Finding Moon - Part 19
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Part 19

"You look sad," Osa said. "I think you are remembering something unhappy."

"Oh, no," Moon said. "Just thinking."

"Of your mother," Osa said. "I remember today is the day you said they would have her in the surgery. She is all alone. Of course you worry about her."

"There's nothing I could do if I were there."

"You would hold her hand," Osa said.

"I should finish here and go back and help Rice," Moon said. Actually there wasn't much he could do right now to help. Rice was stripping the heavy stuff out of the copter he had chosen for their rescue project. There had seemed to be plenty to choose from in the R. M. Air repair hangar, ranging from a little Cayuse too small for their purpose to a huge banana-shaped Vertol Chinook with its twin rotors, which was obviously too large. In between were four Hueys, familiar to Moon from his days with the Armored, an ugly Cobra in camouflage paint, and a Bell Kiowa. All stood on wheeled dollies. Some were obviously in the throes of repair, with panels removed and parts missing. The Kiowa seemed ready to go, but Rice had picked one of the Hueys. It had apparently been left behind by the U.S. Navy, and its original Marine Corps markings showed through the Vietnamese paint job.

"I remember this one," Rice had said. "The radar's off waiting for parts to come down from Saigon, but we won't need radar, and these navy models were modified to increase the range."

Moon had said he hadn't thought they would need the range either. Weren't they just hopping over the border thirty minutes into Cambodia?

"You hear that artillery upriver a while ago?" Rice had asked. "We may not be able to get back here to refuel." What then? Moon had said. And Rice had shrugged and said the best bet would probably be to try for Thailand. So now Rice was removing the machine gun mounts and, as he put it, "everything else that us peace-loving neutrals don't need to get us the h.e.l.l out of here." The less weight, the more miles, Rice had said.

Now Moon was aware that Osa had been staring at him. "Or maybe you were thinking of your sweetheart," she said. "You must be missing her."

"No," Moon said. He chuckled and shook his head, thinking how Osa, who often was so uncannily right about what was on his mind, could be so wrong on this one. He tried to imagine how he'd deal with Debbie in this damp, odorous warehouse. Or how Debbie would deal with him. And with Rice, and Mr. Lee and the others.

"Not missing her?" Osa was looking surprised. He guessed she hadn't expected his amus.e.m.e.nt.

"It's not the kind of relationship you'd normally expect. I own a house. The bank and I own it. I rent out two of the rooms: one to a man who works with me at the newspaper and one to Debbie. Well-" He couldn't think how to finish this explanation. How much had he said when he had that fever?

"Just s.e.x then?" Osa said, looking very wise. "I don't think so. When you were so sick you talked about when you would get married. You talked about love."

Moon found himself embarra.s.sed. "Did I?"

Osa too. Her face was flushed. "I apologize," she said. "I am sorry. This is not my business. Why am I prying into your private life? This is terrible of me. Don't answer any of my questions. I am terribly sorry."

"No, no. It's all right."

Osa wasn't saying anything. Moon suspected she might be crying. Or trying not to cry. Why not? Fatigue. Fear. Dirt. Discomfort. Worry about her brother. Too d.a.m.n much stress for a woman. Too d.a.m.n much stress for Moon too. He wasn't going to look at her. What was her last question?

"Sometimes love and marriage don't go together," he said. "Sometimes other things have to be considered. For example, my mother married a man she didn't love. Her second husband."

"Oh," Osa said. She made a sniffing sound. Trying not to cry, Moon thought.

"How about you?" he asked. "You ever think about marrying somebody you didn't love? Or not marrying somebody you did love? Or any combination of the above?"

"Yes," Osa said.

"Which one?"

"I guess it was a combination of the above. I was going to marry him, but he went away."

"What happened to him?"

"I don't know. He didn't come back."

Well, at least she wasn't crying anymore. But Moon didn't know exactly how to stop this.

"Was this recently?"

"I was nineteen," she said. "Going to school in Jakarta. He was a teacher there. He taught French."

