“What kind?”
“Financial records, biographies of some of the players. Thomas Grainger, for instance. I learned all about him. Angela Yates, your friend who was killed. You.”
“What did you learn about me?”
He grinned. “Wouldn’t you like to know?”
“Yes,” Milo said without smiling. “I would.”
Gray’s smile disappeared. “The usual. Family, the job-that you used to be one of those Tourists but had moved into administration-and that you were the one guy who had been interested in uncovering what happened in the Sudan. That it cost you your family, and your freedom. In some ways, of the two of us I’m the one who got off light.”
Milo leaned back, not liking the easy way Gray placed them both in the same category. He hated that this man knew so much about him. “How far have you come?”
“Far enough. I’ve already written the first two articles on the department. I e-mailed one to the New York Times this morning.”
That surprised Milo; then it didn’t. It was why Gray was willing to meet him now. He’d already unleashed the Chinese revenge. E-mail was notoriously insecure, of course. By now it would have been flagged and a Company representative would be sitting with the editor-in-chief, ready to make a deal. “They won’t print it.”
“Then I’ll try the Washington Post. And I’ll keep trying until I’ve got a sympathetic ear.” He had the earnest tone of a true believer. “The evidence is there-the fiscal black holes that pay for the department, the links between Senator Nathan Irwin and the oil lobby wanting to push the Chinese out of Africa. It was international-you know that, right? They had help from French oil. It wasn’t just an American plot; it was a Western plot. This is as big as stories come, Milo, and I’m not going to let it go.”
25
The waitress returned, and Gray ordered another round. Milo hardly noticed. He was working his way through everything, feeling paralyzed by the slow buildup of revelations. Rick was, he felt sure, Xin Zhu, the Chinese spymaster. Before following that to its logical conclusion, though, he felt he had to deal with the remarkable coincidence of their meeting now. “Last night, when you called Zsuzsa, did you clear it with Rick?”
“Of course I did. We’d had a ton of progress over the last week, and I was writing like mad. I was exhausted. I wanted to see her again.”
“What kind of progress?”
“Well, we learned what happened to you, for instance.”
“What happened to me?”
“You survived, didn’t you? Grainger’s letter told us you were investigating, but we weren’t sure if you were one of the casualties or not. Everyone wanted your ass, after all. You got out of prison and went to live in New Jersey-we knew that-but then you disappeared, and we didn’t know until this week that you really were still alive.”
“How’d you figure that out?”
“Ask Rick. He came in with the information.”
Milo nodded at this. “So you had all the information you needed, and you wanted to see your girlfriend.”
“But Rick wanted to be cautious. Last night he finally told me it was safe to call.”
“And me? Did he know I was around?”
“What do you think?” said Gray. “Yeah. He said you might be around. And that I shouldn’t worry about you.”
Milo thought a moment, then said, “They’re done with you. You do realize that, right? You’re on your own now.”
Gray shook his head. “I might look like I’m alone and helpless, but trust me-they’ve got my back. They want this story out as much as I do.”
Milo turned to gaze at the crowds in the mall. “They’re not there.”
“These guys are much better than you think.”
Milo stared at him, at the confidence he was working hard to sustain. Gray hadn’t asked the most important question, which was whether or not Milo was working for Tourism again. Either it hadn’t occurred to him, or it had, and he was too terrified to ask. That’s how people worked. They avoided the things that most terrified them, even if knowing could save their lives.
Milo changed tactics. “Why do you think your friend Rick wants to expose the Department of Tourism?”
Gray blinked at his denseness. “Why do you think? To ruin it. To finish it off, so it won’t keep blustering into China’s business.”
“Rick’s a smart guy,” said Milo. “He knows that as soon as you get rid of Tourism, another department will take its place. There’s always clandestine funds available. He gets rid of Tourism, and he loses the one secret he has on the Company. That’s not how a spy works. When you get hold of intelligence, you keep it and use it. You only give it up if you’re forced to do so.”
