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"You don't frighten me anymore," Remo said aloud. "I am Shiva." He let the arms twine about him. With each twist, he compressed the statue more tightly between his two burned hands. With a final gasp, it spewed a yellow vapor from its nostrils. The vapor hung like a pall, thick and foul, for a moment in the clear Colorado sky. Then it dissipated like so much morning mist.
The stone crumbled in Remo's hands. He crushed the head to powder, then broke it all apart and threw the other pieces over the side of the cliff. They made little thudding sounds as they struck the earth and rocks below.
He walked back inside the room. Fresh air poured into it through the shattered picture window, and there was no trace of the foul odor the statue had always carried with it.
Sadly Remo knelt beside Chiun. He placed a hand gently over the blue dot on the old man's forehead. The forehead was cool and smooth to his touch. Tears streamed down Remo's face and he asked whatever gods might hear him: "Let me die so well as the Master of Sinanju."
The forehead beneath his palm wrinkled. There was a fluttering of eyelashes and then Chiun's squeaky voice:
"Die well? You will die immediately if you do not remove your big barbarian hand from my delicate skin."
"Chiun."
Remo sat back. The old man straightened himself with great dignity, and as he did, the blue spot on his forehead slowly faded until it was gone.
"How are you still alive?" Remo asked.
"How?" The Korean's hazel eyes widened. "How? How indeed, considering that I am always burdened by you."
"I...?"
"Yes. You," Chiun snapped. "I was halfway into the great Void and you performed as usual. You did nothing."
"l-"
"You should have used the ring as I told you."
"I did use the ring. I held it-"
"You did nothing," Chiun said. "I watched."
"But my hands." Remo offered his burned palm for Chiun's examination. There was not a mark on it. "The ring ... I saw ... It burned . . ." He reached into his pocket. There was something there. He pulled out a pitted ring, cheap and impure, fashioned of silver.
"Was it all in my mind?" he asked incredulously.
Chiun snorted. "If it all fit into your mind, it must have been a very small thing indeed," he said.
"But I swear," Remo said. He felt something on his hand and lifted the ring from his palm. Beneath it, in the circle of the ring, was a drop of water. He tasted it. It was salt, the salt of tears.
"Oh, Ivory," Remo said. He went to the cold, dead body of the woman. Her face was wet with tears. Silently Remo placed the ring on her finger. Perhaps, he thought, it would bring the Weeping Woman some peace at last.
Chapter Twenty-seven
"Am I Lu, then?" Remo asked.
"Well, aren't you an idiot," Chiun said. "Of course you are not Lu. Lu has been dead for two thousand years. Do you not yet know who you are, fool?"
"But what about Ivory? The Weeping Woman. The ring."
They were interrupted as Dr. Harold W. Smith entered the hotel room in New York and sat down behind the large writing desk.
"Well?" Remo demanded of Chiun. "What about those things? What about the statue? It talked."
He saw Smith glance upward sharply.
Chiun said in Korean to Remo, "Such subjects should not be discussed with men of bound minds such as the emperor."
"I beg your pardon," Smith said.
"Ah, Illustrious One. Forgive me my prattle. I was merely telling Remo to remain silent about the cure for the malady which has affected his reason."
"What cure?" Smith asked.
"Something that will ease his burdened mind and make these visions of spirits within statues vanish forever, thus freeing him to be of greater service to you. But we do not wish to waste your time, O Emperor. Please do not give this a second thought."
"But, well, if there's something I could do . . ." Smith said.
"Truly, it is nothing," Chiun insisted. "While it would heal Remo in a moment, you should not be troubled with such trivialities."
Remo cleared his throat. "Well, since you asked, I guess I could use a couple of weeks in Puerto Rico."
"Pay him no heed, Emperor," Chiun said. He kicked him in the shins, out of Smith's view. "That is not what he needs."
"How do you know what I need?"
Chiun kicked him again, harder this time. "Sire, this boy is like a son to me, even if he is white. A son whose innermost thoughts find their way to my heart. I know what he truly needs."
"Really?" Smith said. He sounded even more lemony than usual.
"Indeed. But it is so minor, I will say no more."
"Very well," Smith said agreeably.
"Except that Remo wishes, above all things, to be able to give to his adopted village of Sinanju the tribute it so justly deserves," Chiun added quickly.
"I do?" Remo said.
Chiun ignored him. "A mere five-weight of gold is so little. It shames my student."
Smith sighed. "I thought you gave up the extra tribute in exchange for the trip back to Sinanju."
"That is correct, O Just and Enlightened One. And so it is not I who ask for a ten-weight of gold to replace the paltry five-weight-"
"Ten? Before, we had settled on nine," Smith said. "Yes, O All-Recalling One. But now it is not I who ask for the ten-weight. It is Remo."
"So far, he hasn't said a word about it," Smith said. "It is because he is a shy and reticent thing, Emperor. But in his heart, he wants above all things to see the people of Sinanju clothed and fed. Is that not so, Remo?" He looked sharply at his pupil. Out of Smith's sight, he jabbed a long fingernail into Remo's thigh.