Moon digested that. Or thought he had. "I think something like that would happen to Debbie," he said. "She's a very pretty girl. Small and blond. The kind of girl that when she walks into a room all the men look at her. But she doesn't use her head. She picks the wrong kind of man and she's going to get dumped. Have her heart broken."

Osa said, "You are a very funny man," and when he looked at her, surprised, she was laughing at him.

She reached out and squeezed his hand. "Men," she said.

"What do you mean?"

She laughed again. "I mean you don't understand women."

"Like how?"

"That's not what happened to me at all. That's not what's happened with Debbie."

"How the h.e.l.l do you know?" said Moon. He was not in the mood to be a source of Osa's amus.e.m.e.nt.

"Of course I don't know," she said. "You see, I am doing it again. I'm sorry. We will not talk about it any longer."

"Well," Moon began, but the noise of an approaching vehicle interrupted him. For a former sergeant in an armored outfit it was a familiar noise. A tracked vehicle, which meant armor. Here that meant trouble.

He stood out of sight at the truck entry door of the warehouse. An armored personnel carrier wearing mottled gray-green camouflage paint splashed with mud had stopped with its nose almost touching the gate in the high wire fence that barred access to the compound. Rice was hurrying out of the hangar toward it. As Moon watched, Lum Lee emerged from the door of the little Quonset hut that housed the R. M. Air offices. Mr. Lee stood just outside, watching.

"What is it?" Osa whispered. She was standing just behind him.

"Technically, it's a Model One-hundred-thirteen armored personnel carrier," Moon said. "Armed with one fifty-caliber machine gun on that little mounting on the roof. The one we drove had two benches, six men on each side with their gear stacked in the middle. Driver jammed in against the engine, peeking out through dirty bulletproof gla.s.s and no headroom for anyone to stand up unless the roof hatches were open."

Rice seemed to think it was good news. He unfastened the chain holding the heavy gate. A small man wearing the U.S. Army-model helmet of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam and an officer's uniform climbed out of the roof mounting, hopped off the vehicle, and walked through the gate ahead of it. Rice thrust out his hand.

"Looks all right so far," Moon said.

Then he saw the ARVN officer was holding a pistol. Rice's gesture seemed to have been defensive.

"No," Moon said. "Not so good."

"A pistol," Osa said, voice hushed.

The rear hatch of the armored personnel carrier dropped and a soldier emerged, also in an officer's uniform, carrying an Ml6 rifle. And then the entourage was moving, with Rice, Lum Lee, and two officers in front, and the APC coming along slowly behind them. The men walked into the hangar. The APC parked, the engine died, and a soldier wearing a fatigue cap and carrying a rifle climbed out. He stretched, scratched his hip, and leaned against the vehicle.

"What should we do?" Osa asked.

"I'd say wait. See what happens."

"But-" She didn't finish the thought.

"These are the good guys," Moon said. "R. M. Air was fixing helicopters for them. Maybe they heard the place had been evacuated so they came by to see what's going on."

"Perhaps so," Osa said. "But he pointed a pistol at Mr. Rice."

"Yeah, I noticed." He and Osa should be looking for a place to hide. Under the bales stacked against the wall. Or in the bales. "Our best bet is to get our things together and be ready in case we need to be. Sort of clean this place up."

"In case they shoot Mr. Rice and Mr. Lee and come looking to see if there is someone else to shoot?"

"Well, yes," Moon said. He picked up his rice bowl and his map, put them both in his bag, and looked around the floor for any other traces that they'd been there.

"We could hide over there," Osa said, indicating the mountainous stacks of burlap bags.

"You watch," Moon said. "Don't leave any evidence we're here. I'll make us a hiding place."

He moved enough bags to make a narrow crevice against the wall, put his bag in the back of it, and added Osa's baggage to the cache. He was arranging two sacks atop the pile to be pulled down behind them when he heard an engine starting.

