Voodoo Die td-33 Read online

Page 14


  166

  to remove the first dummy, had gotten to the base of the flagpole.

  Torrez was dead. His heart had been cut from his body.

  This time no one would go up the flagpole to remove the manikin.

  Estrada told this to Corazon, who came out onto the side steps of the palace and shouted:

  "Hey, you, up there in the guard tower. Climb up that pole and get that dummy down."

  The guard kept his back to Corazon and looked out over Ciudad Natividado.

  "Hey, I calling you. Don't you hear me?"

  The guard did not move a muscle to respond.

  Corazon yelled orders to three other guards.

  They ignored him.

  And silence hung over the courtyard as Corazon stopped yelling, silence made deeper by the throbbing of the drums.

  For the first time, Corazon looked at the dummy. It was another stuffed soldier's uniform, replete with medals imitating Corazon's fruit-salad chest.

  A banner was tacked to the chest of this dummy, too. A dark cloud passed overhead, carrying a hint of rain and a puff of wind. It unfurled the banner.

  The legend read:

  "I wait for you today. At the pits. My power against your power."

  Corazon screamed an anguished cry, compounded of hatred and annoyance and fear.

  He turned to Estrada.

  "Round up as many men as you can for this afternoon. We going up there to get rid of this man once and for all."

  "Right, El Presidente," said Estrada. "Right."

  167

  Corazon went inside to wait.

  When Remo awoke from his nap, he knew it was back. His breathing was low and slow, filling his lungs with air, and he could feel the oxygen coursing through his body, flooding his muscles with a quiet energy. His senses were sharp. As he had ever since arriving in Baqia he heard the drums, but he also heard children and an occasional vehicle and chickens. One chicken was having its neck wrung. A jeep went by, tapping the tune of a defective cylinder. Children were skipping rope nearby. The smell of vegetables was in the air, but Remo no longer had to wonder what Ruby had cooked for them. He smelled turnip greens and some kind of mustardy vegetable, and there was a faint cooking aroma of vinegar.

  "Chiun," Remo called as he hopped up off his cot, "I'm back together again."

  "Sheeit," came Ruby's voice. "Everybody watch theyselves now. He's back together again. As bad as new."

  Ruby was sitting on her stool in front of Chiun's cot. Chiun was seated. They were playing dice on the sheet.

  "Who's winning?" Remo asked.

  "I do not understand this game," Chiun said.

  "I'm winning," Ruby said. "Two hundred dollars."

  Chiun was shaking his head. "If she rolls a seven, she wins. I roll a seven and I lose. This I do not understand."

  "Just the way the rules are," Ruby said. "It's all right. I trust you for the money. Besides we got to stop now."

  She came to Remo and whispered, "How's he do that?"

  168

  "Do what?"

  "Roll a seven whenever he wants. They my dice, too."

  "That's our business," Remo said. "We're gambling experts for the U.S. government. We came down here to open a luxury hotel and casino. We were going to open one in Atlantic City but we couldn't figure out who to bribe."

  "Stop talking smart," Ruby said.

  "Got any more greens?" Remo asked.

  "You slept through lunch," Ruby said. "You slow, you blow."

  Til show you how to roll the dice if you feed me," Remo bribed.

  "We don't have time," Ruby said. "Besides, the greens all gone. Old gentlemans eat them all."

  "Too bad. I'll show you what you're missing. Chiun, toss me the dice, please."

  Ruby watched. Chiun held the two red dice in his right hand, looking at the white spots. He curled his long-nailed fingers, then propelled the dice from his palm. Faster than Ruby's eyes could follow, they sped across the ten feet of space between the two men, whirring.

  Remo plucked them out of the air between his fingers, like a magician materializing a back-palmed card.

  "Watch now," he said to Ruby. "I'll play you for ten dollars."

  He shook the dice, called "Nine" and dropped the pair on the dirt floor. They hit, rolled, and turned up six and three.

  Remo picked them up again. "Four," he said. "Hard way." He rolled the dice across the floor in a pair of twos.

  169

  He picked them up again. "Pick a number," he said. "Any number."

  "Twelve," Ruby said.

  Remo shook the dice and rolled a pair of sixes in the dirt.

  "Twelve," he said proudly.

  "Boxcars! You lose," Ruby shrieked. "Where's my ten dollars?"

  Remo looked at her in astonishment. "Chiun. I know how you lost."

  "How?"

  "She cheated."

