PROLOGUE
“Attention, attention. British Airways Flight
Twenty-eight from Hong Kong, now arriving Gate Three. . . .”
Pak Chong Yong stepped off the boarding ramp,
following the line of his fellow passengers into the waiting lounge
in London’s Heathrow International Airport. He wore an expensive
three-piece suit, with five-hundred-dollar shoes, and carried a
leather attaché case for the respectability it afforded him. There
was respectability too in his companion, the attractive Korean
woman next in line behind him. After almost fifteen hours aboard
the 744, Chun Hyon Hee’s pink and white business suit was rumpled,
but no more so than the clothing of the others aboard Flight 28. It
was not yet five in the morning, local time. The sky, visible
through the big windows in one wall of the waiting lounge, was
still dark, though touched by streaks of a cold, predawn
light.
Filing up to the customs gate with the other
disembarking passengers, both kept their faces impassive. This
would be their first and possibly their most dangerous test. . .
.
“Passports, please. You two traveling
together?”
“Yes, sir.”
His English was perfect. The passport he
surrendered to the customs official at the gate gave his name as
Kim Doo Ok, a vice president of marketing for the Seoul-based
Daewan International Corporation. His companion’s passport listed
her as Madam Kim Song Hee, since their control for this operation
had felt they would be safer traveling together as husband and
wife. Chun, like Pak, was a member of the People’s Eighth Special
Operations Corps.
“Business or pleasure?”
Pak allowed his face to crease in an unaccustomed
smile. “A little of both, sir. I have business for my company . . .
but we thought we would combine it with a small vacation.”
“ ’At’s the ticket.” After a cursory inspection
of their papers, Pak’s briefcase, and Chun’s carry-on bag, the
blue-uniformed official stamped their passports, smiled brightly,
and handed them back with a cheerful, “Have a nice stay in England,
Mr. and Mrs. Kim!”
“Thank you. We will.”
Beyond the bottleneck of the customs gate they
stopped momentarily, until the jostle of people from behind forced
the two of them to step aside, suddenly uncertain. Neither of them
had ever been to Heathrow before, and the bustle of people was as
confusing and as noisy as Hong Kong or Tokyo, and far more alien.
Pak felt a shiver of xenophobia, quickly suppressed. His training
in covert operations, relentless, grueling, and long, had included
outings and maneuvers in several Western cities, and for a time
he’d been assigned to Operation Suwi—Watchman—in New York City. He
didn’t like Western cities, however, and knew he would never get
used to them . . . or their mongrel-yapping, contentious, and
ill-disciplined people.
The corridors, coldly lit by fluorescent lighting
panels overhead, were actually not that crowded. Most of the people
milling about beyond the customs gate were waiting for passengers
arriving on British Air 28. Their contact ought to be here
somewhere. . . .
“Mr. Kim?”
Pak turned, eyes narrowed to hard slits in his
round face. The man approaching him from the back of pay phones to
the right had a seedy look to him, and his breath stank of too many
hours in the airport’s bar.
“I’m Kim.”
“Long flight?”
“Not so bad. The service was good anyway.”
“Glad to hear it. Things ain’t what they used to
be, flying.” The formalities of sign and countersign concluded, the
man stuck out his hand. “I’m O’Malley.”
Pak ignored the hand. “Is there someplace more
private? I dislike meeting in the open, like this.”
“Ssst!” the man hissed. He glanced back and
forth, his too-expressive face revealing his fear. “Keep it down,
willya? Ain’t seen no Sassmen about, but that don’t mean they ain’t
there. C’mon.”
Pak exchanged a glance with Chun. That was the
problem with ops requiring cooperation with oegugin . . .
the hated foreigners. More often than not, they were poorly trained
and poorly disciplined, and they nearly always betrayed more
concern for their personal safety than for the completion of the
mission.
Pak would be glad when this mission was done and
he could return to Pyongyang.
“That’s O’Malley all right,” the British airport
security chief said. “But who’re the two gooks?”
Colonel Wentworth glanced up from the television
monitor. The Security Office was a clean, close room filled with
banks of monitors and a number of security men, but the three of
them—Wentworth, the security chief, and the man in the dark suit
whose ID had marked him as a special agent with MI5—had this corner
of the room to themselves, and no one else was within
earshot.
“Their passports are for a Mr. and Mrs. Kim,”
Wentworth replied. “But I wouldn’t place too much faith in that.
Our people are checking with Daewan International now, but I expect
they’ll check out okay. The opposition’s pretty careful about
things like that.”
The security chief reached for a white telephone.
“So. Shall I call my people in and pick ’em up?”
“Negative,” Wentworth said. He was wearing a
headset and could hear the terse back-and-forth reports of the
troopers on the ground, a reassuring background murmur of voices
and code phrases. “My men are already on it. Let’s not spook them
with uniforms, okay?”
“Listen, Colonel, O’Malley’s a known terr. A
damned bloody Provo. If he does somethin’ loopy on the concourse,
it’s me job, see?”
“O’Malley’s not a problem,” Wentworth said. “He’s
not carrying, and his backup stayed outside the security check
zone. My guess is he just went in to pick up the two
Koreans.”
“Well, your guess had damned sure better
be a good one.”