu was anxiously following
after them, as though he’d done something wrong.
“Deputy-Captain Tao,” Xiao-Wu said quietly, “They… These leaders suddenly asked me, and I,
I, I didn’t, didn’t dare to cover up…”
Meanwhile, Lang Qiao, who couldn’t get in touch with Luo Wenzhou for the moment, had just
returned to the City Bureau. She saw two investigators taking Director Ceng away.
“He’s assisting with the investigation.” One of the investigators nodded very warmly to Lang
Qiao. “Comrade, please write up a report of the progress of your ongoing investigation and
submit it to us. Thank you for your cooperation.”
A colleague tugged at her. When Director Ceng and the others had walked off, he quietly said
to Lang Qiao, “I think you know some of our security cameras were bugged?”
“Because of that, even old Director Zhang, who’s stepped back to an advisory position, was
taken away to be investigated. But because the installation and repair factory fees were
comparatively low, according to regulations, final approval didn’t have to come from the
superiors. Director Ceng was in charge of administrative work then. It sounds like there were
some shenanigans at the factory.”
In the villa, Fei Du had just hung up on the Binhai Sanatorium when a call came from Assistant
Miao. Assistant Miao was a little panicked. “President Fei…can you come back to the office
right now?”
“There are some people who say they’re with the police. They want to investigate one of our
past investments—”
“What’s happening now?” A layer of cold sweat suddenly rose on Luo Wenzhou’s back. “Wait
—where are you going?”
Luo Wenzhou was so heavily struck by the information contained in these words that his
eyesight dimmed. Before he could follow, his overlooked silent phone began to flash more
intensely.
“Wenzhou, it’s me.” The first to get through was Tao Ran. He quickly said, “Shiniang is still
undergoing emergency treatment, but the people from the investigation team have come. What
is going on? What’s happening with Yang Xin? Do you have news?”
“I…” As soon as Luo Wenzhou opened his mouth, his phone notified him of another incoming
call. He saw that the caller ID said “Lang Qiao” and had to make an about face and tell Tao
Ran, “Wait.—Xiao-Qiao?”
“Thank heaven and earth you’ve picked up,” Lang Qiao said shakily. “Little Glasses couldn’t
get in touch with you. Boss, some extremely important things.—We can basically determine
the identities of all those knock-off people, they’re relatives of the victims in the unsolved cases
in the Picture Album Project. Al-also, they just took Director Ceng away, there’s a problem with
the factory that did the suspect security cameras, they’re saying he approved it…and they told
me to write a report explaining the present stage of our investigation. Boss, what should I
write?”
“It’s all right, don’t panic.” Luo Wenzhou slowly let out a breath. “Wait until I get back, I’ll tell
you what to…”
Luo Wenzhou’s words were interrupted for the second time by a notice of an incoming call. He
breathed out and found that this was also a call he couldn’t not take and instantly regretted not
having packed an extra head. But unfortunately heads and limbs couldn’t be taken out on
short-term loan!
“Wenzhou.” The third phone call came from the investigator who’d taking him in to listen in on
the whole course of Director Zhang’s interrogation. Because of the relationship with his father,
you could just about say he had a bit of personal friendship with Luo Wenzhou; not much, just
enough to merit a phone call. “There’s something I need to ask you. What is your relationship
with that Fei Du?”
Luo Wenzhou looked up at the silent bedroom on the second floor. His throat moved, and he
quietly answered, “Just the sort of relationship you know it is.”
The investigator seemed not to have expected today’s young people to have strayed so far
from the right path that they’d casually admit a thing like this without any coverup. He choked
for a moment, then sighed. His voice cooling and hardening slightly, he said, “Then I won’t say
anything extraneous. Prepare to hand over the business you have on hand and step back to
avoid suspicion.”
Luo Wenzhou forced himself to swallow the words “Don’t you want to investigate me, too?”
that had come up to his lips—after all, he was no longer that kid who’d cursed out old ladies in
the street and thrown away his work ID.
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“Of course.” He took a deep breath and politely said, “I’ll comply with the arrangements. If I
can’t help, I’ll do my best to stay out of your way.—Only…can you give me a little hint so I can
get my bearings?”
“Is this to do with the things that happened fifteen years ago?” Luo Wenzhou kept his tone as
soft as possible. “He was only seven or eight fifteen years ago, he didn’t know anything. How
can this have anything…”
“I know, we’ve just asked President Fei to come and cooperate with the investigation, resolve a
few questions.” The investigator paused slightly, then added, “We now have evidence to show
that the same criminal gang is likely behind the Picture Album Project and the secrets leaked
from your City Bureau. The Picture Album Project was called to a halt over a decade ago, and
now someone has brought it up again. What are his intentions? I can’t tell you in too much
detail, but I can say that this person is from Yan Security Uni, closely connected to Fei Du. At
the same time, the security system factory suspected of being involved in divulging secrets is
also connected to the Fei Clan Conglomerate… Let’s say all of the above is coincidence. He’s
still an important connection. I hope you understand.”
Luo Wenzhou quickly extracted two pieces of information from this speech—
Someone at Yan Security Uni closely connected to Fei Du could only be his advisor Pan
Yunteng. The investigator was hinting that while on the surface the restarting of the Picture
Album Project had been headed by Director Zhang, in fact it had secretly been promoted by
Pan Yunteng. Why? Was he also connected with The Reciter?
Second, the information leak from the surveillance system at the City Bureau turned out to be
connected by some twists and turns to the Fei family! Was this leftover history that Fei
Chengyu hadn’t cleaned up, or was someone putting on a show?
“I have faith in Lao-Luo’s moral character and family traditions, but you young people now
aren’t like we were then. You have too many trendy new ideas and messy business, and too
many enticements from the outside world,” the investigator said very obscurely. “You called me
‘uncle’ before, so I’ll say a little something extra—Wenzhou, you’re not little anymore, you have
to understand how things stand.”
Middle-aged people were for the most part discreet when faced with the younger generation;
even when raising a point, they still had to say it in a roundabout, tactful way, not using rude
language, maintaining the Eastern model of politeness. But though he’d only said it in such a
polite and tactful way, Luo Wenzhou still felt that it grated on his ear, as though his eardrum
had been hacked to pieces.
Like a poisonous plant, Fei Du had sunk his root system deep into the bottom his heart. The
slightest breath of wind would tear at his flesh and blood. Luo Wenzhou very much wanted to
shout into the phone, “Bullshit, who the fuck do you take him for?”
But anger couldn’t solve anything, ditto roars and fists—countless elders had taught him this
with their blood and tears, and even their lives.
Luo Wenzhou contained his magma-like rage within his body, said thank you, and hung up.
Then he saw Fei Du walk down from the second floor.
145
The lines of Fei Du’s dark gray coat were neat and harsh, and it faintly reflected the light. He’d
exchanged his soft scarf for a steel wristwatch. The rimless glasses were once again
obstructing his gaze. He seemed not to have changed out of water damaged clothes but put
on a layer of cold, haughty plating.
“Don’t be nervous. It’s much better than I anticipated.—There’s only one breath’s difference
between Fei Chengyu and a dead person, I’m 120% sure that he couldn’t have run off himself.
His disappearance is a good thing for me, it means someone’s protecting me,” Fei Du said. “If
Fei Chengyu were really incompetent, then I’d be the only suspect now. But with his
whereabouts unclear, I’m only going to cooperate with the investigation, not waiting for
someone to come arrest me.”
“Fei Chengyu and Fan Siyuan teamed up thirteen years ago, bringing about the current
situation. Fei Chengyu is down, but Fan Siyuan, for reasons unknown, has been pushing this
plan forward on his own. He’s forced the organization to abandon first Zheng Kaifeng and then
Wei Zhanhong. Zheng Kaifeng and Wei Zhanhong were the two pieces of armor they relied on
for existence. The organization has now been brought to the awkward state of running around
naked. The next cut will be to its flesh. They have to fight back, and apart from fighting back,
they also need one final shield they can slip away behind. That’s me.”
“I think that the person implicating you now isn’t The Reciter,” Luo Wenzhou said in a difficult
voice. “Fei Chengyu had his accident three years ago, and afterwards Lao-Yang also died
under suspicious circumstances, so is it possible…is it possible that The Reciter’s people
hidden inside the organization were exposed?”
“But The Reciter’s people had their roots in too deep. It would have been hard to pull them
out.” Fei Du’s gaze passed through the lenses and met his.
With The Reciter making arrangements, the organization couldn’t sit around waiting for death.
What if the second Picture Album Project and the bugged surveillance system had both been
plots started at that time?
Fei Du fished a cell phone out of his pocket and passed it to him. “I’ll lend you my people to
use. You know Lu Jia. If you need anyone to do anything, you can have him pass it on. Even
though he won’t say it, he feels very grateful towards you. Say the word, and he won’t shirk.”
“With Zhou Huaijin. Zhou Huaijin is crucial. The Zhou family is different from Fei Chengyu and
Wei Zhanhong. Their headquarters is abroad. Zheng Kaifeng and Zhou Junmao are both dead,
but neither they nor the police can extend their reach beyond the border. No one knows
whether there are disadvantageous traces of them inside the Zhou Clan, and Zhou Huaijin is
the sole heir. Because of his younger brother’s death, he’ll cooperate with the police
146
unconditionally. So if I were them, I’d certainly want him dead,” Fei Du said. “You absolutely,
absolutely have to protect him. Nothing can be allowed to happen to him.”
Luo Wenzhou tightly gripped his hand and his phone together.
“That driver said I have an important clue. My guess is this so-called ‘clue’ of his doesn’t refer
to Fei Chengyu and Fan Siyuan’s collusion. I’ve been carefully recalling Fan Siyuan and Fei
Chengyu’s conversation back then. If I recall correctly, Fei Chengyu said something very
suspicious at the time.”
“What?”
“He said to Fan Siyuan, ‘Your six cases of righting injustice were really well done. I have to
admire you.’”
Luo Wenzhou forced himself to restrain his irascible temper. “What’s the problem with that?”
“The problem is ‘six,’” Fei Du said. “In those materials you pilfered the other day, Fan Siyuan
was suspected of being connected with seven cases in all—do you think it’s more likely Fei
Chengyu couldn’t count, or that there’s a problem with one of the seven cases?”
“But there really were seven cases,” Luo Wenzhou said heavily. “I asked Director Lu about
that.”
“I was just thinking that there’s one problematic case among those seven,” Fei Du said slowly.
“Shixiong, the Picture Album Project’s original intention was to collect existing cases for a deep
study of the technique of psychologically profiling criminals, and to seek new lines of thought
to make breakthroughs in unsolved cases.—Since that’s the case, why would the case of the
mentally disabled killer be included? There was sufficient evidence in that case, and the killer
was brought to justice. It wasn’t an unsolved case, and the person responsible was
incompetent; there was no universal research value to it. Why would it have been collected in
the Picture Album Project?”
Fei Du shook off his hand. As he headed out, he considered whether he’d omitted anything.
Then he said, “Oh, my phone’s lockscreen code is…”
“I know,” Luo Wenzhou said absently. “That date… The day you discovered your mom’s
suicide.”
Fei Du’s footsteps paused a few steps away from him. “No.”
Fei Du was watching him. Suddenly, he displayed a somewhat indistinct smile. Because he had
his back to the light, it wasn’t clearly visible.
“Director Zhang, these are unusual times. I hope you can make allowances. We need your
cooperation in maintaining a clear line of communication. Also, please don’t leave the city in
the near future.”
147
Just then, a car stopped at the door. Zhang Chunjiu’s gaze went to it, and he saw a somewhat
familiar-looking young man get out. The gaze hidden behind his lenses was unclear. He
seemed to glance at Zhang Chunjiu. The young man’s mouth curved into an ambiguous smile
as he brushed past him.
“Director Zhang? Director Zhang, please come this way. Do you need us to send a car to see
you home?”
“Huh?” Zhang Chunjiu pulled himself together and quickly averted his gaze, politely saying,
“Oh, there’s no need. Someone’s come from home to pick me up.”
The investigator who was seeing him out looked up and saw a small sedan standing across the
street. Having absorbed the lesson, this car didn’t come up so publicly. There was no
chauffeur; an elderly-looking man personally got out of the driver’s seat and waved at the
investigator.
This man was in his sixties, white-haired, and looked somewhat familiar. He was rather
exquisitely dressed; you could read his wealth and respectability in each of his movements.
The smile on his face was so appropriate it was rather false, as though he was waiting to be
photographed for a magazine cover.
The investigator gave an “oh” and suddenly remembered that this majority shareholder of the
Chunlai Conglomerate had in fact been on the covers of all kinds of finance and economics
magazines many times. But perhaps because of lighting and makeup, the man himself looked
older and more reserved than in his photographs. The two brothers didn’t look at all alike. If not
for this event, it would have been difficult for outsiders to connect the thin, wary Director Zhang
with this beer-bellied big boss.
Zhang Chunjiu shook hands and bid the investigator farewell with thorough politeness, then
swapped with Zhang Chunling, taking the role of driver.
When he’d driven a good way, Zhang Chunjiu looked into the rearview mirror and exchanged a
look with his big brother in the backseat.
“It’s all right,” Zhang Chunjiu said. “They only said I can’t leave the area for now, and to stay in
contact.—That’s all convention. Normally they won’t investigate again. If they hadn’t
determined I hadn’t done anything, they wouldn’t have let me go so politely.”
Zhang Chunliu said, “I just saw… That youngster, is he from the Fei family?”
“I thought you were going to…” Zhang Chunjiu glanced outside and narrowed his eyes
somewhat murderously.
“That was my original plan,” Zhang Chunling said, “but the kid is too crafty. My people followed
the wrong car leaving the villa. By the time they realized it, he’d already met up with the police.
148
It would have been too obvious to try anything. And Fei Chengyu’s whereabouts are currently
unknown. It’s not important whether the whelp lives or dies.”
“Fei Chengyu?” Zhang Chunjiu’s expression changed abruptly. “Impossible, I made sure he
was…”
“So did I,” Zhang Chunling interrupted him with a gloomy expression. “But where is he now?”
The heating in the car steamed their faces, so hot it made a person feel restless. Zhang Chunjiu
was silent for a moment. “I’m sure I haven’t slipped up. I did everything according to plan, step
by step. Ge, since Fan Siyuan’s people have exposed themselves, he definitely won’t get away
this time. And if he doesn’t get away, Fei Chengyu’s days are numbered. Does it matter
whether he’s really brain dead or faking it?”
Zhang Chunling leaned back. His breathing seemed to be a little labored because of his size.
“One last time.”
“There was always going to come a day like this,” Zhang Chunjiu said quietly. “Ge, this isn’t a
business you can pass on to the next generation. There’s no one to carry it on. You’ve gotten
old, and I’m going to retire soon. It isn’t like it was before. Going forward, it’ll get harder and
harder. Let’s not wait to end up like Zhou Junmao. If it hadn’t been for Fan, it wouldn’t have
been easy for us to get away—we ought to be grateful to him. Has everything at home been
arranged?”
Zhang Chunling gave an affirmative. “Once this passes, I’ll send them out of the country.”
“We two brothers have had some luck all these years,” Zhang Chunjiu said.
“Luck?” Zhang Chunling laughed silently, teeth showing grimly, like a shark that had just eaten
someone. “I was born with nothing. I’ve never known what luck was. But so what? I haven’t
gotten where I am today by relying on luck.”
After a pause, Zhang Chunling added, “That incompetent Zhou brat who can only spoil
everything has entered the country. Do you know where he’s hiding?”
Zhang Chunjiu gave an affirmative and drove the car away into the biting cold north wind.
When the driver dropped him off at home, it was nearly nine o’clock.
Luo Wenzhou had been waiting at the door for a while, not minding the cold, clearly relying on
his own youth and good health. He’d somehow put his down coat on wrong; it looked like he
149
was hugging a big cushion. He was sitting on the stairs, looking at his phone with his head
down. His hair hadn’t been cut recently, and it was a bit messy. There was a backpack sticking
up at his feet that looked like that of a refugee fleeing a famine.
Hands behind his back, Luo Cheng looked him up and down, felt that this appearance really
was unsightly, and thereupon walked up and gently kicked him. “Hey, why don’t you go
somewhere else? I don’t have any food today.”
Luo Wenzhou looked up and meowed at him. Luo Cheng broke out in gooseflesh at the meow,
then took a closer look and found that the “cushion” in Luo Wenzhou’s arms was a living
creature.
“How long have you been waiting here?” Luo Cheng asked. “Why didn’t you think of calling?”
“I’m fine,” Luo Wenzhou said rather indifferently. “Freezing for a while is conducive to
appreciating the value of life.”
Luo Cheng’s gaze inadvertently fell on the phone in his hand and saw how this person had
been “appreciating the value of life.” There were photographs of himself from every angle. Luo
Cheng suddenly felt he had indigestion, thinking that Luo Wenzhou was becoming more and
more shameless.
Five minutes later, Luo Cheng had brought the son he’d picked up off the ground and the cat of
his own flesh and blood into the house, then personally rolled up his sleeves, put on a pair of
reading glasses, and, following the directions, set up a cat tree for Luo Yiguo.
“I didn’t bring any cans or snacks. Just give it some dry food to eat. And don’t buy it any of
that garbage, the fatty needs to go on a diet. It broke the zipper of my jacket with its weight.”
Arrived in an unfamiliar place, Luo Yiguo was a little shy. It lay on a slipper Luo Wenzhou had
worn, rolling into a big fifteen-jin fur ball, vigilantly looking left and right.
Luo Cheng looked out from behind his reading glasses. “You’re not afraid you won’t get the cat
back if you leave it here with me?”
“Stop boasting, sir. If my mom had agreed, you’d have turned the house into a zoo long ago
and wouldn’t have to come scrounge pets off my cat.”
Luo Wenzhou rudely searched the fridge and pulled out a bowl of leftover fried rice, tossed it
into the microwave, took it out, and swallowed it down. He said, “Boarding at a pet shop costs
more at the end of the year, and it’d have to fight over territory with other cats, and, critically,
this coward couldn’t beat them. I thought both my wallet and the cat could easily get hurt.”
“Then I’ll watch it for you until the New Year,” said Luo Cheng. “Any longer, and your mom
won’t have it.”
Luo Wenzhou paused, feeling the leftover rice he’d just bolted sticking in his chest, refusing to
go down no matter what. He picked up a teacup and drank a mouthful of cold tea, coughed,
and said, “That’s fine, we’ll come visit you for the New Year and pick it up.”
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Hearing this, Luo Cheng didn’t ask why he needed to board the cat; nor did he ask why Fei Du
hadn’t come with him. Matter-of-factly, seeming to know everything, he said, “Apart from
looking after the cat, do you have anything else to ask of me?”
Luo Wenzhou sat for a moment. In the end he clenched his teeth and didn’t make a sound,
standing up and washing the bowl.
Luo Cheng didn’t rush him. The cat tree that had been only a pile of parts quickly took shape.
Luo Yiguo couldn’t resist its curiosity and at last carefully abandoned the slipper and strolled
over, turning around at the foot of the cat tree, sniffing.
“Dad,” Luo Wenzhou said suddenly, “have you had to put up with a lot of gossip on my
account?”
Luo Cheng looked at him strangely. “Have you taken leave of your senses and run over here to
repent?”
Luo Wenzhou sat down next to him rather gloomily. “You’ve never said anything to me.”
Luo Wenzhou thought about it. “…No, I wouldn’t. Anyway, Fei Du is mine.”
Luo Cheng was choked by this for a while. When Luo Wenzhou thought the old man was about
to flare up, Luo Cheng smiled. “You didn’t get so big drinking milk. At your age, if you needed
my sanction for a trifle like who you’re with, what would be the point in living? Other people
can say what they like. Anyway, they don’t dare to say it in front of my face. And it could be
that their requirements are unusually high—though I think you…”
Luo Cheng paused, and Luo Wenzhou felt nervous for no reason.
The reading glasses made the old man’s eyes extremely large, spoiling his usual solemnity. Luo
Cheng looked at him with a none too solemn gaze and pursed his lips. “I think you’ll do. You’ve
managed to grow up into something like a person.”
Starting from adolescence, Luo Wenzhou had always followed a path his elders and the great
bulk of the population didn’t approve of. He’d staked everything on it. So while he was
reluctant to admit to mistakes, he still felt self-doubt, suspecting he’d bungled things, that he
didn’t have the natural endowments and abilities he imagined, suspecting that when he left the
protection of his elders, he may end up a total failure.
Where countless elders had fallen over the decades, he now had to bring things to a
conclusion; could he make that conclusion a satisfactory one?
When Luo Wenzhou had gone home to get the cat and bring it over here, he’d felt his legs were
stuck in mud, ice-cold and sticky, wrapping around his legs and making each step difficult to
take. But when this appraisal, which could hardly count as kind words, fell on his ears, it was
like a high-speed dryer, instantly breaking up his awkward fright.
Luo Wenzhou stared blankly for a while, then suddenly wiped his nose, stood up, and said, “I’ll
be going, then.”
“I don’t.” Luo Wenzhou changed his shoes and bent to tie his shoelaces. “When I first joined
the police, didn’t you say that I could climb up the path I’d chosen for myself, and if anything
happened afterwards it wouldn’t be your business? So what’s this now? Getting soft in your
old age, sir?”
Luo Wenzhou stood up and hopped twice, picked up the phone that had made his dad feel
indisposed, brought it to his lips, and kissed it. “I didn’t get so big drinking milk.”
Then he put on the hood of his coat and went out like the wind.
Back then, Lao-Yang had thought he couldn’t handle things. Up to his death, he hadn’t given
Luo Wenzhou a hint, and he’d even left behind a testament compelling shiniang to hold her
tongue.
If he’d been able to become “sensible” a few years earlier, taken the load from his elders’
shoulders a few years earlier, would shiniang have come to this?
But with things as they were, there was no sense in going over these things.
At least he still had Fei Du, still had his brothers, still had the injustices the last generation had
been unable to resolve. Since even the old man had said he was “something like a person,”
one way or another, he had to act something like a person.
“It’s me,” Luo Wenzhou said, calling Lu Jia. “Your President Fei has entrusted you to me.
Where are you right now?”
“Here it is.” Zhou Huaijin looked at the address he was holding. “This is where Yang Bo and his
mother used to live!”
Lu Jia parked the car and stuck out his head to have a look. The estate’s security guard looked
over alertly at once. Then, seeing the car Lu Jia had driven, his expression eased.
Lu Jia smiled and went into a convenience store at the gate, bought some random stuff, and
started chatting with the cashier. “What estate is that? It looks pretty good, and very private.”
The cashier looked the way he was pointing. “Oh, the Milky Way Town. Of course it’s very
private.—Are you looking to buy an apartment or what? If it’s buying an apartment, I advise you
not to buy one there.”
“A property right isn’t a residence. You see, they have twenty-four hour security, three layers of
guards at the courtyard gates, the building doors, and the hall doors. It’s all expensive cars
going in and out. If your car is a little more ordinary, the security guards will stop you and
cross-examine you for ages. You get me?” The cashier winked very ambiguously at Lu Jia.
“They also call this the ‘Kept Woman’s Tower.’ It’s a bad atmosphere. Though if you don’t want
to live there yourself, it would be all right to rent it out.”
“The property management fees are high. Ten years ago it was five yuan per square meter. Of
course the rent is even higher.” The cashier made change and laughed unkindly. “No one
without money would be up to tricks like that.”
Lu Jia and Zhou Huaijin exchanged a look. After moving to Yan City, Yang Bo’s mother had had
no fixed work and had lived a life of retreat. How had she been able to afford to rent an
apartment here?
“Apparently she ran a private kitchen restaurant here,” Zhou Huaijin said. “The kind where you
cook the food yourself and only book one table at a time. The kind where you have to make an
appointment in advance. She wouldn’t even necessarily get two tables booked a month. When
my little brother’s relationship with Yang Bo was at its most fraught, he wanted to come and
investigate, but he couldn’t manage to get an appointment. She wouldn’t receive him. Zheng
Kaifeng was nearly a regular visitor, although, hm…”
Zhou Huaijin looked down at a photograph of a woman on his phone. While you couldn’t call
her appearance ugly, she still had nothing to do with beauty. Young, she would have been a
passerby; afterwards, she’d become a middle-aged woman so ordinary it was easy to overlook
her sex. Looking at her, even Zhou Huaijin thought she didn’t fit Zheng Kaifeng’s taste.
“She died of illness, and the time of her death was very delicate.” Lu Jia motioned for Zhou
Huaijin to get in the car. “It was right around the time Dong Qian started making contact with
the fake delivery person and planning Zhou Junmao’s murder… If Yang Bo wasn’t Zheng
Kaifeng’s illegitimate son, then I think there’s one possibility.”
“A contact.” Lu Jia started the car. “Zheng Kaifeng wasn’t like Wei Zhanhong. His base wasn’t
domestic. If it happened the way President Fei guesses and he first got in contact with this
domestic gang of full-time murder conspirators through Su Hui, then for maintaining the
relationship and passing on assignments afterwards, he would have needed a contact he could
rely on. Su Hui ruined herself young. Her health broke down over a decade ago, and she died
young, too. So could his contact have been Yang Bo’s mother?”
Zhou Huaijin said, “You’re saying that Zheng Kaifeng and Zhou Junmao kept her son with them
as a hostage to ensure her good behavior!”
“If that’s really how it was and she worked for Zheng Kaifeng for over a decade, then it’s likely
she left behind some trick. So even though she was dead, Zhou and Zheng still didn’t dare to
be discourteous to Yang Bo, and even tacitly accepted the ‘illegitimate son’ rumor,” Lu Jia
said. “This woman must have been very reliable, so it was only when she died that the fake
delivery person found an opening to play tricks on Zheng Kaifeng…. But the question is, why
use her? What’s so special about…”
Zhou Huaijin waited for an age without there being a follow-up. He couldn’t help looking
uncertainly at Lu Jia.
“Mr. Zhou,” Lu Jia said quietly, “did you put on the bulletproof vest I prepared for you before?”
Zhou Huaijin gave a start and looked all around in a flurry. “Wh-what’s wrong? What is it? This
is home, would they really dare to…”
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“Stop looking around,” Lu Jia interrupted him. "It’s the black sedan following us. They’d dare
anything.” He sent his location to his companions and to Luo Wenzhou, then suddenly spun
the steering wheel, turning at an intersection without any warning. “If I can’t shake him, I don’t
dare to take you to the hotel.—Mr. Zhou, fasten your seatbelt. You don’t get carsick, do you?”
Before Zhou Huaijin could answer, the black sedan following them determined from its target’s
reaction that it had been discovered. Not only did it not pull back, it ferociously put on speed
and kept after them.
On a night close to the Spring Festival, the main streets of Yan City were as empty as a little
Australian village. Not stinting, Lu Jia used the luxury car as though it were an F1. The wheels
let out an enormous screech as the car turned. Zhou Huaijin grabbed a handhold, suspecting
the car was about to overturn!
Just then, a white SUV driving towards them from opposite direction suddenly turned on its
distance lights. Strong light flared up, making it hard to open your eyes. At the same time,
without slowing in the least, the white car headed right for them.
Refusing to be distracted, Lu Jia stamped on the gas pedal, screeching as though planning to
die along with the other car. Zhou Huaijin subconsciously closed his eyes. He heard a loud
noise, then the teeth-aching sound of the side mirror scraping against a wall. Zhou Huaijin
found that, in imminent peril, Lu Jia had turned into a very cramped little alley. He’d sent the
bicycle at the mouth of the alley flying, forcing a turn at high speed and stuffing the car into the
insufficiently wide lane!
The white car that had been coming towards them reacted too late. The driver hit the brakes;
there was no time to turn off the distance lights. The black car that had been following Lu Jia
and Zhou Huaijin was dazzled, and the two cars hit each other head on, sending up exploding
sparks that lit up the night sky!
Zhou Huaijin swiftly turned his head to look at Lu Jia and actually saw a stylish secret agent in
a movie in the fat man’s physique. “You…you…”
Lu Jia shrugged, lit a cigarette, and put it in his mouth. “It’s lucky President Fei is going to pay
for the car repairs.—Mr. Zhou, this is only getting started. Can you take it?”
Zhou Huaijin took a few panting breaths and wiped the cold sweat off his forehead. In this
dangerous moment, he said, “So that must mean I’m very important? It seems like all these
things I’ve found… Su Hui, Zheng Kaifeng, all that miserable business, it’s all an important
lead!”
He saw the refined heir to the Zhou Clan smile unexpectedly. “That’s a load off my mind!”
There was a car quietly bathing in the dreary light of the streetlamps, a thin frost on its roof. It
seemed to have been deeply asleep for a long time.
Zhou Huaijin stuck out his head and looked at the scraped-off side mirror. “We’ve shaken them
off?”
Lu Jia didn’t answer. Before Zhou Huaijin could relax, something suddenly came over the fat
guy; halfway down a perfectly good street, he took another large turn without any warning. The
wheels crunched over ice and the car rolled a little. The trunk hit the pole of an old-fashioned
streetlamp. Lu Jia didn’t even look. He pressed down the gas pedal so it screamed, forcing the
car to slim down, scraping off the other side mirror, too!
Zhou Huaijin was choked painfully by his seatbelt. He turned his head to look and saw the
sedan that had been parked by the intersection start up like a risen corpse, only a hair slower
than Lu Jia. There was also an ambush here!
“Instinct.” Lu Jia very basely flicked his cigarette butt into a snowbank in a corner. “When
you’ve been attacked enough times, you know where these people like to set up shop.”
Zhou Huaijin only knew that this was the person Fei Du had sent to look after him. He’d
thought he was something of the “assistant” type. Hearing these words, he finally couldn’t
resist asking, “What do you actually do?”
“Oh, loaf around,” Lu Jia said casually at first. Then he felt this answer was losing face for Fei
Du and quickly corrected himself: “No…I guess I’m that, that what’s-its-name fund’s chief
administrative officer…”
Lu Jia: “…”
He hadn’t looked closely at the business card since it was printed. He couldn’t remember.
The two of them remained in mutual silence for a moment. Suddenly, Lu Jia’s expression
changed. “Shit!”
Past the little alley wasn’t the light at the end of the tunnel; it was a heap of even more
complex, dizzying little streets. Lu Jia got a little mirror out from somewhere, rolled down the
window and hand-crafted a replacement side mirror. Behind them, headlights interlaced
malevolently as some motorcycles came down an alley on their left.
Zhou Huaijin only now realized that Lu Jia’s curse hadn’t been because he couldn’t remember
his own title. He quickly looked out the passenger’s side window. “There’s some this way, too!”
“It looks like they had a reason for choosing to act here,” Lu Jia said heavily. “They expected
ahead of time that we’d come to investigate Yang Bo. They specially encircled and intercepted
us, forcing us in, cutting us off… What are you doing?”
Zhou Huaijin raised his phone. “Hello, 110, there’s a gang of thugs chasing us!”
Lu Jia: “…”
155
Unfortunately, the police didn’t have an Anywhere Door. They couldn’t immediately answer the
call and descend from the heavens. Even Lu Jia’s people couldn’t come so quickly.
By the time Zhou Huaijin had managed to clearly explain his position to the operator among
the ear-splitting engine sounds and crashes, the two of them were entirely walled up in the
middle of a little street.
There were no streetlights around, but the interlocking headlights were dazzling.
Zhou Huaijin had never experienced this kind of combat. He looked wildly left and right. “What
do we do? Do we fight? Are there weapons?”
“Under the backseat, there’s…” Lu Jia spoke a few words, then assessed Young Master Zhou’s
hardware and software. “Eh, forget about it. Don’t hand yourself over to them. Hide.”
“H-hide?” Zhou Huaijin’s gaze swept over the ferocious ring of encirclement. “No… Can’t we
negotiate first?”
Before he’d finished speaking, the group of people encircling them, making the most of their
time, had come up to ram the car. Lu Jia fished a helmet out from under the car seat and
tossed it to Zhou Huaijin. “Put it on yourself. Look for a chance to run.”
Amid the noise, Zhou Huaijin couldn’t hear anything clearly. He bellowed, “What—did—you—
say?”
Lu Jia pulled off his jacket. He turned out to only be wearing a skintight t-shirt under it. Then he
opened the indented car door, sending one person flying with the force. Holding a metal stick,
he swept horizontally; the stick made a startling sound as it met human flesh.
Zhou Huaijin had wanted to help, but now that the moment had come, he had absolutely no
idea where to start. He’d just stuffed his delicate, refined head into the helmet when the car
window next to him was smashed to pieces. Shards of glass rained down. Time suddenly
seemed endlessly stretched out. Zhou Huaijin saw the person who’d hit the car breathe white
steam out of his nose, his expression nearly savage, coming towards him like a wild beast. He
moved unconsciously, using his arms and legs to scramble desperately into the backseat.
The cold, howling wind poured in, and two choppers stabbed right towards his back from the
disorderly car door. Zhou Huaijin suddenly found that he wasn’t afraid—he had no attention to
spare for it. He only struggled to curl up, wondering, “Can bulletproof vests block knives? Is it
the same principle?”
Next, the car shook tremendously, and even more shards of glass came right at his face. A
knife sliced Zhou Huaijin’s calf. At the same time, the knife-wielding attackers were taken
unawares from behind and slammed against the car. An indescribable sour smell filled the air.
Zhou Huaijin stared, seeing that a big garbage can that had originally been standing peacefully
at the side of the road had also entered the battle, wielded by the extraordinarily strong Lu Jia.
The inadequately managed metal garbage can had stood with its belly half-full of aged garbage
throughout the solitary years, a subtle reaction occurring among its contents; the smell could
be compared to a weapon of mass destruction!
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In this short span of time, Lu Jia had already gotten covered in blood, whether others’ or his
own. He grabbed Zhou Huaijin and yanked him out of the car, hooking an arm even sturdier
than a leg around his neck. “Run!”
Zhou Huaijin’s helmet had been knocked askew, thickly blocking half his field of vision. He felt
he’d turned into a heavy-headed mushroom, entirely pulled along by Lu Jia.
Suddenly, something seemed to hit his helmet, like a little stone bouncing off with a bang. The
sound was very loud. Zhou Huaijin was totally disoriented. The arm holding his neck suddenly
pressed down, forcing him to duck, expelling him into a little alley like an espresso machine.
Zhou Huaijin reached out and felt around randomly, feeling sticky concrete. Lu Jia’s breathing
was extremely rough. Zhou Huaijin quickly pulled the displaced helmet into its original position,
finding that the right side of the helmet was full of prickly cracks, and Lu Jia’s arm, laying over
his neck, was badly mangled.
Zhou Huaijin suddenly changed color. “How come they have guns?”
Lu Jia didn’t answer. There was a painful shaking in his heavy breaths. He reached one hand
towards his waist. There was a combat knife hanging from his belt. The cold handle of the knife
rubbed against his palm. Blood-scented sweat steamed up from Lu Jia.
But he only touched it. The next instant, he pushed Zhou Huaijin back and once again took up
the already bent metal stick—the knife was a good knife, a good weapon; it would be no
problem for him to charge out and stab a handful of people with it. He had the skills, and he
was enraged enough.
Though he couldn’t remember the name of the fund, he knew what the money in it was used
for—it was for buying bread for those battle-scarred people with nowhere to go. Though it
couldn’t heal the unending trauma, at least it could keep them from coming to the end of the
line materially.
Even though there was an eternal sword in his mind, he couldn’t cut people down while
representing Fei Du; even more, he couldn’t cut people down while representing those
miserable people, both the ones he knew and the ones he didn’t know.
“Run.” Lu Jia sucked in a breath and said to Zhou Huaijin, “I’ll cover for you. Run away and find
the police. Find Luo Wenzhou!”
Wasn’t this nonsense? Zhou Huaijin thought. Faced with a gang of knife-holding, gun-toting
thugs out for their lives, was this Mr. Lu planning to hold off an army wielding a bent metal
stick?
“I’m not…”
Lu Jia pushed him, making him stumble, then his stick flashed out, beating away an
approaching thug. At the same time, as soon as he showed his head, there was a patter on the
wall next to him, bullets wildly hitting the wall, making dust fly. Lu Jia was forced to recoil
behind a low wall. Just then, the sound on an engine flared up, and a motorcycle pushed its
way towards the place where he was hiding!
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To dodge the bullets, Lu Jia was sticking to the corner. There was no place to hide. He was
about to be crushed to death by the motorcycle. Suddenly, in the darkness, something flew
across the sky, hitting the motorcycle’s front wheel. The motorcycle’s wheels instantly lost
equilibrium. It somersaulted.
Lu Jia raised his head at once and saw that Zhou Huaijin, who’d just run clear, had returned
once more, and he’d gotten some bricks from who knew where. Having thrown one, he was
still holding a couple!
“I’ve already told Fei Du what I know,” Zhou Huaijin said loudly, holding two bricks close to
himself. “Even if I die, they can still keep investigating, and they can guess why they wanted to
kill me! Who am I afraid of?”
He was cowardly and powerless. He’d spent the first half of his life shivering indecisively in a
state of constant anxiety.
The expression on Lu Jia’s face was indescribable, but there was no time to say anything. A
louder engine sound went up, the other motorcycles imitating the first. Zhou Huaijin tried the
same old trick again, but unfortunately he wasn’t a professional athlete. Two flying bricks in a
row missed their targets. He’d come to the end of his resources.
He instinctively raised a hand to block the blinding headlights. Dizzied by a rush of hot blood,
he also felt somewhat sad—Lu Jia had originally wanted him to wait obediently at the hotel; he
was the one who had been unable to give up the riddle of Yang Bo and his mother, who had
overreached himself going out to investigate.
He’d thought that Huaixin’s business had still been unfinished; he still hadn’t attained a final
accounting.
He’d walked right into the trap himself, and involved someone else.
Was Huaixin still in heaven watching him? Zhou Huaijin thought, “If you’re still watching, could
you lend your useless big brother a bit of luck?”
He’d never had any other strong points; probably he could only rely on luck to turn the tables.
Just then, the sharp, brief sound of a police siren came out of nowhere. Zhou Huaijin stared
blankly, thinking it was a hallucination.
Then, as if it had taken a deep breath, the police siren went on; red and blue lights rose and fell
in the night sky, coming right towards their position—
Zhou Huaixin’s paintings hung in his restaurant. Zhou Huaixin’s name was placed in a shrine in
his heart. He’d answered his desperate prayer in this hopeless moment.
For his big brother, the picture-painting little skeleton possessed the qualifications to act as
“faith.”
158
But unfortunately, while the police had arrived, police cars couldn’t easily squeeze into narrow
gaps like Lu Jia. At first they couldn’t get into this “precious territory.” One of the motorcyclists
let out a sharp whistle. His knife fell, quickly dispatching his fallen companions, not leaving a
single prisoner to give information. The others fled in disarray down a prearranged alley—their
route coming and going had been calculated with great accuracy; if Lu Jia hadn’t been
unexpectedly difficult to handle and the police hadn’t come as fast as if they’d been cheating,
it would simply have been a perfect and easy assassination!
Lu Jia wavered. Zhou Huaijin wanted to hold him up, but maybe his arm was too weak, or Mr.
Lu too heavy; he couldn’t hold him. The two of them, sharing equally in comforts and
hardships, sat down on the ground together. Hurried steps came towards them, and a familiar
voice asked, “Are you all right? Where are they?”
“I guessed it was you.” Lu Jia clutched his arm, from which blood was constantly flowing,
forcing a smile towards Luo Wenzhou, who’d rushed up. “By the time the operator had notified
and dispatched the police, I figure our two corpses would have been cold.”
“Fei Du’s phone has your precise position.” Luo Wenzhou looked carefully at Lu Jia’s wound,
frowning. “Enough chatter, go to the hospital.”
“Boss.” Lang Qiao, followed by a few criminal policemen, had turned over all the bodies on the
ground. She said, “The ones left behind are all dead.”
“Take them away, check their DNA and fingerprints,” Luo Wenzhou said heavily. Then he
thought of something and looked deeply at Lu Jia.
“Legitimate self-defense. I didn’t even raise a knife.” Lu Jia could tell what he was worried
about and smiled collectedly. “I was afraid you’d come on your own. I hadn’t expected that a
big hero like you, apart from being good at sneak attacks, would also not be so into solitary
heroics.—What, with President Fei in trouble, haven’t you been suspended?”
“I’m not stupid.” Luo Wenzhou bent down and picked up Zhou Huaijin. “Suspended is as
suspended does, but my people are still my people. My word still holds. Isn’t that right,
children?”
Lang Qiao, Xiao Haiyang, Xiao-Wu, a whole crowd of the Criminal Investigation Team’s elite,
the ones on duty and the ones on vacation, had all been mobilized by him. And then there was
Tao Ran, who couldn’t be there in the flesh but was with them over walkie-talkie. Tao Ran said,
“After all, we all got this big eating your food.”