The lesson was lost on Gray. He raised a hand and patted the air. “Rick’s no more complicated than the rest of us, Milo. He was angry about the Sudan. An angry man isn’t going to fool around with intelligence games.”
Milo doubted that. What Gray couldn’t really know in his bones was that espionage rarely, if ever, provoked wild emotions from men like Rick. Xin Zhu and Alan Drummond and Nathan Irwin-and even Milo himself for a while-worked from behind desks, and, to them, losses and gains were extended mathematical equations. Variables represented trade alliances, corporate influence, nuclear programs, spheres of influence, and the occasional human being. No one could get so upset over math.
“What kind of man is Rick?”
“Physically? Fat, but he carries his weight well.”
“Personality? Is he a joker?”
“Oh, the R joke.” Gray shook his head. “That was his single one-liner during the past two months. This guy doesn’t laugh. Doesn’t drink or smoke. He’s like an angry priest.”
“What about women?”
“Never came up, not really. But I get the sense that if he has one it’s a little wife back in Beijing he would never think of cheating on.”
Just the kind of man you’d trust, thought Milo. While Marko’s drunk, womanizing Xin Zhu was tailor-made for him. Milo wiped his mouth to suppress a smile of admiration.
Not just admiration but awe, because he’d followed everything through to its logical conclusion. Zhu had played this brilliantly.
Henry Gray had been used from the start. Thomas Grainger had tried to use him, posthumously, to reveal an operation he had grown disgusted with (disgust was one of the few emotions administrators knew intimately), and then Xin Zhu had used him to collect enough intelligence about Tourism so that he could pretend to have a mole working in it.
Because there was no mole in Tourism, and there never had been.
He couldn’t help it; the smile flowered on his face. Gray leaned forward and said, “What?”
No mole.
Now, everything fell into place beautifully.
It began with a story written by Grainger. The letter would have remained in his lawyer’s office if he’d remained alive. The Company had killed him, though, and so it was sent to Henry Gray. The Company tried to clean up the mess as it too often did-by killing-but there was a mistake. Gray survived, and so did the story of the Sudanese operation run through the Department of Tourism. Again, the Company was at fault, for its attempted murder led Gray straight into the hands of Xin Zhu, a Chinese spymaster who kept Gray around to help with the investigation.
At the beginning, this had probably been the entire plan: Help a journalist humiliate the Company as payback for its reckless interference in Africa.
Then, during one of Xin Zhu’s absences he found himself in Kiev, liaising with the SSU, and learned of one Marko Dzubenko, a blustering lieutenant planning to defect. With the kind of creativity that’s rare among administrators, he asked the SSU to please not arrest Dzubenko-some sort of deal would have had to be struck. Bring him to the next embassy party, will you? In person, pretending to be a drunk blowhard, he gave Dzubenko a story he couldn’t help but use later to buy himself a new life in America.
It was beautiful because it was so clean. In the end Z
hu did so little. He helped an American journalist work on a story. He told a lie to a defector. Later, when he decided Tourism needed another kick, he passed along the request for the Chinese ambassador to the UN to deliver a single sentence about the Sudan, then refuse to go into details. Zhu knew that there had been a senator working behind the scenes, and any senator would panic at the possibility that the Chinese held a scandal in their hands.
It was beautiful, too, in that its minimalism reflected the minimalism of the original operation in the Sudan. Kill one man and make it look as if the Chinese committed the murder. Zhu’s plan was even more beautiful because no one needed to be killed, or even hurt, whereas last year’s plot had killed one man initially, resulting in riots in the Sudan that had killed more than eighty; then more died just to keep it quiet. Milo was stunned by the audacity of Xin Zhu’s ingeniousness.
“What is it?” Gray insisted.
“Where’s the house?”
“What?”
“Where’s the safe house? I want to see it.”
Gray considered that, staring past Milo at the diners and shoppers, probably looking for his backup. “Why?”
