By Robert Hart Davis (attributed to Dennis Lynds)
February 1966
Volume 1, Issue 1
Illya Kuryakin and Napoleon Solo had one last day to find and destroy THRUSH’s new deadliest weapon—an army of mindless monsters who killed with a smile—and died laughing!
Violent death hung
in the morning air. It rose with the mist over the great river that flowed past
the shining white new city. The rumble in the distance grew louder, a sound
like an express train moving closer. The police and thin line of British-uniformed,
American-armed troops were in their places around the perimeter of the
airfield, at the edge of the city in the morning sun.
The twin-engined
aircraft circled the field once and prepared for the landing. The distant
rumble grew closer. The gently descending aircraft touched down. The morning
mist began to burn off.
The police and
soldiers lounged easily in their thin line, joked, pointed toward the
approaching rumble that shook the ground, and laughed. They were not worried.
This was Africa. The new Africa, but still Africa. The Zulus of Tchaka had
roamed across this land, beating their assegais against their shields to
frighten the enemy before they ever appeared to do battle with them.
The approaching mob
was doing the same thing, and the police and soldiers were not frightened. They
had been through this before. Only as a formality they held their weapons ready
as the first of the mob advanced along the road from the city.
The twin-engined
aircraft rolled to a stop and the door opened. A massive, broad-shouldered man
stepped out and stood at the head of the movable stairs. His white teeth
flashed in the morning sun. He was taller than the nervous men around him, like
some great Zulu chief himself.
At the edge of the
field the first wave of the mob made contact with the police and troops. The
police and troops held them back, smiling but striking out with clubs and gun
butts where necessary. The troops and police smiled, because they had suddenly
seen that the entire mob was made up of the young, the teenagers of this
emerging new nation.
The tall,
broad-shouldered man stepped down the movable stairway and reached the field
itself. He started across, his bodyguards trotting to keep up with him.
“Vive le
Presidente!” voices shouted.
Suddenly, the mob
seemed twice its size. The police stopped smiling. The soldiers battled.
Howling, the mob of teenagers smashed through the thin line of guards. Sirens
wailed in the distance as reinforcements approached for the outmanned police.
The mob did not
wait. Roaring like wild animals, screaming, hysterical, they poured over the
line of guards.
Engulfed by the
wave of suddenly distorted faces, the sea of wild eyes, the police and troops
had no chance.
The teenagers swept
across the open air field like the ancient Zulu warriors.
His bodyguards,
everything forgotten now but the safety of their chief, fired their
machine-guns directly into the advancing mob. The first wave of the roaring mob
went down. Blood spurted across the earth of the field. Screams of pain filled
the air. Legs and arms kicked, writhed on the ground.
But the mob did not
stop, did not pause, did not hesitate even one split second.
The bodyguards
fired again, held down the triggers, the barrels of their sub-machine guns
turning red.
The mob swept on.
Like the great
ocean itself the mob of howling teenagers rolled across the field.
And then the mob
passed on toward the distant edge of the open field and the dark jungle.
Behind them they
left thirty of their own dead; they left a hundred wounded and writhing. They
left the bodyguards trampled and groaning, the police and troops dazed and
wounded. They left the twin-engined aircraft leaning crazily on one smashed
wing.
And they left the
tall president lying on his face, dead, with a long knife plunged into his
back.
* * *
The Palladium in
London rocked to the screams of the teenagers. On the lighted platform stage
four young men sang, twisted, strummed guitars, banged the drums. The young
people screamed with delight. They laughed, clapped, sighed. Their bright young
faces were excited with the beat of the music, the words of the singers. One
tall boy, his hair streaming out behind him, dove from the balcony. His bloody
head lay smashed against a seat below.
* * *
In Sydney,
Australia, the police answered a call. Citizens complained that there was a
noisy party disturbing the peace. When the police arrived in the rich suburb
all was silent. Cautiously the police approached the house. Inside, in the
basement playroom, they found the dead bodies of twenty-two teenagers.
“Poison?” the
detective said. “All of them?”
“Every one. And
self-inflicted without a doubt. They all have the glasses near them.”
“Mass suicide?” the
detective said, unbelieving, staring.
* * *
The laboratory lay
in burned smoldering ruins. Captain Parker of the Chicago police stood beside
the director of the laboratory.
“They were
picketing—nothing unusual,” the director said.
“They know we are
working on military research. Peace groups often picket us.”
“Then they went
wild?” the captain of Chicago police said.
“All at once, just
before quitting time, the twenty of them became two hundred, perhaps three
hundred. They broke into the building and set it on fire.”
“All teenagers?
Every one?”
“All,” the director
said. “And the plans for the nuclear fuse are gone.”
* * *
On a side street in
the Soho section of London, a mob of young people blocked the path of an
armored car. The driver and two guards got out to clear them off. The driver
and both guards died later of multiple injuries from their beating. Two million
dollars in gold bullion vanished.
* * *
The beach near
Santa Barbara, California, was deserted when the sixteen boys and girls, all
under eighteen years of age, walked into the sea and out of sight. They were
never seen again.
“Like lemmings,”
the highway patrol officer said. Bodies washed ashore all week.
* * *
In Red Square,
Moscow, the police failed to hold back the horde of long-haired youths when the
deputy chief of security of the Polish People’s Republic came to visit the tomb
of Lenin. The police were reprimanded. The square was cleared by troops. Six of
the teenagers died, and twenty went to prison. But the deputy chief of Security
of the Polish People’s Republic was dead.
Napoleon Solo
looked deep into her eyes. Violet eyes, like deep, liquid marbles, pools of
beauty. She was curled like a kitten at the end of a long, soft couch. Solo’s
smile was easy, youthful as he looked into those violet eyes.
“How do you do it,
Maxine?’ Solo whispered into her ear. “Be almost six feet tall and curl up into
a powder puff—such a pretty powder puff?”
“Mirrors,” Maxine
Trent whispered back. “I do it all with mirrors.”
“Not all with
mirrors, I hope.” Solo said softly.
“All Napoleon
Solo,” she said. “I’m an illusion. I’m only a mirror myself. If you touch me,
poof!”
Solo sighed. “The
story of my life, poof!”
“Will you risk it?
Touching me?” Maxine whispered.
“For you, I risk
anything,” Solo said.
“Go on! Go on!”
Solo leaned closer
to her. The room—her room—was silent. The music that had been playing was gone
now, the record player turning itself off automatically at just the right
instant. Solo almost smiled; for his purposes he could not have done it better
himself. A very cooperative record player.
Too cooperative?
The sixth sense,
the warning, went off in his brain. The split-second sensitivity to danger,
even to potential danger, that had kept him alive longer than any chief
enforcement agent U.N.C.L.E. had ever had. Was it coincidence, the record
player stopping at just the precise instant he was about to bend down and kiss
her?
He leaned close to
her, smiling, her perfume in his nostrils. His eyes looked into her eyes.
Behind his boyish ardent smile, his mind went to work. He ran Maxine Trent
through his mind like a card through a computer: Age 24; 5 foot 11 inches and
all the right measurements to go with the height; a runner-up for Miss America
one year; daughter of industrialist Clark Trent; known to like action-and
danger. Introduced to Solo two weeks ago by John Knox, a young business
executive Solo cultivated to hide his true occupation.
His true occupation
was chief enforcement agent for United Network Command for Law and
Enforcement—U.N.C.L.E. And U.N.C.L.E. was a supra-national organization sworn
to keep the world safe and, if possible, sane. Any enemy of any peaceful and
honest person in the world was the enemy of U.N.C.L.E. It was hard work,
dangerous work. Now Solo wondered if the danger were close here, in the arms of
Maxine Trent.
“Well, Napoleon,”
Maxine said. “I heard you were a man of action. Your certainly don’t call this
action—yet?”
Solo smiled. “You’d
be surprised, my dear.”
He was about to say
more when the signal went off. A low sound, rising and falling, like a
miniature version of the wailing horn of a Parisian police car. Solo reached
quickly into the inside pocket of his coat and switched off the signal on the
miniature radio set.
Maxine blinked up
at him from the couch as he stood up.
“You’re not
leaving—now?” she whispered.
“I’m afraid I am,”
Solo said. “A previous appointment, my little alarm reminded me. Some other
time we can pick it up, yes?”
She stared at him.
