China's Deadly Back Door
Jay Clayton Wilson
Published by Jay Clayton Wilson
Smashwords Edition
Copyright 2010 Jay Clayton Wilson
Discover three other books in this JASON HARTE SERIES by the author at smashwords.com
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CHINA'S DEADLY BACK DOOR
CHAPTER 1
Damn it. How did they find me!
The young American saw them just as they rounded the curve in the gravel road as he limped from Vietnam to Laos. Two Oriental figures materialized out of the fog. Their high-pitched voices were piercing and argumentative. Through the swirling fog he saw one man shake a rifle and yell at the other. They got closer. There was no place to hide.
Wait. Maybe they haven't seen me yet. Cautiously, Jason Harte dropped to his knees and crawled to the side of the road in the Laotian village. His hand slipped into a shallow ditch. It was an open sewer. It gurgled the vile, stinking effluent of the Laotian neighborhood. He crouched lower and felt tightness in his chest as the horrible odor penetrated his nostrils. His fists clenched. A third man appeared only paces behind the first two. His voice was like a shriek. He carried a shotgun. Jason's caution yielded to panic.
He had to hide. The sewer was the only place. He crawled into the nasty muck, picking up a short piece of discarded garden hose on the way. Putrid, disgusting slime worked its way through his clothes, onto his face, and into his ears as he sank beneath the vileness. He forced the filthy hose in his mouth and began to breathe beneath the green slime. Nausea threatened.
Bile that accumulated in his throat was suddenly forced back by the shattering explosion of the shotgun and the sharp cries of angry men. He could hear pounding feet. They must have seen me. There was no escape from the ditch.
Then the shooting stopped. A moment of silence followed. Is it safe?
Not quite. Suddenly, pain gashed into his back like a sharp bayonet. In a blinding instant his entire life flashed across his consciousness.
An acknowledged potential for greatness dissolved into the unachievable. Aspirations to become a successful businessman with an outstanding reputation for honesty and brisk acumen slipped away in the sewer.
How could my life end in a stinking pit like this?
Well, why not? Jason Harte was a hunted man who had just murdered seven people.
CHAPTER 2
Only twenty-four hours earlier a faded sun settled into the drizzle on the western horizon. Jason had run through a deluge that washed away his tears. How clean and cool the rain had been. He was walking away from one life. Another awaited him.
A new life. No longer would he allow himself to kill. Success in air combat had its rewards. Pride first of all. And he was full of it. But questions had begun to plague him about the meaning of life if the result was nothing more than pride bestowed on those who killed. Where was his contribution to mankind? How were high social and Christian values to be spread across God's world by a killer? What right does one have to lay claim to a set of moral values when he violates them and is rewarded for doing it?
Screw it. I've got to get as far west as I can before the morning traffic starts. The downed pilot's blond hair flew waggishly when he broke into a dead run. The road began to twist and turn in the lower elevations of the valleys between green Vietnamese mountains. Only the meager valley floor had been cleared for the gravel road and subsistence farming. Tiny rice and tobacco fields nestled against the valley walls. Raised paths gave carts access to shanties whose occupants were supported only by their minimal agriculture. In the mire of the rice paddies ancient looking people were bent with toil. Those who stood to look at him remained humped at the waist. Neither man nor woman laid claim to any distinguishing physical attribute. All looked to have survived hardship. All were bent. All gazed with passive interest at the tall pedestrian.
Heavy clouds were descending from the Laotian mountains that he had chosen as his escape route from Vietnam. A couple of vehicles passed by, their windshield wipers scratching grooves in mud splattered glass. He merely stepped into the trees to avoid being seen while he got as far away as possible from his downed Navy jet.
Laos was further away than the ordinary, but more dangerous, escape route to the South China Sea. But he had lived in Laos until his teenage years. After that pleasant time his father, a kindly but stern Presbyterian missionary in the village of Kenthao, had taken him back to the United States to see to his education. It made sense to go there now. To escape. To start again.
Panting as he jogged, he let his mind return to his childhood. I always wondered whether I would ever have a chance to speak Laotian again. He slowed to a trot, wiped water from his blue eyes, and tried to recall the lexicon of the Laotian Lao Lum. He had never become particularly fluent in the Mien and Hmong dialects or familiar with their patois. A reality invaded his musing. He had not yet reached Laos. I wish I had learned more Vietnamese. "Hey baby. Want to--" isn't going to help me here like it did in last week back in Saigon.
In the late afternoon he stopped at a stream crossing. The purling mountain water looked clean and refreshing enough to drink, but for the pathogens that lurked there. So he searched his side pockets and griped, These water purification pills aren't worth crap. There's no cup in my survival gear. A pistol, a map, and some pills. Great. Why not a cup, for God's sake. He grumbled to himself and wandered into the dark forest. There, in the knuckle of a giant limb, he found a puddle of rainwater that had a woody taste. Savoring it, he thought, This tastes like water from that sodden bucket in the well back home in New Mexico. A taste that was remembered fondly because it was unpolluted by the aspirations of men who would send their nations to war. Unspoiled by the loss of innocence. In my new world, I'll regain my own innocents. I'll become a normal, peace loving businessman. I'll keep life fresh and clean, like this water. Sure, I'm going to return to the Navy and finish my tour of duty. But after that I'm through with combat flying. I'm through with killing. Brown moss hung to his thumb. When he flipped it away, it hit on the surface of the clear water. He tried to push it aside. But that messed up everything except the forested silence.
