Previously on Vice Cop, a European rock star responsible for murdering his own fans at his concerts and lavish shows, eluded the detectives who were after him. Hudson and Lexa confronted the villainous rock star who has set a death trap for them in an abandoned theater, resulting in his arrest.
In this episode, you will again find the hardcore action and heavy plot that make up my style of writing for Vice Cop. But you can read a lesbian sex scene on SCENE SEVEN, involving an Asian Mafia lord's wife who fancies herself to be an ancient Chinese Empress. You will find two seperate sex scenes on SCENE NINE involving Hudson and his newly acquired mail-order bride and Lexa and Detective Mason enjoying intimate sex inside a cabin in The Poconos mountains.
*
ONE
Lexa O'Neil was looking at Hudson Banach from her window.
He was sitting alone in his bedroom, shirtless, in dark tight jeans, smoking; staring at nothing in an absent and far-off gaze. He was listening to a record he had borrowed from the Professor. It was an opera album and Lexa recognized the music. It was Puccini's Madame Butterfly, a role her mother had sang in her own career as a soprano. It was beautiful, sad, divine; a song so full of special emotion that it brought her back to the past when she had been a little girl and she remembered her mother on the stage as Butterfly; in that flower-specked kimono with a jasmine flower in her hair. Hudson was listening to the finale in which Butterfly kills herself by thrusting a saber into her stomach after being painfully dishonored by her American husband, the colonel B.F. Pinkerton who had taken an American wife after abandoning Butterfly and her child.
Why was he listening to what was considered one of the saddest operas ever made? Why did he stare so longingly into the nothing, and why was he smoking so much? She knew that he was depressed. He had not been himself lately. He had always managed to tell jokes and laugh along with other officers. But there he was, lonely and crestfallen, listening to that beautiful song, a lonely soul's companion. She felt sorry for Hudson and it hurt her to see him that way but she knew she could not go to his house next door for any reason. They had agreed they would not see each other. As she turned her face away from the window, her phone rang.
It was four in the afternoon and Lexa was off-duty as was Hudson. Lexa had done some grocery shopping and had been running errands and tidying up her house to pass the time. Hudson had done very little on his day off save for shopping and visiting his own family back in Middle Village Queens. For about two hours he had just been brooding in his bedroom listening to that sad opera. Lexa picked up the phone.
"Hello?"
"Miss O'Neil, it's Mason," the detective's voice came through the receiver.
"Oh, hello, Detective, how are you?" Lexa said, with a smile.
"You forgot didn't you?"
"Forgot what?"
"We are supposed to be making plans to vacation in the Poconos, remember? I invited you to spend the weekend with me at the cabin owned by a friend of mine. He let me spend a weekend there. You said you'd love to come."
She put a hand over her forehead and laughed.
"I forgot. I was so wrapped up in that last assignment and you know I've never really had a vacation since I was a little girl when my parents took me - "
"I figured. You're all work and no play just like me, Miss O'Neil. But we deserve to have some fun, we really do. Come on. Get your things ready and packed and let's go."
"Alright. I'm sure I can be ready before nightfall."
"Good. I'll be over at your place at six."
She hung up the phone and she heard Hudson's sigh coming from his home.
TWO
Night had come to New York City.
Hudson had smoked an entire pack of cigarettes, which he had not done in years. He remembered how he had convinced the Professor to quit smoking. Thank God he wasn't here to see what he had done, thought Hudson. But he knew why a smoke was sometimes needed. It was a way to vent. He became hungry. He had not eaten a proper lunch in his depressed state. He had declined an invitation to the favorite "cop's donut shop" Christie's which was near a grove of trees facing a bridge which crossed over the waters into Manhattan. He had always loved going there but today he had no inclination to go.
