355 500 произведений, 25 200 авторов.

Электронная библиотека книг » David McDaniel » The Final Affair » Текст книги (страница 5)
The Final Affair
  • Текст добавлен: 26 сентября 2016, 21:22

Текст книги "The Final Affair"


Автор книги: David McDaniel



сообщить о нарушении

Текущая страница: 5 (всего у книги 11 страниц)

A flock of sirens faded up in the near distance. heading for the front door of Casa del Gato as Illya pushed the back door closed and propped a garbage can against it. “Let’s get him to the car. Harry, you1re going to be all right.”

For some reason Harry started to giggle hysterically at this. He lau9ned and sobbed quietly halfway back to the office, then went to sleep before they arrived. Dr. Grayson was waiting for them, and she took him away.

CHAPTER SEVEN

“SYNLOC / TESTOK”

“0.”

“T, after.”

“H, after that.”

Downstairs intellectual excitement raged in a quiet room as twenty expert cyberneticists and qualified kibitzers stood around their very own almost-work1ng Thrush satellite terminal; up on the sunroof Napoleon and Illya. who had been ordered to go somewhere else and relax. reclined. tense, on deck chairs and played endless games of SuperGhosts. having found themselves unable to muster the concentration required to sustain play in Botticelli – in the first half-hour each of them in turn had forgotten the character he’d picked. .

“N on the front, just to be different.’.

Illya tapped his fingers lightly on the arm of his chair. “That gives me N-O-T-H, which looks like nothing, if you’ll pardon my saying so.

Put a P in front.”

Napoleon opened his eyes. “Pnoth?” he said. “Wasn’t he the ancient Egyptian god of hubcaps or something like that?”

“That would be a proper name. P-N-O-T-H to you.”’

“Same to you. fella. Are you bluffing again?”

“No. I just enjoy English orthography.”

Solo S1ghed and leaned back. “I’ll challenge anyway. I can’t top that.”

“I could have given you Y-P-N-O-T-H, for that matter, if I could add two letters. Hypnotherapy.

“I thought we’d agreed not to mention that.”

“You spelled half of it.”

“Uh – forty percent. And 1 didn’t know what I was spelling at the time. Do you think that set of phoney memories Dr. Grayson set up for Harry will really satisfy Thrush?”

“If it satisfies Harry, it’ll satisfy Thrush. But I’m not sure how how satisfied Harry will be.”

“I got the impression he isn’t going to want to think about it much.”

“No. Dr. Grayson planted blocks and suppressions all around it.”

“The same kind of suppressions you’d have to pay a shrink seventyfive dollars an hour to dig out?”

“Identical, but artificial rather than natural.”

“It doesn’t sound healthy.”

“It isn’t,” said Illya. “But when that sort of thing occurs naturally, it’s in response to something in the environment —like a scab forming over a wound, or your white-cell count multiplying against an infection. The difference is that it doesn’t go away. It’s a learned reaction pattern to something. And in Dr. Grayson’s technique. since she knows exactly where all his buttons are. she will theoretically be able to take them all out again when he no longer needs them, and leave not a wraith behind.”

“Theoretically. He didn’t seem very sharp when we put him on the bus for home at 4:30 this morning.”

“A few hours’ sleep will do him all the good in the world.”

“I wouldn’t mind some myself. I’ve been a busy boy. You don’t suppose —” He answered the intercom in the middle of its first beep.

“Solo here. Are you open to the public yet?”

He covered the mouthpiece and said, “They’ve !Jot it aoing. It’s not ready for general exhibit, but we’re invited to a demonstration of the progress they’ve made in the last twelve hours. Downstairs, ri9ht now.”

Illya was at the elevator and signaling for a car as his partner said, “Thanks, we’ll be right down,” and hung up. The doors opened; Illya stepped in just ahead of him and punched the bottom button.

