THE VANISHING ACT AFFAIR
By Robert Hart Davis (Attributed to Dennis Lynds)
June 1966
Volume 1, Issue 5
Misshapen, monster-like, they crouched deep
under London and listened to their demoniac leader: "You will take over
the Earth after tonight—after the whole men die. For nothing—not even the
creatures from U.N.C.L.E.—can stop me from decreeing the end of the
world!"
Somewhere deep under London, a misshapen monster
had decreed the end of the world. Only two men, Illya and Solo, might stop
him—and time was running out too fast!
(Thanks to Ed 999)
(If you would like an EPUB copy of this tale, write me: delewis1@hotmail)
ACT I—TO SEE OR NOT TO SEE
THE MAN limped across the open space
between the wooded hills and the armored truck.
A grotesque figure in the twilight—short,
heavy, with a twisted leg and thick, shaggy hair that hung down almost to his
eyes in front, below his neck in back.
The armored truck, closed and buttoned
up, its last pick-up of the day made, started its engine. The loading dock was
now deserted, the floodlights out, all personnel of the factory inside.
There was only the armored truck, locked
and sealed, and the man limping toward it.
There [was] no one else in sight as the
truck began to move slowly out of the narrow driveway of the factory, only the
truck and the grotesque figure, limping more rapidly now toward a spot where
the truck had to pass.
Nothing else moved. But the truck and the
hurrying figure were not alone.
High on the side of the wooded hill that
overlooked the factory on the highway between Santa Carla and Coopersfield in
Southern California, two men crouched and watched the scene below through
infra-red binoculars.
They studied the short, shaggy-haired
figure limping, and the truck moving slowly down the narrow driveway—the
limping man and the truck converging on a point just before the driveway
reached the highway.
One of the two men was slender, dressed
in a light black sweater and slim black trousers that contrasted sharply with
his shock of blond hair that looked as if it had been cut below the edge of a
soup bowl. This man's glasses were trained on the slow-moving armored truck.
"They either don't see him, or they
don't think he can be of any danger to them," Illya Kuryakin said.
The second man nodded, his glasses
trained on the limping figure, which looked even more weird through the
infra-red lenses. This man was taller and heavier than his blond companion. A
well-built man of average height, with a youthful, half-amused expression on
his face.
"They could be right," Napoleon
Solo said. "What can he do? The truck is buttoned up like a tank."
"Tanks are hardly invulnerable,
Napoleon," Illya pointed out drily.
Napoleon Solo appeared to be thinking
this over. His open, handsome face showed little of the sharp and shrewd mind
that made him the efficient chief enforcement officer, Section II, United
Network Command for Law and Enforcement, better known simply as U.N.C.L.E.
"We know he's not even armed,"
Solo said.
"Do we, Napoleon?" Illya said.
The Number 2 man of Section II
(Operations and Enforcement) of U.N.C.L.E. watched the strange scene below and
frowned. A loner in a world of organization, Illya's quizzical eyes were often
amused; they were not amused now.
Solo, his sharp mind so well-concealed
behind the facade of a flippant young executive type, saw his partner's
concern.
"We know he left the meeting of the
Cult unarmed. Our detectors showed nothing metal, wood or plastic. We've never
let him out of our sight since," Solo said.
Illya nodded. "Of course you're
right. My gloomy Slavic mind is working overtime. But—"
"But?" Solo echoed quietly in
the deepening darkness.
Illya's eyes were glued to the eye-pieces
of his infra-red binoculars. "But why has he come forty miles from the
Cult meeting to walk unarmed up to an armored truck?" he said softly.
Then, as if the grotesque figure below
had heard the question of the small Russian U.N.C.L.E. agent, the two agents
had their answer.
"Look!" Solo cried.
Both men had their glasses trained on the
events below.
As the truck reached the point of leaving
the driveway, the strange, hairy figure below suddenly rose up from a clump of
bushes. The man limped two quick steps to the armored truck, thrust out his
hand toward the narrow slit of an air vent, and leaped back.
"Air vent!" Solo breathed.
"Gas?" Illya hissed.
"How would you open the truck?"
Solo whispered.
But, below, the limping man seemed to
have no intention of opening the truck. The instant the truck had passed him,
he turned and limped away into the bushes and across the open area toward the
wooded hills. He went as rapidly as he could, without a backward glance.
Then, the man did glance backwards, and
fell on his face.
The armored truck had not slowed, even
after the man had made the motion with his hand toward the air vent. It went on
down the driveway, reached the highway, turned—and stopped dead in the center
of the highway.
As the two agents watched from the wooded
hills in the Southern California twilight, the doors of the truck opened and
the guards jumped out. Four guards, all those in the truck, leaped out, guns
ready. They fired as they came out, the long tongues of flames spitting out
into the now dark night.
The men form the armored truck fired a
withering hail of bullets. They ran and darted all across the road, firing all
the time, running for cover. It was a scene of complete battle.
Except that there was no enemy.
The armored guards were firing a deadly
hail of bullets at absolutely nothing!
Illya and Solo stared through their
infra-red binoculars, and then slowly lowered the glasses and looked at each
other.
"Nothing?" Solo said.
"Nothing at all," Illya said.
"They are firing as if an army were attacking them, and there isn't
anyone."
"Where is our limping friend?"
Illya looked. "Still lying flat.
Which means he knew this was going to happen. He wanted no part of a stray
bullet."
Solo was again studying the armored car
and its wildly-firing guards. Now the suave chief agent of U.N.C.L.E. strained
to see more clearly through the infra-red lenses.
"Illya!" Sola said suddenly.
Both agents stared again at the guards,
who were still engaged in their bloody battle with an enemy who was not there.
The guards were down, flat on the highway and motionless. Even as Illya and
Solo watches, the driver, crumpled to the macadam and lay still.
The weird figure with the long, shaggy
hair got up and began to limp rapidly away toward the woods and the small car
that had brought him to the factory and the armored truck.
The two agents moved. Each picked up a
small, thin attache case.
"You take the truck," Solo
said. "I'll follow our limping friend."
"Check. And Napoleon, be careful.
There is something very odd happening here."
Solo nodded. The two men vanished like
wraiths into the trees on their way down the wooded hillside.
TWO
THE ARMORED truck guards lay on the
highway. No traffic passed in the evening on the back road. Illya, cautious,
approached the silent men and the empty truck. The guards did not move.
His quick eyes searched the empty road
and the dark bushes that bordered it. He saw and heard nothing. No one was near
now, and n o one had been near when the guards fired their weapons into the
twilight, shattering the bushes and trees with bullets.
In the factory building there was light
now, faces at the windows, but no one came out. Illya saw, through the distant
windows of the factory, a man on the telephone. The police would be here soon,
but no one would come from the factory until the police arrived.
He had perhaps fifteen minutes.
Quickly he bent over the fallen guards.
They were not dead; there was no mark of any kind on them. They seemed to be in
some kind of drugged sleep, and Illya remembered the way the limping man had
motioned toward the air vent of the locked armored truck.
He slapped the faces of two guards.
Nothing happened. The men neither moved nor groaned. They did not come awake.
Illya turned his attention to the armored truck itself.
The doors of the truck were open, and
Illya circled it cautiously. There was nothing unusual, no signs of battle.
Inside the truck, through the open rear door, Illya could see the cargo—bags of
money.
Nothing seemed to have been taken or even
disturbed. How could it have been, since Illya and Solo had seen nothing and no
one approach the truck? And yet? The guards had fired at something,
for some reason.
Illya did not believe in magic, but
something which defied logic had happened here. Carefully, he climbed into the
truck to check the bags. Five minutes later he squatted in the truck and rubbed
his chin. The bags were all full. They had not been opened. Nothing at all
seemed to be missing.
Why attack an armored truck of money and
take nothing? Why drug the guards, force them out into the open to fire at
nothing, and take no money? It made n o sense at all. But Illya had long ago
learned that everything made sense if you knew the key, the—
And then it made sense.
Illya saw them through the open rear door
of the truck. Crouched there inside with the bags of money, he looked out
through the rear door and saw them coming from the bushes, out of the shadows,
pouring into the road.
Thrush!
Of course, Thrush! Always Thrush!
There were six of them. They had been
lying in wait. But they had moved too slowly. Illya crouched among the money
bags, fitted the stock on his U.N.C.L.E. special, and opened fire.
There were ten of them now. They fell
screaming all across the road as he fired. But others came on, firing as they
came.
* * *
NAPOLEON followed the limping man across
the wooded country toward the small car Solo and Illya had trailed from the
meeting of the Things To Come Brotherhood. The leader of the only branch of the
strange cult in America, the limping man looked like some shaggy mutation of a
human being.
But crippled and grotesque as the man
was, he moved with amazing agility. Solo scrambled to keep up. The man reached
his small car, and glanced quickly behind. He had heard Solo, and now he had
seen the youthful agent. Solo abandoned his cover and sprinted for his own car.
The small car roared away down the dirt
road. In his own car Solo raced after the small car. The cultist drove like a
madman, the small car careening down the dangerous dirt road. Solo clung grimly
to the wheel of his own car as he followed as closely as he could.
The small car was quicker on the narrow
turns, but Solo's car was heavier and held the road better. What he lost in
speed on the curves, he gained back by holding the road better in and out of
the turns.
But the small car pulled slowly away. And
then the dirt road reached the highway—not the highway that went past the
factory, but the coast highway. The mountains came down close to the sea, and
beyond the road the cliffs dropped to the ocean.
The small car screeched into a turn and
vanished down the highway and around a curve. Solo, forced to slow down, made
the turn and gunned his heavier car after the vanished small car of his quarry.
He rounded two sharp curves without sighting the car of the limping man.
Ahead there was a sickening screech of
rubber, a loud, rending crash, and silence.
Solo came around the last curve into a
long straightaway—and saw, just where the curve entered the straightaway, the
broken guardrail above the sea. He jammed on his brakes. The highway ahead was
completely empty. Solo jumped out of his stopped car and ran to the broken
guardrail. The jagged pieces of wood and metal were still quivering.
He looked down over the edge of the sea
cliff. Spreading ripples and white foam showed where something had struck. In
the center of the circle of white, a black object bobbed on the surface, and,
even as he watched, slowly sank.
It was the small black car.
Solo stared down. He saw no sign of life,
no one swimming or struggling in the water. Then he looked carefully around him
where he stood just off the highway.
Perhaps the limping man had gone over
with his car, and perhaps he hadn't. Solo could not be sure either way. And it
did not really matter. Either way, he was not going to catch the limping man
this night.
Either the cultist was dead with the car,
or he was snugly hidden somewhere in the bushes of the mountains across the
highway. And if he were alive he was well aware of Solo on his trail. No, Solo
would not catch up with his quarry now.
The chief agent of U.N.C.L.E. returned to
his car, and turned back. He drove more slowly, but without wasting any time.
On the dirt road he wondered if Illya had found anything at the armored truck.
He heard the wild firing as he neared the
spot where the small car had been parked. The heavy firing of what his trained
ears told him was an U.N.C.L.E. Special firing on automatic.
Silently swearing at himself for
splitting up forces, Solo leaped from his car, readied his own Special, and ran
through the woods and across the open country toward where he had last seen the
armored truck.
Again he swore at himself. Illya had
fallen into a trap. Grimly he ran on, hoping he was not too late. But while he
was still a hundred yards away, the firing stopped. Solo paused, listened.
There was no sound at all in the dark
night.
THREE
SOLO CREPT quickly but silently through
the bushes. Moving with the catlike speed of a trained athlete, he reached the
edge of the road and looked out. What he saw made him stare in bewilderment.
The road, the guards, and the armored car
were exactly the same as they had been when he last saw them.
Nothing had changed.
Illya was not in sight. These were no new
bodies. There were no enemies, no one of any kind. Only a distant police siren,
wailing faintly and moving closer.
Solo moved out from the bushes, standing
openly now, and looked for any signs of the gun battle he had heard as he ran
up. The only sign was a smell of burned powder in the night air.
He bent to check the unconscious guards.
They were all alive, unharmed, and unmarked. The only injuries visible in the
night were the torn and shattered bushes and trees.
And still he had not found Illya. He knew
he had not been mistaken about the sound of the heavy firing he had heard—it
had been an U.N.C.L.E. Special. Then Illya had to be here, unless they, some
enemy, had taken their dead and wounded, and Illya, with them!
Solo was feeling far from happy with this
thought; then he looked inside the armored truck. Illya lay face down on the
bags of money, his U.N.C.L.E. Special still gripped in his hand.
With a sinking in his stomach, Solo
leaped into the truck and bent over his friend. The small Russian did not move.
Solo felt his friend's body. Illya was very much alive. Solo could see no signs
of a wound or an injury of any kind. Like the guards outside, Illya appeared to
be sleeping peacefully.
But Solo checked the Special in the blond
Russian's hand. The clip was empty, the barrel still hot to the touch. Solo
squatted on his heels in the silent truck and rubbed his jaw. What the devil
had Illya been firing at?
In the silence of the dark night Solo
felt the hair rise on the back of his neck. There was something very strange,
even weird, here on a deserted California back highway. Something connected to
a Cult of strange, crippled, shaggy-haired men who worshiped some distant
future.
Closer, but still far away, the
approaching siren wailed like some disembodied banshee in the night. Solo
opened his small attache case and took out a hypodermic needle.
His eyes studied the silent form of his
friend. Then he selected a tiny ampoule from the case, snapped it into the case
of the syringe, worked the plunger once, and injected the solution into the arm
of the unconscious Illya.
Illya groaned, moved. Solo replaced the
hypodermic in his case and waited. Illya groaned again, and suddenly came
awake. The blond agent leaped up, crouched, his Special aimed and ready. He saw
Solo.
"Quick, Napoleon! They're all around
us! Cover the left!" Illya cried.
Solo watched the excited Slavic face of
his partner.
"It's Thrush! We should have known!
They—." Illya said quickly and then stopped suddenly.
Illya blinked his eyes and looked out
through the rear door of the truck at the deserted highway in the dark night.
Then he turned to Solo.
"Did I kill them all?" Illya
said.
"All who?" Solo said slowly.
"There's nothing out there except
the guards, Illya"
"Don't be stupid! I saw at least six
go down. I— What happened to me? I wasn't hit? I—"
"You just passed out. Your clip was
empty, but there are no bodies out there, not even any blood. ÄAs far as I can
tell, Illya, there never were any enemies out there."
"But I saw them, Napoleon! At least
ten Thrush agents. I saw their guns, their black uniforms, I even think I
recognized two of them! I tell you I saw Thrush men attacking me!"
Solo nodded. "I'm sure you did, but
they just weren't there, Illya. You were firing at nothing!"
Illya's bright eyes looked at Solo from
beneath his lowered brows, from under the haystack of blond hair. Then the
agent nodded slowly.
"Like the guards," Illya said.
"Like the guards," Solo said.
"Some kind of hallucination.
Something still inside the truck," Illya said.
Solo nodded grimly. "I'd say that
was it. Something our shaggy, limping friend tossed in through the air
vent."
"It was still inside the truck, and
when I came in it got to me, too," Illya said. "I thought I saw
Thrush attacking. At least we know why the guards came out firing at nothing.
They had some kind of hallucination. Probably that they were being held
up."
"That has to be it," Solo
agreed. "The question is, why, and how, and just what kind of
hallucination?"
Illya said, "But we know one more
thing—I saw Thrush agents. Why Thrush? Why particularly did my mind tell me
that it was Thrush who was attacking?"
"Maybe we can get that answer back
at the Cult headquarters," Solo said.
Illya nodded, looked alertly at Solo.
"The limping man, what happened?"
Solo told the small Russian. "So
he's probably dead, and that leaves us on a limb. We better get back and see
what other leads we can pick up at the Cult."
