"As quickly as you can, snatch the pebble from my hand." "When you can take the pebble from my hand, it will be time for you to leave." "Time for you to leave." "We ain ' t allowed to give that information." "The man who wrote it is my brother." "My half-brother." "This letter ' s more than six years old." "Yes." "Mister, any of them drifters hang around this town  more than six months, they' re doing good." "You better try the next town." "Than k you." "Please come with me." " I am Caine." " I am Lin Wu." "Hey, mister, anything else you want?" "These boxes." "I am acquainted with a man named Lin Wu." "Perhaps this is the same man." "Could you tell me--?" "Mister, you ' ve got everything you ' re gonna get." "Than k you." "Hey, hold still, I ' ll put out the fire." "Just trying to help out." "Never mind all that good whiskey going to waste." "How we gonna to put out the fire?" "Throw him in here, huh?" "That' s a good idea." "Enough!" "Why, what' d you say?" "He has had enough." "All right, boys, take it slow." "Back it up." "Gently." "Did you hear him?" "Heard it, memorized it and filed it away." "That bottle looks empty." "Come on, I ' m gonna buy you a drin k." "Come on." "You risked your own safety in helping me." "We are grateful." "What I did was little enough." "It is I who am grateful for your hospitality." "We don ' t often have the honor with strangers in this town." "I am merely passing through." "But it has come to my attention that a countryman of mine may be living here." "Perhaps you could help me to find him." "If it lies in our power." "His name is Lin Wu." "We are very thoughtless." "Our guest has journeyed far and is dou btless fatigued." "I don ' t know you." "I am Caine." "Business here?" "I am passing through." "Post office, livery stable, saloon." "For a man passing through, you ' ve been asking a lot of questions." "Only one." "Where is my friend Lin Wu?" "How do you know he ' s here?" "I saw boxes addressed to him at the post office." "Well, he might have left." "Perhaps." "Suppose you find him gone?" "Well, he ' s...." "West side of town." "About a mile out." "He ' s next to the pond." "Satisfy yourself and take some advice." "Forget about him, then go on your way." " Dundee." "Sheriff." "I ' d li ke to tal k to you about your boy." "Oh, well, come on in." "T al k." "You heard about the firecracker stunt?" " No." "Well, a bunch of kids were hazing old Soong." "Soong?" "One of the nicest Chinamen in the world." "Is he all right?" "He' s alive." "Is Greg involved?" "Well, you might say he stopped it." "Oh, glad to hear it." "Dundee, if it happens again, I ' m gonna charge him." "Maybe you should be tal king to some of those other boys." "Yeah, maybe, but we both know who' s top dog in that outfit, don ' t we?" "Well, it won ' t happen again." "Soong ' s too smart." "He ' ll stay away." "I ' m tal king about them staying away from him or anybody else." "Well, I ' ll tal k to Greg." "Poor old Soong." "You wouldn ' t want to know an easier man to get along with." "If all Chinamen was li ke him, I wouldn ' t mind if the town was full of them." "You know how much he gave for the church  knowing all along he' d never see the inside?" "While I ' m here, you know Lin Wu?" "That the Chinaman lives at the edge of town?" "Yeah." "You happen to know where he is?" "Who knows what makes a Chinaman come and go?" "They don ' t thin k the way the rest of us do." "I ' m tal king about one particular man." "So am I." "What are you doing here, John?" "My name is Caine." "Sure, John." "Who asked you here?" "I ' m looking for a friend." "We all are, John  but you won ' t find one here." "You know you ' re breaking the law?" "Trespass." "What is trespass?" "Sticking your nose where it don ' t belong." "Asking questions!" "Randy." "I meant no offense." "Of course not." "Now you ' ve got two, three good hours of daylight left." "Give you plenty of time to collect your things." "All right?" "I seek no trou ble." "Get a good start before dark." "Understand?" "I hear what you say." "Sure you do, John." "Disciple Caine, Disciple Lin Wu, you are both excellent young men." "Your masters