Destroyer 103: Engines of Destruction

By Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir

Chapter 1

Nobody knew when it all started, because it had been going on since the days of Casey Jones. Nobody thought it unusual, because it was as common as a caboose. No one knew when it would end, because as long as man set hurtling engines on ribbons of steel rail, derailments were inevitable. And no one saw a sinister pattern emerge in the waves of rail accidents, because from the earliest days of steam locomotives there had always been rail accidents. Some years there were more. Some years less.

For three unrelenting years there were more. Many more.

Rail fans, train crews and transportation experts alike said the nation's aging rail system was approaching critical mass.

The National Transportation Safety Board blamed engineers on drugs, aging and downgraded tracks, poor maintenance and just plain dumb-ass bad luck.

Everyone agreed that Amtrak was experiencing the worst of the rash of derailments. In three grim years more than one hundred Amtrak passengers had died-more combined fatalities than the nation's passenger rail service had suffered since its inception twenty-five years before.

The fact that Amtrak's cars were filled with passengers, while freight handlers hauled inert commodities, was ignored. As was the fact that the average passenger train hauled a lot more passengers that the average passenger jet. Naturally a train wreck could be more deadly than a plane crash. But they never were. More people walked away from train crashes than died. Nobody could say the same when a 747 cratered. Yet whenever an Amtrak train careened off its rails, it made the front page, not the third section. They weren't hauling cabbages, after all.

The experts all agreed that if you took Amtrak out of the statistical loop, rail traffic was as safe as it ever had been.

Which, if you knew the history of rail, had a lot to do with where you sat.

TY HURLEY SAT in the cab of a new Southern Pacific MK5000C freight hauler, his left hand on the throttle, his right goosing the independent brake as he chased the twin uncatchable gleams of starlight racing ahead of him along a curving stretch of rail approaching Big Sandy, Texas.

The cab vibrated to the deep baritone thunder of the twenty-five-ton Caterpillar 3612 diesel while Ty watched the brake pressure and RPM readouts seesaw on the liquid-crystal display screen buried in the cream-colored molded plastic of the instrument panel. Not twenty feet at his back, under four toiling, yellow-bladed exhaust fans, five thousand horses galloped in concert, but it felt wrong. All wrong.

Ty Hurley hadn't become an engineer to sit in climate-controlled comfort, sucking down polyurethane smell, insulated from the big four-stroke monster-block V-12 prime mover he controlled through a careful balancing of power and braking. This was not railroading. This was not his dream.

He missed the industrial black control panel of his old SD40-2 diesel, with its analog dials and ineffective wall fan laboring to circulate the stale cab air. That was railroading. Ty might as well have been flying the space shuttle as this overengineered appliance. But most of all, he was going to miss being an SP hogger. Southern Pacific had been absorbed by Union Pacific, and his red-nosed gray MK5000C would soon wear UP Cascade green livery. It was the end of an era.

The only things that remained the same were the two uncatchable gleams on the matched steel rails.

Ty had been chasing those gleams all his life, man and boy. Ever since he'd first heard the lonesome wail of a thundering redball freight as it raced toward destinations far, far from Texas.

It had been a good, satisfying life for a man who had never seen the big cities of the East or done much to distinguish himself. He hadn't ever "wiped the throttle"-floored an engine--but he hadn't torn up any track or spilled a load, either. Not on a dozen years on the SP. It was something to brag about, especially these days.

As he adjusted the brake pressure, coming to the big truss-and-timber-pile bridge that crossed the Sabine River, Ty tried counting his blessings.

He was thirty-six and in good health. He had a job. It was the job he'd always wanted. True, the work wasn't exactly how Ty had envisioned it back in the small town of Wichita Falls, but it paid well, and the fringe benefits kept the little wife content and the twins in Nintendo and Snickers bars.

He would probably get used to the MK5000C in time. Maybe, Ty reflected, he would haul freight long enough to see the day when it, too, would become outmoded. Hell, already they were saying the next thing big was AC. An AC monster block wouldn't birds-nest if you ran it flat out by mistake. Ty had never birds-nested an engine, either. Another blessing on the tote board of life.

Most of all, Ty wasn't his poor daddy. His father had worked the SP before him. A good man, now creased of face and broken of heart and spirit.

One day Luther Hurley was highballing down the main line when a bright yellow school bus had trundled crossways onto a crossing and got hung up on the track. Tearing around a long bend in the line, trying to make up time, Luther had seen the stalled bus only at the last. He threw the brake too late. But he could have thrown it five miles back and it would have been too late. Luther Hurley had been pulling seventy double-stacked flatcars rattling behind his bicentennial-liveried MP15 diesel. He couldn't have stopped that hurtling dragon of steel in time if he'd found a way to throw it onto its side like a Brahma bull.

The brake key broke in his hand as, screaming, Luther had plowed smack into the school bus, dragging it squealing and sparking for over a mile along unforgiving tracks.

He was the only one to survive-if you could call the way Luther Hurley lived after that awful day a life. The rescue boys had to pry his hand off the blaring horn, and when they finally did, they realized he had been screaming all along.

Ty Hurley never heard the story directly from his father, who went home that day, never to ride the rails again. A railroad man's pension kept him in beer and Sominex. Ty had read all about it in the newspapers the next day. The report had quoted some expert as saying a freight engine hitting a stalled bus was the equivalent of that same bus hitting a stationary Coke can. There was flat out no survivability factor.

That pithy fact impressed Ty more than the body count, which he had long ago forgotten. It still made him shudder to think about it. And when he came up on a crossing gate, both ends of his digestive system clenched involuntarily.

No, at least he was not his father, who was strong enough to resist falling into hard drink after his working life ended but was never much good for anything else.

From where Ty sat, train travel was the safest thing going. As long as you stayed on the train. Get in the train's path and you were track ballast. Ty knew the statistics. In the worst year less than fifty train passengers died en route. Every year at least five hundred died trying to beat hurtling diesel monsters to crossings or trespassing on tracks and hump yards.

Somewhere past midnight Ty came out of a bend just shy of Big Sandy and grabbed his horn. In town they raised a big old rumpus whenever he did that. Said he woke up the entire town. They never understood it was for their own good. Never connected the warning blast with a twenty-year-old newspaper clipping yellowing in Ty's drawer with his socks and fresh underwear.

For as long as he had any say, Ty would sound his air horn good and loud when approaching a crossing.

And damn anyone who complained. It wasn't just their lives. It was Ty Hurley's, too.

The MK5000C air horn assaulted the Texas night, sounding muffled inside the new cab. Just to be safe, Ty gave it another hoot.

He saw the bone white sport utility vehicle bump and jounce toward the diamond of crossing tracks where the former Southern Pacific line intersected Union Pacific iron, and his heart thumped like a drum, making the big veins in his hands pulse and his tongue go dry.

"Oh, dear Lord, please don't ...." he muttered thickly. He hit the horn again.

In response the sport vehicle surged ahead.

"No, you dad-burn fool. No, you can't win. Back away, back away!" Ty screamed in the soundproof womb of the big hauler, knowing he couldn't be heard by anyone but his savior.

The lights of the sport vehicle were two mothy fans making the crossing glow spectrally. The gates began dropping in response to the automatic signal. A bell commenced clanging.

And Ty changed his tune.

"Hurry up. Damn it, hurry up! You can do it. Floor that sucker."

The gates were winning, and Ty's heart started to drop down his gullet.

It mounted again when the sport vehicle suddenly accelerated and smashed into the gate.

Ty watched it with eyes growing wide.

The sport machine bounced its front tires over the rails and, when its rear set hit iron, it stopped dead.

"Get out! Get out!" Ty screamed, one fist punishing the plastic moulding until it cracked like an egg.

The bone white door flew open, and a figure stepped out. Pinned by the glare of TMK5000C's big cyclops headlight, he looked like a little bug. His actions were not buglike.

He had what looked like a long stick in his hands. He jammed it into a tie. It quivered upright like a bug's feeler.

Turning, he climbed awkwardly to the car's roof, reached down and plucked up his stick. Then he stood up. He just stood there facing the onrushing gray monster diesel with its blunt scarlet nose.

"Jesus Loving Christ!" Ty moaned, shifting the reverser key into neutral. Simultaneously he hauled back on the throttle, initiating dynamic braking. Instantly the traction motors were transformed. They became individual generators, straining to inhibit thousands of tons of headlong inertia.

Ty knew it was too late. He knew it was in the hands of God Almighty. All he could do was clutch his controls and stare at the unavoidable disaster in which he would be an unwilling and impotent participant.

He had heard of people committing suicide by lying down on the rails. It happened back East once or twice. They still talked about a Connecticut Yankee who just laid his idiot head down on CSX tracks and let the cruel steel trucks do for him what he hadn't the nerve to do with a bullet.

But this-

The man stood against the night, all in black. That was all Ty could make out. He wore black. Even his face looked black. Not the black of a black man but the ebony of a beetle's wings. It was as if Ty Hurley's worst nightmare had taken the shape of a man stepped out of Hell to bedevil him.

Before Ty's eyes he grew and grew, and despite the revulsion climbing his gorge, even with the image of a crushed-flat Coke can searing his imagination, Ty looked deep into that black face, into the eyes he could not see, trying to make out the features that would any second be smashed beyond recognition, wondering if that was what his poor silver-haired daddy had done. Wondering if he had seen the fearstunned little faces, the whites of their small round eyes in that awful protracted moment before the bus was busted open like a loaf of Wonder bread, scattering childish bodies like so much sunflower seed.

Suddenly the man lifted his arms. His hands were together, holding his stick. In the blackness Ty Hurley could not make out what it was, but the image that jumped into his mind was of a sword lifted high and defiant, as if the man in black were some fearless warrior of old determined to defeat a modern freight train with a thin blade of steel.

In that heart-stopping instant of time, Ty Hurley prayed for the man. Prayed because he knew that of the two of them, only Ty would survive.

As the baritone-voiced beast bored toward him, the man laid the sword across one shoulder and seemed to be taking practice swings, like a ball player. He was real casual about it.

At the last possible second, the man cocked and let fly. The blade caught a sliver of moonlight, and Ty saw it, too, was black. Leaving his hands, it pinwheeled up as if in slow motion. Ty's eyes went to it even as his brain said, He's chickened out. He's gonna jump clear. Thank God. Thank God Almighty.

Then the whirling blade was coming at his windscreen like a furious helicopter blade, and below his line of sight the fragile utility vehicle exploded in a fireball that instantly scorched the blunt Action red nose black. And without any shudder of contact or any loss of momentum, the thirty-car freight slammed the broken thing along.

A few miles down the line, it got so twisted up it just fell apart. The pieces that were not flung aside were flattened into the track.

Ty Hurley saw and heard none of that. His hands were frozen-one on the reverser key, the other on the air horn.

His eyes were open and they were looking up, blinking uncomprehendingly. He was staring at a work boot. He didn't know whose boot it was, but it looked familiar, very familiar. It looked just like the boot he had laced up this morning, as a matter of fact.

Then the train leaned into a turn. Ty's head rolled slightly, and he could see the boot was his own. He could see himself sitting firm and unshakable at the controls of the monster hauler, and in the final moments before the darkness closed in, he wondered if he were having some kind of out-of-body experience.

For he saw that his uniform collar was very red, and where his head should have been was a curious kind of void in which arterial red blood fountained.

He had a curious thought, too: If I'm up there, what are my eyeballs doing on the floor?

That was the exact moment the blood finished draining out of his brain, and all life oozed away from his severed head, extinguishing that final, ridiculous, unanswered thought.

Without a conscious brain at the controls, the big MK5000C roared on through the night, swaying through the turns, blind and unstoppable, the heavy work boot of its dead engineer holding down the deadman pedal. Microprocessor controls kept the power from exceeding load-hauling tolerances. It rattled through Big Sandy, Texas, and on up to Texarkana, where it naturally ran out of track and piled into the big steel bumpers at the end of the line, with predictable results.

WHEN NTSB INVESTIGATOR Melvis Cupper reached the scene, the yard-crew foreman had one word for him.

"Birds-nested."

"So why didn't the engineer just brake that sucker?"

"I wasn't referring to the engine. We haven't cracked the damn cowl yet. I meant the engineer. He's the birds-nested one."

When he climbed into the big MK5000C cab, now lying on its side like a fallen war elephant in the mess that had been the freight yard, Melvis understood what they meant.

The damn engineer was all over the cab. The impact had flung him every which way, including apart. Fingers had snapped off. One leg was twisted all the way around and jammed up behind one shoulder. The opposite leg looked normal at first. The foot was pointed in the correct direction, but the exposed calf above it had been wrenched around at least three times. It looked like a twist of white taffy.

Worst off all, his head had been torn off his neck.

"Jesus," Melvis muttered.

"Looks like flying glass lopped it clean off."

Melvis speared his flashlight ray all around. "I don't see much loose glass."

"Well, there must be some. Feller's decapitated, ain't he?"

"That's a fact," Melvis admitted.

But the only glass present in the cab were a few splinters from the spiderwebbed window ports, the biggest of which was smaller than a fingernail.

"It's possible the big hunk of glass that got him broke apart in the crash," Melvis allowed.

"Which crash? The one back at Big Sandy or this mess right here?"

"Gotta be this one here. He only hit a Nishitsu Ninja. Damn flimsy little Jap jeep ain't no match for a roaring juggernaut like the MK5000C. Hell, the tallest part of the radio aerial wouldn't even reach up to the headlight."

"Reckon that makes sense, when you put it like that."

It was the only thing that did make sense.

Then the foreman had a thought. "If busted glass didn't get him on impact, why the hell did he ride her all the way in like he did? He had near to fifty damn miles to brake."

Melvis shrugged. "Maybe he froze at the controls. It happens."

"Nobody freezes for fifty miles and then plows into the freight yard, full tilt like he done."

"Well, it's for sure he didn't lose his head at the crossing," Melvis grunted. "Plumb contrary to nature is what that notion is."

But when they backtracked to the initial impact site, they found a solitary sliver of glass that looked as if it had come off an MK5000C.

Melvis ordered the window glass reassembled, and the sliver fit exactly. There was no getting around it. The engineer had been decapitated at the crossing.

"His foot should have slipped off the deadman pedal," the yard foreman said. "How do you explain it?"

"Dope," said Melvis Cupper.

"You NTSB boys are all the time sayin' dope when you can't find a reasonable explanation."

"Dope," Melvis said flatly.

It went into his preliminary report as drugs, and the report was dutifully logged into an NTSB computer in Washington, D.C., where it was archived for access by NTSB offices nationwide.

The clerk typist who performed that simple action did more to facilitate a serious investigation of the mystery of the Texarkana disaster than any field investigator. No one suspected this-any more than they suspected the three-year reign of rail terror was no string of coincidences or run of bad luck.

There was a pattern. But no one could discern it.

Chapter 2

His name was Remo and he was test-driving his new wheels under battlefield conditions.

Traffic flowed all around him. Lead-footed drivers jockeyed in and out of busy lanes in a violent rush. Strangely, most of the flow was sideways, not forward. Drivers struggled to get out of their lane and into another one. Then without bothering to signal, they slid back into lanes they had just slipped out of. It was very ritualistic. A space would open up, and everyone would make a dash for it. Bumpers clashed. Horns blared. Pungent curses lifted above the din. The winner hardly ever spent more than a quarter mile occupying the hard-won slot. As soon as he saw another, he had to have it. The concept of yielding to traffic was as alien as obeying the speed limit.

Remo had a long time ago thought he'd figured out the Boston driving mentality. Every Bostonian firmly believed the common courtesies of the road applied to everyone except himself. So each driver ignored them, serene in the mistaken assumption that the other guy would dutifully observe the rules of the road. But hardly anyone ever did.

Boston drivers were always running late, as well. They were perfectly willing to risk life and limb to shave six or seven seconds off a trip. And they changed lanes as fast and erratically as most people changed their minds.

It had gotten so insane Remo had stopped driving in the city. Instead, he took cabs or the subway.

Remo couldn't find the right car to handle Boston traffic so he had demanded his employer come up with something appropriate. After all, if Remo were to die in a car crash, his employer would be out millions of dollars in training expenses-not to mention one of the two greatest assassins on the market today.

His employer had balked. At first.

"Absolutely not."

"Look, Smitty," Remo had told him. "They pour money into training fighter pilots, and when the jets go down they move heaven and earth until they rescue them even though the big loss is the plane. Right?"

"That is true," Dr. Harold W Smith admitted slowly.

"So, you've poured tons of money into my training, and since I'm stuck living in this madhouse-"

"Boston is not a madhouse."

"Boston traffic is like playing bumper cars in Sherman tanks against homicidal maniacs. These people are okay on foot, but put them behind the wheel of a car, and they fall right off the evolutionary ladder."

Smith cleared his throat. "I am sure you are exaggerating."

"Last time I tried driving from the airport, three people did their best to run over my car because I stopped for a pedestrian at a freaking crosswalk."

"Unlikely."

"Once I was head of the line at a red light when it turned green. I didn't start up instantly, and some idiot behind me leans on his horn and calls me every name in the book."

"He must have been in a hurry."

"He was-to get to the hospital after I dislocated his tongue."

Smith made an uncomfortable noise in his throat.

"Put it in my contract," Remo said. "I want a car that will stand up to Boston traffic. And it's gotta be red."

"Why red?"

"Why not?" countered Remo.

And since good assassins were hard to find, Dr. Smith had done that. Eventually. It had taken longer than Remo expected. There were a few rejects. The first car was a Bonneville. Remo took it around the block for a test drive and was promptly sideswiped by a newspaper-delivery boy on a bicycle.

Remo got out and asked the boy if he were all right. The boy threw the afternoon paper at him and threatened to sue.

"You cut me off," Remo pointed out, relieved that the boy's pitching arm was unhurt.

"You should look where you're going, asshole!" the boy screamed, his nose ring shaking under his dilated nostrils.

"Does your mother know you talk that way?"

"My mother taught me to talk this way when I talk to assholes. This is a brand-new bike. Now look at it."

Remo looked. The bike had lost a fleck of electric green paint. Otherwise it was unscathed.

"I just got this car," Remo had countered, pointing to his scratched front fender.

"Will your mother beat the living crap out of you for scratching it up?"

"I didn't scratch it up. You did. And watch what you say about my mother. I never knew her."

"You're lucky. My mother's going to rip me a new cake-hole."

"Remind her for me to wash out every other orifice with soap, too."

"I could sue you, you know. My father sues people all the time."

"He should start with your mother for dropping a blivot like you into the world," Remo screamed.

"You can't talk to me like that," the newspaper boy screamed back.

"If I were your father, I'd demand my sperm back," yelled Remo, warming to the subject.

At that, the boy stalked over to Remo's new Bonneville and licked the wounded front fender with his tongue. Remo thought it was a new variation on, paint sniffing until the boy straightened and Remo saw the fresh scratch that exactly matched the one made by the collision. The boy then stuck out his tongue at Remo, revealing the silver stud bolted through it.

Whereupon Remo dismantled the ten-speed with his bare hands, reassembling it into a vertical bird cage with the boy caught inside. Remo left him cawing like a crow.

The Bonneville went back to the dealer.

The second car was a Chevy Blazer. It survived the first trip around the block and even got as far as Route 128 and back when Remo happened to park it in front of a supermarket, where a Mercedes SL backed into it.

The woman driver got out from behind the wheel, took one look at the Blazer's damaged front end, her nicked bumper, and turned on Remo.

"You're supposed to watch where you're going!" she shrieked.

"I was parked," Remo declared, reasonable of tone because by this time he suspected all Boston drivers were mentally unstable.

"It's your word against mine," she flung back, flouncing past him.

"You're supposed to exchange papers at the scene of an accident," Remo called after her. "State law."

"I didn't have an accident. You did. Exchange them with yourself."

Remo waited until the woman had entered the store and then kicked her tires. He did this casually, going from tire to tire. His leather loafers bounced off the hard rubber. Each time the tire gave a low pop, and air began hissing.

