“What about Feng Dun and his crew?”
“My bet is they’re gone.”
“Gone?” Tommie frowned.
Randi said, “He means to Dazu. They won’t care about us all that much now. Whatever the leaks were all about, whatever Jon is really working on, is in Dazu. Right, soldier?”
Jon refused to dance. “Close enough. I owe all of you, and Randi three times over. It isn’t the first time, probably won’t be the last, and I wish I could reveal more. But orders is orders.” Randi smiled reluctantly. “If there’s anything we can do to help, give us a jingle, and to hell with the DCI.” She looked him straight in the eyes. “Take care of yourself. I know you think you feel fine, but you look like you connected with a Mack truck.”
“Nice image.” Jon made his thick lips smile. “You, on the other hand, are untouched.”
She sat there in an office chair, lounging back, long legs crossed, blond hair a wild wreath around her sculpted face. He saw questions in her eyes, but worry for him, too.
“My job,” she said dryly. “Gotta keep the face malleable and primed to be disguised.”
“That’s the CIA for you. Ready to rock. Where’s this side exit?”
Tommie, who had been watching the exchange with amusement, said, “You won’t need it. You were right. They’re gone.”
“I’ll use it anyway. No sense pushing my luck.”
Washington, D.C.
Fred Klein’s eyes snapped open. Instantly awake, he lay on the hidden Murphy bed in his dark office. The night in the marina outside was deathly still, the last boat, a battered seagoing trawler that had arrived at eleven p.m. from Bermuda, was snugged down, and its crew gone home.
The jangle of the phone sounded again. That was what had awakened him.
He had talked to Jon and fallen instantly asleep. He sat bolt upright, swung his legs over the edge, and lurched to his desk chair, still drugged with his first nap in thirty hours.
It was his blue phone. He grabbed the receiver. “Klein.”
“Your new office must be sumptuous for you to be so soundly asleep,” Viktor Agajemian said. The former Soviet engineer chuckled. “I’ve been ringing for two minutes, but I knew you’d be somewhere there, yes?”
“What does Chiavelli want, Viktor?”
“Ah, yes. We don’t exchange social calls anymore, do we?”
“Not at three a. m.”
“Good point. Very well, Captain Chiavelli tells me the merchandise is to be moved tomorrow morning. He doesn’t know where or why, but all indications are it’s not related to his mission.”
“Damn!” Klein exploded, fully awake now. “That’s the message?”
“Word for word.”
“Thank you, Viktor. The money will be in your account.”
“I never doubted it.”
Klein ended the connection, but he continued to hold the receiver, considering. So Chiavelli thought the order to move Thayer was either routine or connected to the human-rights treaty. Possibly, it was related to the Empress. In any case, it was a disaster. He could never have a civilian team, or even a military team, in place quickly enough.
He looked up at his ship’s clock. Yes, there still might be time for an alternate plan. He depressed the cradle of the blue phone and dialed again.
Hong Kong Jon had been right. He had observed the hotel long enough to know no one was watching him from outside — except, of course, the CIA agent Randi thought he had not seen at the safe house. You had to hand it to her.
She was a bulldog when she was on assignment.
Smiling conspiratorially about his all-night absence and battered appearance, the hotel staff welcomed him back. He left them to speculate and rode up to his room. Once alone, he went to the bathroom mirror, where he pulled off the Band-Aids from his face and studied his wounds.
He winced when he touched them, but they were all relatively superficial. He yearned for a shower, but settled for using the Jacuzzi in the bathtub.
He was soaking peacefully when his cell phone buzzed. It was in the pocket of the hotel robe, hanging within arm’s reach. He had left it behind when he had broken into Donk & Lapierre.
“Yes?” “You leave tonight,” Fred Klein told him.
“What do I do in Dazu for a day and a half? Pretend I’m a tourist? I thought we decided I’d be better off here, digging into what Mcdermid’s
« up to.
“That was three hours ago. There’s been a serious development.” He told Jon about Viktor Agajemian’s call.