Downstairs nearly everybody in the world who knew about the kidnapped terminal stood in professional silence around the small room watchin9 an operator test the keyboard. Neat green block letters glowed on the screen as Napoleon and Illya entered quietly and stood next to Mr. Simpson.

After a few seconds Napoleon whispered, “On behalf of everyone who doesn’t know, what’s going on?”

“They’ve achieved re-synchronization, and they’re working on Net Reconciliation at the moment.” Mr. Simpson indicated a slender young man with curly black sideburns and quick nervous movements, standing uneasily behind the operator. Mr. Gold is our chief systems programmer directing this operation. He’ll handle the terminal himself once NetRec is verified, which should be shortly.”

Napoleon peered at two six-letter groups on the screen. “And what does that mean?”

“SYNLOC / TESTOK means that synchronization has been locked and will be maintained continuously until the unit is unplugged; and that the unit is ready to be tested without any danger from the integral destruct mechanisms. There wasn’t anyway, since we disconnected them, of course.”

Mr. Gold looked up, recognized them and came over. “Hi there,” he said. “Thanks for all this – looks like it’ll be worth it. Did anybody tell you what we’re going to be doing?”

“Only vaguely,” said Illya.

“Once we get all the access lines straightened out, I have to try and convince U1Comp that this unit is supposed to be undergoing certain modifications in its top secret data access channel, and so naturally we have to keep testing this facility. For the same reason, we can put in an order that any faulty signals coming from this unit are to be reported only .to this unit instead of setting off all sorts of alarms.”

“That seems perfectly reasonable,” said Napoleon.

“It’s stupid,” said Mr. Gold. “I could’ve written them a system that would have prevented this —at the very least they should have a human guard to clear top secret access.”

“Overconfidence,” said Illya.

“Overcomputerization,” said Mr. Simpson.

“Mr. Gold, it’s ready for you now,” said the operator, lookin9 back over her shoulder and starting up from the chair. The screen now showed an additional legend: ULCOMP NETREC had a line to itself and below it, in case there was any doubt, green glowing block capitals said UNIT CLEAR.

“Thank you, Miss Klingstein.” He held the chair as she rose, and then took her place. He drew a pad of data sheets from a thin folder and opened it to the first page of illegible pencil notes, then laid it on the desk beside the keyboard, flexed his fingers and wiped his palms on his shirt, then glanced up at Mr. 5impson and grinned quickly before starting to tap out a series of meaningless numbers and letters. The screen reacted with gibberish of its own.

Mr. Gold studied it for several seconds, and nodded. There wasn’t a sound in the room above the soft endless rush of the air conditioner and the subliminal hum of cooling fans in the equipment rack. He spent another second studying his notes and nodded again, then blanked the screen and typed something else.

“How long does this go on?” Napoleon whispered to Mr. Simpson, who shrugged.

“A day,” he said. “A week.”

“– A month, a year?” Illya quoted under his breath.

“I hope not.”

“But we aren’t likely to see anything more exciting if we stick around now. ”

“Not unless we overlooked an infernal device and the ternina1 blows up.”

Napoleon looked at his partner. “It is not the sort of thing I’d care to wait for.” Illya nodded, and g1anced inquiring1y towards the door.

Outside the Russian said, “I should have realized it would take some time to actua1ly get into it. After a11, stupid as the Ultimate Computer basically is, you could hardly expect to walk up to it and say, lGood afternoon, I’m the new janitor – would you te1l me where the top secret files are kept and 1et me clean them out?’ It takes a certain amount of 1ock-picking, even if you can convince anyone who finds you that you are a janitor, and just by being a janitor the alarm systems ignore you while you’re picking the 1ock.”

“Because they have such a great alarm system, they use cheap locks,”

Napoleon suggested.

“That’s a good analogy. Offer it to Mr. Gold when he comes back to earth.”