When Remo reclaimed his battered Blazer, the woman's car had settled onto its rims.

Remo sent the Blazer back, too.

His employer had then complained that Remo was obviously driving in an unsafe manner.

Remo suggested that the only safe way to operate a motor vehicle in greater Boston was to lash weather balloons to the chassis and float over traffic.

"Try again," he told Smith.

The latest vehicle had arrived just that morning. Remo took one look at it, rubbed his hands together and said, "I can hardly wait."

And he had made a beeline for the Neponset River Bridge and the wild joys of Boston traffic.

So far it was everything he had asked for. But mostly it was red. Red flake, to be precise. Remo didn't know they made red-flake auto-body paint anymore. He remembered seeing it on customized hot rods as a kid, when owning a bicycle was beyond his financial reach.

Remo was tooling along the Southeast Expressway-better known as the Southeast Distressway during rush hour, or the Green Monster on good days-trying her out. It was a long, congested ribbon of elevated highway that ran through Boston proper like a torpid boa constrictor. They were going to be tearing it down soon to make way for the depressed Central Artery. Remo hoped they had the good sense to drive a stake through its heart, too.

The July sun blazed down and made his vehicle burn like a hot coal. He could be seen for miles. That was a big plus. Boston drivers had trouble seeing anything smaller than the Hancock Tower.

As he approached the Roxbury-Mass Ave. off ramp, a man in a black Ford Ranger Bigfoot tried to cut in front of him, horn blaring, oversize wheels clawing asphalt.

In the past Remo would have gotten upset or angry. Instead, he grinned from ear to ear.

Remo fed the engine gas and accelerated, cutting him off.

Recovering just in time, the man gave Remo the finger. So Remo gave his wheel a gentle nudge. His vehicle eased over into the other lane. The Bigfoot driver tried to crowd him back. It was no contest. The other driver only had a jacked-up sport utility vehicle with Bozo the Clown tires. Remo was driving a fourteen-ton armored personnel carrier.

Remo ran him over into the breakdown lane and, not satisfied with that, crowded him against the guardrail.

The Ranger shed sparks and paint for over a mile before the cursing driver finally stopped yanking the wheel toward Remo in a futile attempt to run him off the road. He just ground to a halt, one tire resembling blackened Shredded Wheat.

"I like it," Remo said as he put the mauled Ranger behind him.

"You are insane," said Dr. Harold W Smith, gray face turning white, from the passenger seat. He clutched his briefcase before his chest. His gray eyes were stark behind his rimless glasses. He had come to Boston to personally hand over the keys and special papers that made the APC street legal. Remo had talked him into coming along for the test drive. Smith obviously regretted it.

"That was defensive driving," Remo protested. "You saw him cut me off. Don't deny it."

Coming up on the Neponset-Quincy exit, Remo eased carefully into the exit lane.

Two nuns in a metallic silver Honda hatchback suddenly overhauled him, cut over hard and almost sent him into the rail. Only Remo's superhuman reflexes avoided high-speed disaster.

Dropping in behind the hatchback, Remo gave them a blast of his horn.

The nun who wasn't driving leaned out of the open hatchback and threw her black rosary at him. It bounced off the red flake armor, scattering beads everywhere.

"See!" Remo said. "This is what I'm talking about. Even the nuns go batty when they're on the road."

"Incredible."

"Boston drivers. They are the absolute worst."

"And you have become one of them," Smith said tightly.

"What!"

"You are enjoying this, Remo."

"I'm enjoying having the upper hand in traffic," Remo said heatedly. "I'm enjoying not taking my life into my hands when I pop down the street for a sack of rice. I'm enjoying the fact that no matter how crazy the other guy is, no matter what he's driving, I'm bigger, harder and more impervious than he is."

"Then you will accept this vehicle?"

"With bells on. It have a name, by any chance?"

"It is called a Dragoon."

"I can hardly wait to tell Chiun I am the proud owner of a fully loaded Dragoon."

"Actually," Smith said, "I had the offensive weaponry removed."

"Too bad. Around here they would make great scofflaw discouragers."

"Less weight means better fuel economy," Smith said tightly.

"Good thinking. How many miles to the gallon does this beast get anyway?"

"Three," said Harold Smith, director of CURE, the supersecret government agency that had no official existence.

WHEN THEY PULLED into the parking lot of his private apartment complex in the seaside city of Quincy, the Master of Sinanju was waiting for them.

He stood only five feet tall, his wispy body tented in a teal silk kimono, but the wisdom of the ages seemed to have been inscribed on his parchment features. He was Korean. Bald. Hazel eyed. Long nailed. There was a little hair over each ear, and a windtroubled wisp that passed for a beard. His voice was a querulous squeak.

"How fares the mighty dragon?" he called out.

"Dragoon," Remo corrected.

"I care not how the word is pronounced in this contentious province," said Chiun, who did not look remotely like one of the two most dangerous assassins of the twentieth century. "It is the official conveyance of the Master of Sinanju. Therefore, it will properly and respectfully be addressed as the Sinanju Dragon."

"Dragoon," said Remo. "Tell him, Smitty."

The Master of Sinanju looked up at the man he called Emperor. Smith was climbing out of the Dragoon. He was a thin, spare man past retirement age. Everything about him was gray. Hair, eyes, unhealthy skin color. A man like Smith could have benefited from careful color coordination of his wardrobe selection. Instead, Smith habitually dressed in gray three-piece suits that enabled him to blend into almost any situation like some colorless chameleon.

"Call it what you will," he said. "I must be going."

Chiun's sparse eyebrows lifted, making his hairless scalp wrinkle up. "So soon? But you have only this day arrived, Emperor. I had planned a feast in your honor."

"I really must be going."

Chiun inclined his aged head. "Great is our disappointment, but we will endure it heroically, swallowing our bitter tears, for we understand that we are but servants, mere tools to be employed at will and if necessary disposed of like a sword that has lost its edge. I do not blame you, O discerning one. For our dullness stands exposed before your all-seeing orbs."

And the Master of Sinanju bestowed the withering regard of his hazel eyes upon Remo's hands.

Smith followed Chiun's gaze.

"He's still at it," Remo said, holding up his hands. They looked like ordinary hands. His wrists were freakishly thick, but the hands might have belonged to anyone. The fingers were on the long side, but no one would mistake them for the digits of a concert pianist. The nails were neat and carefully trimmed.

Shying from the horrible sight, Chiun threw a teal sleeve across his eyes. "No, I cannot bear to look upon those maimed things. Look away, O Emperor. Remo, hide them, lest you offend Smith the Tolerant for all time."

"Where do I hide my hands?" Remo asked, lifting his arms to show off his white T-shirt and tight tan chinos.

"You have pockets."

"There's nothing wrong with my hands."

"You have the nails of a sloth, and you say that!" Chiun whirled. "Smith, a boon. Surgeons have changed Remo's face in the past. Can anything be done for his retarded fingernails?"

"I have never heard of cuticle implants," Smith said with no humor whatsoever.

Chiun's spare shoulders sagged. "Then it is hopeless. When I pass into the Void, I will be the last of my line with nails of the correct length."

With that, the Master of Sinanju lifted his hands and stared at them, his parchment features a mask of regret. His nails curved out a good inch beyond his bony fingertips. They looked like ivory daggers and could slice a human throat open with a casual flick.

"He's still trying to get me to grow Fu Manchu fingernails," Remo undertoned to Smith.

"Resist," Smith whispered back.

"Yes!" Chiun cried. "Resist these Western urges, Remo. Do as Smith commands. Let your fingers flower and grow. Unleash the deadliness that lurks within. There is nothing to fear. I will teach you proper nail cultivation. Do this one thing, and your training will be complete. I will ask nothing more of you."

Remo shook his head firmly. "No soap, Chiun. Once I cave in on the nails, you'll be fitting me for a fighting kimono."

"You should be on bended knee begging for a respectable kimono. You look like a scarecrow in those hideous pantaloons."

"Trousers," said Remo.

"Remo needs to blend in with our society," Smith said firmly.

"Let your society know him for a Sinanju assassin! What is this mania for secrecy?"

Remo and Smith exchanged glances. Neither man spoke, but their weary expressions all but said, You explain it to him this time.

"I must go," Smith said in his lemoniest tone of voice.

"Need a lift to the airport?" asked Remo.

"No. I came by train."

"Train?"

"Yes, it was the most economical option. Also I wished to observe the Amtrak system firsthand."

"Why's that?"

Smith lowered his voice. "That is an operational matter."

"Checking out Amtrak involves national security?"

Chiun piped up, his wrinkled face suddenly stern, "Remo! Do you not read your newspapers? The insurgent Amtraks are at the forefront of the rebellions in the far western provinces. Even as we stand here, unsuspecting, they are sowing sedition and advocating the overthrow of the Eagle Throne, which we are pledged to protect."

Smith adjusted his Dartmouth tie uncomfortably. "If you do not mind, I must be going," he muttered.

Chiun inclined his head in a stiff semibow. "Though you take the very sun with you, we will press on, unbowed, living for the day that you call upon us to do your bidding, O generous one," he cried.

"Er, yes," Smith said. He hurried up the street to the subway station as if being hectored by bullies.

"Do you always have to do that?" Remo asked Chiun.

"It is better than suffering that man's tiresome company all evening," Chiun sniffed.

"Smitty's not so bad."

"He eats his rice with a fork," Chiun spat, and then promptly kicked all four oversize tires on the Dragoon.

"Why are you doing that?" Remo asked.

"Because you neglected to."

Remo patted the hull. "So how do you like it?"

Chiun regarded the gleaming monster of steel plate critically and asked, "Why is it scarlet?"

"So the maniacs will see me coming and get the hell out of my way," Remo explained. "And you haven't answered my question."

Chiun wrinkled up his tiny nose. "It lacks dragons."

"I like it the way it is. Without dragons."

"It is half mine. There will be a dragon painted upon my half. See that it is finished by morning."

"If it's your half, why do I have to paint it?"

"Because if you do not, I will insist upon dual matching dragons, not to mention front and rear phoenixes."

Remo sighed. "What color dragon?"

"Gold and green are good dragon colors. But I leave this to you."

"You know, I haven't painted anything since kindergarten."

Chiun shrugged. "You are still young and have all night to learn your craft."

With that, the Master of Sinanju bustled back into the fieldstone building they shared. In past times it had been a church, a Sikh temple and possibly had seen other, more secular incarnations. Now it was a nondenominational condominium. Converted back in the eighties, it had never been offered to the public. Instead, Harold Smith had bought it at auction, turning it over to the Master of Sinanju as part of a previous contract settlement. Chiun had promptly dubbed it Castle Sinanju, and they had moved in. Remo occupied one wing and Chiun the other. They shared the low, crenellated bell tower. It was to this tower Chiun had repaired, Remo knew. Ostensibly to meditate but in reality to watch as Remo once again did his bidding.

There were times in the past when Remo would have fought Chiun's dragon. But theirs was now a long association, and Remo had learned to get along. So what if he had to paint a dragon? It was a small thing to do for the man who had transformed Remo Williams from a still-breathing dead man to the sole heir to the House of Sinanju.

It had been so long ago Remo had forgotten the year. He no longer thought in years anyway. That was Western. Remo wasn't completely Eastern, but a subtle blend of East and West.

In the days when he had been Remo Williams, Newark beat cop, all Remo knew about the East was soaked up during a tour in Vietnam. Turning in his Marine fatigues for city-cop blues, Remo had settled down to the perfectly ordinary life of a police officer.

The day the stony-faced detectives arrested him changed all that. He was charged with the beating death of a pusher-another name he had forgotten. Faster than he could absorb events, Remo was tried, convicted and given the seat of dishonor in the Death House.

He woke up, not dead but in a place called Folcroft Sanitarium in Rye, New York. He was soon to discover it was the cover for CURE, the organization that had framed him. Just as he was slowly realizing the electric chair had been rigged to deliver a nonlethal charge.

They put him in the hands of Chiun, the last Master of Sinanju. He wasn't given a choice. Since he was already dead and buried in the eyes of the world, finishing the job was just a matter of plunging a charged needle in his arm and dumping him into the still-fresh grave with his name on it.

Remo had never heard of Sinanju before that day so long ago. He learned that Sinanju was the name of a tiny fishing village in North Korea, which in turn became the seat of the House of Sinanju, a line of assassins that stretched back some five thousand years. But most of all, Sinanju was the name of the martial-arts discipline practiced by the Masters of Sinanju-village and house.

Remo had been selected to be the first Westerner to be taught the secrets of Sinanju. It sounded cool when Remo had first had it explained to him.

"Is this like kung fu?" Remo asked Chiun.

"What do you know of kung fu?" Chiun snapped.

"Bruce Lee does it in movies. Five guys jump him, and he sends them flying in all directions."

Chiun's bright hazel eyes had narrowed in a look Remo would learn to fear. "You enjoy seeing men fly in all directions?"

"Sure."

And getting up from his lotus position on the Folcroft gym floor, Chiun had obliged Remo. By throwing him in all directions.

A half hour of being bounced off assorted walls taught Remo a very valuable lesson.

One, do not piss off Chiun.

Two, never mention Bruce Lee or kung fu ever again.

The first eye-opening lessons. It made Remo almost nostalgic thinking about them.

Remo soon learned that kung fu, not to mention karate, judo and aikido were all lifted without benefit of payment or credit from Sinanju, which was the sun source of the martial arts.

He then learned what to put into his mouth and what not to put into his mouth. He learned to breathe correctly, from the stomach, not through the lungs exclusively. He learned the first exercises that seemed pointless, and he ate tons of bitter kimchi to purge the fats and sugars that had poisoned his system.

It was long and painful, and Remo never realized he had sloughed off the first outer scales of his Western skin until long after it had happened. By then there was no turning back for either of them.

It was so long ago. An American President had seen his nation fragment into unweldable pieces. Because the title of his stationery said President of the United States of America, he felt obliged to put the country back together.

CURE was created. Secret, funded by hidden budget money, unknown to all except the chief executive, its director, Harold Smith, and later Remo and Chiun, it was the unofficial instrument for correcting America's many ills.

Ills that, by the time the President had perished by an assassin's hand, had grown unchecked and seemingly uncheckable.

Harold Smith had turned to the East to save the greatest nation of the New World. He turned to Chiun, ancient, childless, pupilless-the fading fragment of a former glory.

The East thought Sinanju passed into memory. The West knew nothing of it. It was the perfect solution. America needed an assassin. Sinanju required continuity. A bargain was struck. A dead man would be trained in the forbidden art that was soon to die. No face was lost on either side. All was secret.

And Remo had learned, becoming an assassin and, in time, much more. He became Sinanju, capable of feats of strength, skill and reflex ordinary mortals were only capable of in rare moments of crisis. For Sinanju opened up the entire brain to its full potential. An awakened brain in turn unleashed the dull muscles and inhibited senses.

If a human being could accomplish it, Remo could surpass it. He saw more clearly and much farther than other men. His reflexes were as sharp as those of many predators. His strength and agility exceeded human tolerances.

All this, Chiun had done for him. And if, so many years into their relationship, he had to have a dragon on his side of the family APC, Remo was going to give it to him.

The trouble was, there was nothing in the discipline of Sinanju that imparted artistic skills. Oh, Chiun had tried to teach Remo the slashing ideographic characters used by the ancient Sinanju Masters to record their mighty deeds. But he had failed. Remo proved more adept at the relatively modern Hangul alphabet, which Chiun considered crude and inexpressive.

But if Chiun wanted a dragon, Remo would give him one. For he loved the Master of Sinanju with all his heart.

And above all, he was absolutely, positively not growing talons.

Chapter 3

Dr. Harold W Smith stood by the automatic glass doors at Boston's South Station waiting room, expecting his train to be called. He had already figured out the track. An Amtrak train had pulled into track 7. It was the only silver train with the red-and-white-and-blue Amtrak stripe running down its length in the station. The other trains were all emblazoned with the hideous purple-and-yellow MBTA livery-local commuter trains. People were glancing up at the big electronic departure board anxiously, waiting for the track to be posted. That information was abundantly selfevident. Yet they loitered by the big board while Smith hovered by the doors. It would be just a matter of being one of the first out the door.

That way, Smith was assured of a seat. He had to have a seat. It was a four-hour trip back, and he couldn't afford to waste the time.

It was surprising how crowded the train had been coming up. People actually stood in the aisles. It wasn't a holiday or weekend. It was just an ordinary Tuesday in midsummer.

Smith himself had to stand until New Haven, where the train stopped as the electric engine was switched for a diesel. He understood that once the Northeast Corridor was fully electrified, the fifteen-minute delay would be a thing of the past.

As soon as the Yankee Clipper emptied out at New Haven, Smith had dropped into a vacant seat. Just in time. The train had filled up again within minutes and remained packed all the way to Boston.

Smith was taking no chances on the return trip. His arthritic knee was acting up again. And if he stood, he could not work. Harold Smith detested idleness, a reflection of his cheerless New England upbringing.

When the announcer finally called, "All Aboard for the Merchant's Limited, " Smith made an unseemly dash for the door. The doors parted, and he hurried down the track to duck into a no-smoking car.

Selecting a comfortable window seat, he settled in, his well-worn briefcase balanced tightly in his lap. By habit, he took the seat next to one of the emergency window exits. Harold Smith never took undue chances with his life. If he died, CURE would have to shut down. America could not afford that just yet.

The coach soon filled up.

A large black woman in a purple print dress waddled up the aisle and stopped at Smith's row.

"Is this the catbird seat?" she demanded, pointing at the empty seat next to Smith.

"What?"

"I'm looking for the catbird seat."

"I do not know what you are talking about," Smith protested.

"Looks to me like the catbird seat, so I might as well take it."

The woman dropped into the empty seat beside him and by way of introduction dug a meaty elbow into Smith's lathlike ribs.

"Excuse me," Smith said, squirming in his seat.

"You're excused," the woman said, unperturbed. "What did you do anyway?"

"I did nothing."

"Then why'd you excuse yourself?"

"Your elbow is in my side," Smith said uncomfortably.

"Is that supposed to be a dig?"

"Excuse me?"

"There you go again. Now what's wrong?"

"Your elbow is still in my side."

"I can stand to lose a few pounds. I will be the first to admit it. But these train people don't make the seats big enough to accommodate those of us of the ample persuasion. If you take my meaning. Ain't nothing can be done about it, honey. I tried dieting. I tried not eating. Oprah I ain't."

Smith looked around for another seat. But there was none. Craning his head, he tried to see into the cars behind him. People were coming down the aisles, wearing that worried look that told him there were no seats to be had.

"Now who's squirming?" the woman asked.

"Sorry," said Smith.

"That's better. You settle down now, and we'll get along fine. Like the man say, you got to go along to get along."

The train lurched into motion, and Harold Smith watched the station fall away. Gathering speed, the Merchant's Limited rattled past an iron monstrosity of a bridge that looked as if it had been built by medieval ironworkers. There was a brief stop at Back Bay Station. As the suburbs of Boston began clicking by, the train picked up speed.

Smith waited until the conductor had collected his ticket before trying to open his briefcase.

"Need help with that?" his seatmate asked.

"I can manage."

"Just 'cause I'm a woman don't mean I ain't strong. You look like you could use a hand."

"I am fine."

"You don't look, sound or act like it," the woman said doubtfully.

Smith turned the briefcase sideways, then the long way, but given the way the woman in the adjoining seat was spilling over into his seat, it was impossible to move his arms usefully.

Smith had to be careful. The briefcase was boobytrapped. If unlocked incorrectly, explosive charges would detonate, destroying its contents. Not to mention Smith and anyone in a ten-foot radius.

"You gonna stop fussing any time soon?" Smith's fellow passenger said thinly.

Smith sighed. "Yes. I am done."

"Good. But it still ain't open."

"I changed my mind."

"I don't blame you for giving up. I'm that way about childproof caps myself. You know, I think the companies got it all backward. They should sell medicine in chocolate boxes and chocolate in childproof bottles. If they did that, my life would be a whole lot tidier, and I'd fit into this damn seat to boot."