  "You just a sore loser," Ruby said. "I collect later. Come on now, we got to go." As they went out the back door of the shack, Ruby told Remo, "I forget the ten dollars if you teach me to roll dice like that."

  "Anybody can learn," Remo said.

  "How long it taker

  "Average person, forty years, four hours a day. You, twenty years."

  "Then it took you sixty years and you ain't that old. How you do it?" Ruby demanded.

  She was leading them toward a pre-World War II green Plymouth that looked like a "speed kills" display by the National Safety Council.

  "It's all feel," Remo said. "You feel the dice."

  "I wanna know how you do it, not how you feel. You decide you going to tell me, you and me we can make a deal."

  "I'll think about it," Remo said.

  Ruby herded them into the car, started the motor, and drove off. She drove around the backs of shacks, avoiding children and chickens, until she was out of the main city. Then she cut through some barren flat-land to get onto the main road. Remo noted approv-

  170

  ingly that she drove the old car expertly, not riding the clutch, shifting smoothly and changing ,gears at the precise moment to get the maximum power out of the old wreck.

  "Mind telling us where we're going?" Remo asked. "We gonna finish this all up now, so I can get home," Ruby said. "By the time I get back to my wig factory, those damn 'Bamas, they have theyselves a union and everything. This trip be costing me money." Her tone left no doubt that Ruby thought losing money was important.

  "How are we going to finish it up?" Remo said. "Correction. I'm going to finish it up. You going to watch. This no job for a dice tosser." "How?" Remo insisted.

  "We gonna overthrow Corazon and we gonna put a new man in. And we gonna get that machine of his and you going to take it back to Washington with you."

  "You've got it all figured out," Remo said. "Trust your old Ruby. And stay outa the way if things hot up, 'cause I don't wanna have to explain how I lost you."

  "Are there any more home like you?" asked Remo. "Nine sisters. You wanna get married?" "Not unless they cook like you." Ruby shook her head. "They wouldn't have you, anway. Except one of 'em, she kinda stupid, she maybe would take you."

  "You know, you're the first CIA type I ever met who could cook," Remo said.

  "Stop talking stuff to me," Ruby said. "You know I'm the first CIA type you ever met who knew how to do anything. But they pav on time." "Hear, hear,'' called Chiun from the back seat. "You 171

  see, Remo. This young lady knows what is important."

  "You got trouble collecting from that Doctor Smith? He a tight and tired-ass-sounding old thing."

  "Actually," Chiun said, "only Remo works for Smith. I work for the President. But Smith is supposed to pay us. He is awful. If I were not on him constantly, we would never get our stipend. And it is not nearly what we are worth."

  "Well, maybe you," Ruby said, "but . . ." She nodded toward Remo.

  "Chiun, knock it off," Remo said. "You get your pay all the time. You have it delivered by special submarine, for God'
s sake. And I don't notice you wanting for anything."

  "Respect," Chiun said. "There are things, Remo, that money cannot buy. Respect."

  Remo could tell by the way Ruby set her lips that she did not agree with Chiun, but wasn't prepared to argue it with him.

  Ciudad Natividado was now far behind them. They were speeding along Route 1 toward the far-off hills. The dusty road was a meager two-lane strip cut through an overhang of jungle trees, so it seemed to Remo as if he were riding through a green tunnel. Even inside the car the sound of the drums was growing louder.

  Remo heard a faint tapping sound and realized a light shower was falling. He was protected from it by the overhang of the trees.

  Ruby noticed it, too. "Good," she said. "The old man told me it'd rain. We need that."

  "Will someone please tell me what you're up to?" Remo asked exasperatedly.

  "You'll see. We're almost there." She slowed down

  172

  and as she did she twisted in her seat to look behind her. Far behind were two cars.

  "'Less I miss my guess, that be Corazon," Ruby said. "Right on time."

  Ahead Remo saw the black pitch pit at the base of the hill. It seemed to be giving off steam. Ruby pulled the old Plymouth off the road through brush and past walls of vines and stumps until she was fifty feet from the road, as unseeable as an Alabama motorcycle cop hiding behind a billboard.

  "Now you two wait here. And keep your little lips still, you," she told Remo. "We don' want nothin' going wrong."

  She jumped from the car and a few moments later had vanished into the brush.

  "That woman thinks I'm an idiot," Remo groused to Chiun.

  "Hmmm," said Chiun. "The rain has stopped."

  "Well?"

  "Well, what?" asked Chiun.

  "What do you think about her thinking I'm an idiot?" Remo demanded.

