Edge of War

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Edge of War Page 35

by Larry Bond


  She wouldn’t mind a break herself. Though there was undoubtedly a lot more to do back in Asia.

  Broome’s evening replacement, John Malaki, met them at the restaurant just in time to order. It was amusing watching the two marshals talk—they were nearly polar opposites, though clearly they liked each other.

  “Great spaghetti, huh?” asked Broome as they ate. “Best place down here. If you really want Italian, though, ya gotta go up to Arthur Avenue in da Bronx. Or over in Brooklyn. There’s a million places there. Or Staten Island. Nobody knows about Staten Island. But there’s good Italian there. And Jersey.”

  The two marshals began debating the likelihood that the Mets would make the playoffs thanks to the addition of Albert Pujols, and whether the adoption of the designated-hitter rule would improve or harm the National League.

  Mara tried to get Josh talking about his scientific work, but he gave mostly one-word answers to her questions, and after a while she, too, fell silent.

  He came to life, briefly, when they were leaving. A pair of men in suits came inside the dining room, looking around carefully before holding their sleeves to their mouths and whispering into microphones hidden there. A few seconds later, a pair of men in suits walked in swiftly, trailed by a waiter and two more members of a security team, wearing suits identical to the advance men.

  “Look at that,” said Josh. “Gotta be mobsters, huh?”

  “Nah,” said Broome as they walked out to the waiting marshal car. “Just Wall Street guys. Worried about kidnapping. The usual stuff.”

  “Oh,” said Josh, clearly disappointed.

  21

  New York City

  Jing Yo spent the day mostly in wait.

  He got hardly any sleep. He could feel his enemy nearby, but the sensation was one of frustration and failure, of worthlessness. He knew the scientist must be close to him, almost in the next room. Yet he was very far away.

  A story in the morning newspaper, this time the Wall Street Journal, confirmed his hunches. The story declared that there were rumors of atrocities in the China-Vietnam border conflict, and these rumors were likely to be brought up at the UN when the president spoke on Friday. The paper speculated that the president would offer proof that they were real.

  Or the paper said that the president had to offer proof to be taken seriously. Jing Yo wasn’t sure which. But the scientist would be plenty of proof.

  Where was he? Jing Yo walked uptown and then east to the UN. The crowds were gone, or hadn’t gathered yet, but there were fresh barriers, this time several blocks away. The police turned back everyone a block away unless they could prove they either lived in the neighborhood or worked at the UN. Jing Yo tried three different approaches, mentally recording everything that happened. Coming from the north would be the easiest, he decided, but it would be better to have a worker’s ID than a resident’s. Workers were questioned less.

  There were plenty of work trucks on the surrounding blocks. He could grab a driver, take his license. Though it would be better to have his own license.

  Jing Yo continued his survey of the area, growing more and more restless. He began to doubt his instinct, and the inexplicable feeling that his foe was nearby. Logic dictated that the scientist would be in Washington, at the CIA, being debriefed by government officials. He might already have made a video statement. It might be too late to prevent him from doing harm.

  Of course it was too late for that. And to Jing Yo, it was irrelevant. He cared only about killing the scientist. That was his mission. Everything else was irrelevant.

  Wrath was all he was after. Revenge.

  And yet, that was the greatest temptation, the sin of ego, a turning away from the path. He was motivated by anger, not by his allegiance to the one true Way. And what good came of that?

  Jing Yo had heard nothing from Mr. Wong by noon. He moved westward on the island, deciding to seek out a place where he might obtain a false ID, and perhaps a weapon, in case he had to act on his own. He had two important handicaps: his difficulty with the language, and his lack of knowledge about the city.

  It would be foolish to go up to a person on the street and ask where he could get a phony license. And even worse would come from asking where to buy a gun in a city where owning one was against the law.

