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Chinese Whispers
My knife's so nice
and sharp I want to get to work right away if I
get a chance...
His victims are young, beautiful and
viciously mutilated. He calls himself the Beijing
Ripper.
The media and terror-sticken public
are demanding the arrest of the Beijing Ripper and Li
Yan, the head of Beijing's serious crime squad, has
been put in the spotlight.
American pathologist Margaret
Campbell is invited to perform an autopsy on one of
the victims and her results send shockwaves through
the investigation. Then Li begins receiving personal
letters from the killer, and his life and career start
falling apart. The need to uncover the Ripper's
identity becomes paramount if he is to save himself
and his family.
Peter May's terrifying China thriller
pits Li Yan and Margaret Campbell against an
unscrupulous foe who could prove to be their deadliest
enemy yet.
Extract
Prologue
She sits in the lobby
watching the Western women drift by, heady
strands of exotic scent lingering in their
wake. They mask their age with dyed blond hair
and painted faces, drape themselves in haute
couture and walk with style on heels that
would kill. Skin as pale as ivory, eyes green
or blue or hazel. Startling. Bizarre. They
have everything she aspires to. Money, men,
carelessness with a freedom they take for
granted. But it is an aspiration she will
never realise. For she will never see
tomorrow.
She catches a
glimpse of her reflection. So much light and
glass, polished steel and shining marble. She
is everywhere she looks. And, by contrast, she
is shocked by her plainness. It is only too
apparent to her, even beneath the veil of
make-up; the slash of red on her lips; the
eyes she has tried to make seem a little less
slanted; the curl she has attempted to tong
into limp black hair. She feels dowdy, ugly.
She becomes
aware, then, of a man leaning against the desk
at reception undressing her with his eyes,
anxious to catch hers so that she knows what
is in his mind. He is not ashamed of his lust
and it makes her uncomfortable. She has good
legs, long and slender. Her skirt is short to
make the most of them. But she uncrosses them
now, and presses her knees firmly together.
She knows what it is he wants, and she knows
it is not her.
A voice speaks
her name. Close by. Soft, gentle. She turns,
startled by its intimacy, and he is smiling
down at her. He is older than she imagined,
but his hair is full and dark and he is not
unattractive. And there is something
reassuring about his being Chinese, too. She
jumps to her feet, drawing full lips back over
white teeth in her brightest smile. He will be
no ticket to a better life, but neither will
he make false promises, and he will know the
value of the money he puts in her hand when it
is all over. So simple. The undulating melody
of her cellphone bringing his response to her
two-line ad in the Beijing paper. A price
agreed, a rendezvous arranged. She glances
over her shoulder as he sweeps her towards the
revolving door, and sees the disappointment in
the eyes of the Westerner at reception.
Unfulfilled fantasies. And she feels the power
of denial.
She is shocked by
the cold of this late fall night, lulled into
a false sense of warmth by the extravagant
heating of the foreigners' hotel. The
municipal government has only just turned on
the city's heating system, a week later than
usual to save money. She pulls her leather
jacket more tightly around herself and slips
her arm through his, hoping it will be warmer
in his car.
But if he has a
car, it is nowhere nearby. They walk east on
Jianguomenwai for a long time, late night
traffic dwindling on the boulevard, the
occasional bikers drifting past them like
ghosts in the dark of the cycle lane. All the
time he talks to her, like he has known her
for years. About some new restaurant in
Chongwen district, a hat he bought in
Wangfujing. He is easy company, but she wishes
they would reach his car soon. The digital
display on the clock on the far corner of
Dongdoqiao Road, above the Beijing Yan Bao
Auto BMW franchise, shows a quarter past
midnight. It flashes alternately a temperature
reading of minus two. The lights go out in
Sammie's Café, which claims to be the place in
Beijing where East eats West. The last burger
chomping patrons have long gone, probably on
the last subway train at eleven-forty. The
gates of the Beijing Subway are drawn now and
padlocked, the ticket hall beyond brooding in
silent darkness. The sidewalk is deserted
here, shutters drawn on supermarket windows, a
news-stand battened down for the night. Gold
characters on red hoardings reflect light from
distant street lamps. Xiushuimarket. Silk
Street. A gaping black hole leading to a
narrow alleyway where stallholders closed up
for the night hours ago.