Then he heard something. Engine noise. A truck engine. From behind a tree he saw a truck splashing eastward. While rubbing a shoulder that had been bruised in the crash, he noted that those primeval artists who decorated military equipment with their concept of camouflage had been at it again. Its body was painted with unshapely stripes of green and brown. The tarpaulin that covered the cargo area was the color of diddle, that foul accumulation of ash, unburned tobacco, nicotine, tar, and spit that inevitably oozed beneath the fire in the bottom of his dad's pipe. Like man, he thought, pipe tobacco is glorious and aromatic when it is fresh and young, but quite another matter when time has had its way.
A sandal-clad foot dangled lazily from the back of the truck where the back flap had been tied open. The scene could have been prosaic if it had occurred in the depths of the Great Smoky Mountains. But not here. Not with the expressions of the two Vietnamese in the front seat. Something about their countenance was grim and forbidding. As the truck drove by he noticed that it was a little larger than a standard pickup. With wheels wide apart and a low center of gravity, it was obviously a powerful utility vehicle meant for rugged terrain. Military, most likely.
Moments later, he heard another truck engine - or maybe the same one. It approached from the east. Are these guys searching for me? They must have found the plane by now.
He slipped into a copse and listened. The truck slowed down. Then it stopped. Could they have seen me before I got off the road? How many of them are there? How are they armed? What are their orders? How unfamiliar it was to appraise the enemy when his weaponry had been reduced by so many orders of magnitude. How refreshing.
But, like the moss in his drinking water, the truck represented a threat to his hopes. Suddenly, danger had reappeared. This was not an academic equation to be solved by airborne computers and mental calculus. This is real, he thought. Wake up. These guys are after your ass.
He moved through the dense trees toward the road to get a better look. The waterlogged forest muted the sound of a door slamming.
There it is. He ducked behind a tree. There it is. Parked on the shoulder not a hundred feet away. He wiped sweat out of the dimple on his clean-shaven chin. There's only one guy there. Probably the one who slammed the door.
No such luck. At that moment another man stepped down from the cab. Imperiously, he left his door standing open as if he expected someone else to close it for him. The Imperious One walked with a pronounced strut. A crooked smile displayed yellowed, uneven teeth. His physiognomy was venal and treacherous. A cigarette dangled from slightly snarled lips that spurted out from under a thin, mangy looking mustache.
Slung over his shoulder on a lanyard was a pistol with which Jason was totally unfamiliar. Its barrel was hardly larger than his own Colt .45 although the body was considerably wider and the handle was longer. Some kind of machine pistol, he guessed while noticing that the Imperious One rested his right hand on the weapon as if it were his swagger stick.
The driver hurried around the truck to offer his services with unmitigated servility. The two men did not enter the forest to search. Instead, they walked to the rear of the truck where the Imperious One hoisted himself with a neat handspring that landed him under the tarpaulin canopy.
What the hell are they doing? And who cares? Except that I could use that truck. Better than walking all the way to Laos.
He began to crawl toward the truck, staying low until he got very close.
There were sounds of feet scuffling inside the cargo area. He heard grunts and cynical laughter amid staccato shouting. The Imperious One issued a harsh order above the noise. It was followed by a triumphant shout and the ugly laughter of three or four men.
Another quick order was issued. The obedient driver instantly hopped out of the truck with a rifle in his hands. He surveyed the area as if he had been instructed to be a look out. The silence was marred only by quiet scuffling sounds from within the cargo area just out of Jason's sight. Maybe there was a muffled cry.
A hand appeared from the shadow of the cargo area. It laid the machine pistol on the floor next to the truck's open tail flap. The Imperious One appeared over the weapon. His ugly smile had turned into a smirk. In his hand he triumphantly held a pair of faded blue pants, which he threw to the ground. Then he discarded a small piece of pink clothing by spinning it away like a Frisbee.
A pair of underwear floated to the roadway and landed in a puddle of water.
Damn, Jason swallowed the words. I know panties when I see them. What's going on in there?
Jason worked his way to a tree next to the roadway. There he saw the ugly little man turn around and drop his trousers to his knees. He knelt down and pulled on a pair of bare ankles, spreading them wide apart. The obedient driver leaned his rifle against the fender and grabbed a tiny foot that he eagerly pushed wide to one side. The Imperious One took the girl's ankles into his hands and dragged her across the floor toward him, spreading her legs even farther apart. She made a pitiful, gagged cry for help and tried to turn sideways. Her gasp was muffled when the Imperious One rolled himself forward on his knees between her almost white legs. The girl shuddered.
Something exploded in Jason's mind. Righteous anger and utter revulsion twisted his face into a terrible grimace. Lurid sinews bulged in his throat. He stood and walked to the back of the truck. Lechery and prurience had distracted the men's attention from everything except the supine girl who was pinned to the floor. The Imperious One laid his body on top of her, guiding himself toward her. Her scream was muted. As Jason approached, service pistol cocked, he saw that the girl's head was cradled against the knees of a grinning, sandal clad man who held her by her shoulders. A fourth man held one of her arms. Her legs were spread widely apart revealing white thighs that cupped her exposed pink femininity. Her face was a mask of horror. Her lips were pulled tightly over her teeth in a terrible grimace.
The man who held her shoulders was the first to see Jason. He released her, pointed and screamed an expletive. The other three men jerked around to face the danger. Simultaneously, they reached for weapons.
Venue was established. Jason's blood boiled with an angry, moral rage. He shot the obedient driver in the face. The heavy .45 slug snapped his head back so hard that it hit his shoulder blades. The one who had been holding her arm had his rifle up in an instant. Jason gave him two chest shots that knocked him into the wall. The one who had been holding her shoulders was still pointing, frozen, and then dead with the girl's head resting on his knees. He arched over backward, crimson blood spurting from a fountain in his throat. Smoke billowed out of the barrel of the pistol. The odor of burned cordite filled the truck.
