upstairs. The door to David Wang’s room was not locked. “No one sleep here for three nights, I think,” the clerk said.
The room was small, the walls white and recently repainted. Chinese tourist hotels are not luxurious by European standards, but they are functional. A blue woolen blanket was smoothed across a single bed, and a chest of drawers had been carefully dusted. Two fresh hand towels hung on a hook near a chipped water basin.
The room was ready for a new guest. There was no sign that David Wang had ever slept there.
“Do you remember Professor Wang, the man who stayed here?” Stratton asked the timid clerk. The man nodded vigorously. “I came for his things. Where are they?”
The clerk shook his head.
“His clothes, his books … “
“Men came and took things. Comrades clean the room, that’s all.”
Stratton checked the closet and found three wire coat hangers on a dowel. Stratton went through the bureau. In one drawer he found two handkerchiefs and a pair of blue cotton socks. One of the handkerchiefs was monogrammed with the initials D.W.
“The men left with suitcase,” the clerk volunteered.
“When?”
“The day after Mr. Wang got sick.”
Somebody tapped on the open door.
A small-shouldered American in khaki walking shorts stood in the hallway. He was gray-haired and pink in the face; around his neck hung a pair of small Nikon binoculars.
“Are you a friend of Dr. Wang’s?” he asked Stratton. “My name is Saul Weinstock. I was here Tuesday night when he got sick after dinner.”
Stratton stood up from the bed and introduced himself. “You were in the restaurant?”
“No, but I was in our room downstairs when I heard the commotion. A cleaning boy found Dr. Wang and shouted for help. That’s when I ran upstairs. I’m a retired physician. Had a general practice in Queens for thirty-one years. My wife and I are on a world tour. We met Dr. Wang on a walk through one of the municipal parks.”
Weinstock told Stratton that he had seen David Wang late Tuesday afternoon, shortly after his return from Xian.
“He was tired, but he seemed in good health. We asked him to join us for dinner because we wanted to hear all about the reunion with his brother, but he declined. He promised to join us for breakfast on Wednesday morning.”
The clerk excused himself. Stratton closed the door and motioned Weinstock to sit on the bed.
“Was David still alive when you got here?”
“I’m not sure, Mr. Stratton. Let me tell you what happened, because it’s been bothering me a great deal. After I heard the room boy shouting, I ran up the stairs. As you can see, I’m not a young man. But still, it couldn’t have been more than two minutes.
“Yet already there were two men in the room. They identified themselves as medics—at least that’s what they told the hotel manager. I told them I was an American doctor, and I showed them my medical bag. But it was no use, Mr. Stratton, because they wouldn’t let me in. One of the men stood there, at the door, blocking the way. The other was here at the bed, leaning over Dr. Wang. Now I saw some movement in the professor’s legs, and I’m almost positive I heard him say something in Chinese.”
Stratton asked, “Was he in pain?”
“Yes, it sounded that way. I begged to go in and help, but the hotel manager insisted that I go back to my room. The medics said everything was under control. After a few minutes, they came out with Dr. Wang on a stretcher. A blanket was pulled up to his neck. His eyeglasses were sort of propped on his forehead, and his eyes were closed. I think he was still breathing, but I couldn’t be sure. His color was very poor. His face was gray. I followed the medics downstairs to the car,” Weinstock said.
“They had a car?” Stratton was surprised. Three-wheeled bicycles customarily served as delivery wagons and ambulances in the city.
“Not just a car,” Weinstock added, “a limousine. They put the litter in