Korea Strait (17 page)

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Authors: David Poyer

BOOK: Korea Strait
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Leakham blinked at him, and for a moment Dan saw fear. But just then the door opened, and the other attendees streamed in. Hwang looked from Leakham to Dan with a curious expression. Leakham took advantage of the interruption to push past, throwing the used towel at the attendant.

Back in the conference room the last of the pastries were disappearing. Dan got himself a reheat on the coffee and stood scowling, waiting for it to cool enough to drink. He still hadn't heard back from TAG about Leakham's accusations. He still didn't know what kind of bug was up the guy's ass.

The exercise was half over, though, and so far he'd held it together. The data was going in the logs. As long as they had that, the tapes in the 19 boxes could re-create every rudder order, every search tactic, every constructive “torpedo firing.” And now the safety rules were being observed. He tried to convince himself that none of the rest—U.S. politics, Korean politics, whatever the Chinese were up to, whatever Leakham was up to—was his concern.

The TAG guys had congregated by the sandwich buffet. Dan exchanged a few words with an Australian skipper, then drifted in their direction. He hadn't seen Carpenter or Wenck or Oberg since the exercise started, as they'd been aboard the other ships. “Hi Rit, Don. Everything okay on your end?”

“Data's going down. Yes, sir.”

“Backups?”

“Yes sir, taped backups, Xeroxes on all the logs. We'll get them on their way back today.”

“Good. Everything okay where you live, Teddy?”

Oberg stood like a bear on skates. He looked out of place with the blond ponytail, the startlingly blue eyes, more like a surfer or some kind of Hollywood producer than a military guy. His biceps didn't belong on a producer, though. He smiled dreamily, looking past Dan like some dangerous predator that avoided confrontation. “Yes sir, Commander. Everything's going real fine. Monty's already got my data package.”

O'Quinn stood silent a few paces distant, nursing a soda. Dan nodded to him. “Joe. Feeling better now?”

“Sure,” the retired captain said.

“Rit ‘n' me are going downtown after this. Down to Texas Street,” Wenck said eagerly. “Want to come?”

“I'd better touch base with the commodore. Jung, I mean.” He looked around but didn't see the Korean.

Henrickson said, “He's having dinner with Leakham and that female captain.”

Dan was confused, not recalling any female captain in the exercise, until the analyst added, “The little one with the black hair.”

“Just the right size to—” Carpenter started, then fell silent as Dan turned his gaze to him.

“What's that, Rit?”

“Nothing, sir.”

“Monty, you mean Captain Owens? Carol Owens. She's the naval attache.”

“Well, they're getting together for dinner.”

Dan wondered if he should try to join them, then decided to let the four-stripers have their private party. Of the three, he was pretty sure Jung and Owens were on his side. If he had a side. He didn't as far as the political issue went, whether the U.S. should withdraw or not. He'd come to admire the hardworking, gung ho Koreans, but that didn't mean he'd slant the outcome of the SATRYE. He didn't believe in abandoning an ally. But the U.S. couldn't do everything. At some point, its friends had to shoulder their own burden. Whether this was the time or not he was willing to leave to those who were getting paid
to make those decisions. Like the civilian appointees he'd worked for back at the National Security Council.

Though their decisions had seemed to have more to do with domestic politics than anything resembling a national strategy.

He blinked, becoming aware they were waiting on his answer. “What?”

“Texas Street?” Henrickson prompted. “International Market? Whaddya say? Be nice to get out and walk.”

Dan tilted his wrist, checked his Seiko, feeling the tension in his legs from too long cooped up aboard ship. “Oh—sure. Just give me a couple minutes to shower and change. No showers aboard
Chung Nam.”

Carpenter shuffled his feet. “I, uh, I got somebody to see. Maybe catch you guys down on the street.”

“You still after that Korean girl, Rit?” Henrickson asked him.

“What if I am?”

“Better watch it,” Henrickson warned him. Dan looked at the former submariner too. He considered taking him aside, then remembered: Carpenter wasn't in the military anymore. He didn't need a big-brother act. The contractor waved and faded.

“Meet you in the lobby, then? Sir?”

“You got it,” Dan said. “And I told you: just call me Dan.”

