
Walsh told him where the hell he could go, and where he could stuff the Nobel Prize. They all laughed. They smoked another cigarette or two. And then they were ready to get on with the war again. SERGEANT HIDEKI FUJITA HAD SPENT more time than he cared to remember in Manchukuo. He'd got used to all kinds of noises he never would have heard in Japan. Wolves could howl. Foxes could yip. If he was wrapped in a blanket out where the steppe gave way to the desert, he'd fall asleep regardless. And he'd stay asleep no matter what kind of racket the animals made. Out there, he lived like an animal himself.
He also lived like an animal here in the pine woods on the Russian side of the Ussuri, the river that formed the northeastern border between Manchukuo and the Soviet Union. He dug himself a hole, he jumped down into it, and he slept. Howling wolves? Yipping foxes? Hooting owls? They didn't bother him a bit.
Tigers? Tigers were a different story. When a tiger roared or screamed, even gunfire seemed to hesitate for a moment. Those noises always woke him up, too, though he'd sleep through gunshots or through artillery that didn't come too close. You had to learn to fear gunshots. Not tigers. If you heard that roar, you were afraid, and on the double.
Fujita quickly found out he wasn't the only one who felt the same way. One of the superior privates in his squad, a student called Shinjiro Hayashi, said, "Something deep down inside your head knows that whatever makes that noise wants to eat people."
"Hai!" Fujita exclaimed. "That's just it!" He came off a farm himself. He often had the feeling that Hayashi looked down his nose at him, though a Japanese private who let his sergeant know for sure that he looked down his nose at him was asking for all the trouble in the world and a little more besides. Hayashi wasn't dumb enough to do that. And there were times when having a guy who knew things came in handy: Hayashi spoke some Chinese, for instance.
