In Danger's Path

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In Danger's Path Page 65

by W. E. B Griffin


  “And if we don’t tell General Chow, and fifteen minutes after we arrive he learns that two spurious White Russians have been arrested in the uniforms of Chinese officers?”

  “Then you tell him you didn’t know. I didn’t tell you.”

  Sun thought that over for a long moment. “On the odd chance that your men are in Yümen, and have managed to avoid General Chow’s counterintelligence, have you given any thought about how you are going to find them?”

  “A good deal of thought, and come up with no better answer than I’ll just have to look for them.”

  “There is one possibility,” Sun said. “And that is this. I will tell General Chow that you have been sent by General Stillwell to have a look at his operation. He will brief you. It’s too late to do that today. He would schedule a briefing for tomorrow morning. If we can find your men between the time we land and the time of the briefing—which seems a very long shot indeed…”

  “If we can’t find them when we see General Chow in the morning, you can tell him I just told you about my men.”

  “He will consider that he has been deceived by you. There would be repercussions.”

  “I think it’s worth the chance,” Pickering said.

  General Sun thought that over a moment. “Are you familiar, General Pickering, with the phrase ‘no good deed goes unpunished’?”

  “Yes, I am.”

  “If we can’t find your men by eight o’clock tomorrow morning, I will tell General Chow that I sent your men, in Chinese Army uniform, into his area of responsibility.”

  “That’s putting your neck on the chopping block.”

  “It isn’t exactly what I had in mind when I agreed to use my good offices with General Chow, but I think it is what’s called for.”

  Because of head winds, the flight from Lanchou to Yümen took them just over another four hours. When they landed at sunset, a light snow was just beginning to fall. The commanding General of the 32nd Military District, a tall, stern-looking man in his fifties, was there to meet them. He had with him several senior officers and four vehicles—an ancient Packard touring car, a 1941 Packard Clipper, a 1941 Ford, and a Dodge weapons carrier for the luggage.

  As General Sun’s orderlies loaded the luggage into the weapons carrier, Sun introduced Pickering as an officer on Stillwell’s staff whom Stillwell wanted familiar with the operation of the 32nd Military District.

  “If we had only known you were coming, General Pickering,” General Chow said in excellent English, “we would have been honored to prepare a more detailed briefing than I can offer you on such short notice.”

  “I didn’t want you to go to any special effort, General,” Pickering said. “General Sun has been telling me what a busy man you are.”

  “I will arrange with my staff to have a briefing prepared for you in the morning. Would ten o’clock be convenient for you?”

  “It has been a long flight, General,” Pickering said. “But whatever is convenient for you.”

  “I understand completely,” General Chow said. “Perhaps you will take lunch with me tomorrow, with the briefing to follow?”

  “That would be splendid,” Pickering said. “Thank you very much.”

  “And now we will take you to your quarters,” General Chow said. “Where we will have a drink and then dinner.”

  “You are very kind, sir.”

  General Chow gestured toward the ancient Packard touring car. Its canvas roof was already covered with snow, and there were no side curtains. But General Chow obviously regarded it as the most prestigious of his vehicles, and was honoring Pickering and Sun by inviting them to ride in it.

  Pickering looked at his watch. It was five minutes to six. Presuming everybody was wrong—including Generals Stillwell and Sun—and McCoy had somehow managed to make it here, that gave him eighteen hours to find him.

  That seemed like a very long shot, indeed.

  Ten minutes after leaving the airport, they drove past a building with an adjacent parking lot. It was full of military vehicles. One of them was a Dodge ambulance with the normal red crosses not entirely painted over, and another was a Dodge three-quarter-ton weapons carrier. Both had five-hundred-gallon water trailers attached to them. Three Chinese soldiers armed with rifles were guarding them—and keeping themselves warm by standing beside a fire blazing in a cutoff fifty-five-gallon drum.

  Pickering nudged General Sun with his elbow, but by the time Sun looked at him curiously, they had passed the opening to the parking area.

  And Sun wouldn’t know what I was showing him anyway.

  And there are probably fifty weapons carriers towing water trailers in Yümen.