The Imperious One, who had reached his machine pistol, seemed to freeze in the realization that he would never have time to raise it. He lifted only his eyes. When Jason moved the .45 towards the man's face, they were no longer aslant, but wide and bulging in fearful anticipation. Jason, steady and deliberate, aimed at the petrified face. Full of disgust, he pulled the trigger three times. The face morphed into a bloody pulp. The rigid body of the Imperious One crumpled to the floor over the girl's legs.
I killed them.
At close range he had ended a human life. Eyes that had been tight with anticipation now squinted. His stomach trembled.
What have I done?
His father's flinty voice accused him of being worse than Jezebel. He had betrayed his faith. Jason had surely killed men when he gunned them out of the sky. It was done professionally, even surgically, in the highest tradition of the U.S. Navy. He had out-classed and out-performed his enemy, serving his country under the exact terms of his commission.
But these creeps aren't even wearing uniforms. What if they're civilian employees of the NVA? Am I entitled to kill them?
His stomach got queasy.
Of course I am. Where did that question come from? They got exactly what they deserved. Sure, I had no direct orders from on high or anywhere else to kill them. And I'm through with killing anyway. But what choice was there?
Furrows wrung sweat from his forehead.
Am I entitled to become a law unto myself, establish venue, judge, sentence, and execute?
There was a time when he had moral guidelines that were easily within the ambit of the socially and legally acceptable. Now? His stomach quivered uncontrollably.
I never wanted to kill a man. I never wanted to hurt anyone. It's wrong. What happened? How could I have done this?
Nausea overwhelmed him. Sickness like death sucked him into its vortex.
Turning away from the horror, the world looked about the same except for a presence. Black clouds occluded the sky in the west. Perhaps there was a greater heaviness in the air. Jezebel and her Baal Prophets writhed in and out of the currents, motioning Jason to follow. He had sinned. He became one of them.
Trembling, he looked into the girl's terror filled eyes for forgiveness. With his free hand he pulled the body off her legs. It flopped onto the road. She didn't move. A little red and blue crest adorned her bloody shirt, which had been shoved up around her neck, bore. She was only a schoolgirl, a mere child of ten or twelve, helpless and frightened.
Jason retrieved her clothing. He placed the baggy pants modestly across her widely spread legs. Then he picked up the bloody man who had been holding her arm and threw his remains out of the truck. The girl's lips, still pulled back and frozen over clinched teeth, did not dare to move. Her little eyes were fixed straight ahead in an expression of horror. Gently Jason rested her head on an ammo can and began to drag the next body away. He dumped it onto the exsanguinating heap.
With an effort he withdrew from the ivory tower into which his revulsion had drifted. The environment there was too rarefied for one whose sense of values was supposed to be intaglio. An even greater effort was required to mesh troublesome philosophical issues into the intense reality of his act. A great, hidden sensitivity bore vague premonitions to the surface of his consciousness. He tried to shrug. But he shuddered instead.
What do I do with this kid? She's petrified. With some embarrassment he avoided looking into her eyes.
The machine pistol lay by the back flap. He slung it ever his shoulder, grabbed two of the dead men by their collars, and dragged them into the nearby trees. Then he got the other two. A pool of blood had accumulated on the road. He wiped it away with a shirt torn from one of the dead men.
The girl's facial expression had faintly relaxed. She had not moved except to situate the pants over her nudity.
Again the question arose about what to do with her and with the truck. Actually the truck was a foregone conclusion. This is my magic carpet to the Land of One Million Elephants, he whispered to himself. But what about the girl? Poor pitiful thing. She's starting to cry. Great compassion arose within him. He touched her clothes and lifted them slightly in an offering gesture with an affirmative nod and a controlled, but tender, expression. Sinful man devoured by human compassion. How can it be?
Leaving her to dress alone, he walked around to see whether the key had been left in the ignition. Dallying with his blood splattered .45, he passed some time comparing the two pistols. Little letters were stamped into the barrel of the machine pistol. They appeared to be written in Russian and seemed to say Kovitch AL-21. A catch near the handle released the ammunition clip from the handle revealing two columns of bullets that were about the size of a .22 caliber magnum. It held sixty rounds!
A moment later the child, head bowed, hands clasped, stood quietly in front of him, barely four feet tall. He motioned toward the open door. She got in and sat very still with her hands in her lap below downcast eyes. After a short drive westward, he spoke to her.
"Where do you live?" he asked. Her head bowed a little lower. He asked the same question in a Laotian dialect. She shook her head ever so slightly. After a couple minutes of deep thought he drew a house in the dust on the dashboard. She raised her eyes and motioned ahead.
She said nothing. When they passed the next curve, two or three small houses came into view near the road. With the teeniest movement she pointed at them. Jason pulled over and stopped.
A face materialized behind an open window. Outside, a man standing ankle deep in a muddy field looked up. A figure walked past the doorway inside the house. Then another.
Tears were streaming in rivulets down the child's small, round face although she made no sound. A light breeze blew strands of her short-cropped, black hair. She didn't move. Her eyes continued to study her white knuckled hands. They had begun to wring each other. Jason had no word to express the overwhelming pity he felt for her. She would not move even after he opened the door for her. Six people shuffled out of the house. Their anxiety seemed to border on fear. The man from the field waded toward them.
