TTB C2
by berryChapter 2
âI once served in Dragon Flame.â
The Deputy Directorâs office was in the main building, some distance from Building 7 where the Missing Persons Investigation Division was located.
Having successfully taken charge of the new recruit, He Lin no longer walked in the brisk, commanding stride he had used earlier. Instead, he and Li Shang strolled leisurely across the sunâlit courtyard of the city police bureau, as though announcing his claim to ownership.
The two walked and conversed along the way. Though to call it a conversation was generousâmost of the time it was He Lin doing the talking, while Li Shang listened in quiet attentiveness.
âIn our division there were originally four investigators: myself; an experienced old officer, Wu Yunsheng; a young officer named Fang Jue; and a female officer primarily responsible for technical monitoring, Cheng Xiaoyi. Everyone has their role, and we cooperate with a fair degree of rhythm.â
After this brief outline, He Lin asked, âSo why did you choose the Missing Persons Division?â
He didnât believe Deputy Bai to be so benevolent. Li Shangâs choice must have been decisive, and He Linâs curiosity pricked.
Li Shang, handsome and fineâfeatured, had a natural air of aloofnessâpolished over yearsâgiving the sense that he was not easily approachable.
Now, when asked, he lowered his head, hesitated briefly, then answered: âI thought the pressure here wouldnât be too great.â
Lifting his gaze, he countered, âWhat about you, Captain? Why did you come here?â
He Lin reflected: âStrange story. When I transferred in, I had many options. But when the roster was given to me, the first thing that caught my eye was the Missing Persons Division. Perhaps, deep down, I had the urge to search for those who disappeared.â
Through the police system, he already had friends familiar with which posts offered better opportunities and quicker promotions. Yet he himself could not describe what he felt in that instantâlike a mission had settled upon his shoulders. He even sometimes suspected he had promised someone, or sworn an oath. In that moment it was as though âpossessed,â compelled without hesitation to come here.
âAfter joining, I found it quite suitable indeed.â He Lin added mildly, âThis department is quiet. Cases spike around midâautumn, but generally itâs not too stressfulâjust as you said. And here there are fewer⊠annoyances.â
In simple terms: unlike Narcotics, constantly locked in deadly contests against drug traffickers; unlike Criminal Investigation, weighed down by endless pressure from all sides for results, truth, announcements; unlike the hot departments where leaders parachute in at will.
The division was small, but its authority not low. They could focus on cases wholeheartedly, without getting tangled in political infighting.
The two walked, talking further.
He Lin asked about Li Shangâs background.
Learning that Li Shang had come from Tianning Baseâ±, He Lin was surprised: âI trained at Tianning as well. Which unit were you with?â
Li Shang replied calmly: âBlue Sparrow.â
Blue Sparrow was the most secretive and least numerous of Tianningâs four special ops teams. They specialized in intelligence and nonâviolent yet critical missions: hacking, surveillance, drones, signal interference, cryptography, geographical reconnaissance.
The team included not only field officers but also civilian staff. Unlike other units that required only physical testing, Blue Sparrow required rigorous academic screening as wellâdemanding intellectual elites as well as strong bodies.
He Lin nodded: âThat means this post should fit. Youâll adapt quickly.â
Li Shang asked in turn: âAnd you, Captainâwhat unit?â
With a hint of pride, He Lin answered: âI was once with Dragon Flame.â
That team was Tianningâs ace force, renowned in Yun City and across the nation.
Yun City sat near a portion of the national border. Just north lay Tianning Base, the largest and most professional special police training center.
Inside, thousands of officers could be housed. From there, elite forces for three provinces were born.
Four primary combat units resided there, selected from thousands of candidates by ruthless screening.
Dragon Flame was the most famous, entrusted with major missions both domestic and international.
Undercover operations, crossâborder arrests, hostage rescuesâeven joint missions with foreign police. Any matter critical but not escalated to military level belonged to Dragon Flame.
The other units were: Python, masters of mountainous terrain; Wolf Fang (Wolf Tooth), specialized in urban counterterrorism combat; and Blue Sparrowâthe team Li Shang had named.
As they neared their building, He Lin asked: âWhy did you retire?â
âPartly because of age, partly old injuries affecting my stamina.â Li Shangâs voice was calm, matterâofâfact. Leaving base had been his own rational decision. Though he had other purposes in coming to Yun City, such reasons sufficed for He Lin.
