Read Linnear 01 - The Ninja Online

Authors: Eric van Lustbader

Linnear 01 - The Ninja (10 page)

‘Danvers!’ the Colonel called to his adjutant. ‘Get a cot in here, on the double I’

The man rushed out and the Colonel was reaching for the woman when she began to fall. Her eyes fluttered closed and she collapsed into his arms.

‘Sir?’ Lieutenant McGivers said ‘About this -‘

‘Oh, for pity’s sake, man, get me a cold cloth,’ the Colonel barked irritably. ‘And get Grey in here.’

Grey was the garrison surgeon, a tall angular man with a bushy moustache and sun-reddened skin. He arrived just as Danvers was manhandling the cot through the doorway.

‘Give him a hand, McGivers, there’s a good lad,’ the Colonel said to the reappearing Lieutenant. And together they maneuvered the cot into the room.

The Colonel lifted the woman up, noting her fine Asian features under the layers of dirt and dust, and lowered her gently onto the cot.

He let Grey take over then, going back behind his desk, working on the tail end of his problem with one eye cocked across the room until, at length, the surgeon stood up.

‘All right, Lieutenant,’ the Colonel said wearily, ‘get everyone out of here. We’ll reconvene at 0800 hours.’ He stood up, passing his long fingers through his hair, and crossed to where Grey stood looking down at his patient.

When they were alone in the room, he said, ‘How is she?”

The surgeon shrugged. ‘It’s hard to say until she comes round and I can run a few more tests. She’s obviously suffering from shock and exposure. Several good meals will fix her up, I shouldn’t wonder.’ He wiped his hands on the cloth he had used to clean her. Look here, Denis, I’ve a lot of young boys to see. If you suspect a problem when she comes round, have Danvers come and fetch me. Otherwise, I think you know what she needs as well as I do.’

The Colonel summoned Danvers and sent him to scrounge up some hot soup and any pieces of boiled chicken he could find. Then he knelt beside the woman, watching the soft pulse along the long column of her neck.

Thus the first thing Cheong saw when she opened her eyes was the close face of the Colonel. What struck her immediately, she recalled later in recounting the story to Nicholas, were his eyes. ‘They were the kindest eyes I had ever seen,” she said in her light singsong voice. ‘They were the very deepest blue. I had never before seen blue eyes. I had been outside the city when the British had first come, prior to the outbreak of the war.

‘I often think that it was those blue eyes which so startled me, brought me round. Suddenly I remembered the long days after Tsuko had been killed as if they were part of a film being run off whole for the first time; the pieces at last had knit together. I no longer had gauze in front of my eyes and cotton wool stuffed into my head.

‘With that, it all began to pass away from me - as if I were recalling events from some other person’s life - the dark terrible last days of the war.

That is when I knew that your father was part of my karma, in that first moment I saw him, for I have no remembrance of entering the garrison house, of encountering any British soldiers there before him.’

The Colonel took her home at the day’s end, in the midst of the long shimmering emerald and lapis lazuli twilight, with the city choked with swirling dust, Jeeps clattering down the streets and soldiers running quick-time along the sidewalks while the Chinese and the Malays paused in their homeward journeys, standing quite still, resolute and quiescent and eternal in their cotton drawstring shorts and sloping reed sedge hats.

As usual it was teeming, and the Colonel had the Jeep brought round, though he was often fond of walking. It took him twenty minutes on average to make the journey from the garrison located near Keppel Harbour almost due north through the city to the house he now occupied. As may be imagined, the command was not over fond of his making this trek on foot and dius he was perforce obliged to be accompanied by two armed men from his garrison as escort from door to door. The

Colonel found this a hideous misappropriation of precious manpower but he seemed to have no choice in the matter.

At first he had been assigned an enormous estate near the western tip of the city but he soon found that it was hard by an equally enormous mangrove swamp and being downwind from it was too much even for him. So he had looked around and eventually moved to this current smaller but infinitely more comfortable place.

