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Darkness Under Heaven

Page 23

by F. J. Chase


  Commissioner Zhou nodded. Textbook investigative procedure. And doubly attractive since no one could ever be faulted for following procedure. And the right answer if they had been dealing with a common bank robber. “You are not incorrect, Inspector. But imagine for a moment that you are not investigating a bank robber, but a saboteur who is fighting you with terrorist methods. Put yourself in his place. You have planned this strike where all the damage has occurred within the span of an hour. Do you continue with another series of attacks now?”

  They both looked confused. Commissioner Zhou knew he was most likely asking too much of them. More the pity. “I will pose the question another way. What is our response likely to be? I am speaking of our national response to this crisis.”

  Inspector Cheng said, “As you know, Comrade Commissioner, two additional army divisions have been sent into the city to maintain order, man identification screening checkpoints on the streets, and guard vital areas.”

  “And knowing this,” said Commissioner Zhou. “How would you calculate your chances to accomplish additional attacks of this kind?”

  “Ordinarily I would say zero,” Inspector Cheng replied. “But I will say slim only because I am surprised by this man’s skills so far.”

  “Suicidal,” said Inspector He.

  “I agree,” said Commissioner Zhou. Now he could see them thinking. Good.

  Inspector He said, “Comrade Commissioner, could it be that this bank robbery was to obtain funds to pay Taiwan sympathizers, traitorous elements, or perhaps a criminal gang to smuggle them out of the country?”

  They knew that nearly all of the leaders of the 1989 Tiananmen student revolt had escaped the country, even in the face of a massive national manhunt.

  “Now you are thinking along the correct lines,” said Commissioner Zhou. “I might say yes, but I have met this man. He would not trust any Chinese, not under the current circumstances. And I do not feel that Avakian has access to American spy networks. He will attempt to escape, but will do so without help. So we must ask ourselves another question. How does a foreigner escape first from Beijing, and then from China?”

  Inspector Cheng spoke first. “I could not use air, rail, bus or ship as a normal passenger. Only if I had confederates who could somehow conceal me within cargo. Or hidden inside the transport in some other way.”

  “I agree with your reasoning,” said Commissioner Zhou. “Continue.”

  “Then by vehicle to a national border is the only solution,” said Inspector Cheng. “But there will be some unique element. This man strikes me as an unusual combination of clever calculation and bold recklessness.”

  Commissioner Zhou was feeling the grip of a strong excitement. What had been scattered elements of his thinking were now coming together. “And where do you go?”

  “Vietnam and India are both long and difficult journeys by road,” said Inspector Cheng. He did not mention Laos or Myanmar, which would not welcome an American trying to cross a border. North Korea of course was out of the question.

  “But perhaps being difficult makes them unexpected,” said Commissioner Zhou. “And therefore worthwhile.”

  Inspector He shook his head doggedly, perhaps forgetting himself. “No, Comrade Commissioner. “Fuel, food, shelter, time—all enormous problems. Not with the countryside alerted against foreigners.”

  There had been a report that morning of two American tourists beaten to death by a group of patriotic workers in Jian. Though this information would of course not be released to the media. Not that anyone cared about American tourists, but public disorders must not be encouraged.

  Inspector Cheng was emboldened by He’s support. “The man would almost certainly seek to escape to either Russia or Mongolia.”

  “If I were an American,” said Inspector He. “I would not choose Russia. Not with the liberation of Taiwan progressing and Russia courting our favor.”

  “Yes, I agree,” said Commissioner Zhou. “Mongolia. By vehicle.”

  Guessing what he intended, and concerned for the fate of those who would follow him in this course of action, Inspector Cheng said, “Perhaps we should continue with the investigation and wait for the situation to become clearer, Comrade Commissioner?”

  “By that time he will be in Mongolia and out of our reach,” said Commissioner Zhou. “Which will happen if we conduct a standard investigation.”

  Inspector Cheng persisted. “But undertaking such a step with no clear evidence to support it is a bold gamble, Comrade Commissioner. If we are wrong, there will be strong consequences.”

  Commissioner Zhou was not blind to those fears. His answer was a popular saying about great rewards requiring great risk. “How can we retrieve the baby tiger without going into the tiger’s nest?”

  20

  “I’m ashamed of myself,” said Judy.

  Pete Avakian resisted the temptation to look over at her. Which he wouldn’t anyway because people who kept turning their heads to talk face to face when they were supposed to be driving drove him crazy. He also had no immediate plans to jump into the conversation. Any that began with a statement like that had danger written all over it—no matter what a guy said, it was going to be the wrong thing.

  But she called his silence and raised with one of her own.

  Checkmated, Avakian steeled himself for the worst. He hadn’t thought the bank was much different from what they’d done before. But he was also aware that women felt differently about most things. “Ashamed of what?”

  “There was a teller in the bank. When I jumped over the counter she was sitting there with her finger just stuck on the alarm button.” Judy jabbed her finger furiously in the air. “And that made me so mad I grabbed her hair and kicked her until she cried out. I have never done anything like that in my life.”

  Avakian didn’t say anything.

