“At Can Tho?” Moon asked.
“We were pulling out of there,” Rice said. “I guess Ricky’s files would be downriver at Long Phu.” He shook his head. “That is, if they got all the stuff out of Ricky’s office moved.”
“This Dem had a Saigon telephone,” Moon said. “How’s chances of calling information, getting it that way?”
“From what I’ve been hearing in here about the war the past few days, I say about a snowball’s chance in hell. You can’t get a call through to
Saigon without some sort of special pull. And if you got it through, you couldn’t get the number. And if you got the number, the system wouldn’t be working. Not out to the residences.”
“So what do you recommend?” Moon asked.
Rice leaned back in the chair and rubbed his beard, thinking about it.
He will tell me we will have to just forget it. It’s absolutely impossible, like finding a needle in a haystack. He will tell Osa there’s no way to reach her brother. That the Khmer Rouge have already found him and made a martyr out of him and she should go home and pray for the repose of his soul.
“You have to have a pilot,” Rice said. “Ricky wanted you to come out and help run the place. But he said you didn’t fly.”
“I don’t,” Moon said. “And while you’re thinking, do you have any ideas about an urn Ricky was bringing out of Cambodia for an old Chinese man named Lum Lee?”
“Urn? Oh, yeah. Lee’s ancestral bones, wasn’t it? I’d forgotten about that job.”
“Know where it is?”
“Sure,” Rice said. “Or where it was. Ricky had gone up-country to get it. And he called in to say he had it. And then he stopped at the Vinh place and dropped off the kid to visit Eleth’s mother there. And there wasn’t any sign of an urn in what was left of the helicopter. So I’d say it had to be back in the Vinh village.”
“Just a matter of getting there,” Moon said.
“Yep,” Rice said. “And getting yourself out again. Alive and with all your arms and legs still in place.”
Osa had been sitting silently, hands folded in her lap. She leaned forward. “I think we could do it easily enough in a helicopter,” she said. “Just as we did last summer when you flew me up there. It took less than an hour.”
“I remember, darlin’,” he said. “It was a most pleasant little trip. But that was last summer. Pol Pot’s bloody little bastards, with their tripod-mounted antiaircraft machine guns and little hand-held missile launchers, had not yet come down from the north.”
“Are there any copters left at your hangars? Would any pilots still be there?”
“Copters, I’d say yes. We had eight or nine being fixed when I left, some of them ready to go. And two pilots. That was then. Now I’d say you could subtract two pilots and two copters from that number.”
“No pilots?” Osa said.
“Not if they have any sense. And they were sensible fellows. Smart enough to know the Vietcong wouldn’t like ’em.” He thought about it. “It’s Viet Cong territory-the Mekong Delta is. if the ARVN Yellow Tiger Battalion is still there, maybe. But I doubt it. Why stay? They could fly one of those copters away to Bangkok or get it down to Jakarta or Singapore and get a ton of money for it.”
“Without any proof of ownership?” Moon asked.
Rice grinned at him. “Mr. Mathias,” he said, “we are now in Southeast Asia. I don’t think the Republic of Vietnam is going to be around long enough to file suit.”
Mr. Preda cleared his throat and pushed away from the wall. “It is about used up, all the time you have. You have to go pretty quick now.”
“Back to the subjects of moats and draw-bridges,” Rice said, voice urgent. “Getting across.
“What was the blueprint you had in mind?” “We don’t have any,” Moon said.
“I do,” Rice said. “You good at memorizing?” Moon nodded.
“Eighty-one. Ninety. Twenty-two. You got it?”
“Eighty-one, ninety, twenty-two,” Osa said. “The man’s name is Gregory. He does the same thing a robin does. Or a crow. Or a seagull. Tell him the aviary for the robin will be at the end of the Puerto Princesa runway.” Rice paused. “What day is today?”
“April twenty-third,” Moon said, feeling sick as he said it. “But wait a minute now.”
“April twenty-fifth, then,” Rice said. “In the wee wee hours. The witching hour.”
Moon said, “Hold on now. We-”
Mr. Preda said, “Now we go.” He put his hand on Rice’s shoulder, nodded to Osa. “Have a good day.”
Rice, moving toward the door, turned suddenly. “At Imelda’s?”
Osa said yes.
Rice said, “Until the wee hours.” And to Moon he said, “Across the moat and I can find that little girl for you.”
MANILA, April 22 (UPI)-The U.S. Navy has assembled a fleet of five aircraft carriers, eleven destroyers, four amphibious landing craft and other vessels off the coast of South Vietnam for a possible evacuation mission, a well-informed source at the Subic Bay Naval Base said today.
The Thirteenth and the Fourteenth Day
IT DEPENDED ON HOW you looked at it. You could call it a coup. A stroke of good fortune. Gregory, whoever he might be, would fly in from wherever. They’d get George Rice aboard undetected. Gregory would transport them across the South China Sea to the R. M. Air repair hangars on the Mekong. There Rice would fire up a copter, they’d fly away to the Vinhs’ village and pick up Mr. Lee’s urn, hop up to the Reverend Damon van Winjgaarden’s mission to collect him, and then out of there. Safely. Then Rice, the old Asia hand, would talk to the right people, -pull the right strings, find where Lila had been dropped off. They’d make another copter flight, snatch up the kid, and away they’d go.
On the other hand, it could be an unmitigated nightmare, which is the way it seemed to be working out, with Osa and he doing about twenty years, plowing rice paddies, for scheming to break a convict out of a Philippine prison. Having had plenty of time to think about it, Moon sat in the dim moonlight behind Imelda’s hotel wondering how he could have been so stupid.
Recognizing the stupidity had been quick enough.
“You know what we’ve done?” he asked Osa as soon as the log gate had been pulled across the road behind them and they were jolting away from the Palawan prison. “We have conspired to commit a felony.”
Osa put a finger to her lips and signified the cabbie with her other hand.
“Okay,” Moon said. “So we don’t need another witness against us. But you know what I mean?”
“Of course I know,” Osa said. “Exactly, I know. But what else could we do?”
Moon had thought of several things they might have done by the time the jeepney dropped them off at the hotel. But instead of doing any of them, he had just sat there like a ninny and let Rice take charge of the conversation.
Now it was almost dawn, a day and half after the conversation, and no sign of George Rice. if Moon had enough optimism left to hope for any luck, he would have been hoping that Rice had fallen fatally down a cliff or become victim to whatever predators Palawan Island ’s jungles provided. Probably snakes, at least. But Moon’s optimism was all used up. Rice would appear, probably at the worst possible time, and they’d have to talk him into going right back to the palm-log gate and turning himself in. And what if he wouldn’t?
There was nothing else they could do with him. Except perhaps strangle the bastard and drag his body out into the bushes.
They’d placed the call to Gregory from the telephone in Moon’s room, checking first with the desk to be sure making a connection across the Sulu Sea on a Filipino telephone required no special skill. It didn’t.
The telephone made the expected ringing sounds, then clicked. A woman’s voice said, “What number were