“Okay. Which leaves us with one problem: whi1e half the technicians in the United Network Command are taking apart the gamma laser we brought them and the other ha1f are invading the nervous system of Thrush throu~h a door we brought them with a key we brought them – what do we do to keep busy in the next day, or week, or month or however long it will be unti1

something definite happens? You’re a nice guy, Illya, but if I have to spend another three days sitting around looking at you I’m going to start climbing walls. If I cou1d just get out and wander around San Francisco for six hours a day I’d be happy —but here we are, under effective house arrest except for special occasions because nobody’s supposed to have any idea. anything’s happening.”

“Napoleon, I’m quite surprised at you. Weren’t you and that Korean code c1erk rather a pair? And what about Jennifer, down in Trans1ations?”

“Kim was new here and hadn’t heard. and Jennifer was just curious because she’d heard so much.”

“Heard?”

“It’s been —what? Four or five years? —since that DAGGER Affair, but every now and then somebody remembers to tell all the new girls about what happened to us. And after that they tend to giggle at me.”

“Well, Napo1eon, you knew the job was dangerous when you took it.

Have you thought of talking Mr. Waverly into allowing you a few hours a day outside on your own? If you went between, say, ten in the evening and four in the morning —and maybe a false mustache and glasses would help…”

They stepped into the elevator and the doors closed behind them.

Napoleon was allowed his first liberty that evening. checked in nearly an hour late. and slept like a boulder until noon. Illya had taped a note on his mirror inviting him downstairs to the terminal test area.

but he picked up his’ extension and called instead. In a few seconds the Russian answered.

“What’s going on?” Napoleon asked. “Are they into anything?”

“A lot of confidential bookkeeping records which will probably prove very interesting once they’re analyzed; they’ll all be copied out onto our own tapes while Mr. Gold goes on investigating through another channel.

It’s like drilling holes in a wine keg.”

“I should think the guard would get suspicious if the janitor was drilling holes in the wine kegs when he’s supposed to be cleaning out the top secret files.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Never mind. I just got up. Is there anything going on down there interesting. educational or comprehensible?”

“Not really. I just find the atmosphere intellectually stimulating.

Why don’t you go back to sleep?U

“Because I’m up and hungry. When your massive intellect has sated itself. bring your body up to the Commissary and join me in a plate of steak and eggs. ”

, “That sounds messy. Fifteen minutes?”

“Closer to five.”

“See you there. ”

Little Sirrocco called on an emergency line about seven that evening.

Worried about Harry after his misadventure three days ago, she had telephoned his apartment and gotten no answer. On a hunch she’d phoned his landlady to ask if she’d seen him, and had been told that two friends of his had stopped by with his key. told her he’d been called out of town for a couple of days and had asked them to pick up a few things to send him.

“Do you think they’ve killed him?” she asked Mr. Waverly bluntly.

“Of course not,” said Waverly. “They obviously do not intend to do anything violent to him – it would have been as easy to say he would be away two weeks or a month, and delay any suspicion by a much greater factor.

Or simply arrange an accident. Most likely they want to talk to him uninterrupted – or it may even be that he has been called out of town for a few days. We shall check into this at once. Miss Sirrocco, and if he is in any danger of exposure you may be sure we will spare no effort to rescue him. More specifically, Mr. Solo and Mr. Kuryakin will spare no effort.”

“I don’t know what I think about that. You’ll call me if you find out anything.”

“Mr. Solo and Mr. Kuryakin may appear somewhat unconventional, Miss Sirrocco, but I assure you they are among my most competent and consistently successful agents.”

“Well, somebody at the office told me about an affair here a few years ago…”

“I’m sure even Joe Namath strikes out, occasionally. You understand that Mr. Stevens’ security is of paramount importance to us for very practical reasons. and as soon as you disconnect I shall personally investigate the situation with every facility at hand. Now if you will permit me. , .”

“Well…okay. Call me if you find anything out?”

