Выбрать главу

Remo was doing his best to ignore her. Chiun wouldn't let him.

"She is talking to you," the old man said blandly. He was staring out at the left wing.

"I know. But can't we pretend she isn't?" Remo asked. "I've had to put up with it the last six thousand miles."

"No," Chiun replied. "Because then she might try talking to me."

"Now, now," Amanda admonished, wagging a finger at the Master of Sinanju. "I know you're not the grumpy Gus you pretend to be."

There was a flash of silk, so fast Amanda didn't see it. Remo barely managed to snatch her hand out of the way of Chiun's razor-sharp fingernails.

"Oh," Amanda said softly. "Oh, my."

Remo's hands as they held hers were strong, but not coarse. They were the hands of a real man and not those of the perfumed sons of privilege she had dated all her life. She felt a shudder of electricity shoot through her as Remo held tight for a few lingering moments. For an instant in her tripping heart she wondered if he felt it, too.

"Hey, headlights, if you don't want a stump where your rings used to go, you'll refrain from cheesing off the pissy old Korean guy." He let her go. Amanda wasn't sure what to think. She'd definitely felt something. And while this Remo was a barbarian and, worse, an employee, there was something raw and primal about him.

"I thought we were getting a little better acquainted," she ventured hesitantly.

"Nope," Remo said. "Just didn't want your blood squishing up my new shoes."

She pouted her perfect lips. "Afraid of commitment, I see," she complained.

Remo gave her a baleful look. "Is this you coming on to me? 'Cause if it is, I wish you'd go back to yelling."

Across the aisle, the Master of Sinanju huffed angrily. "And I wish this craft would crash and spare me from having to listen to either of you," he groused, getting to his feet.

Amanda was sending a hectoring finger back his way when Remo intercepted it. With a disapproving harrumph, Chiun glided up the aisle and sank into an empty seat.

"Can't keep your hands to yourself, can you?" Amanda said, doe-eyed optimism returning.

"Put it back in your pants, Amanda," Remo said as he let go of her hand. "Besides, I'm just the help, remember?"

He got up and moved across the aisle to the seat Chiun had vacated. Amanda followed him.

"I've dated the help before," Amanda confided.

"The pool boy, some gardeners. About a dozen drivers."

"Beats a cash bonus, I guess," Remo said. "Assuming you keep your yap shut during. Which I doubt."

He got up and sat in his original seat. Getting up once more to follow, Amanda settled back into hers. "Why are you running away, Remo?" she asked. "What are you men so afraid of?"

"The usual stuff. Commitment leading to long-term relationship leading to me not being able to watch The Three Stooges in peace because you're harping at me to trim the hedges and take the cat to the vet. You want a window into a guy's mind? That's it."

Amanda's face darkened and she folded her arms. "It wasn't like I was proposing or anything," she grumbled.

"You certainly were not," a squeaky voice chimed in from farther up the cabin. "I am having a difficult enough time explaining you, Remo. When you finally do wed, it will be to a Korean maiden, not some melon-dugged ghost face. Besides, this one is damaged goods."

Amanda was embarrassed enough already. When Remo responded she felt like melting into her seat. "How you figure that, Little Father?" he called.

"She was left at the-altar," Chiun called back. "Do you not listen? She keeps going on about it."

Amanda's face grew horrified. "I was not," she insisted to the nearest person, a passing Brazilian stewardess who had no idea what was being said.

"He was probably marrying her for those millions she keeps going on about," Remo said to Chiun.

"I was not left at the altar," Amanda hissed. "There was some ...unpleasantness at my sister Abigail's wedding. That's all I said. You two are the ones who don't listen."

"I listen perfectly," Chiun said. "You talk wrong."

Remo shrugged. "Sue me for only listening to every fourth word," he said. "I'm taking a nap." Reclining his seat, he closed his eyes.

Amanda couldn't believe his nerve. The way both of these men acted it was as if she was their servant and not the other way around. She hoped that by hiring them to protect her, Daddy was signaling a thawing in his attitude toward her. The quality of help he was employing had obviously taken a dramatic downturn since she'd been frozen out of family affairs. She wanted to give him an earful before the inheritance she was counting on was completely frittered away.

Casting a last, longing look at Remo's slumbering form, she turned her eyes back to the window and the lush majesty of the Brazilian rain forest.

THEIR PLANE TOUCHED down in Macapa early in the afternoon. Remo and Chiun waited until the few other passengers on board had deplaned before gliding down the retractable stairs and out into the eighty-degree heat.

The air in Macapa was like a hot shower in July. The humidity was already soaking Amanda's blouse by the time she stepped off the plane.

"There's no one here to carry my bags," she said.

"Yeah, how 'bout that," Remo said.

Frowning at Remo, she looked to Chiun.

"The Master of Sinanju does not lift," he sniffed. "I can vouch for him on that one. No luggage, no bodies, no nothing. But don't worry. We'll wait." Scowling, Amanda collected her suitcases alongside the other passengers.

"A gentleman would help me carry these," she growled as she struggled under the pile of pink Gucci.

"I think I saw one over there," Remo said. "Lemme see if we can catch him."

He and Chiun struck off for the small terminal. Amanda puffed to catch up.

"If you're my bodyguards, you should stay with me," she complained. She adjusted a suitcase strap that was biting into her shoulder. "I've got half a mind to- Hey."

Remo heard the sound of luggage thudding to pavement. When he turned, Amanda was standing stock-still up to her ankles in suitcases. She pointed to the private hangars beyond the terminal.

"That's the CCS jet," she said. She blew a clump of damp stringy brown hair from her face.

Remo looked back to where a sleek white jet peeked out from a shadowed hangar door.

"You sure?" he asked. One jet looked like the rest to him.

Even standing on a South American airport runway in sweat-stained, off-the-rack clothes and amid a pile of ragged seven-year-old luggage, the girl who had grown up on jets still managed a look of supreme Lifton condescension.

"Okay, so you're sure," Remo said. "Stay put."

"I'm standing out in the open in broad daylight, you idiot," Amanda snapped.

"So what do you want from me? Weave a little. Come on, Little Father."

Amanda was hauling her luggage straps back up over her shoulders and cursing under her breath as the two Masters of Sinanju headed over to the long, flat building.

The big hangar door was rolled open wide. When they paused near the corrugated steel wall, they sensed no one inside.

"I smell oil," Remo said. "Not more than normal, though."

Chiun was peering in at the shadowed ceiling of the hangar. "There are none of those devices for spraying acid," he observed. His hands sought refuge in the voluminous sleeves of his kimono.

Remo glanced across the tarmac. Amanda was halfway toward them, lugging her heavy bags.

"Let's hope it just doesn't mean there's a whole new surprise inside," Remo muttered.

Without another word, the two men slipped around the wall of the hangar and disappeared inside.

FROM THE MACAPA airport security shed, Herr Hahn watched the two Masters of Sinanju duck inside the hangar.

He was sweating and panting as he sat in his chair. It wasn't fear, but exertion. He almost hadn't gotten here before them. Even now his own private jet was cooling down on the other side of the airport.