"This is going to be dangerous and expensive, Mao," said Murphy Van Hool.
They had crossed over from Avenue Louise and were strolling towards Tenbosch, a public park in Ixelles popular with retired Eurocrats.
"How much?" asked Mao.
"Each case is different," replied Murphy. "I really can't say, but we'll be dealing with gangsters so I'd advise you to give them what they ask for. You don't want to owe these people money and you don't want them coming after you, either."
Mao fell silent as they entered the park.
"Some of these probably voted for the Irish Exclusion Act," said Murphy, looking at the well-dressed, silver-haired men and women admiring the exquisite landscaping. They stopped and sat on a seat by the high wall that helped make Tenbosch an oasis of tranquillity in busy Brussels.
"OK, Murps. What's the scenario?" asked Mao, as a angry-looking dark dog and its owner, a sturdy woman wearing a heavy green coat and what looked like a man's green hat, embellished with feathers, approached.
After waiting for the odd couple to pass by, Murphy began outlining Mao's future life.
She would deliver his profile to a Basque "businessman" who would manufacture a number of "digital families" for Mao. For a considerable sum of money, of course.
"You won't get to meet him," said Murphy. "So don't ask. It's a secret community, and I've never met him either. They don't like outsiders."
She explained how nothing about Mao in the future would be true. The identity on his communicator wouldn't be his own and his past would be a sham as well.
"If this involves identity theft..." said Mao.
"What's false and what's true is never as it seems," said Murphy, explaining that Mao would be entering a provisional world in which telling lies did not necessarily mean articulating falsehood. If it happened in the future that he had to reveal his identity, it would just be a layer behind which another identity existed.
"I'm going to be an outcast!" Mao said and smiled.
He thought of all the different jobs he could do, depending on the qualifications the Basques would create for him. Maybe he'd become a tennis coach, a recent fantasy, and he pictured the lonely wives he'd sleep with, "grass court widows", whose husbands were off working in Greenland.
"Yes. You'll be an outcast, and if you get caught, you'll be in very deep shit," said Murphy, ending Mao's daydream.
"But there is an alternative to prison, if the nab you," and she outlined the EUSA Admission Programme, which offered amnesty to those who confessed their "alienage". Mao would be expected to name names and if he did, Murphy and her friends could expect harsh consequences.
"Murphy, do you know anything about China's historical ambivalence towards the developed world?" asked Mao.
She looked at him, but couldn't manage a response.
"Because if you did, Murphy, you'd never even think for a second that I'd betray you."
Mao Kelly was eating dim sum in Huit-Huit Chien, a Chinese restaurant on Chée d'Alsemberg in Brussels, when the immigration police walked in. "They said, 'Don't move. Show us your ID'".
"So I gave them a very good student card that identified me as a Catholic Taiwanese post-grad scholar at Louvain. That'll keep them busy for a while," he said, smiling.
Mao was sitting across a table from Murphy Van Hool, founder of Expatriate Irish Respectable Europeans, a voluntary organization that, officially, gave legal advice to expatriates who were in trouble with bureaucrats, employers or landlords.
"I've been busy recently," she said, brushing back the blond hair that kept falling across her eyes. "Look. Two hundred files open and nearly all of them about someone who was fired summarily or denied payment. It's just a few short steps from being fired to being arrested to being deported, you know."
Murphy Van Hool, the daughter of an Irish mother and a Belgian father, showed Mao the breakfast IPTV interview she'd given to a Swiss blogger a few hours earlier.
Irish immigrants, she told the interviewer, had flocked to mainland Europe from the early 1970s, drawn by the potential of the pub trade across the continent. Then, Ireland's integration into the world's economy in the 1990s led to a change in the profile of its émigrés. Remittances were less important and getting white-collar jobs in Brussels and Strasbourg became part of the country's international development strategy.
Irish immigrant numbers rose rapidly across Europe in the early years of the 21st century. The result was that in some NGOs and Quangos there were offices comprised entirely of Irish officials.
The Irish, however, had very low rates of participation in trade unions and political parties. They were also more likely to spend time with other Irish migrants in bars watching football because social interaction was frustrated by language barriers as most Irish insisted on speaking English only.
"Today, the Irish European experience is bleak," Murphy Van Hool told the interviewer. "It is marked by constant anxiety about immigration status. Since the tightening of visa regulations in 2010, the number of undocumented Irish has risen significantly, and while the statistics show they are disproportionately affected by crime, they are the least likely to report their experiences to the police."
They also earned less than others, she added. The unskilled were the most affected. "Most of them are doing cash-in-hand work, like slaves," said Van Hool. "Governments don't care. They just want non-EU people out of here."
