Death Money
throughout Chinatown and Little Italy.
    Jack remembered the Italian mob in Chinatown used to store its illegal Fourth of July fireworks that it hawked on Canal Street in the Bacigalupe basements.
    Plastic signage in Chinese covered over the Bacigalupe name that had been carved into the stone above the portico entrance.
    There were two old lanterns above the bronze entrance doors on which seven death notices—white tickets with the Chinese names of the dead—had been posted. Jack saw the one closest to what he was looking for, Jun Wah Zhang, and went inside. He badged the manager, who led him past the two wakes in progress to a smaller room at the end of the corridor and turned on the ceiling lights. There was a closed casket there, but the room hadn’t been set up for a wake yet.
    On a small table to one side, there was an urn. An inexpensive one you could find in any of the Chinatown curio shops. Dark glazed ceramic, featuring bronze mountains and green scenery of leaves and trees. Colors of the earth. Big enough to hold all the remains of what was once a man.
    No picture.
    Nothing but a Chinese name in black ink on a white scrap of paper. A name that wasn’t even really his, a name he’d purchased.
    “What can you tell me about him?” Jack asked.
    “The association paid for the urn, the for jong cremation, and the burial in their field at the cemetery.”
    “It’s empty now?” Jack asked, looking at the urn. Fire interred .
    “Yes. When we receive the ashes we’ll repack them in the urn. Then it goes out for burial with the next procession.”
    “That’s it?”
    “As far as we know.” The manager shrugged.
    The urn was set on the side in a dark room because Jun was an orphan, and though there’d be an obituary posted quickly in the Sing Tow Journal , no one really expected anyone to come.
    The manager dimmed the lights and left Jack sitting on a solitary folding chair near the back wall.
    Jack thought he’d visit Ah Por next for more clues, since he was only two blocks from the Seniors’ Center. He figured he’d also check South Bronx hospitals for recent Asian victims of assault.
    He was looking toward the closed casket, hoping it was empty, when he caught her out of the corner of his eye: a woman in a cherry-red down jacket coming into the room, stopping, and looking toward the urn. She hadn’t noticed him in the dim light by the back wall.
    She’d surprised him, not only because he didn’t expect anyone to come—except maybe Billy’s friend from the Gee Association—but because no Chinese ever wore red to a wake. So it must have been a surprise to her, too . She couldn’t have expected to come here.
    She looked to be in her late twenties, short hair, a rugged red windburn on her cheeks. A sad face now as sheapproached the urn table. From the bottom shelf of the table she grabbed a stack of paper, death money , lit it, and dropped it, flaming, into a blackened brass bucket. A bribe to the gods for mercy in the next world. She plucked three sticks of incense and lit them, bowed three times before the urn, and stuck the incense sticks into a cup there. She shook her head, whispered a few quiet words.
    Before Jack could move, she rushed out.
    She was already out the front door when Jack stepped from the room. He zipped up his jacket and went out to Mulberry Street after her.
    He followed her north toward Canal Street, keeping a half-block behind so as not to spook her. Stepping quickly, she wore a black turtleneck sweater under the bright jacket that meant she was still celebrating the Chinese New Year.
    Almost to Canal, he saw her slip into the driver’s side of one of the Ford vans parked along the street, the vans carrying the cardboard crates of fruits for the day’s sidewalk market.
    Jack stopped, waited at a distance. The simple rub-on letters on the van’s front doors identified them as Chong Vihn Produce, a warehouse address in Brooklyn. Vietnamese Chinese .
    He considered the two new

Similar Books

The Fifth Elephant

Terry Pratchett

Telling Tales

Charlotte Stein

Censored 2012

Mickey Huff