As I watched her and her comrades, what began to emerge were patterns, certain consistencies in the interaction of the core group and the crowds, the FBI, the police, the camera. And certainly, with each other.
I was reminded of dummy bumps. My own head hurt. The apartment was stuffy, and too small for Mrs. Lim, me, the TV, and the vacuum at the same time. I gave up and piled all the tapes back into the carton.
I got up to search Emily’s medicine cabinet for some aspirin. She had a shitload of prescription drugs and pharmaceutical samples, but nothing that looked like ordinary aspirin. My days of chemical experimentation are long over, so I passed on it all.
I put on my jacket and went to tell Mrs. Lim that I was going out. When I found her, she had her head in the oven.
“I’m going over to Broadway,” I said. “Need anything?”
Mrs. Lim sat back on her haunches and wiped her face on her sleeve. I make noodle for dinner. You just put in oven, ten minute, maybe fifteen minute.”
“Thank you. You’ve been so wonderful. I could not have gotten through the last two days without you.”
She dismissed the schmaltz with a wave of her hand and picked up her cleaning rag again. “You be one for dinner tonight, or two?”
“Excuse me?” I said.
“Michael Flint leaves his tie under living room chair,” she said, and winked lewdly. I press, you give it back to him.”
“I’ll do that,” I said.
She smiled up at me, showing the gaps among her front teeth. The smile was absolutely salacious. “Noodle for two?”
“That would be perfect. I’ll get out of your way now.”
It was pretty funny, thinking about Mrs. Lim taking someone to her bony breast. But at some point, she must have. The image was damned disconcerting.
On my way out, I found Mike’s tie folded over a hanger by the front door. I ran the red and blue silk through my fingers and thought about Mike and wondered how he was. I really had nothing new to tell him-Mrs. Lim found your tie?
I went into Emily’s study, anyway, and dialed the number on the card he had given me.
“Robbery-Homicide. Pellegrino speaking.”
“Is Detective Flint in?” I asked.
“Sorry, he’s out in the field. Can I take a message?”
“Just tell him Maggie called.”
“Will do.”
I felt vaguely disappointed, and I puzzled over why I felt as
I did all the way downstairs and out across Hill Street. The sky was clearing, deep blue holes burned through gray clouds. It was still windy. My short jacket, the one Jaime had paid for, didn’t offer much warmth. But after the closeness of the apartment, the brisk air was a welcome slap.
I cut through Gin Ling Way, giving Hop Louie’s wide berth, and headed for the shops on Broadway. There were at least a dozen Chinese apothecaries in the long block, but no occidental drugstores. Seeking at most directions to the nearest Thrifty, Jr., I stepped into Hong’s, an apothecary I had once visited with Emily.
Hong’s had been around long enough for the oak cabinets that lined the walls to have acquired a soft, burnished patina. The cabinets had hundreds of tiny drawers, each drawer no more than six inches square on the front. It was the contents of the drawers that gave the place its delicious air of mystery-the ingredients of ancient folk remedies: magic cures for impotence, rashes on the liver, a runny nose. Emily told me that Mr. Hong once offered to mix her a tea that would attract a husband. She had turned him down.
The shop was narrow. Much of the floor space was taken up by barrels and wooden crates filled with dried yellow fish and squid, cuttlebone, a variety of desiccated roots, herbs, preserved seaweed, and aromatic teas. Most of it looked fairly disgusting to the uninitiated eye. But the smell was wonderful, a combination of sharp spice and dry earth.
Mr. Hong, in a white pharmacy coat, stood behind the long glass counter. He was mixing a potion for an ancient man who sat on a high stool at the far end.
I walked over to watch, fascinated. Maybe a little magic was what I needed, too.
Suspended by a cord from Mr. Hong’s forefinger was a scale, a salad-plate-size copper disk. He opened drawers and measured out ingredients, weighed each carefully on his scale, then poured it all into a stone mortar: white beetle carapaces, a length of dry snakeskin, thick black threads of something, a thumb-size bit of a hairy red root. All of this he ground in the mortar. Finally, he poured the powder onto a square of pink paper and twisted the corners.
The old man waiting for this concoction had no teeth and one eye had a milky cloud. He put some money on the counter, tucked the twist of pink paper into his shirt pocket, and shuffled with difficulty toward the door. I hoped the powder had the right magic. I hoped he lived long enough to get home and brew it up. Or whatever he was supposed to do with it.
Mr. Hong smiled at me. “May I help you?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “I have a headache.”
He bowed, reached under the counter and brought out two large glass bottles filled with white tablets. “Bayer or Tylenol?” he asked.
“Bayer, please,” I said, smiling to myself.
As I searched my pockets for money, he poured me a glass of water and opened the aspirin. He counted two onto a square of the pink paper and put the paper in front of me.
“It is the change in the weather that makes your head hurt,” he said.
“Is it?” I swallowed the tablets and decided against countering his theory with my own: too many late nights, a bit of booze, a good thumping, hours of old videotapes. Emily. I put the water glass down on the paper and set a dollar next to it. “Thank you.”
He counted out some change and bowed when he handed it to me. “Have a nice day.”
I walked out laughing. Even in Chinatown, weren’t we to be spared? The prospects for the day I faced could hardly qualify for “nice.”
My head began to clear a little. The back of my neck still felt stiff from the blow I had taken at La Placita church, but it was better, too. Maybe “nice” was relative.
I decided to take the bus downtown rather than hassle with Max’s car in traffic. I could get the car anytime. I went down to the Dash stop across from Saigon Plaza and waited in the queue.
Caesar came shambling down the street and saw me before I could decide whether I wanted to speak with him or not. “Hey, pretty lady,” he said. “How you doin’ this fine day?”
“Okay,” I said. “How are you?”
“Not so good, but thanks for asking. You find that dude you was lookin’ for?”
“Not yet.”
“I’ll keep my eyes open.”
I appreciate it.” That should have been good-bye, but he just stood there.
“So?” I said.
“Like I say, I’m not doin’ so good. Don’ know how long I can keep my eyes open.”
I found a couple of singles in my pocket. “Maybe a little pick-me-up would help?”
“Thank you, pretty lady.” He scooted off at a good clip, going a whole lot faster than he had come.
I caught the Dash and took it to Sixth Street, then walked the two and a half blocks down Flower to Rod Peebles’s district office in the Broadway Plaza. When I had called earlier, I hadn’t asked if I could join the party nor even left my name. I thought surprise might be the best approach.
Rod was an enigma to me. After spending a good part of the last twelve hours watching Emily’s core group in action, I still hadn’t figured out how, where, perhaps if, Rod Peebles fit in. He wasn’t quite what he seemed to be.
At every demonstration I had seen on Garth’s tapes, Rod arrived early with the vanguard of people who set up the platform and sound system, got out the propaganda, tacked up the banners, piled picket signs, set up the legal table. They were a very efficient group: each had a task and performed it. But Rod was a floater. He hung around the sound man, though I never saw tools or electrical tape in his hands. He hovered near the boxes of printed matter while others took handfuls and headed off to enlighten passersby. Rod never picked up a flyer, tacked up a banner, touched a picket sign. During speeches, he stood on the platform with the others, but always at the rear. Rod was background noise; he didn’t give speeches.