“Because I’d love to meet Rick,” he said. He really did want to meet Xin Zhu but knew it wouldn’t happen. Not today, at least.
“This might all sound like a joke to you, but you won’t be safe there.”
“Henry, really. I’d love to meet him. Hell, I might even offer him my services.”
“Why are you jerking my chain?”
“I’m jerking nothing.”
Gray considered that, then shrugged and stood up. “I’m not going to be responsible for what they do to you.”
“You’re officially exempt from responsibility.”
Milo paid the bill, then followed Gray back out to the street, where he waved down a taxi. Gray negotiated with the driver while Milo went back and forth over his realizations, checking them off one after the other. He was sure of this.
When Gray turned to look at the cars behind them, Milo said, “They’re not there, are they?”
“What you don’t know could fill the Vatican.”
To reach Budaörs, the taxi driver took the same highway Milo had used to reach Budapest, then exited near the IKEA and ended up in a town of small, clay-tiled houses with muddy yards and new cars. To their left a fallow field opened up, and then a right placed them on a gravel street of new houses, with foreign cars and reinforced concrete gates. They stopped at number 16, and Milo paid the taxi bill with the last of his forints.
“Your last chance,” Gray said as he used a key on the gate.
“No cars,” Milo noted.
“They like public transport. More democratic.”
“Of course.”
Gray rang the bell on the front door, then used another key. No one waited for them, and the first room they entered was stripped down to its bare walls and hardwood floor. Gray stopped, shocked, then ran to the other rooms, finally shouting, “Motherfucker! They took my computer!”
Involuntarily, Milo started to laugh. Xin Zhu had only been interested in sending a message, and Milo was there to receive it: We know who you are and what you did. We can touch you whenever we like.
He took the pieces of his phone out of his pocket and put it back together, walking slowly through the empty rooms. He found Gray coming out of a bathroom, wiping vomit from his lips. He started to say something to Milo but changed his mind.
Milo’s phone rang. He took it to the kitchen.
“Riverrun, past Eve.”
“And Adam’s,” said Milo.
“You’re in some serious shit,” said Drummond. “Irwin’s on the warpath for you.”
“I bet he is.”
“Get yourself back home.”
“I’ll need my credit cards.”
“They’ll be working in an hour, okay?”
“One more thing,” said Milo. “You can unfreeze the department. There’s no mole.”
“What?”
Milo gave him the short version, and though he was doubtful, Drummond said, “What kind of bastard dreams up such a thing?”
“Don’t talk that way about the man I love,” Milo said, then hung up.
26
By the time he landed at JFK, it was Tuesday morning. He drove a rental into midtown and, knowing the lot beside 101 West Thirty-first would be full of employees’ cars, parked in a public lot on West Twenty-ninth and walked over to the Avenue of the Americas, then up the busy sidewalk to Thirty-first. Cameras positioned along the streets surrounding the Department of Tourism’s headquarters tracked his progress, and when he reached the entrance to the inconspicuous brick tower two doormen were already waiting.
In the old days, he would have known these huge men who acted as Tourism’s first barrier against intrusion, and called them by name, but these two had come along after his dismissal, and they were as mute and humorless as their predecessors. There was one familiar face, though-Gloria Martinez, who worked the front desk. She was pretty but stern; this had never stopped Milo from flirting with her in an unending game of proposal and rejection.
The last time she’d seen him, Milo was being beaten to the ground by three doormen in this cold lobby. Now, the look on her face suggested she had assumed him dead, and she showed the maximum emotion her position would allow: “Good to see you again, sir.”
“Ms. Martinez, you are, as ever, a sight for sore eyes.”
When he stopped to be photographed by the computer and stated his name for the microphone, Gloria Martinez didn’t even blink when he said, “Sebastian Hall.” She had only ever known him as Milo.
