The note of irony in Lu’s voice was not lost on Strand. He did not want to respond too readily. He did not know what influenced him in this decision to be hesitant, but he gave in to it. He looked at Lu and tried to appear as guileless and straightforward as possible.
“I will be satisfied having done this,” he said.
Lu raised his eyebrows. He studied Strand. And then slowly, very slowly, a smile returned to his face.
“Oh, Mr. Strand,” he said, “that is a most revealing answer.”
Strand waited.
Now Lu adjusted his position in his chair, turning his body slightly toward Strand. He was still smiling, as though he were enjoying the game they were playing and he had just anticipated Strand’s next move.
“You must believe that you know me very well, Mr. Strand. Having brought this . . . valuable . . . information to me, you have already envisioned my response to it. You are satisfied that this response will suit you. And that is enough.”
He paused.
“Certainly, my reaction to such a traitorous association cannot be a happy one for the person under discussion. He may come to a bad end. Which will suit you. So. You betray him out of revenge. Or from a desire to be rid of a burden. Or from a deep-seated hatred. Or, perhaps, greed: you would benefit financially from his demise.”
He waited with an anticipatory expression, his eyes on Strand.
Strand met his gaze candidly. “I have many faults, Mr. Lu, but greed is not one of them. It doesn’t suit me.” And he left it at that.
Lu Kee continued looking at Strand for a moment and then stood up and walked a few steps to the tall windows that provided the fairy-tale view of Lake Como. He clasped his hands behind his back and looked out. He said nothing.
Strand glanced at Mara whose attention was fixed on Lu.
Lu turned around.
“Okay,” he said. “Who is it?”
“Wolfram Schrade.”
Lu’s face did not change. Then he tucked up his chin and turned down the corners on his mouth dismissively and shook his head.
“Well,” he said finally, “that’s very interesting.” Unhurriedly he sat down in his chair. He sat forward, closer to the coffee table between him and Strand. “Let me see what you have.”
Strand opened his briefcase and laid out on the table all the material he had prepared for Lu. The old man listened to him, looked at the photographs, read the documents, and let Strand explain to him what was on the recordings and the CD. Lu asked a few questions, which Strand answered while the old man listened carefully, pensively.
When Lu finally sat back in his chair, he shook his head again, thinking. He smiled at Mara as if to say he hadn’t forgotten she was there. He said to her:
“Do you know anything about the Song dynasty, Ms. Song?”
“A little. . . .”
“Can you give me a single important fact about it?”
Mara, surprised by his question, smiled, embarrassed. She hesitated. “The Song were the first to provide a recipe for gunpowder, I believe, and they were the inventors of the true cannon used in warfare.”
Lu grinned, surprised and delighted. “Good. Can you name any famous historical figures of the Song?”
“I remember a famous outsider: Chinggis Khan, who overran most of the northern Song dynasty in 1215.” She paused. “Mmmm . . . I remember Su Shih, known as Su Dongpo, perhaps the greatest essayist and poet in the Chinese tradition. There is Zhu Xi, the dynasty’s greatest educator, who established many academies and revived Confucianism.”
Lu laughed softly, nodding. “Good, good, very good. Okay, one last question: What was the Song’s greatest accomplishment?”
Mara did not hesitate. “In my opinion . . .” She looked at him and tilted her head for permission.
Lu nodded.
“Its greatest accomplishment is that in its three-hundred-and-nineteen-year history, there was not a single tyrant among the Song emperors.”
Lu continued to beam at her. Then, slowly, he lifted his hands just above his head and applauded silently while inclining his head in a bow to her.
“I applaud your knowledge . . . and your sound good judgment. And I applaud your father’s intelligence and sense of responsibility.”
“Thank you, Mr. Lu, but it was my mother, not my father, who taught me the history of the Song. As well as the history of Abraham and his people.”
“Then I commend your mother even more. Her daughter has honored her.” He looked at Strand. “Would either of you care for something to drink? I would like a few more words with you, and then you may go.”
They both declined Lu’s offer for refreshment, and the old man went on.
“Mr. Strand, the information you have brought me poses an interesting situation for me. You see, it seems that Wolfram Schrade has been committing adultery with both the wife . . . and the husband.”
Strand frowned.
Lu put his short legs out in front of him and crossed them at the ankles. Even in his casual clothes, he was elegant. Strand expected that he still went to Savile Row for everything he wore. He was clearly an Anglophile at heart. Lu went on.
“It must have been shortly after you retired from the service that Mr. Schrade came to me with a proposition. He said that he had had the good fortune to make the acquaintance of an intelligence officer in the United States Foreign Intelligence Service. He said that this man, who was very well placed, would be retiring in a few years, and he was interested in building a retirement fund for himself.”
Strand’s pulse quickened.
“I began making payments. Strategic bits of intelligence began coming my way. I benefited greatly from this. I gathered from a few remarks by Mr. Schrade that I was not the only one receiving helpful . . . information. Nor was I the only one whose enterprises profited, literally, from this arrangement.”
“You’re still paying?”
