123752.fb2 Infernal Revenue - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 18

Infernal Revenue - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 18

He hesitated. Smith had reported many successes and failures to many Presidents over the long decades. But he had never been in the position of having to report the catastrophic failure of CURE. He sat there, sweat building up in his palms as he groped for the proper words.

He cleared his throat again.

And the telephone rang. His hand came away from the red receiver as if stung. Adjusting his tie, Smith picked it up and spoke.

"Yes, Mr. President?" he said unemotionally.

The voice of the President was hoarse. "Smith, I need you."

"What is the problem, Mr. President?"

"We've lost a U.S. submarine in enemy waters." Smith frowned.

"Enemy?"

"The submarine was on routine manoeuvres in the Pacific. It must have strayed into North Korean territorial waters. They radioed that they had made contact with a Korean naval vessel. Then nothing. That was ten hours ago."

Smith's eye went stark. "The Harlequin?"

"Yes. How did you know?"

"My God!"

"That's how I feel about it," the President said bitterly. "It gets worse. We've contacted Pyongyang, and they claim their ships report no naval contacts. They claim they've not captured a U.S. sub or encountered it."

"My God," croaked Smith.

"When I heard it was North Korea, I thought of you. One of your people hails from that neck of the woods. I thought maybe he could do something for us."

"Mr. President," said Harold Smith. "The Harlequin was in North Korean waters on my authority."

"Your authority! You're not Navy." The President caught himself. "Are you?"

"No, I am not. But as you know, it is my responsibility to make yearly payments to the Master of Sinanju. At his insistence, these are made in gold bullion and dropped off at his village."

"We pay in gold. How much?"

"Several million. The exact amount needn't concern you."

"You don't have a deficit the size of the Pacific to contend with," the President said testily.

"I am aware of the nation's financial difficulties," Smith said bitterly. In all his life he had never owed more than the balance of his mortgage and monthly utility bills.

"How long has this been going on?" the President asked tightly.

"Since you first shook hands with the President who set up CURE," Smith said crisply.

The President was silent. In the background Smith could hear the muted sound of a classic-rock radio station.

Smith said, "There is an understanding between Pyongyang and Sinanju, Mr. President. The submarine is not to be molested."

"Was that understanding with Premier Kim Il Sung?"

"It was."

"Intelligence reports that he is failing and his son is wielding more and more power these days."

"Kim Jong Il is mentally unstable," Smith said. "It could explain this development."

"Development! Smith, this in a full-blown crisis. I've just lost an attack submarine with a full crew, and no one knows where it is. Do you realize what this means?"

"I do. But we have a deeper problem, Mr. President."

"Don't say that."

"The essential question is not whether or not the Harlequin has been lost, but whether it was lost before or after it off-loaded the gold."

"Why is that more of a crisis than the loss of a Narwhal-class attack submarine?"

"Because," said Harold Smith, "if the gold was lost with the sub, we will have to send another submarine with an identical amount if we are to retain the services of the Master of Sinanju."

"Damn," said the President. "We can't risk another submarine. The North Korean navy's probably got their own subs out in the Yellow Sea looking for ours."

"Exactly," said Harold Smith in a grim voice. "Are you saying we can't use your people?"

"It may come down to that," said Smith.

"Smith, your country is depending on you. You've got to come through for us."

Harold Smith hesitated. This was a development as grave as the failure of his computer system. It had international ramifications, and the lives of over a hundred U.S. seamen hung in the balance.

The time may have come to dissolve CURE. Only the President could make that decision. But it was abundantly clear to Harold W Smith that the President of the United States would not give that order until the Harlequin matter was resolved.

"I will do what I can, Mr. President," he said at last. And Smith hung up.

REMO WILLIAMS was awakened by the distant sound of the telephone ringing.

Three telephones, actually. The one in the downstairs kitchen and the second one in the upstairs meditation tower. The third was two rooms away with its ringer shut off. Still, Remo could hear the electronic pulses futilely trying to trigger its bell. Since he had decided to sleep on the farthest room in the eastern wing of the condo, and Remo was hearing it all through many layers of wall and ceiling, he simply willed his acute hearing not to hear the ringing anymore and rolled over.

An hour later, when he got up, the phone was still ringing. It hadn't stopped when he stepped out of the shower. It continued ringing while Remo picked out a fresh white T-shirt, donned tan chinos, slipping his feet into loafers of handmade Italian leather.

The Master of Sinanju was boiling tea in a ceramic kettle in the kitchen when Remo walked in. He wore morning gold.

"I have been waiting for you," Chiun said unconcernedly over the telephone's insistent ringing.

"Why don't you answer the phone?"

"Because I have been waiting for you to answer the phone. I am the Master of Sinanju. I do not answer telephones."