Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
CHAPTER ONE
Sunflowers Orphanage, Tianjin, Mainland China.
The recent past.
Only bad things happened when it was this hot. Bathed in sweat, Li Wei felt a sense of dread in the pit of his stomach as he ambled towards the office. Once inside, he knew his gut was right. His boss, Miss Beverly, and her co-worker Nick had already mentioned the little things: a dripping tap, a squeaking ceiling fan, the ripped curtain that let in too much sun. Wei was doing his best to fix them all before someone boiled over. The faster he worked, the hotter he got. The sweat dripped into his eyes. No one noticed. It was a Tuesday morning in August. When his handyman work was done, Wei did the usual thing and collected rubbish from the kitchen. As he left the building, he heard the tapping of keyboards and the shuffling of paper coming from Miss Beverly’s office and hoped the sour mood had passed. But then the telephone started. It kept ringing, all morning, which was very unusual. He could hear its shrill cry from outside and whoever answered it – probably Miss Beverly – kept slamming the receiver back down. When he went back inside to fetch his rucksack, the frustration in the office was as thick as the air was humid. As he left, Wei’s footfall on the parquet floor seemed louder than normal and he willed it to be silent, just this once, worrying the noise would be the final straw for Miss Beverly. Summer fever, his mother used to call it. Now he knew why. There were omens everywhere. That evening, when the damage was done, he blamed himself for all that went wrong; for not acting sooner. Just before lunch, Wei had skulked away to prune the bougainvillea clinging to the chicken-wire fence separating the orphanage from the alleyway behind. Even then, he could still hear the office phone ring and ring, over and over. Someone slammed it so hard that Wei jumped, pricking his finger on a thorn. He watched the blood swell and bubble on the surface. It was the same colour as the flowers he held in his other hand. Wei went back to work, but not long after, he heard Miss Beverly yelling in Mandarin, then English. Wei saw an old utility vehicle parked outside the front gates. That was nothing unusual. Deliveries came throughout the day. Clothes and toys, from charities mostly. The deliveryman was standing very close to Miss Beverly. She pointed a finger and the man squared his shoulders. Wei stood taller. “No, no, no,” Miss Beverly said in a calmer voice. “Do you think I’m stupid?” She tried to say something to the deliveryman in Mandarin but reverted to English. “We warned him,” the man snapped. The deliveryman was tall, with a large chest that he pushed out as he towered over Miss Beverly. He had very short hair and Wei could see the sparkle of a gold watch on his left wrist. He also wore thick-rimmed black glasses, like Superman. Wei had watched the movie on a DVD. Wei had seen such trouble brewing when he was growing up. Once, in his rural village, a heatwave caused his best friend’s grandmother to go mad. She had stabbed her daughterin-law for overcooking breakfast and then killed herself, in front of her entire family. Wei’s mother was sure the heat had created a devil, although his father disagreed. He said the woman had been insane since birth. The door to the orphanage squeaked open and closed. Nick came outside holding a cup of coffee. He stomped over to Beverly and the man, Nick’s blond hair shining like a lantern in the sun. They all talked at once in English, but much of it was lost on Wei. All he could tell was that Nick was trying to keep the conversation calm, as was Nick’s way. Maybe the man had forgotten to deliver something important. They were low on toilet tissue and vegetable oil, for one thing. Wei shrugged and decided it was too hot to stand there in the sun listening to them argue. He took a bottle of water from his rucksack and sat down under his favourite tree, to the left of the courtyard. In front was the main gate and, to his right, the arched doorway to the orphanage, painted bottle green by Wei himself just days before. It was pleasant in the shade and he felt the stress of the morning fade away. Even better, if he sat very still, a light sea breeze was making its way through the tall buildings that fronted the orphanage. Wei closed his eyes and listened to the children singing a morning song. He smiled to himself at their innocent words. Tài yáng dang kong zhào. The sun is shining in the sky. Hua’ér dui wo xiào. The flowers are smiling to me. Being around