“No.” Jake sighed. “I was sorely tempted. I almost wish I had. Wanted to put the fear in the bastard. Maybe he’ll send her back. Even if he doesn’t, maybe he’ll keep his hands off her.”
The secretary looked at the admiral like he was insane. Both the aides were trying to keep control of their faces, with little success.
Rip Buckingham was beside himself. He shooed the secretary and aides from the room. When they were gone, he whispered hoarsely at Cole, “This man’s crazy. He shot a man dead in Wong’s office. Pulled a gun from his pocket and shot him right in the bloody ticker. Didn’t say a bloody word, just… bang.”
Cole shook his head. “That sure sounds like Jake Grafton.”
Jake pulled the pistol from his pocket, opened the cylinder, and picked out the empties. “Need some more shells. Some gun oil too, if you have any. Salt water isn’t good for these things.”
Buckingham sank into a chair and put his head in his hands.
“I called my attorneys in California,” Cole said. “They need a day to sell some stock, raise some cash. They will be ready to wire-transfer the money to that Swiss account the day after tomorrow.”
“The day after tomorrow,” Grafton echoed. “When Wong calls, why don’t you tell him that he has to take them to a neutral place? I’ll meet him there. When I see them safe and sound, I’ll call you and you can wire the money. That way killing us won’t solve his problem.”
“It’ll be a start.”
“To be safe,” Jake explained, “he has to kill Wu and you and everyone in the revolutionary movement who might oppose him or seek revenge. If all of you are in one place, after he gets the money he can just blow up the building and solve his problem.”
“Okay. But how are you going to get Wu and Callie out of harm’s way after he gets his money?”
“I don’t know yet. I’ll have to think about it.”
“I don’t think it can be done,” Tiger Cole said softly.
“Sonny can’t afford to be known as the man who killed Wu,” Rip said. “Sure, a lot of people know that he kidnapped Wu. But if he kills him…”
Cole opened a desk drawer, extracted a small box, and walked to the chair where Buckingham sat. “This is your brother-in-law’s finger,” he told Rip. “Sonny Wong had it delivered this afternoon.”
Buckingham looked in the box and turned pale.
“We need Wu alive. China needs him.”
“Don’t patronize me,” Rip said crossly. “I’m a big boy.”
“How about doing another story for your dad? The last one was very good — got ‘em in an uproar in Europe and Washington.”
“Okay,” Rip said, brushing the hair back out of his eyes. He handed the box back to Cole.
“You can use a computer in the office across the street. More on the coming revolution, about the goings-on in Hong Kong. E-mail it to Richard for tomorrow’s papers. We want to make damn sure the world knows who the guys are in the white hats.”
Rip took a deep breath, his eyes still on the box.
“What do I say about Wu?”
“Don’t mention him by name. ‘Unnamed patriots’ is the phrase. Nothing about Sonny Wong.”
After Rip left, Cole used the intercom to ask the secretary to get Jake some clean clothes from his apartment. Then he asked the admiral, “Want a drink? I got some bourbon.”
“Yeah.”
“What did you tell Wong?”
“Not to harm Callie.”
“I’m sorry, Jake. Sorry you and Callie got mixed up in this.”
“Yeah.”
Jake was buttoning one of Cole’s shirts when there was a knock on the door. Tommy Carmellini stuck his head in.
“I thought I’d find you here, Admiral. You left a note on my desk asking for a report?”
“I did. Come in.”
Carmellini dropped into an overstuffed chair and watched Jake put on his wet shoes over dry socks. “You want it here, where Mr. Cole can hear?”
“Yep. What have you found out?”
The CIA officer removed a small notebook from an inside jacket pocket and flipped it open. “The clerk selling the passports to Sonny Wong is a woman named Elizabeth Yeager.” He spelled the last name. “She delivers the passports to her bedroom buddy, Carson Eisenberg, a CIA guy who is on Wong’s payroll. She’s been making false computer entries and writing up files to cover the thefts, so all the numbers will match when the department is audited.”
“How did you find out this information?”
“I opened the safes down there, checked the logbooks, then went into the secured cabinets.”
“Jesus!” Cole said. “And I thought this place was reasonably secure.”
“Not even close,” Carmellini shot back.
“Do you have Eisenberg’s contact?” Jake asked.
“Name, phone number, and address. And I got his banking information, where he’s been depositing the cash he got from Wong.”
“What else?”
“Kerry Kent has been talking to some people in her apartment in Chinese. Don’t know what it means without a translator, and don’t know which translator around here I can trust. I sent the tape off to Washington.”
“Uh-huh.”
“The consul general uses English in his office, fortunately. He had a conversation earlier today with Kerry Kent about a plane that was supposed to arrive at seven this evening at Lantau Island. She was worried that with the airport closed, the plane couldn’t land. Cole didn’t think that would be a problem.”
Carmellini looked at Cole. “Was it a problem, sir?”
“You’re still taping conversations in this office?”
“Yes, sir. After you and the admiral had your little talk, I wired you up again.”
“Goddamn you, Carmellini! I told you—”
“Can’t fire me,” Carmellini said smugly and grinned. “I work for him.” He jerked his thumb at Grafton.
“Don’t be a prick.”
“It’s genetic. Folks often remark upon that fact. You’d think I worked for the IRS or—”
“Can it,” Jake Grafton snapped. “Anything else?”
“Yeah. Cole’s been lying to you.”
Grafton’s eyes narrowed. He glanced at Cole, then concentrated on Carmellini. “Explain.”
Carmellini extracted a sheaf of folded paper from another pocket. “The National Security Agency has been doing some intercepts on certain E-mail addresses, and they passed along some dillies that Cole had been sending and receiving.”
Cole sat down behind his desk. He didn’t look too upset.
“Seems that Mr. Cole has been E-mailing people in the states about something called York units. They are supposed to be on that plane.”
“York?”
“York units. Don’t know what those are, but it is obvious to me from reading this correspondence that Mr. Cole is not a traitor, that certain people in the United States government are cooperating with him and providing him with technical and logistical support. Six York units, tech manuals, computers, WB cell phones, the list goes on and on.”
“I know what York units are,” Jake muttered and glanced again at Cole. As usual the consul general’s face revealed nothing of its owner’s thoughts.
“Anything else?” Jake said to Carmellini.
“That about covers the waterfront, I think.”
Jake looked at Cole. “What do you want to do about Eisenberg and the Yeager woman?”
“Can’t prosecute them with illegally obtained evidence.”
“They don’t know how we got the evidence,” Carmellini pointed out.
“Have the personnel officer call them in and fire them,” Cole said to Carmellini. “Then give them a choice: They can go home and be prosecuted for theft and espionage, or they can stay in Hong Kong. If they want to stay, run them out of the consulate. Tell them if they ever show up in the states again they will be prosecuted.”
“Yes, sir.”