TTB C4
by berryChapter 4
1 âCome on, letâs visit the missing personâs residence.â
The next morning, when He Lin arrived at the office, Li Shang was already at work.
Yesterdayâs files had already been archived.
He Lin noticed that not only was Li Shangâs own desk meticulously organized, but the officeâs shared space had also been swept and tidied.
After greeting him, He Lin found Li Shangâs gaze drifting toward his own desk.
âCaptain He, may I help sort out your desk?â Li Shang asked calmly.
A desk is a private territory; courtesy demanded consent before touching.
He Linâs desk wasnât dirty, but it was clutteredâdocuments piled together, somewhat disorganized.
At that moment, He Lin received a call from an officer in the Fourth SubâBureau, about a file handover. With little in the way of personal belongings on this desk, he nodded casually.
Without a word, Li Shang came over, face as cold as everânot sycophantic, but more as though displeased at the sight of mess.
By the time He Lin returned with the case file, his desk looked entirely new: papers neatly classified and arranged, every surface pristine.
Li Shang had finished, now sipping tea impassively.
âThanks,â He Lin said.
âNo need,â Li Shang replied evenly.
Opening a drawer, He Lin revealed it stuffed entirely with candy of all sortsâas if he were running a sweet shop. Selecting a bag of imported squeezable jellies, he tossed it to Li Shang: âImportedâtry some.â
Li Shang hesitated but accepted.
He Lin saw him hold the jelly pouch without unwrapping, asked offhandedly: âDonât like it? I have other kinds if you donât.â
âNo.â Li Shang gripped it tightly, protective, like guarding food. âIâll finish my tea first.â
A fair explanationâjelly with tea, an odd pairing, perhaps.
He Lin shrugged it off and moved to morning business. Before long, he handed Li Shang a new file: âCoordination request from the Fourth SubâBureau. Sort and archive it. Once everyoneâs here, weâll meet.â
At nine sharp, the whole team gathered in the conference room, notebooks in hand.
Copierâprinted dossiers lay arranged in the center.
âThis is a coordination case from the Fourth SubâBureau,â He Lin began. âTwo missing persons: a middleâaged woman named Tang Ailian, and her husband, Guo M uchun. Both disappeared some time apart.â
âBoth husband and wife missing? That doesnât happen often.â Wu Yunsheng flipped through the file. âThe wife disappeared two years backâstill not found. This month, the husbandâs father reported his disappearance as well.â
Li Shang pinned photos to the whiteboard: left side, the wifeâthree pictures, each showing a thin, plainly dressed woman in long sleeves and pants, smile hesitant and awkward.
âThese look old.â Wu frowned.
Cheng Xiaoyi checked notes: âTheyâre indeed several years old. The husband only gave these.â
Fang Jue grimaced: âWeâre supposed to track someone on just outdated snapshots? Weâre police, not fortuneâtellers.â
Cheng replied: âHe claimed she disliked photos. These were the newest. Surveillance screenshots were even blurrier.â
On the right, the husbandâs photos were plentiful: wine tables, friend gatherings, screenshots from videos.
âLi Shangâsummarize the case.â He Lin instructed.
Li Shang flipped through the yellowed file, reading aloud. His voice was cool, steady, cadencedâdrawing team focus fully.
He read each missing personâs basic info, clear in articulation, measured in pacing.
He Lin closed his eyes and listened carefullyâhe could never process long handwritten notes well, but hearing aloud sharpened his mind.
Case facts lined up:
- Tang Ailian, 44 when disappeared two years ago.
- Worked at an electronics factory, retired early at 40.
- Healthy history troubledâlost an infant son, one miscarriage, no surviving children.
- Parents deceased, only an elder brother and sisterâinâlaw.
- Social ties narrow.
- Last sight two years ago boarding Bus 827, alighting at its terminalânever seen again.
- No ID renewals, bank card, WeChat, or phone activity since. Vanished as though into thin air.
Suspicion often fell on spouses in such cases. Though Guo reported the disappearance, Fourth SubâBureau found his cooperation poor. Yet no concrete evidence linked him to her vanishing.