The blogger cut to a French report on Irish workers that quoted Jacinta, a 28-year-old lawyer from Dublin, living in Paris. She described the sort of routine typical of many compatriots.
"I work seven days a week," she said. "I wake up at 5 am and start work at 6 am. Until 7 am, I clean a nursery. After that, I clean an optician's office, which includes the toilets. I finish at noon. Then from 1 pm to 3 pm, I clean an office. After that, I go home for a rest. From 4 pm to 2 pm I work in a bar."
"It's quite common," Van Hool to the interviewer. "They sleep for a few hours; they don't have any social life. They don't complain, because they're afraid of being deported."
The blogger cut to Iarfhlaith Ó Tuathail, Ireland's most influential pundit, who began to speak of the "Irish Diaspora" and how the overseas Irish were akin to the Jews of the early 20th century.
"Most of them dream of returning home one day," said Ó Tuathail.
But Mao didn't. He had grown used to the European way of life.
"Murphy, when I go back to Ireland, I don't feel I belong there," he said. "It's different. The weather's bad. People's teeth are bad. I feel like an outsider in Ireland."
Mao was struck by the fact that he was doubly alienated: From his own ethnic group and from the country in which he had been born.
"When are you going to wake up? For fuck's sake! When are you going to grow up?"
Mao Kelly had developed the habit of talking to himself after he'd accepted that he was a loner — in his early teens, in other words.
It was late morning and he was awake. But it wasn't the aftertaste of the absinthe or the pain in his head that had brought on the rebuking. No. He was upset that he had misled a woman who had been honest with him. Yvette was also gorgeous and his restless sleep had been filled with graphic fantasies involving her in various settings.
"Jesus, you are mad," he said to the bathroom mirror, as he recalled what he had done.
After upbraiding himself for another five minutes, he turned to cursing the other great scapegoat in his life: politics.
Mao, for most of his early life, had ignored politics. And then it was too late because politics took an intense interest in him. Not only because of his revolutionary work in artificial intelligence, which involved subverting 35 international laws, but because of his status as "alien European" within the European United States Alliance. He was a fugitive and, to his shame this morning, a deceitful one.
He tried to recall the sequence of events that had led to this mess. As always, it went back to 2010.
When the people of Ireland rejected the Berlin Treaty in 2010, which was an amended version of the Paris Treaty they had rejected in 2009, which was a modified version of the Lisbon Treaty they had rejected in 2008, the European Union, as it was then called, lost its patience with the stubborn islanders.
The Brussels mandarins responded to the 2010 rebuff by cutting off the generous EU development funding that had become a key component of Ireland's budgeting following the collapse the former "tiger" economy at the end of 2009. The wilful Irish reacted by reducing the nation's corporate tax rate to 0 percent, thus matching the Cayman Islands.
Enraged, the EU ejected Ireland from the Euro currency zone (its place was taken by Albania) and Dublin then astonished the global markets with a breathtaking counterstroke: It declared that Ireland was becoming a tax haven and that it was simultaneously joining Gibraltar, Andorra and Monaco to form the GAIM gambling association. The four launched a 24/7 virtual reality casino that soon became the world's most popular and lucrative betting business. Overnight, Ireland became a favourite holiday destination for risk-appreciative Afghan and Cuban millionaires and its distinctive green passports traded for millions on the black market.
In the final act of the "European Treaty War", as it became known, the successor to the EU, the EUSA, under President Bruni, rescinded the rights that Irish citizens had enjoyed under previous European agreements and imposed strict visa limits on the country's tourists and workers.
Engrossed in his ground-breaking work in the Republic of Flanders and uninterested in politics, Mao Kelly let all these developments take their course without acknowledging their importance or preparing himself for their impact.
When his employer informed him that she had no option but to offer his job to a qualified EUSA citizen, Mao, after recovering from shock, made his decision. Unwilling to return to the rain, he decided to go on the run.
"Santé!" said Yvette.
"Sláinte!" said Mao.
They clinked their glasses of the cloudy liquid. Mao wasn't a big drinker, but he had a secret liking for absinthe that dated to a reading of Ernest Hemingway's "Death in the Afternoon" during his university days in Dublin. He was not a fiction fan, but he had been impressed by Hemingway's cocktail recipe, which he immediately memorized: "Pour one jigger absinthe into a Champagne glass. Add iced Champagne until it attains the proper opalescent milkiness. Drink three to five of these slowly."
It was an odd thing to commit to memory, no doubt, but anything that acted as an antidote to the perpetual rain was a welcome diversion for the young student. Later that day, he hit the Musée d'Orsay website and made Edgar Degas' painting L'Absinthe his notebook background.