Illya was about to answer when he
stopped, listened. There were low groans outside the truck. Illya motioned, and
the two agents leaped down to the highway. The armored truck guards were
stirring now. The sirens of the approaching police cars were much closer.
"I think," Illya said, "I
would much rather not have to explain this to the police."
"A solid piece of thinking,"
Solo agreed with a grin.
"I suggest we see what we can
salvage at the Cult," Illya went on. "Mr. Waverly will not be pleased
if we lose our contact."
"You know, I had the same
thought," Solo said. "Shall we depart, fast?"
"I think we shall," Illya said.
The sirens were less than a half mile
away as the two agents turned and moved off into the night toward their car
parked on the dirt road over the wooded hill.
The guards were beginning to sit up,
staring around them. From the factory, as the sirens came close, men were now running
down toward the road and the awakening guards.
Illya and Solo vanished soundlessly into
the night.
The headquarters of the Things To Come
Brotherhood was in a shabby old mansion on the northern outskirts of Los
Angeles. As the two agents drove on, the mansion showed no light. Inside the
building nothing at all appeared to be moving.
The two agents left their car parked in
the shadows and approached the building on foot. There was no one on guard.
Illya and Solo moved carefully among the trees and tall weeds of the neglected
grounds.
Their informant had alerted them, before
they left New York for this mission, that the old mansion and its unkempt
grounds had been left tot the Things To Come Brotherhood by an insane, but very
wealthy, admirer of the Cult.
Close to the tall, dark old frame
building the two agents heard no sounds at all. Among the palms and
bird-of-paradise plants they looked significantly at each other. Solo grinned
somewhat weakly.
"Are you thinking what I'm thinking,
my Russian buddy?" Solo said.
"I have a certain suspicion that I
am," Illya said drily. "I am afraid we have let them slip quietly
through our fingers."
"Mr. Waverly will not be
pleased," Solo said.
"That, Napoleon, is the
understatement of the year," Illya said. "But I think we had better
make sure."
To make sure did not take long. After a
careful circling of the house, and finding neither light nor sound, Illya tried
the front door and found it open. The mansion, so recently the scene of a
meeting of some fifty very odd and shaggy people, was now as bare and silent as
some forgotten Egyptian tomb.
"You take the left side. I'll take
the right," Solo said.
Ten minutes later the two agents met
glumly in the front entrance hall again. The mansion was as bare as looted
mummy's tomb.
"They even moved out the red velvet
they had draping the speakers lectern," Illya reported. "No chairs,
no lectern, no velvet bunting."
"Not even a burned cigarette
butt," Solo said. "Our limping friend obviously survived the wreck.
He hoodwinked me neatly, in that case."
"And to reach here so much before us
he must have been picked up by another car," Illya pointed out.
Solo nodded. "Well, they've taken to
the hills. It could take a year to dig them all out."
"Perhaps they left some files?"
Illya said.
"All Russians are dreamers,"
Solo said.
They looked. There was, as Solo had
suspected, nothing. For a harmless cult of crippled and shaggy-haired lunatics,
the Things To Come Brotherhood had moved with remarkable speed and efficiency.
The mansion had been swiftly and completely stripped.
The best the two U.N.C.L.E. agents could
come up with was a single, empty match cover. The match cover had neither name
nor address, just a drawing of a sardonic, devilish face with thick, white
hair.
It was Illya who sighed. "We had
better report, Napoleon."
"Do we have to?" Solo said.
For answer, Illya brought out what
appeared to be a small cigarette case. Opened, the case proved to be a tiny
radio sender-receiver, with a miniature tape recorder neatly hidden behind a
flat plate that held a row of cigarettes. Illya pressed his send button.
"Code eleven, New York direct, Agent
two," Illya said mechanically.
Instantly the quiet, dry voice of
Alexander Waverly, Section-I member (Policy and Operations) answered. The chief
of the entire Western Hemisphere U.N.C.L.E. operation wasted no time with
amenities.
"Yes Mr.—uh—Illya Kuryakin? You have
a report?"
Illya reported. At the far end of the
radio communication, in his small but bright New York office, Waverly listened
in silence. When Illya had finished, the two agents stood in the mansion and
waited for the explosion.
"I see. Very enlightening,"
Waverly's voice said mildly. "Well, you hardly starred this time, but some
of it is interesting. Is Mr. Solo there?"
"Here, sir," Solo said.
"Good. Well, I should say your
usefulness out there is now minimal," Waverley said. "Return at
once."
"You don't want us to finish
her?" Solo said, somewhat incredulous. It was not like his dour chief to
let them off a hook so easily.
"No," Waverly said. "We
have a much better lead here. I think we've found the leader of our Cult."
Illya and Solo looked at each other as
they clicked-off. When Mr. Waverly missed an opportunity to point out their
many shortcomings, something important had to be happening. They ran to their
car and drove off toward the Los Angeles airport.
They were so busy wondering what the
better lead was, that for once their habitual alertness was relaxed. They
failed to see the bent, shuffling, shaggy-headed figure that limped out of the
bushes near the old mansion.
They never saw the weird figure bend over
a tiny pencil-like object and begin to talk rapidly.
FOUR
THE SECRET complex of U.N.C.L.E.
Headquarters in New York is hidden behind a facade of old brownstones and a
single large modern building on a quiet street not far from the river and the
United Nations Buildings. There is no way of knowing that the quiet street
hides a modern marvel of automated international police work.
There is no way of knowing that the
billboard atop the modern white stone building houses an antenna in constant
communication with all parts of the world.
There is no way of knowing that boats
move beneath the street from U.N.C.L.E. to the river.
There is no way of knowing that the
innocent shop in the center of the block, Del Floria's
Cleaning & Tailoring, is one of the four known entrances into the
fortress-like complex of quick men, quick machines, and silent observation.
But what man can hide, man can find.
Someone knew.
As the taxi pulled up in front of Del
Floria's Tailoring Shop, and the two men got out, it happened.
Two men, dressed the same as all the
other young men walking along a midtown street, paid the taxi driver, then
sauntered casually down the street, carrying their attache cases like everyone
else.
But someone knew who they were and why
they were going into Del Floria's Tailoring Shop. Someone who did not want them
to enter Del Floria's—not alive.
The shots came close together. Three
shots.
The first shot knocked Illya Kuryakin to
the sidewalk.
The second shot went through the attache
case of Napoleon Solo—because Solo, with the remarkable reflexes of his youth
and his training, had moved the fraction of an inch when the first bullet
struck his partner.
The third shot hit the sidewalk at the
precise spot where Solo had hit the dirt, but Solo was no longer at that spot,
having hit and rolled instantly.
There were no more shots.
Because there was nothing now to shoot
at. Both Solo and the far-from-dead Illya were down behind the cover of
brownstone steps, their Specials out, their eyes searching the buildings and
the windows across the street. On the street itself cautious, if sophisticated,
citizens of New York had abandoned both the street and the two agents. There
was no screaming, just very fast hiding.
The street was empty for a long minute
before other people who had not been close enough to see or hear the shots
began to walk forward where the two agents crouched, their eyes looking for
their attacker.
"You see anything?" Solo said.
"No," Illya said.
Neither man had looked at each other.
Their eyes were too busy looking carefully at every building in front of them.
"How is it?" Solo said.
"Flesh wound, left shoulder,"
Illya said. "Whoever it is, he is not a good shot. Do you see
anything?"
"No," Solo said, still looking
only at the windows and the buildings. "Can you get an idea from the
wound?"
There was a silence. Then Illya spoke.
"Yes, I think I can. And I think I've got him. Look at the tall building a
block to the north. Just to the left of the water tank."
Illya was looking through his binoculars.
Solo focused his glasses. The building was over five-hundred yards away. At the
base of the water tower something glinted, moved. It was too far to be sure
even through the glasses, but Illya voiced both their observations.
"One man. Can't quite make him out,
but he looks like he needs a haircut."
"I agree," Solo said,
"I—"
The voice came from behind them. A dry,
clipped voice that spoke in slow, matter-of-fact tones.
"Mr.—uh—Solo, may I ask what you
plan as your next move?"
The two agents, crouched low behind the
shelter of the brownstone steps, turned and looked up at the aristocratic
bloodhound face of Alexander Waverly. The chief of U.N.C.L.E. New York, was
sucking on an unlighted pipe, his bushy brows frowning with a mildly critical
puzzlement.
"Well—" Solo began.
"The sharpshooter is much too far
away for convenient attack," Waverly said in his unruffled voice. "I
doubt if he will wait for us to reach him. And it is doubtful that he will
attack again, now that he knows he is discovered. Therefore, I suggest we enter
the building and get on with our business."
Solo smiled weakly. "Yes, sir."
Illya pursued the matter one more step.
"Wouldn't it be a good idea, sir, to see, if perhaps we can catch him? He
seems to be still there, and—"
"Our security people are probably
almost there by now, Mr. Kuryakin." Waverly said. "Is there anything
else?"
"No, sir," Illya said.
"Then possibly we can get on with
the more important aspects of the matter. My office, I think. There are two
gentlemen who have been waiting for an hour to talk to you."
The Section-I leader of U.N.C.L.E. led
his two agents through Del Floria's into the maze of steel corridors, all
perpetually monitored and observed by Section 4 (Communications and Security).
They went down the windowless corridors, past the rows of doors without knobs
or keyholes, to the last door at the end of the main corridor on the fourth
floor.
This was the office of Alexander Waverly.
Inside, two men stood up as the chief led Solo and Illya in. They had been
waiting. Also already waiting was the report from Security—the sniper had
vanished unseen.
"Sniper?" one of the strangers
said.
"Uh, yes," Waverly said.
"I rather expect he has something to do with the affair in hand. Certainly
not our old friend Thrush. Much too amateurish."
"I don't think it was Thrush,"
Solo agreed.
"Good," Waverly said drily.
"Now may I have that match book you reported about?"
Solo blinked. "The, er, match
book?"
"Yes, Mr. Solo. You did very little
good out there, I agree, but that match book seems promising. Unless I am
mistaken, the picture you described on it is a likeness of the man we have
reason to want—Morlock The Great."
FIVE
IN WAVERLY'S office there was a long
silence. Then, at the press of a button on his desk, Waverly flashed a picture
on the screen on his wall. It was a full-face and shoulders photograph of a
pale, sinister looking man with jet black eye-brows either cut or painted in a
sardonic "V".
Although the picture on the match book
was a drawing, and the picture on the screen was a photograph, the long nose,
satanic eyebrows and general countenance, and thick shock of white hair were
unmistakably the same.
"Who is he?" Solo asked.
"Morlock The Great," one of the
strangers said. "The world-famous magician. I've seen his act once; it's
pretty good and downright creepy. He's a first-rate magician. But we've thought
for a long time that he's considerably more than that."
Waverly cleared his throat, his fingers
searching in the pockets of his waistcoat for a match to light the pipe. As he
searched, he talked.
"Perhaps I had better introduce you
gentlemen. Uh—Mr. Solo and Mr. Kuryakin, these two gentlemen are from Interpol.
Mr. Fellini is from the Italian branch, and Mr. Dawes from the London office.
As you both know, it was Interpol who first asked us to look into the
problem."
Dawes, the taller of the two strangers in
Waverly's office, nodded. "As far as we can find, chaps, there is no
crime. Without a crime we have no jurisdiction. So—"
The shorter Interpol man, Fellini, broke
in. "No crime, no, not yet! But there is something very bad, very
evil!"
"Quite," Dawes agreed with his
more volatile companion. "Something is jolly well up, but nothing we can
come out and put a finger on. So we came to you chaps."
Illya leaned forward across the circular
conference table. "Perhaps you could summarize for us. All we really know
is that there is something peculiar about this cult, the Things To Come
Brotherhood."
Dawes looked at Waverly. "You
haven't told—"
Waverly found his matches, lighted his
pipe, puffed thoughtfully. "I find it useful sometimes not to tell our
people all the details of a case until they have learned a certain amount by
themselves. However, with what Mr. Solo and Mr. Kuryakin found in California, I
think we can now proceed."
U.N.C.L.E.'s New York chief turned his
placid eyes toward his two agents. "Briefly, gentlemen, there has been a
series of rather odd happenings. I think you will recognize the picture. About
six months ago an Italian coastal patrol ship opened fire one night. No reason
was ever found for the action; there was absolutely nothing to fire at!
"Guards at two American
installations, one in Turkey and one in Venezuela, fought for an hour each to
repel an attack, and later it was found that there had been no attack! No one
to fire at, and yet they had been sure they were being attacked.
"Then, only last week, soldiers at
an English airbase shot down two civilians under the impression that their base
was under heavy attack from Soviet forces. There were, again, no Soviet forces,
no enemy action of any kind!"
Illya and Solo looked at each other. It
was Solo who turned to Waverly.
"Almost exactly what we saw happen
out in California," Solo said.
Waverly puffed on his pipe.
"Precisely. Also, in each case the soldiers and sailors involved blackened
out for a period of an hour afterwards. In addition, there have been a series
of robberies in which the guards claimed to have been attacked by hordes of
bandits. In each of these cases, no evidence of enemy action was found, all the
guards blacked out, much money was taken by the non-existent attackers!"
"Exactly as we saw," Illya
said, "except in our case no money was taken!"
Waverly nodded. "That, I believe,
tells us how the robberies were accomplished—one man caused the strange
hallucinations, and when the guards blacked out, he helped himself to the loot.
However, in your case, you were there and scared the man off."
"And the hallucination got me,"
Illya said.
"It would seem so. But you have
confirmed the suspicions of Interpol—the Things To Come Brotherhood is involved
in all of this," Waverly said.
Solo narrowed his keen eyes.
"Confirmed the suspicions? Then Interpol had reason to think the Cult was
involved before we went to California?"
Dawes answered. "Yes, we did, but
very stickily. We had an anonymous message, through secret but reliable
channels. It came two weeks ago. All it said was that the Things To Come
Brotherhood knew about shadows that attacked.
Naturally, we put two and two together.
"Of course, the message was
anonymous and as such rather unreliable, to say the least. But we did feel it
important enough to act on. Since there is still no provable actual crime, we
decided to drop it in the laps of you chaps."
Waverly took up the story. "I
decided to send you two out to the only known chapter of the Cult in this
country. The results seem to have warranted the effort, I should say. We now
know that the Cult is involved in all this. What we
don't know is why or how."
Illya nodded. "And Morlock The
Great?"
"We have definite proof that he is
connected to the Things To Come Brotherhood. He may actually be its
leader," Fellini said. "The Cult is growing; we have proof. It is no
longer as innocent a collection of fanatics as we had thought."
"They're all crippled in some way,
you know," Dawes said. "They always seemed a harmless collection of
poor unfortunate people. That ridiculous long, shaggy hair they wear. But now
we're not at all sure. Especially if Morlock is running the show, as we
suspect."
"Where is Morlock The Great?"
Solo asked.
"In London, I'm sorry to say,"
Dawes said. "Naturally, we're watching him, but we haven't a shred of
evidence to go on."
Waverly frowned at his pipe that had gone
out. "Perhaps we will have. Our man in London is expected to report quite
soon. With some luck, we can hope for more than we found in California."
"Who is there?" Solo asked.
"Mr.—uh—Morgan, I believe. A good
man, despite his limp. He should give us something to go on."
There was a silence as Waverly and his
two best agents all looked toward the overseas communication receiver.
* * *
DEEP BENEATH the city of London, in a
dank and dim cellar room, the small horde moaned and chanted around the blaze
of the great open fire.
The room was low and vast, its corners
hidden in shadows not reached by the macabre flicker of the flames from the
giant fireplace. In front of the fireplace, where the flames licked at logs,
there was a large, flat stone like some ancient savage altar.