O'QUINN suggested a taxi, but Dan and the younger techs wanted to walk. O'Quinn grumbled and said he'd see them down there, he was taking a cab. “Come on, Joe, walk with us,” Dan told him. “We've been cooped up for a week. Get some fresh air.” But O'Quinn shook his head and stayed behind, looking back and forth along the street in front of the hotel.

Oberg said he wanted to get in a weight workout at the hotel gym. So that left three of them. Dan, Wenck, and Henrickson rolled downhill through narrow streets that Henrickson seemed to know, though Dan lost his bearings quickly.

He thought again how Asian Pusan looked compared to the capital. Tiny stores, tiny homes, warrens of walls behind which invisible radios blared and invisible children shouted. Street vendors hawked fresh fish, cooked fish, pickled fish, salt fish, fish spitted on sharpened
sticks. The Americans didn't get a second glance from the swarms they moved among.

The streets leveled and widened as they neared the water. Past the train station the smell of the sea, or at least of the fish market, grew stronger. Henrickson pointed out a sign that read Texas Street. “Named after—you got it—USS
Texas.”

Down here the streets were for pedestrians only. They looked into Chinese restaurants, companion bars, massage parlors, questionable-looking “barbershops,”
soju
joints. Sweating little men in cheap rayon shirts piloted rattling carts jammed with racks of clothing and boxes of microwave ovens and toasters and fans and toys past them on the asphalt, forcing them to step aside or be run down. A lot of the neon was in English, but the newest signs were all in Cyrillic.

Gradually Dan realized that the pasty, scruffy-looking Europeans pushing carts, setting out displays, and calling to them as they passed, trying to shill them into karaoke bars and storefronts glittering with cheap jewelry, were Russians. The pale women looking down from second-story windows in lingerie or lopsided bridesmaid dresses, or parading the street in skintight pants or leather slit skirts, bra tops, and fuck-me shoes, were Slavic, not Asian. Dan swiveled, checking their six, looking for MPs or the blue-and-gold armbands of the shore patrol. Only a single black man in an NFL cap who might or might not be military.

He blinked, trying to process it: American sleaze and decadence being replaced by Russian. Was that progress? Or some obscure form of conquest from below?

“Where are we meeting Joe?”

“Meet him?” Wenck drew his head back and bulged his eyes.
”Meet
him?”

“He said he was going to catch up with us.”

They exchanged glances. “Old Joe doesn't go out steaming much,” Monty said. “He just said that to get you off his back. He's back at the hotel, curled up with one of his science fiction books and a nice fifth of gin.”

“Hey, you guys.”

Dan and the others turned. It was Carpenter, accompanied by two girls. Beside Dan Donnie Wenck breathed, “Oh,
man.”

Dan had to second that. The girl beside the stocky ex-submariner was slim and young, with legs so long under the midthigh skirt you couldn't look away, and flawless skin. Her eyes were bigger than they ought to be, like a manga heroine's. She couldn't be over eighteen, though on her cork-soled platforms she teetered above Carpenter.

“This here's the guy in charge,” Carpenter told her, speaking loudly and spacing his words. “Dan Lenson. Dan, this is Lee Yung-Chul. Teaches English at Pusan U.”

Dan doubted that. Henrickson's version, that she was a college student, rang truer. As he shook her limp cool fingers Carpenter reached behind her. He dragged another girl forward, neither as tall nor as impeccably beautiful, but sexy enough in her way. And even, Dan guessed, younger. “And this here's a friend of hers. Chang Joon-Yung.”

“Wow,” Wenck said again, flinching and jerking nervously. “Hi! I'm Donnie.”

“Monty,” said Henrickson. Both men smiled at her, but Chang wasn't looking at them. She was smiling through long lavender- and cherry-tinted hair, up at Dan.

“How do you do,” she said in a soft voice that came clearly through the hubbub of Korean and Russian around them. Dan swallowed, looking at her pale slightly chubby legs. The slit skirt wasn't as short as those of the hookers, but it made her look more vulnerable and thus that much more seductive. The freckles across the top of her breasts looked strangely regular. He leaned in, trying not to stare but failing. They weren't freckles. They were some sort of de-cal, or maybe applied with a felt-tip marker….