Smith stared out the window, watching the familiar undulating stone fences and granite outcroppings of New England pass by. They reminded him of his upbringing. Only Harold Smith could be moved to quiet nostalgia by the sight of hard, unromantic granite. But that was the kind of person he was.

At Providence, Smith waited patiently. Hardly anyone got off, but several people got on, all looking disappointed at the lack of empty seats.

"I know that look you wearing," the woman beside him said.

"What is that?"

"You were hoping I was getting off here. Well, I ain't. So you can just get over it."

"I do not know what you are talking about," Smith said stiffly.

"You ain't hardly spoke to me all this time. You ignoring me. That's fine. I been ignored before. It won't hurt me. But this ain't my stop, so don't get all hopeful-faced on me."

The train started up again. It rolled out of the station and into the light of day, diesel engine laboring.

Smith cleared his throat. His Adam's apple bobbed like a yo-yo.

The woman eyed him skeptically. "Something on your mind?"

"No."

"The next stop ain't my stop, either. If this is the catbird seat, like I hope it is, I ain't getting off until the accident."

Smith blinked. "What accident?"

"The accident what's gonna happen."

"How do you know an accident is going to happen?" Smith asked sharply.

"Because one always does on these things. Don't you read the newspapers?"

"Yes. But the accidents are entirely random. There is no predicting them."

"Well, it can't be random enough to suit me. I just want to have my accident and stop riding these damn rattletrap things."

Smith thin jaw sagged. "You want an accident?"

"As God is my copilot."

"Why?"

"For the insurance money, why else? You think I like riding these stuffy old coaches? Hah! Not likely. Once I file my claim, I fly first-class all the rest of my days. No more having my insides shook up in one of these rattlers."

"And if there is no accident?"

The woman shrugged. "Then I guess I ride this damn thing all the way back and start saving up for the next run."

"Madam," said Harold Smith.

"Yeah?"

"You are a fool."

"Maybe. But I'm in the catbird seat, and so are you. Just hope you got the strength in your skinny old body to open that window exit."

Smith said nothing. He was thinking.

For a year now he had been tracking the rash of rail disasters plaguing the nation's railroad system, attempting to glean a pattern or purpose to the unusual surge of derailments and train wrecks.

His computers had found nothing significant, other than the statistical quirk of so many incidents over such a long time.

Smith was a student of statistics, going back to his pre-CURE days at the CIA, where he'd been a data analyst. He understood probabilities, coincidences, cluster effects and other statistical phenomena that the superstitious attributed to everything from bad astrological conjunctions to sunspots.

He understood it was possible that these disasters were simply a run of bad luck aggravated by the declining state of the nation's web of rails.

But Smith also understood the longer the phenomenon persisted, the less likely mere happenstance could be blamed. The longer the list of statistics grew, the less likely the reasons were purely statistical.

Smith had been close to sending Remo and Chiun into the field to look into the problem, when abruptly the string of disasters had stopped. It was a hopeful sign. It had lasted three months so far. If it continued, it meant the worst was over.

Now Smith found himself seated next to a woman who was expecting an accident.

"What makes you think there will be an accident on this particular line?" Smith asked carefully.

"'Cause one ain't happened yet."

"I beg your pardon?"

"I said, one ain't happened on this stretch yet. They been happening elsewhere but not here. So I figure to ride this line until I get lucky. Something bad's bound to happen."

Smith swallowed hard. "If you are referring to the rash of derailments, they appear to have stopped."

"They didn't stop in Texas."

"Texas?"

"There was a big train wreck in Texas last night. Ain't you heard?"

Smith blinked. He had not. He began every day scanning AP wire-service feeds off his computer links. There had been no derailment reported in the morning feeds.

"Are you certain of your facts?" he asked the woman.

"I got eyes. I can read. A freight train slammed into the yards at Texarkana. Made a damn mess, too. Saw it all on the TV."

"Pardon me," said Smith, wriggling in his seat.

Carefully he undid the catches and opened the briefcase, exposing his portable computer system with its satellite phone uplink to the big mainframes housed in the basement of Folcroft Sanitarium, the headquarters for CURE.

"What's that?"

"My laptop," Smith said brusquely.

"I think you need more lap than you got."

Initializing the system, Smith dialed up his mainframes and, that done, called up the AP wire.

It was the first item.

Freight Accident -Texarkana, Texas (AP)

A Southern Pacific freight train crashed into a sport jeep stalled at a crossing grade in Big Sandy, Texas, destroying it. Out of control, the train barreled on east to the Texarkana freight yards for some fifty miles, where it crashed. The engineer was decapitated in the crash. National Transportation Safety Board officials are investigating the cause of the accident.

Smith's prim, bloodless mouth thinned. Loss of life was minimal, he was pleased to see. Oddly there was no word of the driver of the demolished utility jeep. Presumably he had survived.

By all accounts it was a man-made tragedy. A driver had caused it by his reckless attempt to beat a freight train. It was a mistake so common that when Smith analyzed past train accidents he factored those out as statistically meaningless.

"They'll never replace papers," the woman said suddenly.

Smith looked up. "I did not catch that," he said thinly.

"I say, that thing will never replace the newspapers. I don't care how many trees gotta die. Newspapers don't need batteries. Mark my words. The information superhighway is gonna end up sprouting weeds from every crack."

"I see," said Smith, slipping back into thought.

The conductor was coming down the aisle calling out the next stop.

"Mystic. Mystic next! Exit to the rear. Mystic, Connecticut-five minutes."

The train had been humming along the track, doing 120 miles per hour. There was none of the familiar clickety-clack of the trucks on the rail sections. This was CWR track--continuous welded rail. The coach shook and shimmied monotonously.

Glancing out the window, Smith saw Long Island Sound shimmering under a summer sun. The water was lapping at the rail bed up ahead.

As the train rattled and swayed into a long turn, he could see the diesel engine pulling the long silver snake of the train behind it.

The train gave out a low, mournful sound. It was repeated, a more protracted note this time.

There was no warning. Smith was taking in the ocean view, his mind a blank, not thinking of anything in particular when the train shuddered. They were running through an area of salt marsh where cattails waved in a gentle sea breeze.

Then came a boom. A jolt. The car seemed to buck. Smith's eyes flew back to the car interior. He caught the startled looks on faces jerking up from reading material and Amtrak tray meals.

That shared moment of uncertainty seemed to last forever. In reality it was a split second broken by a string of dull detonations.

Boom-boom-boom-boom

And the coach was suddenly hurtling in a direction that was contrary to the tracks below.

Harold Smith clutched his briefcase and held on firmly.

It did him no good. He was pitched from his seat, thrown unceremoniously into the aisle. The last thing he saw were the flying bodies of his fellow passengers.

The strange thing was that nobody screamed. Not one living soul emitted the tiniest bleat of surprise even as the shriek and scream of tortured steel filled the universe of chaos that had violently taken hold of their lives.

Chapter 4

Remo was preparing to conjure up a dragon.

He had stripped off his summer white T-shirt and stood on the passenger side of the big scarlet Dragoon APC. At his feet were an assortment of spray cans. He had bought them at a local hardware store, buying two of every color because it was easier than thinking the color scheme through ahead of time.

If he was going to paint his first dragon, it was going to be a spontaneous dragon. It was going to be a dragon never before seen. It would be a dragon among dragons.

The problem was, what kind of a dragon would it be?

There were dragons and there were dragons, Remo knew.

Some dragons were Chinese. Others Korean, Japanese and even English. There were probably Welsh dragons, too. Maybe even French dragons.

As Remo stood by the blank red canvas that was the Dragoon's armor, he tried to summon up in his mind the exact properties of Korean dragons.

There was only one hitch. Remo had never paid much attention to dragons before this. He was not a dragon aficionado. Or whatever dragon fanciers were called.

Feeling the pressure of eyes on the back of his head, Remo looked back and up.

At the bell-tower window facing the street, he saw the troubled visage of the Master of Sinanju abruptly pull back. Chiun had moved so fast Remo wasn't sure if he actually saw his true face or some kind of afterimage lingering in the void where he had been. But he had been there. No question.

Remo called up. "Hey, Little Father!"

No answer came.

"Hey, Chiun."

The face returned to the window, looking placid and innocent.

The window was heaved up.

"Did you call, Remo?" said Chiun, his voice all innocence and surprise.

Remo let the old fraud's imposture pass. "You still got that black kimono with the golden dragons?"

"Possibly," Chiun said thinly.

"Can I borrow it a sec?"

"Why do you wish it?"

Remo made his face placid. "Could be I want to try it on for size."

"Design your own dragon, plagiarist," Chiun said, snapping the window shut.

"So much for cunning," muttered Remo, eyes returning to the blank expanse of red.

Feeling eyes on him again, Remo got his inspiration.

Walking to the nose of the Dragoon, he stabbed out his right index fingernail. It looked as ordinary as he did. But the index nail was cut slightly longer than the rest. Remo did that purposefully, because while he had no use for long fingernails, the fingernail could be a potent weapon. Especially if one had been trained to use it correctly.

Touching the hard plate with the nail, Remo closed his eyes.

The problem was he still sometimes thought like a Westerner. A Westerner would sketch his dragon on paper first, transferring it to the canvas as a tracing. From that, the final drawing would be done and paint applied.

Remo was going to devise his dragon Eastern style. No tracing for him. Chiun wanted a dragon. He was going to get his dragon. And it was going to be whatever kind of dragon lurked in the red steel, waiting to be discovered.

Shutting his eyes, Remo stepped backward. One pace. Two. Then three. The nail screeched against the plate, making a shriek. A thin wire of scarlet peeled and curled away as Remo's nail-the product of long years of diet, exercise and training-scored the hard, complaining metal.

A long, undulating wave drew itself from nose to stern. When he reached the end, Remo allowed himself to peek.

Not bad. It had a dragonlike back. Repositioning his nail, he started forward.

The metal squealed a different tone going in this direction. He worked quickly, surely, instinctively. This was the Sinanju way. Remo had never done anything like this before, but Sinanju opened the mind, and the mind revealed all manner of hidden talents when it was open.

Hopefully it also revealed dragons.

Reaching the front, Remo stopped and peeked through one eye.

He was back at the point where he had begun. And now he had a long undulating form outlined in silver thread against red. Was it a dragon? Well, it wasn't not a dragon. It was a start. So, emboldened, Remo sketched in legs.

These he did with his eyes open. He made a front talon and a back claw. The tail was already there, so he edged it with short triangular spines. Yes, it was starting to look like a dragon, all right.

Now the head. That was trickiest. The front part of the dragon shape didn't really look like a head. He looked back. Actually the tail looked more like a head, and the head might pass as a tail. But if he switched ends; what were those barbs on the current tail?

Remo regarded his silver-thread dragon from every angle before he was seized by a brilliant inspiration.

Attacking the head, he made eyes and added teeth. Then he went to the back and performed a few operations there. Finally he added a curling, batlike wing.

Then, stepping back, Remo took it in in all its etched splendor.

It was blood-red-a good dragon color-outlined in silver. Silver went well with red.

Yes, it was a dragon. No doubt about it. And best of all, he had created it without resorting to messy spray paints.

As he took it in, Remo continued to feel a dull pressure on the back of his head that might mean a sniper was zeroing in on him but usually meant Chiun was watching.

He turned, grinned and said, "What do you think?"

Chiun was not there.

"Hey, Little Father. I know you're up there."

The window remained closed.

"Chiun. It's done."

Abruptly the front door was flung open, and out stepped the Master of Sinanju like a fussy teal hen. His face was bunched up like a yellow raisin.

Bustling up, he stopped, regarded the side of the Dragoon vehicle and cocked his head this way and that, eyes thinning to walnut slits.

"What do you think?" Remo asked proudly.

"Why does it have two heads?"

"The back is the head and the front is the tail."

"Why it is backward then?"

"It's not backward. It's supposed to be facing that way."

"It faces away from danger?"

"It's a decorative dragon, not a battle dragon."

"It is a cowardly dragon." Chiun squinted. "Its eyes are Western."

"You're imagining things. I drew it Eastern style."

"And its tail is English. I will not have an English dragon on my chariot."

"I don't know what you're talking about. It's a perfectly respectable dragon."

"And I detect Japanese influences in the scales."

"Those are barbs."

"Hah. Definitely Japanese. Erase it. For it offends my eyes."

"I can't erase that. I scored it with my own fingernails."

"It is no wonder then. Would you paint a seascape with a brush that lacks bristles?"

"That's not a good comparison."

"Erase it."

"It can't be erased. It's an etching."

"Then browbeat Smith into purchasing a new Dragon. I will not ride in this monstrosity. I would be shamed before all."

With that, the Master of Sinanju flounced back into the house, pointedly locking the door after him to signify that if Remo ever desired entry to Castle Sinanju again, he would have to mend his ways.

Picking up a spray can, Remo decided he would have to start all over again.

"Maybe I'd be better off letting my nails grow, after all," he grumbled, applying scarlet to his dragon.

AN HOUR AND TEN CANS of scarlet and metallic gold later, Remo's Dragoon looked as if it had been defaced by drunken graffiti artists. He had switched to Western style. The result-no dragon. Nothing that looked remotely like a dragon. Nothing that looked remotely like anything.

Seeing that his hands were flecked with paint droplets, Remo decided to call it a day. Maybe tomorrow was the day a dragon would come.

Reaching the door, Remo found it locked.

"Uh-oh."

No sense breaking in the door. Chiun would never let him hear the end of it.

Remo walked around the building. It was a hot summer day, so certain windows would be open for ventilation.

He found one at the far end, high up just under the eaves.

Remo looked around. No cars on the streets. No nosy people walking by. Perfect.

Taking hold of the fieldstone side, he let his fingertips sense the surface, absorbing its imperfections. It looked smooth to the eyes, but in fact was very rough. Crooking his fingers, Remo found tiny purchase points. He lifted. A bystander watching him would have said he was trying to pull the building down into its own cellar. In fact, that was the technique. Remo was not trying to climb the building. That would not work, strangely enough. But by attempting to drag the building down so the open window reached Remo's head height, a miracle happened.

From Remo's point of view, the building actually sank.

In reality, Remo was scaling the building using his fingers and toes.

His head came up to the open casement window, and he stuck his head in.

A stern face greeted him. "If you have bespattered my fine castle with paint, I will never forgive you," said Chiun in his squeakiest register.

And because Remo knew the next step might be slamming the window in his face, he sprang sideways to the next window, rolled in, snapped to his feet and faded off to one side while the Master of Sinanju pulled the other pane shut with a hard bang.

"Too late," Remo said.

Chiun whirled. For an instant Remo believed he had outsmarted his teacher, but Chiun pretended otherwise. He grasped his wrists with his long-nailed hands and the sleeves of his silken teal kimono met, concealing them from view.

"Your hands are filthy. Wash them this instant."

"My plan exactly," Remo said agreeably. "And while I'm at it, my nails look like they could use a good trimming."

Chiun's eyes narrowed to crafty slits, but he made no protest.

Going to the nearest bathroom-there were more than a dozen strategically placed throughout the sixteen-unit complex-Remo closed the door and gave his hands a good scrubbing with pumice soap. That took off the worst of the paint. The rest was ingrained into his skin.

Remo had a technique for that, too. Human skin consisted of a dead outer layer that sloughed and scaled off in the course of normal living. So Remo, after drying his hands, started dry-washing them vigorously.

His hands blurred. They even smoked a little. And into the washbowl tiny flecks of black material began precipitating. It was paint, turned black by the same friction that burned it off the skin of his fingers.

Hands clean, Remo rinsed them under cold tap water, then examined his nails. They were not very long, but could stand a trimming anyway. No sense encouraging Chiun's hopes by being lax.

Reaching into the medicine cabinet, Remo found a pair of nail clippers. They were extra-heavy-duty and custom-made out of drop-forged titanium. Since he now possessed fingernails that could score steel, Remo needed something tougher than the kind of clippers one could buy at K mart.

Carefully Remo began clipping his nails, starting with the smaller, easier ones. He worked from pinkie to thumb on his left hand. Switching hands, he naturally took the heavy clipper in his left hand and started with the thumb, then jumped to the pinkie and worked back from there. By the time he reached the nail he always saved for last-the extrahard, longish right index nail-he had a tiny pile of shavings on the porcelain sink counter that, if swallowed, would kill a rhinoceros.

The long nail was the tough one. If Remo cut it too short, he risked disarming a useful weapon. Through the years Remo had learned to enter locked buildings by scoring window glass with his right index nail. It was a handy tool to have, even if he would never admit this to the master of Sinanju.

Once Remo had inadvertently cut the nail too short, and for a solid month felt as if he had chopped off his right index finger to the knuckle. That was how much that nail was a part of him.

So Remo carefully trimmed the nail back, leaving enough to be useful. The titanium blade sounded like a tiny bolt cutter at work.

The nail came off in a perfect half-moon sliver and joined the tiny pile.

An impatient knock came at the door.

"You are hogging the bathroom," complained Chiun.

"There's others," Remo called back.

The door hammered under an angry fist. "I wish to use that one."

"All right, all right. I'm done," said Remo, sweeping the nail clippings into a wastebasket.

Opening the door, Remo stepped back as the Master of Sinanju hurried in. His eyes went to Remo's hands.

"Show me your hands. Are they clean?"

"Oh, get off it."

Chiun snapped his palms together. "Show me."

Dutifully Remo offered his hands for inspection.

"I feel like I'm back at the orphanage," he grumbled as the Master of Sinanju turned his hands palm up, then down again, scrutinizing the pale skin for paint flecks and under the nails for stubborn grime.

He flinched at what he saw.

"You have cut them!" Chiun squeaked.

"Sue me."

"It is a wonder you do not chop off your fingertips, you pare the nails so cruelly."

"They say if you cut back its branches, a tree will flourish."

"You are not a tree."

"And you are not my father. Get off my nails."

Relinquishing Remo's hands, the Master of Sinanju made a frowning face.

"You are beyond redemption. Now go. I will clean up here."

"I didn't leave a mess. There's nothing to clean up."

"Go, go," said Chiun, shooing Remo from the room.

More than happy to get off so lightly, Remo walked the mazelike corridors of the place that had been home almost as long as any other place in his vagabond existence.

Well, it wasn't so bad sometimes, he thought as he headed down to the first-floor kitchen, where the fresh scent of rice steaming wafted up. He and Chiun had come a long way from the days when, as part of his contract with Harold Smith, the Master of Sinanju was obligated to liquidate Remo should CURE be compromised. Now they were as close as father and son and, while they had their arguments, both loved and respected each other---Remo Chiun more than Chiun Remo. Remo didn't care how long the Master of Sinanju grew his nails. Or how flamboyant the kimono of the day was. All Remo wanted was to be left alone, to dress as he wished. A clean T-shirt and chinos were just fine with him, day in and day out. What he saved in wardrobe he put in shoes-expensive Italian loafers and no socks, thank you very much.

It was a simple life, Remo thought as he walked down the hall, picking up a universal TV remote from a small table. As he passed open doors, he used it to turn on the TV sets that were a fixture in almost every room, one by one.

This way he caught the news as made his way to the kitchen and the alluring scent of rice. Chiun could turn them off later.

Remo reached the stairs when something said by a network newscaster made him stop.

"Amtrak officials say the cause of the deadly derailment is unknown at this time."

He ducked into the room.

"More after this," the newscaster said.

Before the picture faded, Remo noticed the graphic floating beside the anchor's head. It said Amtrak Derailment. There was a digitized picture of a flopped-over Amtrak train in the box.

"Damn," said Remo.

He switched channels. NBC was still in its precommercial opening segments.

"At this hour rescue operations are still underway in the Connecticut seaport town of Mystic, but with darkness closing in, officials say that recovery and rescue will only become more difficult."

"What train?" said Remo.

"Now this," said the anchor.

Remo flicked stations again and got a gourmet-catfood commercial featuring a dancing Siamese in a tux waltzing with a fully grown woman in a floor-length dress. It looked like a public-service announcement for human-feline interspecies romance.