The small horde of people chanted and
shuffled in a kind of weird dance, a grotesque shuffle, awkward and strange. At
first glance an observer would not have been sure why the shuffling dance
seemed so peculiar. Then he would have seen—all the people in the vast room
were crippled in some way.
Crippled, and with thick, shaggy hair
that hung down almost to their shoulders.
They chanted in some strange language,
moaned, and shuffled.
But their eyes were all focused on the
great, flat stone.
They were waiting.
The fire burned high, the flames licking
up, the flickering light creating giant shadows against the encrusted stone
walls.
And he appeared.
A puff of thick white smoke and a man
stood on the flat stone. A figure on the ancient altar-like stone. Perhaps a
man, perhaps not. A monster, certainly.
One thick puff of smoke and the figure
stood above all the chanting people. There was a great, low moan of joy.
The figure raised its hands.
Silence.
The figure stood there—a long, satanic
face with thick, V-shaped eyebrows, a shock of thick white hair. A sardonic
face of normal size—on the body of a child. The figure, the man, was less than
five feet tall and very think but his head, shaped like the head of the Devil
himself, was full sized and his eyes glowed with power.
In the silence the shaggy-haired people
waited.
The satanic-faced man turned to face the
fire. He flicked his wrist, passed his hand before the fire. Thin smoke
billowed out from the flames. In the room no one moved or spoke as the fumes
spread through the room.
They came out of the fire, out of the
flames themselves.
A winged monster with the head of an
eagle, the body of a lion.
A squat, ape-like figure with the feet of
a hawk.
A slavering creature with the yawning
mouth of a shark.
A coiled snake, a giant snake, with
plumes on its head.
They came from the fire and seemed to
hover above the vast stone room.
There was a great moan of pain and yet of
joy, and all the people except the satanic man on the stone altar fell on their
faces.
All but the sardonic leader—and one man
far off in the shadows of a corner.
This one man, a limping hunchback, let
his eyes take in the whole scene; then, silently, he limped away and out
through a stone archway. He limped on down a dark corridor until he reached a
door. He went through the door and along another corridor.
In this second corridor he changed. He
straightened up, his limp became less pronounced, and he moved at a quick trot.
He reached another door, opened it, and went up a curving flight of stone
steps. At the top two shaggy-haired men watched him as he approached.
The man who had come up from below drew a
small pistol and aimed it at each of the shaggy-haired men in turn. The pistol
sounded twice—short, spitting sounds. Both his targets fell without a sound,
not dead but instantly asleep.
The man jumped over them and entered an
elevator. The elevator moved upward. When it stopped the man stepped out with
his pistol ready. He shot down three more shaggy-haired guards. He ran, now, to
one more door, climbed more stairs, and, at the top, pressed a button.
A slab of rock above him moved open. He
climbed up and out into the ruins of a building. He ran through the ruins and
came out onto the street of a city. He turned left and ducked into a doorway.
Then he took a tiny, flat metal case from its hiding place inside the doorway.
He opened the case and pressed a button.
"Overseas direct, Waverly New York.
Come in, New York!"
The man hunched over the flat metal case.
He did not see the limping figures converging on the doorway where he waited.
He did not see the tiny man with the white hair and satanic face who stood
watching from just inside the ruined building.
"Go ahead, Agent Morgan," a
voice said from the flat tin box.
"Code One, Confidential for
Waverly," the man snapped.
There was another silence.
The limping figures reached the doorway.
The man looked up then and saw them.
* * *
ALEXANDER WAVERLY spoke into his
microphone as Illya, Solo and the two Interpol men watched.
"Go ahead, Morgan. Morgan?"
A silence, and then, from the distant
voice, suddenly filled with fear and panic, "End of the world! End of the
world! Red at low noon! Red at—"
And screams, screams, screams—and
silence.
In the New York office the five men
looked at each other.
From the overseas radio—only silence, the
screams gone.
ACT II: COME KILL WITH ME
THE LONDON MORGUE was damp and gloomy. No
light came down into its dim recesses from the great city outside. The
attendant drew out the body. The CID man, Taylor, turned away at the sight,
coughing, walking a few feet from the corpse of Alec Morgan.
"Good God!" Napoleon Solo said,
his face ashen for once as he looked at the remains of his fellow U.N.C.L.E.
agent.
Beyond a small, quick swallow of his
throat, Illya betrayed no sign of what the grisly sight meant to him. The small
Russian had lived all his life with violent death, with men less human than
monsters. He had learned to show no feeling while he dedicated his life to the
destruction of such men.
With a sharp motion, Illya stepped to the
body of Alec Morgan. The sharp motion was to tell Solo to come with him.
Together the two men looked down at the corpse. Every bone had been broken,
hacked, torn as if by wild beasts. Alec Morgan had been, literally, beaten to
death and torn limb from limb.
But it was the face of the dead
U.N.C.L.E. agent that made Illya and Solo stare in horror. The face was twisted
into a mask of terror. The eyes bulged in ultimate horror. It was not pain,
there was no sign of pain. Illya looked and was sure of that.
"It's not pain. He looks—"
Illya began.
"As if he'd seen the most terrifying
thing he could imagine," Solo finished.
Illya nodded. "As if he saw his
worst fear. And, Napoleon, I would venture that he was not conscious when this
was done to him."
Taylor, the CID man, came back. Pale and
almost green, the Scotland Yard chief inspector nodded slowly to Illya.
"Funny, but that was what our people
thought," Taylor said. "The medical people said most of this was done
after he was at least unconscious, perhaps already dead."
"He was unconscious when he saw
whatever made his face look like that," Solo said.
Illya nodded, turned away. "Well, I
don't see what else we can do here. We better look at what he had with him when
you found him."
"In my office," Taylor said.
But, an hour later, they had learned
nothing. The miniature tape recorder had been smashed. There were no papers and
no clues as to what had happened to Morgan, or where he had been. In Taylor's
office, Illya stared at nothing while Solo listened to the chief inspector talk
about Morlock The Great.
"He's a weird creature," Taylor
said. "Little more than a midget. But those eyes! I've seen him do things
myself that I swear aren't tricks, but we've never proven a thing. He's flirted
with half a dozen international organizations, all suspected of various types
of criminal activity. But this Things To Come Brotherhood seems to be his main
activity."
"Just what do you know about
them?" Illya said, his eyes hard beneath his lowered brow.
"A harmless cult of fanatics, we
thought," Taylor said. "A bit crazier than some others, but without
any potential danger to anyone. Or so we thought. They were small enough, just
a small group of poor, half-demented, physically handicapped people. Then,
about a year ago, they seemed to begin growing.
"They started chapters all over the
world. The main chapter is still here in England, however. They are all unknown
little people, all crippled in some way. They go around wearing their hair in
great, shaggy mops, almost in their eyes. Some of them seem to bleach it or dye
it white! We started to check them not long ago, and while we haven't found a
single one with a criminal record, at least a third seem to have been in mental
institutions of some kind at one time."
"A third?" Solo said.
"Insane?"
Taylor shook his head. "No, not
insane. At least not that we can prove. Merely disturbed, neurotics. There's no
law against being mentally sick. If there were, ninety percent of the fanatics
and cultists would be behind bars. It's not unusual for cult members to have a
history of mental trouble. They are almost always poor misfits who join the
cult in search for some hope."
"And just what is the hope of The
Things To Come Brotherhood?" Illya asked.
Taylor laughed. "To survive. Yes,
that's right. They appear to believe that when all the rest of us have blown
ourselves to oblivion, they will survive and live happily ever after!"
"Just survive?" Solo said.
"On what do they base this, if I'm not asking too much logic?"
"We don't really know," Taylor
said. "Cults are like that. They usually have some sort of
God-figure—idol, if you prefer—who they think will treat them specially. It
seems that our morlocks simply believe that they are
ordained to survive. Sort of a prophecy, I think."
Illya sat alert, his sharp eyes narrowed
beneath the shock of blond hair. "Morlocks?"
"That is what they call
themselves," Taylor said. "That was how we first got onto the fact
that Morlock The Great had something to do with them. Now we think he may be
the leader."
"But you can't prove it?" Solo
said.
Taylor sighed. "My dear chap, we
can't prove anything. These shaggy little people just
go around saying they will inherit The Things To Come. That's how they get
their name. They hold open meetings, talk and talk about how they must prepare
for their time, and keep rather quietly to themselves."
"On the surface," Solo said
drily. "The one we ran into in California wasn't keeping quietly to
himself."
"And the message said the Cult has
something to do with all these peculiar attacks that aren't attacks,"
Illya said.
"And Alec Morgan is dead." Solo
said. "He was working on the Cult."
Illya rubbed his chin. "End of the
world, and Red at low moon," he mused. "It has to mean something.
Morgan was trying to tell us something. A message of some kind, Napoleon."
There was a silence in the office of
Chief Inspector Taylor. Both Solo and Illya were hearing those word again
screamed across the miles of ocean from London to the New York office of
Waverly. Chief Inspector Taylor seemed to have something else on his mind. The
CID man hesitated, and then spoke carefully.
"It's just a thought, mind
you," Taylor said, "but if those words are intended as a message,
it's not likely that Morgan was referring to the actual end of the world?"
"Maybe trying to tell us how
important it all was?" Solo said.
Illya disagreed. "I don't think he
would be wasting his last words on a warning, Napoleon. I think the Inspector
may be right. Morgan wasn't talking about the actual end of the world. No, it
was a message of some kind. Something that would help us."
"Then," Taylor said,
"Perhaps my little hunch may help. If I was surrounded by enemies, the
first thing I'd want to tell you is something that would lead you to the right
place for the job."
"It sounds logical," Solo said.
"A place?" Illya said.
Taylor nodded slowly. "The End of the World is a pub, a public house. A tavern to
you. And it's in the area where Morgan was found."
"A pub!" Solo cried. "Why
not?"
"And 'Red At Low Noon' sounds like a
password!" Illya said.
Taylor nodded. "It has that sound to
me."
The two agents looked at each other. Solo
shrugged. He stood up and stretched in the silent office. Then he checked his
U.N.C.L.E. Special.
"Well, it's worth a try. We don't
have anything else to go on right now, and I hate sitting around," Solo
said.
"At least we can have a beer,"
Illya said.
Taylor said. "Do you want some
help?"
Solo shook his head. "Not just yet.
If they are up to some big trouble, they probably know your men."
"This will most likely be
nothing," Illya said. "I think what you can do is check our Morlock
The Great. Find out where he is. If this turns out to be nothing, he's our last
lead."
"All right," Taylor agreed.
Solo stowed away his U.N.C.L.E. Special
and smiled. "Well, shall we go to The End Of The World?"
"It might be interesting,"
Illya grinned. "I always wanted to be an explorer."
TWO
THE AREA was a vast complex of shabby old
buildings, warehouses, and the ruins of war still standing like scars on the
city. In many places the ruins had been cleared, and small, new houses put up
for the poorer citizens of London. But it was an old and shabby area, the home
of men who lived on the edge of life—petty criminals, the poor, the ragged
hangers-on of the city.
The End of the World was a large pub, ablaze with light in the center of vast black
buildings. There were ruins around the public house, and warehouses, and the
dark buildings where both men and rats lived in uneasy peace. In such a world
liquor is a way of life, and a stream of people went in and out of the pub.
Barely noticed by the patrons of The End of the World, two men limped down the street. One
was small and dark, his dark hair thick and shaggy. He limped on his left leg
and wore shabby old clothes that had not been cleaned for months. There was a
black patch over his left eye, and a thick, black mustache on his upper lip.
"I'll go inside," the disguised
Illya said. "I'm somewhat better at acting and fake accents, if I do say
so."
The second man nodded. The second man
was, of course, Napoleon Solo, but no one would have known that. He was hidden
under a thick beard and old, shabby clothes. He limped also, as if his right
leg was twisted. He was also, to anyone who might be watching, quite drunk.
"Check," Solo said. "I'll
lean on that lamppost over there, where I can watch the door and the street.
Keep your radio-ring open. If there's any danger, I can warn you."
Illya set his new transmitter-receiver
ring, checked the rest of his hidden equipment and his U.N.C.L.E. Special, and
left Solo leaning, apparently drunk, against the lamppost. The disguised
Russian limped across the dark London street and into the glare and noise of The End of the World.
Through the smoke and noise Illya limped
up to the bar and ordered a whisky. His eyes, under his lowered brow, searched
the room and the faces at the tables and lined up at the bar.
At first he saws nothing unusual. Then,
as he ordered his second whisky, he saw two small, limping men with shaggy hair
come into the bar from a back room.
The bartender saw the two men at the same
time. He wiped his hands and walked to them. At the far end of the bar they all
leaned their heads together and whispered. Illya watched them covertly. The
barman, then was involved somehow with the Cult. Probably the two men were
members, morlocks; they looked like it.
Illya bent over his drink, his left hand
just under his lips. He spoke softly, barely moving his lips. "Sonny, this
is Bubba. I have two potential bandits. The barman seems to be involved."
Illya sipped his drink, leaned his head
down, looked around quickly. He was unobserved. A faint whisper came from his
ring. Illya mumbled to himself, half-aloud, to cover the faint voice of Solo
from his ring. "All clear her. Nothing unusual. Will stand by. Sonny over
and out."
Illya clicked off and resumed his
drinking and his scrutiny of the two shaggy men and the barman. As he looked at
them again, he saw that they were now looking at him. The two shaggy men were
walking toward him. The barman was also walking toward him, but behind the bar.
The bartender reached Illya first, and
Illya suddenly leaned across the bar toward him.
"What do you think of 'Red at low
noon?' Funny isn't it?" Illya said to the barman.
The barman's hand froze in midair in the
process of picking up a glass. The two shaggy men had reached Illya now. They
stood on each side of him. The barman nodded toward Illya.
"He thinks 'Red at low noon' is
funny," the barman said.
"Does he?" one of the shaggy
men said.
"What is 'Red at low noon?' "
the second shaggy man said.
"What are words?" Illya said.
"You think 'Red at low noon' is just
words?"
"Words to pass," Illya said.
There was a silence as the three of them
looked at him. Then one of the shaggy ones motioned the barman away. The barman
went. The shaggy man watched Illya.
"From what section?"
"Santa Carla, California,"
Illya said.
"So?" the second man said.
Suddenly he thrust out his hand. Illya did not flinch, did not flicker an
eyelid beneath his disguise. The man smiled. "Welcome, morlock.
We need more word on Santa Carla. Come."
The two men turned without another word
and limped through the smoke and noise toward the door. Illya finished his
drink casually, and followed. So far it looked like he and been right,
"Red at low noon" was indeed a password. At the door the two men
motioned him to hurry. He stepped out into the dark night.
The two men walked ahead to the left,
past where Solo was under the lamppost. But Solo was not under the lamppost.
Illya raised his ring to his lips.
"Sonny, this is Bubba. I have made contact. Sonny? Come in, Sonny. This is
Bubba. Come in, Sonny."
There was only silence. The dim circle of
light beneath the feeble lamppost was empty. The ring radio was silent. Illya
looked up to see where the two men were.
He saw them standing in the road directly
ahead of him. They seemed to be waiting for him. They were not alone.
As if from out of the earth itself men
came limping into the dim light of the street. Many men, all limping, all
shaggy-haired.
Illya looked around quickly.
He fingered the U.N.C.L.E. Special in his
shoulder holster.
Then he dropped his hand to his side.
They were all around him now. Too many of them.
He bent to his radio ring. "Sonny,
this is Bubba. Mayday! Mayday!"
There was no answer, and suddenly, there
was a great puff of smoke directly in front of him.
A man appeared standing where the smoke
blew away. A tiny man with a sardonic face that was all black eyebrows and
sharp nose. A man almost a midget, but with a large head of satanic cast. The
man laughed.
