Read Jack Ryan 11 - Bear And The Dragon Online
Authors: Tom Clancy
You knew you had a bad job when you welcomed a trip to the dentist. Jack had been going to the same one for nineteen years, but this time it involved a helicopter flight to a Maryland State Police barracks with its own helipad, followed by five minutes in a car to the dentist's office. He was thinking about China, but his principal bodyguard mistook his expression.
“Relax, boss,” Andrea told the President. “If he makes you scream, I'll cap him.”
“You shouldn't be up so early,” Ryan responded crossly.
“Dr. North said I could work my regular routine until further notice, and I just started the vitamins she likes.”
“Well, Pat looks rather pleased with himself.” It had been a pleasant evening at the White House. It was always good to entertain guests who had no political agenda.
“What is it about you guys? You strut like roosters, but we have to do all the work!”
“Andrea, I would gladly switch jobs with you!” Ryan joked. He'd had this discussion with Cathy often enough, claiming that having a baby couldn't be all that hard -- men had to do almost all of the tough work in life. But he couldn't joke with someone else's wife that way.
Nomuri heard his computer beep in the distance, meaning it had received and was now automatically encrypting and retransmitting the date e-mailed from Ming's desktop. It made an entertaining interruption to his current activity. It had been five days since their last tryst, and that was a long enough wait for him...and evidently for her as well, judging by the passion in her kisses. In due course, it was over, and they both rolled over for a smoke.
“How is the office?” Nomuri asked, with the answer to his question now residing in a server in Wisconsin.
“The Politburo is debating great finance. Qian, the minister in charge of our money, is trying to persuade the Politburo to change its ways, but they're not listening as Minister Fang thinks they ought.”
“Oh?”
“He's rather angry with his old comrades for their lack of flexibility.” Then Ming giggled. “Chai said the minister was very flexible with her two nights ago.”
“Not a nice thing to say about a man, Ming,” Nomuri chided.
“I would never say it about you and your jade sausage, shin gan,” she said, turning for a kiss.
“Do they argue often there? In the Politburo, I mean?”
“There are frequent disagreements, but this is the first time in months that the matter has not been resolved to Fang's satisfaction. They are usually collegial, but this is a disagreement over ideology. Those can be violent -- at least in intellectual terms.” Obviously, the Politburo members were too old to do much more than smack an enemy over the head with their canes.
“And this one?”
“Minister Qian says the country may soon be out of money. The other ministers say that is nonsense. Qian says we must accommodate the Western countries. Zhang and the others like him say we cannot show weakness after all they -- especially the Americans -- have done to us lately.”
“Don't they see that killing that Italian priest was a bad thing?”
“They see it as an unfortunate accident, and besides, he was breaking our laws.”
Jesus, Nomuri thought, they really do think they're god-kings, don't they? “Bao bei, that is a mistake on their part.”
“You think so?”
“I have been to America, remember? I lived there for a time. Americans are very solicitous to their clergy, and they place a high value on religion. Spitting on it angers them greatly.”
“You think Qian is right, then?” she asked. “You think America will deny us money for this foolish action?”
“I think it is possible, yes. Very possible, Ming.”
“Minister Fang thinks we should take a more moderate course, to accommodate the Americans somewhat, but he did not say so at the meeting.”
“Oh? Why?”
“He does not wish to depart too greatly from the path of the other ministers. You say that in Japan people fear not being elected. Here, well, the Politburo elects its own, and it can expel those who no longer fit in. Fang does not wish to lose his own status, obviously, and to make sure that doesn't happen, he takes a cautious line.”
“This is hard for me to understand, Ming. How do they select their members? How do the 'princes' choose the new 'prince'?”
“Oh, there are party members who have distinguished themselves ideologically, or sometimes from work in the field. Minister Qian, for example, used to be chief of railroad construction, and was promoted for that reason, but mainly they are picked for political reasons.”
“And Fang?”
“My minister is an old comrade. His father was one of Mao's faithful lieutenants, and Fang has always been politically reliable, but in recent years he has taken note of the new industries and seen how well they function, and he admires some of the people who operate them. He even has some into his office from time to time for tea and talk.”
So, the old pervert is a progressive here? Nomuri wondered. Well, the bar for that was pretty low in China. You didn't have to jump real high, but that put him in advance of the ones who dug a trench under it, didn't it?