Further up the channels, Remo caught live CNN footage of a big yellow crane at the scene of the rail accident. The tracks were twisted all out of shape. There were cars on the track bed, cars in the water and the live remote newswoman was saying that this was the worst passenger accident since Bayou Canot-whatever that was.

"At this hour the Merchant's Limited death toll stands at sixty-six and bodies are still being pulled from the water. The ten-coach train left Boston's South Station at 7:00 p.m. and was two hours into its run to Washington when it encountered catastrophe."

"Oh, man," said Remo, grabbing a telephone. He thumbed the 1 button, and the call, after rerouting through three states to foil tracing, rang the contact telephone on Harold Smith's desk at Folcroft Sanitarium. The line ran and rang and rang, and Remo knew by the eighth ring that wherever Harold W Smith was, he was either dead or unconscious. For the foolproof code line also rang his briefcase cellular, which, if Remo knew Smith, nestled under his pillow when he slept.

Harold Smith never failed to answer the CURE line.

Something was very wrong.

Chapter 5

The Master of Sinanju wore his sweet parchment face like a mask of mourning as Remo tore south down Route 95 into Connecticut.

"We must contact the puppet President," he was saying as Remo leaned on the horn and barreled through frightened traffic.

"We don't know he's dead," Remo snapped.

"Technically we are under contract to Smith, not the puppet regime," Chiun continued. "It may be that our present contract will require an adjustment-in our favor, of course."

"The President of the United States is not a puppet. He's really in charge."

"Now, yes. And since true power is conferred upon him by Smith's untimely death, we must hasten to his side to guarantee the proper succession."

"Not until we know that Smith is dead for sure," Remo said testily.

"He did not answer your telephone call. Nor did he answer mine. He is dead. The man is incapable of not answering telephones."

"He could be unconscious somewhere."

"A ringing telephone would rouse him from any state of consciousness less than the complete destruction of his stubborn brain," Chiun insisted.

"He could be under the knife, being operated on."

"He would hear the telephone through his stupor, and his blind, groping hand would instantly clutch for the telephone."

"Not through anesthetic."

Chiun's thin mouth pursed unhappily. "He is dead. The most generous emperor the House has ever known, cut down cruelly in the prime of his magnificent generosity. Woe is us."

"You couldn't wait to get rid of him a few hours ago."

Chiun gasped. "Remo! Repeat this canard never again. Smith was a giant among dwarfs, a prince of emperors. Pharaohs there were, shoguns, maharajahs and deys, but none so generous as Smith. Emperors showered gold in the past, but their largess was but brass dribblings compared to Smith the Golden."

"Smith the Golden?"

"His every pronouncement enriched the universe," said Chiun, closing his eyes at the sublime memory.

Remo frowned. "Your universe, and for the last time he's not dead."

"Let us pray that this is true, but of course it is not. Remo, you may pay brief respects at the site of the catastrophe, but merely slow down. Do not stop. We must reach the city of Washington before the President of Vice attempts to unseat the puppet he secretly loathes."

"It's not like that," Remo said in a tight, tired voice.

"Then there is the scheming queen. Not an hour will pass between her learning of this calamity ere she will attempt to weld her ambitious skirts to the Eagle Throne. Those people are worse than Corvinus the Unjust."

"Who?"

"A Magyar-a Hungarian to you-ruler the House was forced to serve during a difficult era."

"Why was he 'the Unjust'?"

The Master of Sinanju lowered his voice. "He was elected."

"Tsk-tsk."

"It was a Balkan scandal," Chiun confided. "Such things were not done in those days."

Noticing the flashing blue lights in his side mirror, Remo saw that a Connecticut State Police cruiser was bearing down on him.

"I don't have time for this," he said tightly.

"What?" asked Chiun, turning in his seat.

"State trooper on our case."

Chiun shrugged. "He will follow until one of us runs out of fuel."

"That will be us," Remo said, glancing at the fuel gauge.

"Then I suggest you stop. For we are Sinanju, who do not fear Smokies."

Sighing, Remo pulled over and rolled down the window as the trooper emerged from his cruiser, striding toward them.

"We do not have time for this," Chiun said.

"I said that."

"So, back up."

"If we back up, he'll only call for his backup. Then we'll have the entire Connecticut barracks chasing us."

"Not if you squash his radio, too."

"It's a thought," said Remo, who abruptly backed up.

The Dragoon jumped into reverse, and its right balloon tires started climbing the cruiser's hood. The weight was too much for the cruiser's radials. They bloated up and one after the other popped as Remo crushed the windscreen, flattened the roof, demolished the strobing light bar and bumped down off the collapsing trunk until the APC was back on level ground again.

The state trooper took great offense to this display of overwhelming vehicular superiority. He took out his service pistol and emptied it into the APC's side, which lost a few specks of red paint but not much else.

The trooper was reloading and trying to empty his second clip when Remo got underway again.

"He will think twice about challenging us again," Chiun said confidently as rounds spanged harmlessly off the APC's rear deck.

"Are you kidding? By midnight there will be an APB on us from here to New Rochelle."

"As long as we are in Washington by then," said Chiun.

AS HE WADED through the salt marsh, Amtrak conductor Don Burris was grateful for one thing.

At least there were no alligators.

There had been alligators during the Bayou Canot derailment. But that was an Alabama bayou. A wayward tugboat had struck a train trestle, weakening it. So when the Sunset Limited rolled over it, seven cars tumbled into the water, spilling diesel fuel and human passengers into the gator-infested bayou waters.

It had been bad. Real bad. Forty-seven died. But it could have been worse.

Burris had been a conductor on that run. He was one of the lucky ones. His coach had stayed on the rails.

This was bad. No shit, it was bad.

The Merchant's Limited had slammed into a bulldozer straddling the track. What a bulldozer was doing on the rail bed didn't matter now. Saving the living was all that counted. And recovering the dead.

As he waded through tidal rushes and cattails, wearing a fisherman's high rubber wading pants, feeling for bodies with his boots, Burris had another comforting thought. At least this wasn't the era of steam. Back then, when there was a big wreck, the wooden coaches splintered like kindling. If it was winter, the coal stoves set the kindling alight, and the maimed and helpless lay howling as they were consumed. Yes, things could have been worse.

Then Burris's foot encountered a soft, heavy weight that gave slightly.

Reaching down with both hands, he started feeling about. His heart was pounding now. This was grisly work, but it had to be done now. Before the bodies got washed out to sea irretrievably or bloated up and were nibbled on by crabs. Bodies in the water turned horrible pretty fast, and folks naturally preferred open-casket wakes for their loved ones.

Burris's fingers swished and gurgled in the water, groping until what felt like seaweed threaded between his splayed fingers. He clamped down, both hands, and knew because they weren't slimy or slick that he had captured human hair.

Taking a deep breath, he pulled.

A little girl's head broke the surface, and her china blue eyes were wide open, her face a ghastly blue-gray. Burris just wanted to bawl like a baby. But he didn't. He gathered up the sopping form and lifted his voice. A frog that he didn't know was lurking in his throat tangled up the words. He cleared it, tried again.

"Body!" he called.

Two rescue workers came sloshing down off the bank and took the body tenderly from his arms. Swallowing hard, Burris resumed wading.

It was bad, yeah, he told himself. But it could have been worse. It could have been the dead of winter. In the dead of winter the water would have been too cold for efficient rescue operations, and the little girl with the innocent blue eyes would have spent the entire night down there. Maybe two. She had suffered enough. No one should lie unclaimed in the cold, cold water even if he or she was dead and beyond all pain and feeling.

Yeah, it could have been worse. But it was bad. It was real bad.

THE ACCIDENT SITE WAS under floodlights when Remo pulled off the road and got out.

Orange Coast Guard Jayhawk helicopters were traveling back and forth, targeting their spotlights on the purly water, where two cars lay half-submerged in the rainbow stink of diesel fuel. Fireboats bobbed in the darkness like ducks in profile.

"Looks bad," Remo said quietly.

Chiun said nothing. They worked their way toward the crash site.

A temporary morgue had been set up on dry ground, where noisy gas generators powered ground lights. The pup tents were stark pyramids in their back-glow. EMTs were rushing in and out, clutching plasma bottles, a besieged urgency in their faces.

Remo grabbed one on the fly. "We need to find out about a friend."

"Tent 3 has the casualty list," the man said breathlessly.

"Thanks," said Remo, moving on.

At tent 3 a harried nurse was working a cell phone and checking off names on a handwritten list.

"A friend was on the train," Remo told her.

The nurse looked up. "Name?"

"Smith."

"Hold on a second," she told the person the other end. Glancing at her list, she said. "No Smith on my list."

"What's that mean?"

"Anything. Body not recovered. Body not identified."

"What if he's injured, not missing?"

"That's the only list I have. Sorry. Try the morgue. A service rep will point you in the right direction." Into the phone she said, "Hello? Sorry. Listen, do you have any more AB negative?"

Returning to the busy night, Remo said, "Guess we try the morgue."

"Yes, it is what we should do. After we are finished here."

The Master of Sinanju was looking into an openflapped pup tent where two bodies lay on cots, sheeted and still.

They entered. Chiun lifted first one sheet and then the other. Neither was Harold Smith.

Going to the next tent, they found a tangle of arms and legs shrouded by a plastic tarp big enough to floor a room. When Chiun raised one end of the sheet, he found only feet. Going to the other, he got the same display.

Whipping the entire sheet away, he discovered that it was no single body. Only parts. No heads. Chiun replaced the sheet, his wrinkled face stiff.

"Let's check the water," suggested Remo.

Chiun nodded grimly.

An Amtrak cop tried to shoo them back from the water. But Remo said, "No time." Taking his shoulder, Remo spun him around.

The cop spun in place like a top and went whirling and staggering away. When he got himself organized again, Remo and Chiun had slipped into the dark water.

Searchlights cutting into the water made the marshy cove weird, as if something monstrous lurked under the oily water, ready to pounce into the world of oxygen.

The water closed over their heads, and they found themselves swimming through slow-moving tunnels of vertical light. They could see the submerged cars lying on their sides in silt, undercarriage fans turning lazily.

One coach was completely underwater and filled like an aquarium. Inside, dim faces were pressed to the window glass, some with their eyes closed as if napping while leaning against the glass. Others wore twisted expressions, their open mouths full of brine. A tiny fish was pecking at the exposed teeth of a black man with only the bloodshot whites of his eyes showing.

Releasing carbon dioxide bubbles slowly from their mouths, Remo and Chiun floated from window to window, trying to see inside. None of the faces was familiar. Most looked ordinary. Just ordinary people, Remo thought. Ordinary people on their ordinary way to homes or vacations or businesses. Now they were dead, drowned in a steel cage from which their weak bodies could not escape.

Remo wanted to let them out, but attracting attention was against Smith's highest directive. Remo was normally ready to violate that directive whenever it suited him. Now, thinking Smith dead, he felt like respecting it.

Noticing a flutter like a stingray, Remo saw that Chiun was at a door. He got it open. A blooping bubble of air came wobbling out and floated upward. Chiun slipped inside.

Remo followed.

They swam the length of the car, using their eyes to the fullest and taking advantage of the crisscrossing searchlights. Where it was too dark to make out faces, they used their sensitive fingertips, visualizing the cold facial planes they encountered.

Harold Smith's patrician features were not among the dead in this coach, they concluded when they reached its end. Swimming back, they left the dead in peace. Others would redeem them.

Bobbing to the surface, they treaded water, facing one another.

"Guess we try the city morgue," said Remo.

Chiun nodded.

After wading back to shore, they walked the twisted tracks to the engine that had slammed into a tangle of yellow metal with catastrophic results.

"Looks like a bulldozer," said Remo.

Chiun examined the twisted tangle critically.

"What does this contraption do?"

"It's used to push dirt and move it someplace else."

Chiun frowned. "What was it doing on the rails?"

"Search me. Maybe it was crossing."

"We are by the water. There is no crossing here."

"Good point," said Remo. "Let's go."

"Hold," said Chiun. Kneeling, he picked up a bent twist of metal. He brought this up to the light. There was a name on it. And a company emblem-four disks in a circle.

"Looks like a nameplate," Remo said.

"It is Japanese. It says Hideo."

"So? It's a Japanese bulldozer."

"What is a Japanese bulldozer doing on these rails?" Chiun said thinly.

"It doesn't matter that it's Japanese. Come on. Let's check out the morgue."

The nameplate disappeared up Chiun's wide kimono sleeve, and Remo started to object but decided the nameplate wouldn't matter to the investigation.

AT THE MYSTIC MORGUE they were told they were too late.

"What do you mean, too late?" Remo demanded. "The deceased Smith was claimed," the attendant said distractedly as he walked down a line of sheeted bodies, checking toe tags.

"By whom?" asked Chiun.

"Another Smith. Who else?"

"Where'd they take the body?"

"Not my problem. I have a morgue full of unclaimed corpses. I don't ask where the claimed go."

Drawing Chiun aside, Remo said, "Maybe Mrs. Smith claimed it-I mean him."

"We must be certain," Chiun hissed.

Remo addressed the morgue attendant. "Was Smith's first name Harold?"

"That sounds about right."

"We need to be sure."

"Yeah, Howard."

"I said Harold."

"Harold. Howard. Talk to the relatives. I'm up to my ass in body parts."

"One last thing," said Remo.

"Yeah?"

"Where were the injured taken?"

"St. Mary's."

AT ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL they were told, the injured did not include a Harold Smith.

"You sure?" Remo asked the admitting nurse.

"No Smiths," the admitting nurse said. "Try the morgue."

"We did."

"They're still dredging up bodies. It may go on all night."

"Thanks," said Remo dispiritedly.

Outside, with the moon up and the summer stars twinkling, Remo and Chiun stood in silence for a long time.

"Hard to believe he's gone," Remo said after a long while.

"Yes."

"Now what?"

"Washington trembles. We must soothe it with our awesome quelling presence."

"We should pay our respects to Mrs. Smith."

Chiun nodded. "Yes, this is permitted."

Remo looked up at the summer constellations. "I just can't believe he's gone."

Chiun's hazel eyes became austere gemstones. "I understand, Remo. Losing one's first emperor is very hard."

"No, it's just that Smith always seems too tough to die."

"All men die."

"It just doesn't seem real."

"Death is the ultimate reality," intoned the Master of Sinanju.

They padded away.

Chapter 6

Dr. Harold W Smith couldn't believe he was still alive. His pinched nostrils were clogged. His lungs felt like bloated wineskins. Every time he coughed, teacolored salt water came out of his nostrils. Every joint throbbed. His eyes, when he opened them, received the light like needlelike daggers, forcing them shut again.

And if that wasn't bad enough, some idiot was pronouncing him DOA.

"Tag him and ship him to the morgue," an emotionless voice was saying.

Smith tried to protest. All that came out of his mouth was a weak dribble of water.

"He moved," a woman's voice gasped.

"Reflex action," the emotionless voice said dismissively.

"But-"

"I'm a doctor. Don't contradict me, nurse. Tag his toe and get him out of here. The salvageables are backing up."

"Yes, Doctor," the unseen nurse said weakly.

Footsteps went away. They sounded mushy. The man was walking away over soft ground or in sopping shoes.

Smith tried to cough again, but nothing came. His head spun. His eyes were closed, and all he saw was ebony blackness-yet that world of darkness spun and spun.

When everything stopped spinning, Smith had no energy left. And the memories started flooding back.

He remembered the boom-boom-boom of the train going off the rails. The startled faces of his fellow passengers, frozen in shock, then coming apart in fear as they were flung from their seats like rag dolls.

The lights went out, and the coach was plunged into darkness. The first scream of surprise was voiced. Shrill, inarticulate, it was cut off as if the throat had been guillotined.

After that, Smith experienced the abrupt sensation of the coach traveling sideways, followed by a sickening dropping sensation.

All sound went away. The tortured screaming of metal suddenly stopped like a fire had been quenched.

Harold Smith realized even as he was slammed into a seat that was inexplicably disoriented that the sound was gone because the coach was now underwater.

With a final jolt, it settled.

Smith flung his arms and legs about, seeking the familiar. The seat armrest was pointed at a weird-angle. Smith found the release button as the seat back hit him in the head. He saw stars. But when they cleared, the cobwebs in his brain were dispelled.

Smith groped for the window glass. He found a hard metal lever. He couldn't tell if it was the upper lever or the lower one. He yanked it out, and the rubber O-ring seal peeled away in his hands.

Step one.

Smith tried to visualize what to do next when a heavy hand clutched at him.

"Help me!"

Smith recognized the thick voice. His traveling companion. The black woman.

"Let go," Smith said tightly. "I am trying to open the emergency exit."

"Well, what you waiting on?"

But the woman wouldn't let go. A second hand grabbed his leg.

"What's that gurgling?" she demanded.

"Water," Smith snapped.

The unseen voice lifted and went skittering into panic. "Where's it coming from?"

"We are in the water," Smith said tightly. "There is only a little time. Release me at once."

The panicky woman clung more tightly.

One-handed, Smith found the lower lever. He flipped it.

The window hit him with the force of the inrushing water, and again he saw stars.

He had the presence of mind to kick with both feet. His shoes came off. He hardly noticed. The water was cold and embraced him like a clammy shroud. He lost all orientation. There was no telling where he was. He felt cushions, hands and baggage bump against him, and he struggled, mouth pinched shut to conserve the oxygen in his lungs as he tried to fight his way back to the open window.

The current of water beating at him lessened, then slowed, and Smith swam toward it.

His fingers found the open window frame. He grasped them and began levering himself out. With a stab of fear, he found he could not.

Something was holding him back.

Twisting, Smith reached back and around. He found thick fingers and knew even in the dark that the woman was still holding on for dear life, holding on with the unbreakable grip of a two-armed octopus.

Smith kicked wildly, to no avail. Then, knowing he had no choice, he grabbed for the woman's face, found an ear, twisted it like a key and with a hard finger poked her in the eye.

Abruptly her death clutch let go. Smith kicked, got clear of the coach and frog-kicked until his head broke the surface.

Gasping, panting, he trod water, his eyes wide and full of horror. His teeth chattered. Then, recharging his lungs, he dived back down.

Smith found the open window almost at once. He reached in, encountered a limply flailing arm and pulled at it.

Whoever it was came out like a big balloon. Smith felt the body float past.

Smith kicked clear and reached in again.

This time it was like reaching into some cold, watery hell where the damned huddled awaiting redemption.

What felt like two dozen grasping hands reached out to him. Smith took one, but even as he touched it, it went limp. He let go. It was too cold, too dead. He found another-or rather, it found him. Yanking again, Smith extracted another victim. And the person lashed the water, all arms and kicking feet.

There was time to save one more. Smith reached in with one hand. Two hands grapsed his thin wrist. He heaved, and his lungs expelled oxygen. The strain was too great, the person too heavy. He tried to pull free, but the hands refused to release him. And when he stuck his other hand in, it was also grasped by frantic, clawing fingers.

The entire world went black for Harold Smith. Then red. His ears filled with a roaring. It sounded red. Everything was red. Everything was the screaming color of blood.

This is it, he remembered thinking. I am to lose my life because I tried to save my fellow man.

A weird darkness ate the roaring redness, and Harold Smith knew nothing more until he heard the emotionless voice pronouncing him DOA.

Smith could feel the water in his lungs. They were not full, but neither were they functioning properly. His body was trying to inhale. But his lungs had no elasticity.

He tried to call out, but without air to force through his voice box, no sounds could be made. He forced his stomach to cough, and brackish water bubbled up from his mouth, only to slide back again. It was a cold, ugly sensation.

Smith knew that he had to get over on his stomach. He turned.

"Doctor," the nurse's voice said, shrill and high, "I think this man is moving."

"Help me with this other one," the doctor snapped.

"But, Doctor-"

"Stat! Nurse!"