“Can you get the extraction team ready that soon?”
“That’s where you come in, Colonel. You’re going to have to help Chialli get David Thayer out of prison.”
“Only two of us? How do we do that? Have you forgotten I don’t even speak Chinese?”
“Chiavelli does. There’s not time for me to explain it all. You’ll find out the details when you land. Can you leave now?”
“I’m in the bathtub. Give me twenty minutes.”
“Don’t bother to pack. I’ll send someone in to do that and check you out after you’re gone. A car will be waiting downstairs to take you to the airport. There’ll be gear and clothes inside. A navy jet will fly you to the carrier. Good luck.”
“What about …?”
But Klein had already broken the connection. With a groan, Jon rinsed off, climbed out, and dried himself carefully, avoiding the injuries on his face and the ugly contusions and welts on his body. The hot water and Jacuzzi jets had soothed the bruises, and he felt better. He dressed and left the room. All the way down on the elevator, his uneasiness grew. What was Klein sending him into now?
Chapter Thirty-Three
In her shortest, tightest, lowest-cut black sheath, Randi Russell turned every male eye at the British Consul’s party, and most of the female eyes, too, as she entered the glitzy throng. For a change, she wore no facial disguise, only a light touch of glamor-queen makeup. Still, her pale blond hair was swept elegantly upward, and her physical attributes tended to focus an audience’s attention, so she hoped her target — Ralph Mcdermid — would be sufficiently distracted to not recognize her.
She picked a glass of champagne from a passing tray and joined the only person she knew — an executive from a British firm that was an MI6 front.
He smiled at her. “Working or playing?”
“Is there a difference, Mai?”
“Worlds. If you’re playing, I can make a pass.”
“How sweet,” she smiled back. “Another time.”
He gave a sad sigh. “So I’m only your pimp tonight. Pity. All right, whom would you like to meet? And what’s your cover, by the way?” She told him, and he took her around the room, the eyes following. Soon, Mcdermid spotted her. He stared. She gave him a bold smile and continued her conversation with an older Chinese woman high in the local government.
“Would you kindly introduce me to your charming friend, Madame Sun?”
Mcdermid had come up silently behind Randi and touched her on the arm as he passed to address Madame Sun.
The older woman favored him with an indulgent smile while she advised Randi, “Be careful of this one, child. He’s a renowned charmer.”
“Mr. Mcdermid’s reputation precedes him,” Randi said.
“Then I’ll leave you to become acquainted.”
Mcdermid inclined his head to Madame Sun in a polite good-bye. When he focused again on Randi, she saw a momentary cloud pass before his eyes, as if he sensed something was not quite right.
She pouted, altering the structure of her face. “Your reputation does precede you, Ralph Mcdermid. May I call you Ralph?”
The cloud passed, and the lecher returned. Possibly a combination of her clear American English, the revealing dress, and the thoroughly Caucasian face.
He smiled. “What reputation would that be, my dear?”
“That Ralph Mcdermid is a powerful man in all ways.”
The flirtatiousness of that from a stunni
ng woman made even Mcdermid raise an eyebrow, if not very far. “Exactly who are you, dear?”
“Joyce Ray. I work for Imperial Import-Export, San Francisco.”
“Or they work for you?”
“Not yet.”
Mcdermid laughed. “An ambitious woman. Well, Joyce Ray. I like you.
Shall we pass along the food tables and find seats? Perhaps outside?”
“I am hungry.” Randi gave it the double meaning, and she could see a pink flush rise an inch above his collar. He had bitten.
“Then off we go.” He gave her his arm.
They walked to the buffet table and carried their plates to a secluded corner of the patio. He told her a few carefully selected anecdotes about the Altman Group and learned in return that Imperial was a wholesaler with clients in major cities across America and branches in most countries. Also, that she was a vice president.
They got along famously, and she was working her way toward prying information from him, when he stiffened. There was a faint vibration beneath his dinner jacket. His cell phone.
