 |
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| "Plenty of
action and intrigue" |
| —
Publishers Weekly |
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| "Another big
read." |
| —
Irish Times |
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| “Lynds brings
beautifully to life the growing Asian superpower
China with its devious political manipulations,
vast populace, countless dialects and complex codes
of behavior. This latest is as exciting as ever
… a fast-paced action story.” |
| —
Curled Up with a Good Book |
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| The
Altman Code |
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| The
Altman Code |
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| "Ms. Lynds has enough surprises
and unsuspected allegiances to provide both tension and
mystery until the last pages. Pull up a beach chair, slather
on that sunscreen, and settle in to the latest Lynds/Ludlum
gripping convolution where escape is the name of the game." |
| — The Santa Barbara News-Press |
The Story
When word reaches the president of the United States that
a Chinese cargo ship is transporting chemicals to a rogue
nation intent on creating new biological weapons, the president
knows he must act quickly to obtain the proof he needs. Covert-One
agent Jon Smith is sent to rendezvous in Taiwan with another
agent who has acquired the ship's true manifest. But before
Smith can get the document, he is ambushed, the second agent
is murdered, and the evidence is destroyed. Smith escapes
with only his life and a verbal message --- the president's
biological father is still alive, held prisoner by the Chinese
for fifty years. As the mysterious ship draws closer to its
end port, Smith is losing time in uncovering the truth about
the vessel and its cargo --- a truth that probes the secrets
of the Chinese ruling party, a faction in Washington working
to undermine the elected government, and an international
cabal thrusting the world to the brink of war.
Chapter One
Tuesday, September 12th
Washington, D.C.
There was a saying in Washington that lawyers ran the government,
but spies ran the lawyers. The city was cobwebbed with intelligence
agencies, everything from the legendary CIA and FBI and the
little-known NRO to alphabet groups in all branches of the
military and government, even in the illustrious departments
of State and Justice. Too many, in the opinion of President
Samuel Adams Castilla. And too public. Rivalries were notoriously
a problem. Sharing information that inadvertently included
misinformation was a bigger problem. Then there was the dangerous
sluggishness of so many bureaucracies.
The president was worrying about this and a brewing international
crisis as his black Lincoln Towncar cruised along a narrow
back road on the northern bank of the Anacostia River. Its
motor was a quiet hum, and its tinted windows opaque. The
car rolled past tangled woods and the usual lighted marinas
until it finally rattled over the rusted tracks of a rail
spur, where it turned right into a busy marina that was completely
fenced. The sign read:
Anacostia Seagoing Yacht Club
Private. Members Only.
The yacht club appeared identical to all the others that
lined the river east of the Washington Navy Yard. It was an
hour before midnight.
Only a few miles above the Anacostia’s confluence with
the broad Potomac, the marina moored big, open-water power
cruisers and long-distance sailing boats, as well as the usual
weekend pleasure craft. President Castilla gazed out his window
at the piers, which jutted out into the dusky water. At several,
a number of salt-encrusted oceangoing yachts were just docking.
Their crews still wore foul-weather gear. He saw that there
were also five frame buildings of varying sizes on the grounds.
The layout was exactly what had been described to him.
The Lincoln glided to a halt behind the largest of the lighted
buildings, out of sight of the piers and hidden from the road
by the thick woods. Four of the men riding in the Lincoln
with him, all wearing business suits and carrying mini-submachine
guns, swiftly stepped out and formed a perimeter around the
car. They adjusted their night-vision goggles as they scanned
the darkness. Finally, one of the four turned back toward
the Lincoln and gave a sharp nod.
The fifth man, who had been sitting beside the president,
also wore a dark business suit, but he carried a 9mm Sig Sauer.
In response to the signal, the president handed him a key,
and he hurried from the car to a barely visible side door
in the building. He inserted the key into a hidden lock and
swung the door open. He turned and spread his feet, weapon
poised.
At that point, the car door that was closest to the building
opened. The night air was cool and crisp, tainted with the
stench of diesel. The president emerged into it — a
tall, heavy-set man wearing chino slacks and a casual sport
jacket. For such a big man, he moved swiftly as he entered
the building.
The fifth guard gave a final glance around and followed with
two of the four others. The remaining pair took stations,
protecting the Lincoln and the side door.
***
Nathaniel Frederick (“Fred”) Klein, the rumpled
chief of Covert-One, sat behind a cluttered metal desk in
his compact office inside the marina building. This was the
new Covert-One nerve center. In the beginning, just four years
ago, Covert-One had no formal organization or bureaucracy,
no real headquarters, and no official operatives. It had been
loosely composed of professional experts in many fields, all
with clandestine experience, most with military backgrounds,
and all essentially unencumbered — without family, home
ties, or obligations, either temporary or permanent.