Xiao Haiyang pulled a long face. “After all, I don’t trust anyone else.”
“You’re going to make me blush.” Luo Wenzhou waved a hand, not batting an eyelash. “First
determine the identities of the dead. They may have priors. Then keep chasing. In the City
Bureau’s name, request urgent assistance from all the sub-bureaus and police stations. Say a
gang of armed robbers are on the loose.—Specs and Er-Lang, wait a bit. Come with me to see
the wounded to the hospital. The assassination attempt failed, so I’m worried they’ll have some
other scheme planned. Quick!”
As soon as his orders came down, everyone moved methodically, sealing off the scene, calling
for assistance.
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Fei Du didn’t know about the soul-stirring events outside; he was agreeably “cooperating with
the investigation.”
“I got a call from the sanatorium right before I came here.” Fei Du shrugged carelessly. “I
haven’t had time to verify. What, it seems it’s true?”
The investigator looked closely at this Fei Du—he was young, good-looking, tasteful from his
hair down to his fingernails. A scent of mingled false cypress, sweet basil leaves, and cedar
wafted from his cuffs. He was a perfect embodiment of a profligate son of the wealthy. The
investigator couldn’t resist looking down at Fei Du’s information. He was a little too young, still
a student. “Aren’t you worried about him at all?”
“Worried about what? That Fei Chengyu has been kidnapped?” Fei Du smiled, but the smile
didn’t rise above his cheekbones. “For the last three years and more, he’s been reliant on
machinery for his basic needs of existence. There’s no possibility his brain will recover. You
could say he’s a person, or you could say he’s a heap of dirt without being wrong. These last
few years, when the old people at the company refused to obey me, it was nice to have a living
dead ‘retired emperor’ to keep them in their places. Now Fei Chengyu has no more use. He’s a
burden. Let them kidnap him. It’s best if they kill their hostage.”
The investigator stared into his eyes. “You say there’s no possibility Fei Chengyu’s brain will
recover. Who told you that?”
Fei Du raised his eyebrows in bewilderment. “The hospital, of course. Could I have made it up?
The Second Hospital, the Fifth Hospital, Beiyuan Neurological—and the Binhai Sanatorium.
You can ask each of them… Oh, no, you don’t think I did something to him for the sake of the
family property?”
Fei Du breathed a laugh, looking like an explanation was beneath him.—However you looked at
it, when Fei Chengyu had had his car crash, Fei Du had been only eighteen. An eighteen-year-
old only child of a wealthy family committing patricide to snatch the family fortune sounded like
a bizarre plot in a novel.
The investigator found that Fei Du didn’t seem to have noticed at all that if Fei Chengyu really
was brain dead, then he himself was a suspect. He didn’t even seem to know why he’d been
called here.
This bearing of not knowing anything seemed like inadvertently pleading innocence of any
relationship. If he was pretending, then this young person was too shrewd.
The investigator cleared his throat. “A few years ago—not long before your father’s car crash—
a financial leasing company under your company’s banner had a business contract. Its partner
was Tai Hua Digital Technologies, Ltd. Do you know about this business?”
“I don’t,” Fei Du said after calmly recollecting for a moment. His expression didn’t waver.
“Before my dad’s car crash, I didn’t do anything but spend money. I didn’t meddle with his
work.”
“What about after you took over? This would have happened shortly before.”
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Fei Du changed his posture slightly, gently leaning back in his chair, showing a particular
mixture of youthfulness and shrewdness. “It’s under the conglomerate’s name, and the actual
controlling company’s small shareholders themselves are at a high level within the
conglomerate. They have strong backing and will have a much easier time taking up business.
It’s tantamount to using the conglomerate’s resources to advance their private assets—though,
actually, it’s also a good means for winning over the old people, tying their interests to mine.
Everyone profits together and loses together. Interest becomes loyalty. Fei Chengyu tacitly
accepted this. Water that’s too clear has no fish in it—I had no need to knock over their rice
bowls when I stepped up.”
“Su Cheng, one of the conglomerate’s vice presidents,” Fei Du said. “As for that digital
technology company you mentioned…”
“Tai Hua Digital Technologies.” The investigator watched every shade of expression on his
face.
“I haven’t heard of it.” Fei Du shrugged gently. “Maybe it’s not on a large scale. Little sums of a
few tens of millions don’t go by the board or directors or a meeting of the shareholders, and
they wouldn’t deliberately report to me. What’s wrong? Have they been evading taxes, or have
they committed some over-the-line policy violation?”
The investigator’s gaze deepened. He was about to say something when he heard Fei Du
continue: “It must not be that bad. They’re inspected annually. Even if someone is up to some
tricks, they’d still have to wear a cloak of legality and adherence to the rules. It wouldn’t be so
easy to find a problem. So what is the problem? You really have me at something of a loss.”
The question the investigator had been about to ask had just been spoken by Fei Du himself.
He had nothing to follow up with and was temporarily speechless.
Either this young man was genuinely speaking frankly, or he was too careful. Whichever
circumstance it was, it was still unsuitable to keep beating around the bush.
The investigator abruptly went directly to the point, asking outright, “President Fei, when your
business is so large and you’ve worked so hard to gain a foothold, why would you suddenly
put your company aside to go to Yan Security Uni to do a graduate program that you have no
use for?”
Without any hesitation, Fei Du said, “I wanted to find a person called Fan Siyuan.”
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The investigator had been prepared to listen to a heap of dodges and excuses. He hadn’t
expected this answer; he felt as though he’d missed a step. His next question came out almost
subconsciously. “Fan Siyuan? You know who Fan Siyuan is?”
“I know roughly that he was a teacher at Yan Security Uni,” Fei Du said calmly. “But I’ve had
people search for further information with no outcome, so I had to go and find the answers
myself.”
An hour later, the investigator received a call from his colleague. He looked at Fei Du fiddling
with a teacup across from him, feeling that the information he’d just received was somewhat
hard to digest.—Fei Du had told him an outrageous story. After he’d theoretically “died jumping
into the sea,” Fan Siyuan had appeared with Fei Chengyu at the Fei family house and looked
on indifferently as the sadist Fei Chengyu used outrageous means to abuse his wife and child;
Fan Siyuan had even given him hints on how to thoroughly “tame” a person; this word “tame”
had been the chief culprit in leading to Fei Du’s mother’s suicide some years later.
The investigator had examined countless people. He thought that when Fei Du had been
recalling these things, what he’d been holding back had been genuine feeling. That sense of
reality couldn’t be conveyed through fakery or acting.
If that were the case, then the relationship between the father and son must have been rather
fraught, without any sense of trust. Would Fei Chengyu really have dared to feign being
incompetent in front of a son who hated him so much? Wouldn’t he have been afraid his make-
believe would turn into reality? If, as Fei Du said, Fei Chengyu really was like the living dead,
then who had stealthily kidnapped him?
Kidnapping Fei Chengyu definitely wouldn’t get them a penny from Fei Du, so…
If it wasn’t Fei Du himself planning a patricide to gain control of everything Fei Chengyu
possessed and feigning total innocence, then there was someone deliberately framing him,
using Fei Chengyu as a shield in their misdirection.
As he performed this mental assessment, the investigator took his colleague’s call. “Hello?”
“On this point at least Fei Du didn’t lie, he really isn’t the person with actual control over the
financial leasing company that gave money to the suspicious factory connected to the
eavesdropping. It’s a senior executive called Su Cheng. We’ve looked into it. Su Cheng
originally only held 20% of the shares. He took his opening right after Fei Chengyu’s car crash.
Fei Du requested an explanation from him at a senior management meeting, but ‘when the
emperor dies and the crown prince is young, the regent can get away with anything.’ Su Cheng
united a group of old people who had followed Fei Chengyu and nearly forced an ‘abdication,’
putting the heir in a very awkward position, so this business went nowhere afterwards.”
The investigator looked at Fei Du and said heavily, “Call Su Cheng in to cooperate with the
investigation.”
“I was just going to tell you about that. Su Cheng has run for it.”
“What?”
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“His wife says he got a call today, then hastily packed his bags, only said he needed to go
away on business, but he took his passport, and the company says there aren’t any business
trips on his itinerary, and no one plane tickets booked for him. And a female assistant who
works with Su Cheng disappeared along with him. Her apartment is empty. The property
management says they’ve seen Su Cheng coming and going from this assistant’s apartment
more than once and suspect Su Cheng has a dishonest relationship with her. There may also
be an issue of a transfer of assets. We’ll have to investigate further.”
A transfer of assets, running off in the middle of the night, casting aside his wife and taking his
mistress—
“Inspect the airports and the train stations. We have to bring him back!”
While Fei Du couldn’t hear what the person on the phone was saying, he could judge
somewhat based on the reaction of the investigator across from him. He silently picked up his
teacup, using the simple cup to screen the slightly turned up corners of his mouth.
The information leak at the City Bureau had been revealed when they’d caught Lu Guosheng.
Would a mole who’d been so deeply concealed have revealed his interference with the security
cameras so easily?
Fei Du had thought at the time that it was a little unnatural. Now it seemed that it had only been
a covert move, pushing forward the scapegoats.
Director Ceng was one scapegoat. The technical expert forced into a management role was in
fact rather dim-witted when it came to management. These years Zhang Chunjiu had devoted
to cultivating him evidently hadn’t been because he valued his expertise. There had been a
period when Director Ceng had constantly rotated jobs. On the surface, this had been so he
could become an all-around manager who could cover every aspect as soon as possible, but
in fact it had been so that before he’d had time to work out whatever plots were going on, he’d
be uprooted by his task master to perform numerous and convoluted odd jobs, falling into
countless holes in his confusion.
The other scapegoat, it seemed, was the Fei family. As soon as the police found that there was
a problem with the factory, it would be only a matter of time before they followed that lead to
them. Before, when Fei Chengyu had acted as bankroller, a part of the conglomerate’s funds
had been moved, and traces still remained. Fei Du himself had been able to find the signs, and
the economic crime investigation department’s police officers would of course understand at a
glance. And Fei Chengyu was a vegetable, unable to testify. This case would have a
conclusion; those people had probably even come up with the concluding report for the police
—
The one who’d sold out Gu Zhao had been the newly employed medical examiner Ceng
Guangling. Because he wasn’t in the Criminal Investigation Team and his qualifications were
scanty, neither Gu Zhao nor any of the old criminal policemen who’d had suspicions about Gu
Zhao’s case later had suspected him. And meanwhile, apart from Zheng Kaifeng and Wei
Zhanhong, the last conspirator had been Fei Chengyu. With his position, his motives, his
financial resources, his wife and father-in-law dead under suspicious circumstances… No
matter how you looked at it, Fei Chengyu made good material for the evil backstage
manipulator.
“This Su Cheng appeared at the Fei Clan Conglomerate today. When we contacted Fei Du, this
Su Cheng was there. No one noticed him at the time or knew what he was doing. I remember
he was the one who took care of the arrangements for sending a car to get Fei Du. We just
learned that that car broke down on the way back. According to the driver, he nearly rear-
ended someone.” As soon as he heard this, the investigator broke out in a cold sweat—Fei Du,
a “hot-headed young man,” hadn’t waited for anyone to come pick him up after getting word.
He’d hastily rushed over himself. If he’d ridden in that car, would it only have been a question
of “nearly rear-ending someone”?
The investigator looked at Fei Du in trepidation, but he saw the young man fussily drinking the
black tea they’d provided, a look of “I’m holding my nose and drinking swill” hanging at the
corners of his eyes and the tips of his brows. He had no idea of the calamity he’d avoided.
“Go question his wife.” The investigator had no attention to spare for this “fortunate”
youngster. He stood up and walked out. “He was keeping a mistress, and his wife had no idea?
I don’t believe it…”
Fei Du couldn’t hear what he said after. A staff member politely invited him to go rest. Though
his liberty was temporarily restricted, he was still being treated pretty well.
Fei Du smiled unflappably at the staff member leading the way. “Could you lend me something
to pass the time? A novel, a game machine without an internet connection, anything.”
The investigators likely wouldn’t have attention to spare for him for a time, because they’d
soon find that Su Cheng’s wife had hired a private investigator to secretly photograph evidence
of his extramarital affair. Though the “private investigator” didn’t operate especially legally, he
was very dedicated. Apart from providing photographs to Mrs. Su, he’d also preserved a
record of all of Su Cheng’s recent movements.
Everyone who’d had contact with Su Cheng would enter the investigation roster.
When he’d dislodged all of Fei Chengyu’s underlings, he’d only left Su Cheng, an idiot with
high aspirations but low abilities. He’d even turned a blind eye and swallowed the loss of a
small portion of assets. That had been for this day.
The monster Fei Chengyu had raised had turned on him. Fei Du, preparing to ask a tiger for its
skin8, had of course needed to find a fall guy beforehand. Su Cheng was a lure, the opening in
the net, a target he’d left for the other side. When he’d learned they’d planted someone at Su
Cheng’s side, Fei Du had known that they’d taken the bait—these people had been
complacent too long, and they were too arrogant. They thought they could control everything.
With Lu Jia and Luo Wenzhou there, it wouldn’t be so easy for them to touch Zhou Huaijin.
Now that Fei Chengyu had disappeared and Su Cheng had absconded after an unwise move,
everything had gone out of control. What were those people planning to do?
One hoped they’d been cautious and hadn’t left behind any dirt in their dealings with Su
Cheng.
“He said… ‘Humans are a very peculiar sort of animal. Take physical training, for example.
High-intensity anaerobic exercise combined with long periods of low energy-consumption
walking will have a much better outcome than maintaining a moderate intensity of jogging.
Training the mind follows the same logic. Given invariable beatings and scoldings, she’ll
become accustomed, numb, even hover on the edge of attempts at rebellion. So the key thing
for you to do is create a set of rules and an atmosphere with distinct rewards and punishments.
When she does well, you have to give her an appropriate reward. When she breaks the rules,
you have to mete out the most severe punishment. That level just now works. You have to
crush her at one blow…’”
The investigator paused the mini-recorder and looked up at the man across from him.
Pan Yunteng had been repeatedly questioned for half a week and had managed to remain
unruffled, but his eyes were bloodshot. His expression had been somewhat dazed at first, but
when he’d heard halfway through the recording, the dazed expression had cracked open. He
looked up at the investigator in disbelief, then stared fixedly at the little mini-recorder, as
though a demon were about to jump out of it. “He…said that?”
“Fan Siyuan’s own words. Fei Du’s signature is on the testimony,” the investigator said. “Do
you need to see it?”
Fei Du and Pan Yunteng were at two completely opposite extremes. One had an answer for
every question, the other had a mouth like a clam. Zhang Chunjiu had said the Picture Album
Project hadn’t been named by him, pushing Pan Yunteng into the heart of the struggle. But
apart from acknowledging that he had named the second Picture Album Project, Pan Yunteng
hadn’t said a word from start to finish.
“You knew that Fan Siyuan wasn’t dead.” The investigator stared into his eyes. “That’s why you
named the second Picture Album Project.”
“You anonymously reported that Wang Hongliang and the Flower Market District Sub-Bureau
were taking part in drug trafficking. Using your position, you went through special channels. In
the back half of that report, you referred obliquely to the former director-general Zhang
Chunjiu’s negligence, even intentional harboring, and called into question the crime rate during
his term of office, saying it was so low as to be suspect. Since there was absolutely no basis
for the latter half of your suspicions, it was cut off and withheld.—Who gave you the material
for that report?”
“As a citizen, I have the right to anonymously report lawbreakers, and the right to protect my
personal safety and freedom from being threatened because of my report!” Pan Yunteng said,
gritting his teeth. “Who gave you the authority to force me to tell you the source of my
information?”
The investigator said, “You can anonymously report, but that doesn’t mean you can
anonymously denounce on false charges, anonymously say whatever comes to mind.”
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“The evidence about Wang Hongliang was conclusive. Was that denouncing on false
charges?”
“What about the accusation you made against Zhang Chunjiu? Is there also evidence of it? If
there is, please hand it over.”
“It’s all guesswork.” The investigator looked at him and tapped the mini-recorder next to him.
“Professor Pan, did you guess that Fan Siyuan was this kind of person?”
Pan Yunteng’s eyes flashed faintly. He stared at the mini-recorder without making a sound.
“Why would you allow a student who had just started school to join the Picture Album
Project?”
“Because I read his assignments. He submitted papers concerning ‘victims of vicious crimes’
and ‘communal crimes.’ Those were precisely Fan Siyuan’s areas of research before he went
off the rails!
“I…”
“You thought that Fan Siyuan had sent him. You thought he’d joined the Picture Album Project
with the same aim as you! You didn’t think that he was one of the victims in these papers.” The
investigator slammed the table. “Professor Pan, you’re an elder in the field and a model for
others, widely respected. Do you wallow in the mire with that sort of person?”
“When Lu Guosheng was captured, you listened in on the interrogation,” the investigator said
coldly. “I don’t know whether you heard this part. In Feng Bin’s murder, there was one
mysterious individual called ‘go ask shatov,’ and another with the codename A13. They drove
Lu Guosheng to exposure step by step. Who do you guess arranged that? Let me tell you,
concerning this point, Director Lu personally questioned Fu Jiahui, and she didn’t deny it. They
used an innocent minor as a prop, as an offering. Professor Pan, were you entirely ignorant of
this?”
Driven past the point of endurance, Pan Yunteng took off his glasses, put his elbows on the
table, and rubbed at his haggard cheeks.
“The materials for the report on Wang Hongliang came from my…from Fu Jiahui.”
Hearing him speak at last, the investigator secretly sighed and motioned for the staff member
next to him to take notes.
“I was very shocked when I’d read it and asked where this thing had come from. She said it
came from the brother of one of the victims, called Chen Zhen, and it had indirectly reached an
old friend of hers. I didn’t dare to trust lightly and secretly met with Chen Zhen and found a way
to review the details about Chen Yuan’s case. I found that the girl’s death really had been
suspicious. If this was true, then I knew I couldn’t let it go. Though there was something very
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strange about it. I asked Fu Jiahui why she had come to me, when I’d left the City Bureau long
ago. Why didn’t she give these things directly to Zhang Chunjiu? Even going through me, I’d
still go to Lao-Zhang to resolve it. I couldn’t go around him and send these things to his
superiors. What kind of a position would that put Lao-Zhang in? Wouldn’t it be an injustice to
him? That’s not how things are done.”
Pan Yunteng raised his head slowly. “Fu Jiahui said…she said, ‘Who doesn’t know this
business is his responsibility? Do you think he’s going to do anything about it? I suppose you
don’t know how Gu Zhao and Lao-Yang died, either?’ Then she took out Lao-Yang’s testament
and had me read it. That’s when I learned that when he died in the line of duty three years ago
he was privately investigating Gu Zhao’s case afresh. I looked at the photographs he’d secretly
taken. He’d nearly found the den of those wanted criminals. His own strength wasn’t enough.
He needed to find someone to assist him and made the same mistake as Gu Zhao, trusted
someone he shouldn’t have trusted.”
“I can’t think of who else it could be,” Pan Yunteng said quietly. “I demanded to know who her
so-called ‘old friend’ was, and that’s when I learned that he…he wasn’t dead.”
The last “he” evidently meant Fan Siyuan. The investigator followed up, “Have you had contact
with Fan Siyuan? Have you seen him with your own eyes?”
“…yes.”
Though he’d anticipated this, hearing him confirm that this person had returned from the dead,
the investigator still sucked in a breath. “When?”
“This summer, the end of July, I’m thinking… It must have been the last day of July. Lao-Lu’s
wife wasn’t home, he was on his own and came to my house to eat. My wife is a distant cousin
of his. He was even the one who introduced us, and the two families have always been on
good terms. Before we’d finished eating, he got a phone call. I heard him say ‘sister-in-law’ and
knew that it was Fu Jiahui calling him. My heart lurched. I dimly felt something was going on.
On the phone, Fu Jiahui said that Yang Xin had some problem at school. She’d gone out of
town and wanted him to help. As soon as Lao-Lu heard, he left in a hurry without even finishing
his food. Less than five minutes after he left, our doorbell rang.”
“Fan Siyuan came to your house?” The investigator sat up straight, his speech involuntarily
speeding up. “A serial killer come back from the dead was standing in front of you, and you
didn’t call the police?”
“Because he was with Fu Jiahui.” Pan Yunteng breathed out heavily. “He was in a wheelchair.
He’d aged, aged so much he hardly looked like himself. If his bearing hadn’t been the same as
before, I would hardly have recognized him. The first words he said when he came in were, ‘It’s
been a long time, Xiao-Pan. Do you want to know who sold out your brothers?’”
“He didn’t make me do anything.” Pan Yunteng’s gaze was somewhat vacant. He smiled
bitterly. “I’d already handed in the report materials, and I’d started up the second Picture
Album Project. He had no use for me. He said he’d only come to say goodbye. He told me to
look after the second Picture Album Project, and that everything would soon be over.”
On the twenty-seventh day of the twelfth lunar month, the holiday rush was like a raging fire.
Before five in the morning, Zhou Huaijin was startled awake by a resonant segment of Five
Rings Song.
Out of consideration for his personal safety, Zhou Huaijin hadn’t gone back to the hotel. His
temporary abode was Luo Wenzhou’s living room—the rooms had all been given to the
wounded and the girls, and the other men had scrambled around for space to hole up, all of
them getting covered in cat hair.
Zhou Huaijin blearily opened his eyes a crack and saw Luo Wenzhou pick up the phone.
Luo Wenzhou was sitting in a small rattan chair on the balcony, the ashtray in front of him so
full it was about to overflow. You couldn’t say how many cigarettes he’d smoked. It was still
dark, and he was fully dressed, his expression alert. Maybe he’d gotten up early, or maybe he
hadn’t slept in the first place. “Hello, Tao Ran?”
Tao Ran sat in a wheelchair. Both sides of the hospital corridor were full of sleeping relatives of
patients who’d come from out of town and couldn’t bear to go to a hotel. While there were
many people, hardly any were awake, only two people from the investigation team discussing
something with a doctor at the doors of the ICU. They looked somewhat lonely.
Tao Ran didn’t make a sound for ages. Luo Wenzhou looked at the clock and suddenly had an
ominous premonition.
When she’d been alive, he hadn’t been on good terms with Fu Jiahui at all. When he’d heard
her dialogue with Director Lu from outside the hospital room, he’d had even less of an idea of
how to face her. Now he’d been spared the trouble. “We are the reciters of the stories” had
become her last words.
A few people who, like Zhou Huaijin, hadn’t been sleeping soundly, had also been disturbed by
his cheerful ringtone. Seeing that something was wrong with Luo Wenzhou’s expression, they
all silently sat up, looking at him.
The phone signal carried through the howling of the north wind, adding a taste of bitter cold to
the voice coming over it. Tao Ran asked, “Has Yang Xin…still not been found?”
Just then, Lu Jia, his injured arm hanging up, came out of the bedroom. He couldn’t do up the
buttons of Luo Wenzhou’s pajama top and could only awkwardly drape it over himself. There
were still bruises and lacerations on his face from the other day’s late-night thrill. He had a
strong sense of presence wherever he went.
“Someone pretending to be a taxi driver took President Fei to the villa that day. We followed
them and found that they’d gone right out of the city to L City, near Binhai, stopping in a
nearby county town called West Second Strand.”
Xiao Haiyang finished wiping his glasses and put them on. His voice a little nasal, he said, “I
know the place. There’s a wholesale market for small commodities and online shops running
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nearby. The wholesalers all go there to collect goods. There’s a great number of people going
through, the crooks and the good people together. It’s very easy to hide.”
“Right. They’ve rented a very remote little warehouse. There’s more than one parking spot. It
looks like a stronghold. Our people didn’t alert them. They’ve been staking the place out and
just saw a strange car drive in.” Lu Jia showed Luo Wenzhou a few photographs that had been
sent over. “Is this the car you’ve been looking for?”
At first glance, Luo Wenzhou didn’t look at the license plate number. He only saw the profile of
a young girl wearing a white down jacket and recognized her as Yang Xin.
“Boss.” Xiao-Wu hadn’t caught the team of vicious motorcyclists. As soon as he heard there
was news, he was raring for action. “What do we do? Go after them?”
On the phone, Tao Ran was also silently waiting for his answer.
Luo Wenzhou carefully looked through the photographs that had been sent over. “Xiao-Wu,
take a few people, borrow a truck, and go to West Second Strand. Ask the special police to
assist. You have to bring every single one of them back.”
Luo Wenzhou hesitated for a moment. “Be…be careful. Our target is the person behind them.
We have to bring them back and interrogate them. Do your best not to harm them.”
Xiao-Wu stared, understood what he meant, gave an “oh,” and left with some people.
The overcrowded living room had emptied by half. Xiao Haiyang washed his face. “Captain
Luo, what’s our next step?”
“She was called Zhuo Yingchun. She died of illness eighteen months ago. She was fifty-three
years old at the time of her death. Her permanent residence and place of birth were both in H
Town, but her birth is unclear,” Xiao Haiyang said. “I asked about it, and they told me that her
identity information isn’t necessarily true. People of her age didn’t get IDs as soon as they were
born, and a lot of the information was later self-reported. Some may not even be the right age.
Her only recorded relatives are from the Yang family, following her marriage. Her own parents
and siblings are unknown. The civil policeman who deals with the household register said that
in those circumstances, she may have been an orphan, or she could have been kidnapped and
sold. It’s hard to tell what happened a few decades ago. We may have to go there to ask
around.”
“Come on.” Luo Wenzhou stood up. “We’re all awake. When we’ve resolved this, we’ll come
back and make up the sleep.”
169
In late winter, it was nearly seven o’clock before the sky showed the first glimmer of dawn. The
long night, still not ended, made people and animals lazy. And there were also people
wandering about in a desperate plight.
A low-key personal sedan was mixed into the traffic jam on the highway caused by the army of
people returning to their hometowns. As it slowly approached the toll booth, Su Cheng’s palms
holding the steering wheel were full of cold sweat.
“Driver, could I just ask, have you been waiting in this line for an hour?”
“An hour? Nearly half my life! I hear there’s a security check up ahead.”
“A security check going into the city, and a security check leaving the city, too. Is the
government crazy? Are they trying to turn the highway into a parking lot and collect parking
fees?”
The drivers stuck in traffic at the highway toll gate got out of their cars one by one to look
around, cries of discontent rising everywhere.
“They’re inspecting IDs and licenses up ahead,” the woman in the passenger’s seat said in a
low voice.
Su Cheng gave a heavy affirmative, his hands slipping gently on the steering wheel, wiping the
sweat off his palms. He’d put on a wig and a hat, pasted up the corners of his eyes, and stuck
on fake whiskers. He looked like a slovenly, vulgar old man. He had faith that this appearance,
which had nothing in common with the normally rather tasteful “President Su,” would make it
difficult to recognize him. It shouldn’t be hard to slip out of the city.
But unfortunately, he’d been pressed for time and hadn’t had time to make a fake ID. And now
he was looking down the barrel of a gun.
The greater part of the people in Yan City were leaving during these few days. The city was an
empty ghost town, but the highway was jammed up into a pot of porridge. Su Cheng had
thought at first that it was only the traffic caused by too many people. By the time he’d worked
out that there was a security check up ahead, it had been impossible to turn around and flee.
Front and back, left and right, the cars were nearly rubbing shoulders. All the drivers were
glaring like tigers, looking out for others trying to cut in line. Unless he abandoned his car,
escape was impossible.
But Su Cheng had always lived like a prince. Normally he worried when he walked a few steps
that he’d damage the soles of his shoes. Seeing all the surveillance cameras around, the police
covering the area, he looked down at his own ornamental legs and really didn’t have the
courage to open the car door.
“It’s all right.” Su Cheng forced a smile at his mistress and said, consoling himself, “These
kinds of security checks usually only inspect trucks and passenger vehicles. A private car will
get through quickly. Don’t worry.”
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The woman looked askance at him. The old man’s vulgar appearance was already repulsive; if
you added in idiocy, he was simply so hateful he made you want to destroy him out of
humanitarian interest.—Security checks were usually only for coming into the city. If they were
being so strict about leaving the city, there was clearly something abnormal.
The woman grabbed Su Cheng’s arm. “Come on, we’re getting out.”
“O-out?” Su Cheng looked left and right. Just then, the car in front moved a few meters
forward like a snail. Seeing the car next to them about to cut in line, the cars behind honked
their horns. Like the totally worthless A Dou9, Su Cheng vacillated for a moment, then slowly
pressed on the gas pedal and followed.
“We can’t,” he said, believing himself to be in the right. “That would be too obvious. What do
we do if someone stops us? And if we leave the car here, how will we travel?”
Behind her sunglasses, the woman rolled her eyes. Then she took the sunglasses off and stuck
them into her bag, pulled out a makeup remover wipe, and quickly cleaned the lipstick and
eyeshadow off her face. She tangled up her hair, then reached into the backseat and fished up
a pillow, wrapped it in her scarf, and stuck it into her clothes. As Su Cheng looked on,
dumbstruck, in the blink of an eye she went from a tidy and graceful beauty to a dejected
“pregnant woman.”
“The security check may be to catch you.” The woman bit her tongue, managing to bite back
the word “idiot.” She grabbed Su Cheng. “Come with me!”
Su Cheng had no definite views. At a loss, he could only trail after her.
Everyone had been waiting in line together and shuffling their way forward perfectly well when
suddenly some people ditched their car midway. The temper of the driver behind rose to the
sky. He pressed down on his horn and prepared to curse. But before he could open his mouth,
he saw that one of the people who’d gotten out of the car was a pregnant woman. The
“pregnant woman”’s face was pale. She smiled very apologetically at him. The driver had to
swallow down the swear words that had come to his mouth, wrathfully slamming on the horn.
Su Cheng’s back was soaked through by cold sweat. His moist hand clutched the woman’s
wrist, making her feel somewhat nauseated.
Perhaps because this old man hadn’t been accumulating merit, his luck really wasn’t any good.
As soon as he got out of the car, the road ahead inexplicably cleared, and the originally
paralyzed car in front drove a dozen meters at once. A car in the next lane immediately jumped
the line without any hesitation. The drivers behind Su Cheng would have loved nothing better
than to knock the obstruction into the atmosphere; the sounds of their horns reverberated in
waves to the sky.
Su Cheng was too irresolute. As if suffering from procrastination disease, he’d been unable to
come to a decision. When he’d been yanked out of the car by the woman, they’d already been
very close to the toll gate. A security officer who’d just been relieved by his colleague was
startled by the rising and falling car horns. He looked up and saw an “old man” pulling a
“pregnant woman,” staggering through traffic.
Slow-moving traffic was still traffic. It was still hazardous. The security officer immediately
chased after them. “Why did you suddenly get out of your car? Do you need help with
something?”
Su Cheng quivered at being suddenly stopped by a security officer. All of his pores instantly
opened and his soul nearly evaporated out of them. His spinal column stiffened into a stone.
But the woman, resourceful in an emergency, suddenly hugged her belly and squatted down,
realistic pain on her face. She didn’t speak, only groaned mournfully.
Then Su Cheng came around half a beat late. “I’m sorry, Comrade Police Officer, my wife just
said in the car that her belly hurt, we didn’t think we’d be sitting in traffic so long… There’s
really nothing we can do, could I ask you to…”
The security officer was alarmed. “Don’t make her squat in the road. Hurry and pick her up. I’ll
call you an ambulance.”
Then he ran off. The woman who’d been squatting on the ground grabbed Su Cheng, pulling
and pushing him away. In this plight, Su Cheng no longer had attention to spare for his
pampered, precious body. His steps were as fast as flight as he followed the woman to the side
of the road. The two of them jumped over the guard rail and came down off the highway,
charging into the little woods of a green belt.
The security officer, who’d hastily found a colleague to help him carry the pregnant woman,
quickly returned to the scene and was surprised to find that they were gone. When the elder
he’d called over had heard the whole story, his expression suddenly turned severe. A moment
later, a heap of official business vehicles drove out of the tiny highway security check and
started a blanket search in all directions.
Human voices, the sounds of cars, even the barking of police dogs searching for traces
constantly drew nearer. Surrounded on all sides, Su Cheng really couldn’t keep running. He
stumbled, releasing the woman’s hand, briefly and fretfully saying, “I said we shouldn’t have
run! We wouldn’t necessarily have been found out if we’d driven through, and now what?
We’ve been exposed! We don’t even have a means of transportation. Are you trying to tire me
to death?”
Su Cheng grabbed her shoulder. “What do we do now, huh? Tell me what we…”
Just then, someone behind him suddenly said, “Is that Mr. Su?”
Su Cheng trembled and turned his head in bewilderment. A man wearing the uniform of a toll
booth worker was standing behind him, looking at him with a conspicuous smile. “Our boss
knows you’ve run into trouble. He didn’t avoid your calls on purpose, he was only worried the
police were already monitoring you. In the interests of prudence, it had to be this way. He told
me to come help you. We must protect your safety. Please come with me.”
Su Cheng stared blankly. Then a happy expression appeared on his face. He pushed aside the
woman’s hand tugging at him from behind and went up as though he’d seen a relative. “Yes,
yes, I called many times, and he never picked up. How did you find me? Listen to me, the
police have found me, now…”
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The man looked at him and smiled, cultured and refined. Gloved hands extended from the
sleeves of his uniform, falling on Su Cheng’s shoulders.
The woman’s pupils contracted. Not batting an eyelash, she quietly called, “President Su!”
Just then, out of the corner of his eye, he saw a flash of cold light. A switchblade had appeared
in the gloved man’s hand. With Su Cheng entirely unwary, it stabbed right at his chest!
This place was five hours’ drive from Yan City. It wasn’t especially far, but because of the traffic
leaving the city, Luo Wenzhou and the others had travelled all day, setting out at dawn and
arriving when the golden crow had sunk into the west.
It overlooked the sea and backed against mountains, warm in winter and cool in summer.
There were plentiful natural hot springs in the mountains. It was especially busy in winter.
Because of the development of the tourism industry over the last few years, the unknown little
place had changed its face and become filled with the air of modernity.
The hotel hadn’t been reserved in advance; it was really very tight. Fortunately they’d brought
along Zhou Huaijin—though the Zhou family’s fortunes had declined, even a scrawny camel is
bigger than a horse, after all. With Young Master Zhou acting as host, Luo Wenzhou, bringing
along a few criminal police officers and Lu Jia, checked into a hot springs villa hotel,
purportedly with a six-star rating, temporarily booking a detached little villa to stop over at.
“Yang Bo and his mother lived in what used to be a village, called Yang Village. It was at the
foot of the mountains, supposedly pretty unenlightened. Later the hot springs on the mountain
were developed, and the place became a resort. All the villagers were relocated.” Xiao Haiyang,
who’d been dispatched to contact the local public security personnel, returned carrying a stack
of photocopied old materials. He bit off half a bun in one bite. “But, first because there weren’t
many villagers in Yang Village, and second because most of them demanded payment, very
few of them accepted the arrangements. Those were moved to the west city district. I asked
for the addresses and contact information.”
They’d been moving without rest since dawn, taking it in turns to drive and rest. Arriving in H
Town, they bolted a simple meal and unrelentingly set off once more, but the outcome wasn’t
what they could have wished.
Over a decade had passed. Everything had changed. Among the few addresses Xiao Haiyang
had found, the families had either moved long ago, or else the old people had passed away
and the young ones were clueless. Even their memories of life in the village when they’d been
little were blurry.
They made a round of visits and came up empty. Zhou Huaijin felt his hastily-eaten dinner
sticking in his stomach, weighing heavily without going down. It was rather unendurable. He
couldn’t resist smiling wryly at Luo Wenzhou. “I thought your usual work was waving around a
gun and bellowing ‘Don’t move!’ at evildoers. How come it’s all running errands?”
“Who said all we do is run errands? We also have to attend interminable meetings and write
interminable reports.” In the piercing wind, Luo Wenzhou stubbed out his cigarette butt on a
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garbage can. His expression was calm, but he was also impatient, unable to resist taking out
his pack of cigarettes again.
“Hey,” Lu Jia couldn’t resist calling to him, “Luo-xiong, I think that’s about enough. Your fuming
capacity is about to catch up with an airplane’s exhaust.”
Luo Wenzhou smiled indolently and didn’t respond, putting another cigarette in his mouth,
thinking, “What’s it to you?”
Lu Jia said, “President Fei hates it when people are always smoking in the office. If you
normally smoke like this, hasn’t he said anything about it to you?”
Luo Wenzhou paused, expressionlessly put the cigarette away, and waved. “Come on. The last
family.”
At the house the last family from Yang Village had moved to, a young man in his twenties
answered the door. Xiao Haiyang verified his address. “Excuse me, does Yang Yaozong’s family
live here?”
“Yes, that’s my dad.” The man looked at him doubtfully. “Excuse me, you people are…”
“Police.” After working all night to no avail, when he finally saw a bit of hope, Xiao Haiyang’s
eyes lit up, and he promptly displayed his credentials. “We’re investigating a case. One of the
people involved used to live in Yang Village. We’re looking for someone who can answer some
questions, could I ask whether your father…”
“Not very likely. My dad’s been sick for a couple of years, here—” The man pointed at his own
temple. “He’s a bit dull-witted.”
When they came in and had a look, they learned that the old man wasn’t “a bit dull-witted.”
The skinny and wizened old man sat on the couch, snatching a tangerine from a small child a
year or two old. The child couldn’t speak clearly, and neither could the old man. After a
moment, the child, unable to snatch the tangerine back, began to wail. Not admitting defeat,
the old man also opened his mouth and followed suit with great sincerity. The old one and the
young one each occupied one end of the couch, competing in funereal wails, making enough
noise to shake the sky. A young woman, probably the daughter-in-law, inured to this, brought
out a small bench for the guests without looking up.
They felt like a bucket of cold water had been thrown in their faces.
Luo Wenzhou asked the old man’s son, “Could you tell me whether you remember when you
were living in Yang Village, was there a person called Zhuo Yingchun?”
The man thought about it, clearly eager to help, but shook his head. “I don’t think I’ve heard of
them.”
Given his age, it was only normal for him not remember things from so long ago. Luo Wenzhou
wasn’t surprised at all, only very disappointed. He’d left Yan City for a day, and there was no
telling whether another major event would occur. Another day closer to the last night of the
year, and he was still at a total loss, without any leads.
“Let’s go.” Luo Wenzhou shook his head. “We’ll find some other…”
Just then, the senile old man who’d been competing in crying with the child suddenly said,
“Xiao Hua’ao!”
The senile old man’s snot and tears hadn’t dried yet. He opened his mouth, lacking in teeth,
and, as if entertaining himself, said indistinctly, dribbling saliva, “Zhuo… Xiao Hua’ao!”
“So it’s Xiao Hua’ao you’re asking about,” the son said, rather taken aback. “Sorry, I didn’t
know what her formal name was.—She had a son about the same age as me, right?”
“I don’t know what his formal name was,” the man said. “We didn’t use formal names when we
were little.—‘Xiao Hua’ao’ was pretty well-known back then. She came from out of town. We
weren’t developed back then, there was still human trafficking; she was bought. At first they
gave her to a cripple for a wife. Then a few days after the marriage, the cripple died, and she
became a widow. The family thought they couldn’t have spent the money for nothing, so the
elders made a decision and gave her in marriage to a cousin of the cripple. I remember the
person she married afterwards was one of the first batch to drive a car to haul goods. He didn’t
talk much, only kept his head down and made money. The family was pretty well off. Xiao
Hua’ao was always very brightly dressed. Everyone in the village liked to gossip about her
behind her back and gave her that nickname.10—Later her second man died, too. There was a
fuss about the relocation. It was a pretty big deal. Everyone said she was a jinx on her
husband. Then she took her son and moved away somewhere.”
Xiao Haiyang quickly asked, “Do you know where she was kidnapped from?”
“She wasn’t kidnapped,” the man said, “she was bought. When I was little, I heard the old
people say that the human traffickers had connections and got orphans from the city, without
any roots or relations, not at all good-looking, so if one went missing no one would go
searching, but they were definitely clean… Though those were all the corrupt customs from
over twenty years ago, it must all be gone now, don’t misunderstand.”
“How would I know?” The man smiled. “This is all what I heard. Though I remember Xiao
Hua’ao spoke Mandarin very well, not like the locals. There was a rumor that said she’d grown
up in Yan City.”
Orphans, human traffickers, the girl Su Hui sold abroad… Why choose an ordinary woman like
Yang Bo’s mother Zhuo Yingchun as a contact?
The seated circle was silent, because apart from Zhou Huaijin, all of them knew about Su Hui;
there was no need for him to add emphasis.
Su Hui had sold her own daughter; then her crimes had escalated, and she’d used her
daughter to kidnap and sell other girls—a full range of kidnapping, selling, and murder, a range
carried down through three generations.