Osa was standing just inside the doorway, pointing. Moon saw Mr. Lee, looking very wet, climbing the steps into the warehouse. The dolly holding Rice's favored Huey had been rolled out onto the landing pad. The rotor blades turned slowly. Rice was at the controls beside the officer with the pistol. The engine revved, fell to a purr, revved again. As the copter blades picked up speed, the officer with the rifle climbed in through the side door and motioned for the soldier to join them. He ran from the APC, ducked under the rotors, and pulled himself in.

Mr. Lee stood beside them now, watching the copter rise and make a sharp turn out over the Mekong. Over the noise of its engine came the hard crackling sound of automatic rifle fire.

"I believe the Yellow Tiger Battalion has lost one of its company commanders, the leader of its intelligence platoon, and one of its soldiers," Mr. Lee said.

"And have we lost Rice?" Moon asked. "Or is he going to fly them to safety and then come back for us?"

"I think Mr. Rice will not be back," Mr. Lee said. "And I think we should find a place to hide ourselves."

Through the doorway, Moon saw two men slipping through the gate. They carried automatic rifles and wore the black pajamas and conical hats he'd seen in war movies. Five men followed, heading for the hangar.

"Right over here," Moon said, pointing to the great pile of bales. "And hurry."

HANOI, North Vietnam, April 28-(Agence France-Presse) A spokesman for the foreign office here said today that the proposal of the new president of South Vietnam for a negotiated peace had "come too late" and that the war would be ended by "a military solution."

MOON SAT ON A SACK OF SOMETHING heavy but soft, with his arms hugged around his knees, wondering if it had been proper to have jammed Osa in the very back of their cubbyhole. He'd done it to improve her safety, but that was accomplished at the price of increasing her discomfort. Putting Mr. Lee in the middle in recognition of his age gave Moon the spot adjoining the sacks that closed the entrance of their cave. There it was more s.p.a.cious but would be most dangerous if their Vietcong visitors detected them and decided to shoot into the cave-although Moon doubted if AK-47 bullets would penetrate whatever it was (probably rice) that filled the sacks. Would Victoria Mathias have approved of his decisions? A nice ethical question, and better than thinking about a lot of other things.

Moon did not want to think about how the h.e.l.l they were going to get out of this mess.

By twisting his head, Moon could peer through a narrow s.p.a.ce between the sacks and observe a little of the outside world. The most interesting thing he could see was the bottom two-thirds of the Vietcong standing beside the pile of bales across the warehouse. This person wore the traditional VC attire-loose black trousers. His were torn at one knee, wet, and muddy. He sat on one of the bales, rested a U.S. Army-issue M16 rifle against it, balanced a small bowl on his left knee, and began eating from it with his fingers. Now Moon could see almost all of this fellow. By leaning far forward and pulling down on the burlap of the bag in front of him, Moon could also see another black-clad leg. The man with the bowl was old and frail with a kindly face and a ragged mustache that he brushed aside to insert a little ball of rice into his mouth. His hair was short, in what Victoria Mathias had called a "bowl haircut" when she administered them to her sons.

What would this old rice fanner do if Moon pushed back the sack, emerged, and introduced himself? Any impulse Moon might have had to find out died. The man turned his face toward the owner of the leg sitting beside him, revealing that most of his right ear was missing. The area was pink and rough, and from it toward the corner of the old man's mouth ran a series of round, puckered scars. Cigarettes held against the skin, Moon thought.

The old man stopped eating and began talking. He evoked a response. A woman's voice responded.

The old man produced a clasp knife from his pants, unfolded it, cut a small slit in the sack, and extracted a palmful of brown rice kernels. He showed these to someone, said something, and laughed.

Moon felt a poke in the back: Mr. Lum Lee signaling for attention. Mr. Lee pointed to his own ear to indicate listening. Of course, Moon thought. Mr. Lee was Vietnamese. He'd understand. Moon pressed back against the sacks to allow Lee to squeeze his small, bony frame past him.

The motion produced a fresh flood of perspiration, which dripped from his eyebrows, his nose, and his chin and ran down his back and his chest. His hair was wet with it and had been since long before dawn. When they left the blue water of the sea and entered the brown water of the Mekong they had sailed into a kind of heavy humid heat Moon had never known.