are well-pleased." "You have both learned so well that it is hard to choose between you." "However, a choice must be made." "It is the Shaolin way that only one  may step upward into the mysteries of the order at this time." "It lies between you two." "May I speak, honorable sir?" "Let it be Disciple Caine, for I know him to be my superior." "That is for the masters to decide." "A contest has been arranged between you  in which you are enjoined to strive your utmost." "May I speak, honorable sir?" "Let it be Disciple Lin Wu, for I do not wish to contend against him." "Your friendship and your compassion do you both honor  but the ancient ways carry purpose and may not be forborne." "The contest will take place tomorrow." " Pa?" "Yes, son." "Come in." "You look nice." "You going over to see the McKenzie girl?" "Yeah." "You could do worse." "Pa, I...." "Yes?" "Are you in trou ble, son?" "I don ' t know, Pa." "T ell me about it." "Well, the other night me and some of the boys...." "We were just out for a little fun, Pa." "That the Chinaman, Lin Wu?" "Who was there?" "Just some of the boys." "Well, you know how I feel about this kind of thing." "Easiest thing in the world for it to get out of hand." "That ' s why I never wear a gun." "I didn ' t have a gun, Pa." "It' s just as well." "Sheriff' s been asking questions." "Didn ' t seem to be anything too serious." "It could be a whole lot worse." "I just hope it teaches you something." "A man ' s lucky if he can learn a lesson without doing too much harm." "You don ' t supposed the sheriff--?" "Oh, let him thin k what he li kes." "He doesn ' t know anything." "Hello." "Miss Livvy McKenzie?" "Yes." "I am a friend of Lin Wu." "Come in." "Sit down." "Than k you." "Do you know where he is?" "That is the question I came to ask you." "It was empty." "He was supposed to have come here last night." "May I ask why?" "You have pain?" " Headaches." "You consulted him as a physician?" "Oh, yes, a lot of us do." "He ' s helped me." "No one else ever did before." "When was the last time you saw him?" "Oh, two nights ago." " Here?" "In this house?" "Yes." "And he has sent you no word?" "None." "Should I leave?" "No." "Greg." "This is" "Caine." "I ' m surprised to find you here." "Yet I am here." "On what business?" "The same, looking for a friend." "Well, you won ' t find one here either." "Greg" "You keep looking in all the wrong places." "Caine." "ls there any way I may help you?" "Why would you help me?" "You have been of service to my father." "And you are an obedient son?" "Suppose your obedience itself were an injury to your father?" "What has happened may happen again." "T ell me of Lin Wu." "You are a man." "You must be angry." "T o hide such a feeling is to increase its force 1 000 times." "It is forbidden to tal k of Lin Wu." "But you already have." "Caine." "T ell me about Lin Wu." "I ' m keeping him in there overnight for safekeeping." "His own safety." "In the morning, I ' ll get him as far out of town as I can." "If he' s smart, he' ll keep moving." "If he' s lucky, he' ll make it." "You cannot keep him." "Why?" "He is a priest of the Shaolin T emple." "Yeah?" "So?" "A Shaolin priest can wal k through walls." "It is said that listened for, he cannot be heard looked for, he cannot be seen felt, he cannot be touched." "Bernie will take you home." "Stay there." "What are you doing with that rifle?" "Nobody' s gonna get hurt, Pa." "Nobody?" "The Chinaman who broke out of jail, we figured he' d go to Soong ' s house." "He had his chance, Pa." "If you have to use it, don ' t miss." "See anything yet?" "No." "Elvis, take two or three of the boys, go around and cover the back." "A Shaolin priest can wal k through walls." "You wish me to go?" "I wish you never had come." "You can ' t help Lin Wu." "Is Lin Wu, then, dead?" "Why won ' t you answer?" "A man cannot live his whole life in fear." "What have you to fear?" "You are a Shaolin priest." "lf I had your strength...." "You have." "Only look for it." "It has long been my dream to enter the Shaolin T emple as a student." "T ell me of Lin Wu." "Why must you pursue this?" "Why not let the dead