He was a slender man of medium height. He was neither handsome nor ugly. A
pleasant, friendly face that was usually smiling. His dark, brooding eyes were
at the same time quick and bright. Intense eyes, but not hard and not jaded.
Eyes that smiled an apology to Maxine now, yet were already seeing something
else.
He turned quickly
and walked to the door. The speed of the motion gave a slight indication of the
strong, trained athlete’s body concealed in his slender frame. What he lacked
in size, he more than made up for in catlike speed, in skill and in training. He
seemed no different from the thousands of young executives, budding doctors,
youthful professional men, and wealthy, if idle, playboys. He could have been
anything from a tennis bum to a first echelon government man.
Solo was none of
those things. He was a man trained to kill with a single blow of his
innocent-seeming hand.
Once in the
corridor of Maxine Trent’s apartment house, Solo turned quickly left and walked
to the fire stairs. He went through the door and down and out into the midtown
Manhattan street. It was late afternoon and the streets were crowded.
Solo walked a
block, blended with the crowd. Only then did he take his small chrome metal and
plastic sender-receiver set from out of his pocket.
He quickly raised
the two threadlike antennae, pressed a button on the instrument that fitted in
the palm of his hand, and spoke low into it.
“Solo here.”
“Report to Mr.
Waverly at once. Code Mayday,” the crisp female voice of the radio
communications girl said.
Solo clicked off
his set, returned it to his pocket, and began to walk casually but quickly
across town toward the East River and U.N.C.L.E. headquarters.
* * *
Illya Kuryakin ran
his thin fingers through his thatch of unkempt blond hair. The small, thin
Russian muttered to himself in Danish, which happened to be the language of the
book he was intently puzzling over.
The private library
was as quiet as a tomb. Kuryakin was one of the two persons in the small,
book-lined room. The other was an old man whose clothes had seen better days,
but whose thirst for knowledge was undiminished. From time to time, the ancient
female librarian came into the room. She glared at Illya, who she obviously
considered far too young to be a scholar.
Illya smiled
disarmingly at the harridan. With his blond, round-bowl haircut he looked like
a mischievous Russian leprechaun; or a blond knight-errant, an impish
modern-day Prince Valiant with straw hair. His bright and quick eyes danced
beneath his seriously lowered brow. His glance at the old woman was quizzical
and amused—an amusement that did not show on his face as he steadily looked up
at her.
“Can I help you,
madam?” Illya said to the librarian.
“I— I—” the woman
stammered in confusion, caught staring at Illya.
Illya spoke softly.
“I understand. You are wondering what so young a man is doing in a library on
such a fine day?”
“I—”
Illya smiled. “You
are wondering why I am studying so obscure a book about poisons? Your wonder am
I a spy, since I obviously read a foreign language. Ah, that is suspect, eh? A
young man who reads a foreign language must be a spy at least, nyet? Ah the young
people today, such irresponsible animals, nicht wahr?”
“I—” the librarian
blustered, and then turned scarlet as this wisp of a boy suddenly reached out
and pinched her.
“Why, you—”
Illya laughed.
“Well!” the
librarian snapped, turned and stalked off.
Illya smiled once
more, and returned to his work. This library was one of his favorite places to
spend an afternoon in New York. A private library devoted to strange,
half-known poisons, mysteries of ancient witchcrafts and other superstitions,
all the half-insane fears of the human mind. That was Illya’s single purpose in
his life—to try to dispel the insanity of man, to try to save the idiot world
from itself.
For that purpose he
had studied, learned fifteen languages, left the service of the country of his
birth to work for what he truly considered the only sane group of people on
earth—U.N.C.L.E.—United Network Command for Law and Enforcement.
For that purpose,
he still studied, trained his small but lithe body, devoted himself to the
work. He had no interest in either command or position, only in doing the job
better than anyone. He had no time for such rewards and frills of the world as
money, honors, fine living, or creature comfort.
The signal on his
transmitter-receiver went off. Instantly, Illya became the quick, serious agent
of U.N.C.L.E. The old librarian was looking around in fury for the source of
the strange wailing sound. Illya shut off the signal, raised the small plastic and
metal box to his lips.
“Kuryakin here.”
“Mr. Waverly wants
you at once. Code Mayday.” the voice of the communications girl said.
Illya replaced the
tiny radio set in his pocket, returned his book to the desk, smiled winningly
at the ancient librarian.
“Take very good
care of the books, liebchen,” he hissed at the old woman.
He could almost
hear her red-faced anger behind him as he walked out and down to the late
afternoon New York street. Smiling to himself at his own joke, he did not see
the old man in the decrepit clothes move with far greater speed than he should
have been capable of at his age. He did not see the old man follow him.
But he heard the
footsteps behind him on the stairs.
He reached the
street and for an instant was out or sight of the footsteps behind him. He
reached into his jacket pocket for the tiny radio, raised the threadlike
antennae, pressed the sending button.
“Sonny, this is
Bubba. I have a bandit in tow. Plan 9.”
Illya pressed his
receive button. Instantly, the tiny transmitter-receiver whispered low to him.
“Bubba, from Sonny.
Possible bandit here, too. Plan 9.”
The voice of
Napoleon Solo faded. Illya walked on down the sunny street. In a store window
he saw the figure of the old man behind him.
There is a
brownstone house on East 44th Street in Manhattan. It seems an innocent
dwelling, with a small printing shop on the ground floor. A narrow alley runs
beside it. The alley is a dead-end, or seems so, ending one hundred feet back
from the street in a high brick wall topped with broken glass.
Approximately
fifteen minutes after their whispered words over the miniature radio sets,
Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin approached the East 44th Street brownstone
from opposite directions. They seemed intent on their own business, paid no
attention to each other, and walked without looking back.
They seemed to meet
as strangers at the mouth of the alley beside this innocent brownstone with its
print shop. They both turned into the alley, nodding politely to each other,
and began to walk toward the blank high wall at the rear.
At this precise
instant, the printing presses in the ground floor print shop began to operate.
They were old presses, the windows of the pressroom were open, and the noise in
the alley was deafening. Solo and Kuryakin walked on down the alley toward the blank
wall as if oblivious to the shattering noise of the presses.
Behind them the old
man from the private library jumped into the alley, a grim smile on his face as
he heard the noise of the presses. The old man moved down the alley with a
speed that proved he was far from old beneath his disguise. A heavy, wide-mouthed
gun in his hand proved that he was not a scholar. He raised the gun, still
grinning at the convenient noise of the presses that would hide any sound.
He never fired his
strange gun.
The seemingly blank
wall of the brownstone building opened abruptly. Two men stepped out. The
pistols in their hands spat twice each, the noise totally covered by the sound
of the printing presses.
The fake old man
fell like a stone, his body stiff and rigid.
The two men who had
shot him ran to him, picked him up and hustled him through the secret openings
into the brownstone building. The wall closed.
Napoleon Solo and
Illya Kuryakin walked on toward the rear wall.
The alley was
silent except for the noise of the printing presses. There was not even a drop
of blood on the stones to show that anything had happened. The ersatz old man
who had followed Illya Kuryakin was not dead, merely paralyzed and sleeping
from the effect of the darts fired from the special pistols of the two
U.N.C.L.E. men of Section-V—Security and Personnel.
Solo and Illya
continued to walk as if they had seen nothing until they reached the rear wall.
And vanished.
* * *
The beautiful woman
lurked in the doorway of a building on East 45th Street. She watched as the
young man came down the steps of another brownstone two doors up the street
closer to the East River. She frowned. She had expected Napoleon Solo to be
carrying something when he emerged.
Aware that the wail
of his miniature radio had been a summons to U.N.C.L.E. headquarters, she had
trailed him to the 44th Street brownstone. She had not gone up the alley; it
was too convenient. Instead, she, Maxine Trent, had come around the block and been
rewarded for her quick guessing by the appearance of Solo from another
brownstone. But the U.N.C.L.E. agent was empty-handed.
Maxine stared at
the figure of Solo. The handsome young man was walking east toward the river.
She sighed to herself; Napoleon Solo was such a good-looking man; it was too
bad that she would have to stop him now, and search him. He could easily be
carrying what she wanted hidden somewhere on that slender but so nicely
masculine body.
She left her refuge
and followed down the street in the shadows of the buildings on the shaded
side. She was proud of herself. U.N.C.L.E. was so proud of its security! Solo
was sure no one could have followed to the building on 44th Street and from the
building on 45th Street.
The handsome fool
was walking openly, carelessly.
