He glanced back just before he turned the corner—they were keeping their distance.
Rounding the corner, another man stepped away from the wall with a pistol in his hand. It must have been in his pocket.
Jake didn’t think, he merely reacted. He dove for the pistol, seizing it and wrenching it away from the man.
No doubt Grafton’s sudden appearance had startled the man, who must have thought that the sight of the weapon would freeze Grafton, make him stand still in the hope of not being shot. In any event, the American’s move was so unexpected that it succeeded.
Jake Grafton’s adrenaline was flowing nicely. With his assailant’s pistol in his left hand, he hit him with all his might in the throat and dropped the man to the sidewalk, gagging.
Now he ran, fighting the crowd, toward the waterfront.
Soldiers were spread across the pier in front of the ferry landing.
They ’ve stopped the ferries!
Jake veered right, toward the small basin beside the huge shopping mall for cruise ship passengers. In this basin small boats normally took on and discharged passengers for harbor tours.
There were a handful of tour boats tied to the pier, all of them sporting little blue-and-white awnings to keep off the sun and rain. Jake ran along the pier until he saw a man working on one. The engine was running, although the boat was still securely moored.
By now Jake had the pistol in his pocket that he had taken off the man in the street. He was going to have a nice collection of these things if he lived long enough.
He looked behind him. The people who had been following were apparently lost in the crowd, which filled most of the street.
He pulled out his wallet, took out a handful of bills, replaced the wallet in his hip pocket. He jumped down into the boat and waved the bills at the boatman, who was in his early thirties, with long hair that hung across his face.
The boatman said something in Chinese. Jake gestured toward Victoria. “Over there,” he said and offered the money again.
The boatman ignored the money. He pointed back toward the soldiers and shook his head.
Okay.
Jake looked at the boat’s controls as the boatman showered him with Chinese. The throttle was there, a wheel, a stick shift for a forward-reverse transmission … the boat was idling.
“Out. Get out!” Jake pulled the pistol just far enough from his pocket for the boatman to see it, then pointed toward the pier.
Frightened, the boatman went. As he did, Jake Grafton jammed the money he had offered into the man’s shirt pocket. Must be my genial expression, Jake thought as he ran forward to untie the rope on the pier bollard.
With it free, he made his way aft as quickly as he could. Where are the men who were following me? Did they lose me in the crowd?
That must be it. They’re probably searching frantically right this minute.
With the bow and stern lines loose, Jake scrambled back to the tiny cockpit and spun the wheel while he jammed the throttle forward. The boat surged ahead, caroming off the boat moored in front of it.
He didn’t waste time but headed for the entrance to the basin.
There, on the pier! The men who followed him from the hotel! They stood watching. Now one of them removed a cell phone from his pocket and made a call.
There was a nice breeze and a decent sea running in the strait, so the little tour boat began pitching the moment it cleared the mouth of the basin.
Some soldiers around the ferry terminal were shouting and gesturing at him, so Jake turned his boat to the northeast, away from Hong Kong Island. Those guys are itching to shoot someone, he thought and decided to get well out of rifle range before he turned south to cross the strait.
In the helicopter circling over the police station, Hu Chiang also looked at his watch. The assault on the police barracks had gone like clockwork, for which he was supremely grateful. Wu Tai Kwong was supposed to be in the left seat of this chopper running the show; the others had insisted that Hu Chiang take Wu’s place.
As he watched the trucks loading small arms at the police barracks, Hu Chiang wondered just where Wu was … and Sonny Wong. No one had seen Sonny in days.
He had almost refused to take Wu’s place as the tactical leader. Generalissimo Hu Chiang—the thing was ridiculous. If the choice had been his he would have declined. Yet he remembered what Wu had said, so long ago when the revolution was just a dream: ‘The cause must be bigger than we are, worth more than we are, or we are wasting our lives pursuing it.”
“We cannot make a Utopia, fix all that is wrong with human society,” he had told Wu.
“True, but we can build a civilization better than the one we have. To build for future generations is our duty, our obligation as thinking creatures.”
Duty. That was Wu’s take on life. He was doing his duty.
So Hu Chiang was in the chopper this morning, half queasy, trying to keep his wits about him as the faithful stormed the police barracks on the southern tip of the Kowloon peninsula.
From this seat a few hundred feet up he could see much of Hong Kong harbor, which was dotted with dozens of moored ships from all over the earth and squadrons of lighters and fishing boats. He could see the airport at Lantau, the Kowloon docks and warehouses, the endless high-rises full of people with hopes and dreams of a better life, the office towers of Victoria’s Central District, and the spine of Hong Kong Island beyond.
The most interesting portion of the view was to the north, toward mainland China, hidden this morning in the June haze. Hong Kong was but a first step, then the revolution must go north, with or without Wu Tai Kwong or Hu Chiang … .
The radio sputtered again. The leader of the barracks assault was checking in. “Mission completed,” he said, so proud he almost couldn’t get the words out.
“Roger,” Hu Chiang replied and directed the chopper pilot to circle over the entrance to the highway tunnel under the strait.
The army had it blocked off this morning, of course. Forty or so troops were visible, a truck, and … a tank!
