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Lethal Circuit (Michael Chase 1)

Page 11

by Guignard, Lars


  “That too.”

  “You’re too kind. But say I did?”

  “I tell you what,” Kate said, glancing at the check and carefully laying four bills on the table. “If you settle down and make something of your life, I’ll marry you myself.”

  “I’m maid of honor,” Song screamed.

  “And me, I will be the man,” the Frenchman said.

  “You mean best man?” Michael said.

  “Yes, the man.”

  “Sounds fabulous,” Kate said. “Until then, I’m off to bed. Michael?” Crust and his clan smiled dumbly as Kate took Michael by the hand. “We’ll catch you lot later.”

  Within moments they were lost in the crowd.

  “Sorry for the quick exit,” Kate said. “Had to nip it in the bud. Sometimes those evenings can go on forever.”

  Michael was just able to make Kate’s fine features out in the lantern light emanating from a clothing vendor’s cart. Standing there, staring at her like that, Michael felt it again, that same spark that wouldn’t die. He didn’t like that he felt it, not given the circumstances, but there was no denying it was there and he thought that maybe the weariness he had felt earlier in the evening was fleeting, that maybe, just maybe, the night was young.

  “Michael?”

  “Sorry,” he said, snapping out of his reverie. “Where to?”

  “Where would you like to go?” she said.

  “Somewhere quiet,” he said. “Somewhere we can talk.”

  “Follow me.”

  22

  MOBI’S UNAUTHORIZED HACK had allowed him to study the Horten project’s schematics, but despite his efforts, only two things were obvious: A — the blueprints were without a doubt based on the old Nazi cold fusion reactor design; and B — what communications data existed on the project was woefully incomplete. These facts not withstanding, it was obvious to Mobi that if the Chinese had indeed lost control of their bird, there would be a way to reestablish communication with it. The question was how?

  From Mobi’s calculations, at its current rate of orbital decay, an uncontrolled reentry would be inevitable within thirty-eight hours. As luck would have it, it looked as though the crash would take place within the geographic limits of California. Nevada was a possibility, as was the Pacific Ocean, but if Mobi had to guess, the bloody thing was going to burn in directly above Palmdale, about twenty miles as the crow flies from where he currently sat. It was almost as if the Chinese were aiming it at him.

  Mobi needed to take a leak. Logging off of his terminal, he headed down the hall for the restroom. He knew that even if he figured out how to recommunicate with the satellite, he wouldn’t be able to do anything without some very specialized hardware. He entered the restroom through the swinging door and stood at the old porcelain urinal. It boggled the mind how many great minds had worked here at JPL and its sister institution, Caltech, just down the street. Hell, Einstein himself had no doubt once stood before this same old calcified urinal. Mobi found comfort in the idea. Not so much in the fact that the great man had once been here, letting it all hang out so to speak, but on the more human level that even the most brilliant of us still needed to take a leak. And for a brief moment, Mobi let his mind wander free, content in the notion that whoever we were, whatever we said, we were all just jumbles of protoplasmic goo, circling around our tiny sun on satellite Earth, here today, gone tomorrow. He was still lost in the thought when his free arm was pulled abruptly behind his back.

  “Mobi Stearn?” a gruff voice said.

  “Huh?”

  “You’re under arrest for violation of Title Eighteen of the United States Espionage Laws.”

  “I’m what?”

  “Shut up and follow me.”

  23

  WHEN HE WAS eleven, Michael’s father taught him how to fight. Not karate. Not a martial art with niceties and rules. But how to brawl. How to survive when the other guy wanted you down. It wasn’t because he was getting beat up at school. He wasn’t. But Michael’s dad wanted him to learn anyway and he said it was important that he paid attention. Michael had been going to karate since he was seven and the first move in karate was always defensive. It was a good strategy. A noble strategy. But it wasn’t always the best strategy. Because sometimes you had to hit first and hit hard if you wanted to be the last man standing. He said that for all the moves Michael learned in the dojo, one thing they couldn’t teach him was the will to survive. Nobody could teach him that.