Maxine had to hurry
and move closer as people began to pour out of an office at the end of the
block. She passed another set of brownstone steps, still smiling but hurrying.
She never saw the small blond man step out.
Illya caught her
neck, pressed and caught her inert body in his arms as she collapsed. She made
no sound, lay totally unconscious in his arms.
A policeman pushed
through the crowd.
“I’m sorry,
officer. My wife has these spells,” Illya said.
“She just passed
out,” someone said.
“You need a
doctor?” the policeman said helpfully.
“That’s an
excellent idea,” Illya said. “If you wouldn’t mind holding her, I’ll find one
at once.”
Illya handed the
inert form of Maxine Trent to the arms of the policeman, smiled and walked away
into the crowd. All the people looked at the nice young man with sympathy.
Illya smiled sadly back at them as he turned the corner and vanished.
It was nearly
twenty minutes before the policeman began to wonder about the nice young man.
* * *
There are four
known entrances to the hidden complex of U.N.C.L.E headquarters in New York. A
maze of steel and bomb proof concrete hides behind its innocent faade, which
includes a tailor shop, the false offices of an international aid organization
also called U.N.C.L.E., and a key-club type restaurant called The Mask Club.
The stronghold has no stairs, only elevators, and has been penetrated only
once. From that simple penetration, no one in the attacking force survived.
To those who know,
the headquarters can also be entered by water from the river through secret
tunnels. But the main entrance, used by all but the few who can never be seen
going in, is Del Floria’s tailor shop.
Del Floria himself
is a tall, balding man in his fifties. He is a good tailor, but he is also one
of the best and quickest shots with any of the many weapons he has hidden
close.
Del Floria is the
keeper of the gate. He has been this, a key man in Section-V of U.N.C.L.E., for
a long time. To enter the headquarters an enemy must pass him. This has never
been done. The one penetration was made through the river entrances. Del Floria
knows every U.N.C.L.E. member by sight, the only man below Section-I who does.
He knows their faces, and no more. To know more would be his death warrant. Now
he smiled as he greeted two old customers.
“If you would step
into the fitting rooms, gentlemen,” Del Floria said, “we can start fitting
you.”
Solo and Kuryakin
stepped through the curtain into the fitting room. Once inside, they waited a
moment; then, on a signal from Del Floria that all was clear, they stepped into
one of the many dressing rooms. They closed the curtain. The wall opened. They
stepped through. The wall closed behind them.
They stood in the
reception room of U.N.C.L.E.
The room was
windowless, without doors of any kind. A pretty girl sat behind the reception
desk. The controls on the desktop were unlabeled, unidentified. Only she knew
which button did what, and the buttons were interchanged at irregular
intervals. She looked like a receptionist in any office in the city. Her
U.N.C.L.E. special was out of sight in its holster behind her back. She handed
Solo and Illya their triangular identity badges.
Badges in place,
they stepped toward a wall that opened miraculously. Without the badges there
would now be a hundred alarms clanging, doors closing and sealing, armed men
facing them from every angle. With the badges they walked straight ahead
through doors that opened untouched, past doors that never would open without
the proper signal. They walked on floors of steel, between walls of steel, and
there were no windows anywhere.
They rode up two
floors in a silent elevator. They emerged into another steel corridor. Again
doors opened and they reached the end door of the corridor. This door was
unmarked, exactly as all the other doors. A plain steel door with no way to
tell that it was in any way different. But it was. This was the heart of
U.N.C.L.E. operations in New York. The office of the chief, the office of one
of only five men who formed Section-I—Policy and Operations.
The door opened.
Solo and Illya stepped inside. Alexander Waverly stood at an open window,
absently tapping his empty pipe in his hand. Solo and Illya stood behind him.
The chief, the member of Section-I, seemed to be trying to think of something
he wanted to say.
“He—uh, seemed to
know nothing,” Waverly said, without turning around. “The one who was following
Mr. Kuryakin. They brought him around in Section-V but he could tell us
nothing.”
“THRUSH?” Napoleon
Solo said.
“Yes, of course,
Mr.—uh—Solo. Of course,” Waverly said.
The head of
U.N.C.L.E. in New York turned now. Alexander Waverly looked, Illya Kuryakin had
once said, like an aristocratic bloodhound. Beneath a broad forehead and
thinning but neat gray hair, bushy eyebrows stood out from a heavy brow. The
eyes were sunken in deep sockets, heavily wrinkled at the corners, as if the
man had spent many years squinting into the sun and wind of the world. Below
the eyes, Waverly’s face drooped into a permanently serious expression. A face
that never smiled, never frowned, never showed any expression but thought.
“And mine?” Solo
said. “Maxine Trent?”
“She talked her way
out of the hands of the law. She then eluded the Section-V man who followed
her,” Waverly said. “An entirely different cup of tea, the Trent woman.”
Waverly seemed to
be thinking of something a long time ago. It would have been hard for Solo or
Illya to guess what it was. The background of Alexander Waverly was shrouded in
an obscure mist. Beyond a rumor of fifty years service in British and American
Intelligence, the manner of a man who had been born an aristocrat, the speech
of an Englishman who had lived in many lands other than England, there was
nothing known.
Just a man over
sixty who wore tweeds and liked pipes, who could barely recall the names of his
own agents, and who seemed always in a vaguely bumbling haze. A minor official
who should have retired years ago. A man who, when it counted, had a memory like
an elephant, a brain as quick as a scorpion and equally dangerous, a composure
that never ruffled, and the ability to command men. A man who was very alone.
“Well,” Waverly
said. “I expect I sent for you gentlemen.”
“Something THRUSH
apparently knows about already,” Illya said.
“We weren’t
followed for nothing.”
“Yes,” Waverly
said. “I dare say they know what I have to tell you. Not surprising. THRUSH
Council members are well placed, as you know.”
“How would they
know it would be Illya and myself you would use this time?” Solo said.
“I believe they would
assume we would use our best men on something of this importance,” Waverly
said. And Waverly nodded to himself, as if seeing the THRUSH council, his
opponents in the perpetual chess game he played for the future of the world.
“Yes, they would have learned we have been called in. They would properly try
to stop us befor we started.”
“They appear to
know more than we do,” Illya said dryly.
“Eh? Oh, yes, I
imagine they do. We shall have to correct that now. You see, it appears that
THRUSH has found a way to use, and perhaps destroy, the young people of the
world.”
They were seated
around the circular briefing table with the moving top. Waverly had pressed the
button on his desk; a panel had slid back on the wall, revealing the screen.
Now Illya, Solo and Waverly were watching the gray screen. Somewhere far off
inside the complex of steel rooms the head of Communications and Research in
Section-III, the pretty and redheaded May Heatherly, operated the screen and
the running commentary.
“This is the
airfield at Kandaville, photographed a few minutes after the mob had gone. You
will note the knife in the back of the president,” the crisp, yet very female
voice of May Heatherly said.
Solo noted the
knife in the back of the dead president of the new country. But a corner of his
mind thought of the very alive, very pretty, May Heatherly. He sighed aloud.
And smiled when he noted Waverly looking at him. His chief missed little-worse,
understood him. Waverly knew precisely what Solo’s sigh meant, and disapproved,
and yet—
Sometimes Napoleon
Solo was sure that Alexander Waverly still appreciated the young ladies.
“This is the body
of the boy in London, taken just after the Palladium was cleared,” the voice of
May Heatherly went on.
Illya looked at the
crushed head of the boy. His mind observed every detail. He frowned. There was
nothing at all unusual, nothing he could see to go on. Just a dead boy of
seventeen.
“This is the
basement room in Sydney taken by the police when they arrived. There was no
doubt of the verdict, mass suicide,” May Heatherly’s voice continued.
Solo and Illya
looked at the twenty-two sprawled bodies, all smiling in death.
“Note the smiles,”
Waverly said. “Quite unusual.”
In rapid succession
the screen showed the burning laboratory in Chicago, the armored car and its
dead guards in Soho, the beach near Santa Barbara, the dead deputy chief of
security in Red Square. And there was more, much more. Waverly laid a report,
tow copies on the table and swung the top until the copies were before Illya
and Solo.
“The report is
quite complete,” Waverly said. “At least forty-seven other comparable incidents
within the last three months.”
Solo flipped
through the report, scanning the acts and places.
“Teenagers are
always rioting,” Solo said.
