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Two were standing. One was seated.

‘What do you want, Shen Sun?’ Striker asked. He took another small step out of the glare.

‘What do I want?’ His voice was hollow, eerie. ‘I want my brothers back. My sisters. Father. Mother. This is what I want.’

Striker listened carefully to the words. The man was making no sense. Striker inched over a little more, tried to give his eyes time to adapt.

‘What do you want from me?’

‘I tell you what I want from you, Gwailo. I want you to feel the pain I felt, when you ended my mission, when you killed Tran. And Father.’

‘I never killed your—’

‘Yes, you did!’ Shen Sun snapped. ‘The man was here because of you – only because of you. You destroyed my future. My life. Everything! And now you have same pain I have – and you must choose.’

Striker raised his hands in the air, purposely to distract the gunman, and inched his way a little more to the left. ‘You’re talking in riddles.’

‘Then I speak simple. I have gun against daughter’s spine.’

Striker moved a little more left.

‘And here is Kwan child,’ Shen Sun continued. ‘The one we both search for.’

A little more left . . .

‘I give you choice, Gwailo. Simple. Choose Kwan child and she live. But I shoot daughter in spine, and you watch for rest of life knowing your fault.’

‘Shen Sun—’

‘Or choose your daughter – but Kwan child dies.’

‘That’s no option at all.’

‘It’s all you have.’

‘It’s nothing.

Shen Sun cocked his head, spoke softly. ‘Family, or honour?’

‘I can’t—’

Family – or honour!

Ninety-Nine

Shen Sun watched the gwailo’s hopeless expression with a sense of euphoria. He was exhausted; his shoulder seared with pain. And there was no chance of him escaping this situation alive.

None of that mattered.

All that existed in the moment was the terror of the girls before him, and the heavenly desperation of the cop ahead. And he laughed out loud, for he could not help himself. All his life he had strived to be 14K – to be with Shan Chu, the King Daddy himself, the Dragon Head – and before the mission had started, he had been promised a swift trip back to Macau if things at St Patrick’s High had gone well.

But things had not gone well. The whole mission had been disastrous. All because of Detective Jacob Striker. Shen Sun had been forced to improvise. To alter the plan. It had been the only way to keep his dream alive. The only way to reach the place he called home.

And to find the Perfect Harmony.

How odd it was. Here at the end of his life – for that was surely what this was – he had found it. And unexpectedly so. Not in a place, or an object, or even through some achievement. No, he had found it through a state of mind. And that was what it was, wasn’t it? The Perfect Harmony. Finding whatever it was that you were missing inside, that one lost piece that would make a man truly whole. Well, he had found it. At long last, he had found it.

And it was power.

‘This isn’t necessary,’ the cop said.

‘Make choice, Gwailo.’

‘We can find another way.’



Make choice, I say.’

To Shen Sun’s lower left, Riku Kwan let out a sob. He pressed his foot down harder on her ankle, making certain she remained seated. Not that she would attempt escape. He had made it quite clear: any attempt to escape would result in a quick death for both of the girls.

‘Shen Sun,’ Striker said. ‘I’ll do anything—’

‘Choose!’

To Shen Sun’s right, Courtney squirmed. He clutched the hood of her Little Red Riding Hood costume, twisting his fingers deep into the material. She let out a cry as his fingernails dug into her back, but he held her tight.

‘I won’t make that choice,’ the cop finally said.

The words hit Shen Sun like the end of a whip. And for the first time since the gwailo had set foot into the headlights, he felt his euphoria seeping away. The pain in his shoulder became sharper, the throbbing of his head more violent. His body was sweating and shivering, and the weakness of his legs had returned, keeping him off-balance.

‘You will not . . .’ he began. Then Shen Sun Soone felt the world fading on him. He looked up at the cop, standing in the circular glare of the fog-veiled headlights, and suddenly he could see him for what he was – for what he had always known Jacob Striker to be – ever since their first encounter back at the school.

An evil spirit in human form. An earthbound demon.

It made no difference.

‘Make choice!’ he demanded for the last time.

And the cop did.

He reached down, drew his pistol, and ran forward. And just like the evil spirit he was, he fell out of the light into the darkness, and vanished from sight.

One Hundred

The seconds felt like hours.

Striker burst forward, cleared the glare of the headlights and took quick aim the moment the two girls and the gunman came into view. Raine was grounded, on her knees, sobbing but out of the line of fire.

Courtney was not.

She was held tight by the madman, pulled close, a human shield. There was little room – definitely not enough room for a shot. And yet Striker knew he had no choice. If he didn’t act now, Shen Sun would kill her. He squeezed the trigger, heard the blast shake the entire area around them . . .

And then heard Courtney’s agonised scream.

She collapsed onto the wet concrete of the sidewalk, then rolled off the kerb into the lane. Even in the poor light, the dark, glistening splatter that covered her belly was obvious. And Striker realised it hadn’t been him who had fired the shot.

Shen Sun stepped forward. Into the light. Raised his pistol.

Striker saw the motion out of the corner of his eye. He darted left, took aim again, and heard three shots blast off. He felt bone-breaking pain as his chest and ribs cracked from the impacts. The force sent him reeling. He landed hard on his back, in the middle of the road, fighting to breathe, but still managing to pull the trigger in rapid fire.

Bang-bang-bang-BANG! The shots rang out, too many to count.

And then there was more screaming. The girls were screaming.

Striker rolled left, propped himself up on one arm, and sca

Striker raised his gun and drew down on the man. But he couldn’t get the shot off – not without hitting Raine. The girl screamed out in terror as Shen Sun grabbed her from behind, hoisted her to her feet, and pulled her into him.

‘Please!’ she screamed. ‘PLEASE!’

Shen Sun ignored her. He reared up to the bridge railing, wrapped his arms around her, and then found Striker with his eyes.

‘History is circle, Gwailo. Past is also future.’

There was no time left. Striker kept his aim tight, the sights lined up on the centre of Shen Sun’s face, and he pulled the trigger. All he heard was the god awful click-click-click of an empty chamber.

Shen Sun smiled. Smiled as if all the pain and rage and fear had left him and he had found peace. For a moment, he looked calm, serene . . . harmonious. Then he threw his body backwards.

In one quick, horrible moment, Shen Sun and Raine slipped over the railing and were swallowed up by the greyness beyond. Nothing was left behind in their wake, except a young girl’s cry that would forever be embedded in Jacob Striker’s mind.