Jason offered his hand to the little girl. With his help, she finally slid out and walked beside him until they reached the path that led to the first house. The people who approached glared at him with contemptuous disgust and looked like a jury that had just convicted him of child abuse. Tears dripped onto the child's blouse, the powder blue of which had darkened with the wetness. In time the eldest woman reached out her gnarled hand and softly touched the girl's face with parental solicitude. The girl took a trembling step forward, placed her arms around the woman, and buried her wet face into the folds of a muddy jacket. The woman pulled her close.
The man's face had a father's accusing, disgusted look that seemed to be full of judgment and condemnation. Jason was embarrassed by the obvious suspicion. This guy has a right to hate me. Why not? He thinks I harmed the child. But I killed. That's what I did. I violated one of God's most fundamental laws. No wonder he looks at me that way. It's exactly what I deserve.
Another women, about twenty years old, placed her arms around the girl. Keeping her accusing eyes on Jason, she whispered a question into the little girl's ear. The girl replied between sobs that were the universal language of the helpless.
After the child spoke at length, the man softened and looked into Jason's eyes and nodded his head - just perceptibly. He removed his conical straw hat and handed it over with a slight bow and an unintelligible explanation. The hat was a votive gift to hide Jason's blond hair.
* * * * *
After leaving the family the drive westward was as beautiful as a Sunday afternoon somewhere in upstate New York. But this backward country was flagellating itself to death in a civil war. Jason guessed that, After so many centuries of racial intermixing in Vietnam and Southeast Asia, these people must be killing members of their own families.
He thought, and perhaps mumbled, "The bloodshed of World War II should have brought brotherhood to these peoples in their isolated corner of the planet. They all fought against, and were defeated by, a common enemy before being rescued by the allies. Peace was restored from China and Korea right on south through Vietnam and Cambodia, then westward through Thailand and Malaysia, then south again to Singapore, back north to Burma and on to India. Peace reached the inland countries that have always been powerless and landlocked. Laos has virtually no economy and northern Burma is nearly unpopulated. Tibet, Batten and Nepal are strategically unreachable, high in the Himalayan Mountains. So why has there been so much warfare in Southeast Asia? What is to become of the remains of this torn land? It is rich in natural resources and under-populated. All of the elements of destiny are replete with the potential for growth, development, and prosperity. But there is none. I guess blindness always leads ineptly.
Jason, disturbed by his reflections of murder and civil war, tried to regain an old innocence and put his own act of killing into some broader, exculpatory perspective. But his concentration lapsed repeatedly and dissolved into the spurting blood that he had shed by his own hand. There was no rectitude for him. There was only the demand from deep within his conscience that he must never kill again. I will not kill! I will not.
The twisting tightness in his throat did not relax until he approached an intersection. Releasing the accelerator, he respite was welcome.
He expected to see a highway that ran due north to the high altitude, northernmost ingress to Laos from Vietnam. It was called the Tay Chang Pass. What he found instead was smaller than a farm-to-market road in rural Texas. The gravel road he had been driving on continued west to Xam Nua in central Laos. It was a freeway by comparison to the northern route.
On the southeast corner of the intersection were two small metal buildings standing ten or fifteen feet apart. Sliding cargo doors gaped open. Monotony graced the fronts with matching metal entrances and identically situated steel casement windows.
Slowing down, Jason studied a duplicate of the truck he was driving. It was being fueled from a gasoline tank that sat on a rack in front of the buildings. Someone wearing a blue shirt had just replaced the gas cap and was returning the nozzle to its receptacle. Another identical truck was parked nearby. I wonder whether this thing needs gas. Better try my luck at refueling. Running out could be fatal.
Since his truck looked just like the other two, he anticipated that it would be serviced with no problem. Unless those bodies have been found. Innocently, he pulled in behind the one that had just been topped off.
Without power steering, the vehicle turned grudgingly. Gravel covered the entire driveway and crunched beneath the feet of a blue-shirted man who was walking toward the northernmost building. A glaring man exhibiting obvious authority stepped out to meet him. The Glaring One was armed with a machine pistol that strongly resembled the one Jason had taken from the Imperious One. Maybe, he thought, these things are a symbol of authority bestowed upon arrogant, authoritative, little men.
The setting was benign until Jason stopped behind the first truck. Apparently the Glaring One took personal offense. He shouted and motioned an instruction to get behind the second truck that must also have been waiting for fuel. With animated indignation, the Glaring One shrieked instructions as he approached, snarling through yellow, twisted teeth.
Stopping suddenly, he began to study Jason. Then another order erupted from the fumarole that was his mouth. The blue-shirted man ran toward the building. Another order was barked at Jason who saw that he was being instructed to get out of the vehicle. This tyrannical little shit must have been warned. Time to leave.
Jason gunned the engine and ground the gears into low. When he began to make a U-turn, the Glaring One grappled for his machine pistol and began back peddling toward the building. When a man in the adjacent building saw what was going on, he raised a rifle and fired. Another rifle join in. The shooting set in motion a chain of events that Jason couldn't avoid.
Following orders, the blue-shirted man had already reached the front entrance and snatched up a rifle that he fired at Jason with great accuracy. Where there had been a clean windshield, there was now a round hole outlined by milky slivers of glass and laminated plastic. A second bullet hole appeared within inches of the first.
Jason saw the machine pistol aimed right at him. He ducked. Then he gunned the engine in earnest and continued to spin the steering wheel. There was a very short burst from the machine pistol. Jason was astounded when the entire windshield exploded in a shower of safety glass. Twenty or thirty shots must have crashed into the windshield within a fraction of a second.
