Typhoon (13 page)

Read Typhoon Online

Authors: Charles Cumming

When a spook says that to another spook, you know you’re in trouble.

“So all anyone has to do is hear Wang’s voice on a safe-house microphone and they immediately know it’s him?”

It was the obvious flaw in Miles’s version of events, but the American had it covered.

“We got lucky,” he said.

“How?”

“You know Steve Mackay?”

Joe knew Steve Mackay. “Yes.”

“He was involved in what happened in Beijing. Got a routine call from Kenneth yesterday asking if it was cool for you guys to use Yuk Choi Road. Said they had a Xinjiang walk-in who’d rafted over from Shenzhen. Bill asked for a description, got a hold of the audio, called me in when he put two and two together.”

“Hence Kenneth’s presence this morning.”

“Hence.” Miles made a face at the word. “He was your man, Joe, he was your walk-in. You had a duty to share.”

Joe leaned back and caught the eye of a girl at the bar. She smiled through the crush of bodies, dark, interested eyes. For some reason “With or Without You” was playing a second time on the sound system and he felt as though he were trapped in a loop of persistent evasions.

“What happened when you got there?”

“Like Kenneth told you. We already knew who he was and took him back up to the border.”

Joe seized on this. “You’ve spoken to Kenneth about me today?”

“Sure.” Miles took a drag on his cigarette, like a tell in poker. “You think that’s odd?”

“I don’t think it’s normal.” Miles produced a look of bewilderment which invited Joe to continue. “Try to see it from my perspective. I get to the apartment this morning, Lee acts like I’m a priest about to walk in on an orgy. It was as if he’d been instructed to keep me in the dark.”

“That’s the nature of the business we’re in.” Miles illustrated his point with hard, staccato chops of his hand, as if stating the obvious to a junior officer still learning the ropes. “That’s how Lee has been trained to operate. When a Chinese double gets turned back to the mainland, the less people that know about it, the better. Right?”

“So I can’t be trusted with that information? I spend three hours interviewing this guy, uncover intel about riots in Yining, revolutionary fervour across north-west China, as well as what appear to be astonishing human rights abuses in Xinjiang prisons, but his whereabouts are to remain a complete mystery to me.”

Miles was about to say “What mystery?” when two things happened. First, the Chinese girl stood up, along with the other four members of her table, and left the bar. Second, a troupe of five stewardesses passed her on their way into Samba’s wearing the bright red uniforms of Virgin Airways. It was Christmas Day for Miles Coolidge. He forgot all about the Wang situation and produced a low, involuntary hum like the mating call of a sperm whale.

“Sweet Mary mother of all that is good and sacred. Look at what we have here.”

Joe could follow their progress in a mirror hung on the opposite wall, a moving tapestry of hair and make-up laughing all the way to the bar. He watched as Miles’s tanned, shaved head rotated through a hundred and eighty degrees.

“Don’t even think about it.”

“Oh come on.” The American was already on his feet. “Isabella’s all tucked up in bed. Let’s go get some before it gets cold.”

But Joe was lucky. As Miles walked towards the bar, taking with him all hope of their conversation continuing, the stewardesses were enveloped in a ring of freshly showered pilots and cabin crew, never to be seen again. Miles turned on his heels.

“Fuckers,” he said, returning to his seat. “Fuckers.”

 

 

15

UNDER GROUND

 

 

 

 

 

 

They lasted another
ten minutes before Miles announced that he wanted to go “someplace else.” Joe should have been wise to the implication—it was one o’clock in the morning, after all—but he allowed Miles to lead him through the stifling, humid streets to a basement nightclub on Luard Road where there was a bouncer on the door, a dimly lit staircase and no entry fee. In Wan Chai, that usually meant only one thing: the club would be full of hookers.

“Been here before?” Joe asked as he pushed through a warped double door at the foot of the stairs to be hit by a wall of cigarette smoke and house music. Miles said, “Coupla’ times,” and followed close behind him. To their left was a darkened, open-plan seating area where groups of expat men, varying in age from perhaps eighteen up to sixty-five, sat at tables talking to girls from the Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand. The bar was directly ahead of them, a high-countered rectangle surrounded on all sides by customers and girls on stools. A sweat-oozing dance floor heaved to their right. Miles walked past Joe, found a table in the far corner of the club and brought over two vodka and tonics.

