He turned his attention to the knife tour for a few moments, admiring a trip-hammer that was using hydraulic power to beat the hell out of a piece of hot steel being moved around in it by a tong-brandishing worker, stripped from the waist up.
But then he turned back.
“There are, of course, many questions.”
“Of course.”
“You’ll answer them all in due course.”
“So I supposed.”
“But there is one in particular that I have been directed to ask you, just in case something goes awry.”
“In case I get sucked out of the airplane.”
“Rogue wave. Meteor strike.”
“All right. What is the one question?”
“Who killed all those men in your apartment?”
She made no answer.
“Was it you?”
She snorted.
“Because we didn’t think you were that sort of spy.”
“I’m not,” she said. “It wasn’t me.”
“Well, who was it then?”
“You squandered your one question,” she said, “on something that would take me a day and a half to answer properly.”
“Do we need to
“Those probably weren’t even Chinese people,” she said, “but the answer is no. And by the way, he’s not British.”
“Good. Ah yes. One more thing.”
“I thought you said there’d only be one more question.”
“It’s difficult to stop once I’ve got started.”
“Go ahead, then.”
“Where is Abdallah Jones?”
“He could be anywhere in the world,” she said. “He was at an airport last night.”
“Bloody shame.”
“Isn’t it.”
“
Olivia shrugged.
“How do you know he was at
This, then, was the moment. But she didn’t know who this guy was. How much power he wielded, what he might, or might not, be able to do for her. Her sense was that he was just acting here as a conduit between her and someone else, someone back in London. “Mr. Y,” she said.
“He of the chromosome?”
“Yes.”
“I’m all ears.”
“Mr. Y talked to Jones on the phone.”
“That must have been an interesting conversation.”
“Mr. Y’s half of it certainly was. In any case, he knew, somehow, that Jones was at an airport. I would guess he heard jet engines in the background, or instructions on how to fasten a lap belt.”
“But Mr. Y knows nothing further.”
“Funny you should ask,” Olivia said. “Mr. Y says he has more information now. Information that could be used to figure out where Jones went.”
“And where is Mr. Y? Stuck in China?”
“Probably looking at you from behind a shrub. Don’t look around, though.”
“I shan’t. Can’t say how pleased I am that he understands the need to keep his head down.”
“He has all sorts of talents.”
This elicited a searching look from the man. Olivia, remembering this morning’s activities in the bunker, felt her face getting warm and hoped that he would mistake it for the red heat of the case-hardening furnace glowing on her face. Hurrying on, she continued: “If you would like to make an arrangement with him to get him out of the country safely—which is what I recommend and advocate—then I can make a rendezvous with him and let him know where matters stand.”
“Obviously, I don’t have a ready-made passport for a gentleman of his description,” the man said, “since I don’t even know what his description
“I understand. I get it.”
“Speaking of passports—”
Olivia was nonplussed for a few moments, then took his meaning. She reached into her pocket and took out her Chinese passport. Her million-pound Meng Anlan passport. The man took it from her and, with a flip of the wrist, tossed it through the open maw of the forge. It exploded into flame before it had even touched the coals, and was fully consumed in a few moments.
“Farewell, Meng Anlan,” he said. “Hello, whoever’s name is on the passport in that bag. I’ve forgotten it already.”
“Obviously, I’m pleased that you can get whoever I now am out of the country,” Olivia said. “But I am disinclined to leave until I know what is to come of Mr. Y. I know you can’t get a passport for him. But isn’t there some way—”
The man was nodding. “We do, in fact, have a backup plan.”
“Really?”
“Yes. We’re good at such things. It is much more old-school. Very Cold War. Your friend might like it.”
“Pocket submarine?”
“Even more old-school than that. There’s a containership,” he said. “You can actually see it from the north shore of the island. Riding at anchor. Panamanian registered. Filipino crewed. Taiwanese owned. It has been taking on cargo at Xunjianggang. In a few hours, it is departing for the Port of Long Beach. We’d hoped we could get something Sydney bound—which would be quicker—but it’s more important to get you and your fantastically homicidal entourage out of here
“How do we make this work?”