There would be no escape in the truck. He released his grip on the steering wheel and the truck headed in the direction of the Glaring One who turned to run for his life while he continued to fire short random bursts over his shoulder. Bullets tore into the hood leaving long shiny gouges in the metal. Then a burst hit the radiator. It exploded in a cloud of steam. At least three men were firing at once. The Glaring One ran into the entranceway. Jason only hope was to ram the door - head on. The truck hit the building with a tremendous, grinding crash. The impact threw him into the steering column. All firing ceased except for the rifles from the adjacent building.
Jason's reaction had been so quick that he didn't know whether he had actually intended to trap the glaring One and the blue-shirted man in the building. But, there they were. The doorway was blocked by the wreckage of the truck.
Jason dropped to the ground and rolled behind the front axle, using it as a shield against the rifle fire. He crawled toward the corner of the building, always keeping the front axle and wheel between himself and the riflemen who had begun to fire underneath the truck. Bullets scattered gravel on both sides of the wheel.
Jason came up in a crouch near the corner expecting to face intensive fire from the cargo door on the side of the building. There was none.
Jumping over the exposed area between the axle and the warehouse, he hid against the side of the building. The rifle fire from the other building was continuous but ineffective. No sound came from within the building into which he had crashed. He leaned against the wall, thinking fast.
Of course there's no sound! They're trying to telephone for help!
Copper and aluminum wire scalloped from the tops of telephone poles as far as he could see. The nearest was about sixty or seventy feet from where he stood. There was a transformer at the top.
He flipped the safety to full automatic and aimed along the barrel of the Kovitch AL-21. Then he pulled the trigger.
Before he could release it, thirty bullets hit the transformer simultaneously. It exploded in a shower of toxic chemicals, smoke, and flying wire. Jason was stunned. He had never fired a weapon like the little machine pistol. There was hardly any recoil. A pattern of the thirty bullets hit the transformer within a fifteen inches in diameter. And the rate of fire was spectacular. It must be in the neighborhood of seventy rounds per second. Maybe more.
Tense and completely alert, he reflected on his tactical situation. He had already trapped at least one half of the enemy force and cut their communications. Not too bad. Not nearly as bad as the angry cries that began to emanate from within the building when the phone went dead.
The shouts were followed by sprays of bullets that punctured quarter-inch holes in the side of the building just over his head. Each puncture formed a little, pointy king's crown in the metal siding. Sixty or seventy holes appeared in the wall almost instantaneously from one burst. Time for a clip change, Jason guessed. So he ran alongside the building toward the open cargo door. A long, wooden dipstick for the gasoline storage tank leaned against the building. He grabbed it on the way.
With a leap he cleared the area exposed by the open cargo door. Hitting on his belly, he lay flat on the ground. The protruding concrete foundation protected him from the gunfire while he used the dipstick to push the sliding door closed. That endeavor was greeted by almost continuous fire from the machine pistol. Another weapon joined in. It drilled somewhat larger holes in the siding. That must have been the blue-shirted man's rifle. Large holes with shrapnel shaped edges began to gape everywhere. The gunfire was so intense that pieces of steel were literally being blown away.
Bullets flew just above his back while he crawled along the foundation. He turned to go behind the building. Somewhat safer from the random firing, he ran to the space between the two steel structures.
Cautiously, he peered around the corner. He jerked back. A rifle flashed and a bullet slammed into the wall mere inches from his head. He screamed as if in agony and pitched his Colt .45 to the ground in full view of the rifleman.
His heart beat furiously. The odds were too heavily stacked against him to fight conservatively. Knowing that the rifleman thought he had scored a hit, Jason jumped back into the open space between the two buildings and opened fire with the Kovitch. The surprised rifleman was hit by at least two rounds. He staggered and fell to his knees, his hands cupped around his stomach. His cup runneth over.
Jason raced between the buildings and jumped over the wounded man. He took a quick glance around the front corner. As if awaiting a cue from Jason's script, the other rifleman in the building on his left called out. Jason growled something that he hoped would sound like the excited and assured reply of a victor. Then he aimed at the doorway to his left. A face appeared, expecting to see a victorious friend. Instead, he saw a hail of bullets.
The Glaring One and the blue-shirted man were still in the building on his right where the truck steamed and hissed in the doorway like a hot megalith. There was no way to know whether there were more men in either building. He looked at the wounded man who lay behind him. As he watched, the man stopped breathing. The chest sagged. The body went limp.
In a crouched position he peered around the corner again. His options at that point were limitless. Go forward or go backward.
He glanced toward the bullet-riddled truck. His peripheral vision caught a movement under the steaming engine. One of the men had gotten out the building by crawling under the front axle. The flat tires hadn't left much crawl space but the Glaring One had managed it. He was aiming his machine pistol directly at Jason. Jason spun around and dropped to his knees, firing his own weapon explosively in a wide arc that swept across the driveway toward the truck. The weapon discharged its last round just before the arc reached the man under the truck. The empty gun pointed directly at the Glaring One.
Jason looked straight into the barrel of the Glaring One's machine pistol and then focused on the face of the man who held it. The eyes were squeezed shut. The man's entire body had clinched in anticipation of the rain of lead that had arced at him. He couldn't even move, much less shoot.
Noticing that his body had not been torn apart by gunfire, the Glaring One opened one lurid eye. Jason aimed his empty gun at the man and bellowed something unintelligible except in so far as it clearly came from one who had the upper hand. It could have meant only one thing. The man nodded his submission and released the grip on his gun. It fell next to his hand. With as much intimidation and threat as could be mustered from hands and knees, Jason moved on all fours to the truck and took his new prisoner's Kovitch.