“Why not Neptune’s? Why not Big Apple?” Joe asked, tilting the question towards sarcasm. Big Apple and Neptune’s were Miles’s favoured knocking shops on the island, ports of call for a certain type of
gweilo
looking for easy sex after a night out in Hong Kong. Both were awash with women from South-east Asia who would accompany you home for less than the price of a three-course dinner at Rico’s. Joe had been to Neptune’s on several occasions and had hated everything about the experience, not least the barely disguised contempt the trafficked girls held for their cash-rich clientele. But sex for sale was part of everyday life in Hong Kong and Joe wasn’t the type to sit in judgment. If Miles wanted to pay an eighteen-year-old girl from Haiphong who spoke no English to spend the night with him at his apartment in the Mid-Levels, that was his problem.

“I’m not here to get laid, man,” Miles said, as if reading his mind. “I just like the atmosphere. It’s smaller than those other places, right? More intimate. You rather be someplace else?”

Joe knew that Miles had probably brought him to the club as a means of testing the boundaries of his fidelity to Isabella, but he was not about to give a drunk, randy, belligerent American the pleasure of his moral indignation.

“I really don’t care,” he said. “I just want to find out what happened to Wang.”

Miles rolled his eyes and curled a grin at a passing girl wearing a short pink skirt. “Jesus. Can’t you let that go? You fucked up, Joe. You thought Wang was going to make your career and you fell for it. It’s nobody’s fault but your own. Deal with it.”

It took a lot to trigger Joe Lennox’s temper, and this was as close as anyone had come in a long time. He looked across at the dance floor, at the unchosen girls dancing in solemn pairs, at a pot-bellied businessman draping his heavy, sweat-stained arms over the shoulders of a micro-skirted hooker, at a Thai girl laughing as she ground her arse into the crotch of a man whose face was a rictus of consternation, and wondered why the hell he spent so much time in the company of this craven spy whose behaviour was a constant affront to his sensibilities. Was it just a sense of professional responsibility which kept them together? Isabella seemed to like Miles; perhaps that had something to do with it. Or was it simply that Joe had always preferred the company of mavericks and nonconformists, if only because they offered an antidote to the mostly strait-laced sons and daughters of middle England around whom he had grown up?

“I don’t think I fucked up,” he replied, controlling his anger. “I just think you’re lying to me.”

Miles shook his head. “Jesus.” A girl in tottering heels approached their table and he waved her away as if she were little more than a fly in his face. Joe felt a thump of despair. “Let’s put this argument out of its misery, OK?” Miles took one of Joe’s cigarettes and moved his vodka to one side of the table, as if clearing space in which he could make his point. “I’ve listened to last night’s tapes. I’ve listened to what Wang told you. And none of it is news to us. None of it is in the slightest bit of any fucking interest whatsoever.”

Joe caught a wave of garlic breath and pitched away, his eyes going back to the dance floor. He thought of Isabella asleep in bed and wanted to be beside her, entwined in her, away from this. It occurred to him that he had no idea how she had spent her day and this depressed him. “None of it?” he said.

“None of it. The Agency has known about Yining since day one. Christ, we had informants who took part in the riots. Everybody knows what’s going on up there. I’m surprised Wang had the nerve to show up with such an old story.”

Joe had spent the afternoon in the House of a Thousand Arseholes shuttling around the SIS computer system looking for recent reports on Xinjiang. Suffice to say, the Brits had nothing on record about a February uprising in Yining. It was the extent of Joe’s distrust that he suspected Lenan of having wiped the files that morning.

“What about the torture?” he said. “What about the human rights abuses?”

“What about them? Last time I checked I didn’t work for Amnesty International.” Miles was scoping girls, barely seeming to listen to him. At a nearby table, two of them, possibly sisters, slid in next to an American with a thick beard and a deep Texan accent. The low boom of his voice carried to where Joe was sitting and he could hear the man asking if they wanted drinks. “Look, do you know about Baren?”

Joe shook his head.