  He thought of making himself a target for a thief and then taking his weapon from him. But perhaps he looked too little like a victim: for all the stories and rumors of crime run rampant in the city, no one approached Jing Yo or even menaced him with a stare. He found a store to stay in while it rained, leaving as the shower began to diminish a half hour later. By 2:45, even the mist had cleared, though the sky remained overcast.

  At 3 p.m., with still no word from Mr. Wong, Jing Yo went to Central Park. He found a large rock outcropping with no one nearby and sat to make a phone call.

  Someone picked up before the second ring.

  “What has happened?” asked Jing Yo in Chinese.

  “What?” said a voice. It answered in Chinese, but was different from the one that had answered the phone the night before.

  “Have you found him?” asked Jing Yo.

  “We are working. You will wait for your instructions.”

  “Perhaps he is in Washington. Let me go there.”

  “When we have an assignment, we will tell you.”

  “It may already be too late,” said Jing Yo.

  “Time is not your concern. You will do as you are told. No longer call this number unless it is a true emergency.”

  The line clicked dead. Jing Yo put the phone in his pocket, slid down the rock, and began walking once more. He found himself at the entrance to the zoo. He paid the separate admission—surprised to receive change—then wandered through the exhibits.

  The rain forest made him long for Vietnam, and for Hyuen Bo.

  Jing Yo left the park and walked in the direction of his hotel. He was a block away when a black Hyundai Genesis L pulled up to the curb next to where he was walking. The rear window rolled down.

  “You will join me please,” said Mr. Wong from the backseat.

  The backseat of the stretch sedan had three flat-screen displays embedded in the false seat back below the glass separating the driver and passengers. Each one was tuned to a different television news station, Fox, CNN, and MSNBC, from right to left. The volume was off, but a Chinese translation of each show’s sound track ran across the bottom of the screen.

  “Would you like some tea?” Mr. Wong asked as the car pulled from the curb.

  “No, thank you.”

  “How have you spent your day?”

  “I have walked around the city.”

  “Thinking about your assignment?”

  “My mind was not quiet,” answered Jing Yo. It was an answer the monks would give.

  “Then it was productive,” said Mr. Wong. “Problems must be attacked from many directions.”

  That answer was also one a monk might give.

  Jing Yo looked at the screen on the left. An analyst was talking about the price of oil, which had risen fifteen dollars a barrel during the day. The change was considered minor.

  “Your theory about the UN is an interesting one, and has perhaps borne fruit,” said Mr. Wong. “We have obtained the senator’s schedule from a friend. It has several stops in the area, tonight and tomorrow, before he goes to the UN.”

  “I understand.”

  “If you follow him, your scientist will perhaps meet him. But it is possible he will not.”

  “If he meets him, I will be there.”

  The edge of Mr. Wong’s mouth turned up slightly.

  “You are said to be a most capable man, Jing Yo. Worthy of great trust. But there were problems in Vietnam.”

  “There were difficulties.”

  “You were on the wrong side of the people there?”

  “I did nothing to offend them, except my job.”

  “Their attitude toward you was a mystery?”

  �
�Yes,” said Jing Yo.

  “And your commander: he may feel you a great warrior, but he is not your friend.”

  “I need only orders from him, not friendship.”

  “What would you do if you were ordered home?”

  Jing Yo considered the question. It was an obvious test, but what did Mr. Wong really want? A lie, so that he could satisfy himself that Jing Yo would do what he was told—or more likely, so he could report back that Jing Yo was still a faithful soldier? Or the truth, so that he could properly judge his character?

  Jing Yo decided that he could not tell, and because of that, he admitted that he would disobey the order.

  “Why is the matter personal?” Mr. Wong asked.

  “The scientist murdered a companion.”

  “You speak of murder in war?”

  Jing Yo did not explain the circumstances. Finally, Mr. Wong continued.

  “In this matter, your interests and your country’s interests lie in parallel,” he said. “But you must be careful. Putting yourself ahead of your country is not desirable. You know that from your apprenticeship.”

