“When I ask if he is religious.”

Knowing of Andrei Stanescu’s Orthodox faith, part of Xin Zhu’s argument had been to quote the Bible, lines of which-Erika knew from experience-could be pulled out to justify most anything. Zhu hadn’t dug too deeply, though, sticking with the old standard. “And if any mischief follow, then thou shalt give life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burning for burning, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.”

“Is he religious?”

“He did not say.”

“What do you think?”

Andrei stared at Leticia Jones deeply, then touched the bottle of water in front of him but didn’t drink. “Maybe,” he said, but refused to commit himself further.

Leticia Jones did not bother to tell him that the man he had shot was not his daughter’s murderer. It was beyond Leticia Jones’s mandate-which was, as far as Erika could tell, to find out everything about the person of Xin Zhu from people who had met him personally, even briefly. What this told Erika was that the CIA knew embarrassingly little about the man, and it was desperate to learn anything.

Leticia Jones saved the most crucial question for the second day, and when she asked it, her tone was exactly as it had been the previous day: calm, welcoming, almost seductive.

“Why do you think he did it?” A pause. A gentle smile. “Why do you think he helped you-a stranger-take revenge for the murder of your daughter?”

Andrei didn’t need to think about that; he’d thought about it ever since March 28, when he’d picked up the big Chinese man from the airport and listened-at times exasperated, other times hypnotized-to his story. “Rick, his son was murdered. He know what it can do to a father. He know how going back to the murderer can make a father good when he is terrible. No, not good. Better.”

“Better than good?”

“Better than terrible. He know this man that kill my Adriana. He sees injustice, he wants order. He believes in order of thing.”

“So Rick is a man who makes order where there is no order.”

“Exact.”

“You like him.”

“He give me gift. He don’t know me, but he give me gift.”

A gift, Erika thought, that will ruin you once you’ve gotten past this wonderful high.

Before calling the interview finished at 1:18 P. M. on Thursday the twenty-fourth, Leticia Jones rested her hands on the oak table that had separated them all this time, palms down so that each of her long, red-painted nails glimmered under the ceiling lamp, and said, “Herr Stanescu, after hearing all this, it strikes me that you really like Rick. Am I right?”

Andrei nodded. “He is very good man, for me.”

“Which makes me wonder,” she said, “why you would be so open with us. Certainly you realize that we don’t mean your Rick much good. We’re not his friends. In fact, he’s done some terrible things to us, and we don’t forgive easily.”

Andrei nodded.

“Don’t you worry you’re betraying him?”

Andrei smiled, then intoned, “Give to Caesar what thing is for Caesar, and to God the things what is for God.”

You just take what you like from that book, thought Erika.

She walked Jones out to her car, and from beyond the trees they heard traffic humming down the highway. “So what did he do to you?” Erika asked in English. When Jones didn’t reply, she clarified. “Xin Zhu, I mean. Kidnapping people off of foreign streets is no small thing.”

Jones still didn’t reply, only smiled, her feet crunching twigs.

“Tell Alan Drummond that if he wants to be a little less secretive, then I could have a look in our files. We might have something.”

“Drummond?”

“Your boss.”

“You haven’t heard,” Jones said, shaking her head. “Alan Drummond’s out of a job.”

“That’s why they cleared out the offices of the Department of Tourism?”

To her credit, Jones didn’t flinch. “All I know is he’s in the unemployment line. Anything else is above my pay grade.”

“Like what Xin Zhu did to you people?”

Jones shrugged; then Erika put a hand on her elbow, finally understanding. They looked at each other.

“He destroyed it, didn’t he? The department. That would be…” Erika took a breath, wondering what this could mean, and how it might have been done. It was quite nearly awe-inspiring. A legendary department that had struck fear in the hearts of spies all over the planet for at least a half century, felled by a single angry man in China.

Leticia Jones wasn’t going to affirm or deny a thing. She said, “You’ve been very kind, and the American people appreciate it.”

“I doubt that.”

Jones opened the door, then, as an afterthought, placed a hand on Erika’s shoulder. “Well, I appreciate it.”

“Not enough to tell me what Xin Zhu did to deserve this personality analysis?”

Jones got into her car and rolled down the window. “Xin Zhu did nothing, and everything, if you know what I mean.”

“I don’t.”

A shrug, then Leticia Jones drove away.

By evening, both she and Hector Garza were on flights to New York. Erika asked a team to watch them, but somewhere on the road between New York and D.C., the two agents vanished into the cool American night.

PART ONE

IN THE HOUSE OF SOCIALIST PHILOSOPHY

FRIDAY, MAY 16 TO TUESDAY, MAY 20, 2008

1

The time Xin Zhu spent trying to be unheard could have added up to an entire life. Hours driving extra laps through a city, watching the rearview; accumulated minutes gazing into street-window reflections and standing in queues for bread or soup he didn’t even want because his stomach was in knots. Sitting behind desks, thinking through cover stories and diversions and wondering how long ago his office was last scoured for bugs. Visits to cemeteries and bars and churches and empty warehouses and parking garages, only to find that his date wasn’t going to show up. Meals lost sitting for hours in dark rooms, in airports and train stations and wet public squares, waiting.

Then today, driving the dull hour and a half from Beijing to Nankai along the G020, ditching his ten-year-old Audi and taking a taxi to the train station in tree-lined Xiqing. Waiting on the platform until the Qingdao train started to roll before heaving his large body and small gray overnight bag onto the last car. Hovering in the doorway as the station passed, watching for latecomers. All this, even though this same train began life in south Beijing, not so far from where his journey began. All this, just to meet someone who, like him, lived and worked in Beijing.

The story, which his assistant could be depended on to proliferate, was that Xin Zhu was on a weekend trip to Shanghai to gain 665 miles of perspective and consider his dwindling options. By the time the masters in Beijing

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