“Quite true,”
Waverly said. “But there are some peculiarities. Miss—uh—Heatherly, will you
run them again?”
The pictures
flashed on the screen again one by one. Solo and Illya studied them intently in
the silence of the office. They were horrible, sad. They were angering,
wasteful.
“Note all the
expressions of the teenagers, gentlemen, those who are in the pictures. You
will notice the smiles, even on the dead. And observe the eyes-positively
exhilarated, I should say.”
“Manic,” Illya
said. “Almost insane.”
“No, I think not
insane. Look carefully. They are happy,”
Waverly pointed
out. “It has been my experience that teenagers who have committed some act of
violence or vandalism are characteristically frightened or at least subdued
afterwards. Their natural insecurity returns after the impetus if gone. But
these young people are still happy.”
“Drugged?” Solo
said.
“Not in the usual
sense, I should say,” Waverly said. “But I suspect some form of artificial
stimulant—a most peculiar kind.”
Illya leaned
forward. “In what way, sir?”
Waverly did not
answer at once. The older man patted at his tweed pockets as if searching for
something. At last he pulled out a pipe. Then he began to look for his tobacco.
He continued his search as he talked.
“Well, it leaves no
trace of how it was administered. It also leaves no trace in the body. They ran
autopsies on all the dead children. Finally, it seems to have unpredictable
effects.”
“What do you mean
exactly by unpredictable?” Illya said.
Waverly filled his
pipe. “Possible I should have the pictures run again for you, gentlemen. But in
the interest of saving time, let me point out that in some of these cases there
seems to be considerable method to the madness. I should think you could see-”
“The murder of the
president,” Illya said, “the stealing of the gold bullion, the burning of that
laboratory, and the theft of the fuse plans, and-”
“And the killing of
the deputy chief of security,” Solo finished.
“Very good,
gentlemen, I see all your training is not lost,” Waverly said. “Yes, it is
quire clear that in each of those cases random accident appears rather
unlikely. Someone had much to gain in each instance. One such accident, yes.
Two? Possible. Three, not really possible. Four, never.”
“Mathematically all
but impossible,” Illya said. “Given the exact similarity of conditions-all
teenage riots.”
“What about the
Russians?” Solo said. “Each of those cases was in the West except the deputy
chief of security, and he was a Pole. It could have been some sort of purge.”
Illya smiled.
“Always ready to malign my poor countrymen.”
“Your
ex-countrymen,” Solo pointed out.
Waverly cleared his
throat, tapped out his never lighted pipe.
“Let me say it is
not the Russians. Our friends at the Kremlin are not cooperative with
information, as you well know, but in this case we have reliable data to show
that other such incidents have occurred in the Soviet. They are, I believe,
quite as worried as the West.
“THRUSH?” Solo
said.
“I think we can
safely detect their fine hand in this, Mr. Solo,” Waverly said. “Especially
since they appear to be out to stop us before we start. A sign, I believe, of
the high priority nature of whatever scheme they have.”
Waverly searched
his tweed jacket for his tobacco pouch again.
“In addition, our
Section-I representative for Africa, with whom I had the pleasure of speaking
this morning, has some other indications. It appears that the man who will step
into the dead president’s shoes out there may well be a THRUSH man. That would
make the new country another THRUSH satrapy, I fear. In any event, each case
would benefit THRUSH in its work enormously.”
There was a silence
in the office. They were all thinking of the work of THRUSH. That
supra-national organization, almost a nation of its own, had only one work—to
dominate the world, to have the only power. To this end THRUSH had already
invaded the body politic of the earth like some insidious virus. Everywhere on
earth, high places and low, there were men who seemed to belong to various
nations, but who, in fact belonged to only one nation—THRUSH
These men lived
complete double lives, whether they were taxi-drivers of cabinet ministers.
Their rank in the visible world did not necessarily coincide with their THRUSH
ranking. A taxi-driver in New York could be a leader of THRUSH; a cabinet
minister in Peru could be no more than a common soldier. At the head of THRUSH
was the council—great men all, in both worlds: soldiers, industrialists,
politicians, scientists.
Illya Kuryakin
leaned forward across the circular table, his dark eyes fixed on Waverly. “I
can understand the cases where THRUSH has something to gain. But what about the
other incidents? Were they mistakes of THRUSH?”
“Possibly,” Waverly
agreed.
“Or a cover,” Solo
said. “Intended to hide the real incidents where they gained.
“Possibly,” Waverly
agreed again. The older man sucked on his unlighted pipe. “I think, gentlemen,
that we are dealing with both mistakes and a cover, but not in the usual sense.
There is something here that does not meet the eye. Teenagers have been rioting,
running wild at times, for many years. It is a part of our modern world, it
seems. But now we have a difference. Now we have what appears to be true
madness, insanity. Some of it seems directed, some not. But in all cases,
ultimate violence has ensued, and the young people, and others, have
died—smiling! It is as if something had pushed the young people beyond the
normal limits. We know they were not drugged in the normal sense, and despite
much work we have discovered no agents provocateur. We are looking for
something capable of turning great masses of young people into mindless
monsters who kill, steal and perform planned atrocities apparently without
direction! Something that works on great numbers, leaves no trace, and leads to
single acts of definite method in some cases but not in all cases. That,
gentlemen, is the key. Why does it work only in some cases? That is what we
must know.”
“Perhaps it is
still experimental,” Illya said. “That would explain why it doesn’t work.”
“That occurred to
me,” Waverly said. “And that is why we must move fast before it is perfected.”
“How?” Solo said.
“If there is no direction from outside, no agents, no visible contact with
anyone, how can we trace it? You can’t just go and question every member of a
teenage mob!”
“Naturally not, Mr.
Solo,” Waverly said. “In any case that has been tried. The young people seem to
know nothing, those who have survived. All they can tell us is that they
suddenly felt the urge to be violent. In most cases, those who live have no
true recollection of just how violent they have been.”
“Like the alkaloid
drugs,” Illya said quickly. “Aware of what they are doing, but unaware of the
speed, the degree.”
“Exactly,” Waverly
said. “Over and over again authorities have reported that the teenagers appear
to think they merely knocked down a person they have actually trampled to
death.”
“But they do know
they have been violent?” Solo said.
“Yes, Mr. Solo.
They know,” Waverly said. The older man tapped his pipe on the circular table.
“There is one more detail. Is is, I believe, vital. Over the past six months
the cases have tended to be prolonged. That is, the violence does not leave the
young people as soon. Each time they appear to remain in their madness longer.
We have no time to lose.”
“But where do we
start?” Solo demanded.
“In Kandaville, I
think,” Waverly said. “You see, we now have one clue, our only clue.”
The older man
turned back to the screen and pressed a button. Instantly the scene of the
airfield at Kandaville appeared. It was the same as before. Bodies of dead
teenagers, the battered and bloody police and troops, the wrecked aircraft, and
the dead president on his face.
But, as Solo and
Illya watched, the picture began to narrow its field, as though focusing on a
single point.
“You will note the
small group of police near the edge of the airfield,” Mr. Waverly said.
The picture on the
screen became a close-up of this group. Four policemen, bloody and holding
their heads-and standing with them, helping one policeman, a single man wearing
the uniform of a native soldier.
Solo and Illya
stared hard at the hazy face in the blow-up. Waverly placed two prints of the
blow-up on the circular table and revolved the top until the pictures were in
front of the two agents.
“That face,
gentlemen, belongs to Azid Ben Riilah, a Somali of Muslim parentage. He was
born, supposedly, in Somaliland, but he has spent little time there. He
appeared in Kenya during the Mau-Mau troubles. He was seen in both Stanleyville
with the Gizenga rebels, and in Leopoldville with the other side in the Congo
affair. He has been identified in Zulu peace parades in South Africa, also as a
native informer for the Apartheid Government in the same country. In actuality
he is an agent of THRUSH, uncovered only four months ago by Section-II men in
Africa. There is absolutely no evidence of any action on his part that led to
the mob that murdered the president down there. But he was there. You
understand, gentlemen?”
“Is he still in
Kandaville?” Solo said grimly.
“As far as
Section-II there knows, he is,” Waverly said. The Leader of U.N.C.L.E. stood up
in a gesture of dismissal. “He is your man. I assume you will think of just
what to do with him?”
“Any suggestions,
sir?” Solo asked. Waverly had returned to his desk. The older man seemed to
have already forgotten the presence of his agents. The job he had just given
Solo and Kuryakin was only one of many he had to consider each day. After a
moment, Waverly appeared to hear and look up again.
