El
Mirador West of Panama City
Built by a narco-trafficker currently serving the
first of eight consecutive life sentences in a Miami prison, the
elaborate estate called El Mirador, the
Lookout, had been purchased by Liu Yousheng for a fraction of its
value. There were dozens of such abandoned luxury homes in
Panama.
Overlooking a sugar sand beach, the main house
loomed atop a promontory and resembled a piece of modern sculpture,
all angles and primary colors. Because the odd-shaped house had sat
unoccupied for several years before Hatcherly acquired it, the
landscaping had become overgrown, ragged with encroaching jungle.
Liu had had a one-hundred-meter perimeter around the house and its
outbuildings mowed flat. While not unappealing aesthetically, the
open area was meant to give guards open lanes of fire if the house
were ever assaulted.
Liu cared nothing for the architecture of the
place, didn’t even bother to repaint the exterior to hide its
outlandish silhouette. What drew him to this particular abomination
was its isolation—the driveway was eleven miles long—and that the
estate had a heliport with a hangar.
Approaching the well-lit porte-cochere, his limo’s
headlights swept over two cars parked a short distance from the
house’s front door. He recognized one from Hatcherly’s motor pool,
and the other belonged to Omar Quintero, Panama’s president. There
was also a black van in the driveway near the two vehicles.
Sergeant Huai and Captain Chen stood by the van’s open rear doors
as the limo purred to a stop. Beyond them all was darkness and
shadow. Even the moon remained hidden.
Next to Liu in the rear of the limo, Maria Barber
was curled up with her head resting against the rear door. Her
coffee-colored breasts were almost spilling from the top of her
loose blouse and the angle of her legs allowed him a view of her
lace panties if he was so inclined to look. He wasn’t.
“Maria, we’re here,” he said and tapped her
shoulder.
She muttered in her sleep, licked her lips and
slowly came awake.
“I’m sorry, lover,” she cooed when her eyes
fluttered open. “After what you did to me in your office, I just
couldn’t stay awake.”
Liu didn’t believe her. He knew she’d feigned sleep
so she wouldn’t have to talk to him on the long drive to the house.
She still loved the money and gifts he gave her, but she could no
longer maintain the pretense that she loved him. It was just as
well. He’d grown bored of her too. She’d fulfilled her usefulness
and he only kept her around now because sex with her was simpler
than engaging prostitutes.
Stepping from the vehicle, Liu walked to the back
of the van and looked at what Huai and Chen had brought him. His
voice betrayed his disappointment. “Not exactly what I had in mind
but I suppose it will do.”
“Sir.” Captain Chen made a gesture to Liu asking
him to turn around.
Coming out the front door of the house was Panama’s
new president, Omar Quintero, and the director of the canal, Felix
Silvera-Arias. Behind them stood General Yu, the head of COSTIND.
Liu nearly choked. In the military hierarchy of Hatcherly and
COSTIND, Yu’s only superior was the defense minister himself. Not
knowing why Yu was here, Liu didn’t take his presence as a good
sign. A jet of acid erupted in his stomach. He wanted to reach back
into his car for his Mylanta.
“Mr. Liu,” Felix Silvera-Arias greeted him from
several feet away. “Your General Yu graciously invited us out for a
meeting. I have never seen your home before. Quite interesting.
Why, isn’t that—?”
With a sharp glance, Liu cut off the canal director
when he realized that Maria was still with him. Felix had enjoyed
the ministrations of two of Maria’s friends following a dinner a
few weeks ago and was aware of the role Maria had played in their
operation. Her death should have been ordered weeks ago because of
what she knew. He had to get rid of her before Felix mentioned her
name or Yu became suspicious about her identity.
“Get into the car,” he hissed at her.
“But I’m tired.” She pouted. “I want to go to
bed.”
He shoved her into the vehicle, his anger at her
masking his fear of Yu. “Shut up, you stupid puta.” He tapped the button to lower the divider
separating the driver’s compartment and addressed his driver. “Take
her back to her apartment then get back here as quickly as
possible.”
“Yes, sir.”
Liu slammed the door on her protests.
“I’m sorry about that, gentlemen.” He spoke
English, the only language they all shared. “Had I known you were
coming I wouldn’t have hired some, ah, entertainment.”
President Quintero made a dismissive gesture as if
he understood, but General Yu’s scowl deepened. Shorter than the
others, but with a much more commanding presence, it was for the
general’s benefit that Liu had made the excuse. Liu took a deep
breath, wincing at the pain in his stomach. He had to get control
of himself and the situation. He spoke a few words to Captain Chen
and then started toward the others. He shook hands with the
president and Silvera-Arias and snapped a perfect salute to
Yu.
