“We’re all set, sir,” Montgomery said, though he couldn’t help but feel like he was forgetting something. Decades on the job and this trip had him feeling like a damn rookie.
“Good,” Ryan said, opening the door. He was wearing a midnight-blue tie instead of the red one he’d had on when they left.
Montgomery bit his tongue and forced a smile.
Ryan saw his change in mood. “Is something wrong?”
“Not a thing, Mr. President.”
? ? ?
The Akasaka Guesthouse is very secure,” Yuki said. She was sitting beside Jack Ryan, Jr., on the Marunouchi subway line, heading back toward Tokyo Station and the Palace Hotel. Ryan’s chest needed stitches, but Adara had fixed him up with some superglue and a sticky bandage that stopped him from bleeding through his shirt.
The team had almost nothing to go on, aside from some cryptic phrases about a gang—and possibly the word “kill,” which was chilling in and of itself, if that’s what Chen had actually been saying. The fact that Chen was in town at all was bad news, and Jack tried to console himself that the man’s cadre was dead or in jail. Yuki’s superiors had told her the second gunman had survived and was in intensive care. Amanda Salazar and the man Ryan had knocked out were in police custody, refusing to talk. Their respective embassies had been notified and both would probably be released after all the visiting dignitaries left town—unless Yuki’s organization could find a reason to hold them.
“Thanks,” Ryan said. “I know you have plenty of work without me here having you run down a bunch of dead ends.”
Yuki smiled. “We have a saying here in Japan: Nokorimono ni wa fuku ga aru. Luck is in the leftovers.”
“I’m not sure what that means—”
“It means,” Yuki said, “that we must keep going. We find our luck by working through to the last.”
“I hope my friends have some luck with Chen’s computer.”
“I would be severely reprimanded for letting you tamper with that,” she said. “If my superiors were to find out.”
“I know,” Ryan said. “And like I said, I’m sorry to put you in this spot.”
The train rumbled to a stop at Kasumigaseki. They were two stops from Tokyo Station and the cars were getting crowded.
Three middle-aged women boarded and held the suspended rings in front of Ryan as the train began to move. His dad would not approve of his lack of chivalry.
“Japan has a load of cool proverbs,” he said. “But I don’t care for the custom of men sitting while women stand. I think I’ll offer one of these ladies my seat.”
Yuki put her hand on his arm and left it there. “Please,” she said. “It is more polite for you to sit.”
“Seriously?” Ryan said. “Because I might offend some other dude that didn’t think of it first?”
“No.” She smiled, leaning in close to share a secret. “You take up too much space.”
Ryan looked at her. She still hadn’t moved her hand off his arm, and he was fine with that. “Too much space?”
She squeezed his arm now, flirting a little, maybe. “You are quite bulky compared to most Japanese. I am embarrassed to say that some might think you kebukai yabanjin—a hairy barbarian.” She raised her eyebrows. “I do not think so, of course.”
“Of course.” Ryan gave her a slow nod, but he kept his seat until the train stopped at Tokyo Station.
Yuki led the way out of the Marunouchi tunnel. They opened their umbrellas against a steady rain and walked almost due west, past a water garden on the right, toward the Imperial Palace moat. Lots of water. Ryan had a lot of personal experience with the Secret Service. He was sure they’d already had scuba divers check the water features and run a couple dozen waterborne Attack on the Principal drills back on some lake near Beltsville.
They passed a small shrine, and a white castle across the water, the colors and edges of everything muted by the rain and mist.
“This country looks amazing when it’s wet,” he said.
“I think so as well,” Yuki said. “You must be careful, Jack. When you try to leave Japan, ushirogami wo hikareru—it will always tug at the hair on the back of your neck.”
“I can believe that—”
Chavez’s voice came over the net. He was still at the hotel babysitting Chen’s computer while Gavin Biery worked to break the passwords and encryption so he could conduct a remote assessment of its contents. Midas and Adara had been going from place to place, looking for any needles in the haystack of G20 venues. They all planned to link up around the hotel, across the street from the Imperial Palace and grounds.
“I’ve been trying to call you, ’mano,” Chavez said. “Gavin got in.” His voice was far from happy.
“Okay,” Ryan said. “An assassination plot?”
“Gav’s still going over files,” Chavez said. “But not so far. Just as Eddie Feng suspected, Chen is connected to the Beijing subway bombing. He was paid a nice sum for that one. But get this. Did you read about the soldier getting killed in Chad and an attack on a Navy vessel somewhere over near Bali?”
“Yeah,” Jack said.
“Chen received payments around the time of those attacks—and, of course, the bombing in Argentina.”
Ryan pondered the ramifications. “Taiwan?”
“Not even close,” Chavez said. “Foreign Minister Li. Gav got some weird hits checking some back channels. First he thought the connection was just because Li was a victim in the Argentina thing, but Li and a PRC general named Xu own shares in a diamond mine in West Africa. Get this, Vincent Chen’s sister, Lily, is a minority partner in the same mine.”
Ryan stopped in his tracks. “So Chen and Foreign Minister Li are connected? Maybe the sister hired Chen to kill her business partner.”
Yuki turned around to listen to Jack’s half of the conversation.
“We have to pass this up the chain,” Jack said.
“Gerry’s getting it to our friends at the Crossing now.”
He meant Liberty Crossing, home of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence—Mary Pat Foley. She would know if there was anything in the works regarding Li.
“I’ll get back to you,” Chavez said. “Gerry’s calling.”
Ryan filled Yuki in as they crossed Uchibori Street, which was blocked off to vehicular traffic for the entire block in front of the hotel. They were able to walk north, along the Imperial Garden moat.
Yuki stopped with the gathered crowd directly across the street from the hotel. A dozen uniformed police officers and security guards in white hardhats formed a polite but unyielding skirmish line along the sidewalk, allowing people to look as long as they were empty-handed. Photography, or even holding a phone, was strictly prohibited.