TTB C1
by berryChapter 1
âWelcome to the Missing Persons Investigation Division.â âŠ
Northern M Country, Lily Industrial Park.
The setting sun melted into molten gold, the dying light crimson as blood. At last, the final strand of sunlight slowly sank beneath the horizon.
As daylight waned and stars began to return, yet another long night was about to arrive.
Suddenly, with a loud bang, a firework shot into the sky, blooming in the silence of the dark night.
Brilliant sparks scattered like shattered starlight, streaking across the sky, illuminating the rows of grey office towers that filled Lily Industrial Park. There were no fewer than nineteen buildings here, capable of housing several thousand peopleâlike a miniature city.
Soon after, a second rocket, a third rocketed up, bursting in dazzling bright explosions, their booming echo unbroken.
On the open square within the park, those human dregsâmockingly called *âpigs,â âdog-pushers,â and âred clubsâ*Âčâhad gone wild with madness. They roared with laughter, liquor splashing, celebrating tonightâs âgreat harvest.â
This was the parkâs unique custom: every time they closed a massive deal, they set off fireworks.
Each 500,000 earned meant one firework in the sky.
Tonight, thirty fireworks would bloom one after another.
All that bloodâstained, illâgotten fortune had fallen into the hands of these swindlersâand behind this glow of prosperity lay countless families ruined, bankrupted, and broken.
At the edge of the throng, two owners of the park were in conversation.
They were the infamous Zhao brothers of Northern M. The elder was Zhao Zhanping, the younger Zhao Zhanqi. They had been in this trade for more than ten years.
Amid the noise, Zhao Zhanqi wore a trace of worry:
âBrother, Iâm still uneasy about those few who escaped the other dayâŠâ
âWhatâs there to be afraid of?â Zhao Zhanping cut him off, tilting his head to look at the fireworks littering the sky. His tone was utterly dismissive. âIs this the first group whoâs ever run off?â
âBut they took away Engineer Yuan⊠and we also caught that oneâŠâ Zhao Zhanqi glanced around cautiously, lowering his voice: âThose people donât seem like ordinary undercover infiltrators. Couldnât they beâŠâ
âDonât forget whose territory this is.â Zhao Zhanpingâs confidence brimmed. âEven if they wanted to act, their reach canât touch us here. The system development is already completeâEngineer Yuan doesnât serve much use anymore.â
He downed a gulp of liquor and continued with smug delight: âThat White Burial really is a little prodigy. Finally completed the system! With it, every other park will come begging for our services, even the local military will have to step lightly around us. Our comfortable days are just beginning⊠A few pesky ants like before canât shake us.â
Hearing this, Zhao Zhanqi clutched his chest, exhaling relief. âThatâs good. These past two nights, my heart hasnât been settled.â
âDonât worryâWhite Burial will deal with it.â Zhao Zhanping muttered, scanning the crowd. âBut speaking of which⊠why have they been gone so long? Shouldnât they be back by now?â
At that moment, the last firework ascended, dissolving into the black canopy of night. Darkness reclaimed silence.
The celebration came to a close. Just as the crowd began to disperse, all the lights of the park abruptly went dead. Darkness swallowed every building whole.
In the confused shouts, a helicopter approached from afar, its blades whipping up tempests of wind. Amid the roar, several blackâclad silhouettes rappelled from the machine, descending like divine soldiers.
âPolice! Run!â someone screamed in terror.
The crowd scattered like startled birds and beastsâyet where was there to run?
The police had long since obtained detailed internal maps of the compound, already familiar with all passages and personnel placement. Every exit was sealed.
These criminals were turtles in a jarâno escape possible.
The camouflageâclad âred clubsâ were the first to react, raising weapons with a feral cry:
âFuck it, fight them!â
Gunfire erupted, deafening in bursts.
Bullets whistled through the air. A few men who resisted were swiftly shot down, some falling under SWAT fire instantly. Blood bloomed in grotesque sprays; others dropped to the ground, clutching their heads and quivering with fear.
The fortressâlike park, before absolute force, crumbled into fragility.
Zhao Zhanpingâs composure shattered, his legs quaking: âItâs over. All overâŠâ
With their leader absentâSummer Yan nowhere aroundâthe âred clubsâ routed in chaos, reduced to a headless mob.
Stumbling to the rear, Zhao Zhanping muttered: âEven if I die, I wonât let myself be taken by them.â
Panting heavily, he drew a gun and pressed it to his temple, eyes squeezed shut.
Before he could pull the trigger, a powerful force slammed into him. The pistol vanished from his grip, handcuffs clamped tight around his wrists, and he was pressed firmly to the ground under armed hands.
Amidst the panic, Zhao Zhanqi flung handfuls of banknotes into the air, hoping to stir confusion. But before the bills even drifted down, a shot rang outâsearing his shoulder.