"Screw you," the nurse said in a small voice, and rolled Harold Smith over onto his stomach; A sudden pressure in his back became a hard pumping that made Smith's ribs creak and groan and his lungs rebel.

Smith began vomiting water from mouth and nostrils and, as terrible as the bitter marsh water tasted, he knew it meant life. He began coughing. He kept coughing. He coughed long after the coughing reflex subsided.

"He's alive," the nurse was saying.

"Then he doesn't need your help. I need you here, nurse."

The nurse dug in with all her strength, and the last of the lung water rushed out.

Smith hacked and coughed on his stomach, eyes pinched shut, his brain pounding with each explosion of air like a tormented sponge recoiling in pain.

When he was again breathing normally, Harold Smith opened his eyes.

The hovering face was very pale. A wide woman's face, the fleshy ridges contorted with concern.

"Please do not move." The voice was that of the conscientious nurse who had saved his life.

"Doctor's... name..." Smith croaked.

"What?"

"What is the doctor's name?"

"Dr. Skelton," the nurse said. She lowered her voice. "He thinks God planted his feet on the planet personally."

"Thank you..." Smith said weakly.

"You just rest. They'll take you to St. Mary's as soon as an empty ambulance is available."

The nurse disappeared. Only then did Smith remember that he had forgotten to ask her name. On second thought, he decided, it was unimportant. She was just doing her duty as she should. On the other hand, the doctor had been derelict. He would pay for that.

Smith waited until he had the strength to get up before he dared move off the cot.

He stood swaying on his stocking feet. The harsh lights burned through his retina. He took hold of the cot to steady himself. It upset. He landed on his face in the mud, only to climb to his feet with a cold purpose.

With difficulty Smith stumbled out into the night. The panorama of the crash lay spread out before him. A crane was trying to lift a coach from the water. Smith had a sickening thought it was his coach but couldn't be sure.

Passing a pup tent, Smith spied the nurse working over a woman who was naked to the waist. A black woman. A flat-faced doctor was applying two round defibrillator paddles to her chest. "Clear!" he called, not giving the nurse enough time to react. She jumped back just as the body convulsed. This was done three times until the doctor stepped back, dragged his shirtsleeve across his sweating brow and said, "Cover the body."

Smith recognized the dead woman's purple print dress. It was his erstwhile seatmate. He never got her name.

Smith moved on, feet making ugly sucking sounds in the mud. Rescue workers hurried back and forth. No one paid him any mind.

Coast Guard helicopters were patrolling the night sky like impotent dragonflies. Fireboats bobbed offshore, blue beacon lights rotating monotonously. Khaki-clad Connecticut State troopers stood watch over the operation. All was a kind of controlled chaos.

The soft mud under his feet squished with each step. Smith felt awful, unclear, without purpose. Dimly he understood that his briefcase had been lost. It was not waterproof. That meant its contents would be useless if found. But if anyone attempted to open it, they would be killed or maimed by the explosive charges.

Grimly Smith realized that was his highest priority.

Stumbling toward high ground, he found a road that led through thick trees to an area where police sawhorses held back the morbidly curious. Reporters and TV crews were pacing impatiently, waiting for permission to come forward. They were getting little cooperation if the bitter complaints reaching Smith's ears meant anything.

Working his way around, Smith happened to notice the fireman in the cattails.

Instinctively Smith ducked so as not to be seen. The fireman was not looking in his direction. He was wading through the cattails, wading out from shore.

Smith noticed two very strange things about the fireman.

The first was that the cattails surrounding him were still. Eerily still. As he moved through them, they failed utterly to respond to the ripples and waves he was making.

Smith had lost his glasses in the wreck, so his eyes were not at their best. Maybe it was a combination of that, the darkness and his deep fatigue, he thought.

Yet something was very strange. The cattails were photograph-still as the fireman waded through them. The moonlight was strong here, and it showed the play of eddies in the water. A fish splashed, making a quivering ring. Moonlight danced on its dark surface.

But where the fireman was wading purposely out to sea, there was no disturbance of the surface. No ripples. No splashing.

And most strangely of all, no sound of splash or gurgle.

Smith felt a chill that had nothing to do with his ordeal.

His eyes may deceive him, but his hearing was perfectly reliable.

The fireman was moving through cattails that ignored him, water that failed to eddy or gurgle in response to his progress.

Crouching low, Smith watched the man.

He wasn't searching. He was moving in a direct line, toward open water. The back of his black slicker shone. The back of his black fireman's helmet, with its scoop-shaped brim, reflected the shine of moonlight normally.

Nothing else about him was normal.

As Smith watched, mesmerized for reasons he could not process logically, the black shoulders were swallowed by the black water and still the man waded on.

The waterline crept up to the back of his neck, then the helmet brim, then the crown, and yet the fireman continued, unconcerned.

The top of the helmet became a black dome that traveled on, and Smith could see clearly that no bubbles of escaping air were breaking the surface.

The water failed to purl or corkscrew when the shrinking dome of the helmet was lost to sight.

"It should have purled," Smith muttered. "It did not."

His voice in the darkness was thin and hollow.

Smith watched for bubbles. There should be bubbles. If the man were drowning, his lungs should give up expelled gases. If he wore an oxygen mask, there would be bubbles.

There were no bubbles. There was just the placid water that had swallowed a wading fireman with complete and total soundlessness.

Harold Smith was a very logical man. It was his logic that spoke next.

"I do not believe in apparitions," said Smith in a voice that was firm yet troubled and held a hollow ring that only his wife would recognize as doubt.

Smith tore his eyes from the spot and continued on his way. Entering the water was out of the question. He had not the strength to rescue the fireman.

But he moved down to the waterline to examine the soft mud for footprints. He found a set moving toward the black lapping water, but they disappeared well short of where they should. The tracks simply stopped dead. Watching, Smith saw that the tide was going out. If it were coming in, the lapping wavelets would explain the erasure of tracks. But the water was receding, so there was no explanation.

Eyes lifting, Smith watched the water. A fish struck at something, then vanished. He saw no other bubbles of any kind.

Moving on, Harold Smith was hit by a sudden thought. Fire fighters wore fluorescent bands on their slickers. That man had none. Normally they carried bright yellow oxygen tanks slung over their backs. Smith had seen no oxygen tank.

Coming to a spray of light at the edge of the police line, Smith found a pair of taxis waiting for fares.

He opened the rear door of one and levered himself onto the cushions. All strength seemed to drain from him then.

"I would like to go to Rye, New York," he said.

"That's gonna cost, pal," the cabby said.

"Quote me a rate."

The cabbie pretended to think and said, "Seventy-five bucks. Tax and tip extra."

"What tax?"

"Actually there ain't one. That was just my way of saying, 'Don't forget him what brung ya.' "

And Harold Smith was so drained of strength that instead of bargaining, he nodded yes just before dropping off to sleep.

WHEN THE CABBIE said, "Rye coming up," Smith struggled back to consciousness.

"This next exit," he said, squinting at his surroundings. His head pounded, and his tongue tasted like dead fish.

The cabbie leaned into the offramp.

"Folcroft Sanitarium," Smith murmured. "Follow the third left all the way to the end."

He managed to stay awake until the cab slithered between the stone lion heads that guarded the Folcroft gate.

"That'll be seventy-five bucks," the cabbie told him. "Tip not included."

Only then did Smith realize that someone had picked his pocket back at the wreck. His wallet was gone. And so was his red plastic change holder.

But he stopped caring almost at once, because he fainted, slumping to the floorboards like a gray bundle of wet kindling.

Chapter 7

Remo was climbing behind the wheel of the APC when he remembered something important.

He snapped his fingers. "Smith's briefcase!"

Chiun made a face. "He is dead. His possessions do not matter."

"It's got his portable computer inside."

"It matters not."

"It's rigged to blow if someone opens it."

"Unimportant," said Chiun, settling into his seat.

"No, you don't understand. If a rescue worker tries to open it, he'll be killed."

Chiun was unmoved. "That is his fault for trifling with the emperor's possessions."

"We gotta find that briefcase before someone else does."

"Washington, then the briefcase."

"The briefcase, then Washington."

Chiun's voice grew still and chilly. "I am Reigning Master. My authority is supreme."

"Fine," said Remo, getting out and slamming the driver's-side door. "You drive to Washington. I'll catch up."

Chiun slid behind the wheel and keyed the ignition. He pressed his sandaled foot to the gas pedal.

The big engine roared. He pressed it again, harder this time. It raced, making ominous sounds of warning.

But still Remo continued to walk away.

The Master of Sinanju hesitated. To go or to give in? If he left, it would be that much more difficult to converse with the puppet President. The man barely spoke acceptable English. Remo would have to function as interpreter. If he remained, it would mean caving in to his pupil's childish whims. Then again, sometimes children had to be humored. Even adult children.

In the end Chiun compromised. He waited until Remo had vanished from sight before leaving the APC. When he exited the big vehicle, he shut the door with the smoothness of two velvet ropes knocking together. No click sounded.

That way, Remo would not know Chiun followed.

The Master of Sinanju decided to follow at a discreet distance. Let Remo wonder. Fretting would be good for him. And it was his turn to fret. Chiun was tired of fretting over Remo. Let Remo fret over Chiun. It was only proper and just that the child come to know the frustrations of the parent.

As he padded along, making no sound and leaving no footprint because he knew exactly how to place his sandals in the correct spots so as not to leave spoor, the Master of Sinanju reflected that it was different now that Remo understood they were of the same blood.

Different yet not as good. It was easier in the past. When Remo misbehaved, it was possible to bring him into line by casting aspersions on his unknown white parentage. When Remo became too full of himself, calling him a pale piece of pig's ear was all that was necessary to rankle him.

Now it was very different. Remo knew he had Korean blood in him, a gift from his father who, while of American Indian descent, had in his veins the noble blood of Korea. And Remo had accepted this. Chiun knew that Remo was descended from the bloodline of Sinanju. Descended indirectly, with much pollution and dilution of the good blood, but there was no denying Remo's essential Koreanness.

As he walked along, face tight in thought, a sea breeze toying with his thin, wispy beard, Chiun sighed faintly.

In some ways the old days were better. In some ways Remo was easier to control. He seemed more content now. Knowing who his parents were and what he was.

This was not good. A contented assassin was a complacent assassin. Chiun had never been content. Chiun the Elder had never been content. Yui, his grandfather, had never known a contented day and he had lived nearly forty thousand days.

Why should Remo, who was, after all, only partly Korean-although admittedly fully Sinanju-experience wanton contentment?

Chiun would have to find a way to reintroduce discontent into Remo's life.

It was the only way to preserve it.

A few hundred yards ahead, beyond a clump of evergreens, the Master of Sinanju heard the gurgle of a body disturbing water.

His mouth thinned.

Remo, no doubt. It was utter carelessness. To enter the water so as to make it complain!

Hurrying ahead, Chiun slipped down to the water to remonstrate with his inattentive pupil. The death of an emperor was no excuse for carelessness. Emperors died in their time. But Masters of Sinanju were not allowed that luxury. Remo could not expose himself to danger as long as the House depended upon his living. When Remo had trained his own pupil, he would be allowed to die at his convenience.

There was no sign of Remo Williams when the Master of Sinanju reached the shoreline.

The water lay still, regathering at one spot. Chiun drifted down and noticed footprints.

Momentarily he frowned. This was inexcusable. Leaving tracks. Even in loose sand, it was not permitted.

Then Chiun noticed the footprints were pointed in the wrong direction.

Whoever had made them had come out of the water.

Eyes narrowing, he examined them briefly.

The prints lacked heels but were sharply outlined. Shod feet. Not Remo's footprints. He insisted upon Western shoes with heels.

The prints were wet. But just barely.

A person had emerged from the sea. He should have dripped pools of water. There was no sign of such drippings. Only the footprints, which were hollows clotted with shadow.

Turning in place, the Master of Sinanju studied the line of prints. His face frowned, wrinkles bunching.

"Sandal prints," he hissed.

Curiously he followed them with his eyes.

They led into the evergreens. Chiun followed them. Remo could fend for himself. For now.

The trail of shod tracks led into a wild forest, where old trees stood naked and dead, their bark long gone, their knobby boles hard and dry to the touch. They might have been the skeletons of trees, but trees did not have skeletons. Only dead old wood that insects riddled for shelter.

The footprints led into the carpet of fir needles, and Chiun followed them.

They passed a fir tree that was scarred by a fresh notch. Sap was seeping from it. Chiun studied the notch. His face frowned more deeply.

Emboldened, he followed the prints, hands tight to his waist, sandaled feet padding softly. As he walked, he stepped into the very imprints he followed. His sandals fit, nearly perfect. His natural gait followed smoothly. This told him that he pursued a man of roughly his own height and leg length. This made his eyes narrow in quiet anticipation.

Chiun quickened his pace.

Moonlight filtering through interlacing branches made webby patterns on the ground. Chiun avoided the light where he could. It was as instinctive as breathing.

The figure ahead of him made no such effort, Chiun saw as he closed in on it.

The figure was short and thick, his body black and shiny. As he moved, square plates of black material shook and flapped with every step. A helmet covered his squat head, flaring at the back to cover the nape of the neck.

The man strode on with an arrogant purposefulness that the Master of Sinanju recognized.

Chiun decided the proper course of action.

Lifting his voice, he cried, "Nihonjin!"

The figure whirled, setting its black skin plates flapping.

In its hand was a long ebony sword. And under its black helmet, his face lay in deep shadow. Even Chiun's keen vision, amplifying the moonbeams, could not make out the hidden features.

"Chosenjin!" the figure hissed back.

And taking the haft of his sword in both hands, he struck a defensive position, blade held before his face.

Confidently the Master of Sinanju advanced, fists opening, fingernails splaying.

One blade against ten. A sword forged by man against the Knives of Eternity that grew from the deadliest fingers on earth.

It would be no contest.

The sword started forward. It turned to the right, the wrists twisting. A Wheel Stroke. Easily parried.

"Come meet your doom, Nihonjinwa," Chiun hissed.

The sword descended, and the Master of Sinanju stepped in to parry it.

The blade sliced down in a chopping stroke. Chiun's index nail rose to meet it. They clashed, metal encountering horn.

The big black blade was arrested.

His adversary, grunting in surprise and anger, exerted all his strength to force downward the fraillooking nail with its thin supporting finger.

Calmly Chiun lifted his finger as if toying with a great black feather, and the sword, clasped in trembling hands, was forced to relent.

An explosive curse came from the helmeted one.

"You may relinquish your blade when you wish, ronin," Chiun said without concern.

At that, the armored figure jerked back, reclaiming his sword. The blade lifted and swooped down again. It hummed in the air as a fine blade should. But midway though its fall, it went silent.

Chiun's keen ears detected this even as his fingernail rose to block the slicing thrust.

Blade met nail-and passed through!

Chiun recoiled from the contact. It was pure instinct. He feared no blade that he could see. The blade had not been forged that could not be deflected by Sinanju nail.

In that split second of contact, his senses told him this blade had sliced through his nail.

Recoiling, he spun, shifted left, then right, putting distance between his foe and himself.

And lifting his out-thrust finger to the moonlight, he saw that his nail was whole.

It was impossible.

With his own eyes he had seen the blade bite into his precious nail.

But it was whole. Lifting his eyes, Chiun saw that the opponent's blade, too, was whole.

Chiun made a tight face. "Who are you, ronin?"

The foe said nothing.

As he zeroed in on the apparition with all of his senses, the Master of Sinanju realized that his opponent's heart wasn't beating. There was no sound coming from him. No labor of lungs. No gurgle of blood.

Was this a phantom?

Chiun decided to find out.

Placing the toe of one black sandal behind him, he made as if to retreat.

The black plated warrior advanced, naturally assuming timidity on the part of the Master of Sinanju.

Then with a twist of his firmly planted ankle, Chiun sent his silken skirts spinning. His body whirled up in slow spirals whose speed was deceptive.

The retreating toe snapped forward, seeking the helmeted head.

And passed through!

Landing awkwardly because he had anticipated using the recoil of the death blow to land correctly, the Master of Sinanju ducked, feinted and neither felt nor heard the swish of the descending blade.

But the blade did descend.

He saw it as he spun around, hands coming up in a defensive posture. One hand made a fist. The other was crooked like a hawk's talons. He stood ready for anything.

The foe assumed another fighting stance. Chiun recognized that a disemboweling thrust was contemplated. But if the blade had no bite, how could it disembowel?

Chiun struck first.

Tucking his elbow in his ribs, he expelled a gusty breath of air and a perfect punch simultaneously.

The blow drove in true, landing on the chest of the ronin. The defending blade was too slow to parry it. The fist sank into the blackness of the breastplate, and Chiun followed it through, as if through a blackbeaded curtain and not a solid man.

Stepping around on the other side of his foe, the Master of Sinanju whirled to see him slashing empty air with furious strokes. He attacked the spot where his slow senses were telling him the Master of Sinanju should have stood-but where he stood no longer.

Chiun kicked high. His sandals touched but air. He aimed for the boots. They moved, oblivious to his blows. He struck for the backs of the knees to collapse the legs. First the right, then the left, so quickly the blows would land as one.

The foe felt those blows not, and a cold unease grew in the Master of Sinanju's determined breast.

Here was a foe unlike any other. He was a foe Sinanju couldn't vanquish.

Chiun retreated three steps.

The black figure hunkered down to peer all about. His movements were clumsy, for every inch of his body was armored. But he wasn't slow. The speed of his ghostly blade spoke that fact loudly.

"I am here, ronin, " Chiun taunted.

His foe turned, one foot following the other.

The head tilted back, and the face was exposed.

Chiun almost gasped. There was no face under the samurai helmet. Only a black void in which it seemed alien stars twinkled. The face was flat and featureless and gleamed like polished obsidian.

"I challenged you to a fair fight, ronin," proclaimed the Master of Sinanju.

The adversary seemed to understand. Two-handed, he drew back his ebony blade, cocking it so that the blade lay across-his right shoulder. It was a preliminary movement Chiun didn't recognize. The ronin swung it outward once, twice, slowly, with a measured confidence.

Did he expect Chiun to walk into a swinging twohanded blow? Even if his blade possessed no bite?

Chiun waited warily.

Abruptly the armored arms swung forward. The blade left the mailed fingers. It sailed toward the Master of Sinanju, moving silently, neither cleaving the air nor displacing it.

"You seek to frighten me with your ghost tricks, ronin, " said Chiun, calmly lifting his index finger to block the blow with his nail just in case.

The blade turned twice in the air as it spiraled toward him. Chiun saw it as if in slow motion. There was no threat in this ghostly blade. It held no more substance than a moonbeam.

The blade swung into its third silent arc and intersected with Chiun's upraised nail.

He felt no bite, no impact, no resistance. It would not even be necessary to duck this harmless blade, he told himself.

Just as it passed without cutting through his nail, Chiun sensed an abrupt change.

And in the firred forest of darkness, he screamed in unexpected pain.

Chapter 8

It was easier than Remo thought it would be.

He drifted along the shoreline until he came to the rescue site. Everyone was busy. No one had any time for a casually dressed man whose slim form seemed to melt into the shadows while avoiding the sweeping searchlights as if designed to repel all illumination.

They had a big yellow crane at the water's edge, where workmen were lashing lines to the last submerged car. The crane strained upward, and with a sucking sound the coach came up out of the water, gushing noisy strings of water from every joint and broken window.

They let it hang over the water until it finished draining. All eyes were on this scene. Lights were directed onto the coach, and it was possible to see the interior through the windows. See the tangle of humanity that floated in the sinking water as in a fishbowl that was leaking.

As the water level fell, the bodies settled down to the bottom, moving aimlessly and involuntarily like clumps of dead jellyfish.

Remo checked through the salvage debris that was stacked here and there. Piles of it lay unattended. Baggage. Briefcases. Purses. Knapsacks. Articles of clothing. Even toys.

Remo found Harold Smith's briefcase in the second pile he picked through. There was no mistaking it. Once it had been tan, but decades of wear had aged the skin and darkened it to the hue of an old saddle.