  "Some are wise beyond their years."

  Ruby met Samedi walking slowly down the hillside toward the pitch pit. He wore the same shirtless black trousers and bare feet, but for the occasion he wore a top hat and a white collar around his bare neck. In his hand he carried a long bone that looked like the thighbone of a human being.

  "Hurry, holy one," Ruby said in Spanish. "Corazon is almost on us."

  He glanced up at the sky. The sun was moving out from behind a gray cloud.

  173

  "The sun will shine," he said. "It is a good day for doing good works."

  He followed Ruby down the hillside. She stopped ten feet from the tar pits, near a large rock outcropping.

  "Here you must sit," she said.

  He nodded and sank into a squatting position.

  "You know what to do?" she said.

  "Yes," he said. "I will know what to do to the murderer of my child and my land."

  "Fine," said Ruby. "I will be near."

  A few minutes later Ruby was back at the old Plymouth. The heavy roar of Corazon's limousine and a small backup jeep with four soldiers in it grew louder.

  "Want to watch the fun?" Ruby asked.

  "Wouldn't miss it," Remo said.

  He and Chiun followed her to a break in the foliage from which they could peer out over the tar pit.

  "Who's the old guy in the funny clothes?" asked Remo.

  "He is Samedi," said Chiun, cautiously.

  "How you know that?" piped Ruby. "I just found out yesterday his name's Sarnedi."

  "Samedi is not a name, young woman. It is a title. He is leader of the undead."

  "That mean zombies," Ruby explained to Remo.

  "I know what it means."

  "I see some of them walking around up there yesterday," she said, "and I don't know if they zombies or they just buzzing with something. But whatever they are, it was them that got you out of the cages."

  "The zombie need not be evil," Chiun said. "He does the bidding of Samedi, the master, and if the master be good, the works be good."

  "Well, this gonna be very good works. He gettin'

  174

  rid of Corazon for us," Ruby said. "Shush now, they here."

  The black presidential limousine rolled up and slid to a smooth halt only a few feet from the pit of pitch. The jeep stopped behind it and four soldiers got out of the jeep and stood with their rifles across their chests.

  Corazon got out the door of the limousine on Remo's side and hoisted the mung machine out in his big thick arms. His chauffeur and another guard, both carrying pistols, got out the front doors. After Corazon set the machine on the ground, Major Estrada slid across the seat and came out the same door.

  Corazon looked toward the tar pit. He saw the old man sitting on the rock, no more than one hundred feet away.

  A broad smile split Corazon's chocolate face.

  He pushed the mung machine in front of him. Its wheels were too small to roll smoothly over the rough road surface and the machine bumped and skidded as Corazon guided it toward the edge of the black lake. The pitch spit heavy fumes into the air. Heat shimmered from its surface as the hot afternoon sun dried the small shower sprinkle of a few minutes before.

  "Samedi, I am here," Corazon bellowed. "To match your magic against mine."

  "Your magic is no magic at all," Samedi called back. "It is the trickery of a fool, an evil fool. That trickery soon will be with us no more."

  "We will see," Corazon said. "We will see."

  The sound of the drums grew louder. It seemed to infuriate Corazon, who hoisted the mung machine into his arms. He aimed carefully at Samedi, who sat motionless on the stone, then pressed the button.

  There was a ripping sound and then a green dart of

  175

  light flashed out and splashed against the hill. But it missed Samedi by twenty feet.

  "Aaargghh," screamed Corazon in enraged fury. He aimed the machine and fired again. Again he missed.

  In the brush, Remo said, "He's taking dead aim. Why's he missing?"

  "He is not seeing Samedi," Chiun explained. 'The vapor from the tar is creating a mirage and he is firing at the vision he thinks he sees."

  "Thass right," Ruby said.

  Corazon took a deep breath. He aimed carefully and fired again. Behind him, his soldiers leaned on their rifles, watching. Major Estrada sat on the front fender of the limousine, his watchful eyes surveying everything.

  Corazon's shot missed and this time the green glow was a weak pale shimmer.

  "He's not giving it a chance to charge up," Remo said softly.

  Corazon shouted and in a mad rage raised the mung machine over his head and tried to throw it at Samedi. But the heavy machine sailed only ten feet through the air, then landed on the lake of pitch with a dull plop. It lay there like the hull of a wrecked ship half-buried in sand at low tide.

