TTB C3
by berryChapter 3
3 âFor someone to remain in your memory this long, they must have been very importantâŠâ
Later in the afternoon, He Lin beckoned Li Shang to go out with him alone.
The last case had confirmed a child as one who had been abducted three years ago. Officers from the Third SubâBureau had brought the child to headquarters; it fell to them to escort him back to his biological parents.
He Lin had already contacted both sides in advance.
They picked up the child and headed out.
Li Shangâs task was simple: sit in the back row with the boy and look after him.
The child was a sixâyearâold boy. He had been abducted at three; too young, he had no memory of his home, no impression of his parents. He didnât understand what âgoing homeâ meant. In his confused mind, it felt instead as though he was being taken away from his parents now.
When faced with two strange men, as soon as he was seated the boy began demanding to get out, twisting and wriggling restlessly.
It did not take long for He Lin to discover that perhaps he had miscalculatedâhis new subordinate, perfect on the surface, did have one clear weakness.
Namely: children.
Li Shang had seated himself at the far end of the back row, posture upright, aura forbidding. Coldly, he told the child: âSit still.â
For one or two minutes, the child was cowed into silence. But children are children; quiet lasted only briefly. Soon he was climbing on the seat, leaning in deliberately against Li Shang.
He seemed intrigued by this chilly, beautiful âiceâmountainâ older brother.
Li Shang pushed him gently away with a finger, warning: âDonât make trouble. Play by yourself.â
This time quiet lasted even less. The boy began swinging left and right, chattering endless questionsâ
âBrother, brother, where are we going?â
âWhy did the officer say Iâm going home, but I only just came from home?â
He was testing He Linâs driving.
Li Shang moved again at last. Pulling out his phone, he explained sternly:
âIf you keep this up, youâll distract the driver, cause an accident. The drive is sixteen minutes; we have been moving for three minutes and twenty seconds. You only need to keep quiet for twelve and a half minutes more.â
Precise and serious. Unfortunately, that logic was wasted on children. The boy stuck out his hand: âBut brother, itâs boring! Play with me!â
Li Shang sighed softly. He looked at the child, serious: âFine. But I choose what game.â
The childâs eyes lit up: âOkay!â
âDo you know the Idiom Chain Game?âÂČ Li Shang asked.
âI do! Iâm really good! Mom and Dad said I know a lot of idioms.â
âThen hereâs one for you.â Li Shang thought a moment. âXing gao cai lie (èé«éç â âin high spiritsâ).â
âLieâŠâ The boy promptly froze, like a computer crashing. Stuck motionless.
Li Shang basked in the silence, turned to gaze out the window: âTake your time.â
He Lin, driving, tried to think of a continuation too. A full minute passedâtil realization struck: this phrase doesnât continue at all.
Li Shang had deliberately tricked the boy.
Sure enough, after two minutes the child caught on, scowling: âThat doesnât work. You give me another one!â
Li Shang turned back to him, smiling faintly. âAlright.â His lips parted to deliver: âSi fen wu lie (ććäșèŁ â âsplintered to piecesâ).â
Againâlie at the end. The poor child stumbled back into the pit.
Struggling one more minute, he burst into tears.
Li Shang calmly pulled a tissue from the box and handed it to him: âDonât cry. If you canât, go back and memorize more idioms.â
In that moment, a small boyâs heart quietly shattered.
Hearing those cool words, something in He Linâs head flashedâlike an old, distant voice saying: âIf youâre weak, train harder.â
The crying grew louder. He Lin had to intervene.
With a sleight of hand, he produced two lollipops and tossed them back.
Li Shang unwrapped one for the boy, who nibbled through tears, silenced for the moment by sweetness.
Soon He Lin deftly smoothed things further. He didnât explain that the prior caretakers hadnât been real parents; instead, he painted dreams:
âWeâre police brothers, weâre good people. Where weâre taking you has toys, clothes, tasty food. Be goodâyouâll play there a few days.â
The boy, pacified, sucked candy quietly at last.
The second lollipop remained in Li Shangâs hand.
He Lin caught the sight in the rearview, lips curving. âThat oneâs for you. Iâve got more.â
Li Shang froze, lowered his eyes to the roseâred wrapper. He didnât unwrap it, only held it near his lips, as if inhaling the sweetness of a rose.