  “And then I was feeling like a real hot shit on the bike,” she went on. “I was in control, for the first time in a while.” She turned to watch his face. “And I was loving it. Especially the fact that you weren’t in control.”

  Avakian concentrated on the road, because he didn’t think smiling at that would be such a good idea.

  “I went into the bike lane as if I had to live up to all the smack I’d been talking,” she said. “We might have been caught. That policeman didn’t need to die. I killed him. And none of it had to happen.”

  She stopped then, near tears.

  “That’s why you’re ashamed of yourself?” Avakian said.

  “I am.”

  “Good for you.”

  “What?”

  “For feeling ashamed.”

  “Why should that be good?”

  “In our heart of hearts we all want to rob banks and blow things up instead of going to the office from nine to five. Which is why every functioning society makes all that fun stuff, what everyone really wants to do, illegal. Why do you think bored young men become terrorists? And more people know who Jesse James was than Jonas Salk? And why we flock to the movies to watch violence presented as a cartoon where all our fantasies are fulfilled and only the characters we don’t identify with suffer any consequences? We’re drawn to violence and destruction like bugs to one of those blue light zappers on the back porch. But in the real world every action has consequences. I’d like to comfort you, but I think you’d see right through that. So I’ll just say, as a friend: welcome to the real world.”

  More silence. Then she said, “You know, Pete, you’re a really good guy.”

  “Likewise, I’m sure. Except for the guy part.”

  “When am I going to start listening to you?”

  “You can always tell a real combat veteran from a wannabe because the vets never talk about it. Everyone wants to hear a good war story, but you can’t really understand one if you haven’t experienced it. You loved doing it, didn’t you?”

  She hesitated before answering. “Yes, I did.”

  “And you’re also sickened by what you did.”


  “Yes, I am.”

  “Welcome to the club. Only a sociopath doesn’t carry a combat mistake around like a rock in their chest.”

  She leaned over and kissed him very tenderly on the cheek. He took a hand off the wheel and stroked her hair. She sat back in her seat and said, “What was your combat mistake?”

  “Oh, there’s a whole fistful of them. Biggest one? Once in El Salvador we had decent intelligence that our training base was going to get hit by about a thousand guerrillas. The Salvo officer was a worthless thug who stole babies from guerrilla areas and sold them off for adoption in the U.S. The irony is that all the atrocities the American left complained about would have stopped if we’d been allowed to go out on combat operations with them, but there was this post-Vietnam hypocrisy that we were only trainers. Well, my counterpart wouldn’t listen to me. He sent half the base home on leave because he was an idiot in addition to being a thug. And, I’d let him know how I felt about him—totally wrong move—and he was going to show me that my advice was crap. The advisory group at the embassy wouldn’t listen to me because I was self-righteous about everything in those days, and they didn’t want to hear it. So we got hit one night. We hung onto the base, but a lot of good Salvadoran soldiers got killed who wouldn’t have if I’d been as smart as I was loud and immature.”

  “They stole babies?”

  “They looked at it as one less guerrilla to grow up and shoot at them, and childless Yankee couples pay big money for pretty foreign babies. Poor people always get trapped in the middle of every dirty war. The guerrillas would steal their kids, too, to be soldiers.”

  Judy could see the tendons standing out in his neck. “And it’s still a rock in your chest.”

  “Twenty-three years later. Dawn breaks, and there are all the dead bodies. You can’t cut to the next scene. You have to go pick them up and put them in coffins.”

  Okay, Judy, you started it again. Now find a way to change the subject. “You know, the first time I ever heard you use serious profanity was on that bike.”

  “It’s also the first time I learned what my own heart tastes like.”

  “Welcome to my world of the last few days. But we were speaking of profanity.”

  “I try not to drop the F-bomb under normal circumstances.”

  “Any particular reason?”

  “I was probably the most profane guy in the U.S. Army, which is saying something. When I moved out into the civilian world I realized I had to modify that behavior.”

  She said it slowly. “The most profane man in the army.”

  “Well, officer at least.”

  “Excuse me, but men are not supposed to be capable of change.”

  “I am not men,” Avakian told her. “I am DEVO.”

  More than anything else, it was the voice he used that made her giggle uncontrollably. “Of course. How could I be so blind?”

  “I don’t reveal myself to many, Doctor.”

  I’ll bet you don’t, she thought, feeling the pull from him letting her in.

  A nagging sensation that he’d forgotten something had been eating at Avakian for a while, and at that moment the insight jabbed its way into his brain. “By the way, did you happen to find any GPS trackers in the bills you grabbed?”

  “Were those the metal things hidden inside stacks of money?”

  “That’s right,” he said, trying to keep the anxiety out of his voice. “You did leave them behind, didn’t you?”

  “I did.”

  That was a relief. “Wonderful.” He really hated it when he let things slip by him.

  “GPS trackers?”

  “The Chinese version of the exploding dye pack. A cop told me once they haven’t had a successful bank robbery since they started hiding them in stacks of cash.”

  “And the police just show up at your hideout?”

  “Correct.”

  “I guess you learn these things when you’re one of the good guys who goes bad.”

  “Correct again.” He saw the turn coming up. “Okay, here we are.”

