“And a new guy will be taking over,” George had said. “Taking you over, too, Bobby. But—” George’s eyes signaled the secret look that Bobby loved, the look that said that it was only the two of them against the world. “But we won’t tell the new guy about Mister Chen, okay? Mister Chen is our secret, Bobby.”
That had been twenty years ago, and he had never told. The new guy had been called Andy Bose, which was surely not his real name, but Bobby knew enough about espionage to understand that, and anyway, he had liked Andy from the start. And then Mister Chen had turned him over to another Chinese, and then he to another, and so on — six Chinese controls he had had, the last one this shit, Loyalty Man — and he had been the whole time with Andy. And now Andy had called him and they were going to do a big operation together, just like old times, and it would be great.
Being a double agent wouldn’t matter. He could be loyal to Andy for the operation, and nobody the wiser. It would be great.
Lying in the dark, Alan could feel Rose beside him, feel her wakefulness and her worry. There had been no sex since he had got out of the hospital. He had been afraid, he realized, confused by why the injury to his hand should make him so.
“Alan?”
He grunted.
“You really want to go on this Jakarta thing, don’t you?”
He grinned into the darkness. “Yeah — I confess: I really do.”
He heard her chuckle. “Hey, sailor,” she whispered, “want to have a good time?”
“I—” He swallowed. “I’m afraid I’ll touch you with my ha-hand….” He felt her move on the mattress and heard the rustling of cloth.
He heard the smile in her husky voice. “Just you leave everything to me,” she murmured, settling on top of him.
Then he began to slide down that glassy slope that is sex, losing his fear, losing consciousness, losing self-consciousness, merging with her and coming to himself again in warmth and sweetness and safety; and, later, he knew that it was at that moment that his real healing began.
Colonel Lao stood in the remnants of a street, peering out from under the hood of an American rain parka at generations of rubble. The village had been fought over recently. The mosque had been destroyed years ago. In between, the village had been a focus of violence over and over.
His people had a generator running and spotlights on the ruins of the mosque. Forensics people from State Security were all over the site. He hoped they were working for him. Their team leader had an encrypted international cell phone of a type his department had never heard of, much less issued. Lao watched them with a detachment worthy of the ancients. He didn’t even have a cell phone.
“Sir?” His new man, Tsung. Young and competent. A little lazy, but well-trained. He was hovering at arm’s length, careful of Lao’s silence. Lao appreciated his courtesy.
“Are you waiting for me, Tsung?” He turned, shook rain off his parka.
“I have an eyewitness the Ministry seems to have missed. He says that after the plane left, another car left too, going north.”
Lao shook his head again, though not at the rain.
“Well done, Tsung. We needed another complication.”
North meant trouble. Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Russia. Lao didn’t want to consider what would happen if the Russians had Chen. He followed Tsung toward the ruined tower, stopped by a low wall where a technician in an olive-drab poncho was using forceps to clear something out of the muck.
“Cartridge?”
“That shotgun. The shooter moved all the time.”
Lao ducked under the awning and accepted a cup of tea from one of the State Security goons. He had a picture in his head of the fight in the village. Shreed had never moved, firing repeatedly from one position in the open. That made Lao think he had been the first man hit. It also suggested that Shreed had been either ambushed or set up, and that didn’t fit any of the theories he had been offered in the office in Beijing.
Chen’s opposition had come from only a few men, perhaps as few as three or four. They’d killed Chen’s paratroopers with relative ease. Because it was a trap? Or because the Chinese paratroopers weren’t all that good? Lao wasn’t that kind of soldier. He looked at the trails of tape that marked the movements of individual shooters, traced by the cartridge casings they had let fall, and thought that the opposition had done all the moving.
One of the Chinese, a sniper, had apparently killed two of his own men before he was killed himself. That made no sense to Lao. Lao thought that someone else must have killed the sniper and used his weapon. Perhaps the forensics men would find something to prove his theory — or perhaps they wouldn’t.
He used his teacup to warm his hands as Tsung brought him an older man, his thin trousers flapping in the wind. Lao bowed a little and the old man gave him a nervous smile.
“Tell him that I’m a policeman.”
Tsung spoke to the old man in careful Arabic. It wasn’t his best language, and it was one the old man probably only knew from the Qur’an, but they communicated.
Lao stood patiently, sipping tea and offering it to his witness, while the old man told the story of the evening in halting driblets. Lao taped it. He didn’t speak much Arabic and he wasn’t sure he’d trust anyone in Dar to translate, but he had to keep a record.
The old man pointed out the commanding view that the little hill village had of the highway below them in the valley. He described the plane’s landing on the road, and he described the other car’s driving away after the plane had left. Yes, he was sure. No, he had no idea who had been in the car.
Lao swallowed the rest of his tea and spat out the leaves.
Maybe Chen was alive, after all. Lao smiled without humor: If Chen was alive, then he could clean up his own messes. Like the unfinished operation to target the Jefferson. Lao disliked executing operations in whose planning he’d had no part — let Chen be alive and take it over! The operation, he thought, had been put together too hastily, too emotionally — it seemed part of that nervous hysteria he’d felt in Beijing. He never thought he’d be sorry that Chen was dead (if he was dead), but he’d be delighted to have him rise now from the rubble of this Pakistani village and take over.
“Tsung,” he said. The younger man came almost at a trot. Eager. Lao was wondering if Tsung could be trusted to take over some of the details of the Jefferson operation and free him, Lao, to concentrate on Chen. “You’ve run agents among the Pakistani military?” he said.
Tsung grinned. “They don’t like to call themselves agents. ‘Friends of China,’ meaning they have an agenda that matches ours somewhere.” He made a joined-hands gesture, fingers of one hand inserted between the fingers of the other like meshing gears.
“I have a task for you.”
Tsung said something about being honored. Lao ignored it. He skipped details — the name of the Jefferson, the use of the submarines to pass data, the agent on the west coast of the United States — and explained about the plan to tap into Islamic hatred of America and to launch a small-boat attack on an American warship.
Alan was in Dukas’s office at NCIS headquarters at nine-thirty, eager to hit the road for Jakarta.