Terashima.’
Stone could see Zhang’s plan. It followed a time-honoured sequence. Threaten prisoner with bogus murder charge. Prisoner denies charge. Zhang tells prisoner it can be so much easier if prisoner tells everything he knows about third person. In this case, Semyonov.
‘You were seen entering her room,’ continued Zhang.
‘You were there,’ repeated Zhang. His heart wasn’t in it. Zhang knew he wasn’t the murderer. And Stone smelt Semyonov’s influence in this.
Zhang tried the silent thing again, but had already realised Stone could out-silence most people, so he restarted his volley of questions. ‘What are you doing in Hong Kong, Stone? What was your relationship with Terashima?’
Better. The more questions Zhang came out with, the more he would reveal what he was up to. Stone lounged back and look insolently at him again, forcing Zhang to try something else.
‘Why did you go illegally into the Zhonghua Hotel to harass Mr Semyonov?’
It was Zhang’s first mention of Semyonov. Semyonov had basically defected to China the night before, and of course Beijing would protect him.
Zhang realised he was talking too much and clammed up again. Stone knew what was next, though. Back to the threat.
‘You should talk, English. You are in trouble for this murder. Tell me what happened. Otherwise you face long years in my Chinese jail. Or the firing squad in Guangdong.’
‘You are an investigator, Professor Zhang’ said Stone. ‘Threats are unworthy of you.’
The smile had gone from Zhang. His threat hadn’t worked the way it normally did with Westerners. Stone hadn’t even asked for a lawyer.
‘Let me get to the point, Professor Zhang,’ said Stone leaning forward. ‘You know I didn’t murder Junko Terashima.’
‘Supposition,’ said Zhang with very correct English pronunciation.
‘But true,’ said Stone, ‘You, Professor, are a Beijing intellectual. You are not here for the murder of Japanese girl in a Hong Kong whorehouse. You’re investigating something more complex,’ he said. ‘You know I didn’t kill her. You’re using the threat of a murder charge to discover what I know.’
‘Perhaps,’ said Zhang slowly. ‘But this is no idle threat, English. The man who went to Terashima’s room was on camera. He hid his face from the camera, but it was a European man. He looked like you. The murder charge is real. I suggest you begin talking, Stone.’
Finally Zhang was showing his hand.
‘Who are you watching, Professor? Who are you really investigating?’ asked Stone. ‘Me? Or Semyonov?’
‘Semyonov is a friend of The People’s Republic of China,’ Zhang said, flatly. Too flatly. So it was Semyonov — but was Zhang investigating, or protecting the man? Whose side was Zhang on?
‘He’s a friend of China — but you don’t trust him, do you, professor?’ said Stone. Trying to flush him out. ‘What about the weapons trading? Is that what this is about?’
Zhang began the neutral half smile again. It looked inscrutable, but Stone was getting used to this. The neutral thing meant Zhang was thinking what to say. At length Zhang asked another question. ‘Since you bring it up, do you believe the gossip about weapons trading which Miss Terashima talked about?’
‘Why should I know anything about it?’ replied Stone, deadpan. Trying to irritate the Professor. Let Zhang think he was onto to something and then cut him off. Zhang had dropped his guard with that last question. If Stone could get him ruffled again he would drop it again. He threw one of the professor’s mocking half-smiles back at Zhang.
‘Let me remind you of the murder charge against you English!’ shouted Zhang, slapping the table.
We’re in business.
‘I know all about you, Stone!’ continued Zhang, ranting. ‘Dropped out of university,’ Zhang said this contemptuously, ‘Then you spent seven years in the British Army Special Forces.’ Zhang’s slit-like eyes tried to cut into Stone. ‘You are a bourgeois troublemaker. A self-publicist…’ And on it went. At last Zhang had opened up about Stone. He had a file many centimetres thick on him by the sound of it.
And “self-publicist”. Stone loved that one. There could be no stronger insult from Zhang. He’d probably spent forty years fighting for his ideals, watching his country destroy itself through the Cultural Revolution, then rebuild, but Zhang was devoted through it all to the memory of Mao Zedong. Equality. The Communist system. The Iron Rice Bowl. Only to find that after Zhang's lifetime of loyalty, it was the regime itself which had abandoned Communist ideals.
‘I campaign against war, weapons trafficking and people who make fortunes from weapons,’ said Stone. ‘I am still a soldier. I am a soldier for peace; and you are a warrior of the mind, Professor Zhang. We have much in common.’ He knew it would be irritating.
‘Please, Mr Stone,’ spat Zhang contemptuously. ‘You are SAS. Your exploits may dazzle the young women who chase after you, but your soul is that of a killer. The SAS kills people. My file tells me you are a killer, Mr Ethan Eric Stone. And you think you can carry on your filthy trade in China.’
Stone’s cool grey eyes looked back at the leathery face. ‘No, Professor,’ he said. ‘Your file tells you I gave up violence when I left the army. My methods are unorthodox, but I am no killer.’ At least he was gaining some kind of engagement with Zhang now. ‘Your intelligence tells you that I never got to Terashima’s room. I’d be amazed if you hadn’t ID-ed Johan Ekstrom as the killer. Also, your intelligence tells you that I went to Semyonov’s little “party” to confront him about his export of weapons from the People’s Republic of China.’
‘China does not need capitalist running dogs like Ekstrom to sell its goods,’ said Zhang. The words were full of contempt again, but Zhang had shown he knew about Ekstrom too. That was a guess on Stone’s part.
‘What about Semyonov?’ asked Stone, looking down.
‘He is a great friend of the Chinese people,’ observed Zhang again. His stock phrase on the subject.
‘He’s just handed over his whole fortune — twenty-five billion dollars — to a Chinese state enterprise. An enterprise with no sales or products supposedly. Or is nice Mr Semyonov helping China with some new weapons?’
‘You think you are clever, English, but you are mistaken. Semyonov
There. Zhang had sprung a surprise of his own, and was looking suitably pleased with himself. And it had worked. Stone was surprised. “The Machine”? Also Zhang referred to Semyonov back there as “
‘You think you know it all, Stone. But your understanding is that of an imbecile,’ Zhang continued. ‘Twenty- five billion dollars is a small price to pay to work on the Machine.’
The Machine — Zhang had thrown that out there for a reason, had he? He was fishing to assess what Stone knew about it. The answer was nothing, but Stone had to keep him talking.
‘Semyonov is an exceptional man,’ said Stone. Zhang nodded sagely. ‘Is that why China has allowed him to collaborate on The Machine?’
Abruptly the grey steel door opened at the back of the room. An officer strode over to Zhang, speaking to him in rapid Mandarin.
Zhang’s eyebrows shot upward in consternation. Zhang jumped to his feet, anxiety on his face for the first time.
‘
Zhang was still standing, looking distracted, like he didn’t know what to do next. He looked round at Stone, almost as an afterthought, as if what he’d just heard had made him forget everything.
‘Tell me truthfully. Do you know how Miss Terashima died?’ Zhang asked.
Stone said nothing. He’d seen the video clip of a girl’s death. Zhang’s question meant they hadn’t even been through Stone’s laptop yet.
‘An insect bite,’ Zhang said. ‘Most unusual to die so quickly, even here in the tropics. We tested the venom. Japanese hornet, if you please,’ said Zhang in his deliberate English. ‘Seven centimetres long and quite deadly.’
Stone stared insolently back. ‘You expect me to believe that?’