But now that three major international crises had stretched
the resources of the elite cadre to the limits, the president
had decided his ultra secret agency needed more personnel
and a permanent base far from the radar screens of Pennsylvania
Avenue, the Hill, or the Pentagon. The result was this “private
yacht club.”
It had the right elements for clandestine work: It was open
and active twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, with
intermittent but steady traffic from both land and water that
followed no pattern. Near the road and the rail spur but still
on the grounds was a helipad that looked more like a weed-infested
field. The latest electronic communications had been installed
throughout the base, and the security was nearly invisible
but of cutting-edge quality. Not even a dragonfly could cross
the periphery without one of the sensors picking it up.
Alone in his office, the sounds of his small night-time staff
muted beyond his door, Klein closed his eyes and rubbed the
bridge of his longish nose. His wire-rimmed glasses rested
on the desk. Tonight he looked every one of his sixty years.
Since he had accepted the job of heading Covert-One, he had
aged. His enigmatic face was riven with new creases, and his
hairline had receded another inch. Another problem was on
the verge of erupting.
As his headache lessened, he sat back, opened his eyes, put
his glasses back on, and resumed puffing on his ever-present
pipe. The room filled with billows of smoke that disappeared
almost as soon as he produced them, sucked out by a powerful
ventilating system installed specifically for the purpose.
A file folder lay open on his desk, but he did not look at
it. Instead, he smoked, tapped his foot, and glanced at the
ship’s clock on his wall every few seconds. At last,
a door to his left, beneath the clock, opened, and a man with
a Sig Sauer strode across the office to the outer door, locked
it, and turned to stand with his back against it.
Seconds later, the president entered. He sat in a high-backed
leather chair across the desk from Klein.
“Thanks, Barney,” he told the guard. “I’ll
let you know if I need you.”
“But Mr. President — “
”You can go,” he ordered firmly. “Wait
outside. This is a private conversation between two old friends.”
That was partly true. He and Fred Klein had known each other
since college days.
The guard slowly recrossed the office and left, each step
radiating reluctance.
As the door closed, Klein blew a stream of smoke. “I
would’ve come to you as usual, Mr. President.”
“No.” Sam Castilla shook his head. His titanium
glasses reflected the overhead light with a sharp flash. “Until
you tell me exactly what we’re facing with this Chinese
freighter — The Dowager Empress, right? — this
one stays between us and those of your agents you need to
work on it.”
“The leaks are that bad?”
“Worse,” the president said. “The White
House has turned into a sieve. I’ve never seen anything
like it. Until my people can find the source, I’ll meet
you here.” His rangy face was deeply worried. “You
think we have another Yinhe?”
Klein’s mind was instantly transported back: It was
1993, and a nasty international incident was about to erupt,
with America the big loser. A Chinese cargo ship, the Yinhe,
had sailed from China for Iran. U.S. intelligence received
reports the ship was carrying chemicals that could be used
to make weapons. After trying the usual diplomatic channels
and failing, President Bill Clinton ordered the U.S. Navy
to chase the ship, refusing to let it land anywhere, until
some sort of resolution could be found.
An outraged China denied the accusations. Prominent world
leaders jawboned. Allies made charges and counter charges.
And media around the globe covered the standoff with banner
headlines. The stalemate went on for an interminable twenty
days. When China finally began to noisily rattle its sabers,
the U.S. Navy forced the ship to stop on the high seas, and
inspectors boarded the Yinhe. To America’s great embarrassment,
they uncovered only agricultural equipment — plows,
shovels, and small tractors. The intelligence had been faulty.
With a grimace, Klein recalled it all too well. The episode
made America look like a thug. Its relations with China, and
even its allies, were strained for years.
He puffed gloomily, fanning the smoke away from the president.
“Do we have another Yinhe?” he repeated. “Maybe.”
“There’s ‘maybe’ remotely, and ‘maybe’
probably. You better tell me all of it. Chapter and verse.”
Klein tamped down the ash in his pipe. “One of our
operatives is a professional Sinologist who’s been working
in Shanghai the past ten years for a consortium of American
firms that are trying to get a foothold there. His name’s
Avery Mondragon. He’s alerted us to information he’s
uncovered that The Dowager Empress is carrying tens of tons
of thiodiglycol, used in blister weapons, and thionyl chloride,
used in both blister and nerve weapons. The freighter was
loaded in Shanghai, is already at sea, and is destined for
Iraq. Both chemicals have legitimate agricultural uses, of
course, but not in such large quantities for a nation the
size of Iraq.”
“How good is the information this time, Fred? One-hundred
percent? Ninety?”