More law enforcement units poured in, subduing and hauling away the myriad scamsters.
Wails and gunshots filled the night. The earth was littered with paper scraps, money, rivers of blood and spilled liquor.
In mere minutes, the place had transformed from carnival to purgatory. Former glory goneâonly carnage remained.
âPolice! Stay where you are! Donât move!â
âHands on your head! Squat down!â
The square was filled with detained criminals. Bundles of cash were dragged out, computers and phones confiscated en masse.
Tonightâs raid marked the end of Northern Mâs largest fraud park.
At the same time, in a nearby cemetery dark and ghastly, strewn with severed limbs and bones, SWAT officers from China frantically combed the ground.
âFound him!â
At the call, Rong Qing sprinted over, vaulting into a freshly dug shallow pit.
With trembling hands, he carefully brushed away clumps of earthârevealing a pale face beneath.
He had found him.
Halfâburied under soil lay a young man, his entire body battered and bloodied. Eyes shut, torn flesh crissâcrossing, fresh blood still oozing. Most terrifying of all, a head wound where red blood trickled forth mixed with brain matter, forming a winding river of crimson.
Looking upon the scene, indescribable grief threatened to drown Rong Qing. Yet he forced himself steady, checking the manâs injuries.
âHe Lin⊠He LinâŠâ Rong Qing bent over his body, calling his name again and again.
A teammate tugged his arm: âCaptain Rong, calm down. Heâs alreadyâŠâ
With such torture, such a headshotâno one could survive.
But Rong Qing tore free, stubborn: âNo! The blood hasnât clotted yetâheâs still alive!â
In the chaos, the shot had not pierced He Linâs forehead directly, but a fraction aside into the temple.
With one hand, Rong Qing gently covered the horrifying wound; with the other, he carefully tested under the manâs nose.
A faint, fragile breath brushed his fingertips. The abyss in Rong Qingâs heart flickered with faint light. He cried out urgently:
âHeâs alive! Quickly! Get the ambulance here!â
Even as arrangements were made, Rong Qing whispered desperately: âHe Lin! Wake upâŠâ
The voice that was once steady now trembled, shattered. His heart tore apart while his outer shell performed duties as though on autopilot, a broken machine running its last program. Within, collapse consumed him.
At last, under his call, the man slowly opened his narrow eyes, hazed and fragile, looking back at him.
He Linâs gaze lingered upon Rong Qingâs face. His lips moved slightly, meaning to speak a name. But as someone walked past, the wind they stirred shattered the fragile strings of memory. A voice was blown into He Linâs earâbut the name, the memory, seeped with his blood into the soil of this hell, locked away forever.
The trembling: âI am Rong Qingââwas cut off from the last fragment of He Linâs consciousness.
With his strength ebbing, He Linâs final words came as a whisper, more sigh than sound:
âRong Qing⊠who is that? Rong Qing, you came too lateâŠâ
The words faded like wind, yet cut like a blade plunged into the chest. Pain not of flesh but the soul, splitting Rong Qing in two. He felt his spirit bleeding, shatteredâwhile his body could only remain frozen, destroyed.
From that instant, his soul and body severedâno spark of life left.
Official Broadcast:
âRecently, under deployment of the Ministry of Public Security, joint operations between Chinese police and Mâcountry authorities have successfully dismantled Northern Mâs major Lily Industrial Park. More than 2,000 crossâborder telecom fraud suspects were apprehended.â
âOf the four principal ringleaders, the Zhao brothers have been captured; two remain at large. All others have been taken into custody. Relevant suspects and materials have been handed over through official crossings. International wanted notices have been issued for those still on the run.â
âThis success demonstrates the firm resolve and efficiency of our police in combating crossâborder fraud targeting our citizens.â
âTo date, a cumulative total of over 50,000 telecom scammers have been handed over, showing substantial progress in the fight against crimes emanating from M country.â
âNo matter what shore the storm casts me upon, I will step ashore as a master.â
âHoraceÂČ
Two Years Later â Morning. Yun City, Police Bureau, Building 7
Though office hours had not yet begun, the Missing Persons Investigation Division was already stirring.
The phone rang, breaking the calm.
After a single tone, the man by the desk picked it up without hesitation, his motions brisk.
âHello, Captain He? The DNA test results you sent last time are backâcompletely consistent with the missing child.â
Hearing this, the manâs furrowed brow relaxed; relief filled his tone: âThank you.â
Another missing personâs identity confirmed.
Under the sunlight, the man hung up, opened the dossier before him, and signed his name on the closing page. The writing was forceful, elegantâclearly identifiable: âHe Lin.â
Afterwards, He Lin printed the full file, preparing to proofread again.
The yellowed pages bore handwritten notes from years ago. He Lin stared at the uneven script for ten minutes, until the words began to blur and dance. Rubbing at his temple, he had to reread a sentence thrice before scraping together its sense.