In the elevator the doormen patted him down, then used a key to access the twenty-second floor. The ride was silent, and Milo watched their stony faces in the mirrored walls.
When the doors opened, he involuntarily caught his breath. This, for six years, had been his daily destination, his nine-to-five. A quietly productive floor of cubicles and computers and busy Travel Agents combing through the intelligence sent in by a whole world of Tourists. Now, though, the most striking thing about the Department of Tourism was its emptiness. The maze of cubicles was still here, but they were empty. In a few, kneeling in mock prayer, technicians fooled with computer cables, tagging and logging hard drives, but they were like sweepers cleaning up after a parade, not even raising their heads to acknowledge the visitors heading to the offices along the far wall.
On the left and right, windows watched over the midpoints of skyscrapers under slate clouds, and ahead of them, through open blinds, was the office Grainger had used when running the department. It had been taken over by Owen Mendel, then the surprisingly young Alan Drummond, and now, behind the large desk, sat a prematurely white-haired man with reading glasses-fifty-five, Milo remembered. It was a familiar face from CNN talk shows and the occasional C-SPAN sleeper. He was a man not used to having to work through such volumes of paperwork, not used to having to lead a mole hunt. Senator Nathan Irwin.
Milo hoped that, for their first meeting, he wouldn’t snap and murder the senator.
Then again, he wasn’t sure what he hoped.
Irwin wasn’t alone in the office. Drummond was leaning back in a chair used for visitors, and two young men in suits stood around, slouched. One muttered into a cell phone and watched the visitors approach, then turned and said something to Irwin, who took off his glasses. All the men watched them enter.
“Thanks, guys,” Drummond said as he got to his feet, and the two doormen withdrew.
Irwin remained seated, so Drummond made introductions. “Nathan, this is Sebastian Hall.”
Irwin blinked at him, then shook his head. “You mean-”
“Yes,” Drummond cut in, “but for security we stick to work names.”
“Of course,” said Irwin. He finally pushed himself up and stretched a large hand across his desk-actually, Grainger’s desk. The department had decided to keep the oak monstrosity after his death.
Mil
o stepped forward and shook the senator’s cool hand.
“This,” Drummond continued, “is Max Grzybowski, the senator’s chief of staff.”
The blond young man stuck out a hand, smiling goofily. “Pleased to meet you.”
The one with the phone kept whispering into it but raised a hand and offered a salutary smile.
“He’s Dave Pearson, legislative director,” said Drummond, and Milo waved casually back. “They’re Senator Irwin’s personal assistants, and they’ve been given the same clearance as the senator.”
The senator nodded agreeably, then pointed at Milo. “I’ve been looking forward to meeting you, er, Hall. Have time for a drink?”
“That’s up to Mr. Drummond, sir. I’m due for some debriefing, I think.”
“It’s up to me now,” Irwin said before Drummond could answer, “and I want us to chat before your debriefing. Max, can you take care of it?”
After months on the road, there was something freakishly civilized about what followed. Max took out a BlackBerry. “Four o’clock all right?”
Milo shrugged.
Max said to Irwin, “That way you can still make dinner at six with the Joshipuras. Stout-it’s a bar up on Thirty-third.”
Dave Pearson finally ended his call. “Would you like me on hand?”
Everyone looked at Irwin, who shook his head. “Let’s keep this off the record, shall we, Hall?”
“I’m a big fan of off the record, sir.”
“Four at Stout should work,” Max told them both. “Minimal clientele.”
“You sound like a regular,” said Milo.
“Max is a regular of all the world’s better drinking establishments,” Irwin informed him, then settled back down. “Now, though, I’d like to hear a little more about your theory.”
“My theory?”
“Your theory that there is no mole in Tourism.”
There were no spare chairs, so Milo remained standing. “Sure. But first you have to get your mind around one thing that’s almost nonexistent in our line of work.”
“What’s that?” asked Irwin, and Drummond leaned forward expectantly.
The Nearest Exit Page 26