A Loyal Character Dancer - [Chief Inspector Chen Cao 02] (51 page)

BOOK: A Loyal Character Dancer - [Chief Inspector Chen Cao 02]
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“So you will be like him one of those days?”

 

“No one can tell, you know that.”

 

“I know. What will happen to you, Chief Inspector Chen?” She gazed into her cup. “I mean, when will your next promotion be?”

 

“That depends on a lot of unforseeable factors, factors beyond my control.”

 

“You’re a political rising star, you cannot help yourself.”

 

“Do we have to talk about politics until you take off?”

 

“No, we don’t, but we live in politics, like it or not. That’s one of the modernist theories you have lectured me on, Chief Inspector Chen. I’m learning the Chinese way fast.”

 

“You are being sarcastic, Catherine,” he said, trying to change the subject. “Ten days here will be enough. I hope, to keep up your interest in Chinese studies.”

 

“Yes, I’ll go on with my Chinese studies. Perhaps I’ll take some evening courses this year.”

 

He had expected she would ask more questions about the investigation. She was entitled to, but she did not.

 

Actually, there were some things he had chosen not to disclose in the meeting room. For one, he had learned from Gu that the gangsters had been instructed not to carry guns while following the chief inspector and his American partner. According to Gu, because of Chen’s connections at the highest level, the gangsters did not want to make an enemy of him. Then, too, the Beijing government would never let the matter drop if an American marshal was killed in China. This might also explain a common aspect of the earlier accidents, which, though serious, had not been intended to be fatal. Not even the shot fired at Yu.

 

Putting down her cup, she took a picture out of her purse. “I have something for you.”

 

It showed a young girl sitting at a table in a sidewalk caf
é
, playing a guitar, her shoulder-length hair shining in the sunlight, her sandals dangling over a brass plaque on the sidewalk.

 

He recognized her. “It’s you, Catherine.”

 

“Yes, five or six years ago, at a cafe on Delmar. Do you see the brass plaque? There are more than a dozen there, like in Hollywood, except that these honor celebrities associated with St. Louis. Including T. S. Eliot, of course.”

 

“Is that one of the celebrity plaques?”

 

“Eliot’s,” she said. “Sorry, I did not mean any disrespect to your favorite poet.”

 

“No, he would have liked it—a beautiful girl weaving the sunlight in her hair, singing, dangling her sandals over his memorial.”

 

“I asked my mother to dig out the picture and send it to me. It’s the only one connecting me to him.”

 

“What a lovely picture!”

 

“Someday you may be sitting there, talking about Eliot, stirring memories with a coffee spoon, when the evening is spread out against the sky.”

 

“I would like that.”

 

“That’s a promise, Chief Inspector Chen. You are on the invitation list of the U. S. News Agency, aren’t you?” she said. “Keep the picture. When you think of T. S. Eliot, you may think of me, too—occasionally.”

 

“I will not think of Eliot as often as—” he stopped short. He would be crossing the line. It was forbidden. Abruptly he envisioned himself, as Eliot put it,
hearing the mermaids singing, each to each, but not to him,
as he walked in Bund Park.

 

“And I look forward to reading more of your poems, in English or in Chinese.”

 

“I tried to work out some lines last night, but sitting beside Liu in the car, I realized what a lousy poet I am—And a lousy cop too.”

 

“Why are you so hard on yourself?” She took his hand across the table. “You are doing your best in a difficult situation. I understand.”

 

But there was a lot she might not understand. He did not make an immediate response.

 

She continued, “Did you tell Party Secretary Li about the parking lot deal with Gu?”

 

“No, I didn’t.” He had anticipated this question. Li had shown no surprise at his dealing with Gu. It appeared as if Li had known about it.

 

How deeply was Li connected with the Blue? As the number-one police official responsible for the security of the city, Party Secretary Li might have had to maintain some sort of working relationship with the local triad. In the Party’s newspapers, the slogan, “political stability,” was still emphasized as the highest priority after the eventful summer of 1989. But he seemed to be more deeply involved.

 

“What about Qian’s light green cell phone?” she said. “I did not remember seeing one in the market.”

 

“When you were behind the fitting room curtain, I saw someone dialing a cell phone of the same unusual color.”

 

A melody was being played in the bar. It was another song that had been popular during the Cultural Revolution. Chen failed to remember its words except for one refrain—
”We shall be beholden to Chairman Mao, generation after generation.”
He shook his head.

 

“What is it?”

 

“Just the song.” He was relieved at the change of topic. “There is a revival of those popular songs from the time of the Cultural Revolution. This one’s a Red Guard song. Wen could have danced the loyal character dance to it.”

 

“Do people miss those songs?”

 

“They appeal to people, I think, not because of their contents, but they were part of people’s lives—for ten years.”

 

“Which holds meaning for them, the melody or their memories?” she said, subtly echoing the line he had recited for her in the Suzhou garden.

 

“I don’t have the answer,” he said, thinking of another question that had just come up in their conversation.

 

Was he himself a loyal character dancer, in a different time and place?

 

He’d better turn in a report to Minister Huang now. He was not yet sure what exactly to say. At this stage of his career, it might be best for him to show his loyalty directly to the Beijing ministry, circumventing Party Secretary Li.

 

“What are you thinking about, Chief Inspector Chen?”

 

“Nothing.”

 

They heard Party Secretary Li calling to them from a distance, “Comrade Chief Inspector Chen, boarding in ten minutes.”

 

Li was walking toward the cafe, pointing at the new information displayed on the screen above the gate.

 

“I’m coming,” he responded before he turned back to her. “I have something for you too, Inspector Rohn. When Liu did his shopping for Wen on the way to the airport, I chose a fan and copied several lines on it.”

 

Long, long I lament

there is not a self for me to claim,

oh, when can I forget

all the cares of the world?

The night deep, the wind still, no ripples on the river.

 

“Your lines?”

 

“No, Su Dongpu’s.”

 

“Can you recite the poem for me?”

 

“No, I cannot remember the rest of the poem. These few lines alone came to me.”

 

“I’ll find the poem in a library. Thank you, Chief Inspector Chen.” She stood up, folding the fan.

 

“Hurry up. Please. It’s time,” Party Secretary Li urged.

 

The line of passengers started moving through the gate.

 

“Hurry up.” Qian was now at Li’s side, holding that light green cell phone in his hand.

 

Wen and Liu stood at the end of the newly formed line, holding each other’s hand.

 

It would be Chief Inspector Chen’s responsibility to separate the two, and to send Wen through the gate.

 

And Inspector Rohn, too.

 

Along with a part of himself, he thought, though he might have lost it long ago, perhaps as early as those mornings on the dew-decked green bench in Bund Park.

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