He knew it thenâthe aftereffects of his injury were acting up.
Abandoning quarrel with the documents, he rose to make instant coffee.
The warm aroma filled the office air.
This was Yun City Policeâs Missing Persons Investigation Division. He Lin was its captain.
Once, he had served in an elite SWAT unit; only a year and a half ago did he transfer into criminal investigation.
Two years earlier, he had been grievously injured on a missionâhis head pierced by a bullet. Though he survived, he was left with sequelae: amnesia, vertigo, migraines, tinnitus, insomniaâand dyslexia.
His amnesia was intermittentâlike a string snapped into fragments. Some memories sharp, others irretrievable.
Most absent were his special operations years, shrouded under confidentiality.
During his recovery, he sought treatment widelyâspecial medicines, traditional remedies, fish oil, DHAâall with little effect.
Six months later, he grudgingly returned. Passing civil exams, he transferred into city police, inheriting this neglected department.
The Missing Persons Division chiefly archived cases and handled difficult ones assigned by leadership.
The work was intricate, fragmented, often spanning years. Hence, it was long mocked as the âcold palaceâ of city police.
But since He Lin arrived, case resolution soaredâtwo per month on average, even four in one month. Efficiency shocked the whole bureau.
That winter, the director awarded him honors and invited him to higher posts. He Lin declinedâpreferring this quiet, marginal unit to balance his impediments.
He admitted candidly his reading struggles, telling the director: âLengthy handwritten reports exhaust meâI need others to read aloud sometimes.â
Luckily, typed text posed no problemânor did images, audio, or video. Daily life was normal, but work with piles of case files remained tough.
He then raised the real issue: manpower. The division was too small.
The director promised: one quota to be added. Yet half a year turned, fall arriving, no new recruit had come.
As He Lin sipped his coffee, young officer Fang Jue burst in breathless:
âI just saw Deputy Bai⊠bringing in a newcomer!â
Deputy Director Bai Yurong managed personnel.
âWhere?â He Lin set down his cup.
âHis officeâtalking to him now.â Fang gasped.
He Lin phoned Bai immediately, repeating his request for reinforcement.
Bai chuckled evasively: âAh, Captain He, no new bloodâs joined. Donât worryâyour need is well remembered.â
Unfooled, He Lin went in person.
Meanwhile, Bai Yurong sat across from a thin young man, features refined, aura cold.
Though merely thirty, his status was unusual: transferred from Tianning BaseÂł, with no file forwarded, under explicit directive needing special care.
This was no ordinary recruit. Bai was cautious, deferential.
Explaining his recent phone call, he assured: âPeople mistook you for a graduate, begging me for staff.â
The youth asked casually: âWhich division is so short-handed?â
âMissing Persons,â Bai replied. âOnce interns arrive, Iâll assign one there.â
The youth made no response, merely turned pages of the bureau roster. His pale finger lingered at âHe Lin.â
After long silence, Bai prompted: âHave you decided? Finance? Legal? Personnel? All with vacancies.â Easy posts.
The young man finally closed the roster. Calm words:
âMissing Persons.â
Bai blinked: ââŠManagement position orâŠ?â
âDidnât you just say they lack an investigator? That one.â
Bai broke into sweat: âYouâre making it tough for meâdemoting yourself to grassroots? Too busy, too exhausting! A waste of your talentsâŠâ
Yet the youthâs gaze left no room for refusal. He signed without hesitation.
When He Lin arrived moments later, he saw himâstrangely familiar though memory failed.
The youth too averted his gaze swiftly.
As pain pricked his head, He Lin steadied himself, while Bai whispered:
âHeâs chosen your division. Everythingâs signed. Take him with you.â
Though doubtful, He Lin accepted, scanning the slim formâs personnel sheetâage thirty, his own peer.
The name: Li Shang.
He Lin entered the room, introducing warmly:
âHello, Iâm He Lin, chief of the Missing Persons Division. From now on we are colleaguesâwelcome aboard.â
Now seeing him clearly, He Lin thought: cleanâcut, quietly striking, pallid and thin, veins faint behind coldâwhite skin.
âI am Li Shang.â The manâs voice polite, his gaze bright and composed. âCaptain He, Iâll rely on your guidance from here on.â
Footnotes
- âPigs, DogâPushers, Red Clubsâ: Slang from Chinese criminal underworld.
- Pigs (çȘä»): Used for trafficked or lowâlevel scam âfodder.â
- DogâPushers (çæš): Scam call operators.
- Red Clubs (çșąæŁ): Armed thugs, often carrying clubs or guns.
- Horace: Roman poet whose works often emphasize resilience and strength before fate.
- Tianning Base (怩毧ćșć°): Fictional special security / elite training base in this story, with authority above regular local police chains. It denotes high status background.