The girl in the old photograph was naturally delicate-featured, a little dressed up, a sight that
could amount to being pleasing scenery of the human world. Who could see the debt of blood
on her hands? Only when she’d been dead over a decade had her crimes been revealed to the
light of day.
What stuck in the throat was that in these sensational crimes spanning over twenty years, none
of the three main culprits had come to a satisfactory end—Su Luozhan hadn’t been fourteen
yet and had been spared from criminal penalty, and Su Xiaolan and Su Hui had died natural
deaths, lying in drunken dreams on top of the girls’ corpses; in the end, apart from some
insubstantial reputation, to the end of their lives, they hadn’t paid any price.
“Privately-run orphanages always have a problem balancing income and expenditure. In the
end, there are two paths. Either they find a way to be nationalized, or they find fixed long-term
contributions. In the past, some overseas Chinese established donations to orphanages, and
Heng’an was one of them. Afterwards, likely because of the death of its donor, the orphanage
couldn’t continue and wrapped up.” Zhou Huaijin paused. “Its donor was Zhou Yahou.—I was
just thinking that Yang Bo’s mother and Su Hui were both orphans and both came from Yan
City. The cities hadn’t expanded at the time. How many people could there be in Yan City?
How many orphanages? Could they have come from the same one?”
“The pretty ones were sold for a high price abroad, the rest were handed over to human
traffickers and fell into the human trafficking market.” Luo Wenzhou thought about it and
nodded slightly. “That makes a certain amount of sense, but there’s a small problem—given
their method of raising children and then selling them, Heng’an Orphanage not only had a
source of income, it must have been making considerable profits. Even without Zhou Yahou to
act as donor, I don’t think they would have gone bankrupt.”
Xiao Haiyang said, “Maybe they were exposed and closed down?”
“Something like an orphanage being closed down for human trafficking, even if it didn’t cause
a sensation, would still definitely have left a record.” Luo Wenzhou shook his head. “It wouldn’t
have vanished without a trace like this.”
For a time they were all tired and without any lines of thought. They all fell quiet. No one spoke
for a long time.
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Then Zhou Huaijin suddenly cleared his throat, breaking the stillness. “I want… I’m planning to
go back immediately to the old Zhou home.”
Seeing everyone’s gazes collect on him, Zhou Huaijin added, “Following my mother’s lead, I
found an excuse to take a vacation and leave the Zhou Clan headquarters. After I found that
Filipino maid and heard about those appalling things from her, I came right back here and
found President Fei. I had no time, and I didn’t think of going to carefully investigate Zhou
Yahou.—If all of these things really are inextricably tied to the orphanage he donated to, I think
that if a person’s done something, there can’t be absolutely no traces of it. There must be a
lead.”
“If that’s the case, then I can understand why they’ve been so determined to kill you,” Luo
Wenzhou said slowly. “Mr. Zhou, I’m afraid it’s not safe for you to leave the country alone. Why
don’t you wait a couple of days, I’ll think of a way to get someone…”
“I can come along,” Lu Jia put in. “I can take along a few companions and go with President
Zhou. Don’t worry, spending money on private bodyguards won’t get you anything more
reliable than us.”
“Leaving the country isn’t like hopping on a flight to Hainan Island.” Luo Wenzhou frowned. “It
won’t be very convenient for you to get visas at the moment.”
“We already have visas, all current.” As soon as Lu Jia smiled, his eyes vanished. He looked
like an image of good fortune. “President Fei said before that this year’s employee benefit is a
collective vacation abroad. I thought the arrangements had been made for nothing, but now it
looks like it’s perfect.”
“Last fall,” Lu Jia said. “He took care of it when he’d just gotten out of the hospital.”
Zhou Huaijin couldn’t resist opening his eyes wide.—Fei Du had invited him to see him at the
hospital and enumerated the suspicious details in Zheng Kaifeng’s murder of Zhou Junmao.
He’d also suggested that when he left, he should examine what his mother had left behind. Not
long after he’d left, Fei Du had started making plans for Lu Jia and the others to go abroad…
There were so many countries in the world, so many scenic spots; why had the “vacation”
been arranged there?
What Zhou Huaijin could understand, the criminal police officers, each more sensitive than the
next, would of course understand. Lu Jia very composedly accepted their visual salute and
didn’t explain, only smiled meaningfully. “I’ll go book a flight.”
“We’ll split up first thing tomorrow.” Luo Wenzhou was the first to avert his gaze. “You guys go
investigate the old Zhou family house, and we’ll stay here and look for traces of Heng’an
Orphanage. Keep in contact at all times, and be careful.—Don’t think about it for now, take the
time to rest, conserve your strength and build up your energy.”
Everyone was used to hearing him issue orders. They stood up simultaneously and each went
to their rooms, planning to make up for being forced to sleep in a cat’s den by taking
advantage of this rare opportunity to stay at a six-star hotel. But Xiao Haiyang’s steps paused.
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He looked at Luo Wenzhou, who had only spoken and not moved. “Captain Luo, aren’t you
going to sleep yet?”
“There’s been no word from Xiao-Wu yet. I’m a little worried. I’ll wait a while longer.” Luo
Wenzhou waved. “Go on.”
Luo Wenzhou was left alone in the huge living room. He stood in front of the floor-to-ceiling
window, looked up, and saw Orion suspended at the culmination. Three bright stars side by
side sketched the radiant Belt of Orion, slowly moving across the clean-washed night sky.
Luo Wenzhou had taken out his pack of cigarettes. He squeezed it in his hand, looking at it,
then thought of something and put it back in his pocket. He pushed open the window and
used the cold wind of the winter night to clear his head. Those few words just now had made
him long irresistibly for Fei Du. While they’d been apart for less than the time a short business
trip took, he had the feeling that he hadn’t seen Fei Du in a lifetime.
When Fei Du had just gotten out of the hospital… Their relationship had been very delicate
then. Fei Du’s mouth had been full of honeyed words without a line of truth, and Luo Wenzhou
had on one hand been admonishing himself not to act with undue haste, on the other hand
wishing he could grasp him at once.
Luo Wenzhou remembered Fei Du hadn’t had much energy then. He could fall asleep anytime
and anywhere, leaning against something, not even noticing Luo Yiguo. Sometimes he’d be
sitting on the balcony staring into space, not making a sound, looking thoughtful.
Just then, someone unexpectedly spoke behind him. “President Fei said that everything must
have a source. Outrageous-seeming people often have outrageous pasts. If we could find that
source, some things would become much simpler.”
Luo Wenzhou turned his head and saw that Lu Jia, his arm suspended, had strolled over. The
injury to his arm seemed to be like scraping off some skin for him. It had no impact. Lu Jia
casually took a big box of nuts from the minibar, opened the lid, and offered it to Luo Wenzhou.
“Do you want some?”
“…No.” Luo Wenzhou looked at the little dimples on the back of Lu Jia’s hand. “If I eat away
my eight-pack abs, what will I use to carry out the plans of a beautiful man?”
Lu Jia was startled into a shudder by Luo Wenzhou’s impenetrably shameless posturing and
hastily opened a can of coke, too, to steady his nerves.
“What are you thinking?” Lu Jia asked. “Are you thinking about why President Fei could make
so many arrangements ahead of time?”
“In order to steal the Zhou family’s fortune, Zhou Junmao and Zheng Kaifeng collaborated to
kill Zhou Yahou. Over a decade later, their company still hadn’t found a domestic foothold, so
they found someone to run over an obstacle. One was murdering someone for his property,
one was an assassination. Though the methods weren’t very similar, the cases in fact have
similarities—they’re both coordinated crimes, both require a certain degree of trust between
the conspirators, both are murders disguised as happenstance,” Luo Wenzhou said quietly.
“Were Zhou Junmao and Zheng Kaifeng going to change collaborators each time, leaving dirt
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on themselves all over the world? So the two cases had to have had some degree of
connection. That’s a reasonable guess. It’s no wonder he made arrangements ahead of time.
He just thought of it a little earlier than others.”
Lu Jia was wearing short sleeves, sipping ice-cold coke in the cold wind as though untouched
by the elements. He looked quietly at Luo Wenzhou, not making a sound.
Luo Wenzhou paused. “What, were you afraid I’d think his scheming was too deep, his
foreknowledge too suspicious?”
Lu Jia shrugged noncommittally. “It’s not everyone who could accept our sort of person…
Hiding secrets and trauma, divided from others by a layer of something.”
“Brother,” Luo Wenzhou said sincerely, patting his shoulder, “if you keep worrying of behalf of
someone who’s already spoken for, it’s easy to get a beating.”
Lu Jia laughed. “President Fei saved my life. What does it matter if I get a beating for his
sake?”
“He’s all right. He’s good at humoring people. He’ll never do any work around the house
voluntarily, only does a turn after all kinds of prodding. He’s always making me angry over
nothing.” Solemnly, Luo Wenzhou said, “Very lacking in education.”
Unable to keep a straight face, Luo Wenzhou smiled. “What did you mean when you said
‘trauma?'”
“I don’t know. He’s never mentioned it.” Lu Jia hesitated, then said, “It’s just a feeling. That
feeling of not trusting outsiders, living hand to mouth. Sometimes you think you’re very close to
him, within reach, and he looks up and suddenly you’re far off again.”
Fei Du’s blurry memories, his unstoppable coughing, his odd stress response, the tension in his
body when he was in the basement…these were typical symptoms of post-traumatic stress.
But in the end Fei Du hadn’t said anything that day, just fobbed him off again.
In this lengthy process of coaxing and wheedling, Luo Wenzhou felt that he’d spent every day
tearing off Fei Du’s painted skins, one after another, like a Russian nesting doll, until now, when
he felt he was only a layer the thickness of a cicada’s wing away from the final core.
Just then, Luo Wenzhou’s phone rang. He saw “Xiao-Wu” on the caller ID, quickly tidied up his
far-wandering thoughts, and picked up.
“Boss,” Xiao-Wu said in a low voice, “we’ve found the warehouse they’re using as a
stronghold. These people are on very high alert, and Yang Xin knows us, so we haven’t dared
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to approach. We’ve been lying low all day, and now that there aren’t a lot of people outside,
we’re getting ready to implement an arrest at once.”
“Apart from Yang Xin, there’s another person.” Xiao-Wu held the phone with his neck, raising
binoculars his hands, saying to Luo Wenzhou, “It seems to be that Zhu Feng you mentioned,
the woman whose husband was stabbed by the crazy person. She came over with another
batch of people around seven in the afternoon.”
Luo Wenzhou frowned deeply, remembering what Fei Du had hurriedly said to him before
leaving—
The Picture Album Project had been started to assemble psychological characteristics of
criminals. There’d been no need to include a case of an incompetent person impulsively killing
someone in the research plans. And Fan Siyuan had said that he’d only been responsible for
six cases…
So was it possible that the case of the mentally disabled killer hadn’t been one of those
collected by Fan Siyuan in the Picture Album Project? And someone had secretly mixed it in
among the others; then, imitating the criminal method, imitating Fan Siyuan’s “privately judged
execution,” they had killed the mentally disabled killer.
This way, after Fan Siyuan disappeared, that case would naturally be blamed on him and
wouldn’t attract notice!
But there were some problems here. First, you had to guarantee that Fan Siyuan would die or
disappear, or else, as soon as he was arrested, what he had and hadn’t done would quickly
come out in an interrogation. In the end, not only could you not achieve the result of
“hoodwinking the public,” you’d attract others’ notice—but this was easy to explain. Fan
Siyuan had absconded after committing the murders; while a formal wanted notice hadn’t been
issued, he’d still become a wanted criminal, and wanted criminals made up those people’s
collection. In particular, an expert gone bad like Fan Siyuan would have been a high-end
“collectible,” of a grade suitable for keeping under glass, so he would very soon have been
gathered up and protected. The mole had known he wouldn’t fall into the hands of the police.
But why had they needed to go to all that trouble to kill a mentally disabled person?
“Got it,” Luo Wenzhou said to Xiao-Wu. “Zhu Feng is an important witness. You have to take
her alive.”
Xiao-Wu hung up the phone and gestured to the colleague next to him. Under the screen of
night, a sniper quickly got into position. The special police drew close to the warehouse from
three sides in a practiced manner. The criminal police separated to disperse the unrelated
people in the surroundings, in case violence broke out.
Suddenly, a man walked out of the warehouse. He must have been a night watchman. He was
too sensitive. As soon as he stepped out, he immediately sniffed something wrong in the air. A
nearby special police officer reacted with extreme speed; a dart from a tranquilizer gun
whistled, hitting him precisely in the neck. The man immediately fell back. In the instant he fell,
his outstretched arm prodded something, and a sharp alarm instantly began to wail. All the
lights went up in the warehouse!
Flickering human shadows quickly flitted over. Soon after, the stomach-clenching sound of
gunfire rang out!
Xiao-Wu’s scalp prickled—Luo Wenzhou had ordered them beforehand that, as there were
important witnesses inside and Yang Xin was with them, they had to do their best not to injure
them; the police wouldn’t open fire first, so…
Before, you could have said that Yang Xin had only failed to report a crime, had only run away,
had even, for some purpose, deliberately had Xiao Haiyang learn about the hospital killer, and
so on. These weren’t major doctrinal problems. If she’d cooperated after the fact, given that
she was the daughter of a martyr, she may even have avoided punishment. But now, publicly
resisting arrest, illegally carrying a gun, confronting the police—that was of a different nature!
Xiao-Wu clenched his teeth firmly, put on a bulletproof vest, and charged in.
While the people inside the warehouse had weapons, when it came to a real fight, they were on
the level of a mob—especially the way they’d parked all the cars together. The means of
transportation were contained, the surrounding special police raising a brightly-lit encirclement,
police sirens echoing wildly all around, entirely blocking them inside the warehouse.
The sniper took down each of the two people guarding the gates, the bullets hitting their
thighs, even basically in the same place. The two people had no time to react before they were
controlled by the police who’d burst in. Xiao-Wu took some people in and caught three or four
people outside the warehouse. Then he saw a flash of a white down jacket heading towards a
small building behind the warehouse. Xiao-Wu turned and followed.
The scattered sounds of gunfire were exceptionally ear-piercing in the night. The smell of gun
smoke floated through the biting cold air, pouring into people’s lungs, choking them.
Then he charged into the small building, a bullet from somewhere far off coming in with him,
making a clear crash. The person who’d been hiding behind the window quickly jumped aside.
Xiao-Wu hollered into the walkie-talkie as if heartbroken: “Who the fuck is shooting? I told you
not to shoot!”
He chased as he cursed, remembering the first time he’d gone to Lao-Yang’s house when he’d
just started working. The girl, about to take her university entrance exam, had been unable to
do a problem and had gotten into a huff, unwilling to eat. A circle of purported “university
graduate” adults had been compelled by Lao-Yang to tutor their little shimei. End result, it had
turned out that this pack of good-for-nothings had long ago given their knowledge of the
periodic table of elements back to their middle school teachers; they’d sat through a meal
mutually ridiculing each other…
It seemed that the person hiding behind the window just now hadn’t been Yang Xin. This was
also a woman, thin and slight and seeming somewhat aged. Xiao-Wu came closer and closer
and saw that she looked like Zhu Feng.
Not verifying the facts of the matter, he threw himself forward. With the back of her clothes
grabbed by Xiao-Wu, Zhu Feng lashed out behind with something, and Xiao-Wu dodged
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nimbly, grabbing the woman’s wrist. Zhu Feng cried out, and the weapon slipped out of her
hand.
Panting, Xiao-Wu handcuffed her. “Where is Yang Xin? You still have…”
Xiao-Wu froze.
In that instant, he didn’t feel pain; he only felt like he’d been pushed. The inside of his head
buzzed.
The bullet had gone through his neck. The hands of the girl in the white down jacket shook.
She herself stared wide-eyed in disbelief.
Xiao-Wu fell over sideways, rolling uncontrollably towards a corner, his whole body twitching.
He met Yang Xin’s blank gaze.
“Your…”
He’d planned to deliver a whole lecture, but it had all been in vain.
This place had been particular about style when it had opened, filled up with classic pavilions
and kiosks, as though everyone who went inside had to speak softly. Unfortunately, while the
place was suitable, the people were unworthy; the atmosphere hadn’t stood up to the talk and
laughter of the wealthy illiterates who came there. By now, the Chengguang Mansion had
reverted to type—lakes of wine and forests of meat everywhere.
At the end of the year, this place had many guests. Cars came and went, carrying load after
load of drunken pleasure-seekers. Boastful lighting spurted wildly up to the night sky, making
the stars and moon look dim and dejected amid the fireworks of the mortal world. In an
unobtrusive little car at the corner, Lang Qiao was so sleepy she could hardly keep her eyes
open. Her attention wavered, and her forehead knocked against the steering wheel. Lang Qiao
sat up with a start and quickly felt for her binoculars. She saw that the car she’d been watching
hadn’t left yet and relaxed, pulling some mints out of her pocket to clear her head.
In the instant of nearly falling asleep and then startling awake, a person’s heart rate would
accelerate. Lang Qiao rubbed her eyes and crunched the mints, feeling that the disorder in her
heart rate was lasting too long. It was so fast she was short of breath, as though she’d
obscurely sensed something.
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Her phone vibrated. Lang Qiao’s eyes didn’t leave the car she’d been ordered to track. She
picked up. “Hi, boss… Yes, it looks like Zhang Ting has asked for sick leave and has been
staying home recovering. Zhang Donglai is still inside the Chengguang Mansion… Don’t worry,
I have my eye on him—”
Halfway through speaking, she was interrupted by a yawn. “Anyway, what do I have to keep
my eye on him for? Boss, if you still suspect Director Zhang, can’t you make me keep an eye
on the main target? At least it’d feel like I was doing something.”
Luo Wenzhou was silent for a while. His voice sounded forced. “No, it’s too dangerous, and it
would be easy to alert the enemy.”
Lang Qiao breathed out a cool mint-flavored breath. “Boss, do you really think there’s
something wrong with old Director Zhang?”
Luo Wenzhou didn’t answer. Lang Qiao thought it was strange, because Luo Wenzhou had
definitely called her for a reason, and he hadn’t gotten to it yet. “Hello? Hello? Are you still
listening? Which of us has the bad signal?”
Just then, laughing voices came from the direction of the Chengguang Mansion. Lang Qiao
quickly looked that way and saw Zhang Donglai at the center of a cluster of flashy young
women, hugging one with each arm, his legs about to twist into a braid; he walked rather like
he was performing a folk dance.
“That good-for-nothing Zhang Donglai’s finally come out.” Lang Qiao was instantly alert. As she
started the car, she quietly said to Luo Wenzhou, “Boss, are you still there?—Oh, did
everything go well with Xiao-Wu and the others? Has Yang Xin been caught?”
Luo Wenzhou said something, his voice submerged in the sound of the engine. The next
instant, Lang Qiao’s car suddenly leapt forward, the front wheel driving right into the curb. She
hit the brakes and was smashed against the back of the seat by her seatbelt.
Lang Qiao held the phone with one hand and the steering wheel with the other, her eyes still
following Zhang Donglai at the gates of the Chengguang Mansion.
Zhang Donglai clung to the young women very indecently for a while, sent them all away, then
sat sprawling on a little stone bench to sober up and wait for a driver, breathing out perfect
smoke rings towards the night sky.
“What did you say…” She heard her own voice seem to come from somewhere else, breaking
as it left her mouth. “Boss, what did you say? Say it again, I didn’t hear clearly…”
Normally, if Luo Wenzhou wasn’t calling her “Lang-Er” or “Lang Big Eyes,” then it was “Er-
Qiao.” It was only when something major happened that he would earnestly call her by her
formal name. Over time, she’d nearly developed a conditioned response. As soon as she heard
her full name come out of Luo Wenzhou’s mouth, she wanted to cry.
Tragedy often makes people feel that it can’t be true. Then they’re unable to resist trying to get
to the bottom of things, seeking an “explanation,” whether it’s their own tragedy or someone
else’s.
It's as if this way, they can draw a lesson from the mistakes of others to obtain an exemption
from bad things.
But the rain will fall, girls will marry, floodwater will burst into the anthill—where does the “why”
come into it?
Far off, a car drove over and stopped in front of Zhang Donglai. Two people got out. This was
rather strange, because drivers normally didn’t drive their own cars to take work. Zhang
Donglai also seemed very taken aback. In the midst of his tottering, he squeezed out a bit of
intellect and propped himself upright, saying something to the newcomers in confusion.
The newcomers nodded. Then the two of them together very respectfully picked him up and
put him into his car.
“Some people…some people have come to pick up Zhang Donglai.” Lang Qiao forced her
attention back to what was in front of her. Her field of vision shifted, but her tears were falling,
blurring her eyes, filling up as soon as she wiped them. “There are two of them, driving a black
SUV, license plate number Yan BXXXXX. One of them is driving the car they came in back the
way they came, the other one is, is driving Zhang Donglai.”
Lang Qiao was sobbing too hard to catch her breath. At the end of her endurance, she lowered
her head, her sharp chin nearly touching her chest. With difficulty, she said, “Male, height…
height over a meter seventy-five at a visual estimate, sturdy physique, on high alert, look like
bodyguards—they’re leaving.”
“Don’t follow!” Luo Wenzhou said at once. “Did you place a listening device and tracker in
Zhang Donglai’s car?”
“I did, but…” Lang Qiao’s heavily nasal voice was squeezed into a thread. “I was in too much
of a rush, I don’t know whether they’ll find it.”
Luo Wenzhou asked, “When Zhang Donglai came to the Chengguang Mansion, did he also
come with attendants?”
“No, he drove himself, bringing over a few girls. Apart from me, no one was following him.”
“So something happened tonight that has them nervous.” Luo Wenzhou muttered to himself for
a moment, then quietly said, “Listen to me. Withdraw now and report on your tailing when you
have a chance. Yang Xin… The suspect Yang Xin and the others have been arrested. They’re
being transferred to the City Bureau under escort. You’ll see them there.”
“Boss,” Lang Qiao said quietly, “if I go back to the City Bureau, I won’t be able to see Xiao-Wu,
right?”
As she cried, Lang Qiao turned the car around, hung up the phone, and turned on the locator.
She watched the bright dot representing Zhang Donglai constantly moving forward. The static
coming back showed that the listening device was still in the moving car. The music on the car
stereo was free and natural and distant. Though no one was talking, she still turned on the
recorder.
The music coming over the listening device must have been playing on some radio station. It
was intermittent, interrupted periodically by little advertisements and the time. Headphones on,
Lang Qiao drove through the clear roads, remembering when she’d first come to work at the
City Bureau. Everyone had been a senior, all of them older than her. Each day she came to
work, all the way from the gates to the office, she’d call everyone ge and jie. When Xiao-Wu
had finally joined a year later than her, she’d practically felt that her position in the family
hierarchy had risen. She’d held Xiao-Wu’s head down and forced him to call her “jie.” Later
she’d inadvertently seen his ID and found out that Xiao-Wu was actually two months older than
her, a senior “youngest brother.”
But the senior youngest brother hadn’t been fated to stay with them long; he’d come in a hurry
and left in a hurry.
On the listening device, someone finally spoke. It must have been the driver. He said to Zhang
Donglai, “Manager Zhang, wake up. We’re nearly home.”
Zhang Donglai mumbled, vaguely saying, “Hm? Where is this? What home?”
“Fuck.” Zhang Donglai sat up swiftly. “Who told you to bring me over to the old man? No… You
took me right home without even consulting me. Dage, be nice, would you dare to go home
and see your dad when you’d drunk yourself into this state?”
The driver very patiently said, “It was Chairman Zhang’s orders. He said it’s been a long time
since he’s seen you and misses you a little. Something’s happened at home. He knows you
were at the Chengguang Mansion today, tobacco and alcohol are unavoidable on a social
occasion. He sent me on purpose to pick you up, didn’t he?”
Zhang Donglai had just sat up quickly, and his head was spinning. He kind of wanted to throw
up. Blankly, he asked, “At home? What could have happened at home?”
The driver smiled politely and perfunctorily towards him. “I don’t know that. You can ask him
yourself when you get there.—Here we are.”
The dialogue coming over the listening device came to an abrupt halt.
Lang Qiao turned her head and looked at the location of Zhang Donglai’s car. She found that
the address was the luxurious house where the investigation team had gone to invite over their
old Director Zhang. She quickly sent the information to Luo Wenzhou.
Zhang Donglai walked nervously through the door of the house. First he breathed into his hand
at the door, feeling that after having the trip to disperse, the smell of alcohol wasn’t so intense.
Then he shuffled inside. Once through the door, he stared, because he saw Zhang Ting in the
living room looking at her phone, luggage piled at her feet.
“Are you going somewhere?” Zhang Donglai asked. “Who are you going with? Where?”
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“I’m going to study abroad. When I didn’t want to work before, dad and I came to an
agreement. He contacted the language school, and he told me to take you away with me.”
Zhang Donglai was a little dizzy. He felt for the door frame, feeling that he really was drunk; he
simply couldn’t understand what Zhang Ting was saying. He stood where he was for a
moment, staring blankly, pinching the bridge of his nose in total confusion, asking himself in
bewilderment, “Am I going abroad?”
He’d thought he’d only gotten eight parts drunk, but now he suddenly had the feeling that he’d
gotten blackout drunk.
The next moment, Zhang Donglai pulled himself together. “Even if I am going abroad, it can’t
be to study abroad. I finally managed to muddle my way to graduation after all those years,
was that easy? I’ve finally been released upon completion of my sentence, and no one had
better think of sending me back!
“Where’s dad?” Without waiting for Zhang Ting’s answer, Zhang Donglai swiftly stood up and
went to slam on a locked door. “Dad, I have something to say to you. Why are you banishing
me again? What have I done?”
Inside the study, Zhang Chunjiu and Zhang Chunling sat across from each other. Hearing his
son’s hollering outside, Zhang Chunling let out a long sigh. He’d borne too many hardships in
his youth; with his own descendants, he’d wanted to compensate for it. “I’ve never let them
touch any of this stuff, always thinking that I’ve spent enough of my life in hatred and narrow
escapes, and the next generation should be different, live a carefree normal life. Was I wrong?”
“There’s been a problem with the ‘nail’ on Su Cheng. We’ve lost track of him,” Zhang Chunjiu
said in a low voice.
Zhang Chunling’s expression turned ugly. “Another problem, with the nail now. Who is it?”
“A woman, original name Wei Lan. Brought over from another place by a subordinate. They say
she killed someone, and she looks all right…”
“It’s him again.” Zhang Chunling squeezed the words out from between his teeth. “Didn’t I tell
you to look out for him exploiting an advantage, to use people you know inside and out as
much as possible?”
Zhang Chunjiu couldn’t answer. Having reached their current position, become a colossus
entrenched in the shadows, they were no longer a small gang of a handful of people; how
could they know everyone inside and out? Anyway, what did it mean to know someone “inside
and out?” Fan Siyuan had hibernated for nearly a decade; who knew how deep his infiltration
went?
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Zhang Chunjiu changed the subject. “Starting from when Su Cheng left his residence, he
shook my people off twice. Luckily I already had someone watching the car rental place, but I
didn’t expect them to meet a security check at the toll gate, then ditch the car and run.”
“Didn’t I tell you to take care of it as soon as possible?” Zhang Chunling asked coldly.
“Yes, I know. He ran too quickly before. There was no time, and the last person I sent to deal
with him has fallen out of contact along with the others.—Dage, Su Cheng can’t be this vigilant,
and even if he were, he doesn’t have the skills. I didn’t expect this blemish to be hiding in plain
sight, this Wei Lan…”
Zhang Chunling interrupted him. “Didn’t I tell you not to panic yet? Neither of us contacted Su
Cheng in person. It’s always been our subordinates under cover of the shell company
communicating with him. What about the people who were in contact with him?”
“They’re all being transferred,” Zhang Chunjiu said heavily. “And everyone in Wei Lan’s chain.”
Zhang Chunling stood up and walked two circles. “It’s all right, don’t scare yourself.”
“When I sent people to dispose of Zhou Huaijin last night, it also didn’t go well. The police
came too fast. I haven’t dared to reach out in that direction. I’m running blind.” Zhang Chunjiu
sighed. “Dage, I have a bad feeling.”
The two of them exchanged a look. Just then, there was another knock at the door. This time,
there was a very cold and restrained voice. “Chairman Zhang, it’s me.”
Zhang Donglai had been throwing a tantrum outside the study door with no one paying
attention, but now he watched in astonishment as the door opened when the driver who’d
brought him here knocked gently.
Zhang Chunling fixed his eyes on him coldly, and Zhang Donglai’s demands instantly fell
through. He laid down his arms, hemmed and hawed, and quietly said, “No, why hasn’t anyone
talked it over with me? Why should I go abroad, I have my job…”
Before he’d finished saying the word “job,” Zhang Chunling had expressionlessly shown the
driver into the room and once again shut his good-for-nothing son outside the door. Zhang
Donglai raised a hand to pound on the door again, remembered Zhang Chunling’s expression
just now, and didn’t dare.
Zhang Ting had walked up behind him at some point. She quietly said, “Ge, has something
happened to our family?”
The purely innocent brother and sister looked at each other helplessly.
Inside the study, the driver pulled a listening device with its battery removed from his pocket.
“Chairman Zhang, this came from the young master’s car.”
Zhang Chunjiu only glanced at it and recognized the little listening device’s origin. “Police
issue.”
Zhang Chunling’s face fell at once. “Someone was following you, and you didn’t know about
it?”
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The driver quickly said, “Chairman Zhang, absolutely not! If there had been someone following
us while I was driving, I would have noticed!”
“What are we paying all those people downstairs for? Have the surroundings searched.” Zhang
Chunling frowned at Zhang Chunjiu again. “What’s going on? Didn’t you say that they had
temporarily stopped investigating you?”
“I don’t think it’s the investigation team’s people.” Zhang Chunjiu muttered to himself for a
moment. “If the investigation team had bugged anyone, they would have bugged me. They
wouldn’t have touched Donglai. Unless—”
Unless whoever it was had known that Zhang Chunjiu was an extremely dangerous individual,
and that as soon as the listening device was placed, he would have been on the alert, and they
may have paid dearly for their cunning. So they’d gone the roundabout way and bugged Zhang
Donglai! Because the younger generation was a weak spot, as soon as there was a hint of
anything, there would first have to be arrangements made for Zhang Donglai and his sister.
In an instant, Zhang Chunjiu met Zhang Chunling’s eyes and said, “It may be Luo Wenzhou’s
people. Don’t delay, dage. Send away the people who contacted Su Cheng along with Donglai
and Tingting tonight. Apart from that, while that Zhou Huaijin escaped calamity yesterday, I
figure he won’t dare to stay in the country much longer. It’ll be the same thing to take care of
him over there.”
“The two of us also have to prepare for the worst,” Zhang Chunling said meaningfully to Zhang
Chunjiu.
“Don’t worry. Let’s see how things go first, not give ourselves away.” Zhang Chunjiu nodded.
“Our escape route has been arranged. We can leave any time!”
In the long winter night, some were crying bitterly, some were absconding, and the future of
some hung in the balance.
When the light of day first broke, Zhou Huaijin, who hadn’t slept all night, and Zhang Donglai,
knocked out by a drink, had already set out from different places, traveling to the same
country.
Meanwhile, the fourteen suspects arrested at West Second Strand, including Yang Xin and Zhu
Feng, were transferred under escort to the City Bureau. Xiao-Wu, who hadn’t had time to close
his eyes, reached Yan City at the same time.
Fei Du’s biological clock woke him precisely at six in the morning. He methodically cleaned
himself up. He showed no traces of having been inconvenienced by being placed under house
arrest by the investigation, and after breakfast he received his cell phone, which had been shut
off for days. An investigator said to him, “Mr. Fei, you can go home. Make sure to stay in touch.
We may contact you any time. Don’t leave the area.”
The other one he’d brought with him. It was full of all kinds of things. As soon as he turned it
on, whistling advertisements, regards from his drinking buddies, and software update
reminders nearly crashed the phone. He didn’t display any happiness at being told that he
could go. “So I can go? Have you questioned Su Cheng? What’s his problem?”
The investigator was choked by his sudden question, because they hadn’t found a single hair
from Su Cheng’s head.
A rental car had been found abandoned near an exit toll gate on North Yan Highway. Su
Cheng’s fingerprints were on the steering wheel. That was the last sign of him. Then he seemed
to have vanished off the face of the earth, running away without a trace… No, if he really had
run away, that would be good; the worst outcome was that he may already have been silenced.
But he couldn’t mention these details of the investigation to Fei Du, so the investigator avoided
the central issue, saying, “Concerning the problems of the property under your company’s
banner and Su Cheng, we’re still investigating at present. Until all the details of the case have
come to light, you’re still under some suspicion, President Fei, so even though you’re being
released, we may still perform a follow-up investigation. Please understand when the time
comes.”
Fei Du looked up. The gaze hidden behind his lenses inexplicably made the investigator feel
uncomfortable. For a moment, he even thought there was something demonic about the color
of Fei Du’s irises. He couldn’t even tell whether Fei Du had just been asking casually, or
whether he was a suspicious individual sounding him out.
The investigator’s tone cooled involuntarily. “Do you need us to send a car to take you?”
Light flashed off Fei Du’s lenses, interrupting his gaze; he suddenly changed, once more
becoming that clever but inexperienced young man. “I heard the last investigator say that the
car the company sent to pick me up got into a crash midway—was someone trying to kill me?”
The investigator said, “We can send an escort, do our utmost to preserve your personal safety,
President Fei.”
Fei Du pushed at his glasses and smiled wryly. “Even if everything is all right on the way, what if
they break into my house? I couldn’t take that. It might even bother the neighbors. Everyone’s
on vacation now, it wouldn’t even be possible to hire an hourly worker, never mind a
bodyguard.—How about this, look, can I wait here a while for someone from home to come
pick me up?”
Those who had looked into Fei Du’s background all knew that “someone from home” meant
Luo Wenzhou. The investigator thought it was very indecent, but he couldn’t quibble with this
request. “That could work, but while you’re waiting, you can’t run around all over the place.”
“I’ll just stay here. I won’t go anywhere.” Fei Du raised his cell phone at him. “Just lend me a
charger.”
The investigator looked at him, still thinking there were a few unsuitable things about Fei Du.—
The whole investigation team’s views about Fei Du were polarized. Some people thought he
was an innocent and unconnected young man, who may well have been framed and killed by
Su Cheng if he hadn’t been fortunate. The others, however, thought that he wasn’t so simple.
Being confined and investigated for days just before the New Year would have been an
unexpected calamity for anyone, but when you thought about it, throughout the whole process,
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Fei Du had been actively cooperative, not at all flustered, answering anything he was asked
without any resistance.
In stressful circumstances, however mild a person’s temper, they would still show some
aggression and resistance. People who’d been shut into a little dark room and weren’t planning
on confessing to a crime were usually either loudly stressing their own innocence, or
obsessively asking non-stop, “What do you actually think I did?” Because of their worries, as
soon as this question came up, implicated people would keep asking it over and over.
But Fei Du had only affably asked once at the beginning and hadn’t brought it up again.
It seemed like…
It seemed like he wasn’t at all worried about being investigated, like he knew that at a certain
time, he’d be safely let go. Everything he said was just to accord with the seasonal lines the
scenic characters in front of him had learned.
After leaving, the investigator didn’t relax. He quietly turned on a surveillance feed and watched
Fei Du.
In a very relaxed posture, Fei Du was openly sitting back and playing on his phone, totally
ignoring the camera above him. Through the camera, the person watching the feed could even
see the writing on his screen.
Like an ordinary young person, Fei Du had too many apps on his phone; it was unbearably
cluttered.—He posted status updates and responded to the messages he’d received while the
phone had been off for a few days; meanwhile, quite a few people, learning he was back
online, started sending him private messages. Fei Du was interacting with five or six people at
the same time, now reporting that he was safe and sound, now asking people to bring him
things from abroad, now very inappropriately flirting and teasing, somehow managing not to
get any wires crossed; his playboy skills were expert.
The investigator listened to a few sentences—at first, Fei Du, cheered up by someone, beamed
into the phone and sent a voice message: “Really? You’re all so disappointed that I didn’t go?
That won’t do. How about I add another twenty thousand to each of your travel expense write
off quotas? Not on the company’s account. I invited you, you should all enjoy yourselves.”
It sounded like there had been a trip arranged by the company for the employees. Given the
quota, it seemed like it was a luxury tour abroad, the investigator thought absently, feeling a
little sad—they had to go through the formalities just to get reimbursed for meals, but the
young master’s lips flapped, and each person’s quota went up twenty thousand.
A while later, on the security camera feed, you could see that a friend noted down as “The
Philosopher” had sent Fei Du a WeChat message: “Master Fei! How much money have you
defrauded the revenue of! Why have you been locked up so long!”
When Fei Du had been taken away to be investigated, he’d publicly announced that the reason
was to cooperate with an investigation into the economic problems of a subsidiary company.
He hadn’t mentioned anything else.
Before Fei Du had answered, this “Philosopher” sent several more messages in a row: “You
didn’t even get to see your brother one last time! My dad’s banished me to exile in a barbarian
land!”
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Presumably the only punctuation this person knew how to use was the exclamation mark; he
was always yelling.
When he’d finished reading, Fei Du’s face displayed schadenfreude. He sent a voice message,
saying, “Your dad’s finally had enough of a wastrel like you?”
The investigator sighed. It seemed this was one of his drinking buddies, come to complain
about being taught a lesson by his parents. He cut off the security camera feed—he felt that
there was no point in listening any further. Fei Du was simply passing the time. He wasn’t blind;
of course he knew the security camera was filming him. It may be assumed that he wasn’t
stupid enough to confess anything.
Under the security camera, Fei Du raised his phone, listening to the voice message “The
Philosopher” had sent.
The man’s voice seemed to be coming from very noisy surroundings. His speech was like his
typing, full of its own punctuation marks: “You’ll never guess, I got knocked out by a drink at
home! Today when I opened my eyes, I even fucking thought I’d gotten blackout drunk, so I got
up and looked around, and, fuck me, where was I? On the other side of the ocean, don’t you
know! Gone in the middle of the night, along with Zhang Ting! Do you think my dad’s having a
midlife crisis? Is he crazy?! I don’t even have a signal on my phone, I’m in a restaurant
bathroom borrowing their wifi!”
Fei Du, seemingly indifferent, asked, “Borrowing wifi in a bathroom? How does it smell?”
“The Philosopher” said, “Get out! My dad sent people to watch me, they watch me wherever I
go, they won’t let me contact anyone else, and they won’t change my phone card. I was forced
to hide in the bathroom!”
Fei Du laughed.
“Oh, I see, am I here specifically to provide entertainment for you?—Master Fei, to tell you the
truth, I’m worried there’s a problem at home. Have you heard any rumors?”
Fei Du didn’t bat an eyelash. “I haven’t. What problem could there be? I think you’re the one
with the problem. Have you stirred something up again lately?”
“I didn’t!”
Fei Du said, “Given your character, after you’d stirred it up, you may not have known it
yourself.”
“That’s true,” “The Philosopher” himself acknowledged. Then he groaned sorrowfully. “But if I
die, at least let me understand why I’m dying.—Even if I had to be sent packing, at least he
could have left me some time to say goodbye to my brothers, right? And you, too! You’ve
spent this last half a year indulging in pleasures in some siren’s Cavern of Silken Webs,
forgetting your duties. I haven’t seen a shade of you!”
Hearing the description “Cavern of Silken Webs,” Fei Du thought of something and smiled for a
while, unable to restrain himself. Then he said, “Oh, where are you now?”
“The Philosopher” told him the country and the place name.
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Hearing this, “The Philosopher” instantly swore. “Why didn’t you say so? Give me the contact
information, quick. Did Miaomiao come, too? All your assistants are great beauties, all of them
dancing attendance on you alone every day, it’s too fucking wretched!”
Zhang Donglai, who had woken to find himself in an alien land, held his nose and waited in the
bathroom for a moment. Fei Du quickly sent him a WeChat name card, saying this was the
team leader. Zhang Donglai added them excitedly; they quickly verified him and very politely
sent a smiley face in greeting. “Hello, President Zhang. President Fei told me to look after you.
Let me know if there’s anything you need.”
This person’s profile picture was a little rabbit wearing a bow on its head. Though they hadn’t
sent a voice message, from the tone of the words you could tell this was a cute, lively girl. As
he salivated, trying to guess which of the beautiful women from Fei Du’s company this was,
Zhang Donglai energetically set about flirting, ignoring even Fei Du.
Just then, there was a knock at the door. Perhaps one of the people following Zhang Donglai
had thought he’d been in there too long and had come over to knock. “Manager Zhang, are
you all right?”
