Implant

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Implant Page 12

by Jeffrey Anderson


  “Hi, honey, how is the conference?”

  “Actually, that’s why I was calling.” For some reason she felt hesitant now that he was on the phone. Maybe it would be better if she waited until she got home when she could explain in person. He’d be angry and those conversations never went well over the phone.

  “Oh, something wrong?” He waited on the line, while she didn’t answer. “Julia?”

  “Sorry, I was thinking about something else for a second. No, the conference is fine. It’s just that I’ve got a bunch of new stuff about the next phase of my project and I can’t concentrate on the speakers. No point in staying, so I called the airline and changed my flight to this afternoon.”

  “Okay, no problem, if that’s what you want to do. What time will you be home?”

  “Probably late,” she said, “since I lose a couple hours flying east, but I don’t have my itinerary with me. I’ll call when I know more.”

  “Direct flight from Salt Lake or do you have a layover?”

  “Layover. Oops, I’m at the airport. I’ll give you a call as soon as I know more.”

  “Okay, have a good flight.”

  Julia hung up and immediately pulled to the side of the freeway where she sat for several minutes with her emergency blinkers flashing.

  Terrance knew. He knew where she was and he’d screwed up and now she knew that he knew.

  The conference wasn’t in Salt Lake, it was in Denver. She’d told him that, and so maybe he’d forgotten. Sometimes he didn’t listen carefully. But what were the odds that he’d substitute Salt Lake City by pure chance? No way. He knew she was in Utah and he’d flubbed up as they’d gone back and forth, each playing their role.

  How could he have told Sarah? Couldn’t he see how much this mattered?

  “Fine, if that’s the way it’s going to be,” she said, talking only to herself now. “You don’t care about my career, why should I care about yours?”

  And as for Sarah’s threat that she’d never work again, Julia didn’t believe it. Maybe the government could lean on private institutions or threaten to pull grants, but could they stop her from working in a university? From going abroad to do research for a few years until things quieted down?

  Sarah said she’d send a plane to Provo, but that would take time. And she had apparently not spoken to anyone at the facility. Not the head of security, at least. Julia still had clearance.

  Julia pulled back onto the road. At the next exit, she got off and turned around, headed south to Nephi again. Time to do what she’d come for. She would download the entire data set from Ian’s implant. Find out for herself exactly what happened in Namibia.

  Chapter Seventeen:

  Charles Ikanbo sat passively while the director for ChinaOne chewed him out. The man ranted about Africa, about the lazy Namibians, about Americans and French and British, and even about the high price of rice in Namibia.

  Better to let him burn out his anger and then do what he could to soothe the man, who could in turn calm the Chinese ambassador and the angry noises from Beijing itself.

  Li Hao had summoned Charles north, to Henties Bay on the Skeleton Coast. Charles had no choice but to obey. The Chinese were pouring so much money into the country, in jobs, in roads, in schools and clinics—bribery was a lesson they’d learned from Western role models—that the entire government had become beholden to their whims and tantrums.

  “This place is a hellhole,” Li said. He spoke English with a British, Oxford-sounding accent. “An absolute stinky pit of a country. And the entire government are lapdogs for Americans and their imperialist friends. And your security forces are absolutely worthless. You have done nothing, you continue to do nothing. Six men killed, gunned down by this enemy agent. And you do nothing.”

  “Forty-two dead, actually,” Charles said. He could no longer be quiet. “Six Chinese, plus eighteen of your mercenaries, sixteen Namibian laborers and two of my security officers.”

  “I want the man who did this. I want answers. I know the Americans were behind this. They are jealous of China’s rise, and anxious to preserve their hegemony. This is all just a CIA plot.”

  “Come now, Mr. Li,” Charles said. “You are a reasonable man. You know that not everything that happens in the world is a CIA plot. We are a sovereign nation, and the Americans have many legitimate interests here. Why would they jeopardize those interests by acts of aggression against the Namibian state and its business partners?”