rest?" "Then he is dead." "Yes." "The contest will continue until one of you touches the floor." "He who remains on the platform prevails." "You are both enjoined by your vows to do your utmost." "T ell me how he died." "Li ke so many of his countrymen, at the hands of white men." "Why?" "Why was my father tormented?" "Ask them." "Where is the body hidden?" "Near his house, there is a large area of swampland." "A body put there may be lost forever." "Unless one knows where to look it is hopeless to search." "Someone knows." "The men who put him there." "It is they who will lead us to Lin Wu." "Is he here?" "Please, he ' s a young and foolish boy." "Forgive him." "What did he say?" "Come on!" "He told him of the swampland." "Right over there." "Th ere ' s n othing there." " Look, I heard it." "You heard a splash." "It could have been anything." "It ' s Cole." "We ' ll be shooting each other next." "There ' s somebody with him." "Who else is there?" "Florin, Arlo, a few of the others." "Get them." "You know what you ' ve done?" "All he had to do was follow." "You led him right to the spot." "Now you ' ve got no choice." "You all here?" "Yeah." "We' re going into the swamps and form a skirmish line 5 feet apart." "See anybody else shoot." "This is a lawful order." "Come out here on the ban k." "I guarantee I ' ll see any man in jail who disobeys this order." "Now." "Doing a little frog hunting, sheriff." "Any law against that?" "Mr. Dundee  I could charge every man here with murder." "Murder of who, sheriff?" "This man has been beaten to death." "I ' ll have the names of every man here on warrants for murder." "A little premature, sheriff." "Don ' t you need an indictment first?" "I ' m calling for an inquest for tomorrow morning." "An inquest means witnesses." "People who are willing to testify, raking up a lot of muck do nobody any good." "For what?" "You ' re over your head, sheriff." "You know how the people in this town feel." "Nothing li ke an outsider stirring up trou ble to bring us together." "When you have your inquest, sheriff, you ' ll find we all feel the same about this." "Have you learned nothing?" "You are new to this country." "You must understand, no jury will indict a white man for what has been done to one of our people." "Yet you must appear." "T ell me why." "lf you stay away it will be an acceptance of things as they are." "If you appear at the inquest, your very presence will be a demand for justice." "The presence of your son, your wife and your daughter will be worth even more." "You ask me to su bject my family to shame?" "T o hurt?" "For what reason?" "How can they find safety in a fortress whose walls will burn  whose windows will not stop a bullet, whose doors will yield to anyone  with the strength to force them?" "How can you hide  when the more you remain unseen, the more they will feel free to seek you out?" "May I speak, Father?" "It is my duty to obey." "I respect and revere my father  but I have never been prouder to be his son than last night  when he risked my safety  and the safety of my mother and my sister  in accordance with the wishes of the priest." "Who else was with you that night?" "Well, it ' s hard to say." "A lot of people coming and going." "You know how it is." "I remember Pop Fuller, he dropped by for a drin k." "Was Elvis Cooper with you?" "Or Greg Dundee?" "I just don ' t remember." "Did you go out to Lin Wu ' s house that night?" "Yeah, I thin k I was out there." "Did you see Lin Wu?" "Well, that ' s pretty hard to say." "They all look ali ke to me." "All right, you can step down." "Greg Dundee, come to the stand, please." "Raise your right hand." "Do you swear to tell the truth  the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God?" "I do." "Can I ask a few questions, Bert?" "Y es." "You ' re acquainted with Livvy McKenzie?" "Yes, I know her." "Do you have an understanding with her?" "More than one." "Are you engaged to her?" "Y es, I guess you might say we' re engaged." "Did you know that she was being treated by Lin Wu?" "Treated?" "For a medical complaint." "Are you saying there ' s something wrong with her?" "She