"Ah, Mr. Kuryakin, I think. We
expected U.N.C.L.E. to send someone," the tiny man said.
Illya knew at once that this was Morlock
the Great.
Morlock The Great laughed again.
"Our man missed you in New York, but we have you now. Very foolish to use
that password Morgan gave you."
"I found you with it," Illya
said drily. His voice was cool, calm, but his mind raced. Where was Napoleon?
"True, and that you may well
regret," Morlock said. "You will also regret coming alone. Strange. I
was sure Mr. Solo would be with you."
Illya watched the tiny man. They did not
have Solo? The words sounded true. The Cult did not have Napoleon? Then who
did? Morlock The Great gave him no more chance to think.
The tiny magician seemed to wave his
hand. A cloud rolled over Illya's mind. He felt himself stiffening, losing
consciousness. Where was Napoleon?
THREE
NAPOLEON SOLO had waited under the
lamppost, feigning drunkenness, and watched Illya enter The
End of the World. Alert, ready to give the warning if anyone suspicious
entered. No one did.
Some time passed. The night was cold and
wet under the feeble street lamp, and Solo stamped his feet, sang to convince
anyone who watched that he was indeed drunk. He received Illya's first message,
and become even more alert. Illya had spotted two possible suspects.
Solo was so busy watching the door and
the street that he did not see them come from a building behind him until they
were on him. The cold muzzle of a pistol was pressed into his back. An only too
familiar voice hissed in his ear.
"Really, Napoleon, that beard!"
Maxine Trent!
"And those awful clothes and thick
beard," the Thrush agent purred. "What have they done to you? Why, I
hardly get a twinge of desire when I see you like this."
"Good evening, Maxine," Solo
said. "Should I say it is a pleasant surprise?"
His alert eyes took in the situation at a
glance. Maxine stood behind him, but she held no gun. Another Thrush agent held
the gun in his back. There were two other Thrush men, armed and watching him
closely.
"It's always pleasant, Napoleon.
This time especially. I don't have to kill you," Maxine said sweetly.
"I'm relieved," Solo said.
He turned and smiled at the beautiful
Thrush agent he knew so well. Her violet eyes were so deceptively alluring. Her
long, soft hair was black now—it could be red, or blonde, or any color she
chose for any job. Solo ran her through his mind like a card through a
computer. Age twenty-five; all the right measurements; runner-up for Miss
America one year; daughter of industrialist Clark Trent. One of the best, most
skillful of Thrush agents. A tall, lovely, deadly woman.
"To what do I owe my good
fortune?" Solo said.
"I need you," Maxine said.
"I want to know all you know about Morlock The Great and the Cult."
"So you're working with him?"
Napoleon said. "That makes him a little more dangerous."
Maxine smiled. "Why, thank you,
Napoleon. I take that as a compliment. Thrush will be pleased. Now, tell
me—"
The beautiful Thrush agent stopped. Her
violet eyes were looking across the street. Solo whirled. The door of The End of the World had opened. Two shaggy men stepped out.
"Well—" Solo began.
He got no farther. As he turned back to
Maxine, the tall woman reached out and touched his neck with her hand. She was
smiling. Solo felt the tiny pin prick, and knew no more.
* * *
ILLYA opened his eyes. There was no
light. He moved and found that he was lying on a damp stone floor. He flexed
his arms and his hands. He was not tied up. He felt his face—his disguise was
gone.
He sat up and looked around. His eyes, as
they grew accustomed to the dark, saw the confines of his prison. Four stone
walls, no windows, perhaps ten square feet of floor space. A table and a chair.
Nothing else.
And not a sound. He listened. The stone
room was quieter than a tomb. No sound at all.
He looked at his watch. Strangely, they
had left him all his clothes, his jewelry and hidden weapons. His U.N.C.L.E.
Special, and his knife, were gone. Also his eye patch and false mustache. His
watch showed that no more than half an hour had passed since he had left The End of the World. Then he had to be still somewhere in
London.
But there was no sound at all. The entire
life of the great city gave no hint of existing somewhere beyond the stone
walls. He felt no drafts, no current of air. Nothing on the surface could be
this silent. He was underground—in a stone room far under the earth.
Somewhere deep under the heart of London
the morlocks must have headquarters, their real
headquarters. The shaggy, limping creatures lurking in hidden passages under
the earth and—. And Illya stopped. If there had been any light his eyes would
have brightened.
He had it! Morlocks!
The Things To Come Brotherhood! What had Taylor, the CID
Inspector, said? They believe they will survive! Of course, H. G. Wells and his
Time Machine! They had mixed two of H. G. Wells's
stories. The morlocks appeared in The
Time Machine. Things To Come was another book.
And yet, both books were much the same—they presented what Wells thought the
future would be like!
A world destroyed—and the morlocks survived! More than that, the morlocks
ruled the future! A mutant race of shaggy-haired, half-crippled men who lived
on, and controlled, their more fortunate-looking fellow humans. This Cult had
merely taken the deformed and cast-out, the survivors of mental wards, and told
them they would, indeed, survive and inherit the earth!
Ridiculous, half-insane; yet what else
was any Cult? Cults grew because some people, some groups, had to have a dream
to believe, no matter how crazy it was. What better dream than to believe that
you will inherit the earth, and are, therefore, really better than all the
normal, healthy, handsome people?
But what were they up to now? Harmless,
Taylor had said. Perhaps they may have been once, but now—
Illya jerked from his reverie. There had
been a sound, a noise. Even as he watched, a section of the wall opened and a
figure entered.
Two figures.
A shaft of light from outside fell on
Illya, revealing him, but also revealing the two figures.
They were more grotesque than any he had
seen before.
One was a heavy, ape-like figure with its
face barely visible beneath the shaggy shock of white-dyed hair.
The second was a thin, hunchbacked figure
that shuffled behind the first, its face also invisible under the shaggy hair.
This second figure carried a long club. Both morlocks
moved to stand over Illya. The agent tensed to attack. There were only two. But
he never moved.
Even as he prepared, the hunchback raised
his club and smashed it down on the head of his companion.
* * *
NAPOLEON SOLO heard the water and felt
the motion of the barge under him. He was pinioned securely to the chair. The
two Thrush agents were preparing their instruments. Maxine grinned at Solo
"Come now, Napoleon dear. Don't make
me resort to such old fashioned methods."
"Believe me, all I want to know what
you in U.N.C.L.E. have learned about Morlock The Great, the Cult, and how they
make people fight when there is nothing to fight."
"I'll bet you would," Solo
said.
"I have orders to let you go if you
co-operate. You know how unprecedented that would be. Really, Napoleon, all we
want this time is some information."
"That's all? You ask so little,
Maxine," Solo said.
"Please, Napoleon, I have a few
scores to settle, but I'm willing to forget if you would just—"
Maxine stopped. Solo, tied securely,
could not see what she was looking at, but she was looking at something o
someone over his shoulder. She nodded quickly, and stepped past Solo out of his
sight. The agent was not worried about Maxine; he was still watching the two
Thrush men preparing their tortures for him.
He saw that they had their backs to him.
He listened. He could hear no one behind him. He began to work on his bonds.
They were secure. And the thorough Thrush people had taken all the secret
weapons they could find. But they had not taken everything.
At that moment Maxine Trent returned. The
beautiful Thrush agent smiled down at him.
"I have to go, Napoleon. I will
leave you in the capable hands of Walter and Bruno there. Remember, they have
instructions to let you go once you have talked fully."
With that, Maxine turned on her heel,
spoke low and sharp to the two torturers, Walter and Bruno, and walked quickly
from the cabin of the barge. Moments later, Solo heard a motor boat roar away.
Silence descended on the barge. He
listened, but he could hear no other sound of life but the lapping water. He
heard the water and the metallic sounds of Walter and Bruno preparing for his
torture. Then all sound stopped but the water.
Walter and Bruno turned to look at him.
Both of them smiled. Solo did not have to ask. He could see that Walter and
Bruno were going to enjoy their work on him.
FOUR
ILLYA FOLLOWED the limping hunchback down
dark corridors and through many narrow stone rooms. His keen eyes studied the
walls and corridors. The corridors were no longer of damp stone, they were
concrete—thick new concrete. He saw air vents high in the walls.
At last they reached a small room far
from the stone prison he had been kept in. This room had no entrance and was
piled to the ceiling with cans of food. Or, to be exact, the room had an
entrance, a door, but that was not the way the hunchback led Illya into the
room. They entered through a large hole left when the hunchback removed a loose
stone in the corridor.
The hunchback replaced the stone and
turned to smile at Illya.
"We will be safe here for a time.
That door is locked on the outside. Only the inner council members have
keys."
"That loose stone?" Illya said.
"Only I know about that. I had
repaired it for myself in case I was discovered."
Illya looked at the crippled man. Now, smiling,
and with the thick hair pulled back from his face, Illya could see that the
hunchback was relatively young, not at all bad looking.
Under the hair was a gentle, intelligent
face.
"You wrote that note to
Interpol?" Illya said. "About the firing at shadows?"
The morlock
nodded."Yes, I wrote it. My name is Paul, Paul Dabori. I joined them when
I felt I must have some friends, but now I know there is something wrong. They
must be stopped. You are from Interpol?"
"No, from U.N.C.L.E.," Illya
said.
"Ah, I have heard of
U.N.C.L.E.," Dabori said. "That is better."
Far off, suddenly, there was a sound of
gongs. Loud, frantic ringing of gongs. Illya stood alert in the dark of the
hidden storeroom. Paul Dabori nodded. The hunchback seemed disturbed.
"They have discovered your escape. I
killed the other guard, but they are not all fools. They will guess that I have
helped you. We will not be safe here much longer."
"Why must they be stopped?"
Illya said.
"I will tell you, but first we must
escape." Dabori said.
"How?"
"I have a way. This was an ancient
cellar. It connects to the sewers. That is our only way out, the sewers down to
the river."
"All right. Let's go now,"
Illya said.
Dabori shook his head. "No, I know
how they will search. We must wait until they are almost here; then we can pass
them and reach the sewers. You see, we must go through some of the new
corridors to reach the old sewers."
In the dark Illya sat with the hunchback.
The two men listened to the incessant clangor of the gongs, the distant sounds
of voices and running feet. Illya stood up to inspect the room. He saw that the
cans were filled with basic foods: meats, vegetables, butter, sugar. All in
cans.
And there were large cans of plain water.
Puzzled, Illya continued his search.
There was medicine, and surgical
supplies, and some large cylindrical objects that Illya recognized as air
filters. Then he touched the walls. The walls were not stone on the inside.
The walls were lead!
"Yes," Dabori said behind him.
"The walls are lead-lined. The new concrete is twelve feet thick. There is
food and water for a hundred men for six months. The new parts are all sealed
into a unit; the air is filtered through many filters. There is even oxygen in
case the vents must be closed for a time."
Illya touched the lead walls again. Then
he slowly turned to look at Dabori.
The hunchback, even in the dim interior
of the hidden storeroom, was grim.
"An atom bomb shelter," Illya
said. "A secret, and very bell built atom bomb shelter!"
"Yes," Dabori said. It is part
of the plan. There are many such shelters in the world now, all the plan of
Morlock The Great. That is why I had to tell—"
Dabori stopped, held up his small hand.
Illya froze. Just outside the room he heard voices and footsteps. Someone tried
the door. Outside men stood around the door. Illya took hold of his small,
cuff-link gas bombs, and waited.
* * *
WALTER and Bruno bent to take off Solo's
shoes. They both bent down, eager to get to work. Solo waited until their faces
were both close to him near his feet. Then, with a powerful effort, he lifted
his entire body, and the chair itself, a few inches off the floor in a jump,
and came down on the heel of his left shoe.
The two Thrush men, intent on the
anticipation of torturing Solo, failed to react for a split second. It was
enough. As Solo made is jump and came down, they reacted and hurled themselves
backwards. They were too late.
A spurt of reddish gas burst from the
capsule hidden in Solo's heel. The gas quickly expanded flush into their faces.
They gasped once each.
Solo hurled himself over backward and as
far as he could go. Even then he got a faint whiff of the gas before it
dispersed in the air of the barge cabin.
The whiff made his head reel, made him
fight for consciousness. Everything went black and green and red and he felt
himself slipping away; then it was gone. He lay in a sharp draft of wind from
under the door.
Quickly he crawled himself around on the
floor, the chair still firmly tied to him. Walter and Bruno had taken the full
dose straight into their faces before they had time to jump away. They both lay
flat, eyes staring at nothing, barely breathing.
Solo had two hours.
In two hours they would revive—with
headaches, but otherwise as good as ever. Before then, Solo had to be free.
Where he lay, his eyes searched the barge cabin. What he wanted was on the leg
of that very table where Walter and Bruno had prepared their instruments of
torture—a small blowtorch with a thin jet of blue flame.
Painfully, Solo gathered his muscles and
heaved himself to his knees. He swayed to his feet with another lunge upward,
staggered, crouched over with the chair against his back and legs, knees bent
where they were tied to the chair. But he did not fall, the training and
balance of the trained athlete coming to his aid now.
Earlier, while they were overpowering
him, he had cursed as his hand, rasping against a corner of the table, had
grated on a rough, abrasive edge of the wood, which had in fact tore some skin
from his hand. Solo stared down at the ragged fused bit of wood and metal. Solo
grinned, the sweat running into his eyes. Then he lay down and went to work.
They had made one mistake in binding him.
After looping the rope firmly around his legs, they had tied it off to the rear
rung of the chair—as far from his hands and feet as they could get. Now that
was going to free him. He extended his legs until the chair, where he lay on
his side, rubbed against the roughened table leg, just under where it joined
the upper surface of the table itself.
It was hard, back-breaking work, scraping
the rope against the table. He was lying at an awkwardly cramped angle, so that
the labor of rubbing his legs against the abrasive spot put a terrific strain
on his lumbar muscles. Every ten minutes he had to rest, panting. After what
seemed like an eternity, he strained, almost without hope, and felt the torn
rope part.
For a precious moment he fell back on the
floor, hoarding and restoring his strength which had been so sorely spent.
Then, not daring to rest longer, he went to work again.
Quickly now, his legs free, he stood up
straight, the chair still tied only to his arms behind him. They had not been
stupid enough to use only one rope. He looked at Walter and Bruno. The two
Thrush men had not moved. Grinning to himself again, Solo repeated the
operation, but much more easily this time.
With his legs free, he was able to
maneuver his body to where the ropes on his hands and arms crossed the upper
part of the table leg.
Three minutes later he was free, with
nothing worse than two ugly scrapes on his hand.
He threw the chair away, and quickly felt
the lining of his jacket. He found, and drew out, a tiny flat needlelike
object. Then he found a flat, capsule-like object inside the thick cuff of his
trousers. The capsule-like, flat cylinder was wrapped in a tiny net of cotton.
He fitted the capsule into the miniature syringe, bent over Walter, and
inserted the needle into the Thrush man's arm.
He squeezed the fat capsule.
Walter jerked, shuddered, his limbs
moving in spasms. Then the Thrush man's eyes began to flutter. Suddenly they
came open. But Walter was not awake, not really.
Solo bent close to the ear of the Thrush
man. "Where did Maxine go? Agent Trent, where did she go and why?
Answer!"
Walter's eyes blinked, his body jerked,
his lips began to move. "Uh—No—I will not—" The Thrush man shuddered
convulsively. "I—she went to—Morlock. The country house; Salisbury—you
must capture him and make him—tell—"
Solo let the man fall back and threw away
his now useless miniature syringe of powerful truthserum and stimulant. Moments
later he was swimming in the icy water of the Thames. He reached the shore, a
wide flat of mud at low tide, and climbed up the embankment. It took him five
minutes to locate a telephone, and five more minutes to get the exact location
of Morlock The Great's house near Salisbury.