  It was the one thing that continued to puzzle Charles, his disingenuous protests to the contrary. That the CIA was behind this, he had little doubt. Rogue agent or not, as the supposed diplomat, Anton Markov had claimed, the Americans had been eager to retrieve their man before he could reveal any secrets.

  “Come with me,” Li said. “I want to show you something.”

  He seemed to be calming down, so quickly, in fact, that Charles wondered if it had been an act to intimidate him. If so, it hadn’t worked.

  They walked through the villa, toward the back terrace that overlooked the ocean. The villa itself was tastefully appointed, with traditional baskets and pottery on niches, alternating with rooms decorated with Chinese landscapes. A pair of Namibian women were sweeping the back deck, but picked up their brooms and departed hastily as soon as Charles and Li Hao stepped outside.

  The cold water of the Atlantic met the hot air of southwest Africa off the Skeleton Coast and frequently formed heavy fogs that would roll fifty kilometers inland. Today, however, was cool and clear. A steady breeze sent long, cresting waves to crash against the beach. Two boys, barefoot and shirtless, fished in the surf.

  Li made his way to a telescope mounted on a tripod. He fiddled with the telescope for a few minutes. “There, look.” He stepped back.

  Charles looked. In the distance, a gray warship on the horizon. The image was unclear, hazy with the distance, so he supposed it could have been South African. They had a navy that patrolled this far north. He doubted it, though. Probably the Americans.

  “Spying,” Li said. “There are probably men watching us right now, taking note of the fact that I’m talking on the deck with a Namibian, probably an official of the government.”

  Charles stepped back from the telescope. “Why would the Americans need to spy with a warship? They have satellites. And they have bases all over Africa. They can fly a plane overhead at seventy thousand feet, so high you would never see or hear it.”

  “Yes, of course,” Li said in an impatient tone. “It’s all about intimidating me. They know our countries are forging an important alliance, and they want to stop it. Take Namibia for themselves.”

  Charles bristled. “Namibia is not for the taking. By the Americans or anyone else.”

  Li had been staring over the horizon, as if trying to spot the American ship with the naked eye, but now he blinked, and said, “Of course not. The Chinese would never want that. We are partners, only. We wish to help Namibia develop her land, people, resources. Not take them. That is not the Chinese way.”

  A year ago, when Charles had first met the Chinese delegation, he had thought them worse than the Americans or Europeans. They spread money, made demands, cultivated friends and sabotaged enemies. Most African countries were all too willing to play the game, like a prostitute who thinks she is taking advantage of her customers by taking their money, even as she slips into a sleazy lifestyle that she can’t escape. The thing about prostitutes is that sure, they got diseases from their clients, but they gave them back, too.

  Namibia was a quiet, stable part of the continent. Charles never thought those tactics would work here. But after the way that his brother, William, acquiesced to the Americans’ demand to release the prisoner, and the way the Chinese threw a tantrum in its aftermath, he was no longer sure.

  “You have to understand,” Charles said, “there’s nothing I can do about the American agent now.”

  “So you’re admitting that he was a spy?”

  “I don’t kno
w. I will probably never know.”

  “That’s not good enough,” Li said. “We’ve already invested three billion dollars, U.S. What is that, almost twenty-five billion Namibian dollars? How can you guarantee this won’t happen again?”

  “I suppose you could walk away now.” Charles permitted himself an inward smile. Li had overplayed his hand. “Maybe that’s what the Americans are hoping, that you’ll decide the effort is not worth the rewards. You want my advice? Rebuild your camp, set up a tighter perimeter and cultivate more contacts within the Namibian government. By cultivate, I don’t mean bribe, by the way. But you have to offset the Americans and the Europeans, and that means you need friends.”

  “Actually, what I was hoping is that we could deepen our partnership with the Namibian government. More specifically, with your security forces.”

  “Get rid of the mercenaries, you mean, and rely on Namibian troops to protect your camps?”

