"Destroyer 010 - Terror Squad.pdb" - читать интересную книгу автора (Williams Remo)Yes, Remo remembered all the trouble CURE had gone to for him, and if wrapping a tray around a fool's head endangered all that work, well, that was the business, sweetheart
"Is that all you can say, Remo? That's the biz?" Dr. Smith had said in one of those rare face-to-face meetings. "That's all I can say." "Well, it's done," said the lemon-faced Dr. Smith. "Now to the business at hand. What do you know about terrorists?" Then followed an afternoon briefing on terrorists, a preamble to a mission. 27 Remo bent over and tinkled a hand in the pool like everyone else's pool in this luxury community. "I do not hear a body move through the water," came the Oriental voice. "I do not hear a body move through the water," Remo mimicked under His breath. He stood in boxer bathing trunks, an apparently normally built man in his early thirties with sharp features and deep dark eyes. Only his thick wrists would give any indication that this was more than an ordinary man, for the real deadliness was where it always is with man, in his mind. "I do not hear a body move through the water," came the voice again. Remo went into the pool. Not in a dive or a splashing jump, but instead, the way he had been taught, like the essence of gravity returning toward the center of the earth. Even a novice in the martial arts knew that collapsing was actually the fastest way of getting down. This was an extension of it. One moment, Remo was standing on the side of the pool, and the next, the lukewarm water surrounded him, above him, and around him, and His feet were on tile. To someone watching, it would appear as if the pool Just sucked him in. He waited, letting his eyes adjust to the stinging chlorinated water, letting His restricted use of oxygen adjust his body, letting the arms float while the mind concentrated the focus of the weight at his feet and legs to keep him steady underwater, He was in a world of warm blue jade and he adjusted to become part of it, not fight it. When he had first learned moving through water, he had tried harder and harder, and succeeded less and less. The Master of Sinanju, Chiun, had said that when he 28 stopped trying he would learn to move through water, and that it was Remo's arrogance that made him believe he could overpower it, instead of submitting to it. "By submission, you conquer," Chiun had said, and then demonstrated. The wisp of an aged Oriental had entered the water properly, leaving a trail of only three small bubbles following the descent of his body, as if a small rock had been placed gently, not dropped, into the water. Without seeming propulsion, the body suddenly was moving through the water much as Remo had seen a tiger shark do in a city aquarium back east. No flailing. No straining. Swish. Swish. Swish. And Chiun was at the other end of the pool and out of the water as though vacuumed out. It was the training of the House of Sinanju that made its masters appear not to push themselves but to be pulled. Remo had tried. Failed. Tried again. Failed. Until one tired afternoon, following three failures in which he had moved no better than an ordinary swimmer, he felt the tuning of his body. His body in conjunction with the water made the forward movement. It was too easy to believe. And then, trying it again, he found he could not do it again. Chiun had leaned over the pool and taken Remo's hand. He pushed it against the water. Remo felt force. Then he pulled Remo's hand through the water. The hand moved swiftly, without effort. The water accepted the hand. That was the key. "Why didn't you show me this the first tune?" Remo had asked. 29 "Because you did not know what you did not know. You had to begin at ignorance." "Little father,'' Remo had said, "you're as clear as scripture." "But your testaments are not clear at all," Chiun had said. "And I am very clear. Unfortunately, a light to a blind man is always inadequate. You now know how. to move through water." Once more, down into the pool and off-swish, swish, swish. Then up and out and pad back to the beginning. On the third time, Remo glanced quickly back to the house. Competence had already brought him to the point of boredom. To hell with it. He slapped the water once at one end, dashed to the other and slapped It again. "Perfect," came the Oriental voice. "Perfect. The first time you have achieved perfection. For a white man, that is." It was only that evening when Chiun's television shows were over, and Remo continued to maintain a happy little secret smile, that Chiun looked quizzically at His pupil and said: "That third moving through the water was false." "What, little father?" 30 "False. You cheated." "Would I do that?" asked Remo indignantly. "Would the spring rice swallow the dew of the Yacca bird?" "Would it? I don't know," Remo said. "I never heard of a Yacca bird." "You know. You cheated. You are too happy for having paid the proper effort in this morning's training. But I say to you, whoever robs from his own efforts robs himself. And in our craft, the robber's price can well be death." The telephone rang, interrupting the aged Oriental. Chiun, casting a baleful eye upon the ringing instrument, became quiet, as if unwilling to compete with a machine so insolent it would dare interrupt him. Remo picked up the receiver. "This is Western Union," came the voice. "Your Aunt Alice is coming to visit you and wants you to prepare the guest room." "Right," Remo said. "But what color guest room?" "Just the guest room." "Are you sure?" "That's what it says, sir," said the Western Union operator, with the smug arrogance of one observing another's discomfort. "Just guest room. Not blue guest room or red guest room?" "Correct, sir. I will read...." Remo hung up on the Western Union operator, waited the few moments necessary for a dial tone, then dialed again, an 800 area-code number that he was ordered to call because the telegram did not mention the guest room's color. 31 The phone barely rang once and was answered. "Remo, we're in luck. We got them 2,000 feet over Utah. Remo, this is you, right?" "Well, yes it is. It would help to have you verify before you start vomiting over an open line. What the hell is the matter with you, Smitty?" Remo, was shocked. Smith's external composure was usually perfect, almost Korean. |
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