“I haven’t seen it,” Klein said evenly,
puffing a cloud of smoke and forgetting to wave it away this
time. “But Mondragon says it’s documentary. He
has the ship’s true invoice manifest.”
“Great God.” Castilla’s thick shoulders
and heavy torso seemed to go rigid against his chair. “I
don’t know whether you realize it, but China is one
of the signatories of the international agreement that prohibits
development, production, stockpiling, or use of chemical weapons.
They won’t let themselves be revealed as breaking that
treaty, because it could slow their march to acquiring a bigger
and bigger slice of the global economy.”
“It’s a damned delicate situation.”
“The price of another mistake on our part could be
particularly high for us, too, now that they’re close
to signing our human-rights treaty.”
In exchange for financial and trade concessions from the
U.S., for which the president had cajoled and arm-twisted
a reluctant congress, China had all but committed to signing
a bilateral human-rights agreement that would open its prisons
and criminal courts to U.N. and U.S. inspectors, bring its
criminal and civil courts closer to Western and international
principles, and release long-time political prisoners. Such
a treaty had been a high-priority goal for American presidents
since Dick Nixon.
Sam Castilla wanted nothing to stop it. In fact, it was a
long-time dream of his, too, for personal as well as human-rights
reasons. “It’s also a damned dangerous situation.
We can’t allow this ship . . . what was it, The Dowager
Empress?”
Klein nodded.
“We can’t allow The Dowager Empress to sail into
Basra with weapons-making chemicals. That’s the bottom
line. Period.” Castilla stood and paced. “If your
intelligence turns out to be good, and we go after this Dowager
Empress, how are the Chinese going to react?” He shook
his head and waved away his own words. “No, that’s
not the question, is it? We know how they’ll react.
They’ll shake their swords, denounce, and posture. The
question is what will they actually do?” He looked at
Klein. “Especially if we’re wrong again?”
“No one can know or predict that, Mr. President. On
the other hand, no nation can maintain massive armies and
nuclear weapons without using them somewhere, sometime, if
for no other reason than to justify the costs.”
“I disagree. If a country’s economy is good,
and its people are happy, a leader can maintain an army without
using it.”
“Of course, if China wants to use the incident as
an excuse that they’re being threatened, they might
invade Taiwan,” Fred Klein continued. “They’ve
wanted to do that for decades.”
“If they feel we won’t retaliate, yes. There’s
Central Asia, too, now that Russia is less of a regional threat.”
The Covert-One chief said the words neither wanted to think:
“With their long-range nuclear weapons, we’re
as much a target as any country.”
Castilla shook off a shudder. Klein removed his glasses and
massaged his temples. They were silent.
At last, the president sighed. He had made a decision. “All
right, I’ll have Admiral Brose order the navy to follow
and monitor The Dowager Empress. We’ll label it routine
at-sea surveillance with no revelation of the actual situation
to anyone but Brose.”
“The Chinese will find out we’re shadowing their
ship.”
“We’ll stall. The problem is, I don’t know
how long we’ll be able to get away with it.” The
president went to the door and stopped. When he turned, his
face was long and somber, his jowls pronounced. “I need
proof, Fred. I need it now. Get me that manifest.”
“You’ll have it, Sam.”
His big shoulders hunched with worry, President Castilla
nodded, opened the door, and walked away. One of the secret
service agents closed it.
Alone again, Klein frowned, contemplating his next step.
As he heard the engine of the president’s car hum to
life, he made a decision. He swiveled to the small table behind
his chair, on which two phones sat. One was red — a
single, direct, scrambled line to the president. The other
was blue. It was also scrambled. He picked up the blue phone
and dialed.
***
Wednesday, September 13th
Kaohsiung, Taiwan
After a medium-rare hamburger and a bottle of Taiwanese lager
at Smokey Joe’s on Chunghsiao-1 Road, Jon Smith decided
to take a taxi to Kaohsiung Harbor. He still had an hour before
his afternoon meetings resumed at the Grand Hi-Lai Hotel,
when his old friend, Mike Kerns from the Pasteur Institute
in Paris, would meet him there.
Smith had been in Kaohsiung — Taiwan’s second-largest
city — nearly a week, but today was the first chance
he’d had to explore. That kind of intensity was what
usually happened at scientific conferences, at least in his
experience. Assigned to the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute
for Infectious Diseases — USAMRIID, he was a medical
doctor and biomolecular scientist as well as an army lieutenant
colonel. He had left his work on defenses against anthrax
to attend this one — the Pacific Rim International Assembly
on Developments in Molecular and Cell Biology.