  "And now you have no magic at all," Samedi called out. He clapped his hands and rising from clumps of brush on the hillside as if they were instant blooming trees rose ten, twelve, twenty black men, wearing white trousers and no shirts, all with the glazed eyes that Remo had seen the night before in the two men who had walked down Giudad Natividado's main street and terrified the guards.

  "Attack," cried Samedi and the men raised their arms and began to shuffle down the hillside.

  176

  Corazon realized that he had thrown away his only true hope of staying in power. He grabbed a stick and leaned over the edge of the lake, trying to spear the mung machine and pull it back to him.

  As he teetered on the edge, Major Estrada tossed away his cigarette, took a deep breath, then charged forward. His outstretched arms hit Corazon midrump and El Presidente went tumbling forward into the lake of pitch. The black goo sucked at him, pulling him partly down, and he shouted, but he was stuck there, like a fossil embedded in amber. "I wasn't countin' on that," Ruby said. Estrada turned to the soldiers. "Now we return to the real island magic," he shouted. "Fire on them. Raise those rifles. If you want to live, fire." He pointed toward Samedi.

  The soldiers looked hesitant. The z
ombies now had split into two groups and were coming around the lake toward the soldiers.

  Estrada reached into a pocket of his tunic and pulled out a cloth bag of salt. He drew a large circle on the ground with the white powder and called the soldiers.

  "Come inside. The dupples cannot harm you here. And then we rid the island of this foolishness." He waved his arm and the soldiers moved up to join him. Ten feet out in the lake Corazon had wrapped his arms around the mung machine and was screaming for help.

  "Pull me out of here. Estrada, come get me." "Sorry, Generalissimo," Estrada called. "I've got Other things to do."

  He grabbed the rifle of the nearest soldier and pushed it up to the soldier's shoulder. "Fire that

  177

  weapon," he ordered. He pulled his automatic pistol from his holster.

  "They gonna get the old man," Ruby said.

  Remo looked at Chiun.

  "Since I don't work for the President and I'm only here as a spectator, Chiun, what do you think?" he said.

  "I think you are absolutely right," Chiun said.

  And before Ruby could speak, Chiun and Remo had leaped from the ground and sliced their way through the heavy brush as if it were not there.

  The soldiers had their rifles to their shoulders and were all aiming at Samedi. Estrada's finger was tightening on the trigger when Remo and Chiun hit the circle of salt.

  Before Ruby's wondering eyes the bodies of khaki-clad soldiers began flying through the air. She saw Remo and Chiun moving through the seven men so slowly that it looked as if any one of the soldiers could have felled them just by swinging; his rifle. But where the soldiers grabbed, Chiun and Remo had just vacated. They moved strangely, fast without seeming to hurry, intensely without seeming to strain for power, and the air was filled with the thwacks of blows and the cracking of bones and the screaming of soldiers. The two men's hands were blurs.

  In ten seconds it was over and the seven soldiers lay in the dirt, Major Estrada face-down, his hand still wrapped tightly around his pistol butt, but his trigger finger removed from his hand.

  Now the zombies were around the lake and moving toward Remo and Chiun.

  Remo saw them and said, "I wasn't exactly counting on this. Little Father. Quick. How do you kill the already dead?"

 