“What do you want?!” Zhang Donglai yelled to him, pestered beyond endurance. “You’re even
rushing me when I’m shitting? You won’t let me take my time?”
His phone vibrated. Zhang Donglai looked down. The person had sent a group picture of some
rather familiar-looking beautiful girls with their arms around each other, laughing merrily,
dimpled faces smiling into the camera. It was like a beam of light, illuminating Zhang Donglai’s
dejected heart.
The rabbit with the bow said: “We reserved the hotel’s pool. We’re planning to have a swimsuit
party. Are you coming?”
Zhang Donglai’s head heated up. “Even if I have to sacrifice everything I have!”
There was an update notification on Fei Du’s Moments. He opened it and looked. A friend with
a profile picture of a rabbit with a bow had posted a status update: “Dress up, beauties, a
mysterious honored guest is coming tonight!”
When Fei Du looked down, the smile on his face receded like the tide. He closed the page and
looked at the calendar on his phone: the twenty-eighth day of the twelfth lunar month.
In an interrogation room in the City Bureau, Yang Xin, not making a sound, had sat idle for a
whole day, unmoved by threats or persuasion, letting others counsel and scold her; there had
even been one criminal police officer, emotions out of control, who’d jumped up, red-eyed,
wanting to beat her.
Suddenly, the door of the interrogation room opened again. Yang Xin looked up gloomily and
met the eyes of Lang Qiao, who’d come in—Lang Qiao was the one who’d nearly hit her and
had been restrained midway by her colleagues. Lang Qiao looked at her expressionlessly but
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didn’t come in. She held open the door, saying to someone behind her, “Slow down, it’s a little
narrow, take care not to bump yourself.”
Then there was a rustling sound, and Yang Xin clearly saw who was behind her. Unconcealed
astonishment at last appeared on her stiff face—a wheelchair forced its way through the door
with Lang Qiao’s help; it was Tao Ran, who should still have been in the hospital, returning
while still wounded!
Staying in the hospital evidently wasn’t at all pleasant. Tao Ran had lost a considerable amount
of weight. His cheeks were sunken, making the gentle lines of his face look somewhat more
fierce.
“Xinxin,” Tao Ran said after looking at her for a while, “you could have beaten me to death and
I still wouldn’t have thought that one day I’d be here talking to you.”
Yang Xin had thought that she had a heart of stone, but in the moment she saw Tao Ran, her
human heart revealed itself inopportunely, defeating her in an instant.
All these years, no matter how cold her mom had been, Tao Ran had never taken issue. He’d
been like an overly mild-tempered big brother, gentle and caring down to trivial details.
Sometimes when she’d posted some grumblings online while at school, a package would
arrive the next day—the tickets she couldn’t get, the out-of-print book she couldn’t find, the
snack she wanted to eat that there was nowhere to buy. When he went to the city her school
was in on business, the first thing he’d do when he was through with work would be to come to
the school to see her, carrying bags of stuff.
Some classmates had even said jokingly that she had a model long-distance boyfriend, and for
some reason she hadn’t denied it.
Tao Ran looked down at his own arm in its cast. “If it had been me, would you have shot me,
too?”
The rims of Yang Xin’s eyes reddened instantly. She opened her mouth, subconsciously
shaking her head.
“I’d rather it had been me you shot,” Tao Ran said quietly. “Since shifu’s been gone, I ought to
have been taking care of you two, but I’ve never known the grievance you felt. I haven’t done
my duty. I’ve wronged you, and wronged shifu. I deserve to take a bullet.”
Yang Xin’s tears rolled down like a dike bursting. “Tao Ran-ge…”
Tao Ran pursed his lips. “But Xiao-Wu didn’t wrong you in any way. His mother and big sister
have come, they’re downstairs now. I saw them from far off and quickly had Xiao-Qiao push
me in by the side door to avoid them…”
Yang Xin took in a shaking breath, holding her head. There was a clatter of handcuffs.
Tao Ran’s throat moved slightly. “Because I didn’t know what I should say to them.”
Luo Wenzhou stopped the car at the side of the road and waited for Fei Du to come out,
meanwhile listening to Lang Qiao reporting to him over the phone. “Yang Xin says that
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warehouse was one of their strongholds. They’d planned to briefly stop there for a day, then go
see ‘Teacher.’ Their reaction was so intense because they’d gotten a call from one of their
people beforehand saying that the location of the stronghold had been given up by a traitor.”
From the corner of his eye, Luo Wenzhou glimpsed Fei Du walking out. As he opened the door
and got out of the car, he said to Lang Qiao, “Did she say why they resisted arrest so fiercely?”
“She did. She said that Director Zhang…Zhang Chunjiu is the one who killed Lao-Yang and Gu
Zhao, that the ranks of the police are full of his people, and that he’d use the police to silence
them, then throw dirty water on ‘Teacher.’ She also said she didn’t want to hurt Xiao-Wu, she
only wanted to scare him, make him let go of Zhu Feng… She’d never used a gun before,
hadn’t expected the recoil to be so strong, the bullet went astray…”
Just then, a few investigators came out to escort Fei Du. Fei Du gathered up his coat and
suddenly called them to a stop. “Oh… I actually wanted to ask, what’s going on with Teacher
Pan?”
Fei Du said, “Sorry, I’m speaking out of turn.—Though I’ve only taken one semester of classes,
he is my teacher, and Teacher Pan’s wife has always been very good to me. If you can’t talk
about it, then forget it. Because you asked me what happened on July 31st, I suddenly
remembered that before my car crash that day I’d planned to go see his wife…”
The investigator’s expression flashed. He was thoughtful for a moment, then fixed his eyes on
Fei Du and said, “That time you didn’t manage to go, a major suspect who still hasn’t been
found came to the door to see him.”
First, Fei Du stared. Then the investigator saw this young man, rather unmoved by honor or
disgrace, suddenly think of something; his expression suddenly changed.
“Impossible,” Fei Du repeated. “Teacher Pan’s wife did psychological counseling for me for
many years. They’re both very upright people.”
The investigator had a thought, wanting to make him keep talking. “Perhaps you only know
what they’re like on the outside, not in their hearts?”
“If he’d been connected to the person who sold out his colleague, he wouldn’t have resigned
and gone to teach at the school. Given Teacher Pan’s qualifications, if he’d stayed at the City
Bureau, his position would have been high by now, and he could have gotten hold of any
information right away. What can he get at school? When we propose any materials to request
for consultation, we have to go through a whole series of formalities to get them. It needs the
ratifying signatures of at least five people, all the way up to Director Lu. That’s too much
trouble.”
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“But Pan Yunteng himself admitted this. There’s no use calling it into question.” The
investigator made another attempt. “Perhaps he only came into contact with the suspect after
leaving the City Bureau, and perhaps he was deceived.”
Fei Du frowned. “You mean to say that the true culprit framed someone else for his crimes and
tricked Teacher Pan into trusting him, and used Teacher Pan to attain his goal?”
The investigator didn’t answer Fei Du’s question directly. He only calmly said, “That’s all
possible.”
In sum, the evidence currently pointed to Fan Siyuan. After all, it was an unquestionable fact
that he’d committed murder and absconded, and Fei Du and Pan Yunteng had confirmed the
fact that Fan Siyuan hadn’t died. But for the investigation team, the disappearances of Su
Cheng and Fei Chengyu had made all of this increasingly bewildering.
“Teacher Pan used to be a criminal policeman. Criminal policemen are most particular about
evidence and nitpicking logical flaws,” Fei Du said. “He wouldn’t have been deceived so
easily.”
The investigator had hoped to hear more valuable information from Fei Du, but when he’d
listened to the end, he found that everything was conjecture. In spite of himself, he felt
somewhat disappointed and smiled perfunctorily at him. “Perhaps you don’t understand him
so well.—President Fei, the car’s come to pick you up.”
“I do understand about him nitpicking logical flaws. I don’t mind telling you that when I first
turned on my phone, there were quite a few people from school asking me about Teacher
Pan’s situation. He’s been tormenting them over their dissertations for several semesters, and
now that they’re about to get results, this happens.” Fei Du smiled. “Sorry, I’m holding you up.”
Saying so, he very urbanely withdrew some steps, then turned towards Luo Wenzhou.
The investigator watched him get into the car, a thought suddenly flashing through his mind.
He thought, “Fei Du was just talking to other people about Pan Yunteng? What did they say?”
Perhaps when he got back he’d request the security camera records of Fei Du playing on his
phone and comb through them.
Luo Wenzhou had seen Fei Du standing at the door talking to the investigator, so he hadn’t
gone over. His face calm, he stood waiting in front of the car. Likely because he’d been leading
a vagabond life and resting badly for some days in a row, he now felt somewhat dazed, as
though his field of vision was constantly narrowing. At last it was only the height and width of
one person—just about large enough to fit Fei Du, wrap around him, draw in close bit by bit.
But this was broad daylight, with the investigator’s gaze like a searchlight, and of course Luo
Wenzhou hadn’t come by himself—before leaving, Lu Jia had given him the contact information
for a bunch of Fei Du’s people. Now, their people were everywhere: at the corner, across the
street, in a parking lot nearby, even the “peddler” hurriedly riding an electric tricycle.—Luo
Wenzhou really couldn’t do anything inappropriate with everyone watching, so he restrained
himself, opened the car door, and lightly touched Fei Du’s shoulder. When his hand fell on him,
his heart, hanging suspended for days, fell back into his chest. Luo Wenzhou breathed out
silently.
Fei Du’s gaze met his bloodshot eyes and quietly said, “I’ll drive.”
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Luo Wenzhou didn’t make a sound, nodding silently. When he couldn’t see Fei Du in person, he
was like a machine operating at high speed, with nicotine and anxiety for stimulants, letting him
simultaneously process countless pieces of information, run around without sleep or rest,
ignoring day and night.
But now, the suppressed grief and indignation, along with the boundless exhaustion, suddenly
intensified and surged up, all of it submerging him. His mind empty, Luo Wenzhou was pushed
into the passenger’s seat by Fei Du. He quietly said, “We found one of their strongholds
yesterday, caught Zhu Feng and Yang Xin, as well as the driver who contacted you. While
arresting them, Xiao-Wu…Xiao-Wu…”
At this point, as if he’d forgotten how to speak, he repeated himself over and over.
Fei Du paused, then reached out a hand to cover his eyes. “You’ve had it hard.”
At his movement, Luo Wenzhou closed his eyes. Fei Du glanced all around, then quickly leaned
over and pecked the corner of his mouth. “Rest. I’ll wake you if anything happens.”
Not making a sound, Luo Wenzhou leaned back in his seat. The hand covering his eyes moved
away, and he instantly felt untethered, reaching out his arm and laying it on Fei Du.
At some point he drifted off. Then he was woken by the sound of his ringtone.
The moment he was startled awake, Luo Wenzhou felt he’d missed a step coming down from a
height. He gave a start and reached out nearly in a panic, scrunching up a handful of stiff wool
coat. Fei Du gently held his wrist, rubbing it with the pads of his fingers.
Luo Wenzhou turned his head to look at him, and his floating soul answered the force of
gravity, returning once more to its place. He pressed down on his temple and turned on the
speaker. “Yes, I’m here.”
“We just finished interrogating Zhu Feng,” Lang Qiao said. “Zhu Feng admitted that she
dressed up as a school janitor, tailed Wang Xiao, and used a recording to mislead her. She said
it was so that evil would be rewarded with evil. It’s one link in Teacher’s great plan. Zhu Feng’s
attitude is very bad, she’s very defensive, and she doesn’t trust us a bit.—Also, she revealed a
piece of information I thought I should let you know at once.”
“Zhu Feng’s husband was killed going out, and later the killer was arrested. But afterwards, in
the course of the interrogation, the killer was found to be incompetent, and the matter ended
with the killer being sent to a mental hospital—Zhu Feng maintains that there was some plot
there, that the criminal was swapped out.”
“Zhu Feng was unable to accept the judgement that the killer wouldn’t have to pay with his life.
She attempted to infiltrate Anding Hospital and assassinate the killer. Anding Hospital’s
management was lax, and in fact she managed to get in. The reason she didn’t act was that
she discovered that the man being kept in the mental hospital wasn’t the person who’d killed
her husband. Zhu Feng believes that this killer bought off all the public security organs in one
fell swoop, and we faked the evidence of his mental disability and found someone who looked
very similar to him to take his place in the hospital, while he remained at liberty. So the police
and the courts are all rogues cut from the same cloth, all worthless.”
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Luo Wenzhou was subdued by the scope of this conspiracy theory. “Bought off all the public
security organs in one fell swoop?”
“No…wait.” Luo Wenzhou thought about it. “When Zhu Feng says we found someone who
looked ‘very similar’ to be a substitute…what’s the plot? Identical twins? Plastic surgery?
Anyway, if he was very similar, how did she know the criminal had been swapped out? Slight
changes in details of physical appearance may well have been to due being hospitalized and
taking medication. Some people change a lot when their surroundings change.”
“Wait a bit, boss.” After Lang Qiao had spoken, a while passed, and she sent Luo Wenzhou a
recording.
Fei Du had already stopped the car in the parking spot outside of Luo Wenzhou’s house. He
stuck his hand out of the window and made a gesture. The vehicles that had stealthily escorted
them the whole way each dispersed to where they’d come from, standing by in the area. Luo
Wenzhou opened the recording. There was a woman’s hoarse voice on it.
“My husband was called Yu Bin, the ‘civil and military’ Bin11. He was an art teacher… He was
very honest, good-tempered, none of the students he taught had anything bad to say about
him. He only taught, didn’t have office hours, so he had a good deal of free time, so he did all
the grocery shopping and cooking. We went out together that morning. He was going to buy
groceries, and that was on my way to work. Right after we parted, I remembered he had a
class that evening, and I hadn’t taken my keys, so I turned back to find him. I heard people
shouting something from far away, I went over, and the crowd suddenly started to riot. People
were screaming, children crying… Then a man all covered in blood, carrying a knife, charged
right at me! I froze. I remember he was pretty tall, pretty bulky, with dirt all over him and his hair
a mess. His hair looked like a mop, all in tufts, like the tramps living under bridges… I didn’t
know the blood on him came from my Da-Bin, or I…I would have…
“My mind went blank. I heard someone shouting, ‘Run, a lunatic is killing people!’ I had no time
to react. I saw him go towards me and pushed my bicycle towards him in fright. The handlebar
pulled up his sleeve, and I saw a long scar on his arm that looked like a centipede.”
A police officer on the recording said, “This information isn’t in the old file. You didn’t tell the
police?”
“Because no one asked me. He committed a murder in front of a crowd, everybody saw.
Someone called the security guards from nearby, and the police, the security guards, and also
some brave and warm-hearted passersby all chased after him. They caught him quickly. The
knife was in his hand, there was blood splashed on him. There was nothing worth investigating.
I never thought that someone could play a trick with a case like this. The guy in the mental
hospital didn’t know anything, he couldn’t even understand human speech. At first glance he
looked like the man who’d killed my husband, but he didn’t have that scar on his arm!”
11 斌, made up of the characters ⽂文 and 武, which mean civil and military; no one’s going to
directly call attention to it apart from this, but it’s the same character as the kid Feng Bin’s
given name.
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Luo Wenzhou said, “Zhu Feng persists in thinking that the man sent to the mental hospital was
swapped out because his physical characteristics didn’t match the killer she encountered at
the scene of the crime.”
“The name of this killer who committed murder in broad daylight is Qian Cheng. He lived near
the scene of the crime. All the neighbors knew him. Because of his mental impediment, Qian
Cheng was unable to live alone. He was still living with his father in his forties. When his father
died, he was entrusted to a relative. The relative accepted the money but was very sloppy
about taking care of him, only coming to see him once a week, allowing him to wander around
everywhere, going through trash when he was hungry. But while he was crazy, the neighbors all
said he didn’t spontaneously bother others, and his temper was rather mild. He wasn’t very
aggressive. At first, when they heard he’d killed someone, no one believed it.—The person in
these photographs is Qian Cheng.”
Xiao Haiyang pointed to the photographs in the old file. One was a photograph from when he’d
just been arrested, the man and his ragged clothes both filthy, not looking human at all, like a
walking mop. The second, however, was much tidier. He’d been cleaned up, had his head
shaved, and been put into a prison uniform. In this one you could see his face. He looked like a
middle-aged man with rather regular features, his expression somewhat strange, not like a
normal clear-headed person.
“There are rigorous procedures for a judicial determination that a mental disability makes
someone incompetent. Even though the supervision wasn’t so comprehensive over a decade
ago, faking it still wouldn’t have been as easy as outsiders imagine. And if someone had
disagreed with the outcome of the determination, they could have applied with the court to
have another institution issue a view,” Luo Wenzhou said. “This person was established locally,
everyone in the area knew him, and they all knew he was crazy. It’s not likely to have been
faked.”
“And this was a mental patient who ate garbage,” said another criminal policeman. “He had no
money, no backing, not even his relatives minded him. This won’t sound good, but he was a
burden. Who would go to the trouble of undertaking such a risk to fake it? I think Zhu Feng is
untrustworthy.”
Fei Du quickly read through the description of the case details in the old file—
The killer escaped after the killing…police were dispatched at once…with the help of the
warm-hearted crowd…stopped in a little alley…the weapon…bloodstains…
His eyebrows raised, and he suddenly looked at the two photographs Xiao Haiyang had taken
out.
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“You’re right. The relative treated him as a burden, kept him out of sight and out of mind,
wishing he’d disappear. If he went missing, no one would have looked for him,” Fei Du said
quietly. “Is there a map from the time of the area where the crime occurred?”
“Yes!” Xiao Haiyang did his work very attentively. Hearing these words, he at once took out an
old map densely strewn with marks.
Xiao Haiyang looked closely and drew a circle on the map. “It should be here, across from a
shantytown about to be torn down.”
“I think there are two rather reasonable conjectures,” Fei Du said. “First, the substitution of the
killer is entirely made up, Zhu Feng’s own nonsense…
“Second, the killer really was switched out, not during the course of the arrest and trial, but
before he was arrested.”
Luo Wenzhou stared, then immediately came around. “You’re saying that the person who
committed the murder in the street and Qian Cheng, who the police caught at the scene,
weren’t the same person?”
“The killer, when he committed the crime, and Qian Cheng, when he was arrested, were both
covered in blood, dressed up like typical tramps, their features indistinct. As long as their
physical characteristics were similar, in an emergency like that, it would be normal for
passersby who weren’t friends with him not to spot the difference.”
Xiao Haiyang said, “Qian Cheng was a mental patient with no one to look after him. He had no
friends.”
Fei Du went on, “And at the time, apart from the eyewitness testimony, there was also the
conclusive evidence of the bloody clothes and the weapon. If, as Haiyang says, there was a
time lapse between the killer fleeing and finally being caught, it wouldn’t have been hard to
play a trick in between.—He’d need to find a place to stay ahead of time in the shantytown
about to be torn down, tie up the scapegoat Qian Cheng, furiously flee everyone’s field of
vision after the killing, run into the shantytown, wipe his own fingerprints, and give the bloody
clothes and murder weapon to Qian Cheng.
“A tramp appears wearing the bloody clothes and holding the murder weapon. If someone yells
out, ’There’s the killer!’ the people pursuing the killer will immediately subconsciously chase
him, and they’ll think they’ve caught the killer. Anyway, the lunatic couldn’t even talk. He
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wouldn’t be able to work out clearly what was happening, never mind explaining himself.” Fei
Du paused. “To kill someone in public without leaving a trace, you only need to plan an
appropriate escape route. If nothing goes wrong, it’s much more workable than buying off all
the public security organs.”
“All of Qian Cheng’s neighbors said that while he was abnormal, his nature was gentle, and
Zhu Feng said in her confession that Yu Bin wasn’t of a disposition to get into altercations.
Neither seems like the sort of person to start fighting in the street over a trifle,” Fei Du said
quietly. “It was premeditated murder.”
“That’s a crucial question.” Fei Du looked up at Luo Wenzhou. “Also, who was the person killed
in the mental hospital? Was it the real killer? Or was it the unfortunate scapegoat Qian Cheng?”
“It was Qian Cheng,” Xiao Haiyang said. “Qian Cheng’s basic information was recorded when
he was arrested, and of course there would need to be an autopsy to confirm the identity of the
corpse. If he’d been switched for someone else, it would have come out long ago. And Zhu
Feng says that her husband’s killer got away. She won’t acknowledge that the person who died
in the mental hospital was Yu Bin’s real killer—what’s the problem with that?”
Fei Du said, “If the above conjectures are correct, then it must not have been The Reciter who
killed Qian Cheng, because he was innocent.”
“You think The Reciter doesn’t kill innocent people?” Luo Wenzhou’s expression was
somewhat grim. “So Chen Zhen, Feng Bin, and Xiao…”
“No,” Fei Du interrupted him, “The Reciter wouldn’t use this ceremonial method to kill an
innocent person."
As he spoke, he stood up and walked up to the balcony connected to the living room.
Fragmentary sounds of fireworks rose far off. The city center wasn’t being strictly managed this
year, and quite a few people were furtively letting off fireworks ahead of time, filling the sky,
which had cleared up briefly, with curling smoke.
Fei Du closed his eyes slightly. In the depths of his memory, the man who had appeared like a
specter in Fei Chengyu’s basement displayed a secretive smile. He was tall and sturdy, his eye
sockets deep, with thick, indissoluble shadows in his eyes… They were sharp, cold, and
resentful.
“The Reciter was once a mutual aid organization composed of victims. Over long periods,
trauma that doesn’t receive proper treatment harms a person’s sense of trust, sometimes
followed by hyper-vigilance and aggression. It can change a person’s character, make them
alienated, unsociable, increasingly separated from the rest of society. Only facing a crowd of
people who have encountered similar things will they feel a sense of belonging—that’s why a
mutual aid organization is beneficial.
“But ordinary mutual aid organizations create a comparatively comfortable environment where
traumatized people can lessen their stress, accept reality, and slowly leave their small social
circle and return to ordinary life with the guidance of professionals and mutual positive
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reinforcement. They aren’t for steeping in others’ negative reinforcement, aggravating their own
separation from the outside world, finally developing into a sealed off, isolated group that has
wiped out individual awareness.
“The materials studying group psychology are numerous. The famous September Massacres in
Paris and the Rwandan Genocide are both typical cases, and The Reciter’s originator is an
expert in the field. The group he has successfully created is like this.—They believe themselves
to be persecuted, to be righteous. Their hyper-vigilance is constantly being strengthened. Their
initial hatred towards those who harmed them has overflown like a bowl filled to the brim with
water, spreading to everyone in the outside world.—They feel that injustice is society’s fault,
the fault of each person in that society. And as for the police, who ought to uphold justice,
they’re useless, neglectful of their duty, committing unforgivable sins.
“In the end, the people outside the group are objectified and can easily become the props of
revenge. Even harming the innocent will be regarded as a necessary sacrifice on the road to
revenge and justice.” Fei Du’s gaze swept over all the police officers containing their anger.
“But a ‘prop of revenge’ and a ‘target of revenge’ are different. To increase the group’s
cohesiveness, they have to have a certain faith. Fostering faith like that requires a sense of
ceremony—for example, acting out ‘a tooth for a tooth’ on the criminals, making them die in
the manner of their crime.”
“You mean that the originator of The Reciter, Fan Siyuan, was already planning this group
starting from the first person he killed during the first Picture Album Project,” Luo Wenzhou
said. “Killing was part of his plan. He didn’t lose his mind out of ‘gazing into the abyss.’”
“No,” Fei Du said. “This group has a stable structure. Its members are few, cohesive, very loyal.
This was consciously planned and cultivated by Fan Siyuan. In the beginning, when he killed
unpunished suspects acting as a ‘vigilante,’ it wasn’t out of a sense of righteous indignation. If
Fan Siyuan had early contact with Zhu Feng, he must have realized that the person in the
mental hospital wasn’t the real killer, and there would be no point in killing him.”
“The time when Zhu Feng broke into the mental hospital is very close to the time when Qian
Cheng was killed in the end.” Luo Wenzhou muttered to himself for a moment, then said,
“Could it have been like this? The real killer heard Zhu Feng’s accusation and realized that his
substitution hadn’t been so seamless. Things had just started going wrong with the Picture
Album Project then, so he used that case for his own advantage—giving the unconscious
impression that since Qian Cheng had been killed for revenge, he was the real killer. First
impressions are the strongest, and no one would look into it more closely later.”
Xiao Haiyang swiftly jumped up. “So the murder of Zhu Feng’s husband Yu Bin was arranged
by the mole in the City Bureau!”
Luo Wenzhou said, “Go investigate Yu Bin’s social contacts when he was alive, the school, the
students he taught, where he went.”
Then another criminal police officer asked, “Captain Luo, is there someone we suspect of
being the mole? Should we go keep an eye on him?”
“There’s no need now,” Fei Du said. “It’s nearly time. Someone will get to it.”
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After seeing Fei Du off, the investigator who had been responsible for him couldn’t resist going
back to carefully review the surveillance record of Fei Du.—It was very long, several hours of
chat with different people, the information confused and disorderly. First he found the part
concerned with Pan Yunteng and went through it from beginning to end. Just as Fei Du had
said, it was all bewildered students asking about him and sending their regards; there was
nothing of value. The investigator was somewhat disappointed and was planning to abandon it
when he faintly thought there was something sticking like a fishbone in his throat.
While combing through it once more from beginning to end, he suddenly noticed something
and hit pause and replay.
On the screen, a rather delicate expression flashed over Fei Du’s face. Then, seeming
deliberately calm, he replied with a voice message: “I haven’t. What problem could there be?”
The investigator paused. Then he replayed Fei Du’s whole conversation with this “Philosopher”
from the beginning once more. Then he called a technician—Fei Du hadn’t put on headphones,
and he hadn’t pressed the phone close to his ear when listening to the voice messages. Over
the listening device, you could faintly hear a male voice. When the technician had increased the
volume, the voice messages “The Philosopher” had sent Fei Du became very clear.
The key term “Zhang Ting” made the investigator give a start.
Meanwhile, Zhou Huaijin, who had quietly returned to the old Zhou family house, was after all
the only heir of the Zhou family. Very efficiently, he had already found where a former assistant
of Zhou Yahou’s from thirty-eight years ago had ended up.
Lu Jia was holding an ice cream, looking around pensively. Hearing this, he smiled. “Very likely.
Your mom also mistakenly thought you weren’t Zhou Junmao’s biological child. For the sake of
protecting you, a mother would do anything. It’s entirely possible this Zhou Chao hasn’t been
found because she hid him.”
Having gone through the life and death chase in Yan City, as soon as Lu Jia’s big head started
revolving vigilantly, Zhou Huaijin felt nervous. He quickly started looking wildly around, too.
“What is it? We aren’t being followed again, are we?”
Lu Jia smiled, narrowing his eyes. “You just noticed? I figure they got their eyes on you as soon
as you got back to your old house.”
“What?!”
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The night before, giving “too many people, I don’t want to be a bother” as his reason, Lu Jia
hadn’t gone back to the old house with Zhou Huaijin, only sending two bodyguards to
accompany him. The rest had gone ahead to arrange the hotel.
Zhou Huaijin hadn’t minded at the time, because having managed to return to a familiar place,
he’d relaxed in spite of himself and slept soundly. He absolutely hadn’t expected that the
people who wanted to kill him would have followed him here like malevolent spirits.
Zhou Huaijin quickly twisted his head towards Lu Jia. “You already knew that…”
“Relax, they wouldn’t have touched you yesterday.” Lu Jia licked the ice cream. As if his
tongue was barbed, half the ice cream disappeared in one lick. “They don’t have as many
connections here as you do. First they have to work out who you’re looking for, bide their time,
then catch you both in one go.”
Messily licking the ice cream, Lu Jia put his arm over Zhou Huaijin’s shoulders, not letting him
look around left and right, pushing him forward. “You haven’t noticed that all my people are
here? Let’s go. You may not trust be able to trust me, but can’t you trust President Fei?”
The place where this old man who had worked for Zhou Yahou lived was very remote, a
rundown little compound, totally undecorated. The gate had just been swept, so it was at least
clean. Lu Jia shot a look at one of his cronies, and a few people scattered smartly, lying low in
the backyard.
Then Zhou Huaijin walked over and knocked on the door. After a moment, a female foreigner
inside asked who was there over the intercom at the door.
Zhou Huaijin looked at Lu Jia. Lu Jia nodded, indicating that he should tell the truth. So he
cleared his throat and announced Zhou Chao’s alias. “May I ask whether he lives here? My
surname is Zhou. I’m the son of an old friend of his.”
There was silence inside for a while. Then an East Asian-looking middle-aged woman stuck out
her head and looked nervously at the crowd of uninvited guests. With a very forced smile, she
said, “I think you’re talking about the person who used to live here. We only moved in last
month.”
Zhou Huaijin frowned and took a photograph of an old man from his pocket. “Could you please
tell me whether you’ve seen the previous resident? Is this him?”
The woman hesitated. Waffling, she took the photograph. Maybe she was face-blind or
something; she looked it over for an age, then haltingly said, “I’m not really sure…”
The woman’s hand shook; the alarm on her face couldn’t be hidden any longer. The
photograph fell to the ground—she had been buying time!
Lu Jia looked over calmly and saw a white-headed old man climbing over the backyard hedge
like a character in a martial arts film. While the housekeeper had been distracting the uninvited
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guests at the door, the venerable old fellow had seized the opportunity to make a break for it.
You could see he didn’t suffer from arthritis; his legs were nimble enough for parkour.
Lu Jia stretched out his neck and sighed feelingly. “Wow, that one’s old but vigorous!”
Unfortunately, Zhou Chao hadn’t expected that the people who’d come to find him would have
prepared ahead of time. As soon as they saw him show his face, the people lying in wait in the
backyard swarmed up and quickly caught the old man who was fleeing as quickly as a hare. Lu
Jia bent down and picked up the photograph the woman had dropped. He’d wanted to say
something, but searching his guts and his belly, he found that of the foreign language he’d
learned at school, only “thank you,” “goodbye,” and “good morning” remained; he could only
shut his mouth like a great immortal, displaying an enigmatic smile.
Not far behind Lu Jia and the others, in an unobtrusive white business car, a man in full battle
gear put down his binoculars, adjusted the angle of his sniper rifle, and sent out the
photograph of Zhou Huaijin, Lu Jia, and the crowd of people holding down the old man. He
asked his employer, “Confirmation? We have to act.”
In Yan City, China, separated by many hours’ time difference from the small town in C—,
darkness had already fallen.
Zhang Chunjiu picked up the phone, listened for a moment without making a sound, then
suddenly raised his head and said heavily to Zhang Chunling, “Someone went to look for
Donglai at the office.”
To hoodwink the public, after they’d secretly sent Zhang Donglai and his sister away, Zhang
Chunjiu had found someone to pretend to be Zhang Donglai and come and go from the office
as usual—there weren’t many people in the office now, and nothing to do. The fake Zhang
Donglai, wearing a face mask and dark glasses, wouldn’t have a problem going under the radar
as long as he avoided saying too much to the employees on duty, creating the false impression
that everything was as usual at the Chunlai Conglomerate…as long as no one went to look for
him on purpose.
Why had the investigation team suddenly wanted to find Zhang Donglai?
The two brothers exchanged a look. Zhang Chunjiu quickly pulled open the curtains and
looked out. The city’s evening lights had been lit, passing through the hazy mist, jubilantly filling
the air. It was a tranquil and auspicious scene.
Someone knocked gently on the door and said gravely, “Chairman Zhang, we’ve located Zhou
Huaijin. He’s found an old man called Zhou Chao. We’d like to request guidance. Should we
move at once?”
Zhang Chunling took a phone from his hand and saw the photograph that had been sent over;
it was very clear. The old ethnically Chinese man was looking at Zhou Huaijin in alarm. His face
had changed, and it was ashen pale, but after all these years Zhang Chunling still recognized
him at a glance. “It’s one of Zhou Yahou’s people. He came to Heng’an.”
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Zhang Chunjiu seized the phone. “Why is he still alive? What were Zhou Junmao and Zheng
Kaifeng up to all those years?”
“I don’t think it’s so strange. Zheng Kaifeng was greedy and lecherous, Zhou Junmao was
indecisive, the two of them were as close as brothers but divided at heart under an appearance
of harmony, and there was Zhou Yahou’s woman in the middle. It’s normal for a slip-up to
happen.—Don’t be impatient. We can take this opportunity to eradicate the trouble at its roots.
Tell them to move.” Unhurriedly, Zhang Chunling said, “It’s fine, I don’t believe they can have
any evidence, and I don’t believe they can dig up the traces of things that happened forty years
ago. So what if Donglai isn’t there? Which of the nation’s laws am I violating by sending my son
abroad?”
“The investigation isn’t over yet. Leaving now would amount to a confession. I’ll stay to take
care of the follow-up,” Zhang Chunjiu said. “Don’t worry, I can extricate myself.”
“Dage,” Zhang Chunjiu suddenly said out of nowhere, “I remember back then it was also
winter, and you…you hid me in the coal basket. There was soot everywhere, I got covered all
over, my face all black, and I watched from the basket…”
Zhang Chunling’s expression changed. He interrupted him. “Enough. What are you talking
about that for?”
Zhang Chunjiu lowered his head. The wind and frost of over fifty years had forged for him a
copper skin and iron bones. He was shifty and inconstant, all-conquering. The seemingly
eternal fold in the center of his forehead temporarily relaxed for a moment. He took a coat from
the clothes rack and respectfully put it on Zhang Chunling, then passed him a scarf. He said,
“That’s true, what am I talking about it for? Dage, be safe on your way.”
Zhang Chunling hesitated for a moment, took the scarf, and made a gesture at his
subordinates. A few people followed him, silently filing out.
Lang Qiao’s phone began to vibrate. She looked down and saw that it was her father asking
when her lengthy overtime would be over and whether she would have time to visit relatives
with her parents for the Spring Festival. Before she could reply, she saw the old director of
teaching affairs beckoning to her, carrying a ring of keys.
“Sorry, teacher.” Lang Qiao quickly put her personal phone back in her pocket. “I’ve made you
go to the trouble of coming out in the middle of the night right before the New Year.”
Following Zhu Feng’s evidence, Lang Qiao had found the Fourth Middle School, where the art
teacher Yu Bin had taught.
“It’s all right. The children have gone traveling, and it’s just the two of us left. I’m taking this as
a bit of exercise after dinner,” the old director said. “Ah, it’s been over a decade. I didn’t think
anyone would still come to investigate Teacher Yu’s case. It was too tragic. Such a nice young
fellow, it’s heart-breaking just to mention.—Well, here we are.”
Lang Qiao looked up and saw that “Art Classroom” was written on the door.
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“In recent years we’ve been pursuing higher education entrance rates. The physical education
classes are still getting by, but music and arts classes are basically just for show,” the old
director said. “When Teacher Yu was here, the school had specially enrolled art students. Later
the policy changed and our school stopped enrolling them. The art classroom is used for
visitors now… Let me see if it’s this key.”
Saying so, the door creaked open. An uninhabited smell assaulted the senses.
The old director turned on the lights and pointed at a portrait in oils hanging on the wall. “Look,
that was painted by Teacher Yu.”
Lang Qiao stared. She was a layman who couldn’t tell the difference between good and bad
painting. She only thought this portrait was very realistic, so realistic she could tell at a glance
that the beautifully smiling girl in the picture had exactly the same phoenix eyes and dimples as
Zhu Feng. She was wearing a dress, her eyes curved as she smiled at someone outside of the
painting. It gave a person a favorable impression.
There was a label under the oil painting with the title, artist, and date on it.
Yu Bin had painted it fifteen years ago. The name of the painting was “Dream Partner.”
Now, the immortal smiling face in the painting remained, but the person outside the painting
had become a hideous woman filled with rancor.
“Here.” The director of teaching affairs opened a display cabinet and said to Lang Qiao,
“Young lady, come over here and have a look—is this what you’re looking for?”
Lang Qiao quickly went over. The director showed her a displayed certificate of merit. “Before
Teacher Yu died, he took his students to paint from life. One of the students entered a painting
he did at the time in a contest and got an award. One certificate went to the student and one to
the teacher…but sadly Teacher Yu was gone soon after they returned. He didn’t have time to
see this certificate. Teacher Yu’s spouse wasn’t in a very good mental state then. Seeing his
things hurt her, so these stayed here at the school.”
Lang Qiao took the certificate. There was a reproduction of the award-winning work attached
to the certificate. It was a very beautiful seaside landscape. Inside the certificate was a
yellowed strip of paper that fell out as soon as it was opened.
“That was written by the student. He was on very good terms with Teacher Yu.”
Lang Qiao put on gloves and carefully unfolded the paper. Written on it was: “Facing the sea,
spring has come and the flowers are in bloom. In memory of our last visit to Binhai with
Teacher Yu.”
Lang Qiao’s pupils contracted slightly. “Teacher, can you contact this student for me?”
Lang Qiao hurriedly summoned Xiao Haiyang—it wasn’t so easy to find a student who’d
graduated over a decade ago. The director of teaching affairs, wearing reading glasses, had
spent ages going through the student roster. The teachers who had taught this student had
either retired or left; he’d spent a full hour calling around everywhere asking. When he’d finally
contacted the former art student himself, it was nearly midnight.
The art student was at the airport, preparing to go traveling with his family; apparently it was an
overnight flight.
Lang Qiao and Xiao Haiyang sped over, charging into the McDonald’s they’d arranged to meet
at ahead of time.
After midnight, the fast food restaurant was full of exhausted travelers. It was very quiet. Some
people were resting their eyes, using their bags as pillows. Those who were still awake weren’t
communicating with each other; all of them had set up their phones and computers. At a
glance, this seemed like a still, empty space. Xiao Haiyang had been dragged the whole way
by Lang Qiao and was gasping for breath like a sick dog. Each of his steps rammed into the
ground, disturbing quite a few lightly-sleeping backpackers. Escorted by angry looks the whole
way, they finally found Yu Bin’s student in a corner.
The senior middle school student from over a decade ago was now an adult, over thirty. There
was a small beard around his lips. Given the expense of his apparel, you could see that his
economic situation was pretty good.
“Could I see your credentials?” The man’s bearing was genteel and polite but very cautious.
First he asked for Lang Qiao and Xiao Haiyang’s credentials; he carefully checked the forgery-
proofing marks against the light, then slightly apologetically returned their two work IDs.
“Sorry.”
“No problem, it’s a citizen’s right.” Lang Qiao got the painting certificate and the strip of paper
she’d taken from the school out of her bag. “Are these two items yours?”
“The winning painting was painted by me.” The man looked down at it a little longingly,
examining the reproduction on the certificate for a moment. Smiling wryly, he said, “This is an
immature work from my school days, but it’s really full of inspiration… Binhai is a very special
place. The sea is so wide, but for some reason, it makes you feel wild and empty, especially
when the wind rises around dusk. When it pours through the cracks in the reefs, it sounds like
someone’s crying. It’s grim and lonesome.”
The two materialists Xiao Haiyang and Lang Qiao knew all the details about Binhai. Having
heard this very artistic description, they shuddered simultaneously.
“I was nearly in my third year of senior middle then. Reasonably speaking, I ought to have been
fully focused on specialized classes for preparing for the university entrance exam. When I
went to Binhai, it was actually to spend some time with my schoolmates and scribble
something for practice. I hadn’t planned on entering any contests. But when the painting was
finished, the outcome was unexpectedly good. Teacher Yu loved it and strongly recommended
that I submit my name. I didn’t even think of placing. I didn’t expect that by good fortune… I
put the paper in there when I sent the certificate back.” At this point, the man was silent for a
while, shaking his head somewhat bleakly. “In fact, I’ve sometimes thought over these years,
could Binhai be…an evil place, like in folklore? I’m not superstitious, but sometimes when I see
that painting, I feel like there’s an inauspicious atmosphere in it.”
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Lang Qiao got out her notebook. “Could you tell me whether you still remember how many of
you went together? How long did you stay in Binhai?”
“Oh…four or five people. Me, our teacher, and some kids from senior middle year one, all
special arts students,” the man said. “It would have been the weekend. School was pretty
tense then, there was no time apart from the weekends. I remember we stayed there two
nights… We must have gone on Friday and returned on Sunday.”
“No, there weren’t even any people there at the time. There was nowhere to stay the night. We
stayed in an agritourism village nearby—you could call it nearby, but actually you still had to
drive over half an hour. We rented a car there. We’d find a view during the day, then go back to
the village to rest in the evening.”
Lang Qiao quickly followed up, “When you were painting at Binhai, did you encounter any
unusual people or events?”
The man looked up at her and opened his mouth, but his answer was evasive. “Actually, Officer
Lang, the reason I agreed to wait here to see you today is that someone asked me that same
question before.”