Yep. There it sat, right in front of the harbor tunnel entrance, squat and massive and ominous.
Hu Chiang picked up the mike and began talking.
Another helicopter, this one belonging to the PLA, was circling over Victoria’s Central District and the southern tip of Kowloon. General Tang was in the passenger seat. He had had the chopper pick him up at City Hall and was now looking the situation over.
He had certainly not expected the crowds that he saw coming toward Victoria’s Central District from the west and east. Connaught Road was crammed with people, as were Harcourt Road and Queensway, an endless stream of people coming from the Western District, Wanchai, and Happy Valley, all headed toward Central.
He had his troops deployed in the heart of the Central District and around City Hall, with his headquarters in the square in front of the Bank of the Orient.
The troops there seemed to be properly positioned, but the size of the crowds stunned Tang. This massive outpouring of people in defiance of the government he had not expected. It was almost as if … as if the people expected to swallow the troops.
For the first time, General Tang wondered if Sun Siu Ki or the party leaders in Beijing understood what was happening in Hong Kong.
A cry for help from the Kowloon police barracks snapped General Tang back to unpleasant reality. He motioned to the pilot of the helicopter, who swung out over the strait and flew toward the southern tip of Kowloon.
The pilot pointed out another chopper to General Tang, who had trouble seeing it at first.
“A television station helicopter,” the pilot said over the intercom. “I have seen it many times before. They must be taking pictures for the television.”
That, of course, was the last thing that General Tang wanted. Television pictures of this mass outpouring of antigovernment sentiment would shake the regime to its foundations. The people in Beijing had no idea, none at all!
&
nbsp; Tang waved angrily at the television helicopter. The pilot looked directly at him, then looked away.
“Can you talk to that pilot?” Tang demanded.
“Yes.” The army pilot changed the channels on the radio and called the helicopter.
Hu Chiang didn’t hear the army pilot’s call because he was talking on a different frequency to the squad leader in charge of the trucks carrying the weapons from the police barracks. These trucks had to get through the tunnel to Victoria, so the tank and army troops were going to have to be neutralized. Hu’s pilot heard the call, though, and told Hu about it on the intercom.
“Trouble,” the television station pilot said. “If we ignore him too long, he will have everyone in the world shooting at us.”
“Let’s do it to him first,” Hu said and pointed west toward the harbor as he spoke into the microphone on his headset. The pilot took the TV chopper in the indicated direction.
Tang forgot about the civilian helicopter when he got a glimpse of the police barracks and the uniformed bodies still sprawled upon the lawn, which had been used as a campground. Tang knew corpses when he saw them, and those men looked real dead.
He saw the trucks, which must be loading the weapons Tang knew were stored in the barracks.
He directed his pilot eastward.
The streets of Kowloon were packed with cars. With the tunnel to Victoria closed, there was no place for the Hong Kong Island traffic to go, so a massive traffic jam was the result. Traffic in the city was always bad, yet today it was impossible. People had abandoned the cars in gridlocked intersections. The weapons thieves were fools to assault the police barracks with the streets impassible.
They certainly weren’t going to make a fast getaway in all this traffic. His order to close the tunnel, he thought with a bit of pride, may have proved their undoing.
He again spoke to the pilot, who took him east a half mile until the machine was over the entrance to the harbor tunnel.
The troops were where they were supposed to be, the tank was there … . They just needed to be told that there were armed criminals in the vicinity … to be ready!
He consulted the printed frequency list his staff had given him this morning, then dialed the radio to the proper channel. He keyed the mike and began speaking. When he did so he naturally looked down at the people he was talking to, the soldiers surrounding the tank.
He was three words into his message when the tank exploded.
The explosion was not a massive fireball: but a cloud of smoke that jetted from the side of the thing, then seemed to envelop it.
As if it were hit by a wire-guided antitank weapon, General Tang thought, then realized that was exactly what had happened.
Out of the corner of his eye he saw a streak of fire in the air, not large. Before he could react a loud, metallic bang shook the chopper, followed by a severe vibration, then a slew to the right.
“We’ve been hit,” the pilot shouted over the intercom. He wrestled with the cyclic and collective, trying to gain control, even as the helicopter spun faster and faster to the right and began falling.
Michael Gao was a thirty-six-year-old security analyst with a finance degree from Harvard. He worked for one of the large American mutual funds that regularly invested in the Hong Kong market … when he was working. Just now he was engaged in high treason against the government of a sovereign nation. Dress it up any way you like, he thought wryly, shooting down an army helicopter with a Strella missile is going to be difficult to explain away in court. Ditto popping a tank.
He had wrestled with these issues a thousand times in the past year and always came back to the fact that he personally wanted the Communists out of power in China. He believed it would be better for everyone, including himself, if some form of democratic government were installed in Beijing. And he believed the conversion worth a major national convulsion. That being the case, it logically followed that he should personally commit himself to making it happen. So he had.
No going back now, he told himself as the helo completed the last few revolutions of its out-of-control spiral and smashed onto the top of a gravel dike around the tunnel entrance.
