part 5
2011-10-23IL NAM KWON NIMBLY popped two pork dumplings into his mouth and then drained his teacup of its smoky brown immediately flew back to the revolving contents. His chopsticks of the table, where they latched onto a wooden platter at the center tender meat off the small barbecued chicken foot. Kwon sucked the bones and then reached for the steamed vegetables.
>The North Korean and his European henchmen sat at the stained wooden table with three Hong Kong Chinese. The seven of them ere the only lunch guests in the deserted House of Eight Plums restaurant. The other customers had either been bought off or threatened off in order to reserve the sunny little dim sum eatery for their exclusive use. Kwon really did not care how the place had been emptied out. Lao the Chinese had handled that. What he really cared about was the fact that his people were getting nowhere with the information search regarding the identity of the night intruder he had observed at the Jaejun International warehouse.
>Kwon seethed in repressed rage over the humiliating irony that had left him looking like a total fool. That kind of thoroughness in tactics was hardly the trademark of the American CIA or Korean Intelligence, and certainly was nothing within the capabilities of Indian Intelligence. The Russian KGB could have no way of even suspecting the plot at this early stage, and would have employed heavier-handed methods anyway.
>Who was left? Could it have been the Japanese industrialists who were being set up? That was highly unlikely as well. How could they even suspect what was in store for their little capitalistic exploitation venture? Besides, the Japanese had willingly provided his cause with hundreds of millions of their yen in the past whenever one of their companies ended up the hostage in a Peoples Liberation extortion action. They had so much money that it was simpler for them to just buy off anyone who threatened their well oiled Japan Incorporated profit machine. Resistance was not a tactic in the handbook of the postwar Japanese.
>The hulking Korean wordlessly lifted the empty teapot into the air and stared impatiently across the deserted restaurant at the proprietor’s wife. The tiny woman, a veritable portrait of fear, leaped from the stool on which she had perched and flew into the kitchen.
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> “Whoever it was will make another move sometime soon,” reasoned Kwon. “They think that we are still unaware of them, that we’re still in the dark.”
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>The North Korean knew that he could take no chances at this point. He would grab anyone remotely suspicious and personally beat or drug the information he needed out of them. His nemesis had already demonstrated an annoying knack for unconventionally sly tricks. Kwon assumed the stolen North Korean car and the parking lot escape were intended as some sort of humor. There would be no second chance to laugh at Il Nam Kwon now.
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>”We have the warehouse under close scrutiny at all times, just as you ordered,” said Chang Man Lao, Kwon’s chief contact for local services in Hong Kong. “Do we do anything to further disguise the shipment?”
>”We leave the crates as they are for now,” replied Kwon slowly, sifting through several possibilities in his mind as he went along, “and watch to see what their next move is. We do have an advantage, since we know that they are on to at least some of the plan, though we do not know how much, or even who ‘they’ are. They probably have no idea how much we know about them.”
>The proprietor burst from the kitchen with two fresh pots of tea and ran to the table to personally pour a cup for Kwon and then Lao. Three of the owner’s children, appearing to range in age from seven through early teens, followed their father to the table with wheeled carts full of steaming bamboo serving boxes loaded with more of the dim sum delicacies. The children covered the table with generous portions of food and then backed away to wait at the outer edges of the white-painted, wooden-walled room.
>Sergei Orosov reached for a pork ball with faltering chopsticks but accidentally ended up with a boiled chicken foot instead. The Bulgarian nervously regarded the pale appendage and then discreetly replaced it on its wicker server, hoping that Kwon would not see the action and take offense.
>Munching on a spring roll, Kwon seemed to come up with an answer. “We leave the crates just as they are, and give our little rats in the attic the impression that we have no idea that they are on to us. We even appear to leave the site unguarded-or, better yet, poorly guarded so that they do not begin to suspect a trap. And then we wait to see their next move and discover who they really are.”
>It would be of no concern if the intruder had been Korean. The crates were now long gone from South Korean soil.
>The American CIA would not be that much of a problem, either. Since the 1970s, the pitiful Americans had become gun-shy when it came to involvement in other nations’ problems, even when those problems threatened to move in right next door to them. The communist powers had carte blanche to shoot down the Westerners’ civilian aircraft, depose the Westerners’ small allies from elected office, even attempt murder of the Western world’s religious leaders without fear of any attempt at punishment or retribution. The CIA would at best brush the crates off as not involving them.
>The Japanese and Indians also were no problem. Even if those nations had hired someone to do the spying for them, it would be of no consequence. They had no way of physically stopping the cylinders from arriving at the energy plant in the dark of night.
>It would be a major problem, however, if the Russians had uncovered the plan.
>Huang Fei had conceived the plan whereby an unwitting Japanese industrial giant would be held accountable for a massive industrial pollution accident in the Ladakh range of the northern Kashmir stretch of the Himalaya Mountains. The region just happened to be the center of a three-way controversy, being legally claimed as territory by India, Pakistan, and the Peoples Republic of China. The region also just happened to be within three hundred miles of the unstable border edging Soviet-occupied Afghanistan.
