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The Ghost(英文版)-第46章

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 I took it to The Hague in person。”

  “You’d no idea who it came from?”

  “No。 Not until my anonymous source called and told me。 And just you wait till Lang hears who it was。 This is going to be the worst thing of all。” He leaned in close to me。 “Mike McAra!”

  Looking back; I suppose I already knew it。 But suspicion is one thing; confirmation another; and to see Rycart’s exultation at that moment was to appreciate the scale of McAra’s treachery。

  “Hecalledme ! Can you believe that? If anyone had predicted I’d ever be given help by Mike McAra; of all people; I’d have laughed at him。”

  “When did he call?”

  “About three weeks after I first got the document。 The eighth of January? The ninth? Something like that。 ‘Hello; Richard。 Did you get the present I sent you?’ I almost had a heart attack。 Then I had to shut him up quickly。 Because of course you know that the phone lines at the UN are all bugged?”

  “Are they?” I was still trying to absorb everything。

  “Oh; completely。 The National Security Agency monitors every word that’s transmitted in the western hemisphere。 Every syllable you ever utter on a phone; every email you ever send; every credit card transaction you ever make—it’s all recorded and stored。 The only problem is sorting through it。 At the UN; we’re briefed that the easiest way to get round the eavesdropping is to use disposable mobile phones; try to avoid mentioning specifics; and change our numbers as often as possible—that way we can at least keep a bit ahead of them。 So I told Mike to stop right there。 Then I gave him a brand…new number I’d never used before and asked him to call me straight back。”

  “Ah;” I said。 “I see。” And I could。 I could visualize it perfectly。 McAra with his phone wedged between shoulder and ear; grabbing his cheap blue Bic。 “He must have scribbled the number on the back of the photograph he was holding at the time。”

  “And then he called me;” said Rycart。 He had stopped pacing and was looking at himself in the mirror above the chest of drawers。 He put both hands to his forehead and smoothed his hair back over his ears。 “Christ; I’m shattered;” he said。 “Look at me。 I was never like this when I was in government; even when I was working eighteen hours a day。 You know; people get it all wrong。 It isn’t having power that’s exhausting—it’snot having it that wears you out。”

  “What did he say when he called? McAra?”

  “The first thing that struck me was that he didn’t sound his usual self at all。 You were asking me what he was like。 Well; he was a pretty tough operator; which of course is what Adam liked about him: he knew he could always rely on Mike to do the dirty work。 He was sharp; businesslike。 You could almost say he was brutal; especially on the phone。 My private office used to call him McHorror: ‘The McHorror just rang for you; Foreign Secretary…’ But that day; I remember; his voice was completely flat。 He sounded broken; actually。 He said he’d just spent the past year in the archives in Cambridge; working on Adam’s memoirs; going over our whole time in government; and just getting more and more disillusioned with it all。 He said that that was where he’d found the memorandum about Operation Tempest。 But the real reason he was calling; he said; was that that was just the tip of the iceberg。 He said he’d just discovered something much more important; something that made sense of everything that had gone wrong while we were in power。”

  I could hardly breathe。 “What was it?”

  Rycart laughed。 “Well; oddly enough; I did ask him that; but he wouldn’t tell me over the phone。 He said he wanted to meet me to discuss it face…to…face: it was that big。 The only thing he would say was that the key to it could be found in Lang’s autobiography; if anyone bothered to check; that it was all there in the beginning。”

  “Those were his exact words?”

  “Pretty much。 I made a note as he was talking。 And that was it。 He said he’d call me in a day or two to fix a meeting。 But I heard nothing; and then about a week later it was in the press that he was dead。 And nobody else ever called me on that phone; because nobody else had that number。 So you can imagine why I was so excited when it suddenly started ringing again。 And so here we are;” he said; gesturing to the room; “the perfect place to spend a Thursday night。 And now I think you should tell me exactly what the hell is going on。”

  “I will。 Just one more thing; though。 Why didn’t you tell the police?”

