22
It was almost dark by the time we reached the outskirts of Itaewon and found a spot to ditch the bus. We hoofed it through the narrow back alleys. The sight of a beautiful Korean woman with wet hair clutching a burlap bag as if it were stuffed with gold dust and two American GIs still shaking mud and lily pads off their butts was enough to make every pedestrian we encountered gawk in wonder.
Going to Herman's hooch was out of the question. I figured the kidnappers would be watching. Our job was to exchange the skull for Mi-ja. Not just turn it over to them.
Instead, we found a tiny yoguan hidden in a narrow alley. After paying for a large room with bath, we washed, sent out for bandages, and patched ourselves up as well as we could.
Lady Ahn had suffered the fewest cuts but still she was impatient with my careful washing and disinfecting.
'An apo,' she objected. It doesn't hurt.
Ernie was okay and so was I. Scratches, bruises, hurt pride, but that was it.
'There're two things we have to do,' I told Ernie. 'First, we set up a meet with the kidnappers so we can trade the skull for Mi-ja.'
Ernie nodded. 'Right.'
'And second, we collar the guy who beat up the little nun so Eighth Army can turn him over to the ROKs.'
Ernie scowled up at me. 'What's wrong with those dorks over at the CID Detachment? Why didn't they pick him up?'
'You know how they are. Take an MP escort with them when they go down in the ville. Wear their suits and ties so the First Sergeant won't accuse them of screwing off. They scare the hell out of everybody they need to talk to.'
'Yeah,' Ernie said. 'Nobody tells those dickheads shit.'
'So apparently this guy who beat up the nun has found out that we're looking for him and he's decided not to make it easy.'
'He can't leave the country. Not without a phony passport, and he probably doesn't have any idea about how to buy one of those. We'll pick him up eventually.'
'But we can't wait.'
'Why not?'
I told him about the nun.
Ernie almost leapt out of his chair. 'You're shitting me! She's going to toast herself?'
'The day after tomorrow. In downtown Seoul. In front of the TV cameras and everything.'
'She's too young!'
'Right. So let's find the jerk who mugged her. Lock his ass up.'
'Okay.'
'And we have to get Mi-ja back.'
Ernie paused. 'You're right. Should we have chow first?'
From a public phone in a back-alley store, I made a call to the pharmacy near Herman's hooch. The pharmacist's daughter answered. She told me that Slicky Girl Nam was at home being cared for by the old women from the neighborhood. The kidnappers hadn't called and no, she didn't know how to locate Herman. I told her I'd call back every hour until the midnight curfew.
Just before the witching hour, the pharmacist's daughter still hadn't seen Herman and she still hadn't received a call from the kidnappers. They wouldn't call after curfew. Movement through the streets of Seoul is impossible once the police shut down the city.
On the way back to the yoguan, I gazed up at the rain clouds scudding past the monsoon moon. The silver orb was almost full. Only a sliver of darkness along its edge held the difference between life and death for a small girl named Mi-ja. But tomorrow, even that slender hope would be gone. The moon would be full. And we would have our last chance to save her life.
Back in the room, I spread out a sleeping mat and, without taking my clothes off, plopped down on the floor next to Lady Ahn. Looking back on it, Ernie and 1 should have taken turns pulling guard duty, but nothing bad happened that night. God must watch over fools.
At dawn I washed my face and shook Lady Ahn awake. When I tried to pry the jade skull out of her grasp, she shoved my hands away.
'You no touch,' she said.
I tried to remain calm, explaining to her that two powerful sects of Buddhist monks were now after the skull and it wouldn't be safe here in the yoguan. She couldn't protect it by herself. Ernie and I had to return to the compound and find the mugger of Choi So-Ian. Otherwise the little nun would burn herself to death and Korea, too, would erupt in flames.
Lady Ahn shook her head. 'Nuns have burned themselves before. We Koreans are used to it. Whatever Choi So-lan does, she doesn't get the jade skull.'
I stared at the burning fierceness in her eyes, waiting for it to die. It didn't. I spoke anyway. 'What about Mi- ja?'
She took a deep breath, turned away. 'You can save her somehow. Without the skull.'
I let that sit, allowing the silence to grow, until we both knew her statement wasn't true. Ragyapa and his Mongolian Buddhists were ruthless. I wouldn't be able to save Mi-ja. The kidnappers would stop at nothing until they had the skull.
'We only need the skull for a few hours,' I said. 'Once we make the exchange, and have Mi-ja back, Ernie and I will make sure that Ragyapa doesn't leave the country with the skull. I promised you in Taejon, we'll get it back for you. We won't let the Korean police know about it. We won't let Eighth Army know about it. No government official will confiscate the jade skull. We'll get it back for you. No matter what we have to do.'
Lady Ahn looked at me. Then she looked at Ernie. 'No matter what you have to do?'
Ernie grinned. 'That's the easy part. Once I check my. 45 out of the arms room, and we have Mi-ja, those Mongol assholes won't be safe anywhere.'
'Once you have Mi-ja,' Lady Ahn asked me, 'are you willing to kill to recover the jade skull?'
I almost flinched. Her eyes flamed like the eyes of a tigress. I thought of the yellow-toothed grin of Ragyapa, the man who'd kicked me in the stomach in the Temple of the Dream Buddha. I thought of the frightened child whimpering in the corner. I thought of the severed ear.
Would I kill for the jade skull? No. But would I kill for Mi-ja, to save her life? That was easy. The answer was yes. Many times yes. And would I kill for this gorgeous woman who sat in front of me? This woman known as Lady Ahn? This woman as beautiful as any goddess carved in ivory?
The answer to that, too, was easy.
'What they did to Mi-ja,' I answered carefully, 'deserves killing.'
Lady Ahn sat with her head slumped for a long time. She breathed slowly, as if working up courage. Finally, she released the strap from her grip. She shoved the burlap bag across the floor. I picked up the jade skull of Kublai Khan, smiled a reassuring smile, then slung it over my shoulder.
We stopped at the back-alley store so I could use the pay phone again. Ernie rummaged through the candy rack, searching for his favorite brand of gum. Out front, Koreans milled about, some pushing carts, some carrying loads knotted to wooden A-frames on their backs. Others with pans resting on their hips, filled with towels and soap and shampoo. On their way to the bathhouse.
I kept an eye on them all.
I waited on the phone line. It took about five minutes for the pharmacist's daughter to fetch Herman.
When he picked up and grunted hello, I said, 'I got it.'
'Where?'
'In a safe place.' Actually the skull was still hanging over my shoulder, in the burlap bag half full of wet