“Who’s this?” Joe asked immediately. “Is there any connection between them?”
“No, this man is just a waiter.” Jian sensed Joe’s quickening interest.
“If he’s just a waiter, why did you take his photograph?”
“Your friend goes to Urumqi,” Jian replied quietly. “He also eats at the Kala Kuer restaurant where he speaks to this man a great deal. I have seen them together. And I have been in this business long enough to know that when foreigners take an interest in Xinjiang, it is not always because of the food.”
Joe smiled. There was a nice curl of irony at the perimeter of Jian’s grin. Perhaps he knew why Joe had come to Shanghai, after all. A man with Jian’s contacts-his guanxi — had probably caught a whiff of TYPHOON long ago.
“So do you know the waiter’s name?” he asked.
“Of course.” Jian seemed pleased finally to have a correct answer. The slide show was over and he reached across to retrieve his laptop. “The waiter’s name is Ansary Tursun.”
34
All the way back to the hotel, in the lift to his room, down to the spa and through twenty laps of the Ritz-Carlton’s outdoor pool, Joe Lennox tried to remember where he had heard the name Ansary Tursun. Switching on CNN at eight o’clock, he watched a news report about a car bomb in Iraq and contemplated sending a message to Vauxhall Cross asking them to comb the files for mention of Tursun’s name. But Joe was a stubborn man and it became a point of operational pride that he should remember where he had heard the name before London woke in the morning. If he could not come up with an answer, he would admit defeat and contact Waterfield. Yet he had retrieved Platoon from his memory, and the violins of Barber’s “Adagio” still soared in his mind. What was the difference? It was just a question of locating the melody of Ansary Tursun.
The phone rang beside his bed. Joe muted the television and picked up.
“Joe? It’s Tom. What are you doing for dinner?”
He had seen Tom Harper three times in the previous week. In other contexts, this might have been considered excessive, but it was quite normal in Shanghai, where groups of Western expats met up sometimes three or four nights a week. The alternative was bleak: to stay at home watching cheap, pirated DVDs of the latest Hollywood blockbusters with a takeaway from Sherpa’s for company. Most of the interesting overseas radio stations were banned by the Chinese internet censor and state television consisted largely of game shows, military parades and historical soap operas. When Joe had lived in Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore, expats had also clung together in gangs, and life was lived to an excess which would have been unthinkable back home. It was one of the things he had found most frustrating about returning to London: his social life had somehow seemed stale and predictable by comparison.
“I hadn’t got any plans,” he replied.
Tom explained that half a dozen of his friends were going to Paradise Gardens, a Thai restaurant on Fumin Lu. Joe was pleased to be invited, and not simply because of the operational advantage to being seen out in Shanghai. He had also begun to feel the restrictions of life in the hotel. He had no desire for women, but neither did he want to spend every waking moment thinking about Miles and Isabella. Although it was in the nature of his profession to exist in what might be described as a perpetual artificial state, Joe was no different from most people in that he required the escape valve of an occasional night out.
They arranged to meet at the restaurant at nine. Joe took the lift down to the first-floor bar, where he sank a vodka and tonic and nodded at the band, a New Orleans jazz trio who had been playing at the hotel for the previous fortnight and knew Joe on sight. He bought the pianist a Coke (“I’m AA,” he had disclosed during their one and only conversation), malt whiskies for the vocalist and drummer, and signed the bill to his room. There was a long queue for cabs downstairs, so he walked a block east along Nanjing Lu and hailed one off the street.
By the time Joe arrived at the restaurant, Tom’s friends-three men, two women-were already sitting down. He knew all of them except for one, a striking woman in her mid-twenties who looked lively and possibly Malaysian. The others-Ricky, a Scouser who managed a factory on the outskirts of Shanghai making ladies’ underwear; Mike, a physics teacher at the American School in Pudong; Jeff, a Canadian ex-lawyer who now hawked teeth-whitening products to the Chinese; and Sandrine, a senior French employee of Estee Lauder-were familiar faces. They were all of a similar age and had lived in Shanghai for several years.
“Watch out, here comes the spy,” Ricky called out as Joe walked in. “You’re looking very handsome tonight, mate.”
“That’s because I’m wearing one of your bras, Ricky,” Joe replied, and everybody laughed. He apologized for being late and sat at the vacant seat between Tom and the Malaysian girl, who introduced herself as Megan. Her voice was confident and international and Joe suspected that she had been educated, at some point, in America. He scoped her ring finger and saw that she was not married.
“So how’s the Ritz-Carlton?” Jeff asked. Jeff always asked about the Ritz-Carlton.
“Expensive. I had my company accounts director on the phone this morning asking why I’d sent her a bill for fifteen thousand dollars.”
“Fifteen thousand dollars? Why so much?”
“Because spies watch lots of porn,” said Ricky.
Joe was shown a menu from which he ordered a beer and a green chicken curry. It didn’t bother him that Ricky made jokes of this sort: on the one hand, they added to the Lennox legend, which was helpful in terms of rumours filtering down to Miles; on the other, Ricky’s sheer effrontery suggested that he did not take the idea that Joe might once have been a spy particularly seriously. Had he done so, he would almost certainly have kept his mouth shut. Popping a napkin and placing it in his lap, Joe felt the momentary apprehension that comes from being seated next to an attractive woman and was glad when Tom engaged him directly in conversation. They spoke about a building which was being torn down in Tom’s neighbourhood to make way for a shopping mall, but Ansary Tursun was still on Joe’s mind and he set about trying to trigger his memory.
“Have you ever eaten in a restaurant called Kala Kuer?”
“Xinjiang food?”
Joe nodded.
“Sure. It’s on Yishan Lu. Probably the best la mian noodles in town. Why? You getting bored of Chinese?”
“Very,” Joe replied. “We should go there sometime.”
Joe’s beer arrived and he decided to keep pressing. Tom was a walking Yellow Pages of Shanghai bars and restaurants and it saved time to pick his brain.
“What about Mexican nightclubs?”
“What about them?” Megan had leaned across to interrupt, bringing with her an invisible mist of scent and shampoo. She looked at Joe and smiled a smile that told him she was a test. I’m single, you’re single. These guys are setting us up.
“One of the musicians at the bar in my hotel told me what a good time he’d had at this Mexican nightclub.” He took his beer from the waiter and said “Thank you” in Mandarin. “Said I should go down there but couldn’t remember the name of the place.”
Megan and Tom shared a look that Joe could not quite interpret. After a beat, she said, “That’s where we were going to go afterwards.”
“Seriously?”
“He must have been talking about Zapata’s,” Tom explained. “That’s the only Mexican bar between here and Tijuana.”
“It’s a bar, not a nightclub?”
“It’s everything,” Megan whispered. “You’ll see.”
A two-storey building on the corner of Hengshan Road and Dong Ping Road, Zapata’s is a wild, chaotic Shanghai nightspot that relies for its atmosphere on a cocktail of cheap alcohol, elastic opening hours and hot Asian weather. Joe arrived direct from the restaurant with Tom, Megan and Ricky, who led him across a crowded outdoor terrace where tanned, freshly showered expats sank Heinekens and talked shop in midnight temperatures of twenty degrees. Conscious of Zhao Jian’s disclosure that Sammy, Miles’s Pakistani contact, was a regular customer, Joe scanned the crowds for his face, but there were too many people to make an effective assessment.