But scientific conferences, like fish and guests, got stale
after three or four days. Hatless, in civilian clothes, he
strode along the waterfront, marveling at the magnificent
harbor, the third largest container port in the world, after
Hong Kong and Singapore. He had visited here years ago, before
a tunnel was built to the mainland and the paradisiacal island
became just another congested part of the container port.
The day was postcard clear, so he was able to easily spot
Hsiao Liuchiu Island, low on the southern horizon.
He walked another fifteen minutes through the sun-hazed day
as seagulls circled overhead and the clatter of a harbor at
work filled his ears. There was no sign here of the strife
over Taiwan’s future, whether it would remain independent
or be conquered or somehow traded off to mainland China, which
still claimed it as its own.
At last, he hailed a cab to take him back to the hotel. He
had hardly settled into the back seat, when his cell phone
vibrated inside his sport jacket. It was not his regular phone,
but the special one in the hidden pocket. The phone that was
scrambled.
He answered quietly, “Smith.”
Fred Klein asked, “How’s the conference, Colonel?”
“Getting dull,” he admitted.
“Then a small diversion won’t be too amiss.”
Smith smiled inwardly. He was not only a scientist, but an
undercover agent. Balancing the two parts of his life was
seldom easy. He was ready for a “small diversion,”
but nothing too big or too engrossing. He really did want
to get back to the conference. “What do we have this
time, Fred?”
From his distant office on the bank of the Anacostia River,
Klein described the situation.
Smith felt a chill that was both apprehension and anticipation.
“What do I do?”
“Go to Liuchiu Island tonight. You should have plenty
of time. Rent or bribe a boat out of Linyuan, and be on the
island by nine. At precisely ten, you’ll be at a small
cove on the western shore. The exact location, landmarks,
and local designation have been faxed to a Covert-One asset
at the American Institute in Taiwan. They’ll be hand
delivered to you.”
“What happens at the cove?”
“You meet another Covert-One, Avery Mondragon. The
recognition word is ‘Orchid.’ He’ll deliver
an envelope with The Dowager Empress’s actual manifest,
the one that’s the basis for the bill to Iraq. After
that, go directly to the airport in Kaohsiung. You’ll
meet a chopper there from one of our cruisers lying off shore.
Give the pilot the invoice manifest. Its final destination
is the Oval Office. Understood?”
“Same recognition word?”
“Right.”
“Then what?”
Smith could hear the chief of Covert-One puffing on his pipe.
“Then you can go back to your conference.”
The phone went dead. Smith grinned to himself. A straight-forward,
uncomplicated assignment.
Moments later, the taxi pulled up in front of the Hi-Lai
Hotel. He paid the driver and walked into the lobby, heading
for the car-rental desk. Once the courier had arrived from
Taipei, he would drive down the coast to Linyuan and find
a fishing boat to take him quietly to Liuchiu. If he could
not find one, he would rent one and pilot it himself.
As he crossed the lobby, a short, brisk Chinese man jumped
up from an armchair to block his way. “Ah, Dr. Smith,
I have been waiting for you. I am honored to meet you personally.
Your paper on the late Dr. Chambord’s theoretical work
with the molecular computer was excellent. Much food for thought.”
Smith smiled in acknowledgment of both greeting and compliment.
“You flatter me, Dr. Liang.”
“Not at all. I wonder whether you could possibly join
me and some of my colleagues from the Shanghai Biomedical
Institute for dinner tonight. We are keenly interested in
the work of both USAMRIID and the CDC on emerging viral agents
that threaten all of us.”
“I’d very much like that,” Smith said smoothly,
giving his voice a tinge of regret, “but tonight I have
another engagement. Perhaps you are free some other time?”
“With your permission, I will contact you.”
“Of course, Dr. Liang.” Jon Smith continued on
to the desk, his mind already on Liuchiu Island and tonight.

Chapter Two
Washington, D.C.
Wide and physically impressive, Admiral Stevens Brose filled
his chair at the foot of the long conference table in the
White House underground Situation Room. He took off his cap
and ran his hand over his gray military buzz cut, amazed —
and worried — by what he saw. President Castilla, as
always, occupied the chair at the head. But they were the
only two in the large room, drinking their morning cups of
coffee. The rows of seats at the long table around them were
ominous in their emptiness.
“What chemicals, Mr. President?” Admiral Brose
asked. He was also the chairman of the joint chiefs.
“Thiodiglycol — “
“Blister weapons.”
“ — and thionyl chloride.”
“Blister and nerve gases. Damn painful and lethal,
all of them. A wretched way to die.” The admiral’s
thin mouth and big chin tightened. “How much is there?”
“Tens of tons.” President Castilla’s grim
gaze was fixed on the admiral.
