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A Case of Two Cities

A Case of Two Cities

Titel: A Case of Two Cities Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Qiu Xiaolong
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helped, he knew. There could be something terribly wrong in his work, he suspected.
     
    “I have something for you,” she said, producing a folder. “A transcript of Bao’s cell phone calls. Perhaps you may make something out of it.”
     
    “Oh, you are so effective.”
     
    “Our people in L.A. have been following Xing and his associates closely. Especially his mysterious next-door neighbor. The man who called Bao had been seen in their company, so they tapped his line as well.”
     
    The first page was from a phone call to Bao on the day of their arrival in St. Louis. From L.A. The caller must have known Bao well.
     
    “I have phoned your hotel several times, Master Bao, and they told me you have not arrived yet. I was worried. So I’m making this call on your cell phone.”
     
    “Don’t worry. The highway traffic was terrible. We have just checked in.”
     
    “Is that the hotel you have shown me in the list?”
     
    “Yes, it’s a good hotel. A five-star one, close to the Arch. I don’t know how to pronounce its name in English.”
     
    “That cop still has the best room?”
     
    “Don’t mention him again. He alone has a massage bath in his room. And he simply takes it for granted. He must be luxuriating in the American bubbles right now, I bet.”
     
    “A typical bourgeoisie—you are absolutely right, Master Bao. It’s depressing even to talk about him. I’m calling you because I know someone in the shopping mall under your hotel. Old Fan, the owner of a Chinese buffet. Mention my name, and he will probably give you a treat. He may not have read your poetry, though.”
     
    “Yes, I’ll go there.”
     
    “Well, I’ll call you again if I have some other information.”
     
    * * * *
     
    There were several earlier phone records. Chen knew he did not have the time to peruse all of them. That call alone was enough to arouse serious suspicion. The mysterious caller might have been a fan of Bao’s poetry, but a fan, however passionate or devoted, would not have made a long-distance call, from a public phone, to his “master,” talking about the luxurious room of another writer, or about another restaurant owner he knew slightly. Furthermore, they must have had earlier discussions about Chen. At the least Bao had shown him the itinerary of their visit—including the name of the hotel in St. Louis.
     
    “According to Detective Lenich,” she said, “a Chinese man asked about your room number at the front desk, and then made a call in the lobby.”
     
    Chen recalled now. The afternoon, upon his arrival, a call came into his room. When he picked it up, the caller hung up.
     
    He didn’t give it a thought at the time.
     
    He knew he was in more serious trouble than he cared to admit. A possibility he had so far refused to acknowledge scuttled across the floors of his subconscious. He took a drink, trying not to show any change in his expression.
     
    “There’s one thing about being a poet,” he said. “Occasionally, you may be followed by your fans all the way.”
     
    “Here is the tape. The transcript was done in a hurry. So you can listen more carefully.”
     
    “I don’t know how I can thank you enough, Catherine.”
     
    “I’m concerned about you. It’s also in the common interest of our two countries that nothing else happens to your delegation,” she said, glancing at her watch. “It’s time for us to go back, I think.”
     
    “Yes, I’m afraid so.”
     
    It was a fact, he knew, but it disappointed him. He didn’t want to talk about it. The music from the café seemed to be slowing down with a dying fall.
     
    There was a black bat flitting around over their heads.
     
    * * * *
     

25
     
     
    T
    HE FOLLOWING MORNING PROMISED to be an easy one for Catherine, with the delegation scheduled for a visit to Washington University.
     
    “You must have stayed up quite late,” Shasha said to her over breakfast. “Chen could be a romantic poet.”
     
    Catherine smiled without giving a response. It was true that she had stayed up late last night. Back from the Central West End, she had a long discussion with Detective Lenich on the phone. He stuck to his theory of insider involvement. For such a hypothesis, Little Huang had to be somebody of secret significance. According to Chen, however, there was nothing to support that. She believed her Chinese partner and Lenich had not been that pleased with her inclination. Then she did more research on her laptop,

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