Danny stayed on the phone as they switched from the helicopter to their rented car, and only concluded the conversation a few blocks from their destination. That gave him just enough time to call down to Brunei and tell Bison to get the team ready to move out; he anticipated Colonel Bastian would want another recon at the recycling plant, and this time he was going in with full gear.

Dog had already beaten him to it.

Stoner drove to a building owned by the American-Asian Business Coalition on Hsinyi Road not far from the American Institute, which handled American “concerns” in Taiwan on an officially unofficial basis. Despite the late hour, the coalition building was ablaze with lights, and Danny wondered if anyone in Taipei believed that the coalition was anything other than a front for the CIA.

Stoner led the way downstairs to a secure communications center. In contrast to the Dreamland facilities, the unit was primitive, amounting to a set of encrypted phones and two computer terminals that had access to a secure network. The decor wasn’t even up to the command trailer’s standards: The walls were paneled with a wood veneer so thin it looked like plastic; the industrial carpet on the floor was old and ragged.

Stoner pulled out a rolling chair from the conference table at the side of the room and swung it next to the desk with the phone bank. He swept his hand for Danny to take a seat, then made the connection back to Langley. When it went through, Stoner gestured for Danny to pick up a nearby phone. A case officer named James Pierce came on the line, updating them on information he’d gotten from Dreamland and the NSC liaison, Jed Barclay. That segued into a discussion of the capabilities of the government forces of Taiwan, and conflicting estimates of Chen Lee, his business empire, and the possible capabilities of his companies.

“There are dissenting views,” said Pierce. “But at this point, the best guess is that the government knows nothing about the UAV project. And if this is a nuke, they know nothing about it.”

“You sure?” asked Danny.

“The real expert’s sitting next to you,” said Pierce, meaning Stoner. “But there are no intercepts from known CKKC units indicating any sort of operational control on the aircraft, let alone any indication of experimental work, no unit movement, nothing,” said Pierce. “The NSA group working on it for us has gone over it pretty well. And as for nukes, forget it. We’re pretty wired into the government; we’d know.

Believe me.”

Danny wasn’t sure whether Pierce meant what he said literally or figuratively.

“The best evidence that they don’t have one is a conversation three weeks ago between the president and the defense minister debating whether they should start a program and what it would cost,” added Pierce. “It was partly that debate that led the president to make his overtures toward China.”

Brunei

Page 171

0600

DOG’S FOUR ORfive hours of fitful sleep made him feel more tired than ever. He cut himself shaving, then burned his finger on the in-room coffeemaker. His mood was so foul that even a message on his voice mail system at Dreamland that Cortend had returned to the Pentagon “and contemplated no formal report” failed to put a bounce in his step as he walked from his hotel room to his elevator. Instead, his brisk stalk warned off the security detail escorting him, even the normally loquacious Boston, heading the team. The men stood at stone attention during the brief ride to the lobby, fanning out as the door opened—as much to stay out of the boss’s way as to protect him.

Miss Kelly, the State Department rep, was waiting near the door.

“Good morning, Colonel,” she said. “Breakfast?”

“No thanks. I have to check in with my people,” he told her.

“I wanted to apologize for being brusque the other day,” she said.

“Not necessary,” said Dog.

“I wonder if I could have a word,” she said, touching his arm to stop him and then glancing at the bodyguard detail.

“Fire away,” said Dog.

“The sultan would like a demonstration,” said Miss Kelly. “He’s heard so much about the Megafortress from his nephew, the prince—they would greatly appreciate a ride.”

“I thought Mack was entertaining them,” said Dog.

“He is,” said Miss Kelly. “But he made it clear that a ride, uh, a flight, was up to you.”

“I’ll bet he did.”

“He’s looking for a liaison and has asked Major Smith if he might stay on.”

“I have a mission here,” said Dog, starting back into motion. “Mack can deal with him.”

“I have a mission here as well,” said Kelly, who had trouble keeping up in her heels. “I will call Washington.”

“I’ll give you a quarter.”

THE COFFEE ATthe Dreamland Command trailer had been made hours before, and to compare the burned-out dregs to crankcase sludge would have been to defame engine oil everywhere. Boston volunteered to make a fresh pot; Dog made a mental note to add a personal commendation to the sergeant’s file at the earliest convenience.

He was on his second cup of coffee when Ray Rubeo’s face snapped onto the screen from Dream Command. Rubeo’s familiar frown was back, and even before the scientist stepped aside to reveal the others in the control room, Dog knew Jennifer was back.

Page 172

But what in God’s name had she done to her beautiful long hair?

“Good to see you back where you belong, Ms. Gleason,” he said.

She didn’t answer; it wasn’t clear that she had even heard.

“We’re sifting through a forest of radio transmissions,” said Rubeo, giving the latest update. “We’re still a distance from figuring it out.”

“Anything new on the bomb factory?”

“The video cameras that were placed show nothing unusual,” said Rubeo. “They’ve continued their standard security sweeps.”

“We have to assume they know something’s up,” said Stoner, who was in Taipei. “But we do have people watching both on land and out in the harbor, and there’s nothing out of the ordinary.”

“Even if the assessment is right and they do have a bomb, we haven’t found the delivery system yet,”

said Dog.

“Sure we have,” said Jennifer. “The UAVs.”

“They’re not big enough,” said Zen, who was on the circuit from Penn, on the ground in Taiwan.

“You’re looking at their UAV as if it were a Flighthawk,” Jennifer said. “It isn’t. From the analysis that I’ve seen—and admittedly I’ve been out of the loop for a few days … ”

She paused. Dog could see her frown.

“From what I’ve seen,” she continued, “the ghost clone should be able to go further with a heavier payload. It’s been used up until now for reconnaissance, but reengineering it for a different role is child’s play. If I were building a long-range nuclear cruise missile, I’d start with an airframe like the ghost clone’s. It’s not quite as stealthy as a B-2, but it’s damn close. And it’s small to begin with.”

“Then why not use a cruise missile?” asked Zen.

“It is a cruise missile,” said Jennifer. “With longer range and a heavier payload. The thing is, if my technology isn’t good enough to build a very small nuke, this may be easier.”

“We are speculating,” said Rubeo.

“Sometimes speculation isn’t wrong,” said Jennifer staring into the video camera.

Washington, D.C.

13 September 1997

2103

AFTER A LONGday of meetings, Jed Barclay’s eyes felt as if they’d screwed themselves deep into his skull. The NSC had scheduled a meeting for tenP.M., but he and his boss had been summoned by the President to the White House for a private briefing ahead of the session. While not unprecedented, the Page 173

move underlined how serious the situation was. The meeting in Beijing was now less than twenty-four hours away. The vice president had just arrived in the capital.