“Ah, so the people have no voice at all, do they?”
Ming laughed at that. “Only at party meetings, and there you guard your voice.”
“Are you a member?”
“Oh, yes. I go to meetings once a month. I sit in the back. I nod when others nod, and applaud when they applaud, and I pretend to listen. Others probably listen better. It is not a small thing to be a party member, but my membership is because of my job at the ministry. I am here because they needed my language and computer skills -- and besides, the ministers like to have young women under them,” she added.
“You're never on top of him, eh?”
“He prefers the ordinary position, but it is hard on his arms.” Ming giggled.
Ryan was glad to see that he was brushing enough. The dentist told him to floss, as he always did, and Ryan nodded, as he always did, and he'd never bought floss in his life and wasn't going to start now. But at least he'd undergone nothing more invasive than a couple of X rays, for which, of course, he'd gotten the leather apron. On the whole, it had been ninety minutes torn off the front of his day. Back in the Oval Office, he had the latest SORGE, which was good enough for a whispered “damn.” He lifted the phone for Mary Pat at Langley.
“They're dense,” Ryan observed.
“Well, they sure as hell don't know high finance. Even I know better than this.”
“TRADER has to see this. Put him on the SORGE list,” POTUS ordered.
“With your day-to-day approval only,” the DDO hedged. “Maybe he has a need-to-know on economics, but nothing else, okay?”
“Okay, for now,” Jack agreed. But George was coming along nicely on strategic matters, and might turn into a good policy adviser. He understood high-stress psychology better than most, and that was the name of the game. Jack broke the connection and had Ellen Sumter call the SecTreas over from across the street.
“So, what else do they worry about?” Chester asked.
“They're concerned that some of the workers and peasants are not as happy as they should be. You know about the riots they had in the coal region.”
“Oh?”
“Yes, the miners rioted last year. The PLA went in to settle things down. Several hundred people were shot, and three thousand arrested.” She shrugged while putting her bra back on. “There is unrest, but that is nothing especially new. The army keeps control of things in the outlying regions. That's why they spend so much money, to keep the army reliable. The generals run the PLA's economic empire -- all the factories and things -- and they're good at keeping a lid on things. The ordinary soldiers are just workers and peasants, but the officers are all party members, and they are reliable, or so the Politburo thinks. It's probably true,” Ming concluded. She hadn't seen her minister worry all that much about it. Power in the People's Republic decidedly grew from the barrel of a gun, and the Politburo owned all the guns. That made things simple, didn't it?
For his part, Nomuri had just learned things he'd never thought about before. He might want to make his own report on this stuff. Ming probably knew a lot of things that didn't go out as SONGBIRD material, and he'd be remiss not to send that to Langley, too.
“It's like a five-year-old in a gun store,” Secretary Winston observed. “These people have no business making economic decisions for a city government, much less a major country. I mean, hell, as stupid as the Japanese were a few years ago, at least they know to listen to the coaches.”
“And?”
“And when they run into the brick wall, their eyes'll still be closed. That can smart some, Jack. They're going to get bit on the ass, and they don't see it coming.” Winston could mix metaphors with the best of 'em, Ryan saw.
“When?” SWORDSMAN asked.
“Depends on how many companies do what Butterfly did. We'll know more in a few days. The fashion business will be the lead indicator, of all things.”
“Really?”
“Surprised me, too, but this is the time for them to commit to the next season, and there's a ton of money in that business going on over there, man. Toss in all the toys for next Christmas. There's seventeen billion -- plus just in that, Mark Gant tells me.”
“Damn.”
“Yeah, I didn't know Santa's reindeer had slanted eyes either, Jack. At least not to that extent.”
“What about Taiwan?” Ryan wondered.
“You're not kidding. They're jumping into the growing gap with both feet. Figure they pick up a quarter, maybe a third, of what the PRC is going to lose. Singapore's going to be next. And the Thais. This little bump in the road will go a long way to restore the damage done to their economy a few years back. In fact, the PRC's troubles might rebuild the whole South Asian economy. It could be a swing of fifty billion dollars out of China, and it has to go somewhere. We're starting to take bids, Jack. It won't be a bad deal for our consumers, and I'll bet those countries learn from Beijing's example, and kick their doors open a notch or so. So, our workers will profit from it, too -- somewhat, anyway.”
