Mortal Kombat (9 page)

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Authors: Jeff Rovin

BOOK: Mortal Kombat
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Kano turned away, and after offering the fallen man her hand and helping him up, Gilda rejoined the group.

"Gilly!" Kano called after her.

She stopped, and turned her had back halfway. Her sleek green tights glistened in the setting sun, a dramatic contrast to her weather-beaten leather flight jacket.

"Don't think that just 'cause you're a lady, I won't take you on," Kano warned. "Ya pulled a knife on me. I won't forget that."

"Good," Gilda said, and continued walking. "That means I won't have to do it again."

Smart-mouthed huss!
Kano thought, determined to teach her a lesson – though not here, and not now. He already had Moriarty and Schneider ready to turn on him, and he didn't want to press his luck. Senny and Woo might get it in their thick heads to do the math and throw in with them to take his lion's share cut.

Pulling the map from his belt, Kano continued up the slope, wondering how he had gotten himself into this situation. Controlling members of the deadly Black Dragon gang was difficult enough under normal circumstances, but keeping on top of this mix of Black Dragon and melon-minds – this was nearly impossible. The most reliable of the Asia-based members of the gang hadn't wanted to join Kano, feeling that the story was probably a bunch of hooey and that not only would he never find the amulet, but he probably wouldn't live to collect the dough that Shang Tsung had promised on delivery of the gem. Of course, none of them knew that the amount was three million bucks, or they might've thought differently.

But Kano had believed Tsung's emissary, the giant who had come to him at his apartment in Hong Kong. Not even Kano had the guys to tell a trench-coated guy who stood over eight feet tall and looked like an iguana that he was full of baloney – what with his blather about the hidden sun and moon, about the boatmen who would be waiting at this village on the East China Sea, about the island covered with fog and some master who didn't like to be disappointed.

Besides, Kano was only staying in Hong Kong because he didn't have the money to go anywhere else. He had been deported from both Japan and the United States, and was wanted in thirty-five other countries. At this point, if he'd been invited by Martians to help them conquer Venus, he'd have gone – as long as they paid him cash dollars.

Still, he wished he could have come here with some of the regulars he'd been used to working with. Fei-Hung, the Drunken Master from Korea. Connor, the swordsman from Scotland.
Those
were pros. Schneider and Moriarty were newcomers, small-time operators who were friends with one of the leaders of the Black Dragon Society. They got in without having to prove themselves on a big solo job, and this was their first assignment. Kano was beginning to think they were big-time losers.

The other two men in the group were seasoned pros, though Kano felt that Jim Woo was a bit
too
seasoned for his taste. A former bodyguard from Beijing who used to work for Mao Zedong and drifted from job to job after the leader's death, Woo was now past retirement age. Though his enthusiasm was surprisingly high, his reflexes were halfway into the Dumpster. If it weren't for his accuracy with throwing stars and his ability to roll a newspaper so tight it made a passable knife – plus the fact that no one had been rushing to join Kano on his little adventure – Woo wouldn't have been there.

Senmenjo-ni was a different kettle of tea, a guy with no field experience
and
no physical skills. A former banker, a big-time desk-jockey, "Senny" had made the mistake of joining the gold rush when greed became the operative word in the 1980s. He got seriously burned with insider trading and was only able to stay out of jail by agreeing to become an accountant for the Black Dragons. All he brought to this particular party was an ability to speak about twenty bajillion languages, eyeballs that were as sharp as shark's teeth, and the fact that he was willing to carry more than his share of the supplies they needed. Otherwise, he was Mr. Useless.

And then there was Gilly.

Kano had found her through a double agent, a Hong Kong cop who was on the payroll of the Chinese branch of the Black Dragon Society. The lawdude said she was way cool, and he was right – though Kano had had serious reservations about taking her on. He'd worked with a woman once before, which was one time too many. After he and Libby "Liberator" Hall had kidnapped a Bolivian newspaperman who was hounding some big-time money launderers in La Paz, Kano had tried to give her forty percent of the payday and keep sixty percent for himself. Sort of like what he was doing now, only more generous because he
liked
the cute blonde. Hell, he'd figured, she was a twenty-two-year-old kid who was just starting out, and he was a veteran.