“Sorry, that’s also why I carefully checked your credentials before,” the man said. “After
Teacher Yu died, more than a year later, around when I was in my first year of university, a
person came to find me. Male, very tall, middle-aged, said he was a police officer handling
Teacher Yu’s case.—I don’t know how to describe it, I just inexplicably felt a little afraid of him.
You may have noticed that I’m kind of sensitive. Anyway, I didn’t quite dare to look him in the
eye.”
“He said he wanted to ask me about a few things connected to Teacher Yu’s murder. I thought
it was very strange. The killer who murdered Teacher Yu had been arrested, hadn’t he? What
was there to ask? But this person said that there were some things that weren’t as simple as
they seemed on the surface. He suspected that there was some plot behind Teacher Yu’s
murder, and that it had to do with our trip to Binhai.”
Xiao Haiyang’s elbow shook, knocking over a cup of coke on the table. Ice cubes spilled over
the table. His expression was disbelieving. “What did you say?”
“Gu Zhao—the ‘Zhao’ that’s golden knife.12 If I recall correctly, that was his name. What’s
wrong?”
Xiao Haiyang’s fingers shook unconsciously. “Can you…can you describe his appearance?
What did he look like? Around thirty-five, thin, about a meter seventy-five…”
“I couldn’t really tell his age, but I think he would have been a little older. He was over a meter
seventy-five tall.” The man recalled carefully for a moment. “When I started university, my
physical measured me as a meter seventy-nine, and he was taller than me. And when he was
standing in front of me, he gave me a very oppressive feeling. A square face, pretty
distinguished-looking. What, do you know him? So was he a fake police officer or not?”
As he gave the description, Xiao Haiyang’s expression changed a few times. First it was lost;
then a faint anger rose—that wasn’t Gu Zhao. Over a year after Yu Bin was murdered, Gu Zhao
had already died suffering an injustice, and someone had dared to use his identity to go around
deceiving people!
He instantly felt as though the cleanest place in his heart had been sullied. If Xiao Haiyang had
had fur, perhaps he would have bristled up into a ball. He clenched his fists with a crack and
coldly said, “No, he was fake. What did he ask you?”
“Like you, he asked very carefully who’d gone to Binhai, how the trip had been arranged,
whether we met anyone on the way, whether anything particular happened. I said I didn’t
remember, and that man thought about it, then asked me, ‘Did your Teacher Yu ever go out
alone?’”
Xiao Haiyang and Lang Qiao exchanged a look—yes, if Yu Bin’s killing really was connected to
his trip to Binhai, why had none of the students who’d gone with him been harmed? The
criminals didn’t have the bottom-line principle of not killing minors, so it was likely he’d
encountered something while acting alone.
“As soon as he said that, I did remember. There was such a time. The night before we left,
because we’d talked it over and agreed to set out first thing the next morning, Teacher Yu told
everyone to make sure to pack up our things. Then a female student suddenly couldn’t find her
camera. We helped her remember, and we thought it was likely she’d left it at the painting spot
we’d picked out. For a student, a camera is a valuable object. As soon as Teacher Yu heard, he
went to find it for her. Because it was already late, he didn’t take the student. He drove over by
himself and scraped someone’s car on the way. I only found out when I saw him settle the
account for the rental car. That person calling himself Gu Zhao…”
Xiao Haiyang suddenly interrupted him. “Don’t call him by that name.”
The man and Lang Qiao both stared. Xiao Haiyang came back to himself and lowered his head
slightly. “I’m sorry, but he wasn’t Gu Zhao. Please don’t call him by that name.”
Though he was being as polite as possible, his speech was still very stiff. Lang Qiao wanted to
mediate, but the man was very understanding. He said, “Oh, I see. So he was using the name
of a police officer of good moral standing and reputation? So I’ll just say ‘the fake police
officer.’”
Hearing the expression “good moral standing and reputation,” Xiao Haiyang didn’t know what
he felt.
“The fake police officer asked me to tell him who my teacher ran into. But I didn’t know. I
wasn’t there. I only heard him say that it was dark, and his mind was wandering a little. When
he was passing over a seaside cliff, a car suddenly came out of the woods. He didn’t react at
once and accidentally ran into their door. Though they must have been nice people. They didn’t
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say anything, but my teacher felt very sorry. He insisted on going after them and giving them
his contact information, telling them to send him the receipts for the repair work and the paint
job. It was just a little matter. The accident came to a peaceful resolution. Teacher Yu was a
sensible person.”
Xiao Haiyang said, “Do you remember their license plate number?”
“Teacher Yu may have remembered, but he wouldn’t have gone out of his way to tell me.” The
man spread his hands.
That was fair. In spite of himself, Xiao Haiyang was somewhat disappointed. But Lang Qiao
said, “How did you know the person who questioned you before was a fake police officer?”
“But…”
“Before leaving, I remembered something and wanted to tell him, but when I looked back, I
saw that that man’s face was frighteningly grim, completely different from his genial expression
before. There was an anti-fraud campaign going on at school at the time, and I suddenly felt
uneasy and asked him for his ID—though I didn’t have any common sense at the time and
couldn’t tell whether the credentials were real or fake. I furtively went through the anti-fraud tips
the political teacher had sent out on my phone, and I saw that the first thing was ‘police
officers normally act in pairs when gathering evidence, so be careful if you meet one acting
alone.’”
“It was the drawing,” the man said. “Teacher Yu was very diligent. He always had his
sketchbook on him. When he saw something touching, he’d draw it. When we went to Binhai,
he’d just used up his sketchbook, and there were a few drawings on loose paper… Contour
drawings of the courtyard in the agritourism village, things like that. I asked for them before we
left, and I found there was a sketch of a man and a woman. I’d never seen those two people
before. I guessed they were the people he’d run into when he went out that night.”
When Luo Wenzhou took Xiao Haiyang’s phone call, Little Glasses was simply babbling.
Xiao Haiyang only now remembered that Yu Bin’s student had planned to leave Yan City on an
overnight flight. He quickly turned to the man draped with luggage. “This…isn’t making you
miss your flight, is it?”
“The plane’s already taken off.” The man shrugged. “My spouse went on ahead with both our
parents.”
“Then…”
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“It’s all right, I’ll see whether I can transfer to another flight. If I can’t get a ticket, then I’ll forget
about it. It’s only a vacation. It won’t kill me to miss going once. But if there really is some
hidden plot in Teacher Yu’s murder, can you call me when you finish the case and tell me?” The
former art student said, “Teacher Yu was very good to me. If I can do something for him,
whether it’s useful or not, my conscience will be easy. I think he should have enjoyed a long
life.”
Luo Wenzhou turned his head to look at the surveillance feed from the interrogation room. A
criminal police officer was interrogating Zhu Feng about the case at Yufen Middle School.
“You dressed up as a school janitor and used a recording to mislead Wang Xiao. Who
instigated you? Did you know what you were doing?”
“You say that your aim was to uncover Lu Guosheng and the place where he was hiding. Fine,”
the criminal police officer said, “but did you know that this would lead a boy’s death? He not
only died, he died without an intact corpse!”
Zhu Feng looked at him expressionlessly, the lines from her nose to her chin pulling the corners
of her mouth down.
“Since you were shadowing Wang Xiao, didn’t you know about the schoolyard violence that
child was experiencing? And you not only looked on unconcerned, you also used her?”
Zhu Feng flattened her lips and coldly said, “She didn’t die, did she?”
“A dozen wounds. Da-Bin was stabbed a dozen times… He didn’t even look human. Didn’t you
all look on unconcerned?” Zhu Feng’s voice was hoarse. “She didn’t die. What does she have
to complain about?”
For some reason, Luo Wenzhou felt these words stick like a fishbone in his throat. He sighed
heavily, put a cigarette in his mouth, and walked out of the observation room. He searched all
over himself and found that he’d forgotten to put his lighter in his pocket.
Just then, there was a click next to him, and a tiny flame appeared in front of him.
Luo Wenzhou turned his head. Fei Du had found a lighter somewhere. He asked him, “Need a
light?”
He choked for a moment, then silently waved a hand, putting the cigarette away. Just then, his
phone vibrated. Xiao Haiyang had sent him a picture. Luo Wenzhou opened it and had a look,
finding that it was a pencil sketch. The paper was yellowed. The drawing was in a plastic folder,
preserved pretty well. There were a man and a woman drawn in it, with the date and Yu Bin’s
signature in the corner.
It was drawn very vividly. When he’d seen it, Luo Wenzhou sighed. “Su Hui, and…”
Over a decade ago, when Zhang Chunling and Su Hui had been traveling to Binhai through the
night, they had been hit by the art teacher Yu Bin, returning to find something for his student.
Had Su Hui acted as Zheng Kaifeng’s contact with Zhang Chunling, so when Yu Bin had run
into her with Zhang Chunling, for the sake of security, Zheng Kaifeng’s contact been changed
to Yang Bo’s mother Zhuo Yingchun?
Luo Wenzhou knocked on the wall with his fist. “A drawing… It’s preposterous, and we can’t
even verify whether this was drawn by Yu Bin himself, or on what occasion it was drawn. Even
if my own dad ran the courts and the procuratorate, he still couldn’t give me an arrest warrant
based on this… Master Fei, what have you got to smile about?”
The barrel of the hidden sniper’s gun swept over Lu Jia and Zhou Huaijin, then aimed at the old
man Zhou Chao, who had been pushed into the yard. The sniper shot a look at the car full of
his accomplices—first shoot the old fart who should already have been dead, then get rid of
the ticking time bomb Zhou Huaijin. The rest could be taken care of in batches.
In the yard, Zhou Chao, full of terror, was just yelling something. Lu Jia blankly asked Zhou
Huaijin, “What’s this fake Western devil yelling about?”
“Oh, really?” Hearing this, Lu Jia straightened his collar and stood at attention. “I’ll get
uncomfortable if he keeps praising me like that.—Old Mr. Zhou, if you absolutely won’t
cooperate, that’s all right, although…”
His gaze focused on a small red dot flashing on Zhou Chao’s face.
“Down!”
The young person holding Zhou Chao had been prepared. His reaction was extremely quick.
He held down the old man’s head, pulling him out of the way. Immediately afterward, a
revolving bullet brushed the old man’s white hair, breaking the window behind him with a
whistle. The East Asian housekeeper’s screaming formed a duet with Zhou Chao’s babbling
cries.
“Fuck, not even any advance notice. These people leave the country and suddenly they’re
running wild!” Lu Jia grabbed Zhou Huaijin with one hand and the East Asian housekeeper with
the other and swiftly kicked open the door, charging into Zhou Chao’s house.
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As he was involuntarily pulled by him, Zhou Huaijin inappropriately remembered a line of lyrics
—a chicken in the left hand, a duck in the right hand13.
Just then, there were three honks of a car horn in the back yard. Lu Jia whistled and called out,
“Coming!” Laden down, he used Zhou Chao’s house as cover, carrying them through. A truck
with a container was waiting behind to pick them up. “Lao-Lu!”
Lu Jia sighed. “Sorry, a fault in my planning, we’ll have to trouble the old fellow to jump the
hedge again.”
Before he’d finished, Zhou Chao, Zhou Huaijin, and the little housekeeper all cried out at the
same time as they were thrown over. After their first sneak attack had failed, the armed ruffians
quickly encircled, the concentrated sounds of gunshots constantly drawing closer.
In these circumstances, even Zhou Chao had no choice. He scrambled up into Lu Jia’s evil
truck.
“Where’s Da-Zhao?” Lu Jia brought up the rear, slamming the container door. One dangerous
bullet after another hit the metal door, denting part of it. He hollered at someone, “What are you
still dodging and hiding for? If you waste any more time, we’ll all get shot into sieves!”
Before he’d finished, the sounds of motor vehicle engines came from every direction. A few
persistent cars had already gone around Zhou Chao’s yard. The truck looked very stocky, and
in fact wasn’t very nimble. It had no room to advance or retreat.
They had probably realized that Lu Jia had been prepared. For the sake of fighting a quick
battle, they became increasingly frenzied. Two small-scale SUVs came up on either side. There
were guns on both cars. Amidst the wildly flying bullets, the truck’s driver sharply turned the
steering wheel. The people in the container instantly felt like they’d been thrown into a washing
machine spin cycle, tumbling together into a heap.
Outside were the sounds of guns, of car wheels screeching, of collisions. Adding in the
screams and groans inside the container…there was no need to open your eyes; you could
imagine a soul-stirring scene of lives hanging by a thread.
The truck had dodged the formidable enemy ahead, but it hadn’t dodged the pursing troops
behind. The heavily burdened container truck was rear-ended with a huge bang. Zhou Chao
was scared into clutching his head and wetting himself.
Zhou Huaijin was also so shaken he wanted to throw up, fingers convulsively clutching at the
container’s wall, clenching his teeth and bracing his arms, displaying a boxing defense
movement he’d picked up from TV; perhaps he was planning to demonstrate blocking bullets
bare-handed.
But while his heart rose to his throat, the second strike he anticipated didn’t come. After being
hit, the truck didn’t linger, instead hurrying ahead, breaking out of the encirclement. And the
bumping outside actually vanished!
For a good while, the only sounds in the container were rough gasping for breath and Zhou
Chao’s tearful muttering. No one spoke. Then someone turned on the lights inside the
13 The song is 回娘家—the title refers to a married woman visiting her parents.
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container. Zhou Huaijin wiped the cold sweat from the corners of his forehead, exchanging
helpless looks with a crowd of companions who’d just survived disaster.
Lu Jia, however, was extremely composed, not a bit panicked. He looked very calmly at Zhou
Huaijin. “You doing all right?”
“Not bad.” Zhou Huaijin smiled wryly. “I think I’ll be used to it soon… What’s going on now?”
“It’s safe now, don’t worry. They wouldn’t dare to keep chasing.” Lu Jia carelessly rolled up his
sleeves and disdainfully lifted Zhou Chao. “Old uncle, you’re in good health, but your
psychological quality won’t do.”
“Wouldn’t dare to chase? Why?” The container was sealed off, the circumstances outside
unseen. Zhou Huaijin made a connection with the “Da-Zhao” Lu Jia had shouted to, in spite of
himself developing some abundant imaginings about the driver. “What were you preparing at
the hotel last night? Does the driver have some kind of murder weapon?”
In spite of himself, Zhou Huaijin became deeply anxious. “It can’t be too flashy. There’ll be
trouble if you alert the police here.”
“Nothing so Westernized,” Lu Jia said after a moment of speechlessness, waving a hand at him
and modestly saying, “An indigenous method.”
Zhou Huaijin displayed a vigorous desire for instruction. “What indigenous method?”
“Have you ever gotten one of those mysterious prank calls when you were at home?” Lu Jia
smiled at him. In an atrocious accent, he said, “Your son’s life is in my hands.”
At the villa where Zhang Donglai and his sister were staying, Zhang Ting was staring emptily
out the window. She still felt this was very unreal, and she was faintly uneasy. Every time she
remembered that she was thousands of miles from home without anyone to talk to, she
couldn’t resist feeling distressed.
Just then, urgent footsteps suddenly came from outside the door. Someone knocked on her
door twice, then almost rudely opened it before Zhang Ting had answered. Zhang Ting turned
to look in astonishment and saw the “steward” who’d accompanied them the whole way, his
face green. He asked her, “Miss Zhang, do you know where your brother has gone?”
The curtains were drawn in Zhang Donglai’s room, and the door had been shut starting last
night. He’d picked up two bottles of wine before going into the room, looking like he was
planning to drink himself into a stupor and sleep for twenty-four hours to adjust to the time
difference.
Everyone was well aware of Zhang Donglai’s character as one of Yan City’s famous useless
rich kids and knew he insisted on sleeping late. No one dared to go bother him in the morning.
The outcome was that no one knew what time he’d slipped away!
The security here was first-rate. It would have been much too difficult to sneak in and snatch
as hefty a fellow as Zhang Donglai without anyone being the wiser—he had to have run off
himself.
Zhang Donglai was a stranger in a strange place here. Never mind speaking a foreign
language; if he could remember the whole alphabet, he was already doing right by the nine
years of compulsory education. You couldn’t even have asked him to go out and buy a pack of
cigarettes; where could he have run off to?
The Zhang siblings had been sent abroad for their own safety, but while the two of them had
been perfectly safe amidst the turmoil at home, as soon as they arrived at a “safe” place, it
turned out to have been a miscalculation, and one had immediately gone missing!
The “steward” who had been ordered to look after them looked down at his cell phone.
Someone had just sent him a photograph. In the photograph, Zhang Donglai was lying down
curled up with one of the wine bottles he’d taken yesterday lying next to him. His eyes were
closed. It was unclear whether he was asleep or… The text under the photograph provided: “If
you keep chasing, we’ll have to break him to pieces and return him to you.”
The “steward”’s hand was shaking. Zhang Chunling had just the one darling son, practically his
reason for living. Before coming here, orders had come down from above to put the two
siblings above everything, and if anything happened to them while he was responsible…
“Who?” Zhang Ting was somewhat bewildered. After a while, she finally remembered. “I…I
haven’t heard him say so, he only knew one person surnamed Zhou, the one who died a while
ago. And they didn’t have many dealings before that. My brother said he was a dumb…a dumb
something-or-other.”
When Zheng Kaifeng had been responsible for the Zhou Clan’s Chinese headquarters, Zhou
Huaijin, unlike the thoughtless Zhou Huaixin, wouldn’t have shown his face in Zheng Kaifeng’s
territory without a compelling need. He practically didn’t return to the country. And he was an
elite who had graduated from a famous school, another species from Zhang Donglai and the
other idle sons of the wealthy; they wouldn’t piss in the same pot. There was no intersection
between them. The “steward” truly couldn’t imagine how Zhou had managed to get Zhang
Donglai away.
“What’s the matter?” Zhang Ting’s gaze inadvertently swept over the photograph on his phone,
and she grabbed the “steward”’s arm. “Has something happened to my brother? He…he was
just fine yesterday, has he been kidnapped?”
Flustered, Zhang Ting said, “But…but I was right next door, I didn’t hear anything moving. And
there are so many people here… If I’d known the public security outside the country was so
bad, I wouldn’t have made a fuss about going abroad. Uncle, what are we going to do now?
How much money do they want? I’m going to call Dad.”
“No, wait!” The “steward” trembled at her last sentence, quickly squeezing out a smile. “Where
are you getting kidnapping from? Your brother may have gone to see a friend. He likes to go
out. It’s all right, there’s a tracker on him, set your mind…”
Another photograph arrived before the “steward” had finished speaking. The “steward”
couldn’t maintain his forced smile any longer—the tracking devices on Zhang Donglai’s shirt
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button, belt, and useless phone had all been found and arranged together, not a single one
missing. The other side sent a message saying: “Do you want to come and find us?”
His expression sinister, the “steward”’s fingers shook. He responded to the message: “What do
you want?”
There was a “ding” as a response came rather quickly to the message; an ID photo was sent
over. The “steward” froze, then slowly raised his head. Everyone’s gazes collected on one of
the people inside the villa.
The “steward” was shaken. This person had been specially transferred by Zhang Chunling,
sent out of the country with the siblings to avoid the investigations. He was the one who had
had dealings with Su Cheng!
The next mysterious message was a time and and address. “We want him alive. If he isn’t
delivered at the stipulated time, we’ll cut something off the little young master and send it to
you. No tricks. The little young master is worth more money than this trash.”
Under Zhang Ting’s tearful gaze, the “steward” angrily threw the cell phone.
Yan City—
When the investigation team had secretly turned the focus of the investigation to Zhang
Chunjiu once more, Luo Wenzhou had returned to the leaderless City Bureau.
“This.” Fei Du got out his cell phone full of odds and ends and showed Luo Wenzhou a status
update. A friend called “The Philosopher” had posted two photographs captioned “boring.”
One was a selfie, and the other was a living room scene, a group of people with a stack of
luggage, looking as if they had just finished sorting their things and were planning on a long
stay.
“That’s Zhang Donglai?” Luo Wenzhou stared, looked the pictures over, and couldn’t tell
anything from them. “Why is he posting photographs now? What’s the matter with this
photograph?”
“Of course you don’t know them, but Su Cheng definitely does. He not only knows them, they
must have been in quite close contact. After all, they conspired to run me over on my way back
to the office to be investigated…”
“What!”
Luo Wenzhou’s reaction, however, was to slap him on the back of the head, unfeelingly
interrupting Fei Du’s playacting.
With his perfect hair messed up by Luo Wenzhou, the somewhat secretive smile on President
Fei’s face instantly fractured.
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“Fei Du, you bastard, didn’t you swear up and down to me that it was all right? And here I
fucking thought you were reliable!”
“It was all right.” Fei Du silently backed away a couple of steps to guard against more of Luo
Wenzhou’s pawing. “Su Cheng is timid and overthinks things. As soon as he noticed I was on
my guard, he’d know the plot had been exposed, and he’d run off immediately. A good-for-
nothing like him has no use but to be silenced. But Su Cheng mysteriously disappeared on the
way. Given Zhang Chunling’s previous style of handling affairs, he would react at once and
arrange a retreat for himself. The people who’d contacted Su Cheng couldn’t have been the
wanted criminals he’s been protecting. I guessed that at a time like this, he wouldn’t rashly
punish his own trusted aides. The most likely possibility was that he’d send the people who
had contacted Su Cheng away, along with his own weak spot to what he thought was a safe
place.”
Luo Wenzhou grabbed his collar and yanked Fei Du back to his side. “Zhang Donglai has
landed his dad in it too fortuitously.”
“It’s not fortuitous. He trusts me,” Fei Du said. For some reason, he wasn’t smiling now; nor
was he using that tone of showing off to the person he liked. He flatly added, “Zhang Donglai is
impatient and can’t stand solitude. Suddenly arriving in a strange place, his first reaction would
be to complain to someone he thought was trustworthy. I tricked him into leaving. The
photograph was taken by someone I had pretend to be a beautiful woman in order to entice
him.”
“On the way back to the office for the investigation,” Fei Du said. “Su Cheng was a lure I left on
purpose. One of my people was with him, keeping an eye on him.”
From the inside breast pocket of Luo Wenzhou’s jacket, Fei Du took the cell phone he’d put
there himself and dialed a number. The other party seemed to have been waiting for him. It was
picked up as soon as it started ringing.
“President Fei, good heavens, I’ve been waiting so long for you to call!” The girl’s voice came
over the speaker, her speech so fast it was a little garbled. “I’ve been worried to death, is
everything going well with Lu-dage and the others? You weren’t contacting me… I didn’t know
what to do!”
A moment later, a somewhat deep female voice came over the phone. “This is Wei Lan.”
Weiwei’s biological father had died, and her mother had been an irresponsible drunkard. She’d
had a bad reputation locally. When Weiwei had been little, other children had bullied her, calling
her a “prostitute’s whelp.” She had a sister seven years older than her who’d protected her
since she was small. She was arrogant and obstinate, dropping out of school young and
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leaving. She’d wanted to break free of the circumstances, take her little sister away from their
hellish home; but circumstances were like a prison. How could it be so easy to break free?
After her big sister left, the young Weiwei’s mother remarried, but her life didn’t change for the
better; instead it was adding frost on top of snow. Her beastly stepfather had given the young
girl unforgettable nightmares for the rest of her life, until she’d finally gathered her courage and
escaped her frightening “home,” helped by Fei Du’s fund.
At first, the fund had helped her search for her long-gone big sister as it looked for a way to get
justice for her. But when the evidence had been conclusive and the police had come to the
door to arrest him, Weiwei’s stepfather had run away to avoid punishment. Afterwards, his
body had been found in a little pool about three kilometers from his house. He’d been stabbed
to death. He was entirely naked, some organs cut off his body, soaking upside down in the
sludge.
After dealing with the body, the killer had very calmly left, covered in blood. She’d encountered
a witness on the way and had even smiled at them. The murder weapon had been stuck into
the body’s chest, with the killer’s fingerprints openly on it.
Judging from the composite drawing provided by the witness and the fingerprints on the
weapon, the local police had focused their suspicion on Weiwei’s sister Wei Lan and had
issued a local wanted notice.
The fund had spent these years looking for her, but she had disappeared without a trace,
becoming one of the kept wanted criminals, until the person Fei Du had set to monitor that
idiot Su Cheng had reported that Su Cheng had hired a female assistant of unclear origin.
“I think I can get the old fart off my hands now?” Wei Lan laughed softly.
Wei Lan snorted carelessly. “Save it. Little baby, I was fucking people up while you were at
home drinking milk.”
Fei Du took no notice of her insolence. He only asked, “Are you ready?”
She had killed someone, after all. She was an escaped criminal. Revealing herself now, she’d
spend the rest of her life kicking her heels in jail.
“There’s no need for you to worry about me,” Wei Lan said. “Fei Du, remember what you
promised me.”
Immediately after, Luo Wenzhou asked, “When did you contact her?”
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Fei Du’s gaze flashed. This business was a whole story that would take a long time to tell.
“When I’d just gotten out of the hospital,” Fei Du answered, treasuring words like gold. Then,
perhaps his eyelashes had smeared his lenses or something; he earnestly wiped his glasses
and directly changed the subject. “Su Cheng will turn himself in and give evidence. There’s
Zhang Donglai’s photograph. With luck, we’ll be able to lure the person who contacted Su
Cheng back to the country. Do you think that with these conditions, you’ll be able to request an
arrest warrant for Zhang Chunling?”
Fei Du didn’t respond to the invitation. He reached out to do up one button on the jacket Luo
Wenzhou was wearing open, his gaze sweeping over his waistline, delineated by his clothing;
the corners of his eyes narrowed. “Zhang Donglai posted that status update five minutes ago.
I’ve seen it, and Zhang Chunling and his brother will see it, too. If you don’t hurry, it’ll be too
late.”
“I’ll settle things with you when I get back!” Luo Wenzhou took up his phone, turned, and ran.
He’d only heard the tip of the iceberg and knew that Fei Du was hiding more than just this. Luo
Wenzhou faintly felt something was wrong, but the moment was urgent, and he had no time to
spare to look into it carefully.
Fei Du watched Luo Wenzhou leave. Then he put his hands on the windowsill next to him and
let out a long breath.
Midnight passed and the last day of the lunar year began.
The zodiac animals changed places. The prohibition on firecrackers was lifted.
Having “accidentally” learned from Fei Du that Zhang Donglai and his sister had secretly left
the country, the investigation team had increased surveillance on the Chunlai Conglomerate
and the Zhang brothers, watching the Zhang house non-stop around the clock. Each car going
in or out was carefully investigated to make sure that Zhang Chunjiu and Zhang Chunling
stayed in the investigation team’s line of sight.
At 1:30 AM UTC +8:00, an enormous sound woke the night. Something seemed to have
exploded in the tranquil Zhang house. The windows splintered to shards, and tongue-like
flames poured out. The “eyes” ordered to keep watch over the Zhang house was stupefied, but
before he could react and report it, he received an order to cooperate with the arrest of the
Zhang brothers.
In a place like Yan City, the lowest density estate still had neighbors. There happened to be a
wind. The dry wind scattered the strange fire everywhere. In the blink of an eye, it was
uncontrollable. Cries for help and fire alarms rose and fell. The police and the investigation
team, arriving at the same time, impenetrably surrounded the scene.
There was an accelerant in the fire. The more it was suppressed, the more arrogant the flames
became, the heat wave nearly dispersing the chill of the winter night. The fire department kept
calling for backup, throwing all their efforts against the fire. A moment later, a very realistic fire
truck silently stopped outside, fully-equipped “firemen” going in and out. No one knew when it
drove away again.
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A full half hour later, the intensity of the fire was finally under control and the police impatiently
charged in to search. They saw a complete mess; everyone was gone!
At this time, Zhang Chunjiu, who had been requested to remain in contact, had certainly
absconded.
Howling police cars speeded away. The airports, the train stations, the traffic network, and the
surrounding provinces all received notifications to assist in the arrest of Zhang Chunjiu and
Zhang Chunling.
At the same time, the escaped Zhang Chunling was staring at the the photograph “posted by
Zhang Donglai.” His expression extremely grim, he contacted the people keeping an eye on his
unfortunate son. “That scoundrel Zhang Donglai…what!”
The news of Zhang Donglai’s disappearance could finally no longer be contained, coming over
across the ocean.
At 2:15 AM, an abandoned firetruck was found near the Dongba River, and the widespread
surveillance network finally found a trace nearby—the security camera footage showed people
suspected of being the brothers Zhang Chunjiu and Zhang Chunling inside a black business
car. After crossing the Dongba, they drove southeast, on the way out of the city.
Roadblocks and unmanned drones urgently set out. At the same time, the investigation team,
monitoring the Chunlai Conglomerate, saw a member of the conglomerate’s senior
management left behind to hold down the fort silently change his clothes, dress up as a take-
out delivery person, and ride away with the usual large bag of a take-out delivery person on his
back. He was also heading southeast, out of the city!
The investigation team at once dispatched personnel to follow him and stop this person, who
believed he was being covert.
“Wait!” As soon as he heard a bit of this, Luo Wenzhou, who’d hurried over with some people,
felt something was wrong—he had no basis, but given Zhang Chunjiu’s experience and anti-
reconnaissance abilities, his tracks shouldn’t have been found so quickly. “Wait a bit, I advise
you to closely investigate the surveillance footage around the Zhang house for the last few
days…”
“Captain Luo, Zhang Chunjiu’s fingerprints have been found in that firetruck.”
“Captain Luo, have a look at this. This is security camera footage from a private car nearby.”
The police had done a blanket search around the abandoned firetruck. There had been a
private car with a security camera at a perfect angle. It had caught the scene of the people in
the fake firetruck abandoning it. One of the men peeled off his disguise as he walked. This
person’s gait and minute gestures…
He suddenly turned his head and looked around thoughtfully, and the camera caught his face.
It was Zhang Chunjiu himself!
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“Is that Zhang Chunjiu? Really?” an investigator clamored at Luo Wenzhou. “You’ve been at
the City Bureau so many years, you wouldn’t mistake him, would you? He must be brought
back at any cost!”
Like an inescapable net, the pursuit spread over the quiet southeast of the city, waiting for the
poisonous insects to charge in.
Fei Du was waiting at the open window for the night wind. Suddenly there was the creaking of
a wheelchair beside him. Without even turning his head, he said, “Why aren’t the wounded
personnel resting yet?”
“I can’t sleep.” Tao Ran, shuffling, pushed his wheelchair up beside him.
Fei Du put a hand on the arm of the wheelchair to stop it, closed the window, then took off his
jacket and put it over him.
In his capacity as a frail mummy, Tao Ran didn’t decline his care. He stared emptily for a while
in the dimly lit corridor.
“When shiniang gave me shifu’s relic, I also didn’t sleep. I can recite every punctuation mark of
that testament. I feel it’s more frightening than any vicious criminal. I spent all night reading it,
and the next day I thought I was prepared…” Tao Ran lowered his head and laughed bitterly. “I
didn’t think I’d prepared in the wrong direction.”
Lao-Yang had said, “There are people there who have changed.” It really was ridiculous,
because it now seemed that the chief culprit, unlike what they had guessed at the very
beginning, hadn’t been corrupted by the influence of money. He’d been solid as a rock, bad
from beginning to end. It was the person who’d preserved that testament who had been
carved into another form by the piercing winds and biting frost.
Tao Ran asked hoarsely, “Why did Director Zhang do it? Was he short of money? Short of
power?”
“I think it may have been because of this.” Fei Du got out his phone and showed Tao Ran an
old black-and-white photograph.
It was a rather ancient group photo. There were around a dozen children in the photograph,
from young children to teens, all of them expressionless, standing in two rows, clustered
around two men. One of the men was wearing a Western suit and standing ramrod straight,
lifting his chin; the other man was shiny-faced and balding. Each of them was holding one
corner of a cardboard sign reading “Donation from the patriotic overseas Chinese Zhou Clan
Conglomerate” and so on.
The smug middle-aged men made a stark contrast to the lifeless-looking children around them.
Looking closely, you could nearly feel some of the dread.
In one corner was written “Yan City Heng’an Orphanage”; the date was over forty years ago.
“Lu Jia just sent this. They found Zhou Yahou’s assistant from back then.”
The old fart Zhou Chao hadn’t been cooperative at first, but he’d been scared out of his wits by
the murderous pursuit. He’d learned that his whereabouts had been revealed, and not
cooperating would have been a dead end. While he was old, he still feared death; he had
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handed everything over without another quibble—the person in the photograph representing
the Zhou Clan Conglomerate in delivering the donation was Zhou Chao himself.
“Heng’an Orphanage.” Tao Ran looked closely under the light. “That’s…where Su Hui used to
live? Oh, I think I can see which one is her.”
“Have another look. There are other acquaintances there,” Fei Du said. “The little boy curled up
in the corner, and the teenager standing next to the orphanage’s director.”
The little boy was five or six, as skinny as the end of a radish. He was tightly clutching the
teenager’s clothes, his grim gaze projecting from the photograph, the little fist at his side tightly
clenched. At first glance, Tao Ran thought the boy looked familiar. Frowning, he carefully
examined him for a while, then suddenly saw a clue in that old black-and-white photograph.
It seemed that the boy’s face, smaller than the size of a palm, could fit nothing but a pair of
eyes. Fifty years of extravagant living had been unable to remove the thinness ground into his
bones during his youth, and in his features there was some shadow of the way he would look
when he had grown up—Tao Ran remembered the photograph he’d seen countless times on
Director Lu’s desk of all of them when they had been young. “That can’t be Director Zhang?”
“The Chunlai Conglomerate’s big boss doesn’t show his face very much, but there are
photographs of him from public occasions.” Fei Du searched on his phone for a moment and
found a photograph of Zhang Chunling online. He put it next to the teenager standing beside
the orphanage’s director. “Does that look like him?”
“Director Zhang… Zhang Chunjiu and Zhang Chunling came from Heng’an Orphanage? They
were orphans?” Tao Ran adjusted his sitting posture with difficulty. “No, wait, I remember you
said this orphanage was a den of human traffickers, so…”
“Lu Jia says that the director who received the donation was named Hao Zhenhua, of Yan City,
born in May of 19—. With a full name and a place and month of birth, can you find out what
happened to him?”
“Wait a moment.” Tao Ran swept away his earlier dejection and indicated for Fei Du to push
him into the office. He started making calls and investigating.
With concrete information, it was much easier to search. Apologizing, Tao Ran woke up a string
of sleepy on-duty personnel. A moment later, they really did scout out a person whose name
and age matched.
“There was a case—the deceased was Hao Zhenhua, male, forty-six years old, stabbed to
death. The killer came to the door and stabbed the victim three times in a row in the chest and
abdomen. The victim experienced heavy internal bleeding and fled inside the house. The
bloodstains extended from the door to the bedroom. The killer chased him inside, picked up a
copper flowerpot belonging to the deceased, and pounded on the deceased’s head several
times in a row, until he was dead… The scene was a disaster. It says the corpse’s head had
been crushed like a watermelon. All the valuables and cash in the house were taken. The police
at the time determined that it had been a burglary.”
“And after?” Fei Du found a bag of instant milk powder somewhere and dissolved it in warm
water, then added extra sugar and put it next to Tao Ran. He asked, “When did this burglary
and murder happen?”
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“After, it came to nothing. Later, the city concentrated on an organized crackdown, dismantling
a few violent criminal gangs. There were some vicious ones who perhaps didn’t even know
themselves how many cases they were responsible for. They confessed to it along with the
others in their confusion.” Tao Ran took the milk, drank a mouthful, and nearly spat it out. He
suspected that Fei Du’s hand had slipped and he’d poured the whole sugar bowl in. It was so
sweet it had become bitter. “The murder took place two years after Zhou Yahou’s death. What
Captain Luo and the others said that day makes sense—Heng’an Orphanage didn’t close
down because of Zhou Yahou’s death… Comrade Fei Du, this is more sugar than goes into
candied fruit.”
“Too sweet?” Fei Du raised his eyebrows very innocently and reached out a hand towards him.
“Then you can give it to me to drink.”
Tao Ran had felt uncomfortable leaving food for other people to eat since he’d been three
years old. He quickly waved a hand as if to show he could make do. He drank a large mouthful,
finishing off half the cup. “In other words, it’s likely the orphanage’s director was the first victim.
The orphans planned their revenge and feigned a burglary, killing the director. Criminal
investigation techniques weren’t developed then, and the deceased’s relatives didn’t insist
afterwards, so it was resolved in this muddled way.”
“Director Hao Zhenhua’s relatives probably knew what business he was in,” Fei Du said. “Even
if they’d known who the killer was, they still may not have dared to look into it. You can seek
sympathy for someone who died in a burglary, but if the truth came out, they may have brought
shame and ruin upon themselves… They probably got a taste for it then and began to follow
this road.—Ge, are you sleepy?”
Perhaps the heat was on too high in the room, and perhaps Fei Du’s low, gentle voice was too
soporific. Tao Ran thought that hearing this shocking inside story, he ought to have been
excited, but now he inexplicably felt that his eyelids were somewhat heavy.
Lu Jia said, “Most of the children the institution took in to raise were girls. Each year on
Christmas, the orphanages Zhou Yahou donated to would send over photographs of girls
between the ages of twelve and fifteen for him to pick from. The ones he picked would be sent
abroad and payment given to the orphanage’s director in the form of a donation, according to
the number. The girls sent over were normally kept in Zhou Yahou’s villa. Sometimes he
entertained friends that were as scummy as him.
“The rest of the girls would be sold to human traders when they grew up. As for the boys…
Boys were more likely to be adopted then, so there weren’t many healthy boys remaining at the
orphanages.
“The girls had to be kept to be given to the bankrollers. They had to look somewhat
presentable, so the orphanage wouldn’t normally go overboard mistreating them. So the boys
those bankrollers didn’t want would experience even more intense abuse. As long as they
could walk straight, they couldn’t be idle. Starting from when they were seven or eight, they
had to earn the cost of their provisions for the orphanage, whether they did it by hiring
themselves out as child labor or by pilfering and stealing. If they couldn’t pay up, the outcome
would be even more terrible. Beatings and scoldings were nothing out of the ordinary, and
then…”
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Lu Jia’s voice recording cut off midway, as though his hand had slipped and he’d accidentally
sent the message before it was finished.
After a while, Lu Jia’s voice continued: “And then, the girls waiting to be sold had to be ‘intact,’
but that problem didn’t exist for the rest of them, so… President Fei, you understand.”
Fei Du lowered his head slightly. His lenses reflected the light, and Tao Ran couldn’t see his
close-by gaze.
Fei Du put his phone aside and plucked Tao Ran’s hand off of himself.
Tao Ran desperately wanted to open his eyes, but in the end he was powerless to resist. The
boundless exhaustion submerged him. “You…”
In a flash, the odd taste of that too-sweet cup of milk came over his tongue, and a thought
flickered through Tao Ran’s mind—why had Fei Du allowed Zhang Donglai to publicly post
those two photographs? Perhaps it had even been Fei Du’s own people who’d posted them.
Since Zhang Donglai was already in his hands, if it had been only to serve as evidence,
couldn’t he have just handed the photographs over to the police?
Tao Ran’s consciousness let out a final inaudible murmur, then dissipated in total defeat.
Fei Du brought some chairs together, carefully laid a cotton-padded overcoat on them, then
picked up a jacket someone had taken off, rolled it into a pillow, and, avoiding Tao Ran’s
wounds, carefully picked him up and arranged him on the chairs.
He looked over Tao Ran’s unwilling sleeping countenance, made himself a cup of coffee, put
on headphones, then used Tao Ran’s access and communications devices to track the police
force’s progress in pursuit of Zhang Chunjiu and his brother.
At 2:45 AM, Zhang Chunjiu and the others had fled to an area near Yan Sea Highway, and an
unknown number called Fei Du’s cell phone.
There was silence over the phone for a moment. “…I didn’t expect you to be the oriole stalking
behind.”
224
“Chairman Zhang.” Fei Du laughed silently. “I was just wondering when I was going to get this
call from you. You truly are composed.”
The police wouldn’t resort to cross-border kidnapping. If they’d really had unfavorable
evidence against him, they’d have come for him with an arrest warrant long ago.
And all the people who had been beside Zhang Donglai were old people they could trust,
people they knew inside and out, some who had even been with them at Heng’an. If Fan
Siyuan’s hand really did stretch that far, he wouldn’t have had to wait until now.
Zhang Donglai absolutely hadn’t been kidnapped by force. He had snuck out himself in the
night, changing his clothes and bringing wine, dressing as though he intended to go out raising
hell with his drinking buddies. Evidently some “friend” who had his trust had tricked him away.
After going through it all, if he hadn’t been able to think of Fei Du, Zhang Chunling could have
poured water out of his head.
And after kidnapping Zhang Donglai, the request had been to exchange him for one person.
