He turned and moved softly away through the woods, and behind him he heard Remo's laugh echoing over the wide river.
And in that prideful laugh, welling out of his throat like the pulsing of the blood in his veins, Remo felt at one and at peace with his ancestors, that generation after generation of assassins who had refined the magic of Sinanju and handed it down through the ages as their legacy to him.
He turned and looked back at Muckley's body.
"That's the biz, sweetheart," he said coldly. "But don't worry. When I meet him, I'm canceling his return ticket."
As soon as Remo entered the room, Chiun knew.
"You have met the Wa," he said.
Remo nodded.
"He got away," Remo said. "He left his calling card."
Remo held the red-leather handled knife toward Chiun, just as Theodosia burst into the room.
"I just heard on the television," she said. "Muckley's dead. Knifed."
She saw the knife in Remo's hand and uttered a muffled "oooh."
Her eyes fixed on him, all questions, which Remo did not answer.
Chiun took the knife and looked at the engraved horse on the Hade.
"You said you were just going to talk to him," Theodosia told Remo accusingly.
"Easy," he said. "I didn't kill him."
"On television, they're blaming Wesley and his people. That means you. Us. All of us."
"They can blame who they want," Remo said. "He was dead when I got there."
Theodosia nodded, but it was not a convincing statement of agreement.
Before either could speak, the telephone rang and from the first syllable, Remo recognized the annoyed voice of Harold W. Smith.
"I didn't do it," he said.
Remo listened a while, then said, "We'll keep him alive." He hung up, without any pretense of a cordial goodbye.
"Who was that?" Theodosia asked.
"My junior high school gym teacher," Remo said. "He promised to check with me from time to time to see if I was making a success out of my life."
Chiun was carefully examining the knife. Rachmed ran into the room.
"I just heard," he said to Theodosia. "Missss, I do not mind telling you that I do not like all this killing and violenccccce."
"No," Remo said. "I guess pickpocketing is as violent as you like to get."
Rachmed glared at him. "It was all a mistake, sssir," he said. His face flushed.
"And the whorehouse for little girls? Is that a missssssstake, too?"
Baya Bam ran from the room. Theodosia looked at Remo with suspicion in her eyes. "Just who the hell are you?" she said.
"Your friendly neighborhood bodyguard," Remo said. Chiun put down the knife. Remo said, "Pruiss is all right?"
Chiun nodded toward the wall separating his room from Pruiss's.
"You can hear him breathing, can you not?"
Remo listened and caught the sound of Pruiss's breath. He nodded. Theodosia strained to hear but could hear nothing.
"If it wasn't you, who was it?" she asked Remo. She paused, then answered her own question to her own total satisfaction. "Those oil people. Bobbin," she said. She swore.
She wheeled. Remo and Chiun heard her entering Pruiss's room.
Chiun looked at Remo.
"The game is almost played out, my son," he said.
Remo nodded.
"Be careful," Chiun said.
Chapter twelve
"I didn't know that was going to happen."
Flamma was shoving clothes into a bag. Judging by the size of the red satin garment she was wearing, Remo gauged that the bag — a small model's hat box — would hold enough changes of clothes for an around-the-world trip. Twice. On foot.
"What'd you think was going to happen?" Remo said. He lounged on the bed as Flamma breezed about the small motel room showing him lots of flesh and very little interest.
"I thought they were going to yell at Wesley and embarrass him and that would be that and I'd be even because he wasn't going to make my movie."
"Sheep Dip, wasn't it?" Remo asked.
"Animal Instincts," Flamma corrected. "But I didn't expect anybody to get killed. Even if the Reverend Muckley wasan old pervert."
"Who hired you?" asked Remo. He had gotten into her room by showing an old card he carried, one of many, which announced that Remo McElaney was an investigator for the United States Senate Select Subcommittee on Grain Purchases and Natural Resources. He could just as easily have shown her a card listing himself as an FBI agent, a CIA man, a Treasury man, a Jersey City cop, or a field representative for the International Fish and Game Commission. But Grain Purchases and Natural Resources was the first one that had come out of his pocket. Flamma was so nervous she hadn't bothered to look at it closely. People never did.
"Will Bobbin," she answered. "Well, he didn't exactly hire me but he paid my way out here and he promised me a screen test."
"If you run now, you'll blow the screen test," said Remo.
"It's all right. I'm getting two pages in the National Star. That'll get me all the screen tests I want," Flamma said. "Anyway, where the hell is Bobbin when I need him? I need protection," she said.
"Why?" asked Remo. "Somebody after you?"
"Who the fuck knows?" she said. Without any seeming regard for Remo's presence, she took off her red satin top and, barebreasted, began to root in a drawer for a thin halter top that she began to put on.
"Who the hell was after Muckley, that twerp?" she asked. "If Wesley's involved, I don't know. That man just may go crazy. He may want us all killed and that dyke with him is just the bitch to do it."
"Theodosia?" asked Remo.
"Right. Theodore," said Flamma.
She had her top on and now she peeled off her red satin G-string. Bottomless and blase, she rooted around in the drawer for slacks to wear.
She found a pair and began to slip them on.
Remo said, "Maybe Bobbin. But why would Bobbin want to have Muckley killed?"
She pulled her trousers up. "Beats me," she said. "Bobbin put me on to Muckley though. I kind of thought they were working together." She shrugged, an ample movement that earthquaked the mountains of her breasts and let them drop. "Some kind of falling out?" she suggested.
"Maybe." Remo got up from the bed. He stood behind Flamma who was tossing her makeup from a dresser drawer into the small bag.
He touched her on the shoulders, then let his fingers move over to one of the long tendons in her neck and began slowly rotating around the skin at the joint of her neck and shoulder.
She lolled her head to one side, like a child being tickled. "Ummmmmm," she said contentedly.
"Where's Will Bobbin now?" Remo asked.
"I don't know. Don't stop that. It feels good. Do all you government men do this?"
"When'd you see him last?" Remo changed his attention to a spot in the center of Flamma's bare back. She arched like a kitten.
"Bobbin? After the press conference," she said.
"Where?"
"A cocktail lounge in town. I was with a reporter and Bobbin was in the bar and he made me promise not to tell the guy who he was. Make bigger circles. I asked him where he was going."
Remo made bigger circles. Flamma reached behind her and pulled Remo's hips closer to her.
"What'd he say?" Remo asked.
"He said he was going to hang around town until Wesley left. He wanted to be sure." She turned and ground her body against Remo.
"You really have to go?" she asked.
"Yeah. Did you forget your plane?"
"I wouldn't mind missing it if you're going to hang around," Flamma said.