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Authors: Tom Bradby

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BOOK: The Master of Rain
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Field looked down at the floor. “I could have used Lu’s notes to change things. I could still do as I threatened and send them to the right people in London and Washington, to the
New York Times,
newspapers in England, Tokyo, Paris.”
Chen laughed, tipping back his head, his smile only fading when he realized that Field had been serious. “There will be change here, Field, have no fear.” Chen shook his head, smiling again. “No, no.” He pointed up the stairs. “She is there. The boy was tired.”
“Where will you go, Chen?”
“I have friends.”
“In the city or elsewhere?”
“In all places.”
Field suddenly understood. “You’re a communist . . .”
“Whisper it quietly.” Chen smiled.
Field shook his head.
“One day, you may come back to China, Richard. Then you will find no Lu Huangs, no Macleods, no taipans, and foreigners will be welcomed as honored guests.”
Field stared at him. “Who else? There are many—in the force, I mean.”
“They will have their time.” Chen nodded. “The girl waits for you.”
“There are three men at the gate. They followed me from the consulate.”
“Of course.”
“Will you go now?”
“When it is time.”
Field hesitated. “Will Lu keep his word?”
Chen shook his head solemnly. “I do not know.”
Field offered his hand, but Chen waved it away to indicate that it was not the end. Field held his stare until he rounded the corner and was climbing the last few steps to her room.
Natasha was asleep on the bed, in her dressing gown, her head resting on her arm. She was curled up, her hair spilling across the white sheet.
She awoke and pushed herself upright, her eyes bleary. “Richard?”
He sat down beside her.
“You must leave.” Her voice was sleepy. “They will come for me now.”
“It will be all right, Natasha.”
“No, you must—”
“Natasha.” He took hold of her arms fiercely. “It will work. Trust me.”
She pushed herself onto her knees and stared at the empty bed between them. “Alexei is asleep in the next room. I . . .” She fell toward him, her arms around his neck.
When she released him, she took his face gently between her hands, her mouth close to his. “You have risked everything for me,” she said.
“I have reached an agreement,” he said. “I must leave today, now, but you and Alexei will follow in two weeks, and we will meet in Venice.” He lifted her chin. “Together in Venice, the two—three—of us.”
Hope flared briefly in her eyes, then she lowered her head.
“You’re free, Natasha. Both of you are free.”
“I cannot come to the wharf.”
“I understand.”
She looked at him, tears in her eyes. He moved toward her, but she raised her hand. “You must go.”
Field stood and she came to him, her arms around him, her tears wet on his face. “My love,” he said as he caressed the back of her head.
And then she released him again and turned away, so as not to look at his face. “Good-bye, Richard,” she said with a finality that suggested she was certain she would never see him again.
He waited for her to turn around.
“Please go, Richard.”
His throat was dry. “I cannot.”
“You must.”
Field felt the tears welling in his own eyes and he turned back down the stairs. Chen had gone and Katya was sitting at the kitchen table. He stopped in front of her. “It will be all right,” he said, but as he moved beyond her and stepped onto the path outside, he felt as if he were drowning.
When he calculated that he had gone far enough to be seen from her attic window, he stopped and turned around.
She was not there.
Fifty-seven
T
he quayside was busier than Field had seen it, streams of coolies running up and down the gangplanks, loaded with leather trunks, cranes above them swinging cargo onto a steamer moored astern of the
Martínez.
The sudden hoot of a horn made Field jump.
A coolie bent down to take a hold of his bag.
“No,” Field said, trying to prevent him, before realizing it was hopeless and showing the man his ticket with the cabin number listed above the second-class stamp.
Field followed the man up the gangplank.
Once on deck, they ducked through a door and down a steep companionway to the base of the ship.
Field was sharing a cabin above the engine room, which was all that had been available, and his companion had not yet come aboard. He watched the porter lift his bag onto the lower bunk—it would be cooler below—before turning expectantly. Field shoved a note into the man’s hand; he looked at it but did not move.
Field reached into his pocket and gave the man all the small change he had left, which was not much. After the porter had reluctantly withdrawn, Field shut the door and locked it, then took out and checked his revolver.
He sat down on the bunk and faced the door, then looked around the small cabin, trying to ignore the smell of diesel and oil and remembering how sick he had been in the tiny third-class cabin on the way out. It would, he thought, be simplest for Lu’s men to kill him now. His body wouldn’t be discovered until they were well out to sea.
He stood.
He took out his key, locked the door after him, and climbed quickly up the steps to the deck. He walked to the rail overlooking the quayside, where he was in full view of a hundred people or more.
Field scanned the crowd.
Every face was a disappointment, though he told himself he had not expected her to come.
The sun was sinking slowly over the city, but was still bright enough to make him squint as he watched the plumes of smoke blowing across the rooftops in the gentle, late-afternoon breeze.
The horn on one of the funnels above him let out a series of loud blasts, and Field turned back to the quayside to watch the last of the passengers saying their farewells. His eye was drawn to a smartly dressed woman in a yellow dress and small, fashionable, matching hat, who was saying an emotional farewell to her husband and teenage children.