When he tried to stiff her for the ten percent difference, he almost lost the use of his remaining original eye. He swore he'd never work with a lady again, 'cause they didn't reason with you when you had a disagreement: they just stuck a long-nailed thumb in your eye. On the other hand, he had to admit that Libby had been one of the most trustworthy partners he'd ever had, and he had a feeling that Gilly, here, was the same.

Kano certainly trusted her more than he trusted what the big lug had told him. Chu-jung village... Mt. Ifukube. Names that hadn't been used in ten centuries, and only that eight-foot-tall guy's interpretations of other landmarks to guide them.
Why didn't that stinkin' baby put some useful landmarks down here?

Part of Kano thought he should've followed his initial instincts: taken the two million bucks and bought himself an island somewhere. But while the tall guy hadn't said as much, Kano knew that one day ole lizard-ears would've come wading out of the surf and tried to snap him like a wishbone. Better to do what he was paid to do, collect five million, pay each of the other Black Dragons two hundred thou, and use the four mil that was left to buy a bigger island.

He couldn't help but wonder what Gilly would do if she ever found out what he was
really
being paid. Not that it mattered. She wouldn't... and even if she did, he could always go back to that Doc Rotwang in Munich and get a new ear or hand or whatever. He could still buy a nice island for three million –

"Boss!"

Senny had hurried up behind Kano and tapped him on the shoulder. Kano's hands shot to the twin pearl-handled daggers he carried in sheaths on his belt; in the space of a heartbeat, the killer had turned and crossed them under the chin of the short, round-faced ex-banker.

"No, no!" Senmenjo-ni cried. "Don't hurt me. I see something." He pointed a trembling finger toward the top of the rise. "Up there!"

Kano twirled the knives and dropped them back into the sheaths as he turned. Squinting ahead into the setting sun, he saw something that made him smile... if the twisted, chipped-tooth expression on the lower half of his face could be called a smile.

"C'mon," he said, hurrying ahead. "I smell good news."

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

 

"Goro," Shang Tsung said as he glided across the floor of the palace dining room. "Has the boatman had any word from your man Kano?"

"No," said the giant, his voice rumbling like a fortissimo bottom A on the piano. "And Kano was not
my
man, Master Shang. He was
a
man... the only man."

"This troubles me," said Shang Tsung as a hooded figure pulled out his ornate gold-and-ivory chair. The master of Mortal Kombat sat, his thin head shaking slowly from side to side. "It has been five days."

"I expected it to take at least that long for them to find Kung Lao's ancestral village," Goro said, "if in fact it still exists. He said he would send a messenger when he knew, for certain, that he had found it."

"The Sherpa said the village exists," Shang Tsung pointed out, "though it now goes by some other name."

"The Sherpa," said Goro, "would have said anything to save himself."

"I believed him," Shang Tsung said. "The man was too stupid to lie." He rested his bony hands on the arms of the chair, the sleeves of his richly embroidered green-and-gold robe reaching nearly to the floor. "At least five days to find the village," Shang Tsung sighed, "and then more days, perhaps weeks of searching to find the mountain. After fifteen hundred years of searching and wondering, Goro, why are these last days so interminable?"

"Because the prize is so near," Goro replied in his bull fiddle voice. He fell into a large iron chair at the end of the long burl table. "It is always the way. In battle in the Outworld, I never lamented the foe who escaped me by days, only the ones who eluded me by minutes. In love, I always missed my females more when I was about to see them than when I left them."

"You may be right," Shang Tsung said. "Tell me again why Kano was the best man for this job – why we couldn't get the man I wanted."

Goro reached into the smaller of two bamboo cages set before him, pulled out a small struggling horny toad, and put its head in his mouth. He bit down. "Because the man you wanted, Sub-Zero of the Lin Kuei ninjas, was not available."

"I know that," Shang Tsung said, his reedy voice impatient. "
Why
wasn't he available?"