“Eh? Oh, I’m sure
you’ll think of something—uh—Solo.”
Illya was grinning
like a cat as Solo turned away from Waverly. The two of them walked out through
the door that silently opened and closed itself. They went to check on their
transportation and on the Section-II agents in South Africa.
Idlewild Airport,
renamed John F. Kennedy International Airport, bustled with the night-departing
passengers. Three giant jets were departing within the hour. Napoleon Solo,
carrying a briefcase stepped to the loading desk to claim his seat on the
London-bound B.O.A.C. jet.
Some buildings
away, a small, bent old man with graying dark hair and a heavy beard shuffled
up to the loading desk of the Air France flight non-stop to Paris. The
uniformed loading clerk studied the old man closely but without giving himself
away.
The old man
muttered in French but with a heavy German accent. The loading clerk stamped
his ticket, gave him his seating card, and turned his attention to the next
person.
At the B.O.A.C.
loading desk, the actions of a baggage handler were vastly different. Observing
Napoleon Solo, the baggage handler suddenly bent over for a dropped suitcase.
At the loading
desk, Solo was passed through and took his place on a seat to await the time to
board. Idly, he noticed the baggage handler pushing his cart away down the
long, bright corridor.
Solo became aware
of the noise before he actually heard it. A rumbling like the sea, turning into
a roar that came closer. Solo leaped up, walked quickly toward the fence that
imprisoned him inside the loading area.
He was too late.
The first of a
horde of teenagers appeared running at the far end of the wide and shining
corridor. Behind the first few young boys and girls he saw a solid wall of
howling teenagers coming toward the loading area. Solo whirled and sprinted for
the door to the plane. It was locked.
Quickly he opened
his briefcase and produced a small, circular object. He touched it to the
electrically controlled door. He pressed a button. The door, activated by the
special electronic circuit activator, sprung open. Solo dashed through, just as
the howling mob of teenagers reached the loading area and smashed down the
fence.
In the loading
ramp, a long tunnel with corrugated sides like some giant bellows, Solo ran
toward the door into the jet. Already the howling teenagers were in the tunnel
behind him.
Solo ran into the
jet, past the protesting stewardess, and along the aisle toward the pilot’s
cabin. Behind him the teenagers knocked down the screaming stewardess.
Solo, inside the
pilot’s cabin, locked the door behind him. Again he opened his briefcase and
produced a small pellet. Setting the pellet on the escape hatch, he pulled a
tiny cord on the pellet and jumped back.
The door was
bending, breaking under the pressure of the screaming mob behind him.
The pellet burst
into white, flame-less heat, a heat that would melt any metal known. The escape
hatch dropped open. Solo threw his briefcase out, lowered himself through the
open hatch and let go.
He seemed to fall
for minutes.
He hit hard on the
concrete, rolled and came up on his feet. Above him the mob of teenagers had
reached the hatch. One was already jumping through.
The first teenager
jumped down, tilted in the air and landed on his side, screaming with the pain
of a broken arm. Solo did not wait. Others were already jumping down. He picked
up his briefcase and ran toward the distant corner of the loading building.
He reached the
corner and turned it, the mob of teenagers strung out now behind him, some
limping but still coming on. As he reached the next corner he stopped, skidded
to a halt.
A second howling
mob was coming at him from the other direction. He turned and ran out toward
the great open area of the airfield, running with the speed that had made him a
track star in his younger days.
As he ran into the
dark night, he pulled the transmitter-receiver from his pocket. He raised the
threadlike antennae.
“Sonny to Bubba.
Sonny to Bubba. Condition Red, condition Red.” He pressed the receiving button.
“Bubba to Sonny.
Instruct action. Am safely aboard.”
Solo pressed his
sending button, trying to speak clearly as he ran on across the dark field.
“Proceed. They are
after me. I’ll lead them off. Watch yourself.”
“Can I help?
Repeat, can I help?” the distant voice of Illya said from the tiny receiver.
Solo stopped and
looked around. He could hear the howling mob still behind him, coming closer.
He pressed his send button.
“Proceed on
mission. Good luck.”
Solo replaced the
tiny set in his pocket. He listened. The mob seemed to be moving off, heading
the wrong way. He smiled and began to trot, carrying his briefcase. He heard
the sound of motors too late.
Glaring light
pinned him in the night like a moth on a pin.
He dropped his
briefcase and drew his U.N.C.L.E. Special. He aimed the Luger-like pistol at
the lights. They were car headlights, one set on either side of him. He flicked
the special button on his pistol to set it to fire bullets, not darts. He
raised he pistol and aimed at the lights.
Something touched
his neck. A faint, stinging prick.
He knew nothing
more…
In his seat at the
window of the Paris-bound jet, the old man with the beard muttered to himself.
But it was neither French nor German he muttered. It was Russian—and his bright
blue eyes were not old.
Illya replaced the
tiny radio set in his pocket. He sat back in his seat. The disguise had worked
for him. NO one had chased the old man who spoke such bad French. His head
turned and he seemed to sleep facing the window of the jet.
But Illya was not
asleep. His eyes peered out into the night. He saw the faint lights of
headlights far off in the center of the
airfield. He had a
sinking sensation as he looked at those strange lights and thought of Napoleon
Solo. But there was work to do.
Soon, the jet took
off. He had reported to headquarters the Condition Red call of Napoleon. There
was nothing more he could do now, but get on with his task.
As the field passed
below, all was dark.
ACT II: THRUSH and COUNTER-THRUSH
Napoleon Solo did
not open his eyes. Awake, alert again, with no ill effects beyond a blinding
headache and a pain in his neck where the dart had struck, he remained
motionless. He was surprised to be still alive.
His hands, he knew,
were bound behind him; his feet were encased in something soft yet strong. He
probably did no have long to live, but the training of years never deserted
him. He listened to the voices to remember them for future reference. Two men
and a woman. He could not hear what they said, but he would never forget the
timbre of their voices.
Cautiously, Solo
opened his eyes. And saw nothing. He blinked, opened his eyes again—all was
black, yet moving, fluttering with faint light.
As if his eyes were
not open at all.
Yet he knew he was
opening them; he knew the muscles were opening his eyes.
But his eyes were
not open.
“Look, his eyes are
moving,” the woman’s voice said. The voice of Maxine Trent.
“Fix the eyes,” a
man’s deep voice said.
Something sprayed
against his eyelids, a cool mist. He waited, blinked and his eyes came open.
“Hello, Napoleon,”
Maxine said.
She stood before
him, changed now. The soft female face was longer, harder. Her languid clothes
of the afternoon had been changed for a severe black suit, a wide-brimmed hat
pulled low. But she was smiling the same smile. She was still almost six feet
tall, yet not too tall. Solo sighed. Even here and now she was a beautiful
woman.
“Hello, Maxine,”
Solo said, mustering up a smile.
Behind Maxine all
was black. He could not make out any shape to the room. There was a bright
light on a fine inlaid table, but the light did not seem to reach any corners
anywhere.
Solo could just
make out the shapes of two men behind Maxine. He could not see them. While he
was pretending to stare hard to make them out, he tested his bonds. The rope
around his wrists behind the chair he was sitting in seemed secure. The soft
material encasing his feet would not budge.
He glanced down to
be sure of what he was up against, and he stared. Maxine Trent laughed
mockingly. Solo stared at his feet. There was nothing holding them—nothing at
all. They were encased in nothing, yet he felt some soft but strong material
holding his feet.
There was nothing
holding his feet, yet he could not move them. When he tried to move them the
unseen material clung and cut into his legs. Maxine laughed again.
“If you could turn
around, Napoleon, you would see that there is nothing holding your hands,
either. No rope at all. See?”
Maxine held two
mirrors in such a way that he could see his bound hands behind the chair. There
was no rope. There was nothing holding his hands, yet they were bound tight.
“A toy, Mr. Solo,”
the deep male voice said from the darkness.
“A simple hypnotic
drug that paralyzes the muscles and induces the brain to ascribe some physical
cause, such as ropes or a cement block on the feet. It is both effective as a
restraining device, as a demonstration of our limitless sources of power.”
There was a sudden
hiss from the dark, an eerie sound like wind whistling through a thin reed.
Reedy, hissing and yet it was a voice. It was the weird, toneless voice of the
other man hidden in the dark.
