Asian Saga - King Rat - Asian Saga - King Rat Part 26
Library

Asian Saga - King Rat Part 26

"Huh?"

"Just a saying."It means 'Let's take a powder.'"

Happy now that they were friends once more, they started into the jungle. Crossing the road was easy. Now that they had passed the area patrolled by the roving guard, they followed a short path and were within quarter of a mile of the wire. The King led, calm and confident. Only the clouds of fireflies and mosquitoes made their progress unpleasant "Jesus. The bugs are bad."

"Yes. If I had my way I'd fry them all," Peter Marlowe whispered back.

Then they saw the bayonet pointing at them, and stopped dead in their tracks.

The Japanese was sitting leaning against a tree, and his eyes were fixed on them, a frightening grin stretching his face, and the bayonet was held propped on his knees.

Their thoughts were the same. Christ! Utram Road! I'm dead. Kill!

The King was the first to react. He leaped at the guard and tore the bayoneted rifle away, rolled as he twisted aside, then got to his feet, the rifle butt high to smash it into the man's face. Peter Marlowe was diving for the guard's throat. A sixth sense warned him and his clutching hands avoided the throat and he slammed into the tree.

"Get away from him!" Peter Marlowe sprang to his feet and grabbed the King and pulled him out of the way.

The guard had not moved. The same wide-eyed malevolent grin was on his face.

"What the hell?" the King gasped, panicked, the rifle still held high above his head.

"Get away! For Christ's sake hurry!" Peter Marlowe jerked the rifle out of the King's hands and threw it beside the dead Japanese. Then the King saw the snake in the man's lap.

"Jesus," he croaked as he went forward to take a closer look.

Peter Marlowe caught him frantically. "Get away! Run, for God's sake!"

He took to his heels, away from the trees, carelessly crashing through the undergrowth. The King raced after him, and only when they had reached the clearing did they stop.

"You gone crazy?" The King winced, his breathing torturing him. "It was only a goddam snake!"

"That was a flying snake," Peter Marlowe wheezed. "They live in trees. Instant death, old man. They climb the trees, then flatten their bodies and sort of spiral down to earth and fall on their victims. There was one in his lap and one under him. There was sure to be more 'cause they're always in nests."

"Jesus!"

"Actually, old man, we ought to be grateful to those bloody things," Peter Marlowe said, trying to slow his breathing. "That Jap was still warm. He hadn't been dead more than a couple of minutes. He would've caught us if he hadn't been bitten. And we should thank God for our quarrel. It gave the snakes time. We'll never be closer to pranging! To death! Never!"

"I don't ever want to see a goddam Jap with a goddam bayonet pointing at me in the middle of the goddam night again. C'mon. Better get away from here."

When they were in position near the wire, they settled down to wait. They couldn't make their dash to the wire yet. Too many people about. Always people walking about, zombies walking the camp, the sleepless and the almost asleep.

It was good to rest, and both felt their knees shaking and were thankful to be alive again.

Jesus, this has been a night, the King thought. If it hadn't been for Pete I'd be a dead duck. I was going to put my foot in the Jap's lap as I smashed down the rifle. My foot was six inches away. Snakes! Hate snakes. Sons of bitches!

And as the King calmed, his esteem for Peter Marlowe increased.

"That's the second time you saved my neck," he whispered.

"You got to the rifle first. If the Jap hadn't been dead, you'd've killed him. I was slow."

"Eh, I was just in front." The King stopped, then grinned. "Hey Peter. We make a good team. With your looks and my brains, we do all right."

Peter Marlowe began to laugh. He tried to hold it inside and rolled on the ground. The choked laughter and the tears streaming his face infected the King, and his laughter too began to contort him. At last Peter Marlowe gasped, "For Christ sake, shut up."

"You started it."

"I did not."

"Sure you did, you said, you said ..." But the King couldn't continue. He wiped the tears away. "You see that Jap? That son of a bitch was just sitting like an ape -"

"Look!"

Their laughter vanished.

On the other side of the wire Grey was walking the camp. They saw him stop outside the American hut. They saw him wait in the shadows, then look out across the wire, almost directly at them.

"You think he knows?" Peter Marlowe whispered. "Don't know. But sure as hell we can't risk going in for a while. We'll wait."

They waited. The sky began to lighten. Grey stood in the shadows looking at the American hut, then around the camp. The King knew from where Grey stood he could see his bed. He knew that Grey could see he wasn't in it. But the covers were turned back and he could be with the other sleepless, walking the camp. No law against being out of your bed. But hurry up, get to hell out of there, Grey.

"We'll have to go soon," the King said. "Light's against us."

"How about another spot?"

"He's got the whole fence covered, way up to the corner."

"You think there's been a leak - someone sneaked?"

"Could be. Maybe just a coincidence." The King bit his lip angrily.

"How about the latrine area?"

