“Why should you care?”
It was a fair question, and she knew her answer couldn’t be glib. “I have several reasons, all of them more or less self-serving. First of all, I was hired to find out what happened to the money. I think I’ve taken that between seventy and eighty percent of the way, and I’m professional enough to want to finish the job. Second, I get paid a fee for every dollar I recover. I can’t recover anything unless I know what’s left and where it is. Third, I have taken a certain dislike to Tommy Ordonez. I think he’s the kind of operator who uses people. If I went to him with what I have, he would cut me out without a thought. I don’t want to give him that opportunity. And finally, I really am intrigued by the way Philip handled this deal and the story he spun to Jim Cousins. He’s been very creative, and I want to know the truth.”
Ling looked at the envelope, and she knew he was anxious to view its contents. “You see, it is interesting,” she said.
He shook his head. “Yes, Philip did incorporate the company and asked me to hold the shares.”
“I want it in writing.”
“No problem.”
“Good. I’ll give you a copy of this contract when I get your letter confirming the shares.”
“How about arranging a meeting with Philip?”
“That’s not a condition,” she said. “I just want you to do the best you can. I am serious when I say that I’m his best chance to avoid his brother’s anger.”
“Jesus, you remind me of your father,” Ling said. “Every deal he ever negotiated left something on the table for the other party.”
“There’s no point in being unreasonable,” she said.
“Maybe you should say that to Tommy Ordonez.”
“I will, when I know exactly what happened.”
“You don’t think Philip just made off with fifty million dollars?”
“You know him better than I do. What do you think?”
Ling shook his head again. “Not a chance.”
(12)
Ava woke at 7 a.m. with a start. The time changes and jet lag were beginning to get to her. Her mind was alert but her body felt like a sack of potatoes that had been tossed about in the back of a truck. She rolled off the bed, knelt, and said a small prayer to St. Jude. Then she got up and grabbed a couple of pouches of Starbucks VIA instant coffee from her “Double Happiness” bag. The coffee didn’t energize her nearly enough. She needed a good, brisk run to give her body a real jolt. As she stripped in the bathroom she looked at the still-dark bruises on her body. She sighed, put on her Adidas running gear, and walked over to the window.
The ground was wet but the rain had stopped and the mist had cleared. The Pan Pacific Hotel was in the Canada Place complex on Vancouver’s inner harbour, overlooking Burrard Inlet. Ava could see the Coast Mountains to the northeast and Stanley Park to the northwest. She put on her running jacket and grabbed her cellphone before leaving the room.
Stanley Park was more than four hundred hectares — larger than New York’s Central Park. Within the park, more than two hundred kilometres of trails and roads wound around half a million centuries-old trees, some of them seventy metres high. Ava jogged the perimeter, which was encircled by a seawall close to nine kilometres long that offered breathtaking views of the inlet. It began to rain again, ever so slightly, but the scenery around her was so beautiful that she hardly noticed.
Just as she was passing under Lion’s Gate Bridge, a massive construction that spanned the inlet, connecting the downtown area to wealthy West Vancouver, she heard her cellphone ring. She stopped to retrieve the phone, leaning against the seawall.
“This is Ava Lee.”
“Edward Ling. Good morning.”
“Good morning.”
“You sound winded.”
“I’m running in Stanley Park, halfway around the seawall.”
“In this weather?”
“It isn’t so bad.”
“Well, while you’ve been running, I’ve been working. I have that letter you wanted. I’m going to send it to your hotel by courier and, if you don’t mind, I’ll ask the courier to pick up the envelope you promised me in return.”
“That’s fine, but I’ll be at least another forty-five minutes.”
“There’s no rush on my end.”
“How about Philip Chew? Did you manage to arrange a meeting?” Ava asked.
“I’m afraid I had no luck with that. When I called the house, Philip wouldn’t even come to the phone. I spoke to his wife. She said he was quite ill and not up to handling any business, legal or otherwise. I must say she sounded distressed herself.”
Ava remembered what Chang had said about Philip in Manila. It sounded like it hadn’t been an exaggeration. “That’s unfortunate. I guess we’ll just have to proceed as best as we can without him for now.”
“My letter?”
“If I’m satisfied with it I’ll send the envelope back with your courier.”
“You will be.”
Ava slipped the phone back into her pocket and resumed her run around the seawall, but now her mind was less on the scenery and more on Philip Chew. She considered her options. Call the Chew residence? Go directly to their home and try to worm her way in? Contact Louis Marx to see if he could broker a meeting? She knew that unless she was willing to get on a plane to Costa Rica and traipse from bank to bank, trying to locate those fifteen different recipients, her only real chance of finding out what had happened to the money was to talk to Philip Chew.
It was ten thirty when she walked, wet but energized, into the hotel lobby. When she got to her room, she saw a white envelope on the floor. There was a note and a phone number on the front: I’m waiting in the lobby. Call me when you want me to pick up the paperwork for Mr. Ling.
Ava ripped open the envelope. Ling’s letter was short and to the point, confirming that KVD had been incorporated by Philip Chew and that McDougal, Fraser, and Ling held the shares in trust for him, and only him. It was what she wanted. She called the courier’s cellphone number and told the woman who answered that the envelope for Edward Ling would be waiting outside her door.
Ava stripped and stepped into the shower. As she was standing under the hot spray, trying to relax her aching muscles, her mother came to mind.
Jennie, Ava, and Marian had relocated to Canada from Hong Kong when their father had taken on his third wife. For two years before moving to Toronto they had lived in Vancouver, where Ava knew her mother had had an active social life and a wide circle of friends. Mah-jong players, other second wives, Vegas junketeers — women with money, looking to fill their days with fun. Ava also knew that, true to her mother’s social nature, Jennie had kept in touch with many of them.
It was close to eleven when she left the bathroom, two o’clock in Toronto.
“Yes,” Jennie Lee said. Ava could hear mah-jong tiles clicking in the background.
“Mummy, it’s Ava.”
“Where are you?”
“Vancouver,” Ava said. “I think I need your help.”
“Give me a minute.” Ava heard her mother talking to her friends, and then the phone went silent. When Jennie came back on the line, there was no background noise. “I went outside so we could talk properly. What is going on?”
“You still have a lot of friends here, don’t you?”
“Of course. Auntie Grace, Auntie Lily, Auntie Kimmy — lots of them.”
“Could you make some calls for me?”
“Why?”
“There’s a very wealthy man here named Philip Chew. Could you find out if any of the aunties know him or his wife?”
“Why?”
“Because I need to talk to him, and I think if I try to do it directly I won’t have any luck. It might actually be best if I could talk to his wife first, and I was hoping maybe one of the aunties knows her and could help make that happen.”
“Her name is Kitty.”
“Who?”
“Philip Chew’s wife.”
“You know her?”