“Goodbye. Miss Sirrocco.” Mr. Waverly’s finger dropped on the cutoff button. lifted, and signaled the terminal test area.

“Mr. Gold? Waverly here. Can you read from local records of Thrush?

Good. I need to know as quickly as possible the present location and/or disposition of an employee of the San Francisco satrapy, one Henry Eugene Stevens —Stevens with a V. Thank you.”

Again the gnarled finger depressed the cutoff and released it. then switched to the paging channel. He called, “Mr. Solo, Mr. Kuryakin -report to my office at once. please.”

Upstairs in a lounge Napoleon looked up from bleak contemplation of some report or another, and the light was suddenly back in his eyes.

CHAPTER EIGHT

“Oh, We Had To Carry Harry…”

“Mr. Stevens was taken into the Medical section about two o’clock this afternoon for ‘extensive psychological testing,’ according to their own confidential records,” said Mr. Waverly. “This means he will be checked over this evening, kept under deep sedation overnight, and then tomorrow morning —”

“They begin to take his head apart,” said Illya.

“We cannot afford this. Dr. Grayson assures me that while her implants are proof against any standard technique short of a really perceptive Rorschach test, deep hypnoprobing could lay the entire substructure bare in a matter of hours. In shorts gentlemen, you must recover Mr. Stevens.”

“Where is he?”

“Inside Thrush’s San Francisco office under Alamo Square.”

“1nside —?”

“Mr. Gold had acquired the full security layout of the Alamo Square complex, and a full-color printout is bein9 prepared for you at the moment.

You will doubtless have some locks to pick and some alarm systems to contend with, but I’m told that every wire, every sensor and every warning signal is indicated along with its parameters and limitations.”

“You’re kidding~”

“Mr. Solo, I am no such thing. If you are to have any hope of success on this impossible mission you must know every detail of the fortress you must breach.”

“But sir,” said Illya, “at the very least, kidnapping Harry will tell them we have the gamma laser. And it could make them suspicious of such little coincidences as the loss of Baldwin’s old terminal.”

“If he talks tomorrow, they will have knowledge instead of suspicion and this project will be aborted in a matter of minutes. We have just begun tapping this store of data on the world-wide operations of Thrush and .

scarcely a measurable fraction of a percent has been subjected to analysis; already three specific commercial operations as well as several public movements in California alone have been discovered to be directly operated by local Satraps. Beyond a doubt, if we are allowed to continue Thrush will be rooted out and totally destroyed as a functioning entity before the end of the year. We can afford to lose the gamma laser, we can afford to lose individuals’ lives if necessary —we can afford to lose a 9reat deal s but we cannot afford to lose the security of this tap into the Ultimate Computer.”

“Have you considered that their suspicions of him might extend to their holding him as bait for a rescue attempt?”

“No. Without our terminal, we wouldn’t have any idea what had happened to him. Thrush therefore would have left us a trail to follow. Also his Psychfile indicates they are more concerned with his mental condition than suspicious of it. The most recent entry, ten days ago, states that he is ‘unusually disturbed and emotionally exhausted by the pressures of his job.’

It was on the basis of this report that he was placed under surveillance.

Tomorrow he is scheduled for an intensive probing to find what is interfering with his efficiency.”

“And Dr. Grayson thinks they’re likely to find it.”

“Yes.”

Napoleon looked at Illya and Illya looked at Napoleon.“In that case I suppose we’d better get in there tonight and get him out.” said Solo resignedly. “Okay, where are those blueprints?”

It didn’t sound easy, and it wasn’t going to be as easy as it sounded.

Just knowing that the corridors around the medical detention area were filled with ultrasonics which made movement impossible didn’t help to get through them, nor was the knowledge of a CCTV camera which monitored all twenty-four doors in Harry’s ward in a straight view down the hall particularly encouraging. Nevertheless. any security device can be bypassed.

given the technology and the incentive. U.N.C.L.E. had both.