  He had to listen to the voice deep within him to learn it. And the will to survive was at the heart of the fight. It didn’t matter how good you were, it didn’t matter how much you practiced, without that will, without that raw determination to put the other guy down, none of it was worth anything. Michael’s dad made him promise that he would choose his battles wisely, but if it came time to fight, he would listen to the voice deep within him and fight like his very life depended on it. Because it did.

  MICHAEL AND KATE stepped off West Street and onto an ancient stone bridge gracefully arched over the dark water of a canal. Yangshuo was an old town, rich in history, but Michael’s attention was more squarely focused on Kate than the surroundings. Part of it was just good common sense. He still didn’t know the woman and he wasn’t ready to trust her. But the bigger part was that latent energy he felt growing between them. He had felt it as he held her down on the cold metal floor of the airplane and he felt it here in the South China night. It was a dangerous energy, a force that if not properly harnessed, might just kill him.

  It was this sobering thought that grounded Michael. Kate looked up at him as if she sensed the change in his mood. They were nearly halfway across the bridge now, the newly risen yellow moon reflecting off the swift moving water below. Five men pushing two large vegetable carts approached from the other end of the bridge. They wore wide-brimmed straw farmer’s hats on their heads and worn flip-flops on their feet. The bulbous yellow fruit in their carts emitted a sweet nearly overpowering odor that Michael recognized from his trip through the Shenzhen market the day before. Durian. According to his guidebook, the Chinese called it the god of all fruit. What caught Michael’s attention, however, was not the pungence of their cargo, nor the wear of their shoes, but a glint off the ear of one of the farmers.

  Michael wasn’t sure if it was the cart or the farmer that moved first, but whichever it was, several hundred pounds of freshly harvested fruit headed down the bridge straight for them. Michael instantly pushed Kate out of the cart’s way to the side of the bridge, the first of the men brandishing a sickle blade. Time seemed to slow in that moment. Michael recognized the arced blade as being about thirteen inches long, similar to what he had seen the farmers use in the fields, but unlike those, this one shone with a finely honed razor edge. The blade brought Michael back nine long years to the mountain mine in Peru where his abductors had held him.

  The kidnappers hadn’t said what they wanted. But when they took out the blade and the video camera, it soon became apparent that it wasn’t him. No, Michael was the leverage, not the prize. Even he could see that. They drew blood that day. Not enough to kill him, but enough to make a point on camera. Then they gave him a rag for a bandage and told him to clean up. But where was his father? When was his dad going to save the day?

  The very thought of his father rocketed Michael back to the here and now. He involuntarily touched the lone raised scar his kidnappers had left him behind his ear. He was no longer seventeen and he was well aware that if anybody was going to save the day, it was going to have to be him. But he was also aware that a close quarter knife fight involved a serious risk of being cut, something he didn’t want and couldn’t afford, even if it meant subduing his attacker. No, what he needed was an exit strategy because a quick glance from left to right informed him that all five men were closing in fast.

  The first cart hit the stone balustrade just below them, while the second impacted above. The intended effect seemed to be to box them in and it worked like a charm. I
t was fight or flight time and Kate was ready to fight. Michael could see it in her eyes. What worried him now was her gun. Michael knew she could probably get several shots off before their sickle wielding attacker got any closer, but it wouldn’t do either of them any good if at the end of the day they were left with a bridge full of bloody men, a handful of witnesses, and the local cops investigating the crime.

  The farmer with the sickle slashed. Michael pivoted to the side and sucked in his abdomen handily escaping the blade, but the largest of the farmers now blocked all exit. The big farmer reached out with a single straight arm, drilling Michael squarely between the shoulder blades. A third assailant pawed at Michael’s pockets causing an avalanche of coins to bounce off the bridge at his feet. Michael instinctively shielded Kate with his body while looking for an opening. The farmer with the blade came in for a second jab. Michael sidestepped away, but there was still nowhere to go; the carts blocked their escape from either side.