It was situated on a hill which the Colonel liked quite a bit because when he faced north he could gaze up at Bukit Timah, the island’s granitic core and its highest spot. Beyond that dark mass, the hump of some great leviathan, lay the black waters of the Johore Strait and Malaysia, the southernmost tip of the massive block of Asia. On the days when it was particularly hot and humid, when his shirt stuck like hot wax to his skin and the sweat poured from his scalp into his eyes, when the entire city steamed like a tropical rain forest, it seemed to him as if Asia’s bulk were sliding slowly downwards onto the top of his head, suffocating him in a blanket of endless marshes, mosquitoes and men; the crick in his neck would return, paining him worse than ever.

But this was all before the appearance of Cheong. To the Colonel it was nothing short of miraculous, as if she had come into his room, not from the streets of Singapore, but from the cloud-filled sky. That first evening, when he had turned her over to tiny Pi to be bathed and clothed, and standing by his polished teak desk, taking his first long drink of the day, he felt the tiredness washing away from him like a residue of salt drowned in a hot shower. He thought only that it was good to be home after so long a time at work. Yet perhaps this had been only the most mundane part of it, for when he recalled that time many years later - as he was often wont to do - he was not at all certain of his motivations or his feelings in the matter. He knew only that when she had been brought back to him in his study, when he saw again her face, for the first time since he had left England in the early part of 1940 to come East, he no longer seemed obsessed with Asia. He stood watching her come towards him, feeling like a house bereft of the ghost that had haunted it for so long, now empty, waiting to be filled by new and more substantial tenants. He recognized then his spirit, unchained at last, dancing inside of him and he felt that here before him was his true reason for seeking out the mysteries of Asia.

He studied her face, using the light of the breaking sky, the day’s last light, a spurt before darkness fell completely, with the innate fierceness with which he had applied himself to the destruction of the enemy. This was a most formidable talent in the Colonel, one that was highly respected among the Americans as well as the British military and for which he had been amply rewarded by one battlefield promotion after another.

It was-not, he felt, a purely Chinese face. This he derived not from any overt configuration of features but by the overall aspect. There was, for instance, nothing classic about that face. This the Colonel found utterly fascinating, not to mention charming. It was oval, longer than it was full. She had high cheekbones, very long almond-shaped eyes and a nose less flat than one might normally expect. Her lips were wide and full and, with those eyes, were her most expressive features. Later on, he would be able to tell any nuance of changing mood just by a glance at her lips.

Pi had pulled Cheong’s long hair back from her face and, having first endeavored to do away with the ragged ends, had tied it tightly back with a red satin ribbon so that it hung down across one shoulder in a long ponytail, so thick and gleaming that the Colonel thought of her more at that moment as some mythical creature come to life. She was, he felt, so densely oriental that it was if she were the living embodiment of that vast flat crowded land.

‘How are you feeling?’ He said this in Cantonese and, when he got no response, repeated the question in Mandarin.

Tine now. Thank you,’ she said, bowing.

It was the first time the Colonel had heard her speak and he was somewhat startled, never having heard such a beautiful and musical voice before. She was tall, almost five-nine, with a figure as slender as a willow but as shapely as any man could wish for.

‘It is most fortunate that I met you,’ she said, her gaze directed at the floor. She tried in vain to pronounce his last name. ‘I am most ashamed,’ she said, giving it up at last. ‘Pi coached me all through the bath. I am most humbly sorry.’ ‘Don’t be,’ the Colonel said. ‘Call me Denis.’ This she could manage, pronouncing the D sound in a way that had no analogue in the English language. She repeated it twice then said, ‘I shall not forget it, Denis.’ By that time, the Colonel knew that he was going to marry her.

 

When the Colonel received the request by American courier via British liaison to join the American SCAP - the occupation forces - Command in Tokyo as an adviser to General Douglas MacArthur, the first thing he thought of was how he was going to tell Cheong. There was no question of his not taking the assignment. Already he found himself chafing to be in Tokyo.

It was early in 1946 and this part of the world was still reeling from the emotional fall-out caused by the explosions at Hiroshima and Nagasaki; the effect was incalculable, the ramifications endless.

He had been married to Cheong for four months and she was three months pregnant. Still he had no second thoughts about abandoning Singapore, which he thought of as much his home as England ever was. Beside the fact that he felt it was his duty to take the assignment at SCAP headquarters, he further understood quite keenly the complex problems that had developed within Japan since its unconditional surrender, ending the war, last year and he was eager to immerse himself in what MacArthur had called ‘steering a bold new course for Japan’.