"Can I help now, Solo?"
Inspector Taylor asked from the far end of the line.
"Stay where you are," Solo
said. "If Illya can't get to me, he'll probably contact you. Tell him
where I've gone!"
Ten minutes after that a black car,
delivered to the bank of the Thames by a silent man in a business suit, raced
away toward the south and west toward Salisbury.
The silent man was an U.N.C.L.E. agent in
London. Section I (Communications and Security). The man driving the car was
Napoleon Solo—re-armed and anxious to find Maxine Trent and her men.
FIVE
FIVE MILES from the ancient cathedral
town of Salisbury, the magnificent spire of the cathedral itself out of sight
to the north, the black car slowed to ha halt five hundred yards down a country
lane from a big, gothic house. Behind the wheel, Solo looked at the silent
house through his infra-red binoculars.
What he saw made him slide silently from
his car and fade quickly into the thick hedgerow that bordered the country
land. They were there. Two black cars and at least seven Thrush men, wearing
their black uniforms and carrying ugly rifles with heavy, round infrared night
scopes.
Cautiously Solo moved closer. They, the
Thrush men, were deployed around the old house. The house itself was dark and
silent. Solo looked for Maxine Trent. He finally located her standing with two
Thrush chief guards near one of the two cars. They appeared to be planning
their attack.
Solo edged closer, his U.N.C.L.E. Special
ready, but cautious because there were too many of them. They seemed ready to
move. One of the two chief guards of Thrush stepped forward from the shelter of
the car toward where his men waited. He took two steps—and stopped.
High on the third floor of the gothic
house, on a small balcony, there was sudden flash and a great red glow seemed
to bathe the facade of the house in eerie red light. The Thrush attackers
stared upward.
The night was as bright as day with the
red glow.
On the small balcony there was a puff of
blue smoke.
A man stood on the balcony.
Solo recognized the satanic face of
Morlock The Great.
The midget-like figure with the oversized
head stood high on the balcony and laughed down at the gaping Thrush men.
The Thrush leader stared upward.
For a long minute nothing moved, nothing
happened but the weird laughter of the midget bathed in the red glow. Then
Maxine Trent shouted.
"There he is! Take him alive!"
As if galvanized by an electric shock,
the Thrush men leaped up and ran toward the house. They did not hesitate a
second the command of their superior far more powerful to them than any fear.
They ran up the steps of the old house—and fell in a hail of withering fire.
The Thrush men screamed. The red glow
went out on the balcony above. In the dark the Thrush men stumbled across the
porch and into the house. Inside there was more fire and more screaming in
pain.
Solo watched as a Thrush man ran back out
onto the steps of the old house.
"Empty! The place is empty!"
"Someone fired at us!" a Thrush
leader cried.
"No one! Automatic fire. Booby
trap!"
Solo saw the flash of blue light to the
left. The light flashed at a spot fifty yards from the house. A blue light
bright on a small hillock. Another puff of smoke, white this time, and Morlock
The Great stood on the hillock, laughing Maxine Trent cursed and shouted to her
surviving men.
The Thrush soldiers ran toward the small
hillock.
Solo watched. He was impressed by what he
knew had to be tricks. He had seen great magicians work before. But they were
impressive tricks. Even though he knew that this was Morlock's house and would
have been prepared, the trick of the smoke and lights was enough to almost
frighten him.
On the hillock, Morlock laughed. His
tiny, devilish figure mocked the running Thrush men.
As the Thrush soldiers reached the foot
of the hill they vanished in a series of explosions. Solo nodded. Mines.
Morlock had taunted the Thrush men into a small, private minefield.
The Thrush soldiers groaned, screamed.
Morlock The Great vanished from the
hillock.
Once more the tiny magician appeared,
this time on a tall stone two hundred yards from the house. A puff of red smoke
and the midget magician stood there.
No one pursued him.
Only Maxine Trent, safe behind the car,
was left to stand and stare at the distant figure. Morlock laughed once more,
and was gone.
Solo stepped out of the bushes and stood
behind Maxine Trent.
"You're having a hard night,
Maxine," Solo said.
The woman agent whirled, her violet eyes
flashing in the dark. She reached down, lifted her skirt to show her long,
magnificent leg. Solo saw the holster strapped to the shapely thigh.
"Ah, ah, Maxine!" Solo said,
his Special trained on her. "You're all alone now."
Maxine hesitated, smiled, straightened up
and looked around her hat the bodies of her men.
"So I am, Napoleon. But not really,
darling. I have you," Maxine said.
Solo grinned. "Correction. I have
you. Shall we go?"
Maxine shrugged. Solo motioned her into
the silent house. He stepped warily, watching for more of Morlock The Great's
little traps, and for the very possible return of the wily little magician
himself.
But inside the house all was silent.
There were no more traps, no sign of Morlock The Great. In fact, there was
nothing inside the house at all. Solo stared around slowly at the vast
emptiness. Even Maxine Trent blinked her violet eyes in a puzzled surprise.
Why would Morlock The Great come to an
empty house? And why have an empty house so well booby-trapped with automatic
weapons and mine fields?
* * *
THE GENTLE-FACED hunchback, Paul Dabori,
sat against the wall of the lead-lined storeroom deep under the great city of
London. The voice and footsteps outside had gone away without searching the
storeroom, and Illya listened as Dabori told his story.
"I was lonely, I suppose, Mr.
Kuryakin," Dabori said. "We are all lonely, we human beings, one way
or the other. But for a man like me—"
"You seem like a very good
man," Illya said quietly.
Dabori shrugged. "I was, I suppose,
feeling sorry for myself. I joined them. They said that since we who were
crippled, deformed, were shut out from the rest of the world, we had to make
our own world. I was full of self-pity then. I listened. It was, they told me,
a brotherhood and a literary society."
"And then you found that they were
building the atomic bomb shelters?" Illya said.
Dabori nodded. "Here, and under
Morlock The Great's house at Salisbury. I helped work on that shelter. They
have built them all over the world."
"Why?" Illya said grimly.
"Why are they building them? Just in case? To be sure to survive? That is
possible, but you don't think so, do you, Paul?"
"No. Morlock has a plan of some
kind, a plan that will be put into effect soon. Somehow it involves all those
robberies and the attacks where no one attacked."
"Soon?" Illya said.
"Very soon, I think."
Illya stood up in the hidden, lead-lined
storeroom. "Then we must get out of here. Tell me, have you seen another
prisoner?" And Illya described Solo.
Dabori shook his head. "No, no one
like that. But perhaps Morlock took him to the Salisbury house. Morlock is
there now himself."
"You know how to get there?"
Illya asked the hunchback.
"Yes," Dabori said. "But
we cannot go yet. They are still searching for you. We must wait."
"But not long," Illya said.
"Soon we'll have to take some action, Paul."
Dabori nodded. "I know. I am
ready."
In the dim light of the lead-lined room
Illya Kuryakin and the gentle hunchback listened and waited.
* * *
SOLO and Maxine Trent completed their
search of the house. In the front hall, with the bodies of two of her men, they
stood and considered what they had found.
"Nothing," Maxine said,
undisturbed by the bodies of her men. "Absolutely nothing."
"But wired for defense. Why?"
Solo said. "It's your turn to tell me what I want to know, Maxine. For
instance, there should be a cellar under this house, but there seems to be no
entrance into a cellar."
"I noticed the same thing. You think
the real part of this place is down below?"
"Why don't you tell me,
Maxine?" Solo said.
"Oh for God's sake, Napoleon, don't
you realize yet that we're not working with Morlock The Great! He just killed
eight of my men!"
Solo grinned, his Special still warily
trained on the beautiful Thrush agent. "With Thrush that could be a lover's
quarrel."
"For the last time, you fool, Thrush
is just as anxious to stop Morlock The Great as U.N.C.L.E is! Do you think we want some other organization getting in our way?"
"Not enough spoils to go around,
eh?" Solo said.
Maxine shrugged. "If you like, yes.
We in Thrush have no love for competitors. We have enough trouble with do-good
outfits like U.N.C.L.E. without having to worry about amateur
competitors."
Solo smiled. "Just what are you
suggesting?"
"That we pool forces! There, I said
it! Think of it, Napoleon—for once we can work together. You want to stop the
Cult, whatever it's up to, and so do we. You saw how much Morlock loves us! I
say we work together."
"Why should we? You want to know
what we know. What do you have to offer?" Solo said.
"Illya Kuryakin and how to save
him," Maxine said.
Solo watched the beautiful Thrush agent.
He did not rust her as far a s he could have thrown all of England. But if she
knew where Illya was! After all, it was obvious that she, and Thrush, were not
working with Morlock and his Cult this time.
"You know where Illya is?"
"I saw them take him, Napoleon, and
I know how to get into their London headquarters," Maxine said.
Solo grinned. "Then welcome,
partner."
Maxine laughed. "It has a nice
sound. And may I have my gun back?"
"On one condition," Solo said.
"Condition, Napoleon dear?"
"That I can put it back into its
holster."
"Napoleon, you do care!"
Smiling, Solo returned her small pistol
to its holster on her long, beautiful leg. Maxine laughed as Solo kissed her
lightly. He, too, laughed—he had taken the precaution of palming the bullets
from the clip before he returned the pistol.
"Shall we go to London?" Solo
said.
"Lead on, partner," Maxine
said.
ACT III: THE LAST SHALL BE FIRST
MAXINE TRENT lifted her skirt to climb up
out of the old sewer onto the ledge of dry stone. Solo followed her. Together
they stood in the dark far below London. Rats scurried against the ancient
stone walls, and ahead there was a door.
"That's it, Napoleon," Maxine
said. "One of our men located it last week."
"Where does it lead?"
"Into the old tunnels and corridors.
There are new corridors, but I think we can find a way through."
"Stay here," Solo said.
The agent inched along the stone ledge to
the old door. It was rusted and locked, but there was a trace of oil around the
lock. The door had been used. Solo took out a small strip of what looked like
foil and stuck it to the door next to the lock. The foil was self adhesive.
Solo polled a small metallic thread and jumped back.
The foil burst into an intense white
heat. The door glowed around the lock, melted, and when the white hot glow died
away in the dark sewer, a gaping hole had appeared in the metal around the
lock. Solo stepped forward and pushed the door open. He motioned to Maxine.
Together, Solo and Maxine stepped through
the door and into a short stone tunnel that led to a flight of stone steps
going upward. Carefully, they moved up the stairs in the pitch dark. The steps
did not go far, and came out in a low room that stank of slime and ancient
decay.
They crossed the low room and went
through an archway into another low stone room. The second room was low but
vast, its corners hidden in the dark. Solo flicked on his ring flashlight. The
ultra-powerful beam picked out all the corners of the vast room.
Rusted metal rings hung from the walls;
rusted metal cages littered the floor. Spikes that had once been sharp
protruded out from the walls. There was a cauldron and a brazier all turned to
dust at Solo's touch. What had once been skeletons lay on the floor, nothing
now but white dust.
"Things don't change much,"
Solo said. "It reminds me of a Thrush headquarters."
"Ah, ah, Napoleon dear. Remember,
we're partners; speak nicely about us," Maxine said.
"I'd rather speak nicely about how
we're going to get out of here," Solo said, his powerful miniature light
playing around the walls. "I don't see any way out, and no one's been in
here for centuries. There must be another way in; that door had been
oiled."
"Then we better find it,"
Maxine said.
They turned and retraced their steps to
the smaller stone room. As they passed out of the vast room into the smaller
one, Solo suddenly crouched and pulled Maxine down. His U.N.C.L.E. Special was
out. Maxine held her pistol.
Something moved along the right wall of
the smaller room. Solo and Maxine waited, watched. His light out, Solo crouched
with his Special trained on the wall. A Stone moved, a large stone.
The stone fell into the room.
Someone, a figure, came through the hole
in the wall. A second figure followed. The two figures turned to replace the
stone.
Solo switched on his miniature flashlight
ring.
The two strangers dove for the floor.
Solo and Maxine shone the light directly
on the two and stepped forward with their weapons.
* * *
DEEP beneath the city of London, in a
large, soundproof room lined with thick sheets of lead, the twelve men sat at
the long table and watched their leader. They were all deformed, disfigured
men, and their leader was Morlock The Great.
The tiny magician stood before a great
map of the world. His thin, delicate hands swept an arc in the air that took in
the whole world and the many red pins on the map. His eyes gleamed in his large
head.
"They are all completed. We are
ready. We will not wait now."
"And Kuryakin?" one of the men
at the table said.
"He does not matter. He and Dabori
cannot escape from her," Morlock said.
"Dabori perhaps has found a way. I
never trusted him," another man said.
"It does not matter!" Morlock
said. "If they escape it will be too late. We know they have not yet
escaped. I am telling the Inner Council, you men, that the day is at hand! We
move—tonight!"
The twelve men at the table looked at
each other, and their eyes glowed like the eyes of their leader. Morlock The
Great laughed a diabolical laugh that filled the large room where the Inner
Council of the Brotherhood held their secret meetings.
"They all want to stop us, but they
will not!" Morlock said. "After tomorrow the prophecy will be
fulfilled—we will inherit the whole Earth!"
Excitement ran through the room like an
electric current. The members of the Inner Council began to talk, to
congratulate their chief. Suddenly, there was a low buzz and a light over the
single door began to blink. Morlock pressed a button.
"Yes?" the tiny magician said.
"Report strangers entering the old
vaults from the sewer!"
"How many?" Morlock snapped.
"Two, sir. The detector shows that
they are armed."
"Very well. Deal with them!"
Morlock snapped, and then said, "No, wait. I will come and deal with them
myself."
The midget switched off his communicator.
His satanic features twisted into a crazy grin as he surveyed the members of
his Inner Council.
"As a precaution, we will find out
who they are and what they know. But, whoever they are, they will not stop us
now. Tonight, gentlemen! Tonight the morlocks take
over the world, as predicted long ago!"
In the large, secret room far below the
great city, there was a savage shout from all the leaders of the Cult
* * *
AS HE stepped toward the two figures on
the old stones, Napoleon Solo grinned. But he didn't feel as happy as he
looked.
"Really, Illya, you look silly lying
there," Solo said.
Illya raised his head. The small Russian
stood up and dusted himself off.
"What took you so long,
Napoleon?"
"I was delayed," Solo said,
"but I brought a friend. Step forward, Maxine."
Maxine Trent came into the light of the
tiny ring flashlight. The beautiful Thrush agent smiled at Illya.
The blond U.N.C.L.E. agent raised an
eyebrow.
"A friend, Napoleon?"
"In this case, apparently,"
Solo said, and explained the details of Thrush's participation in the affair.
"It should be an interesting
experience," Illya said as he eyed Maxine from under his lowered brows.
"I, too, have a friend. Paul Dabori is the man who sent the warning to
Interpol."
Illya recounted his experiences and the
four of them squatted in the dark, the light out now, to plan their next move.
Solo rubbed his chin.
"Atom bomb shelters," Solo said
slowly.
"That explains why the house in
Salisbury was so empty. A bomb shelter underneath it," Maxine said.
But Solo was not listening. He was
rubbing his chin, thinking. Now he looked at Illya and the morlock,
Paul Dabori. The hunchback waited eagerly to see what he could do.
"Atom bomb shelters," Solo said
again, "and robberies for money to stock them, probably. And
hallucinations that make men think they are being attacked."
Illya nodded. "Are you thinking the
same thing, Napoleon?"
"When you had the
hallucination," Solo said, "you thought Thrush was attacking
you."
"The enemy most on my mind,"
Illya said. "Yes. And those armored car guards thought they were being
robbed—what was most on their mind."
