Hong Kong, 1954. The British colony was not yet ready to hear about a
Eurasian policeman having an affair with the police commissioner's
daughter. Simon Lee tasted swift punishment. He was banished to the far
tip of a wild and distant island a stone's throw from Chinese waters -
to Tai O, the ancient trading post where fishermen, salt-farmers and
refugees were thrown together with spies, pirates and Triads. Dolphins
swam the waters, eagles fished the sea, and some still believed that a
tiger prowled the hills at night. It was a place haunted by history,
where corpses had floated in the bay when Japanese troops occupied the
police station, and everybody had a secret about what they did during
the war. Life was unpredictable for the band of misfits that staffed Tai
O Police Station. But when a stranger was murdered on a beach, accused
of being a Communist spy, Lee found himself on a collision course with
his masters in Central. Who had the dead man been working for? What did
the secret agents know? Why was Central so eager to brush the execution
aside? And who or what really was the 'tiger'?