  In the time it took the farmer to ready himself for another slash, Michael faked with a front kick then let go with a roundhouse to the man’s solar plexus. The fake served to put the farmer off guard and Michael’s second kick connected with an audible crack. So far so good. Instantly, he pulled back to deliver a swift sidekick to the man’s kneecaps. Once his attacker buckled, he would follow it up by a jab to the throat which would give him the requisite millisecond to take hold of his wrist and disarm him. Then he could move on to the others, providing Kate hadn’t already shot them, of course. Except something was off. His assailant wasn’t looking at him anymore. He was staring vacantly down the bridge.

  “Michael!” Kate called out.

  And Michael saw what all the fuss was about. A vehicle raced toward them. It was moving so quickly that all five of their assailants had already leapt away. True, it was traveling without its headlights, nearly invisible in the blackness, but the whine of its engine was now so loud Michael had no idea how he could have missed it. Adrenalin, he thought. Adrenalin and the task at hand.

  In that instant Michael and Kate leapt up onto the stone balustrade. A split second later they were both caught in the sudden glare of a single headlight as the fruit carts flew, durian cascading down like rotten rain. Michael noted that their assailants had disappeared into the darkness. Instead of looking into the eyes of five angry farmers he was now facing down the speeding vehicle which had caused the crash. It was a compact three-wheeled truck, a Chinese cross between a pickup and a motorized tricycle and its snout-like front end was thoroughly flattened by the impact, radiator belching steam into the blackness. Michael looked to Kate who seemed more shaken by this turn of events than she had by the melee which preceded it. He noted that she had chosen this juncture to draw her Glock, aiming it squarely through the smashed driver’s side window.

  “Seven-seven-seven my ass,” a disgruntled voice said from within the vehicle.

  Kate kept her finger steady on the trigger.

  “It was seven-seven-four and I had to dig through three editions to get that.”

  The man in the truck poked his head past the deployed airbag and out the window, revealing his gray ponytail. It was Ted at the wheel. Kate shot Michael a glance.

  “Ted,” Michael said.

  “Always happy to serve.”

  “How did you find us?”

  “You called me, remember?”

  “No. Here,” Michael said. “How did you find us here?”

  “A thanks would suffice. But since you ask, I spotted you on West Street and followed you up through the crowd. Looks like you’re lucky I did, too.”

  “Looks can be deceiving,” Kate said, lowering her weapon to her side.

  “You’re telling me,” Ted said. “Now holster that thing and let’s get the hell out of here.”

  • • •

  FOUR HUNDRED YARDS away, safely ensconced in his makeshift command post, MSS Captain Zu Huang expressed his displeasure with a sharp look toward his subordinates. Though the farmer peasant cover had worked well, the violence, in Huang’s opinion, had been overplayed. A simple threat, accompanied by a hip check, or a bump to the shoulder would have been more than ample to plant the device. After all, they had found the American. Their objective now wasn’t to scare him away, it was simply to follow. To wait and follow and let the People’s Republic’s superior technology sing.

  24

  TED STRODE UP West Street, Michael and Kate following him through the crowd. They were safely anonymous, at least for the time being, and Michael felt his composure return. Still, he was embarrassed that he had lost his focus, even momentarily back on the bridge. What had happened so long ago on the mountain side in Peru had happened. Nothing could change that. But he couldn’t let the past interfere with what he had to do now.

  “Those guys on the bridge were MSS,” Ted said. “Ministry of State Security.”

  “How do you know?” Michael asked.

  “My gut. My gut and the fact that I think I saw an ear piece on one them. Your typical farmer doesn’t wear earpieces. Earrings maybe, or ear plugs, but not earpieces.”

  Ted was walking quickly now, Michael and Kate struggling to keep up. “Suddenly you’re an expert on Chinese Intelligence Services?” Michael said.

  “I never said that.”

  “Kate’s been telling me things, Ted. Stuff about my dad. Stuff you’d never mentioned.”

  “Like what?”

  “Like the fact that he was CIA for starters,” Michael looked to Kate before adding the next part. “The fact that she’s MI6. That they spent a couple of years partnered together looking for an old Nazi airplane. That maybe the reason he’s gone missing is because of it.”

  Ted clicked his tongue and redoubled his pace up the street.