“Downside?”
“Boeing's squealing some. They wanted that triple-seven order, but you wait an' see. Somebody's going to take up that slack, too. One other thing.”
“Yeah?” Ryan asked.
“It's not just American companies hauling out on them. Two big Italian places, and Siemens in Germany, they've announced termination of some business with their Chinese partners,” TRADER said.
“Will it turn into a general movement...?”
“Too soon to say, but if I were these guys” -- Winston shook the fax from CIA -- “I'd be thinking about fence-mending real soon.”
“They won't do it, George.”
“Then they're going to learn a nasty lesson.”
“No action with our friend?” Reilly asked.
“Well, he continues his sexual adventures,” Provalov answered.
“Talk to any of the girls yet?”
“Earlier today, two of them. He pays them well, in euros or d-marks, and doesn't request any, uh, 'exotic' services from them.”
“Nice to know he's normal in his tastes,” the FBI agent observed, with a grunt.
“We have numerous photos of him now. We've put an electronic tracker on his cars, and we've also planted a bug on his computer keyboard. That'll allow us to determine his encryption password, next time he makes use of it.”
“But he hasn't done anything incriminating yet,” Reilly said. He didn't even make it a question.
“Not under our observation,” Oleg confirmed.
“Damn, so, he was really trying to whack Sergey Golovko. Hard to believe, man.”
“That is so, but we cannot deny it. And on Chinese orders.”
“That's like an act of war, buddy. It's a big fucking deal.” Reilly took a sip of his vodka.
“So it is, Mishka. Rather more complex than any case I've handled this year.” It was, Provalov thought, an artful understatement. He'd gladly go back to a normal homicide, a husband killing his wife for fucking a neighbor, or the other way around. Such things, nasty as they were, were far less nasty than this one was.
“How's he pick the girls up, Oleg?” Reilly asked.
“He doesn't call for them on the phone. He seems to go to a good restaurant with a good bar and wait until a likely prospect appears at his elbow.”
“Hmm, plant a girl on him?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean get yourself a pretty girl who does this sort of thing for a living, brief her on what she ought to say, and set her in front of him like a nice fly on your fishhook. If he picks her up, maybe she can get him to talk.”
“Have you ever done such a thing?”
“We got a wiseguy that way in Jersey City three years ago. Liked to brag in front of women how tough he was, and the guys he whacked, that sort of thing. He's in Rahway State Prison now on a murder rap. Oleg, a lot more people have talked their way into prison than you'll ever catch on your own. Trust me. That's how it is for us, even.”
“I wonder if the Sparrow School has any graduates working...?” Provalov mused.
It wasn't fair to do it at night, but nobody had ever said war was marked by fairness in its execution. Colonel Boyle was in his command post monitoring the operation of 1st Armored's Aviation Brigade. It was mainly his Apaches, though some Kiowa Warriors were up, too, as scouts for the heavy shooters. The target was a German heavy battalion, simulating a night's laagering after a day on the offense. In fact, they were pretending to be Russians -- it was a NATO scenario that went back thirty years to the introduction of the first Huey Cobras, back in the 1970s, when the value of a helicopter gunship had first been noticed in Vietnam. And a revelation it had been. Armed for the first time in 1972 with TOW missiles, they'd proven to the tanks of the North Vietnamese just how fearsome a foe a missile-armed chopper could be, and that had been before night-vision systems had come fully on line. Now the Apache turned combat operations into sport shooting, and the Germans were still trying to figure a counter for it. Even their own night-vision gear didn't compensate for the huge advantage held by the airborne hunters. One idea that had almost worked was to lay a thermal-insulating blanket over the tanks so as to deny the helicopters the heat signature by which they hunted their motionless prey, but the problem there was the tank's main gun tube, which had proved impractical to conceal, and the blankets had never really worked properly, any more than a twin-bed coverlet could be stretched over a king-size bed. And so, now, the Apaches' laser-illumination systems were “painting” the Leos for enough seconds to guarantee hits from the Hellfire missiles, and while the German tanks tried to shoot back, they couldn't seem to make it work. And now the yellow “I'm dead” lights were blinking, and yet another tank battalion had fallen victim to yet another administrative attack.