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"What else should I remember?"
"We will find that out later," said Chiun abruptly. "Come. We must leave this place."
Chiun led them to the bush where the American POW's and the Amerasians were hiding. Youngblood cut off their questions and got them organized.
"Listen up. The old guy's gonna lead us out of here. Don't give him no shit. Got that?"
"We cannot walk," Chiun told them. "We must have a vehicle."
"I'll grab a tank," Remo said. Without another word, he disappeared.
The tank came lumbering up moments later. Remo's head stuck up from the driver's hatch.
When Dick Youngblood saw it, he started swearing. "Williams, you idiot!" he yelled. "That's the T-54. The cannon ain't real."
"Someone ran off with the other one," Remo told him.
"Well, it's better than nothing," Youngblood grumbled. "Let's hope we don't have to do no fighting." Those who couldn't fit inside the tank clung to the deck. Chiun took a commanding position in the turret hatch.
He pointed south and called, "Forward!" Then he folded his arms imperiously.
Remo looked up at him sourly. "Who died and left you in charge, Chiun?"
"I am merely pointing the way to the waiting submarine," Chiun said defensively. Then, reacting, he added, "Chiun! You called me Chiun!"
"Of course," Remo said blandly. "That's your name, isn't it?"
Chiun eyed the back of Remo's head wonderingly. Along the way, they came upon the elephant. The elephant was calmly tramping a circle in the middle of the jungle path. The circle was greenish and soaked in red, like a blanket that had been drenched in cranberry juice. Except that from the edges of the mushy patch human hands and limbs protruded. They did not move. They were attached to a communal blob.
Chiun whispered and the elephant fell in behind the tank.
"Do not worry," Chiun said when the prisoners started to scramble for the front of the tank in fear. "He is on our side. I told him I would lead him to a nice place if he helped us."
"You can talk to elephants?" Remo asked.
"Mostly I listen. This is a very friendly elephant. I found him dragging a cannon. Peasant fighters were flogging him. I needed transportation because you denied me a ride in your tank, and dragging a cannon is a waste of a good elephant. So I liberated him."
"What's his name?"
"I call him Rambo."
"Don't you mean Dumbo?"
Chiun eyed Remo warily. "Are you certain your memory has not returned?"
"Why would it do a strange thing like that?" Remo asked innocently.
Chapter 21
The defense minister of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam put down the phone and walked back to the tactical table on which a plastic map of Southeast Asia lay flat.
Grimly he moved a black counter closer to the open sea. In a ragged line behind the counter, many red counters were strewn.
"They have a destination in mind," he told his top general, the only other man in the Hanoi operations room. "It is either a village or port. If they sought mere escape, they would have fled deeper into Cambodia, not back into Vietnam."
"A village or seaport on the Gulf of Thailand, obviously," General Trang said. "I will have the entire coast sealed off."
The defense minister shook his iron-gray head.
"No, we will let them reach the gulf. It may be that there are American rescue ships waiting off the coast."
"We could stop them before that, and wring the truth from their weak lips."
"These red counters," the defense minister said bitterly, "represent the latest Soviet military equipment. Modern tanks, Hind gunships, and self-propelled howitzers. This black counter is an old T-54 with a cannon that cannot even fire. Why do we move the black counter every hour, but every red counter we move into position stops dead?"
The general blinked. He wondered if the question was a rhetorical one. He decided to answer anyway.
"Because they have been destroyed, Comrade Defense Minister."
"Because they have been destroyer," the defense minister said woodenly. "Exactly. Everything we throw at them bogs down or falls from the sky. How is it possible?"
"I do not know."
"One tank. One American tourist. A handful of undernourished U.S. prisoners of war and an unknown number of mongrel bui doi armed with assault rifles and limited ammunition. Yet they win."
General Trang cleared his throat. "I am told they also have an elephant," he ventured lamely.
The defense minister raised a skeptical eyebrow. He shook his head silently. "This reminds me of the war."
"Which war?" the general asked reasonably.
"The war against the Americans."
"But we won that war."
"That is what worries me. We were the thorn in the side of the huge military machine. We expected to lose. And because we knew we would fail anyway, we kept fighting, for we had only the choice of victory or death."
"I do not follow, comrade."
"We beat the Americans for one fundamental reason. We cared more about winning than they did. But these," he said, tapping the black counter, "are not fighting for the glory of victory. They are fighting for their lives."
"But this time we are the huge military machine," General Trang protested.
"Yes. Exactly. That is what worries me. Summon a gunship to take me to the area. I will personally manage the ground campaign," he ordered. "If it is not too late," he added.
"But...but this is just a skirmish."