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    Chinatown Beat

    Year of the Dog

    Red Jade  _1.jpg

    Copyright © 2010 by Henry Chang

    Published by

    Soho Press, Inc.

    853 Broadway

    New York, NY 10003

    All rights reserved.

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Chang, Henry, 1951–

    Red jade / Henry Chang.

    p. cm.

    ISBN 978-1-56947-859-2

    eISBN 978-1-56947-860-8

    1. Yu, Jack (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Chinese—United

    States—Fiction 3. Organized crime—Fiction.

    4. Chinatown (New York, N.Y.)—Fiction. I. Title.

    PS3603.H35728R43 2010

    813’.54—dc22

    2010027922

    10   9   8   7   6   5   4   3   2   1

    For Andrew,

    My brother, the first born, who covered the straight and narrow so that I could run, wild and free, down these Chinatown streets, slipping off the yoke of what we were expected to be in Chinese America.

    You proved that all things are possible through dedication and determination and a dash of Destiny. Thanks for the Beavers, the Tracers, the “Chinatown Angels,” and Paradise in Harlem, but most of all, for sharing this blood.

    Peace and love, always.

    Table of Contents

    Title Page

    Copyright Page

    Acknowledgments

    Dark Before Dawn

    Death Before Dishonor

    6:55 AM

    Law and Order

    Waiting for Buddha

    Law on Order

    Back to the Future

    Woman Warrior

    Traffic Stop

    Neighborhood Blood

    Easy Pass

    Fan and Sandal

    Touch

    Noble Truths

    Golden Star

    Searching

    The Way

    72 Hours

    0-Five

    Shorty

    Night Games

    Cops

    Cleansing

    Water Becomes Water

    Prayers

    Siu Lam Sandal

    Pawns

    Seekers

    Savoring the Cherry

    South

    Comida Mexicana

    Overthrow the Ching

    Cop Stuff

    Change

    Chameleon

    Safe Deposit

    Changes

    Syuhn Ferry

    Red King

    Fot Mong, Nightmare

    Carry-all

    Having a Ball

    In the Mood for Love

    One False Move

    Women Hold Up Half the Sky

    Mourning Rain

    Sense Us

    Shadows in Seattle

    Blind Faith

    Tail and Trail

    Walk, Don’t Run

    On the Waterfront

    Swept Away

    Dead Man Flying

    Legal Blows

    Lucky to Be Alive?

    Good News, Bad News

    Pain and Suffering

    Pieces of Dreams

    Wait Until Dark

    Acknowledgments

    Many thanks go to Geoff Lee, Jan Lee, and Eddie Cheung at Sinotique, Doris Chong for the inspiration, Alvin Eng for the good Words, The Emperor’s Club for spreading the love through music, Benilda Ayon, Liz Martinez, Debbie Chen in Houston, and my NYC hindaai posse for keeping me grounded.

    Special thanks to my editor Laura Hruska, Ailen Lujo and the Soho Press crew, and to Dana and Debbie for crunching the numbers and cheering me on.

    For Seattle, I’m grateful to Doug Moy, Chandra and Jason, Linsi and Brandon for the great hospitality, and to Maxine Chan for the keen insight.

    I’m indebted to M.C., attorneys Joann Quinones and Keith Smith for the legal aid.

    A shout-out goes to Chef George Chew the man, and to Marilynn K. Yee, photog extraordinaire.

    And at last, much love and thanks to Maria Chang, for the long leap of faith.

    Red Jade

    Dark Before Dawn

    “Rise up! Yu! Yuh got bodies!”

    It was the overnight sarge calling from the 0-Nine, the Ninth Precinct, growling something about Manhattan South detectives into his ear, barking out a location with two bodies attached to it.

    As soon as Jack Yu caught the address, he knew: Chinatown again. He was going back to the place he’d left behind when he moved to Brooklyn’s Sunset Park, just across the river but a world away.

    It always started with the rude awakening, the alarms going off in his head, the angry clamor, and then the Chinatown darkness snatching him off again, back into the Fifth Precinct, back to unfinished business….

    He’d been dead asleep, dreaming he was still partying at the After–Chinese New Year’s party that Billy Bow had pulled together at Grampa’s, aka the Golden Star Bar and Grill, a favorite Chinatown haunt. In this dream, Jack was picturing himself feeding quarters into the big jukebox setup, a rock tune with a deep bass pounding out, Hey son where ya going with dat gun in ya hand? He’s gulping back a beer, scoping out the revelers. Gonna shoot ma lady, she cheat’in wit annuda man.

    Jack spots Alexandra. Alex. Friend and confidante, wearing a bright red Chinese jacket, the color of luck, glowing in the darkness of the bar. She nods at him and jiggles her smile to the backbeat, her long black hair shimmering in the dim blue light. Gonna shoot her down, down to the ground, wailing from the jukebox. He wants to pull Alex close, to bring her heart to heart, to kiss her eyes lightly and find out what she’s thinking. But suddenly there’s this clamor, from the back of his head, accelerating to his frontal lobe, like a thundering lion drum starting up, following the raucous clash of brass cymbals and iron gongs, exploding suddenly into jarring, blinding consciousness.

    He reached toward the frantic pleas of the noise, the cell phone’s cry, the alarm clock’s clang. The clock radio banged out a steady beat. Jack looped the beaded chain over his head; the gold detective’s badge tumbled, then its weight held the chain taut. He’d moved to Brooklyn and changed precincts after Pa’s death, but still he hadn’t escaped the old neighborhood. He rolled his neck, popped the ligaments, pulled on his clothes.

    He patted down his thermal jacket for the plastic disposable camera, and dropped his Colt Detective Special into a pocket.

    He took the stairs down and stepped into the freezing wind, letting the cold rain pelt his face, pumping up his adrenaline. He jogged down to Eighth Avenue in the desolate darkness, and jumped into one of the Chinese see gay, car service lined up along the street of all-night fast-food soup shacks. He badged the driver, giving the address in Cantonese while slipping him a folded ten-spot.

    “Go,” Jack said, “Faai di, quick. I’m in a hurry.”

    The driver made all the green lights and the short-cut turns. He blazed the black car across the empty Brooklyn Bridge and dropped Jack off at Doyers Street, off the Bowery in the original heart of Chinatown.

    The trip had taken twelve screeching minutes.

    Seven Doyers was a four-story walk-up right on the bend of the old Bloody Angle, where the tong hatchetmen of the past battled and bled over turf and women, butcher-sharp cleavers hidden under their quilted Chinese jackets.

    Jack knew the street well; it was around the corner from where he’d grown up, where his pa had passed away recently. And around the corner from where his former blood brother Tat “Lucky” Louie had met his fate: shot in the head, he was now comatose at Downtown Hospital.

    The Bloody Angle was a serpentine, twisting street that was anchored on the Bowery end by a Chinese deli, two small restaurants, and a post office branch. Where the street cut to the right and dipped down, there was a stretch of Chinese barbershops and beauty salons on both sides.

    Doyers was a Ghost street and everyone knew it. The Ghost Legion was the dominant local gang that terrorized Chinatown, and Lucky had been their dailo, their leader. Normally, Lucky would have been Jack’s source for information about gangland politics, but his condition had ended such cooperation.