He Lin already sensed Li Shangâs frail health, but since he had passed entry tests and been approved, it mattered little. He offered comfort: âI too retired from injury. Howâs your healthâif itâs not too private?â
His question carried no disdainâmerely for future care.
âAnemia, some old wounds. They rarely flare, wonât affect work.â
He Lin understood. âNot fit for special ops, true. But for police service, manageable. Here, most tasks require little physical pursuitâIâll assign you more clerical work.â
After a pause, Li Shang added: âThereâs still something you should know. Though retired, if base recalls me for a mission, I must return.â
He Lin accepted easily; heâd heard of this recall mechanism for rare talents: âIf base needs you, Iâll cooperate.â
Inside the office, He Lin introduced him to the team.
Wu Yunsheng was the eldest, around forty, yellowâskinned with crowâfeet at the eyes, genial smileâtypical veteran cop. âI started in narcotics. Later, when I married, the leaders took pity and transferred me to criminal investigation. Then when children came, shifts were too harsh, and I moved here. I know most departmentsâlater Iâll introduce you around.â
He Lin said: âOld Wu is our anchor. With him, I neednât worry about daily affairs.â
Nextâyouthful Fang Jue, shortâhaired, sunâbright smile. Meeting Li Shang, he sprang upright like a class monitor greeting a transfer student. âIâm Fang Jue, joined a year ahead. Old Wu is my master. Besides investigations, I driveâoutside tasks Iâm usually chauffeur.â
Then the woman, Cheng Xiaoyi, only just tied her messy ponytail, embarrassed before the newcomer. âIâm Cheng Xiaoyi, graduate in audiovisual investigative tech. I handle online data and video analysis. Any database neededâask me.â
After introductions, He Lin gave Li Shang a tour. Entire third floor was theirs: offices, meeting room, pantry, showers, a bunk room, and the largestâan archive chamber. Airâdried, ventilated, fingerprintâlocked.
Li Shang entered, looked up. Shelves towered, rows of files stacked in chronology.
Each folder: at least one disappearance, spanning decades. No bones in sight, yet an equally stark reminder of mortality.
He Lin gestured: âThese hold Yun Cityâs most complete archive. Marked in redâsolved, person found, case closed. The unmarkedâstill unresolved.â
Li Shang gently pulled one tired dossierâthe missing elder would now be eightyâseven, perhaps already gone, perhaps family long since departed. A thin bookletâyet proof he had walked this earth.
So long as it remained, hope remained.
Replacing it, Li Shang reflected: maybe years later, they would finally find him, add the red markâbringing closure.
He Lin explained his duties: âFile archiving, indexing, scanning, digital entry. Know locations for quick retrieval. Update progress with markings. Otherwiseâride with me on investigations, assist, record statements, draft reports.â
Clerical, yet requiring endless patience.
He Lin worried about his suitabilityâbut Li Shang simply answered: âAlright.â
In that somber archive, his eyes shone, seemingly content.
He Lin added: âNow we can split into two field teamsâeasier for investigations.â
Li Shang said: âI can drive too.â
Then to the auxiliary police centerâthey coâshared twenty assistants with other divisions.
Returning, He Lin set Li Shangâs desk beside Fang Jueâs. Fang bustled, assembling his computer; Cheng logged him into police systems; offered him a manual of proceduresâeverything digital now, with online requests needed for warrants, etc.
Li Shang bent over the manual attentively.
The division had high clearance: phone locations, call logs, bank transactions, travel tickets, CCTV, DNA matches.
Silently, he memorized it all.
Fang leaned over cheerfully: âAnything unclear, just ask. So much easier than before.â
Wu Yunsheng, sober: âYet rememberâeven with all this, many will never be found.â
Li Shang, hearing, gazed sideways at He Linâs profile.
Soonâhis desk neatened, sticky notes lined the monitor, handwriting delicate.
He Lin handed him new case filesâLi Shang finished within two hours, catching omissions besides.
He Lin was impressed: âHave you done similar work before?â
Li Shang: âFirst time.â
His crisp, clear answers made He Lin nod again and again. So adept, so carefulâit hardly fit ânovice.â
The thoughtâperhaps this could be a protĂ©gĂ©âbut quickly he dismissed it. Li Shang was older; it would be awkward to call him âMaster.â
By noon, the team ate in the small cafeteria.
