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“But why would Yan take the risk now?” he asked.

“The heart,” replied Dong. “The election.”

“I don’t know,” said Sally, forever the skeptic.

“Why don’t we ask Lin?” suggested Cape.

Sally and Dong exchanged a look.

“What?”

“We’ve got a little problem,” said Sally. “Lin has disappeared.”

Chapter Forty-eight

Xan taught his students the value of patience, though he had none himself.

It had been a long day, and the night was turning cold. But as he looked across the street toward the alley, Xan smiled for the first time in days.

Patience had its rewards, after all.

Chapter Forty-nine

Sally told Cape that when she came back last night, Dong was asleep, his two guards were unconscious, and Lin was gone.

Sally had mistakenly assumed Lin was too weak to move. And since their view from the bunker was limited, Sally had gone out to patrol the neighborhood.

Cape asked why Lin had run.

“If Lin recognized Dong-and it’s not hard, with that eye rolling around-she’d know he was forced out of the Triad. She could have fallen into a trap or a plot to steal the dragon’s heart for himself.”

“Wouldn’t she have trusted you?” Cape had asked. “You said you were close to her sister.”

Sally’s eyes hardened. “That was a long time ago,” she said, adding, “And I’m not there anymore.” She looked at Cape, but her eyes were still somewhere else. “Lin is who I would have become, had I stayed. Trust isn’t part of her vocabulary.”

“You think she went to Yan without the dragon?”

Sally shrugged. “She wasn’t strong enough to risk stealing it, even if she knew where Dong kept it hidden. I might have come back at any minute. This way, at least she could tell Yan where it was. That’s better than being trapped or dead underground.”

“I thought I was paranoid.”

Sally shook her head. “You’re not even close,” she said. “Lin was trained to be suspicious.”

Time was running out now that Lin was missing. They needed to get an angle on Yan quickly, otherwise they’d be going in blind. And since Yan was a respected public figure and they were an exiled criminal, a trained assassin, and a private investigator with questionable judgment, the best they could hope for would be to get arrested.

So Cape climbed the ladder and crawled out of the hole. His phone couldn’t get a signal in Dong’s underground lair, and reception wasn’t much better between the buildings. He walked the length of the alley, checked the signal on his phone, and dialed Linda’s number.

It rang almost ten times before there was an answer.

Linda didn’t like to get too close to phones, so when it rang, she dashed across the room, pushed the button for the speakerphone, then retreated to a safe distance and shouted, which always made her sound angry.

“It’s the middle of the night!” she yelled, making Cape think maybe she really was angry. He visualized her hair lurching forward as she reprimanded his disembodied voice.

“Sorry,” said Cape. “But Sally and I-”

“Sally’s OK?” shouted Linda.

“Oh, yeah,” said Cape. “I forgot-”

“Then why are you calling?” demanded Linda, sounding pissed again.

“Remember when I asked you to look into Harold Yan?”

Didn’t you get my message?

Cape held out his phone and checked the screen, which read: 2 new messages. Beau had mentioned he’d called several times, but he wouldn’t have left more than one message.

“I got it,” said Cape, putting the phone to his ear. “I just haven’t listened to it.” He imagined Linda’s hair crouching down, ready to strike.

“Why not?”

“I’ve been in a tunnel,” said Cape. “Under a manhole cover.”

That put Linda at a momentary loss.

“So what did you find out?” asked Cape.

“Almost nothing,” said Linda, her voice dropping to a normal pitch. Cape could tell she was standing closer to the phone, fears of electromagnetic menace temporarily gone. “Lots and lots of press clippings, going back ten years, but it’s all pretty standard stuff for a public figure. The more public he became, the easier the trail is to follow.”

“OK,” said Cape, discouraged. “Is that what you said in your message?”

“No,” said Linda. “The Sloth and I tried to go back, to before Yan left China.”

“And?”

“And nothing,” said Linda. “Before immigration, the guy disappears.”

“Isn’t that because you’re trying to access records in China? That must be next to impossible.”

“Not for the Sloth,” said Linda. “He even has a program that can translate the characters into English as you scroll down a page.”

“So?”

“So either Yan had a really, really boring life in China,” said Linda. “Which I doubt. Or…he’s a criminal.”

“Who changed his name when he came to the States,” said Cape. “Because he wanted to get into politics.”

“Where the real power is.”

“The real power is in politics?”

“I heard that on an episode of West Wing.”

“Then it must be true. OK, so he gets a new identity.”

“Exactly,” said Linda. “Not that hard, really, if you know the right people.”

“But if I can prove Yan has a criminal past…”

“You’ve got some leverage,” said Linda. “You could really screw up the election.”

Cape started to get excited until he realized he didn’t have a single piece of evidence.

“I don’t have jack shit besides this conversation, do I?”

“I’m afraid not,” said Linda, her voice even softer. “Unless…”

“Yeah?”

“Sloth said you’d need his fingerprints.”

“Fingerprints,” said Cape to himself. “And then?”

“Then you’d need a friend at Interpol, the CIA, NSA, or the FBI.”

The last three letters of the alphabet soup got Cape’s attention. Linda was still talking, but he’d taken the phone from his ear. Carefully, he reached into his right-hand coat pocket and touched the sides of a round disk with his thumb and forefinger. As he pulled his hand from his pocket he saw the red and white letters against a blue background: Yan for Mayor.

Absently he raised the phone to his ear and said “thanks,” hanging up before she could answer. Gingerly dropping the button back into his pocket, he called John Williams at the FBI and left a message.

Ten minutes passed.

When his phone rang, Cape nearly jumped out of his shoes.

“You’re up late,” said Williams.

“Can you run a set of prints for me?” asked Cape. “Through Interpol or maybe the Hong Kong authorities? The records might go back ten or even twenty years.”

Williams coughed for almost a full minute before getting it under control. “You must have the wrong number-you want me to pick up your dry cleaning, too?”

“You said you wanted a lead on the ship.”

“We already got the jeans guy in custody,” said Williams. “You remember, the asshole you should’ve given to us, but instead gave to the police?”

“Big deal,” said Cape.

“We got him on conspiracy, murder, and tax fraud, for starters.”

“You think he’s the mastermind behind this?”

Williams was silent on the other end.

“Neither do I,” said Cape.

Williams grunted. “What’ve you got, cowboy?”

“A thumbprint, maybe,” said Cape. “On a button.”

“Not much,” muttered Williams. “What do you want?”

“A name.”

“That’s it?” said Williams skeptically. “And what do I get?”

“A name,” said Cape. “And maybe some answers.”

“Maybe?”

“That’s all I can offer,” said Cape.