Sheila went into the air with the thrust of Remo's legs, turning a lazy half-somersault. Like a cat, she twisted her body on the way to earth, to land on her feet.
Instead she landed on a spike of cut sugar cane, which, like a spear, buried itself in Sheila Feinberg's stomach.
Almost in slow motion, as Remo watched, her body slid down the bamboolike spike. It exited from her back, bloodied, raw bits of flesh stuck to it.
She was dying and looked at him with not pain but bewilderment, the look unreasoning animals get when they encounter the reality of their own death.
Remo rolled to his feet and walked toward Sheila Feinberg.
She gestured to him with a hand, moving jerkily, like a pantomimist aping a robot.
"I've got to tell you something," she hissed. "Come here."
Remo knelt near Sheila to listen. As he did her teeth opened wide and she drove her mouth toward his open throat. But she was slow now. With the passing of life had gone her speed. Remo just leaned back and her teeth closed harmlessly on air. Her face fell back down into the dirt.
Remo stood and looked down as she breathed her last.
"Sorry, but that's the biz, sweetheart," he said.
Suddenly he felt fatigue wash over his body, like a giant wave engulfing a swimmer. He wanted to sleep, to rest, and when he awakened, to rededicate his body to Sinanju. But there was something he had to do first, or there would never be any rest for him.
The flames had died but the field still smoldered when Chiun and Smith arrived a few minutes later in the rented jeep that had met them at the airport. The rental agent for the jeeps on the island had remembered well the blonde woman with the cage and instructions to the farmhouse were simple and direct.
Remo was standing in the field, his back to them, as they approached.
The naked body of Sheila Feinberg lay on its back on the ground in front of him. The gash in her stomach had opened even wider, and when Remo turned to them, Smith saw his hands were red with blood.
Remo smiled when he saw Chiun.
"Are you all right?" Smith asked.
"I'm fine. She wasn't pregnant," Remo said and walked back to the farmhouse to wash.
Chiun walked along behind him, matching him step for step.
"Look at you," he said. "Fat. You're fat. Fat, fat, fat."
"I know, Little Father," Remo said. "I've learned something."
"It will be the first time. And do you know how much I spent on candles for you?"
Remo stopped and looked at Chiun. "Doing death rituals? I know something about Sinanju, Little Father. I know that's only for blood of your own blood."
"Your life was so worthless, I thought I would ennoble your death," said Chiun, peevishly. "Then you went and didn't die on me. All those candles are ruined."
"We'll get you some more," Remo said. "You know, Chiun, even though I'm not much, you're lucky to have me as a son. It must be good to have a son."
"It's good to have a good son," Chiun said. "But one like you is like no son at all. Really, Remo, you have no consideration at all."
"Fat, too. Don't forget that."
When Remo came out of the farmhouse, Smith had just finished inspecting the woman's body.
"Was this Sheila Feinberg?" he asked.
"That's her," said Remo.
Smith nodded. "Well, at least she won't be making any more tiger people. Did you, by any chance, find out the names of any of the ones still in Boston?"
"No," said Remo.
"Well, when you go back there, I guess you can clean them up kind of quickly. Especially now that you know how they behave."
"I'm not going back there, Smitty," Remo said.
"But they're still there. Still killing," Smith said.
"They'll stop soon. They're almost done."
"You sound sure," Smith said.
"I am. I told you, she wasn't pregnant."
Remo would say no more. He was silent riding in the jeep to the airstrip where Smith's private jet waited for them.
In the plane, Chiun spoke to him softly.
"She was changing back, wasn't she?" he said.
Remo nodded. "How did you know?"
"Her body. It had lost its grace. That thing could not move like the thing that took you from the sanitarium last week."
"You're right, Little Father," Remo said. "She had been throwing up her meals. She thought it was morning sickness and pregnancy. But it wasn't. It was her body rejecting the change. Her shape was changing too and she was losing strength. She was on her way back."
"So the others in Boston, they will change back too," Chiun said.
"That's right. So I guess we can just leave them alone."
Smith joined them as Chiun said, "Still it was not a bad attempt. If we could make it permanent, we could get some of this NDA..."
"DNA," said Smith.
"Correct," said Chiun. "Do you have some?"
"No," Smith said.
"Could you get us a bottle?"
"I don't think they sell bottles. Why?"
"I have been very busy practicing tolerance for inferior peoples quite a while. If you notice, I have not mentioned that either of you are white. This is part of my new program to tolerate the inferior of the world. But if we got some of this DNA, we could change the whites and the blacks to yellow. Then we could change the level to Korean. And then improve that to North Korean. Do you follow me?"
"So far," said Smith.
"Then we could refine all those North Koreans into the best of what anyone can or could aspire to be. A person from Sinanju. Do not be overwhelmed, Emperor, but is that not a wonder to conjure?"
"Yeah, Smitty," Remo said. "Just think. You'll have four billion. Just like Chiun."
"I can't get any DNA," Smith said rapidly.
Remo laughed. "He'll settle for a centrifuge," he said.
Chiun said even though he was tolerant, it was still just like whites to fritter away what was probably their last chance to improve themselves.
He told Remo in Korean that would be the theme of his next book.
"Next book?" asked Remo. "Where's your last book?"
"I have decided not to waste it on you people. You wouldn't appreciate it. But this next book might bring you to your senses."
"When are you going to write it?" asked Remo.
"I would have had it well underway by now if I had not had to waste so much time on you. If you will just leave me alone and keep things quiet, I will finish it in no time."
"I'll do my best," Remo said.
"That will not be good enough," said Chiun. "It never is."