"And the Cult believes that they
will survive while the rest of the world goes under," Solo said.
There was a silence, and it was Maxine
Trent who finally spoke. Maxine had listened, and now she spoke.
"And they have built atom bomb
shelters. So it is clear that Morlock The Great intends to help his Cult
survive. He doesn't intend to wait, he's going to make the atom bombs
drop!"
Illya sighed. "It looks very much
that way. I'm afraid that rather than wait for us to kill each other off, he's
going to help us—by starting an atomic war!"
Dabori finished it. "And soon. I
know it is soon. They are worried that they will be discovered."
This time the silence was deeper. Maxine
Trent seemed lost in her own thoughts. Solo and Illya were seeing the horror of
what they had just said. Somehow, Morlock The Great intended to set the powers
of the world at war with each other—an atomic war in which the only survivors
would be the Cult itself, deep in its shelters. Illya moved.
"You brought weapons for us?"
Illya said.
"Of course," Solo said.
Solo hands the extra U.N.C.L.E. Special
he had brought to Illya, and handed Dabori the small pistol he carried as a
spare. Maxine drew her own pistol from the holster on her leg.
The four crawled back through the opening
in the wall into the inner corridor. They followed Dabori as the hunchback led
them back along the old stone corridors until they reached a lead door. Dabori
opened this door with a key he had stolen, and the four stepped through into
the new shelter-headquarters of the Cult.
TWO
AFTER A time, moving down the silent
concrete concrete corridors with their faintly whirring air-vents and lead
doors, they became aware of a strange silence. Dabori was the first to raise
his head. The hunchback was puzzled.
"We should have met guards. There
should be noise, some activity," Dabori whispered.
"How many men are down here?"
Solo asked, his voice low.
"Normally fifty who are the
regulars, and some fifty more who come and go. Morlock did not want too many of
us to vanish from the surface at one time. Most of the Cult hold down regular
jobs. Only a cadre of elite are permanently down below," Dabori explained.
They continued along the concrete
corridors, so silent they could have been buried beneath the Sahara Desert.
Illya was worried.
"Do you think Morlock could have
started his plan?" the blond Russian said.
"I don't know," Dabori
whispered. "He could have. I know it was to be soon."
"You mean you think they have all
gone to start whatever their plan is?" Maxine asked.
"It is a possibility," Illya
said. "We have no idea what the plan is."
"How can we find out?" Solo
spoke quietly to Dabori.
The hunchback shrugged. "The Inner
Council. They are the only ones who would know, and they will be very hard to
reach, very dangerous."
"Can you get us to them?" Illya
said.
"I can take you as far as I
know," Dabori said. "That is to a chamber I have seen them enter. The
chamber is not where they meet, but it must lead to where they meet. It is
always empty after they enter, and there must be some secret exit because they
do not come back out for a long time."
"Let's find out," Solo said.
Dabori nodded and, when they reached a
cross corridor in the maze of thick concrete tunnels and lead-lined rooms, led
them down the corridor to the right. They twisted and turned through the
catacomb of concrete. Still they met no one, heard no one. Maxine became
nervous.
"It's not right," The Thrush
agent said. "It's not natural to meet no guards, hear nothing,
Napoleon."
"Until we know better, let's be
thankful," Solo remarked.
"Unless we are too late," Illya
said grimly.
They moved on through the silent tunnels
with Illya's words in their minds. Already hell could be breaking loose above,
and they would be trapped down here—safe, but for how long? They would survive
the holocaust above, but there was not one of them who thought they would be
welcome guests of Morlock the Great.
"There," Dabori said.
They had reached a widening of the
corridor, a long, narrow room of benches and tables, obviously a kind of dining
hall, to be used during the long, lonely days of waiting for the surface to be
safe again. Doors were cut into the concrete walls. It was a small door to
their left that Dabori pointed to.
"Stand back," Solo said.
He placed another strip of heat foil on
the lock and pulled the metallic cord. The foil burst into white heat. The door
melted around the lock. The four hurried through into a small, empty room. Solo
indicated the four smooth walls.
"Look for a secret door," Solo
said.
The voice that answered was not one of
the other three. It was a voice from nowhere.
"Spare yourself, Mr. Solo," the
sardonic voice said. "I will show you where the door is."
There was a rumble of concrete and the
wall on the left slid, moved and there was a door leading into blackness. The
voice was faintly mocking.
"Voila,
gentlemen, and lady—the door!"
Illya crouched, let his eyes search the
walls around. There was nothing. Solo looked carefully for the source of the
voice. Maxine Trent held her pistol and looked form wall to wall. Only Dabori
did nothing. The hunchback stood there calmly. Unafraid, but aware that there
was nothing to be done.
The voice spoke. "You wish to see
me? That could be arranged, but what is the point, gentlemen? We have you now.
Look behind you."
They looked.
In the doorway through which they had
entered the small room there were a horde of shaggy-haired creatures whose eyes
seemed to glow in the dark.
"Take them!" the voice
commanded.
Illya and Solo raised their weapons.
There was a puff o smoke that instantly filled the room. Then all went black.
* * *
AT FIRST both Solo and Illya seemed to be
having the same dream. A dream filled with a face of the Devil himself bathed
in a red glow. Their most deadly Thrush enemies crowded behind the face of the
Devil and fired at them. The Thrush agents were small, tiny, and the face of
the laughing Devil filled their minds.
Then they became aware that they were
seated on a damp floor, and the face of the Devil became the satanic face of
Morlock The Great.
The magician was not alone. Behind him
his deformed, shaggy-haired guards held very efficient-looking machine pistols.
"So, gentlemen, we meet at last. Ah,
you have caused me a certain trouble. That little affair in Santa Carla was
most inopportune. We had to move our location."
"You should have told us it would be
inconvenient," Illya said.
The tiny magician laughed. "Bravado,
gentlemen? I expected more from you. Your Mr. Morgan led me to admire
U.N.C.L.E. Most resourceful, that one. No one else had ever penetrated out
little fortress down here." Morlock looked at Dabori. "Not counting
traitors, of course. Ah, Dabori, I was worried about you. Never enough hate for
the healthy and handsome. No gall."
"I am not insane," Dabori said
softly.
The brilliant eyes of the tiny magician
flared as he looked again at the hunchback. Dabori did not flinch. He stared
back at his former leader.
"Insane," Dabori said again,
softly.
Morlock drew a deep breath, smiled.
"It is always the excuse of the weak and faint-hearted. So you have thrown
in with the doomed ones, very well. I have no more time to waste with any of
you. I don't suppose you will tell me just how much you know, how much your
organizations know of my plans."
"We won't," Solo said.
Morlock nodded his grotesquely enlarged
head. "I thought not. Well, I leave you now. This prison, you note, is not
within my shelter. After it is all over perhaps the death form above will not
reach here for some hours, even days. You will have time to think about being
almost alone as you die."
Morlock turned to go. Suddenly, Maxine
Trent leaped up. None of them had been tied. The beautiful Thrush agent stepped
toward Morlock. The shaggy-haired guards rushed forward. Maxine laughed.
"Don't be a fool, Morlock! You can't
hope to succeed alone. But with that powder of yours, the powder that causes
those men to fire at nothing, we in Thrush could help you gain the rule of the
world!"
Morlock held his guards back. He smiled
his sardonic smile at Maxine.
"Ah, Thrush! So, the lion and the
wolf lie together against me? Thrush and U.N.C.L.E. I must be far more powerful
than I even dreamed."
Maxine stepped closer to the magician.
"Listen to me, Morlock. U.N.C.L.E. knows essentially nothing. I brought
them here. Thrush can offer you real power, true mastery inside a perfect
organization. U.N.C.L.E. has no idea of what your powder can do."
"And do you?" Morlock said
coldly.
"We know that in our hands it would
bring the world to its knees. Don't be a fool," Maxine said. Why destroy
the world when you can rule it by the threat of destruction? Why rule over a
burned out cinder? Bring them under your thumb. Only Thrush can help you. With
that powder we can destroy all their defenses, take over, rule—"
Morlock's eyes flashed insanely.
"They will die! All of them, the beautiful and the healthy. All the pigs
who glory in the arrogance of their normalcy! We! We deformed and cast out will
rule! We are the future! Our Brotherhood!"
Dabori struggled to his feet. In the pain
of his twisted body the hunchbacks' voice was loud and clear.
"No! The sane do not envy. Our
bodies may be twisted, but we do not wallow in self-pity! We face the world as
what we are—men! Only an insane few hate as you hate.!
"You can lead, join Thrush!"
"Enough!" Morlock thundered.
The grotesque magician sneered at Maxine. "So beautiful and so doomed! I
will deal with no one, work with no one. Thrush is no better than U.N.C.L.E.
you will all be destroyed!"
With a curse, Maxine suddenly bent and
tore off her left shoe. She leaped toward Morlock. The rubber lift, and a
sheath of leather, came away from her spike heel and a thin metal blade
gleamed.
The Morlock guards tried to aim their
weapons. But Maxine had Morlock himself between her and the guards. The guards
milled. Morlock shouted. Maxine cursed. Illya and Solo leaped to their feet.
Dabori grappled with a guard.
In the wild melee, Maxine nearly reached
Morlock. But a guard caught her arm and she slashed at him. Her sharpened heel
stabbed into the guard, who screamed. But he had saved Morlock. Other guards
forced Maxine down.
At the instant Maxine was stopped, Illya
suddenly hurled himself forward and tackled morlock around the ankles. The
small Russian made no further attempt to attack. On the ground, with Morlock
also on the ground in front of him, Illya smiled.
"She almost got you. I'd rather save
you for an insane asylum," Illya said.
Morlock struggled up. His guards herded
them all back now. The macabre magician stared down at Illya.
"So, you saved me from her? I thank
you, but it will not help you. Tie them up! They cannot escape, but let us not
take any further chances with them."
The guards roughly tied up the four. Then
the damp stone room was empty. In the silence Maxine breathed heavily. The
beautiful Thrush agent glared at them all.
"You could have helped me, you
idiots! Now look at us!"
Solo laughed. "Helping you, Maxine,
is a dangerous game. No, Morlock or Thrush, that's no choice."
"Do you have any other
choices?" Maxine screamed.
"Well," Solo said,
"perhaps we do."
And he showed his fee hands to them all.
In one hand was a tiny razor in the shape of a fingernail. His ropes were
neatly cut through.
THREE
IN THE silence of the slim room, Solo
stood up and bent to use his fingernail razor on the ropes that bound his feet.
Then he freed Illya and Dabori. He replaced the innocent seeming
fingernail-razor in his pocket.
"They tied us up too fast. Usually
they would see the razor, but I thought they might miss it this time,"
Solo said.
"I always said you can think very
well at times," Illya said.
"Thank you," Solo said.
"My pleasure," Illya said.
"But what do w do now?"
Solo looked around the dark room.
"Well, I would say we find a way out."
Dabori limped slowly around the walls.
"If we can escape from this room, I think I can get us out. But I do not
know this particular room. I must find my bearings."
"Then we better get out of this
room," Solo said.
"That seems reasonable," Illya
said. "What do we have?"
"Well, they left me the heat
foil," Solo said.
Illya shook his head. "There isn't a
door, just a stone slab. This is an ancient room. What about explosives?"
"I've got my belt," Solo said.
"But if we blow the door, we don't know who is outside. It won't do us any
good to blow out and walk right into their hands."
"Then we better get them into the
room," Illya said.
"Perhaps some smoke?" Solo
suggested.
"That might work. They don't care
about us, but it could make them curious, Napoleon," Illya agreed.
"Smoke then," Solo said,
"and a small explosion. Let's have your cuff-link. You better keep the
other, and I've got mine."
Illya removed one of his tiny cuff-link
bombs and handed it to Solo. The agent took the bomb and set it as far away
from the stone slab entrance as possible. Then he crossed the room to the slab
and bent down. He felt in front of the crack beneath the slab.
"Draft blowing out," Solo said.
"It should work. When I drop the smoke bomb everyone start yelling as loud
as he can. Illya, you get ready to set off the bomb when they come in."
"Check," Illya said.
Illya went to the small cuff-link bomb.
Solo stepped back from the stone entrance slab. He looked around once to be
sure all was ready, then pulled off his tie clip and hurled it to the floor
directly in front of the slab.
A thick cloud of smoke billowed up
instantly in front of the stone slab. In the dark dungeon Solo, Illya and
Dabori began to shout, yelling, as if in frantic panic.
For a moment nothing happened. The thick
smoke choked them as they shouted, but the draft from the old dungeon was
sucking the smoke under the slab.
Then there was noise outside, and the
slab began to swing inward. Four armed guards ran through the opening into the
slimy dungeon.
Illya set off the tiny cuff-link bomb.
The explosion rocked the ancient stone
room. Two of the morlocks fell, blown down by the
explosion as the limped in. Solo grappled with the third, and Dabori leaped on
the fourth.
Solo chopped down his morlock
with a single karate blow to the throat.
The hunchback wrestled his man to the
floor. The morlock attempted to use his machine
pistol. Dabori wrested it from him and smashed the morlock
across the head. The morlock lay still. Dabori stood
up.
"Quick!" Solo cried. "Get
their weapons and let's go!"
Illya, Solo and Dabori scooped up the
four pistols. Solo carried two weapons. The three men dashed for the open stone
slab. Two more morlocks appeared in the opening. In
complete silence, Solo and Illya leaped on them and clubbed them down with the
machine pistols.
No more morlocks
came.
"Which way?" Solo said.
Dabori peered out through the opening.
The eyes of the hunchback glistened.
"Left! I recognize the
corridor."
"Now," Illya said, "before
more guards come."
The three men stepped into the opening.
Behind them there was a loud swearing. Maxine Trent, where she was still tied
like a bundle, swore at them.
"Cut me loose, damn you!"
Maxine shouted.
Solo turned, grinned. "Sorry Maxine
dear. You didn't turn out to be a very helpful partner. I think you'll be cosy
right where you are."
Maxine squirmed in her bonds.
"Napoleon! You wouldn't!"
"But I would," Solo grinned.
"Have patience. We'll probably be back for you."
"Napoleon!" Maxine screamed.
"Damn you! I'll kill you for this! I'll—"
The beautiful Thrush agent squirmed in
her bonds, cursed, flopped on the floor like a furious seal. Solo laughed as he
went out through the opening into the dim light of the corridor. He followed
Illya and Dabori along the corridor at a slow trot, the hunchback limping
valiantly to keep the pace.
Behind them Maxine's curses echoed like
the wail of an outraged banshee.
FOUR
THE THREE men moved as fast as Dabori
could trot. The hunchback led them down the new corridors with the softly
purring air vents. Again they saw no guards, but this time they could hear
noise and voices somewhere in the distance toward where the long dining room
was.
"It is a conference," Dabori
said. "That is where they meet. And that is why we have met no
guards."
"How much farther before we can get
out of the new part?" Solo said.
"Not far, but they will discover our
escape at any—"
The sudden clanging of the alarms drowned
the next words of the hunchback. Their escape had been discovered.
They began to run, Solo helping Dabori
along the dim corridors. Two morlocks appeared from a
side corridor. Solo and Illya fired at the same instant. The morlocks
went down.
They jumped over the fallen enemy and ran
on; no more need for care or silence.
But the search for them was at the other
end of the secret shelter. Once they heard the boom of Morlock The Great's
voice from the distance, urging his men to find them, but they saw no more
guards before they reached another door that led into the old dungeons and the
sewer.
Dabori had a key to this door, too.
"I think they will be watching the
other way," Dabori said. "They do not know about this way."
The door led into a storeroom piled with
food for the survival of the morlocks, and, across the
room, behind giant cases of canned water, Dabori indicated a loose stone in the
wall. Together they pulled it out, crawled through, and replaced the stone.
