Rebecca smiled at the man and took his hand as his facade finally cracked and he began to sob. His body shook and he covered his face, trying to hide the sudden shame he felt at crying before women. His knees felt weak. He feared that he would fall to the floor when Rebecca put a hand to his shoulder and pulled him close, saying nothing, until he could compose himself. Though he had controlled his emotions for decades, it still took a full minute.
She stepped away, took Roland’s hand, and the husband-and-wife team walked out into the hallway. Kyra closed the door and marked the time on her watch. It was going to be a very long ten minutes.
The deadline came and the phone never rang. Kyra took Pioneer by the hand and they ran anyway.
The hotel suite that Mitchell had arranged was larger and far nicer than Jonathan had expected. The US Government was not usually extravagant when paying for travel accommodations, but the NCS had its own standards. The analyst had heard stories, exaggerated he’d thought, about how well some case officers lived on the road, but this room lived up to them. The suite featured a very large sitting and dining area, divided from the kitchenette by a wet bar, and a bedroom separated by a sliding French door with opaque glass panes set in a grid. Jonathan parted the suite’s heavy white curtains an inch, which was enough to see that the view of the Forbidden City was inspiring. The food service had been excellent, with classic Italian cuisine on the menu as well as the local favorites. The television dominating the near wall was an impressive plasma display so large that Jonathan knew he would never be able to afford one for his own home. Mitchell had the volume up high enough to annoy both Jonathan and anyone who might try listening through hidden microphones. The senior analyst wished that he could afford such places on his own salary when he was traveling privately. Analysts didn’t get approvals for this kind of accommodation. Jonathan accepted that with a grudge, but he had no desire to play on the case officers’ field, no matter what the perks were.
In truth, he had no interest in the room’s interior design. He shifted his feet, clasped his hands behind his back, and tried to suppress the part of his mind shouting that his study of it was an effort at self-distraction. He was trying very hard not to wonder where Kyra was at the moment.
Mitchell had chosen the suite at random. Beijing had thousands of hotels, likely hundreds of thousands of rooms for rent, and even the MSS could not bug them all. At least that was the theory. There was still a decent chance that somewhere in the basement the MSS was listening, but Mitchell didn’t seem worried. Jonathan was sure it was a poker face. No cover story would hold up if they were raided. If they were arrested and Pioneer identified, whatever they told the Chinese government would be irrelevant. The MSS would consider proximity to be guilt, and none of them would set foot on United States soil again for a very long time. Jonathan had been in war zones, but he doubted that he had ever been in as much danger as he was this evening.
Mitchell sat at the cherry dining table finishing the remains of his risotto while a plate of pastry fritters waited on the side. Jonathan had tried to beg off the food — his jet-lagged stomach didn’t think it was time to eat — but Mitchell insisted and the analyst took a bowl of gnocchi. Mitchell had ordered frittate for Kyra and Pioneer, and it was keeping warm under a tray cover. Jonathan was sure she would appreciate the wine. His initial thought had been to wait to order until she arrived — he refused to think in terms of if—but he supposed that once Pioneer was in the room, Mitchell wouldn’t want anyone coming to the door.
Jonathan looked at the digital clock on the writing desk by the window. “We’re behind schedule,” Mitchell said.
“We have a schedule?” Jonathan asked.
“Always,” Mitchell said. “Twenty minutes late, but she’s still inside her window. If she doesn’t get here in the next ten minutes, we might have to push everyone back to the next flight.” He set his utensils on the plate, picked up a fritter, and walked over to the window.
There was a knock at the door. Jonathan resisted the urge to answer it, instead letting Mitchell take the job in case there was some private entry protocol he’d arranged. If there was one, it was subtle. The senior NCS officer simply looked through the peephole and opened the door. The woman at the door was shorter than Kyra, with shoulder-length dark hair. She was dressed in casual clothing and dragging a wheeled suitcase behind. She marched past Mitchell and he closed the door to the hallway.
“John, this is Anna Monaghan,” Mitchell said. “She’s with S and T”—the Agency’s Directorate of Science and Technology. “John’s an analyst.”
Anna offered her hand. “Cooke told me about you before I got on the plane.”
“Then you’re a recent import?” Jonathan asked.
“I am,” Anna said. “Just got in. Hate the flight from Dulles. Coming down over Russian airspace drives me up the wall.”
“The Russkies don’t shoot down airliners anymore,” Mitchell said. “And you won’t be here long enough to get lagged. After you do your beauty work on our friend, you’re on the first flight out tomorrow,” Mitchell said.
“A shame you won’t get the suite when we’re done,” Jonathan said.
“I wish,” Anna said. “Same hotel, but I’m six floors down with the common folk.” She scanned the room and looked to Mitchell. “Stryker’s still on the street?”
“Stepped out ninety minutes ago. She’s still got ten minutes,” Mitchell said. “Fifteen before I get really worried.”
“I’ll set up in the bedroom. I need to steal the desk, and I am taking a shower.”
“No arguments here,” Mitchell said. The woman rolled her case into the bedroom and closed the sliding door.
Kyra and Pioneer entered the Marriott lobby twenty-two minutes behind schedule. The taxi driver had taken a winding route to find any persistent cars behind, and their surveillance detection run on foot had not turned out any hostiles. It still wasn’t a given that they were alone, but having made it this far was a promising development. Unless the MSS was running a particularly sophisticated operation, waiting to learn the hotel room number so they could arrest Pioneer together with his handler, their odds of escape had risen considerably. She hoped that their body doubles would not have to spend an unpleasant evening in the local lockup. The MSS would not be able to prove that their proximity and similar dress to a known traitor and his escort was sure evidence of participation in a conspiracy, but Kyra doubted that the MSS required proof beyond a reasonable doubt. She suspected that their threshold for conviction dropped as their annoyance level rose, and once they realized that Pioneer was no longer under their watch, the annoyance level would be stratospheric.
Jonathan had been right. She was craving a shot of anything she could lay hands on, knowing this would be a terrible time for it. If the operation went south and Roland and Rebecca went to prison… she knew without a doubt that the imprisonment of two fellow officers as the price paid for her sake would drive her down into the bottle.
Kyra cursed herself for letting her mind wander. It was like Venezuela again. She had picked a poor moment for self-examination. Still not safe. She exhaled, scanned the lobby, and found the elevators. She led Pioneer away from the front desk toward the lifts and reached for her front pocket. She extracted the disposable cell phone, a low-end Nokia.
She dialed the second number preprogrammed into the phone, which was the chief of station’s number for his own rented disposable phone. Both units were destined for secure disposal, where and how Mitchell hadn’t bothered to tell her. This would be the last call her phone would ever make.