Dead in Hong Kong (Nick Teffinger Thriller) (13 page)

BOOK: Dead in Hong Kong (Nick Teffinger Thriller)
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Kong got there early, an hour before the club opened.

Good thing, too.

Problems were already in the making.

 

SHORTLY AFTER MIDNIGHT, something unexpected happened. Jack Poon showed up, in the flesh. That by itself would have provided cause to take notice. To add to the spectacle, however, his slender frame was sandwiched between two women, both western, both blond, both a good six inches taller than him, both drop-dead gorgeous.

Everyone in the club stared.

Most didn’t know who he was, at least by sight
, b
ut everyone knew one thing—he had deep pockets
, l
ots and lots of deep pockets.

For that reason alone, people parted as he walked.

Kong hustled his way over t
o see if the man needed liquor or a roped-off booth or
pri
vate room to screw his lovelies or w
hatever.

“Actually, I swung by to talk to you,” Poon said. “Remember that new plan that I was going to work on?”

Kong remembered and nodded.

“Well, I think I came up with something.” He slapped Kong on the back and said, “You’re going to be in awe. It makes that airplane thing look like a day at the zoo.”

Kong swallowed, b
oth excited and repulsed.

“No parachutes, right?” he asked.

Poon grinned and said, “You’re too much.” Then he handed one of the blonds to him and said, “This one’s for you. Let’s sit down somewhere and have a drink.”

 

THEY ENDED UP IN THE HOSTESS ROOM, Twisted, at the booth in the back corner. Poon ordered six women, shoved money in their crotches and got them drunk. Then he positioned them as a visual wall around the perimeter of the table and motioned for the blonds to get underneath.

They did.

Kong felt his zipper slide down.

Poon cocked his head and said, “The rules are simple. Keep your hands on the table. The first one who comes is the loser.”

Chapter Thirty-Six

Day Five—August 7

Friday Night

______________

 

TWO MINUTES AFTER the artist said “Two minutes,” the vehicle came to a stop and the engine shut off. Prarie reached up to uncover her eyes when a vice-like hand wrapped around her wrist and brought it down.

“Leave the blindfolds on until we get inside.”

“Why?”

“Just humor me,” he said. “It’s only a few more minutes.”

He led them out of the car and through a door.

“Okay, you can take them off,” he said.

Prarie expected to be in a studio, standing in the midst of paintings. But she was in a dark industrial warehouse, mostly empty and gutted, but with scattered silhouettes of ancient machinery here and there. Two
sturdy wooden
chairs sat on the concrete in front of her.
Each had rope tied on the arms and legs, where a person’s wrists and ankles would be. The man looked at Emmanuelle first, then Prarie, and said, “You are very stupid ladies.”

Suddenly a second person grabbed Emmanuelle from behind.

It was a
man
, a
strong man.

She screamed.

The scream stopped when the man brought a cloth to her mouth and pulled it against her face.

She struggled violently.

It did no good.

Then she dropped to the ground.

 

AT THE SAME TIME
someone g
rabbed Prarie from behind, a
third man.

A terrible saturated cloth came to her mouth.

Her first instinct was to grab the man’s hand and pull it off, but she couldn’t. Then she dropped straight down, slithered out from under his arms and rolled when she hit the ground. Something was there next to her—Emmanuelle’s purse.

The man came at her
as a cat would a mouse
, slowly
, e
njoying the anticipation.

“So, you want to play?” he said.

Before she knew it, the gun was in her hand.

The man by Emmanuelle saw it and charged with a knife.

Fast.

With obvious intent.

She fired.

Bam!

Bam!.

He dropped to the ground, twitched, gurgled and then stopped moving.

The other man came at her.

The cat.

She turned the gun on him.

“Stop right there!”

He hesitated, as if deciding, and then stopped.

The air was deathly silent.

No one said a word.

Not a sound came from anywhere, other than the air passing in and out of everyone’s lungs.

Chapter Thirty-Seven

Day Five—August 7

Friday Night

______________

 

WEARING A SHORT BLACK DRESS and matching high heels, Fan Rae picked
Teffinger
up at the Fleming after dark and headed east on Hennessy Road towards the Wan Chai district. The garment rode up as she drove, dangerously high, and the smooth golden skin of her thighs occasionally flashed with a neon blue or green or yellow. Fan Rae must have caught him staring because she said, “I did what you wanted.”

“You mean the panties?”

She nodded.

“Lack thereof, to be precise,” she said. “Go ahead and check.”

He almost did, but said, “Later.”

“You’re such a tease.” She exhaled. “Hong Kong nights get me horny. They’re the best in the world. I’ve been to a lot of places—Bangkok, Tokyo, Rome, Paris—none of them compare.”

“Have you ever been to the United States?”

She shook her head.

“No interest,” she said.

Minutes later they were on Queens Road East, pulling into the parking lot of a standalone building with a neon sig
n that said
High Tide Bar
.

“We’re here,” she said.