  Jing Yo finally realized that Mr. Wong had himself trained in Shaolin. It should have been obvious, he realized now—but the most obvious things were always the last to be learned.

  “I am a prisoner of my ego,” Jing Yo admitted, lowering his head in shame as he would have at the temple.

  “We are all, in one way or another,” said Mr. Wong softly.

  * * *

  Mr. Wong had the car drive him to Queens. They turned onto local roads immediately after the bridge, threading their way onto a residential block midway between Astoria and Long Island City.

  “This opens both doors,” said Mr. Wong, handing Jing Yo a small silver-colored key. “You will find everything you need inside. One last thing—your phone. You no longer require it.”

  Jing Yo handed over the phone, then got out of the car. Mr. Wong lowered the window.

  “Thank you,” Jing Yo told Mr. Wong.

  “Remember your training,” said Wong. “And be true.”

  The building was a small two-family row house. The key was to the apartment downstairs; there appeared to be no one living upstairs. It was sparsely furnished with generic furniture; it would have been difficult to guess the ethnic background of the person who lived here.

  A satellite phone sat on the kitchen table. Jing Yo turned it on, then put it in his pocket.

  At first, Jing Yo thought that the place was simply “clean”—an empty shell where he would wait for orders. But as he began to examine it more closely, he realized that it was in fact outfitted specifically for him. The closet in the rear bedroom had a variety of clothes in his size, from casual to formal suits. The ones that had been made for him by the tailor had been transferred here, and supplemented with others. Underwear and socks in his size were in the dresser drawers. Two pairs of shoes, one dress, the other casual, sat in the closet. There was a wallet in the small box in front of the bureau. Inside the wallet was a set of identification cards, business cards for several professions, credit cards, and a thousand dollars in bills ranging from fives to a hundred. Beneath the wallet were magnetic card IDs, including one that showed he was a temporary translator at the UN, specializing in different varieties of Mandarin Chinese, and another that indicated he was an aide to the Malaysian ambassador.

  A nice irony there.

  He found a door to the basement in the hall and went downstairs. A door at the far end led to a small backyard, fenced off from the alley behind by a tall, solid fence. The yard was only a few feet deep, and covered with old cement.

  The basement was mostly empty, with a small metal kitchen table near the outside door. A set of old flower pots sat in the middle of the table. Closer to the stairs were a washing machine, a dryer, and the boiler. Next to the boiler was an old room used to store coal when the building was new. The door had a padlock, with a key still inserted in it.

  Metal shelves lined the walls. On the shelves to his right were four pistols, in varying sizes, from a two-shot derringer to a Magnum. There were submachine guns—an FN-P90 bullpup-style gun, a mini-Uzi, and an MP-5N. And there was a Remington bolt rifle, outfitted with sniper scope and small bipod, in a black case that looked as if it were for an electric guitar.

  Strongboxes filled with ammunition were stacked on the opposite shelves. At the base was a kit for an RPG-29V rocket-propelled-grenade launcher, with four thermobaric antipersonnel rounds and four rounds designed to pierce a main battle tank’s armor.

  Jing Yo took only the Glock 9mm pistol and the small derringer, locking the door and taking the key with him back upstairs.

  The second bedroom had been converted to a study. The desk was an old secretary, packed with books and dictionaries, the sort of thing a scholar might have had in his house before the Internet.

  A briefcase sat next to the desk. Jing Yo opened it, and found a custom-built laptop inside. When he booted it up, it asked for a password.

  His name in pinyin unlocked it.

  There were several programs installed, including a Web browser that connected via a satellite modem card. Jing Yo clicked on an icon for Google Earth. The program zoomed on the house he was sitting in.

  The detail was extremely fine—much better than he would have seen with Google. As he moved the cursor, he saw a time stamp at the bottom right-hand corner of the screen. The image had been taken earlier in the day.

