Satori - Don Winslow [61]
So, if Guibert is Hel, what the hell is he doing here?
In the guise of a French arms dealer.
His paranoia rising, Voroshenin pulled the shades on the window. He sat down, but soon found himself pacing back and forth in the room.
Assume he is Hel, he told himself.
What of it?
Why is he here?
To know that, you must first answer the question of who he’s working for. Well, you know that he was last in the control of the Americans. Did they simply turn him loose after a few years? He killed a Jap general whom they were going to hang anyway, so easy come, easy go?
Highly unlikely.
In the first place, the rigid Americans don’t possess that level of moral flexibility. In the second place, Hel couldn’t obtain a “cover” without professional help and backing. The Guibert cover — if that’s what it is — is both sophisticated and deep. Someone went to a lot of trouble and expense to place Guibert in Beijing, and no intelligence service of any government would do that so some young man with a grudge can pursue his romantic notion of revenge.
For what, then?
Voroshenin walked to the window, edged the bottom corner of the curtain open, and peeked out onto the street. It was empty, quiet, a gentle snow falling.
He let the curtain fall back.
Hel was in American control, but he appears now as a French national.
Is this a French operation? Doubtful — the French were still supine from the war, and more than had their hands full in Vietnam. They were not about to do anything that would bring China into that mess.
All right, so Hel was in American control, appears as a French national, albeit with a Chinese background. Is this a Nationalist operation? Is Hel on loan from the Americans to the Nats, and if so, for what purpose? It didn’t make sense — why would the Nats use a Westerner when they had thousands of disaffected Chinese available?
So that leaves the Americans, Voroshenin concluded.
Don’t dismiss the obvious just because it’s obvious.
Hel was in American control and still is. Quite a useful tool, really — familiar with China, speaks the language. Has Russian and French as well. Born to be a spy, when you think about it. You’d have recruited him yourself, and it’s a pity that Gorbatov didn’t when he had the chance.
So assume Hel is working for Washington.
What’s his task?
His cover as an arms dealer puts him in touch with the Ministry of Defense and he was hosted at dinner by —
Liu.
General Liu.
Mao’s chief and only rival.
Could the Americans be using Hel to make overtures to Liu? Or has he already accepted them? His smile genuine for the first time that night, at last Voroshenin saw the entire board, his next move, and its potential result.
I’m sorry, Alexandra, he thought, your son will have to die under exquisite torture, but that is the cost of allowing oneself to become a pawn in someone else’s game.
He looked at his watch.
It was only midnight.
Kang Sheng would still be up.
49
NICHOLAI SLIPPED OUT OF the hotel.
He simply took the elevator down to the basement, had a pleasant chat, and shared a few cigarettes with the men in the kitchen and then went out the delivery entrance at the back of the hotel.
Then he walked briskly into the Legation Quarter. The streets were almost empty now, this late at night, with most of the Beijingren securely tucked away inside their living units. Lights were on, of course, in the Russian Legation, and Nicholai stood across the street under an elm tree and watched the front door.
A car pulled up and waited, its tailpipe smoking in the cold.
Voroshenin, trailed by his faithful hounds, came out a few minutes later and got into the car, which quickly pulled out.
A nice piece of luck, Nicholai thought, for the move he contemplated was a terrible risk. But Otake-san had taught him that very often not taking a risk was more dangerous than taking one.
Cupping his hands against the bitter wind, he lit a cigarette, moved to a spot under the glow of a streetlight, and waited.
It took twenty long minutes for Vasili