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'You don't need any insulin yet, Dr Xingyu?'

'No.'

'Nothing to eat?'

'No.'

The question.

'Night like this,' I said, 'nice tot of rum would go down rather well."

'Rum?'

He turned to look at me, face blank.

Ask the question.

'Never mind,' I said.

The wind buffeted the rocks, moaning.

Now.

He sat huddled into his coat, staring in front of him.

'Dr Xingyu, why must you go to Beijing?'

He turned to look at me again, the moonlight throwing a sheen on his pale face. 'To tell the students they were wrong, in Tiananmen. Democracy is not the way.'

Mother of God.

'Hear you.'

The snow whirled against my face. 'He's been brainwashed,' I said.

Chapter 25: Pendulum

'Zhege yingguoren si duide.'

I tapped the pendulum.

'In English, please, Baibing. You don't mind if I call you Baibing?' It would set him more at ease, invite his trust in me.

'No.'

The snow had eased over the last half hour, as it had done last night, when Chong had seen to the sergeant out there; the moon was brighter now, shining on the pendulum. I'd taken the silver paper from the packet of syringes on Xingyu's flight bag, and wrapped it around a stone and hung it on a bit of string from one of the stalactites in the roof of the cave and set it swinging.

It had taken a long time to persuade Xingyu to keep his eyes on the pendulum: There are things you don't remember, important things. You'll have to remember them, or we can't take you to Beijing.

Swung the pendulum.

But I haven't forgotten anything.

Yes, you have. I want you to remember everything, or you can't go home and see your wife again.

To and fro… to and fro, a tiny silver moon a little distance from his eyes. I watched his eyes.

There is nothing I want to tell you.

Taken a long time, fifteen or twenty minutes, wearing him down, he'd never get to Beijing, never see his wife, over and over again, tapping the pendulum. But now he was deep in theta waves and under my control.

'Zhege yingguoren si duide.'

'In English, Baibing.'

They'd talked to him in Mandarin, or course, in the temple, Trotter or the man who'd been with Xingyu when I'd found him, or both; but it wouldn't make any difference: I was asking him for images, ideas, not speech patterns.

'The Englishman is right,' he said.

'Is he? Right about what?'

He didn't answer, went on staring at the tiny silver moon. I was up against a block, something he felt was very important, important not to divulge.

'Right about democracy?' I asked him, and that broke his resistance.

'Yes. There is no future in democracy for the People's Republic, no room for it. You can see what democracy has done to Europe and America. We cannot contemplate that happening in China.'

I touched the stone to keep it swinging. 'What has it done, Baibing, to Europe and America?'

In a moment — 'It's all there, in the manifesto.'

'What manifesto?'

'The blueprint.'

'Of course it is. But I forgot where you put it. The manifesto.'

Silence. He was having to find his way mentally through a bewildering field of concepts: his own fierce convictions before Trotter had gone to work on him, then the doubts Trotter had put into his mind, then the new convictions he'd been given under hypnosis. And now I was starting to ask worrying questions.

'We can't go to Beijing,' I told him, 'without the manifesto.'

Swinging the pendulum.

'He said he would give me a copy of it, on the flight to Beijing.'

'What's it about? The manifesto?'

'It is the blueprint for the New China.'

'Under democracy?'

Hesitation, noted. 'No.'

'Under Communism?'

'Yes.'

'Under your present leaders?'

'No.'

Oh really.

'Under what leaders?'

'Under Xu Yun.'

Making some progress now. Xu Yun was on the second level of the hierarchy, a young minister, said to be brilliant and on his way; but he'd been given a rap on the knuckles for going personally into Tiananmen Square in June 1989 to talk to the students and peddle a soft line to bring the tension down.

'What will Xu Yun do for China?'

'He will at first seem to favour democracy, then gradually swing the ideas of the people toward the new Communism. He is very clever, and the students approved of his actions in Tiananmen, when he went to listen to them.'

'Good. And what is the new Communism?'

'A society in which all people are truly equal, with no rich and poor as we see in Europe and America, with no millionaires and homeless sharing the same streets, with no pollution as the end product of industrial greed, no crime waves induced by social inequality, no drug culture spawned by the egocentric devotion to the self instead of the state. It is in the manifesto.'

Gooseflesh again, as I listened to Trotter speaking with Xingyu Baibing's voice. And a sense of revelation, because I was beginning to learn more about the Englishman and the dream that had driven him.

'That's very interesting, Baibing. Would you like to tell me more?'

He hesitated again: the question seemed to worry him. 'I have not read the manifesto.'

'But our friend Mr Trotter talked to you, didn't he, for quite a long time. Tell me a little more.'

In a moment — 'The human race has so far proved itself the least intelligent of all living species; man is the only animal incapable of living within its natural environment and accepting nature as its earth mother instead of a system to be conquered and controlled. By the use of fossil fuels, the construction of nuclear power stations, the destruction of the rain forests and of life in the oceans, we are destroying the planet itself, its surface and its protective envelope.'

His tone was easier now, less hesitant: he was on his own ground here, speaking of ideas he'd held long before he'd come under Trotter's influence.

'And the new Communism will be able to do something about that?'

'Not immediately. It will take ten or twenty years. But it must be done, for the planet and human life to survive. Instead of nuclear power, with its unconscionable problem or Chernobyl-like disasters and lethal waste disposal, we need to harness the infinitely greater power of the sun's heat and the force of the winds and the oceans. Instead of fossil fuel, with its equally unconscionable problems of the increasingly lethal accumulation of poison gas in the atmosphere, we need electric transportation, much of it solar-powered. Instead of impoverishing the soil and saturating food products with toxic chemicals and irradiation, we need to allow the land to enrich itself again by disciplined crop rotation and the development of organic fertilizers. All this can be achieved. It is in the manifesto.'

I stood up to check on things outside. The snow had stopped, and moonlight flooded the scree. As the wind shifted I could hear sounds from below, the banging of tailboards and the murmur of engines. The line of light had crept higher, away from the road and toward the hills; the soldiers were still too far away for me to pick out individuals, but their line was nearer now.

Tempted to pick up the radio: Your deadline was two hours and there's ninety minutes left. Have you done anything? Are these bastards awake in London? The tide was rising, and all I could do was to go back in there and listen to Trotter's vision of a brave new world.

Xingyu was still sitting bolt upright, absorbed by the rush of concepts and images going through his mind. 'I must get to Beijing,' he said.

Not really. Not now.

'So China can achieve all that,' I said, 'in a matter of a decade, two decades?'