Now, his father reported him missingâtwentyâthree days ago. Retired factory supervisor, frail health, widowed father remaining. No trace since.
The room lapsed silent.
Sparse clues. A difficult case.
Fang Jue muttered: âIf Guoâs been gone over twenty days, why didnât Fourth Bureau escalate sooner? Why toss it to us now?â
Wu Yunsheng sighed: âLikely inheritance disputes.â
IndeedâTang and Guo shared a property. After two years, legal kin could apply to declare Tang deceased, transferring rights. Guoâs family had been awaiting. Then Guo disappeared too. His father now wanted his sonâs assets. Tangâs brother insisted she livedâclaiming joint property rights. Dispute arose.
Unable to resolve, Fourth Bureau dumped the problem upward.
The team turned to He Lin.
Finger twirling his pen idly, eyes sharp, he paused, then stopped the movement: âFiveâminute recess. Then we continue.â
During break, He Lin skimmed photos, Wu fetched water, Fang went to the restroom, Cheng scrutinized video recordings, while Li Shang outlined notes on a blank sheet.
Five minutes up, they returned.
âFang Jue, your view?â He Lin asked.
âFiles are thin, especially the husbandâs. As for the wifeâgone so long, likely dead. Most homicides motive out as passion, revenge, or money. She had no affairs, no enmities, no wealth. Iâd lean toward accidental deathâdrowning, car accidentâŠâ
He Lin cut him off: âDo you know the physicianâs prime rule?â
Startled silence.
He Lin supplied: âNever trust what the patient saysâtrust results. Same for us. Donât blindly trust written records. Suspects lie, relatives repeat hearsay, officers can be sloppy. Case files written preâresolution can be full of errors. Read themâbut donât believe them.â
The lesson struck. Fang had zeal, but too linearâleaning heavy on files instead of grasping beyond them. Still, his heart was strong, his integrity true. With time, he would grow.
âAnd you, Li Shang?â He Lin prompted.
A real case was the best exam.
Li Shang, eyes on his sketched flow diagram, spoke:
âThe two disappearances may tie together. Guoâs case is newest, best to begin from himâthen work backward to Tang. Missing status brings uncertain outcomes, but possibilities include four:
Oneâboth alive but missing.
Twoâboth dead.
Threeâwife dead, husband alive.
Fourâhusband dead, wife alive.â
Concise. Structured.
He Lin nodded appreciatively: âGoodâsound logic.â
Li Shang continued: âFurther inferenceâmaybe they provoked someone. Maybe coincidence and misfortune. Orâhusband killed wife, later exposed, someone avenged. Multiple options remain.â
He Lin added: âDonât forget one moreâsuicide. A share of missing cases are just that. Alsoâif the wife died, husband is prime suspect. Conversely, if husband died while wife lived, suspicion falls on her.â
Li Shang jotted notes solemnly.
Across the table, Cheng Xiaoyi cast him a glance, then shifted eyes toward He Lin, frowning slightly, before returning to her file.
He Lin turned to others: âThoughts?â
Wu muttered: âTwo years vanished could mean sheâs hiding deliberately. No spending recordsâsheâs supported by someone.â
He Lin nodded: âAnd rememberâher case orbits around Bus 827. With missing cases, we search last verified locations. Often, signs appear before disappearanceâabnormal behavior warning events. That, too, is crucial.â
He laid out assignments:
âFirstâCheng, check archives for similar cases in recent years. SecondâWu, liaise with SubâBureau detectivesâweâll all revisit both residences, conduct a new search. ThirdâFang, schedule interviews with Guoâs father and Tangâs brother for followâup testimony.â
By afternoon, the office hummed with activity.
Then He Lin walked to Li Shangâs desk, tapping the surface with a finger:
âCome onâletâs visit the missing personâs residence.â
Footnotes
Âč Fourth SubâBureau (ććć±): One of the cityâs district police branches reporting to headquarters.
ÂČ Bus 827: Often, lastâseen public transport locations are treated as critical investigative starting points.
Âł Red mark (çșąæ ): In missing persons archives, solved or closed cases are stamped in red inkâsymbolizing resolution.