'It isn't ICAC. We haven't bugged him.'
'Hamley said the tracker was police issue.'
'Did he show it to you?'
'Yes.'
'What did it look like?'
'It had the word Nabeshima on the side.'
White bit his lip.
'Well?'
'Nabeshima are our exclusive suppliers. ICAC, the Serious Crime Group, all the other spooks get their hardware from Nabeshima, via the Royal Hong Kong Police.'
'You know a lot about it.'
White grunted. 'I get their salesman drunk every quarter. Filthy job but somebody has to do it.'
'So who - who, if not us, is investigating Frank?'
White shrugged. 'If it was the regular RHKP we'd already have been told about it. One of Frank's colleagues in the Serious Crime Group, maybe? Only I don't think the SCG have the brief to conduct internal investigations. If it's not ICAC, there aren't many higher levels could order such an aggressive investigation.'
'The CIA?' I sneered. MI5, maybe? UNCLE?'
He turned off the fan. The Spies Like Us routine had gone sour in his mouth.
'Well?'
'Well - ' White grinned. Pure Schadenfreude - no humour there at all. 'I'm fucked if I know.'
'Justin's gone backwards,' Eva cried.
Justin's tiny, temporary gains, his flashes, his brief moments of connection that were all I won for all my reading, all my money - they brought him little enough gain, and Eva no comfort. She wanted to mourn him, but I wouldn't let her. I kept wiring him up to the lightning conductor. I kept him jerking. I wouldn't let hope die. 'I talked to Dr Yildiz on Monday,' I said. I'd been doing my homework for this. 'There's an anti-convulsant called ethosuximide.'
She looked at me like I was mad.
'It's been linked to language gain. Very modest. Nothing like the DMG. But maybe a combination of that and DMG - '
'Can you hear yourself?'
'For God's sake,' I said, 'DMG's a just bloody food supplement. What harm can it do?'
Eva rubbed her face. 'How long are we going to go on like this?'
'On like what?' I had to engage her. I had to keep her enthused. Somehow.
'Justin's - it's like he's bleeding to death and we're just slapping on Band-Aids!'
'That's not fair. DMG got him talking - '
'Adam.' Her anger startled me. 'It's over.'
'It wears off, I know,' I replied, limply enough.
If I could have kept Eva in the life she was used to, things might have been easier for us. But specialist day-care and private consultants and even the workaday costs of research were pushing me so far into the red, I could barely afford to run my car, let alone my wife.
It wasn't that Eva was shallow. Material comforts weren't some kind of fetish with her. She just needed some stability in her life, some sense that we weren't spilling ourselves down the plughole of hopelessness and debt.
I hid my bank statements. Eva spent my cheques the way she had spent her mother's - on Justin. I spent more time at home, poring over the screen in the living room. Eva, the cyberwidow, stroked Justin's forehead while he slept.
I knew she was lonely. I knew I wasn't much company for her. But I couldn't see that I had much choice. Every day I scoured the papers, looking for a loan, a deal, a way to keep our sinking ship afloat. But that, obviously, could never be a lasting solution. What I really needed was an answer, a miracle. A treatment. A cure.
That's what I was holding out for.
A cure.
The way I figured it, it was the only thing could save us.
And then, against all reason and all expectation, I found one.
'I cannot do this any more.'
She shouted it so loud, the party at the next table turned round.
'Oh Jesus Christ.' Eva hid her face behind her glass.
'So you raised your voice,' I said, 'so what?'
'For God's sake Adam, not here, please.'
I'd meant it all to be a lovely surprise: a terrace table at the Bela Vista in Macau, to celebrate our anniversary. But then, for the first and probably last time in the hotel's history, they called to confirm the reservation, and blew the surprise. Then our baby-sitter failed to show, and we had to call in the maid.
'You're right,' I said, calming her as best I could. 'Drugs and diet aren't the answer, no-one ever said they were. But Ivar Lovaas's study claims his method's cured some kids - '
We were under a lot of strain at the time. The Lovaas method is very time-and effort-intensive and parental involvement is vital. It's a behavioural programme, very intensive, forty hours a week minimum, at home and in special classes.