“Unacceptable. When — “ Brose stopped abruptly,
and his pale eyes narrowed. He took in all the empty chairs
at the long table. “I see. We’re not going to
stop The Dowager Empress en route and search her. Instead,
you want to keep our intelligence about the situation secret.”
“For now, yes. We don’t have concrete proof,
any more than we did with the Yinhe. We can’t afford
another international incident like that, especially with
our allies less ready to back us in military actions, and
the Chinese close to signing our human-rights accord.”
Brose nodded. “Then what do you want me to do, sir?
Besides keeping a lid on it?”
“Send one ship to keep tabs on the Empress. Close enough
to move in, but out of sight.”
“Out of sight maybe, but they’ll know she’s
there. Their radar will pick her up. If they’re carrying
contraband, their captain at least should know. He’ll
be keeping his crew hyper alert.”
“Can’t be helped. That’s the situation
until I have absolute proof. If things turn rocky, I expect
you and your people to not let them escalate into a confrontation.”
“We have someone getting confirmation?”
“I hope so.”
Brose pondered. “She loaded up the night of the first,
late?”
“That’s my information.”
Brose was calculating in his mind. “If I know the Chinese
and Shanghai, she didn’t sail until early on the second.”
He reached for the phone at his elbow, glanced at the president.
“May I, sir?”
Samuel Castilla nodded.
Brose dialed and spoke into the phone. “I don’t
care how early it is, Captain. Get me what I need.”
He waited, hand again running back over his short hair. “Right,
Hong Kong registry. A bulk carrier. Fifteen knots. You’re
certain? Very well.” He hung up. “At fifteen knots,
that’s eighteen days, give or take, to Basra with a
stop in Singapore, which is the usual course. If she left
around midnight on the first, she should arrive early in the
morning on the nineteenth, Chinese time, at the Straits of
Hormuz. Three hours earlier Persian Gulf time, and evening
of the eighteenth our time. It’s the twelfth now, so
in six-and-a-half days she should reach the Hormuz Straits,
which is the last place we can legally board her.” His
voice rose with concern. “Just six-plus days, sir. That’s
our time frame to figure out this mess.”
“Thanks, Stevens. I’ll pass it on.”
The admiral stood. “One of our frigates would be best
for what you want. Enough muscle, but not overkill. Small
enough that there’s a chance she’ll be overlooked
for a time, if the radar man’s asleep or lazy.”
“How soon can you get one there?”
Brose picked up the phone once more. This time, his conversation
was even briefer. He hung up. “Ten hours, sir.”
“Do it.”
***
Liuchiu Island, Taiwan
By the green glow of his combat watch, agent Jon Smith read
the dial once more — 2203 — and silently swore.
Mondragon was late.
Crouched low in front of the razor-sharp coral formation
that edged the secluded cove, he listened, but the only sound
was the soft surge of the South China Sea as it washed up
onto the dark sand and slid back with an audible hiss. The
wind was a bare whisper. The air smelled of saltwater and
fish. Down the coast, boats were harbored, motionless, glowing
in the moonlight. The day tourists had left on the last ferry
from Penfu.
In other small coves up and down the western coast of the
tiny island, a few people camped, but in this cove there was
only the wash of the sea and the distant glow of Kaohsiung’s
lights, some twenty kilometers to the northeast.
Smith checked his watch again — 2206. Where was Mondragon?
The fishing boat from Linyuan had landed him in Penfu harbor
two hours ago, where he had hired a motorcycle and driven
off on the road that encircled the island. When he found the
landmark described in his directions, he hid the cycle in
bushes and made his way here on foot.
Now it was already 2210, and he waited restlessly, uneasily.
Something had gone wrong.
He was about to leave his cover to make a cautious search
when he felt the coarse sand move. He heard nothing, but the
skin on his neck crawled. He gripped his 9mm Beretta, tensed
to turn and dive sideway to the sand and rocks, when a sharp,
urgent whisper of hot breath seared his ear:
“Don’t move!”
Smith froze.
“Not a finger.” The low voice was inches from
his ear. “Orchid.”
“Mondragon?”
“It’s not the ghost of Chairman Mao,” the
voice responded wryly. “Although he may be lurking here
somewhere.”
“You were followed?”
“Think so. Not sure. If I was, I shook them.”
The sand moved again, and Avery Mondragon materialized, crouching
beside Smith. He was short, dark-haired, and lean, like an
oversized jockey. Hard-faced and hungry looking, too, with
a predator’s eyes. His gaze flitted everywhere —
around the shadows of the cove, at the phosphorescent surge
of the sea on the beach, and out toward the grotesque shapes
of coral jutting like statues from the dusky sea beyond the
surf.
