TTB C5
by berryChapter 5
2 âA cut across her palm, requiring thirteen stitches.â
At three oâclock in the afternoon, two police vehicles from headquarters pulled up outside the missing coupleâs apartment building.
Officer Xu from the Fourth SubâBureau was waiting at the entrance. Seeing them arrive, he greeted them with a broad smile, extending a cigarette as he led them upstairs:
âThank you for coming, leaders from the Bureau. The wifeâs disappearance was handled by me back then, later when the husband went missing, I led the team tooâbut there were really too few clues to go on.â
He Lin took the cigarette. Back during his special operations days, cigarettes were offâlimitsâtoo damaging to fitness. One teammate who smoked secretly was caught countless times and scolded every time by the captain.
But after these two years in criminal investigation, working alongside old detectives and leaders, He Lin had picked up the habit.
Out of the corner of his eye, Li Shang noticed the exchange of cigarettes and frowned. âFocus on the scene.â
He Lin chuckled lightly: âI know. Not smoking now.â
He slipped the cigarette back in his pocket; the others followed suit, refraining from lighting up.
The apartment door opened. A stale, sour odor drifted outâmoldy air from days without cleaning or ventilation.
Xu began grumbling about the difficulty of their job: how few people in the subâbureau had to cover such a huge jurisdiction.
While chatting, He Lin surveyed the interior.
Li Shang busied himself with his freshly issued recorder and law enforcement body cam, before trailing He Lin closely, noting details.
The entryway shoes: Guo Mucunâs slippers remained, several other pairs scattered, impossible to tell what, if anything, was missing.
The flat was cluttered and grimy; trash hadnât been cleared in weeks. The fridge was stocked with expired food.
On the coffee table lay both ID cards, bank cards, miscellaneous documents, and medical recordsâstacked haphazardly.
The bedroom: socks tossed randomly, cobwebs in corners.
Only the living roomâs center seemed recently cleanedâfloor dragged, surface neat. No obvious blood, no signs of struggle.
He Lin squatted down, sharp gaze glinting: âSee hereâthe floorâs been specifically wiped. Just this section.â He outlined the area with his hand.
For a man living alone, haphazard at housekeeping, to suddenly scrub only a patch of the living roomâŠvery off.
Li Shang silently recorded everything.
He Lin asked Xu: âWhen Tang Ailian disappeared, was this place thoroughly searched?â
Xu thought. âWe spoke with Guo several times. Her ID was at home, she hadnât taken belongings, so it didnât look like travel. Guo had an alibi, insisted she was alive. We visited repeatedly, but since it wasnât classified a criminal case, we never applied for a search warrant.â
âYou should have searched.â He Lin moved the television aside. Behind tangled cords shone faint, dried specks of reddish brown.
That shape and spray patternâevery detective knew it. Blood spatter.
âBlood,â Wu Yunsheng confirmed, crouching. âOld stains, not recent.â
He gestured with Fang to demonstrate: an injured person likely seated, struck in the head, bled onto the TV, surface wipedâtrace left hidden behind.
âPhoto of Tang Ailian,â He Lin said.
Li Shang produced it swiftly.
He Lin held it up: âTaken late July, her retirement memento. Noticeâher expression dead serious. Sunshine, over 35â that day, others in shorts, yet she wore long sleeves, buttons tight.â
Wu nodded grimly: âShe may have been hiding something.â
âThis spatter wasnât fatal. But this manâGuoâappears a habitual abuser.â He Lin asked the technicians: âHave the luminol?â
âYes.â Out came the spray. Trainee forensic staff readied sample kits.
âCheck living room and bedroom thoroughly,â He Lin ordered.
Li Shang, new to the process, donned a mask, took a bottle.
Patiently, He Lin showed him where to spray, explaining: âMost domestic violence occurs in living room or bedroom. Alsoâcheck thresholds. Victims try to flee.â
Fang asked curiously: âWhy doors specifically?â
âBecause beaten wives, weakest party, will instinctively run. Bloodstains often mark the doorframes,â He Lin said.