Remo claimed it, looked around to make sure he wasn't seen and, satisfied, started back for the Dragoon.

The case sloshed in his hands, drooling malodorous water. It was heavier than normal but grew lighter with each step.

Far ahead a sound pierced the night.

"Aiiee!"

Remo knew that sound. It was Chiun's familiar cry of anguish, only it had a weird, horror-struck quality now.

Clutching the briefcase, Remo broke into a run. His feet floated across the sand and into brush. From there, he sprinted through the trees. He had no eyes for anything along the way, counting on his ears to take him to the site of the anguished wail.

Whatever it was, Chiun was in trouble.

Deep trouble.

CHIUN BURST OUT of the trees before Remo could reach the exact spot.

The Master of Sinanju clutched one hand. It was wrapped tightly in the wide sleeve of his kimono as if injured.

"Chiun! What is it? What's going on?"

"I am wounded," he said in a thin, disbelieving voice.

Remo dropped the briefcase. "What!"

Chiun danced in place. "I am maimed. I am undone."

"Let me see it. Let me see it."

Chiun recoiled, one hand clutching his muffled wrist. "No, Remo. It is too horrible. The sight will drive you mad."

"I can take it, Chiun. Just let me see it."

Visions of a bleeding wrist stump jumped into Remo's head.

Chiun looked down at his feet. "Where is it?"

"Where is what?"

"We must find it. Perhaps the surgeons of this land can reattach it."

"God, no," said Remo, hearing his worst fears confirmed.

"Do not stand there like a dunderhead. Help me find it."

"Okay. Okay. Where did it fall?"

"Back there." Chiun pointed into the forest with his uninjured hand. The indicating nail gleamed like a blade of polished bone.

Remo swept past the Master of Sinanju, eyes scanning the fir needles. He spotted footprints that looked like Chiun's, but that couldn't be. The Master of Sinanju didn't leave footprints.

"I don't see it here," Remo called hack anxiously.

"Be careful where you step. Do not break it."

"Your hand?"

Chiun's voice grew querulous. "Hand? What are you babbling about, Remo?"

Remo looked up. "I'm looking for your hand-aren't I?"

"No. My hand is still attached to my wrist, as it should be."

And with a nervous flourish Chiun shook off the silk sleeve, exposing his right hand.

Remo looked. Chiun's right hand was a tense fist like a bony mallet carved from aged ivory.

"I don't get it. What happened to you?"

Chiun's face stiffened to a waxen mask. "I cannot bring myself to say."

"Come on," Remo said, approaching. "It can't be that bad. Let me see."

Chiun averted his face, offering his tightly closed fist to his pupil.

Remo took it carefully. He counted the fingers. All four looked intact. The thumb was still there, too.

Carefully Remo unbent them, opening the Master of Sinanju's fist.

"Tell me it is not as bad as it seemed in the first anguished moment of pain," Chiun moaned.

"I don't see anything," Remo said slowly.

"The longest finger. Tell me it is whole."

"It is."

"And the nail?"

"Yeah, it's- Wait a minute. It's gone."

Chiun threw a thin wrist across his forehead. "I am undone. I am shamed. I have been humiliated."

"What the hell happened?"

Chiun dragged his eyes back to his hand. They fell on the stump that was his fingernail. It projected slightly past the finger's tip, but at a slanting angle, not tapered to a point like the rest.

"It will take years to renew," he wailed.

"Well, months anyway," said Remo. "But what happened, Chiun?"

"I cannot say."

"Why not?"

"My humiliation is too great. Do not force the words from my lips. Just find the member that was once part of me."

"Okay," Remo said, relaxing slightly now that he knew Chiun hadn't really been maimed. "Give me a sec."

He found the nail easily enough now that he knew what he was looking for. It lay on the ground, clearly. visible to Remo's Sinanju-trained eyes. In the moonlight it looked strangely white, as if dead.

Remo brought it back to the Master of Sinanju, cupped in one hand.

"Now what?" he asked.

"Wrap in it warm milk," said Chiun.

"That only works with teeth," Remo said.

Chiun hovered over the cupped artifact. "Is there no hope for it, then?"

"Maybe it can be welded back on, but I doubt it."

"I cannot bear the sight of it, detached as it is."

"Maybe Super Glue would work," said Remo.

"I will not stoop to artificial nails to hide my shame. Remo, do the necessary duty for me. I beseech you."

"Do what?"

"Bury the poor thing."

"Bury a fingernail?"

"It is the only correct thing to do."

"We can do that later. Mind explaining how you managed to break this nail?"

"It is a sign that I am growing old and infirm. My Knives of Eternity have grown fragile. Never has this happened before. There is no other explanation. Not even a ronin could accomplish this on his own."

"A what?"

"If you had listened to me, this would not have happened."

"Don't blame this on me. I had to recover Smith's briefcase, okay? I didn't want a maimed rescue worker on my conscience."

"A maimed teacher is acceptable, however?"

"I didn't maim you."

"I told you Japanese were behind this tragedy, but you did not listen."

"Japanese! Where do you get that?"

In the distance a familiar rumble and growling shook the darkness.

Remo turned. "Isn't that-?"

Chiun puffed out his cheeks. "The fiend! To add insult to injury, he is stealing my dragon!"

Remo flashed toward the sound. He broke from the trees in time to see the scarlet Dragoon APC rumbling down the road.

He started after it but Chiun's voice stopped him like a cracking whip. "Remo. Come back. You do not know what you face."

"A car thief. Big freaking deal," said Remo.

Abruptly the Master of Sinanju was in front of him. He blocked the way, his face stiff and cold. "I will not risk your humiliation, too. Your honor must be unsullied if mine is to be avenged."

"What are you talking about?"

The Dragoon continued rumbling away. Remo tensed.

"Stay. I will explain."

His fists clenched tight, Remo wavered between obedience and pursuit. Ultimately obedience won. He let the air escape his lungs and followed Chiun's beckoning finger back into the dense forest of fir trees.

"You see these tracks?" Chiun said coldly.

"Looks like sandal prints."

"They are not," snapped Chiun, who then led him to a scarred fir tree.

"See this?" he asked, indicating a raw notch in the bark.

"Somebody chopped a hunk from that tree."

"It is the unmistakable bite of a katana. Study it well, Remo. For you have never before encountered its like."

In the darkness Remo looked at it from a couple of angles. "Looks like a sword chop."

"Yes. Some might call it a sword. But it is correctly called a katana. "

Remo's brow furrowed. "I don't know that word."

"Do you know the word ronin?"

"No."

"You are abysmally ignorant."

"Sue me."

"Sit."

Reluctantly Remo sat down on the fir needles, which were dry and odorless. A freshening breeze came off Long Island Sound, smelling of rank salt grass and dredged-up muck.

"A foe unlike any I have ever before encountered challenged me with his katana blade," said Chiun.

"Right."

"His first blow I parried successfully."

"Of course. You're you."

"His second passed through me harmlessly."

Remo frowned. "Okay..."

"We fought. Blows were struck. None landed. He was as mist. While I was as hard as bone. Yet no harm was done to either combatant."

"You were fighting a ghost?"

"A ronin."

Remo made a face. "I don't know that word."

Chiun lifted a hand, his left. The right lay in his lap, tightly fisted so the embarrassing absence of nail didn't show.

"I am not yet finished with my tale."

Remo subsided.

"Blows rained. Then the blade of doom was descending. But I feared it not, for it failed to swish and flutter the air it sliced through as a true blade should."

Remo nodded. Chiun had taught him years ago that striking swords made distinctive warning sounds.

"As this hateful blade had no substance. I failed to shrink from it." Chiun hung his aged head. "My error, which I will eternally regret."

"Oh, for crying out loud! It's only a nail."

Chiun clapped his hands in Remo's face. "My honor has been besmirched. The honor of the House has been besmirched. Thus, your honor has been sullied, as well."

"I don't feel besmirched or sullied," Remo countered. "Unless you count the fact that you let him run off with my new Dragoon."

Chiun regarded Remo with cold hazel eyes. "I have heard this story from my grandfather, who swore me to secrecy. My father never revealed it. Nor did the Master who trained me. But it is true nonetheless."

Remo had sense enough to close his mouth. Chiun's normally squeaky voice had deepened to the ringing tone he used to relate accounts of past Masters. There was no dissuading him from launching into whatever he was about to recount, so Remo mentally kissed his scarlet Dragoon goodbye and assumed an attentive mien.

"You know of shoguns?"

Remo nodded. "Sure. Old-time Japanese warlords."

"Once during a turbulent time in Japan, the shoguns were at war with one another. All Japan was in chaos. Terrible was the slaughter. Wonderful was the gold to be earned by a cunning Master who was prepared to play shogun against shogun."

An owl hooted. Without taking his eyes off Remo's face, Chiun picked up a stone and flung it. The owl squawked in midhoot and vacated the area in a frantic shivering of wings.

"The Master in those days was Kang. He was a very busy Master. There was no work from Egypt. There was no contact with Persia. The Khanates were quiet. But Japan called for his skills time and time again. Now in these days Kang would betake himself to Japan to succor this shogun or that shogun. He cared not which side of a duel he found himself. For one Japanese was the same as another in Kang's eyes." Chiun lifted a precautionary finger. "His mistake.

"A shogun sent a message to the village of Sinanju, which was peaceful and contented in the days of which I tell. For the gold flowed directly from Japan and into the bellies of the people of Sinanju. And this shogun summoned Kang to come to his keep to treat with him. The message was signed with the crest of a shogun Kang had never met but of whom he had heard.

"So Kang went as asked. He came to this keep, which lay on the Kanja Plain. And coming to this keep, he found it impregnable. No voice responded to his knock. His shouts went unanswered.

"Standing on the ground before the shogun's gate, Kang called up time and again, 'I am the Master of Sinanju, come to treat with the shogun who dwells within.'

"But only songbirds answered him, Remo.

"Thinking the shogun away in battle, Kang studied the keep well, and though it was thought impregnable, he discovered a way in. He breached this impregnable keep and as soon as he was within, a host of samurai fell upon him.

"Well the Master fought. Though every hand was against him, he gave no quarter, showed no mercy. Steel blade broke asunder against his mighty blows. Samurai spilled their innards as their own blades were turned upon them-for the blade has never been forged that could whelm a Master of Sinanju."

Chiun's voice grew hushed. He looked at his tightly clenched fist. A wince of pain troubled his wrinkled countenance. He went on. "When at last the shogun's samurai were exhausted, the Master went to his chambers and presented himself, his voice full of righteous wrath and thunderings.

" 'Why have you summoned me into a trap, shogun?. Speak, before I remove your head from its ignominious perch!'

"And in a voice that told Kang the shogun considered himself already dead, the defeated one said, 'I summoned you not. Why would I summon one whom the winds whisper had been hired to vanquish me?'

"Hearing these bitter words, the Master understood. He asked but one question. 'Who is your most bitter enemy, shogun?'

"And absorbing the name Nishi, the Master quitted the keep of the doomed shogun."

An understanding light came into Remo's eyes. Seeing this, Chiun nodded with quiet satisfaction, then continued his story.

"Journeying to the castle of the shogun who was called Nishi, Kang announced himself with these words, 'I am the Master of Sinanju, just come from the keep of your most bitter enemy.'

"'He is dead?' asked the shogun called Nishi in the manner of one who already suspected the answer and was pleased by it.

" 'No, only his samurai,' said Kang.

"And down from the ramparts of Nishi's castle came a single lump of gold-not even enough to pay for the food the Master had consumed along the way to Japan.

"Kang repaired into the forest for the night, Remo. With the dawn he saw the forces of Nishi array themselves about the keep of the first shogun, whom the Master had deprived of all protection.

"The armies of Nishi consisted of bowmen, swordsmen and spearmen. Some rode fine horses. Others marched on foot. Quickly they surrounded the defenseless keep. The moment of doom had come for the helpless shogun.

"Seated upon his stool far behind his lines where he could watch the coming battle, Nishi gave the order to attack.

"They came in crane formation. They moved in rolling-wheel formation, encircling the untrained servants of the doomed shogun. All this Kang saw from a place of secrecy.

"The battle lasted all day, not because the forces of Nishi met with resistance but because they delighted in slaughter. As the piteous cries and moans of the dying smote Kang's ears, he stared into his palm, where lay the lump of gold that would not carry his stomach back to his home.

"At last, when it was over, Nishi stood up from his stool and rejoiced in his great victory, purchased at so little cost to him, that from that day on all of Japan would tremble at the sound of his name. The pennants of his clan fluttered over all that was formerly his defeated foe's.

"That night Nishi slept in the fine bed of the dead shogun, with the unseeing head of the defeated one standing guard at the door to the bedchamber.

"But when his retinue came to wake him the next morning, they were struck dumb with horror. For perched on a spear pike at the very door sat the unseeing head of Nishi the Cunning. And on the bed where he had slept his last lay his dead body. But on the pillow, Remo, lay the correct head. The head of the shogun who had not summoned the Master of Sinanju."

Chiun leaned back.

"Nice story," admitted Remo.

Chiun inclined his head. "Thank you."

"But what does it have to do with anything?"

"Did I say the story was over?"

"No, but you acted like it was."

"You are easily deceived. A trait you will have to overcome if you are to rectify the besmirchment of our House."

"I'm all ears," Remo said wearily.

"You are all nose and feet, but that is another story. Listen well.

"Unseen and unsuspected, Kang returned to his village, bearing no gold but having avenged a grievous insult. There to await another summons from Japan, whose gold and blood continued to flow for years to come.

"Now it was the custom in those feudal times that when a shogun died without heir, his samurai were released. They became masterless samurai, otherwise called ronin. "

"Ah-hah. "

"It was a shameful thing to be a ronin, Remo. A ronin had no clan, no liege, and no loyalty. Only his katana and his meager skills. Some ronin offered their services to any who would pay. Even lowly farmers. Others turned to banditry. Some fell into more-evil habits, such as politics. For in those times there were more samurai than there were shogun in need of warriors. Thus, the blight of itinerant ronin. "

"Kinda like Fuller brush salesmen today?"

"There is no comparison!" Chiun flared. "Now, sit quietly as I relate of my tale the portion that concerns us."

Chiun made his voice hollow. "A time came when Master Kang was at peace in his village. This was several years later. And word came that a peasant in a nearby village had been slain by an itinerant Japanese samurai.

"Now, since the slain one was not of our village-" Chiun paused to make certain Remo absorbed the word our "-Kang gave this matter no mind. Samurai in Korea were rare, but if the business of the samurai concerned Sinanju, the samurai would come to Sinanju."

"I'll bet he did," said Remo.

"He did. Exactly. A morning came when this samurai trudged into the village, hollow of eye, lean of cheek, his bedraggled body encased in once-fine armor that was as black as onyx. He came to the House of the Masters on the hill, where he took up a pitiful stance. And his voice lifted.

" 'I am Edo, a samurai made masterless by the Master of Sinanju.'

"Hearing this, Kang stepped into the morning sunlight. 'What shogun did you call master?' demanded Kang of the pitiful ronin.

" 'Nishi the Brave.'

"'Nishi the Miserly,' spit Kang, 'For he tricked the House and so sealed his doom.'

"'You have made me a ronin, and I have come to avenge this curse.' And out from its sheath purred his black katana.

" 'Better that you plunge the blade you now draw into your own belly than point it at the Master of Sinanju, ronin,' Kang intoned.

"And without another word, the ronin laid the flat of his blade across his outstretched wrist in a manner Kang recognized as a threatening stance."

"I can tell you exactly what happened after that," Remo said.

"You cannot. Listen well. The ronin bared his teeth like a wounded animal, all the hate he harbored in his heart leaped into his beady eyes like malevolent fires.

Suddenly he lifted the blade, and swack! Down it came, chopping off the first finger of the ronin's right hand. The digit fell to the dirt. Bending, he lifted it up and with a snarl flung it into the face of the Master, who of course dodged it with ease.

"Then without waiting, the ronin dropped to the ground-whereupon he opened his belly with his own blade."

Remo nodded. "Hara-kiri."

"No, seppuku! Hara-kiri is what ignorant whites call it. You are not white, although you are sometimes ignorant. The ritual suicide is called seppuku."

Remo sighed. "So the samurai died?"

"Do not dignify the wretch with that honorable term. He was but a ronin. And yes, he died, but not before leaving Master Kang in his debt."

Remo looked puzzled. "When did that happen?"

"The removal of the finger and the flinging of it, this is very Japanese, Remo. It signifies that the ronin acknowledged his powerlessness to avenge the insult against his person. Loss of the finger meant he challenged Kang to redress the wrong done to him. But the seppuku denied Kang that opportunity forever. Thus, the ronin died. Thus Kang lived with an unpaid debt hanging over his head."

Chiun leaned back. Remo waited, watching carefully. Was Chiun done? He looked done. But he had seemed done before. Remo wasn't about to be mousetrapped again.

"What have you to say, Remo?"

"You done?"

"Of course I am done!" Chiun flared. "Now, what have you to say?"

"It's a heck of a story?"

Taking his cloudy puffs of hair in hand, Chiun wrenched at them as if driven to utter distraction. "No!"

"Don't get upset. Don't get upset. Okay, the ronin chopped off his finger. Now, someone chopped off your fingernail. They connect, right?"

"Correct. They connect."

"Okay, I see where this goes. A descendent of the defingered ronin is after you."

"No. It is the same ronin. He has come back."

"From the grave?"

"Wherever it is that ronin come back from. I do not know. I am no Nihonjin." Seeing Remo's blank look, Chiun added, "A Nihonjin is a man from Nihon, which the English call Japan."

"You're telling me that a ghost samurai chopped off your fingernail?"

"Not a samurai-a ronin. He had no substance except when he wished. He had no face. He was not of this world. Therefore, he is of the next. For what other worlds are there?"

Remo looked Chiun square in the eye. "A dead ronin has my APC?"

"Yes. But he will not be satisfied until he has purchased redress."

"He got your fingernail. What more does he want? I mean, isn't that enough? A finger for a fingernail?"

"No. He desires my life. Possibly yours. My Master is dead, so he cannot take that from me. Therefore, he will make you, the next in line, masterless, thus doubly depriving me."

"This is all over fingers?"

"No. This is about face. Have you not been listening? Kang was deprived of face."

"That meant the ronin won. Shouldn't Kang be chasing him through the Void?"

"Is this white logic I hear? Are you flinging white logic in my face?"

"Has this guy ever bothered the House before? Since he died way back when, I mean?"

"No. That is why the story was not handed down. It was believed that he sought no revenge other than the unpayable debt. But now he is back."

"That doesn't make sense. Where has he been all this time? Where did he come from?"

"He came from the water. I heard him emerge, at first making sounds but later none and wielding a katana that had no substance yet bit like steel."

"You saying he walked all the way from Korea?"

"Yes."

"Wouldn't it have been easier to walk across the Bering Strait and take the land route via Canada? I mean, if you were a ghost, why would you take the long way? The poor SOB had to walk all the way across Asia and Europe, then cross the freaking Atlantic. Lot quicker to just walk the Pacific, don't you think?"

"Are you inflicting more white logic upon me?"

"No, just common sense."

"The answer to your idiotic question is as simple as it is obvious. The ronin became lost in his wanderings and came the wrong way. This explains why he was so many centuries before haunting us."

"I don't buy it."

"There is more." And Chiun extracted from his wide kimono sleeve the mangled manufacturer's plate from the Japanese bulldozer struck by the Merchant's Limited. "Behold. The crest of the four moons. This, Remo, is the crest of the Nishi clan."

"How do you know those are moons?" asked Remo.

"I know because I know moons."

Remo rolled his eyes moonward. "So in addition to walking the entire Atlantic seafloor, he dragged along the clan bulldozer?"

"I did not say that," Chiun flared.

"Okay, let's say to avoid an argument we have a phantom ronin on our tailbones. What do we do about it?"

"We must return to Sinanju."

"What!"