children was comforting. Wei had never had much of a childhood. He was left to his own devices from the age of six or seven while his parents worked. He escaped to the city as soon as he’d turned fifteen and took the handyman job in the orphanage within a week. Miss Beverly said he was their oldest child. She hugged him sometimes, despite the fact he stank of rotting vegetables and nappies from carrying bags of rubbish all day. One day, she told him he was kind and that this made him special. He liked Miss Beverly. Her smile always reached her eyes. He would never leave the orphanage. It was his home now. Wei had just nodded off, a fresh dream of tall mountains and a speeding car edging its way into his subconscious brain, when he heard Miss Beverly. She was yelling, very loudly. He had never heard her shout before. He sat up and rubbed at his eyes. He heard Nick’s booming voice. “That’s it!” Nick said. “No more! Go!” Wei stood too quickly, almost falling over. He saw Nick put up a fist in front of the man’s face. The man pointed something at Nick. “You have no business here!” Nick yelled at the man in Mandarin. “Put that away!” That was when Wei saw the new girl, Nick’s friend, come out of the orphanage door, edging the older children inside as she did. Ever since she’d arrived to visit Nick at the orphanage the day before, Wei had been mesmerised. She was in frayed denim shorts and a T-shirt, and Wei kept his eyes trained on her long, lean legs. “Get back!” Nick called to his friend. “Why?” she cried. “What’s going on? Nick?” She had reached him and was trying to grab at Nick’s shirt, but he shrugged her hand away and hissed something in her ear. Miss Beverly took the new girl’s arm and the two walked backwards very slowly. Wei followed them towards the schoolhouse. It’s the heat, he wanted to say. Wei caught up with Miss Beverly and the new girl. “Do you need help?” he said, a little breathless. They had stopped near the doorway. “Wei,” Miss Beverly said to him in a whisper, “go inside and call the police station. Now. Okay? I’m right behind you.” She smiled at him, a kind of annoyed grimace, as though he wasn’t moving fast enough. He widened his eyes and ran. From Miss Beverly’s office window, he could see the far side of the courtyard, but the gate was hidden from view unless he leaned the top half of his body out of the window. He hoped the deliveryman had gone. Nick was respected. He had done a lot of good. Maybe Nick had paid the man off.
But just as Wei hung up the phone, the new girl screamed. She called out Nick’s name and, a few seconds later, Miss Beverly stumbled into her office with the new girl in her arms. The two of them were sobbing. Wei smelled a musty heat coming off their bodies and wanted to be sick. Outside, he heard the front gate slam against the broken metal lock and the roar of the truck as it drove away. Miss Beverly told the new girl to sit down. She slumped to the floor, her head in her hands. Wei bent down and gently rubbed her folded arms. But then he saw the blood. A sticky cobweb of deep red staining her shirt. Wei gasped and pulled his hand away, but it was too late. The blood had coated his palm. “I think he killed him,” the girl whimpered. Wei shook his head. “What do you mean?” The new girl stayed silent. She was shivering. “Stay here,” Miss Beverly said, rushing back outside. Wei went to the window and pushed at its timber frame. He inched himself through it. Surely Nick had hurt the bad man. Surely Nick was stronger. But lying on the ground like a discarded jacket was Nick, his blond hair soaking in a pool of black blood. The pale-blue coffee cup lay cracked into two perfect halves next to one outstretched arm. Miss Beverly kneeled over him. Her body heaved before placing a hand over her mouth. Behind her, several of the older children were weeping loudly, their cries shrill in the still air. “Bring the children in, Wei!” Miss Beverly called out in between sobs. She didn’t take her eyes off Nick’s body. Wei did as he was told.
* * *
A week later, the new girl had gone. The police had spoken to Miss Beverly not long after the ambulance had taken Nick’s body away. Miss Beverly made Wei promise to never tell anyone what happened or what the deliveryman looked like. And he didn’t. Sometimes, Wei heard Miss Beverly talking about Nick on the phone, but she always whispered. Afterwards, she’d whimper a little. Over time, life went back to normal, for Wei and the children anyway. But Miss Beverly, she stopped smiling.
CHAPTER TWO
Snake Bay, Sai Kung, Hong Kong.
Three months later.