That person had been the one who had contacted Su Cheng. So it went without saying whose
hands Su Cheng had fallen into.
Zhang Chunling said grimly, “Su Cheng was your lure. I should have known something was
wrong starting when you escaped the assassination—it wasn’t coincidence, and it wasn’t your
good fortune, either.”
“My luck isn’t any good. I don’t dare to gamble on ‘coincidence.’ Later, I suppose because I
obediently went into the little dark room to be questioned by the investigation team and picked
up some inexplicable squabbles, you overlooked me, Chairman Zhang, not taking me
seriously.” Fei Du rested his elbows on the arms of his chair, two fingers propping his temples,
calmly turning half a circle in the swivel chair. “When Su Cheng disappeared, you thought he
had fallen into Fan Siyuan’s hands. Just in case, you appropriately sent your children to a safe
place… How sincere a parent’s heart, Chairman Zhang.”
“I never imagined I’d be sending him into your hands,” Zhang Chunling said coldly. “President
Fei, the pupil truly surpasses the master.”
“You flatter me,” Fei Du said somewhat coquettishly. “All I had to do was fool that stupid girl
with Su Cheng. Nothing technical about it. You must find it funny, Chairman Zhang.”
Zhang Chunling likely could only have vented his hatred by firing a bullet into Fei Du’s head.
One word at a time, he said, “Enough nonsense. What do you want?”
“What do I want?” Fei Du repeated the question, seeming very thoughtful. “Chairman Zhang,
that doesn’t sound very friendly. I’m a good citizen with a law-abiding business, helping the
police solve a case…”
“Helping the police solve a case with a kidnapping?” Zhang Chunling snorted. “You
deliberately luring my people abroad, was that to help the Chinese police solve a case?
President Fei, my character is rather straightforward. I don’t like going around in circles talking
nonsense. Let’s be honest and not speak in code. I could have another son if I wanted to.
You’d better not think he’s such a strong playing chip.”
Fei Du didn’t speak. He took off one earpiece and put it next to the phone’s receiver.
225
The jumble of voices coming over the earpiece passed at once through the receiver, flowing
over the signal to Zhang Chunling’s ear.
“Five cars in all, the difference in the license plate numbers is…”
“I heard you two grew up in an orphanage. With such a large age difference, it would seem that
Director Zhang isn’t biologically your younger brother.” Fei Du picked the phone up once more
and sighed in a hypocritical display of emotion. “Not related by blood, yet still so much
affection and faith. That’s truly rare. No wonder you’ve never worried about letting him be such
a crucial figure in such a crucial position.”
There was silence on the other end of the phone. Fei Du closed his eyes and could almost
imagine the other’s rage-twisted face.
“Chairman Zhang, even if you manage to run today, afterwards you’ll be a criminal, wanted
everywhere. You’ll have to hide for the rest of your life. You may be extradited any day to come
back and eat lead. It can’t have been easy making it this far. Are you content with that
outcome?” Fei Du lowered his voice. “How about I give you a clear road?”
Zhang Chunling still made no sound, but he didn’t hang up the phone, either.
“You just heard—before, Director Zhang could get internal information from the police. I can
get it, too. I have better connections, better means, more money than he does, and I’m on
good terms with your honored son. I’m also generous. I won’t haggle as much as Fei Chengyu,
who was unwilling even to fund a piece of empty land. Aren’t I an ideal business partner?” Fei
Du said unhurriedly. “My requirements aren’t high, either. I just need you to be a little loyal, not
blow around all over the place, ganging up with all these Zhous and Zhengs… What benefit
can there be to being with trash like that, aside from inviting trouble? I suppose you must have
deep experience on that point, Chairman Zhang?”
Zhang Chunling at last spoke. Clenching his teeth, he said, “Fei Du, you really are Fei
Chengyu’s son, the same stock of greed and malice.”
“You flatter me. Though I’m a little more strong-minded than that good-for-nothing Fei
Chengyu.” Fei Du’s voice was very low, his tone almost gentle; if you didn’t know better, you
might have thought he was coaxing a lover, not making threats and promises to an
unprepossessing elderly man. He said, “My guess is that up to his death, Fei Chengyu had only
found traces of Wei Zhanhong and his ilk. He wouldn’t have known your identity, Chairman
Zhang, isn’t that right? Set your mind at ease. I’m not Fei Chengyu, and you aren’t the same
person you were three years ago. Our collaboration will be smooth.”
Zhang Chunling coldly said, “I don’t know that I’ve changed at all.”
“Forgive me for speaking frankly, but three years ago, you were hiding backstage with victory in
your grasp. Now…” Fei Du laughed silently. “You’re a stray dog at the end of your rope.”
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Over the phone, you could hear Zhang Chunling suck in a breath.
“Your backers, your brother, your reputation, your reputation, your power—in the blink of an
eye, it’s all gone. Chairman Zhang, think carefully. Do you want to be all alone in the world from
now on, fleeing here and there in solitude, or do you want to listen to my arrangements and let
me take care of you and those…capable people under your leadership? I’m very willing. After
all, I’m very fond of Donglai. I don’t especially wish to see him grieved.”
Zhang Chunling was silent for a long time, then finally roughly said, “How do I know you aren’t
playing a trick?”
“Chairman Zhang.” Fei Du sighed. “There’s no value to me in playing a trick on you. Zhang
Donglai is in my hands. If I’d really been planning to give you away to the police, I wouldn’t
have let Zhang Donglai post that status update and alert you. Otherwise, maybe now the police
would be chasing you through the streets along with Director Zhang. Where would you find the
time to haggle with me? I think I’ve demonstrated my sincerity enough as the first party. Don’t
you think so?”
Zhang Chunling choked, unable to get a word out for a long time. He was forced to
acknowledge that Fei Du was making sense and come to terms. “Have Zhang Donglai talk to
me. I’ll send you the meeting place. You’d better come, President Fei.”
Fei Du stood up, noiselessly put a blanket over Tao Ran, picked up his jacket, and walked out.
As he was passing by a corner of the hall, someone quietly asked him, “Are you sure you can
lure him in like this?”
Fei Du was putting on his jacket as he walked. Without turning his head, he said, “We’ve both
‘unveiled our secret intentions.’ Not showing himself now would be admitting defeat. As far as
he’s concerned, catching Zhang Chunjiu alone has no meaning. Unless he’s dead, there will be
a reaction.”
The person asked, “Why didn’t you tell Wenzhou and the others?”
The person didn’t accept this perfunctory explanation. “Too realistic. So realistic it nearly
seems real.—Can I trust you, Fei Du?”
Fei Du’s steps paused. He raised the corners of his mouth ambiguously.
The southeast road out of the city was already firmly sealed. Police sirens shook the sky. The
flickering streetlights swept over Zhang Chunjiu. His face was like a stone. A police car
suddenly charged out of an intersection ahead, red and blue lights flashing as it made its
appearance, blinding them so they couldn’t see how many cars were coming.
“Turn east, go straight through,” Zhang Chunjiu ordered, not batting an eyelash.
“Director Zhang, east of here is the sports park and the East Forest Ski Run, it’s…”
“I know,” Zhang Chunjiu interrupted him evenly. “Drive, don’t waste words.”
The sports park and the enormous ski run divided Yan City’s city center from the East Forest
suburb. It was in a crevice, something outside of anyone’s jurisdiction. Apart from the little
commercial district established based on the sports park, all around was a neither here nor
there urban-rural fringe. The streetlights were sparse, and there was traffic year-round.
But in the small hours of the morning on the eve of the New Year, it was for once quiet here.
The five cars located by the police went right over the roadside railing. Wheels almost leaving
the ground, they charged horrifyingly down two sides of a great slope.
Zhang Chunjiu said calmly, “Show those tiresome sham goods some fun.”
The pursuing police cars were drawing close. The car bringing up the rear of Zhang Chunjiu’s
procession suddenly opened its window, and someone threw something outside. In the dark,
the leading police car couldn’t clearly see what it was. By the time they sensed something
amiss, it was already too late. The thing thrown out of the car exploded as soon as it touched
the ground. After an enormous noise, car alarms began to cry madly, and a few police cars
overturned almost at once. Fire flared up instantly, raising a wall of flame.
Meanwhile, the five cars carrying the criminals raised their guns; a hail of bullets came pelting
in from behind the screen of the flames and the explosion.
The quiet early morning, like a porcelain vase fallen from a high place, cracked with an ear-
splitting noise, the firefight coming without warning.
“The ambulance will follow, and the bulletproof vehicles will go on ahead. Split up and hem
them in. They must be pinned down.—Give me the map, be careful of the nearby
communities…” Luo Wenzhou’s words suddenly paused.
“Captain Luo, the urban villages here are mostly concentrated to the west of the road. They
aren’t in this direction. Set your mind at ease. Up ahead, there’s only the East Forest Sports
Park and Ski Run. The ski run closed the day before yesterday and won’t open until the third
day of the New Year. No one will be there now. We can trap them there!”
Luo Wenzhou quickly narrowed his eyes, remembering that when they’d been surreptitiously
tracking down Yang Bo and his mother, Zhou Huaijin had mentioned something—that Heng’an
Orphanage had been located in Yan City’s suburbs, and the place had become a ski run long
ago.
The place where it had all started, the place where it would all end?
Luo Wenzhou’s spine went cold. He suddenly had an ominous premonition out of nowhere.
228
Fei Du arrived at the pre-arranged street garden and looked around. He saw no trace of Zhang
Chunling, but he wasn’t surprised. He quietly sat in his car, waiting.
“You Raise Me Up” was playing on repeat. He tapped the steering wheel with his fingers to the
rhythm.
Suddenly, a bullet brushed against his car, hitting a rock next to his front wheel. The
rebounding bullet leapt up and knocked against the bulletproof glass, making a frightening
bang.
In the rearview mirror, Fei Du glimpsed the cars surreptitiously following unable to hold
themselves back from moving.
Just then, the phone rang, the ringtone exactly the same as the song he was looping. The two
overlaid refrains produced an unusually pleasant sound.
Fei Du couldn’t resist listening to it a little longer before reaching out to pick up the phone.
“Chairman Zhang, I came to rescue you, and you shot at me. What is that supposed to mean?
You’re not indispensable to me, and if your freedom and your son’s life aren’t indispensable to
you, then we’re fated to part…”
Fei Du frowned.
Fei Du slowly rolled down the window and made a gesture aimed behind him.
“Leave by the park’s back gate. I’ll tell you where to go.”
Zhang Chunling had him go around in circles around the street garden. Probably determining
that he’d thrown off his people, he said, “Drive two-hundred meters ahead, stop by the road.
There’s a car ready to take you, if you please, President Fei.”
Fei Du stepped on the brakes and indeed saw a small car parked not far away. He couldn’t
resist taunting Zhang Chunling. “Our interests are the same now, and we’re in a cooperative
relationship. Chairman Zhang, you clearly know I only want to protect you, but you’re so
defensive… A businessperson ought to know when to be generous.”
“The generous all die young,” Zhang Chunling said coldly, then hung up.
Fei Du knew what he meant. He tossed his phone, wallet, and keys into the car and went over
empty-handed. Two people quickly got out of the waiting little car and glared at Fei Du with
hostility, scanning him all over with a detector, wishing they could peel off his skin.
“It’s lucky I don’t have a pacemaker,” Fei Du said, taking a dig, “or I’d have to implore you from
the bottom of my heart.”
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The two people searching him didn’t respond. One raised his head, gave him a grim look, and
opened the car door, indicating for Fei Du to get in.
“Chairman Zhang,” one of Zhang Chunling’s subordinates said, “a few cars came over five
minutes afterwards. There’s a crowd gathered near where Fei Du left his car. They’ve taken a
phone from the car. I figure there’s a tracker on the phone. They seem flustered and are
searching for traces of him in the vicinity.”
Zhang Chunling wasn’t at all taken aback—if Fei Du hadn’t tried anything, he’d have thought it
was strange. “Got it, bring him over as arranged. Be careful.”
Fei Du changed cars three times, being searched each time. When he changed to the last one,
he still didn’t seem angry at all, only looked a little tauntingly at the people searching him. One
of them, who had the look of a chauffeur, suddenly departed from normal behavior, opening his
mouth. “You’re asking a tiger for its skin, President Fei. You have some courage.”
“What, do I seem like the sort of person who’d be very scared of death?” Fei Du shrugged,
then looked at his watch. “It’s nearly four. I’ll just give you a warning, if I’m out of contact too
long, the people looking after Young Master Zhang may become uneasy. Perhaps something
will happen that none of us wants to see.”
The chauffeur said, “Then it seems there isn’t much time left.”
“An hour.” Fei Du’s expression cooled. “Even my patience has limits. At most, I’ll put up with
your boss’s ridiculous suspicions for another hour. Please pass that on to him. He’ll do as he
sees fit if he wants his son.”
The chauffeur, seemingly very loyal to his post, turned to report something. As Fei Du prepared
to get into the third car, his ears suddenly picked up a strange movement. Then something
warm splashed onto the small bare patch on his neck. Fei Du quickly turned his head and saw
the person who’d just searched him falling towards him, his neck sliced nearly halfway through
by a knife. Blood from the carotid artery sprayed all over him. Fei Du instinctively reached out a
hand to block it and was nearly pulled down by the body. The next instant, a hand grabbed
him, hooking firmly around his neck—
Then, the corpse pressing on him was kicked aside, and the person holding his neck forced Fei
Du into the car. His back bumped into the ice-cold car door.
The hand was cold and solid, almost smelling of metal. Fei Du nearly had the illusion that the
smell of blood was accompanied by the dampness of the basement, pressing on his windpipe,
for a moment even overcoming his revulsion at the blood and making him struggle fiercely.
The person impatiently rammed a fist into his unprotected belly. Fei Du’s breath caught; for a
few minutes he was in so much pain he had no awareness. He was completely tied up and
thrown into the backseat.
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There were two people in each of the cars Zhang Chunling had sent, one to drive and one to
search him. This car’s driver, however, had exchanged a few words with him, then without any
warning had risen in revolt, slaughtering his unwary companion.
The driver pulled open the car door and looked loftily down at Fei Du, who was covered in
blood, then suddenly sneered and reached towards Fei Du’s bloodlessly pale face and pulled
his glasses from his nose. The exquisite frames cracked, breaking in two pieces in the man’s
hands, revealing the tracking device hidden in the earpiece—
Fei Du had expected Zhang Chunling to be uncertain of him; it was unavoidable that he would
be searched. At the same time, Zhang Donglai was in his hands, and he was perhaps their
future bankroller and meal ticket. Therefore, even if he was searched, Zhang Chunling would
still have some scruples and not rudely touch his head, and naturally he would overlook the
glasses he always wore.
The driver expressionlessly crushed Fei Du’s glasses on the ground with his foot. “Trash.”
Then he turned and got in the car, stepped on the gas pedal, and sped off in another direction.
At the same time, Zhang Chunling, waiting for Fei Du, realized that things had changed. The
last car he’d sent after Fei Du had fallen out of contact!
Zhang Chunling’s first thought was that Fei Du was playing tricks. But then he thought that,
after making such a fuss, Fei hadn’t even reached his temporary hiding place; would he need
to play tricks out of nowhere now?
What would be the use of coercing a driver and a lackey? The police weren’t so short on
testimony.
Zhang Chunling suddenly stood up, cold sweat coming up on his spine.
Just then, a call came from the phone in that mysteriously vanished car. Zhang Chunling
pushed aside his subordinates and personally picked up. “Hello!”
No one spoke over the phone. Faint white noise crackled. Then, someone played a recording—
“…if I’m out of contact too long, the people looking after Young Master Zhang may become
uneasy…”
“…At most, I’ll put up with your boss’s ridiculous suspicions for another hour…”
Cold sweat vied to pour out of Zhang Chunling’s pores. “Who are you?”
The rustle of the playback filled his eardrums. The other side said nothing.
Click. The phone was hung up, leaving behind a busy signal. Zhang Chungling punched the
tabletop.
Near the park, Lu Youliang had arrived in person at the scene but was sitting in the car, not
showing his face.
231
A plainclothes officer pretending to be Fei Du’s subordinate had searched Fei Du’s car and
picked up the phone and wallet Fei Du had left behind. “Director Lu, he didn’t leave anything
but these two things. The phone is locked, and I’ve gone through the wallet. There’s nothing
but cash and cards.”
Lu Youliang frowned, looking helplessly at Fei Du’s lockscreen. He touched something, and a
fingerprint prompt suddenly jumped up.
“Apart from codes, the phone user’s fingerprints can also unlock it,” the plainclothes officer
patiently explained to the old fogey who couldn’t keep up with the times. “It needs Fei Du
himself to press…”
Before he’d finished speaking, he saw Lu Youliang fish around in his pocket, fishing out a
fingerprint film. Then, under the plainclothesman’s dumbfounded gaze, Lu Youliang pressed
the fingerprint film to the fingerprint pad. “Like this?”
The first line of this draft file was: “If the tracking signal on me has disappeared, then I’m
already in the hands of The Reciter…”
Lu Youliang was horrified. Before he could react to the enormous volume of information
contained in these words, someone next to him called out, “A problem, Director Lu! The signal
from the tracking device on Fei Du suddenly disappeared!”
Fei Du’s draft continued: “If I’ve guessed correctly, the financial backer behind The Louvre that
Gu Zhao investigated was Fei Chengyu. The Reciter believes that a person who has committed
a crime must receive retribution in the same form. This is their faith and their ceremony.
Therefore, Zhang Chunjiu, who made Gu Zhao bear a stigma, has to be publicly arrested, lose
his reputation, and restore Gu Zhao’s good name. The instigators behind The Louvre also have
to accept their fate—Zhang Chunling is one, and ‘the heir to Fei Chengyu’s legacy’ is another.
So if I’ve guessed right, the place where this started is the place where it will end.
The contents came to an abrupt halt. Lu Youliang nearly had a heart attack at his pause.
“The place where this started is the place where it will end.” Perhaps for some people, life was
like an all-encompassing circle, from one end to the other; they were trapped inside it all their
lives, never able to escape.
Zhang Chunjiu’s five cars were herded by the special police from the Yan Sea Highway exit to
the sports park.
The sports park’s footprint was very large. When the weather was good, there were often
amateur athletes training for marathons here. The initial concept had been for a “city oxygen
bar,” so every kind of vegetation had been piled up in it, so concentrated it seemed like virgin
forest. The five cars entered the “man-made virgin forest” just like mice getting into an antiques
storehouse, scattering all over, hard to find.—The air was dry and the plants were parched; if
they dropped bombs at random in the forest, it wouldn’t be any fun.
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The whole area was cordoned off. The police gathered more reinforcements, surrounding the
sports park in layer after layer. A crowd of firetrucks stood at the ready. The search for Zhang
Chunjiu would soon have been going on for over two hours.
Wanted criminals could also exhaust their supplies. Of the five cars, three had already gotten
into trouble. All the broadcasting devices in the park were urging them in unison to give up
resisting and prepare to be arrested. Zhang Chunjiu turned a deaf ear to them. “Stop here.
There’s a lake up ahead. Drive the cars into the water. Let the police go search for them.”
The place he mentioned was next to a little hill in the depths of the sports park—it seemed that
the hill had been there already before the park had been built. It hadn’t been fully developed
yet and seemed to be under construction just now, blocked by “Out of Bounds” signs and
chains.
Zhang Chunjiu, accompanied by a fat man pretending to be Zhang Chunling and a few
subordinates, passed through the fence and familiarly walked up the desolate hill.
The gang of wanted criminals had been brought to an impasse by the police. Seeing his
confident bearing, as if he had a countermove in mind, they hurriedly followed. They traveled
through the thick forest with no traces of human work for about ten minutes, all entirely at sea,
then found unexpectedly that they’d somehow come out of the sports park, secretly leaving
the police encirclement!
“Director Zhang,” the fat man dressed up as Zhang Chunling said fawningly, “you’re pretty
familiar with this place.”
The trees had grown tall and the path had narrowed. The once unpeopled place had become a
scenic spot. Looking down from on high at where the light of morning had yet to reach, there
were tens of thousands of lights, a field of prosperity where everything had changed.
Once he had run up this hill countless times, had even passed nights shivering here on black
nights like this and been captured and brought back.
Zhang Chunjiu swiftly raised his head and looked at the shadowy slope, thinking he could hear
footsteps drawing close.
He subconsciously gripped the handgun in his pocket—the once weak and helpless boy had
become an all-conquering man, but the terror he had felt then seemed to be carved into his
bones…even though he had stabbed that person three times with his own hands.
Zhang Chunjiu came back to himself and silently walked towards the ski run—the wide,
smooth road, the distinctively-styled ski run, everything about the surroundings…in his eyes, all
of it twisted and changed shape, restored to its “original form” of forty years ago.
The high-end, extravagant sports park and the buildings crumbled one by one, changing back
into the barren hill and Heng’an Orphanage. The highway disintegrated before his eyes, falling
into a wasteland of thickly-growing reeds and sorghum.
This wasteland was extremely frightening. Walking through it, you couldn’t show your head. If
you carelessly walked two steps you would step in mud. After it had rained, small lizards and
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toads would shuttle back and forth. Someone’s miserable shrieks went through it,
accompanied by the barking of the orphanage’s vicious dogs…
Zhang Chunjiu gave a fierce start. In the biting cold winter wind, his forehead was covered in
thin sweat.
He remembered there had been a heart logo at the orphanage’s gates. Over the years, a corner
had fallen off, suspended high in front of the ruined courtyard with cage-like metal railings on
both sides. There were always children leaning on the railings, looking out.
Su Hui had been only seven, like a poorly growing little flower, but those people had already
been impatient to “harvest” her. Zhou Yahou didn’t like this sort of pre-adolescent chick, but
she really looked too conspicuous. The higher-ups had seen her photograph and wanted to
take her away ahead of time, even if they sent her as a present.
He remembered that it had been Christmas Day. Heng’an Orphanage, with its connection to
the West, had been hung full of bright red ornaments for the season, and faint Christmas music
had been playing over the loudspeakers. Sometimes it was off-key, giving it a strange, gloomy
atmosphere.
The girl’s hair was messy, her face dirty. She was covered in mud. The young boy was too
small. Not knowing his own limitations, he was pulling his small big sister by the hand. They
were rushing in terror towards the big wilderness. The dogs bared their fangs and howled. One
of them hadn’t been tied up. When the two children were about to reach the big iron gate, it
swiftly leapt out and bit the girl’s calf.
The little boy climbing the metal railing was so scared he nearly passed out. Huge despair rose
up. He watched as the beast tore at the girl’s body, the people drawn by the crowd of dogs
constantly drawing near…
Just then, a human figure rushed over and took the boy from the railing.
This was his big brother. He didn’t know who his parents were or what his own name was.
From the beginning of his memories, it was his big brother who had taken care of him, his big
brother who had given him a name.
His brother stuffed him into a bamboo basket for storing coal, firmly covering him up. He
picked up a wooden stick and tried to drive away the big dog biting the girl. The beast was
salivating. Releasing the bloody girl, it fixed its ghastly gaze on the teenager.
The little boy in the basket watched as the big dog was pushed aside by the thin, frail teenager.
Then those people came over. Cursing, they took away the girl, who had fainted. They thought
it was his big brother who had tried to take Su Hui away. In a towering rage, they ordered the
big dog to bite him, used a lash to whip him. On this day in the dead of winter, they poured
freezing water with shards of ice in it over him. They even ripped open his clothes and stamped
him down to the ground. The men’s filthy bodies were exposed…
The basket was full of soot. In Zhang Chunjiu’s memories, that Christmas Day also seemed
soot-colored. He had cowered feebly in the bamboo basket, watching from among the ashes.
234
Always watching.
“The cars are there!” A subordinate’s excited shout wiped away the soot in front of Zhang
Chunjiu’s eyes. The wretched old orphanage vanished like smoke.
A row of three cars that had been prepared ahead of time was lined up, respectfully waiting
there. There were even weapons prepared inside. The drivers had waited for a long time,
trembling with fear. “Director Zhang, everything is ready.”
“Director Zhang, all the police are in the sports park now, let’s hurry…”
Just then, lights suddenly went up above the stadium, dazzling, and sharp police sirens rose.
Gun barrels aimed at Zhang Chunjiu and the others. Next, five or six police cars surrounded
them from all directions.
Luo Wenzhou silently got out of his car and stood a few steps away, looking at his former
superior with a complicated expression—
“Find Luo Wenzhou, have him take some people over there himself.”
“Where’s Luo Wenzhou? What, sleeping in the duty room again? Still sleeping at this hour?
What does he do with all that sleep?!”
When old Director Zhang had been at his post, he hadn’t been as easy-going in his treatment
of his juniors as Director Lu, constantly ordering the young people under his command around
by their full names. Luo Wenzhou had been ordered around the most by him. This name had
come out of Zhang Chunjiu’s mouth countless times, sometimes calling for him to get to work,
sometimes calling for him to come receive a scolding.
Luo Wenzhou had never expected that a day would come when old Director Zhang would call
his name under these circumstances.
The police had guns, and so did the criminals. Neither side was willing to lay them down first.
They pointed at each other, for a time deadlocked where they were.
Zhang Chunjiu turned his head to look at the person disguised as Zhang Chunling. His posture,
his figure, his attire, his position at the center of a crowd, were enough to make the disguise
convincing. Unless someone who knew him well got a close look, it would be hard to see any
flaw…and if the police could get a close look, then it must mean that the dust had already
settled, and his big brother had left safely long ago.
“You do have some skill, to be able to chase us here.” Zhang Chunjiu turned to Luo Wenzhou.
“Secretly rescuing Zhou Huaijin, shadowing Donglai—it seems that was all you.”
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Luo Wenzhou didn’t respond to this nonsense. Ignoring both sides’ guns, he walked a few
steps straight forward. “Director Zhang, I’d like to ask you for guidance on a certain matter.”
“Three years ago, during his annual vacation, for the sake of protecting a citizen, Lao-Yang was
killed by an escaped criminal while crossing an underpass.—Lao-Yang had a bad knee. He left
the sidewalk for no reason to walk through the underpass. I reported this suspicious point
many times, and every time it was suppressed by you. Can you explain this to me?”
“What is there to explain? He didn’t go out to buy groceries that day. He’d received inside
information and gone to track down a suspicious individual. With the groceries as a screen, he
followed him all the way to the underpass,” Zhang Chunjiu said blandly. “He didn’t catch up to
him. He met an escaped criminal who had been waiting there.”
“An eyewitness said that someone’s dog suddenly went crazy and haplessly enraged the
criminal,” Luo Wenzhou said grimly. “In fact, the sequence of cause and effect is reversed. The
dog felt the criminal’s ill-intent first, then started to bark, because he’d already been planning
to attack a passerby or flee to attract Lao-Yang.”
Yang Zhengfeng, an old timer soon to retire, who hadn’t dared to take the steps two at time
going down into the underpass, with his gout and bone spurs—what kind of heroics had he
been indulging in? He’d thought that he was still a strapping young fellow who could snatch
away a naked blade bare-handed; randomly menacing a passerby was enough to make him
materialize. It was too easy to calculate, not worth mentioning.
“But at death’s door, Lao-Yang didn’t mention the person he had been pursuing. He told Tao
Ran a seemingly meaningless radio frequency—” At this point, Luo Wenzhou’s words suddenly
stopped, because he had seen Zhang Chunjiu smile.
Luo Wenzhou stared for a moment, then suddenly realized something. As though speaking to
himself, he quietly said, “Actually, he didn’t leave those words behind for Tao Ran. Did he leave
them for you? With one last breath left, he didn’t mention the escaped suspicious individual
because he thought that person would certainly be caught… He must have had a partner. The
security cameras didn’t film that person because the two of them weren’t acting together. One
was chasing, the other had gone around ahead to cut him off. This sort of coordination that
doesn’t need verbal communication only works between old partners—that person was you!”
“At the very beginning, someone anonymously sent him some things, fingerprints and a DNA
comparison, and a stack of photographs. The fingerprints and DNA both belonged to a wanted
criminal, and the photographs showed where the fingerprints had been collected. Yang
Zhengfeng didn’t report it.”
“No, because the person who’d sent him the stuff was not only a killer, he was a ‘dead
person.’”
Zhang Chunjiu laughed scornfully. “I don’t know what kind of potion Fan Siyuan fed him that
made him choose to conceal this business and secretly investigate it himself. The Reciter’s
submissions to that program were Fan Siyuan hinting to him which cases had something
unusual about them. In fact, he had an ulterior motive—he was also protecting that nut job. He
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didn’t tell me about him until just before his death. Fan Siyuan is a nut job. He killed six people,
was wanted by the police, and jumped into the ocean. I cherished his talents and sent
someone to rescue him. I didn’t expect that I would be rescuing a wretch who bites the hand
that feeds him.”
“My big brother and I didn’t see people directly, including Zheng Kaifeng’s sort. For ordinary
contact with customers and for running errands, we used the people close to us, people we
trusted.”
“During the course of the investigation, Lao-Yang couldn’t have avoided using his privileges to
look into some old case files. It’s no surprise you discovered that,” Luo Wenzhou said. “But he
was investigating a mole. How did you gain his trust?”
“You have it backwards.” Zhang Chunjiu smiled strangely. “The question is, how did he gain my
trust?”
“If you want to attain a person’s trust, the best thing to do isn’t to desperately try to prove to
him that you and he are on the same side. It’s the reverse. You have to make him realize that
you’re on guard against him, entice him into racking his brains trying to win your trust,” Zhang
Chunjiu said. “I pretended that I was secretly investigating Gu Zhao’s case, and investigating
very cautiously, covering up my tracks as I investigated, so he only discovered a trace ‘by
chance.’ I made him realize that I was not only investigating, but for some reason, he was the
one I suspected. I patiently played a game of ‘probing’ and ‘counter-probing’ with him for half a
year—finally, Yang Zhengfeng made me ‘believe’ that he wasn’t the mole.”
At this point, Zhang Chunjiu, looking at Luo Wenzhou, suddenly changed the subject. “Does it
sounds unfathomable? Hasn’t Fei Du done that to you?”
“First he schemed to get close to you, then accidentally revealed his defenses, got you
confused and disoriented, going all out running after him, racking your brain to prove yourself
to him and win his trust. When you’d fully fallen into his trap, you still had to suffer all manner of
hardships to win yourself the ‘higher ground’ and feel complacent—do you really think he’s any
good?” Zhang Chunjiu shook his head. “Luo Wenzhou, you’re as full of yourself as your shifu
was.”
Luo Wenzhou sighed. “Director Zhang, in your position, don’t take the trouble to worry about
other people’s business.”
“Of course, two negatives make a positive.” Zhang Chunjiu spread his hands towards him,
displaying an expression of unclear meaning. “If a reprehensible person like me says he’s no
good, then that may just go to show that his moral character is all right. That’s not for certain.
See what you think. Perhaps he did grow unsullied out of the mud. The Fei family didn’t start
out doing any kind of honorable business, and later Fei Chengyu had his father-in-law
assassinated for his money and only gradually entered a close relationship with us based on
that business. That person—Fei Chengyu. He was so greedy he really was like a monster
wearing a human skin. He was the one who started plotting against us. Thirteen years ago, he
conspired with Fan Siyuan to infiltrate us bit by bit and use the police to cut away our other
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major customers one after another, to make us have to depend on him like stray dogs,
becoming the knife in his hand.”
Luo Wenzhou said, “So their first step was to use the suspicious points about Gu Zhao’s case
to lure Lao-Yang into investigating a few dens where wanted criminals were hidden—whose
dens were these?”
“Most of them had been built with Wei Zhanhong’s money. Wei Zhanhong was young, wildly
ambitious, really a little demented. His activities were too eye-catching. Fei Chengyu and Fan
Siyuan planned to make the first cut with him.” Zhang Chunjiu shook his head. “Although those
two really did take everyone for idiots.”
“You used Lao-Yang to expose them instead,” Luo Wenzhou said grimly. “And Fei Chengyu’s
car crash was your doing.”
Zhang Chunjiu hooked the corners of his mouth, silently acknowledging the charge.
“But Fan Siyuan got away. You knew he wasn’t finished yet, and you knew that the ‘empire’
you’d single-handedly built had been infected by him with a virus you couldn’t eliminate. So
you took precautionary measures. First, taking advantage of the mess in the Fei family after Fei
Chengyu’s car crash, you tricked Su Cheng into boarding your pirate ship, then deliberately
tampered with the surveillance installations in the bureau—that way, even if you retired or were
transferred, you could still get the information you wanted any time. And if it was exposed,
Director Ceng would muddle his way into being your scapegoat, and Su Cheng and Fei
Chengyu would become the ‘masterminds behind the scenes.’”
“And you purposefully brought up the ‘Picture Album’ again—that’s right. It was Teacher Pan
who named the Picture Album Project, but it was you who raised a project plan nearly identical
to the ‘Picture Album’ from back then.”
“Because during the first Picture Album Project, you used Fan Siyuan as a cover to kill
someone yourself.”
“Why would I want to do that?” Zhang Chunjiu said. “Was I only too anxious to have someone
uncover me?”
“Because you knew better than Fan Siyuan why that unfortunate art teacher and lunatic had to
die. You knew that even if that case was investigated from top to bottom, you still wouldn’t be
implicated in any way. A normal person would think that the real killer would have loved nothing
better than to wipe this thing out of existence. They absolutely wouldn’t voluntarily bring it up.
—When Lao-Yang died, it was likely Fan Siyuan would follow the traces and get his eye on
you. You wanted to use this method to dispel his suspicions. When the investigation team
reached you, you even used that bit of foreshadowing to incriminate Fan Siyuan and Teacher
Pan together. Truly a stroke of genius.”
“Don’t disgust me. The outcome wasn’t at all ideal,” Zhang Chunjiu said rather carelessly.
“That mad dog Fan Siyuan saw through it and realized that it was me—I don’t know why. I
think it may have been because I didn’t come from Yan Security Uni like them?”
“Director Zhang.” He lowered his head slightly and went on with great difficulty. “On the day
we…we saw off Lao-Yang, you personally came to order each of us to put on our uniforms
properly, personally led us to take part in the funeral. What were you thinking then?”
There was a moment where a subtle change came over Zhang Chunjiu’s expression. His lips,
as thin as a line, curled, and his jaw tensed.
“Lao-Yang was your friend for twenty years, the type that would entrust his wife and child to
you, a friendship of life and death. He hadn’t wronged you in any way. Officer Gu came to the
City Bureau in the same year as you and took you as a big brother. The two of them trusted
you at the most dangerous times, asked you to watch their backs. When you stabbed each of
them in the back, did you feel happy? Did you make fun of their stupidity?”
Zhang Chunjiu was silent for a long time, then forced a smile. “…Are you saying that to prick
my conscience?”
Pointing at the fat man hiding behind him, Luo Wenzhou said, “Zhang Chunling is your brother,
so Lao-Yang and Officer Gu weren’t your brothers anymore?”
For some reason, when he heard the name “Zhang Chunling,” the faint wavering in Zhang
Chunjiu’s face vanished. He was like a river turning cold again after a moment of warmth, his
human feelings like a spring breeze blowing across the surface, temporarily thawing the thick
layers of ice under his skin. But soon, a more ruthless chill swept over everything, once more
solidifying his heart into iron and stone.
“Captain Luo!”
Without any warning, Zhang Chunjiu got out the hand stuck into the pocket of his jacket and
shot a gun right at Luo Wenzhou.
Sadly, while Luo Wenzhou’s speech had been uncommonly heartfelt and sincere, he hadn’t
relaxed his vigilance. As soon as Zhang Chunjiu’s shoulder moved, he was on the alert. At the
same time, a fully-armed special police officer next to him pushed him aside, and the bullet hit
a bulletproof shield. Luo Wenzhou quickly rolled away.
The peace talks had come to an end. Zhang Chunjiu fired at him three times. “What are you
standing there for, hurry up…”
He suddenly stopped, staring blankly, because the people who had come to rescue him,
looking cool with their sub-machine guns hanging around their necks, all raised their hands.
Zhang Chunjiu instantly understood something and looked swiftly towards Luo Wenzhou.
Luo Wenzhou patted dirt off of himself. “I know this is the former location of Heng’an
Orphanage.”
“Sorry, Director Zhang. I’ve found some things you didn’t want people to know, so I got here a
step ahead and have been waiting here for you,” Luo Wenzhou said quietly. “Director Zhang, all
these years you’ve spent venting the pain you experienced onto others, has it helped?
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“You clearly knew that Zheng Kaifeng and Zhou Yahou were birds of a feather, and you still
wallowed in the mire with him.” Luo Wenzhou turned a deaf ear on him. “Do you have
nightmares? Do you dream of the monsters that hurt you when you were little? Have you been
afraid all these years, feeling that you couldn’t surmount them, that you couldn’t face them,
and so you had to become like them…”
“Shut up!”
“You knew that Zhang Chunling couldn’t control himself. He even went to Su Hui, like Zhou
Yahou, like those heavy-jowled, pot-bellied assholes. It’s written down in Su Xiaolan’s diary. A
girl who had just started elementary school—
“Who did Zhang Chunling take her for? The little Su Hui, who was the same age back then at
Heng’an Orphanage?”
Luo Wenzhou’s gaze met Zhang Chunjiu’s in midair. He saw that the man’s eyes were
bloodshot, like a trapped beast forced into a dead end. Zhang Chunjiu suddenly laughed
quietly and slowly pressed down on his own chest. “You understand shit.—Luo Wenzhou,
Young Master Luo… Have you ever been beaten? Have you ever been hungry? Do you know
what it means to be afraid all the time?”
As he spoke, he slowly pulled his hand out of his inside pocket. The muzzles of seven or eight
policemen’s guns locked on him at the same moment—Zhang Chunjiu was holding a small
detonator!
“You don’t know anything, so don’t stand there talking about it.” One word at a time, Zhang
Chunjiu said, “I’ll tell you a secret…”
Luo Wenzhou had no attention to spare, but he heard desperate panting from the other end,
and Tao Ran struggling to spit out two characters in a wretchedly hoarse voice—
“Fei Du is a good child.” Zhang Chunjiu lowered his voice strangely, his words coinciding with
Tao Ran saying “Fei Du” over the earpiece. Luo Wenzhou’s pupils contracted.
“The bombs were buried at the former location of Heng’an Orphanage, from where the building
used to be, all the way to the back courtyard,” Luo Wenzhou said. “We’ve already dismantled
them.—Director Zhang, the orphanage has also been dismantled for many years. No matter
how much you hated it, this place has changed. What meaning does it have now?”
Luo Wenzhou pressed his earpiece with one hand. Though he would have loved nothing better
than to dive through the phone, he still had to divide his attention and deal with the person in
front of him. “It’s all over, Director Zhang.”
There was a faint smile at the corners of Zhang Chunjiu’s lips. “Oh, really?”
Luo Wenzhou realized something was wrong. The next instant, a heatwave exploded. An
enormous sound rendered him temporarily deaf, and something hit his bulletproof vest.
Someone seemed to be pushing him. His pupils contracted rapidly at a powerful light—the
“Zhang Chunling” hidden among the crowd behind Zhang Chunjiu had exploded!
Unidentifiable pieces of flesh and blood flew through the fire. A person raising his hands in
surrender had been standing next to the human bomb; one of his raised arms disappeared
without a trace, and half of his face caught fire. Maybe he was scared witless; he stood
unmoving where he was and began to shriek.
All the bulletproof shields rose at once. The well-trained special police quickly broke away and
sought cover. Zhang Chunjiu fell forward heavily onto the ground. His back seemed to be on
fire, burning painfully. Raised earth and stones spurted right towards him. He saw the police
come together in confusion. His ears thundered. He couldn’t hear anything. He could feel the
exquisite explosion from the tremors in the earth.
The smells of blood and gun smoke were chokingly thick. The only imperfection was that the
much-renovated surface of the ground had changed, changed into some mixture of asphalt,
cement, and rubber…not the stinking mud that it had been back then.
In all his dreams, Zhang Chunjiu could smell the stink of that mud, because his head had been
stamped into it more than once when he’d been young. The hatred engraved in his memory
came with it, permeating the mud like a toxin. Now, having passed through so many years, the
venom at last exploded like a gushing oil well.
Apart from the fat man dressed up as Zhang Chunling, he’d had five people with him. Each
person had a secret little strongbox on him. Zhang Chunjiu had told them that these contained
cash and gold bars for emergency use, had them divide them up amongst themselves and
carry them with them. The fake Zhang Chunling didn’t need to personally carry a bag, so the
explosives had been hidden in the stuffing at his underbelly.
He’d had two plans. If he couldn’t detonate the bombs underground, the bombs on those five
people would still be enough to blow this place sky high—with the police on the scene all
serving as sacrificial victims. Faced with a pile of body parts, the medical examiners would
have had to work overtime until the Lantern Festival to separate them out, and Zhang Chunling
would have escaped long ago.