At a stoplight, He Lin turned to see: âYou donât like candy?â
âNoâŠâ Li Shang shook his head, hesitated. âFeels like itâs something for children. I donât usually.â
He Lin chuckled: âTry this brand. Theyâre good.â
ââŠAlright. Later,â Li Shang replied, but still didnât unwrap it.
The boy, spotting it, reached greedily: âIf youâre not eating it, give it to me!â
Li Shang drew it close protectively, slipped it into his pocket. âThis oneâs mine. Kids canât have too much sugar.â
Listening, He Lin smiled again. Indeedâhis new subordinate couldnât handle children, but somehowâŠwas rather cute himself.
The parentsâ home was not far. Half an hourâs drive, they arrived.
The family had never given up. Posters in every street. Faces posted online. Records in police databases. It was through those fragmented clues that He Lin had traced the boy back.
DNA matched. The truth, resolved. After yearsâtheir son returned.
At the news, the parents had been waiting at the door. A crowd of relatives hovered, stretching necks, eager beyond measure.
Once they saw him, the mother burst into tears, running forward, clutching her son and sobbing out his childhood name again and again.
The father turned away, wiping surreptitious tears, shoulders heaving with restrained emotion.
The boy, however, only stared blankly, eyes clear and uncertain. Slowly, perhaps sensing the rich love surrounding him, perhaps glimpsing fragments of memory, he timidly lifted a hand. Amid weeping, he managed to whisper: âMama.â
The woman trembled all over, hugging him as if never again to let go.
The father stammered endless thanks to He Lin, the word xiexie repeated like a flood of gratitude.
He Lin instructed: âLet him adapt slowly. Get him things he likes.â
Li Shang, watching, remained detached. However touching, his duty was firm. He handed papers to the father. âPlease sign here.â
With that, the handoff was complete. Another caseâready for a red mark, closed.
He Lin lingered to exchange brief words, then withdrew, leaving the family united.
Checking his phone, he murmured: âWeâre nearly off duty. Iâll return the files. You head home if you like.â Turning: âWhere do you live?â
Li Shang reported an apartment complex near the bureau.
He Lin nodded: âGood spot. You can wake at 8:30 and still be on time.â
In the front seat, Li Shang was quietâstill recalling the reunion.
He Lin grinned: âFeels good, doesnât it?â
A soft affirmative from Li Shang.
He Lin said warmly: âThatâs when I first fell in love with this work. Missing persons arenât like homicides, where truth is predetermined. Itâs like opening a blind boxÂłâany outcome possible.â
Li Shang asked: âCases like todayâsâcommon?â
âLess than one in five result in reunions,â He Lin answered. âBut every one is moving. Some return alive. Some, dead. Some endings happyâŠsome tragic.â
As he spoke, Li Shang looked at him. Strong profile, high nose, brows once youthful but filled now with quiet righteousness.
He stared, momentarily dazed.
He Lin sensed the gaze, felt again the faint prickling headache. Mild thoughânot blinding.
Words slipped unbidden: âEach time someone finds their lifeâs path again, I feel complete. We police endure the harshest selection, the hardest trainingâfor one reason only: to protect those we must protect.â
It sounded heroic, a little boastful.
Rare for him to say such words aloud, he peeked at Li Shangâs reactionâonly to find his eyes startled, unreadable emotion rippling in them.
He Linâs confidence faltered. Flustered, he rubbed his nose and laughed softly: âNot my original phrase. Something I once heard. Mustâve been someone important who said it.â
Li Shang pressed gently, gaze unwavering: âIf you remember it so long, that person must have been important.â
He Lin misunderstood. Thinking he was teased for his poor memory, he relaxedâand deflected with humor: âMustâve been a girlfriend. I donât recall. Haha.â
The joke fell flat.
Li Shang lowered his lashes, sighing inwardly. The answer is half right. But the path is all wrong.
He dropped Li Shang at his apartment.
Inside, Li Shang unlocked the door. Once alone, his mask droppedâexpression colder, freer.
He thought: At least today, being beside him didnât trigger headaches or bleeding. Thatâs something. PerhapsâŠI can stay by his side after all.
He had much to do tonight.
The apartment was freshly rented online, rushed in straight from Tianning after sorting his discharge yesterday. Sparsely furnished, echoing.
