Hong Kong

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Hong Kong Page 38

by Stephen Coonts


  Jake vaulted a rail to gain a little distance, then did it again.

  He slammed open the door at the bottom of the stairwell and charged through, right past two marines with assault rifles.

  They turned and knelt.

  As the York blasted through the door the marines opened fire in full-automatic mode.

  The impact of the bullets staggered the York and gave Jake another second of lead, but that was all.

  Fortunately the York didn’t attack the marines. It ignored them and ran by, limping slightly, using its hand on whatever was handy to help stay balanced.

  Jake ran through the metal detector at the main entrance, blasted through a group of American tourists waiting to talk to consulate personnel about leaving Hong Kong, and on out the front door.

  The York was four seconds behind him.

  “Jesus!” one tourist exclaimed to a marine guard. “What in hell was that?”

  “A York unit,” the sergeant replied.

  “Who was it chasing?” the tourist’s wife asked.

  “That is our new charge d’affaires.”

  “Oh, Lord,” the woman moaned. “Why in the world did we ever leave Moline?”

  There wasn’t much traffic, so Jake sprinted across the street without breaking stride and ran into the next building, a huge office tower. The entire first floor consisted of a variety of shops, the interior walls of which were floor-to-ceiling glass. The effect was stunning.

  Jake Grafton glanced over his shoulder, checking that the York wasn’t too close, then dashed into a shop that had an exterior exit.

  Sure enough, the York attempted to cut the corner and smashed into the glass, which literally exploded from the impact.

  Shards of glass flew everywhere as screaming shop girls dove for cover. The York stumbled, went to its knees. Jake hit the bar for the outside door, triggering an alarm, and blasted on through.

  In the center of the reception area of the next building was a large pool filled with giant Japanese goldfish. Water trickled in from a slime-covered waterfall. The whole thing was ringed with a variety of stunning tropical flowers.

  Jake leaped to a small rock in the center of the pool, then leaped on across to the other side.

  Charlie York tried to make the same leap … and fell into the pool.

  With legs and arm churning, it rose, slime dripping from the barrels of its minigun, and splashed wildly after Grafton, who gained three or four seconds on the York.

  The next building was the hotel. The doorman shouted at Jake as he ran toward him, but the uniformed man cleared out of the way when he saw the York coming, still decorated with green pond slime.

  People in the hotel lobby ran for cover, screaming, shouting, getting behind whatever was handy as Jake ran by, looking for a sign or symbol that might indicate the pool’s location.

  He slowed as he went by the front desk. “Where’s the pool?” he roared at the little squad of clerks in their bright red blazers.

  One of them pointed toward the rear of the hotel.

  Jake ran that way.

  He saw a short stairs, then a double door. Aha! A sign.

  Two turns, one more door, and he found himself on the edge of a large swimming pool. He went around one side, slowed to a walk. His chest was heaving. Fortunately there was no one in the pool.

  The York blasted through the door, slamming it open.

  It saw Jake, started for him, then slowed, its head turning back and forth, scanning.

  It came to a halt two yards past the shallow end, on the side opposite Grafton.

  “Smart,” Jake muttered. “The damned thing is too smart.”

  Obviously the York appreciated the dilemma. Regardless of which way it chose to approach Grafton, he could escape by going in the other direction. He could even escape by jumping in the water.

  Unless the York could swim.

  Naw! Four hundred-plus pounds of titanium and hydraulic fluid, Kevlar and computer chips?

  The York began moving forward, toward the deep end of the pool. It removed a pole the maintenance personnel used to vacuum the bottom of the pole from its hook on the wall.

  The pole was far too short to reach. Apparently the York realized that fact, for it cocked its arm to throw the pole like a javelin. The butt end of the pole hit the wall behind the York.

  Charlie York moved toward the shallow end, where there was more room to throw the thing.

  Jake retreated toward the deep end. He suspected the York could heave that light pole with excellent velocity, and he wanted all the distance he could get.

