Justine recognized the smell when she stepped onto the landing. The sweet ripeness with a hint of the putrid stench that was to come as decay set in.
She hurried into the bedroom directly opposite the staircase and found the bodies of two men splayed on the floor. She recognized one from his Ryedale Engineering employee photograph, Francis Johnson, otherwise known as Billy Bostic, and guessed that the man lying next to him, who bore more than a passing resemblance, was his brother Joe.
Both men had been shot in the head at close range.
“We’d better call this in,” Justine said.
Sci had already produced a pair of latex gloves. “Go ahead. I’ll see what I can find before the police get here.”
Chapter 31
“And you didn’t touch or disturb anything when you found the bodies?” Otis Urban, one of the detectives leading the murder investigation, asked.
It was late afternoon by now and Justine was feeling the heat as she gave her statement to the detective. He was a short, slight man with dark hair and a heavily stubbled jaw. He had an air of intensity that reminded Justine of a hummingbird. His black suit was lined with mustard-yellow silk, which added to the mental image she had formed.
They were standing in the shade of a beech tree in the neighboring garden, but even in the shadows it was hot on this sweltering day. Justine could see Sci being interviewed by Urban’s partner, Siobhan Sullivan, in a garden across the street.
Howard Avenue had been cordoned off and Bostic’s house was now a crime scene, with forensic experts checking every inch of the interior and grounds. Police officers and plain-clothes detectives were canvassing the neighborhood, talking to locals about what they might have seen or heard.
“We came straight out and called 911,” Justine assured Urban.
She didn’t feel comfortable about misleading the detective, but Sci had insisted there was no need for them to know he had spent quite a while combing the crime scene. He had been careful, he said, and insisted that their knowing the truth would only complicate matters. A good defense lawyer would be able to say the scene had been compromised, even though Sci had been meticulous as ever.
Urban checked his notes. “Okay,” he said. “I think I’ve got everything I need for now.”
“You know where to find me if you need anything else,” Justine said.
The detective nodded. “Thanks,” he responded before moving toward the house.
Justine watched Sci wrap up his interview and saunter over to join her.
“Boy, it’s hot,” he remarked.
“You tell them what you found?” Justine asked.
“Yeah,” Sci replied. “Nothing.”
She responded with a skeptical look.
“I’m serious,” he said. “They might recover some DNA or microfibers, but I doubt it. Looks like a professional hit. And if we hadn’t identified the brother from the photo on Facebook, we would have no idea who they really were. Their wallets and phones were taken. Probably destroyed.”
“You think they were killed by whoever bought the detonators?” Justine asked.
Sci nodded. “Most likely. Trying to cover his or her tracks.”
“Makes sense,” Justine agreed. “But we have nothing to go on.”
“I didn’t say that,” Sci replied with a twinkle in his eye. “I sent Mo-bot some information. We’ll see what she can do with it.”
Justine eyed him with suspicion and shook her head. He and Mo-bot had earnt their reputations as legends within their respective fields. If anyone could find this killer, it was them.
Chapter 32
I was sitting watching the footage being transmitted by the drones, listening to the restful sound of Zhang Daiyu sleeping. Hua had set us up in one of the Beijing office’s surveillance vans, a black LDV 9 with screens, audio receivers, and data-capture systems that made the most of the information being transmitted by the bugs he’d hidden around Molly Tan’s apartment.
Hua had taken away the defunct bugs we had discovered in the apartment for analysis. They were standard-issue CREPTO, the same model and design as the ones he’d installed. Intelligence agencies and private security companies throughout Asia used them.
Zhang Daiyu and I stayed in the van, which was parked around the corner from Molly Tan’s building. We decided to split the day into shifts and I was on point first, monitoring the apartment while Zhang Daiyu slept in a cot at the back of the vehicle. She was due to relieve me at 8 a.m., but she was exhausted and still suffering from the after-effects of the street attack, so I planned to let her sleep in if she didn’t wake naturally.
Her breathing was deep and rhythmic. It would have sent me off to sleep too had it not been for the years of training that kept me alert and focused on the mission. There would be a time for sleep, but this wasn’t it.
The apartment was completely still. Molly and her husband were in bed and their two boys were fast asleep in their bedrooms. She was one of the richest women in China, if not the world, but when it came to the fundamentals of life, her needs were the same as everyone else’s.
I’d never really had to worry about money, not in the way people operating at the margins of society do, but I’d been exposed to the challenges faced by families who weren’t as fortunate as the Tans. I wondered how many children could be fed and clothed with Molly Tan’s fortune. Retaining just half of it would still have left her a wealthy woman, but how many lives might the other half have changed? I wasn’t usually big on politics, but inequality on this scale was hard to ignore. It was of course built into the capitalist system, and was one of the distinguishing features of a functioning democracy, but China claimed to be something else. Yet still there were people like Molly Tan living here, who had so much when countless others had so little.
I couldn’t quite square this in my mind.
I allowed my thoughts to wander for a time, to avoid the lure of sleep, but eventually I forced myself to focus on the job in hand: watching the Tans’ apartment. Nothing much happened and I settled into the rhythm of the sleeping household, disturbed only by the occasional deep breath or snore.
Then, at a little after 5 a.m., the peaceful scene was interrupted by something completely unexpected. I saw the living-room door open. The live video feed from the surveillance device in the air vent above the living area showed two men in ski masks creep into view.
They were both carrying pistols fitted with long suppressors and I had little doubt they had come to murder Molly Tan.
Chapter 33
“Zhang Daiyu, wake up,” I said, and she stirred immediately. “We’ve got a problem.”
I pointed to the screen showing the two masked men creeping through Molly Tan’s apartment. One was slight, the other tall and muscular. They were both dressed in black and moved with the grace of leopards.
She rolled off the cot and hurried over to join me as I pulled out my phone and dialed a number.
On a second screen, I saw Molly roll over in bed, fumble for her vibrating phone, and answer me.
“It’s Jack Morgan. Don’t hang up,” I said. “You need to move fast. There are two men in your apartment. They have guns and they’re coming for you.”
I saw her sit bolt upright.
Behind me, Zhang Daiyu was making another phone call and rattling off information in Mandarin. I guessed she was on the phone to the police.
“Do you have a panic room?” I asked.
“Yes,” Molly replied.
“Go there now,” I said. “Do not switch on any lights.”