Slicky Boys (42 page)

Read Slicky Boys Online

Authors: Martin Limon

“Did you catch him in Taegu?”

“False lead,” I said. “He was there but sold the ration control plate to some dumb buck sergeant.”

“Clever.”

“Yeah,” I agreed. “Now he knows we’re onto him.”

Ernie groaned. I don’t know if it was from pain or from thinking about Shipton.

The skin around his nose and mouth twisted, his stomach moved like a rising bowling ball beneath the sheets, and suddenly blood and water squirted from his mouth. I ran around the bed and grabbed a towel, and now he was retching yellow bile and I handed him the towel and ran out of the ward.

Down the hall a sleeping medic sat behind a counter. I yelled, “The guy in the third bed, Intensive Care, he’s vomiting up blood!”

The medic pressed a button, jumped up, and a few seconds later three people in green smocks and I stood around Ernie’s bunk. He’d stopped throwing up but his breath still sounded bad.

One of the medics turned to me.

“You didn’t give him any water, did you?”

“A little.”

The medic’s chest puffed out and he was about to read me my rights as a prisoner or the riot act or something when we heard a knock against the bedside table.

“Get the . . .
fuck
away from me.”

It was Ernie, growling. Somehow, he’d yanked out his tubes, tumbled off the bed, and pushed away the medic who was trying to restrain him. From the locker behind his bunk, he grabbed his socks. The medics kept jabbering away but Ernie put on his shirt and his blue jeans, then reached for his shoes and his jacket. He turned to me.

“You ready, pal?”

“You should stay here, Ernie. You’re not well.”

“We have to catch that asshole Shipton.”

He slid on his shoes, raised his arms and put on his jacket, and started down the hallway. The medics ran after him. One grabbed his arm; Ernie swiveled and punched him in the nose.

The medic howled and grabbed his face, and I ran in front of him and his buddies and held my hands up.

“Sorry. Sorry. He’s not himself.”

“He can’t
do
this,” one said. “He’ll be busted down a stripe for sure.”

“I know. I know.”

Ernie bounced around on the balls of his feet for a few seconds, eager to throw another punch. Suddenly his fist fell, his head rolled, and he collapsed in a heap.

I helped the medics take off his clothes and we hoisted him back onto the bunk. One shot him up with some sedative and another stuck the rubber tube back down his throat.

When I left, he was snoring soundly.

37

T
HE KILLER LURKED IN THE ALLEYS OF
N
AMDAEMUN-SI
, the Great South Gate Market, checking the eyes of strangers.

Farmers shoved wooden carts loaded with fat cabbages and winter turnips into a bewildering maze of canvas-covered corridors. Squatting over an open coal stove, an old crone fried
pindae-dok,
fragrant pancakes made of flour and garlic and green onion. Workmen waited for the sizzling delicacy, stomping their boots in the crusted snow.

When he was satisfied that he hadn’t been followed, the killer strode deeper into the catacombs of the market. Merchants in bloody aprons pounded hatchets on wet boards, wailing out the prices of their fresh catch from the sea. In the distance, dogs yipped. Their barking grew louder.

Behind a plywood partition, a small kennel was hidden from the regular flow of pedestrian traffic. A Korean man crouched in front of one of the bamboo cages, scratching behind the ear of a frisky mutt. The man’s face was like brown leather stretched across a craggy ridge of granite; his body hard, from years of training as an agent of espionage in the secret enclaves of Communist North Korea. He stood and turned slowly—warily—as the killer approached.

“Kei sago shipo,”
the killer said. I want to buy a dog.

The Korean nodded. “We have the best stock.”

“It must be a pup but old enough to mate.”

“We have just the thing. And since it hasn’t yet mated, the meat will be most beneficial to the health.”

The obligatory code words over, the Korean squatted back down and pulled the large pup out of its cage.

“You have been busy,” he said.

It was not an accusation, merely a statement. The killer didn’t answer.

The Korean said, “Your mission is too important to be endangered by some personal vendetta.”

The killer’s face hardened. “The mission is important to you. To me, only the money is important.”

“If you want your money, you will not jeopardize this mission.”

The killer took a step forward. “The Americans killed a woman who was mine.”

The Korean cocked an eyebrow. “Are you sure it was they who killed her?”

“The ROK Navy long ago gave up on me. It could only have been them.”

The Korean turned back to the dog and shrugged. “Perhaps.” He found a loose leather thong and deftly tied it around the back legs of the pup. “But now,” he said, “since you returned the favor and killed
their
woman, this ‘nurse’in Itaewon, they are after you with more fervor than ever.”

The killer shrugged again. “It will do them no good.”

The Communist North Korean yanked the knot tight and lifted the dog by its hind legs, tying it to a wooden crossbar. The puppy whined, its front paws barely touching the ground. The Korean rose and turned back to the killer.

“Do you eat dog meat?”

The killer shrugged. “Meat is meat.”

The Korean tied another leather thong around the dog’s snout and ratcheted the crossbar higher, until the pup’s front paws scratched wildly in the air.. Canine eyes whirled with panic, the muffled screams of the dog slicing through the cold morning air. The Korean jerked down on the front paws and the joints of the back legs cracked. Ignoring the animal’s frantic yipping, he glanced back at the killer.

“You Americans love dogs, they say. Certainly you will enjoy this meat.”