Fang guided Li Shang: âNever order braised chickenâfreezer meat, tastes like corpse. Get Yangzhou fried riceâauthentic. And try the saltâpepper ribsâfresh, crispy outside, tender inside.â
All sat in one table. Fang exchanged gossip with Cheng; He Lin and Wu spoke of prior cases.
Halfway through, Fang paused, noticing Li Shang remained silent. âYou donât talk much, do you.â
Cheng teased: âSo ethereal, unworldlyâlike an immortal, with an aura that says: keep your distance.â
He Lin felt the same: a naturally frosted demeanor, faint smiles were already vividâan ice block, refusing to melt.
Li Shang lowered his gaze: âIâm a little⊠socially anxious.â
Cheng brightened: âAh! So youâre an Iâperson. Have you done the full MBTIÂČ test?â
âINTP,â Li Shang answered, steady.
Cheng exclaimed: âThe Logician! Curious, gentle, loves learning, prefers solitude. Iâm INFPâthe butterfly.â She turned to He Lin: âWhat about you, Captain?â
He Lin thought: âTook it once⊠forget the code⊠but something like the âProtagonist.ââ
Cheng stirred her soup with a spoon, laughing: âENFJâthe legendary great sword. Strong confidence, clear goals, altruistic warmth. Fits you perfectly, Captain.â
Wu Yunsheng blinked, lostâthese youngstersâ games beyond him. Curious, he asked what the letters meant; Cheng patiently explained, even recommending a link for him to test.
Fang, half listening, interrupted: âIâm an Iâperson too.â
Cheng rolled her eyes: âNo wayâyouâre clearly an E. Iâd bet ENFP.â
Spark lit Fangâs face: âIs that the best?â
Cheng smirked: âYouâre the classic happy puppy. Optimistic even when the worldâs on fire, zero selfâcontrol, three hours alone and you crack. Thatâs ENFP.â
She nailed it. Fang scratched his chin sheepishly: âFair, true partly. But I feel introvertedâafter work, I canât be bothered with chores. Just lie there and sleep.â
âWould you rather play games or sleep alone?â Cheng pressed.
He thought: âGames.â
âIf treated to dinnerâgo or stay home?â
âOf course go.â
Cheng closed the case ruthlessly: âSee? Not introvert, just lazy.â
Everyone laughed. Fang fell silent, tail tucked.
Wu, having finished his meal, studied Li Shang quietly, finally asking: âHow old are you?â
âThirty.â Li Shang calmly picked food.
All at the table frozeâexcept He Lin and Wu, already aware. Fang and Chengâs expressions erupted in shock.
Sensing their reaction, Li Shang explained: âI lack much investigative experienceâessentially a novice.â
âThatâs not the pointâŠâ Fang gaped, bitter. âYou look so youngâI thought at last Iâd stop being the baby of the teamâŠâ
Cheng, twentyâsix, fresh from police school but already junior elder, sighed: âI thought twentyâfive at mostâcould pass as still in college!â She turned to Wu: âHow did you guess?â
âHis eyes.â Wu smiled knowingly. âLooks youthful, yes. But the eyesâtheyâre not what they seem.â
Years in investigation made Wu sharp. Instinct rarely wrong.
After the meal, trays were returned.
Cheng cornered Li Shang: âHow do you maintain? Teach me.â
Li Shang: ââŠâ
But Fang cut in: âSome are just babyâfacedâyou canât copy that.â
The remark skewered Cheng, who chased Fang all the way backâignoring whether such roughhousing might trigger appendicitis.
Li Shang and He Lin walked side by side from the cafeteria.
Behind them, Wu Yunsheng frowned over his phone, muttering like a baffled elder on a subway, âThis ESFJ âmaleâmomââwhat on earth is that?â
Footnotes
â± Tianning Base (怩毧ćșć°): Fictional elite police special operations training base, considered semiâmilitary, producing Chinaâs top special police teams.
ÂČ MBTI: MyersâBriggs Type Indicator; a widely popular personality system dividing people into 16 types (e.g., INTP âLogician,â ENFJ âProtagonist,â etc.), often referenced in modern Chinese youth culture.