“No.” He smiled. “That’s why I can tell you. Mr. Schrade stopped it about eighteen months ago. He said something had happened: he could no longer trust his source.”
“So, you received information from this man, via Schrade, for about three and a half years.”
“About three years.” He looked at Strand steadily, trying to see the effect of this surprising information. Strand gave him no satisfaction.
Strand said, “Why have you told me this?”
“Because, sir, I am afraid my reaction to the news you have brought me will not be suitable to you.”
Strand’s stomach tightened.
“I am skeptical that I can . . . affect . . . Wolfram Schrade’s life in any way.”
Strand’s disappointment was sudden and complete.
Lu nodded at the coffee table and the papers and photographs, the audiotape and CD.
“I trust your information, Mr. Strand. I believe it. If circumstances were different, I would act upon it as you anticipated that I would. But . . . they are as they are. As matters stand now, I can do nothing to help you. I really cannot say any more than that.” He shrugged. “I thought, in some way, for you to know about the man in the Foreign Intelligence Service would be of benefit to you. I thought you might be able to use it somehow.”
It was the end of the conversation.
“I understand,” Strand said. He sat forward in his chair and began gathering up his documents.
“Please,” Lu said. “I assume these are not originals.”
“No, they’re not. If anything changes, I hope you’ll use the same lines of communication to get in touch with me.”
“I will do that.”
They all stood, and Lu offered his hand to Strand.
“I like you, Mr. Strand. I am sorry.”
• • •
The Abbate moved slowly away from the glitter at the dock of the Villa d’Este. Lanterns dotted the night along the shore as they eased past the floating pool, away from the voices and sounds of careless opulence. The craft picked up speed gradually, meandering up the wes
tern side of the lake rather than the middle as they had done before. Then the speed increased a bit, and then more, and then more until the Abbate was screaming northward, skirting the shoreline, the lights of the villas flickering through the trees.
The speed of the craft seemed almost wild for a boat. Suddenly the engines throttled down, the steering lights went off, and the captain turned out into the open water, the engines almost silent, purring. They drifted.
On the bow and stern two men stood and surveyed the lake behind them with binoculars.
“You suspect Lu?” Mara asked.
“Anyone. We have to be clean when we get to the car.”
The Abbate, its lights still out, continued to purr as it steered eastward. The two men exchanged words in Italian with the captain, who cut the engine altogether and turned the rudder so that the boat faced roughly back toward the Villa d’Este. The boat sat heavily in the water, hardly rocking. Now all the noises were small and distant, and the boat became one with the water. Far in the distance they could hear other boats, but they remained far away.
Again the men exchanged words, their voices sounding dull and mysterious against the water. The engine started again, and slowly the Abbate turned toward the east and headed across the lake, toward the villa where they had first emerged from the boathouse.
Strand sat with Mara tucked in against him. She was silent, but he knew her mind was not quiet. As they moved across the water he looked toward the Villa d’Este. It glowed on the shore far in the distance, a sad and magical place.
CHAPTER 30
LAKE COMO
Strand and Mara got into their car and started up the drive to the main road, the gravel crunching underneath the tires as the headlights illuminated the close walls of pines crowding either side.
The route south along the lake was even more dangerous in the darkness. They rode most of the way in silence, both of them staring out from behind the flailing headlights that raked wildly across the constantly changing view: a wall of rock, a short stretch crowded with woods, darkness as the lights swung out over the lake on a sharp turn, the surprise appearance of a hamlet of a few houses, suddenly another rock wall, another gap of darkness on an outside turn, a short stretch of woods.
Finally Mara said, “There’s a spy inside the FIS? Isn’t that what he said, Harry?”
“Yeah, that’s what he was saying.”
“God, what are you going to do? Don’t you have to tell somebody?”
“I’m going to think about it.”
She turned and looked at him. “Do you think you know who it is?”
Strand hesitated. “Bill Howard.”
“Why do you think it’s him?”
“The timing was right. The opportunity was right. And I know damn well the money was right. Howard hasn’t been happy with his career, and he’s near the end of it. It was his chance to get even for all the disappointments. They must’ve come to some kind of agreement shortly after I retired. After Schrade discovered the embezzlement scheme and broke off with the FIS, Howard must’ve stayed with him, selling him FIS intelligence that Schrade then passed on to Lu. And others.”
Secrets. They accumulated in men’s lives like spiderwebs in lightless corners, one upon the other until they were festooned into a thick and dusty drapery that obscured the turns and, ultimately, hid the way entirely.
“You seem awfully sure of this. What if you’re wrong?”
“I wouldn’t have said it if I thought I was wrong.”
Mara was quiet again.
“I was surprised by Lu’s response,” Strand said. “Obviously Schrade’s providing him with intelligence from other sources now—the Germans, the French maybe. And it must be paying off in big numbers. Whatever Schrade’s past betrayal must have cost Lu, he’s willing to overlook it for now.”
“For now?”
“Schrade hurt him very badly. The old man won’t forget that. Lu takes the long view. For now Schrade is useful, but he won’t be always. No one ever is. Time passes. Things change. Revenge is a demon with a long memory and abundant patience. Schrade’s day will come.”
