Flight 291 taxied to Runway 9 half an hour later and then got held up while an executive jet came in. We were cleared by the tower at 18:24 and got airborne seven minutes after the scheduled departure time. The evening sky was almost clear, with a scattering of cumulus along the southern horizon and the windsocks hanging limp.
Nine hours later in Bombay, waiting to change flights, I picked up a copy of the Times of Singapore and found a seat in the departure lounge. In Kuala Lumpur a top National Front leader had called for an end to unbalanced pro-Malay government policies and urged Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Mahathir Mohamad to crack down on corruption. In Bangkok, Thailand's new military commander, General Chovalit, had ordered the army and its nationwide radio and television networks not to play politics in the coming general ejection. In Singapore, a government minister had accused police officers of being too strict, and suggested they should mix more freely with the public they served. Fights among teenagers in coffee-shops and at wayangs were becoming more violent, following the increasing practice of 'staring down' in order to provoke attack, which had yesterday led to a twelve-year-old boy's ear being severed by a knife.
There was nothing in the paper to do with drug-running or the armaments trade. After twenty minutes I left my seat and picked up a copy of Glitz at the gift shop and went aboard Flight 232 for Singapore at 08:36. I was almost the last on.
During the flight I re-read the instructions Pepperidge had given me, memorised their main points and went forward to the toilet, tearing the three sheets of feint-ruled paper into small pieces and flushing them in the pan. As I went back to my seat a stewardess was pulling the curtain closed between the first-class and coach sections after pushing a drinks cart through. I notched my seat back a little and relaxed, slipping from beta to alpha waves.
There were a couple of moles, of course, digging away in SIS. It could be that.
'Would you like some champagne?'
Almond eyes, heavily shadowed; an exquisite silk hanbok, ochre shot with emerald, pattern of white cranes, a few stitches gone at the shoulder seam.
I shook my head. 'Are we running on schedule?'
She glanced at her thin jade-faced watch. 'Ten minutes early. We should land in Singapore in about three hours from now, at 1 p.m. local time. Is there anything I can bring you, sir?'
'Nothing.' Patchouli on the air as she passed behind me.
It hadn't been Floderus who'd told me about the moles: everyone along the grapevine knew it and a lot of them couldn't sleep at night. They were having a swine of a time trying to find them, and until they found them they couldn't tell how much damage was being done. So it could be that. One of the moles had caught wind of the mission Floderus had been offered. Or Pepperidge had talked too loudly, in a pub or somewhere.
I wasn't totally surprised. Even at the clearance and briefing stage of any given mission there could be vibrations picked up and passed on for what it was worth, however tight the security. Last year they'd got on to me very fast indeed, moving in and having a go at me before I even left London, smashing my car against the Thames embankment and putting me into hospital. This time they'd picked me up almost as fast, but this was just low-key passive surveillance, one man with a black dress-bag for camouflage. I hadn't been looking for anyone; I'd just been checking the environment as a matter of routine, and the Asian with the bag – the one who'd got out of the cab behind mine at Heathrow – had turned away a couple of times in the departure lounge in Bombay, avoiding eye contact, and I'd followed up at once, heading for the men's toilet and fading before he got there. He'd panicked right away, checking the toilet and coming straight out again, not terribly professional.
At the moment he was somewhere back there in the coach section.
There was no actual problem. He wasn't strictly a tag: he wasn't trying to find out where I was going – you can't shadow someone and hope to get a seat on the same flight at the last minute if that's where he takes you. This man had just been told to make sure I got to Singapore without changing flights and finishing up somewhere else, where they'd never find me again. I couldn't shrug him off until we landed, and in any case I knew now that there'd be others, waiting at the baggage claim: they wouldn't leave it to one man to keep track of me through terrain as tricky as Singapore.
Action later.
Sticky heat struck the face as we went through the walkway, then there was the cool of the air-conditioning again. I behaved precisely on cue at the baggage claim, checking no one, taking my time, chatting up a nice little American girl and helping her pull her two streamlined cases off the carousel.
In the cab outside I told the driver to take me to the Marina Bay area, and when we were moving along Fullerton Road I leaned forward on the seat.
'What's your name?'
'Ahmad.' A big grin. 'How are you?'
I passed him a US $50 bill. 'Let me have your card. And head for Chinatown.'
'This money not enough. Hundred dollar fare.'
'Listen carefully, Ahmad. I'm going to leave my bags in your care. Drop them at your office and make sure they're kept safe. I'll pick them up there in an hour, and then you get another fifty.'
'A hundred. I can't -'
'Ahmad. Look at my eyes in the mirror. Do I look like someone you can bullshit?'
His eyes met mine, then he looked away. 'What place you want to go?'
'Keong Siak Street.'
'Okay.'
When we got there the other cab was still close behind us but I hit the door open and dropped, pitching between two fish stalls and ducking under a bead curtain, scattering birds near a grain merchant's cart, the wet noon heat against my skin and the smell of sandalwood on the air, sandalwood and lamp oil and fish and curry and incense, a voice yelling out in Malaysian as I dodged past a medicine man and under a flower stall, finding an alley and lurching among bicycles and cane-work and dustbins, coming out into New Bridge Road and stopping the first cab.
'Chong Street, off Boat Quay.' I slammed the door shut. 'Not this way – through Cross Street. When's it going to rain, for Christ's sake?'
'Maybe tonight, cool things off.'
'Jolly good show.'
4 Party
The screams were coming from the room next door and I went into the passage. The door was locked so I shouldered it open and it swung back with a crash and I saw the woman standing on the windowsill, clutching the thin canvas curtain.
The window was open and she let go of the curtain and began tilting forward just as I got to her, and pulled her back into the room. She started screaming again in Chinese, beating at me with small cold fists, her half-starved body naked under the cheap cotton wrapper, a huge mole standing out on her stomach.
'What's up?' Al said from the doorway.
'She was trying to jump out of the window.'
'Ta-men sha-ssu le wo ti erh-pzu!'
'Take it easy now,' Al said. 'Six in the morning, for Christ's sake, you'll wake everybody up.' He ran this place, the Red Orchid. 'They hung her son,' he told me, 'over there, dawn this morning. Let's get her onto the bed.'
She went on struggling for a minute and then suddenly went slack, and we laid her down, pulling a blanket over her thin ivory body as she went into a paroxysm of shivering. I went and shut the window, drawing the curtain to keep the brightness out.
'We were all praying for him,' Al told her, 'all of us. Take it easy now.'
He sat on the edge of the bed and stroked the woman's thin untidy hair as the sobbing began, worse than the screaming had been, the quiet desolate sound of a breaking heart.
'What, then?'
One of the kitchen boys stood in the doorway, white slivers of wood from the smashed frame scattered around his feet.