"Because to return to Sinanju means that he will have to follow. To follow means a Pacific crossing if he is wise, an Atlantic crossing if not. Either way, by the time the ronin catches up with us, I will be long dead and one of your descendants will head the House."

"I'm not hiding from any ghost ronin. Besides, we're under contract to America."

"A Master buries the sword of his emperor. Do you remember that lesson, Remo?"

"Yeah. The emperor dies, the contract's void. Unless other arrangements are made. We're on the way to Washington to do just that, last I heard."

Chiun shook his head somberly. "No longer. We are on the way to Sinanju." Chiun stood up. "Come. We will return to Castle Sinanju, there to pack and prepare for your journey home."

Remo climbed to his feet. He towered over the Master of Sinanju. They stood regarding one another in the moonlight, Chiun gazing up, Remo looking down.

Remo spoke first. "As future Reigning Master, I have some say in this."

Chiun inclined his head politely. "You do."

Remo folded his lean, hairless arms across his chest. "Good."

"When you are Reigning Master and I am retired or dwelling in the Void. On this night you will obey Chiun your teacher so that the House continues."

"One step at a time is all I'm promising."

At that, Chiun flung himself out of the woods like a silken wraith, Remo padding after him, thinking, Won't my life ever settle down?

Chapter 9

Connecticut State Trooper Francis X. Slattery had pulled over all kinds.

His stretch of Interstate 95 got them all. It was close enough to New York City to suck up all the crazies coming north, and since as many crazies were hot to visit the Big Apple as escape from it, he got them coming in both directions.

It was worse in the summer. In winter, snow kept the chronic speeders within reasonable excess. Sometimes the snow kept them off the roads entirely. Even crazies had flashes of common sense.

But in midsummer everyone was on the road, sane or otherwise.

Yes, Slattery had pulled over all kinds. Topless blondes at the wheels of cherry-red convertibles. People humping in the back seat while doing ninety. Once, he pulled over a lime green Volkswagen Jetta to find an Irish setter at the wheel and the other occupants swearing up and down the dog had been exceeding the speed limit, stone deaf to their protestations.

But this was something new.

It wasn't that he'd never seen an armored personnel carrier barrel by. A lot of military traffic convoyed up and down 95. Usually they were spattered green and brown. Sandy colored during the Gulf War.

This particular APC was a smoldering red in the predawn light. And it was going like a bat out of Hades down the highspeed-breakdown lane.

Slattery pulled out from behind the Burger Triumph billboard and fell in behind it.

The license plate reflected his headlight glow. Not a military plate. Massachusetts. That was interesting. Some of the most certifiable drivers ever to blow through Slattery's life were from the Bay State. It was said there was a lot of inbreeding up there.

Punching up his on-board LEAPS computer, Slattery ran wants and warrants. The plate came back redhot. Seemed the very same vehicle had rolled over a Rhode Island State cruiser earlier in the evening. Literally rolled over, mashing it as flat as Ohio.

Slattery called it in. "Dispatch. Fifty-five pursuing fire-engine red armored personnel carrier south on 95. Mass plate 334-E. Vehicle conies back wanted in Rhode Island."

"Proceed with caution, fifty-five."

"You bet your sweet life," Slattery muttered, replacing the dash mike. He lit up his light bar and made the siren keen.

The APC probably would have accelerated, but it appeared to be pushing the envelope. It was too heavy to have much pickup, Slattery figured. And it was already doing seventy-five.

Hanging on its tail, Slattery let the strobing light bar and wailing sirens work on the suspect's nerves.

Trouble was the suspect appeared not to have any. He held the road at a rock-steady rate of speed.

Tiring of this, Slattery roared into the opposite lane and began pacing the other machine.

He got his second big shock of the night.

The driver of the fire-engine red APC was tricked out like a full-dress samurai.

Now, Slattery had seen a lot of weird stuff on I-95. Not once, not twice but on three distinct occasions, he arrested Batman in full leather flying down the road. Each time he arrested him, there was a different guy under the cowl.

None of this was on Halloween, mind you.

But this guy looked serious. His black armor looked serious. In fact, it looked like real armor. And with the light bar slashing crazy shards of multicolored illumination into the APC interior, the samurai glanced over briefly like a bored robot, then turned his attention back to the road as if a pacing state cruiser were no more of concern than a buzzing yellow jacket.

"Have it your way," Slattery muttered. Flooring it, he roared ahead of the APC and cut in front. He wasn't fool enough to stop dead. Visions of being the meat in a crushed-car sandwich came vividly to mind.

Instead, he eased up on the gas just enough to make the APC slow. It tried to scoot into the next lane. But the big red machine wasn't built for scooting. Slattery stayed ahead of him every mile of the way.

"Gotcha," he muttered.

After a while the APC engine began to sputter and miss. Slattery began thinking it was his lucky day.

The APC rolled to a gradual stop, engine sputtering.

When it was hung up on the soft shoulder on the road, Slattery brought the cruiser circling back. He parked it nose to nose with the APC, his high beams blazing into the APC interior.

The samurai sat rigidly behind the wheel, as if he had no eyes to be blinded with.

In the brief seconds as he apprised dispatch of the situation, Slattery got a good look at the samurai's face.

He hadn't any.

A flat black shield reflected his beams. That was all. It was creepy. But Francis X. Slattery had a job to do.

"Assistance en route," dispatch advised.

"Affirm," he said, hanging up the dash mike. Unholstering his SIG-Sauer, Slattery stepped out of his vehicle. He was on the wrong side of the road, but when dealing with samurai, it might pay to resort to the unexpected.

Slowly, to show he wasn't afraid, Slattery walked up to the passenger side of the APC. He saw that that side was marred by meaningless graffiti. Unless it was Japanese graffiti. Who could tell?

With one big hand, he rapped on the passenger-side window. "Roll it down, sir," he said with just the right amount of steel in his voice.

The samurai stayed put. His head rotated on his neck until he was looking at Slattery-if that black, featureless regard could be called looking.

"Right now," Slattery ordered. "License and registration."

A lot of years on the job told Slattery never to show fear or concern. He had his side arm in hand, but kept it below the samurai's line of sight. That way, he was within policy.

But the samurai showed no inclination to play by the rules. He stayed put.

So much for by-the-book. Now it was time to get serious.

Slattery snapped the weapon up. "Out of the vehicle! Now!"

Without any bullshit, the samurai obeyed him. He stepped out of the APC. It happened so fast Slattery had trouble taking it in.

The driver's-side door didn't open. The samurai just stepped out. He was suddenly just ...there. Standing. Then he was coming around to Slattery's position, the loose, ebony plates of his armor jumping with every assured step.

"Hold it."

The samurai advanced. He was walking toward him as if the pistol Slattery held in a firm Weaver's grip was meaningless.

"Stand or I will shoot. I mean it."

The samurai kept coming. He strode into the high beams, his gleaming body resembling an upright black beetle balanced on its hind legs. He had a very confident walk.

Slattery discharged his weapon.

He squeezed off two quick shots, held fire and saw to his consternation the samurai was still coming. Shooting for the head this time, he snapped out three rounds. The weapon bucked and convulsed in Slattery's hands as he emptied the clip.

The damn samurai walked on, calm, cool and collected like the monster in an old horror flick. Impersonal. Unconcerned. Unstoppable.

Slattery retreated to the guardrail, dropped his clip and shot a fresh one home. Bringing the weapon up, he resumed fire.

The SIG roared and danced, casting angry gun flashes on everything. Including the short black sword that was suddenly in the samurai's hands and swinging back to take a swipe at him.

The blade swung up and over, weaving in midair as if the samurai was toying with him.

Slattery's SIG fell silent. He thumbed the clip out.

And the hovering blade came down with a sudden sharp chop-to bite into his shoulder at a diagonal and remove Francis X. Slattery's entire right shoulder from his torso.

It jumped off his body like a side of ham.

Slattery's horror-filled eyes followed it down.

It lay in the ground like a giant chicken leg, dressed in red-spattered Connecticut State trooper khaki.

The disconnected hand clutched the SIG, and his finger kept squeezing the trigger in some feeble nervous reflex. But it had no strength left. It was dead but didn't know it yet.

Then, legs buckling, Slattery fell atop it.

Francis X. Slattery had seen many weird sights on the job. Now he watched helplessly a black armored samurai climb behind the wheel of his cruiser and go roaring away.

Then he saw no more. He was dead.

That was how the backup cruiser found him.

AN APB WENT out and within the hour, Slattery's cruiser was found abandoned. Beside the vehicle lay the body of a local teenager. Bifurcated as if a guillotine had missed his neck and chopped him clean in two across the waistline.

They found his missing Camry in Pennsylvania, not far from the Amtrak station at Reading. No one connected the samurai with the Reading train station. Local authorities assumed he had stolen another car. But without a dead body to connect to another missing vehicle, they had no clue what car he'd be driving, if any.

All anyone found was a pay phone beside the abandoned vehicle, the receiver dangling.

No one connected it with the missing samurai, either.

There the trail ended.

Chapter 10

When they returned home, Chiun insisted that Remo circle Castle Sinanju three times before parking.

"I think the coast looks clear," Remo said dryly as he completed the third pass.

"You can never tell with ronin, who are more sneaky than ninja," Chiun said bitterly.

Remo shot the rental car into one of the parking slots. Chiun got out first. He examined the windows of the house. A few upper ones were open for ventilation.

He examined both doors before allowing Remo to use his key.

Even then he insisted they hang back, with both doors open.

Their ears searched the interior. Hearing no heartbeat or other telltale signs, Chiun entered first.

Splitting up, they combed the building.

When every room had been checked, they rendezvoused as agreed in the bell-tower meditation room.

"Look, Remo."

Chiun was pointing to the telephone on a low taboret. It was hooked up to a message machine. The red light was blinking.

"Must be Smith," Remo said, starting across the room.

Chiun intercepted him with his tiny body. "Are you mad? Smith is dead."

"Oh, right. I forgot. Who could it be? We don't know anyone else."

"It is the ronin, checking to see if we are home. Do not fall into his cunning snare, Remo."

"A ghost using the telephone?"

"He absconded with your dragon. If he can drive one infernal white device, he can dial another."

"How would he know our number?"

"How would he know to find us where he found us in the first place?" Chiun retorted. "Ghosts know all manner of dark secrets. That is one privilege of being a ghost. They lurk invisible. They spy unsuspected. There is no defense against their vaporous wiles."

"Seems to me a ghost smart enough to use telephones and cars wouldn't take a zillion years to walk across the Atlantic."

"Ronin are inconsistent. No doubt he is crazed from harboring centuries of grief and shame."

Remo's eyes were on the monotonously blinking light.

"Maybe Smith called us before the wreck."

"From a train? Do not be ridiculous, Remo."

"They have rail phones now. Just like on airplanes."

"It is the ronin, " Chiun hissed. "He is very clever."

"For a guy who walked the wrong way to America," Remo said dryly.

Chiun eyed Remo thoughtfully. "You cannot let go of your emperor. That is your problem."

"I still can't believe Smitty's dead."

"He will never die in our hearts. Even if his noble bones have been consigned to the cold clay, we will remember him always. Now, cast him out of your mind. We must pack."

And because he knew the Master of Sinanju was right, Remo allowed Chiun to chase him from the room.

THE SUN WAS COMING UP as Chiun was going through his steamer trunks some twenty minutes later.

Upstairs the telephone rang and rang.

Standing up, Chiun raised his voice. "Do not dare climb the tower stairs, Remo. I know what you are thinking."

Remo's voice came from down the hall. "I'm in the bathroom, Chiun."

"Stay there. I am still about my packing. Answer no telephones."

"Who would be calling us at this hour?" Remo called back.

"A houseless ghost knows no rest. We will ignore the fingerless fiend."

But the phone rang and rang and rang. It stopped after nearly fifty rings. Almost at once it rang again. And kept ringing.

Remo came out of the bathroom dripping from a cold shower. He wore a towel around his waist. Except for his freakishly thick wrists, he looked as ordinary as soap.

He poked his head into the room where Chiun was busy packing.

"Are you thinking what I'm thinking?" he asked.

Chiun did not look up from folding kimonos. "You are thinking wrong."

"Harold Smith is the only guy I know who would flog a telephone line like that. Then hang up and go round all over again."

"It is the ronin. In the days of Kang, they would knock on any door for hours until given food."

Remo cocked an ear ceilingward. "Sound's like Smith's ring to me."

"You are imagining things."

"Maybe the ronin's leaving a message. Think I'll mosey upstairs and eavesdrop."

Chiun leaped to his feet. "You will do nothing of the sort!" he said, pointing with a threatening finger. Realizing it was his blunted index finger, Chiun hastily made a fist and shook it at Remo.

Remo said, "I won't pick up the phone, I promise."

"The ronin will hear you eavesdropping. They are like that."

"Oh, get off it, Chiun."

"Remo!"

But Remo had floated up the stairs.

In the bell tower the phone kept ringing. And ringing. Oddly the message machine wasn't picking up.

Remo saw why when he looked more closely. The tape was used up.

Rewinding, Remo set it at the beginning and hit Playback.

A weak voice croaked, "Remo. Smith. Call me. Urgent."

Beep.

"Remo. This is Harold Smith. As soon as you are back, contact me the usual way."

The voice was stronger now.

Six messages later the voice of Harold Smith was quite strong. And very annoyed.

The Master of Sinanju had entered by this point.

"Sounds like Smith to me," Remo told him.

"Yes, it does sound like Smith," Chiun admitted.

"Sounds like he's still with us."

"The ronin," said Chiun, shaking his head. "It only sounds like Smith. He has disguised his voice."

Beep.

"Call me at Folcroft. Please."

"How many 1's in that message?" Remo asked Chiun.

"Four."

"Japanese have trouble with their 1's. Don't tell me different. That's Harold Smith."

Chiun's face puckered up. His eyes narrowed. His fingers clenched and unclenched. All except the right index finger, which he kept curled.

"Go outside," he spit. "Call Fortress Folcroft from a pay telephone. If he lives, say nothing of the ronin to him. If it is a trick, you will know it because the answering voice will say 'moshi moshi.'"

"What is a moshi moshi?" Remo asked.

"A Japanese hello."

"I'll be back," said Remo, popping down the stairs.

Chiun called after him, "If you are ambushed, at least you have no fingernails to lose. But mind that you retain your fingers. If you lose one, I will never speak to you again."

"What if he throws a finger in my face?"

"Better you lose a finger than allow the House to be doubly shamed. If you lose a finger, throw it back in his face, Remo."

"Do thumbs count?" Remo wondered aloud.

"Mine, yes. Yours, not at all. Now go."

Remo went out the rear entrance and crossed the street to the Oriental market at the intersection of three streets. There was a pay phone bolted to the brick building. Slipping a dime into the slot-Massachusetts had to be the last state in the Union where the pay phones took dimes-Remo leaned on the 1 button.

He waited for the automatic connection.

The phone never rang. Instead, Smith's lemony voice said, "Remo?"

"I didn't hear it ring," Remo said suspiciously.

"That sometimes happens."

"How can you pick up a phone before it rings?" Remo asked, all the time matching the lemony voice against his memories of Harold Smith's distinctive voice.

"It did ring. On this end. The phone company has instituted a policy of dissynchronous rings. The ring you hear on your end of the line is not the ringing on this end."

"Why would they do that?" Remo asked, thinking it sure sounded like Harold Smith. Right down to the constipated consonants.

"It is to foil persons calling relatives long-distance and hanging up after one or two rings as a signal they have arrived safely. The phone company's lines were being used without charge."

"They sound as cheap as you," Remo said.

Harold Smith cleared his throat. "Actually it is very thrifty of them."

"It is you, Smitty!" Remo exploded.

"Who else would it be?" Smith asked querulously.

"We heard about the train wreck and went bombing down. Three different people said you died."

"A man named Howard Smith was killed. Coincidence."

"Well that coincidence cost me my Dragoon. Someone stole it while we were combing the wreckage."

Smith groaned. Then he said, "I must ask you to return to the wreck."

"Why?"

"My briefcase was, er, left behind."

"I know. I salvaged it."

"You have it!" Smith's voice skittered on the dangerous edge of sounding pleased, and Remo's suspicions flared up again.

"Yep. Figured I couldn't let it fall into innocent hands."

"Its secrets are invaluable."

"Actually it's as wet as a drowned cat. I was thinking of the rescue workers who would've been maimed if they tried to pick the lock."

"It would have served them right," Smith said flatly.

"Spoken like a man with a new lease on life. You know, Smitty, I hear about people having close shaves who see the world differently afterward. I guess we can't add you to that happy list."

"I had a near-miss. Near-misses do not count. The world has not changed in my absence."

"Well, Chiun and I thought you were dead."

"I am not dead. And I have an assignment for you."

"What's that?"

"These train derailments. It is time we looked into them."

"Just because you nearly died in one? Aren't we a little behind the curve?"

"I have been following them for over a year. I suspect sabotage."

"I suspect mismanagement. Didn't the government get involved in Amtrak years ago?"

"It is a quasi-governmental agency."

"Isn't that kinda like being semipregnant?"

"Freight lines are suffering, as well. There was a derailment in Texarkana the night before last. I want you and Chiun to go there."

"What are we looking for?"

"According to the preliminary NTSB report, they cite human failure on the part of the engineer. The report hadn't been released to the public, but I would like you two to look into it. You will be Department of Transportation agents. Liaise with the NTSB chief investigator. He was very quick to cite drugs. Too quick. I would like to know more."

"Want us to hold him upside down and shake the truth out of him?"

"Be discreet."

"Chiun will be wearing a flaming red kimono trimmed with silver-and-gold salamanders. That discreet enough for you?"

"Why are you being so testy, Remo?"

Remo leaned against the brick. "Oh, I don't know. I guess thinking you were dead and finding out I kinda missed your sour old puss put me in a mournful mood. Now I wish you'd go back to being dead. I liked you better dead."

"I am not dead. Go to Texarkana. Report as needed."

"And happy rebirth day to you, too," said Remo, hanging up.

BACK AT THE BELL TOWER, Remo broke the news to the Master of Sinanju.

"Bad news. Smith is alive."

"He gave you the secret password, naturally?"

"What secret password?"

"Arrgh! You failed to verify it was Smith! Must I do everything myself?"

"Believe me, it's Smith. Two minutes into the conversation, I started hating the sound of his voice and he gave us a dippy assignment."

"What assignment?"

"We're looking into the train derailments, starting in Texarkana."

"I do not know that place."

"Oh, believe me, Chiun. You'll love Texas. And Texas will love you."

"Is that one of the flat, square provinces far to the west where the buffalo roam and the roughnecks play"

"The phrase is rednecks and I'm sure we'll bump into a few of those."

"We will go because we are obliged to go. And Texas will be the last place the faceless ronin will seek us."

"Let's go," said Remo as Chiun turned to pick over his steamer trunks. They were half-packed. The open ones spilled elaborate brocaded kimonos, tatami mats and many of the papyrus scrolls Chiun had brought from Sinanju, on which were inscribed the inked histories of his village.

"You will take the silver trunk with the lapis lazuli phoenixes."

Remo groaned. "Not that one again."

"Do not drop it, and above all do not open it under any circumstances."

"Didn't I lug this thing across half of Mexico last time out?"

"Now you will lug it to exotic Texarkana, where men's necks are red and never a discouraging word is heard."

"I think I'm going to rewrite that last part of the song," grumbled Remo, lifting the trunk onto his shoulders.

Chapter 11

Melvis O. Cupper didn't like what he was hearing.

"No drugs," the Texarkana medical examiner was saying.

They were in the county morgue. The body of Southern Pacific engineer Ty Hurley lay on the porcelain autopsy table, his head and a few disconnected parts piled at the top of the table, above the main portion of his torso.

Hurley looked as if he was about to be sewn back together. But Melvis knew nothing would ever put the poor bastard together again. Out of respect for the dead, in his big red hands he held his white Stetson with the black letters NTSB stenciled on the crown.

"Mind closin' his eyes for me?" Melvis said.

"They bother you?"

