Authors: William Diehl
Tags: #Vietnam War, #War stories, #Espionage, #Vietnam War; 1961-1975, #Fiction - Espionage, #Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), #Fiction, #Spy stories, #Vietnamese Conflict; 1961-1975, #Suspense, #Adventure, #Thrillers, #Military, #Crime & Thriller, #Intrigue, #Thriller, #History
Earp stared into Billy Kot’s eyes arid, with a single, lightning move, reached under his jacket, hauled out his long-barreled .44, swung it out until it was six inches from Billy Kot’s heart and fired. The gun
roared and the shot ripped into Billy Kot’s chest and exploded into his heart. He was lifted six inches off the
floor and blown backward into the open hatch of th
e
junk, where he landed spread-eagled on his back an
d
slid to a stop.
Earp dived over the ta
b
le and rolled away, h
e
clawed loose one of the pipe
b
ombs from his belt, lit i
t
with his cigar and threw it
o
ver his shoulder toward the bulkhead.
On deck, Hatcher jumped up and, holding his legs together, came down feet
firs
t
on the thin latticework hatch cover. It shattered and he dropped through. The floor below swept up toward him. The Aug spat quietly in his hand, cutt
in
g down the other two Chinese gangsters in the a
lc
ove as Hatcher hit the floor.
The main room of the junk disintegrated into chaos.
Earp’s bomb bounced with a ringing sound and exploded. Bits of wall and doors vanished in a white hot blast, and a shower of dust and bits of wood clattered into the room. Flames licked the bulkhead of the junk.
Fong crouched in one of three small cells in the fore section of the junk adjacent to the cubicles of the opium den. Sloan sat on the floor leaning against the bulkhead. Fong leaned over so his face was inches from Sloan’s. ‘I will enjoy ki
l
ling you, Harry,’ he said softly.
Sloan laughed. It wasn’t big laugh, but it was sincere. ‘You’re stupid enough to do that,’ Sloan said.
‘I’m going to kill you a little bit at a time!’ Fong said, his voice rising with his anger.
‘Your smoke’s been doing that for a long time,’ Sloan said with a wave of his hand. He was staring at the floor, trying to get his bearings, trying to make his way through the hazy slow motion induced by drug and concussion.
‘I’ll wait until you come do
w
n,’ Fong said. ‘When it
will hurt the most. I am going to kill you and every
gwai-lo
that Yankee bastard Hatcher knows. I will kill
the world out from under him. Then he will come to me.’
‘I wouldn’t look forward to that if I were you,’ Sloan said.
A moment later, Earp’s bomb went off.
Fong was knocked to his knees as the junk shuddered from the explosion. He whirled toward the sounds of gunfire, and Sloan slammed his foot into his back, sending him sprawling out of the cell. The gunman spun around and fired a shot at Sloan. The bullet ripped into his side.
‘Ahh, damn!’ Sloan bellowed and rolled into a tight ball against the bulkhead.
The stoned opium heads in the house of Dreams, awakened from their dreams by the explosion and the gunfire that followed, swarmed from their cubicles and rushed toward the main hold. Screa
m
ing, bumping into each other, babbling, tumbling down the narrow passage, they choked it from wall to wall, their vacant eyes suddenly alive with fear. The door to the House of Dreams burst open. Earp, Potter a
n
d Corkscrew were raking the interior of the junk wit
h
shotgun and
rifle
fire. A bullet smashed into Corkscre
w
’s leg but he kept shooting. House of Dreams custo
m
ers stumbled into gunfire, flames, smoke and destruction.
Faced with the insane nightmare, Fong forgot Sloan and dashed into the middle of the mad scramble, slashing his way with his gun through the crazed mob toward the exit. Then as he looked up he saw his deadliest enemy at the other end of the passageway. Hatcher, his eyes aglow with deter
m
ination, was waiting for him at the exit to the main hatch.
Forgetting his own peril for the moment, Fong started firing at Hatcher. Hatcher
d
ucked but did not back off. He charged into the screaming mob of Chinese, zigzagged directly toward Fong, his Aug
chopping away at the wall as Fong ducked into the mass of fleeing men and then veered off into one of the opium
cubicles.
A second bomb exploded, bursting another cache of produce to bits. The explosion sent Hatcher, Fong and the terrified dopers sprawling. More flames spewed from the side of the boat, and then from the center of the pile of shattered vegetables a geyser of white powder poured out. Tollie Fong’s precious cargo of China White showered from its ruptured hiding place as flames roared up the side of the junk.
Hatcher fell against the wall as the turmoil intensified. Fong jumped into one of the cubicles of the House of Dreams and crouched there, waiting him out.
Hatcher started down the passageway, hugging the wall, his gun ready.