"Too risky."

They waited. Then they saw Grey look once more over the fence towards them and walk away. They watched him until he rounded the jail wall.

"May be a phony," the King said. "Give him a couple of minutes."

The seconds were like hours as the sky lightened and the shadows began to dissolve. Now there was no one near the fence, no one in sight.

"Now or never, c'mon."

They ran for the fence; in seconds they were under the wire and in the ditch.

"You go for the hut, Rajah. I'll wait."

"Okay."

For all his size the King was light on his feet and he swiftly covered the distance to his hut. Peter Marlowe got out of the ditch. Something told him to sit on the edge looking out of the camp over the wire. Then, from the corner of his eye, he saw Grey turn the corner and stop. He knew he had been seen immediately.

"Marlowe."

"Oh hello, Grey. Can't you sleep either?" he said, stretching.

"How long have you been here?"

"Few minutes. I got tired of walking so I sat down."

"Where's your pal?"

"Who?"

"The American," Grey sneered.

"I don't know. Asleep I suppose."

Grey looked at the Chinese type outfit. The tunic was torn across the shoulders and wet with sweat. Mud and shreds of leaves on his stomach and knees. A streak of mud on his face.

"How did you get so dirty? And why are you sweating so much? What're you up to?"

"I'm dirty because - there's no harm in a little honest dirt. In fact," Peter Marlowe said as he got up and brushed off his knees and the seat of his pants, "there is nothing like a little dirt to make a man feel clean when he washes it off. And I'm sweating because you're sweating. You know, the tropics-heat and all that!"

"What have you got in your pockets?"

"Just because you've a suspicious beetle brain doesn't mean that everyone is carrying contraband. There's no law against walking the camp if you can't sleep."

"That's right," Grey replied, "but there is a law against walking outside the camp."

Peter Marlowe studied him nonchalantly, not feeling nonchalant at all, trying to read what the hell Grey meant by that. Did he know? "A man'd be a fool to try that."

"That's right." Grey looked at him long and hard. Then he wheeled around and walked away.

Peter Marlowe stared after him. Then he turned and walked in the other direction and did not look at the American hut. Today, Mac was due out of hospital. Peter Marlowe smiled, thinking of Mac's welcome home present.

From the safety of his bed, the King watched Peter Marlowe go. Then he focused on Grey, the enemy, erect and malevolent in the growing light.

Skeletal thin, ragged pair of pants, crude native clogs, no shirt, his armband, his threadbare Tank beret. A ray of sunlight burned the Tank emblem in the beret, converting it from nothing into molten gold.

How much do you know, Grey, you son of a bitch? the King asked himself.

Book Three

Chapter 15.

It was just after dawn.

Peter Marlowe lay on his bunk in half-sleep.

Was it a dream? he asked himself, suddenly awake. Then his cautious fingers touched the little piece of rag that held the condenser and he knew it was not a dream.

Ewart twisted in the top bunk and groaned awake.

"Mahlu on the night," he said as he hung his legs over the bunk.

Peter Marlowe remembered that it was his unit's turn for the borehole detail. He walked out of the hut and prodded Larkin awake.

"Eh? Oh, Peter," Larkin said, fighting out of sleep. "What's up?"

It was hard for Peter Marlowe not to blurt out the news about the condenser, but he wanted to wait until Mac was there too, so he just said, "Borehole detail, old man."

"My bloody oath! What, again?" Larkin stretched his aching back, retied his sarong and slipped on his clogs.

They found the net and the five-gallon container and walked through the camp, which was just beginning to stir. When they reached the latrine area they paid no heed to the occupants and the occupants paid no heed to them.

Larkin lifted the cover off a borehole, Peter Marlowe quickly scooped the sides with the net. When he brought the net out of the hole it was full of cockroaches. He shook the net clean into the container and scraped again. Another fine haul.

Larkin replaced the cover and they moved to the next hole.

"Hold the thing still," Peter Marlowe said. "Now look what you did! I lost at least a hundred."

'There's plenty more," Larkin said with distaste, getting a better grip on the container.

The smell was very bad but the harvest rich. Soon the container was packed. The smallest of the cockroaches measured an inch and a half. Larkin clamped the lid on the container and they walked up to the hospital.

"Not my idea of a steady diet," Peter Marlowe said.

"You really ate them, Peter, in Java?"

"Of course. And so have you, by the way. In Changi."

Larkin almost dropped the container. "What?"

"You don't think I'd pass on a native delicacy and a source of protein to the doctors and not take advantage of it for us, do you?"

"But we had a pact!" Larkin shouted. "We agreed, the three of us, that we'd not cook anything weird without telling the other first."

"I told Mac and he agreed."

"But I didn't, dammit!"

"Oh come on, Colonel! We've had to catch them and cook them secretly and listen to you say how good the cook-up was. We're just as squeamish as you."