Mondragon said, “Let’s get this over. If I’m
not in Penfu by 2330, I don’t make it back to the mainland
by morning. If I don’t make it back, my cover’s
blown.” He turned his gaze onto Smith. “So you’re
Lieutenant Colonel Smith, are you? I’ve heard rumors.
You’re supposed to be good. I hope half the rumors are
true. What I’ve got for you is damn near radioactive.”
He produced a plain, business-size envelope and held it up.
“That’s the goods?” Smith asked.
Mondragon nodded and tucked it back inside his jacket. “There’s
some background you need to tell Klein.”
“Let’s get on with it then.”
“Inside the envelope’s what The Dowager Empress
is really carrying. On the other hand, the so-called ‘official’
manifest — the one filed with the export board —
is smoke and mirrors.”
“How do you know?”
“Because this one’s got an invoice stamped with
the ‘chop’ — the personal Chinese character
seal — of the CEO, as well as the official company seal,
and it’s addressed to a company in Baghdad for payment.
This manifest also indicates three copies were made, which
means there’s another copy somewhere. The second copy
is certainly in Baghdad or Basra since it’s an invoice
for the goods to be paid for. I don’t know where the
third copy is.”
“How can you be sure you don’t have the copy
filed with the export board?”
“Because I’ve seen it, as I said. The contraband
isn’t listed on it. The CEO’s seal is missing.”
Smith frowned. “Still, that doesn’t sound as
if what you’ve got there is guaranteed”
“Nothing’s guaranteed. Anything can be faked
— character seals can be counterfeited, and companies
in Baghdad can be dummies. But this is an invoice manifest
and has all the correct signs of an inter-office and inter-company
document sent to the receiving company for payment. It’s
enough to justify President Castilla’s ordering the
Empress stopped on the high seas and our boys taking an intimate
look, if we have to. Besides, it’s a lot more ‘probable
cause’ than the rumors we had with the Yinhe, and if
it is fake, it proves there’s a conspiracy inside China
to stir up trouble. No one can blame us, not even Beijing,
for taking precautions.”
Smith nodded. “I’m convinced. Give it to —
“
“There’s something else.” Mondragon glanced
around at the shadows of the tiny cove. “One of my assets
in Shanghai told me a story you’d better pass on to
Klein. It’s not in the paperwork, for obvious reasons.
He says there’s an old man being held in a low-security
prison farm near Chongqing — that’s Chiang Kai-shek's
old World War Two capital, ‘Chungking’ to Americans.
He claims he’s been jailed in one place or another in
China since 1949, when the Communists beat Chiang and took
over the country. My asset says the guy speaks Mandarin and
other dialects, but he sure as hell doesn’t look Chinese.
The old man insists he’s an American named David Thayer.”
He paused and stared, his expression unreadable. “And,
hold onto your hat . . . he claims he’s President Castilla’s
real father.”
Smith stared. “You can’t be serious. Everyone
knows the president’s father was Serge Castilla, and
he’s dead. The press covers that family like a blanket.”
“Exactly. That’s what caught my interest.”
Mondragon related more details. “My asset says he used
the exact phrase, ‘President Castilla’s real father.’
If the guy’s a fraud, why make up a yarn so easily disproved?”
It was a good question. “How reliable is your asset?”
“He’s never steered me wrong or fed me disinformation
that I’ve caught.”
“Could it be one of Beijing’s tricks? Maybe a
way to make the president back off about the human-rights
accord?”
“The old prisoner insists Beijing doesn’t even
know he’s got a son, much less that the son’s
now U.S. president.”
Smith’s mind raced as he calculated ages and years.
It was numerically possible. “Exactly where is this
old man being — “
“Down!” Mondragon dropped flat to the sand.
Heart racing, Smith dove behind a coral outcrop as shouts
in angry Chinese and a fusillade of automatic fire hammered
from their right, close to the sea. Mondragon rolled behind
the outcropping and came up in a crouch beside Smith, his
9mm Glock joining Smith’s Beretta, aiming into the dark
of the cove, searching for the enemy.
“Well,” Mondragon said gloomily, “I guess
I didn’t shake them.”
Smith wasted no time on recriminations. “Where are
they? You see anything?”
“Not a damn thing.”
Smith pulled night-vision goggles from inside his windbreaker.
Through them, the night turned pale green, and the murky coral
formations out in the sea grew clear. So did a short, skinny
man naked to the waist, hovering near one of the statue-like
pillars. He was knee-deep in water, holding an old AK-74 and
staring toward where Smith and Mondragon hunched.
“I’ve got one,” he said softly to Mondragon.
“Move. Show a shoulder. Look like you’re coming
out.”
Mondragon rose, bent. He thrust his left shoulder out as
if about to make a run for it. The skinny man behind the pillar
opened fire.