“I am honored by your visit, General.” Liu barely
succeeded at sounding genuine. Rather than honor he felt terror. As
far as he knew, the general had never set foot outside China. Liu
blew on his fingertips as if they’d just been burned.
“Perhaps,” Yu grumbled. “Let us go inside.”
The four men moved into the cool interior of the
house. In the large living room, a pair of half-finished drinks
stood amid condensation puddles on a glass-topped table. The
minimal furniture was sleek, whites and chromes mostly. The walls
were bare of any decoration, as if the design of the house was art
enough. Yu sank into a separate chair while the two Panamanians
took their places on a sofa facing the cocktails. Although they
were the most powerful men in the nation, even they were subdued by
Yu’s menacing aura. They waited for the general to start the
conversation.
Liu desperately wanted something to settle his
roiling stomach, and every second the silence dragged on made it
worse. His abdomen made an audible twist. The autonomy he’d enjoyed
since first coming to Panama was at an end. That much was clear.
What he didn’t know was what controls Yu was about to place over
him and what that meant for his career once Operation Red Island
was complete. He felt his place within COSTIND suddenly
slipping.
Felix Silvera-Arias finished off his drink in a
nervous gulp while President Quintero, elegant in a tailored suit
despite what must have been an urgent summons to this meeting,
wiped his glasses on a scrap of silk he then returned to his breast
pocket. Like Liu, the canal director wore casual slacks and a loose
shirt. Both Panamanians possessed the studied polish of longtime
politicians. They even resembled each other slightly—they were
cousins. Felix owed his new job to the president and Quintero owed
his presidency to the backroom machinations orchestrated by
Silvera-Arias—and Liu.
Yu, squat and pugnacious in a suit he made look as
regimented as a uniform, had neither an insider’s élan nor a
politician’s charm. His rank was the result of years of unwavering
discipline and success. And in a culture that revered age, Yu was
just sixty-four years old. He had a great deal further to go within
the Beijing power structure.
“Mr. President, Mr. Director,” Yu started formally.
“If you could excuse Yousheng and I for a moment, we need to speak
in private.”
There was a second-long pause when the leader of
Panama thought he was expected to leave the room. Instead, Yu stood
and beckoned his protégé to follow. They took up seats on the far
side of the room, where even if the two Panamanians could
understand the language, they couldn’t overhear.
“When I am finished,” Yu spoke softly in Chinese,
“translate what you feel necessary to keep those two satisfied.
There is a new resistance developing within the portion of the
People’s Congress who know about what you are attempting here. They
feel that your plan will antagonize the Americans rather than deter
them.
“Our president has been informed about this and is
beginning to rethink our position in Panama. I believe he’s going
to order COSTIND to pull out of Operation Red Island.”
The news was devastating, but Liu knew better than
to interrupt.
“I understand nearly everything is in place to
execute the plan with the exception of finding the buried treasure.
Is that true?”
“Yes, General.” Liu spoke formally, hoping there
was still a chance to salvage Red Island. “Gemini has been in the
Bay of Panama awaiting transit for a couple of days. Our
submersible is ready to deflect the ship preceding Gemini through
the locks. Everything at the mine is as it should be, and the
government here has already accepted the first shipment of bullion
from home as down payment for what we will recover near the River
of Ruin.”
“But no gold has been found at the volcanic
lake?”
“That is correct, sir,” Liu answered at once.
“Why?”
“I overestimated the abilities of local troops to
act as guards and have needed to use more of our own soldiers. I’ve
spread them too thin, sir. I’ve lost efficiency in all aspects of
the operation because of this.”
“And you’ve needed extra guards?”
Liu gave the other two men a significant look.
“This is a lawless country, sir. Thieves have attempted to
infiltrate our container port and the Twenty Devils Mine.”
Yu seemed convinced by the ready answers. They
agreed with his own sense of what he’d seen of Panama since his
arrival just a few hours earlier. “Very well.” The general went
silent for a moment. “I need an honest assessment, Yousheng.” His
use of Liu’s first name was meant to impart trust. If anything it
made the Hatcherly executive even more suspicious. “How far can we
safely push up the timetable without jeopardizing the mission?
Don’t give me an answer you think I want. I want the truth.”
Liu wasn’t fooled into believing there was a
truthful answer to that question. The general was looking to
execute Red Island before China’s president canceled it, but wanted
to leave a scapegoat, someone to blame, if it didn’t go well. By
answering, Liu was being maneuvered into that sacrificial role. If
he delayed implementation too long and Red Island was canceled, his
future in COSTIND was over. He’d be lucky to get a job as a dock
worker. On the other hand, if he pushed it too close and it failed,
Yu would have him killed long before he returned home.
