‘Don’t give me the Pollyanna,’ said Sammy, his puffy eyes screwing up with pain. ‘I’ve read your file — the full NSA file — and as an intelligence officer you make a great undertaker.’
Mac pretended not to hear. ‘Why is McHugh so important?’
‘Mind your own business.’
‘Read the file again,’ said Mac. ‘My business is minding your business.’
‘Shut up, McQueen,’ said Sammy with a wince, a big split evident in his bottom lip. ‘I need a handful of Percodans just to survive that frigging awful accent right now.’
‘You going to tell me what this is all about?’ said Mac, wanting to keep him talking. ‘What is this place? A counterfeiting operation?’
‘It’s a bit beyond that, buddy.’
‘So?’
‘You didn’t read between the lines when Charles was briefing you? Christ, he went way too far in my opinion.’
‘He said General Pao Peng was funding an economic destabilisation strategy, but I don’t —’ Mac stopped; the question had answered itself as he spoke.
He remembered his first gig after the Royal Marines, in 1991, when the Firm sent him to the tail end of Desert Storm to learn his trade from Rod Scott. He’d patched through Ramstein Air Base on his way from the UK to Basrah and spent a night in Kaiserslautern on the booze with a bunch of US Air Force intel blokes. Mac remembered the bars and oompah of K-town, but mostly he remembered the fact that the locals had stopped taking American fifty- and twenty-dollar bills. A cell of economic agents from the soon-to-be defunct KGB had gambled some massive currency trades hedged in US dollars and had released container loads of bad US currency into Germany, in the hope of creating large profits when they closed their currency positions.
Mac couldn’t remember if the Communists had got away with it but he certainly recalled how quickly the local merchants reduced a symbol of economic strength to worthless pieces of paper. Currency, so they said, wasn’t money — it was an idea. And as soon as householders and small business owners no longer accepted the idea created by governments and banks, the currency became worthless.
‘They’re diluting the greenback?’ said Mac. ‘That’s what those boxes of notes were doing in your car?’
‘Gee, you’re a regular Einstein, McQueen.’
‘Is it possible?’ said Mac, thinking about the scale. ‘Can the Chinese do that?’
Sammy tried to get comfortable. ‘You’re not cleared for this stuff.’
‘I’d bet each of these bales holds — what — a billion dollars, US?’
‘So?’ said Sammy.
‘So they were shipping the bales out all night and this was only one shipment — I’m thinking this has been a huge effort.’
‘Okay,’ said Sammy, ‘this is how it works. There’s about eight hundred and fifty billion US dollars in circulation but about four hundred and fifty billion of that is outside the US.’
‘More than half is in foreign use?’ said Mac, surprised.
‘Yeah — and that’s important. Because, of the greenbacks in foreign circulation, Asia has about seventy per cent.’
‘So almost half the US currency in existence is being used somewhere between Pakistan and Japan?’
‘Sure,’ said Sammy. ‘Asia not only has this massive circulation of US currency but it uses that money at a street level — hand-to-hand commerce.’
‘Which means when the streets are flooded with new currency, the Asian economies notice it?’
‘Sure do,’ said Sammy. ‘After last night’s effort, I’d say this facility has produced about two hundred of those bales,’ said Sammy.
‘Well, that’s half of —’
Sammy snickered.
‘That’s serious,’ said Mac.
‘An extra fifty per cent of the circulating currency is suddenly dumped into the market? That’s more than serious, McQueen — that’s a currency four billion Asians are about to stop using.’
‘And the US dollar devalues? Is that it?’ said Mac.
‘That’s it.’
‘But the US Treasury has stop-loss tactics for these situations, doesn’t it?’ said Mac, trying to remember some of his old briefings.
‘Yes, there’re programs but they focus on correcting the capital markets.’
‘But they can’t stop street sentiment in Asia?’ said Mac.
‘You’re smart for a man who drinks rum when he doesn’t have to.’
‘Shit,’ said Mac.
Sammy paused before deciding to go on. ‘The big problem is the Chinese economy — Beijing holds about a trillion dollars of US government debt and their currency is pegged to the US dollar.’
‘And if the US dollar takes a dive,’ said Mac,‘that hurts the Chinese, the leadership gets shaky and Pao Peng gets his shot. Is that it?’
‘That’s it,’ said Sammy, turning away.
Thinking back to that night in Phnom Penh, Mac remembered how struck he was by the smell in the boot of Sammy’s car — the smell of all that new money. He was smelling it now, in this printing factory.
Burying his free hand in his pocket, Mac pulled out the slip of paper that he’d found in Sammy’s box of cash.
‘What’s that?’ said Sammy, craning his neck as Mac flattened the note.
‘I found it in your car. It seemed cryptic, but now I’m not so sure.’
‘Give me that,’ said Sammy, jerking forwards but restrained by the cuffs.
‘I’m betting that P means paper and I translates as ink, right? All genuine?’
‘No comment, McQueen.’
‘But what’s this?’ said Mac, concentrating. ‘SN and SF?’
‘Yes, Sammy,’ said a heavy Hungarian accent, ‘what’s this SN and SF?’
Turning, Mac found himself looking up at Joel Dozsa, dressed in a dark trop shirt and grey slacks.
‘You’re making a big mistake, Dozsa,’ said Sammy, sounding both desperate and angry, which was probably a mistake. ‘You don’t mess with the US government like this and live to talk about it.’
‘Don’t you love Americans, Mr McQueen?’ said Dozsa, his dark eyes mocking and dangerous. ‘Always threatening.’
‘Nice place you have here, Dozsa,’ said Mac. ‘But I’ve seen enough — you can send up the porter now.’
‘Hmmm,’ said the ex-Mossad man, eyeing Mac like a specimen. ‘You were on the right track with the ink and paper.’
‘Genuine?’ said Mac.
‘I’m proud of that,’ said Dozsa, glancing at his watch. ‘Now Mr Chan is going to tell us what those other initials stand for.’
‘Fuck you, Dozsa,’ said Sammy.
Dozsa drew a handgun from his waistband and shot Sammy in the right calf muscle. The screams of agony bounced around the high roof, competing with the echo of the gunshot. Replacing his gun, Dozsa leaned against the office windows, fishing out a cigarette and lighter.
Grabbing at the railings, Sammy gasped for breath, saliva dripping off his lip.
‘That’s fair, right, McQueen?’ said Dozsa, taking a deep drag on the Camel. ‘Now you both have holes in your legs.’
‘Seems only right that you get one too,’ said Mac as blood poured across the concrete floor. ‘Lend us the piece for a sec, Dozsa, and I’ll get you sorted.’
Dozsa smiled. ‘Always the joker — it’s a pity we never worked together.’
‘I prefer to work against criminals,’ said Mac. ‘Not with them.’
‘You may have seen the worst of me lately,’ said the Israeli, his voice losing the mocking edge. ‘But when it came down to it, I showed you the courtesy due to a professional.’
‘What? Shooting at me and my driver, trying to run me over in Saigon?’
‘If I wanted you dead, McQueen, it would have happened long before Saigon.’
‘What’s that?’ said Mac.
‘I could have shot you in that hotel corridor, but I hit you over the head instead — remember?’