  “Excuse me,” Pickering said.

  “Certainly,” General Sun said.

  Their quarters turned out to be a large and comfortable house. Inside General Chow led them into a room off the foyer that had been turned into a bar. There he began to offer a series of champagne toasts to Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, President Roosevelt, General Stillwell, and—Pickering thought with growing impatience—every general officer, Chinese and American, in China.

  Though he was fully aware that the ambulance and weapons carrier he had seen en route to the house were almost certainly not the ones McCoy and Zimmerman had driven to Yümen, in the absence of any other alternative, he was perfectly willing to grasp at a straw. The moment General Chow and his officers left the house—or sooner, if he could get General Sun alone for a moment—he was going to tell him he may have seen McCoy’s trucks, and wanted to go looking for him.

  General Chow failed to leave General Sun’s side, and showed no interest in dinner. He did show every sign of too much drink, which meant the cocktail hour could go on forever, with dinner to follow.

  “Sir, may I speak to you a moment?” a voice said in Pickering’s ear.

  “What’s on your mind, Sampson?” Pickering asked, not entirely cordially.

  “Not in here, sir.”

  What the hell does he want?

  Sampson gestured toward the door to the foyer of the house. Pickering marched out of the room into the foyer.

  “Sir, I was hoping that General Chow would leave—”

  “What is it, Sampson?”

  “Sir, on the way here from the airport, I believe I saw Captain McCoy’s vehicles.”

  “Is that so?”

  “Yes, sir. I’m sure it was the ambulance he drove to the OSS house in Chung king. The paint didn’t quite obliterate the white of the red cross markings—”

  “There’s probably fifty ambulances with bad paint jobs in Yümen,” Pickering said.

  “The door of the ambulance Captain McCoy drove to the OSS house had a longitudinal scar on it, sir. So did the ambulance I saw before. And both vehicles here were towing five-hundred-gallon water trailers. Sir, with respect, I think having a look makes sense.”

  “So do I,” Pickering said. “Go back in there and as discreetly as possible have Colonel Banning come out here.”

  Banning came into the foyer a moment later, and on his heels was Major Kee Lew See, with a curious, concerned look on his face.

  “You wanted to see me, sir?” Banning said.

  “Sampson and I both think we know where McCoy is. Or at least was,” Pickering said.

  “Where?”

  “We saw the ambulance and the weapons carrier in the parking lot of a building—”

  “How do you know it was McCoy’s ambulance and weapons carrier?” Banning interrupted dubiously.

  “I don’t, obviously,” Pickering said sharply. “But in the absence of a better idea where McCoy might be, I think I want to have a look.”

  Major Kee politely but insistently asked a question.

  “Major Kee,” Sampson translated, “would like to know if there is any kind of problem, and if so, how he might be able to resolve it.”

  “Tell him we need a vehicle for about thirty minutes,” Pickering ordered.

  Sampson translated, and then translat
ed Kee’s reply: “Major Kee says that he hopes you will not give General Chow any reason to believe that you are not pleased with the festivities.”

  “Tell him that I am delighted with the festivities.”

  Sampson translated again and a moment later, translated Kee’s reply: “Major Kee believes that General Chow will misunderstand if the General does not immediately return to the festivities.”

  “Banning, you and Major Kee go back in there and tell General Sun that I will return in about an hour, and look forward to resuming my role in the festivities.”

  This time Major Kee did not wait to hear Sampson’s translations. He uttered a string of rapid-fire Chinese.

  Sampson smiled. “How much English do you speak, sir?” he asked.

  “I understand a good bit,” Kee said in heavily accented but perfectly understandable English. “Be so good, Captain, as to translate my comment to General.”

  “Yes, sir,” Sampson said. “General, Major Kee said—”

  “That it would be better,” Banning interrupted him, “if I went back in there and made your apologies. He feels he would be more use going with you when you look for Captain McCoy.”

  “Thank you, Major Kee,” Pickering said. “Can you get us a car?”

  “We will take the Packard Clipper, General,” Major Kee said. “That has been set aside for General Sun’s use.”