Jason breathed hard and deep. Sweat dripped off his thick eyebrows. Not knowing quite what to do with his captive, he motioned toward the building and asked in his best barroom Vietnamese, "Are they're others inside?"
Betrayed by cunning, obscene eyes, the man lied in his most beseeching voice, "No, I am alone." Then he watched to see whether his lie had been believed. He looked deeply into Jason's eyes, studying the countenance for a clue. Under Jason's level gaze, the Glaring One remembered vividly that the American had heard him order the blue-shirted man to run for a rifle and commence firing from the doorway. He recalled the louder noise made by the rifle when it was fired from within the warehouse in an attempt to kill the man whose countenance was being scrutinized and whose stupidity was being relied upon. The hot sweat of fear broke out on his smudged face. Looking into steel blue eyes, he began to tremble in realization of the awful truth about Jason Harte. Regardless of the gun pointed at him, he began to crawl backward to the building.
At that point, Jason had had plenty of war. He wanted no more killing. He never wanted any of it in the first place. At least not in the absence of a false veil of respectability draped over the event by high-speed aircraft and state of the art electronics. The far away echoes of his philosophically oriented classmates admonished him that it was wrong to settle disputes with violence. His father's sermons had always wrapped enemies in loving arms, full of forgiveness. Jason was remorseful. Deep within his heart there was indeed the kindly compassion of brotherly love. The kindly, sympathetic compassion ebbed when the Glaring One crabbed his way out from under the truck, the lair from which he had intended to kill. Now he was going to join forces with his ally who was hidden somewhere back in the building.
Wrong! Jason shot the Glaring One in the shoulder joint, shattering the socket. The scream was like one from hell' s condemned that echoed against steel walls where its horror reverberated and had its intended effect. The cargo door flew open on the other side of the building. An extremely frightened man in a blue shirt escaped in a desperate sprint. The crunch of pounding feet on the gravel could be heard from far away like a final drum roll. Two other men scrambled with him in the direction of the Tay Chang Pass.
Then Jason killed the treacherous little man who had lied.
* * * * *
In the gathering darkness, he examined the truck that had just been refueled. Its contents were deadly. There were at least ten crates of AK-47 assault rifles along with a full crate of Kovitch AL-21 machine pistols. He found that the other truck was loaded with ammo boxes for both types of weapons along with a wooden crate marked "Sony". Each of the fifty boxes in that crate contained a handsome AM-FM radio that sported a stereo tape player.
It took only a few moments to transfer the boxes of ammunition to the truck that held the crates of guns. With a final effort, he also heaved the crate of Sony stereos into the truck. Then, fully laden, he drove away from the carnage, heading due west toward Xam Nua, Laos, in his second stolen truck of the day.
He drove slowly, in a state of shock, having experienced more warfare in the past eight hours than he had faced during his entire two years of naval service. All of the skills he learned with such professionalism had been useless. The past eight hours were not warfare. There was no valor, no glory - just ignoble, bloody death. Civilian deaths!
While the sun went down he agonized, What values did I pretend to have this morning? I pretended I wanted to do the right thing. Start a new, upstanding life with a clean slate. Be worthy. Make something good of myself. Now I've got to face the real facts. I'm a murderer.
Uncharacteristically, the tall American drooped his shoulders over the steering wheel and brooded about what he had done and searched for any justification that would avoid the awful truth. But the truth he discovered about himself made him shudder. He was like all the rest - only worse. Righteousness has spurred many religious men on murderous conquests through out history. At the helm of virtually every great victory there had been a killer. Francisco Pizarro came to mind. With an army of less than two hundred men, he affected conquest over the entire Inca Empire of five million while killing multitudes. So ruthless was Pizarro that he accepted a twenty-eight million dollar ransom for the life of his captive, the great Inca king, Atahualpa. Then he murdered him.
Hardly noticing the winding, bumpy road, Jason squeezed the steering wheel and continued to flagellate himself by drawing comparisons to others who had reduced themselves to murder while on some noble mission. Hernando Cortez, leading an initial army of five hundred soldiers, who were armed with only ten handguns and thirty crossbows, conquered the Aztecs and subjugated a nation of six million -- beguiling Montezuma II in the process. What about the better known of history who accomplished similar feats in Europe and Asia - Alexander the Great and Genghis Kahn? How many did they kill?
He analyzed a new, horrible facet of himself and cried out, "While my own murderous hands drip with the blood of fewer men, we are only talking about orders of magnitude. A hand can be covered by only so much blood before it becomes completely saturated."
Jason drove on into the night toward Laos. He was consumed by the stern dictates of a flinty morality that had always guided him. Condemned by its high religious mandate, he tried to cloak himself with a warrior's philosophical certainty of an even higher calling. But he heard nothing at all.
* * * * *
Imperceptibly, the winding road began to descend and the fog thickened. Mist became intermittent, only occasionally reaching the intensity of a slow drizzle. More buildings began to appear out of the heavy vapor. They were closer to the road and were situated in a less random order. The amorphous outskirts of a village materialized from the gray weather. Jason Harte turned the truck into a dense copse and stopped under the dripping trees. He turned off the engine, hid the key, and stepped onto the mossy, leaf carpeted earth.
The danger existed that his long westward drive had not yet taken him out of Vietnam and into Laos. In fact, it was equally unclear whether the Laotians would be any less hostile than the people to the east had been.
Furtively, he walked along the road in search of any evidence that he had reached the modest, eastern-most Laotian village of Xam Nua.