 

A LARGE NUMBER OF WOMEN were inside, all young, all beautiful, all professional flirts. From what Fan Rae told
Teffinger
earlier, most of the hostess girls in Hong Kong were now from the Philippines or Thailand. Their main function was to fawn over the men, get them drunk, feed them fruit, sing Karaoke, rub their legs and laugh heartily at anything that was even remotely funny.

They were adorable young women spending time with older, not-so-adorable guys.

For that, the men paid roughly $500 HKD per hour per girl.

Plus the bar tab.

Plus tips.

Many of the men were Chinese businessmen who came to close deals and show respect to their counterparts by spending money on them. In those situations, the girls were careful to not favor one man over another, as such would be an act of disrespect.

Then there were the westerners, expats and weary travelers, looking for a little company and hoping there would at least be an under-the-table handjob at the end of it all.

There wouldn’t be.

There was no sex, not in the club
anyway.

Many of the women though wrote down their phone numbers for after-hours services, off-site.

One Girl, One Room.

That was the most popular form of prostitution in Hong Kong, meaning one woman with her own, private apartment.

No pimps.

No hotels.

The High Tide Bar, like most hostess bars, started life at a topless bar. Then there came a point when licenses were no longer given out. The topless bars eventually disappeared as they were traded or sold. Hostess bars sprang up in their stead as the next best thing.

 

TEFFINGER
AND FAN RAE TOOK A BOOTH. A few minutes later, a classy woman named Sun An joined them. She was old enough that she was clearly not one of the girls but probably had been ten years ago.

“Would you like me to send a girl over?” she asked.

Fan Rae nodded.

“Yes, Syling Wu,” she said.

Sun Ah frowned.

“Syling has not shown up yet.”

“Is she scheduled?”

“She is.”

“When was she supposed to be here?”

Sun Ah looked at her watch.

“An hour ago.”

“Is she usually late?”

No.

Never.

Not even five minutes.

This was very unlike her.

“Did she call in?”

No.

She didn’t.

“We’ll wait for a little and see if she shows up,” Fan Rae said.

Sun Ah patted her hand and said, “Fine. In the meantime, would you like someone else to join you?”

“Yes, please.”

“Do you see one in particular that you’d like?”

Fan Rae looked at
Teffinger
and said, “You choose.”

Teffinger
surveyed the landscape and said, “Who would Syling want here, if she shows up and joins us?”

“Probably her,” Sun Ah said, nodding.

“Okay then,”
Teffinger
said. “Her.”

 

TEFFINGER
HAD TO ADMIT, the woman who joined them—a 21-year-old Bangkok girl named Dan Dan—would have been enticing to a man who was looking for nothing other than youth and beauty.
She was too young for
Teffinger
’s taste, though, and he wished she was in a dorm room studying for a test instead of sitting here with her hand on his knee.

They ordered drinks.

Sun Ah set an entire bottle on the table, plus three glasses.

Teffinger
must have had a look on his face because Fan Rae whispered in his ear, “I got the tab, so relax.”

“You sure?”

She nodded.

“I’ll be reimbursed,” she said. “This is work.”

Okay.

Good.

Dan Dan had big brown eyes, a fashionably distressed hairdo, a floral silk blouse hugging a buxom chest, and a white miniskirt. She started off perky, in character, but got serious when they told her they were detectives and wanted to know about Syling Wu.

“She just up and vanished,” Dan Dan said.

She no longer answered her phone.

She wasn’t at her apartment.

None of her friends had seen her.

No one had heard from her.

She didn’t show up for work tonight.

“And here’s something else weird,” Dan Dan said. “A man was in here earlier tonight looking for her and wanting to know if anyone knew where she was. The guy gave me the creeps.”

“What was his name?”

“He never told me,” Dan Dan said. “Something happened to Syling. I don’t know if this creepy guy was part of it or what. But something definitely happened to her. She’s g
-punk
—not here of course, on her own time—but she’s stable and dependable.”

Teffinger
raked his fingers through his hair.

“Describe this guy,” he said. “The creep.”

She did.

He was about fifty, Chinese, five-three and slight of build. “There was something wrong with his eyes.”

“You mean physically wrong?”

“No, more like the brain behind those eyes was—what?—I don’t know, twisted or something.”

“Would you recognize the guy, if you saw him again?”

Dan Dan nodded.

Definitely.

In a heartbeat.

Teffinger
was about questioned out when one more popped into his head. “Was Syling into pagan practices or anything like that?”

Dan Dan shook her head.

“No,” she said.

“Is that the kind of thing you would know about, if it was happening?”

“I think so.”

“Did Syling ever go to a bar called
Hei Yewan
?”

“Yes.”

“Yes?”

Dan Dan nodded.

“Yes, probably once a m
onth or thereabouts. It’s a g-punk
hangout.”

“Did she ever go to the back room of that place?”

The woman looked confused.

“I didn’t know there was a back room.”

“Syling never said anything about
a back room that has a K’ung chia symbol
painted on the floor?”

No.

She didn’t.

“Is that why she’s gone?” Dan Dan asked. “Because of that room?”

BOOK: Dead in Hong Kong (Nick Teffinger Thriller)
3.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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