“It’s as bad as Ames,” Exley said.
“Worse,” Shafer said. “The Soviets were on the way out when Ames betrayed us. He got some people killed, but he didn’t change the Cold War. But this—”
Shafer broke off. He didn’t need to say anything more, Exley thought. The struggle for dominance between the United States and China had only just begun. Now this CIA mole, whoever he was, had given China an enormous advantage. His treachery had opened a window on America’s most secret intelligence programs and military capabilities while giving China the chance to conceal its own.
“How many agents do we have in China?” Exley said.
“Even before this, we were incredibly thin over there. A half-dozen PLA officers, a couple of mid-level politicians. But no one really senior. With one exception. Maybe.”
“Maybe?” Shafer said. “Mind if I ask what you’re talking about?”
Tyson looked at Shafer. He seemed to consider his next words carefully, though perhaps the hesitation was as much an act as everything else he did, Exley thought.
“I’ve said too much already. The ramblings of an old man.”
Exley saw the pit bull hiding in Tyson’s basset hound face and decided to drop the subject. Still, what he’d said didn’t make much sense. Why would one agent have escaped if the mole had given up everyone else?
“George,” Shafer said, “I have to ask again. How do we know that this fine gentleman isn’t just messing with us?”
“Watch and learn, Ellis.” Tyson clicked the DVD one more time.
“HOW MUCH DID YOU PAY THIS SPY?” the English woman said.
“I don’t know exactly, but millions.”
“What did he give you?”
“Everything the Americans did in China. If they recruited someone, planned an operation, everything.”
“Were you worried that the CIA had planted him? That he was a source of disinformation?”
“Disinformation?” The off-screen translator said something in Chinese. Wen nodded vigorously, almost angrily. “Yes. Of course, we considered he might be trying to fool us. You think we don’t understand these situations?”
“Of course, of course,” the woman said soothingly.
“At first we test him, use him only to check information we already know. But everything he gives us is correct. Very specific, and always correct. So we know he must be real.”
“Mr. Wen, what was the most valuable information this agent provided?”
“Easy,” Wen said. “He told us the Americans had an agent in North Korea. A nuclear scientist. The Americans called him Drafter.”
Exley heard a gasp. She needed a moment to realize she’d made the sound. The Chinese had given the Drafter to the North Koreans?
“When was that?”
“Two years ago, maybe.”
“When did you tell the North Koreans what you’d learned?”
“Not until this year. A few weeks ago.”
“Why did you wait?”
“I don’t know. How do the Americans say it? ‘Above my pay grade.’”
“Do you have any idea?”
“I think some people think China should stand up to America. United States has many problems right now. Time for China to show its power. If America doesn’t answer, then China knows it is winning.”
“People in Zhongnanhai, you mean?”
“Yes. Ministers. The Standing Committee. But not everyone.”
“We’ll return to that later. Let’s focus on this scientist — the Drafter, as you call him. What did you tell the North Koreans about him? His name?”
“We didn’t know his real name. But enough so that they could identify him.”
“And how did you find out about this? It wasn’t to do with Europe.”
“Of course I find out.” Wen looked irritated. “I was home in Beijing when the North Koreans sank the boat that the Americans sent to rescue him. I am eighth-ranking officer in the Second Directorate. Of course I hear.”
Tyson paused the DVD.
“NOT THE SEVENTH-RANKING, and not the ninth-ranking. The eighth-ranking. Ellis, you believe him now?”
Shafer nodded. “Obviously he’s telling the truth. The Chinese have somebody inside. Otherwise they wouldn’t have known the Drafter’s code name.”
“And Chinese wouldn’t give up the mole,” Tyson said. “He’s too valuable. So Wen’s defection is real. He did it on his own, not on orders from Beijing. Maybe for Ms. Monica Cheng. Maybe because of those pesky audits.”
Shafer looked at Exley. “You agree?”
Exley considered. “I’m not sure. We already knew we had a mole. Even if we haven’t made much progress finding him.” The traffic and property records they’d searched hadn’t offered any clues, and they were still waiting for new polygraph results. “The real test is whether he helps us find the mole.”
Tyson grinned. “Ms. Exley. You are the brains of the operation, I see now.”
Exley was tired of playing the good student to the two masters. “And you’re a smug, patronizing jerk.”
Tyson’s smile didn’t disappear. “You sound just like my wife. The strange part is that I really was trying to pay you a compliment. You’re two hundred proof spot-on.”
He clicked the DVD.
“CAN WE STOP FOR TONIGHT?” Wen’s suit jacket was off, sweat stains widening under his arms.
“A few more questions. And then I promise you can rest. Now. This mole within the CIA. Did you know his name?”
“No.”
“Department?”
“Told you already, he was in the Division of Operations.”
“Where in the Directorate of Operations? On the China desk?”
“Not sure. Asia, but maybe not China. Also he spent time in what the Americans call counterintelligence. Don’t know where he is now.”
“Can you tell us anything else about him?”
Wen closed his eyes. “Something happened to him. Something bad. Personal. A few years ago.”
“Like he was in an accident?”
Wen shook his head. “Not exactly. Something else. A big problem. He didn’t tell us. We found it ourselves when we were checking him.”
“Anything else? I promise, this is the last question tonight.”
“He served in Asia. A long time ago.”
“Do you know where?”
“No. And you said last question.” At that Wen stubbed out his cigarette, folded his hands on the table, and closed his eyes.
TYSON CLICKED OFF THE DVD, leaving the screen black.
“So, Ms. Exley, you see I wasn’t trying to be smug and patronizing, though perhaps I can’t help myself. You asked the right question.”
“And the answer is yes,” Exley said. She felt slightly mollified. “Wen gave us enough to find our mole. He’s spent most of his career on the Asia desk. He’s worked in counterintelligence. He was in Asia briefly and had ‘a family problem.”’
“I’m guessing it wasn’t an argument with his mother-in-law,” Shafer said. “There can’t be too many case officers who match all those criteria. If we check that against your seventy names, we should get him, or get very close.”
“Soon, please,” Tyson said. “Because the Brits told our China desk about Wen’s defection yesterday. The mole will be wondering if Wen has tipped us to him already.”
“That’s why you’d rather have the Brits hold on to Wen?”
“Exactly. Until we know who the mole is, we’re better off with Wen as far from Langley as possible. Meanwhile, based on what he said about the mole having some connection to counterintel, I have to assume that we don’t have much time before he runs. If this guy’s been around as long as Wen says, he’ll know he’s in trouble.”