by Larry Bond
~ * ~
E
scaping such a close call gave Ferguson an adrenaline rush, but he couldn’t put the energy to much use; the general and his aide left within a few minutes. Park and Li left the room as well but stayed upstairs in the cottage, their presence announced by a series of lights on the second floor. A pair of younger men, guards, came down into the room near the terrace and warmed their hands by the fire.
Deciding he’d seen all he was going to see, Ferguson made his way back to the guest house. Along the way he stopped at the barn. Sneaking in through the window, he scouted the large room but found nothing more interesting than a stash of heavyweight gear oil in the corner and a burned-out clutch plate that looked to date from the 1950s.
Climbing the gutter back to his room seemed dubious, so Ferguson slipped around to the front. The guards had disappeared, and the open door beckoned. He went up the steps and walked in, but before he could go up the stairs Ha spotted him and called out his name. He was standing near the great room, talking with a friend.
Ferguson went over, mentioning how warm the night was.
“Warm for now, yes,” said Ha, several notches beyond ripped.
“Drink?” asked his friend, who wasn’t far behind.
“Sure,” said Ferguson, thinking he might ask a few questions about Namgung.
They walked inside, Ferguson helping steady Ha as he made for the bar.
“Mr. Manski. Having a good time?”
“Mr. Li,” said Ferguson in English. He swept around, pretending to be drunk. “Drink?”
“No, thank you,” said Li. “We must rest now for the morning. The hunting starts at eight.”
“Eight.”
“Where is your escort?”
“Escort. Don’t know,” said Ferguson. “A short drink.”
“No, thank you,” said Li firmly, taking hold of the bottle. The other men had already retreated.
“I will have a chance to talk to Mr. Park soon?” said Ferguson.
“Very soon,” agreed Li.
“He’s an important man.”
“Yes.”
“Does he know many army officers in the People’s Democratic Republic?”
Li stiffened. “He knows many people.”
“General Namgung was very impressive. Important.”
“Namgung,” said Li, correcting his pronunciation. “Mr. Park does not know him well.”
“Yes,” said Ferguson. He told Li in Russian that it was important to know many military people, because their discipline rubbed off on you, and they were very good drinkers.
Li accompanied him to the stairs. As they started up, Ferguson remembered he had left the door to his room locked.
Ordinarily, this wouldn’t be a problem-—a quick twist with his pick and tension spring, and he could easily get in. But he didn’t have his tools with him.
Improvise.
“Maybe another drink,” he said to Li.
“No, no. Come now, Mr. Manski. To bed.”
One of the young women who’d been serving the guests was coming down the steps. Ferguson saw that her hair was pinned at the back, clipped by a pair of simple bobby pins. He lurched toward her, knocking her down. As she shrieked, he grabbed one of the pins from her hair.
“Sagiva deuryeoyo,” he said drunkenly. “I’m sorry, I’m sorry.”
Li shook his head but smiled, then wagged his finger as the girl escaped. “Naughty, naughty,” he told Ferguson.
“To bed,” said Ferguson, hoping Li would leave him. He didn’t, though, following Ferguson as he walked up the steps.
Ferguson worked the bobby pin between his fingers as he walked down the hall. As good as he was with locks, it was tough to cover a pick. Under the best circumstances it took a few seconds to get the tools oriented properly. A simple lock could be fairly resistant to an improvised tool. Even Ferguson, who’d used bobby pins as a kid to raid the liquor cabinet, couldn’t guarantee results.
Li stayed right behind him the whole way to his room. Ferguson stopped, put his hand out on the door, then turned and stuck his face in his companion’s.
“I thank you for this great opportunity,” he told Li. “Thank you very much. Thank you.”
“Yes,” said Li, backing away from Ferguson’s spit.
As he got out his handkerchief, Ferguson ducked down to the lock, working the pin into it. He grabbed at the handle as if drunk, then managed to get the tumbler to turn just enough to force the door.
He glanced over his shoulder.
Li had already disappeared down the hall.
Pushed it a little too far tonight, Ferguson thought to himself after he relocked the door and tiptoed to bed. But better that than not far enough.
~ * ~
28
THE WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON, D.C.
If he was going to do the right thing, then he was better off doing it without hesitation. The sooner he clued Corrine Alston—and, in effect, the president—into what Ken Bo was doing, the sooner he would end the temptation to do the wrong thing.
Because really, the temptation was overwhelming.
Slott picked up his phone and dialed her office.