    Acid Rock Read onlineAcid RockKill or Cure Read onlineKill or CureDeath Therapy Read onlineDeath TherapyChinese Puzzle Read onlineChinese PuzzleMafia Fix Read onlineMafia FixMurder Ward Read onlineMurder WardBrain Drain Read onlineBrain DrainSweet Dreams Read onlineSweet DreamsKing's Curse Read onlineKing's CurseSlave Safari Read onlineSlave SafariOil Slick Read onlineOil SlickUnion Bust Read onlineUnion BustDeadly Seeds Read onlineDeadly SeedsHoly Terror Read onlineHoly TerrorMurder's Shield Read onlineMurder's ShieldSummit Chase Read onlineSummit ChaseThe End of the Game td-60 Read onlineThe End of the Game td-60Death Check Read onlineDeath CheckDeadly Seeds td-21 Read onlineDeadly Seeds td-21Union Bust td-7 Read onlineUnion Bust td-7Shock Value td-51 Read onlineShock Value td-51Ghost in the Machine td-90 Read onlineGhost in the Machine td-90Date with Death td-57 Read onlineDate with Death td-57Fool's Flight (Digger) Read onlineFool's Flight (Digger)Infernal Revenue td-96 Read onlineInfernal Revenue td-96Brain Storm Read onlineBrain StormCoin of the Realm td-77 Read onlineCoin of the Realm td-77The Empire Dreams td-113 Read onlineThe Empire Dreams td-113Walking Wounded td-74 Read onlineWalking Wounded td-74Blood Lust td-85 Read onlineBlood Lust td-85Fool's Gold Read onlineFool's GoldMarket Force td-127 Read onlineMarket Force td-127Lucifer's Weekend (Digger) Read onlineLucifer's Weekend (Digger)Firing Line td-41 Read onlineFiring Line td-41Blood Ties td-69 Read onlineBlood Ties td-69Time Trial td-53 Read onlineTime Trial td-53Next Of Kin td-46 Read onlineNext Of Kin td-46When Elephants Forget (Trace 3) Read onlineWhen Elephants Forget (Trace 3)Feeding Frenzy td-94 Read onlineFeeding Frenzy td-94Holy Terror td-19 Read onlineHoly Terror td-19Power Play td-36 Read onlinePower Play td-36The Wrong Stuff td-125 Read onlineThe Wrong Stuff td-125Spoils Of War td-45 Read onlineSpoils Of War td-45Timber Line td-42 Read onlineTimber Line td-42Lost Yesterday td-65 Read onlineLost Yesterday td-65By Eminent Domain td-124 Read onlineBy Eminent Domain td-124The Ultimate Death td-88 Read onlineThe Ultimate Death td-88A Pound of Prevention td-121 Read onlineA Pound of Prevention td-121Dead Letter (Digger) Read onlineDead Letter (Digger)Terror Squad Read onlineTerror SquadBottom Line td-37 Read onlineBottom Line td-37Created, the Destroyer td-1 Read onlineCreated, the Destroyer td-1Ground Zero td-84 Read onlineGround Zero td-84Murder's Shield td-9 Read onlineMurder's Shield td-9Encounter Group td-56 Read onlineEncounter Group td-56The Last Alchemist td-64 Read onlineThe Last Alchemist td-64Shooting Schedule td-79 Read onlineShooting Schedule td-79Troubled Waters td-133 Read onlineTroubled Waters td-133Voodoo Die td-33 Read onlineVoodoo Die td-33Killing Time td-50 Read onlineKilling Time td-50Kill Or Cure td-11 Read onlineKill Or Cure td-11Profit Motive td-48 Read onlineProfit Motive td-48Fade to Black td-119 Read onlineFade to Black td-119Disloyal Opposition td-123 Read onlineDisloyal Opposition td-123Oil Slick td-16 Read onlineOil Slick td-16Look Into My Eyes td-67 Read onlineLook Into My Eyes td-67Last Call td-35 Read onlineLast Call td-35High Priestess td-95 Read onlineHigh Priestess td-95Death Sentence td-80 Read onlineDeath Sentence td-80Brain Drain td-22 Read onlineBrain Drain td-22Child's Play td-23 Read onlineChild's Play td-23An Old Fashioned War td-68 Read onlineAn Old Fashioned War td-68Wolf's Bane td-132 Read onlineWolf's Bane td-132Smoked Out (Digger) Read onlineSmoked Out (Digger)Acid Rock td-13 Read onlineAcid Rock td-13Ship Of Death td-28 Read onlineShip Of Death td-28Mugger Blood td-30 Read onlineMugger Blood td-30Sue Me td-66 Read onlineSue Me td-66Rain of Terror td-75 Read onlineRain of Terror td-75Cold Warrior td-91 Read onlineCold Warrior td-91Syndication Rites td-122 Read onlineSyndication Rites td-122Mob Psychology td-87 Read onlineMob Psychology td-87Bloody Tourists td-134 Read onlineBloody Tourists td-134Death Therapy td-6 Read onlineDeath Therapy td-6Mafia Fix td-4 Read onlineMafia Fix td-4Hostile Takeover td-81 Read onlineHostile Takeover