“Excuse me a moment.” No smile. No endearment. She made no attempt to follow as he walked out past hibiscus and frangipani into the garden. Far too risky and obvious. In any case, it would not matter. He was gone less than thirty seconds. “I have to leave. Rain check, okay? I’ll call your company.” Before she could respond, he marched off. She waited until he was out the door. She followed, first on foot and then by car, always at a discreet distance.
She was still tailing him when he drove down into the parking garage of his office building. She waited then parked six cars away and watched him stand in front of the elevator, foot tapping. As soon as a car arrived, he stalked inside, and the doors closed. She climbed out and rushed to the elevator. The indicator went all the way to the top. The penthouse. What had brought Mcdermid here at such a late hour? She did not like it. On the other hand, perhaps she would learn something useful. She sprinted back to her car, skirt riding up on her thighs.
Inside, she switched on the portable link to the wiretap bug. She heard Mcdermid’s voice: “Okay, I’m in my office.”
“What’s so important that we had to talk?” A man’s voice. She did not recognize it. “Please don’t tell me you allowed Smith to escape.”
“I allowed nothing,” Mcdermid snapped, “but, yes, they escaped.”
“What do you mean, ”?” The voice was not young, not old. Calm, well modulated, and forceful. A certain projection to it. “He was helped by another agent. We think she’s CIA.”
“Think? Charming.”
“Don’t get sarcastic. We need each other. You’re a valuable member of the team.”
“I’ll stay that way only as long as I’m behind the scenes.”
“It’s not as bad as you think. In the end, neither Smith nor the CIA woman damaged us or our project.”
“That the CIA may have you under surveillance doesn’t concern you?” the voice demanded uneasily. “Even if it’s not related to our deal, they’ve traced at least some of the White House leaks to you. That should bother you one hell of a lot.”
“Realistically, the leaks are of little consequence to either of us. Until someone figures out exactly which ones I’m interested in and why, I’m not going to worry. Besides, we have far larger problems.”
“Such as?” Mcdermid hesitated. Then he delivered the bad news: “Yu Yongfu’s alive. So is his wife. Worse, they still have the Flying Dragon manifest.” There was a bellow of outrage. “This is your fault, Mcdermid.
Where are they? Where’s the damn manifest!”
“China.” A lengthy pause, as if he were controlling his shock. “How? You assured me the manifest had been burned!” Mcdermid sighed and explained the details. “The two million isn’t much, just coffee money, but I won’t pay it unless I have to.”
“It wouldn’t end there anyway, and there’s no guarantee we’d get the document. ” The shock was gone, replaced by an even inflection that was almost soothing. Definitely the man was a polished speaker and on-his-feet thinker. Probably accustomed to public appearances. She was beginning to believe he was a politician, someone accustomed to the necessity of diplomatic discourse that said nothing and revealed less.
But it was definitely not Secretary of the Army Jasper Kott, on whom she had eavesdropped in Manila. “How will you handle it?”
“The way they instructed, with a few surprises. Feng should be nearly in Dazu by now.”
“If Li Kuonyi is as intelligent as you say, she’ll expect him.” There was a thoughtful pause, and when the stranger spoke again, Randi realized she’d had an eerie feeling about him since she first heard his voice. She had heard him somewhere, perhaps not long ago. “I’m not at all sure you’re well advised to continue to use Feng.”
“There’s no time to replace him. Besides, he not only knows all the players now, he spent time in Dazu on some kind of operation. He has the kind of free movement in China that’s hard to find for a Westerner.” The voice said nothing, but its familiarity continued to resonate in Randi’s mind. Where? When?
Who was he? Mcdermid continued, “There may be another problem with Feng.
An unfortunately large one.”
“What?”
“He may not be working only for us.”
“Explain.”
“Just as I paid him to work for Yu Yongfu so he could report on his activities to me … I’m beginning to wonder whether he’s reporting on our activities to someone else. Someone in Beijing perhaps. Whoever it is must have either a lot of money or a lot of power. Otherwise, Feng wouldn’t bother.”