Goro used a thick finger to push the rest of the horny toad into his mouth, and after shaking the cage to see what else was in there, he dug through a wriggling layer of garter snakes to pull out a newt. "Because he killed an assassin by the name of Scorpion, and went into hiding. No one knows where in China he is, not even other members of the Lin Kuei."

Shang Tsung shook his head. "But you are sure of this other man's pedigree, this Kano?"

Goro ate one of the snakes and nodded. "When I couldn't find Sub-Zero, I learned that both the U.S. Special Forces and the benevolent White Lotus Society were looking for him. He needed the money – but, more importantly, he needed the challenge. He reminded me of Kintaro, a leader in my army in the Outworld. He would like to fight for pay, but if no pay is available he likes to fight just the same." Goro's forked tongue played over his thin lips. "These imported snakes are good."

"And this society to which he belongs," said Shang Tsung, "the Black Dragon?"

Goro popped a second snake into his mouth, slurping in the long, green creature. Pushing away the cage of appetizers with his upper arms, he pulled over the larger cage of entrées with his lower two limbs and threw back the lid. His red eyes went wide with anticipation as he studied the contents. His eyes settled on a Mexican beaded lizard, and he put his top right hand into the cage.

"They are a group that formed in Tokyo after what is called the Second World War," Goro said. "Kano was only five years old when they found him, an orphan stealing from American soldiers and natives alike. He had the good fortune to steal from one of the members, who admired his skills and they took him in."

"And they say it's a cruel world," Shang Tsung said. He gazed toward the portico and at the hills that rolled toward the beach of his island.

The view looked no different than it had fifteen centuries before, when he and Goro had come here to toast the death of Kung Lao. Nor did he and Goro look any different. Instead of being held every year, the Mortal Kombat tournaments were now held once every generation, in keeping with the different time frame that existed in the Outworld. Goro's unbroken string of triumphs had made it possible for the two of them to remain the same age they were the day that Kung Lao's heart and soul had been ripped from his body and sent through the portal to Shao Kahn.

If only there were some way to reclaim the lost fragments of my own soul,
Shang Tsung thought. But he tried not to think like that. What had been lost was irretrievably lost – though the amulet would compensate a great deal for that, if it could be located.

"But we will make it a better world, Goro," Shang Tsung said. "With the souls you've collected through the years of victories in Mortal Kombat, we have nearly enough to open the Outworld and enable Shao Kahn to cross over." He gazed at the giant Shokanite as he feasted on a live reptile. Though the venomous creature bit Goro before the giant managed to pull it in half, the Outworlder was immune to its poison. "Once the Lord of Darkness has come here with his hordes of demons and furies, he will remake this sorry place. And when he does, we will assert ourselves as well. You with the help of Kintaro and your army of Salinas... I with the amulet." Shang Tsung's dark eyes narrowed. "Assuming that this fool can find it."

"He'll find it," Goro said around a Gila monster he'd stuffed whole into his wide mouth. "He knows that if he fails, there will
be
no hiding. Unlike the humans who seek him, I will find him."

Shang Tsung raised the metal lid from his own plate, lifted his ivory chopsticks, and began picking at the chunks of broiled goat floating in a stew. He selected a small piece and chewed slowly while he thought back to the Sherpa who had found the map in the mountains and had sold it to one of the combatants in the most recent Mortal Kombat – an American who thought it would fetch a handsome price back in the United States and had refused to sell it to his host. The American's remains still lay in the three spots on the beach where they landed when Goro flung them from here; they lay right beside the limbless torso of the Sherpa, who was found, brought here, and couldn't remember where he had discovered the map.

The old yak,
Shang Tsung thought.
Too much time spent smoking herbs and not enough paying attention to what was going on around him.
That kind of lifestyle would change when Shao Kahn ruled, with Shang Tsung and Goro at his side. There would be no lazing.... People would be forced to build and study and serve. And if they didn't, they would be flayed alive and roasted.

Shang Tsung had no appetite, but he forced himself to eat as he contemplated the future and waited for the boat that would bring Kano and the amulet to him....

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

 

As soon as he saw them, the shepherd left his herd and ran toward the village, his legs churning madly, arms flailing, voice shrill.

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