His career, his very life, was coming down to this
moment. “I can implement the plan in three days,” he said, shaving
five days from the original timetable.
“Can it be done the day after tomorrow?” The
general’s eyes bored into his. His meaning was clear. Red Island
will be executed the day after
tomorrow.
“Yes,” Liu said, then qualified his answer. “But
only if the DF-31 missiles are here. We can smuggle the warheads
later, they are smaller, but those rockets need to be in Panama
before the canal is closed. Afterward there will be too much
scrutiny to offload them.”
Yu glanced at the compliant president and canal
director. “You think they will pursue a vigorous
investigation?”
“Not them, but even if the Americans are denied the
right to place troops here, they will send in covert teams of
investigators. Hatcherly’s warehouses will be watched closely. It’s
too much of a risk to unload the missiles after such a team
arrives. The Americans shouldn’t be underestimated.”
“That’s why you didn’t want the warheads brought in
until after the canal was closed?”
“Yes, sir.” Liu was heartened to see that Yu
understood the subtleties of the operation. “It’s likely that the
United States will send a group from NEST, that’s their Nuclear
Emergency Search Team. Even under the best shielding, a nuclear
warhead may be detected by their sophisticated equipment. I’ve
heard they can identify trace radiation from medical X-ray machines
that haven’t been used for years.”
Yu grunted.
Liu continued. “If the rockets were here, we could
proceed with the rest of the operation and then bring in the
warheads after a few weeks. But I believe the DF-31s are still in
China, yes?”
Liu saw immediately that he’d been outmaneuvered.
Yu gave no outward sign, but he could feel it. The missiles were
already in Panamanian waters, or would be by the next day.
The general didn’t need to state the obvious. “You
have an enclosed dry dock at the Hatcherly facility that you plan
to use for their unloading?”
Liu swallowed. The operation was going ahead a full
week before his schedule and he couldn’t stop it. His only choice
now was to put his full efforts into seeing it through. “Yes,
General. There’s a ship in it now, ostensibly for a refit, but it’s
a COSTIND vessel we’ve been keeping there as cover.”
“Have it moved out,” Yu ordered through the cloud
of a freshly lit cigarette, his dark eyes squinting. “The vessel
carrying the missiles, a refrigerator ship named Korvald, will arrive tomorrow night.”
“And the warheads?”
“Are still in China. As you suggest, we’ll ship
them in a few weeks.”
“Ah, General. The gold? I have enough from the
supply you gave to me at the beginning of the operation to make one
more payment, but after that . . .”
“You will get no more from COSTIND. It is up to you
to find the treasure. That is all there is to it.”
Liu stopped himself from protesting more. He knew
the general wouldn’t be swayed by any argument he could
devise.
There were over a hundred and fifty men scouring
the volcanic lake and the banks of the River of Ruin. He’d always
known it was only a matter of time to find it, but time was the one
thing now taken from him.
Liu nodded at the two Panamanians pretending not to
be offended that they’d been excluded from the conversation. “I
will negotiate to extend the bullion you’ve given me. I should be
able to buy a few more weeks.”
Yu just shrugged. He had no interest in those kinds
of details. “Is there anything else you need from me?”
“I don’t think so, sir. My geologists have assured
me that the ground in the Gaillard Cut has been sufficiently
saturated with water to ensure liquefaction when the explosives go
off.”
Implementation of Red Island had been designed to
coincide with Panama’s rainy season so that the land had soaked up
a tremendous amount of water. Under the onslaught of the special
explosives they were to use, the wet ground would become a liquid
slurry unable to support its own weight. The principle was the same
that caused such devastation during earthquakes. Structures on
solid rock fared well during a temblor but buildings on reclaimed
land were severely damaged because the soil seemed to dissolve in a
process called liquefaction.
Liu continued. “Most of the crew have already been
taken off Gemini and the submersible is ready to retrieve the
remainder once everything is in position.”
“What about the diving chamber near the
lock?”
“Explosive charges are in place to destroy it as
soon as the men have attached the diverter submersible to the ship
we intend to use to block the canal.”
“And you know which ship that will be?”
“Yes, sir. Like Gemini, it’s a bulk carrier
registered in Liberia. She’s named Mario
diCastorelli and is already on station and ready to go through
the canal. She’s loaded with Portland cement and scrap steel. When
Gemini explodes she should roll over and that cargo will turn into
a solid mass weighing about twelve thousand tons. Removing just her
hulk alone will take several months.”
“Well thought out.”