> When the deadly phosgene gas was released to work its skin burning, lung-searing effects, it would be reported in the international media that the Japanese corporation had been guilty of deceiving the locals with their claims that the energy production facility could in no way produce any sort of pollution danger. The local Indian government would claim to have been betrayed and appear to be criminally foolish. They would be subjected immediately to extreme pressure, if not an actual invasion itself, from the contesting Pakistani government. In order to maintain civil stability, prevent wide-scale outbreaks of bloody guerrilla warfare, and assume control to protect the endangered environment of the neighboring Peoples Republic of China, Huang Fei would be compelled to move into the region with Peoples Liberation Army forces from the lower Sinkiang Military Region.
>Huang would then appoint Lin Fuzhi to implement a provisional military government in order to restore order and supervise the cleanup efforts. The contested region adjacent to their Aksai Chin territory would suddenly once again belong under China’s control, Huang Fei would be regarded as a hero to be rewarded in the eyes of Beijing, and the Chinese would have taken complete possession of the Japanese-Indian prototype energy generation system, which was reportedly a completely safe and remarkably efficient facility. As an amusing by-product, there would be entire villages of the nuisance Tibetan refugees wiped out overnight.
>A wood-splintering crash from the windows across the restaurant sent Kwon tumbling to the floor. He executed two bounding sideways rolls and rose to a crouch, the silenced 9mm pistol in his right hand leveled to cover any potential target that appeared. The Bulgarians were moving away from the table in reaction, their eyes turning toward the windows. Cresc and the Hong Kong Chinese remained seated, staring across the table at the source of the disruption.
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>From beneath the tall stool that had toppled over and taken him with it, the restaurateur’s youngest son stared back at the deadly party that bore down on him. With eyes wide in terror and mouth drawn back in a soundless cry, the young boy remained frozen in place and then began to tremble. The boy’s brother and sister stopped dead in midstoop over the fallen stool that pinned their younger sibling to the floor and glanced sideward at the rising Kwon. The children’s mother and father looked on in horror.
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>Standing tall once again, the assassin heaved a disgusted sigh and slid the Makarov back into its soft chamois holster. Eyes still boring into the floored child, Kwon picked up his chair and moved back to the table again. Quietly, like shadows moving across the bare wooden floor, Orosov and Karushilev rejoined the others.
>The proprietor of the House of Eight Plums was now alternating between frantic bows of humiliated apology to Kwon’s party and furious slaps to the stubbled scalp of his youngest child. The skinny chef would jerk up and down from the waist with hissing kowtows and then spin on his feet, greasy white apron flapping about him, to batter the shrieking child on the floor, only to suddenly turn back and bow over and over again in shame and fear.
>Kwon ran out of patience. With a single barked order in Korean, he ended the distracting hysteria. Though the Chinese family did not, of course, understand the Korean language, the message was picked up with no uncertainty. The proprietor kicked and elbowed all three children out of the room and back into the kitchen. The three cowering youths made no attempt whatsoever to resist their father’s blows and curses as they all disappeared through the swinging red door.
>That little episode was just one more example of why Kwon grew more and more weary of leaving his personal enclave in North Korea. It amazed him that the chaotic capitalistic societies of the world had not all totally crumbled yet. These people were pathetic. No discipline, no uniformity of ideals, no common social goals, and no authorities to direct and supervise the progress of the community through the curbing of petty personal greeds. These factors were sure to be the downfall of the capitalists eventually.
>How fortunate Kwon had been as a child. Rescued by the State after being abandoned by those in whom he had wrongly placed his trust, he had been guided to manhood and groomed in preparation for a useful role as an agent of the forces of justice and equality among the workers of the world.
>It had been easy to forget the small-hearted, greedy parents who had cared more for the bags of gold they had levered away from their destitute countrymen than for the offspring they had brought into the world. He had thought that he missed them at first, but had been reeducated to see the folly of personal wants that went counter to the greater needs of the people. He had learned to hate the memory of the parents who had discarded him. Il Nam Kwon had grown to feel increasing indebtedness to the communist designers of North Korea’s destiny. How beautiful and systematic was the communal social ideal that had been nurtured and strengthened by their country’s leader, the great II Sung Kim. If Kwon had ever had a father, it had been the spirit of 11 Sung Kim.
> Kwon had been personally selected for training in his eventual specialty after beating to death a fellow fifteen-year-old comrade in the Red Youth Guard. The boy had been caught sneaking into their community pantry to steal food by night. They knew that someone had been pilfering, and lay in wait for him. The apprehended boy had resisted student arrest, claiming that the food was to be taken to his infirm mother and father, who were, he claimed, in fact a part of the greater body of people that they had pledged to serve.
>The young II Nam Kwon had been enraged by the boy’s blatant self-righteousness, his foolish maudlin doting on those wretched old ones who deceived the boy into feeling responsible for their selfish comforts, and his effrontery at refusing to acknowledge his obvious guilt. Kwon had crushed the bigger boy’s larynx with four elbow slam strikes.
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