Four men chose that moment to push between them. They were unshaven, sloppily dressed, so drunken they reeled. Too unexpectedly for anyone to stop him, one made a sweeping and regal flourish in the air that ended with his arm thrown around Chang's shoulders. She pushed it off with a look of disgust.

Henrickson shouted at them in a sudden torrent of Russian so violent heads snapped their way all along the street. The drunks hesitated. Then one said something in a low voice to the others. They about-faced raggedly and lurched off.

“Well done, Monty,” Dan told him. “Where'd you learn to speak Russian like that?”

“Oh, you pick it up.”

“Uh-uh. What'd you just tell them?”

“I said these girls were, uh, ours, and they'd do better down at the Club Havana.” Henrickson looked down the alley thoughtfully. “They're starting to call this Russian Street now.”

“I can see why. I thought we'd see more troops here. Ours, I mean.”

“They stay close to base these days. The girls won't have much to do with them anymore. Rather snuggle up to the rich Koreans, or even the Japanese.”

The girls turned back to them, and Henrickson changed tack instantly. “Where you guys headed? Want to get something to eat? Or go to a blowfish restaurant?” They made faces, simultaneously, and Dan revised their ages downward again. But Wenck joined in, he couldn't keep his eyes off them, and they didn't seem to mind; Carpenter's girl clearly loved the attention.

Finally they nodded reluctantly. Dan coughed into his fist and said he needed to log on to TAG and get his traffic, make sure everything was coming on okay on that end. Maybe he'd split early and catch them back at the hotel.

They didn't seem sorry to see him go.

WHEN they were out of sight, instead of going back to the hotel he doubled back to the bazaar area and did some shopping. He found silk scarves for Blair. Got his daughter a lacquered box she might find a use for in her dorm room. He noticed the familiar logo of a Baskin-Robbins and stopped in for rocky road, but his stomach wasn't feeling that great and he threw it away unfinished. He felt bloated and uneasy. The uphill back to the hotel was steeper than he'd noticed coming down. He should get out and run a couple of miles before dark.

The thought of a workout improved his mood, which had grown dark after seeing the Korean girls and the available flesh all along the red-light street. And the whole inexplicable thing with Leakham. He was starting to put together what the guy had insinuated in his message, that he and Jung were getting it on together, with the fact that a couple of senior officers he knew were gay. One of them had once been his commanding officer. Cabals, countercabals. He'd hoped it
wouldn't all follow him out here, but it looked like he'd hoped in vain.

He changed in his room and went out again. He warmed up and stretched in the parking circle, ignoring the looks of the valets and lobby staff, then shook the tension out of his shoulders and headed out.

He went uphill at first so it'd be easier to find his way back. The streets steepened till he was puffing. His wind wasn't as good as when he'd been able to run every day. Then the buildings ended. The hillside became a wooded park. He slowed at the top and jogged broad, quiet paths shaded by tall, perfectly straight trees he couldn't identify—their leaves looked like beeches' but their bark didn't—swerving to avoid elderly couples and strolling lovers. He got a pretty good run in, and when he got back as dusk fell he was sweating and felt less logy.

He was jogging in place in the lobby, waiting for the elevator, when someone plucked at his soaked shorts and giggled. He turned to see the younger girl smiling up through her ridiculously colored bangs.

“Uh—Hi! What are you doing here?”

“We all come back hotel.”

“Uh-huh. Where's Rit? And Lee?”

“Lee up with Rit. Don-ee and Mont-ee are in the bar. Then I saw you.” She rubbed the fabric of his shorts between thumb and forefinger and made a face. “Wet.”

“I was out running…. You say your friend's with Rit?”

“They went to his room.”

“I bet they did.” Dan scrubbed a hand over his face, wondering exactly how old Lee was, what the legal age was in Korea, what would happen to Rit Carpenter if they got busted bare-ass in a hotel room. He regretted now he hadn't taken a more proactive role. He still wasn't sure how old these girls were. They could be fifteen. They could be
fourteen.
TAG was a military command, even if it was supported by contractor personnel. If Carpenter got himself in the papers, it'd embarrass the country just as much as if he were still in uniform.

Meanwhile Chang was running her hand down the inside of his leg. He was afraid he liked it. “I like practice English,” she murmured. “You will talk to me? In your room?”

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