“Thank you, General.” Liu was startled by the
compliment. “It was an idea I had after first making this proposal
to the minister of defense.”
“Who is crewing the Mario
diCastorelli?”
“As the name implies she’s owned by a shell company
in Italy with Liberian registration. Her crew is mostly Filipinos
with Greek officers. They have no idea what’s in store for them.
Gemini will detonate less than a hundred feet from their ship. Just
before the explosion, the submersible will dock at Gamboa to unload
the divers and the crew from Gemini. It will be scuttled there. All
the men will be driven straight from Gamboa to Cristobal on the
Atlantic coast, where a ship will spirit them away.”
“And it is the last piece of physical
evidence?”
“That’s correct. The diving bell and mini-sub are
the last links. At some point during the redredging operation,
their remains will be quietly retrieved and disposed of.”
“You’ve thought this out well, Yousheng. I’m
pleased. With the exception of finding the gold, everything has
gone remarkably smoothly. Just for the sake of argument, could you
maintain control of Panama after the canal is closed if you don’t
find the treasure?”
Liu shook his head. “For the short term, perhaps,
but it’s not sustainable. Panama’s economy depends on transit
tariffs far and above what we can provide through taxes on using
our railroad and pipeline. Without the money, the country will
descend into chaos. Quintero would be overthrown and his likely
replacement would invite American troops in to keep the peace and
see that the canal is reopened.”
“But if we keep them afloat economically, they will
resist when the Americans pressure them to allow them in?”
“That’s why we’ve paid Quintero and Silvera-Arias.
It’s up to them to defy any U.S. pressure.”
“They’ll hold up?”
Liu looked at his superior. “As long as the money
keeps flowing, they’ll do what we want. By the time we reveal the
missiles to the American government, our position here will be
unassailable.”
“A well-thought-out plan,” Yu repeated.
Knowing that if it succeeded the general would take
all the credit, Liu was certain that if it failed, that failure
would rest on his shoulders alone. Such was the way of Chinese
politics. But success meant Liu would forever be attached to the
general as he continued his rise in Beijing.
“Go tell our Panamanian friends about the change in
schedule.” Yu stood. “I’m returning to the city. I have an early
flight in the morning.”
Meaning you won’t be anywhere near the action when
it comes, Liu thought bitterly. But this was the price he had to
pay. A man like General Yu had already proven himself again and
again. Now it was Liu’s turn. “Yes, sir.”
“Do you know what time you will detonate Gemini?”
Yu asked as he led his subaltern toward the door without any
thought to President Quintero or Director Silvera-Arias.
“My explosives experts tell me that when it is
overcast, the pressure waves bounce back from the sky and amplify
the detonative forces. So it will depend on the weather on the day
after tomorrow, General.”
“Very well. I look forward to your call telling me
it is done.”
Liu snapped another salute. “It will be my
honor.”
The wily old general didn’t return the salute as he
wandered over to the sedan he’d commandeered from Hatcherly for
this visit. Liu waited until the vehicle’s taillights faded down
the long drive, absently blowing on his fingers. Then he went in
search of Captain Chen. He found the leader of the commando group
just returning from one of the outbuildings.
“Tell Sun to get to work as soon as he gets here,”
Liu barked. Yu had set a near-impossible task, made worse because
of the situation Liu had intentionally kept from him—the Special
Forces, or whoever they were, who’d been interfering at every turn.
“Yu’s ordered the timetable pushed up. We have about thirty-six
hours.”
The soldier couldn’t hide his shock. “Is that
feasible?”
“It damned well better be,” Liu said. “And sometime
tomorrow morning I want Maria picked up and disposed of.”
“You mean . . .”
“You know damned well what I mean. Kill her.”
Liu could feel the pressure mounting: a lead weight
in his gut and a burning ache behind his eyes. That was why he had
no compulsion about ordering his lover’s murder. Even an hour ago,
the thought had given him pause. No longer. Too much was at stake
to care about his conscience or anything else. Same went with using
Mr. Sun’s talents. Having Mercer tortured had bothered him on one
level, surely not enough to stop him from ordering it, but the
feelings were there. That too was gone now. He would use any assets
open to him to see Red Island’s successful completion.
Red Island. He’d even picked the code name, as an
allusion to what the Soviets had attempted in Cuba. Of course they
had wanted their missiles discovered, otherwise they would have
camouflaged them rather than leave them in the open for U-2 spy
planes to find. The Cuban Missile Crisis had been a game of nuclear
brinkmanship: remove yours and we’ll remove ours. What he had in
mind was much subtler.
Nuclear blackmail—back off when we take Taiwan or
eight American cities get carbonized.