Ghost Hero
got back?”
    “Great heaping piles of it. Dr. Yang had been against the whole thing from the start. Not that he knew Mike from Adam, or cared. It was the idea of Anna involved with a dissident, on the other side of the world, where he couldn’t protect her—I’m just sayin’, that was no semester to defend your thesis.”
    “What about Anna’s mother?” Bill asked. “Did she object, too?”
    “She and Anna are pretty close. She was in on it longer than Dr. Yang, watching the romance bloom. She wasn’t happy, either, because she was afraid Anna would get hurt. But she tried to soften Dr. Yang up. When Anna got back, she bombarded the Chinese consulate, her senator, everyone she could think of with phone calls, letters, e-mails. Eventually Dr. Yang gave in. He was furious, but she’s his little girl. He called some people he knows, and he knows some serious people. But no one could do anything. The PRC’s not backing down.”
    “Even though Mike Liu’s small potatoes?”
    “ Because he is. He has no huge international following, no one claiming he belongs to the world, not to China. They’re calling this a purely internal matter and no one’s cashing in the political chips to challenge that.”
    The swirling student traffic thinned as we walked north. We stopped for a light a few blocks away, across the street from Union Square.
    “Now I get it,” I said. “Why Dr. Yang might not want to tell Anna about the Chaus. Stir up the whole subject of dissident artists.”
    “Anna’s sort of back to a normal life. Basically, she’s making art and waiting for Mike. Between you and me I get the feeling Dr. Yang hopes she’ll forget him and fall for somebody else. Also between you and me, though, Anna’s still in touch with dissident groups here and in China, not a word about which she breathes to Dr. Yang.”
    “Poor Anna,” I said again. “And poor Mike.”
    Jack’s eyebrows went up. “You don’t even know Mike. He might be a self-righteous confrontational jerk with a martyr complex.”
    “He’s a political prisoner. That makes him one of the the good guys. And I hardly know Anna, either. Is he really that bad?”
    “No idea. I never met him. From what I hear he’s a serious, sweet guy. Talented writer, too.”
    “Then why did you say that?”
    “You felt bad for him. I was jealous.”
    “Go get arrested, I’ll feel bad for you, too.”
    “Getting shot at’s not enough?”
    “That’s getting old.”
    I got no answer because Jack’s and Bill’s phones both rang at once. I wouldn’t have put it past Jack to orchestrate that but it was for sure beyond Bill.
    Jack finished his call first. “That was Jacqueline. At Chocolat. They finished the temporary window and she told them to hang around so I could approve it. About that martini—”
    “We’d have to put it off anyway,” Bill said, folding his phone. “I have a date.”
    It took Jack a beat, but he caught up. “With Shayna Dylan? Seriously?”
    Bill gave a modest shrug. “I’m too sexy for Vladimir’s shirt.”
    “Hah,” I scoffed. “You think Shayna dating you is about anything as high-minded as sex?”
    “Um, well, good luck,” Jack said to Bill. He glanced at me and added, “With everything. Talk later, when you’re done? I’ll be in my office, doing whatever I was doing when all hell broke loose.” Then, habit overcoming reason, he stepped into the street and hailed a cab.
    “I still think it’s weird,” I said as Bill and I crossed to the subway, Bill to go uptown, me to go down.
    “That Jack prefers cabs?”
    “No, he had a deprived childhood where they don’t have subways. But based on what he said, I can see why Dr. Yang didn’t tell Anna what he’s doing, but it doesn’t seem like it would be a big deal if she found out. And why does he care if we know?” A thought occurred to me. “Uh-oh.”
    “Uh-oh what?”
    “‘Based on what Jack said.’ Maybe he’s holding out on us. Maybe something completely

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