Behind him, Potter searched the bulkhead, saw the telltale bulge of the two hundred-gallon gas tanks. He cut loose with the AK-47. The 9 mm. slugs thunked into the tanks, rent them, blew off the nozzles. Gasoline sprayed out into the hold, hit the flames started by the two bombs.
Fire streaked up the streams of gas, burst into the tanks and exploded. Two tremendous swirling yellow balls of flame boiled out under the deck and swept through the hull. The blazing gas spilled out over the heroin and ignited it, melting it into black charcoal. The junk was transformed into an orange inferno.
Hatcher dived for the floor and covered his head with his hands. Fire roiled over his head and set the passage aflame.
A gas-fed fireball swept over Fong. His face was seared by the flames. His clothes burst into flames. Then the second tank blew, exploding the side of the junk, and the screaming Fong arced like a blazing skyrocket through the hole into the river.
The regulars rushed up the stairs and out of the roaring tomb, leaving behind Fong’s dead or dying
mobsters. Earp and Potter, dragging the wounded corkscrew, rushed down the gangplank with the terr
ified
Thai produce men
in
to pure
c
haos on the wha
r
f
.
A fire truck came through the crowd with its siren screaming. Behind it a police car appeared, then another. Riker spotted them and dropped the van into gear, pulling over beside his friends. Earp shoved Corkscrew in the side door before rolling in himself, and was followed by Potter, who slammed the door shut.
‘Let’s move it,’ Earp said, and Riker turned the van away from the blazing junk, and headed away from Chinese Town.
‘How’d it go?’ Riker asked.
‘We did the job,’ Earp said.
‘Three minutes, twenty-five seconds,’ Potter said.
Earp checked the wounded Corkscrew. ‘How’s the leg?’ he asked.
‘Think it’s broken,’ he groaned.
‘I got an old Purple Heart you can have,’ said Potter, lying on his back gasping for breath.
‘Already got one,’ Corkscrew said and mustered as much of a laugh as the pain would allow.
Inside the burning passageway, Hatcher crawled quickly toward the bow of the junk. The fire roared around him, flames snatching at his clothes. He kicked open one of the small hatches, then the next, and saw Sloan crouched against the bulkhead clutching his bleeding side. Flames roared overhead like a furnace. Heat devoured oxygen. Hatcher dashed in, grabbed him by the collar and, dragging him
t
o
his feet, rushed toward the only open side hatch that wasn’t consumed by fire.
‘Can’t do it!’ Sloan cried out.
‘Bul
l
shit,’ Hatcher answered.
‘Hatch, over here!’ Sy yelled, still in the snakeboat and hanging on to the side of the junk. Hatcher dragged Sloan through the flames
and
shoved him out
of the open hatch and into the boat and tumbled in after him.
‘Get the hell out of here,’ he said, and Sy turned the slender boat and roared away from the inferno.
FINISHED BUSINESS
Sy eased the snakeboat up beside the wharf and Hatcher helped Sloan out. The wound in his side was still bleeding, despite a makeshift bandage Hatcher had fashioned from Sloan’s shirttail.
‘See you around sometime, Sy,’ Hatcher said as he and Sloan struggled out of the boat and onto the wharf. Three blocks away the waterfront was pandemonium. The flaming junk cast a yellow glow over the river and the fire trucks, police cars and spectators on the pier.
‘You be okay?’ Sy asked.
‘We’re fine, pal. Head up one of the k
l
ongs and dump the boat. And stay away from the Longhorn for a couple of days.’
‘You okay guy, Hatch,’ the little Thai said.
‘And you’re a great fighter,’
H
atcher answered.
He hoisted Sloan, helping him away from the wharf and across the street to an alley. It was deserted and quiet, the clamor from the fire scene barely discernible in the background. Finally Sloan fell against the wall and, sliding to the ground, squeezed his riddled side. Hatcher knelt beside him, pulled his hand away and inspected the wound.
‘A bee
-
sting,’ he said, ‘you’ll get over it.’
‘It’s killing me,’ Sloan groaned, pressing his jacket against the wound.
‘I should kill you. You’re a menace. You lied to me, double-crossed me, set me up If anybody deserved to die, it was you, not Cody.’
The customary smile played at Sloan’s lips. ‘No sympathy, huh, laddie?’
‘I’d sooner have sympathy for the devil.’
‘Hell, you couldn’t kill me,’ Sloan said wearily. ‘I’m family.’
‘Oh, I could kill you, Harry. But I’m not going to and it has nothing to do with family.’
‘I did what I had to do, you did what you had to do,’ said Sloan. ‘I don’t have to explain that to you.’
‘There was no other way to deal with the problem,’ Hatcher said.
‘I’ve got the same trouble all over the world.’