"I'm fixin' to talk about the poor fella behind his back and all, I don't care to have him starin' at me like that."

The ME shrugged and dropped a sheet over the head and loose parts. Somehow that made it creepier. Melvis could have sworn the shrouded eyes were peering through the thin cloth. He thought he could see the outline of the pupils against the whites.

"You sayin' absolutely no dope?"

"No drugs, no liquor. Not even aspirin traces."

"What about amphetamines? Surely you found some of those. After all, he was a dang engineer. They live on the stuff."

The ME shook his head in the negative. "No illicit substances in the system."

"Check the stomach?"

The ME lifted a clear plastic bag that sagged with a blackish substance.

"What's that?" Melvis grunted.

"His last meal. Moo Shi pork."

"Looks like regurgitated saw grass to me. How can you tell?"

"Same way I can vouch that the blood is clean. Analysis."

"Dang, I was countin' on dope."

"The dead man struck a stalled car. You know just as I do that wasn't his fault."

"I know that. But why didn't he brake?"

"He was decapitated."

"That's the part that bothers the fool out of me, I don't mind sayin'," said Melvis Cupper in the cool fluorescent atmosphere of the county morgue. "There wasn't enough glass in the cab to chop him up like that."

"Impact forces can sometimes wrench a man's head clean off."

"I got a good look at the neck stump. Looks like a clean cut. And a wrenched-off head would pull out all manner of plumbin', wouldn't it?"

The ME frowned. "I must admit you're right about that. Well, there are some factors we haven't accounted for yet."

"That's what I been sayin', Doc. What happened is plumb inexplicable. That's why I was hopin' it was dope."

"Drugs wouldn't explain what happened here."

"Not to you and me. But I gotta tell you, when I run into somethin' I can't otherwise explain away, dope fills the bill. Covers up a wealth of sins and omissions. In fact, I highly recommend it to you."

"You have a different way of looking at your responsibilities than I do," the ME said firmly as he sheeted the headless nude body.

"Appreciate you not takin' that tone with me, Doc. I got more of these fandangled derailments these last two, three years than I care to count. There's a big one back East right this minute I'm supposed to look into once I get done here."

"You'll have to find your answers elsewhere," the ME said formally. "My report will say no drugs in the system. And death by traumatic decapitation."

"Dang."

A voice from the suddenly open door asked, "Melvis Cupper in here?"

"That's me," Melvis said, turning.

The first one through the door didn't make Melvis's eyebrows quirk up much. He was six footish. On the lean side. Short dark hair and deep-set eyes that sank back into his head so he seemed to have hollows instead of eyes, like on a skull. His wrists were mighty big, though. Reminded Melvis of Popeye the Sailor Man.

He wasn't Texan. Not in a white T-shirt, tan chinos, fancy leather loafers and no self-respecting hat on his head.

"Who might you be?" Melvis demanded.

The man flashed an ID card, identifying him as Remo Renwick from DOT-the Department of Transportation.

Melvis was handing it back when the second man popped through the swinging door.

Now, here was an entirely different article. He swam in silvery silk skirts like a lady. But he was a man. Old as sin, too.

"And this 'un?"

"Chiun. Derailment specialist on loan from Washington."

"Him?"

"Yes," said the little old Asian. "I am very familiar with trains."

"That so? You don't look much like a railroad man from the cut of your skirts."

The face of the tiny Asian stiffened. "I am old enough to have ridden steam locomotives."

"That so? What kind?"

"My first engine was a Mikado 2-8-2."

Melvis's eyes popped like white grapes. "You don't say! And where might that have been?"

"The Kyong-Ji Rail Line."

"Never heard of it. Must be east of Texas."

"West. For this train wended its way through my native Korea many years before you were born."

"Do tell."

"Can we get on with this?" Remo asked.

"What's the rush?" Melvis countered.

"The Department of Transportation is very interested in this derailment."

"NTSB has it covered. You gents can wait for the official report like everyone else."

"The preliminary one says drugs."

Melvis cleared his throat noisily. They had him there. "We just been discussin' that little detail, the doc and me. Ain't that right, Doc?"

"Drugs are not present in his system," the ME said flatly.

"So much for the preliminary report," Remo Renwick said pointedly.

"Now, don't get all carried away. We're still compilin' data."

Remo Renwick drifted over to the dead engineer on the dissection table. "This the engineer?" he asked.

"Yep. I wouldn't lift that sheet if I was you. It's kinda raw under there."

Ignoring him, Renwick lifted the sheet, picked up the head and examined it as if it were 4 basketball he was checking for leaks, then tossed it to the old Korean. The little guy caught it as if catching heads was something he did all the time.

"See now!" the ME protested.

"Let 'em have their fun," Melvis said. "They look like right ready boys."

The old one had the head upside down and was looking at the stump. The younger man was poking about the other stump.

"Check this out, Chiun," he said.

The little guy drifted up to the neck stump, which was red but bloodless. It had been thoroughly washed and disinfected.

"Decapitated, plain as day," Melvis said.

The little guy shook his head. "No."

"If that isn't decapitation, what is?" Remo asked.

"I will explain later." His eyes went to Melvis and the ME. "Away from these prying ears."

"Those are right unfriendly words to use around a fellow public servant."

"His head came off. That's decapitation," Remo was telling the old Korean.

"Later," Chiun argued.

Remo looked Melvis in the eye. "Give me a rundown."

"You read the preliminary report?"

"I did. He didn't. Let's hear it."

"Engineer hit a sport vehicle at the crossing at Big Sandy. Tore the thing apart, dragged it a few miles down the line, then plowed smack into the freight yard at Texarkana. Engineer ended up discombobulated. A lot of rail fouled and boxcars on their side. Not much else to tell."

"Where did the man lose his head?" asked the little Korean, going right to the jackpot.

"That answer we ain't exactly shook loose. Some think it was at the crossing." Melvis eyed the ME. "There's others who hold that it came loose in the big freight-yard wreck."

"What's your opinion?" asked Remo.

Melvis rocked back on his ostrich-skin boot heels, squeezing his white Stetson in both hands. "I'm reservin' judgment on that particular point."

"I would like to see the place where this tragedy took place," said Chiun.

"Which? The first wreck or the big one?"

"The beginning."

"Suit yourself. I got a car outside."

As they started out of the autopsy room, Melvis remembered something. "Doc, you keep that sorry fella on ice. I got me a feelin' we ain't done with his sorry ass just yet."

On the way out Melvis's hard-bitten attitude softened as he asked Chiun, "You really ride steam locomotives in your youth?"

"From Kaesong to the railhead at Sinanju. And back. Many times."

"Man, I was born eighty years too late. I hanker for the clean smell of steam and coal smoke."

"Steam is heavenly, I agree."

Remo looked at them both as if they were crazy.

WHEN THEY RETURNED to the rental car, Remo took the wheel and waited for Chiun to close the passenger door.

"What's this about steam?"

"It is my cover," Chiun said airily. "I am conversant with trains."

"Just let me do the conversing, okay?"

"We will speak of this later."

"For crying out loud, we have a fifty-mile drive ahead of us."

"You drive. I will think."

"Suit yourself," said Remo, waiting until Melvis pulled out of his parking slot. Then he fell in behind him.

On the way out of town they drove past the freight yards. A derailment team was putting a boxcar back on the rails with a pair of Caterpillar tractors.

Chiun craned his neck to see the operation.

"What are you watching?"

"It is very interesting to see how they do it in this day and age."

"Huh?"

"When I was a youth, oxen were employed."

"They really had trains in Korea way back then?"

"Yes. In Pyongyang they were called ki-cha, which means 'steam cars.' We called them cheol-ma."

Remo blinked as he searched his mind for the English translation.

"Iron horse?"

"Yes. We called them iron horses."

"Funny. That's what the Indians used to call them in the days of the transcontinental railroad."

"Why should that surprise you, Remo? My ancestors settled this land."

"Let's not get carried away. Just because one of your ancestors came across the Bering Strait and pitched a tent doesn't mean every Hakawi and Poohawk is Korean."

"I have been reading of late. Your historians claim that America was settled by Koreans."

"Tell that to Leif Eriksson. Or Columbus, for that matter."

"It is true. This was a barren land until Koreans came. We conquered the wilderness to live in harmony with the land. Until the evil white man came, despoiling all."

"You been watching that Kevin Costner series again?"

"He actually wept when describing the horrors whites inflicted upon my ancestors' noble Cheyenne cousins."

"He could use an egoectomy," Remo grumbled.

"I am thinking of petitioning Emperor Smith for the return of my ancestors' stolen lands."

"Never happen."

"Oh, I do not want it all, Remo. Just all the land west of the Kutsen River."

"Where?" asked Remo, recalling kutsen was Korean for "muddy."

"You occupiers call it the Mississippi," Chiun sniffed.

"Save us all a world of grief. Don't even bring it up."

"Only the land closest to Korea is of interest to me, Remo. I do not think my ancestors traveled very far west, I do not recognize the eyes of the Powatans or the Mohawks. I suspect them of being Mongol vagabonds."

"Pocahontas was a Mongol? Is that what you're saying?"

"I defy you to find a trace of Koreanness in that tart's face," sniffed Chiun.

They followed Melvis's car through piney scrub hills. Oil-derrick farms bristled here and there. Finally they turned off onto a dirt road that ran alongside a rail bed. A freight train barreled by, and the Master of Sinanju's eyes went to it. A faint smile came to his thin lips.

"What are you looking at?" Remo asked.

Chiun sighed. "There is something about a train."

"You weren't kidding him back there?"

"I admit it. I am a buff."

"I admit it. I couldn't care less about trains. They're slow, noisy and they take too long. And I'm surprised you don't share that opinion."

"Barbarian. You have never known the sublime joys of steam."

"Cross my heart and hope to avoid it, too. I thought the only steam you cared about fluffed your rice."

"Have I never told you of my first train ride, Remo?"

"Yeah. No need to plow old ground. We have a busy day ahead of us"

"No, I insist."

"Look, you told it to me. I know it by heart. Give it a rest."

"Excellent," said Chiun, beaming. "Now, you tell it to me."

"Why do you want to hear your own story back?"

"Because I would like to savor the memory without the distraction of having to recount the details."

Remo said, "Tell me why that engineer wasn't decapitated and I'll tell you your story back."

"I will think about it," Chiun said vaguely.

And Remo smiled thinly. He had gotten out of a tough one. He couldn't remember Chiun's railroad story to save his life.

THE CROSSING at Big Sandy bore few signs that an accident had occurred. Fresh gravel lay in the rail bed, mixed in with older, rain-discolored ballast. The rails gleamed unbroken.

Melvis Cupper stood at trackside as he explained things. "SP hauler hit the sport vehicle along this stretch. Broke it apart and carried it three miles east, throwin' off sparks and hot steel."

"What happened to the driver?" Remo wondered aloud.

"No one knows."

"Anybody run the plate?"

"Never found a dang plate."

"Isn't that kinda strange?"

"Like I said, metal was Hang off for three miles. It's probably in the bluebonnets somewhere."

Remo looked at the tracks. They were sunk flush with the ground. Wooden sections lay on both sides of the track for the convenience of crossing vehicles.

"Rail's not very high."

"Yeah. That's so the cars can mosey across."

"Looks to me like you'd have to have four flats to stall out on this spot."

"Maybe he run out of gas."

Remo looked at Melvis Cupper. "You're full of easy answers."

"After this I gotta head east to look into that Amtrak spillover. I got my hands full. This was a common freight derailment. One dead hogger. No frontpage headlines. Gotta file it, forget it and move on. Way things are pickin' up, there's more comin'."

Remo noticed the Master of Sinanju lying down beside the rails. He placed one fragile ear to the rail, closing his eyes.

"Is he doing what I think he's doing?" Remo asked Melvis.

"Does my heart proud to see a foreigner who comprehends high iron. Way the Asiatics are floodin' in, you'd think the old ways are not long for this sorry world."

Remo said nothing.

Having satisfied himself that no train was coming, Chiun stood up and began walking the track.

"I guess we walk," said Remo.

They walked. The hot Texas sun beat down, and Melvis Cupper adjusted his Stetson, saying, "You boys really ought to get yourselves hatted up Texas style. Do you a world of good."

"Pass," said Remo,

"What about you, old fella?"

"I have known many summers. I do not fear the sun." His eyes were fixed on the ties.

"Suit yourself. But sunstroke ain't nothin' to wish away."

When they came to the section of track where the wood ties were scorched from the sport-vehicle gas tank going up, Chiun abruptly left the rail bed.

"Where we goin' now?" Melvis asked Remo.

"Where he goes."

"That don't answer my interrogative, as we say in east Texas."

"Learn to go with the flow," suggested Remo.

Chiun came to a flurry of footprints. He stooped, examining these. Remo watched him.

Melvis spoke up. "Those tracks won't tell you a damn thing. That's where we all stood the other day, pokin' about."

Chiun stood up.

"Where are the tracks of the escaping driver?" he asked.

"Search me. Figure he hightailed it for Mexico by now."

"Has it rained of late?" asked Chiun.

"Naw. Dry as a bleached cow skull."

"There should be tracks of the fleeing one."

"Well, if you can find 'em, you're more than welcome to 'em."

Abruptly Chiun walked into the underbrush.

Remo soon saw why. A crushed sprig of mimosa showed that a man had walked here in the recent past.

Carefully Chiun placed his feet on the bare spot. His gait became deliberate, cautious.

Remo watched the ground as he followed.

"Who we followin'?" Melvis asked.

"Search me," Remo admitted.

"Hush!" said Chiun. His tone was very serious.

They walked into trackside woods. This was east Texas. Pine and sweet gum predominated. Without warning, Chiun stopped.

"What's wrong?" Remo asked.

"They stop," he said.

"What stops?"

"The tracks."

"Whose tracks? I see only yours."

"Come around. Carefully."

Remo did. Melvis hovered close.

The Master of Sinanju was pointing at the sandy yellow soil. Ahead of him stretched a short set of footprints. They looked like Chiun's. But Chiun hadn't walked this far yet. And Chiun left prints only when he wanted to. Remo followed them back and saw that Chiun was standing in a lone set. Only then did Remo realize that the tracks he'd thought were Chiun's were really older tracks Chiun's feet perfectly fit into.

"Wait a minute..." Remo said.

"Hush."

"What's goin' on?" Melvis muttered.

Chiun's eyes squeezed into slits of deep thought. "These tracks are two days old. Perhaps older. But no more recent."

"Yeah. You're right," said Remo.

Their eyes met. Chiun's chin lifted. A dusty breeze toyed with his wispy beard. He took it between two fingers, the short-nailed index finger and the second one.

"Two days," he repeated. "No sooner."

"No argument there..." said Remo.

Chiun turned on Melvis. "What manner of vehicle was destroyed here?"

"Lemme think now. It was a funny one. Oh, yeah. A Nishitsu Ninja."

"Hah!" crowed Chiun.

"Hah what?" asked Melvis.

"Weren't they recalled a few years back?" Remo said.

"Yeah. They kept tippin' over on tight turns. But a few folks spent the money to have 'em fixed up so they were stable. That's why I said it was funny. You don't see too many Ninjas on the road these days. Worst Burn rice-burner ever built."

Suddenly Chiun turned, hurrying back to the rail line. He walked them carefully, striding, his fists tight, hazel eyes scouring the rails, the ties and the surrounding brush.

"What's he lookin' for now?" Melvis asked Remo.

"You'll know when I do."

"You're not bein' very cooperative."

"Sometimes the dog wags the tail. Other times it's the other way around. I learned a long time ago to follow along and let the pieces reveal themselves."

Melvis spit. "You would last two days with NTSB."

Chiun stopped so abruptly that Melvis nearly bumped into him. They gathered around. Chiun was looking straight down.

In the center of a tie was a fresh gouge.

"I'm lookin' at a gouge, am I right?" said Melvis.

Chiun nodded.

"Looks like a hunk of metal hit it pretty hard. It's sound, though. No urgency about replacin' it. Am I right?"

"A katana did this," Chiun intoned.

"Oh-oh," said Remo.

"What's a tanaka?" asked Melvis.

"Katana. Sword."

"Sword, huh? I'd put it down as a flyin' hunk of axle or something."

"It's a sword cut," said Remo.

"What sword?"

"The blade that beheaded the engineer," said Chiun.

"You funnin' me? He was decapitated."

"Beheaded."

"What makes you say that?"

"Experience," said Chiun, abruptly leaving the rail.

"Where we goin' now?" Melvis wanted to know.

When Chiun stepped into the rental car, the immediate question was answered.

Remo leaned into the car. "Where to next, Little Father?"

"We must speak with Smith."

"Who's Smith?" asked Melvis.

"Our supervisor."

"I got a cell phone in my rig."

"We need more privacy than that."

"Well, there's gotta be a pay phone somewhere's around. After all, this is Texas."

"Not if he gets his way."

"Say again?" asked Melvis in a dubious voice.

"It goes back to the original settlers."

"The Mexicans? Never."

"No, before them," said Chiun.

"You mean the Injuns?" Melvis exploded. "I'd sooner see the dang Asiatics have it."

"You're getting warmer," said Remo.

Chapter 12

Harold Smith was at his desk when the blue contact phone rang. He had been cleared to work by the Folcroft doctors who had pulled him from the taxi and administered stimulants.

The first thing Smith had said upon regaining consciousness was, "I must get to my desk."

"It's the middle of the night, Dr. Smith," the head doctor said. "I prescribe rest."

"And I pay your salary," Smith snapped.

The Folcroft staff knew their director. They eased him into a stainless-steel wheelchair and rolled him to his Spartan office, where he peremptorily dismissed them.

Reaching under his desk, whose top was a slab of black glass, Smith pressed the button that activated the buried video terminal. It lurked under the tinted glass. When the screen came on, the amber phosphorescent sign-on cycle was visible only to Smith.

None of the Folcroft staff suspected the concealed terminal any more than they knew of the existence of the four mainframes that hummed quietly in the basement behind blank concrete walls.

This was the nerve center of CURE.

As soon as he had the system up and running, Smith called up incoming reports on the derailment he had just survived, downloading them into his ongoing Amtrak file.

Twenty-odd minutes into this he remembered to call his wife.

"I am fine," Smith said without bothering with a greeting.

"Why wouldn't you be, Harold?" Maude Smith asked sleepily.

"I was on the train that derailed but I am fine."

"Oh, Harold."

"I am fine," he repeated.

"Where are you now?"

"At work."

"You should come home, Harold. You sound tired."

"I will see you tomorrow," said Harold, hanging up and thinking that there was no reason to let Maude know he had been on that wreck. There was no sense worrying her needlessly.

That was hours ago. Smith had toiled through the night, pausing only when he experienced an uncontrollable fit of coughing. His tongue tasted brackish. His stomach was sour. He loaded it up with antacid pills and Maalox, all to no avail.

When his secretary showed up for work, he asked her for black coffee but said nothing about the accident.

The wire feeds on the Mystic derailment were still coming in. The death toll was mounting in slow increments. It looked as if the final fatality total would exceed forty. Smith read that information, making absolutely no connection with his own brush with death.

In his mind a person either survived an accident or did not. One is dead or living; there is no in-between. Harold Smith still breathed. Almost didn't count.

The first bulletins were fragmentary and under constant revision. The earliest reports simply attributed the derailment to excessive speed. This was revised to human factors, a euphemism for crew fatigue or drug-induced engineer impairment.

When he read that the train had struck a bulldozer, Smith frowned like a puckering lemon.

"What would a bulldozer be doing on the tracks?" he muttered.

A follow-up report referred to cable being laid in the vicinity of the derailment, and suggested the bulldozer had attempted to cross the tracks and become stuck. There were no witnesses and no missing workmen.

"Ridiculous," Smith said. "There is no crossing on trackage so close to the water and no place on the shore side for the bulldozer to go."

But there the reports stood. A bulldozer had blocked the tracks. That was the end of it as far as the media was concerned. All they cared about were facts-whether true or not.

Smith moved on, looking into the Big Sandy incident.

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