“I want to give you a heads-up about something,” he told her when she picked up her phone. “Can you come to my office?”
“When?”
“As soon as possible. Now would be good.”
“Is it about Korea?” she asked.
“I’d rather explain in person.”
“I’ll be there in about an hour.”
~ * ~
C
orrine told her secretary to rearrange her schedule, then began closing down the documents she’d been reviewing. She was about to pick up her pocketbook when the phone buzzed.
“Mr. Ferro from the NSA,” announced Teri.
Corrine grabbed the line.
“The tape unit you gave me last night is very interesting,” said Ferro. “The system this came from, that it’s part of, uses a Cray XIE as the main computing unit. It’s a very powerful supercomputer. Where exactly did it come from?”
“You can’t tell from the data there?”
“Not without more study. It’s a backup of a large number of data sets, and it’s going to take a while to unravel.”
“I see.”
“There are several simulations that seem to deal with some sort of complicated chemical extraction. It seems to involve plutonium,” added Ferro. “We have to have an expert look at it.”
“I see.”
“Should we proceed?”
“Yes,” said Corrine. “What about the small disks?”
“Some correspondence in Korean regarding the purchase of office supplies. Looks like it’s all from a place called Science Industries. We haven’t translated it all yet.”
“You can move ahead with both.”
“All right.” Ferro paused. “Have you spoken to the CIA about this?”
“I’m on my way there now,” said Corrine.
~ * ~
T
he South Koreans tried to make their own weapons-grade uranium in the nineteen eighties and nineties,” said Slott. The words practically gushed from his mouth, and it was a relief to get them out. “The program was exposed in 2004. Ken Bo is claiming this is part of it.”
He pushed the paper across his desk to Corrine. There were only three lines on it, a brief secure e-mail that mentioned two code-word CIA projects and “Korean efforts believed related to M.”
“M is a reference to that project. You see, if he contends that this was part of that program, he and his people will be off the hook,” said Slott. “It’s a CYA memo. Cover—”
“I know what CYA stands for,” said Corrine. “Is his claim right?”
Slott shook his head.
“How do you know?”
“I know. For starters, the material was different. This was plutonium. The waste was accounted for. Blessed Peak wasn’t built until three years ago. So they would have
had to hide the waste all this time, then move it here. Unlikely.”
“But the site was used as a waste site before they built the new plant.”
“For cesium, nothing else. I know because I ordered it checked, and the man who checked it didn’t make a mistake.”
“Are you sure?”
“It was Ken Bo.”
Corrine leaned back in the seat.
“Does this mean he’s not really looking for the plutonium?”
“No. He’s getting himself in a position to limit damage in the future. He is pursuing it. How hard I don’t know.” Slott rocked back and forth in his seat. “He is working on it. He has a plan to get people into the waste site and take measurements. And one of his officers has been nosing around where Ferguson was, though rather ineptly. And, frankly, it seems to have been accidental, part of standard contact gathering. Though it’s difficult to tell from here.”
Corrine put the paper down on the desk.
“I have to tell you, Dan, face-saving games . . . They’re not very important to me. I don’t care whether someone was at fault or not. I want to get results. The president, I’m sure, would feel the same way.”
“I realize that,” said Slott. “Though that’s not the way Washington works.”
“Did Bo screw up?”
“We should have known about this.” Slott picked up his pencil, twisting the lead out slowly as he continued. “It’s our job. Something like this is very important—critical. So by definition, we screwed up. And, by definition, when we screw up, it’s my fault.”
“You’re being awful hard on yourself.”
“It comes with the job.”
“I don’t see Director Parnelles taking responsibility. If the buck is going to stop anywhere, it has to stop at his desk, not yours.”
Well, he thought, that’s something at least. Not the reason I told her, but something.
“Thank you for saying that,” he told her.
“I mean it.”
Slott smiled faintly. He’d thought his conscience would feel better when he finished, but it didn’t. Now that he’d told her what he thought Bo was up to, he only felt more depressed about it.
Then again, it really wasn’t her problem, was it? It was his.
On the one hand, he didn’t want her interfering; on the other, he had given her ammunition.
But it was the right thing to do, he decided: cut off the games.
“I’m sorry if I wasted your time,” he told her.
“It wasn’t a waste,” Corrine told him, slipping the paper back. “I didn’t mean to imply it was.”
Slott started to get up, but Corrine didn’t.
“There’s something I have to tell you involving the First Team,” she said. “Bob Ferguson went into a place called Science Industries and gathered some material there. He sent it back. It’s very interesting. There may be information on extracting plutonium. I don’t have all the details yet.”