was being treated by a doctor." "She had headaches." "Is that so bad?" "Bad enough to call in a doctor for treatments." "Well, she was worried about them." "Scared she ' d end up li ke her mother " "Who died in an asylum after suffering from headaches?" "Greg, did you know that she was treated the night he died?" "You were  outside the house when he came out." "You, Randy, Elvis, a couple of others." "All right." "Did you go in to see Livvy after he left?" "No." "No." "Well, weren ' t you curious to see how she was?" "Whether the treatment helped?" "Greg?" "Or was it that you didn ' t want to see her?" "You couldn ' t stand the idea that he might have touched her?" "A Chinaman putting his hands on her body." "Dirty, yellow, Chinamen hands on a white woman." "You followed him home, all of you." "You took him out" "T each him a lesson." "Beat him a little bit, so he' d keep his hands off white women." "Lousy, yellow" "And by the time you finished the lesson he was dead." "So you buried him." "And it was over." "No great loss, a Chinaman." "Laying his dirty, yellow hands on her" "He never touched me." "He was gentle." "So respectful." "He gave me medicines." "He was the only one who ever helped me." "He worked as a doctor." "Some of the rest of you went to him for help." "You, Edith." "May." "He treated your wife, Alex." "That ' s right." "If any of you can thin k of anything he did  that maybe we should know about, stand up and tell us." "You all know these boys." "They' re good boys, all of them." "High spirits, maybe." "T omfoolery." "They never meant any harm to anyone." "Just scare the Chinaman a little." "Well, they' re kids." "They' re kids." "They got scared." "They buried the body." "Accident." "They had no reason to hurt him." "Two nights." "Two nights after they beat a man to death, these same  kids wal ked into Soong ' s store looking for someone else." "Another lesson." "Of course, they ran into a different problem there." "You thin k I can ' t take him?" "One finger on my left hand." "What is he?" "He' s a slant-eye." "Come on." "What are we tal king about here anyway?" "All this fuss about killing a Chinaman?" "I mean, who needs a reason?" "I enjoyed it." "I mean, it ain ' t as if we was tal king about a man." "May I speak?" "You tell a man he is something less than a man, and say it often enough and even he will believe it." "The price he pays is easy to see." "The price you pay is hidden, but it is just as deep." "It has been called to question whether the death of Lin Wu was the death of a man." "This letter I found on his body is addressed to Miss McKenzie." "" Honored Miss :" "I ask you to excuse grievous faults and errors in me for to understand this new language, this new land occupies my time with great effort." "Be assured that what happened to your revered mother is of her world, and not yours." "Do not clutch at pain and pain will pass  for I have touched the roots of your suffering, and they will wither." "In my country, we say there is a time for each to die." "It is not the death that is so drear, but the fear of death." "Fear is the darkness." "And I wish you to know, gentle lady, that I am not afraid." "At the end what remains is not riches, not structures of stone  but remembrances of those few people we have joined spirits with." "Honored lady, I bid you-- "" "The letter ends." "The purpose of this inquest is to judge whether there are reasonable grounds to bring a charge of murder in the death of Lin Wu." "I ask that this jury move an indictment of murder against Greg Dundee  Randy Buckmill, Elvis Cooper, others to be named later." "So moved?" "Yea." "Yea." "Yea." "Yea." "Yea." "Yea." "It is so moved." "Lower away." "May his trou bled spirit at last find rest." "And you?" "Mine will be at peace." "This journey to the Shaolin T emple is one I had long wished to make." "Student Soong." "Ready to roll." "I will miss you, my father." "And you, old man?" "Are your spirits heavy?" "Lighter perhaps at this moment than they have ever been, or will be again." "The father learns from the son." "But the father learns." "It is perhaps enough." "[ ENG LlSH]"