She knew as soon as she saw him that it was time. He stood not far from her, but even from there, she could see the darkness of his eyes, their murky depths. Everyone was drunk or close to it. She watched as champagne fizzed, corks popped and colourful canapés appeared on silver trays carried with lightning speed from galley to deck. Occasionally, she heard the heavy splash of bodies as the braver ones jumped from the boat’s roof into the olive-green waters below. It was heady, and despite herself, Scarlett was caught up in the rising excitement as the boat gently swayed against a light breeze. Seated to her right was a girl from the UK called Alice. She was tall and slim, with beautiful red hair and a calm voice, as though everyone around her was slightly less intelligent than herself. Scarlett had spotted Alice on first arriving and – noticing she too was alone – sat next to her immediately. Alice had her legs tucked neatly under her, nose turned up as others walked past. But Scarlett didn’t find this off-putting. Maybe it was Alice’s curiosity. As they talked, Alice didn’t pry but was interested, and shared snippets of her life story without rabbiting on like most people when they’ve been drinking on a boat in the sun all afternoon. For Scarlett, it was light relief, considering she knew no one and could not make an excuse to leave until the boat docked. A man with a booming voice stood and clinked a spoon against a glass. He had a red face and a beer belly, a pinkchecked dress shirt stretched tight across what appeared to be a hairy stomach. His cheeks wobbled as he spoke. “We are gathered here today…” he started. Everyone laughed and told him to sit down and shut up. Scarlett asked Alice who he was. Alice replied, in that smooth, soft voice, that he was Mark Bignell, the owner of the boat, a long-time Hong Kong banker. He loved to throw lavish parties and was very generous with his money. He was infamous for once being caught red-handed in leathers at an S&M dungeon in Central Hong Kong, a place the police had raided after a tip-off that the occupants were heavily involved in illegal drug use. Naturally, they were. It was all over the papers. Mark Bignell was married with three teenage children. “But Johnny knew people who helped him,” Alice explained with a slight smirk. “And who is Johnny?” Alice pointed. “Be careful,” she said. “I’m serious.” Alice could be helpful. Very helpful. “Who invited you here today?” Alice asked with a vague wave of her hand around the crowd. “My new boss, Vivian.” Scarlett tried not to blush. She reminded herself that she was lucky enough to get the job as an executive at Vivian’s highly regarded PR company. “She’s been very… helpful. With information. About Hong Kong, I mean. I knew nothing when I got here. Nothing and no one. It’s… amazing.” Alice had offered a small smile, her eyes lingering on Scarlett’s, before glancing away. The party roared into life, with a rising frenzy that was palpable with every passing hour. By dusk, there were some who could barely stand, grappling with railings and benchtops as the boat keened and rolled back to Sai Kung Harbour. The waiters still served canapés with patient smiles, the music pounded and thumped along the polished teak deck, fine wine flowed like water from a fountain and some of the younger girls in bikinis were dancing on the bow. Scarlett felt her head might explode, but it was now or never. She could see that he was a little drunk for sure. But he had his wits about him. He kept his gaze steady as he talked and his voice was not raised three octaves, as was the others’. He was steady on his feet despite the choppy waves. Scarlett watched as he leant against a railing near the stern, a quieter spot away from the throbbing speakers. The girl talking to him was tanned and petite, with long, light brown hair, loosely plaited. Scarlett thought it best to hang back for a bit and sip at her drink. The cocktail was sickly-sweet and she felt a wave of nausea. She’d already had too much to drink as it was and, being racked with nerves, had barely eaten. Maybe now was not the right moment after all. She needed a sign. That, or go home and try another time, although the thought was depressing. Singing started from behind her. The boisterous, rousing bellowing of football stadiums. I love you, baby, and if it’s quite all right, I need you, baby! They were oblivious as they shoved and pushed against Scarlett, heading for some other section of this massive floating party boat, a junk, summer’s favourite day out in Hong Kong. She felt a wash of something ice-cold drip down her right arm, the spilled contents from one of the singer’s sticky cocktails. She wiped at it, glad for the distraction from standing there alone in a sea of social animals. In the comparative quiet after they moved away, a seagull cried and Scarlett turned to watch it sail above the thundering music and off into the perfect nothingness of a clouding sky. Scarlett wondered if she too would one day be able to do the same, to find that kind of peace. “You okay?”
And there he was, standing over her, smelling of cigar smoke and gin, or was it some kind of exotic bottled scent? Scarlett felt her pulse race as she automatically inhaled. The combination was strangely exhilarating. For all the times leading up to this – when she thought she would have to feign happiness – she surprised herself by beaming the most warm and genuine of smiles. Scarlett nodded and said yes, laughed her throaty laugh. She introduced herself and he took her hand in his. The heat flowed from her arms up to her cheeks. The heavy late-afternoon sun beat down. The music faded into the background. Johnny didn’t take his eyes off hers, and Scarlett felt a cold rush of panic rise from her stomach to her temples. It was, she later thought, as though he knew too.