Выбрать главу

The two of them walked toward the Korean Airlines international arrivals area. They had about an hour to kill.

“Listen,” Fisher said. “We had a rocky start here. I’m sure that’s partly my fault. I didn’t get a helluva lot of sleep on that air mattress.”

Jake had heard he slept like a hooker after a six-John night, but the guy sounded like he wanted to save face. “Hey, no problem. The briefing you got was right, though. I can be a pain in the ass at times.”

“At times?”

“Yeah. While I’m awake.”

They continued on until they found the customs area where all international passengers would have to go upon arrival into Korea. The plan was simple. Fisher would sit off to the side with a good view of arriving passengers through customs. Jake would get the signal from Fisher and they would follow her from there. The other Agency officers from Korea would follow them. The only glitch, as far as Jake was concerned, was transportation. They were supposed to hop into cars with the local officers, who would reveal themselves when needed. Since neither of them knew the local officers, Jake and Fisher were working in the blind. But Jake had one ace up his sleeve. Something the local boys would not know about.

When the two of them got to the customs area, there was already a crowd of people waiting for friends and family members to arrive. That would be a problem, Jake knew. There were only a few other non-Koreans waiting.

Fisher took up a position along a wall of glass barriers where he could see passengers come through the customs stations and file down a ramp through double doors manned by two Korean security officers with automatic weapons.

Jake got among the Koreans and pulled out a piece of white paper with the name “Kim” in dark black block letters and held it in his left hand. He put his right hand in his pocket and waited, trying his best not to scrutinize the others waiting there.

Soon passengers started shuffling down the ramp, pulling carts full of suitcases.

“Black pants. Leather coat.” Fisher whispered in Jake’s ear as he passed behind him and went off to the side again.

Looking at the woman he had mentioned, Jake ran the face through his mind. He guessed she matched the grainy digital photos he had seen at the briefing earlier that morning. Leather, he thought. That would be tough.

Jake slipped through the crowd as the woman came through the door, his sign prominently in front of him. As she approached, he pulled his right hand from his pocket and reached out for the woman’s left sleeve.

“Excuse me,” Jake said, startling the woman with his hand on her arm. “Are you Kim?”

Her eyes opened wide as she pulled her arm from his hand. She simply shook her head and quickened her pace away from him.

Jake turned and asked a few more women the same question, before he turned and started down the corridor after Fisher, who was now some twenty feet behind their target. Jake didn’t want Fisher to get too close, since the woman might have seen the agent’s face when he had tailed her across the Pacific Northwest. Or even at Brightstar.

What happened next, neither of them could have anticipated. Two men in plain clothes grabbed Fisher up ahead, and as he struggled, armed security guards moved in from behind. Jake, unsure what to do, passed Fisher and the scuffle, his eyes concentrated on the woman ahead. The others were on him just as quickly as they had scooped up Fisher. He tried to pull free, but it was no use.

Jake’s eyes concentrated on the woman fading in the distance through the crowd, her head straight forward, ignoring the commotion behind her.

A real pro, Jake thought, as the police dragged him away.

44

The woman walked confidently through the airport terminal away from all the commotion toward her objective. There. Ahead. Standing in front of a bank of computer screens looking at departing flights, was her contact.

She moved in next to him, her ticket out, and her eyes alternating from her ticket to the screens. The pass was nearly impossible to see; two hands sweeping down past each other. Then the bald man walked away and she kept her eyes on the screen. She would not look at the note here. Take a seat in the waiting area.

Nodding her head to herself, she returned her ticket to her purse and then made her way down the corridor two more gates until she reached an area with a departing flight to Hong Kong. She would stay there until her real flight was about to depart.

* * *

Standing across the corridor at a table in a small café kiosk, Chang Su watched the woman sit in the half-full waiting area for the Hong Kong flight. There was no way she would go to that city, she thought. Not after making the brush pass with that bastard. She too had been trained to sit in another area until just before the departure of her actual flight.

She looked at the cast on her left arm and thought about Jake Adams. He had been so good to her and so good for her, yet she had been forced to deceive him and run like a rat from a sinking ship. Maybe he would understand.

Focus, Su. There would be no way to follow her if she jumped on a plane at the last minute. No way to get a ticket that fast. No way to be sure the flight was not full.

Where would she go? That depended so much on the buyer, Su was sure. And who would that be?

She would not have to wait long. A half an hour later, the woman got up from her seat and walked down through the terminal only four gates and strolled through the ticket agents toward the aircraft.

What? This made no sense. Standing across from the ticket counter, people flowing across in front of her, Su checked again the destination. That made no sense, she thought.

The woman was boarding a Korean Air flight to Vladivostok, Russia.

Su had to get on that flight. She hurried across to the ticket counter to try to exchange her ticket to Shanghai for one to Russia.

* * *

Jake Adams, sitting on the cement bench in the small holding cell, shifted his gaze from the dank floor to Agent Fisher across from him. They had been there for seven hours and had not said more than a few words to each other, each knowing they were being observed through a two-way mirror on one wall.

Why had they not tried to question them, Jake wondered? They had pulled all of their identification and were probably doing a thorough check on both of them. What would they find? Not much in the public system on him, that was for sure. However, if they looked beyond the normal law enforcement channels, he could be in trouble, even though he had done nothing wrong. Nothing they knew about anyway. What about his new partner, though?

“I told you to pay those damn parking tickets,” Jake said to Fisher, breaking the silence. He had to do something drastic to get the hell out of there.

Jake got up and went to the mirror, pressing his face against the glass. “Listen you fuckin’ fascists, I’m an American citizen. I’ve done nothing wrong but buy your damn T.V.s and radios for the past ten years.” He pounded his fists against the glass.

Fisher laughed. “You’re a funny guy, Jake. Appeal to their capitalism. I like that.”

“You got a better idea?”

Rising from his chair, Fisher unbuckled his pants, turned around and then lowered them to the floor and bent over, exposing his white ass to the mirror.

“Shit,” Jake said. “That’s gonna show up on the Internet.”

Fisher pulled his pants up and tucked his shirt in before closing them and zipping up.

“Yeah, and I haven’t worked out in weeks.”

Suddenly, the door unlocked and swung inward. The first to enter was a Korean officer in a uniform. Jake expected an escort, but what he saw next surprised him. In walked his friend, Lieutenant Colonel Stan Bailey, wearing civilian clothes.