The difficult part was the ultrasonic. The alarm sensor was cheap and simple: it generated a modest number of decibels at forty or fifty KiloHertz and reacted to the echoes of everything within its area of coverage. Any change in the waveform, causable by the appearance.

disappearance. or movement of anything which reflected or absorbed soundwaves at any place in range would upset the echo pattern and tri9ger the alarm.

The detector unit was smaller than a table radio and cost about $50; its only countermeasure on the west coast strapped around the waist and fed a spiral cord to a light aluminum baton. Mr. Simpson introduced Napu1eon to the lights and switches above the hand grip.

“Don’t turn it on until you’re ready to use it —the batteries are good for six hours. but not under a steady drain. You’ll hear the ultrasonics before they can detect you. of course —or this neon pip will.

That part you can leave on all night: it has a penlight cell which should last most of a year.”

“That tells us when we’re coming close?”

“Yes. When the pip is glowing steadily, stop and set this switch to Monitor. This blue light will go on. probably for ten or fifteen seconds.

When it goes out. you might want to wait another second or so before you put your full weight down. so to speak; then you move the switch back past rut to Source and these two pink lights will go on. Then you’re sonically invisible. When you have only half your time left on the batteries. one of them will go out. When you have ten minutes left, the other turns orange and starts to fade.”

“How does it work?”

“I was just coming to that part. During the first phase, it is analyzing the wave patterns in the room; when you switch it over it duplicates them. As long as you walk slowly, not over ten feet per second or so. and carry the wand with this knob above you like an umbrella, you’ll probably be pretty well protected.”

“Pretty well?”

“Well, under some circumstances it might not be adequate. If this green light goes on it means the unit isn’t quite matching. If that happens, stand absolutely still until it goes out. It’ll usually be three or four seconds. The air conditioning system moves a lot of warm air through this corridor, so the ultrasonic alarms are not set to their greatest sensitivity.”

“Of course,” said Illya. “Moving air could refract the waves and set off a false alarm. Now what do we do about the television camera? I see there is a relay box here in corridor four, the second sound-guarded one, but that’s five or six minutes away from Harry’s room and if a camera went out they’d have someone up to see about it within five minutes.”

“Yes.” said Mr. Simpson. “But not in a minute and a half.”

“Probably not.” admitted Napoleon. “But how do we !Jet from the box to the cell and back in under ten minutes? I did pretty well in track at college. but that w:as a few years ago. and I’m not sure my wind is up to the distance.”

“You don’t have to —at least not both of you. I’m sorry. I thought that was clear. You will go in together as far as Corridor Four. where you.

Mr. Kuryakin. will make yourself comfortable and prepare not to move for ten or fifteen minutes. You will wait with your hand inside the relay box; after an appropriate delay for Mr. Solo to reach his position at the entrance to Mr. Stevens’ ward, you can trip this induction jammer without moving anything but your hand. which will be concealed behind the panel. After ninety seconds you restore normal service. They won’t worry about it further until morning.”

“By which time it will be too late.”

“Hopefully.”

“And all I have to do is play Statues for fifteen minutes while Napoleon runs up and down the halls?W

“Walks.”

“Walks. then. What do I do if a guard comes by?”

“Not likely, since he couldn’t move in the sonic field any more than you could. At least you’ll be safe from guards.” said Napoleon. “You can meditate for a few minutes before and after you ji9ger the picture. I suppose I have to COlT1e back and pick him up afterwards?”

“Certainly.” said Mr. Simpson. “He probably knows more than Harry Stevens. ”

“I’d like to think so,” said Illya. “Is Harry going to be able to perambulate under his own power?”

“We sincerely hope he can. The odds are beyond us at this point. I~e haven1t been able to find out what he was shot with before he was put to bed, and there is no way of telling.”

“We may have to carry Harry,” said Napoleon. “That’ll slow things down. How long was that picture to be cut?”