They were in another low room that had
not been seen by human eyes for centuries. The dust lay a foot deep on the
stone floor. Dabori pointed to the far end where there was a low archway. They
went through the archway and down a circular stone staircase. At the bottom
there was the last door.
Solo burned the door open and they
emerged again in the sewers of London. Ten minutes later they came out into the
mud at the edge of the river. The Thames stretched dark in the night. Together,
the three climbed up the embankment to dry land.
"We must get the police!"
Dabori said.
Illya shook his head. "No time now.
With us loose, Morlock will move even faster. We don't know what he plans or
where it will happen."
Dabori was desperate. "But what can
we do then? We must do something. We are out, but.. ."
Solo smiled in the night. "We follow
Morlock, right, Illya?"
Dabori blinked under his mop of shaggy morlock hair. "Follow? But how—"
"I think Illya has arranged that,
eh, Illya?" Solo said.
"Of course," the small Russian
said. "Come on."
Illya led them through the streets and
past the now dark and silent pub with its blazoned sign, The
End Of The World. When they reached a building a block past the public
house, Illya stopped and looked at Solo.
"There?" Illya said.
His hand pointed to one of the ruins
still left from the second world war. It had been a church, and was now only
rubble and jagged walls against the night sky. Solo nodded.
"By distance from the river, and
general location, that should be right above the Cult shelter," Solo
agreed.
"It would be just the place they would
pick," Illya said. "I don't imagine anyone in the whole city knows
what is down there. And we don't have any time to waste, do we? Napoleon, you
better get us a helicopter, and quite fast. I'm getting a signal!"
In the hands of Illya Kuryakin a
miniature gauge had appeared. Paul Dabori looked at the gauge, and at Illya.
The gauge had a white dial with black numbers and a black pointer. Closed, it
seemed no more than a cigarette lighter, and there was a small receptacle
attached that was empty now.
Illya smiled. "When I tackled
Morlock, I managed to plant the sensor on his trouser leg. A radioactive
sensor. This gauge picks it up as far away as fifteen miles. You see, we don't
know where he is going, so I thought we would probably have to follow
him."
"The gauge is moving!" Dabori
said.
"Yes," Illya said.
"Morlock is coming out."
Bent over his ring transmitter-receiver,
Solo called for help. "London Control, this is Sonny. Come in, London
Control. Sonny and Bubba, Mayday. Come in, London Control!"
The ring seemed to speak. "London
Control. Go ahead, Sonny."
"Request helicopter. Repeat. Request
helicopter immediately," and Solo gave the location.
"Helicopter at the river near The End Of The World. Roger, Sonny. Helicopter already in
area; will be there in two minutes!"
"Over and out," Solo said.
Illya watched his gauge. "He's
out!"
The three men ducked down in the shelter
of a doorway. From the ruins of the church across the street four men appeared
as if by magic. Three were morlocks, armed and wary,
and the fourth was Morlock The Great himself. The four walked quickly to a long
black car that suddenly glided down the street.
Solo pointed upward. "There!"
The helicopter circled the area, keeping
well away until the black car had pulled away and vanished toward the west.
Then the helicopter swooped down toward the river. Illya, Solo and Dabori
hurried down the dark city street to the river. The helicopter floated on the
river.
"Paul," Illya said to Dabori,
"this time you must stay here. Watch the old church until we get
back."
Dabori nodded. The hunchback stepped back
and smiled at Illya and Solo as the two agents waded through the mud and swam
to the helicopter. Aboard, the helicopter lifted off at once.
"Where to?" the pilot said.
Illya looked at his gauge. "West,
about fifty miles an hour, make a zigzag and stay ten miles back. I'll guide
you."
"Roger," the pilot said.
The helicopter swung off to the west
across the great city. Illya and Solo bent close over the gauge that tracked
Morlock The Great.
ACT IV: NOT WITH A BANG BUT A SCREAM
THROUGH THE dark English night the chase
continued. Hours had passed and still the dial of Illya's gauge showed Morlock
and his men driving west. The car, some ten miles ahead, was driving fast. In
the helicopter, by the light of the instrument panel, Solo and Illya bent over
a map.
"He's heading in the general
direction of his Salisbury house," Solo said.
"Where he most surely has another
atom bomb shelter," Illya pointed out.
"But how does he plan to start a war
out here?" Solo said.
"The naval base at Portsmouth?"
Illya said.
"Not near enough."
"Some installation at
Southampton?"
"Possibly, but—" Solo began.
"He's turning off!" Illya said,
his eyes on his gauge.
The dial on the gauge indicated that Morlock
The Great had turned his car and was not heading sharply north. The pilot swung
the helicopter in pursuit.
The first faint grey of dawn was just
tinging the eastern sky when the pilot suddenly spoke.
"You say he's out to start a
war?" the pilot said.
"We think so," Illya said.
"Then I think I know where he's
going," the pilot said. "on your map. You see the town of
Colingbrane?"
"Yes," Illya said.
"Well, it won't show on your map,
but there's an IRBM missile base at Colingbrane. According to our information,
the missiles are hot, are aimed at major Soviet cities!"
"Then that's it!" Solo said.
"How close is Morlock?"
"A few miles from the town,"
Illya said, looking at both his gauge and the map.
"But how does he figure on starting
anything?" the pilot said. "Those missiles don't go without a call on
the hot line from the top. The base has world-wide communications and missile
tracking. They can't be surprised, and they can't fire without clearance from
the top. Only the general has control of the firing button."
"Foolproof?" Illya said, his
voice a question.
"I'd say so," the pilot said.
"No," Illya said. "Nothing
is foolproof, because there are always fools. In everything there must be a
human element, no matter how small, and what one human can make almost perfect,
another can always destroy by locating the tiniest flaw."
"Well—" the pilot began.
"Illya!" Solo warned, pointed
down to the gauge in the blond Russian's hand.
The gauge showed that Morlock had
stopped. The helicopter was closing in rapidly.
"Set down right on top of
them!" Illya snapped.
The two agents prepared their weapons,
leaned out the windows of the lowering helicopter. A very faint grey light
revealed the black car parked below at the edge of a high fence. Beyond the
fence there was nothing but houses and trees and small hills.
But the trained eyes of Solo and Illya
saw that the houses inside the high fences were not houses. The trees were
newly planted. The small hills were not hills but mounds covered with sod.
That was all they had time to see. As the
helicopter swooped down, hovered over the car, morlocks
came out into the open. Exposed, in the open, and stupidly fearless, they
raised their weapons to fire.
They never fired.
Illya leaned out of the copter, dropped a
small cylinder that exploded with a silent puff. The gas spread incredibly
fast, and the morlocks slumped to the earth, asleep.
"Set us down," Illya said to
the pilot.
The helicopter touched down just outside
the fence. The fence, the two agents knew, would be electrified. They took
their tools and weapons and turned to run toward the fence.
Solo instructed the pilot. "They'll
have picked you up on their radar. Take off, but stay around. Let them catch
you a mile or so away. Don't talk for a half an hour; that should give us time.
If it doesn't, it won't matter by then."
"You are so encouraging,
Napoleon," Illya said.
"A realist, my Russian friend. Come
on."
The helicopter took off. Already they
could see two jet fighters approaching high in the dawn sky. Solo and Illya,
hidden in the grass, watched as the jets swooped in and forced the copter to
land again a mile away.
Then they moved off along the fence.
The base was a friendly base, and the
soldiers on guard would be their soldiers, but the soldiers would not know
this, and the two U.N.C.L.E. agents did not have time to convince them. At the
fence they went to work.
The fence was electrified and wired for
alarm. Swiftly they attached special circuit loops to the wires they planned to
cut so that no circuit would be broken. Then they shunted off the wires they
would cut. Using insulated cutters and gloves, the cut just two wires, and
squeezed through without touching the fence again.
Inside, they moved at a trot through the
dawn light. The gauge in Illya's hand led them unerringly across the missile
base, among the camouflaged silos, toward wherever Morlock The Great was
working his deadly plan.
Twice they had to shoot guards with their
sleep darts. The soldiers fell without a sound and the two agents moved on. The
gauge led them directly to what looked like a simple English country house.
There were two guards at the door. Illya and Solo crept closer.
The two guards did not move. They were
dead.
"Morlock," Illya said.
"Yes, and that means he's
inside," Solo said.
Without saying any more to show their
thoughts that even now they could be too late, Illya and Solo entered the
building and moved along the dim dawn hallways. They found deserted offices,
empty halls, silent rooms.
"Even at dawn the base should be
active," Illya said.
"Below?" Solo said.
"That's where the control would be."
"And where Morlock is," Illya
said, pointing to his gauge.
They followed the gauge until they
located the heavy door that led down into the bowels of the earth where the
heart of the missile base would be. The door was locked. It was an extra-heavy
door, made of some strong metal. Illya Kuryakin and Napoleon Solo looked at
each other.
"Alloy steel, from the look of
it," Solo said.
"Will our thermite melt it?"
Illya said.
"I don't know. We may have to blow
it."
"Try the thermite. We can't warn
Morlock," Illya said.
Solo pressed the foil to the door over
the lock, pulled the metal fuse. The white-hot glow filled the dawn hallway.
When the foil burned out there was s
hole, but the door was still locked.
"Again," Illya said.
The second foil glowed in the dim dawn
light of the silent corridor. The hole in the alloy steel door grew deeper,
wider, and, then, was through. The door swung silently open.
Illya and solo faced a small
antechamber—and a second door!
"Elevator," Illya said.
"But there has to be a stair
also," Solo said. "They wouldn't have only one way down. Electrical
systems can fail."
"There," Illya pointed to a
flat panel that had a button beside it, an emergency stairway.
This door was much thinner and the
thermite bit through with dispatch. The door opened and Illya and Solo plunged
quickly down a narrow, winding staircase. At the bottom there was another steel
door—but this door was open!
They went through and found themselves on
a kind of balcony—a circular gallery that ran around the walls above a large
room. They looked over the edge at the room below.
The sight that met their eyes made them
stare in horror.
TWO
MASKS!" ILLYA barked.
The two agents quickly put on the small
gas masks they carried for just such an emergency. Wearing the masks, they
peered down at the scene on the floor below.
The room was the central control of the
IRBM missile base. A giant illuminated plastic map covered the far end of the
room. The most sophisticated tracking instruments lined the left wall—radar,
DEW Line relays, telemetric relays from all across the world. A long table
filled the center of the room. A row of telephones was at the right—the red
telephone standing out like some malignant monster.
But it was not the room itself that
chilled the U.N.C.L.E. agents. It was the men in the room—the frantic men.
At the giant map enlisted men with long
pointers were tracking the moving lights that indicated the incoming enemy
missiles detected by the tracking instruments. The men at the map were wild
with excitement, shouting, screaming out the progress of the enemy. A mad, wild
excitement mixed with a thick odor of fear.
At the tracking instruments the operators
were equally excited, calling out the blips on the radar, relaying the messages
of the reports from across the world. The enemy missiles were pouring in all
over the world, were being tracked by the radar in the room, by the radar at
other installations, by the Distant Early Warning line far up in Canada. The
operators on the machines shouted their progress in mounting panic.
"A thousand miles!"
"Nine hundred!"
"Closing in on England now—five
hundred miles!"
"Closing on Washington!"
"Four hundred miles!"
At the long table officers, pale and
anxious, sat with their portfolios open, staring at the map and at the radar
alternately like the audience at a tennis match.
There was fear on their faces, but there
was also determination. Clear on the faces of all the officers was the absolute
determination that, destroyed though they would be, they would do their final
duty and take the enemy to destruction with them.
And at the red telephone there was one
man. A man with a greater look of determination on his face than any one else
in the madhouse of the room. A man wearing the uniform of a general. A man with
his hand on the red telephone.
A man who, as Illya and Solo watched,
heard the telephone ring.
There was a silence, sudden as death, in
the control room.
The general picked up the red telephone.
"Yes sir. I know, sir. In five
minutes they'll know what they started."
The general lowered the red telephone and
turned to face the room, where the men at the map still followed the progress
of the incoming missiles, where the radar men tracked the enemy, where the
communications men received the reports from the rest of the world, where
officers waited for the command to fire their own missiles.
Only—
There were no lights moving on the giant
map.
There were no blips on the radar screens.
There were no messages on the instruments
relaying form other bases.
The red telephone had not rung.
In the room, Illya and Solo saw, only the
men were active, were moving—the instruments and the map were dark and silent.
And, unseen in a distant corner, was the
small black-cloaked, satanic figure of Morlock The Great!
In the air was the diabolical powder
thrown by the insane magician.
In the silent room nothing happened, but
the men in the room, frantic, saw it all happening in some giant hallucination.
The general walked to the red button that
would fire all his missiles into the heart of the Soviet Union.
The general took his key from his pocket
to unlock the red fire button.
Illya and Solo saw that there was no time
to bring the frantic soldiers from the nightmare. Taking careful aim, they both
fired at once.
The sleep darts struck the general, who
gasped once and collapsed on the floor.
An officer, seeing the general fall, ran
forward and reached for the key.
Solo shot him in the neck. He collapsed,
asleep.
In the room pandemonium broke loose.
Morlock The Great, crouched in his
corner, was cursing, firing at the two agents now. Illya tossed a sleep-gas
cylinder, and another. The gas filled the room.
Men fell all across the room.
One more officer made a frantic last
attempt to unlock the red fire button—and fell to the floor before he could.
In the room there was now complete
silence.
The men all slept.
The machines that had been silent were
still silent.
The red fire button was still locked, and
the red telephone stood silent.
Illya and Solo stood up on the balcony.
It was over. There would be no atomic war today. But tomorrow?
"Where is he?" Solo said.
They both looked to where Morlock The
Great had been firing at them. The spot was empty now. Behind the place, in the
steel walls, a door stood open, a door into a black hole.
"The elevator!" Illya cried.
"He was standing at the elevator. He got away!"
"Then we better get him!" Solo
said.
Illya pulled out his tracking gauge. The
dial showed that Morlock The Great was above them somewhere, above and moving
away.
The two agents did not wait to explain to
the general or his men. That could wait. When the general and his men woke up,
the effects of the diabolical powder would have worn off. Then there would be
time for explanations.
Now Illya and Solo had a man to catch.
They raced back up the stairs and out into the bright sun of morning.
THREE
THE MISSILE base was still quiet and
undisturbed. All the action below had not ruffled the surface. But already men
were moving, the day shift getting ready to take over the endless job of doing
nothing but wait for a disaster that, if it happened, none would be likely to
survive. An endless, terrible job, where a man could not even hope for action
since, when action came, it would be the end.
Illya and Solo moved as swiftly as they
could and still remain unseen. They checked the dial on their tracking gauge
and saw that Morlock was apparently heading straight back to his car. The
magician seemed to need no help, could move unseen wherever he wished. Illya
and Solo trotted toward the same spot.
Then they were seen!
But the soldiers who converged on them
did not fire. It was clear at once that the soldiers knew who they were, and
that they were friends.
A jeep raced up. In it was the helicopter
pilot and four officers.
"The jet guys forced me down. I got
a going over, but I finally convinced these boys to call 'Washington direct and
we're all cleared. What happened."
Illya and Solo explained. Two of the
officers ran off toward the control center. The other two waited. Illya checked
his gauge.
"He's in his car, moving away fast.
Come on; we'll have to borrow the jeep."
The two officers, armed, the pilot, and
Illya and Solo, roared off in the jeep. The gauge of the tracking instrument
showed Morlock moving fast, about four miles ahead. They passed where the black
car had been. The four morlocks still lay asleep.
"He's heading for his house,"
solo said as he looked at the tracking gauge.
"Then we had better get there with
him," Illya said.