When luminol reacted, glowing traces lit the house.
Large patches in the bedroom doorway trailed toward the front doorâdripping streaks, leading to the entrance.
And on the inside of the doorâbloody palm prints, most distinct midway up, fading downwardâuntil collapse.
A scene emerged vividly: Tang Ailian staggering, clawing at the door, beaten down.
He Lin analyzed: âThis blood at the doorâcompare to this.â He lifted a medical record from the table. Though handwritten doctorâs notes strained his eyes, the diagram told enough.
Li Shang read aloud: âPalm laceration, required thirteen stitches.â
Fang peered: âIt says patient claimed it was an accident while cooking. Impossible! The angle needed to cut that deep into the palm? Ridiculous.â
Xuâs face looked as patchy as the blood on the walls. He wiped sweat: âWe never had reports of abuse. The man seemed honest. We didnât see itâŠâ
Wu and He Lin exchanged a pointed glance without speaking.
Every seasoned cop could sniff out a wifeâbeater. But domestic abuse was hardest to prosecuteâvictims hesitated to report, cases fell in gray zones. A quiet rule often prevailed: unless the victim speaks, officers donât âmake trouble.â
Technicians marked evidence, bagging samples.
A faint odor tugged at Li Shangâs sensitive nose. He followed it into the kitchen, opening a cupboard. From its corner he retrieved a halfâdrunk, moldy box of milk. âHereâs something.â
Fang exclaimed: âBrother Li, sharp nose!â
He Lin and Wu remained reserved, but Xuâs face changed. He stared at the milk carton pensively.
Fang asked: âWhatâs up with the milk?â
Xu explained: âWe were investigating burglaries nearby. Thieves posed as milkmenâleft cartons like these. Same brand. I didnât expect it here.â
The coincidence rang bells for others too.
Wu had heard rumors from neighbors.
He Lin had read internal reports.
Fang blurted: âIs this the âMilk Banditsâ from those short videos?â
Only newcomer Li Shang was clueless to the tale. Yet ironically, he had found the clue.
Newâmedia sensationalism had dubbed them âMilk Bandits,â but the reality was grim.
Yun City had seen a string of burglaries. Targets: solitary residents.
The gang marked doors of lone dwellers. In afternoons they left gifts: free eggs, cartons of milk, small notes with a fake delivery contact.
Older residents, unable to resist a âfreebie,â drank the milkâdrugged with sedatives.
At night, burglars, masked and gloved, slipped in, clearing cash and valuables. Victims slept unaware.
At first, police thought it simple burglary; rainâwet nights left scant forensic clues.
Until one woman stored the milk instead of drinking. That night, catching a burglar redâhanded, she screamedâhe fled.
Chemical tests confirmed sedatives in the carton. Thus, method exposed.
Success rate soared for the criminalsâeven as police work grew harder. Patrols warned community guards, urged residents not to accept gifts from âmilk salesmen.â
And yetâduring Guoâs disappearance, the gang operated nearby. Shortly after, they vanished again.
Could Guo have been one of their victims? Living alone, old block, weak securityâperfect target. And now a halfâused milk box showed up.
He Lin bagged it: âTest for sedatives.â
Fang scratched his head: âBut werenât they after money only? Never killed?â
Wu replied grimly: âThey hadnât. But what if Guo woke, saw them? What then?â
He Lin thought hard. âIf true, we must merge investigations.â
Officer Xu pointed: âThat case was already escalated to headquartersâ AntiâBurglary Unit. Youâre all in the same Bureauâyou could collaborate.â
Footnotes
Âč Luminol: A chemical spray that reveals latent blood traces, glowing blue under low light even after wiping.
ÂČ âMilk Banditsâ (ç愶性ç): A sensational nickname used in Chinese media for a real string of burglaries, where thieves disguised as milkmen drugged victims with tainted âfreeâ milk.