The voice was grim, alarmed. “You had him checked.” It was a statement not a question, and Randi realized one of her problems. This was the man’s private voice, sarcastic, dry. What lingered in her mind was a public voice, but she’d had contact with so many men in high government posts that her memory was overloaded with them.
“Thoroughly,” Mcdermid said. “We know he isn’t Public Security or the military. No, it’d be a private party.”
“One with an interest in the Empress?”
“That’s how I read it.”
“Very well. Do whatever you have to. 1 don’t want to know the details.
Just make sure the president doesn’t get the manifest.”
“You want the profit not the problems.”
“That’s our arrangement.”
Mcdermid’s words were sharp, a warning: “Your hands are as dirty as mine. If I go down, you do, too.” The phone slammed into its cradle.
In the Buick, Randi sat back and closed her eyes, running the voice through her mind. She attached faces to it. She tried it out in different environments. After a half hour, she gave up. The answer would come to her at some unexpected moment, she told herself. She could only hope it would be soon.
She dialed her cell. “Allan? You heard the new call?”
“Sure did,” Allan Savage said.
She told him about the familiarity of the voice. “Did anyone there recognize him?”
“I’ve heard him before, too. But I can’t place him, and no one here can either. But then, most of our guys are electronic geeks with atrophied recall systems who don’t know who the DCI is and think the Gipper’s still president.”
“Okay. I get the picture. See that the tape gets sent to Langley in the next pouch. Have the lab boys check it against other voice prints.”
“You want me to make our report?”
“No. I’m coming in.” She would talk to the DCI directly.
Beijing The night enclosed Wei Gaofan’s office in Zhongnanhai in soft darkness, with the lights of Beijing glowing above his walls, turning the starry sky a shining pewter gray. He stood in his doorway, staring out at his courtyard and the graceful willow tree and the groomed flower beds that usually gave him a sense of tranquility. Still, tonight he was heavy with distrust. He was called the ultimate hard-liner, as if it were an insult, but his was the vision that was
pure. The Owl and his fellow liberals were politically blind. They were incapable of seeing what he saw. He pitied them, but at the same time, they were his ideological enemies. China’s enemies. They were forcing the country on an unnatural path that would do more than expose it to the world. Their way invited in the three contagions — capitalism, religion, and individuality. When his phone rang, he returned inside to his desk. The call had come in on his private line, known only to his network of cronies, proteges, and spies. He had a premonition of bad news. “Yes?”
Feng Dun’s tones were corpselike, confirming the premonition: “Yu is alive. It was the woman. She tricked me.” Wei inhaled sharply. “And the Flying Dragon manifest?”
“Li and Yu still have it. Yu never burned it.”
He reported in detail. Wei fell heavily into his chair. His stomach knotted, but he kept his voice steady. “Where are they?”
“Dazu. I’m on the road now. Heading there from Chongqing.”
“What are they doing?” Feng explained the call from Li Kuonyi to Ralph Mcdermid and the deal they made. “I’ll have Yu, Li, and the manifest in less than forty-eight hours.”
“You’re positive?”
“It’s hardly to our benefit for me to be unrealistic.” Feng’s voice had returned to its normal, whispery timbre.
This turn of events had shaken him, but already he was showing renewed confidence. In all the years Wei had employed Feng, he had never known him to lack self-assurance. If anything, the former soldier of fortune had an overabundance of it. But this was no small problem, and the political complexity of it would be beyond the grasp of most security experts. Feng had always been loyal to him, even when sent off to work for others so he could bring back information. But then, Wei had taken Feng with him as he had risen in government. Yu Yongfu would never have been able to do for Feng what Wei could. Likewise, neither could an American, even Ralph Mcdermid. For a former mercenary like Feng, it was an honor to work so intimately for a member of the Standing Committee, and the income was more than generous, especially when others paid him as well.
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