TTB C7
by berryChapter 7
4 Â âHow is it? You able to keep up with the notes?â
He Lin glanced over Li Shangâs notebook. His handwriting was fast, sharp, and preciseâevery key detail and timepoint mentioned by Tang Aizhu had already been accurately jotted down.
He Lin knew: once domestic violence happens the first time, there will inevitably be a second. Abuse always escalates.
Hearing Tangâs testimony, He Lin could almost see itâthe fading light in a womanâs eyes, dying a little more with every blow.
She too had once been young, believing she married for love. Yet in the end, all she entered was a cage called âhome.â
Perhaps one day she simply failed to escape, dying under her husbandâs hand. Or perhaps fleeing from home was her final struggle for survival.
He Lin asked: âAnd afterwards?â
Tang scratched his thinning hair: âAfterwards⊠once she was healed, she came to my place, repaid the money sheâd borrowed. Not long after⊠she disappeared. That was the last time I saw her.â
The story of Tang Ailian waned to silence.
He Lin pressed: âAt that final meeting, did she seem unusual? Say anything oddâfor example, plans, meeting someone, things to do?â
Tang shook his head: âWe only spoke a few minutes. She handed me the money, rushed away like she had something pending.â
âWhat kind of matter?â
He hesitated. âDonât know.â Two years blurred memory.
He Lin asked: âTo your knowledge, any friends? Possible contacts?â
Tang faltered. âSince her child died, our contact dropped. She didnât really have friendsânot that I know. Else she wouldnât have come to borrow from me out of desperation.â
âWhat about Guo Mucun?â
Tang sneered: âThat man? I wish him dead. Likes drinking, maybe drank himself to death somewhere.â
With little else, Wu probed further, but drew blanks.
As questioning ended, Tangâs gaze drifted to the apartment interior. He asked, calculating: âIf my sister is still alive, does this house remain hers?â
Wu Yunsheng saw through him at once: âWeâre police. We handle cases, not property disputes.â
Tang signed the deposition reluctantly.
Escorted to the door by Fang and Li Shang, he spun back: âThis houseâmy sister spent her lifeâs savings on it. She lived half her life in moldy walls with that man. At least this one place should belong to her.â
He Lin advised steadily: âInheritance issuesâyouâll need a lawyer and court. But honestlyâthe best way is finding your sister herself. Do that, and all else follows.â
Tang nodded vaguely and turned to leaveâbut suddenly froze in his steps. âWait!â
He Lin leaned forward: âYou remembered something?â
Tang frowned in concentration. âYes⊠that day. After she repaid me, her phone rang. She answered. She called the other person⊠by a name. Sounded like a color? Like some kind of âsisterâ.â
âA color?â Fang blurted instantly: âRed, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet?â
Tang shook his head. âNo. None of those.â
Wu guessed: âGold? Silver?â
Li Shang offered: âBlack, white, gray?â
No. Tang kept frowning.
He Lin thought a moment: âRedâŠâ
Tangâs face lit up. âYes! Red! Hongâjie. Sister Red. That was it!â He even laughed, triumphant. âFollow that lead, you may get somewhere.â
He Lin: âDo you know what the call was about?â
Tang shrugged apologetically: âNo. Only remembered the name itself. Already a miracle my memory dug out that much.â
Li Shang carefully circled the character for HongâjieââRed Sisterââin his notes.
Not long after Tang left, the father of Guo Mucun arrived: Guo Ziying.
The old man, more than eighty, still walked briskly, spirit sharp.
Routine check followed: Li Shang registered his personal info.
But the manâs manner was that of an old street rogue: evasive, uncooperative. Some queries he ignored, pretending deafnessâothers simply brushed off.
When He Lin steered talk to Guoâs domestic violence, a flicker broke the old face. He snorted: âWhat man hasnât hit his wife? Few slaps, whatâs the fuss?â
He Linâs expression tightened, brows furrowed. No surpriseâsuch a father breeds such a son.
Li Shang too paused, gaze flicking upward.
Fangâs chest heaved, anger rising, until finally he muttered under breath: âDomestic violence is a crime.â
Correct words, but not the right timingâlikely to sour the exchange. Wu tugged him subtly to settle him down.
