TTB C8
by berryChapter 8
5 âI heard Captain He was also in special operations beforeâŠâ
Night had fully fallen, and a bright moon hung in the sky.
Most of the lights were still on in the city bureau offices, including the one in the Missing Persons Investigation Division.
After Li Shang came upstairs, Cheng Xiaoyi was still there with a steaming takeout bowl of rice noodles in front of her, just about to eat.
Seeing someone return, Cheng blinked in surprise: âWhy did only you come back?â
Li Shang showed her the car keys: âItâs closer to Fang Jueâs place over there, and the others headed straight home. I drove the car back and came to pick up the office laptop issued today.â After grabbing his things, he asked, âWhy havenât you gone home?â
Cheng pointed at the files on the desk: âThereâs still a lot I havenât gone through, and I donât want to slow the team down. I rent alone anyway; going home is boring. May as well keep busy.â
âNeed a hand?â Li Shang asked.
âSure. My eyes are a little blurry from reading all day.â Cheng didnât refuse the new colleagueâs offer and handed him several of the remaining files.
Li Shang took them and began with the first one.
Chengâs desk sat slightly forward and to the side of Li Shangâs. When he walked in earlier in the day, he had immediately caught her eyeâbut given he was a male colleague and the office was full, she hadnât stared.
Now, at night, only the two of them were in the office. Cool white light fell over Li Shangâs face, and Cheng found herself a little dazed.
Li Shangâs skin was that cool, fair kindâstrikingly distinct in a bureau full of rough men.
His features were fine, his brows naturally soft like distant mountains without any grooming, and lashes like crow feathers. When silent, he carried a cool aloofnessâtruly pleasing to look at.
With a handsome face to accompany her meal, Cheng took two bites and asked: âWant to order something?â
âNo need, Iâll eat when I get back.â Li Shang declined without hesitation, still looking down, fully focused. âThis batch should take about half an hour.â
âHalf an hour?!â Cheng exclaimed. âHow is that possible? Iâve spent all afternoon and only finished a third.â
For Cheng, finishing the rest would take five to six hours at least.
âNow there are two of us, and I read quickly,â Li Shang said, as if stating something trivial and easy. In the blink of an eye, he set aside the file heâd just finished.
âDid you really read carefully?â Cheng felt he hadnât grasped the weight of the task. âWe canât afford errors. If we miss a linked case, not only does it make solving harder, it could have severe consequencesâŠâ
She gave an example: âThere was once a serial missing persons case. The officer screening files failed to find a related case from years earlier. It was Captain He who, while combing old files, noticed a peculiar knot in a shoe at the victimâs homeâonly then the link wasnât missed. Many cases hide connections; photocopies even obscure details. Thatâs why for comparisons, we insist on paper files and manual review instead of relying on digital copiesâŠâ
Li Shang didnât explain; he handed her the file heâd just read: âAsk me.â
Cheng set the noodles aside, took the file skeptically: âAlright thenâwhatâs the incident time?â
The question was simple. Li Shang proceeded to recite time and place, the missing personâs name, ID numberâone by one.
Chengâs eyes widenedâŠ
âThe missing personâs home address is Unit 4â302, Building 4, No. 543 Bailonggang Road; license plate YB2783âŠâ Beyond such details, Li Shang succinctly outlined the disappearance process and even noted a small line of fine print flagged in the document.
Chengâs mouth fell open; when he finished, she finally came back to herself, marveling incredulously: âYour memory is incredible.â
More than incredibleânear photographic.
Revived in spirits, Cheng quickly finished dinner and resumed screening. With Li Shang helping, their pace increased dramatically.
Li Shang poured himself a cup of hot water and, like a seasoned old cadre, got to work.
He taught Cheng several simple screening techniques. The two first skimmed all files quickly, categorized them, then pulled a few for focused review.
Before long, they narrowed it down to three files. Li Shang passed them to Cheng: âThese need to be copied.â
âOkay.â Cheng stood up, and as she reached the copier, she realized something felt offâwhy was she so readily doing exactly as Li Shang said?
She mentally replayed their workflow.
At first, they discussed together. But unlike how quietly compliant Li Shang had been behind He Lin earlier in the day, he now showed strong opinions and initiative. Polite and gentle in manner, yet his plans were rational and efficientâtruly better solutions.
He had also taught her many clean, streamlined methods.
Unconsciously, Li Shang had gradually taken the lead⊠and it had all happened so naturally.
Once she understood, Cheng felt at ease.
She wasnât the type to fussâwhoever is more capable should take charge. If the sky falls, the taller one will hold it up. They only needed to finish the job; she was happy to cooperate.
Besides, Li Shang was more than competent. Without his help, she might have worked very late and still not finished by tomorrow.
She genuinely appreciated his help.
Aside from the copierâs soft whirring, the office fell quiet. While Li Shang took a brief rest, Cheng casually asked: âBy the way, what did you do before?â
Li Shang seemed to hesitate, but answered: âSpecial operations.â
âSpecial ops?â Cheng was a little startled. âWere you in a desk role?â
âNo.â Li Shang denied it and left it there.