They stared into one another’s eyes. Suddenly, the killer stepped forward, a knife appearing from the folds of his coat. He squatted and, with one swift movement, sliced the sharp blade across the pup’s throat. Blood exploded onto dirty ice.

Ignoring the Korean, the killer slashed vertically up the dog’s quivering torso, reached in, and peeled back the hide. The knife continued to probe. Guts snaked onto the pavement like steaming serpents.

The killer carved and peeled until what had once been a pup was nothing but a hanging lump of raw meat. He carved off a chunk of flank, rose, and offered it to the Korean.

The Korean smiled but shook his head. “I prefer mine cooked.”

The killer gazed into the Korean’s eyes and popped the still bloody dog flesh into his mouth. Chewing with the big, knotted muscles of his jaw, his eyes never wavered from the eyes of his Communist handler.

The Korean didn’t flinch. He reached into his pocket, pulled out a slip of paper, and handed it to the killer. On it were etched four numbers.

“Memorize this and destroy it.”

The killer glanced at the paper, soaking up the information. When he had it locked in his memory, he popped the paper into his gory mouth and swallowed it whole.

“Only a few days,” the North Korean said, “and the operation will be ready.”

The killer nodded.

“There have been inquiries,” the North Korean said. “Discreet but unmistakable. Someone is planning to set a trap for you.”

The killer stared at him, chewing slowly, waiting.

“When you go in, this man, this Sueño, he will come after you.”

The killer snorted with contempt. “Let him.”

“Do not be overconfident. We cannot eliminate him now. That would only alert the Americans, make our job more difficult. You must ensnare him in his own trap. Once you have the documents we need, killing him will be of no consequence. But make sure that no one realizes that it was our work.”

The killer growled. “I am not an amateur.”

He swallowed the last of the dog meat, turned, and vanished back into the endless maze of the Namdaemun Market.

38

S
TRANGE HAD A HABIT OF ARRIVING AT THE OFFICE
early. So do a lot of NCO’s who have no life outside their work. He stumbled into me at the back entrance of 8th Army headquarters, snapped his head around, and almost poked me in the eye with his cigarette holder.

“What happened to you?” he asked.

“Long night.” I took him by the elbow and guided him toward the Distribution Room. “Let’s talk.”

He held a cup of snack bar coffee in one hand and fumbled for his keys with the other. Once inside, I shut the door behind us.

“I need everything you’ve got on the recent security violations.”

He placed his coffee on a desk and sat down. “You guys finally starting to take this stuff seriously, eh?”

“Let’s just say
I’m
taking it seriously.”

He fiddled with the empty plastic in his mouth. “Had any strange lately?”

I took a quick step forward, leaned across the desk, and lifted him by his khaki lapels halfway out of his chair.

“I have a serial killer on my hands,” I said, “and people I know and love have been killed, and I’m not going to put up with any more of your shit. You start giving me the information I want and you start giving it to me right now!”

I didn’t think Strange’s gray pallor could grow any grayer but somehow it did. The stained cigarette holder tumbled from his lips.

“Okay,” he croaked. “Okay.”

After that, things went a lot smoother. I asked the questions, and he answered. When he didn’t know something he picked up the phone and called one of his buddies in the far-flung network of army security wienies.

The picture I put together was composed of suspicions and anomalies that would never stand up in a court of law. But these guys knew their business and they took it seriously. What they had wasn’t enough for them to pass along an official report to the head shed, but it was enough for me.

I ran my theory about the tunnels and the nuclear devices being placed beneath the DMZ past Strange. He had no direct knowledge of it, but it didn’t seem too farfetched to him. Even if it wasn’t true, it was the type of scheme the North Koreans would believe in—and would want to check out.

On the wall of Strange’s office hung a large map of Korea. We charted the places that had been hit by Shipton. His method of operation seemed pretty straightforward. Somehow, he obtained inside help—maybe a combination to a filing cabinet or a copy of a key to a door—and then, either by putting on a uniform and impersonating an American officer or by using his commando skills, he gained access to the information he wanted. Each place he had hit was a potential gold mine for certain types of information: orders for heavy equipment, disposition of explosives, personnel records for mining engineers, acquisition of contract excavators.

Shipton knew exactly what he was after and he’d gone about it systematically. We were looking for any missing pieces of his puzzle, the parts Shipton still needed to fill in. If we could figure them out, we might be able to anticipate his next move.

Strange shook his head. “Looks like we’re too late. He’s already put it all together.”

“Except for one thing,” I said.

“What’s that?”

“The actual location of the tunnels.”

Strange ran his finger across the map until it pointed to an area here, at 8th Army Headquarters, in the south of Seoul.

“What’s that?” I said.

“Geological Survey.”

“Have they reported any security problems?”

“Not a one.”

I lifted his clipboard off his desk and thrust it at him. “They’re about due for their annual security inspection, aren’t they?”

He gulped. “As a matter of fact, I was planning on doing that today.”

“Good.”

He reached for his cap.

I read the
Stars & Stripes
and drank about four quarts of coffee in the snack bar. I didn’t even bother to call the office. They knew Ernie was in intensive care and the Nurse was dead and I was after her killer. If they couldn’t figure out why I didn’t report in, screw them. At noon I called Strange.

“They’re clean,” he reported. “But mighty nervous.”

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