The old man smirked at Fangâs indignation: âThen go sue me, boy. Iâve beaten my own wife many times. Letâs see you lock us all upâthere arenât enough jails.â
Sensing the tension, Wu smoothed things quickly: âEach case must be assessed individually. Letâs return to matters at hand.â
Old Guo sniffed: âYou met Tang family first, right? Donât believe their nonsense. My son mayâve quarreled with that wife, but their marriage was fine. Else why wouldnât she divorce all these years, barren and still clinging on?â
He Lin pulled focus: âAny clue on Tangâs whereabouts?â
No direct reply. Instead: âAlive or dead, gone nearly two yearsâher ID ought to be annulled. My boy missing nowâhouse mustnât leave our family. You solve it, Iâm free of hassle.â
He Lin: âTo find him, you must cooperate. Share facts.â
Old Guo shrugged: âIf I knew, why bother police? But suppose that woman still livesâand committed crimesâshe couldnât claim the house, could she?â
His tone revealed no worry, no grief. All schemes. A shameless old scavenger.
He Lin answered calmly: âDepends on the crime.â
Only then old Guo dropped his sneer: âWhat if she caused my sonâs disappearance?â
He Linâs gaze sharpened: âExplain.â
Old Guoâs wrinkled grin turned chilling: âTwo years my son searched. At firstâout of love. Laterâout of revenge.â
âRevenge?â
The old man spoke low, malice evident: âThat woman ran away. Thatâs betrayal. My son vowedâonce he caught her, heâd beat her halfâdead, lock her up. If in a bad mood, choke herââdeserve it.â He checkedâwouldnât even face death penalty. Do a few years, then free.â
The words curdled the air.
Fangâs fists clenched. Without Wuâs earlier warning, heâd have cursed outright.
The othersâ faces hardened. They could tellâGuo had spoken seriously to his father. Not drunken exaggeration. Real intent.
The old man licked lips. âAnd just before he vanished, he told meââIâm close. Soon Iâll catch that bitch.ââ
He Lin pressed: âDid he mention what clue he found?â
A shrug. âNo. Didnât say more. But unless you find him, I wonât let matters rest.â
After he left, Li Shang shut his notebook with a snap. His cold voice slipped: âTrash.â
He Lin tilted his head: âWhat?â
Li Shang answered calmly, eyes sharp: âMen who hit womenâtrash.â
His expression remained blank, voice flat as steel. He never lost composure like young Fang, but he had firm hates.
He Lin gave a grim nod: âTrue. If we find Tang Ailian, then at least this place stays out of that old bastardâs hands.â He asked lightly: âHowâs your noteâtaking?â
âIâll organize the testimonies tonight,â Li Shang replied.
He Lin had already arranged a work laptop and tablet for him.
âNo rush,â He Lin counseled. âMissing cases arenât like homicides. They donât resolve overnight. Solving requires peeling layers. Sometimes resting brings breakthroughs.â
He wasnât against overtime when necessary, but believed in balance: when tired, stop. Seeming rest often refreshed new insight.
âGot it,â Li Shang said quietlyâwhether with sincerity or not, hard to tell.
He Lin asked once more: âAny investigative thoughts yet?â
Li Shang responded: âNext stepâcheck the Milk Bandits, and this âRed Sisterâ. AlsoâŠit seems none of them actually care about Tang or Guoâs lives. Only about this apartment.â
âIf not for the property,â he added, âthis case might never have reached us.â
âNormal,â He Lin said flatly. âYouâll see it often. Only the closest kin or true lovers mourn the loss. To everyone elseâitâs nothing.â
Cold wordsâbut fact.
The sun had already dipped. Their workday ended.
Descending the stairwell, He Lin checked his watch. Offâhours. âAlrightâeveryone worked hard today. Donât worry about clocking outâgo home.â
Wu headed straight out the gate.
Fang sighed: âGuess Iâll drive the car back.â
Seeing Fangâs reluctanceâhe lived nearbyâLi Shang offered: âIâll drive. I rent beside headquarters anyway, need to pick up my computer. Same route.â
Fangâs face lit up: âBrother Li reliable! Love you.â
Taking the keys, Li Shang asked He Lin: âShall I give you a ride too, Captain?â
He Lin waved it off: âNo. Metro line to my place. Direct.â
Li Shangâs gaze lingered on himâthen back down only once He Lin was gone.
Fang meanwhile rattled off endless regulations about police vehicle use; Li Shang simply nodded: âIâll remember.â
Sliding into the car, he drove skillfully. Alone, his mask of restraint slipped; calmness and detachment returned.
No GPS neededâmemory sufficient. The white police sedan threaded agilely through peakâhour traffic.
By the time he parked in the Bureauâs lot, into the fixed slot, only ten minutes had passedâwithout speeding.
Footnotes
â± Red Sister(Hong Jie) (çșąć§): A nickname or alias. In Chinese underworld or gray circles, color+title (âBlack Brother,â âRed Sisterâ) often signifies a code name or gang epithet.
ÂČ Milk Bandits: The previously introduced burglary gang posing as milk vendors, drugging victims.