“We waste time. He
will tell us,” the hissing voice said.
Maxine Trent seemed
to stiffen like a dog whose master has whistled. Her beautiful face changed,
became a mask. A tremor very like fear seemed to shudder through her.
Solo stared toward
the point in the dark where the reedy voice had hissed. It was a voice that was
inhuman, made not of flesh and bone but of metal and plastic, yet Solo knew now
that this was the voice of a leader of THRUSH—a council member. It had to be,
to make Maxine jump like a dog in obedience and terror.
“Tell us what
Waverly told you, Napoleon,” Maxine Trent said. “It will save time.”
“I like to see
THRUSH work,” Solo said calmly. “Sometimes I even learn something.”
The deep male voice
snapped in the dark. “The needle.”
Solo laughed.
“Pentathol? How unimaginative. I really expected better, especially with a
council member present.”
The reedy hiss of
the hidden voice neither laughed nor threatened. “Council Member N if that will
help, Mr. Solo. And the needle does not contain pentathol. That would be far
too slow and unreliable. NO, I have developed something much better. Its effect
is similar, but it acts instantly; no one can withstand it.”
“Proceed, Agent
Trent,” the deep male voice ordered.
Maxine approached
with the needle. Solo thought about the deep voice. This had to belong to a
chief agent, above Maxine Trent, but below the horrible hissing voice. Somehow
he had to see them.
“Try to relax, Napoleon,”
Maxine Trent said. “You will anyway. In five seconds you will tell us all you
know.”
The beautiful woman
raised the needle, found a vein in his paralyzed arm, and plunged the point
into his flesh.
Illya Kuryakin
leaned to look out the window of the small jet as it circled the city below. A
white city, dazzling in the African sun, the great river curving like a snake
around the buildings. Even from the sky, Illya could see the great white
government buildings in the center, and the grey-brown shacks surrounding them
where the people still lived.
Illya stared down.
It was for this that he had left the service of his own country—to bridge that
terrible gap between the great white buildings and the miserable shacks of the
people. To free the great river that wound below to serve the people, all the
people.
He had seen the
failure of a dream in his own country, the failure of many dreams in many
places, and other places where there had not yet even been time to dream amid
the misery.
And, somewhere sown
there was a man, Azid Ben Rillah, who served a “nation” that wanted to destroy
all dreams—all dreams but the dream of keeping every misery as it was. Down
there, somewhere, THRUSH was at work to keep the hovels dirty, to forever separate
the power from the people.
It was a “nation”
Illya would destroy, and all like it. Then, perhaps, he could listen to his
jazz records, read his books, travel as he had always wanted to, alone and
afraid of no on and nothing, with no one afraid of him.
“Fasten your
seatbelts please.”
The voice of the
stewardess pulled Illya from his reverie. He fastened his seatbelt and waited.
He had abandoned his disguise in Paris—even Napoleon might be made to talk—and
now sat in the small jet a Specialist Tworkov of the Soviet trade mission to the
new country. A drooping blond mustache hid his young face. He had acquired a
creditable limp. Thick glasses hid his dark eyes. All his weapons were checked
and in place.
Illya left the jet
fourth in line. Behind the thick glasses his eyes watched. The field was clear.
A fawning native porter ran up to clutch his suitcase. Illya casually fingered
the deadly, needle-like knife in his side pocket. The native porter grinned up.
“Bwana have three
more suitcase?”
“Can you carry
three or six?” Illya said.
“Uphill three,
downhill six,” the native said.
“I have only one.”
Illya said.
“One is very good.
I am twelve,” the native said.
“I am nine,” Illya
said.
“So?” the native
said. “Welcome to Africa, Mr. Kuryakin. Follow me closely.”
Illya followed the
porter across the field, his eyes, behind the thick lenses, scrutinizing
everyone who neared them. The porter moved fast, did not pause on his way into
the single main building of the airport. Once inside the building the porter
led Illya to customs, and through customs under the regular procedure.
Illya continued to
follow the porter out to a taxi. Once inside the taxi, Illya watched the porter
vanish. The taxi driver waited for Illya’s instruction.
“Imperial Hotel,”
Illya said.
The driver nodded
and drove off. Once out of the area of the airport, with no cars in sight on
the sunny morning, the driver reached into his pocket and brought out an
innocent card. It was plastic.
Illya opened a
small bottle of fluid and placed a drop on the plastic. A faint purple spot
appeared. It had identified the driver as Joseph Ngara.
“You were supposed
to have another man with you,” Joseph Ngara said.
“We ran into
trouble in New York.”
“I’m sorry. Who was
it?”
“Napoleon Solo,”
Illya said. The taxi swerved a hair. “Napoleon? I’ve worked with him. Damn,
Kuryakin, we can’t afford to lose chief enforcement agents like him.”
“We haven’t lost
him yet,” Illya said. “You’re Section-II out here?”
“Chief enforcement
agent for Section-II, Africa. Our Section-I man briefed me,” Joseph Ngara said.
“We had our eye on Rillah for some time, but we only got proof he was THRUSH a
few months ago.”
“Have you found
what he is doing here?”
“Not precisely,”
Ngara said, “but he arrived less than a week before the riot that killed the president.
We picked up one clue, a word: PowerTen. Two words, really, but our, ah, source
says he heard it as one word: PowerTen.”
“Your source is
reliable?’ Illya asked.
“Reliable but
low-placed. He heard Rillah use the word twice when talking otherwise in code
on the telephone. The word seemed to impress Rillah.”
“Anything else? Any
weaknesses we can use to make him talk?” Illya asked.
“You know better,
Illya,” Ngara said. “THRUSH agents don’t have weaknesses.”
“Everyone has a
weakness somewhere, Ngara,” Illya said. “Only THRUSH knows how to neutralize
the weaknesses of their agents. Is there anything unusual about Rillah?”
“Yes, he likes
modern jazz music. He frequents a place called The Yellow Zebra. Almost every
night he’s there.”
“Jazz?” Illya said.
“It’s more this
rock and roll, the long-haired kids with guitars,” Ngara said.
Teenage music!
Illya’s dark eyes narrowed. He sat back in the taxi.
“I think we had
better visit The Yellow Zebra tonight,” Illya said. Ngara nodded. By this time
they had reached the Imperial Hotel. Illya paid Ngara as he would any driver,
and went in to claim the room reserved for Comrade Tworkov. All was in order:
the Russian trade mission was, conveniently, out of the city at this time.
Section-V did not make mistakes when they arranged a cover. Illya examined the
room, secured it against surprise attack, and slept soundly until time to go
that night.
* * *
The Yellow Zebra
was a loud neon glare in the night of Kandaville. It was a small club, down a
flight of stairs from the street. A quartet of young men played and sang in
strong rhythm on the bandstand. They played well, and Illya nodded his
appreciation as he entered with Ngara. The young girls of the city whirled
across the dance floor, their young bodies quick and alive.
“There,” Ngara
said.
Illya looked. Azid
Ben Rillah sat alone at a table near the bandstand. The Somali lounged
indolently, a long, Russian-made cigarette dangling slack from his full lips, a
glass of some colorless liquid in front of him. His strong, dark hands fondled
the glass like a lover, raised it to his lips from time to time.
Illya slipped into
a seat at a table behind Rillah. Joseph Ngara sat with him. Illya had removed
his disguise now. The Russian Tworkov was supposedly asleep in the Imperial
Hotel.
The blond
U.N.C.L.E. agent looked nothing more than a young music lover on the town, but
his sharp eyes missed nothing. He noted the faint sign given by Ngara to a
young waiter and to a lithe girl singer who came out now on the bandstand and
smiled softly at Azid Ben Rillah.
“Rillah seems a
little interested,” Ngara said without looking at Illya. “But I’m worried. He’s
smart, and Mahyana is one of our newest agents. I’m afraid she’ll overplay it.
But someone has to get close to him.”
“There may not be time,”
Illya said. “Whatever they have, it seems to be advanced rapidly. Perhaps a
day, two days, but then we’ll have to force his hand. We.”
Azid Ben Rillah
suddenly turned around in his seat and his deep-set brown eyes passed across
Illya’s face. To anyone but an agent as sharply trained as Kuryakin it would
have appeared that Rillah barely noticed him, for the brown eyes immediately
shifted away to look at another part of the room.