td-81Killer Chromosomes td-32 Read onlineKiller Chromosomes td-32King's Curse td-24 Read onlineKing's Curse td-24Last Rites td-100 Read onlineLast Rites td-100Bidding War td-101 Read onlineBidding War td-101Angry White Mailmen td-104 Read onlineAngry White Mailmen td-104The Head Men td-31 Read onlineThe Head Men td-31Political Pressure td-135 Read onlinePolitical Pressure td-135Once a Mutt (Trace 5) Read onlineOnce a Mutt (Trace 5)In Enemy Hands td-26 Read onlineIn Enemy Hands td-26Remo The Adventure Begins Read onlineRemo The Adventure BeginsLast War Dance td-17 Read onlineLast War Dance td-17Misfortune Teller td-115 Read onlineMisfortune Teller td-115Skin Deep td-49 Read onlineSkin Deep td-49Unite and Conquer td-102 Read onlineUnite and Conquer td-102Murder Ward td-15 Read onlineMurder Ward td-15Dangerous Games td-40 Read onlineDangerous Games td-40Created, the Destroyer Read onlineCreated, the DestroyerThe Final Crusade td-76 Read onlineThe Final Crusade td-76Summit Chase td-8 Read onlineSummit Chase td-8The Final Reel td-116 Read onlineThe Final Reel td-116Dying Space td-47 Read onlineDying Space td-47Assassins Play Off td-20 Read onlineAssassins Play Off td-20Pigs Get Fat (Trace 4) Read onlinePigs Get Fat (Trace 4)And 47 Miles of Rope (Trace 2) Read onlineAnd 47 Miles of Rope (Trace 2)Bloodline: A Novel Read onlineBloodline: A NovelUnnatural Selection td-131 Read onlineUnnatural Selection td-131Judgment Day td-14 Read onlineJudgment Day td-14Line of Succession td-73 Read onlineLine of Succession td-73Midnight Man td-43 Read onlineMidnight Man td-43The Last Dragon td-92 Read onlineThe Last Dragon td-92Total Recall td-58 Read onlineTotal Recall td-58Balance Of Power td-44 Read onlineBalance Of Power td-44Sole Survivor td-72 Read onlineSole Survivor td-72The Sky is Falling td-63 Read onlineThe Sky is Falling td-63Survival Course td-82 Read onlineSurvival Course td-82Death Check td-2 Read onlineDeath Check td-2The Seventh Stone td-62 Read onlineThe Seventh Stone td-62Deadly Genes td-117 Read onlineDeadly Genes td-117American Obsession td-109 Read onlineAmerican Obsession td-109Slave Safari td-12 Read onlineSlave Safari td-12Bay City Blast td-38 Read onlineBay City Blast td-38Sweet Dreams td-25 Read onlineSweet Dreams td-25Feast or Famine td-107 Read onlineFeast or Famine td-107Chinese Puzzle td-3 Read onlineChinese Puzzle td-3Chained Reaction td-34 Read onlineChained Reaction td-34The Final Death td-29 Read onlineThe Final Death td-29Brain Storm td-112 Read onlineBrain Storm td-112Getting Up With Fleas (Trace 7) Read onlineGetting Up With Fleas (Trace 7)Father to Son td-129 Read onlineFather to Son td-129Dr Quake td-5 Read onlineDr Quake td-5Lords of the Earth td-61 Read onlineLords of the Earth td-61Trace (Trace 1) Read onlineTrace (Trace 1)The Color of Fear td-99 Read onlineThe Color of Fear td-99The Last Monarch td-120 Read onlineThe Last Monarch td-120The Eleventh Hour td-70 Read onlineThe Eleventh Hour td-70Engines of Destruction td-103 Read onlineEngines of Destruction td-103The Arms of Kali td-59 Read onlineThe Arms of Kali td-59Killer Watts td-118 Read onlineKiller Watts td-118Terror Squad td-10 Read onlineTerror Squad td-10Target of Opportunity td-98 Read onlineTarget of Opportunity td-98Arabian Nightmare td-86 Read onlineArabian Nightmare td-86Waste Not, Want Not td-130 Read onlineWaste Not, Want Not td-130White Water td-106 Read onlineWhite Water td-106Dark Horse td-89 Read onlineDark Horse td-89Return Engagement td-71 Read onlineReturn Engagement td-71Last Drop td-54 Read onlineLast Drop td-54Prophet Of Doom td-111 Read onlineProphet Of Doom td-111Blue Smoke and Mirrors td-78 Read onlineBlue Smoke and Mirrors td-78Air Raid td-126 Read onlineAir Raid td-126Failing Marks td-114 Read onlineFailing Marks td-114Bamboo Dragon td-108 Read onlineBamboo Dragon td-108Terminal Transmission td-93 Read onlineTerminal Transmission td-93The Last Temple td-27 Read onlineThe Last Temple td-27Identity Crisis td-97 Read onlineIdentity Crisis td-97Funny Money td-18 Read onlineFunny Money td-18Master's Challenge td-55 Read onlineMaster's Challenge td-55