"I'll grant you that much sense. I'll even confess that I haven't made up my mind. In fact, there's no evidence indicating murder. I'm trying to tell you. This isn't a murder case. Not yet. Like I said downtown, all we're trying to do is find out who the man was and what happened."
"I wish you luck. But you will gain nothing by hounding me."
"Maybe not. But I'll remind you that there's a connection, a provable connection that'll hold up in court, between a dead man and a porcelain doll found in your possession." It would not hold up, really. A good lawyer would get the whole thing laughed out before the prosecutor went before the Grand Jury. But the old woman didn't need to know that.
"That'll have to be explained," he continued. "Really, what makes your position difficult is your mysteriousness."
She started to let herself out. Cash reached over, gripped her left hand with his right. "Please. You read the paper. You should have an idea what would happen if the media got ahold of a story like this. We're trying to keep them off, but if we don't get it cleaned up pretty quick, they'll get their hooks in. They could make a circus out of you. We're trying to protect your privacy as much as anything."
She wasn't mollified. "Thank you. And good-day, Sergeant." She took care of the car door and gate herself, leaving Cash with one foot still inside the vehicle as she stamped up her walk, a diminutive Fury.
Glancing round, Cash saw several neighbors watching. A teenager with ragged hair and beard spat, mouthed a silent "Pig."
Halfway to her door Miss Groloch stopped, turned, said, "If you want to find out what happened to Jack, look into the Egan Gang. Carstairs would not."
"Egan's Rats? He was connected?" But she was on her way again.
Carstairs's report hadn't mentioned Egan's Rats at all. But the gang had been powerful at the time, with Torrio and Purple Gang alliances, and O'Brien's belonging would explain how he had supported himself. Cash made a mental note to look into it.
He frowned the long-haired youth into his flat, then dumped himself into the car.
X. On the Z Axis;
21June l967;
A Company Scale Action
Whang! Whang! Whang!
The bullets did more damage to nerves than to the Huey. The AK47 couldn't punch through the ship's armor.
Michael clutched his M-16. John's fingers were white on his M-79.
Twenty-two was too young.
Then Wallace, who was at the open hatch talking back with the M-60, said, "Huh?" and stiffened. The machine gun kept firing, muzzle climbing.
John staggered over to help Sergeant Cherry drag the dead giant away from the weapon that had been his closest friend. Through the black man's nap he saw the rotor wash whipping the up-rushing grass of the landing zone.
The chopper shuddered, shook, flipped. Its main rotor played power mower for a fractional second.
"Ahshitmyarm!" John screamed as men and equipment piled onto him.
"Not again!" Michael yelled.
"Get the fuck out before the fuel goes!" Cherry ordered. "Come on! Move it! Cash, take care of Harald."
Oblivious to the gunfire, the men hauled one another through the hatchway. Michael got an arm around John and, crouching, firing with his left hand, dragged his friend away from the wreck. "Medic!"
Gunships ripped across the sky, sending their best to the little brown brothers behind the treeline. Air cavalrymen poured from the uninjured craft.
Wham-whoosh!
The force of the explosion threw them forward.
"Damn!" Michael snarled. "We didn't get Wallace out."
"He don't care. He was dead already."
"Lyndon Johnson, I love you, mein Fыhrer. How's the arm?"
"Hurts like hell. I think it's broke."
"That was a good coon. A bad motherfucker."
"Yeah."
"I hope the lieutenant does it. If he don't, I will."
"Write the letter?"
"Yeah."
Wallace had said, if he got skragged, send the announcement to his next of kin, George Corley, care of the Governor's Mansion, Montgomery, Alabama.
"What the fuck are we doing here, Michael? We had wives. We had deferments." Incoming mortar bombs crumped like a beaten bass drum with a loose head.
"You was the one who wanted to quit school and join the army." Cash peered into a cloudless sky so bright it hurt. "Here come the navy birdboys."
"I wasn't the one who said let's volunteer for Nam. I wanted to go to Germany. Remember?"
Napalm sunflowers blossomed among the trees. They only perturbed the brown brothers more. The volume of fire doubled.
"Them bastards were laying for us again."
Cherry came snaking through the grass. "How's the arm, Harald?"
"Okay, except a little broken." John groaned when the sergeant made sure the bone hadn't broken through the skin.
"Where's the grenade launcher? Lieutenant's got a machine gun that company says needs skragging."
"In the chopper."
"Shee-it. Great. Well, Cash, it's you and me hand-delivering it, then."
Michael unconsciously fingered a grenade. "What about John?"
"He'll be okay. All he's got to do is lay here and jack off. The dinks will be hauling ass out of here in fifteen minutes. They don't, the navy's going to splatter them from here to the Cambodian border. And the Arvans are coming up behind them."
The ADs began a second pass, this time firing rockets.
"So take it easy, John," said Michael, examining his weapon. It had a tendency to jam.
"You be careful. I need somebody to bring me flowers in the hospital."
"Hell of a way to get the Purple Heart." Cash's smile was a pale, nervous rictus. "What I'll bring is that little Le girl you liked so much. The one that works out of the Silver…"