Chengâs curiosity grew.
Li Shangâs scholarly air didnât quite match her image of special ops.
Cheng added: âI heard Captain He was also in special operations.â
âMhm,â Li Shang murmured.
Compared to Li Shang, He Lin was tallerâfully 1.87 meters. His frame was more robust, legs long, movements crisp with no hint of dragâmuch closer to Chengâs mental picture of special ops.
From the first moment she met Captain He, she felt a heatâhe was like the fire of justice, a controlled flame that brought people light and warmth. Li Shang, by contrast, was refined and quietâlike a piece of cool ice.
Cheng asked: âDid you know him before?â
Li Shang paused slightly, then didnât answer directly: âHeâs very capable.â
It seemed they might have worked in adjacent departments.
Just then the copier clicked; Cheng brought over the fresh copies and handed them to Li Shang.
Li Shang passed her a sticky note: âThese questions need checking.â
Cheng sat at the computer, compiled the materials, printed, and obediently did the secretaryâs work.
After a moment more, Li Shang pulled out three case files: âOne might be connected. The other two canât be ruled out.â
Cheng glanced at the timeâit had taken thirtyâeight minutes total; indeed, just over the half hour Li Shang had promised.
She read through the file Li Shang had ultimately selected as linkedâa missing personâs file from the Second SubâBureau.
The missing person was a twentyâsixâyearâold woman named Liu Yushu, reported missing by family.
Cheng frowned: âThe commonality between these isâŠâ
Compared to Tang Ailian, Liu Yushu was younger, more beautiful, and more educated.
Their situations differed widelyâage gap significant, different neighborhoods.
It was hard to imagine what connection could exist between the two disappearances.
Li Shang pointed out: âBoth were reported by husbands, both husbands suspected of domestic violence, similar family dynamicsâand most crucially, disappearance location and time.â
He opened the Yun City map on his phone and zoomed to show Cheng the dropâoff for Liu Yushuâs last ride.
Cheng was startled: âOnly one intersection from Bus 827âs stopâa few minutes on footâŠâ
And because of the odd positioning of that intersection, the two sides belonged to different administrative districts, so the case fell under the Second SubâBureau.
Two months apart, in nearly the same locationâindeed a critical red flag.
Li Shang said: âWeâll let Captain He judge it tomorrow.â
They tidied the office, Cheng switched off the lights, and they stepped into the corridor.
Cheng walked ahead, holding back a question until she finally asked it.
âLi Shang, this afternoon when Captain He asked for your analysis, youâd clearly written more on the paper. You even circled Bus 827âwhy didnât you say it first, and only spoke after Captain He summarized?â
He Lin hadnât noticed it, but from Chengâs angle, she had seen it clearly.
Most newcomers are eager to perform and earn the leaderâs favor. Li Shangâs behavior puzzled her.
Cheng turned back, waiting for his answer.
Li Shang looked upâand at that moment, a sharp pop sounded from below, followed by a car alarm blaring in the quiet courtyard.
In that instant, under the dim corridor lights, Li Shangâs eyes sharpened and his body tensed slightly. He halfâpivoted, searching for the source of the soundâhis entire demeanor changed.
Cheng, turning back, was startled by the noise, misstepped, nearly twisting her ankle, her balance faltering.
Li Shang didnât move his stance, but his hand flashed up, steadying her arm and pulling her upright.
Cheng felt the firmness in his gripâhis expression and bearing pressed a subtle, palpable force upon her.
Then Li Shang looked across the roadâthere stood a balloon vendor, with a car flashing nearby.
He quickly confirmed the source: the vendor had popped a balloon, bumped the car alarm in his fluster, and walked off cursing.
The alarm faded, and the tension dissipated.
Only then did Li Shang turn back and explain: âWhen Captain He asks, I answer. If he doesnât ask, I fill the gaps. As for those pointsâyou can be sure heâll think of them. No need for me to say it.â
Cheng lowered her head in thought. Put that way, it sounded like Li Shang was deliberately hiding his excellenceâleaving face and room for He Lin to lead.
Li Shang added: âAlso, donât mention I helped you tonight.â
âOhâokay.â Cheng nodded quickly, finding her new colleague even more mysterious. âThanks.â
On the bus home, Cheng kept recalling that look in Li Shangâs eyes.
She no longer doubted his special ops backgroundâsharp, vigilant, carrying a heavy sense of pressure, like a beast coiled to strike.
Then another thought struck her.
Was Li Shang really INTP?
Could he be⊠INTJ?
A jolt ran through herâif so, all her confusions suddenly had answers.
So when he told her earlier, had he remembered wrong? Or misâtested?
But for a rigorously logical INTJ, such an error would be unlikely.
Only one possibility remained: he did it on purposeâperhaps hiding something, or simply acting.
It was just a trivial maskâwhen no one important was watching, he tore it off without a second thought.