Seven
April's eyes dropped quickly to the page. She was surprised by what she'd written. Back in the day when she'd been a young detective in Chinatown and even in her old precinct the Two-Oh, on the Upper West Side, where she'd met and first worked with Mike, she used to piss off her bosses by taking notes in Chinese. She hadn't done that in a long time. Now some unknown force caused her to sketch out yang, the Chinese character for "sun." She stared at the long unused calligraphy. Sun. Wayne Wilson's new restaurant was called Soleil—"sun" in French. Doodling, April had translated it into Chinese.
To April, doodles mattered in the same way that body language mattered. Remy's body language betrayed her in every way. The way she stood, the way she rubbed the side of her nose when she answered questions. Both were sure signs that she wasn't telling the truth. Now she was caught in a lie for sure, and April had recorded it in the Chinese character for "sun," the name of Wayne's restaurant. Yang, which was the spoken word for "sun," also meant male energy. Action and aggression. The opposite of yin, the symbol for female passivity.
Even though April was an ABC, American-born Chinese, the teaching of ancients—Huangdi, Tao, Confucius—was in her blood and often guided her thinking without her even being aware of it. She'd heard the ancients' voices through many tutors in her Chinatown childhood. Those long-ago lessons had been impossible to evade then, and were no easier to escape now.
The root of everything was the duality of yin and yang, earth and heaven. Female and male. Dark and light. All the qi (energy) in the universe was connected to the primal yin and yang: the four directions, the five earthly transformative elements, the six atmospheric influences. In the human body there were the nine orifices, the five organs, and the twelve joints. The ancients believed that balance in all elements of the universe was achieved only in the proper alignment of yin and yang. When male or female dominated the other half, trouble followed.
What did it have to do with the murder of Maddy Wilson? April had no idea. But it came to mind because sun was the ultimate yang. Clearly Wayne Wilson identified himself with the sun qi, the heavenly energy that surrounded and protected the earth. He was the very epitome of yang.
April hadn't let on to Remy that she knew all about Wayne Wilson and his new restaurant. The new bistro Soleil happened to be nearby in Mike's precinct. Wayne had invited the precinct captain to its opening night, and feeling very special, April had gone with him. That was how she'd met Wayne Wilson. And that was how she knew that the woman who'd discovered Maddy Wilson's body had probably never been slated to be a chef at that restaurant. The restaurant was not going to open. It had already opened, and it was going strong. It was, in fact, a big hit. So Remy was either confused or betrayed—or lying.
Furthermore, April knew all about chefs. Her father had held on to his job for thirty years. They were going to have to carry him out of the upscale Chinese restaurant where he still worked five days a week. Mike's father had also been a chef. He'd died at his station in a West Side Mexican restaurant a decade ago. Since Soleil already had a chef and a sous-chef, Remy's story didn't play. She had restaurant experience and was going to cooking school, but was working as a nanny? Why? But before April could explore that question with the young woman, there was a commotion at the front door. Wayne Wilson was home. Remy jumped to her feet.
"Maddy!" Wayne stared at Remy as he said his wife's name. "What happened to my baby?" he cried.
The girl cringed as he said the word baby. April watched their exchange.
"Remy! Tell me it's not true!" He looked shocked.
Remy opened her mouth, but nothing came out. Then Sergeant Minnow came out of the kitchen and stopped the interaction before it could go any further.
"I'm sorry, sir. I need to talk with you," he said.
Wayne spun around. "Who the hell are you?"
"I'm Sergeant Ed Minnow," he replied almost apologetically.
"You've got to be kidding." Wayne made a move to brush him aside.
"No, sir, I'm not kidding. I'm in charge here." Minnow lowered his voice so April couldn't hear him.
It was that terrible moment that April had lived through many times when she had to tell a family member of a murder victim that his life was no longer his own. His house was no longer his house. His secrets were no longer his secrets. All would be revealed in the name of justice. Yangs like Wayne didn't do well in the role.
Wayne's personality had been clearly displayed at the Soleil opening. He'd been wearing black slacks and a black shirt with a black jacket. Very chic. The only color relief had been his gold-on-gold tie with a big sun in the middle of his chest. The brassy color splashed down the front of his shirt and spiked out in all directions. That same logo was on the cocktail napkins, the matchboxes, the dinner plates. TiepinS in the same shape had been the party favors.
He'd moved around the three large rooms of his restaurant, like the Sun King himself, encouraging guests to try his Godiva. chocolate martinis, lime martinis, mango martinis—every kind of martini a fan could dream about. Glasses of pink champagne circulated on ever-full trays. A wine bar offered glasses from the bottles on the wine list, and the finger food was exceptional. That night no one went home hungry. Or sober. The crowd swilled the alcohol at a frantic pace. The celebs and models who were invited and photographed at so many events like this all over the city were there. Wayne had been particularly gracious to his precinct captain, singling him out and introducing him around. It was New York, after all, where cops were celebrities, too.
Wayne was not going to let Sergeant Minnow finish his spiel. "It's my wife, my house. I want to see her. That's my right."
Sergeant Minnow tilted his head to ' one side, sweat gleaming on his forehead. April knew he was sizing up Wayne, trying to figure out how to control the situation. April did not intrude. Mike would have told the sergeant that April would be "helping" him. But he didn't have to tell April to be discreet about it. She already knew the sergeant would not be wanting any help from her.
Minnow lowered his voice even more. April could hardly hear a murmur. She guessed that he was explaining the procedure. Mr. Wilson could not see his wife's remains. The Crime Scene Unit had arrived and was now working in the gym. No one could go in there. Wayne interrupted with a cry of horror.
"She died in the gym? Shit! I built that gym."
Minnow tried to say more, but Wayne couldn't listen. He turned to Remy and saw April. Relief flooded his face.
"Oh, thank God. Lieutenant Sanchez, come over here." He wagged his finger at her.
April almost turned around, thinking Mike was behind her. Most people still called her "Woo." Not "Sergeant Woo" anymore, but "Lieutenant Woo." Or just "Lieutenant." Or even "ma'am." Then she remembered. She was Lieutenant Sanchez. "Stay here for a moment," she told Remy.
"But I need to talk to him," the girl protested.
April shook her head. They could not speak to each other.
"Please!"
"No."
"But I have to," she pleaded.
"Look, Remy, you discovered the body. That puts you in the hot seat. Remember what I told you. If you want my help, you have to do what I say."
"I would never hurt Maddy. Never. I couldn't do that." Remy looked like a zombie when she said it, though, devoid of emotion.
"I'm talking about something else here. You've seen things no one else has seen."
Remy pressed her lips together.
"What you saw has to stay secret. You can't tell anyone. It's a big responsibility, okay? Only you know what she looked like. It has to stay with you."
"Jesus." Remy sniffed.
"Lieutenant," Wayne called. "You're needed here."
"I didn't hurt Maddy. Please tell him that," Remy begged.
April didn't take the time to reply.