Shortly after he'd drifted to the south of France, he was shopping in a supermarket when he saw a bottle labelled spiritueux à base de plantes d'absinthe. He bought it and made it last a fortnight, adding restrained measures of the spirit to glasses of water every second evening before going to bed.
"Did you know," Mao asked, "that Oscar Wilde, Baudelaire, Verlaine, Rimbaud and van Gogh were absinthe drinkers?"
Yvette shook her head, although she knew. Obviously he needs to talk, she thought to herself. Besides, he was weirdly attractive.
"There was something about absinthe that made people mad, if they weren't mad already, in which case it made them bad," said Mao. "For example, the year Oscar Wilde was arrested and imprisoned happened to be Aleister Crowley's first year at Cambridge."
And Mao, who had once seen a documentary about this strange character, launched into a vivid description of Crowley's occult life, which was filled with taboo-breaking rituals, with both men and women, and mystical rites.
At one point, he looked across the table and saw Yvette sneaking a glance at her watch.
"Oh, my God," said Mao. "I'm such an idiot. You should have told me to shut up."
"No. No. It's fascinating. It's just that I have to catch a flight to Amsterdam in a few hours. I'm doing a workshop for a week with Erik-Jan De Jong, you might have heard of him, of the Koninklijk Concertgebouworkest."
Mao had never heard of Erik-Jan De Jong or, for that matter, the Koninklijk Concertgebouworkest, but he nodded his head vigorously. Yvette had told him she played the cello, but he thought she was talking about a hobby.
"How about if I pay here," said Yvette, "and you get the next bill?"
He was fully unprepared for this gambit and tried to think through the implications. She was either brushing him off, kindly, or she was probing what the advice sites usually referred to as "his intentions."
Truth to be told, he'd had a pretty disastrous record with women, once he'd decided that he wasn't bisexual or gay. His intensity frightened them away, and although he'd read on the advice sites that women liked men who had a sense of humour, especially if they turned it against themselves, he had no idea how that worked. He was what he was and a few furtive disasters and regular porn amounted to the totality of his experiences to date.
"Great," he said. "Let's synch, then."
"Fine," said Yvette, taking out her communicator, a sliver of metal that screamed money and, probably, Indian design and Iraqi manufacture.
This kind of synching was a bit like shoot-outs in those old Western films. Everything happened instantly and the level of access each "shooter" granted the other, in real time, revealed everything about their objective. If he went high and she went low... If both went low...
He went for high because he felt he had to see her again and he'd nothing to lose. He closed his eyes.
The communicator's vibration forced him to look at the display. He smiled. Yvette Guiliano's lifestream was his to explore. The high-level one he had exchanged with her looked authentic and was authentic in its own way, but it wasn't real. He had to be careful.
"Can I get Mireille to call a taxi for you?" asked Yvette as she beckoned to the women polishing glasses behind the bar.
"Ah, no, thanks. I'll walk," said Mao.
"OK. Well, thanks," said Yvette, standing up. "It was a fun evening and we'll be in touch."
She placed a hand on his arm and lightly kissed his cheek.
"My parents weren't political at all, you know," said Mao Kelly.
It was early morning and they were in a small bar on the Cours Masséna.
Yvette had ordered two different types of absinthe and was sipping hers tenderly. Mao hadn't touched his.
She had seen dark hair before but nothing quite like the blackness of the mane that sprouted from his head, fell to the left and right and encircled his face. She tried to imagine him without clothes.
"My mother was the only girl in her family," he continued. "Which was very lucky for her because if she'd had an older sister, I wouldn't have had a mother. If you know what I mean."
"What do you mean?" asked Yvette.
"They'd have strangled her, of course," said Mao. "It's called gendercide in English. The Chinese prefer boys, always have, and then there was the one child policy..." He trailed off and they looked across the table at each other.
Perhaps Sun Jen and Hu Xinpeng had looked at each other like that once. In China. They worked on a collective farm, Mao explained, and it was love at first sight. Jen was the most beautiful woman Xinpeng had ever seen and he was unable to eat for three days after they first met, at a tractor repair class.
A week later, he contrived for the imported Russian machine, a DT-20 made by Harjkovskii Traktornyi Zavod, to stop as it passed the irrigation works that Jen was overseeing. He insisted that it was a chassis problem in the hope that she would join him under the machine. Which she did. And she didn't slap him as he placed his hand on her thigh and planted a kiss on her lips.
They made such a fuss of pretending to coax the machine back to life that a crowd gathered. Oil and water levels were checked twice, the fan belt was removed and replaced and the battery plugs were inspected from different angles. Then, banging down the hood, Xinpeng mounted the tractor, switched it on and the engine growled to life. The spectators clapped and cheered, delighted by the drama that had taken them away from their mindless, back-breaking chores.