Lilly the maid was Lovaas-trained herself, as we had been, and had children of her own enough to populate a whole New Town, but something in Eva - some ingrained class-anxiety - wouldn't let her rest this evening. She fretted for her son, nursed by a mere amah...
'Adam, Justin - he's beginning to frighten me. Is that dreadful?'
'No,' I soothed. 'You're just reading into him what isn't there. You know' The cataplana arrived just then, the spices so heady, I lost the thread of what I was saying.
'Adam?'
'What were we talking about?' The things I said to comfort her were by now worn so smooth, I kept losing my grip on them.
Eva said, 'Yesterday, for example. I hurt myself. I cut myself. I was getting lunch. The way he looked at me - '
'But we know all this,' I interrupted, losing my patience. 'We've already lived through this. We know he doesn't understand other people's feelings. You're telling me nothing about Justin that we haven't already come to terms with.'
Eva smiled a little smile, and pretended not to mind my butting in. 'Maybe mother can help me,' she said. Her eyes glistened in the candlelight. The breeze blowing down Rua Comendador caught her hair. She was so beautiful tonight, the undisputed star of the terrace of the Hotel Bela Vista. The waiters were taking turns to serve us, just to get a look at her face. 'I know how you feel, darling, but she's so good with him - '
'No.'
'Adam - '
'Will she do the Lovaas training? Will she stick with it?'
Eva tossed her fork into her cataplana and pushed it aside. In the candlelight, the skin around her eyes looked more bruised than ever, and her lips looked bitten to a dreadful, swollen softness.
'I'm sorry,' I said.
'You want everything your own way,' she said.
'I just hate seeing you bullied.'
'Me in the house wiping food off the walls. You in the library pretending you're Nick Nolte.'
The last happy surprise I had sprung on Eva had been two tickets to see Lorenzo's Oil. Nolte and Susan Sarandon play parents reading up on a cure for their dying son: not, on mature reflection, a happy choice for us.
'I know I'm fucking up - '
'Don't do that!' Eva snapped. 'Don't back away like that. Every time I try to tell you something real, you bland me out.'
'I don't.'
'You do.'
I needed something to calm me down. To soothe me. I drank off the glass of white port I had misguidedly ordered seconds before my fish arrived. The ice had melted: I downed it in one. Alcohol, that famous marital aid.
'I can't cope with Justin in the house any more. I spoke to mother. She's prepared to pay for him to go to the Higashi school.'
Higashi's 'Daily Life Therapy'. Another very highly regarded behavioural programme, only this one is residential. And exclusive.
'Tokyo?'
'Adam - '
'I won't let that bitch steal my son from me.'
My time was now evenly spent smoking Silk Cut in the SCG lounge and getting vertigo in the ICAC car park. I was still reporting to the Weird Sisters about Hamley, and now Hamley, made paranoid by the tracker he had found in his car, had me reporting to him about the Weird Sisters. When Hamley found out I was working on Top Luck he must have seen the writing on the wall because he immediately began his own investigation into the company. This quickly spiralled into a major - if intractably complicated money laundering case. Hamley had me working on it on the days I was in the SCG building. Meanwhile Daniel White had me working on it when I was at ICAC. Which meant that while I was reporting on Top Luck to White I was also reporting dizzyingly similar information to Hamley. If I was actually getting anything out of this arrangement, it might have been almost bearable. But there were no bonuses to be had with a secondment like mine, and every month saw me eating further and further into what few savings I had put by, simply to meet the household expenses. I was earning well, but the salary transfers barely touched my account before they were gone. Everything I earned was going on Justin.
It was the only way I could keep him.
In the end, Eva's mother won. Her hatchet job on her daughter was total. The Lovaas regime we were running at home broke down in a welter of tears and recrimination. My wife was wrecked, and Justin was suffering.
Eva needed time to put herself back together. A respite from Justin, she said, needlessly ashamed; and her mother repeated her offer to sweep our son off to Daily Life Therapy in Tokyo. But that, I knew, would only be the beginning, as piece by piece she reclaimed and reconsumed her daughter. The only way I could think of to fend her off was if we sent Justin to Tokyo and I paid for the therapy myself.