‘No, Harry. This was survival. Your job is political expediency.’
‘Whatever you call it, you do it and forget it.’
‘No,
you
do it and forget about it.
I
think about it.’
‘Ah bullshit. You’re a soldier. You did what soldiers do.’
‘You’ve been telling me that for years. I didn’t do what soldiers do, I did what
you told me to do.’
‘Why the hell did you come over here anyway?’ Sloan asked.
‘I thought I was doing something decent for a change, a sense of responsibility to an old friend. I’m talking about Cody, not you.’
Sloan said, ‘Ahh,’ and waved the remark off with his hand. There was a moment of awkward silence and then Sloan said, ‘You were the best, the best I ever had. The perfect shadow warrior.’
‘Trouble is, you ran out of soldiers, didn’t you, Harry. One double cross too many,
o
ne lie too often, and one morning you woke up and you didn’t have any warriors left. They were either dead, crippled or had quit. That’s why you made your deal with Fong.’
Sloan leaned over and pressed his side harder and groaned with the pain that was burning deep in his side. ‘Just tell me one thing,’ he asked. ‘Is Cody alive?’
‘No, he’s dead,’ Hatcher whispered. ‘He died a long time ago.’
‘I’ll be damned,’ said Sloan. ‘A
l
l this fuss for nothing.’
‘It wasn’t for nothing. It was a payoff trip’
‘payoff to who?’
‘You were paying off Tollie Fong.’
‘You’re crazy. Why would I owe Tollie Fong anything. Because I smoked a little of his pipe?’
‘No. Because he took our place. When you ran out of soldiers, you had an execution squad made to order
—
Fong and his Chiu Chao assassins. He got rid of Campon for you in Atlanta because Campon was too independent, too corrupt. Sooner or later it would have come out and the boys in the State Department would’ve had fits dealing with that. On the other hand, Cosomil was nice and safe.’
‘And he didn’t have half of Madrango’s treasury in bank accounts in Switzerland,’ Sloan added.
‘And Cosomil would be a good little boy and take his orders from the White House,’ said Hatcher.
Behind them, two dozen yards away, Tollie Fong swam out of the darkness and grabbed a ladder on the dock. His arm was burned and his face was scorched. He started up the ladder and heard the voices, He cautiously peeked over the lip of the wharf. Hatcher and Sloan were fifty yards away.
‘I know you too well,’ Hatcher was saying. ‘I’ve done the same things for you too many times. In Paris you were in real top form. You not only got rid of three ambassadors that were giving us a bad time about our bases in Europe, you laid it off on the Hyena and got rid of him too. You always were resourceful. Always looking to cover two or three bases at a time.’
‘Well, that’s the mission, isn’t it?’
‘That’s a matter of interpretation.’
‘Call it whatever you want. ‘The enemy never sleeps, pal, don’t forget it. You want to turn namby-pamby, go right ahead, but let me tell you, if I can get rid of a piece of shit like Hadif and I have to bend the rules a little, you bet your ass I’ll do it. It’s my
job.
Sure, I made a deal with Fong. He was on the same side we’re on.’
‘He may have been on your side, Harry. He sure as hell wasn’t on mine.’
‘I had that under control.’
Fong clung to the ladder and sneered as he listened to Sloan’s confident explanation.
‘He raped and murdered Daphne Chien in cold blood just to get even with me,’ Hatcher said hoarsely. ‘He was about to hand you your brains. He was training antiterrorists upriver, that’s w
h
at ex-SAVAKs and Tontons were doing up there.’
‘He was training them for me,’ Sloan said bluntly.
Hatcher shook his head. ‘And what was the big payoff, Harry? Were you going to set him up so he could smuggle a thousand keys of 999 past customs?’
‘What the hell, if it wasn’t him it’d be somebody else. It’s good for the economy.’
‘Fifteen years ago you sent me upriver to get rid of the Chiu Chao dope smugglers. N
o
w you’re in bed with them.’
‘Water under the bridge, laddie,’ said Sloan. ‘You’ve got Paris, New York, Chicago, your buddy in the insurance company. I’ve got Thailand. What the hell’s the diff?’
Hatcher stood up.
‘For years I thought you had mined me into a judge, jury and executioner. It finally got to me in Los Boxes, when I had nothing else to think
a
bout. Now I know I was never judge and jury
—
that was your job. I was just the executioner. Anyhow, somebody else will have to judge you. I’m through with all of that.’
‘Where are you going?’
‘Home.’
‘What about me?’
‘Tell Buffalo Bill his son died honorably on the field of battle. He can die in peace. See you, Harry.’
Hatcher turned and walked away.
‘Wait a minute, damn it!’ Sloan called after him.
But Hatcher vanished into the swirling black smoky mist.