“Ninety seconds. Will you need two minutes? That’s quite a long time for dead air.”

“A point. How much does Harry weigh?”

“Ah…one-twenty.”

Napoleon shrugged. “Ninety seconds. Do I have a key to his room?”

“It’s a three-button combination. They don’t need more —a bolt and latch would restrain those patients who need it, and all comings and goings are monitored and taped automatically.”

“Except when the camera malfunctions,” said Illya.

“I believe the malfunction should be recorded as well ,” said Mr.

Simpson. “All things considered, I think you should be glad it is as simple as this, Breaking into one of Thrush’s more securely protected areas was impossible before, now it is merely difficult.”

“Difficult for you; for me is easy,” said Napoleon.

“Close de box,” said Illya. “Does that about cover things?”

“Pretty much. One more point: Mr. Waverly asked me to tell you before you left. If you are caught, don’t be recognized.”

“We’ll work on it. Incidentally. considering the situation, why us?”

“Because you’re that much better than anyone else available.

Remember that as a team your training, experience and record is simply superior to 98% of the U.N.C.L.E. field staff. Besides, no one else in the top ten percent is within call on such extremely short notice. Therefore you are not only the obvious but the solitary choice for the job. My congratulations.”

“Thanks.”

Their counterfeited magnecard opened an unmarked door in the blank side wall of an apartment house which faced on the next street uphill.

Behind the door was a half-empty basement garage, deserted and silent. To their left, deeper into the hill, another closed door with an inconspicuous cardslot beside it was the only break in an otherwise featureless concrete wall.

It opened into a similarly bare corridor which ran fifty feet farther into the hill and then turned right to a third door, which surrendered to the same key and let them into a small waiting room. A sign on the inside of this door said EXIT; the other door was open on their left.

“This looks like it,” said Napoleon. “Ready for Phase One?”

“Do you want a countdown just like in the movies?”

“Only if you start at two – we haven’t much time. Give me the gadget and let’s get it together.” He strapped the battery belt around his waist and plugged the baton into it. The three-position slide switch came naturally under his thumb as the orange detector pip flickered to unsteady life. “Bang on. That’s the way we have to go.”

He thrust the knobbed end of his wand out the door and the pip glowed like a fanned ember. He flipped the switch up and the blue jewel below the detector pip lit.

It seemed like a very long time before it went out and the unit declared itself ready to match anything. He flicked the switch down and locked it, and two pink jewels shone side by side.

“That should do it. Ready to go?”

Illya nodded.

“Okay. Bunch up now —this umbrella isn’t any too big.”

The silence of the corridors was eerie. Their feet shuffled noiselessly on the light carpet as they passed neatly numbered doors and turned twice according to memorized directions. Then they found and stopped at a locked steel wall panel almost tall enough to step through. Two doors, one above the other, painted the same restful color as the rest of the wall; the upper housed intercom junctions, the lower video. -The locked latch of the lower compartment, a standard industrial type, surrendered easily to a stock key. Illya sat crosslegged on the carpet beside it, studied the inside for a minute and said, N In about forty seconds it will be 3:42. You’re still satisfied with a seven-minute lead time and a ninety-second cutout?”

“Yeah.”

“Okay. My zero is 0342. I’ll cut the picture at 0349 and it will stay cut until 0350:30. I’ll hope to see you back here by 0400.”

“Remember, I should have somebody with me. I may take a little longer coming back.”

“Just don’t make any extended stopovers. The first shift comes in at 5:30 and I’d hate to have to explain to Ward Baldwin why I was sitting in his basement with my finger on his camera cable.”

“I’d better get started. HeLve talked up my forty-second margin.”

“Don’t be long.”

Illya sat with his left side against the wall and his head half inside the relay box. His right elbow rested on his knee and his wristwatch, moved for the occasion to his unaccustomed wrist, was visible with scarcely a shift of his eyes from the little box he held ready to be pressed against the fat gray video cable. He relaxed slightly and began to watch the minutes marching past.