“Corrigan didn’t mention that when he briefed me this morning.”
“I know.” Corrine had debated how to present the issue all the way to Slott’s office. She decided that the best way, for the good of the team, was to blame herself: protecting the client, an old lawyer’s trick. “I had Ferg use a back channel to get the data here because I wasn’t sure how much to trust Seoul, based on your comments the other day.”
Slott folded his arms and sank back into his chair as she continued. It’s me they don’t trust, he realized, and it wasn’t just Corrine. Ferguson was in the middle of it. And probably Parnelles, whom Ferguson was close to.
Because he’d worked in Seoul, and Ferguson figured he was covering up for the people there.
Damned if you do; dammed if you don’t.
“The NSA has the tape and the disks,” said Corrine. “The Department of Energy has the soil samples and is scheduling the tests now. I’ll refer them to you.”
She got up to leave.
“Yeah,” said Slott, not bothering to get up. “Thanks.”
~ * ~
29
NORTH OF SUNG HO, NORTH KOREA
Korean breakfasts were traditionally skimpy, and when the party was roused at seven-thirty the morning following the reception, all that was available was a large metal pot of weak tea. Ferguson downed two cups, and was on his third when his “translator” Chonjin appeared.
Ferguson’s pretend hangover amused Chonjin greatly, and the North Korean quickly suggested a cure: an ill-smelling concoction mixed with goat’s milk from the kitchen.
Ferguson wouldn’t have trusted the remedy even if he’d had a real hangover. But with Chonjin watching, he decided he had to take at least a sip. His stomach revolted; he ran to the nearby washroom as Chonjin nearly doubled over laughing.
Another man came in as Ferguson wiped his face at the sink. He was a North Korean soldier in full uniform.
“Captain Ganji,” said Ferguson. “Annyeonghaseyo.”
The man, a corporal, looked at him and shook his head, explaining in Korean that he was not a captain and certainly not Ganji. Ferguson apologized, then switched to Russian, saying that he admired Ganji, a very shrewd thinker and a good drinker.
The soldier shook his head, and told him in Korean that he didn’t understand.
“English?” tried Ferguson.
That didn’t work either. The man rattled off something far too rapidly for Ferguson to understand.
“Mworago hasyeosseoyo?” said Ferguson. “I’m sorry, I missed what you were saying.”
“He was explaining that the captain is an aide to General Namgung,” said Chonjin, coming inside the room. “He spends all of his time at the capital, at headquarters.”
“Oh, very good,” said Ferguson in Russian. He laughed. “And did I meet the captain last night?”
“He wasn’t here.” Chonjin turned to the other Korean and began quizzing him. “He says you thought he was Captain Ganji,” Chonjin told Ferguson when he was finished.
“Oh. I was actually trying to say good morning.”
“Annyeonghaseyo.”
“Annyeonghaseyo,” repeated Ferguson. “Doesn’t sound like Captain Ganji or General Nagtum to me.”
“Namgung,” said Chonjin curtly. There was no longer any trace of amusement in his voice. “He is a very important man.”
“I’m sorry,” said Ferguson. He turned to the other man, who had a very worried expression on his face. “I am very sorry.”
“Joesonghaeyo,” prompted Chonjin.
“Joesonghaeyo,” said Ferguson.
“You speak English very well for a Russian,” said Chonjin as the other man slipped past them.
“Thank you.”
“You know more Korean than you let on.”
“I keep trying.”
Chonjin told him in Korean that he was the bastard son of a three-legged pig.
Ferguson got the bastard but missed the rest.
“You may be right,” said Ferguson in Russian. “My mother was rather loose.”
“Come,” said Chonjin, switching to English. “Let’s go hunting, if your head has cleared.”
“Dah,” said Ferguson, staying in Russian. “My head feels much better.”
“Wait,” said Chonjin as they got to the door. He reached into his jacket, and for a moment Ferguson thought he was going to pull out a gun. Instead he presented him with a small package. “Your business cards,” he said in English.
“Спасибо,” said Ferguson. “Thank you.”
~ * ~
P
ickup trucks with benches mounted on the sides of the beds were lined up at the front of the lodge. When all the guests had boarded, the trucks set off, following the dirt road and passing the house where Park had met with General Namgung. They continued along the stream for about a half mile before coming to the edge of an overgrown field. Two other trucks were there already, waiting. These had shotguns for the men to use.