But they did not make it. At the old
gothic house five miles from Salisbury the car was parked, but there was no
sign of Morlock The Great. Solo looked at Illya.
"Below? In the shelter?"
Illya shook his head, studied his dial.
"No. The gauge shows that he is over there, to the left about a
mile."
They all turned to look. The land was
flat in that direction, and there was nothing in sight. Not a house, not a
trace of a human being.
"The gauge is working. He has to be
out there."
"Let's find out, then," Solo
said.
The five men moved at a fast walk out
toward where the gauge said they would find Morlock The Great. When they were
still a half a mile from the spot, a small aircraft appeared on the flat land.
Its motor was running. Before the five men could run to the spot, the small
plane raced down its runway and rose into the air. Illya looked at his gauge.
It showed that Morlock was in the plane.
"He's gone," Illya said.
Solo bent over his ring radio.
"London Control! Come in, London Control, Sonny here. Code One!"
Instantly the ring answered. "London
Control, Code One, all facilities alert."
"Morlock The Great escaped in a
light plane. No destination known, but probably London. Notify police,
Interpol, and organize an intercept. Alert Mr. Waverly in New York. Sonny and
Bubba returning to London."
Solo clicked off, and the five men
returned to the jeep. A half an hour later they were in the helicopter again,
flying toward London.
* * *
IN THE RARE London sunny day, Solo and
Illya approached the ruined old church that stood above the underground complex
of the Cult. The tracking gauge in Illya's hand showed that, somewhere far
below, Morlock The Great was still in the city. Solo looked for their friend,
Paul Dabori. The hunchback was not in sight.
"He should have been here,"
Solo said.
"Yes, but we have more important
problems," Illya said. The blond Russian nodded towards the ruins of the
church. "There is something odd over there."
Illya led the way across the street and
into the ruins of the old church. There was a clear space in the rubble that
had not been there before. Somehow, the rubble itself seemed to have moved.
"The rubble was camouflage,"
Illya said. "Real rubble and bricks on a movable platform."
In the center of the clear space that had
not been there before, a large slab of stone lay heavy and flat. The altar
stone, but not where it had been. Where it had been was now a gaping hole in
the earth.
"The stone was under the
rubble," Solo said.
"It must work electronically. Much
too heavy to be moved any other way."
The two agents surveyed the hole in the
ground that led downward—a flight of narrow stone steps.
"This they didn't build," Illya
said. "It's an old hideaway, built under the altar."
Solo took a breath. "Well, he's down
there. Shall we wait for Mr. Waverly and help?"
"We missed him at Salisbury. I don't
think we have time to wait," Illya said.
Solo checked his Special. "Let's go
then."
The two agents started down the stairs
into the ancient hideaway under the altar.
At first it was pitch dark. Then, as
their eyes became accustomed, they saw that they were indeed in a very old
stone room. The followed the homing signal to a blank wall. Solo felt carefully
around. Four feet from the floor there was a tiny projection. The projection
was metal and not at all ancient.
Solo pulled it. The wall slid silently
open. The two agents looked at a shaft. Illya peered over the edge. Far below
there seemed to be a dark object. Cables ran down the shaft.
"Elevator, at the bottom,"
Illya said.
"If we bring it up we'll alert
them," Solo said.
"Then I expect we shall have to go
down to it," Illya said.
With no more words, Kuryakin swung out on
the cables and began to slide down. Solo followed. The two men slid carefully,
breaking themselves to prevent their hands being burned raw by friction.
At the bottom they crouched on the top of
the elevator car. Silently, Illya opened the roof hatch. The car below was
empty. They lowered themselves in and pressed the open button. A long, darkened
corridor stretched before them. One of the new concrete bomb shelter corridors.
Once again, all was silent.
They left the elevator and moved along
the dim corridor. The forced air vents hummed above their heads. Illya watched
his gauge, letting it lead them closer and closer to Morlock The Great.
"The left corridor," Illya
said.
The turned down the left corridor.
"Now right," Illya said.
It was at the end of this right corridor
that they first heard the sound. A distant rumbling like a powerful engine,
and, below the rumbling a sound like the sea far off on a stormy day. Solo held
up his hand. They both listened.
"What do you think it is?"
Illya said.
"A motor, real powerful motors,
and—" Solo said.
"And voices, a lot of voices!"
Solo nodded. The rumbling of motors, and
the sound that was many voices, came no closer. But even as they listened in
the dim corridor, two morlocks suddenly appeared from
a door in the wall in front of them.
The morlocks,
hurrying, and the two agents saw each other at the same time.
The morlocks
were too slow.
Illya and Solo stepped over their bodies
and went on down the corridor. They had used sleep darts and there had been no sound.
But Illya stopped, looking at his gauge.
"We're going away!"
Kuryakin turned and retraced his steps.
When he reached the door the two morlocks had come
from he stopped again. He pointed at the door.
"In there, Napoleon. But not
close."
Solo stepped past and opened the door.
A narrower, brighter corridor led
downward at a sharp slant. As the two agents moved silently along this
different-looking passage, the sound of engines and voices grew louder. The two
agents nodded to each other. At least it was becoming clear that they were
going in the right direction.
"From the sound of it," Solo
whispered, "they may all be up ahead."
"We'll need the sleep-gas bombs
again," Illya said.
"And a little luck. 'Dabori said
there could be a hundred," Solo said.
The passage continued downward. A chill
grew in the draft of air that was now coming along the passage.
"This passage connects to
outside!" Solo said.
"Morlock would have an escape route,
Napoleon," Illya said.
The voices seemed very close now, and the
throb of powerful engines. Then, suddenly, Illya stopped again. He stared down
at his gauge.
"We've passed him again," Illya
said.
The blond agent returned up the passage
and stopped at a spot where there was nothing at all—blank wall on either side,
and smooth floor and ceiling. Illya narrowed his eyes and began to feel the
walls.
"Here!" Illya whispered.
"Be ready! The gauge says he's very close, right behind this wall. I feel
a lever."
Illya pulled the lever and a wall slid
open A very narrow opening, and on the other side only darkness. The two agents
peered in.
The shouts came loud from the end of the
main passage. From both ends of the passage, the morlocks
were roaring in fury and rushing toward them. There was no time to hesitate.
"Inside!" Illya cried.
The two agents dashed through the small
opening in the side wall—and stepped out into space.
With cries of surprise, Illya and Solo
fell down through the pitch dark.
FOUR
STUNNED, the two agents lay on what
seemed to be a dirt floor. Nothing moved in the dark. The only sound was the
sound of motors not far away, and the rumbling sound of morlock
voices.
Solo was the first to revive. He sat up
and switched on his miniature ring-flashlight. They were, he saw, in a deep
pit. The floor was dirt, but the sides were stone. Above, far above, the
ceiling was stone, and halfway up was the black shape of the opening they had
been so cleverly forced through.
Illya's voice spoke beside Solo.
"Look!"
"What?"
"Shine it left, on the floor,"
Illya said.
Solo shined the light. In the center of
the pit-like room where they lay on the dirt there was a small metal pillar,
like a receptacle for burning incense.
It stood only two feet high and had a
flat top. On the flat top was a tiny object.
The two men looked at the object.
"The homer," Illya said.
"It's the device I attached to Morlock The Great's cuff."
There was a loud, mocking laugh.
It came from above, from the opposite
side of the pit from where they had plunged down. Solo shone his lights up. As
he did so light flooded the entire pit from spotlights up in the ceiling. The
two agents blinked in the bright glare.
The sardonic laugh came again.
On a wide ledge halfway up the sheer
stone walls they saw once again the tiny, grotesque figure of Morlock The
Great. The magician stared down at them.
"You did very well, gentlemen. I
underestimated you badly. But, then, you now have underestimated me. I admit I
was stupid to let your plant that device on me, but you were stupid to think
that I would not detect it in the end. So, now here we are."
"And without an atomic war,"
Solo pointed out.
Morlock laughed, his over-large head
shaking on his skinny midget body. "True. I failed this time. But I have
you. I will not fail next time, but for you two I fear there will be no next time.
I do not intend to make the same error again—the error of leaving you alive
behind me, I mean."
"We are not alone," Illya said
coldly.
"U.N.C.L.E. ? Yes, they will send
more men, but I think you two are the most dangerous. The others I can
handle," Morlock said. "I am in no hurry, really. We are all
prepared, the shelters are ready. All that has happened is that we have lost
our good London shelter, and—"
"Don't be stupid, Morlock,"
Solo said. "You're known, and so is your plan. Every government will be
after you. You won't be able—"
"So," Morlock said, "you
have reported. Unfortunate. Still, it is not as bad as you hope. I'm sorry to
tell you. They will not find me, and we will start again."
"Where can you hide now?" Illya
said, mocked.
The grotesque figure on the ledge only
laughed his sardonic laugh.
"Ah, gentlemen, where I can hide is
my secret. But I admit freely, that you have caused me much trouble. Yes, much
trouble. I will not let you off lightly. So, Voila!"
The grotesque magician waved his tiny
hand. There was a puff of smoke on the floor and morlocks
appeared as if from nowhere. Before Illya or Solo could move they were pinioned
by strong hands, something was looped around one of each of their legs. Another
flash of smoke, and the morlocks vanished.
"You must admire my tricks,
gentlemen," Morlock said from his ledge. "I am the greatest
magician."
Solo and Illya were too busy looking at
what had been done to their legs. They looked at each other, puzzled. The morlocks had chained one leg of each of them—chained
securely and on long chains that clanked when they moved. The morlocks had also removed all clothes but their underwear.
"Your clothes appear to be far too
dangerous," Morlock said drily from his ledge. "Are the chains
comfortable? As you see, you have quite free movement. So, now, Ole!"
And the tiny magician gestured again with
his hand. There was another flash of flame and smoke, and the sound of water.
Fast, inrushing water. Illya and Solo stood up. Water was gushing around their
feet, pouring into the room.
On the ledge the insane little magician
choked with demonic laughter. "A swim, eh? A nice swim. You are quite free
to swim, to fight, until—But you must have guessed, yes? Until the chains reach
their limit!"
The water gushed up. It had reached their
waists now. Illya bent, struggled with the chain on his leg. Solo watched the
tiny magician laughing on his ledge.
"You can fight, you see? Ah, that is
the pleasure! To watch you struggle, and you will
struggle because you are alive! No simple drowning, not for you! You will swim,
and thrash, and then the chain will hold you, the water will rise, and you will
go under. When the water reaches my feet—your heads will go under and you will
die! Die!"
The water rose higher and higher, and the
two agents were swimming now. The chain on only one leg did not prevent them
from swimming on the surface of the rising water.
Morlock roared with laughter on his
ledge.
In the distance, suddenly, there was the
sound of firing. Doors crashed. The voices of men reached their ears above the
sound of inrushing water. On the ledge the monstrous little magician listened.
He seemed to be estimating. His laughter was gone. He stared down at them from
his glowing, satanic eyes.
"Your friends, but they will not be
in time. My men will hold them until I escape, and by then you will be under
the water."
The water rose swiftly. The two agents
struggled to swim, to break the chains. Morlock leaned down toward them as they
floated up toward his ledge.
"You destroyed my plans! You stopped
me! I will win, but you have ruined it all for now! So you will die! You will
all die and we outcast and spit-upon will inherit the Earth!"
Struggling, Solo and Illya looked at each
other. Their heads were nearly up to the ledge. Each man could feel the chain
reaching its end, dragging now on their thrashing legs. Another few minutes and
the chains would be fully extended—and then—
On the ledge the water lapped at the feet
of Morlock The Great. The grotesque magician laughed once more.
"We will rule the earth!"
Morlock cried, and once again his hand described an arc in the air.
"Farewell, dead men, Voila!"
The tiny hand made its magic gesture.
There was a puff of bright red smoke,
and—
A sheet of flame shot to the ceiling of
the stone pit.
Inside the flames, his clothes a
holocaust, Morlock The Great screamed and screamed.
There was the puff of smoke, and where
there should have been nothing an no one, where Morlock The Great should have
vanished in his puff of smoke—there was a great sheet of flame and the tiny
magician, his eyes a mask of terror, turned into a human torch before the eyes
of Solo and Illya struggling in the water.
With a final scream of horror and pain,
Morlock The Great leaped into the water.
It did not help. The flames did not go
out, and, on the surface, Morlock The Great burned like a torch.
Solo and Illya stared, struggled, fought
to keep their heads above water.
Then they felt it—the water was receding.
On the ledge where Morlock The Great had
played his last trick, they saw the twisted body, and gentle face, of Paul
Dabori. The morlock who had come to their aid smiled
down as they floated down with the receding water.
* * *
IN THE long conference room of the Cult
shelter deep beneath the city of London, Solo and Illya sat in dry clothes and
listened to the dry voice of Alexander Waverly. The chief was having difficulty
lighting his pipe.
"You see, your friend Paul Dabori
decided to slip back after you went off in chase of Morlock. It seems he
decided that with all that hair he would not be recognized, especially after
you all escaped."
Dabori smiled. "They never suspected
I had come back down here. When Morlock came running back, there was much
confusion. I followed him to his private room. When he wasn't looking, I
replaced some of his special smoke powder with some of your heatfoil. I tore up
the foil, and mixed it with his smoke powder. I'm afraid it fixed him."
Waverly managed to get his pipe alight.
"So, when you gentlemen were, shall we say, at the end of your—uh—rope,
Morlock could not resist one last disappearance, and set off his smoke act.
Unfortunately, this time Dabori had mixed him something a little stronger than
smoke. You saw the result, I believe."
"And I knew where the walves were
for that pit," Dabori said.
Solo raised an eyebrow. "If you need
work, I think we could use you, Mr. Dabori."
The hunchback shook his head. "No, I
will return to my own work, I think. I want to live quietly, usefully now. Of
course, first I will get a haircut!"
Solo laughed. Illya looked seriously at
his Chief. Waverly, his bloodhound face impassive, puffed quietly on his pipe.
All around them the London police were herding morlocks
away.
"Did you get them all?" Illya
said.
"We did. They had a submarine. That
was the motors you heard. But they were still waiting for Morlock himself when
we broke in. When they saw his body, all fight went out of them. I don't think
we will have any more trouble with them. I'm afraid many of them will need
mental care, though," Waverly said.
"And the powder? The powder that
induced the hallucinations?" Illya said.
"We do have it all. We will analyze
it, of course, but then it will be destroyed," Waverly said.
Suddenly, Solo jumped up. The chief agent
looked all around the room. He seemed to be looking for someone.
"Maxine!" Solo said. "We
forgot Maxine!"
Alexander Waverly studied his pipe.
"No, we picked her up where you had left her."
"I'll bet she was annoyed,"
Solo grinned. "We have her?"
Waverly coughed. "Ah, no, I'm afraid
she's slipped us again. A very resourceful woman. It seems she had a hidden
hypodermic and knocked out our guards. She escaped, and with some of the
hallucination powder. She—"
Illya sat up. "Thrush has a sample
of that powder?"
A smile spilt Waverly's impassive face.
"Yes and no. The Trent woman did escape with a sample. But, fortunately, I
had taken the precaution of removing the real powder. I hope Thrush will not be
too disappointed with their sample of the simple smoke powder Morlock liked to
use, poor man."
Solo and Illya grinned at each other.
Solo, his boyish face smiling, wondered just what Thrush would say after their
experts ran exhaustive tests on what would turn out to be simple smoke powder.
Solo decided that Maxine would have a few
bad moments. But Maxine Trent had a charmed life. Solo knew that he would see
her again.
Illya Kuryakin was busy studying the
records of the late, and very unlamented Morlock The Great.
The grotesque magician himself was a
charred corpse in a tiny coffin on its way to the London morgue.
THE END
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