Napoleon kept a measured stride to the end of the corridor and around the corner, down that hall beyond the range of the ultrasonic field to another door and into a stairwell. The door closed behind him as he stripped off the heavy belt and coiled it around the staff, then set the improvised caduceus in the corner behind the door. He wouldn’t need it until .he came back this way.

He was at the proper corner with twenty seconds to spare. and his eye tracked the second hand across the last thin lines to the minute. Then with the faith of long friendship he moved as if the corridor would be safe two seconds after the mark. Counting in his head, he sprinted lightly to the eighth door on the right and punched 6-1-9 on the lock. It opened at once into a darkened cubicle. The blue-white swath of light fell across a bunk against the far wall. Sprawled across it, shirt and shoes off and sound asleep, was Harry.

“I’m afraid you’ll have to leave your toothbrush,” Napoleon murmured under his breath as he continued his mental count. 21 -22-23– 24 …

He hoisted Harry, sti11 unconscious, more or less to his feet and braced him against the wall. 30 – 31 – 32 – whoops! – 34 …. Napoleon turned around and let Harry sag forward over his back., arms over his shoulders. Harry was breathing deeply and evenly. Poor mutt, Napoleon thought irrelevantly. This is probably the best sleep he’s had in a while.

That cost him count – he g1impsed his watch while he crossed Harry’s wrists in front of him and shifted the weight onto his back. 48 – 49 50 … Better get moving.

His burden balanced like a side of beef, he staggered into the corridor again, hooking the door to with his toe and near1y losing his balance in the process. 64-65– 66… He made the end of the corridor and c1eared the corner with about five seconds, to spare, secure in the knowledge that Il1ya would be likely to give him a few seconds mar9in.

Once he was out of camera range he could slow down. The stairs were going to be a problem -“HEY, FELLA! WHAT ARE YOU DOING? Hold it right there!!

Napoleon started to turn, drawing his gun with his free hand, and fe1t something slam into his back like a sledgehammer as the SPLAT of a silenced Thrush rifle followed the sudden voice behind him. His own automatic coughed fatally once and silence rose from the carpet as the wa11s absorbed the echoes. The Thrush guard kicked a few seconds and was still.

Harry felt strangely limper than he had a minute before —Napoleon ducked and lifted the linked arms to check his passenger. He didn’t look…

It suddenly became apparent to Napoleon that Harry’s troubles were, ultimately. finished.

So was their carefully prepared plan. Harry could no 10f1ger be induced to tell anyone anything, and there was an inconvenient1y dead Thrush unexpectedly involved as well. The situation called for some brilliant improvisation. He wished Illya were there.

Two deaths do not cancel each other, he said to himself, but two bodies may be easier to explain than one if we use them to explain each

other. A pair of double doors opened off the corridor into a large dark office. and a quick search found and lit a desk lamp.

Now – how do we do it? Harry was shot while escaping, obviously.

And he killed the guard before he died. Uh-huh – with what? Well, he grabbed the guard’s pistol? You’re kidding. Got a better idea? He shook his head and started plotting the set-up.

Put the guard over by the door, maybe even with his body slumped against it; Harry about three feet away. the guard’s automatic in his hand.

Say Harry had been hiding in here and the guard heard him. or -There was a footstep outside and Napoleon’s hand darted to the lamp switch plunging the room into darkness just as the latch clicked and the door opened.

Light spilled in from the corridor. silhouetting a figure with a gun in her hand pointing steadily at him. He froze, squinting against the bright fluorescents. There almost seemed to be something familiar about the way she stood…

Slowly she lowered the gun.

“Napoleon?” said a soft. slightly hesitant voice.

Something impossible started to stir in his memory as she spoke; on sudden impulse he snapped the desk lamp back on. She came a step towards him. tentatively.


    Ваша оценка произведения:

Популярные книги за неделю