  He was right. The pole came like a Zulu spear and nearly got him.

  When it realized the pole had missed, the York bent down and began breaking off tile with its claws. Then it backhanded the pieces the length of the pool at Jake.

  He misjudged the first one, which almost got him on the arm.

  The odds were with the York. It had him trapped.

  How long would it keep this up? How much of a charge was on its battery?

  Enough, apparently.

  Jake dodged piece after piece of tile.

  Then the door flew open and Tommy Carmellini and Tiger Cole came blasting through. They had power cords in their arms.

  Callie was right behind them.

  The two men stopped dead, sized up the situation, then began looking around for a place to plug in the cords.

  The York half turned, watched them, waiting—probably—for threatening behavior, which didn’t seem to be coming.

  As it turned its head to check Jake’s location, Callie charged the thing. She hit it in the side with her shoulder, her legs driving as if she were an all-pro tackle taking out a nose guard. She heard Jake’s shout, then the force of her charge carried her and the York into the pool, where they hit with a mighty splash.

  Foam welled up, obscuring the water.

  Jake ran around the pool toward them. If the York got hold of her …

  He hit the water in a running dive.

  He was stroking toward them when he saw Callie’s head break water.

  The York had used its hand to get itself erect, its feet on the bottom.

  As it stood it saw Jake swimming toward it.

  And went for him.

  “Get out of the damn pool,” Cole shouted.

  Grafton managed to turn, to stroke toward the deep end. Over his shoulder he caught a glimpse of Callie climbing from the water.

  The York followed Jake, walking on the bottom.

  It went deeper and deeper, reaching for the man, who couldn’t see how far behind the York was.

  Terror flooded him. He was so tired.

  “Get out of the damn pool!” It was Cole, shouting again.

  Jake got to the end, reached up for the edge with both hands, and heaved himself up, out of the water.

  The York was only ten feet behind. Its stalk was the only part that protruded above the water.

  As Grafton got his feet out of the water, Cole threw one end of a plugged-in extension cord into the pool.

  The York kept coming. There was just too much water and too little current.

  It reached the end of the pool, turned, and started for the ladder in the corner.

  “The damned thing is going to climb outta there,” Jake shouted. “Get that cord out of the water and bring me a female end.”

  Carmellini ran down the side, meeting Jake halfway. The hundred-foot cord was plugged into a socket near the door to the room and appeared to be long enough.

  Jake ran back toward the York, which was slowly and laboriously trying to climb the ladder with one hand.

  It slipped and fell back in.

  Jake slowed, walked the rest of the way.

  The York grasped the top of the ladder railing with its only hand and climbed the first two steps. Now it needed to release its hold on the top of the railing while it balanced itself and get a new hold farther back so it could complete its climb. This was where it fell the last time.


  This time it slid its hand along the railing …

  The damn thing had an uncanny ability to learn.

  It was going to get up the ladder, onto the concrete …

  Jake leaned in from the right side, the side with the missing arm, and jabbed the female end of the extension cord into the receptacle on its back.

  The York froze, half in, half out of the water.

  It had gone into its rest cycle.

  Callie ran toward him. Jake turned and caught her as she threw herself into his arms.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  “You guys have a way to go to perfect those York units,” Jake Grafton told Virgil Cole as they drove through Kowloon on their way to the railroad station at Lo Wu, a mile or so from the border. The army was gathering there.

  “If they were any better you wouldn’t be here.”

  “I grant you that, but still …”

  “Write a letter to my company, a guy named Harvey Keim. Tell him what you observed, what you think. He’ll be pleased that you took the time to help.”

  Callie was sitting in the middle of the limo’s backseat, between her husband and Cole.

  “Is that all you two have to talk about? Those damn robots?”

  “Well—” Cole said, coloring slightly. “I’m sorry it wasn’t much of a vacation for you folks.”