He ordered takeout, bought necessities. Began tidying. Quiet, efficient, precise.
Nine years of life shrunk into one suitcase.
Uniforms behind him, only monochrome clothes. One by one, he hung them neatly.
Three objects came too:
Firstâa rectangular alarm clock. Though phones now common, he clung to it. Obsessively punctualâalways waking before it rang, unless body broken.
Secondâa small medicine box, filled with pills, gauze, disinfectant. Sorted precisely beside his bed.
Thirdâa heavy little case.
Insideâdozens of refrigerator magnets, vivid trinkets. Like toys.
At Tianning, only captainsâ quarters had fridges. Sunlight bleached old magnets pale.
Expressionless, Li Shang affixed them on his fridge. Some sunâbleached, some fresh. His memory catalogued eachâwhen, where acquired.
Sorting normally quick; here, he lingered. Half an hour passed before they were aligned, even shifting one a few millimeters.
The top looked chaotic; the last rows, neatâan exact replica of another fridge arrangement. One in Rong Qingâs old dormitory.
One of the few surviving testaments of that era.
Takeout arrived. He ate a little, lost appetite. Leaving the rest.
By nine, he kept routineânight run. Sprinting fiercely under Yun Cityâs lights, circling his block. Returning pale, color drained.
Shower, dry hair, medication. Dozens of pills measured without flinch. Wounds had left him weakenedâweight falling since his last recovery, strength unreclaimable. Stillâalive, workingâenough.
From his laundry pile, he pulled a little object. The second lollipop.
He stared at it, heavy. Rarely did he eat sweets. To him, sugar always belonged to someone else. Taken for granted thenâlater realizing: life grants few candies, each one less when eaten.
If it were Rong Qing, he wouldâve unwrapped, eaten, kept the wrapper.
But Li Shang could not. That man had forgotten him. He could only stare at candy, think of him.
He could not bear to consume it.
Closing his eyes, he pressed it to his chest, letting his heartbeat savor its sweetness.
In imagination, he ate it. In reality, he sealed it carefully in a moistureâproof bag, reverently like a rare treasure.
There was still time. He produced the little case again. With magnets removed, it was lighter. At the bottom lay photos and papers. His face hardened.
Into a small dark utility room he carried them, where he had prepared bare walls.
He pinned photos, strung red threads, weaving a web across the wall. Clues connected, all used.
Staring, his thoughts returned two years.
Lily Park: the joint operation, an undercover mission two weeks long. They had appeared to win triumphantly. But for him, it was defeat.
For he had left He Lin behind. Nearly died himself.
The park had four headsâthe Zhao brothers, and two Chinese migrants.
When captured, two were missing: the enforcer, Xia Yan; the accountant, Bai Zang (âWhite Burialâ).
They vanished before police struck. Taking massive funds, as though forewarned.
Xia Yan: internationally wanted.
Bai Zang: almost nothing known. Called âBoss Bai.â A ghost. Believed male, Chinese. Three years in, yet unseen by almost all. Worked entirely online, managing daily affairs remotely.
Legend said he delighted in torture chambersâthose who saw him, ended dead.
After the parkâs destruction, further pursuit was cut short when the Zhao brothers mysteriously died in prison before interrogation. Line severed.
Two years passed. Rumor resurfaced: someone had seen Xia Yan near Yun City. MeaningâBai likely lingered too.
Of all who had glimpsed his true face and lived, only one remained.
He Lin.
Though his memory lost, he might still be a target.
Upon hearing this, Li Shang knewâhe must come. Rong Qingâs unfinished mission. He must guard He Lin.
And, if possibleâseize those two remnants.
By 11:30, Li Shang climbed into bed.
Unfamiliar home. Solitary night. Mattress softer than the baseâunsettling.
After a pause, he rose, opened the wardrobe, and took out an old pillow. He held it tightly against his chest.
Only then could he fall asleep.
Footnotes
ÂČ Idiom Chain (æèȘæ„éŸ): A traditional Chinese word game where players must continue with a new idiom beginning with the last character of the previous one. Li Shang deliberately chose idioms ending in âèŁâ (lie), which has very few continuations, effectively trapping the child.
Âł Blind box: A modern Chinese slang borrowed from collectible toysâmeaning something with entirely unpredictable outcomes.