But Illya Kuryakin
knew better. Azid Ben Rillah had been shocked within a hair of his life when he
had seen Illya. There had been no more than a flicker in the brown eyes of the
Somali, a faint stiffening of Rillah’s body, a minute knotting of the corded
muscles of the THRUSH agent’s neck. But it had been enough to betray him.
Azid Ben Rillah had
recognized Illya—and had been startled.
Which meant, at
least, that Napoleon Solo had not talked yet. A man who had known Illya was
coming would not have been shocked at the sight of him.
Illya felt a sudden
coldness in his stomach.
What was it?
Something he,
Illya, saw in the dark face of Azid Ben Rillah. What? Damn it, Kuryakin, he
told himself silently, what was it?
He stared at the
dark face of the Somali. Rillah, recovering instantly as befitted a trained
agent of THRUSH, was casually continuing his contemplation of the lithe and
soft young dancers. Illya abandoned all attempts at concealment. He stared at
the dark indolent face.
Yes! It was the
face. Something—something he had not seen in the fuzzy blowup in New York. A
picture can only tell so much, and the picture in New York had not been a good
one. Now, with the live face before is staring eyes, Illya saw something
different, something—familiar!
Yes, familiar! He
knew that face. Not as it was, not dark like this, and the eyes—Illya stared,
forced his mind back and back. How far? How far back was it?
Rillah, he knew,
had had a similar feeling; the Somali knew Illya from somewhere. But where,
when? The eyes—blue! But no Somali had blue eyes. The face floating somewhere
in the dim past of Illya’s mind had blue eyes and a fair skin, not a Somali at
all.
It was something no
picture could show, but the aspect of that face, the real live face, was know
to Illya. Far back. Before U.N.C.L.E. Yes, long before U.N.C.L.E. when he had
served in the Soviet—
And he had it!
He knew who Azid
Ben Rillah really was.
In that instant the
Somali who was not a Somali suddenly stood and walked quickly for a curtained
doorway at the side of the room.
Illya leaped in
pursuit.
Joseph Ngara was
right behind him. Ngara nodded sharply to the waiter, who was one of his men,
and to the girl singer. The waiter dropped his tray and clawed under his coat.
The girl singer
lifted her skirt showing long, beautiful legs like smooth brown marble—and
showing a tiny holster from which she drew her small pistol.
The three African
Section-II members converged on the curtained doorway. Illya had been quick but
Azid Ben Rillah had been even quicker. The fake Somali vanished through the
doorway.
Illya followed,
through a passageway and out, suddenly, into the dark African night of an alley
that stank of garbage.
Rillah was waiting.
The fusillade of
shots from the semi-automatic pistol hammered the night, striking chips from
the stone wall, bare inches from Illya’s head.
Illya went down,
his U.N.C.L.E. Special out. He clicked the control to the paralyzing-dart
magazine. He needed Rillah alive—false brown colored contact lenses and all.
Rillah stepped out,
firing madly.
Illya raised his
pistol from where he lay and fired once, twice. The sharp spit of the pistol
firing darts was barely heard in the night.
Azid Ben Rillah
clawed at his neck and went down, rigid on the filthy stones of the alley.
Illya started to
rise.
They came from both
sides at once.
Joseph Ngara and
his two agents came out the door, guns ready.
The six strangers
came from the open end of the alley. Their guns were held out in front of them.
They stood crouched, legs straddled wide, firing as they came.
Joseph Ngara went
down, riddled and dead.
The waiter choked
on his own blood in his torn throat.
The girl singer
sprawled in the shelter of two heavy garbage cans. She crouched, her dress torn
open, legs and breast brown in the dim light—and she never stopped firing.
Her small pistol
empty, she grabbed and reached Ngara’s U.N.C.L.E. Special, set it on automatic,
fired a withering fire toward the killers coming fast down the alley.
Illya clicked his
Special to bullets and poured fire into the six strangers.
Six who were only
three now, the others dead or dying.
No one had spoken a
word. They were all trained, and words did not help. Cries of pain or anger
only wasted time, spoiled the deadly aim.
Illya smiled like a
wolf in battle. Three to two, but he and the girl had cover; the three THRUSH
men did not.
Azid Ben Rillah lay
silent between the two battling sides.
Illya aimed
carefully this time. It would soon be over.
And the three
remaining THRUSH agents suddenly vanished in great sheets of flame. Flame
licked high in the alley. Flame that rushed across the ground toward the girl
and Illya as if pushed on a strong wind. But there was no wind.
Illya felt cold.
They had thrown
flame bombs, deadly flames that fed on their own creeping fuel and moved toward
Illya to consume him.
Napoleon Solo
talked, his voice filling the dark, cornerless room where Maxine Trent stood
above him and the two hidden men stood behind in the shadows. Maxine still held
the needle. An instant in his arm and Solo began to talk at once.
“Mary had a little
lamb. Its fleece was white as snow. And everwhere that Mary went. The lamb was
sure to go.”
“Tell us!” Maxine
Trent cried. “What did Waverly tell you?”
“Baa baa Black
sheep, have you any wool?” Solo said, his voice crisp and precise. “Yes sir,
yes sir, three bags full!”
The reedy, inhuman
voice hissed from the dark. “Slap him, you fool! He has to tell us. The serum
cannot be evaded. He has to tell us what he knows!”
Maxine Trent
slapped Solo hard. Blood trickled lightly from the corner of his mouth.
“The nineteen
forty-two St. Louis Cardinals were one of the great teams of all time. Ray
Sanders played first base, Marty Marion was at shortstop, Stan Musical was in
right field, Enos Slaughter.”
Now the deep voice
cursed from the dark room. Maxine Trent stared at Solo, turned to look
helplessly, with fear in her eyes toward the hidden men. The deep-voiced man
spoke.
“It is no use; he
has been conditioned. He can tell us nothing this way.”
“Conditioned?” the
thin, hissing voice said.
“U.N.C.L.E. has its
methods, too,” the deep-voiced man said.
“Conditioning so
that under any form of truth serum a man will only tell what he has been
conditioned to tell. It is a long process, much too long for general use. I
know they had conditioned the five Section-I members to give us false data; we
had Waverly once, and everything he told us was false. But I did not know they
had extended it down to Section-II. You will get nothing but nonsense from Solo
this way.”
There was silence.
Maxine Trent stared down at the babbling Solo as he reeled off the personnel
and exploits of the 1942 St. Louis Cardinals baseball team. The needle in her
hand seemed ludicrous now. She wanted to stop Solo, shut him up, turn off the
endless stream of ridiculous information.
She slapped him,
but he neither blinked nor stopped, rendered helpless by the truth drug.
“Stop him,” the
reedy voice hissed.
A hand holding
another needle appeared from the dark. Maxine Trent took it again plunged it
into Solo’s arm. Solo stopped babbling at once. His eyes came unglazed. He
blinked, grinned up at Maxine Trent.
“I trust you
enjoyed all my information, Maxine,” Solo said.
The deep voice
cursed again in the dark behind Maxine Trent.
“Prepare him. We
will have to use older methods,” the deep voice said.
“Anything,” the
hissing voice cried from the dark. “I must know what Waverly knows! The
smallest error must be corrected! You understand?”
“Yes,” Maxine Trent
said. She looked down at Solo. “I’m sorry, Napoleon, but you won’t cooperate.
You can’t be conditioned against simple torture.”
“Try me,” Solo
said.
The deep voice
whispered somewhere off in the darkness. Then a hand appeared again from the
dark. It held another hypodermic needle.
“Release him from
the hypnotic drug, make him comfortable,” the deep voice said.
Maxine did as she
was instructed. Almost at once Solo felt as if the ropes were gone, the soft
material holding his feet was taken away. He moved, stretching the cramps from
his muscles. A hand came out of the dark, holding a glass with amber fluid in
it.
“Give him a drink,”
the deep voice said. “The best Scotch whiskey, Mr. Solo.”
Solo drank and the
warmth coursed through his body.
“Perhaps a
sandwich, some hot coffee?” the deep voice said.
Solo nodded and his
mind came alive. Inside, there was sudden flicker, a plan. He was aware of what
the deep-voiced chief agent of THRUSH was doing—the hot and cold treatment. A
variant. In torture it is the sudden changes that break a man. The coming and
going and coming again of pain.
They were awakening
his nerves, his responses. Almost any man can face danger once; it is the
second time, the third time that are hard. Likewise in torture. Once the pain
began a man could slowly learn to stand it, to self-condition his body to take
the increasing degrees of pain.