  “I didn’t mean that,” Callie stated emphatically. “You guys haven’t seen each other in twenty-eight years.” She made a gesture of exasperation.

  “It’s been an exciting visit,” Cole agreed.

  Callie opened her mouth to speak, then closed it when she felt Jake squeeze her hand.

  As they rode they watched the people walking beside the road. Many carried army weapons on their shoulders and a makeshift pack on their back. There were so many of them … .

  “Looks to me like you have more than ten thousand troops,” Jake commented.

  “I was thinking the same thing.”

  “Be honest. How would you rate the chances of overthrowing the Communists?”

  Tiger Cole thought a moment. “Fair. I think a majority of the Chinese people are ready for a change, and a revolution is the only way they’re going to get it. Rebellion has busted out all over. There’s fighting in every major city, units of the armed forces are refusing to fight the rebels, people are thinking seriously about what comes next. If the Chinese want change badly enough, they can accomplish anything. We’ll just have to live the tale and hope it turns out well.”

  The driver pulled the limo to a stop as near to the station as he could. The passengers got out and stretched their legs.

  The aroma of shark cooking in a deep-fat fryer wafted across them. A street vendor had set up business nearby.

  The driver opened the trunk and passed out a sleeping bag and a small backpack. Jake had given Cole the Colt in the shoulder holster, which he was wearing. Now Jake helped Cole put on the backpack.

  “This is ridiculous, you know,” Jake said to Cole. “You’re on the Fortune magazine list of five hundred richest Americans, and you boil your earthly possessions down to a pistol, a backpack, and a sleeping bag?”

  “In the age of hypocrisy a man has to travel light.”

  “I’ve heard there is such a thing as underpacking,” Callie remarked, “though I’ve never gone there myself.”

  “After a couple hundred miles I’ll be down to a toothbrush and one extra pair of socks,” Cole replied. “I’ll give the backpack to some lucky soul who wants to make it into a hat.”

  Another car drove up. Rip Buckingham and Wu Tai Kwong got out, along with two women, one old and one in her thirties.

  The younger woman had been crying. Rip took her in his arms and held her tightly as he swayed ever so slightly back and forth. He didn’t seem to care who was watching.

  “I wish you would stay,” she whispered.

  “I’m a newspaperman, Sue Lin. This is the story of a lifetime. I have to go.”

  “I know,” she whispered.

  Wu hugged the old woman, bent down and whispered something to her, then picked up his backpack and walked away. He looked back once, paused, then continued on into the crowd, which swallowed him.

  Rip lingered. “I want you and Lin Pe to go to Australia,” he said to his wife. “I mean it. No ifs, ands, or buts. I don’t want to walk all over China worrying about you.”

  “We’ll worry about you.”

  “That’ll be enough worry for the whole family. Lin Pe, will you and Sue Lin do as I ask?”

  Both women nodded.

  He put them back in the car finally, murmured something to the driver. The car pulled into a gap in the passing traffic and crept away.

  Rip came over to where Cole and the Graftons were standing. “Hello, Admiral. I owe you a debt of gratitude for rescuing my brother-in-law.”

  Jake just nodded and shook the outstretched hand. “Good luck, Mr. Buckingham. Don’t be too harsh in your stories on the archcriminal Virgil Cole.”

  “I’ll try to be objective and fair.”

  “I’ll hold you to that,” Cole said, serious as always. Buckingham winked at Grafton, shook Callie’s hand, then shouldered his packs and walked away.

  “How long will you stay in Hong Kong?” Cole asked Jake.

  “A couple of weeks, according to the weenie at State. He’s probably lying so I won’t squawk too much. You know how it is—I’ll leave when they tell me to go back to the states, and not before.”

  “I love Hong Kong,” Cole said, quite unnecessarily. He stood looking around, breathing in the sights and smells and sounds. “It’s a unique, magical place. Nowhere else quite like it.”