The Colonel deliberated only a moment before he called Danvers in and told him that he was leaving for the day; if anything important came up he could be reached at home.

He arrived at the house to find Cheong taking care of him personally, having shooed Pi away from the doorway at the first hint of the jeep turning into the driveway.

‘You are home early today, Denis,’ she said, smiling.

He climbed out of the Jeep, dismissed the driver. ‘I suppose now you’ll tell me that I’ll be in the way of the servants’ cleaning,’ he said gruffly to her.

‘Oh no,’ she cried, linking her arm in his as they went up the stairs and into the house. ‘Quite the opposite. I’ve patted them on the behinds and told them to do the work in the kitchen that they have been putting off for oh-so-long.’ They went down the hall and into his study where she poured him a drink.

‘Ah,’ he said, taking the chill glass from her. ‘Have they done anything for which they should be punished?’

‘Oh no.’ She put her small hand to her mouth as if shocked by the notion.

He nodded, happy inside himself. ‘Of course you’d tell me if that were the case, wouldn’t you?’

‘Not at all.’ She indicated that he should sit in his favourite chair and when he was comfortably settled within its soft embrace, his long legs stretched out on the carpet before him, one boot set over the other, she knelt at his side. She wore a deep blue brocaded silk robe with a mandarin collar and wide bell sleeves. Where she had obtained this rather remarkable garment the Colonel could not imagine and he had not the bad taste to ask her. ‘That is none of your concern,’ she continued. ‘I am the mistress of this house. Discipline is here my concern as it is yours downtown.’ She meant at the garrison house. ‘You must trust me to maintain a perfect aura within our house. Tranquility is all-important to the health of one’s spirit, do you not agree?’ And when he nodded, watching her eyes, she continued. ‘The tranquility of one’s house is not only confined as to its location and the servants therein but also to its major occupants.’ She paused and the Colonel, who had been calmly sipping his drink through all of this discourse, now sat up, placing his glass on the side table by the chair. The Westerner in him longed to take her delicate, capable hands in his, lean towards her and say, ‘What is the matter, darling? What’s troubling you?’ This, he knew, he could not do, for in doing so he would shame her. She had obviously spent much time in the preparation of her presentation. He must honour that by allowing her to come to the point as she might. If there was anything the Colonel had learned by being in the Far East for six years, it was patience, for to fail to learn that lesson swiftly was to court peremptory disaster out here where life was so different, seeming only to float upon the bosom of the eternal Pacific.

‘You know, Denis, that tranquility is only one aspect of the harmony of life. And harmony is what all people strive to achieve. Harmony is the basis of a clear mind, of a good and powerful karma.” She put her fingers along the back of his hand, which lay along the smooth worn wood of one armrest. ‘You have such a karma. It is very strong, like the thrown net of a master fisherman.’ Her eyes looked down at her hands, one atop the other, flashed upwards to his face. ‘I am afraid to do anything to destroy that. But now there is more than one to think of. Our karma have meshed and, intertwined, may be all the more powerful for it, yes?’ He nodded again and, satisfied that she had both his attention and his agreement, she said, ‘Now I must ask something of you.’

‘You know that you have only to ask me,’ the Colonel said sincerely. ‘You, who of all people in this world make me the most happy, can have anything that is mine.’

Yet this heartfelt speech appeared to have little effect on Cheong. ‘This thing I must ask you is very large.’

He nodded.

‘We must go away from Singapore,’ she said boldly. Then, seeing that he did not stop her, she went on in a rush. ‘I know that your work means a great deal to you but this is’ - she searched for the proper words that would convey her thoughts -‘most imperative for all of us. For you, for me and for the baby.’ She placed one palm against her lower belly. ‘We must go to Japan. To Tokyo.’

He laughed, struck first by the humour of it and then intrigued by the eeriness.

“This is funny?’ she cried, misunderstanding his expression of relief. ‘It is bad for us to stay here. Most bad. In Japan our karma will flourish, expand. There lies our - what is the English word? - destiny, is that right? Our destiny.’

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