  “Is that all you have to say? You were his best friend. Are you going to tell me you didn’t know about any of this?”

  Ted ignored Michael, instead leading the way toward an establishment that was about as different from the ramshackle guest houses lining West Street as you could get. Its expansive gardens and reflecting pools made it look more like a palace than anything else. Kate seemed to know the place.

  “The Yangshuo Hotel?” Kate said.

  “I’m getting too old for the backpacking thing.”

  “And?”

  “And it’s time to read the writing on the wall.”

  THE WALL IN this case was to be found in the resort’s gracious glass paneled lobby. Outside, the landscaping was lush, waterfalls and exotic plantings covering the inner courtyard. Inside, the floor to ceiling windows were broken up by traditional bearing walls at fifteen-foot intervals. A polished marble floor separated them from the empty reception desk at the far end of the lobby. Other than the bellhop outside the swinging glass doors, they were alone.

  “Check out the artwork,” Ted said. “See anyone you know?”

  Michael noted that the walls between the glass panels were covered in framed photographs. He turned his attention to the nearest one — a framed photo of what looked like some Japanese tourists in front of the hotel. Strike that, they were Japanese dignitaries; their suits were formal. Michael turned to the next picture and saw a similarly laid out photo of the British Royal Family. Continuing along the wall, the next shot was of President Nixon standing with a cadre of Secret Service; the next showed President Carter with his Secret Service; then President Clinton alongside his protection detail; then George W. Bush.

  “So this place is popular with Royals and ex-presidents?”

  “Presidents,” Ted said. “They were in office when they visited.”

  Michael’s eyes skipped across the glass panels overlooking the courtyard to the solid wall behind the reception desk. There was a bell on the desk and on the wall behind it were more of the same photos, each sporting an identical layout to the last. There were dignitaries from Africa, India, South America, the list went on.

  “So what do you think?” Ted asked. “Why so many official visitors?”
r />   “The banana pancakes?”

  Ted ignored Michael’s quip. “What if I told you I have firsthand knowledge as to why one of these guys was here, flawless intelligence on two more, and a lot better than a guess on the rest of them?”

  “I’d say start talking.”

  Ted eyed the front desk. Even though there was nobody there, he beckoned Michael and Kate to follow him outside just the same. Once they were clear of the bellhop he spoke quietly.

  “All those presidential visits from Nixon on up amounted to one thing.” Ted quietly surveyed the area as they walked to ensure nobody was within earshot. “They were official cover to get a CIA team into Red China under the auspices of a Secret Service Security Operation.”

  “How do you know any of this?” Michael asked.

  “Kate didn’t tell you?”

  “Tell him what?”

  “I was on the CIA team,” Ted said to Michael. “So was your dad.”

  • • •

  MICHAEL BIT DOWN on his tongue as a group of Japanese tourists shuffled past on their way back to the hotel.

  Kate said, “I had no idea, Michael. I swear.”

  “Calm down, nothing to get uppity about,” Ted said. “I just assumed you knew. Nixon on his trip to China in seventy-one. I was a new agent. Your father and I had just finished the basic operative training course at Camp Peary. Everybody calls it The Farm now. Both of us were pretty psyched when we got the assignment.”

  “You’re saying my dad was here all the way back in nineteen seventy-one?”

  “Michael, your father ran one mission for more or less his entire career — the recovery of the Horten 21. Everything else, every single other thing he did for the CIA, was filler.”

  “Yeah, but you’re saying he was looking for this thing for decades?”

  “That’s what I’m saying. It was our first assignment together. He just never let go. Back when we started, half our classmates were stuck in embassies somewhere and we were out here on the frontlines posing as Nixon’s security detail. You’ve got to remember, back in the Nixon era coming here was big news. His was the first US presidential visit ever and the Chinese wanted to impress him. They even built a bloody highway for him. They call it the Nixon Road, from the airport to the city, and they did that just to make Tricky Dick feel welcome. You can imagine how they’d feel if they knew a big old chunk of the reason for his trip to this part of the country revolved around a CIA plan to find the Horten.”

 

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