To her surprise,
they turn into the tiny market street, and are
swallowed up immediately by its darkness. She
hesitates, but his grip on her arm only
tightens, and her surprise turns to alarm. She
wants to know where they are going. Where is
his car? He has no car, he tells her, and he
cannot take her home. Here they will not be
disturbed. She protests. It is too cold. He
promises to keep her warm. And perhaps another
hundred yuan...
She is slightly
mollified, and reluctantly allows him to lead
her deeper into the alley. Here, in the day,
thousands of people clamour and haggle for
bargains, stallholders shouting and spitting
and throwing the dregs of cold green tea
across the flagstones. She has been here many
times, but never seen it like this. Cold,
deserted, shuttered up. Above the stalls, on
the east side, the lights of apartment
buildings seem to plunge the alley into even
deeper gloom. On the west side, three-storey
luxury apartment blocks lie empty, as yet
unsold. She glances back. The lights of the
boulevard seem a long way away. Up ahead, the
street lamps lining the road outside the US
Embassy Visa Office seem feeble, devoured by
the night.
Her eyes are
adapting now. She can make out signs for silk
carpets, fresh water pearls, "cloisonné", seal
carving. She wishes she were somewhere else,
fulfilling the fantasies of the man at the
reception desk, perhaps. In some warm hotel
room.
They are almost
at the far end of the alley when he turns her
into an opening, and she feels the freezing
cold of metal gates pressing up against her
back. She feels his breath on her neck, lips
grazing her skin, and she tenses for the
inevitable. It never gets any easier. But he
steps back and says she should relax. He takes
a pack of Russian cheroots from his coat
pocket and his lighter flares briefly in the
dark. She fumbles in her purse for her
cigarettes and he lights one for her. She is
still shivering from the cold, but less scared
now. He leans against the wall, talking about
the demolition in the north of the city and
the new apartment blocks they are building
there. He blows smoke into the air and watches
it drift past a banner forbidding smoking. He
asks her where she lives, and if she has a
day-job. And she tells him about the antiques
stall at Panjiayuan, and about her mother, and
has no inkling of the contempt he has for her.
She thinks his smile reflects his interest.
She thinks his eyes are kind.
She finishes her
cigarette and he tosses his cheroot into the
darkness. Embers scatter as it hits the
ground. He steps closer, a hand slipping into
the warmth beneath her jacket, his hand
searching for small breasts pushed up into
fullness by the Wonderbra sent by God for
Chinese women. Hot breath on her face. She can
smell the bitter smoke of his cheroot. His
hand lingers only briefly at her breast before
gliding up to her neck, fingers softly
encircling it as he finds her lips with his
and she chokes back her repugnance. Only, she
has no breath. And she cannot speak. And for a
moment she wonders what has happened to her,
before realising that his fingers have turned
to steel and are crushing her windpipe. She
struggles to free herself, but he is far too
strong. His face is still close to hers,
watching as she fights for a life that is
fading so quickly. His eyes are wide and full
of something she has never seen before. She
cannot believe she will die like this. Not
here. Not now. Lights flash in her eyes, and
the fight in her starts to ebb. Too fast. Too
easy. All too easy. Then darkness descends
like a warm cloud. And she is gone. To a place
she has never dreamed of.
Her slight frame
has become a dead weight in his arms,
surprisingly heavy in lifelessness, as he
lowers her to the ground, arranging her
carefully on the paving stones. He glances
quickly each way down the alley, and can hear
the guard stamping his feet just beyond the
far end of the market street, where
embassyland stretches off into silent
darkness. There is a frisson for him, knowing
that there is someone so close. So oblivious.
It somehow emphasises his superiority.
Crouching beside her, he looks at the dead
girl on the ground and runs fingertips lightly
over the features of her face. She is still
warm. Blood still oxygenated. There is a tiny
smile on his lips as he draws the knife from
beneath his coat.
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