"You must take a lot of water," Mr. Lee had told him as they left Glory of the Sea. the Sea. "You're big. You will sweat. You must drink more water and take salt too." They had loaded four fuel cans of water onto the sh.o.r.e boat, and Moon had been drinking like a camel all day. Still he felt a ferocious thirst. "You're big. You will sweat. You must drink more water and take salt too." They had loaded four fuel cans of water onto the sh.o.r.e boat, and Moon had been drinking like a camel all day. Still he felt a ferocious thirst.

He glanced at Osa. She sat head down, eyes closed, the face of a person enduring. Even in the dim light filtering in between sacks and the warehouse wall he could see her face was glistening with sweat. He tapped her knee, produced what he hoped was a rea.s.suring grin, and received a faint smile in return.

The sound of a shout reached him, then more shouting, followed by laughter. Something clattered.

Then a voice very, very close said something loud. Then came a long discourse in a loud, commanding voice. The sound of an order barked out just above them. Moon held his breath. He gripped Osa's knee. More voices, distant now. Then a dragging, sc.r.a.ping sound. Then silence.

Moon exhaled. Released Osa's knee. Looked at Lum Lee. Mr. Lee signaled silence. They listened. Nothing. Perspiration ran from Moon's eyebrow to the corner of his eye, causing it to sting. A bead of sweat dropped from his nose and was replaced by another. Heat and silence surrounded them.

"They are gone," Mr. Lee said.

Mr. Lee was right. The dragging, sc.r.a.ping sound they'd heard had been produced by the Vietcong closing the sliding warehouse door behind them. Moon slid it open an inch and peered out. The muddy yard was empty of people. The APC stood at the hangar entrance, shiny with rainwater. Also shiny with rainwater was the copter landing pad, reminding Moon that George Rice had flown away with their only hope of getting out of here. He pushed the door open another inch, his fingers touching paper tacked to its outside surface.

He detached it. It was handwritten with a felt-tipped marker pen in a language strange to Moon. He handed it to Lum Lee.

"Ah," Lee said. "This warehouse, the rice it contains, and all its other contents are taken into the custody of the Revolutionary Committee of An Loc. Any trespa.s.s or theft will be subject to punishment by the court of the people."

"Right," Moon said. "What were they talking about before they left?"

Lee nodded, opened his mouth to respond, and then sat suddenly on one of the sacks. He was gray with exhaustion. Osa put her hand on his shoulder. "You are not well?" she said.

"Tired," Lee said. "Just tired." He looked up at Moon. "At first the man who had been tortured- the man with the ear sliced off and the burned face-he was telling the woman the mistakes they had made in getting here too late to capture the helicopter. He said the helicopter might be useful to the Yellow Tiger Battalion in holding a bridge somewhere upriver. But he said he thought the puppet soldiers who took it would use it to run away from the fight." He offered Moon a weak smile. "I think he is absolutely correct."

"So do I," Moon said. "Is that why they were laughing?"

"They opened some of the bales," Mr. Lee said. "One of them had opium b.a.l.l.s buried in the copra."

Moon exhaled. "Opium," he said.

"In the raw form," Mr. Lee said. "They tap the poppies in Burma. In the mountains. Boil it down into tar and roll it into b.a.l.l.s. Then they wrap the b.a.l.l.s in cloth and move it down into Cambodia. Then it is either-"

Mr. Lee became aware of Moon's expression. He stood silent a moment, cleared his throat.

"I believe Mr. Rice told us that this warehouse was owned by an ARVN general," Mr. Lee said.

"Yes," Moon said. "That's what Rice told us. What else did you hear?"

"A little bit later several people came in," Mr. Lee continued. "A woman speaking now. She told the old man that they had heard on the Saigon radio that the Americans were evacuating their emba.s.sy building in Saigon. They talked about a big mob of city people, the ones who had helped the Americans, fighting each other and trying to get into the emba.s.sy grounds and the American marines keeping them away, and helicopters flying in and landing on the roof and flying away with the Americans."

"The fat lady sang," Moon said.

Mr. Lee stared at him.