“Baren is a township in Aktu, near Kashgar.” Miles turned back to the table and now adopted a more serious expression. He had a near-encyclopaedic memory and enjoyed reeling off chunks of history. “Back in April 1990, the Chinese police broke up a public prayer meeting outside some government offices in Baren. Accused the worshippers of inciting
jihad
, of getting funding from the Afghan
muj
. Caused a riot involving about two thousand local Muslims. The cops and the Public Security Bureau, probably the Bin Tuan as well, brought in helicopters, riot troops, shot about fifty of them, including the ones who were running away. Surely you know about this?” Joe ignored the effortless condescension. “Baren was just about the biggest ethnic separatist uprising in Xinjiang in the last seven years. Out of a Muslim community of ten thousand, every man between the age of thirteen and sixty was arrested in connection with what happened. That’s how serious the Chinese take the situation up there. Then you got bombs going off right across Xinjiang. One on a bus in Urumqi killed about thirty people in early ‘92. This shit is happening all the time.”

“What about Yining?” Joe asked.

“What about it?”

“Is what Wang told me true?”

Miles drained his vodka and frowned. “Forget about Wang,” he said. “Wang Kaixuan is a myth, a spook story. Nothing that old fuck told you has any meaning.”

Joe was not an aficionado of American movies and did not realize that Miles was lazily quoting dialogue from
The Usual Suspects
.
Myth. Spook story
. For ten seconds in a Hong Kong nightclub, Wang Kaixuan was Keyser Söze. “So there was no uprising in Yining?” he asked. “No riots? No mass imprisonments? No torture?”

“Of course there was.” Miles was shrugging his shoulders but seemed equally interested in the fact that his drink was now finished and that it was Joe’s turn to buy a round. He looked down at his glass, rattling the ice. “Nobody’s denying that Yining was a shitstorm. Nobody’s saying that. But you gotta ask yourself a bunch of serious questions about the kind of guy you thought you were dealing with last night. Professor of economics? A Han Chinese who somehow speaks perfect English? Nobody north of Guangdong speaks English like that unless they’re MSS. For Christ’s sake, Joe, Wang spent a year at Oxford University in the seventies pretending to study law.” Miles saw Joe’s look of astonishment and added, “What? He didn’t tell you that?”

“Not in so many words . . .”

“Then he suddenly develops a conscience about Uighurs getting butt-fucked in Liu Daowan? Give me a break. What do you have here? An entirely new concept? The self-hating Han?” Miles laughed at his own joke and then narrowed his eyes. “How come he just
happens
to be in Yining when the riot takes place? He was a fucking government agent. You think a Chinese academic from northern Xinjiang is going to risk his life to save a few hundred Muslims? Don’t you have any understanding of the national character? All the Chinese care about is themselves. It’s me, myself and I—then me again if you’ve still got some time left over afterwards. I can’t believe how naïve you are.” Miles lifted his glass, waved it at the barman and indicated that he wanted two further vodka and tonics. “You’re paying for these, by the way.”

Joe was at a dead end. Experience had taught him to doubt the word of those who argued their case with a mixture of hostility and impatience; it usually meant that they were concealing something. He believed very little of what Miles was telling him, but had to tread carefully. Miles clearly enjoyed a much closer working relationship with Lenan than Joe had previously realized. As a result, everything that he said about the Wang situation would certainly be reported back to his SIS masters, with potential consequences for his career. So it was better to act dumb, to appear to accept Miles’s version of events and then to check the veracity of his story at a later date. Joe had a hunch that Lenan had handed Wang to the Americans. If that was the case, there was very little he could do about it. There was certainly no future in making waves. He just resented the fact that he was being treated like an idiot.

“Fine,” he said. “I’ll go and pay for the drinks.”

At the bar he handed a five-hundred-dollar note to a middle-aged Chinese cashier who looked as though she had been living underground for the best part of ten years. Her eyes were black pools of fatigue, her light-starved complexion a sickly yellow glow beneath the cruel lights of the neon bar. He put the drinks down on the table, told Miles he was “off to buy cigarettes” and walked to the entrance of the club, splashing water on his face in a toilet that stank of sex and piss.
Go home
, he told himself, though he was wired and hot and still angry that Wang had slipped from his grasp. Joe thought of Ansary Tursun and Abdul Bary, two Uighur men whose faces he had not yet seen, the one handcuffed to a basement wall in wretched solitary confinement, the other held down by laughing guards as his toenails were extracted by pliers. What was the true character of this country to the north, this ancient land to which Joe had committed so much of his young life? What would become of Hong Kong when the PLA goose-stepped over the border at midnight on 30 June? Joe felt drunk and melancholy. The thud of music in the club reverberated through the toilet walls and he walked outside onto the street to buy cigarettes from a 7– Eleven.

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