Most importantly, this way, he could happily go to his death, not fall into the hands of the police
and suffer their interrogations and trials.
They weren’t qualified—no one on earth was qualified to judge his crimes.
Zhang Chunjiu, lying prostrate on the ground, turned his head slightly to look in the direction of
the sports park. The small practice field looked back at him peacefully and quietly through the
guard rail. Then the practice field gradually dissolved, turning into the metal fence surrounding
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the old courtyard. Those children stared at him silently, lifelessly, like a row of sinister little
ghosts.
He smiled at them.
Just then, Zhang Chunjiu’s chest went hollow. The illusion of the old courtyard walls and the
little ghosts dissipated at once. He was roughly pulled up off the ground. Zhang Chunjiu’s eyes
were still dazed. For a moment he couldn’t understand what had happened. Something closed
onto his wrist. Luo Wenzhou, clutching his collar, was roaring something. Zhang Chunjiu
instantly opened his eyes wide and realized something was wrong.
Zhang Chunjiu found the strength somewhere to struggle out of Luo Wenzhou’s grip and
suddenly turn around—apart from the fake Zhang Chunling, the other five “bombs” were all
mute! Those cowards had taken shelter here and there, shivering, not paying attention to the
suitcases they were carrying. One of the suitcases had fallen and opened. Waste paper and
stones fell out from inside it. The bomb that had originally been in there had vanished!
Most of the old newspapers stuffed into the suitcase had already burned up in the fire. A
corner of one of them floated in front of Zhang Chunjiu’s eyes. There was still some faintly
distinguishable writing on it. The date was fourteen years ago, and the article was about the fire
at The Louvre—
Zhang Chunjiu began to roar and was pressed against the ground by the policemen surging
up.
Luo Wenzhou handcuffed Zhang Chunjiu and immediately left him to his colleagues. He raised
a hand to feel a little scratch on his forehead, then returned the call that had dropped just now.
It didn’t connect. Tao Ran’s phone was turned off!
Tao Ran had spent a long time trying struggle free of his nightmares. When he’d woken and
seen that it was still pitch black outside, he hadn’t known how long he’d been unconscious.
Panicked and confused, his first reaction had been to grab his phone and call Luo Wenzhou.
But when he’d just connected, before he had time to say anything, there’d been a huge sound
on the other end. Tao Ran’s hand had trembled in fright, and he’d rolled right off his chair,
knocking the battery out of his phone. As a half-immobilized injured person, Tao Ran had had
to exert enormous strength to turn himself over, crawling over the floor feeling around
everywhere for the parts of his phone.
Luo Wenzhou called six times without connecting. Remembering how Tao Ran had said “Fei
Du” without any follow-up, his chest was about to explode. For a moment, his mind was blank.
His colleagues next to him had already quickly searched the suspects for other inflammable
and explosive materials. A police officer ran over. “Captain Luo, there’s one dead and one
seriously injured. The dead person seems to be Zhang Chunling. It’s likely he was carrying the
explosive.”
Luo Wenzhou’s fingers almost subconsciously hung up and redialed. “Impossible. Zhang
Chunling couldn’t be the first to become a human bomb. And just now that fat guy didn’t say a
single word. That doesn’t seem like Zhang Chunling’s style. It was a front.”
“Huh? A front?” His colleague was confused. With a rather complicated expression, he looked
over to where Zhang Chunjiu had been shoved into a police car not far off. “You’re saying that
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Director Zhang… No, Zhang… Whoever, that he personally lured us away to shield Zhang
Chunling? So where has Zhang Chunling gone?”
Luo Wenzhou had no attention to spare to answer—the seventh call had connected!
Tao Ran was sitting collapsed onto the ground, feeling he hardly looked human. Panting, he
said to Luo Wenzhou, “Fei Du…Fei Du drugged me, I…I don’t know where he’s gone…”
As Tao Ran spoke, he turned his head to look. The computer he’d used to look into Hao
Zhenhua was turned on. Under the screen were a walkie-talkie and his other phone—many
police officers normally used two phones, a personal phone and one provided by their
employers, normally used specifically for work.
“He touched my computer, walkie-talkie, and work phone before he left.” Dragging his cast-
encased leg, Tao Ran moved with difficulty, shifting over next to the chair and going to the
computer. “Just now… Your pursuit of Director Zhang, and those status updates Zhang
Donglai posted… That bastard!”
Tao Ran tried to climb into the chair but failed. He really couldn’t resist bursting out into a curse
that might not be heard from him once in twenty years. “Those photographs Zhang Donglai
posted were wrong, he didn’t post them for us to see, he…”
Luo Wenzhou’s nerves had been concentrated on Zhang Chunjiu. He hadn’t had time to think
carefully. Hearing the thread of Tao Ran’s conversation now, he came around and swiftly raised
his head, looking at Zhang Chunjiu. The blood that had poured from Zhang Chunjiu’s ears had
already dried. Through the car window, he was looking coldly at him.
Zhang Chunjiu must have mentioned Fei Du just now in order to distract him, to smooth the
way for the explosion…but why had it been Fei Du he’d brought up? Who had those two
photographs posted under Zhang Donglai’s username been for? Where was Zhang Chunling?
Also…when Zhang Chunjiu had been preparing this drama for so long, it shouldn’t have ended
with only one dead and one seriously injured. Where were the other bombs? Why hadn’t they
gone off?
A few police officers urgently clearing the scene were rushing here and there gathering the
scraps of newspaper that had fallen out of the suitcase. Luo Wenzhou looked over and
instantly understood something. Not waiting for Tao Ran to speak, he hung up the phone and,
gritting his teeth, dialed another number. “Hello—Director—Lu. How—are—you?”
Fei Du was shaken awake. When he’d just recovered a bit of awareness, he was picked up and
thrown out of the car. It was dim all around, and he was unsteady on his feet. As soon as they
touched the ground, he stumbled. He couldn’t use his arms, which were tied behind his back,
to keep his balance. He fell rather awkwardly to the ground.
The smell of the blood sticking to him made him want to throw up, and Fei Du had no interest
in struggling. He simply rolled over where he’d fallen and laughed.
The driver who had grabbed him couldn’t stand to watch his arrogance. He kicked him in the
chest. “What are you laughing at!”
Fei Du really wasn’t remarkable for physical strength. At the kick, he flew a length over the
ground and immediately began to cough. His blood-soaked hair covered one of his eyes. After
a good while, he finally caught his breath. He quietly sighed with emotion and said, “How truly
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barbaric. Teacher Fan, this good subordinate of yours has been pawing at me the whole way.
It’s anti-intellectual, and truly in poor taste.”
Hearing these lines, the “barbarian” immediately stepped forward, planning to let him know
what pawing truly meant. Just then, not far off there was a frail-sounding cough. A sickly male
voice spoke. “Enough, don’t give him something to laugh about.”
Hearing these words, in the blink of an eye, the barbaric kidnapping driver turned from a teeth-
grinding, blood-sucking wild beast into a domesticated animal. He agreed obediently and
retreated a few steps.
Fei Du turned his head with difficulty and saw a woman come over pushing a wheelchair—if
Luo Wenzhou had been there, he could have recognized the woman as the front desk
receptionist who had passed him a note at the Great Fortune Building.
And sitting in the wheelchair was a man. His skeleton was holding up his big frame with
difficulty, but he had lost weight dramatically. He was wearing a plain knit cap on his head, and
his neck was feebly turned to one side. He was watching Fei Du with a smile that wasn’t quite
a smile…
Despite the bold mark this man had left in the depths of his consciousness, Fei Du nearly didn’t
recognize him.
The man in the wheelchair looked at Fei Du with a gaze full of interest, motioning for the
woman behind him to push him closer. The barbarian driver immediately walked over to stand
beside him and protect him to the death, like an utterly loyal dog, glaring menacingly at Fei Du
—Fei Du could only smile at him very helplessly, demonstrating that he was an invalid who
could only be kicked around; he didn’t have the ability to leap up and bite someone under
these circumstances.
Both the nearby cement floor and the suspended ceiling were undecorated, with years of
accumulated dust on them. A few power cords reached from somewhere and hung
precariously, a couple of lightbulbs tied to the copper wires. There was barely adequate light.
At the least movement, the lightbulbs shook. Looking at it too long was dizzying.
Under the disorderly light, the flickering human shadows came and went. In every direction, the
corners hid an unknown number of people. The echoes of footsteps rose and fell. Among these
people were probably the fake security guard from the Longyun Center, Wang Jian, and the
fake patrolman from the Drum Tower…and so on, and so on. They normally hid in corners
others couldn’t see, like unspeaking human props. No one knew how much unremovable
hatred you would find if you opened their chests.
Fei Du could almost feel the gazes of those people watching him. They were ice-cold—the icy
cold of judgment. If not for the fact that he was still useful, they probably would have wanted to
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raise a stake and imitate the citizens who had burned witches in the Middle Ages, roasting him
into a skewer on the spot.
“Teacher Fan,” Fei Du said to the man, “thirteen years ago, I saw you at home once, but it was
too long ago. I’m not quite sure—I do have the right person, don’t I?”
“You’re more cool-headed than Fei Chengyu, more patient than him, more composed. And you
can camouflage yourself better,” the man in the wheelchair said. He spoke slowly, and his voice
was quiet, as if he didn’t have enough strength, full of a sense of sickness and weakness. “So
young. You really are too frightening.”
Fei Du seemed somewhat astonished to hear such high praise. He tried to move and felt a
sharp pain beneath his ribs. He suspected that the driver had broken a rib with that kick just
now. Fei Du relaxed his breathing as much as he could and found himself a more comfortable
position. “I’m a captive. How frightening can I be?”
Fan Siyuan beckoned, and a few people came over pushing a hospital bed. There were some
pieces of simple life-preserving equipment on the hospital bed, wrapped around an old man
who had been lying down for three years. This was Fei Chengyu, who had mysteriously
vanished from the sanatorium.
Fei Chengyu wasn’t moving at all. His muscles had atrophied. His arms, merely skin and bone,
lay at his sides, the deathly pale skin very slack, the texture of a rotten pancake. Fei Du looked
at him absently and quickly looked away, not feeling any surprise that Fei Chengyu would
appear here.
“You were unconscious the whole way, so now you must not know where this is. We’ve
removed all the tracking devices on you. You’re all alone and in my hands, but you aren’t
panicked or afraid.” Fan Siyuan looked at him calmly and pointed at Fei Chengyu. “This person
has the closest blood relationship to you. He used the techniques of abuse to mold you,
shackle you, but there isn’t any hatred in your gaze looking at him, I could even say no
movement, as though you were looking at a piece of expired meat. You don’t know fear or
pain, so you can be precise and ruthless. Fei Chengyu didn’t amount to anything in his life, but
cultivating you may be a redeeming quality. You really are an ideal monster.”
“We still have a while to wait,” Fan Siyuan said. “A crucial figure hasn’t arrived yet. I can speak
to you a little. What do you want to say?”
“Oh, I see, I can’t just say anything.” Fei Du thought about it, then asked, “I see you aren’t in
good health. What’s going on?”
“A tumor. At first it was lung cancer. Now it’s metastasized. There’s nothing to be done, only
chemo. Chemo is very painful. At my age, I don’t plan on continuing to torment myself,” Fan
Siyuan answered frankly. “I’ll give you some advice from an old man. Smoking is bad for your
health.”
“I don’t have that bad habit. If these subordinates of yours could be as pleasant to deal with as
you are, Teacher Fan, perhaps I can remain healthy a little longer,” Fei Du said politely. Then he
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sighed rather sadly. “Zhang Chunling really is useless. He’s not dead himself, but he’s gotten
flustered and left such a large opening.”
“If not for that, how would I have known that you, the innocent President Fei, were the oriole at
the center of the web? We old fellows have all been duped by you. You really are too deep,”
Fan Siyuan said. “But now that I mention it, I don’t think it’s surprising. After all, you are Fei
Chengyu’s son. There was poison in your bones from the moment you were born.”
“Teacher Fan, that’s very unfair of you to say. If I hadn’t gotten mixed up in this and driven the
Zhang brothers thoroughly to the end of their ropes, would your people have been able to
invade the enemy’s interior so easily? The two of us are natural allies to start with. It’s very
unfriendly of you to talk about me like that.”
“Shut up!” Before Fan Siyuan could say anything, the driver standing guard beside him became
enraged. “Who’s your ally? Trash! Sinner!”
Fei Du shrugged, an unspeakable craftiness permeating his smile. “You collaborated closely
with my father over a decade ago, and now we’ve finally taken down Zhang Chunling and his
gang… Of course, I’ve only put in a little force in this. Most of the credit goes to you. Teacher
Fan, you’re the elder. Just say the word, and of course I’ll offer up that old dog Zhang Chunling
with both hands.”
Hearing how he planned to take a share of the spoils without taking part in the plot, the driver
was beside himself with rage. Likely he thought he was polluting the air by breathing here.
Agitated, he said, “Teacher has done this to…”
Fan Siyuan waved a hand to interrupt his subordinate’s speech. “I’m not interested in
controlling anyone, and I don’t want Zhang Chunling to become my dog. From the start, I’ve
only wanted to destroy them.”
Fei Du raised his eyebrows, feigning astonishment. “Teacher Fan, you aren’t going to tell me
that you’re an undercover police officer? Killing six people in a row is too high a threshold for
going undercover.”
“Those scumbags deserved their punishment!” These words came from some believer’s
mouth. The words “deserved their punishment” echoed in the empty underground room. It was
ghastly.
“While I’m not a police officer, most of those who trained to be police officers back then were
my students. I understand them,” Fan Siyuan said. “In a certain sense, the police are only
mechanical props, following a rigid institution, obeying a rigid sequence. And most of them are
only using it as a job to feed their families. They’re powerless. Fairness, righteousness? These
things…”
At this point, Fan Siyuan laughed coldly. Behind him, all of his believers were filled with
stereotyped righteous indignation. Their righteous indignation was unusually pious. Fei Du
simply felt that he’d wandered by mistake into the den of some cult.
“But I couldn’t see back then where this colossus was, and I wasn’t in a position to investigate
it. They had eyes in the City Bureau. They were everywhere. If I lightly touched the edge of it, I
would have ended up like…” Fan Siyuan’s words came to an abrupt halt, the rest of what he
was going to say disappearing. After a good while, he went on: “There was nothing to be done.
If I wanted to get close to it, I had to descend into the shadows myself, descend into the
abyss, become one with them… There was nothing I could do.
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“Destroying one person, one family, is too easy. You think these malicious pieces of garbage
should die, but they can easily evade retribution. And even if one victim has the luck to have
the demon put to death, so what? Most killers don’t have to pay with their lives. Most of those
who ought to die only eat and drink for free in prison for a few years. The price they pay isn’t
enough to atone for their crimes.”
This time, there was no need for Fei Du to pretend. He displayed a very natural “Are you
crazy?” expression. “Oh… So you’re an unpaid volunteer judge?”
Fan Siyuan ignored him. The old man’s gaze passed over his head, passed through the cement
walls and the suspended ceiling, seeming to fall on a very distant place. “Much of the time,
studying criminal psychology makes you very unhappy, because the more you know, the more
you understand that those people—especially those guilty of heinous crimes, the most
demented ones—even if they’re arrested and brought to justice, they don’t know regret at all.
Some people are even pleased with their own control over others’ lives. Like you, President
Fei.”
Fei Du felt that it would be best for him to keep his mouth shut at this time. Thereupon he
could only smile.
“The more you understand these things, the more hopeless you feel. But sometimes there will
be a few people who give you consolation, make you think there’s still hope for the world, that
there are still things in this system that you’re reluctant to part with, that not everything you’re
doing is a futile effort.”
A bullet instantly brushed past him. Fan Siyuan raised his eyelids. “I don’t especially want to
hear his name from your mouth.”
“After that fire fourteen years ago, the only meaning left in my life was to make sure those who
deserved to die got what was coming to them.”
Fei Du seemed to be silently digesting for a while. “Zhang Chunling and the others took in
wanted criminals, so you turned yourself into a wanted criminal, succeeded in infiltrating them.
But after you’d infiltrated, you found that this organization was more enormous that you’d
imagined, and you were at the outskirts. So you and Fei Chengyu, each with your own sinister
designs, hit it off easily and used each other—he wanted to weaken the organization and
control it himself, and you wanted them all to die… Teacher Fan, I really admire your type of
psychopath.”
“Teacher Fan.” The woman pushing the wheelchair looked at Fei Du with a hateful gaze. “This
sort of trash isn’t worth you making a mental effort.”
Fei Du raised his eyebrows at her slightly coquettishly. “Hey, young lady, have I offended you?”
The gaze of the woman pushing the wheelchair was like a knife, instantly stabbing a hole in Fei
Du. “A scumbag who owes a debt like you ought to have sentence passed upon him!”
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“Owe a debt? Whom do I owe?” Fei Du smiled as he looked at her, peach blossom eyes
curving, plump lower eyelids emerging naturally under his eyes. “I never owe debts to beautiful
young ladies, unless…”
Before Fei Du finished speaking, a bullet came from above, piercing through his ankle.
The sharp pain twisted through him. Fei Du groaned, all the blood in his body seeming to turn
to cold sweat and pouring off of him. He curled his legs up painfully, leaving a long trail of
blood on the ground. The change in the tempo of his breathing aggravated the injury to his
ribs. Fei Du couldn’t maintain in his sitting posture any longer. He sat collapsed on the ground.
Fan Siyuan raised his head. High up, there was a man with friendly, good-natured features
holding a gun. “Teacher, you see it. This sort of person doesn’t cry until he’s seen the coffin!”
These words of his nearly brought out the “people’s wrath.” All around was a babble of voices
—
“What’s the use of the law? It can’t distinguish between good and evil. This sort of person
might only pay a bit of a fine and then get away clean, go on being powerful and entitled,
continue to harm people.”
“I spit!”
Fei Du had never expected that he would one day face this sort of universal contempt. After he
had endured the worst of the initial pain, he laughed breathlessly. “Doesn’t cry until he’s seen
the coffin… Pft… Haha, ladies and gentlemen, I don’t mind telling you, I won’t cry even if I do
see a coffin.”
Fan Siyuan’s believers had become the embodiment of “a tooth for a tooth.” Nothing else
could fit in their minds. Hearing that he could still spout nonsense at a time like this, they were
overcome with rage, planning to swarm up in a crowd and trample him.
“Teacher Fan.” Fei Du turned over amidst the public wrath, casually setting aside his injured
ankle, lying there relaxed, idly half-closing his eyes. Amidst the clamor of those wanting to peel
off his skin and rip out his sinews, he unhurriedly said, “Could I trouble you to take some care?
I would die very easily. If you touch me again, I won’t be able to hold up to you judging my
crimes.”
“You all fantasize every day that you’re righteous judges, and the climax comes when others
weep bitter tears in front of you, kneeling on the ground in repentance, hopelessly and
regretfully waiting for you to unfeelingly pronounce your unforgiving judgement—isn’t that
right? How can a sinner be allowed to die a natural death? How can he meet death easily?
How can he die privately, without undergoing your trial and sentencing? A dead person can’t
feel anything, isn’t that right?” Fei Du carelessly turned his head and spat out a mouthful of
bloody saliva from biting the inside of his cheek, but the smile at the corners of his mouth was
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increasingly obvious. “Only a sadist can know what a sadist feels. How about it, do I
understand you all?”
Just then, urgent footsteps suddenly broke through the silent confrontation. A middle-aged
man charged in, bent down, and said something to Fan Siyuan. The next instant, the sound of
gunfire came from outside.
Fei Du raised his eyebrows. “Oh, the long-awaited guest arrives—do you think he’ll kill you or
me first?”
Two people came over, one on each side, and roughly hauled him up.
Howling police sirens surrounded the former location of The Louvre. This place had changed
hands and been renovated many times. It had become a combination movie theater,
supermarket, and eating, drinking, and merrymaking complex.
The on-duty staff member in charge totteringly followed after the police, looking bewildered.
“Officer, we only open at ten, there’s no one here. There are just these few nighttime security
guards, and they’re all here. What are you looking for?”
The security camera records for the mall, the underground parking lot, and all the traffic
cameras and surveillance cameras within a kilometer radius were requested. Everyone
hurriedly searched through them, sweating—there was nothing.
The night was as calm as water. They went through the security camera records several times
on fast-forward…
Lu Youliang’s scalp went numb. He’d heard that Fei Du was a very reliable person, and when
he’d come into contact with him, he’d also thought that, apart from being too deep a thinker,
there was nothing else wrong with him. He was much steadier than these youngsters who
would drop the ball at the critical moment. He hadn’t expected to become the first person to
be landed in a hole by him!
His voice wasn’t loud, and based solely on his words, he was speaking reasonably. But
Director Lu for a time didn’t quite know how to answer. Putting himself in Luo Wenzhou’s
shoes, he felt that the next moment he would burst into vulgar language over the obstruction of
the phone signal—of course, even if Luo Wenzhou really did speak rudely, Director Lu could do
nothing but pardon it.
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But instead, the two of them were silent over the phone for five seconds, and Luo Wenzhou
didn’t erupt. “Fei Du’s message says, ‘The place where this started is the place where it will
end.’ But there’s no one at the old location of The Louvre.”
Lu Youliang said grimly, “Zhang Chunjiu betrayed Gu Zhao and made him bear a stigma, dying
unjustly. Gu Zhao died in the fire at The Louvre, and The Louvre was bankrolled by Fei
Chengyu and built by Zhang Chunling. The two of them should count as the chief culprits of Gu
Zhao’s murder. The Reciter’s methods are private justice in the form of ‘a tooth for a tooth,’ so
Zhang Chunjiu, who was responsible for the framing, had to take back the charge he framed
Gu Zhao for—so if I’ve understood correctly, as the killer, Zhang Chunling should burn to death
at the old location of The Louvre. But why aren’t they here?”
Luo Wenzhou, wearing his headphones, really couldn’t restrain himself. He opened the window
of the speeding car, and the biting cold winter wind came pelting in, accelerated by the speed.
His colleague driving the car gave a start as he was swept by the cold wind, but he quietly
glanced at Luo Wenzhou’s face and didn’t dare to make a sound.
Luo Wenzhou closed his eyes, more and more fretfulness and anxiety amassing in his heart,
enough to send the globe exploding up to the Big Dipper.
He unconsciously squeezed his knuckles. “Fei Du wouldn’t mislead us on purpose. There was
no need for it, and he doesn’t want to commit suicide.”
Lu Youliang said, “I don’t understand. Since he had a premonition that the tracking device
would be removed, why couldn’t he have given us a definite location…”
“Because he wasn’t sure.” Luo Wenzhou slowly let out a white breath. “He isn’t a roundworm in
The Reciter’s—that Fan Siyuan’s—belly. Even though he roughly knows what he’s thinking, he
still can’t accurately read his mind. That’s why he was unclear about the address and left us his
line of thought. I think the general direction is right, but the ‘place where this started’ that Fan
Siyuan thought of isn’t the same one we’re thinking of… The former location of The Louvre is
where Gu Zhao was wronged, and the ski run used to be Heng’an Orphanage, the place where
Zhang Chunjiu and his brother came from—if neither of those is right, where else can it be?”
Drawing near to four-thirty in the morning, the sky showed no signs of lightening; the morning
star was unhurriedly climbing up.
“Fei Du…Fei Du is extremely audacious. He’d dare to do anything. But he isn’t rash, and he’s
very meticulous. If the message he left you hinted at the old location of The Louvre, it shows
that he thought there was a good chance Fan Siyuan would go there, and it was worth a
gamble. But he may also have mentioned the remaining low-probability chance. Uncle Lu,
please help me…help me think…”
Luo Wenzhou’s words had started out very orderly, but at the end, somehow his voice broke.
He cleared his throat twice in a row, but it was still fiercely blocked. He couldn’t keep back his
last words.
Standing in the cold wind, Lu Youliang turned his head to look at the building behind him—that
high, oddly-styled roof must have been the movie theater. Apparently the tickets were all
bought out for the first two days of the new year; in recent years it had somehow become
popular to go out for the family dinner on New Year’s Eve. In another fifteen hours or so, this
place would be a brightly lit scene full of a babble of voices.
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Fourteen years had passed, and he still remembered the unforgettable ruins of the fire, still
remembered how thunderstruck he had felt when he’d heard what had happened to Gu Zhao.
Lu Youliang took a deep breath. “Tao Ran—right! I’ve remembered, before he left, he contacted
a friend of his abroad who’s with Zhou Huaijin. They’ve found someone who used to work for
the Zhou family. They mentioned Heng’an Orphanage, and then, according to that person’s
account, he had Tao Ran track down the file on the murder of Heng’an Orphanage’s director!”
Fei Du had given Tao Ran a soporific. The dose hadn’t been large. At a time like that, he ought
to have been coaxing him to go to sleep, not talking to him about such an invigorating old
case… So what had he thought of then?
“Hao Zhenhua was Heng’an Orphanage’s director. He was stabbed three times when he
opened the door. Then the killer hit him over the head with a blunt object continuously until he
died. When he was dead, the killer still wasn’t satisfied. He stabbed the body ten more times.
This charge was placed on a gang of burglars.” Tao Ran, half-immobilized, pressed the phone
to his ear. “At the time of the crime, the deceased Hao Zhenhua was alone in his residence in
the outskirts—no, it wasn’t a villa, so-called villas hadn’t been thought of yet at the time. He’d
somehow managed to get a homestead in his hometown, built himself a house, and used it
specially for storing his valuables, like a secret treasury.—I have the address, I’ve sent it to you,
but the whole area was relocated twenty years ago because of road repairs. I looked up the
location on the computer just now. It must be where Yan Sea Highway passes through. No
matter what, I don’t think The Reciter can go up onto the highway.”
Luo Wenzhou had no attention to spare to answer. He quickly pulled up a map.—Yan Sea
Highway stretched from the southeast of Yan City, connecting Yan City to the bordering Binhai
District. The entrance to the highway was by the East Forest Ski Run. That was where Zhang
Chunjiu and the others had left the main road, turning into the sports park.
The ski run was where Heng’an Orphanage had been. The asshole director had used the
orphanage to frantically accumulate ill-gotten gains, which he couldn’t take directly home to
arrange, so he’d delivered them all to his little treasury in the countryside. The location of this
“little treasury” was very delicate. It was under Yan City’s jurisdiction, but it was on the border
between Yan City and Binhai…
Tao Ran said, “This Hao Zhenhua was killed the year after Zhou Yahou’s death, about thirty-
seven years ago. Zhang Chunjiu would have been an adolescent, and Zhang Chunling would
have been around twenty-five. This murder’s comparatively bloody method, the mistreatment
of the body, and the excessive stabbing show that the attacker’s emotional state was very
unstable. The scene shows violence and disorder. The deceased was entirely unguarded when
he opened the door. On the one hand, he may have known the killer. On the other hand, he
may have thought that there was no danger from the killer—synthesizing all of the above, my
guess is that the one who stabbed him was the adolescent Zhang Chunjiu. There must have
been an adult assisting him to gather the property and calmly clean up the scene. This murder
was later by coincidence attributed to a looting gang. I analyzed it for Fei Du and said I thought
it may have been the first murder they committed. It’s likely that their reasoning and method in
committing crimes was a lesson learned from the experience of getting away with this one.”
“Gather the property?” Luo Wenzhou quickly followed up. “How much did the killers take from
the deceased’s home?”
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“Unclear,” Tao Ran said. “The wardrobes at the scene had all been rifled. They were practically
empty. If everything inside had been taken, the quantity must have been impressive. But in
order to cover up the truth, the victim’s family maintained that the wardrobes had been empty
to start with. The case was resolved carelessly, without a close investigation.”
Lie low, kill, disguise the scene, take a great quantity of property and flee… That was all right if
it had only been cash, but if there had been other things—enough property to fill up a few
wardrobes—they must at least have had a stronghold nearby.
That stronghold was likely the origin, where Zhang brothers had begun their crimes!
Yes, there was also Su Hui’s dumping site in Binhai.—In the past, the status of places on the
periphery of Yan City, like the Binhai District, had been unclear; there were many unused plots
of land in the outskirts waiting to be developed, none of them worth any money. Which one of
them wouldn’t have been more convenient than Binhai, a place in a different administrative
district?
Why would Zhang Chunling and the others have chosen Binhai?
The art teacher Yu Bin had encountered Zhang Chunling and Su Hui in Binhai and had been
silenced because of it. This had happened fourteen years ago. The organization had already
been in its finished form then. Given Zhang Chunling’s power and caution, would he have
personally gone to that awful place to accompany Su Hui in dumping a body?
But if it hadn’t been to dump a body, then what had he gone there to do?
Was it possible that Zhang Chunjiu and the others’ initial stronghold had been…
“Stop the car!” Luo Wenzhou suddenly said. “I have something to ask Zhang Chunjiu!”
Luo Wenzhou didn’t wait for the car to stop fully before charging out, yanking Zhang Chunjiu
out of the escorting police car. “When you killed Hao Zhenhua, the director of Heng’an
Orphanage, the stronghold you shadowed him from, and where you divided up the loot, was in
Binhai, right? Where was it?”
For a moment Zhang Chunjiu couldn’t understand why he was asking this. He stared blankly.
But since his scheme had fallen through, he truly was full of hatred towards Luo Wenzhou, so
he only answered with a sneer, not saying a word.
If he could, Luo Wenzhou would simply have torn Zhang Chunjiu’s head off, turned him over,
and pulled out the words hidden in his belly. He firmly gripped Zhang Chunjiu’s collar. Zhang
Chunjiu was lifted by him, tottering, a breath catching in his throat, choking him so purplish red
rose in his face. His gaze met Luo Wenzhou’s bloodshot eyes. He displayed a cold smile.
Just then, Lu Youliang’s voice came over his earpiece. “Wenzhou, let me talk to him.”
Luo Wenzhou forced down the magma constantly erupting in his chest, pulled out the cord of
his headphones, and pressed his phone to the coughing Zhang Chunjiu’s ear.
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Zhang Chunjiu’s gaze flashed slightly—after all, he and Director Lu had been friends for over
twenty years.
But Lu Youliang didn’t bring up old times to stir up emotion. “Listen to me. Your big brother
Zhang Chunling is with The Reciter—Fan Siyuan and his gang. They’re all over there now. Fan
Siyuan used your nephew’s life to lure him in. I don’t think you need me to tell you what he
wants to do.”
“If we capture Zhang Chunling, we’ll hand him over to the procuratorate according to
procedure after we’ve finished interrogating him. Even if the highest court condemns him to
death with prompt execution, he can still die with dignity, and you’ll have a chance to see him
again. But if he falls into Fan Siyuan’s hands… Do as you see fit—”
Fei Du couldn’t stand up. He was entirely dragged along. Hearing the gunfire outside
constantly drawing near, for a moment he didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.
Zhang Chunling, a psychopath guilty of heinous crimes, a scoundrel spanning the decades
who could occupy the trending topics on all the major social networking sites, was grinding his
teeth, on the one hand wishing to rip him to pieces, on the other hand watching the clock,
holding his nose, and doing his utmost to save his life before daylight.
Fei Du found laughter amidst suffering, feeling that he was like a human master who had
summoned a demon from hell, and Zhang Donglai was an unbreakable contract—alcohol-
scented, human-shaped.
“If you can still laugh at a time like this, I believe now that you wouldn’t cry if you saw a coffin.”
Fan Siyuan sighed quietly by his ear. “The first time I saw you, I watched with my own eyes as
Fei Chengyu dragged you out of that cabinet, beat your mother, put those zero sum metal rings
around your neck and hers. She collapsed on the spot, but you didn’t make a sound from
beginning to end, didn’t shed a tear… I was very curious then—what lived inside the body of
such a beautiful, adorable little boy?”
Fei Du laughed mockingly. “The superhero Teacher Fan. A miserable woman and her child were
being tortured like that in front of you—why didn’t you save us?”
“Your mother killed her father for Fei Chengyu’s sake, and you’re the continuation of his filthy
bloodline. The two of you are parts of Fei Chengyu. What are you doing playing for pity? When
I saw the look in your eyes, I knew that when you had spread your wings, you would backlash
against Fei Chengyu. I was eagerly looking forward to knowing the outcome of the father and
son battle. Why would I have prevented it? Unfortunately, time waits for no man. The tumor
came before I got to see the end of the drama, so I had to move first.”
As he spoke, the gunfight outside had grown increasingly outrageous. Zhang Chunling’s
criminal subordinates evidently had the upper hand and quickly charged in. Fan Siyuan’s
attitude sitting in his wheelchair was truly out of tune with the surroundings, extremely eye-
catching. As soon as the other charged in, he saw them. He didn’t say a word; a clip of bullets
shot towards Fan Siyuan.
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Fan Siyuan wasn’t at all flustered. The cement floor in front of him rose out of nowhere,
blocking the bullets whistling towards him and revealing an underground passage. The woman
pushing him quickly went in, and Fei Du was hauled up and thrown over someone’s shoulder,
his chest caught against the person’s hard shoulder. He nearly blacked out—
After taking the art student back home, Xiao Haiyang and Lang Qiao, carrying the sketch Yu
Bin had left behind with his life, went to look for the place where the collision had occurred
according to the art student’s directions. When they’d found the approximate location, they
received a dispatch call.
“Take note—approximately twenty kilometers west of the east coast cliffs is an abandoned
vehicle rental center. The location has been sent to all of you. A group of criminals has taken a
hostage. They are armed. Take care. Once more, they are armed…”
“An abandoned vehicle rental center?” Xiao Haiyang muttered to himself for a moment. “Didn’t
Yu Bin’s student say they rented a car from the scenic area where they were staying?”
Lang Qiao quickly scanned the map. “It’s not far. Come on!”
“Because the location was far from crowded areas, backing on a mountain forest, it developed
into the first den for hiding criminals. The boss was Zhang Chunling. You could call this criminal
organization the initial form of the Chunlai Conglomerate.
“Later, the tourism industry sprang up, and the Binhai District was no longer as desolate as
before, so they expanded their den and got involved in the car rental business, first to mask
themselves, and second to get faster information.
“Though a good thing can’t last forever. Perhaps there were too many bodies buried in that
patch of land in Binhai, and it was cursed. All the businesses failed, and the tourism industry in
the end was more dead than alive, not gathering popularity. As the Chunlai Conglomerate
expanded, they slowly moved away. The car rental business is now entirely abandoned.”
“Good heavens,” Lang Qiao gasped in amazement when she’d heard. “You’ve managed to dig
so deep!”
Tao Ran sighed. “We had no other choice. The circumstances aren’t very good now. The
Reciter lured the escaped Zhang Chunling over there…”
“What!” Lang Qiao and Xiao Haiyang said with one voice.
Then, not far from them, there came a sudden string of gunshots.
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Lang Qiao gave a start, feeling all the hairs on the back of her neck stand up. She turned and
opened her eyes twice as wide. “Real guns? Or is someone letting off fireworks?”
Xiao Haiyang’s experience with both gunfire and letting off fireworks was limited. He could only
look helplessly back at her.
Lang Qiao pressed her hand to her waist. “Specs, tell me you didn’t buy your firearms license.”
“I scraped by, but don’t ask me how,” Xiao Haiyang answered. “They all said it was because I
lost five-hundred yuan before the test.”
“What’s going on?” Tao Ran had heard the background noise over the speaker. “Wait, precisely
where are you two right now?”
“Deputy-Captain Tao,” Xiao Haiyang said grimly, “there wouldn’t have been many car rental
businesses here fourteen years ago. Do you think…that when the art teacher Yu Bin and his
students rented a car back then, it could have been from those people?”
Tao Ran currently wasn’t in the mood to discuss an old case with him and interrupted with rare
harshness. “Don’t worry about that now. You’re too close. Stop where you are at once and
await orders. Captain Luo and the others will be there soon!”
Xiao Haiyang hit the brakes and hung up Lang Qiao’s phone.
Xiao Haiyang touched the gun at his waist. This had been requested along with the whole team
when Zhang Chunling had sent people to kill Zhou Huaijin. Xiao Haiyang still hadn’t gotten
accustomed to it, always feeling that it was rubbing uncomfortably at his waist. He suddenly
unlocked the car doors and said to Lang Qiao, “Get out and wait for Captain Luo here.”
Xiao Haiyang pressed his lips into a line. After the nearby sounds of gunfire had broken through
the night sky, they’d become increasingly more aggressively concentrated in this desolate
place. He suddenly opened the car door without a word and got out.
She hurriedly chased after, grabbing Xiao Haiyang’s shoulder, holding him in place. “Have you
ever been out in the field? Have you ever shot a gun? Can you shoot or run, young master? I’m
really impressed!”
Xiao Haiyang’s face went white, because Lang Qiao was right. Even a slender-looking girl like
her could hold him up, but, but…
“The first notice we received said that the criminals had taken a hostage. If the Chunlai
Conglomerate and The Reciter are exchanging fire now, what about the hostage?”
Although Tao Ran hadn’t had time to tell them who the so-called “hostage” was, Lang Qiao still
frowned.
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“Of course that’s just my excuse.” Xiao Haiyang sighed. Then, not caring whether Lang Qiao
understood or not, he went on quietly: “All these years, I’ve wanted to know why…why there
are people like Lu Guosheng in the world, why there are people who would hide them away like
treasures and with even greater malice use them to do even more evil things. I’ve always
dreamed of personally arresting him…”
As Xiao Haiyang spoke, he struggled…and still couldn’t break free of Lang Qiao’s grip, but in
his struggle he knocked into the phone in Lang Qiao’s pocket, which hadn’t been put away
carefully. By chance, the phone fell onto its screen and bounced off a sharp stone, instantly
cracking into a spiderweb.
“Let me go! Let me go!” Xiao Haiyang’s voice was very low. He was practically humbly
imploring her. “Over a decade—for over a decade, not a day has gone by that I haven’t thought
of ending this. I’ve lived this long without succeeding in cultural or martial arts. I have no other
aspirations… Even if I die here bringing them down with me, I’ll still be perfectly happy. You
don’t understand, let go!”
The emotions Xiao Haiyang understood were always a little different from others’ emotions.
This made him feel that he was communicating with others through a layer of something, like
an eccentric who didn’t understand human feelings. Lang Qiao had never seen such deeply
convincing grief and desperation in him. She subconsciously loosened her hold.
Xiao Haiyang tottered back a few steps from inertia and firmly met Lang Qiao’s eyes for a
moment. Then he seemed to suddenly spontaneously learn how to speak sensibly; leaving
behind the phrase “look after yourself,” he turned to go.
“Wait!” Lang Qiao bent and picked up her cracked phone, sadly sucking at her gums—this
wasn’t the piece of crap the City Bureau assigned them. It was her own phone, worth nearly a
month’s salary, dead in the line of duty before she’d even had a chance to put a protective
screen over it. “You know what? Before my university entrance exam, I also broke a new phone
and actually got a hundred on the math. Isn’t that the same as the principle behind you testing
for your firearms license?”
“Do you believe in mysticism?” Lang Qiao opened the car door. “Get in!”
The two of them quickly approached the abandoned car lot—the former lumber mill. It was
very spacious here, backing onto a gently sloping hill. There was an expanse of forest on the
hill. Though much of the vegetation had withered, the dead twigs with their withered leaves and
the old trees could still just about give someone a place to conceal themselves.
Lang Qiao efficiently hid the car and did a simple inspection of the surroundings. She
beckoned to Xiao Haiyang. “Follow me.”
Xiao Haiyang’s expression was somewhat complicated. “You really don’t have to…”
“Shut up—hss… Deputy-Captain Tao didn’t say this place was so big!” Lang Qiao had nimbly
hopped through the woods into the little thicket behind the old mill. She sucked in her breath
when she stuck her head out to have a look.
Both the lumber mill and the car rental business had come to an utter end. The surroundings
were full of weeds. But the building’s footprint was awe-inspiring; it was fully the size of a
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school. There was a ring of cars surrounding it. Dense gunshots rang out inside. Lang Qiao at
once saw a string of eye-catching bloodstains.
“On the surface it was a parking lot for rental cars, and in reality it hid wanted criminals. The
structure inside may be more complex. I’m thinking, where should we start…” Before Lang
Qiao had finished, Xiao Haiyang suddenly pressed down her head.
Lang Qiao, suddenly interrupted, stared at first, then heard the rustle of footsteps.
The two of them hid behind a few big trees growing in a row, not daring to breathe too deeply,
listening to the hasty footsteps growing near and then fading away, passing nearly right by
them, then running off in another direction. After a good while, Lang Qiao carefully looked in
the direction where she’d hidden the car, then held down the trembling barrel of Xiao Haiyang’s
gun—fortunately the kid had forgotten to remove the safety, or else there would have been
great fun when it went off by accident.
