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Satori - Don Winslow [143]

By Root 1310 0
had tightened on the trigger.

The lieutenant stared at the old man for a second, the old man stared back, and then the lieutenant ordered his men to move on. Nicholai lay back and looked at Solange sleeping. He drifted off himself, and when he woke up it was dusk. A few minutes later Bay came in, followed by a woman with bowls of rice and steamed fish. Solange woke up and they ate, then got ready to resume the march.

They walked the dikes now, shielded by the neat rows of mulberry trees. Staying in tight formation, they literally walked in each other’s footsteps and made reasonably good time until the moon rose and lit them. Then they stretched apart and moved by twos and threes, the scouts going ahead and whistling signals that it was safe for the next group to move.

The local militias were out, walking the dikes themselves, going from village to village. Several times, its patrols came within eyesight, and Nicholai’s party flattened themselves to the ground and belly-crawled, if they moved at all.

It was a deadly game of hide-and-seek in the moonlight, a match of stealth and wits. To Nicholai’s surprise, Solange was very good at it — she moved with a quicksilver grace and silence, and he laughed at himself when he remembered that she was not only Solange but the Cobra.

She is more experienced at this, he thought, than I am.

The night seemed to go forever, but they made about ten miles before the sky started to turn to the stony gray of predawn and they came to a long line of mulberries a half mile from a small hamlet.

Bay signaled them to lie and wait.

A few minutes later, Nicholai heard the single sharp whistle to come ahead and he quick-stepped in a slouch along the dike until he reached the relative safety of the tree line. There was a small clearing among the trees and there he saw Xue Xin.

161


“IT’S GOOD TO SEE YOU again,” Nicholai said.

“And you,” Xue Xin answered.

He looked so different now, in the light khaki jacket of a Viet Minh officer with a holstered pistol on his hip.

“You knew we’d meet again,” said Nicholai.

“I always knew it,” Xue Xin said. “I knew your true nature.”

More than I did, Nicholai thought.

His name wasn’t Xue Xin, of course, but Ai Quoc.

Nicholai saw it clearly now.

Quoc had controlled the operation and had counted on Nicholai to honor his deal with Colonel Yu.

“I knew,” Quoc continued, “that you would realize the truth and see things for what they are.”

“And now I want a life,” Nicholai said.

Quoc looked past him to see Solange and smiled. “We will do our best to get you out. It might require some patience on your part.”

“I have become the personification of patience.”

“Why do I have my doubts?”

“It must be your monklike wisdom,” Nicholai answered. “All that clipping of vines and deep breathing.”

The sky was turning a coral pink.

Quoc said, “We should be going.”

Nicholai walked up to Bay Vien. “Where are you going now?”

“Back to Saigon,” Bay answered, “to curse your name to the heavens for stealing my weapons and getting away with it.”

“Will they believe you?”

“Yes, or they’ll pretend to,” Bay said, “for a while longer, anyway. Then …”

He left it unfinished. It was obvious — no one knew the future, no man could say what his karma held in store for him.

“Goodbye,” Nicholai said. “I hope we see each other again in better times.”

“We will,” Bay answered.

Bay gathered his men and headed out.

“We need to go,” Quoc said. His soldiers, thirty-odd veterans, started to heft the crates on bamboo poles and were already walking north.

Quoc began to limp after them.

The airplane came out of the east.

162


WING GUNS BLAZING, strafing the tree line, it came in low and out of the sun.

Three Viet Minh went down like toy soldiers knocked off a shelf.

The shells splintered trees, spraying shards of wood like shrapnel.

Nicholai tackled Solange and lay on top of her. The ground shook under them from the vibrations of the low-flying plane.

“Go now!” Quoc yelled as the plane rose to come around for another strafing run.

Nicholai got to his feet and pulled

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