The chopper didn’t explode or burn. After the dust from the impact settled, just a wisp of smoke rose from the crumpled wreckage. No one emerged from the cockpit—no doubt the crew was dead or dying.
No one rushed to their aid.
Michael Gao realized with a start that he was hearing the popping of small arms. He looked down from the top of the building where he stood and watched his friends snipe at the troops around the smoking hulk of the tank.
With a gut-wrenching certainty, Michael Gao knew that if there had been any men in the tank, they too were now dead. The armor-piercing sabot he had fired raised the temperature of the metals it penetrated so high that the materials forming the tank’s interior would spontaneously ignite and cook the crew, if by some miracle they survived the initial concussion and thermal shock.
The soldiers near the tunnel entrance were lying in the street or trying to find cover. Bursts of automatic rifle fire created sparks where the bullets ricocheted off concrete and little puffs where they impacted. This was ridiculous! The rebels didn’t have time for this.
Gao leaned over the edge of the roof, shouted to the man who was on the roof of the lower building across the street, the one facing the tunnel entrance. “Use the loudspeaker!”
The man picked up the microphone. “PLA soldiers! Lay down your arms. You are surrounded. We will kill you all unless you lay down your arms and surrender.”
One by one, the demoralized soldiers threw their assault rifles on the street and raised their arms in the air.
When the general’s helicopter went down, Hu Chiang told his pilot to circle back over the tunnel entrance. He arrived in time to see the last of the soldiers guarding the tunnel throw down their arms.
The problem was the cars and trucks that filled the streets from curb to curb … and the tank that smoldered in the tunnel entrance. In their planning sessions the rebels had anticipated both problems. They had two solutions, both painted yellow and made by Caterpillar. They were on flatbed trucks parked in the rubble of a building being demolished. Now they came clanking onto the street with their blades down.
Vehicles that couldn’t move were bulldozed out of the way. Trucks were pushed up onto sidewalks, cars were stacked one atop the other. All this was accomplished in a bedlam of people running, screaming, protesting, begging the armed rebels not to ruin their cars … all to no avail. The bulldozers pushed and shoved and made a way, and soon the first truck carrying weapons taken from the police barracks armory was waiting near the tunnel entrance. The truck was covered with armed rebels hanging on every available protuberance.
One of the bulldozers backed up to the tank, and a cable was hooked to the thing. Then the dozer began pulling, dragging the tank out of the way.
When it was clear, the other bulldozer raised its blade and led the trucks into the tunnel.
Governor Sun’s secretary thought the New China News Agency weenie on the telephone was some kind of flake. This story of Jimmy Lee falling apart, worried about committing treason … Jimmy Lee? The top one percent of the top one percent of cool?
He put the radio censor on hold and told his colleague at the next desk, “Another nut case. This one wants to talk to the governor.”
“The governor will refuse.”
“I know.”
“He will be angry you asked.”
“What should I do? Perhaps the man is telling the truth.”
The man at the next desk surrendered. “Tell the governor. Let him make the decision.”
At Lantau Airport Ma Chao and his fellow fighter pilots were directed to don their flight gear and wait in the ready room, which they did. Apparently during the wee hours of the night Beijing had ordered a full alert.
Unfortunately, no amplifying orders had been received over the military radio communications net. The
telephone system was down, silencing the faxes and computers. An old Bruce Lee movie was playing on the television.
The ready room was abuzz with speculation. Everyone seemed to have an opinion—the more outlandish, the louder the proud possessor proclaimed it. They argued, wondered, gestured, and guessed. The Americans and Taiwanese were invading. The Japanese had declared war. There had been a coup in Beijing.
Ma Chao and his friends sat silently, taking it in, saying little. They thought they knew what was happening, but without explanations or verification from headquarters, they couldn’t be certain. Nor was there a need for immediate action.
Patience was needed, and Ma Chao had plenty. Like all the pilots, he was wearing a sidearm. He had the flap unbuttoned so he could get it out and into action quickly.
As he listened to the fantastic scenarios that were being paraded before the group as quickly as they were concocted, he thought about the commanding officer and his department heads, all Communists, all loyal to the regime, as far as Ma Chao knew.
When the crunch came Ma Chao and his three fellow conspirators were going to have to take charge, and that probably meant they would have to shoot some of the senior men. Ma Chao sat in the ready room wondering if he could do it.
He had assured Wu Tai Kwong that he could. “I am a soldier,” he said. “I have the personal courage to do what must be done.”
“You could shoot men you have served with for many years?”
“I do not know,” he finally replied, truthfully.
“Ah, my friend, on men like you the revolution will succeed or fail. You must use your best judgment, but you must not surrender. You must face unpleasant reality and do what the situation requires of you.”
He had nodded, knowing the truth of Wu’s words.
Wu always told the truth. All of it, never just a piece, and he never sugarcoated it. You got bald reality from him.
“Chinese pilots are poorly trained,” Wu told him and explained how Western air forces trained their pilots. “You Chinese pilots fly straight and level, relying on the ground controller to find the enemy and steer you to him. What if the ground controller is off the air, or the enemy refuses to fly straight and level, waiting for you to assassinate him? What then? Could you improvise?”
Hong Kong Page 24