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The Ghost(英文版)-第28章

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  For a few moments; I stared stupidly at the screen; then I opened the separate filing cabinet on the laptop’s hard drive that automatically stores every piece of email; incoming and outgoing。 And there; sure enough; to my immense relief; at the top of the “Email you have sent” queue was one titled “no subject;” to which I had attached the manuscript of Adam Lang’s memoirs。 But when I opened the blank email and clicked on the box labeled “download;” all I received was a message saying; “That file is not currently available。” I tried a few more times; always with the same result。

  I took out my mobile and called the internet company。

  I shall spare you a full account of the sweaty half hour that followed—the endless selecting from lists of options; the queuing; the listening to Muzak; the increasingly panicky conversation with the company’s representative in Uttar Pradesh or wherever the hell he was speaking from。

  The bottom line was that the manuscript had vanished; and the company had no record of its ever having existed。

  I lay down on the bed。

  I am not very technically minded; but even I was beginning to grasp what must have happened。 Somehow; Lang’s manuscript had been wiped from the memory of my internet service provider’s computers; for which there were two possible explanations。 One was that it hadn’t been uploaded properly in the first place; but that couldn’t be right; because I had received those two messages while I was still in the office: “Your file has been transferred” and “You have email。” The other was that the file had since been deleted。 But how could that have happened? Deletion would imply that someone had direct access to the computers of one of the world’s biggest internet conglomerates and was able to cover his tracks at will。 It would also imply—had to imply—that my emails were all being monitored。

  Rick’s voice floated into my mind—“Wow。 This must’ve been some operation。 Too big for a newspaper。 This must’ve been agovernment”—followed swiftly by Amelia’s—“You do realize how serious this is getting; don’t you?”

  “But the book is crap!” I cried out loud; despairingly; at the portrait of the Victorian whaling master hanging opposite the bed。 “There’s nothing in it that’s worth all this trouble!”

  The stern old Victorian sea dog stared back at me; unmoved。 I had broken my promise; his expression seemed to say; and something out there—some nameless force—knew it。

  EIGHT

  Authors are often busy people and hard to get hold of; sometimes they are temperamental。 The

  publishers consequently rely on the ghosts to make the process of publication as smooth as possible。

  Ghostwritin g

  THERE y doing any more work that night。 I didn’t even turn on the television。 Oblivion was all I craved。 I switched off my mobile; went down to the bar; and; when that closed; sat up in my room emptying a bottle of scotch until long past midnight; which no doubt explains why for once I slept right through the night。

  I was woken by the bedside telephone。 The harsh metallic tone seemed to vibrate my eyeballs in their dusty sockets; and when I rolled over to answer it I felt my stomach keep on rolling; wobbling away from me across the mattress and onto the floor like a taut balloon full of some noxious; viscous liquid。 The revolving room was very hot; the air…conditioning turned up to maximum。 I realized I’d gone to sleep fully dressed and had left all the lights burning。

  “You need to check out of your hotel immediately;” said Amelia。 “Things have changed。” Her voice pierced my skull like a knitting needle。 “There’s a car on its way。”

  That was all she said。 I didn’t argue; I couldn’t。 She’d gone。

  I once read that the ancient Egyptians used to prepare a pharaoh for mummification by drawing his brain out through his nose with a hook。 At some point in the night a similar procedure had seemingly been performed on me。 I shuffled across the carpet and pulled back the curtains to unveil a sky and sea as gray as death。 Nothing was stirring。 The silence was absolute; unbroken even by the cry of a gull。 A storm was coming in all right; even I could tell that。

  But then; just as I was about to turn away; I heard the distant sound of an engine。 I squinted down at the street beneath my window and saw a couple of cars pull up。 The doors of the first opened and two men got out—young; fit looking; wearing ski jackets; jeans; and boots。 The driver stared up at my window and instinctively I took a step backward。 By the time I risked a second look; he had opened the rear of the car and was bent over it。 When he straightened he took out what at first; in my paranoid state; I took to be a machine gun。 Actually it was a television camera。

  I started to move quickly then; or at least as quickly as my condition would allow。 I opened the window wide to let in a blast of freezing air。 I undressed; showered in lukewarm water; and shaved。 I put on clean clothes and packed。 By the time I got down to reception it was eight forty…five—an hour after the first ferry from the mainland had docked at Vineyard Haven—and the hotel looked as though it was staging an international media convention。 Whatever you might say against Adam Lang; he was certainly doing wonders for the local economy: Edgartown hadn’t been this busy since Chappaquiddick。 There must have been thirty people hanging around; drinking coffee; swapping stories in half a dozen languages; talking on their mobiles; checking equipment。 I’d spent enough time around reporters to be able to tell one type from another。 The television correspondents were dressed as though they were going to a funeral; the news agency hacks were the ones who looked like gravediggers。

  I bought a copy of theNew York Times and went into the restaurant; where I drank three glasses of orange juice straight off; before turning my attention to the paper。 Lang wasn’t buried in the international section any longer。 He was right up there on the front page:

  WAR CRIMES COURT

  TO RULE ON BRITISH

  EX…PM

  ~ ANNOUNCEMENT

  DUE TODAY

  ~

  Former Foreign Sec。

  Alleges Lang OK’d

  Use of Torture by CIA

  Lang had issued a “robust” statement; it said (I felt a thrill of pride)。 He was “embattled;” “coping with one blow after another”—beginning with “the accidental drowning of a close aide earlier in the year。” The affair was “an embarrassment” for the British and American governments。 “A senior administration official” insisted; however; that the White House remained loyal to a man who was formerly its closest ally。 “He was there for us and we’ll be there for him;” the official added; speaking only after a guarantee of anonymity。

  But it was the final paragraph that really made me choke into my coffee:

  The publication of Mr。 Lang’s memoirs; which had been scheduled for June; has been brought forward to the end of April。 John Maddox; chief executive of Rhinehart Publishing Inc。; which is reported to have paid 10 million for the book; said that the finishing touches were now being 
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