forward with his feet. The guest chair for the day.

Al turned to his right and pulled back the corner of an old tattered blue tarp he had fished out of the river since Jake’s last visit. A new piece of furniture covering for the living room.

“Marilyn is dead,” Jake said abruptly.

Al shot upright in his chair and his sunglasses fell off his head. “When?”

“Friday night. It was in Sunday’s paper.”

“What happened?” Al asked. He reached for his stack of newspapers from the weekend, not believing he missed any piece of published news.

“She fell down the escalator at the McPherson Square Metro station. That’s the report anyway.”

“What do you mean?” Al asked, pulling out Sunday’s Metro section.

“I was with her on Friday. And I’m not really sure, but I think we were being watched. Followed. I don’t know.”

Al’s eyes watered as he stared off into the distance. “Tell me exactly what happened. Details count.”

“We went out for drinks after work and went our separate ways near the station. As I was getting into a taxi, I think someone was watching me. An Asian guy.”

“That’s it?”

Jake told Al about Marilyn crying in the office and the morning conversation that had ruined his appetite for the day and his taste for waffles for life. “There is a service for Marilyn tomorrow evening,” Jake said with compassion. “I thought you might want to know.”

“Thanks.” Al rubbed the bridge of his nose with his forefinger and thumb. There was something there, something below the surface that Marilyn’s death had stirred up.

“Did you go to the police?” Al asked.

“Not yet. I wasn’t sure if I should. Like I said, I don’t know if it was anything. I don’t know if it was a coincidence, or if the guy was just zoned out on crack. But he was definitely looking at me. Gave me goose bumps.”

Al thought in silence before speaking. “It was probably nothing. I know a lot of homeless guys who will stare you down for no reason.”

“I guess that’s the truth.”

“You know that girl you are looking for?”

“Did you learn something?”

“She works for Chang Industries, but I think you already knew that.”

“Yeah, I knew where she worked. I wanted to know if you could find out where she worked.”

“Thanks for the show of confidence. Let me see if I can tell you something you didn’t know. Chang Industries is a sweatshop for which Winthrop Enterprises serves as the middleman. A guy named Lee Chang runs the sweatshop. Call it whatever you want, but Chang Industries, as benign as the name sounds, is not a nice place.”

“I haven’t heard anything about either Lee Chang or Chang Industries at work.”

Al thought it over. “What do you know about your father?”

“Not much, really. Why? Do you think Winthrop Enterprises has something to do with this?”

“Probably not. Your father is just a middleman. A very good one. Very savvy. He knows a lot of people.”

“I’m not following you.”

“All right. I’ll give you an example. Let’s say you have a product you need to have manufactured. You go to someone like your father, and he arranges for you to see different factories and facilities. You name the location.”

“So he just sets up meetings and acts as the intermediary.”

“Yes. And, depending on the deal, he gets a cut of the profits. He could even finance some of the deal for a bigger cut of the profits.”

Al was still thinking about Marilyn, trying to put the seemingly unrelated pieces together while carrying on his current conversation.

“So what’s the story with the Wei Ling girl?”

“She’s in Saipan on a work visa. It was renewed this June. Good for a year. She’s still in Saipan. No record of her leaving the island. On a personal note, she is twenty-three, five-foot-three, one hundred and ten pounds. She is from a small town in the Guangzhou province. No siblings, not surprising as China has a one-child policy unless you are wealthy enough to pay a steep fine for additional children. Blood type O.”

“Now how do you know what blood type she has?”

“A magician never reveals his secrets.”

“You said she hasn’t left the island?”

“No. She is still there. Why do you ask?”

“My father said she went back to China.”

“So your father is hiding something.”

“Hiding a few things I imagine,” Jake said. “Speaking of hiding, you said you would tell me about my father working as a spy for the CIA.”

“A spy? Hell no, Jake. He wasn’t employed by the CIA—he provided information to the CIA, via yours truly.”

“You were a spy?”

“An Official Cover Operative.”

“What the hell is an Official Cover Operative?”

“A CIA employee working under the safe umbrella and diplomatic immunity of the State Department. A perfectly legitimate spy, if there is such a thing.”

“A spy who spends his whole life telling everyone that he works for the State Department.”

“Not just telling everyone, actually working in the State Department, with State Department personnel. The only difference was that my boss was located at Langley.”

“So if my father wasn’t a spy…”

“He didn’t work for the CIA, but he fed the CIA information, for money. A very subtle difference.”

“I don’t think my father needs the money.”

“Jake the snake, when you’re right, you’re right. It wasn’t a matter of money with your father.”

“Then why did he do it?”

“For the chance to be a big shot. We are talking twenty some years ago. Your father had started Winthrop Enterprises and was traveling the globe making connections, signing deals and hobnobbing with the international elite.”

“That’s what he’s doing now.”

“Yes, but aaaaah, the world was a lot smaller twenty-five years ago. There weren’t a lot of westerners running around Tokyo and Beijing. Your father stood out. A young, successful, globetrotting American businessman.”

“I still don’t see the connection with the CIA.”

“Connection. Good choice of words. Your father was a connection.”

“How?”

“We paid your father to report on what he saw in Tokyo and Beijing. Who was talking to whom about what business. Deals in the works, activities of interests. Protests, if there were any. Incidents of bribing. Whatever he could tell us.”

“Wouldn’t the CIA know all of this?

“Sure, well, some of it anyway. But it cost a lot of money to get intelligence through formal channels. Renting real estate, setting up front companies, implementing electronic surveillance, these things aren’t free and believe it or not the CIA does have a budget. Paying American citizens to tell us what they know is cheap.”

“So what did he tell you?”

“Your father was a good source of intelligence for a few years. He tipped us off to the sale of certain illegal hi-tech goods in Asia that we weren’t aware of. Some technology that ended up in a North Korean sub that washed

Вы читаете Sweat
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату