Sunday, April 26, 2020

the very dark side of American media (and Russian!):

  the very dark side of American media (and Russian!):  chicago tribuneny timeswashington postla times, moscow times have skipped reporting that Professor Luc Montagnier and then Professor Petr Chumakov separately declared in April 2020 on the origin of Wuhan virus.  Mere coincidence, Dr. Watson, mere coincidence.  Yet a China daily picked up the story!!   BLACKLISTED IN MAINSTREAM NEWS, SO SORRY
  -r, mt. shasta
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4-23-20  Professor Petr Chumakov, chief researcher at the Engelhardt Institute for Molecular Biology in Moscow,  said “No one excludes that behind the scientists were conservatives who were directing actions in another direction that they needed“—as given to Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper in Russian.  https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/11462934/coronavirus-wuhan-lab-russia-microbiologist-claims/
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25th April 2020 – (Moscow)  A Russian microbiologist, Petr Chumakovt  who works at the Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology in Moscow said recently that Wuhan laboratory scientists “did absolutely crazy things” to alter coronavirus and enabled it to infect humans….
  Nobel winning French professor Luc Montagnier recently claimed that the novel Coronavirus was created inside a lab and mentioned that the virus which infected over 2.7 million people globally was accidentally released from Wuhan Institution of Virology.
  Earlier we reported that a Czech molecular biologist, Dr. Soňa Peková explained in detail why she believed that the novel coronavirus originated from the laboratory and the American scientists tried to refute it. She also tried to disprove the claim which appeared on Nature Medicine journal that the virus evolved from a natural mutation.   https://www.dimsumdaily.hk/russian-microbiologist-claims-wuhan-lab-did-absolutely-crazy-things-in-coronavirus-research/
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4-23    The Russian microbiologist wonders why people are only now starting to catch on to such controversial research, considering much of it has been published in the scientific press.  “All this has been analysed,” he said.
  “It is interesting that the Chinese and Americans who worked with them published all their works in the open press.  I even wonder why this background comes to people very slowly.”  https://www.yourlifechoices.com.au/the_meeting_place/post/microbiologist-claims-he-knows-the-origin-of-coronavirus
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4-26  “There are several modifications to that genome that give the virus exceptional abilities."  https://www.corona24.news/c/2020/04/26/researchers-in-wuhan-made-absolute-madness-with-coronavirus-says-leading-russian-microbiologist.html
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4-16   Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said at a news conference on Thursday that the World Health Organization has repeatedly said there is no evidence that the virus was engineered in a lab.
  Zhao added that well-known medical specialists have said any claim that the virus was leaked from a lab has no scientific basis.

Zhao stressed that the matter should not be politicized.  He said it is China's consistent view that the question of the origin of the virus is scientific and should be dealt with by scientists and medical experts.  https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20200416_35/
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丘馬科夫稱,武漢實驗室就多種冠狀病毒變異,從事長年研究。
https://orientaldaily.on.cc/cnt/china_world/20200426/00180_021.html

Friday, April 24, 2020

Gardella 16, 17

16
  My adventure in China lasted from May 9, 1952 when we were dropped in until May 30 when I was picked up by the submarine--just three weeks.  After three weeks of living so fully it might seem that the rest of my life--twentyeight years of it as I write this--has been dull by comparison.  I think it's more accurate to say that I've lived two lives almost as though I'd been two different people.  My life since I left China has been enough like the lives of most people that a few pages are all I need to tell you about it.
  On July 5, 1952 my mother came to visit me at the US Naval Hospital in Annapolis, Maryland.  She found me with my arms & legs bandages & was told that I had been hospitalized because of a severe allergic reaction to poison ivy in the field.  This was of course not true.  What those bandages covered if they covered anything were the various bruises, scrapes & scratches I'd acquired on the other side of the world.
  About ten days after that visit I was dismissed from the hospital; after another ten days, on July 24, I was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps.  When my mother met me at South Station in Boston she was clearly upset by the way I looked.  & for a long time my refusal to talk about my experience in the Corps was both a mystery & a source of anxiety to her.
  I didn't know what I was going to do with the rest of my life.  I tried reenlisting as a marine & was rejected.  I lived with my parents in allston about a mile from Harvard Stadium & for months I kept to myself, drank alot & worked at odd jobs now & then.  In the spring of 1953 I met Marie who brought me back from the hell my life had become.  I stopped drinking & found steady work.  On November 21 of that year when Marie was still only sixteen & I was one day short of my nineteenth birthday we got married.
  In 1955 the year I went into construction work our first daughter, Susan Marie, was born.  Our second, Janet Muriel, arrived three years later.  In 1958 I began moonlighting as a cab driver in Boston, working from five to midnight after an eight-to-four day in construction.  I kept that up for years.  I got my first assignment as a construction foreman in 1960 & by 1963 I was a general foreman--the youngest in our area so far as I know.  Our grandson, Robert Edmund Storme, was born in 1974.
  It was in 1977 that I found I had leukemia & decided to put the story of my China mission in writing.  On May 31, 1979 just two weeks after the manuscript was sent to a published I returned home from work to find my wife had been beaten, left bloody & dazed as though she'd been drugged.  Nothing had been taken--none of Marie's jewelry & none of my collection of guns.  The local police kept an eye on her all that summer.  On July 13, 1979 I had the encounter in Harvard Stadium with which this book begins.
  Three weeks later, on August 7, our apartment was broken into & ransacked, though once again nothing was taken.  In our bedroom we discovered several peculiar & frightening things.  Marie's coat had been laid on our bed with the stuffing from a pillow inside the hood to suggest the shape of a human head & with the right sleeve folded across the chest.  My pistol had been placed where the hand would have been.  The fabric of the coat had been ripped with a knife.  & in a picture on the wall a circle had been drawn around Marie's head.  Around this time Marie received a number of mysterious telephone calls.  I am as certain as I can be of anything, as I write this, that these incidents add up to deliberate terrorization with the purpose of scaring me out of having my story published.  Just who was responsible of course I do not know.  Now let me go back twentyeight years to just after I left China.
 
17
  On May 30, 1952 before I could finish the American meal I'd been served aboard the submarine I was given a shot that left me drugged.  I woke dazed & groggy.  Again I didn't know where I was.  When I tried to get up I found that I was strapped to the bed across my legs, waist, arms & chest.  As my vision cleared I saw the total whiteness of a hospital room.  to this day I don't know where that room was.  It couldn't have been aboard the sub--the quarters were too spacious for that.  Was I in the naval hospital at Annapolis or somewhere en route?  Hospital rooms everywhere look pretty much alike.  The two figures in white who were present were not the two corpsmen who had given me the shot.
  One of them asked how I was feeling.  I said, "I've felt better.  What's going on?"  "Take it easy," he said.  I noticed a pole with a bottle attached & a tube from it leading to my arm.  never having seen such an apparatus before I asked what the hell it was.  The corpsman explained that I was being fed intravenously because I'd been sick & in shock.  then the second corpsman asked me a question:  "How about the others?"  I looked at him.  "What others?"  "Don't play games," he said disagreeably.  "The others in your group."  I answered, "I'm not playing games.  Find out for yourself."
  While the men looked at each other I began to wonder whether they were docts at all.  One of them came toward me with a syringe & injected something into the tube leading to my arm.  I remember that a kind of whistling went through my head; after that I lost track of things again.  Other things were happening as I drifted in & out of consciousness.  Once I awoke & heard voices through a slightly opened door.  "How are they going to list the others?"  "Missing in action."  "The poor son of a bitch in there," the first voice said, "he should get a medal.  Instead he'll get nothing but a hard time."  "You think it's all true?"  "After what we've been giving him it's got to be.  It's a wonder he's even alive."  "That's for sure."  "The letter we found on him is probably what did it."  "Yeah, the blackmailing son of a bitch!"  I managed a hoarse yell, "They're not missing in action, they're dead!  They're dead, you bastards!"  The two men came in & I heard one of them mutter.  Then I went under again.
  I remember another time seeing three men standing over me while I tried to bring my eyes into focus & hearing one of them ask how I felt.  "A little bit groggy," I told them, "but okay."  "You've been through alot," the same voice said, "can you hear me, can you understand me?"  I said, "Yeah."  "We want to send you somewhere, somewhere in Asia."  I said, "Yeah, where?"  "Indochina"  "So I can be missing in action?"  & they put me under again.
  Then I remember waking in another hospital room.  This time I wasn't strapped down.  The sheets were crisp & smooth & I was dressed in pajamas.  I had a radio by my bed & there were flowers on the window sill.  I swung my legs over the side of the bed & tried to sit up.  Immediately I felt dizzy & my head began throbbing.  A second later the door opened & two civilians came in.  One of them spoke softly.  "You'd better get dressed.  There's someone upstairs waiting to see you."  He pointed to a corner of the room where a set of marine tropicals was hanging.
  I stood up slowly & carefully & managed to get into the uniform while the two men watched.  I felt like an old man--weak & stiff & tired.  The corridor into which I followed the two men was thronged with people in white.  At least I really was in a hospital this time.  We got onto an elevator & when its door opened we walked through a doorway & into a room with the shades drawn, with almost no light coming through.  As my eyes became adjusted to the dark I saw that several people were waiting.  A voice came for the far end of the room:  "Son--"  Someone interrupted.  "John, leave this to me.  Those _____ have gotten us into this.  Now let's see if I can get us out of it."  The voice was snappy & somehow it struck me as familiar.  "Son, we are...awfully sorry for what happened.  Awfully sorry.  May God help us all."  The voice paused again as though saying a prayer.  "We know everything now, son; I didn't know before; I'm sorry I didn't."  "Didn't know?" I asked.  "Who didn't--"  One of the others said, "Keep your voice down.  Do you know who--"
  The snappy voice with the familiar twang intervened again.  "John, I told you to keep quiet!"  Then more calmly, "Son, there's nothing yu or I can do about it now.  It's too late.  If you talk about what happened, what you did, you could start a war.  You've got to keep your mouth shut."  As my eyes grew more accustomed to the semidarkness I could see that the figure was short & blocky & wore a square-cut, double-breasted jacket.  As he moved even in the dim light there was the tiny glint of a reflection from his glasses.  The voice softened.  "You deserve alot but this country can't give it to you.  It can't give you any medals because all of this is going to be forgotten.  None of it will be  in the records.  None of it will have happened.  I'm not asking you to forgive me, I'm asking you to forgive our country.  I found out about all this only by the grace of god.  But I can make you a promise.  This happened; it won't happen again; that's my promise.  You have to make one in return."  "Yes, sir?"  
  "You must remain silent; tell no one; I'm asking you to promise that for your country."  "Yes sir, I promise," I said.  Then I asked, "Sir, what happens to me now?"  "You will be discharged for medical reasons.  I understand you have a history of asthma."  "Sir, I have a favor to ask you," I began.  Though what I really wanted to ask was to get back into the marines, I also knew there was no point in asking for that.  So I said, "When I was picked up I had on a set of rosary beads.  They were very special.  I'd like to have them back."  "John--" the short man said.  He didn't have to say any more.  He sounded very much the boss.  The man who had left the room was soon back.  He handed something to the short man who now walked toward me.  The rosary beads were in his hand.  I took them & thanked him.
  Then one of the others drew up a shade & there was no longer any doubt in my mind about who the speaker was.  "Son," he said, "I'd like to shake your hand."  The hand he held out was small but strong.  Before I let it go I asked, "Sir, where am I & what day is it?"  "This is the US Naval Hospital at Annapolis, Maryland & it is June 28, 1952."  Then abruptly President Harry S. Truman released my hand, wheeled about & walked smartly out of the room with the others close behind him.  Two weeks later I walked out the hospital with the rosary beads in my hand.
 
Epilogue
  Not all the questions you must have about the story I have told can be answered.  For some of them the reason is simply that I don't know the answer.  For others, to give it would endanger the lives of others.  But there are a few things that I can at least try to clear up though they will raise further questions.
  Why did I go back on the promise I made never to tell the story?  There are several reasons.  One is that it was an old promise & the world has changed.  I believe my experience has something to say to policymakers.  & I now know that the government never really kept the promise that was made to that seventeen year old kid.  My illness, my wife, my priest--all of them gave me the same message:  that it was right to tell the truth about what I knew regardless of how awful it might seem.
  Where was President Truman on June 28, 1952?  Could he have been talking to me in the hospital that day?  A journalist who checked his schedule for that day found that he was in Washington & that no appointments were listed on his calendar.  Annapolis, Maryland is thirtyfive miles from Washington, no more than an hour's drive away.
  What do Marine Corps records say about me & the special force?  That I never left the States, that the medical records of my stay in the naval hospital were destroyed by fire, & that there are no records that any of the men with me--Damon, Masters, Holden, White or Craig--was ever in the Corps.  
  What happened to my friends in China?  I'm happy to be able to say that as of the time I write this, Gunny, Charlie, Kim & the Mongol lieutenant are alive & well.  Audy is also alive but has never really recovered from the wounds he suffered when we rescued the children from the village near Kenyu.  Nancy & Scotty are dead.  Nancy was killed in a battle in 1954.  Scotty, after surviving forty years of combat, died of natural causes in 1977.  
  God only know where John O'Malley is.  I've also learned the Dragon Lady is alive & has twin sons--our sons.  They are big & blond & as of the time I write this they are twentyseven years old.  Some day before I die I am going to see them.  May God give me strength whatever happens.    
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Gardella 15

15
  At the edge of the village bodies were strewn about.  No one had seen us yet, & the Dragon Lady & I crouched together out of sight of the others among the buildings.  Four soldiers stepped around a hut that was perhaps twenty yards away, spotted us & pointed.  When I raised my weapon they merely stared--& then for reasons I'll never understand they burst out laughing.  For an instant I froze, but in what would otherwise have been a fatal moment the Dragon Lady fired a burst that knocked down the four of them before they could get off a shot.  The firing was ricocheting all around us.  I fired back in the direction it seemed to be coming form & we ducked between two huts.  But soon it was apparent that the soldiers weren't shooting at anything in particular.  They might almost have been drunk & they were in as much danger of hitting each other as they were likely to hit us because there were so many more of them.  While I watched in fact that was actually what happened, as the rain of bullets continued & the Dragon Lady went on firing.  Now I could see Gunny across the road firing from behind some sort of cover while the Dragon Lady was leading the way to the school.  Running, we kept low, using the huts for cover, & waved for Gunny to join us.  We stopped firing as we moved through the village & the soldiers' shots tapered off as well.  Thinking of the soldiers who had laughed I wondered whether everyone hadn't gone crazy.  "The school," the Dragon Lady said, pointing to a large building, & we headed for it.  Gunny & Scotty had caught up with us.   Gunny kicked in the door & the Dragon Lady & I went inside.
  Years later that scene would come to me as one of the worst of my bad dreams.  In a far corner half a dozen kids huddled together crying.  Almost a hundred others had been butchered.  I was all the more shaken because of the Dragon Lady's reaction.  Her hold on her machine gun tightened until I could see it quiver.  Then she turned & would have run out--except that I reached out & stopped her just as Scotty pushed through the doorway & had his first glimpse of the slaughterhouse.  Looking around we counted five living, whimpering children--the oldest possibly three years old, the others hardly more than infants.  Why they had been spared there was no telling.  The others ranged in age all the way from babies to teenagers.  The walls were sprayed & splotched with what looked like red paint but wasn't, it was blood.  I turned away myself & the Dragon Lady said, "We must see if any of them are still alive."  Then Gunny, Scotty & I began going from one child to another picking up one body & then laying it down again next to the others.  Halfway through Scotty had to go outside; I could barely control my own stomach & as soon as I got outside I heaved my guts.  The final count was ninety-eight bodies.
  What had become of the soldiers wasn't clear.  Meanwhile the Dragon Lady told us to consolidate & get to high ground before a counterattack took place.  Scotty & I each lifted two of the surviving children & Gunny grabbed the fifth.  We got out quickly making our way to a ridge beyond the town from which we looked down over the burning houses.  Suddenly the Dragon Lady asked, "Where is Audy?"  While the rest of us stared she was saying, "You wait here!" & had taken off down the hill.  Realizing that it was too late for any word of protest I quickly put the two children on the ground & started after her.  "Be right back!" I called out.
  The four Mongols who had covered our withdrawal & were now making their way uphill likewise turned & followed as we tried to retrace our steps among the huts, but without finding any trace of Audy.  Then the Dragon Lady sent the Mongols to comb the outlying areas while she & I waited in the doorway of a hut.  I wondered how long we could wait, not knowing how many soldiers were left alive or where they might have gone.  It seemed that the town had been deserted though until a squad of soldiers dashed by.  We were concealed & held our fire.  Then the Mongol lieutenant came striding toward us with Audy over his shoulder, two of his men following.  They paused among the huts to reconnoiter before making a dash across the open space that separated them from us.  All this happened very fast.  I saw that Audy's back was covered with blood & then the Dragon Lady was signaling to the Mongols to keep on moving.
  After I'd gestured to the lieutenant that I'd carry Audy for awhile & been waved off, I ran back with the Dragon Lady toward the high ground.  The lieutenant was close behind us while two of the Mongols again covered our withdrawal.  I asked the Dragon Lady where the other Mongol was & she replied, "Do not worry about him, he will get away."  We had no sooner reached Gunny, Scotty & the five children than the Dragon Lady ordered us to pick up the children & be on our way.
  Keeping to the line of the ridge we moved off even though the fourth Mongol had still not appeared.  With Audy hanging like a sack over the lieutenant's shoulder there was still no telling whether he was more than barely alive.  One of the kinds I was carrying had fallen asleep.  The other had discovered my ear & was busy playing with it.  There was a sudden halt as the Dragon Lady discovered that the radio had been left behind.  While two of the Mongol lieutenant's men went back for it we had a chance to lay Audy on the ground & see how he was.  I was relieved that there was no blood coming from his nose, mouth or ears, though he'd been hit twice in the back & had lost a lot of blood.  As Gunny & I were leaning over him he opened his eyes briefly & looked as though he might be trying to say something, but all he could do was cough.
  "Easy, buddy, easy," Gunny said, & Audy managed a smile.  His breathing was hard with a rasp.  We all looked at each other with the same worried question & then Scotty said, "Let me look after him for awhile.  You three go & get some rest."  The Dragon Lady, putting one hand on my back & one on Gunny's, led us off into the darkness.  We'd sat there for awhile, none of us saying anything, before I finally asked the Dragon Lady, "What was going on with those soldiers that made them so crazy?"
  "Like a bunch of zombies," Gunny said, & I agreed.  Only zombies could have done what they did in that schoolhouse.  Thinking all over again about the frightful bloodbath we'd seen there I couldn't handle it anymore.  Trying to control myself only made it worse.  I threw myself face down, landed my forehead on my machine gun & lay there shaking.  I could feel Gunny & the Dragon Lady both leaning over me & Gunny was saying, just as he had to Audy a little while before, "Easy, buddy, take it easy."  Once I'd gotten a grip on myself I felt a bit ashamed.  Why the hell was I feeling so sorry for myself when we had those five children to worry about?  "The kids," I said, "is anybody looking after them?"  "They're all sleeping," Gunny said & for some reason I started to cry again.  "We shall have to take them somewhere that is safe," the Dragon Lady said.  "You know that now we cannot reach our destination by morning."  
  "Who cares?" I yelled.  "I don't give a damn when we get there!"  Then a kind of stupor came over me & for awhile no one said anything.  "But about those soldiers," I asked finally.  "No one normal would act that way."  "They were not normal," the Dragon Lady said.  "They were machines.  Before a battle they are given a drug in their food or their drink or else they smoke it, so that when they fight they do not know what they are doing; it makes them unafraid."
  There was silence again until Scotty walked over to us.  He took a deep breath & said, "Audy is not doing well; I've stopped the bleeding but he had already lost a good deal.  The bullets went straight through him.  I tried to close everything up as best I could, but..."  He took another breath.  "I had to push things back into place...."  He dropped his head looking exhausted.  When the Dragon Lady asked if we could help he only shook his head & went back to watch over his old friend.  Then came the bellow that was the Mongols' signal & in a couple of minutes the lieutenant & his men were back bringing the basket with the radio in it.  With that worry disposed of our main concerns now were Audy & the children, & after that the question of the delay in our schedule.  In answer to the first the Dragon Lady said, "There is a village near called Kenyu where I have friends.  We can leave Audy & the children to be cared for.  But we shall not be able to reach Lienyun by the morning."
  "Will we make it by tomorrow night?" I asked, & when she said yes I was suddenly struck by an idea:  we could radio to ask for a twentyfour-hour delay which meant we'd have twelve hours' leeway--time to look things over instead of just walking in.  Gunny asked, "Will they wait another twentyfour hours?"  "I think so," the Dragon Lady said.  "It is a good idea, Khan, we shall do it; now we must get started."
  We picked up our burdens & took off at a fast trot in the moonlight.  Soon from a ridge we could spot the village.  The lieutenant put Audy down gently; we did the same with the kids who were drunk with sleep, & the Dragon Lady & two Mongols went down to negotiate.  Before long everything had been cleared, & with a reminder from the Dragon Lady that we must slip in & out quickly we had entered the town & were following her into a hut.  A group of women were already waiting there to take the children & in another room others immediately started tending Audy.
  After one long look at the man & the children I'd never see again I made my way with the others back to the high ground.  The pace became more exhausting as the ground got hillier & steeper.  Nobody was talking.  I kept thinking about Audy & about the third Mongol.  It now seemed clear that he would not meet us--which meant that he must be either dead or captured.  After awhile we stopped to bivouac & set up the radio.  While I sat with my back propped against a rock, resting, Gunny came over & joined me.  I said, "You know, I'm going to miss you, you son of a bitch."  I could see his grin in the moonlight but his voice when he spoke was serious.  "Same here, kid.  I never really had a friend in my life before; but you, Ricky--you're a friend.  I figure if you have one friend in your whole life then you're ahead of the game.  If I ever have a kid I hope he'll be like you."
  I was so touched that I could only growl a little.  & I knew he was just as uncomfortable with so much emotion.  "So now, kid," he said, "I'm going to find myself a place to sack out; see you in the morning."  He got up & walked off a little way.
  The Mongols were out there somewhere in the darkness & Scotty--who could fall asleep faster than anybody I ever met--was around on the other side of the rocks.  I slid down & stretched out on the ground right where I was.  In a couple of minutes just as I was beginning to doze off I realized that the Dragon Lady was sitting next to me.  "Now it is very peaceful," she said, "& soon, Ricky, you will be gone."  "Ricky?" I said, a little scared at hearing her call me that, "No more Khan?"  she had propped her head on her hand & she lay there looking at me in the moonlight.  "You are not Khan the warrior now, you are Ricky."  I said, "Maybe some day I can come back."  I didn't quite know what I was saying but I meant every word when I whispered, "I'll never meet anyone like you."
  She put up her hand & touched my face.  "You do not have to tell me anything," she said.  Her face was close now & I leaned over & kissed her.  Then I put my hand on her hair.  Then I ran my hand down her back.  Then I pressed her slim little body against mine.  I could feel every inch of her from her face down to her toes responding.  We were together when I woke.  She was still asleep--the first time I had ever seen her sleeping.  I didn't want to wake her but neither did I want to be seen with her like this.  When I tried disentangling my arm from her, she woke.  She gave me a smile, raised her hand & ran it over my face.  Then abruptly she sat up.  "We must get on the radio."
  We found Gunny & Scotty already fiddling with it.  Had they seen us together?  One look at their faces was all I needed to know that they had.  But there were no remarks from anybody.  Scotty said, "Shall we try?"--& at a nod from the Dragon Lady he began fiddling with the transmitter again.  "Spec One, Spec One, this is Quicksand, this is Quicksand, do you read us, over."  He had to repeat it twice more--while we all got more & more jittery--before the answer came.
  "We have a delay," Scotty told them, "we cannot make destination on time; I repeat, we have a delay; do you read?"  "Loud & clear," the answer came back.  "Interrogatory- -what is the cause of the delay?"  Scotty ignored the interrogatory.  "We have a twentyfour hour delay; we need twentyfour hours; over."  "We will give you twentyfour hours, no longer; say again--twentyfour hours, but no longer."  "Loud & clear," Scotty replied.  "Rendezvous in twentyfour hours; out."  The Dragon Lady told us now that it would take only two or three hours to reach Lienyun.  "We shall wait so that we arrive in darkness."  "What the hell are we going to do all day?" Gunny asked.  The Dragon Lady smiled.  "Rest."
  & that is what we did.  We lay around all day in the warm sun with the Mongols patrolling as seemed to be their nature, until the shadows began to lengthen.  That was our signal to be on our way--to whom or whatever it was that would be waiting.  The last thing we did was to hide the radio among the rocks.  It was an unnecesary weight now that we didn't need it anymore.  Then we were off & in less than three hours we came in sight of the South China Sea.  It glistened in the moonlight as we made our way down to the beach where we huddled together on the sand while the Dragon Lady sketched out the area.  The fourth pier, our place of rendezvous, was perhaps half a mile away.
  The four of us were to approach it through the water armed with knives, while the Mongols wrapped the rest of our weapons & carried them overland to meet us.  It was less likely that they would be stopped & they would be nearby to act as a support once we'd boarded the boat.  After we'd left the weapons & bandoliers with them there was a brief rehearsal & then we headed into the water, holding our footing as long as we could & then swimming parallel to the beach.  Soon we could make out the piers in the darkness.  The moon disappeared behind the clouds & that was a good sign.  While the Dragon Lady swam in an arc to find the right pier & then the boat I followed with a slow breaststroke.  Finally, treading water, she pointed to a large two-masted junk among the pilings.
  The whole ocean seemed to be at our backs as we closed in.  I could make out a figure walking along the deck; then it disappeared through a hatchway.  We found a ladder near the stern.  The Dragon Lady signaled silence with a finger to her lips; then, with her knife's blade clenched between her teeth she positioned herself to climb aboard.  I lunged, intending to go ahead of her, & clamped my hand above hers on the ladder.  Though she shook her head I insisted & finally she moved aside for me.  With both hands on the ladder I listened a moment or two & then carefully & quietly pulled myself up out of the water, moving slowly to avoid the least splash.  Moments later with my head at deck level I could take in the entire boat from one end to the other.
  Though the moon was out luckily our side of the boat was a shadow.  Seeing no one I hoisted myself onto the deck & darted for the cabin door.  Glancing back I saw the Dragon Lady's head appear; I waved her aboard & she glided toward me like a cat, with Scotty & Gunny behind her.  As we positioned ourselves on both sides of the cabin hatchway & I reached for the knob we heard a man's laughter inside & then the sound of a second & a third voice.  We stepped back into the shadows & I whispered, "The weapons!"
  The Dragon Lady vanished into the darkness; then she was back with the three Mongols & our guns.  Armed with those we moved back to the hatchway.  She whispered, "We go on the count of three.  Do not shoot unless it is necessary."  She held up one finger.  With my machine gun gripped firmly in my left hand I unsheathed my knife with my right & held it at the ready.  Two fingers.  Then three.  Gunny threw open the hatch, slamming it against the bulkhead, & we bolted through, down two steps & into the cabin's interior before fanning out while the Mongols covered our rear.  My wildest imaginings could not have prepared me for the shock that would come in an instant.
  A few feet away three men sat at a table with filled glasses before them.  Caught by total surprise they sat frozen in place for several seconds while we stared at them & they stared back at us.  It was a deadly silence.  Then Gunny broke the quiet, "Holy Mother of God!"   He spoke for me as well because I saw the terrible truth.  Of the three Americans or whatever they were, I recognized one at once.  A rage came over me--over all of us--that I've lived with ever since.  A calculated breaking of faith by our own people had caused the deaths of our comrades.  We were trained, sent on a mission & abandoned--purposel y.  The man turned white.  Then he blurted, "You're--how in hell...?"
  "You know him?" Scotty asked.  "We know him."  "Watch this," said Gunny quickly.  "Spec One, this is Quicksand; do you read, over."  "You worthless bastards!" snarled one of the others.  Then quickly assuming an air of command he spoke to me, "Stand at attention; where's Roberts?"  But my eyes never left those of the one man I knew had betrayed us.  "We know him,"  I was in a cold fury, "just like we knew that bastard Roberts.  This is the other one who trained us, & threw us to the wolves."
  It was all in the open now & both sides knew it.  The countless nights I've lain awake thinking about what happened next have all ended in a question--could it have been different?  Conditioning by teamwork & unrelenting fighting over the last three weeks had accounted for our survival.  Killing the enemy was the important goal if you survived; & here was the enemy.
  Suddenly it happend, so quickly that our response together was reflexive.  Out of the corner of my eye I saw the third man lunge for a weapon leaning against a nearby bulkhead & that triggered the two others to do likewise.  Diving across the table I drove my knife into the body of the man who had trained & betrayed us.  The blade entered where the chest merges with the throat & when I pulled it out he was dead.  Quickly I turned to see that Gunny & Scotty had made quick work of the two others while the Dragon Lady & the Mongols looked on.  No shots were fired:  it was silent work with cold steel done according to the law we'd lived under in China:  kill or be killed.  As I looked at the bodies the reality of what we'd done for revenge & survival hit me.  We had killed three Americans.
  I felt Gunny's hand on my shoulder trying to steady me as he said firmly, "Three Americans, Ricky, but not our people."   In a frenzy I shook his hand off.  I turned over the table, I punched at bulkheads, all the while screaming at the top of my lungs.  Gunny, Scotty & the Dragon Lady had to wrestle me down.  The Mongols who had come rushing in now stood over me with expressionless faces.  At a word from the Dragon Lady they & then Scotty left the cabin.  In a few minutes I could feel the boat underway.  Calmed by exhaustion I tried to get my thinking clear again.  Finally I asked, "Where are we going?"  "Out to sea," the Dragon Lady said.
  I stared at the bodies on the floor.  "You see what we did."  I said it to no one in particular.  Gunny said, "We killed three bastards; they were playing games with us & the last one they played, they lost."  I sat there stupefied, wondering what we could do now.  "We can't just go out to sea," I said.  "Between the Communists & the Americans we'll get cut to pieces."  The Dragon Lady answered, "We must get out, away from here; then we can use the radio; we shall keep moving to make it harder for anyone to find us."  "They''ll find us," Gunny said.
  "They'll find us," Gunny said.  "Yes," she agreed, "they will find us; but now search through those men's pockets.  Perhaps you will find something to help with the radio."  It was awhile before I could bring myself to go & help Gunny.  When I did I found in the pockets of the man who'd trained us a wallet containing an ID card with a photograph.  It read, UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT, CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY.  The name on it was James Strong.  Again the bewilderment.  Why would an American intelligence agent carry ID papers?  What was going on?  While I stared at it Gunny was saying, "Tell me, kid, do you still want to go back?"
  The question stung like a whip.  "I've got to find out," I said.  "Do they think we're traitors?  I've got to find out."  Gunny gazed at me.  "You don't think you'll get a straight answer, do you?"  While I stared back he said, "Rick, you're not going to be able to get them; I can smell it now."  Pointing a finger at him I said slowly, "We'll see about that.  & I'll tell you one thing more:  they're going to know I'm back, they're not just going to write me off!"  Gunny's face changed.  He nodded slowly.  "I know what you mean.  & you're right."  He turned to the Dragon Lady, "The question is, can he get back?  Can we stay close enough to shore to broadcast & beach the junk if something happens--& then run like hell back across China?"
  "Yes," she answered, "we can."  "Well," he told her, "it's a long shot, but we don't have much choice."  He looked at me hard.  "She said a few days ago that once you made up your mind you wouldn't change it."  "That's right," I said.  "I did choose to go back; & by all that's holy that's what I'm going to do; whether they like it or not."
  The Dragon Lady said there was something she must do & hurried from the cabin.  that left the two of us with the corpses.  "Better search these other two & get it over with," Gunny said.  It wasn't a pleasant assignment & my own search turned up nothing.  But then Gunny was shouting, "Look at this!"  He held up a card.  Turning it to the light I read out loud, "United States Foreign Service.  Aleksei Kutuzov."
  I was just saying, "What would that be, German?" when the Dragon Lady came back into the cabin.  She said quickly that it was a Russian name.  While we both stared she added, "Perhaps he is one who works for both sides."  To this day I have no clearer idea than I had then about who trained us or where their orders came from.
  "Whoever they are," I said then, "the question is, what the hell are we going to do with them?"  Gunny said without hesitation, "Feed 'em to the fishes; like any other garbage."  The Dragon Lady concurred.  She shouted a command through the hatchway & in a few moments the two Mongols had come in & were dragging the bodies out.  "We shall feed them to the fishes," she said, "to the fishes who swim down deep!"
 Gunny said, "Okay, now we send a message."  We headed for the radio room where in a couple of moments we were joined by Scotty & the Dragon Lady.  "Well, here goes," Gunny announced, "either we make contact real quick or we start running like hell back to Mongolia."  He pressed the button to send.  "This is Quicksand, this is Quicksand, we are Americans.  This is urgent, I will not say again; if I don't get acknowlegment we'll defect, we go straight to the Commies.  We'll go straight to Mao if we have to; will tell everything; everything.  Acknowlege loud & clear--or God help you & everyone.  We're standing by, over."  We waited.  The radio operator was obviously calling in the communications officer.  In a couple of minutes we had an answer.  "Quicksand, who are you mister?  We're in dark here; need specifics; give more identification, over."  Gunny replied, "This is Quicksand, we are Americans waiting for a pickup off the mainland.  Strong & Roberts are gone, that is all I can tell you.  Say Wilco or we return to mainland...& God help us all.  give me a call sign, over."  The answer came.  "Quicksand, interrogatory- -can you tell us the star of 'The Outlaw?'  Say again, who is the star of 'The Outlaw,' over."  Gunny looked at me puzzled.  "Jane Russell," I told him, & he transmitted it. 
  The reply came back at once.  "This is Eagles Nest, Quicksand; correct on interrogatory; need coordinates; say again, your location, over."  Gunny looked at me.  "If we give a location from the charts we're dead ducks."  He hesitated.  "I'll try Onion," he told me.  "Strong understood that one; let's hope these guys will too."  He sent the message:  "Eagles Nest, this is Quicksand.  We are two miles east of Onion.  Repeat, we are two miles due east of Onion, over."
  Christ, I said to myself, how many times before the Communists know we're at Lienyun?  But Eagles Nest, apparently not understanding right away, asked us to stand by.  While we did I wondered about Eagles Nest.  Wasn't this the command post for those same bastards, Roberts & Strong?  We waited getting more & more nervous.  Then the answer came, "Quicksand, this is Eagles Nest.  We have your approximate location as two miles due east of Onion.  Hope we understand you.  Can you head due east from your present location, over."  "This is Quicksand; wilco; due east; how long to pickup, over."  "Less than two hours" was the answer.  Then Eagles Nest said, "We hope you're authentic; if you're not, the devil take you."  Gunny was running with sweat as he spoke, but what he said was simply, "Likewsie, no sweat, out."  Then he put down the mike.  "Well, it's done."  "What happens now?"  With all the doubts I had about Eagles Nest I couldn't help shaking at the thought that I would soon be on my own.  
  It was Scotty who answered.  "We're taking the small boat to shore.  You're staying aboard this one.  The currents will take you east without power; you can't risk running a motor.  Then, lad, you're on your own."  The leave-taking I hadn't dared imagine was quick.  It was also emotional & my tears flowed freely:  Gunny throwing his arms around me, then Scotty embracing me, the Mongol guards clasping my arms & their lieutenant with his right hand on my left shoulder, repeating the only English word he knew, a word he'd first heard after I fought him:  "Friend."  Seeing how shaken I was, Scotty cut in to lead me to the wheel.  "It's a calm sea, lad, you shouldn't have much trouble."  Then he climbed down into the small boat which now rode free in the water.  The Mongols were already waiting, steadying the boat by grasping the ladder.
  Before he finally climbed down Gunny handed me a folded piece of paper.  "Keep it with you," he said, "it's for you to read--you & the people who pick you up."  Then he turned & jumped into the small boat without looking back.  I felt the Dragon Lady's arms around my waist.  Turning to receive her head against my chest I realized what I'd already forgotten, how tiny she was.  Leaning down I put my arms around her, lifted her until her face was even with mine & kissed her on the lips.  "I love you."  "I love you."  She climbed down the ladder quickly.  Through the darkness I watched them cast off & then wave.  After awhile they were barely visible; then there was nothing.
  Alone I found myself clutching the rail as though for support.  Then I reached up to finger the rosary beads I'd worn about my neck ever since Kim gave them to me.  I wept long & hard.  I watched the water as the boat cut cleanly through it.  A sudden chill seized me; rushing to the cabin I retrieved my machine gun & took it with me to the bow.  Remembering the note Gunny had given me I reached into the pocket of my tattered pants, unfolded & read it.
  Dear Rick,
  First, I hope you understand why I'm staying--because I found what I wanted, just like Scotty did.  but the important thing is that I have found out from the Dragon Lady a way to check & make sure that you are safely back in the States.  Sometimes when you pick up the telephone & it's a salesman, just listen.  Then you can tell him to bug off.  Through friends we can check & see if they are leaving you alone.  If at anytime something happens to you we will take matters into our own hands even if it means going to the Communists.  I don't think the bastards will want that, so they better lay off you.
  Don't think every telephone call you get is going to be from her friends.  It won't.  You won't even know, neither will the bastards.
  So long & God bless you.  We all love you.         Gunnery Sgt. Robert Masters, USMC    Special Force Group One, China
 
  The moon had gone behind clouds, it was dark & there was no one now to see me shivering in my wet clothes, lost & crying.  What had I lost?  What was I gaining?  What lay ahead?  A thousand miles in twentytwo violent days through the heart of China with death stalking us every step of the way to the eastern coast & now waiting for a rendezvous with my people.  My people?  Hadn't I just left my people?  Your other people, a voice seemed to say to me.  Why was I crying?  Because I had been involved in so much killing?  You'll just have to live with that.  Can I?  You'll have to.  I'm afraid now.  Afraid of what?  Of what they'll do to me.  You've got another responsibility now.  I know that.  But there's something else.  Like what?  I've learned something.  What?  I don't know how to say it:  a sort of discovery; mine; but I'm not sure what it is.  What is it?  I'm not sure; try; I can't; yes you can, name it; I'm not very good with words, I'm seventeen, I...Name it.  
It's just that I've learned so much in the last three weeks.  Enough to last a lifetime.  In a way it has been a lifetime.  Before words like brotherhood, compassion, love were only words.  Now I think I know what they mean.  Not bad.  What's the matter with that?  But not just because the Dragon Lady & I...I know.  It's more than that:  there are Kim & Nancy & the baby I rescued.  Anybody else?  Gunny, Scotty, Audy, Charlie & John O'Malley.  & many others.  So what's the matter with that?  I can't stop crying.  Why bother?  It can be good sometimes.  You know, all these things I have trouble finding the words for I learned from a strange people.  I had come as a stranger & was made welcome.  You are very fortunate--for that reason if for no other.  "Let not thy heart be troubled."  The ancient comforting words.  Touching the rosary.  Sobbing softly now.  "Remember the miracle."  I could almost hear her speak those words by which I would live.  A sudden breeze chilled me & then as quickly as it came it died.  Then there was no sound but the waves against the side of the boat as the current carried me to my mission's end.
 
 
  I don't know how long it was before a powerful thrust upward broke the surface less than fifty yards off.  Moments later along the starboard side I could make out the conning tower of a submarine.  Clutching my machine gun I watched for the next several minutes as a small dark shape bobbed its way toward me, & when it appeared alongside I saw it was a manned rubber raft.  Then through the darkness I heward a crisp American command:  "Ahoy topside; show yourself."
  Aboard the submarine no one said a word; & I was hustled into a cabin.  I saw a clean bed & a sink--everything spotless & in order.  After a minute there was a rap on the hatch & three men came in.  One of them was an officer; I smiled at them; nobody smiled back.  The officer asked, "Who are you?"  "I am PFC Lawrence Gardella, Special Force Group One, United States Marine Corps."  It's no wonder he stared at me, I suppose--ragged & bruised, with a string of green jade rosary beads around my neck.  "& just where did you come from?"  I'd been ready for that.  "I'm sorry, sir," I told him.  "I cannot say any more than that."  "Who else was with you?"  "I can't say that either, sir."
  After staring for a second or two longer he turned to one of the men with him.  "Get this individual a bath & some chow; & some decent clothes."  Glaring at me now, he said, "I'll talk to you later."  He wheeled & made his exit.  The hatch closed behind him.  A couple of minutes later another sailor appeared.  "First a shower," he said, "then some chow."  He actually smiled, he seemed the friendliest of the lot.  But I wasn't exactly getting a hero's welcome.
  After my first shower in a month I put on the clothes they'd left for me.  They weren't a perfect fit but they were an improvement on what I'd been wearing.  The same sailor was waiting to lead me back to the cabin where I found a tray with soup, coffee & pudding on it.  As soon as I'd finished everything I slept--I don't know for how long.  When I woke I couldn't remember where I was.  As soon as I did I stepped outside the cabin.  Two sailors intercepted me.  I said something about wanting to take a walk & one of them said, pleasantly enough, "Sorry, this is a submarine not an aircraft carrier."  "Okay then, how about some more chow?"
  "Right away," he said.  He seemed a nice enough guy.  I went back into the cabin, sat down on the rack, started to doze & was almost asleep again when the food arrived:  bacon & eggs, ham, pudding, coffee, milk & juice!  I was halfway through when a couple of corpsmen in white coats walked in.  One had a tray with some medical paraphernalia on it.  "Time for your shots," he said.  "We don't know what you might be carrying."
  I held out my arm for him to swab.  They gave me the shots & were gone.  The last thing I remember of my stay aboard the submarine is the sight of their white coats framed by the hatchway.  From May 30, 1952 through the entire month of June I was pretty much out of it, although I remember the voices I heard now & then.  In particular I remember a meeting with someone--someone very special.  Before I put down what I remember of that though there are a few things I should tell you about the rest of my life.

Gardella 14

14 
  O'Malley was the one who finally broke the silence.  "I've got a plan," he said, "but it depends on the weather."  While Gunny & I looked at him in surprise--we' d gotten used to expecting nobody but the Dragon Lady to offer any plans--she said, "I would like to hear it.  But with any plan we must finish off all the Communists & get away quickly.  & there must be no survivors who might send out a message."
  "O'Malley began, "You may think I'm daft, but first hear me out.  You know how afraid they are of ghosts."  Gunny was giving him a hard look, but the Dragon Lady put up her hand to give O'Malley a chance.  "If we could spook them," he went on, "scare the hell out of them & then have people hit them from the rear..."  While Audy made a gesture toward his head that showed what he thought, the Dragon Lady was saying, "It might work."
  O'Malley then explained his plan in detail.  He wanted some of us to rise from the midst of the field where the bodies were as though we were ghosts & walk straight into the Communist camp.  Covered with mud we'd certainly look like corpses just risen from out there.  But the rain would have to have stopped giving some visibility before it would work.  "Yes," the Dragon Lady agreed, "they do frighten easily.  & that would perhaps distract them long enough for us to attack & finish every one of them off.  Remember:  no one must be left alive to send out any warnings."
  Since she though it had a chance to work, all at once it became our plan.  She got everyone together & then divided us into five groups.  Four would attack from the sides of the camp & the fifth would play the challenging & dangerous role of the dead who had been raised.  The Dragon Lady, Gunny, Audy, O'Malley, the lieutenant & I along with several others made up this group.  The Dragon Lady was to fire the first shot to signal the attack.
  We moved out with the wind & rain driving as hard as ever.  Crouching low, wading through mud & water, we sloshed into the field where I tried not to look at the corpses.  Covered with mud until they were partly submerged, many revealed neither sex nor age except for the very young ones.  The size of the children made them unmistakable; those tiny bodies made me so angry that as at no other time I actually wanted to kill the soldiers who had been responsible.  & if O'Malley's crazy plan worked my chance to do it might come.
  When we'd moved about ten yards in from the road our group spread out & we lay down in the mud & water waiting for dawn & a break in the weather.  The dawn we were sure of, the weather we could only pray for.  After we'd waited for what seemed to be hours light finally appeared in the east.  As I looked around me the first thing I could see was the outline of the body nearest me.  I closed my eyes not wanting to look.  Opening them again I realized that the wind & rain had both died down as though approving of our scheme.
  While I slowly turned my head to peer across the road at the Communist camp the Dragon Lady came crawling toward me through the mud.  Speaking softly she told me that Scotty & Charlie were prisoners.  For a second I was relieved just to hear that they were alive.  Then I began to remember the kind of thing that was done here to prisoners of whatever side.  Still lying motionless she whispered, "We must continue with our plan."
  The forms of the Communist sentries were now becoming visible only yards away.  there would have been no way to hide there if the fields hadn't been strewn with corpses.  As I tried to erase the image of them from my mind I heard voices.  Lying there afraid to move, with our weapons wrapped, we were never more powerless than at that moment.  The pounding of my heart brought a new wave of terror as I heard the voices growing louder.  What now came into view was a group of what appeared to be farmers, perhaps thirty or forty of them all ragged & muddy with their hands bound behind their backs being herded in our direction by Communist soldiers.  I scanned the group for any sight of Scotty or Charlie but didn't see either of them.  A soldier who seemed to be an officer was shouting orders to the others.  Obviously this was the field of execution.
  With a sudden deliberate & yet fluid motion the Dragon Lady stood up.  Holding her weapon behind her she gave a low moan.  Then the rest of us, our weapons hidden, rose likewise & moved slowly toward the road moaning as we went.  Through the morning mist I saw that I was part of a skirmish line, an assault carried out by ghosts--& that we had scared the hell out of those soldiers.  As they panicked & ran screaming a few of them dropped their weapons.  The prisoners were every bit as frightened & their flight added to the confusion.  The terror was catching; soldiers pouring out of their tents were in a panic even before they saw us.
  From the size of the bivouac & the number of men I'd seen running I guessed there were about a hundred soldiers.  Thus far not one had turned to look at us.  Then an officer appeared to have grasped the situation.  From a distance of about twenty-five yards he began to bark orders, drawing his pistol meanwhile.  From the speed of her response it was clear that the Dragon Lady had been watching for this moment.  Tossing away the wrappings from her weapon she let loose a burst of gunfire that knocked him off his feet.  At that the rest of us began firing.  In the slaughter that followed we had not only surprise & superstition on our side but also confusion as the farmers started running for freedom.  Now the four other groups of our force caught the Communists in a crossfire that finished them in a few minutes.
  Audy was the first to reach Scotty & Charlie; he was untying them when I got there.  I could see that they were alive & in fair shape though Scotty had been slashed badly & Charlie had a deep ugly wound in his scalp.  "For awhile, lads," Scotty told us, "you had me pretty frightened too; I really thought the dead had come to life."
  O'Malley coming up behind me roared at that.  We explained as we introduced him to Scotty that it had been his idea.  Now Gunny & I helped Scotty to his feet.  "Can you make it?" I asked.  "Aye, I've been worse, I've also been better."  He turned to O'Malley.  "& thanks for your help.  "I'd do it any time," he replied, "but now I believe we're going in different directions, so I'll be saying goodbye."  & he shook hands all round.
  "If you have trouble, try to get word to us," the Dragon Lady said, "you know our direction."  "You're a remarkable woman," he told her, "& I thank you for your offer.  but John O'Malley has been looking after himself for quite awhile now; got to be moving on."
  After one more round of goodbyes O'Malley was off down the road alone & on foot, a stranger in a dangerous country.  I've thought many times since about how China had its way of converting the likes of O'Malley, Audy, Scotty, maybe even myself.  To what?  Different customs, a different way of life, a new way of seeing the important things?  I'm still not sure.  When he was about twenty-five yards from us O'Malley halted, turned, waved & shouted, "God bless you all!"  As we waved back I couldn't help saying softly, "God bless you too, John O'Malley!"
  Then the Dragon Lady was assembling us once more.  Once we had picked up as many of the slain Communists' weapons as we could carry we were off.  We saw no one--the weather had taken care of that.  The road was muddy but easier going than the land around it would have been.  From it we had a broad view of the field where the slaughter had taken place.  I stood there sickened yet hypnotized until Gunny slapped me on the shoulder to get me moving.
  Seeing that Charlie needed help I pulled up alongside him & lifted his arm around my own shoulders so that we could walk together.  Though Charlie was still a little dazed, Scotty seemed to be in good shape.  We'd lost only one man in rescuing the two of them.  As I looked around at our group, faces splattered, hair matted, clothes caked with mud, I could understand how O'Malley's trick had succeeded.
  We were marching into a fresh wind.  Before us I could see the canal.  Then the Dragon Lady signaled a halt; she conferred for at least fifteen minutes with a scout who had just returned--which meant, I could be pretty sure, that a new plan was being hatched.  by now I'd lost track of the number of changes of plan & I wasn't surprised to hear her announce, "We have a boat but we shall not go to the Grand Canal.  We shall go on the Hwang Ho instead--& it will take us to Laichow Bay.  That is near Weihai."
 "& Weihai," I exclaimed, "is where we get the boat to Seoul!"  she nodded & all at once what had been a kind of dream seemed close--a thing that was possible, that could really happen.  & knowing that brought a new kind of uneasiness.  What had kept me going up to now was lack of hope--not giving a damn.  I didn't want to change that all of a sudden, it would make a nervous wreck of me.  I tried not to think of all this, to force my mind in other directions as we trudged on.  The sun had come out & the wind was drying the mud that still covered most of me.  When I began to brush it from my clothes the Dragon Lady cautioned, "Don't clean up too well; you should look like a farmer or a Mongol." 
  After twenty minutes or so we met two more of the Dragon Lady's scouts.  They told her the Hwang Ho was only a mile away & that there was a boat waiting for us.  "The owner of the boat is a friend of mine," she said, "& he will take us to Laichow Bay.  Also he has a radio."
  A radio meant contact with Americans--another sign of how close we were.  Once again I tried not to think about what it meant.  The Dragon Lady ordered us to leave the road & to form into two columns, one on either side of the road.  We moved like this for so long that I lost all sense of time.  Finally as we descended a slight hill two large expanses of water lay before us:  the canal on one side, the Hwang Ho on the other.  Several junks were tied up at piers on the river & the Dragon Lady headed for one of these with her usual sureness, as if it were something she did every day of her life.  People at work on the piers or repairing boats in the water glanced at us but didn't seem concerned.  Following her cue we went aboard.  She pointed to a cabin, told us to go inside & then leaped back onto the pier.  Inside the cabin which was dark & stuffy we found three men to whom I nodded, not knowing what else to do.  They nodded back with no sign that they were either startled or worried at seeing us.  Audy explained presently that there were to be two boats & that the Dragon Lady was dividing up our people between them.
  Soon the Mongol lieutenant was aboard along with the others assigned to our junk.  I could hear the crew preparing to cast off with still no sign of the Dragon Lady.  I was beginning to be nervous & at seeing from the cabin porthole that the lines were cast off, my heart started to pound.  Then out of nowhere she came into the cabin.  She had been on board up front the whole time.  She told us now, "You must stay away from windows & doorways, out of sight.  Before long if all goes well we shall be at Laichow Bay."  In a couple of minutes we were under sail, out on the river & moving swiftly with the current.  The Dragon Lady motioned for Gunny & me to follow her.  "We shall try the radio," she explained as she led us into a smaller cabin just behind the other.
  "What is your call sign--your call letters?" she asked.  Gunny & I stared at each other looking blank.  "Christ, I don't know," he said.  "Do you remember if Lieutenant Damon said anything about a frequency?" I asked him.  "No, dammit!  We were none of us briefed about any such thing.  Now what a time to think about it!"
  The Dragon Lady spoke to the captain who started fiddling with the transmitter, tuning in on various frequencies.  We could hear the static & voices fading in & out.  Then after some time we heard an American voice:  "Eagle One to all eagles.  Return to nest, return to nest.  Acknowledge, over."  "Jeez, Gunny!" I said.  Sounding as excited as I was, he said, "How do you work this?"
  "Press it to talk," the Dragon Lady said, "release it to listen."  Pressing the button with his thumb, Gunny said, "Eagle One, Eagle One, can you hear me?  Can you hear me?"  He released the button & waited.  There was no answer.  He pressed the button & spoke into the mike again:  "Eagle One, I'm an American, can you hear me?  Come in, for god's sake!  I don't have a call sign!  I'm an american, come in!"  Again he released the button, we waited, & again there was nothing.  "Dammit!" Gunny barked, "Why don't they answer?"
  "They do not know who you are," the Dragon Lady said quietly.  "& they do not want to give their position away.  Neither do we; so we must stop now so as not to give it away."
  "Code," I said.  "Wait a minute!  When we landed in Manchuria, what was the password the lieutenant used with Yen?"  Gunny looked at me trying to remember.  Meanwhile the boat captain had been fiddling with the radio.  Frantic, I said, "What's he doing?  He'll lose them!"  "He has to remain in contact with his friends," the Dragon Lady told me.  "They are watching the Communists for us."
  "But hell," I insisted, "we'll lose them!"  But behind the angry annoyance my mind was searching for the password.  I paced up & down, groping, then I shouted, "Quick!  Sand!  Quicksand!"  The operator went on fiddling with the radio.  "I remembered the password!" I shouted.  "So let's send it, let's see what happens!"
  But when the Dragon Lady looked up it was with bad news.  "The Communists have gunboats at the mouth of the river in Laichow Bay; we must go ashore."  "Can't we try the password once?"  She spoke to the captain, then told us firmly.  "No, not now, they are too close, they might pick up our position.  We shall have to wait."  "But where will we get another radio?"   "As soon as we leave the captain will call someone--someone on shore who has a radio.  We can try to send the message from there."  
  I asked how long it would take us to reach Weihai.  "A few days--if all goes well," she said.  Then she stared at me & asked as though out of nowhere, "Have you decided now what you will do?"
  It took me a second or two to realize what she meant.  Then I remembered that I had said I wanted to stay.  I hadn't thought about it in any systematic way but now that we were so close to actually being at the sea I knew where my wishes were aimed.  "I think I'm going to go," I said.  "I'll miss you & I'll miss Nancy & Kim; but at least I'll see them once more."  The Dragon Lady replied softly, "You will not see Nancy & Kim again."  "What do you mean?  Why not?"  Suddenly I was upset & surprised at the emotion that surged through me.
  "They have started back to Inner Mongolia where they will be safer.  Our journey has become dangerous with so many people.  So I had to send them back."  She looked at me & I saw her eyes go soft as they rarely did.  "Please do not feel you were deceived, I know you cared for them, but it had to be done & quickly.  It is better this way."  I said soberly, "I know you did what you thought was right."
  Just then we felt the boat bump gently alongside the pier.  I welcomed the interruption.  The thought of not seeing Nancy or Kim had brought me closer to what I dreaded even more--the thought of not seeing her again either.  Out on deck the captain gave us baskets to hide our weapons in.  The day was warm & pleasant, the water was bright in the sunshine.  We were all smeared & caked with mud--a total mess.  Without hesitating I took a flying leap & landed in the water.  "Come on in," I yelled & in a minute they had joined me--Gunny, Scotty, the Dragon Lady, even Charlie--for a leisurely bath before we waded ashore.  Our skins & our clothes were now a couple of shades lighter.  Feeling the water run from my sopping hair on my face I asked Gunny if he had a comb.  "Got something on the line?" he teased & I gave him a shove that sent him back into the river.
  While we were still splashing & shoving each other the Dragon Lady was assembling her people from the second boat.  We would be bidding goodbye to most of them before they began the long trek back to Mongolia.  In no time they were on their way, leaving only a small group of us to head for the sea:  the Dragon Lady, Gunny & I, Scotty, Audy, Charlie, the Mongol lieutenant & three of his men.  Staring at the backs of the departing group I felt a tense sadness.  This was the end of something.  I didn't know what might be beginning but the long journey with them was over.  Then almost at once we were also moving on.
  The ocean of mud left by the storm was already draining & beginning to dry out.  Now there would be only an occasional slight dip in the terrain.  Altogether it was as flat as anything I'd ever seen.  After we'd gone a mile or so a village came into view & we headed toward it.  The place seemed strangely solitary.  Not many people were working the land around it & inside the walls I saw no more than fifty people with perhaps half a dozen huts.  We were led by a villager to one of these.  Audy told us, after listening to what he was telling the Dragon Lady, that this was the shack with the radio.  Though I was eager to try it the Dragon Lady said, "No, we shall eat first.  The villagers suggest caution because the Communists are near.  If we have to flee I should like to do it with full stomachs."
  While we ate Scotty told us what had happened to him.  He & the others had been passing some soldiers on the road when suddenly they found themselves in a fire fight, for no reason that they could see.  "They had the jump on us," he said.  "Some of our people got away, most were cut down.  They overpowered Charlie & me & wanted to shoot him on the spot.  But I told them he was too important, their superiors would be angry."  He smiled.  "I believe they thought we were you."  He looked at Gunny & me.  "Good thing we weren't lads, or you wouldn't have come to rescue us."  When the meal had ended the radio was brought from its hiding place somewhere within the hut.  The Dragon Lady began tuning carefully & while we listened an American voice broke through.  "It would be good if we had some sort of call sign," she said.  I urged, "Try Quicksand."  "But that was only a password & countersign, " Scotty told me.  "Something to use in the field, not the same thing at all."  "All the same," I persisted, "what have we got to lose?"
  The Dragon Lady pressed the button to transmit & spoke into the mike.  "Quicksand, this is Quicksand, come in."  We waited, all we heard was a crackle of static, we waited more, still nothing but the crackle.  Scotty said, "Let me try.  Maybe the accent is scaring them off."  While he picked up the mike the villager who had come in with us spoke to the Dragon Lady & she explained, "He is afraid that if we transmit for too long they will know our location.  Then the whole village may be in danger."
  "Maybe they're not hearing us," I said, feeling depressed.  Audy put a hand on my shoulder.  "It's the right frequency, they're just not answering."
  The Dragon Lady went on conferring with the villager--asking him, Scotty explained, about another transmitter somewhere out on the road.  "In an hour we can try again," she said.  If that failed, she went on, we had two choices.  One was to go to the coast, to Laiyang, where we might find someone with a portable transmitter we could use.  Then we could travel south along the coast sending messages as we went.  "That'll be bloody dangerous," Audy interjected.  "We'll be trapped with our backs to the water with nowhere to go if we're found out."  & Scotty agreed.  The Dragon Lady nodded silently.  Then she said, "The other choice is to head back to Mongolia."  We all groaned.  Then I said, "You people have got to get back there whether we get out or not.  & how many times can you roll the dice without crapping out?"   I said it as much to myself as to anyone else.
  The Dragon Lady looked mystified & Gunny started to chuckle.  "It means rolling the dice many times & being lucky & then finally not being lucky," he explained.  "Oh," she said earnestly, "I shall remember that"--& we all laughed.  But Gunny had turned sober again.  "Suppose we go to the coast," he said, "what are our chances?"  The Dragon Lady said, "They will depend on whether we can make radio contact & get help before we are found.  If they find us first we shall not have much room to move & there will not be many of us to fight..."  Her voice trailed off.  Then she brightened.  "We roll the dice," she said, "But we shall be lucky."  "I never won anything in my life," I told her, trying a feeble joke, "but I'm willing to bet on you."
  All business again, she said, "We must have some sort of code, a signal for the radio.  Something so that the Americans will need to talk to us.  Something... "  We all sat puzzling over the problem until Scotty jumped to his feet.  "The message Roberts had on him!  Do you remember how it went?"  While I tried, still drawing a blank, Gunny slapped his hads together.  "Get that radio working! he shouted.  The villager ran up the antenna again & Gunny said, "I'm going to send this message & then we run like hell for the coast!"  He picked up the mike.
  "Command post," he said, "this is Quicksand, Roberts, Roberts.  Six ships sunk.  Will not return.  They feel the same as most of us.  But hung his name on anyway.  Sing a song to Jenny next.  Quicksand, Quicksand, can you hear me, over."  The son of a bitch had remembered every word!
  While we listened Gunny repeated the message, this time pacing his words, taking care to pronounce each syllable.  Again there was no answer.  After he'd tried one more time, still with no response, Scotty said, "They're bringing the brass in on this one.  Give them five minutes, then try again."  The villager was beginning to look concerned & the wait seemed to go on forever before Gunny said, "Let's have a go at it."
  & this time the answer came!  "Quicksand, Quicksand, this is Spec One, do you read me, over."  I slapped Gunny on the back; he ignored me.  "Spec One, this is Quicksand, affirmative, we read you, over."  "Quicksand, this is Spec One, what is your approximate location, over."  Gunny stared at all of us for a second, then he spoke into the mike again.  "Spec One, this is Quicksand, we are near Onion, we are near Onion, over."  "We read you, can you stand by?  I say again, can you stand by?"
  "Negative, we cannot stand by," Gunny answered.  "I say again, we cannot stand by, we are moving, will call you tomorrow morning, tomorrow morning; do you read us, Spec One, over."  "We read you, Quicksand, loud & clear, we have your approximate location, we will wait for your call tomorrow morning, over."  "This is Quicksand, affirmative, tomorrow morning, out."  Ecstatic, we broke into a cheer.  "I kept it short," Gunny explained, "because I figured we were being monitored.  Give 'em time & they could triangulate our position."  "Tell me one thing, Gunny," I said, "what in hell is Onion?"  "Hold on a minute & I'll tell you," he said.  "I remember when I was in Korea I was looking at a map of China.  I saw this place, L-i-e-n-y-u- n, & I pointed to it & asked one of my buddies how it was pronounced.  Lienyun--sounded to me just like Onion.  Throwing that at them I figured we'd be close but not too close."  I said, "Too close to what?"
  The Dragon Lady said, quick as always, "He means that the Americans will not be the only ones plotting our location.  We cannot even be sure those are real Americans we spoke to; they could be defectors in the pay of the Communists.  What is good is that we are not really close to Lienyun, not close enough to be there by tomorrow morning."  "You're some shrewd son of a bitch," I told Gunny admiringly.  He said, pretending to be hurt, "Took you awhile to find out!  But now we've got to be cutting out of here.  They'll be looking for us."
  While we got ourselves ready the Dragon Lady was having a lively conversation with the villager.  After the rest of us had gotten our gear together & gone outside, she & Audy came out carrying a large basket.  When I asked what was in it, she said, "The transmitter.  The owner has made us a gift of it; but it is better for him too not to have it any longer."  While I peered inside the basket at the portable radio with its handpowered generator I saw Charlie waiting with an expression that made me uneasy.  "Now I must say goodbye," he told us.  "My injury is not all healed; you will be traveling fast; I will only slow you down.  Instead I will prepare for our trip back to Mongolia.  That way I can do more good."  Charlie's words gave me another jolt.  I thought of Nancy & Kim.  Every time I left someone now it was for the last time.  I went over & gave Charlie a bear hug & once again I had to turn & walk away so as not to be seen with tears in my eyes.  I had been through more with him in a few weeks than I would in a lifetime with most people.  While the others made their farewells I realized that what I felt about Charlie I also felt about everyone else in this strange exotic crew.  When--if--Gunny & I ever got out of here I knew I'd be leaving a sort of family behind.
  We marched off at top speed.  From our full strength of a hundred now we were down to just nine--the Dragon Lady, Scotty, Audy, the four Mongols, Gunny & me.  The afternoon was warm & as our clothes dried out completely I began to feel parched, but we traveled without stopping for a drink.  I thought how strange it was--drowning in water one day, thirsting for it the next, one day nothing but mud, the next day nothing but dust.
  We cut across country keeping to narrow footpaths, avoiding main roads.  We now saw few people.  Fatigue was already creeping up on me & Scotty had told us it would take two days to reach Lienyun--if we didn't run into any trouble.  It was a relief when with darkness approaching the Dragon Lady signaled a stop.  But it was only to tell us that we would not get there in time unless we traveled faster.  Now, she said, we were going to run.  She turned & broke into a trot.  We all followed & to my surprise, though my legs had been bothering me, with the change of pace they actually began to feel better.  But it wasn't long before I was sweating heavily & feeling limp.  We jogged for at least an hour before the next stop came.  I sank to my knees, sucking in deep breaths, feeling drained of strength, breath & water.  "Don't drink too much," she cautioned, "just moisten your lips & take a sip.  We shall rest five minutes, then we run again."
  The five minutes passed quickly.  I saw that Gunny was exhausted too, so was everyone.  But once again when the Dragon Lady was on her feet we all managed to follow somehow.  As I ran my mind slipped into a kind of trance.  I recalled incidents from my childhood, the sports I'd taken part in, the training for this mission, all the running we'd done then.  & now an odd thing happened.  With my mind wandering off I'd ceased to keep an eye on the Dragon Lady & wasn't ready when she stopped short.  There I was chargining into her like a runaway buffalo, knocking her down & falling over her.  We'd all been in such close quarters for so long that the physical contact in itself was nothing new.  What happened now was that I realized in a way I hadn't before that she was a woman.
  Slowly I began pulling myself off her & at the same time helping her up with my hands underneath her shoulders.  I had never been quite that close to her before or touched her body in quite that way.  Our eyes met & stayed locked in the same steady gaze.  I heard Scotty saying, "Why don't we all take a breather?"  Her shoulders felt strong & wiry yet delicate under my grasp.  "Are you all right?" I finally asked.  "Yes," she answered, "are you?"  I'd never heard quite that sound in her voice before.  "Yes, I'm all right."  "Soon you will be going home," she whispered.  "Yes," I said.  "I guess so, it won't be easy."  Then I leaned down & kissed her gently on the lips.  I hadn't had much experience as a ladies' man & God knows I hadn't planned this.  We just stood & looked at each other again until she dropped her hands from my shoulders & we pulled apart.
  After a minute she had the old amused look.  "Shall we run all night or shall we rest?" she said.  "I think we should follow Scotty's recommendation"  "Then let's tell them."  We walked over to where Scotty, Gunny & Audy were sitting.  The Mongols as usual headed off by themselves.  By now it was dark.  I took out a skin bag of water & we each had a long swig.  We hadn't sat there long before the Dragon Lady was asking whether we had the strength to go on running through the night.  There were hills ahead of us, she said.  Also, we could not run during the day without arousing suspicion.
  Though no one was eager to run again we all agreed that we had to do it.  This time as I ran my thoughts were all of the Dragon Lady & the way she'd looked & sounded.  I wondered how I could want to leave whatever it was that she was to me.  I asked myself what there was at home.  My emotions were so confused that I all but broke out laughing at the thought of us nine taking such incredible chances to reach the sea for the sake of somebody who couldn't even be sure he wanted to go!
  But also as we ran I loosened up & began to appreciate the task we'd undertaken.  There was a moon now & I could see the terrain getting hillier.  The ups & downs put a strain on my wind as well as my legs.  The next time the Dragon Lady signaled a stop I took a sip of water that went down the wrong way.  I started coughing & for some moments I couldn't stop.  The Mongol lieutenant came over looking worried & put a hand on my shoulder.  He said something to Audy who explained, "He's offered to carry you."  "No thanks," I told him as soon as I could speak.  "Tell him I'm okay."
I was embarrassed all the more because there was no doubt in my mind that he could have done it.  The Mongols were carrying the food, water, radio & weapons, but in all our running they never broke stride or asked for a rest.
  As we resumed our run I found myself worrying about the next message we sent.  Each time we transmitted the Communists would be one step closer to locating us.  We took one more break just before sunup.  With the first light of dawn I felt a little safer; all through the night in the back of my mind there had been the fear that we might stumble onto an encampment of soldiers.  With light showing in the east the Dragon Lady quickened the pace for one last sprint before the cover of darkness was gone.
  Once the sun came up my aches turned into pains.  I wondered about Scotty, Gunny & Audy, all of them a good deal older than I was.  When it was full daylight we paused on the side of a hill near a clump of trees.  I saw the Dragon Lady standing there, her hair blown by the breeze, the rags she wore outlining the shape of her body.  I was looking at her in an entirely new way now & I told myself I'd better stop it.  While the rest of us slumped to the ground grateful for the rest the Mongols stationed themselves a little apart from the line of trees.  One of them had taken my binoculars for the first watch.  
  After a silence the Dragon Lady turned to Gunny & me.  "When you first sent the message you used a name--"  "Quicksand," I said.  "No, no, it was a man's name."  "Roberts," Gunny said.  "Yes, yes, that's it, Roberts.  Who is he?"  "He was a CIA agent from the States, or anyhow that's what I think he was."
  She thought for a moment.  "So they think you are this agent, this Roberts, calling."  "Well, if they do they're in for some surprise," I said.  The more I thought about this the less I liked it.  But I was too exhausted to brood for long.  In a minute or two I was sound asleep.  The voices of Gunny, Audy & Scotty woke me.  My legs ached.  When I asked how long I'd been asleep Scotty answered, "A couple of hours."
  The Dragon Lady had been off talking to the Mongol lieutenant, now she was beside me.  "How far to Onion or whatever it is?" I asked.  She said, "We could reach it by tomorrow morning."  "Only we told them this morning," I pointed out.  "They will wait."  "Because they think we're Roberts?"  She did not answer.  Anyhow we had enough other things to worry about--such as the message we were going to transmit right now.  
  Soon the radio picked up the American voice.  "Quicksand, Quicksand, this is Spec One, do you read, over."  Scotty flipped the switch to send.  "Spec One, this is Quicksand, read you loud & clear, over."  "Quicksand, have you reached destination?  I say again, have you reached destination, over."  "Spec One, this is Quicksand, we need another day, I say again, another day to reach destination, over."
  "Affirmative, Quicksand, will look for you same time tomorrow, be as quick as you can, the business is over, be as quick as you can, over."  Scotty flipped the switch again.  "Spec One, this is Quicksand, we have a man ready for the world, we need shipment, we need shipment, do you read, over."  The voice came:  "Loud & clear, Quicksand, one package for shipment, one package for shipment, over."  "Spec One, will be at destination tomorrow morning, need shipment quickly, cannot wait, need instructions, over."  "Hold on that last interrogatory, Quicksand.  Can you call back after dark?  Say again, can you call back tonight?  We will have orders, over."  "Wilco, Spec One, will call back after dark, out."  Scotty snapped off the radio & turned to us with elation in his face.  We all began to cheer, hug & pound each other on the back.
  Then for a second or two the Dragon Lady clung to me.  I said softly now, "I may really be leaving soon."  "Are you happy?" she asked.  "I don't know," I said, "part of me wants the trip to start all over again, I know that's selfish but it's true."  "Yes, I know," she said.  We strolled away from the others full of things we wanted to say but couldn't & after a moment we reluctantly returned.  "The package ready for shipment," Audy announced.  "The battered package ready for shipment would be more like it," I told him.  "Or rather, two battered packages."  I looked toward Gunny waiting for the laughter to begin.  Instead there was an embarrassed silence.  Then Gunny said, "No, Rick, I'm not going."  "What?"  "That's right, Rick, I'm not going back."
  Looking around I could see that the others already knew.  What I couldn't take in, what I couldn't handle just then was that everybody had known but me.  "Since when is all this?" I blurted out.  There was another pause.  Then Gunny said, "Rick, I'm no traitor, you know that, & I'm no coward."  "But you don't want to go home."  "That's right, I never had a home, Rick, except the Corps.  & after what happened to us & what I've seen here I'm staying."  "But in less than a year you'll have twenty & you can retire!"  "Ricky, you've seen the way the government treated us.  They couldn't care less.  They'd find a way to screw me out of my pension too."  "Gunny, that wasn't the government!  I was beginning to yell.
  Then Gunny was yelling too.  "Wake up, kid.  the government is supposed to know what its forces are up to.  If it doesn't even do that--then God help us all!  & even if I did get the pension," he went on in a tone that was quieter but grimmer, "could I retire on two hundred a month?  I'm thirty-six years old & I've been in the Marine Corps for nineteen of those--more than half my life.  what am I supposed to do with myself now?  I'd been in two wars & still that bastard CO in Korea was all set to have me court-martialed.  I can do without that bullshit!"
  "& here you'll be in the middle of a war that goes on all the time," I said.  "So that's what I know how to do anyhow.  I got nothing back in the States, no friends, no family, no job; so I'm staying."  I asked, "Then why did you keep it a secret from me?"  "I wasn't going to change your mind about going back.  Once we got close to the water I knew you'd have to change it again."  "I don't know how you can be so sure."  "You've got your whole life ahead of you, kid.  You've got family.  Also you've got to go back & tell the story of what we did."  
  I looked around me angry with everybody.  "First you sneak Nancy & Kim away," I said, glaring at the Dragon Lady, "& now this."  It shook me to see her look at me the way she did then--as though I'd actually hurt her.  I'd never seen this steely woman so near to crying.  She said, "I didn't want them here because I was afraid you would decide to stay.  That was part.  Part was that I was also afraid for them, that they would not be safe."  Now I was unhappy with everything including myself.  But I said, "I understand," & then "I'm sorry."
  She shook her head as though she didn't think I understood at all.  Tears rolled down her cheeks.  "You fought here with us, Khan; you are a brave man; but now you must go home.  Let me say to you what my father told me once.  He was a wise man & he told me, 'Life is a beautiful miracle & it is given only once.  The choice you make can never be made a second time.  Enjoy what you have chosen; never look back; look forward & live the miracle.' "
  It took several minutes for what she had been saying to sink in.  Finally I said, "I'll always remember what you told me."  & I've never forgotten.  Then she said something else I've never forgotten.  "Khan, although you have fought bravely here, your fight is not over.  You may have another war to fight when you are at home."
  When I asked what she meant, it was Scotty who answered.  "Your group was sent over on a mission.  It seems clear to me, lad, that you were never supposed to go back.  Now after you've done what you've done, seen what you've seen--now there may be people who will not want you back, not want you to tell your story."  He was saying things I'd been afraid to think through.  Gunny joined in then, "Because maybe no one is supposed to know about our mission.  Maybe they don't want anyone around to tell about it.  Remember, it's most likely Roberts they're expecting to pick up.  They may be in for one hell of a surprise, don't forget."  By then I couldn't think of anything to say.
  "We shall speak about this again later," the Dragon Lady said, & soon we were hitting the road again--walking fast now rather than running, passing many people at work in the rice paddies.  All the while my mind was racing.  Gunny would stay in China--alive & by choice.  The bodies of Damon, Craig, Holden & White would all remain.  Sally & Yen had died but at least on the soil of their own country.  I thought of them & of all the bodies I'd left behind--scores of them, the Chinese & the Russians I'd killed.  Could I justify all that killing even in a country where killing was a way of life?  I found the Dragon Lady walking beside me looking up at me.  I wondered whether I'd been talking to myself.  She asked, "Are you all right?"  I smiled & said yes.  I reached out to take her hand & held it for awhile before I let it go, thinking again about whether I really wanted to go back.  The Dragon Lady had probably been right about sending Nancy & Kim away.  I'd come to feel very close to them both partly because they were young like me.  & they might have influenced me to stay if they'd been with us now.  But no, I'd made up my mind; the thing was decided for alot of good reasons.  Well then, why did I seem to keep forgetting what those reasons were?
  The day had become hot & sticky & when we came to a stream I was happy to jump in for a quick wash.  But the Dragon Lady had warned that we were in a dangerous area & would have to keep on moving.  Everywhere people were working in the ricefields.  Though we skirted them wherever we could while holding a direct route to Lienyun we often wound up sloshing through the wet fields as a shortcut.  Though wading slowed us down & was hard on the legs, after awhile once again I could feel my legs loosening up.
  As the day ended we went even faster.  Clouds partly covered the moon but there was enough light for us to see where we were going.  As I adapted to the pace it began to seem almost comfortable.  At the same time I was becoming rather lightheaded & it didn't seem long before we were stopping for a rest.  Once we were on the move again I felt a strange tension growing among us.  Like a scene in a grade B movie it seemed quiet--too quiet.  & that I didn't like it.  The small group drew in closer together at the risk of losing its scouts--the Mongols carrying our gear, now close to us instead of moving in isolation.  Near the top of a hill we stopped.  While the Mongols fanned out again as security we set up the radio.  Establishing contact this time was not so easy.  I had almost fallen asleep when I heard, "Quicksand, Quicksand, this is Spec One, this is Spec One, do you read, over."
  What made this so crucial an exchange was not having any code; instructions for the pickup would have to be given in the open.  Spec One's information was as guarded as possible--pier number four at first light tomorrow, with no mention of Lienyun itself.
  Almost immediately one of the Mongols came in & after a frantic exchange with the Dragon Lady he raced off again into the darkness.  He had learned, she told us, that a large group of people, perhaps fifty or more, were coming toward us.  Whether they were soldiers or not she did not yet know.  While the Mongols patrolled the five of us who were left took out our weapons & waited, stayling low.  When the Mongols finally emerged from the darkness they brought with them two men who looked distraught.  They had come, the Dragon Lady explained, from a village about a mile off where Communist soldiers were torturing & killing people--especially children.  "We have a decision to make," she said.  "Decision?" I helfted my machine gun & said, "Let's go."
  The Mongols sped into the darkness & we followed running.  Almost immediately I began to sweat.  My heart was pounding.  How much longer could our luck hold out?
  We could hear the crackle of gunfire muffled at first by a fold of the hills.  As we got closer a glow appeared in the sky; racing between two hills we found the village on fire & now we could hear both the shots & the screams of people in pain.  The Dragon Lady signaled a halt.  "We cannot run in blindly," she said.  "We must see what is happening."  As we dropped to our knees & positioned our binoculars the Mongols appeared on the slope & spoke quickly to her.  "They are killing everyone," she told us.  "They have gotten the children together & put them in the school."  We spread out; then at her arm signal we sprinted in a skirmish line toward the village.  My thoughts as we careened down the hill were more confused than they had ever been--& yet it was all so simple.  We were close to the sea.  If we got through this, I was thinking, this would be the last combat for me.  If we didn't it would still be my last combat.  I brought my machine gun to the ready as I ran.