“What about Ray’s gold cigarette case?” asked Broker.

“Evidence,” said Tuna and nodded out. They shook him.

One eye rolled open. “That night…morning really…when Cyrus showed up, Ray wouldn’t do it. You know Ray. By the book. Insisted on getting the orders in writing. Made Cyrus write it down, sign it. Op order to go for the gold…get it?”

Broker and Nina locked eyes.

Tuna giggled. “Saw him fold it in a piece of radio battery plastic, tuck it in his cigarette case, and button it into his chest pocket. All comes down to me fucking up. I was supposed to take it off him…forgot when the shooting started.”

Nina made a face but did not look away.

“He rolled out. But he fell into the cargo net. Snake city, fire coming in. The guys on the ground had the gold on the forklift, tipped it into the net on top of Ray. Get it?”

“If he stole it why’s he buried with it,” recited Nina.

“You got it, he’s on the beach under the gold, orders should be there with his…remains. Evidence,” he pronounced, again. Then he surged up toward Nina. “You still got that copy of the UCMJ, the article I underlined?”

“Yes I do,” said Nina.

“Figuring that out kept me going after I got the cancer. Now go out there and burn Cyrus at the fucking stake for everybody to see. That’s my act of contrition. My gift to you…” said Tuna. He turned to Broker. “You keep her on track over there. Do this right and you and Trin can get moderately rich. But to nail Cyrus the gooks have to catch him digging it up. So promise me, they get most of it.”

Broker nodded.

Tuna croaked again. “Map.”

Broker held up the map. Tuna blinked. “There’s this gook graveyard, on a hill over the dunes. And this little cove-here.” He stabbed the map. “It’s about four klics north of Trin’s vet’s home.” Tuna cackled. “Jimmy Tuna’s Memorial Home for Crippled Viet Cong. I love it. See the cemetery symbols?” Broker saw them. “Three of those old graves, with the big round walls…hope they’re still there.”

Broker nodded. “Get me something to write with,” he said urgently.

Tuna shook his head. “Don’t mark the map.” He grinned. “Trin’s rules, remember. Memorize the location. Center grave. Fix on the grave to your right, shoot an azimuth, one hundred and sixty-three degrees. Walk eighty- two steps. I paced it off. And dig.”

“You getting this?” said Broker, looking up.

“Got it,” said Nina.

There was an interval of silence while Tuna rested. All things revolved unsaid. Just eyes.

“That’s it. Now go,” Tuna blurted. He reached up and pulled Broker close by the arm. For a second his old strength flowed with the heroin. “Wait. Tell Tony not to bury them. And gimme the Colt. When the time comes I’ll have Tony leave me down there with the rifle and the pistol. Send for the sheriff so none of this rubs off on you.”

Nina nodded and handed Jimmy the.45. He squinted. “When push comes to shove, go with Trin, you understand?”

“I understand,” said Broker.

“Now you better split,” said Tuna. “Tony and me will fix it all here. Don’t worry, they won’t get to me. Be nice, though, if a few more of them would come through the woods into that field.” He lurched in his chair, fumbled at the rifle leaning against the rail, picked it up, and locked his eye to the scope. He scanned the trees. “Coming. Hear ’em in the grass. Black maggot sonsabitches.”

Broker stood up and tucked the map under his shirt. He hefted the Mini-14 and turned to Tuna. “Does this square it for killing Ray?”

“Fuck you, Broker.” He grinned and brandished the rifle. “Get outta here and let me die in peace.”

“That’s it, let’s go,” Broker yelled to Nina.

They ran.

Halfway across the field she stopped and held him by the arm. “What did he mean? Trin’s rules?”

“Trin’s first rule: Trust no one,” said Broker. “Now run.”

They jogged down through the springy alfalfa and into the oak grove. Jimmy Tuna’s raucous stoned laughter and the crack of the Carcano echoed through the trees, over the roar of the cicadas. Crazy. Shooting at sunspots.

A beleaguered Tony Sporta, breathing heavily, his overalls smeared with mud, waved to them from across the swamp. They plowed into the deep drag trail that now furrowed the sunken causeway, sinking past their knees. The two bodies lay in the muck just ahead.

“C’mon, c’mon. Leave ’em be,” yelled Sporta, waving them on. “I gotta go get some logging chains for weight.”

“There’s been a change,” yelled Broker. “No logging chains.” Sporta held his cupped hands to his ears and then stomped in a circle, swearing.

As they dragged their feet through the mire and struggled, half stepping, half slithering, over the corpses, Nina panted, “Remind you of anything?”

Broker frowned and she started chanting something under her breath, upbeat and vaguely familiar.

“Country Joe and the Fish,” said Broker. He scanned the trees. The Mini-14 floated in one hand, the other touched the tiger tooth under his shirt for luck. The mud sucked at his feet.

Next stop, Vietnam.

52

They had a map. The map would draw Cyrus like honey. Broker popped the clutch. Rubber scorched. Tony Sporta had thrown them the Beretta and Nina’s purse and shooed them from his office. Now he ducked a volley of gravel and, still swearing mightily, waved them on with a final gesture of good riddance.

They were wearing slimy hip waders of mud. Broker’s tennis shoe slipped off the accelerator.

Nina yelled over the grinding engine, “We have to run this by the U.S. Mission in Hanoi. Catch him red-handed. Arrange to get him…extradited.”

Broker rolled his eyes and yelled back, “The United States doesn’t have an extradition treaty with the Vietnamese government, goddammit. They haven’t even set up an embassy yet. I want Cyrus, Nina; I want him bad. But it has to go down right or he’ll weasel away. We have to check out Tuna’s story first. Locate the stuff. See if the orders are with…the remains.” He swiveled his head to see the road behind. “Is there anybody following us?”

“No. I’ve been watching,” she went on without missing a beat. “There’s an advance team in Hanoi. There’s the U.S. liaison office. I have a number-”

“Slow down.”

Nina grabbed the wheel as Broker overdrove the shoulder and swiped ten yards of weeds growing at the lip of a ditch. “You slow down.” She glanced in the back-seat where the Mini-14 lay, locked and loaded, in plain view. “Isn’t it against the law to drive around with that rifle uncased?”

Broker ignored her and reached across her knees and clawed his cell phone from the glove compartment. The battery was dead. And no spare. They’d left the other one with Tuna. He slowed down to seventy-five when he saw an Amoco station up ahead at a crossroads. He braked precipitously, leaving another smoking swatch of Goodyear products in Wisconsin.

“Jesus,” muttered Nina, bracing.

“Phone,” said Broker.

“What?”

“Tickets. Visas. Phone.” He left the motor running and the door open as he ran for the pay phone. After he picked up the receiver he realized it was a toll call. He still had a wad of hundreds in his pocket from New Orleans.

Вы читаете The Price of Blood
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату