He slowed his pace until most of the pedestrians—?swift-?walking New Yorkers, all—?were flowing past him. Then he casually paused to look at himself in a window while turning his attention behind. It was as he thought: an Asian man in a tracksuit, face half-?hidden by a baseball cap, was a hundred yards back, also slowing down, apparently keeping pace.
Gideon swore under his breath. While it might still be in his imagination, he could take no chances. Even if it wasn’t that particular fellow, with all these crowds it could be anyone. He had to assume he was being followed and act accordingly.
He crossed Broadway and entered the subway station, going to the downtown platform. The station was packed, and it was impossible to know if the man in the tracksuit had followed him down. But it didn’t matter — there was one surefire way to lose the son of a bitch. Gideon had done it before. It was fun and dangerous and foolproof. He felt his heart quicken in anticipation.
He waited until he heard a faint rumble from the uptown tracks across the way. As he leaned out, he could see the headlights of a local coming up the tunnel, closing in fast on the platform.
Waiting for just the right moment, and making sure no other trains were coming, he leapt down onto the tracks. There was a gratifying chorus of screams, shouts, and loud admonishments from the waiting crowd. Ignoring them, he hopped over the third rail, crossed the uptown local tracks just ahead of the arriving train, and scrambled onto the platform. More screaming, shouts, hollering—
As the train pulled out he saw, through the grimy window, across the rails, the Asian man in a tracksuit still standing on the downtown platform, staring in his direction.
24
Like the whining of a mosquito, the persistent sound of a buzzer intruded into the exceedingly pleasant dream of Tom O’Brien. He sat up with a groan and looked at his clock. Nine thirty in the morning. Who could possibly be disturbing him at this ungodly hour?
The buzzer sounded again, three short blasts. O’Brien muttered, throwing off the covers, pushing the cat to the floor, and picking his way through the strewn apartment to the door. He pushed the intercom button. “Go fuck yourself.”
“It’s me. Gideon. Let me up.”
“Do you have any idea what time it is?”
“Just let me up, you can bitch later.”
O’Brien thumbed the door-lock button, unlatched his front door, and wandered back to his bed, sitting down and rubbing his face.
A minute later Gideon came in, carrying a bulky Pelican case. O’Brien stared at him. “Well, well, look what the cat dragged in. When did you blow into town?”
Ignoring this, Gideon set down the case, went to the window, and, standing next to it, opened the curtain with a finger and peered out.
“Cops after you? You still boosting shit out of museums?”
“You know I gave that up a long time ago.”
“You look like yesterday’s feces.”
“You’re always so affirmative, that’s one of the things I like about you. Where’s the coffee?”
O’Brien pointed a finger toward the Pullman kitchen at the back of the studio apartment. Avoiding the moldy dishes in the sink, Gideon rattled around and soon emerged with a coffeepot and mugs.
“Man, you’re ripe,” said O’Brien, helping himself to a cup. “And your duds are revolting. What the hell you been doing?”
“I’ve been swimming in the Harlem River and being chased across subway tracks.”
“You’re kidding?”
“I’m not kidding.”
“Want to take a shower?”
“Love to. And also — got any clothes I can borrow?”
O’Brien went into his closet and sorted through a huge pile of suspiciously dirty clothing sitting on the floor, picking out a few items and tossing them toward Gideon.
Ten minutes later, he was cleaned up and dressed in reasonably fresh clothes. They felt a little loose on him—?O’Brien hadn’t stayed quite as skinny as Gideon—?and they were covered with satanic designs and logos of the death metal band Cannibal Corpse.
“You look marvelous,” O’Brien said. “But you’ve got the pants pulled up too high.” He reached over and tugged them so they were hanging halfway down Gideon’s ass. “That’s how it’s supposed to look.”
“Your taste in music and clothing is atrocious.” Gideon hiked them back up. “Look, I need your help. I’ve got a few problems for you to solve.”
O’Brien shrugged, sipped his coffee.
Gideon unlocked the Pelican case and removed a piece of paper. “I’m working on an assignment, undercover. I can’t tell you much about it — except that I’m looking for a set of plans.”
“Plans? What sort of plans?”
“To a weapon.”
“Cloak and dagger, man. What kind of weapon?”
“I don’t know. And that’s really all I can safely tell you.” He handed him the piece of paper. “There is a bunch of numbers here. I have no idea what they mean. I want you to tell me.”
“Is it some kind of code?”
“All I know is it has something to do with weapon plans.”
O’Brien eyeballed the sheet. “I can tell you right off that there’s a theoretical upper limit to the amount of information that could be contained in these numbers, and it isn’t even enough to detail the plans for a pop- gun.”
“The numbers could be something else, a passcode, bank account or safe-deposit, directions to a hiding place, the encoded name and address of a contact…or, for all I know, a recipe for chop suey.”
O’Brien grunted. Over the years, he had gotten used to his friend’s vanishings and reappearances, his black moods, his secretive doings and quasi-criminal habits. But this really took the cake. He stared at the numbers, then a smile cracked his face. “These numbers are anything but random,” he said.
“How do you know?”
O’Brien grunted. “Just looking at ’em. I doubt this is a code at all.”
“What is it, then?”
O’Brien shrugged, laid the paper down. “What other goodies you got in that case?”
Gideon reached in and pulled out a passport and credit card. O’Brien took them; both were Chinese. He stared. “Is all this…legal?”
“It’s necessary — for our country.”
“Since when did you become a patriot?”
“What’s wrong with patriotism — especially when it pays?”
“Patriotism, my dear chap, is the last refuge of a scoundrel.”
“Spare me your left-wing twaddle. I don’t see you packing your bags and moving to Russia.”
“All right, all right, stop hyperventilating. So what do you want me to do with the passport and credit card?”
“Both have magnetic stripes containing data. I want you to download that data and parse it, see if anything unusual is hidden in it.”
“Piece of cake. Next?”