walkway, meaning a single choke point.
There was an open-air parking garage next to the hotel. I
walked into it and hugged the wall, obscured by bushes lining the
wall's exterior.
He appeared a minute after I'd gotten in position. The streetlights
illuminated him and cast shadows into the garage where I
stood silently by. I watched him stroll past me down the tree-lined
walkway in the direction of the Avenida da Amizade, named, like
most of Macau's thoroughfares, by the Portuguese centuries earlier.
The soft drape of his navy sport jacket was too stylish for his
surroundings--dress in Macau, I had learned, was almost slacker
casual--but I supposed that as a white island in an Asian sea he was
going to stand out regardless.
Past the parking garage he turned right into an alley. I glanced
back at the hotel exit--all quiet. So far he seemed to be alone, with
no counter surveillance to his rear. I moved out to follow him. He
reached the Avenida da Amizade and -waited for a break in the traffic
before crossing. I hung back in the shadows and waited.
On the other side of the street he turned left, looking back over
his shoulder, as any pedestrian would, to check for oncoming traffic
before crossing. I permitted myself the trace of a smile. His
"traffic check" was an unobtrusive bit of counter surveillance It
was nicely done, casual, and I saw from the quality of the move that
I was probably going to have a hard time following him solo.
He moved down the wide boulevard in the direction of the
Hotel Lisboa, the territory's biggest casino and best-known trolling
ground for prostitutes, and after a moment I crossed the street and
trailed after him. The streetlights around us were widely spaced,
with ample pools of darkness between them for concealment, and
Karate couldn't have spotted me even had he looked backward to
do so.
A few hundred meters farther on, he cut down the steps of
an underground passageway. The passageway was H-shaped, its
lengths running parallel to the Amizade and its middle running
perpendicular beneath it. I moved just a little more quickly to close
the gap, and arrived at the entrance in time to see him disappearing
into the middle of the tunnel and under the street.
Now I faced a dilemma. If I followed him in and he glanced
back, he -would make me. If I stayed put and he emerged on the
opposite side of the street and hurried on to develop distance, I
could easily lose him.
I thought for a moment. Until now, his counter surveillance had
been subtle, disguised as ordinary pedestrian behavior. But he was
abandoning subtlety now: after all, a pedestrian out for a stroll
doesn't typically cross a street one way and then, a short stretch
later, cross back. He knew what he was doing. The question was,
which way would he play it? Double back, to catch a follower? Or
hurry out the other side, to lose him?
If I had been working with a team, or even just a teammate,
there wouldn't have been a problem. We would have just tag-teamed
him in, knowing that if one of us got spotted, the other
would fall into place after. But this time I didn't have that luxury. All
I had was instinct and experience, and these were telling me that the
tunnel move was a feint, an attempt to draw a follower into the tunnel,
weed him out of the crowd, then turn around and catch him.
So I moved past the passageway on the right, hiding in the shadows
of one of the avenue's stunted palm trees, hoping I was right.
Fifteen seconds went by. Thirty.
If I had been wrong, this was my last chance to try to cross
the street. If I waited until he had emerged, he would see me
coming.
Just another second, just another second, c'mon, asshole, where
are you . . .
Boom, there he was, moving up the vertical side of the H, still
on my side of the street. I let out a long, quiet breath.
He strolled another hundred meters along the Avenida da
Amizade, then cut right. I did the same, in time to see him