Smith squeezed off two careful rounds. In the green light,
the man jerked upright and pitched onto his face. A dark stain
spread around him as he floated face down in the sea.
Mondragon was already back down. He fired. Someone, somewhere
in the night, screamed.
“Over there!” Mondragon barked. “To the
right! There’s more!”
Smith swung the Beretta right. Four green men had broken
cover and dashed away from the sea toward the inland road.
A fifth lay sprawled on the beach behind them. Smith fired
at the lead man of this outflanking group. He saw him clutch
his leg and go down, but the two behind him grabbed him by
each arm and dragged him onward into cover.
“They’re flanking us!” Sweat broke on Smith’s
forehead. “Move back!”
He and Mondragon leaped up and pounded across the coral sand
toward the ridge that sealed the cove in the south. Another
fusillade behind them said a lot more than three of their
attackers were still standing. With a jolt of adrenaline,
Smith felt a bullet sear through his windbreaker. He scrambled
up the ridge into thick bushes and fell behind a tree.
Mondragon followed, but he was dragging his right leg. He
flopped behind another tree.
A fresh fusillade ripped through leaves and small branches,
spraying the air and making Smith and Mondragon choke with
the dust. They kept their heads down. Mondragon pulled a knife
from a holster on his back, slit his trousers, and examined
his leg wound.
“How bad is it?” Smith whispered.
“Don’t think the bullet hit anything serious,
but it’s going to be hard to explain back on the mainland.
I’ll have to hide out ‘on vacation,’ or
fake an accident.” His smile was pained. “Right
now, we’ve got more to worry about. That small group’s
on our flank by now, probably up on the road, and the gang
in the cove is going to drive us to them. We’ve got
to keep moving south.”
Agreeing, Smith crawled ahead through the brush, forged hard
and tough under the sea-bent trees by the constant wind and
spray of the South China Sea. They made slow progress, Smith
clearing a path for Mondragon. They used only their feet,
knees, and elbows, as they cradled their pistols. The bushes
gave reluctantly, the branches tearing at their clothes and
hair. Smaller twigs broke and scratched their faces, drawing
blood from forearms and ears.
At last they reached the high bank above another less-sheltered
angle in the island’s coastline. It was far too open
to the sea to be called a cove. As they crawled eagerly on
toward the road, voices carried in the windless night from
there. Behind them, four silent shadows materialized ashore,
while two remained ankle deep in the sea. One of the shadows,
larger than the rest, motioned the others to spread out. Bathed
in gentle moonlight, they broke apart and emerged as four
men dressed completely in black, their heads covered by hoods.
The man who had ordered them to fan out bent over. Smith
heard a whispery version of a deep, harsh voice give instructions
over what was probably a hand-held radio.
“Chinese,” Mondragon analyzed quietly, listening.
His tones were tight. He was in pain. “Can’t make
out all of the words, but it sounds like the Shanghai dialect
of Mandarin. Which means they probably did follow me from
Shanghai. He’s their leader.”
“You think someone tipped them?”
“Possibly. Or I could’ve made a mistake. Or I
could’ve been under surveillance for days. Weeks. No
way to know. Whatever, they’re here, and they’re
closing in.”
Smith studied Mondragon, who seemed to be as tough as the
ocean-forged brush. He was in pain, but he would not let it
stop him.
“We could play the odds,” Smith told him. “Head
on for the road. Are you up for that? Otherwise, we’ll
make a stand here.”
“Are you crazy? They’ll massacre us here.”
They crawled deeper into the brush and trees, away from the
sea. They had gone a slow twenty more feet, when footsteps
approached from the rear, grinding through the undergrowth.
Simultaneously, they saw the shadows of the inland group pushing
toward them and the sea. Their pursuers had guessed what they
would do and were closing in from front and back.
Smith swore. “They’ve heard us, or found our
trail. Keep moving. When the ones from the road get close,
I’ll rush them.”
“Maybe not,” Mondragon whispered back, hope in
his voice. “There’s a rock formation over there
to the left that looks like good cover. We can hide in there
until they pass. If not, we might be able to hold out until
someone hears the shooting and shows up.”
“It’s worth a try,” Smith agreed.
The rock formation rose out of the brush in the moonlight
like an ancient ruin in the jungles of Cambodia or the Yucatan.
Composed of odd-shaped coral groupings, it made a crude kind
of fort, with cover on all sides and openings to fire through,
if that was what they had to do in the end. It also contained
a depression in the center, where they could sink low, nearly
out of sight.
With relief, they hunkered in the basin, their weapons ready,
as they listened to the sounds of the island in the silvery
moonlight. Smith’s scratches and small puncture wounds
stung with sweat. Mondragon eased his leg around, trying to
find a position that was less painful. Their tension was electric
as they waited, watching, listening. . . . Kaohsiung’s
lights glowed against the sky. Somewhere a dog barked, and
another took it up. A car passed on the distant road. Out
on the sea, the noise of the motor of a late-returning boat
growled.