He tugged his straw hat low over his suntanned face and stooped his shoulders as best he could. It was not a posture to which he adapted with ease. Stooping was, at best, uncharacteristic for any man who once loved to dance along the farthermost edge of adventure, feinting at disaster.
He felt the stillness of the morning. For one who had lived a life singularly devoid of dilemma, there was an unfamiliar aura of trepidation. Not actual fear. In place of that emotion he and his entire breed of pilots experienced nothing more than greater challenges on higher orders of magnitude. At least that's how such men thought of themselves.
But the reality was that Jason's immediate future was filled with slimy sewer water. The filthy ditch in which he his was nothing more than his due. He didn't deserve to become an American businessman. He deserved to die.
CHAPTER 3
The pain in his back was sharp. He pulled himself to his knees expecting to be stabbed again by a rifle-mounted bayonet. But a bayonet would not end Jason Harte's life. Fate would not have it that way - yet.
Opening his eyes was a loathsome task. They were squeezed shut against pathogens and filth that slithered in the polluted mess. His body shuddered with revulsion. The effluvium dripped from his putrid green face. He spat the hose through which he had been breathing. But he could not spit out the gritty residue. And there was nothing to wipe his mouth on except the back of his filthy hand.
A man's voice spoke in distinctive, well enunciated Laotian, "Here, use this quickly and come along with us." A clean handkerchief was unexpectedly pressed into his hand.
It began to rain. Jason looked up at two swarthy, well-dressed men. They were not armed. He wiped his face and climbed out of the filthy ditch. Understandably, neither of the men offered him a helping hand.
When it began to rain in earnest the taller of the two men popped open his long, black umbrella -- the bayonet with which he had gained Jason's attention.
The street was deserted. There was no sign of the men who had been shooting. However, several empty brass cartridge casings were scattered around.
It was raining very hard by the time they took the footbridge across the ditch and went through a wooden gate. Monsoon rains had started early that year and had continued with little reprieve. Water poured from the roof of a small house where middle-aged woman was protected from the rain by an overhanging eave. The front door was open behind her. The old home looked warm, inviting, and neat.
It was the woman who spoke first. "Here," she said in the Sao Soung dialect of the rural mountain people, "Bring that poor man inside. Do you want him to drown like a dog?"
The taller of the two men spoke to her in her own dialect. He made the transition from the lexicon of the Lao Lum with a pleasant ease. There was no evidence of condescension although he was obviously of the valley culture, the Lao of the Valley.
With a simple dignity he said, "But Lea, my dear, he hid himself in the binjo ditch. The odor is more than should be endured in your honorable residence."
Smoothly manipulated, she replied, "Well then, have him get out of those clothes and clean himself. Is he a pig that we should force him to stand there in his filth? I'll get a fresh, warm robe."
The shorter man acknowledged a preemptory nod from his taller companion. He took charge of the umbrella and walked through the rain with, but not very close to, his charge. Just around the corner of the house, water cascaded with a sibilant roar from the roof.
"Let me suggest that you remove your wet clothing and rinse yourself. I will bring soap and a towel. In fact, it would be better if you left your military clothes here when you have finished. They will be taken care of."
When Jason finished his breathtaking shower and had washed his shoes, his host said, "Here. A dry towel and a terry robe." Finally able to stand erect and rub until his suntanned skin burned, some of his natural hubris began to return. He was about to ask questions when the other man appeared.
"Ah, there you are," said the tall, gracious gentleman. He stood and walked toward Jason with a proffered hand. "Please try on these woolen socks and let's see if we can make you a little more comfortable."
He continued with a presence that commanded attention. "My name is Ki Song. This is my friend and life-long associate, Xiang Khoung. In English it is pronounced Shang Kong. And, to my delight, let me now present our hostess, Lea Khoung. She is Xiang's sister."
Jason shook hands with the men and nodded a careful, polite bow to Lea Khoung. He said in the Lum dialect, "I can't tell you how much I appreciate your hospitality. What was going on out in the street?"
"Ayee, what a welcome you received in our village." It was Lea Khoung who was not bashful about taking over the conversation. "You have been greeted by those trouble makers, soaked in sewer water, drenched in the rain, and frozen in an outdoor shower. Are you a tramp that we should treat you so? No! You are the American pilot who crashed yesterday. What is your name and how do you have our language?"
Jason wondered how much they knew about the crash? Or was she guessing. Did they also know about the killings? If they did, would they turn him in? What was their attitude toward Americans? What did they intend to do with him? He was being warned from some deep recess of his instinct to be civil but to reveal as little as possible. He brushed short but tangled hair away from his intelligent eyes and asked, "I wish you would call me Jason. All my friends do." He relaxed his wiry shoulders slightly and smiled as if his white teeth would assure everyone that they were properly introduced. "What was that shooting all about?"
Ki Song, who was less than pleased by Lea's interruption, told him, "There are some competing factions who have not quite come to terms with the civilized approach to resolving difference. Now you must tell me how you have our language. You speak with hardly any accent."
That didn't tell Jason whether anyone was searching for him in the immediate area. So he expanded on his question, not his answer. "You mean they are triad? Or soldiers?"
"The triad are ancient societies. We call them tongs. I'm surprised you know about them." Ki Song seemed to appreciate that Jason might be more difficult than he had hoped when he first saw him on the street.
"I see," Jason replied while he thought, Ki Song doesn't want to tell me anything. Look at those eyes! This is a savant who has known power and used it with dignity.
Lea Khoung began on what was going to be a lengthy aphorism. "The tongs are dog meat with no . . ."
Ki Song deftly assumed the conversation.
"Well, now, we must remember that our friend has been soaked. Surely a refreshing drink would not be out of order even though it is early." He wondered whether the suggestion would spring Lea Khoung off in another direction, as he intended.