  “No, we must stick with our contractors. This recent disaster notwithstanding, they are absolutely indispensable. They have modern weaponry. They have experience in Africa.” Li looked distressed and again Charles thought about his earlier rant and how he’d taken a much more realistic turn. “Here is the problem. When you see a white man in Namibia, who is he? He could be Namibian, or maybe South African or a Zimbabwean expatriate. He could be a foreign executive, or a tourist, a mercenary, or a spy. Anything.”

  Charles said nothing, angry at himself. Forget the excuses, he should have caught the two Americans at the airport. At the time, he thought it better to watch them, see what the two CIA agents were up to. And then they had started their own war and killed forty-two men.

  “But when you see a Chinese, what do you think?” Li asked. “Right. You know exactly who he is. He’s either a diplomat or he works with ChinaOne.”

  “You need more time. The Europeans and Americans have been meddling in Africa for generations. The Chinese have only just started.”

  “Which is why we need Blackwing,” Li said, apparently missing the irony. “They can go where we can’t, hear things that we never will. But I need protection from your government. The Americans would never dare attack the Namibians directly.”

  Below, on the beach, one of the boys shouted and reeled in his line, pole bent as something struggled on the other end. Charles wished suddenly he were down there with them, barefoot and shirtless. Wading in the waves to pull in a fish, wet and slippery and alive, from the water. Instead of all this work, constrained by offices and suits, arguing with foreigners.

  “Unfortunately,” Charles said, “I cannot help you.”

  “Because of the contractors?”

  “Because of the contractors, yes, but also because the Namibian military has fewer than seven thousand men, and they are under control of the minister of defense—a prickly, uncooperative man. My security forces, unfortunately, number in the low hundreds. We do not have the resources nor the political backing to protect foreign business interests.”

  “Then you will allow the Americans to continue to violate your sovereignty?”

  “Of course not.”

  To be honest, this was the tricky business. Charles had been told through more than one channel to back off, that the Americans had been dealt with already, whatever that meant.

  “I have been assured that there will be no further incidents,” Charles said, “which means that if I turn up more spies, I am free to act. But I will not be guarding your camps or participating in corporate espionage.”

  “Corporate espionage?” Li asked. He sounded shocked. “We wouldn’t do that. But I would really love to have your closer cooperation with my contractors. Isn’t there anything I could do to change your mind? Perhaps I could put you on retainer, offer you a stipend for private consulting work.”

  “You mean a bribe,” Charles said in a cold voice. “Give you my men and resources to pad my bank account.”

  “Bribe? No, it would be for private work. If not that, how about a grant, or something to help your home village or to further a project you find especially worthy.”

  “This is Namibia. It is not Angola or Sudan. I would never accept a bribe, no matter what you call it.”

  “If only everyone in Namibia felt the same way,” Li Hao said with a sigh. He leaned down to look through his telescope.

  “Is there anything else, or may I go?” Charles asked.

  “Can you do this much, at least? Can you at least warn me if you get word of any more American spies in Namibia, so we can prevent another ugly incident.”

  “That is the first reasonable request you’ve made all afternoon. Yes, I can do that.”

  “Good, since you seem to be an honest man, let me give you a bit of information. You may already know, but just in case, I thought I’d pass along what I’ve heard. Nothing to back it up, no official source, just whispers.”

  “Go ahead,” Charles said.

  “There are elements within the armed forces who are unhappy with recent developments.”

  “Recent developments? By that I suppose you mean the concessions granted to ChinaOne.”

  “Yes, exactly,” Li said. “They fear they will be left out of the action.”

  What “elements” could possibly know about what was going on at the Chinese camp in northern Namibia? Charles himself didn’t know, not for sure, and his brother was the Minister of Mines and Energy. Maybe the Minister of Defense knew, perhaps a few of his aides or generals, and of course, the president and maybe the prime minister and a few other members of parliament.

  “Does that mean they are pressuring the president to renegotiate the terms of the concessions?”