  “Make my apologies, please, Colonel,” Pickering ordered.

  “Aye, aye, sir.”

  [TWO]

  The Inn of the Fattened Goose

  Yümen, China

  2005 13 April 1943

  Captain Kenneth R. McCoy, USMCR, and Gunnery Sergeant Ernest W. Zimmerman—both of them out of uniform in a manner not even dreamed of by the United States Marine Corps—sat at a small table near the center of the dark and smoke-filled room. More than a dozen “other” Chinese officers were in the room, and as many well-dressed civilians, but McCoy and Zimmerman were the only Caucasians.

  On McCoy’s table were plates; bowls of cooked and raw onions and sweet peppers; glasses; and two liter bottles of beer. A roaring fire, built on bricks, was set in the center of the floor. It was both a source of heat and a stove. Cantilevered from a pole rising from the floor to the ceiling was a fire-blackened cast-iron dome that could be swung over the fire. A very large Chinese woman in a black gown sliced a thin piece of beef six inches by four from a quarter carcass of beef, hung from the same pole, threw a glance at McCoy’s table, held up the beef, and asked if that would be enough.

  “Two, no, three slices like that for me,” McCoy called to her in Cantonese. “And for my fat friend, five.”

  The large Chinese woman smiled and pushed the fire-blackened dome over the fire. Then she picked up her knife and sliced more thin oblongs of beef from the carcass.

  “That thing is like an upside-down wok,” McCoy said.

  “It’s made out of cast iron,” Zimmerman protested. “They hammer woks out of sheet steel.”

  “Well, pardon my ignorance,” McCoy said.

  “That’s the way the Mongolians do their beef,” Ernie said. “It ain’t Chinese.”

  “She’s going to melt the wok if she leaves it in that fire much longer,” McCoy said.

  “I told you, it ain’t a wok,” Zimmerman said.

  “Drink your beer, Ernie,” McCoy said.

  “Shit, I don’t like that,” Zimmerman said softly.

  McCoy followed Zimmerman’s eyes.

  A very large Chinese officer was standing just inside the door. His hand rested on the molded leather holster hanging from his Sam Browne belt.

  “He looks like he was looking for something interesting, and just found us,” Zimmerman said.

  “I don’t like the way he’s dressed,” McCoy said softly. “Too well.”

  “Are we going to get fucked up this late?” Zimmerman said.

  “Just play it nice and easy, Ernie,” McCoy said, and directed his attention to the large Chinese woman.

  She swung the inverted cast-iron dome off the fire. Then, moving quickly, she dipped four of the thin slices of beef into a bowl and laid them on the dome. There was a sizzle, a delicious smell, and a cloud of smoke. Using a fork, she turned the slices over, let them cook momentarily, and then placed them on two plates. She handed the plates to a boy who started toward McCoy’s table, and then she pushed the cast-iron dome back over the fire.

  “It’s us he’s after. Here he comes,” Zimmerman said very softly.

  “Easy does it, Ernie,” McCoy said softly.

  “Sir, you are American?” Major Kee Lew See asked in English.

  “What did you say?” McCoy replied nastily in Cantonese. “What do you want?”

  “I asked if you are American,” Major Kee asked in Cantonese.

  “And who are you to ask me what I am?” McCoy said.

  “I am Major Kee Lew See, aide-de-camp to General Sun. Your papers, please, Major.”

  The Chinese boy reached the table and laid the plates of beef on it.

  “You don’t mind if I have my supper first, do you, Major?” McCoy said, and shifted in his seat.

  “Your papers, please, Major,” Kee repeated.

  McCoy, with a look of patient resignation on his face, took out his fraudulent identification and handed it over.

  As Major Kee very carefully examined it, McCoy, hoping he couldn’t be observed, opened the top of his holster and put his hand on the butt of the 9mm Luger Parabellum automatic pistol it held.

  “This is a very good forgery,” Major Kee said, handing the identification document back to McCoy. “Very few people would question it.”

  “What are you talking about?” McCoy said, easing the Luger from the holster and putting his finger on the trigger.