"Absolutely not!" She sprang to her feet instead. "Are we drunkards that we should begin drinking before breakfasts. I will take good care of our guest with hot tea and a healthy breakfast. Where are your manners?"
Ki Song had not quite negotiated the tack. So, to take the edge off the pilot's wariness, he continued with great diplomacy, "Do you smoke?"
Jason shook his head and replied, "No, thanks. I don't."
"Oh, good." This American cannot be all bad. "If tobacco were not one of our very few cash crops, I would gladly risk defoliation of the plants. Let us be seated in the other room. Are you comfortable enough?"
Over a hot, fragrant tea, Ki Song touched his lips with his napkin and said in serious but assuring tones, "Almost five hundred American planes have crashed in Laos since the war began. That is approximately twenty percent of your total aircraft losses. Even though they were lucky to get away from Vietnam, I'm afraid that the pilot survival rate has been rather low, especially here in the mountains. Certainly, being an American is enough of a hazard in Asia these days -- even in the absence of other extenuations."
Extenuations? Jason thought. Is he trying to bait me into talking about the Tay Chang shootings? He tried to lead Ki Song away from talk about extenuations of any kind. He used his own napkin on well-shaped lips and told them, "This entire region is in political turmoil and somehow the U.S. is right in the middle of it." It was obvious to everyone that the two men were engaged in a civilized struggle to extract information while giving none. "We have become targets for a lot of accusations, both deserved and otherwise."
Disregarding the exculpatory remark, Ki Song addressed their hostess, "Lea Khoung, what delicious tea. I feel more like a human being again, thanks to you."
"Thank you," she embarked to regain what she believed to be her rightful status in the conversation, "You are thoughtful. Your breakfast will be ready in a moment. Until then, may I pour?" She offered a simple, well-used porcelain teapot. But she thought, I'm so tired of Ki Song treating me as if I know nothing. Looking at Jason, she began, "Now, tell me ..."
Imperceptibly, Ki Song motioned to Xiang Khoung.
"Lea, my generous sister," he interrupted, "Would it be possible for me to have a little more of that wonderful smoked fish when you serve breakfast to our guest?"
"Oh, of course. Shall we go to the table?" But her eyes said, Bastard. Who do you think you are? You come here with your fancy boss from the big city and treat me like a country fool. I'll show you. She stood and took Jason's cup. "I have never had any use for that horrible little Vietnamese who was killed at the Tay Chang intersection. His name was anathema in here in Xam Nua. But Pu Nguyen, his brother, is a very powerful colonel who commands the Viet Soo Airport near Hanoi. Did you know who he was?" Now, speak my handsome witness! Are you the killer?
"I've studied the maps of Hanoi lots of times. But I can't place the Viet Soo Airport. Is that the little military airstrip just west of town?"
Ki Song had suffered long enough in the midst of inept questioning. "Yes," he answered with a smile. "It is. And you must be glad the rain slackened. Of course, if there had not been a break in this miserable monsoon weather yesterday, you would not be in this predicament. You would still be grounded or aboard your carrier."
They all laughed out loud and gave up the probing.
After breakfast, Ki Song graciously complimented Lea Khoung on an excellent meal. Then he rose from the table and stood tall and erect. That was the indication that the meal was finished.
"Xiang, old friend, what would I do without you," he said without appearing to condescend. "It is very reassuring that you will be drive us back to Vientiane. That is but another of your many valuable contributions to our success." Deftly, he dissolved the morning undertones by giving so much face to both Xiang and Lea.
"Jason, won't you please plan to stay with Lea Khoung for a few days and rest up. That bruise on your shoulder needs time to heel. And it will be safer here. Frankly, I am told that an American pilot tried to steal a military truck and he killed several men to do so. The search party will shoot him on sight. We would not want you to get caught up in all that. Afterward, I would be honored if you could visit with me in the Vientiane. Say this Friday? I will send someone drive you."
Ki Song had made a generous offer. His motives were unclear. But Jason was in no position to refuse, nor did he want to. The American Embassy was in Vientiane, the capital of Laos. That would be the place where he would tell the Navy that he was ready for duty, but he was through flying.
After Ki Song got in the car, Xiang drove due west through Phonsavan. Ultimately, the road would end at its intersection with Route 13 that ran parallel to the western border with Burma. Turning right would take them north to Luang Prabang, the old capital that was located about half way to the China border. But they would turn south and soon arrive in the new capital city, Vientiane. Both cities were founded on the banks of the Mekong River, the commercial lifeline of Laos.
The Mekong River flowed south from the mountains in China to Burma, Thailand, Vietnam, and Cambodia, separating those countries from Laos. Its ultimate destiny -- the dark waters of the South China Sea.
While they drove across the desolate Plain of Jars toward the Route 13 intersection, Xiang started a casual conversation about the American flier. Foremost on his mind was the motive behind inviting him to Vientiane. Clearly, they had to get him off the street in Xam Nua. But there had to be more. Xiang Khoung had been Ki Song's friend and business manager for too many years not to sense the embryo of a plan that would make money.
"Ki Song, do you intend to tell Three Hands about the American?"
"What is there for us to tell? The incident at the Tay Chang Junction has been in the newspapers and on the radio. We cannot be certain that Jason is the man who killed Pu Nguyen's brother.
Xiang responded, "But, if you do not say something, it will come as a surprise when he appears as your guest."
"He will not be my guest. He will be Three Hands' guest. I will arrange it. After all, Three Hands may also profit - unless Jason is the killer."