My bowels just about unraveled. When the gun didn’t go off, I thought I might have a chance.
“Too many guards around here, Shipton. A gunshot would make it real hard for you to get away.”
He smiled. “You’re right. Besides, it would be less enjoyable. And I owe you one.”
“Owe me for what?”
“For killing Miss Ku.”
“Are you mad? I never touched the girl.”
He shrugged. “Maybe it was your partner then. Doesn’t matter. That’s why I killed that Itaewon bitch he was shacked up with. I would’ve offed him too if she didn’t have so many noisy neighbors.”
“They know how to treat a thief.”
The scars on the side of Shipton’s head swarmed toward his eyes like a school of hungry fish. “You got a sharp mouth for a lowlife, on-the-take CID asshole.”
He lowered the gun and slid it behind his waist.
“Get up!” he said.
I rose unsteadily. I ached all over but especially in my right hand, which was shooting thunderbolts up my arm.
Shipton grabbed two rifles, M14’s, the type the Honor Guard uses, both with shiny, stainless steel bayonets glimmering in the green light. He loosened the carrying strap on one and slung it over his powerful shoulders. The other he pointed at me.
“Out the back, Dreamer,” he said.
We stepped into the commander’s conference room. In the far wall was a door locked by a long brass bolt. Shipton jerked it back, pushed the door open, and shoved me through. I missed the first stair and fell facedown into the snow.
Shipton poked me with the bayonet.
“Move,” he hissed.
I lifted myself up and staggered along the big brick wall of 8th Army Headquarters.
Behind us, the flames at the Aviation building crackled. Men shouted. All activity was centered down there. We were moving away from all that, into the shadows.
No chance to run away. He’d pop me in the back before I made three steps. Best to keep him talking.
“Why’d you kill Whitcomb?”
“Keep moving.”
“Is it because he saw you that night in J-two?”
“You’re a real sleuth, aren’t you?”
“How long you been working for the North Koreans?”
He jabbed me again with the bayonet. “Shut the fuck up.”
We turned a corner, and in the distance I spotted a shadowy figure pushing a cart. Coal delivery. The workman wouldn’t be much help. Anyway, he moved away, not even glancing in our direction.
“You better hope nobody shows up,” Shipton said. “If they do, I’ll shoot you and end it quick.”
But for some reason he had decided not to shoot me right away. I considered asking why but thought better of it. Instead, I concentrated on finding a means of escape. Anything. A loose brick, an old piece of pipe, anything I could use as a weapon. The M14 in Shipton’s hands was loaded. I’d heard the rifle’s bolt clack forward before we left the Headquarters building. The odds against me were long, but I wasn’t dead yet.
He poked the tip of the bayonet into my back.
“Over there,” he said.
With the blade, he motioned toward a gap between two buildings. When the narrow pathway opened up, we were standing in the center of a small, courtyardlike space with the backs of four brick buildings facing us. Four more narrow pathways ran off like spokes from a wheel, all of them uphill, giving the impression that we were in an enclosed bowl. Once, the Japanese Imperial Army had used this space as a garden. But with typical American efficiency we’d black-topped it over.
It was like the spot in Namdaemun where Cecil Whitcomb had died. In the center of things but isolated: Shipton’s method of operation. Ice crunched beneath my stockinged feet. My toes were frozen-I’d left the boots back in the Headquarters building-but I hadn’t even noticed the discomfort until just now. Too many other things to worry about. The snow had stopped falling and a few stray trails of footsteps crossed this small field of frost.
“Hold it right there,” Shipton said. I had reached the center of the courtyard. “Turn around.”
I turned.
Before I could react, he popped the magazine out of the MI4, ejected the live round from the chamber, and tossed the weapon to me. It slipped out of my grasp, clattering to the snow, and as I bent to pick it up he whipped the other rifle off his shoulders and pointed it at me. He clanged a round into the chamber.
I hefted the M14 in my hands. He had bullets, I didn’t. But at least I had the bayonet.
“Go ahead,” Shipton taunted. “I’ll even give you a chance. The same one I gave Whitcomb.”
Some chance. To die with a knife in the gut or a bullet through the head. I braced the rifle butt against my hip. Pain roared from my wrist.
“Too bad you’re hurt,” he said. “Makes it less challenging.”
“I’ll kick your ass anyway.”
His eyes widened. “Is that what you said to Miss Ku?”
What the hell was he talking about? Why did he think I killed Miss Ku? But if he didn’t kill her, who did? No time to think about that now. Only time to find a way to stay alive. I had to get under his skin somehow. Force him to make a mistake.
“You really cared for her, eh?” I said. “The way you cared for the admiral’s daughter?”
His face didn’t flinch.
“Not an admiral,” Shipton said. “Not yet, but she was an officer’s daughter, all right. I thought maybe she wouldn’t be like those bitches in Vietnam, just using GI’s while they’re still fucking their old boyfriends. But I was wrong.”
“They’re not all like that, Shipton. Only the ones who hook up with you.”
Keeping his eyes on me, he stepped in a slow semicircle, checking all the pathways leading into our private coliseum of death. Not a sound. No one. Only the distant hollers of men battling the fire. Shipton looked back at me.
“What’s the spirit of the bayonet fighter?” he asked.
It wasn’t a question I was expecting. I knew the answer. Everyone who’d been through basic training knew the answer.
When I was silent, however, he raised his rifle. “What’s the spirit of the bayonet fighter?”
I stared into the black hole of the bore. “To kill,” I answered.
That seemed to satisfy him. “And what are the two types of bayonet fighters?”
The rifle was still pointed at my head. I had no choice but to go along with his sick fantasy. “The quick and the dead,” I answered.
“That’s right.” He lowered the rifle. “The quick and the dead, Dreamer. Now, let’s see what type you are.”
Hope rushed through my body like an electric shock. Maybe he was crazy enough not to shoot me. At least, I’d have a chance. I gripped the rifle butt tighter, ignoring the pain in my right arm.
Keeping his eyes on me, he popped the magazine out of his M14 and ejected the round from the chamber. Run, I thought. Before I could make a move, he shuffled forward in the snow, holding the bayonet pointed straight at my eyes. He jabbed.
I backed up, but the tip of the blade caught my forearm. Blood started to trickle.
“You’re an oaf, Sueno,” he said. “I thought all you Mexes could knife-fight.”
That’s why he was after me. Why he followed me into the CID building at night and why he wrote “Dreamer” in blood on the wall of the Nurse’s hooch. Not just because I had been assigned to his case, but because I’m Mexican. He was from the south of Texas. His prejudices were probably inbred.
“Go fuck yourself, Shipton,” I said.
I backed up faster now. He followed. We circled each other, bayonets pointed.
He moved like a cat, smooth, agile-as if he’d been born to bayonet fighting. Throw him off stride, I thought. Make him angry. Do something.
“Mexicans are too tough for you, Shipton. Did they know how weak you really are? Is that what you’ve been trying to hide from all your life?”
He didn’t respond, but the features of his scarred face hardened into stone. With a yell that curdled my chilled blood, he hopped forward, jabbing the bayonet at my solar plexus. I moved to my side, not backward as he expected me to, and thrust out with a jab of my own.