Hungry as he was, he went for a ride in his black Camaro (newly designed so that it looked like a Thunderbird with phoenix bird emblem). He searched for a nice little restaurant where he could have his solitary dinner. The city had restaurants to spare so he knew he would eventually find something he'd like. Tired of eating in Manhattan and Queens, uninterested in eating at fast food restaurants in Brooklyn or the Bronx, he decided he'd go to Chinatown. He recalled one long ago summer night in which his father had taken him to eat at Madame Chang's, a beautiful Chinese restaurant shaped like a Chinese palace. It was located in Chinatown and he knew how to get there by heart.
He reached Madame Chang's and it was still early in the evening. His father used to frequent the place back when he was alive. It was possible the same owners were running the place. Madame Chang and her husband. Or maybe things had changed and the place had new owners. It had always been a popular restaurant and many tourists and non-Asian New Yorkers were frequent visitors. The decor of the restaurant was so lavish looking for all its fake kitschy appearance. Red pillars with golden bases stood at the entrance and more pillars inside.
At the door to the restaurant were two mason lion statues which the Chinese called fu lions. Inside, beads hung over small chandeliers, the tables were covered in pretty tablecloths with tiny little cherry blossoms and the murals and walls were painted with scenes of beautiful Chinese landscapes as cherry blossoms, bridges, mountains, Chinese country folk in triangular little hats and above them good luck dragons and clouds.
"Are you dining alone?" said the Chinese woman at the door.
"Table for one," Hudson replied, "my name is Hudson Banach."
"Please wait," the woman said.
She was rather stout for an Asian woman but she was youthful looking. She was in casual clothes. At one time, everyone who worked as hosts dressed in traditional and ancient Chinese robes. Hudson stared at the lady as she jotted down his name.
"Does Madame Chang and Mr. Chang still -"
"No. Not anymore. New owners. But they are hardly ever here except sometimes to supervise. "
Hudson thought that was very odd. All of the restaurant owners he had known were dedicated to their business and often looked as if they lived at the restaurant. But that was back in the day when his father came to eat at restaurants in the city. Hudson was showed to his seat by the same lady and he was seated in a small table for one toward the back next to a large golden Buddha. Various colored Chinese lanterns hung on the ceiling above him. He sat down and looked over the menu.
"A waiter will be right with you," said the lady.
The Muzak playing was ancient and traditional Chinese folk music which was purely instrumental. It was pretty and upbeat and it made Hudson feel a little better. He was, as a matter of fact, in a Chinese kick and had become enamored with Asian themes. He knew it was the Professor's influence. The Professor had been listening to Puccini's two operas set in Japan and China - Madame Butterfly and Turandot. Plus, the Professor had taken him to see Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado, after having learned that his blind date with Sally Dee, the wild daughter of a country singer, had discarded the tickets he had bought.
Hudson ordered some Cantonese food as the restaurant served both Cantonese and Chinese foods. He had to wait a while and so he drank a lot of water. He had jokingly called this part "Chinese waiter" torture when he had taken Kyle Lennox to this place in the past. He sighed. The waiter, a Chinese man, arrived with his meal. Hudson chewed his food slowly wit leisure. He began to overhear the conversation going on behind him. Two men, in business suits, were talking. Both men were white and apparently New Yorkers.
"I'm with Cherry Blossom," the man said, "ever read any of our picture catalogs?"
"I'd like to receive one. You're in the mail order bride business, correct?"
"That's right. So moving on. Did you decide you wanted to do it?"
"Well, I don't see why not. I'm so lonely and tired of seeing all these Manhattan couples. I'm good at my business but I need a wife at home. I have always heard Asian women are very obedient wives who don't give any trouble. I shall like that."
"Here."
Hudson turned to look. The man handed the other guy a catalog book which he looked over slowly and pensively.
"These women are beautiful. They are legal age right?"
"Naturally. They put up their own ads and they seek to leave China which you know is not such a great country and want to marry American men. So let me know which one you want. My name is Nat Coldwell. Here's my number. I can get a woman for you and it would all be legitimate."