  Callie Grafton found herself nodding in agreement. She too found Hong Kong fascinating. “When you get back to America,” she told Cole, “come see us. If you’re broke, call and we’ll wire you the price of a bus ticket.”

  That remark brought a shadow of a grin to Cole’s features. “I’ll remember the invitation,” he said, offering his hand. Callie shook it, then Jake.

  “There is one thing I still don’t know,” Jake said as Cole picked up his bags. “Who shot China Bob Chan?”

  “Ooh,” Cole said, grunting a little as he hefted his pack. “I did, of course. He knew too much.”

  “Why didn’t the CIA tape pick up a conversation?”

  “I knew the office was bugged, so I stopped in the secretary’s office, and Chan stopped because I did. We discussed our business right there. He decided he wanted to show me a letter he had received, so he opened the door and walked across to his desk, me tagging along behind.

  “You see, he knew everything and he wanted money, a lot of it. Even if I paid him off, I thought it probable that he’d tattle to the authorities with specifics they could check. So as I followed him to the desk I drew the pistol from my pocket and shot him in the head when he turned around. Bob didn’t even see it coming. Not a bad way to check out, if you gotta go, and he did. Then I ditched the pistol in a trash-can and went downstairs and got on with the mixing and mingling.”

  “So you knew there was nothing on the tape that would implicate you?”

  “I was pretty sure there wasn’t, but the truth was that I didn’t care. Still don’t. I wouldn’t pay ten cents for a videotape of me doing the shooting, if one existed. Sonny Wong never understood that simple fact, which tells you how bright he really was. You can tell State I shot Chan if you want to—now that the revolution has begun, it just doesn’t matter.”

  “Doesn’t sound like you’re planning on returning to the states any time soon.”

  “I’m not.” Cole sucked in a bushel of air and let it out. “Life’s an adventure. I’ve been a high-tech exec long enough, been a diplomat, been rich, been to all the black-tie parties I can stand. Now I’m going in this direction, going wherever the road leads.”

  “Keep the faith, shipmate.”

  “Yeah, Jake Grafton. I’ll do that. For you and me and all of those guys who fought the good fight in their
time.”

  They shook hands, then Tiger Cole walked out of Jake Grafton’s life.

  Jake turned to Callie. “I hate to say this, but I’m up to my ears in work at the consulate. Want to have the kitchen make us a pizza and help me tackle the paperwork?”

  “Yes,” she said and put her arm around his waist as they walked back to the car.

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  Alas, there is no “correct” way to render the Chinese language into English. Prior to the Communist takeover of China, the widely used Wade-Giles system of transliteration gave us Hong Kong, Peking, Mao Tse Tung, Chiang Kai Shek, etc. The Communist bureaucracy spawned a new system, Pinyin, to transliterate Mandarin, which the bureaucrats decreed would be putonghua, or “common speech,” i.e., the “official” language of China. (Mandarin is the language of northern China; the language of southern China is Cantonese.)

  Unlike Wade-Giles, Pinyin often fails to present phonetic clues to English speakers, or, amazingly, the speakers of any language that uses the Roman alphabet. For example, qi in Pinyin is pronounced chee. We anglicize or transliterate Paris, Rome, and Moscow, and the French, Italians, and Russians seem unruffled. Why must Hong Kong become Xianggang?

  For reasons we can only speculate about, in the last two decades American and British newspaper editors have embraced Pinyin with remarkable fervor, which leads to nonsense such as “The President ate Peking duck in Beijing.”

  In his excellent book, The Making of Hong Kong Society (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991), Dr. W. K. Chan points out that there are at least fifty-four different ways of presenting any Cantonese name in English. Faced with this plethora of choices, the author has spelled the names in this book in a way that seemed to him easiest for an English speaker to pronounce. Any complaints should be addressed to the Pinyin troglodyte in Peking, or Beijing, or wherever.

 

 

 


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