  “Nice place.” A modern slab of an apartment building that looked close to twenty stories. “Is that a lake over there?”

  “Shuidui Lake. We’re really just across the Ring Road and the Airport Expressway from the SAS Royal. And what you’re looking at is the Dongyuan Apartments.”

  “Another hideout?”

  “No. This is where we pick up our ride. So let’s keep a good thought that all our mischief hasn’t knocked him off schedule.”

  “Him?”

  “Major General Dong. Not related to the apartments. Army military intelligence type. And, as his name might imply, the biggest tool you’d ever want to meet. He keeps his mistress in an apartment here, and every day he waits out rush hour with her before returning home to the family. I’m told you can set your watch by him. And he’s just the kind of creep who’d blow off a national emergency to get laid.”

  As he’d figured, her female face was set in total disapproval. “And you know this how?”

  “I needed to get in touch with him one afternoon and all the Chinese started tittering. Official minders are only human after all. The longer they hang around with you the more torn they get between official circumspection and a natural desire to be informative. Eventually you end up hearing all the gossip.”

  “And this general is going to be our hostage?”

  “Perish the thought. You wouldn’t be able to stand him for fifteen minutes, let along a long drive. We’re just going to borrow his official vehicle for the trip.” While explaining this Avakian had been slowly cruising through the parking lot.

  “I assume you know what his car looks like.”

  Now Avakian did turn and look at her.

  “Okay, stupid question. I must be getting nervous again.”

  Avakian was beginning to despair that they’d kept the general at work. Then he realized the car wouldn’t necessarily be near the building. The general would call his driver while he was on the way down, and be met at the front door.

  Slightly encouraged by that thought, he made a wider circuit of the lot. “There we go. That’s my boy.”

  “Which one?”

  “The black Mercedes 350 SUV with the tinted windows.”

  “It’s nice, I guess. Did we want an SUV?”

  “What we really want is the license plate.”

  “Judy’s confused again.”

  “Look closely at the other cars, Doctor. A regular Chinese registration is a blue plate with white letters and numbers. While this one is…?”

  “White with a red letter prefix and black letters and numbers.”

  “It’s a special military plate. The number also indicates the occupant’s rank. Military vehicles do not have to stop and pay road tolls. More importantly, no cop who values his career is going to pull over a major general’s car for any reason whatsoever. Likewise any military checkpoints. Hopefully.”

  “And you’ve been planning this for how long?”

  “Ah, I see what you’re getting at. You’ve got to understand that the countries I work in usually have some pretty serious governance problems. So whenever I take a job I always like to think about how I’m going to get out if, say, the insurgents overrun the capital and the airport gets closed. Or shelled. This actually happens more often than you’d think. Gets to be a habit.”

  “You always think about what could go wrong in surgery, too.”

  “Wouldn’t doubt it.”

  “It’s certainly turned out to be a big help lately, hasn’t it?”

  “We’ll see.”

  “You know, Pete, I just realized who you are.”

  “Why am I not sure I want to hear this?”

  “You’re Eeyore as a criminal mastermind.”

  Avakian’s mind was on the task at hand. “Eeyore?”

  “Winnie-the-Pooh?” She did the Eeyore voice: “It’ll never work. We’ll die in a hail of bullets.”

  Avakian laughed loudly.
“Recognizing you have a problem is always the first step, isn’t it?”

  “Maybe. But not doing it anymore is always the final step.”

  “I’ll take it under advisement until I have reason to be optimistic. Now, when I get out you hop behind the wheel and keep the engine running. Then follow me—we won’t go far. Any questions?”

  “What are we going to do about the driver?”

  He just looked at her again.

  “Oh,” she said. “All right. I’ll shut up now.”

  Avakian parked two rows back and off to the side of the Mercedes so they wouldn’t be visible in any mirrors.

  He drew the pistol as he exited the car but kept it out of view behind his back. The attraction of the Mercedes was now a definite disadvantage. With the tinted windows he had no idea what the driver might be doing. Maybe in the back seat taking a nap.

  As he turned into the narrow space between the driver’s side of the Mercedes and the car parked next to it he ducked down below the side mirror. Most people didn’t lock the driver’s door while they were in the car, which was how carjackers made their money.

  He reached up, grabbed the door handle, and yanked it open. The driver’s startled face twisted around to meet his. Late twenties, senior sergeant’s epaulets, phone buds in his ears as he rocked out to his MP3 player. Avakian swung the pistol across his body like a backhand tennis shot, catching the sergeant on the side of the temple.

  He fell back against the seat and Avakian pistol-whipped him again just to be sure.

  Judy lifted herself over the center console and settled in behind the wheel. She could just imagine the phone conversation. Mom, I met a great guy. Well educated, great sense of humor, incredibly sensitive, and a stone-cold killer and criminal genius. And she could just hear her mother’s voice in her head telling her not to be so picky—it was a little thing she should overlook.

  And her girlfriends? They’d tell her to let him kill anyone he wanted to as long as he had a job, was good in bed, and didn’t leave wet towels on the bathroom floor. No problems there. He even refused to leave dirty dishes in the sink in a hideout, for heaven’s sake.

 

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