  “I’m afraid they have even more despicable plans.” Li shook his head. “That’s one problem with your elected governments. They may work fine in America and Germany but in a small, weak country like Namibia, you’re just one bad general from losing everything.”

  Charles paused a beat. It was true that Namibia was a young country. It had begun as a German colony, then a South African protectorate after World War II, but had only been an independent country since 1989. And nobody knew the growing pains of starting a new government in Africa better than himself, who had seen it all from the beginning. He watched Li Hao, who stared back, unblinking. “A coup? In Namibia? Impossible.”

  Li Hao tightened his mouth into a line and Charles began to suspect that whatever the man had heard, it was not just speculation.

  Charles’s mouth felt dry. He had to warn the president. And his brother. Unless…no, he didn’t want to go there.

  Chapter Eighteen:

  Julia flashed her badge at the door. The guards let her back inside the CIA-run asylum in Nephi, Utah, and then she had to get past the security desk. A young man in a white shirt and tie took her badge and scanned it, then glanced at his monitor, which was turned from Julia’s view. He typed something into the computer and stared at the monitor again.

  She had her story worked out. If they told her she was no longer authorized to enter the government run asylum, she would claim she’d left her cell phone in the examination room, or thought she had.

  “What’s the purpose of your visit?” the man asked.

  “I was here earlier, remember?”

  Her voice came out in a squeak and she wanted to kick herself. If she was going to pull this off, she had to get tough. In a hurry.

  “Yes, but you checked out, so the system needs me to reenter a reason for your visit, and it won’t show the details of your previous entry. I don’t even know, since you arrived at the previous shift. Which patient are you seeing?”

  She let her breath out slowly, relieved. The computer hadn’t flagged her name. Sarah Redd was so used to being obeyed that she hadn’t bothered to countermand Markov’s authorization for Julia to enter the facility. “Ian Westhelle.”

  “Ah, the new guy. Heard about him.”

  Dr. Eric Jonas met her in the hall as she made her way toward Ian’s cell. He gave her a smi
le that made her skin crawl. “Back again? I thought you’d given up.”

  “What? No, I just stepped out to get a bite to eat.”

  “Should have told me, I could have shown you around. There are a few places around town that pass beyond McDonalds and the local greasy spoon.”

  “Thanks, but maybe next time.” She hoped the shudder didn’t make its way into her voice.

  “Here, I’ll give you a hand.” Before she could protest, he flagged down a couple of security guards and followed her into the wing where they kept Ian. No numbers, but she remembered the correct cell by count.

  There were two slots on the door. The first was like the money exchange at an inner city bank, where only one side could be opened at a time. For sliding in food or water. The second was a metal door to slide open, beyond which was a plexiglass shield, perforated with holes for communication, beyond which were metal bars.

  She slid open the second door. “Ian, it’s me, Julia.”

  “It’s Dr. Nolan,” Jonas corrected from over her shoulder.

  “What do you want?” Ian asked.

  “If I come in, will you promise not to attack me?”

  “You’re not serious,” Jonas said. “This man is an animal. You saw what he tried last time. He’ll tear your head off. Let us go in and subdue him and you can examine him while he’s strapped down, like last time. Better yet, drugged.”

  Julia ignored him. “Ian?”

  “You’re safe,” Ian said. “But don’t bring anyone in with you, especially not that ass Jonas. For that matter, tell him to ‘gaan kak in die mielies.’”

  “I want to take you to the examination room. We can talk there. No drugs, no restraints. Is it a deal?” She turned to Jonas. “Could you enter the code, please?”

  Dr. Jonas slid shut the metal panel. “I’ll need authorization for this. If you’re serious, not just playing with the patient, I’ll have to make a phone call first.”

  Julia took a deep breath. Now was the time to be confident. She forced an aggressive tone to her voice. “You want to call the Director of National Intelligence?” Julia raised an eyebrow. “God, you’ve got some balls. Well, go ahead if you’d like.”

 

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