  The only thing I can do is stick the barrel in this guy’s belly, march him out of here, put him in the back of the ambulance, get the hell away from here, and worry about what to do with him later.

  “Killer,” Zimmerman said softly, and nodded toward the door.

  Brigadier General Fleming Pickering, USMC, trailed by Captain Jerome Sampson, USA, was making his way across the crowded room to them.

  McCoy let the Luger drop back into the molded holster.

  “Who the hell are you, Major?” he asked in English.

  “I told you, Captain McCoy. I am Major Kee Lew See, aide-de-camp to General Sun.”

  Major General Chow Song-chek was feeling absolutely no pain when he started to climb up into the rear seat of his ancient Packard touring car. Then some thought stopped him, and he stepped off the running board.

  God, now what? Pickering thought.

  General Chow’s departure from the front door of the VIP villa had taken him almost as long as his departure from the dinner table.

  “General Pickering, my friend, may I say something to you man-to-man?”

  “Of course, General.”

  “You tend to underestimate Chinese hospitality,” General Chow announced.

  “General, I am overwhelmed by your hospitality,” Pickering said. “I have difficulty finding the words to express my gratitude.”

  “Nevertheless, my friend, you did not fully understand that all you had to do was give me a small hint that all that you wished was not being furnished.”

  What the hell is he talking about?

  “That’s probably true, sir, but there is, I assure you, nothing that I wish to have that has not already been so graciously provided.”

  “Not now, of course, at this hour. We are all tired. It was otherwise, may I dare to say, a satisfactory welcome to Yümen and the Thirty-second Military District?”

  “It exceeded anything I would have dared to hope for,” Pickering said.

  “I am pleased that you are satisfied with our poor attempt to welcome such a distinguished visitor as yourself,” General Chow said. “And I assure you, my dear General, that tonight there will be nothing…” He winked at Pickering and struck his right shoulder in a gesture o
f masculine friendship. “…nothing at all, missing to entertain you.”

  Pickering saw that Lieutenant Colonel Banning was having a very hard time keeping a straight face.

  “That’s very kind of you, General,” Pickering said.

  General Chow—for the fifth time—shook Pickering’s hand, came to attention and saluted, and finally climbed again into the backseat of the ancient Packard.

  It drove away from the house in a cloud of blue exhaust smoke.

  “What was that all about?”

  “When he missed you before dinner, General,” Banning said, “General Sun told him that you had gone off to seek female companionship.”

  “Good God!”

  “And when you came back,” Banning went on, “General Chow asked Kee if you had found what you wanted and were satisfied with it. Kee assured him you had.”

  “General Chow was a little embarrassed that he hadn’t thought of female companionship for you himself,” General Sun said, smiling. “He apparently intends to make up for his oversight tonight.”

  “Jesus Christ!”

  “With all respect, sir,” Lieutenant Hart said. “I hope the General realizes that the reputation of the Marine Corps rests on the General’s performance tonight.”

  “Oh, for God’s sake, George,” Pickering said, hoping he sounded properly indignant. He looked around the yard, spotted McCoy’s ambulance—which did indeed have a “longitudinal scar” on the driver’s door—and made a “come here” wave toward it.

  McCoy and Zimmerman got out and walked to the door of the house. They saluted.

  “General Sun, may I present Majors MeeKoy and Zimmerman of the 2035th Liaison Group?” Pickering said.

  General Sun shook their hands and spoke to both of them in Chinese, asking each a question that required more than a monosyllabic reply.

  He’s checking their Chinese, Pickering quickly decided. I would.

  “Please come in the house, gentlemen,” General Sun said, switching to English. “We’ll get something to drink—not that I need anything more—and then I hope you will tell me how I can be of assistance.”

  McCoy was prepared for this. There hadn’t been much time to talk in the Inn of the Fattened Goose. Pickering had understood the necessity of getting back to General Chow’s party as quickly as possible. But there had been time to explain why he and General Sun were in Yümen, and to tell McCoy that he was going to have to brief Sun about how his Gobi Desert plans were going, as well as solicit his advice and help with the other Chinese.

 

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