  He opened the Web browser and examined the bookmarks. One led to Senator Grasso’s calendar, apparently posted on an internal Web site used by the senator’s staff. Others led to pages with information about the places where the senator was due to appear the following day: a Catholic school on Long Island, a science museum in Queens, and the UN.

  As he examined the links, Jing Yo’s stomach began to growl. He’d skipped lunch and forgotten dinner.

  He got up and went to the refrigerator. It was stocked with a variety of food. He took out a frozen pizza and began to preheat the oven. As he waited for it to reach temperature, he noticed a coffee cup with two sets of keys on the counter beneath the cabinet. One set said Ford on it; the other was blank, but looked to him as if it went to a motorbike.

  He placed the pizza in the oven, then went out to the front stoop and looked up and down the block. There was a Ford Taurus parked across the street. He walked over slowly and, after making sure no one was around, placed the key in the lock.

  It didn’t fit.

  He spotted a pickup truck near the corner, but decided not to try it when he saw some people approaching.

  Jing Yo turned the corner and continued walking. He’d have to wait until it was much darker to check the truck. He spotted an alley up on his left and, realizing it must be the one behind the house, turned down it.

  Cars were parked along the backs of the property, with just enough room to back out without scraping one another or the tall fences on the other side.

  There was a van parked at the back edge of the house where he was staying. The key opened it.

  The scooter was in the back. The registration documents were in the van’s glove compartment, as was the key for the storage case between the front seats. Jing Yo opened the case and discovered a pair of boxes. One had a hand-held GPS unit. The other looked similar, but when activated flashed only a single-word message:

  Searching …

  It was a locator unit, used to track shipments. In this case, Jing Yo suspected, it would help lead him to the senator.

  “If I fail at this,” Jing Yo thought as he returned to rescue his burnt pizza from the oven, “the fault will be only mine.”

  22

  Hainan Island

  Now that they had the Chinese patrol boat, it was easy to scout the harbor area, though Zeus was careful to keep the ship well away from other military vessels. They moved east slowly, Zeus and Christian both scanning carefully with their binoculars.

  There were so many landing craft jumbled together
that it was impossible to get a precise count. The preparations seemed far more ad hoc than an American or NATO operation would have been. They were using much smaller boats, more like what would have been seen during World War II than those favored by current NATO planners. The support craft that the U.S. would have used—most notably the large amphibious-warfare ships that were essentially helicopter carriers—were nonexistent. Then again, the Chinese already had a substantial fleet out in the water to the south, where presumably they were going to invade. They would be able to use the airports on Hainan and the mainland for support.

  The airport at Sanya remained open to civilian flights, with a steady stream of airliners coming in and going out. But it was also being used for military sorties—Zeus saw two flights of J-8 fighters land in the hour or so it took for them to sail leisurely across the outer harbor.

  Leisurely being a relative term.

  Their pass complete, they moved the ship farther offshore, reasoning that the farther away it was, the less likely it was to attract attention. They moored the fishing boats nearby. The marines took turns sleeping, trying to get some rest for the operation later that night.

  Wiping out the radio had been necessary to avoid being detected, but now it was needed to monitor broadcasts and figure out if the Chinese authorities were concerned about the missing ship. Christian went to work rigging up a substitute antenna. It worked well enough to pick up transmissions on the standard Chinese navy frequencies, as well as some other chatter on the general maritime bands.

  The main com handset had also been damaged in the battle. Christian also rigged a substitute that seemed workable, though Zeus put off testing it until absolutely necessary—no sense taking the risk of drawing more attention to themselves than they had to.

  If he weren’t so obnoxious—or maybe obnoxious in a different way—Christian might be a decent officer, Zeus thought. But he seemed always to be doing something to rub Zeus the wrong way.

  After covering the damage done to the superstructure with a tarp, one of the marines found some gray paint to make it less noticeable from a distance. Christian complained about the smell as if it were the most putrid scent he’d ever taken a whiff of.

 

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