Martin Limon - Buddha's money
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- Название:Buddha's money
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Business girls hung on Ernie like fronds on a palm tree. Still, when I whistled he caught the signal and lunged for the darting Sooki. He grabbed her arm. She tried to wriggle free, but with Herman's help Ernie kept his grip on her and dragged her over and stood her in front of me.
I held the note under her nose.
"Who told you to deliver this to me?"
Sooki pouted. She scanned the heavily lined eyes in the crowd, apparently finding nothing there to be afraid of.
"Some guy," she told me. "A foreigner."
"From which country?"
"I don't know."
"Asia?"
"Yeah. Maybe. He look like a Korean."
I twirled my forefinger around my head. "Did he wear a turban?"
Her eyes widened. "How you know?"
"Did this guy also pay you to tell me and Ernie about the Buddhist nun?"
She shrugged. "Maybe."
Herman lunged forward. Ernie held him back. Sooki studied Herman's protruding lower lip and his clenched fists.
"Same guy," she told me.
"Where can I find him?"
"I don't know. He stop me in alley, told me to tell you about the little nun. Pay me five dollars GI money."
"And the second time?"
"Same." Sooki straightened her shoulders, glancing proudly at the curious business girls clustered around us. "But this time he pay me ten."
A sigh of appreciation arose from the women.
I kept interrogating Sooki, but it quickly became apparent that she knew nothing else. I pointed my finger at her nose. "If you're lying to me, I'll find you."
She slapped her painted nails on her hip. "No sweat, GI. Anytime you want to catch Sooki, can do easy. Only need this one."
She nibbed her thumb and forefinger together.
Sooki had been hired twice in the same night to carry a message to us. Maybe by sending us after the mugger of the little nun, this foreign man had been trying to get me and Ernie-the only two CID agents in Itaewon-out of the way. To divert our attention from Mi-ja's kidnapping. But he'd been fooled. Even though there'd been a riot outside the Itaewon Police Station, Herman the German had managed to break through to us.
Herman shoved his huge body in front of me.
"What the hell does the note say?"
I ignored Herman and scanned the dark skyline. Two-or three-story buildings. A few yoguans, Korean inns, hotbed operations for GIs and the girls they picked up. Most were apartments. Housing business girls and the families of those Koreans who did legitimate-or semilegitimate- work here in Itaewon.
Beyond the buildings, between drifting rain clouds, the tristudded belt of Orion glimmered with a faint glow, no match for the glare of the Itaewon neon. Still, the pale stars seemed somehow heroic. I swiveled slowly in a 360-degree turn, scanning high and low. The three-quarter moon was rising. No sign of observers. But they were there. We were being watched. I was sure we were.
Because I had stopped moving forward, the business girls pressed in on me, breathing their hot breath on my arms, clutching my elbows. I shrugged them off and unwrapped the note.
"What's it say?" Herman demanded.
I showed it to him.
"That's Chinese." Herman looked back and forth between me and the note. "I can't read it."
So many business girls had their arms laced around Ernie that he looked like a man towing an acrobatic troupe. "You couldn't read it anyway," Ernie told Herman, "even if it was in English."
The business girls giggled.
Herman just stared at Ernie. Amazed. Not by what Ernie had said but by the stunning fact that we wouldn't be able to read the note. Herman could only work on one problem at a time. Ernie's sarcasm couldn't break through.
"I can read the note," I said.
"You can?" Herman leaned over the paper, blocking my light.
"Yes." I pointed to the three characters at the top. "These are simple. The name of the district we're in: Itaewon."
Herman peered at the paper. So did Ernie.
"And this is the character for temple."
"Temple?" Herman said. "There's no temple in Itaewon."
"Then we'd better shit one," Ernie said.
Sooki stepped forward again. "Yeah. There's a temple in Itaewon. GI never go there. GI babo." Stupid. "GI don't know."
Herman grabbed her soft arms. "Where is it?"
Sooki leaned as far back as she could. "Sooki show you. But cost ten dollars."
The surrounding business girls cackled in glee. Herman backed off as if Sooki had suddenly become radioactive.
"There's one more thing that has me worried," I said.
"What?" Herman asked.
"The three characters down here on the bottom of the note."
"What do they say?"
"Oh bun hu."
"What the hell does that mean?"
"It means they've given us five minutes to get to the temple."
Herman let out a whoof of air. "We've already used three."
"Maybe four. We don't have time to be dicking around," I told Herman. "Pay her the ten dollars."
"I'm broke."
I couldn't believe it. Herman's daughter had just been kidnapped and the asshole was still trying to stiff me for a measly ten dollars. I reached in my pocket, dug out a wrinkled Military Payment Certificate, and slapped it in Sooki's hand. "Here. Let's go. Bali bali!" Quickly.
Sooki smiled, slipped the money in the top of her bra, then trotted off into one of the alleys that led off from the top of Hooker Hill.
Ernie flapped his arms like a flamingo preparing for flight. About three business girls fell back. They pouted and straightened their skirts.
Without hesitation, Herman rolled forward after Sooki. This time I kept score. He bowled over nine business girls. But didn't have time to try for the spare.
During the weekdays, when all of the GIS are on compound, the Korean business girls have a life of their own. They gossip and play huatu, Korean flower cards; they visit the public bathhouses with their friends; they smoke cigarettes and eat chop. The fact that there was a temple in Itaewon shouldn't have surprised me. A place to worship Buddha would fit right into the business girls' routine.
But what surprised me most was that I didn't know about it. Maybe none of them wanted to tell a GI about their secret temple. I didn't blame them. We Americans have a habit of ruining everything that's good.
Sooki wound through the alleys like an expert. I wasn't sure if we could trust her, but with only a minute or two until our rendezvous, I had no choice but to take a chance on her. I didn't have to explain this to Ernie. He was alert. Watching for a trap.
Up here above Itaewon the lanes became even narrower and darker. Even the clangs of rock and roll from the main drag faded into silence. All I heard was heavy breathing and our footsteps sloshing through the mud.
Finally, Sooki stopped and crouched at the corner of a tall stone wall. I squatted down next to her and she pointed, whispering. "The Dream Buddha," she said. "That's His temple."
"The Dream Buddha?"
"Yes. We call him Maitreya."
I'd read about Maitreya. The Buddha of the Vision of the Coming Age. A Buddha who has not even been born yet in his human form but who still manages to help mortals in the here and now. It makes sense when you think about it. All Buddhas are eternal. Neither the future nor the past is a barrier to their will.
Ernie and Herman crouched next to us, breathing heavily. I peered around the wall.
It was a small pagodalike temple. Made of wood, painted blue, with red and gold filigree along the tile of the layered roofs. A few candles shone inside, illuminating a gold-plated Buddha. His enigmatic smile beamed out at the world. The odor of incense wafted through the gentle rain.
"Nobody's there," Ernie told me.
"They're here," I answered. "Somewhere."
Herman motioned for us to keep quiet. "Listen," he said.
We heard creaking in the pagoda. Up high. Through the mist I saw another stone wall, looming behind the pagoda, almost as high as the highest roof.
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