She pulled out a small set of binoculars from somewhere and saw that there were about a
dozen people in that group, each of them carrying a weapon, walking very fast towards a place
where the mill backed against hill.
“I think they’re Zhang Chunling’s subordinates,” Xiao Haiyang said almost inaudibly. “Look,
they seem to be very familiar with the territory.”
“Wait, I remember Deputy Tao saying…that The Reciter lured Zhang Chunling here? But isn’t
this place the Chunlai Conglomerate’s old lair? Fighting in another person’s territory—what’s
wrong with these Reciter people’s chief’s head?”
“The Zhang brothers have always hidden behind the scenes. They must be very cautious and
very afraid of death. They wouldn’t have dared to come so quickly to a strange place. It may be
The Reciter’s aim to make them stop at nothing.” Xiao Haiyang paused, then said, “Xiao-Qiao-
jie, what should we do now?”
Lang Qiao, full of misgivings, froze when he called to her like this, her heart giving a lurch
without warning, an ill-timed memory stabbing her like a needle.
Xiao-Qiao-jie…
Only Xiao-Wu, when he’d just come to the City Bureau, had called her that.
Lang Qiao had guessed right; the structure under the abandoned lot was more complicated
than it appeared from the outside, like an ant hill.
Storerooms and narrow corridors intersected. There were false walls and secret passages
everywhere, perfectly separating the place where they’d carried on the disguise of doing
business from the place where they’d sheltered evil.
Fei Du had taken a rough look and had a faint guess—this was likely the original form of The
Louvre and the Beehive.
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Fan Siyuan must have come here ahead of time to investigate many times. He was very familiar
with it. Under Zhang Chunling’s fierce besieging firepower, he quickly took a crowd of people to
withdraw underground.
Underground there was a space with thick cement walls on all four sides, built like an air-raid
shelter. There was a thick protective door at the entrance that could be tightly sealed. The
protective door was painted the exact same gray as the surrounding walls. If you didn’t get
close and look carefully, you practically wouldn’t notice the completely different world here.
There were peepholes and small openings for bullets to pass through in the door, enough to
support a dozen guns. It was like a fort.
Fei Du was roughly thrown onto the cement floor. He turned his head to look. In these
disorderly circumstances, Fan Siyuan and the others had actually brought the burden of Fei
Chengyu along. Perhaps due to blood loss, Fei Du’s vision darkened a little. He squeezed his
eyes shut for a while, whispering as though talking to himself: “I guess this must be close to
the place where Su Hui dumped the bodies. Is that right, Teacher Fan?”
Fei Du was entirely indifferent. “Did you find this place by following Xu Wenchao and Su
Luozhan? No wonder…”
“No wonder Su Luozhan knew the details of the crimes Su Xiaolan committed over twenty
years ago,” Fei Du said. “Su Luozhan is a little psychopath, jealous by nature. Tormenting
people is her delight. If she ‘by chance’ found out about the harassing phone calls Su Xiaolan
came up with, she certainly wouldn’t be able to resist imitating them—truly a brilliant move,
achieving so much with so little effort.”
“Shut your mouth!” the woman who had been pushing Fan Siyuan’s wheelchair all along
suddenly said.
Fei Du looked at her in the dim light. With a smile that wasn’t quite a smile, he said, “In the
process, you must have witnessed the little girls’ bodies being transported here many times,
right? Such a pity. So many of them, such little girls. Flower buds that hadn’t opened yet, dying
in humiliation and becoming cold corpses…”
The woman could stand it no longer. She strode over and grabbed Fei Du’s collar.
“Teacher Fan,” said Fei Du, “could you take better care of the important prop?”
Fei Du was astonished to find that there were tears in her eyes.
Fan Siyuan said grimly, “We may have been able to prevent one or two cases, save a few girls,
but so what? Catching Xu Wenchao and Su Luozhan alone wouldn’t change anything. Xu
Wenchao was only a psychopath’s puppet. He didn’t know anything. And the Su family’s third
generation little monster hadn’t even reached the age to assume criminal responsibility yet. The
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Chunlai Conglomerate behind them was the true culprit. It wouldn’t feel it if you cut off one of
its tentacles. It would have been saving a little only to lose a lot, making many more people
suffer.—Ruobing, some sacrifices are necessary.”
Fei Du’s brow moved. “Oh, really? But from what I understand, you haven’t only watched
people in mortal peril without trying to help. Zhao Haochang, who killed He Zhongyi, really was
a scumbag, but there’s a cost for even a scumbag to kill someone. Without a compelling need,
who would use that method? Who was it who made him steadfastly believe that He Zhongyi
was a parasitic drug addict? And who sent that text message pointing at the Golden Triangle
Lot? I ran into He Zhongyi and exchanged a few words with him. He was introverted and timid.
All this time I haven’t been able to understand how he managed to get up the courage to go
‘pester’ Zhang Ting, a strange young woman.
“And then there’s Dong Xiaoqing. After Zheng Kaifeng’s second contact person, Zhuo
Yingchun, passed away, your people took advantage of the vacancy to creep in. You knew that
Zheng Kaifeng was planning an internal war against Zhou Junmao, so you helped him arrange
Dong Qian, a perfect killer—just like arranging for Lu Guosheng to kill Feng Bin—and
afterwards you tricked that stupid girl Dong Xiaoqing…”
“We didn’t trick her!” the woman denied loudly. “We only told her the truth! Didn’t she have the
right to know the true reason behind her parents’ deaths?”
“It was far more than the true reason behind her parents’ deaths. You must also have told her
the secret of the mole within the police.” Fei Du sighed. “That old fart Zheng Kaifeng truly was
crafty. First he use a trumped-up paternity test result to drive a wedge between Zhou Junmao
and Zhou Huaijin, burying a chess piece. Then he secretly commissioned an assassination.
This way, even if a conspiracy theorist discovered that there was a plot behind Zhou Junmao’s
death, suspicion would all point to Zhou Huaijin, the eldest son of confused origin. Even Dong
Qian may have thought his employer was Zhou Huaijin.—But, beauty, don’t tell me that your
all-powerful Teacher Fan was also misled by him?”
Fei Du laughed aloud. “Why didn’t you tell Dong Xiaoqing that Zheng Kaifeng was the real
culprit, Teacher Fan?”
The woman stubbornly said, “Because…because Dong Xiaoqing couldn’t have gotten close to
Zheng Kaifeng. What would have been the use of telling her? The outcome would only have
been that old scumbag quietly getting rid of her!”
“After she killed Zhou Huaixin, wasn’t she still silenced according to pattern?” Fei Du’s line of
sight went past her, fastening onto Fan Siyuan. “Teacher Fan, you clearly knew that until it was
all over, Zhang Chunling’s people would be watching Dong Xiaoqing. You were afraid that the
sluggish police wouldn’t be able to find traces of the organization. Before they dealt with Dong
Xiaoqing, you lured the police to her house, lit the fire to lead the police to investigate the
security camera on the door across the way…”
Fan Siyuan’s face fell slightly. He shot a look at two men following him. The two of them quickly
pushed aside the woman and stepped up.
Fei Du quickly said, “In fact, you’d always wanted to lead Dong Xiaoqing into killing Zhou
Huaijin—yes, your original target was Zhou Huaijin, because Zhou Huaixin was stupider, easier
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to control! How would Dong Xiaoqing have known that Zhou Huaijin was getting out of the
hospital that day? You helped her plan it! Zhou Huaixin was unsatisfied with his family to start
with. If both his father and the older brother he mutually depended on for survival died
unnatural deaths one after another, you could take the opportunity to get close to him, use him,
get his help investigating the Zhou family’s association with Heng’an Orphanage… Ugh…”
Fei Du groaned. A man had grabbed his neck and punched him in the lower abdomen, forcibly
cutting off his speech. The other person roughly taped his mouth shut.
Cold sweat rolled down Fei Du’s forehead, quickly soaking his eyelashes. He was curled up in
pain, but from start to finish, his eyes were fixed on the woman beside Fan Siyuan, hunting
down a flash of alarm on her face.
Fan Siyuan beckoned to the woman. “Ruobing, don’t you know how crafty this person is, how
well he can confuse and poison people’s minds?”
Just then, human voices suddenly came from outside. The person who’d been guarding at the
protective door with a gun turned to Fan Siyuan and said, “Teacher, they’ve caught up!”
Before he’d finished, rapid gunshots drew close—this place had after all been single-handedly
built by Zhang Chunling. He knew perfectly well where the boltholes were. It was only a matter
of time before he caught up. Everyone tensely went on guard.
“How many of our people have been sacrificed to reach this point? Including our brothers and
sisters who were just standing with us. For the sake of luring Zhang Chunling here, they’ve
smeared their blood on this filthy ground,” Fan Siyuan said coldly. “Ruobing, what are you
thinking?”
Fan Siyuan looked at Fei Du with a gaze as though looking at an inanimate object. “Put on the
yoke. The last trial can begin.”
The woman hesitated, looked at Fei Du, slowly walked over to Fei Chengyu’s moving hospital
bed, and pulled off the sheet covering him.
At 4:50 AM, the “underground fortress” where Fan Siyuan and the others were located
encountered an assault comparable to the firepower of a battlefield, but unfortunately one side
couldn’t get in, while the other couldn’t get out; they were practically deadlocked.
Zhang Donglai was in Fei Du’s hands, Fei Du had threatened that he only had “one hour’s
worth of patience,” and now daybreak would soon come to Yan City’s sky. No one knew what
Zhang Donglai, held in a foreign land, would suffer. Zhang Chunling was simply about to go
mad, very much wishing to blow that shit-stirrer Fan Siyuan sky high.
But Fan Siyuan was entirely unmoved, not at all worried about running out of ammunition and
provisions and dying trapped here; he simply let them waste time.
The phone carried by the driver who had kidnapped Fei Du suddenly rang. He respectfully
handed it over to Fan Siyuan. “Teacher.”
A faint smile appeared at the corners of Fan Siyuan’s mouth. “Chairman Zhang, here I was
thinking you weren’t going to contact me.”
“Come down here and let’s reminisce about the old days.” Fan Siyuan smiled. “Though I’ll be
gone soon, I still have some time left. I’m afraid President Fei’s people won’t wait any longer.
Isn’t that right, President Fei?”
The person pressed against the protective door looking out had gotten halfway through his
words when he was interrupted by an enormous sound—one of the walls of this seemingly
impregnable underground fortress collapsed.
Dust and smoke came pelting down. A corner of the innermost wall turned out not to be solid;
there was a passage there about the size of a person!
Lang Qiao and Xiao Haiyang, with peril on all sides, had followed the group of people that had
gone around to the foot of the hill the whole way. They’d watched them go into a dilapidated
thatched cottage, lift open the floor, and go right down.
Lang Qiao gaped, in spite of herself remembering when she’d been little and her school had
arranged for them to watch Tunnel War14. She yanked back Xiao Haiyang, who’d wanted to go
right down, and cautiously investigated the surroundings. Then she gestured at him, and the
two of them, one after another, went in after those people. This seemed to be a small secret
escape tunnel, only big enough for one person to pass through. It was easy to accidentally get
your face full of the surrounding sandstone. Luckily, people had gone ahead leading the way.
When the winding tunnel was about to turn a corner, an enormous sound suddenly came from
up ahead. Lang Qiao subconsciously put a hand over Xiao Haiyang’s mouth and pressed him
to the side.
This person said, “This was our asylum in case of emergencies back then. I didn’t expect that
you would find it.—Fan Siyuan, you didn’t think that when we built this place, we wanted to die
trapped in it?”
1965 Chinese film about a village defending itself against a Japanese attack during World
14
War II using tunnel warfare.
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“Captain Luo, Xiao Haiyang and Lang Qiao are nearby, I told them to stay put and await orders,
but now I can’t get in touch with them…”
“Wenzhou,” Lu Youliang suddenly said quietly over the phone, “I take responsibility for
approving this business today, and it was my plan. If anything happens, I…”
“Captain Luo, there are bloodstains and signs of a suspected firefight near the mill. We can’t
see Lang Qiao and Xiao Haiyang.”
Luo Wenzhou closed his eyes, interrupting Director Lu. “It wasn’t you, Uncle Lu. I know. That
scoundrel Fei Du arranged it. And I can guess that he made you hide it from me.”
Remembering Fei Du’s odd parting words of “sincerity works miracles,” Director Lu felt so sick
at heart he couldn’t speak. After a long silence, he finally said, “…I asked him why, and he
didn’t tell the truth.—Why?”
The whistling wind and the police sirens performed in chorus, and the cars’ lights wove through
the pot-black sky, rising high above empty and desolate Binhai.
“Because of Zhu Feng, Yang Xin, shin…Fu Jiahui. Those people aren’t like Zhang Chunling’s
wanted criminals. They’re unassuming. Many of them have done things that don’t even amount
to crimes. They can turn around and hide any time. Ordinarily, they don’t seem any different
from normal people—but they’re like landmines left over after a war. If you can’t trigger them
safely, there will be disastrous consequences afterwards. So there needed to be a ‘fuse.’”
With Zhang Chunjiu arrested and Zhang Chunling on the run, the Chunlai Conglomerate was
already a spent force.
Over the last year, the whole Chunlai Conglomerate had been constantly weakened, and now it
had disintegrated. Zhang Chunling’s identity had been exposed, and he was a fugitive in flight.
It would be very easy for The Reciter’s people to sneak in next to him—Fan Siyuan being able
to quietly snatch Fei Du away showed that—it wasn’t at all difficult to make Zhang Chunling die
a violent death. At that time, the frightening group of “volunteer judges” would have retired
covered in glory, noiselessly going to ground; it would have been hard to find them again.
The triggering “fuse” had to give them a greater sense of crisis, had to fill up the vacancy of the
hatred they had nowhere to put—at a time like this, what better reason for their merriment
could there be than a “mastermind behind the scenes,” an “oriole stalking behind?”
Fei Du had captured Zhang Donglai not only to arrest Zhang Chunling and expose The Reciter;
he’d also planned to rapidly intensify the conflict between the two sides, fish them up with one
net; everyone arrested would be an “illegally armed underworld element”; no one would be
able to escape…
The “lunatic” had planned backwards and forwards, but who knew whether he’d planned for
his own miserable plight on the verge of death.
There was a metal ring closed around his neck, and the metal ring’s other end was connected
to the unconscious vegetable Fei Chengyu’s neck. Violence was keeping Fei Du temporarily
quiet, without further opportunity to “mislead the people with lies.”
Three or four surrounding gun muzzles aimed at him at once. One gun was pressed against his
back, so he could be turned into a sieve at the least stir.
Fei Du couldn’t quite stand up straight and simply leaned back against the gun muzzle—the
hand of the person holding the gun was very steady, allowing him to lean without moving, but
the material was rather stiff, so it wasn’t especially comfortable.
He couldn’t speak, so he blinked his eyes at Zhang Chunling, who had “descended from the
heavens.” In his eyes, reddened from the sweat dripping into them, you could still read a hint of
ridicule, as though he was thinking that it was very interesting that Zhang Chunling still had to
hold his nose and protect him.
Zhang Chunling put him out of sight and out of mind, his gaze sweeping over the inhuman-
looking “corpse” of Fei Chengyu, then falling directly onto Fan Siyuan.
For some reason, in the instant Fan Siyuan saw Zhang Chunling, his hands resting on the arms
of the wheelchair suddenly began to tremble.
Zhang Chunling coldly said, “I heard you wanted to see me. Here I am.”
“Zhang Chunling.” Fan Siyuan held this name in his mouth, chewing it over three times. In his
eyes, clouded from illness, floated a brightness like the last radiance of the setting sun, like two
flames lighting up.
Looking on with the cool eye of a bystander, Fei Du suddenly had an impression that for a
moment he’d seen a trace of humanity in this man.
It was strange to say—Zhang Chunling was in fact a drowning dog come to a dead end; one
slip-up, and Fei Du had grabbed him by the wounded leg; he’d become the biggest loser in
this game of villains doing each other dirty. However you looked at it, from The Reciter’s point
of view, it should have been Fei Du, the one who’d “taken all,” who was the greater danger, the
greater “poison.” But while Fan Siyuan had called Fei Du “frightening,” he hadn’t displayed
enough tribute to his “frightfulness.” In front of him, he could still mystify with skill and ease.
But faced with Zhang Chunling, who seemed no longer worth mentioning, he lost control.
Gods and demons couldn’t lose control; it was only humans who could.
Fan Siyuan’s emaciated back drew into a bow. His neck stuck out. In a tone of voice difficult to
read yet also nearly empty, he said, “Fifteen years ago, on National Road 327, an unemployed
young person named Lu Guosheng ganged up with a man and a woman, together killing three
passing drivers one after another. After becoming wanted by the police, he mysteriously
disappeared. You offered him shelter.”
Zhang Chunling’s cheek twitched. “Thirteen years ago, a criminal psychologist gone mad killed
six people one after another and was secretly pursued by the police. I offered him shelter, too. I
fed him bones and gave him a nest, but now he wants to come back and bite me.”
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Fan Siyuan’s believers one after another displayed an anger as though their faith had been
blasphemed against, but their “faith” personified wasn’t touched at all. Fan Siyuan seemed not
to have heard what Zhang Chunling had said. “Lu Guosheng went into hiding at The Louvre.
Once he carelessly left behind his fingerprint and attracted the notice of the police. The police
increased the reward for information about his location and within a week received over twenty
reports over the phone. Some of the reporters were absolutely certain, but however quickly the
police got there, they came up empty—because you had a pair of “eyes” in the City Bureau to
quickly pass on the information.
“There was a police officer who became suspicious. After this case was shelved, he began to
privately investigate it again, following the traces all the way to The Louvre…but at a critical
moment when collecting evidence, he chose the wrong partner, trusted the wrong person.”
“That did happen,” Zhang Chunling said calmly. “We were forced to abandon The Louvre. I
remember that busybody police officer was named…”
Xiao Haiyang, eavesdropping from the end of the secret passage, clenched his fist tightly,
suddenly going forward without a word.
Lang Qiao was surprised, then quickly went after him, desperately hauling back Xiao Haiyang
as she got out a communication device, planning to call for backup. But when she looked at
her phone, she found that she had no signal!
Lang Qiao’s hair stood on end. A moment’s carelessness, and Xiao Haiyang had already
reached the opening of the secret passage. Then, seeing something, he suddenly backed up a
step, crouching back. Lang Qiao thought this was strange and carefully looked in the direction
of his gaze. She covered her mouth at once—no one had told her that the “hostage” was Fei
Du!
In an instant, Lang Qiao and Xiao Haiyang exchanged a number of looks—but there was no
outcome from this exchange, and no tacit understanding. They only found that they were both
equally at a loss.
The next moment, a bullet shot at Fei Du, and the two young people’s hearts tightened; Lang
Qiao nearly charged straight out.—The bullet brushed past Fei Du; the amazing thing was that
Zhang Chunling looked even more nervous than the two of them.
Zhang Chunling’s shoulders tensed the moment Fan Siyuan shot. The people behind him all
raised their guns and aimed them at Fan Siyuan in his wheelchair. The atmosphere was
abruptly fraught.
“Don’t say his name.” Fan Siyuan’s voice seemed to be squeezed out of his throat. “Don’t talk
about him!”
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When he’d warned Fei Du not to mention “Gu Zhao,” it had been cold and ceremonial. As
though Gu Zhao were a memorial tablet hung up high in a shrine, a symbol, theoretically holy
and inviolate, that he was guarding out of duty.
But now, faced with Zhang Chunling, the reflexive nerves numbed for many years seemed to
suddenly come back to life. Fan Siyuan was like a person just woken from a long hibernation;
the indestructible ice wrapped around him cracked off bit by bit. The grief and indignation
suppressed for many years once more revived. The ashes of his faded, indistinct memories
glowed again. There was a tremor in his voice.
Lang Qiao pushed Xiao Haiyang and mouthed the word “Luo” at him, showing him her phone,
which had no signal, using her eyes to signal to him—I’ll stay here and watch, you go find
Captain Luo and the others.
Lang Qiao glared at him—This isn’t the time to play the hero!
Xiao Haiyang gestured at her and shook his head again—Lang Qiao understood what he
meant. Little Glasses was saying that he’d just been following her with his head down; the
terrain here was too complicated, and he wouldn’t be able to find his way out.
Xiao Haiyang pointed to Lang Qiao, pointed to himself, gave a thumbs up, and nodded. He
meant, You hurry up, I’ll stay here and watch, I know my limits, relax.
Lang Qiao couldn’t relax, but right now she had no other choice. She’d seen that if she delayed
for a second, something unimaginable might happen.
Lang Qiao clenched her teeth and shoved her protective amulet—her broken-screened phone
—into Xiao Haiyang’s hand, then turned and headed out of the secret passage.
Fan Siyuan’s accusation was still ongoing: “…the informers…those pieces of trash betrayed
him, falling over each other to give false testimony. His good friends, his good brothers, not
one of them made a sound. No one spoke for him, no one redressed his injustice. A trifling five
million and an easy to duplicate fingerprint mold, and they all decided he was guilty. His file
was sealed, his name was obliterated…”
Zhang Chunling was entirely unmoved. “That was a problem with the police. You can’t put it on
me.”
“You’re right. That was the indifferent and useless police,” Fan Siyuan said. “If I wanted to
destroy you all thoroughly, I could only choose this road.”
Even a psychopath like Zhang Chunling, hearing these words, was astonished. “You killed
those people, thoroughly discredited yourself, for the sake of infiltrating and investigating me?”
For some reason, the woman beside Fan Siyuan subconsciously lowered her head and looked
at Fei Du, not expecting to meet Fei Du’s gaze. Fei Du’s eyes were calm and understanding,
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like a mirror that could reflect her heart. The woman couldn’t resist feeling irritation; she quickly
frowned. But Fei Du curved the corners of his eyes, smiling silently at her.
“The Binhai wasteland is full of buried souls who died unjustly. From over thirty years ago down
to today, the people you’ve killed are innumerable.” Fan Siyuan suddenly raised his head.
“Zhang Chunling, do you admit your guilt?”
Zhang Chunling seemed to have heard the world’s best joke. “Ha! You were the one who
schemed to have that unfortunate Dong Qian act as Zheng Kaifeng’s killer, hitting Zhou
Junmao. And it was you who planned for Wei Zhanhong’s stupid little whelp to hire an
assassin. For your framing plot, you sent someone to go to the hospital to kill that useless
informer, and your man got tangled up with the police—the way I see, we’re two of a kind. You
ask for my guilt—what right do you have to ask?”
Fan Siyuan looked at him with a horrifying expression. “I ask because I can make you face
retribution. Today you’ll end up like the one you killed. Do you believe that?”
For a moment Xiao Haiyang’s hair stood on end, and he was covered in gooseflesh—of course
he knew how Gu Zhao had died, but this sort of underground space, with the overgrown secret
passage and all kinds of weird storehouses and little rooms neighboring each other, was an
exceptionally good place to bury kerosene and bombs!
Indeed, he then heard Fan Siyuan say, “Zhang Chunling, do you dare to look down? There’s
raging fire under your feet. You won’t get away!”
The police force’s unmanned drone had already arrived first on the scene and returned the
disorderly picture. Next, the earliest police cars also came.
The police cars alarmed the crows on the barren mountain. The ominous black birds rose to
the sky, crying hoarsely. The people Zhang Chunling had left outside as sentries exchanged
looks and went towards the little thatched cottage leading underground to report.
Lang Qiao had already seen the light of the entrance, but she suddenly stopped—she’d heard
rapid footsteps!
Lang Qiao took a deep breath, pricked up her ears, clung to the damp, ice-cold wall of the
secret passage, and closed her eyes—two…three. There were three people coming. They had
to be armed. She couldn’t shoot, and she had to fight a quick battle, or else it would endanger
Xiao Haiyang and Fei Du inside…
Luo Wenzhou had jumped out of the car before it had fully stopped and was already at the
entrance of the old mill—he couldn’t hear the sounds of either gunfire or human voices. Apart
from the ground covered in blood and scattered corpses, letting people know that there had
been a fierce firefight here, it was absolutely silent.
Luo Wenzhou, looking at the ground covered in blood, felt his heart give a lurch, as though
he’d fallen from a high place without warning. He tasted blood at the tip of his tongue.
“Impossible.” Luo Wenzhou firmly hauled back his own scattering soul. “Impossible. The blood
hasn’t dried yet. Even if they’ve run, they can’t have run far.—Listen to me, Zhang Chunling and
the others used this place to hide wanted criminals. That couldn’t have been on the surface.
Don’t stop, keep searching, bring the dogs!”
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Lang Qiao stuck close to the wall of the secret passage, hiding in the shadows at a bend. At
the moment the person walking in front passed by her, Lang Qiao reached out her foot to trip
him. He didn’t react at once, cursed, and fell forward. The instant he fell, Lang Qiao knocked
heavily on the back of his neck. The second person didn’t know why his companion had
suddenly fallen. When he bent slightly to investigate, someone suddenly charged out of the
darkness, without warning raising a knee into his underbelly. The person had no time to cry out
before he was caught around the neck and his vision went black. He fell to the ground. Lang
Qiao grabbed the gun and a long stick from his belt.
But the third person had already seen the ambush in the darkness and wanted to open his
mouth to call out. At the same time, he threw himself towards her. Lang Qiao, already
accustomed to the dark, nimbly stuck out the long stick, hitting him in the throat, narrowly
keeping back his cry. He grabbed her arm; Lang Qiao curled up inside her jacket and stamped
heavily on his instep, prodding his chin from below with the stick, once more forcing him to
shut his mouth. Then she pressed the muzzle of the gun to his chest.
Sweating, he raised his hands and backed up as she pushed. One walking forward and the
other backing up, they came from the entrance of the secret passage.
He didn’t dare not to turn. Hands held high, he slowly turned around. Before he could get a
firm footing, there was a chop across the back of his neck, and he collapsed soundlessly.
Lang Qiao found a length of rope on him and quickly tied him up. Then she peeled off her
jacket and stuck the sleeve into the poor devil’s mouth. Then she finally breathed a sigh of
relief—she had outdone herself. It was lucky she hadn’t made Xiao Haiyang run this errand.
Xiao Haiyang, entirely unaware of the soul-stirring events that had taken place behind him, was
tense all over—Fei Du was too far from him; to get there from here, he’d have to deal with at
least five or six people!
Before he could come up with an itinerary, he heard Fan Siyuan say, “Light it!”
Xiao Haiyang’s mind buzzed. He got out his gun. But the fire he expected didn’t come. The
whole underground room was silent for a moment, and then Zhang Chunling laughed. His face
was a little crooked; he looked unusually ill-intentioned when he laughed. “Did you think you
could pull a trick here without me knowing? Fan Siyuan, this is my territory. I built this place
brick by brick, tile by tile, with my blood and tears. You’re much too full of yourself!”
Xiao Haiyang hadn’t expected this reversal; his legs went weak, and he nearly fell flat.
But before he could finish sighing in relief, he saw Fan Siyuan raise his gun, pointing at Fei Du.
While he seemed to have been pushed to an impasse, he unexpectedly smiled.
“Your territory? That’s right. Killing and starting fires are your specialties. How could I outdo
you?” His throat was scratchy, his voice like an owl’s. “But your son’s life is in his hands.”
The person pressing the gun to Fei Du’s back tore off the tape sealing his mouth.
Fan Siyuan didn’t look around. “President Fei, it’s your turn.”
267
“The doctors say I have less than three months to live. For me, death is only a belated
homecoming,” Fan Siyuan said to Zhang Chunling. He pointed at Fei Du. “You can shoot me
now, as long as you’re willing to gamble—will you kill me faster than I’ll kill him?”
“I don’t especially want to die. I’m not sick, after all,” Fei Du said. “So…Chairman Zhang, has
Zhang Donglai contacted you?”
His words, full of hidden meaning, succeeded in raising the veins at the corners of Zhang
Chunling’s forehead—Zhang Donglai’s phone was sending him a photograph every minute of
Zhang Donglai tied up, holding a giant countdown display. The countdown was constantly
going down. There were only three minutes left on the latest photograph.
This was Zhang Chunling’s territory. He could easily remove the kerosene underground, clear
away Fan Siyuan’s ambush, raise a hand and turn the whole gang of them into crushed
watermelons. But Fan Siyuan’s gun was pressed to Fei Du’s head, and Fei Du held Zhang
Donglai in his hands. Zhang Chunling had been short of close relatives since childhood. He
was obsessed with the idea of pampering his children, and with their blood relationship to him.
Zhang Donglai, far off in a foreign land, was Zhang Chunling’s life.
There were three protagonists on the scene; adding in the innocent useless rich kid Zhang
Donglai elsewhere, they formed a life-and-death ring spanning over a dozen time zones and
the boundless ocean, coming to a perfect deadlock.
“It seems that among the four of us, one must die to break the equilibrium. Who will die first?”
Fan Siyuan looked at Zhang Chunling with a furtive smile. “Your territory. You have the say.”
Xiao Haiyang, hiding in a corner, had prepared to charge out, but he was held in place by the
complicated “relationship quadrangle.” He didn’t know where to start meddling.
Lang Qiao ran to the secret passage’s entrance on one breath. She was just about to leap out
when she suddenly thought of something, paused in her steps, and lightly tapped the mouth of
the cave twice before showing her head. It seemed that her broken phone was secretly
blessing her; Lang Qiao’s sudden quick wits gained great reward—as soon as she tapped,
there was an answer outside. Someone walked towards the mouth of the cave and said in a
low voice, “What’s wrong?”
Lang Qiao spat out a breath. In the instant he stuck his head out to look into the mouth of the
cave, she flung out her handcuffs like nunchucks, wrapping around his foot. Then she yanked.
The person cried out and lost his balance. He tipped over backwards and kicked at Lang Qiao.
268
Lang Qiao ducked and dodged, then quickly charged out of the secret passage. But before her
feet touched solid ground, a fierce wind swept by her ear. Lang Qiao subconsciously blocked
in front of herself with both hands, and a wooden stick smashed into her forearms with a crash.
After a fierce pain, her arms went numb, and her gun slipped out of her hand—there was more
than one lookout!
Meanwhile, the one she’d pulled down climbed back up, pulled a knife, and stabbed towards
her.
This place was worse than the narrow secret passage; she couldn’t launch a secret attack and
take them unawares. Lang Qiao instantly went on the defensive. She’d just narrowly swept
aside the knife with her handcuffs when she took a hit to the shoulder from the stick. The hit
was accurate. All her internal organs shook, and she stumbled and went to her knees.
Suddenly, in the faint light, she saw that there was a gun at the belt of the stick-brandishing
person who had hit her.
They had guns, so why were they attacking with a knife and a stick? Posing for a photograph?
The Reciter’s people were basically all gathered underground. Who were they afraid of alerting?
In a flash, a thought swept through Lang Qiao’s mind—she rolled awkwardly into a ball on the
ground and threw herself towards her own knocked-aside gun. The stick, as thick as a
person’s arm, flew threw the air, smashing down on her back. Lang Qiao nearly felt she’d been
smashed into two halves. The knife-wielding thug followed closely after, stabbing towards her.
“Die!”
Just then, a beam of light from somewhere swept into the unremarkable thatched cottage. The
two thugs were startled, and Lang Qiao seized the opportunity to turn, grab some grit off the
ground, and throw it into their faces. The knife went astray and caught on her sweater, the ice-
cold blade brushing her skin. The worn-out sweater was pulled out of shape. She struggled on
the ground with all four limbs. Her hand touched her gun. The stick-wielder brought the stick
smashing down towards her head.
At the same time, Lang Qiao hooked her finger over the trigger, turned her head, and shot
twice at the thug’s shin—
The sudden gunshot in the forest at the foot of the hill made Luo Wenzhou, searching the old
mill, raise his head.
Meanwhile, the phone in Zhang Chunling’s pocket vibrated again with a message notification.
Zhang Chunling knew without looking that there were two minutes left on the fatal countdown
next to Zhang Donglai!
If no one broke through the deadlock, the first to die would be Zhang Donglai!
“Zhang Chunling, you’re guilty of monstrous crimes. Why don’t you look at the vegetable in the
hospital bed? When you were working hand in glove with Fei Chengyu, did you ever think a
day would come when you would see him under circumstances like this?”
“As for Fei Chengyu, he was a child of poverty. His father went to prison for intentional
homicide when he was little. His family had no source of income and managed to survive
relying on the financial aid of a kind soul. That kind soul supported him all the way through
university, until he coveted the man’s only daughter.—Oh, that’s wrong. It wasn’t the stupid,
useless woman he coveted; it was the man’s great wealth. His backer understood what there
was in the bones of this presentable-looking man and forbade his daughter to have contact
with him, and cut off his financial aid… There’s no need for me to tell you the outcome. Fei
Chengyu thought it was Wuthering Heights, but to me it looks more like ‘The Farmer and the
Viper15.’ Am I right, President Fei?”
“You’ve inherited everything of his—his property, his baseness, and his dirty methods. If
Chairman Zhang decides to abandon his darling son, then I’ll have no choice but to abandon
you. But you seem not to have killed anyone before, so for the sake of fairness, I’ll give you
some preferential treatment… How about a choice?”
Fei Du’s gaze fell on the metal ring closed around his neck—this metal ring was so familiar, so
strange.
When he’d been little, the other end had been a handful of simple rings, forcing him to squeeze
his fingers closed when he was suffocating, squeezing the necks of those small animals.
Later, the mental ring had taken on a more complicated installation, the other end closed over
a person’s neck with a small handgrip in between. If he only subconsciously squeezed it, he
would see the other person’s panic-stricken, suffocated face…and breathe another breath.
This was an instrument of torture Fei Chengyu had invented himself, full of malicious
imagination.
Now, his great invention, the other end of that metal ring, was closed over his own neck.
“Chairman Zhang is still rather indecisive.—President Fei, let’s play a game while we wait for
him. Do you think you’d like to die first yourself, or do you have an injustice to report, a wrong
to avenge? Will you make Fei Chengyu die first instead of you?”
Before he’d finished, one of his subordinates immediately stepped forward, grabbing the metal
ring around Fei Du’s neck and lifting him.
Fei Du had no room to resist. He was hauled up, the seemingly eternal calm at last
disappearing from his face. He began to cough reflexively. Xiao Haiyang came to the end of his
endurance. He wiped the cold sweat in his palms on his pants, raised his gun, and charged
out, roaring, “Don’t move! Police!”
The word “police” wavered midway, the pitch rising up to the ceiling of the underground room.
The glaring, gun-toting criminals all turned their heads at once, silently watching the four-eyed
young person charge in through the mouth of the secret passage in full public view—the
above-mentioned young person’s calf muscles were trembling, shaking so hard his pant legs
were moving without a breeze. He only remembered halfway through the “Don’t move!” that
he’d forgotten to take off the safety again and fiddled with it as though fooling around.
15 The Aesop’s Fable that gives us the idiom “to nourish a viper in one’s bosom.”
270
For a moment, an expression of seeing a sight too horrible to look at crossed even Fei Du’s
face.
Xiao Haiyang was entirely unaware of his own awkward plight, insisting on reciting his lines to
the end. He roared, “You’re all under arrest! Put your guns down! Hands up!”
“Teacher Fan, I’m going to break this ‘equilibrium.’” Fei Du’s gaze flashed. While everyone’s
attention was divided, he seized the opportunity to speak. While he was addressing “Teacher
Fan,” he turned to the woman named “Ruobing” while he spoke. “Before Zhu Feng and Yang
Xin were arrested, a taxi driver came to find me, saying he was one of your people. He was
very sloppy, easily tailed, letting the police follow him to catch Yang Xin and the others. Did you
do that deliberately?”
The woman beside Fan Siyuan stared emptily. Then, as though her hand had been burned, she
released the back of the wheelchair.
“Fu Jiahui had been revealed, so Yang Xin had no more use, either. Letting her run around
would only attract the notice of the police and give Zhang Chunling and the others an opening.
So you deliberately put her and the important lead Zhu Feng together, and…”
Ruobing realized something from his words and stepped back slightly, shaking her head in
disbelief.
Fan Siyuan howled at the man holding the controls to the metal rings: “What are you waiting
for!”
“…exposed them, but you gave them a misleading warning and weapons, because…”
Fei Du’s words came to an abrupt halt as the metal ring drew in tight. Boundless darkness
engulfed him along with the familiar feeling of suffocation, and his memories opened their
bloody mouths towards him. The basement, the ice-cold corpse, the bloody fur, the woman’s
screams… There was a loud rumble. The man holding his neck by the metal ring cut apart the
cords tying his hands. The fatal handgrip was in front of him, and he instinctively reached out
to grab it.
At the same time, Ruobing understood what Fei Du hadn’t had time to say.
Because…
Because Fan Siyuan understood the marionettes under his control, knew that they were all
carved wood steeped in poison, knew that they couldn’t forgive. He also absolutely didn’t
believe that Fei Du was as innocent as he had displayed himself to be at the start; he’d been
certain that he would get his eyes on the warehouse where Yang Xin and the others were
hidden. When the time came, there would be a conflict between the two sides, illegal guns and
violent injuries; there was a 100% chance the police would be alerted, and he could kill two
birds with one stone, blowing both the useless garbage and the deeply-scheming Fei Du out of
the water together.
But something had gone wrong. Fei Du had kept calm, had held back and not moved rashly,
letting the police find the warehouse first.
271
In a moment of desperation, Xiao Haiyang’s mind went blank. He quickly pointed his gun at
Fan Siyuan. “Let him go!”
Meanwhile, Zhang Chunling’s mind roared; he’d heard a different meaning in Fei Du’s brief
description of these events—Fan Siyuan had deliberately exposed the warehouse where Yang
Xin and Zhu Feng were hidden to Fei Du, but the people who ought to have been under Fei
Du’s gaze had inexplicably fallen into the hands of the police.
And when they’d tried to kill Zhou Huaijin, who had secretly ganged up with Fei Du, the police
had arrived abnormally fast.
Fei Du could have gotten inside information from the police so easily by tricking them so they
were going around in circles, or he could also have…
Now that he’d also seen the little four-eyes calling himself the police, what else was there for
Zhang Chunling to understand?
Fei Du’s plot to dupe them hadn’t been at all seamless, but Zhang Chunling and Fan Siyuan,
one because he was wild with worry for his son, the other because of his long-ago strong first
impression, had determined that Fei Du wasn’t at all a good person, and so they hadn’t
carefully considered some details. And Fan Siyuan still hadn’t realized it!
“You told me to choose how to undo this ring?” Zhang Chunling’s expression changed several
times. Unforeseen by anyone, he raised his gun, laughed coldly, and shot at Fei Du.
The men holding Fei Du subconsciously pulled him aside. The bullet brushed past Fei Du and
fell at the foot of Fei Chengyu’s hospital bed. The situation on the scene once again rotated a
hundred and eighty degrees, and Zhang Chunling’s and Fan Siyuan’s people opened fire on
each other.
All of Xiao Haiyang’s hair stood on end. In the confusion, he charged towards Fei Du.
Just then, Ruobing retreated into a corner and suddenly called out, “He put a bomb under the
hospital bed! If you squeeze the handgrip it’ll…”
Before she had finished speaking, a bullet hit her. The woman groaned and went down.
The woman’s shout fell like thunder on everyone’s ears. Fan Siyuan instantly looked at Fei Du—
Fei Du was holding that fatal handgrip in his hand, but for some reason, he would rather be
choked than squeeze it. He was using the remains of his consciousness to look with his blurred
vision at Fan Siyuan, actually forcing out a smile towards him, as though he’d had some
insight.
When the word “bomb” was spoken, Zhang Chunling tensed, and his subordinates charged up
without even thinking about it, wanting to screen him and run out in the midst of Fan Siyuan’s
mad dog counterattack. At the same time, Zhang Chunling shot again at Fei Du, who was
holding the handgrip.
Xiao Haiyang gave a cry, quickly pulled over Fei Chengyu’s hospital bed, and threw himself at
Fei Du, rolling him under the hospital bed. Something fell out of his pocket along with his gun.
At the same time, Fan Siyuan found the strength somewhere to push away the wheelchair.
272
Using the bodies of his subordinates as a shield, like a crawling monster, he fired his gun as he
approached Fei Du and Xiao Haiyang.
Suddenly, Zhang Chunling, who had already retreated to the entrance of the secret passage,
heard his subordinates calling out in panic. “Chairman Zhang, there’s…”
Before Zhang Chunling could turn his head, there was a gunshot, and a fierce pain in his hand
holding the gun—a bullet had passed precisely through his palm.
Fan Siyuan, taking no notice, raised the gun towards Xiao Haiyang, who was blocking Fei Du.
“Press down! Press down! Fei Chengyu used that thing to train you to squeeze your mother’s
throat, countless times! Have you forgotten! Aren’t all your dreams of killing him? Huh?”