There was another, longer series of blasts, and the coolies assembled by the gangplanks. They pulled them back, then caught the ropes from the bow and stern as the
Martínez
drifted slowly out into the current, its engines surging as the propellers began to churn the muddy waters of the river.
And then he saw Penelope, a small, frail figure amid the crowd. She raised her hand to him and he acknowledged it.
She stepped forward, coming to the very edge of the quay, her eyes fixed on his, her hand suspended in midair. He could see that she was crying.
Field raised his own hand as the liner gathered steam and the propellers turned faster and the quayside began to recede, then he walked slowly down to the stern, flicking his cigarette far out into the river. He watched the sampans bobbing up and down in their wake.
“Mr. Field?”
He turned to see a man in uniform, with a gray mustache and a pleasant smile.
“I’m Captain Ferguson.”
They shook hands.
“Mr. Lewis asked me to make sure your voyage is comfortable, so if there is anything I can do, please don’t hesitate to ask. You are down below?”
Field nodded. “Yes.”
“We’d be happy to move you up into a first-class cabin on deck here. We have one available.”
Field hesitated. “Thank you,” he said. “I’ll be fine where I am.”
The captain looked disappointed. “If you change your mind, please let me know. In the meantime, I hope you will at least do me the honor of dining at my table tonight.”
“Yes, of course.”
Field turned back toward the river. The buildings around them were dwindling in number and size, obscured gradually by the black smoke drifting across the sky from the factories in Pudong.
As they moved around the bend in the river, he watched the Union Jack high above the dome of the Hong Kong Shanghai Bank flapping idly in the breeze and faintly heard the clock on the tower of the Customs House striking the hour.
Field watched until they were gone.
Depression settled upon him. It was as though, with his last glimpse of the city, Natasha had slipped away from him, too.
The passengers melted away back to their cabins, and soon the buildings gave way to a patchwork of green paddy fields and small villages, close enough for him to see the children running along the banks of the river, waving.
Field walked to the bow and looked dead ahead as the
Martínez
left the river and began to pitch heavily as they struck out for the open sea.
The wind had strengthened, whipping the spray into his face.
He closed his eyes. He held on to the rail and tasted the salt in his mouth. He could hear his father’s voice. “Whatever happens, Richard, don’t be fortune’s fool.”
He suddenly felt terribly tired.
Epilogue
I
t was another of the perfect days Field had already grown accustomed to. He sat on the cobbled edge of the quay, the sinking sun still sparkling across the still waters of the lagoon.
He kicked his heels against the wall and watched the sea lapping beneath his feet. He looked at his watch for perhaps the hundredth time.
He examined the telegram. The
Aurora,
it said. September 1.
The lagoon seemed to Field to be surprisingly deserted. In the distance, two or three gondolas plied their trade off St. Mark’s Square, and, beyond them, there was only the steamer that he’d spotted a few minutes ago.
He stood and walked across to the man who still leaned against the door of his office, his blue cap pushed back off his forehead and his tie and collar loose. “The
Aurora
?” Field asked, pointing toward the ship in the distance.
The man shrugged and Field smiled. He offered him a cigarette. “Perhaps,” he said encouragingly, as Field lit it for him.
“A girl?” the man asked.
“Perhaps,” Field replied.
Field wandered back to the water’s edge. The liner was approaching fast, her white hull catching the sunlight as she steamed toward them.
He took his hat off, wanting to make sure that he was conspicuous, and tapped it against the side of his leg.
He did not move. He ran his fingers through his short hair, trying not to let his mind run ahead of events once again. During the long nights here, hope had been his enemy, his imagination turning over a thousand times what her reaction would be to this city, to a life of freedom.
He could see her laughing—that was how her face always appeared to him now—her hand cool in his as they walked together.
Sometimes he even thought about what he was going to do with the boy. He’d need to be educated, of course. Field wondered what his mother and Edith would make of what he’d done, and how they would take to Natasha.
They would love her, of course.
If she came.
He put his hands in his pockets.
“The
Aurora, si,”
the man said behind him.
“Shit,” Field whispered.
She was slowing, turning, and Field could see now that some of the passengers were gathered on deck.
He scanned their faces, trying to hold his nerves in check, but unable to see Natasha or the boy.
The
Aurora
came closer and closer. He found himself replacing his hat and staring down at the waters below as the ship edged toward the quay.
Field took a few paces back and waited.
He watched as the ropes were thrown down and secured, and a gangplank raised.
The passengers began to disembark, his eyes fixed upon each face. He saw no sign of her.
The last vestiges of hope drained slowly away, until there were no more faces. The passengers who had disembarked were now talking to the relatives who had greeted them, leaving the liner empty, save for the crew.
She had not come.
Field bent his head. He had known it was impossible.
He took another step back and looked up once more.
A Chinese in a dark suit and fedora stood at the top of the gangplank, his eyes upon him. He stared at Field for a long moment, then moved back.
And then Natasha was coming down toward him, Alexei behind her, holding up a small brown suitcase and waving.
The Chinese disappeared.
BOOK: The Master of Rain
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