Then they heard voices, again murmuring in the Shanghai dialect.
The voices came closer. Closer. Feet crackled against the
tough brush. Shadows passed, broken up by the brush. Someone
stopped.
Mondragon raised his Glock.
Smith grabbed his wrist to stop him. He shook his head —
don’t.
The shadow was a large man. He had removed his hood, and
his face was colorless, almost bleached looking, under a shock
of oddly pale red hair. His eyes reflected like mirrors as
they searched the coral formation for any shape or movement.
Smith and Mondragon held their breaths in the depression inside
the rocks.
For a long moment, the man continued his slow surveillance.
Smith felt the sweat trickling down his back and chest.
The man turned and moved away toward the road.
“Whewwww,” Mondragon let out a soft breath. “That
was — “
The night exploded around them. Bullets slammed into coral
and whined away into the trees. Rock chips showered down in
a violent hail. The entire dark seemed to be firing at them,
muzzle flashes coming from all sides. The large, red-headed
man had seen them but had made no move until he had alerted
the others.
Smith and Mondragon returned fire, searching frantically
among the moonlit shadows of the brush and trees for a visible
enemy. Their cover had now become a disadvantage. There were
only two of them. Not enough in the darkness to beat off at
least seven, possibly more. Their ammunition would soon run
low.
Smith leaned close to Mondragon’s ear. “We’ll
have to make a break for it. Head for the road. My motorcycle’s
not far away. It can carry both of us.”
“There’s less fire coming from the front. Let’s
pin them down and break that way. Don’t worry about
me. I can do it!”
Smith nodded. He would have said the same thing. Right now,
with adrenaline pumping through them like lava, either of
them could run from here to the moon, if they had to.
On a count of three, they opened fire and rushed out of the
rocks toward the road, running low while still moving fast,
dodging brush and trees. Moments later, they were through
the circle of attackers. At last, the gunfire was from behind,
and the road was close ahead.
Mondragon gave a grunt, stumbled, and went down, ripping
through the tangled vegetation as he fell. Smith instantly
grabbed his arm to help him up, but the agent did not respond.
The arm was without energy, lifeless.
“Avery?”
There was no answer.
Smith fell to his haunches beside the downed agent and found
hot blood on the back of his head. Instantly, he felt for
a pulse in his neck. None. He inhaled, swore, and searched
Mondragon’s pockets for the envelope. At the same time,
he heard the killers approach, trying to be quiet in the heavy
undergrowth.
The envelope was missing. Frantically he checked every pocket
again, taking whatever he found. He felt around Mondragon’s
body, but the envelope was gone. Definitely gone. And there
was no more time.
Cursing inwardly, he sprinted away.
Clouds had built over the South China Sea and drifted across
the moon, turning the night pitch black as he reached the
road. The deep cover of darkness was a rare stroke of good
luck. Relieved, but furious about Mondragon’s death,
he ran across and dropped into the cover of the low ditch
that bordered the two-lane road.
Panting, he aimed both Mondragon’s Glock and his Beretta
back at the trees. And waited, thinking. . . . The envelope
had been in an inside pocket. Mondragon had gone down at least
twice that Smith had seen. The envelope could have fallen
out then, or perhaps when they were crawling through the brush,
or even when they were running, their jackets flapping.
Frustrated and deeply worried, his grip tightened on the
two weapons.
After a few minutes, a single figure emerged warily at the
road’s edge, looked right and left, and started across,
his old AK-74 ready. Smith raised the Beretta. The motion
attracted the killer’s attention. He opened fire blindly.
Smith dropped the Glock, aimed the Beretta, and shot twice
in rapid succession.
The man slammed forward onto his face and lay still. Smith
grabbed the Glock again and opened a withering, sweeping fire
with both weapons. Shouts and screams sounded from the far
side of the road.
As they echoed in his mind, he leaped out of the ditch and
tore away through the trees toward the center of the island.
His feet pounded, and his lungs ached. Sweat poured off him.
He did not know how far he ran, or for how long, but he became
aware there were no sounds of pursuit. No trampling of brush.
No running feet. No gunshots.
He crouched in the cover of a tree for a full five minutes.
It seemed like five hours. His pulse pounded into his ears.
Had they given up? He and poor Mondragon had killed at least
three, wounded two more, and perhaps had shot others.
But little of that was important right now. If the killers
had quit their pursuit, it meant only one thing — they
had what they had come for. They had found the secret invoice
manifest of The Dowager Empress. |