Three days later, at the collective's monthly production discussion, after a visiting party official had spent an hour denouncing teachers and bureaucrats, and calling selected Communist Party leaders "capitalist roaders", Jen and Xinpeng were suddenly called forward.
Had someone seen them kissing under the tractor and betrayed them? Would they be sent to re-education camps? Might they be indoctrinated to death?
"Comrade Sun. Comrade Hu," began the official. "Your conduct has been brought to my attention."
They looked at each other and Jen almost fainted with fear.
"You put the knowledge gained in the tractor repair class to the best possible use. By repairing the people's machine, which was acquired at great expense, you helped your community to meet its production target, and as a token of our appreciation, I hereby present each of you with a copy of our Dear Leader's thoughts."
At this, a pale functionary, wearing very thick glasses, and unknown to all in the room, rose, walked forward to the two barely-literate peasants and handed them copies of a little red book. He then asked then to hold them up and another man approached and took two photographs.
"You haven't touched your drink," said Yvette. "Do you mind if I order another?"
"Not at all," said Mao, who had never revealed the family story to a stranger, but felt unable to suppress the torrent of words that kept gushing out.
"And did they get married and become happy communists?" Asked Yvette, sipping her second absinthe.
"Not quite," answered Mao.
His father, he said, became quite friendly with the local party bigwig after he'd repaired the man's bike and one evening, he invited Xinpeng to meet him at his home for a "discussion".
He began with the theory of ownership and its evils, but stopped abruptly as if someone had cut off his information supply.
"That's enough of that," he said. "Let's try something that's not as dry" and he winked at Xinpeng, who had no idea what he was referring to.
The man produced a bottle, opened it and filled two small rice bowls with a crystal clear, aromatic liquid. He offered one of the flowing bowls to Xinpeng, who drank it down in a gulp and began to cough uncontrollably.
"Easy, easy. That's very good stuff. You're not supposed to treat it like a pig treats swill."
"I'm sorry," said Xinpeng, who had never tasted anything with such a remarkable flavour before.
"Would you like a cigarette? It might help stop that cough of yours," said the official, and he handed Xinpeng one that was white, quite unlike the yellow ones everyone else smoked.
"Now, what do you think of this?" asked the official, as he pulled out a newspaper clipping showing a photograph of Xinpeng and Jen at the collective's meeting. "Tractor heroes drive production forward", was the headline.
"That's lovely," said Xinpeng, who would have liked to say more but the aromatic liquid seemed to be affecting his concentration and clouding his thoughts.
"Yes, she is a beauty, isn't she?" said the official. "Did you know that there's a shortage of marriageable women in the capital?"
Xinpeng shook his head, which felt heavy. "Some VIP there saw this photo, apparently. He likes country girls. Likes to 'break them in', is what I've heard and he then passes then on to a party member who needs a wife because if you don't have a wife you don't get invited to important social gatherings."
Xinpeng puffed his cigarette in the hope that it might help him think clearly so he could make sense of what he was hearing.
"Yeah. That's how it works. Here, have some more. Anyway, he's sending some of his men next week and they're going to take her. Abduct her, so to speak."
Xinpeng's heart almost stopped.
"No!" said Yvette.
Mao raised his glass and drained the absinthe with one swallow.
"I think I'll have another," he said.
He stopped and looked back and saw the video intercom showing two young men wearing the kind of über-scruffy clothing favoured by those employed to do the dirty work of state agencies. They held up some sort of ID to the camera and spoke urgently to the lens. Because Mao preferred to keep the volume muted, the men gave the impression of burly fishes as they opened and closed their mouths, silently pouting; noiselessly talking.
If only he had paid attention to politics, this wouldn't be happening.
Mao Kelly moved to the south of France because he didn't like rain. He stayed because he fell in love with Yvette, who played the cello. And the biotech, robotics and artificial intelligence firms clustered there needed people with outstanding mathematical abilities, so he had interesting, satisfying and well-paying work.
Yvette.
They met in July in an Irish bar on the harbour not far from the train station. It was a favourite with loud Australian backpackers in summer and huge Welsh rugby supporters in winter. The locals came to watch the visitors drink beer and fight and experience the thrill of being near people who didn't seem to care how they looked or behaved.
For the carefully groomed and discreet expat knowledge workers, the Australians and the Welsh represented a world many of them had fled from but couldn't quite leave behind. They felt superior to but envious of those who were happily monolingual and multiculturally uncouth.