Strand glanced at Mara. She was facing forward, lost in her own thoughts, embracing herself as if she were chilled. Her face and the front of her black dress were washed in a pale jade light from the dials on the dashboard.
He couldn’t imagine what she must be thinking.
After a few moments she said, “What are we going to do now, Harry?”
“We’re going to contact Mario Obando. We’ll set that in motion, and then keep on going.”
“Where?”
“France, I think.”
When they entered the outskirts of Como, Strand turned away from the center and stayed on the outer edges of the city. Mara said nothing as he drove deeper into the working-class neighborhoods, where the silk factories that supplied the famous designers of Milan toiled in a gray sameness. Occasionally he glanced at her. She had leaned her head against the window and was watching the city grow darker and grimmer.
Their room was on the second floor of a begrimed hotel overlooking a dreary piazza. It was filthy.
Strand took off his suit coat and quickly set up his computer on the gritty surface of a small, wobbly table. Getting down on his knees at the baseboard, he took off the cover of the telephone jack. With a pair of wire strippers he kept in his laptop case, he bared a small section of several colored wires and connected color-coded alligator clips to them. The clips led to a hand-size black box that plugged into his laptop. Within half a minute the laptop was up and running. He logged on to the Internet and began the laborious approach to Mario Obando.
Mara pushed aside the lace curtains stiff with dirt, opened the window, and looked down at the café across the street. There was a scattering of tables and a few people drinking, talking quietly, and smoking in the jaundiced light. She turned around one of the two chairs and sat down, lifting the skirt of her dress and putting it in her lap. She gathered her hair and twisted it and piled it on her head, holding it with one hand to let air to the back of her neck. She leaned on the windowsill and looked down at the café.
• • •
When the computer began beeping Strand looked at his watch. It had been only forty minutes since the last communication. Immediately the words began scrolling up on the screen.
Where do you want to meet and when?
Strand typed:
As soon as possible. Europe.
Five minutes passed. Ten. Then words began reappearing on the screen again.
France. Will give you time and place four hours from now.
• • •
They bypassed Milan and headed west, soon crossing the Ticino River into the flat landscape of the rice fields that dominated the terrain from Novara to beyond Vercelli. The highway was straight and unremarkable. A low half-moon illumined the cloudless night and the highway, its monotony interrupted only occasionally by the dark clumps of villages or solitary farmhouses.
At Santhia the highway turned northward slightly and began a slow ascent out of the plain. The foothills of the Alps began to punch up out of the landscape, and in the near distance he caught the dim silhouette of the Alps themselves, dark and hulking, blacker than the half-moon night.
At Aosta they stopped for gasoline and two cups of strong coffee and pushed on. The air had grown cool and crisp. In half an hour they entered the Mont Blanc tunnel at Entreves, and when they emerged eleven and a half kilometers later they were in France. Strand turned away from the ski resort of Chamonix and started toward Geneva, half an hour away.
“It’s almost time to check in with Obando,” Strand said. “We might as well stop for the night.”
At the first small road sign advertising lodging, Strand pulled off the main highway and followed a narrow alpine road for a few kilometers into the foothills. They came to a collection of kitschy little “Swiss chalets.” Strand roused the concierge, paid an outrageous price, and got the keys to one of the cottag
es near the edge of the compound.
Mara insisted on bathing, and while she did Strand tapped into the telephone wires again and logged on to one of the French service providers. Within twenty minutes he had an answer from Obando: Paris. The day after tomorrow. Cafe Martineau, Blvd. des Capucines. 4:00 P.M.
It was not until they were ready to collapse in bed and Mara threw back the curtains in the bedroom that they understood why they had paid so much for the room. The little cottage was perched on a small promontory above a shallow valley. In the wan light they could see the downward-sloping hillside falling toward a broad alpine meadow and a valley that ran to the left and right. On the opposite side of the valley the land rose up quickly, then fell back and rose again. A mountain range emerged, and almost immediately the gargantuan dark mass of Mont Blanc towered above them in the night sky like another planet that had drifted too close and was rising toward them over the edge of the earth.
“My God,” Mara said. “Look at that.” She stood at the window a moment and then came back and crawled onto the bed. She sat there, embracing her knees, staring at the mountain, a dark behemoth anchored against the cobalt night. At the top, the frail light of the half-moon reflected off the legendary snowy crown.
As Strand lay on the bed beside Mara, looking at her naked silhouette highlighted by the moon glow between her and the mountain, it was not the mountain’s beauty that he saw, but its menace. In the light of day the massive landmark’s brooding gray body was a stunning foil for its majestic, snowy cap. But now, by the beguiling light of the half-moon, Strand sensed something altogether different. Now he felt an ominous pull, something like a beckoning, and the mountain became the physical presence of the Father of Darkness.
He reached out and touched Mara’s bare skin. She turned and looked at him, but he could not see her eyes. Then, without speaking, she lay down beside him, her face turned toward the mountain.
CHAPTER 31
The Color of Night Page 19