when, in response to his persistent questions, she promised to take him there one day, it always had the feeling of âone dayâ that would never come.
âI wish I remembered more Cantonese. Mum used to speak a bit, but in the end we stuck to English.â
âYour dad was always a terrible linguist,â Laura says. âOne thing he couldnât do! Maybe some of it will come back to you. Anyway, most people who deal with tourists still speak English. Not that long since we rented the place from the Chinese, after all!â
âCan you tell me about the story youâre doing?â
âOh, donât worry about that, Danny boy,â Laura says brightly. Slightly too brightly. âJust have a good time with Zamora. Eat noodles. Leave the bad guys to me.â
âIt feels like youâre not telling me things, Aunt Laura.â
âHonestly not, Danny. Scoutâs honor.â
âIâm not a little kid anymore,â he says, cutting her short. âThereâs something youâre not saying. About the trip.â
It comes out sharper than he intends. But itâs frustrating the way silence descends whenever he asks the tricky questions. About his parentsâ deaths, for example. People were kind and supportive, of courseâLaura especiallyâand he appreciated that. It helped him cope with the shock, cope with how much he missed Dadâs deep voice describing the world and the wonders in it, missed Mumâs quick smile, steadfast optimism. Their love. He can just about cope with that. Most days.
And he can generally push from his mind the wreck of their trailer, the deathly hush that hung over the Mysterium encampment, the white-sheeted stretchers. He can cope with all that.
Just about.
But he canât cope with the fact that nobody, not even Laura, ever seems to want to answer the âdifficultâ questions directly.
âIâm growing up, Aunt Laura. I can deal with stuff.â
âI suppose you are, Danny. Fair point.â She glances around the cabin, then drops her voice. âWell, this lot are a really nasty triad gang.â
âTriad?â
âOrganized criminal gangs. Centuries old. Bit like the Mafia with a big code of honor and secrecy. This lot are called the Black Dragon. A bunch of upstarts forcing their way into the Chinese underworld. And theyâre reaching out to gangs back home in Britain. I want to get up close and personalâand show how dangerous they are. Not glamorous. Just thugs.â
âWhat do they do?â
âMost of these gangs stick to drugs, human trafficking, stuff like that. But this lot have their fingers in a lot of pies. Getting into kidnapping. People are paying up because they realize the Dragon means business.â
âHow?â
Laura taps her fingers on the tray table. âThey send the relatives locks of hair, with a warning to pay up fast. If they donât, they get something else.â
âLike what?â
âA box of steamed dim sum, wrapped up like a gift . . . and in one of the dumplings there will be the victimâs little finger. Maybe two.â
Laura laughs apologetically. âLike I say, Danny, âfingers in a lot of pies.â Just experimenting with a tagline. They use bolt cutters, I believe.â
âHow would you know whose finger it was?â
Laura waggles her little finger in front of his face. âYouâd recognize this little piggy, wouldnât you?â
Dannyâs stomach tightens, a brief image in his head of Lauraâs lively finger severed and bloody on a white plate. He pulls a face. âAnd how do you get close to them? The Black Dragon?â
âCuriosity killed the cat. Donât you know that?â
âDoesnât seem to stop you.â
âThis catâs got a lot of lives left, Danny boy.â
âMum always used to say that . . . if something went wrongââ
âAnd