The Kung Pao Diner & Deli
While Maya pulled her car out of the Municipal Center
garage, Sage made a phone call. “Hi, this is Sage Marlowe. I’ll be at the Kung
Pao in about ten minutes. Meet me there.” Nine minutes later, Maya pulled into
the diner’s parking lot.
Maya and Sage sat in a booth near the front window. The
waiter arrived with a broad smile on his face. Maya smiled back. “My friend
would like a cup of coffee and I would like my usual.”
“One order of sweet and sour pork fried rice, glass of green
tea iced, and coffee double-double. Coming right up.”
Sage watched the old man march off to the kitchen. “I
thought he retired.”
“Dad? He quit running the kitchen, but he likes to come in
from time to time to help out. He’ll expect me to leave a big tip when we
leave.”
Sage was on her second cup of coffee when Officers Baer and
Walker arrived. Niome took a seat next to Sage. “You weren’t in the morgue, so
I figured the two of you came here.”
Jerome sat next to Maya. “Any chance we could get some
coffee?” A few minutes later, Mr. Lee arrived with two black coffees in
Styrofoam cups. “What’s this?”
“It’s the cop special,” Mr. Lee replied. “Black coffee to
go.” And with that explanation, he made himself scarce.
Sage grabbed a handful of sweetener packets and some non-dairy
creamer and passed them to Jerome. “Thanks,” he muttered. “They ought to fire
that waiter.”
“They can’t,” Niome replied.
“Why not?”
“He owns the place,” Maya replied. “I suppose you want to
know about our hairy corpse.”
“Of course, we want to know about Bigfoot. Is this a one off?
Or should we notify animal control?” Niome pried the lid off her coffee and
took a sip.
“It’s not Bigfoot or any other large furry unknown. It’s
some sort of chimera of unknown origin. It’s best if you and your partner stay
out of it.” Maya stabbed a chunk of pineapple and waggled it at Niome as she
spoke.
Sage wrapped her fingers around her coffee mug and closed
her eyes. Jerome turned his head to address Maya. “Sure, but you’re gonna let
the civilian help. Seriously, that don’t make no sense. I mean, look at her.”
Sage opened her eyes and turned her head to face him. She reached across the
table and touched his hand. For an instant, he saw himself through her eyes. He
shivered. “Damn! What the hell was that?”
“In the old days, they called it sorcery. Nowadays, it’s
just a parlor trick,” Sage replied. “Promise me that you’ll stay out of it
unless I invite you in.”
“It’s that bad?” Niome frowned. Sage nodded. “Fine. We’ll
stay out until needed. I still need a coroner’s report to close the file.”
“I’ll have one for you tomorrow morning,” Maya promised.
After the two officers left with their coffee, Sage sighed
with relief. Her mood brightened with the arrival of Edgar Carson. “I thought
they’d never leave,” he said as he sat next to Maya. Staring across the table
at Sage, he said, “Okay, I’m here. What do you want to talk about?”
Smiling at Edgar, Sage replied. “I have a case for you. I
need some background information on a man named Scott Casey. Find out where he
works, who his friends are, and anything about his family and background. Be
discrete.” Sage grabbed his notepad and pen, wrote down an address, then slid
the two items back to him. “That ought to be enough information to get you
started.”
“I thought you were going to threaten me for stalking you or
worse.” He glanced at the information she had jotted on his notepad. “Does this
have anything to do with why you were talking to the cops?”
“Yes and no. This is a closed case as far as the cops are
concerned. As far as you are concerned, this is just a background check. I know
you’ve checked out mine – what there is of it. And I know you still have questions
about me. This takes precedence.”
“Yeah, I still can’t figure out how you knew where the girl
was. That was just bizarre. Cops had all sorts of people helping them look. You
walk in and -boom- they find her, like, within hours.”
“We can talk about that later, after you’ve finished looking
into Scott Casey.”
Edgar rose to leave when Maya’s phone rang. “Oh,” he said
reaching inside his coat, “I brought the book I borrowed with me.”
“Thanks,” Sage said as she took it from him. Before Maya
could say anything about the phone call, Sage smiled. “I know. Time to go see Nana
Lee. She’s waiting for me.”
“She said something about bad signs and black magic.” The
two women slid out of the booth and traveled through the diner’s kitchen.
Exiting out the back, they climbed a flight of iron stairs to a second-floor
fire door that stood ajar. Inside the hallway were a few empty lunch trays
waiting for someone to return them to the kitchen.
The door to Nana Lee’s room was open. The heavy scent of
sandalwood wafted out into the hallway. Inside the room, Nana had already set
out a pot of jasmine tea for the three of them. In front of her on the table
was a pile of twenty-four rectangular bamboo sticks; a stripe of black paint bisected
half of them. She waived her hand beckoning the two to come sit with her. She
poured two cups of tea while they sat down. She offered them a puff of her
cigarette, but they waved her off. “I left them so you could see for yourself.”
She began to slowly peel the pile apart, placing the sticks into ordered groups
revealing two distinct hexagrams. Nana Lee regularly consulted the Yijing
before venturing out. She didn’t need to consult the text to know what the
signs meant.
Maya glanced at her watch and noted the time. “Thank you for
the tea, Grandmother. I need to get back to work.”
“Go then, Sūnnǚ.
The Shenlong and I still have much to discuss,” Nana Lee waved her away.
Maya looked at Sage, who smiled and nodded. “You have that
report to write about the bear that was shot this morning. I need that
file closed.”
“What about Animal Control?”
“Call them. Tell them you want to keep the animal for a
necropsy. They won’t object.”
Nana Lee watched her granddaughter retreat. She took a sip
of her tea then a drag on her cigarette. Sage knew better than to break Nana
Lee’s silences without permission. There was the clatter of someone gathering
dishes out in the hall, followed by the sound of a screen door slamming shut.
Nana Lee turned to face her guest and nodded her head. “You have a question for
me, yes?”
“I have a chimera with the head of a bear, the body of an
ape, and the feet of a rabbit. Are these in any way tied to the Chinese
calendar or zodiac?”
Nana Lee gathered up the pile of sticks in front of her and
placed them into the bamboo cylinder. “The rabbit, yes. And the monkey, maybe.
But the bear,” she paused and scrunched up her face before shaking her head,
“no, there is no bear.”
“That’s what I thought. I’ll have to look elsewhere.”
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