So that's what we did. I'd been sitting up long into the small hours many nights now, poring over the laptop, juggling figures, trying to make things balance. It was all so hopeless, once I phoned dad, to ask whether maybe he could remortgage his house if I paid the instalments. It turned out he had already remortgaged years before, without telling me, to pay for mum's respite care. He said he had savings.
'What do you need?' he said.
'Christ, Dad.'
'Come on. It's okay.' He knew I'd married money, but he didn't say anything. It was all I could do not to burst into tears. I said something dumb and put down the phone.
We didn't entertain any more. We couldn't afford to. It became embarrassing, not inviting people back, so Eva spent most of her time indoors.
It got so that an unannounced visit by Daniel White was a major break in routine. Eva went into overdrive. 'Another drink?' she called, hovering at the kitchen door. Her face was drawn and weary. Justin was home after his first term at Higashi, and the flight had left him nervous and irritable. But despite her weariness Eva kept on determinedly fussing around us like the perfect hostess.
'Well, I'm fine,' White told her. 'In fact it's such a nice day, shall we all take a walk?'
It was obvious White wanted to speak to me alone - appearances aside he was hardly a friend of the family, so why else would he turn up like this unannounced on a Sunday afternoon? But he extended the invitation to Eva, guessing rightly that she would have to stay in and look after Justin. I despised him, suddenly and fiercely, for his hypocrisy. Americans are at their very worst when they think they're being tactful.
I walked him down Lugard Road. I liked White, translation problems apart, but he had begun to represent for me a nemesis I knew would come very soon, if I wasn't bloody careful.
'He's a beautiful little boy.'
'Hmm?'
'Justin.'
'Yes,' I said. 'He's autistic,' I said.
'Yeah, I know.' Absently, White broke a sprig of jasmine off a tree hanging over the path. There was a gap in the foliage here, and we stood for a moment looking down on Hong Kong. They have amazing faces, don't they?'
'You know about that?'
'My sister lives in a sheltered house in Delray Beach. Every once in a while Dad has to go rescue her. Fort Myers; once she made it as far as Orlando. She has an obsession with bus travel. Muriel. She's very bright.' He put his hands in his pockets and started walking again along the bridle track. 'Small world, huh?'
A party of Australian joggers tramped past us.
White was going back to the States for a week to see his father safely out of hospital.
'What happened?'
'Golfing accident.'
'He get hit by a ball?'
'No, an alligator bit his hand off.'
'I was - '
'Really. Bit his forefinger clean off and severed a tendon in his thumb. They sneak into the water features at night.'
'Jesus.'
'One hell of a handicap.' He turned his troubled blue eyes on me. 'I'll be away, these next six days.'
'Well,' I said, 'if there's anything - '
'Whoever's tracking Hamley, they did more than bug his car.'
I didn't need this. My life was complicated enough. 'Haven't you found out who it is yet?'
'There's a listening device in his office phone.'
I felt myself colour up. Whenever Hamley was out of the office I'd go in there and use that very phone. It was the only way, in an office as crowded as ours, that I could plead with my bank manager in private. (I'd given up my mobile. I couldn't afford the bill.)
'In his desk. In his washroom...'
'I can't be doing with this, Dan. I work for him. He employs me. I can't hear this.'
'They're all police issue so it's a piece of piss for us to listen in on them.'
'Really.'
'Trouble is, now Hamley's on his guard, it's only a matter of time before he has his office swept.'
'Not my problem.'
'And when he finds them, he'll blame ICAC. We're the only spooks are entitled to plant equipment on him.'
'Not my problem.'
'Whoever works for ICAC and has access to his office - ' White shrugged. 'Obviously, until we know who's actually bugging him, suspicion's going to have to fall somewhere.'
I couldn't believe what I was hearing. 'You're framing me?
'Don't be dumb. I'm just telling you how things are going to look.'
'But you've go to do something.'
He shrugged. 'What can I do? I'm off to see my dad.'
We walked on a little way. 'If you want to cover your back,' he said, 'you'll have to do it yourself.'
I laughed. I couldn't help it.
'They're only bloody microphones. They're in his office. We can tell you what they look like, where to find them. Please, Adam.'
'I don't believe I'm hearing this.'