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Snakehead
The macabre discovery of a truck
full of dead Chinese in southern Texas brings
American pathologist Margaret Campbell together
again with Li Yan, the Beijing detective with whom
she once shared a turbulent personal and
professional relationship.
Forced back into an uneasy partnership, they set out
to identify the Snakehead who is behind the
100-million-dollar trade in illegal Chinese
immigrants which led to the tragedy in Texas - only
to discover that the victims were also unwitting
carriers of a deadly cargo.
Li and Margaret have a biological time-bomb of
unimaginable proportions on their hands, and an
indiscriminate killer who threatens the future of
mankind.
Extract
Chapter One
I.
Deputy J. J. Jackson, known to his
colleagues at the Walker County Sheriff's Department
simply as Jayjay, stuck another matchstick between
his front teeth and began chewing on it. He
unzippered his fly and issued a yellow stream into
the dry bed of Bedias Creek. Steam rose from it in
the cool morning air, and he made a bold effort to
make sure that most of it crossed the county line
into Madison. Somewhere to the north, beyond the
trees that broke the monotony of the flat Texan
landscape, prisoners were being called out of their
cells at the Ferguson Unit to face another day of
incarceration. And he was free to piss in the
breeze, clocking off in just over half-an-hour, to
bring to an end the long red-eye shift, and with it
the prospect of an empty bed. He spat out the
matchstick and regretted that he had ever given up
smoking. He was sure to die of wood poisoning.
The Dixie Chicks played from the open
door of his black and white. Strictly
non-regulation, but hell, you had to have something
to keep you awake. Cowboy take me away, fly this
girl as high as you can, into the wild blue. He
squeezed his ample frame in behind the wheel and
eased his patrol car out on to the deserted Highway
45. He was flying now, south, into the wild blue.
Day was when Martha would have had hot pancakes and
syrup, and a plate of grits on the table when he got
home. But since she'd run off with that air-con
salesman he'd taken to driving into Huntsville for
breakfast at the Cafe Texan, opposite the County
Courthouse on Sam Houston Avenue. He always sat in
the smoking room just so he could breath in other
people's cigarettes. Nothing you could do about
secondary smoking he could tell the Doc.
Hello, Mr. Heartache, I've been
expecting you. He sang along with the Chicks.
Up off the highway on the right a
Mexican fast food joint stood proud on the bluff.
Much as he liked that beer with the slice of lime
stuffed in the neck, Jayjay avoided Mexican food
whenever possible. It gave him bad heartburn. But
today he turned off and followed the bumpy road up
to the parking lot, a big empty stretch of dusty
tarmac. Empty, that is, except for a large
refrigerated food container hooked up to a red,
shiny trailer tractor. Not unusual. Truckers often
pulled off to snatch a few moments shut-eye during
an all-nighter. But the door on the driver's side
was lying wide open, and there was no sign of anyone
around. There were no other vehicles in the lot, and
the restaurant wouldn't be open for hours yet.
Jayjay left his engine running and got
out of the car. He had no idea why the truck had
drawn his attention. Maybe it was because the driver
had made no attempt to slot it anywhere between the
faded white lines. Maybe it was just instinct.
Jayjay held a lot of store by instinct. He had had
an instinct that Martha was going to leave him at
least two years before she finally got around to it.
Although that might not have been so much instinct
as wishful thinking. But, hell, there was something
odd about this truck. It looked... abandoned. He
pulled the brim of his Stetson down, stuck another
matchstick in his mouth and clamped his open palms
on his hips, the forefinger of his right hand
touching the leather of his holster for comfort.
Slowly he approached the open door of
the truck, glancing a touch nervously to left and
right.
'Hey y'all,' he called. And when there
was no response, 'Anybody there?' He stopped,
staring up into the empty cab, working the
matchstick from one corner of his mouth to the
other. Then he pulled himself up into the cabin and
checked in back where the driver would usually
sleep. Empty.
He eased himself down on to the tarmac
and looked around. Where the hell could he have
gone? The Dixie Chicks were getting into some
R&B. Some days you gotta dance, Live it up when
you get the chance... A slight breeze stirred the
dust in the lot. Sun rising under early morning
cloud dimpled it copper pink. Later, as the same sun
rose, it would burn it off.
Jayjay walked the length of the
trailer, past rows of tyres as tall as he was,
painted black walls, treads he could almost get a
fist into. GARCIA WHOLESALE, it said on the side.
Fresh painted. New.
Round the back the tall doors of the
trailer stood slightly ajar, and he began to get a
bad feeling. He took his gun from his holster,
crooking his arm and pointing the weapon at the sky.
'Hey!' he shouted again. 'Is there anybody in
there?' He didn't really expect a reply, but was
disappointed to be right. He spat out the match and
pulled the left hand door wide. It was heavy and
swung open slowly. He was immediately hit by the
smell of something rotten. Whatever cargo this thing
was carrying had been left unrefrigerated and was
well past its sell-by. He could see boxes of produce
piled high: tomatoes, eggplants, avocados,
cucumbers. He grabbed a handle on the inside of the
door and pulled himself up. The smell was almost
overpowering now, thick and sour like vomit and
faeces. Jayjay blenched. 'Jesus...' he hissed. Boxes
had collapsed from either side and he had to pull
them away to make any progress into the interior of
the trailer. Tomatoes and cucumbers rattled away
across the riveted steel floor, and a naked arm fell
from between two boxes, an open palm seeming to
beckoning him in. Jayjay let out an involuntary yelp
and felt goosebumps prickle across his scalp. He
holstered his gun and started tearing at the
cardboard. Another column of boxes toppled around
him revealing that only the back quarter of the
truck was carrying produce. It was too dark to see
clearly into the space beyond, or the body lying at
his feet. He was gagging now on the stench. He
fumbled for the flashlight hanging on his belt. The
beam that pierced the dark shot back through him
like a frozen arrow. The scream stopped in his
throat, too thick to squeeze past constricting
airways. Bodies. Dozens of them trapped in the
light, fixed in death. Arms and legs entwined, faces
contorted terribly by some dreadful struggle to hold
on to life. Vomit and blood and torn clothes.
Ghostly pale Asian faces, wide-eyed and lifeless,
like photographs he had seen of mass graves in
concentration camps. Jayjay staggered backwards,
stumbling over boxes, feet skidding away from him on
the slime of burst and rotting tomatoes. He hit the
floor with a force that knocked all the breath out
of him. For a moment he lay still, wondering if he
had slipped through a crack in the earth and fallen
into the devil's lair. And in the distance he heard
the Dixie Chicks. I've seen 'em fall, some get
nothing and, Lord, some get it all.
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