cart parked next to the door.
“What does the sign say?” she called to Mr. Tung, pointing.
Moving to her side he looked at it. “People’s Security Bureau,” he said, and abruptly turned away, his face expressionless.
People’s Security Bureau … the Sepos, she remembered from her reading, and she wondered if, since Mao’s death, the Sepos still knocked on doors at midnight to take people away, or whether the new order had changed this. She hoped so. Bishop had said, “You’ll find many surprising changes happening there, but they’ve been taking place very cautiously, very slowly.” She lingered a moment gazing at the open door, trying to imagine what lay behind its innocent facade, and then she turned and hurried away, made uneasy by a vague sense of foreboding.
“What did he say that building was?” asked George Westrum, catching up with her.
“People’s Security Bureau.”
“Oh, cops. By the way, did you know Malcolm writes kiddies’ books?”
The tone of his voice, she thought, would not havesurprised Malcolm. “Yes, very fine ones,” she told him. “Perhaps your children—are you married, George?”
He shook his head. “Never had children, been a widower for years. Tell me why in hell a man would write children’s books? Hasn’t he grown up yet?”
Mrs. Pollifax glanced at George’s baseball cap, tilted boyishly at the back of his head, and smiled. “Do any of us?” she asked dryly. “And should we—completely?”
He didn’t hear her; he said abruptly, “There’s Iris Damson up ahead. Doesn’t realize it’s almost time to be heading for the bus. Excuse me, I’ll just hurry along and tell her.”
She watched him march briskly toward Iris, passing Joe Forbes photographing workers mixing cement, then Peter and Jenny taking pictures of each other, and Malcolm aiming his camera at children playing. She smiled, thinking George Westrum was showing very definite signs of becoming addicted to Iris.
In late afternoon they reached the airport, where they said good-bye to Mr. Tung. Because there were no reserved seats on the plane, not even for foreigners, there was a mad dash across the tarmac once the plane was announced, and the group found themselves widely dispersed throughout the small two-engine prop plane. Mrs. Pollifax settled herself into an aisle seat with two men in Mao jackets beside her, and realized, now that she had sampled a little of China, it was time she began considering just how she was going to approach Comrade Guo Musu in his barbershop near the Drum Tower in Xian. She found that no inspiration occurred to her at all; she had no idea what the Drum Tower might be, and not even her wildest flights of imagination could conjure up the appearance of a barbershop, which in China would scarcely announce itself with a striped barber pole. It troubled her,too, that so far the tour appeared to be arranged to prevent even the most accidental of encounters with the Chinese, and up against these frustrations she began to reflect instead on just which member of the group might be her coagent. One of them—
one person on this plane
—knew what Xian meant, and why she was here.
One person, she reflected, and again asked, who? Which one?
From where he sat on the plane he could just see the back of Mrs. Pollifax’s head several seats down the aisle, and as the plane lifted he wondered what she was thinking about as they took flight to Xian, and to Guo Musu, and he wondered how in hell she was going to extract information from a total stranger, given so little time and the watchful eye of Mr. Li. Once again he shook his head over Carstairs’ choice; they had a very tight schedule, and if she failed in this contact it was highly doubtful that he would ever find the labor camp by himself. The distances were too vast, and their time too painfully limited.
He had programmed himself not to think ahead, but separated from the others now, with two native Chinese between him and
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