  “You are joking; are you? Discussions at The Hague were at a very delicate stage。 If I’d told the police that McAra had been in contact with me; naturally they’d have wanted to know why。 Then it would have been bound to get back to Lang; and he would have been able to make some kind of preemptive move against the war crimes court。 He’s still a hell of an operator; you know。 That statement he put out against me the day before yesterday—‘The international struggle against terror is too important to be used for the purposes of domestic political revenge。’ Wow。” He shuddered admiringly。 “Vicious。”

  I squirmed slightly in my chair; but Rycart didn’t notice。 He’d gone back to inspecting himself in the mirror。 “Besides;” he said; sticking out his chin; “I thought it was accepted that Mike had killed himself; either because he was depressed; or drunk; or both。 I’d only have confirmed what they already knew。 He was certainly in a poor state when he rang me。”

  “And I can tell you why;” I said。 “What he’d just found out was that one of the men in that picture with Lang at Cambridge—the picture McAra had in his hand when he spoke to you—was an officer in the CIA。”

  Rycart had been checking his profile。 He stopped。 His brow corrugated。 And then; with great slowness; he turned his face toward me。

  “He waswhat ?”

  “His name is Paul Emmett。” Suddenly I couldn’t get the words out fast enough。 I was desperate to unburden myself—to share it—to let someone else try to make sense of it。 “He later became a professor at Harvard。 Then he went on to run something called the Arcadia Institution。 Have you heard of it?”

  “I’ve heard of it—of course I’ve heard of it; and I’ve always steered well clear of it; precisely because I’ve always thought it had CIA written all over it。” Rycart sat down。 He seemed stunned。

  “But is that really plausible?” I asked。 “I don’t know how these things work。 Would someone join the CIA and then immediately be sent off to do postgraduate research in another country?”

  “I’d say that’s highly plausible。 What better cover could you want? And where better than a university to spot the future best and the brightest?” He held out his hand。 “Show me the photograph again。 Which one is Emmett?”

  “It may all be balls;” I warned; pointing Emmett out。 “I’ve no proof。 I just found his name on one of those paranoid websites。 They said he joined the CIA after he left Yale; which must have been about three years before this was taken。”

  “Oh; I can believe it;” said Rycart; studying him intently。 “In fact; now you mention it; I think I did hear some gossip once。 But then that whole international conference circuit world is crawling with them。 I call them the military…industrial…academic complex。” He smiled at his own wit; then looked serious again。 “What’s really suspicious is that he should have known Lang。”

  “No;” I said; “what’sreally suspicious is that a matter of hours after McAra tracked down Emmett to his house near Boston; he was found washed up dead on a beach in Martha’s Vineyard。”

  AFTER THAT I TOLDhim everything I’d discovered。 I told him the story about the tides and the flashlights on the beach at Lambert’s Cove; and the curious way the police investigation had been handled。 I told him about Ruth’s description of McAra’s argument with Lang on the eve of his death; and about Lang’s reluctance to discuss his Cambridge years; and the way he’d tried to conceal the fact that he’d become politically active immediately after leaving university rather than two years later。 I described how McAra; with his typical dogged thoroughness; had discovered all this; turning up detail after detail that gradually destroyed Lang’s account of his early years。 That was presumably what he meant when he said that the key to everything was in the beginning of Lang’s autobiography。 I told him about the satellite navigation system in the Ford and how it had taken me to Emmett’s doorstep; and how strangely Emmett had behaved。

  And; of course; the more I talked; the more excited Rycart became。 I guess it must have been like Christmas for him。

  “Just suppose;” he said; pacing up and down again; “that it was Emmett who originally suggested to Lang that he should think about a career in politics。 Let’s face it; someone must have put the idea into his pretty little head。 I’d been a junior member of the party since I was fourteen。 What year did Lang join?”

  “Nineteen seventy…five。”

  “Seventy…five! You see; that would make perfect sense。 Do you remember w
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