"Mao, this is Yvette," said Dinesh Ashenfelter, introducing him to a woman wearing a startlingly white top, which melded with her skin and struggled to restrain her nipples.
"Pleased to meet you," said Mao, who was famously single and meticulously polite.
"Guys, there's Jarol. I need to talk to him for a minute." Ashenfelter was already deep in the crowd before Mao could figure out a way to use him as a shield in what might become an uncomfortable situation.
"Is that your real name?" asked Yvette.
"Kelly is as Irish as I am," replied Mao.
"I'm singing in the rain / Just singing in the rain / What a glorious feeling / I'm happy again," sang Yvette and heads turned.
Mao was mortified. Public exhibitions of emotion didn't come naturally to him and now this woman was placing him at the centre of attention.
"Kelly. You know?" said Yvette.
But he didn't know what she meant.
"There was an American actress called Kelly who was a princess in Europe during the last century, if that that's what you mean," said Mao. "Did she sing when it rained?"
"You are funny," said Yvette and she laughed. But he knew at once that she was laughing not at him, but for him. Her brown eyes and her tanned body laughed and he had the odd sensation that he was now the only other person in the room.
Suddenly, glasses shattered and someone yelled, "Pig's arse! That's bullshit, and you know it."
"It's the Australians," said Mao to Yvette, explaining.
"Screw you with a broomstick, mate!" And a table crashed over.
"Come," said Yvette, and she caught his hand.
They walked along the Boulevard Amiral de Grasse and heard the surf break on the rocks below, while the walls, buildings and castle above them were bathed in light.
"Tell me about your name," commanded Yvette and Mao, sensing that this was going to be a long night, began to unfurl the family story that began in eastern China's Shandong province and ended in Dublin, which the human traffickers told his parents was Liverpool.
It was evening when Mao Kelly woke. He'd slept for a solid 14 hours and was grateful to the Norwegian apartment owners for their king-size bed, crisp sheets and the twin comforters, around which he'd wandered during the night-into-day slumber. Now, he was awake, thirsty and hungry.
The fridge was Scandinavian. There were containers of juice concentrate — mango, kiwi, papaya — and two bottles of what looked liked spirits and labelled Løiten Linie. Jars of pickled herring stood side-by-side with sealed packages of smoked fish and something that might have been meat and which was branded "Pinnekjøtt". He opened a plastic box marked "Knäckebröd" and found what must have been some kind of rye bread before it had turned to cardboard.
Taking a bottle of the akevitt, Mao wandered from the kitchen to the dining room and stopped for a minute in front of a large painting of a blue cat with celadon eyes and inscribed "S Knight" in the lower right-hand corner. It dominated the room's curved space, which consisted of a white wall that merged with a glass one and created a cocoon from which he could watch the serene Mediterranean, light blue here, purple there. White boats dotted the seascape. He opened the bottle.
Had seven years really passed since Mao received that message? Apparently.
It was a June morning and he was working on an artificial intelligence project near the Sophia Antipolis technology park northwest of Antibes. It was a discreet operation. It had to be.
"EUSA Office of Professional Accountability" was the sender's address. Having good reason to be suspicious of bureaucracy, Mao opened the message and simultaneously called Kate Houlihan on the Paddyfields secure network.
"Hi Mao, how's she cuttin'?" asked Kate, before he'd had time to say anything.
"Fine, Kate. How're you?"
"Same as ever. Tryin' to keep warm. Iceland's fucking freezing today. Anyway, what can I do you for?"
"Just got this weird message from something called the 'EUSA Office of Professional Accountability', and they want me to confirm, within 24 hours, that my profession matches their records."
"Jaysus, Mao, are you serious?"
"Yes, Kate, I am. Why?"
"Listen. You've gotta drop what you're doin' and get out of that place at once. Do you hear me?
"Kate. You're joking, right?"
"Mao. I'm deadly serious. Someone's tipped them off. That 24 hours — you can forget it. The OPA is an anti-immigration operation run out of Strasbourg. One of their squads will be up the stairs inside an hour. I'm tellin' you. Get out of there now and run."
"But what will I tell Yvette?"
"Mao. Forget Yvette for a moment. Get out of the apartment and across the border. Then you can think about Yvette."
"But..."
"Mao, I have to go. And you better go, too. Call me when you get to San Sebastian. OK?"
He stared at the communicator as if it developed some contagion. A minute, or maybe five, passed before he shook off the inertia. Then, calling up banks in Ireland and Bahrain, he quickly transferred money to an account in the Republic of Euskal Herria and saved some maps of the Western Pyrenees.
After throwing a change of underwear, two t-shirts and a wash bag into his backpack, he looked around the apartment and walked towards the window.
