Выбрать главу

"What was your part supposed to be?"

"When I was told, I was to blow things up."

"What things?"

"Whatever things I was told."

"What were you told?"

"I was not told! What manner of terrorist would I be if I fell into enemy hands and told of my mis­sions?"

"A valuable one," said the mummy Asian.

That sunk in.

"Then I am not valuable?'' asked Mohamet.

"Not to us," said the Westerner.

"You are going to kill me?"

"Nope. You're going to commit suicide."

"I wish to die. I admit this. Paradise calls to me. But I have no intention of committing suicide unless in doing so I can take infidels with me. That is not my mission. I am a suicide mailman, not a fool."

"Maybe you're both."

"I do not see how."

Then the Westerner picked him up bodily and tossed him over the spread-winged eagle.

Mohamet Ali saw the pavement come rushing up to meet him, and his last conscious thought before his head pulped against hard Western concrete was,

the roof by the back way and melted into the surging crowds.

"This may be easier than we thought," Remo was saying. "We know where the Deaf Mullah is. All we have to do is take him out."

"Smith's missions are never simple," Chiun said.

"This one will be."

"You wish."

They were moving back to the heart of the com­motion at the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Summer Street. As the police pushed back the crowd to clear the way, an ambulance came scooting up Atlantic.

"What is the hurry?" asked Chiun. "He is dead."

"I think they want to scoop him up so the cameras can't telecast every drop of blood."

"What kind of cretins enjoy the sight of blood?"

"People who don't have to deal with it every day like you and me," Remo growled.

Chiun nodded, his hazel eyes roving. Abruptly they narrowed. A hiss escaped his papery lips.

Remo spotted Tamayo Tanaka almost as quickly. She was standing before a mobile microwave TV van,

a Channel 4 microphone floating before her sensual red lips.

Her crisp words floated to their ears, thanks to their ability to filter out unwanted sounds and focus on the important.

"...unimpeachable information that the United States Postal Service has been infiltrated by Muslim terrorists bent on global domination, wholesale rap­ine and pillage and deeds even more unwholesome."

She touched her earphone connection to listen to the on-air anchor.

"Yes, Muslim terrorists. Not militia, as reported elsewhere. Nor a breakaway faction of the postal union."

Remo said to Chiun, "Nice going, Little Father. She's starting a panic."

"It is not my fault," Chiun said stiffly.

Over at the remote truck, Tamayo Tanaka said, "Back to you, Janice," and flipped her mike to a sound man, who had to tackle it so it didn't break on hard pavement.

She was touching up her makeup when Remo and Chiun suddenly appeared on either side of her.

"I thought you needed at least three sources to go on the air with something like that?" Remo de­manded.

Tamayo didn't even look up from her compact mirror. "Well, you're two of them."

"Not on the record."

"And I'm the third," she added. "My numbers are good, which translates as automatic credibility."

"What if we're all wrong?" demanded Remo.

"Then a weekend anchor gives a fifteen-second re­traction, and all the important careers go on. Are my eyes on straight?"

"One is drooping," Chiun said.

"Which one?"

"Figure it out," said Remo. "By the way, you owe us a twenty for the cab ride."

"It was my cab. You hijacked it. Be thankful I didn't kick you out."

"You know, you remind me of Cheeta Ching."

Tamayo grinned broadly. "She's my hero. I'm go­ing to be the next her."

"The last her was pretty hard to take."

"Fly to any city in the country, and you'll find at least one Asian anchor, all competing to take Cheeta Ching's place in the constellation that is network news. And I just took a major step up the golden lad­der."

She pressed her lips together, thought them too red and reached over to take the sound man by the sleeve of his white shirt. The sound man was busy coiling up the mike line and didn't notice he'd been hijacked un­til Tamayo delicately dabbed her mouth with his sleeve.

"Just right," she said, returning the arm. "Too red, and I look like a Ginza hooker on the make."

"Go with the feeling," said Remo. "Come on, Lit­tle Father."

From South Station, it was a straight subway run to Quincy, so they filtered through the emergency- services people and grabbed a Red Line train.

From the North Quincy T stop, it was a short walk home to Castle Sinanju, a converted church.

Remo used the kitchen telephone to report to Har­old Smith. "Good news and bad news," said Remo. "Which do you want first?"

"The bad," said Smith.

"No surprise there. A local TV nitwit named Ta­mayo Tanaka just went public that Muslim terrorists have infiltrated the postal service."

Smith's lemony voice was now sounding startled. "What is the source of her information?"

"I think Chiun can explain that," said Remo, holding the phone down for the Master of Sinanju's convenience.

The Master of Sinanju grabbed the receiver in both hands and squeaked, "It is an impenetrable mystery without explanation. Do not attempt to fathom it lest you succumb to madness."

Remo took the phone back and said, "She got it out of him."

"She has no other sources for this?"

"No, but that doesn't seem to faze her much."

Smith vented a sigh like a creaking barn door. "What is the good news?'' he asked.

"The terrorist gave up the name of his master­mind."

"Yes?"

"Ever hear of the Deaf Mullah?"

"He is in prison."

"So is John Gotti. And I hear he can still get things done with a phone call."

"This is very useful," said Smith. "If we isolate the Deaf Mullah from outside contact, we can hobble this conspiracy overnight."

"How's the roundup going?" "The FBI has in custody seven of the principal sus­pects."

"That's a good dent. Anything we can do on this end?"

"Stand by. I am working on the composite sketch of Joe Camel."

"This is one terrorist I'd like to see in the flesh," Remo grunted.

"This may yet happen," said Smith, terminating the call.

Replacing the receiver, Remo said, "What say we catch up with the events of the day?"

"Only if we watch the proper Woo," Chiun said thinly.

"After Tamayo Tanaka," said Remo, "I'll take any Woo I can get."

Chapter 22

In his private quarters in the al-Bahlawan Mosque in the upper reaches of Ohiostan, the Deaf Mullah sat before his computer terminal, his ear trumpet resting on the carpet beside him, his loyal Afghan guards ar­rayed outside, with their Russian rifles and their sharp scimitars.

Here was the perfect method of communications with his network of Especially for one to whom the entire world of sound rang and rang. Tin­nitus, the Red Cresent doctors had called it. The re­sult of the premature explosion of a bomb meant for the godless modern pharaoh of Egypt. Lies. It was the voice of Allah, believed the Deaf Mullah, to whom the incessant hardship was a spur to press forward his mission on earth.

The nightly contacts were coming in now, from Chicagostan, from Washingtonstan, from Los Angelestan—all major cities where his could wreak great, Allah-blessed terror and destruction.