She brought it to a stop with a brief screech of the tires. The policeman, who had been dozing on his feet, glanced up sharply and peered out the window of the booth.
As he approached, Kangmei shook her hair out from under the cap.
"Ni nar?" the policeman demanded-the universal inquiry of Marxist China.
Kangmei gave the name of a commune not far from her own birthplace. She told the policeman she was a barefoot doctor there.
"Are you a driver too?" The policeman eyed her. He did not have a flashlight so he stood very close, sticking his head through the window of the cab. In the flatbed, Tom Stratton held his breath.
"No, Comrade, I am not a driver. This truck is assigned to the commune." Kangmei made up a common name. "Children are sick, and so is the regular driver," she went on. "We have run out of medicine and I am going to get some more at the clinic in Chungzho." She fumbled in her blues for an imaginary piece of paper.
The policeman shrugged and waved her on.
"Xie xie, ni," Kangmei called in the earnest tones of a heroic worker. She pressed the accelerator, lifted her foot off the clutch-and promptly stalled the truck. Heart pounding, she wrestled with the stick shift. First gear. She could not find first gear. Again she tried to move the truck and again the engine died. Don't flood it, Stratton prayed from beneath the lumber and crates.
The policeman laughed and ambled back to the truck. "I hope you are a better doctor than you are a driver," he said. "Let me try."
"No, Comrade, I can do this," Kangmei said defiantly. "I must do this myself-for my commune." She turned the key, and from under the hood came a dying whine.
"Too much fuel in the carburetor," the policeman diagnosed. "Wait a few minutes and it will be fine." He opened the door to the cab. "Would you care to come in for a drink of tea?"
Kangmei reached for the door and slammed it. "No," she said sternly. "I must hurry, Comrade. I told you, the children are very sick."
Stratton had no idea what was being said. The slamming of the truck door alarmed him. Through the slats of the crate above his head, Stratton could see nothing but stars and wispy clouds. Gradually he levered himself up, turning his head slightly to gain a view of Kangmei. Suddenly the woodpile shifted and one of the vegetable crates fell, banging on the steel flatbed.
The policeman jumped at the noise. "What!" he said. "What was that?" He walked to the back of the truck and peered into the rubble of cargo. "Are you alone, driver?"
Kangmei twisted the key and jerked on the stick shift with all her strength.
This time the engine responded, and the truck surged forward.
"There, I did it!" she exclaimed.
The flustered policeman dashed ahead of the truck to lift the zebra-striped gate before it could be demolished.
"Xie xie, ni," Kangmei sang out as she drove past.
Stratton waited several miles before sitting up in the flatbed. Then he tapped on the rear window of the cab and signalled for Kangmei to pull over. She surrendered the driver's seat with a sigh of relief.
"Your father must be a very skilled man, to drive a truck like this," she said.
"I am sure it is a most important job."
"Well, it doesn't exactly put you at the top of the social ladder in America,"
Stratton said. "I'm not sure what you told that cop, but you must be a wonderful actress. And your driving isn't bad for a beginnner. My old man would approve."
Kangmei shyly turned away. Stratton tenderly stroked the back of her neck; her skin was warm velvet.
"Are there more road checks?"
"I don't think so," she replied distractedly. "None that I remember."
"Are you tired?"
"Just a little, Thom-as. You are the one who needs to sleep."
Stratton cruised slowly through the hillsides until he found what he was looking for. He drove the truck off the asphalt and steered it down a washboard track until it was out of sight from the road. He parked and turned off the lights.
Tall trees swallowed them into shadows.
"We can nap here for an hour, but no more. We must not be on the road after the sun comes up."
"Yes, we must finish the journey tonight." Kangmei took Stratton's hand and led him through the trees until they found a clearing. They lay down together on a natural mat of pine needles, ivy and crisp cedar leaves. Stratton closed his eyes; his mind fell, spinning through the clouds toward sleep. He barely felt Kangmei's hands, gently pulling his shirt off. He heard her soft footsteps fade into the forest.
He quivered out of sleep when the cold water drenched his thigh.
"Ssshh. Lie still, Thom-as." She sponged his face with a rag and kissed him on the forehead.
"There is a brook nearby, with clean water." Kangmei washed the bullet wound in Stratton's leg. She had pulled his trousers off. In the grayness of deep night, he lay pale and limp.
"We will see a doctor tomorrow," she whispered. "He will treat the leg properly."
Stratton smiled and reached up to capture her hand. Tenderly he kissed it. She looked down at him for a long moment, a young woman of timeless wisdom.
"Yes," Stratton said at last. "Please."
In silence, Kangmei stripped. Suddenly she was astride him, a velvet presence.
She moved gently at first, back and forth, until she found his lips, and then his neck. Stratton closed his eyes and held her fiercely as she sank down on him again and again.
Later, when they were in the truck again, Kangmei revealed her secret. It was as if she had saved it for Stratton, saved it for the end.
"After they dragged me from your room in Xian, I was delivered to the police," she began. "They were told I had been caught pilfering at a market. I was thrown into a cell with three other women. Each had been accused of stealing items from the Qin burial vaults. They were not mere peasants, but trusted workers on the site. Petty thieves, my father called them. Their arrests were part of a new campaign-banners, leaflets, announcements on the loudspeakers-all arranged by my father to show the ministry that he was cracking down against pilfering. It was a charade, Thom-as."
"But I saw a big article in the People's Daily," Stratton broke in.
Kangmei said, "Certainly there is a problem with stealing, but only a minor problem. The artifacts are worth a fortune by Chinese standards. One of the women in my cell admitted that she had stolen a bridle from one of the bronze horses. The bridle was made only of stone beads, not gold or silver. Still, she was able to sell it to a street peddler for a hundred yuan. The peddler probably sold it to a tourist for three or four times as much. Such things do happen."
"In our country, too."
"But, Thom-as, something bigger is happening at Xian. If these prisoners were telling the truth, then I know why Uncle David quarreled with my father. I know what he had found out. During the past several months, the Qin site has suffered three major thefts-the crimes are so enormous that they would create a terrible scandal in Peking. There would be a large investigation by the Ke Ge Bo. People would go to jail, or worse."
"What was stolen, Kangmei?"
"Soldiers. Three soldiers, Thom-as, on three different occasions. A spear carrier, an archer and a charioteer. They are among the most priceless treasures in Chinese history, buried with the Emperor Qin-and now missing."
"My God." Stratton's mind juggled the pieces of the puzzle. "David found out!"
"I think so," Kangmei said sadly. "That is why I do not think he is still alive, Thom-as, no matter what my father told you."
"No, don't you see? Wang Bin needs David more than ever now. He needs him to get out. It's only a matter of time before Peking discovers this theft, and your father knows this. There is nothing left for him to do but run."
Stratton coaxed more speed from the recalcitrant truck. Once Wang Bin learned that Stratton had escaped, he would act quickly. Quickly enough, and there was a good chance he would never be caught.
"Kangmei, what could your father have done with the clay soldiers?"