It was the swing
from pain to peace, to pain again that was hard. First agony, then relief, then
agony, and again relief, until what finally broke a man was fear of the next
agony.
They knew this, and
they were relaxing his defenses. How far would they go? A faint hope flickered.
A double hope, and a plan. He had his cigarette lighter camera in his pocket.
He could feel it. An he still had the small but powerful gas bomb that was his
innocent-seeming pearl stickpin. He did not think that the deep-voiced man or
the hissing-voiced Council Member N would apply the torture.
Another aspect of
good torture was to leave the victim alone with some mindless torturer, someone
who could not be talked to. The true interrogator went away, and the victim in
his agony almost prayed for the return of one who would listen. It was a chance.
Solo nodded, breathed.
“First, if I could,
a cigarette?” Solo said quietly.
“Of course,” the
deep-voiced man said from the dark. “Maxine, give him a cigarette.”
Maxine handed Solo
a cigarette. He reached quickly into his pocket for his lighter. He flicked it
once, twice, three times before the flame burst out and he lighted his
cigarette. The reedy voice hissed.
“The lighter, you
fools! It is a camera!”
Maxine grabbed at
the lighter. But Solo had anticipated her. The instant he had taken his three
pictures of the dark ahead of him through the infra-red lens, he had pressed
the tiny button that dropped the miniature film cartridge into his hand.
As Maxine grabbed
the camera, he palmed the tiny cartridge and let it vanish up his sleeve.
“Open it!” the
reedy voice hissed.
Maxine opened it
and removed the film cartridge she found there. Solo tried to look beaten. They
did not know that the camera had a special optical arrangement that took
pictures on both cartridges through a single lens. The camera was made for just
such an eventuality. There would be a cartridge in the camera—and it would be
exposed in case they checked to be sure.
The deep-voiced man
checked.
“Not bad shots, Mr.
Solo. I admire you. Infra-red. I never underestimate U.N.C.L.E. Too bad you
underestimate me.”
“Why bother?”
Maxine Trent said. “He won’t leave here alive.”
The hiss of the
inhuman voice was almost like a laugh this time as it burst low and horrible
from the darkness.
“You see too many
spy movies, Agent Trent. No, we will not tell him what he wants to know because
he will die. This is not a movie. Prepare him now; we can waste no more time.
We will send in Gotz.”
The deep-voiced man
laughed. “We will leave you now, Mr. Solo. Miss Trent and Gotz will take good
care of you. If you find you would like to talk, just send for us. We will not
be far.”
Suppressing the
smile he felt at their predictable actions, Solo flexed his arms as if
preparing his body to resist the tortures of the unknown Gotz. One of the
weaknesses of power was the tendency to always use the same methods to enforce
its strength.
Solo had often seen
this peculiarity of power-mad nations. It had been one of the weaknesses of
Hitler’s Germany, and it was a common, fundamental weakness of THRUSH.
But it was the time
to act. Solo did not know how many men would be with the unknown Gotz.
Maxine stood
watching him, her pistol in her hand, now that he was free. She was the proper
distance away, and the rest of the room was still lost in darkness. Solo would
need time to find a door, and exit. He stretched.
“Careful,
Napoleon,” Maxine said. “I would hate to shoot you now. Too bad you have to be
U.N.C.L.E. They’ll never let me keep you now.”
“I’m sorry, really,
Maxine,” Solo said, continuing to flex his arms and legs, but carefully.
“You’d make a
lovely pet. I could tranquilize you every day,” the tall beautiful agent
purred. “My little kitten. But you have to be U.N.C.L.E. Why couldn’t you have
been just C.I.A., or British MI-five? They’d have let me play with you then.”
“I’ll try to do
better next time,” Solo said.
“Poor Napoleon.
Always trying,” Maxine said. “It wasn’t nice of you to trap me earlier, was it?
How did you guess? The record player I imagine. I told `N’ that you would guess
when it shut off and the tape recorder came on.”
“It was a trifle
too convenient, Maxine,” Solo said. And he distracted her for an instant. “So
`N’ isn’t that smart?”
“Not as smart as he
thinks,” Maxine said smugly, her guard down the fraction of a second as a
result of her anger at her leader. “They think they can’t make errors on the
Council. They.”
Solo moved. His
hand flicked up and across his tie, tore the pearl stickpin out and hurled it
at Maxine’s feet, all in a single motion.
The force of
pulling it out set off the fuse. A cloud of gas exploded and engulfed Maxine
Trent. Still the beautiful agent managed to fire a single shot. The bullet tore
a furrow, skin deep in the side of Napoleon Solo’s head. He went down, but came
back up almost at once. His head ached, but there was not much time, not after
the shot.
Maxine Trent lay
crumpled on the floor of the room. She would be unconscious for hours. Solo
stepped quickly through the light into the dark corners. He found, once his
eyes were accustomed to the dark, that the room was large and empty. Only the
inlaid table and the lamp were in the completely silent room.
And there were no
doors.
Solo blinked,
looked.
There was nothing
but smooth walls without doors or windows. He walked quickly around the entire
perimeter of the room. There was no way out. And then he saw that the room was
soundproof. This, at least, gave him a little time to locate some exit. There had
to be a way. But he could not find it. Nothing but bare smooth walls.
Routine—and a
little luck—came to his aid. Solo had been an agent for a long time, he knew no
one survived long without a little luck, accident or pure chance, all helped by
the mistakes of the enemy. THRUSH had a prescribed routine of operation, and it
helped Solo now.
A tiny red light
winked on, winked three times, and stopped. But it was enough. It had to be a
signal that someone was about to enter the room. A precaution, of course, since
all agents who used this room undoubtedly had standing orders to shoot anyone who
entered without the signal. A precaution that would save him.
Solo waited.
The wall opened
silently, without even a hiss, directly beneath the winking red light. A man
stepped through. Two men.
The second man was
a tall, slender Chinese carrying a machine pistol. Solo chopped him down with a
single blow to the neck under the ear.
The first man
turned slowly.
He was the biggest
man Solo had ever seen. A giant well over seven feet tall, weighing over three
hundred fifty pounds without an ounce of fat anywhere. There was no doubt that
this was Gotz, the torturer.
Gotz turned
ponderously, his tiny pig eyes seeing the Chinese lying on the ground, Maxine
lying unconscious. He moved toward Solo.
There was not an
instant to wait. Once in those giant hands Solo would have no hope. The giant
could not be fought. One chance was all Solo would have, and he took it.
His feet braced
against the wall, Solo pushed off as hard as he could and hurled himself toward
the giant. His open hand thrust straight up and forward. The heel of his hand
caught the giant flush on the point of the chin, snapping the giant’s neck back
with enough force to break a roof beam.
Surprised,
ponderous, the giant could not evade the single blow. His head snapped back on
his bull neck. He staggered, grunted once with pain and collapsed in a
quivering mass of bone and muscle. It was a blow that would have instantly
killed almost any man on earth, but Solo did not think the giant was dead.
He turned and
dashed through the opening without waiting a second. He ran down a narrow steel
corridor. At the far end there was a door. At the door Solo stopped, took off
his shoe, removed the heel and took out the thin strip of thermite foil. He
stuck the foil to the lock area, pulled the magnesium fuse and jumped back.
A large hole melted
in the door. Solo pushed and the door opened. Alarms went off, loud, clanging.
But he was in a bright hallway. There was light. He reached a window. Outside
he saw the city and below him the river. He was still in New York, in some riverfront
warehouse building.
The alarm clanged
on; feet pounded.
The river was three
stories below. The window was locked and could not be opened. Solo backed up,
wrapped his suit coat around his head and dived through the glass. He fell,
jack-knifed in the air, and hit the water in a clean dive.
Under water he let
his coat go and swam for the dark shadow. He came up underneath the building.
The film cartridge was still safe inside his shirt. A tug passed close on the
river. He swam for it.
In the Kandaville
alley, Illya Kuryakin watched the flames flow toward him. The girl singer was
still firing.
“Back!” Illya
shouted. “Get Rillah!”
The flames that
roared around them, slowly engulfing the alley had one advantage. They hid them
from the THRUSH agents. Crouched low, Illya and the girl, Mahyana, dragged the
paralyzed Rillah back away from the flames.
The flames blocked
them from the door of The Yellow Zebra. The other wall had no openings of any
kind. The wall of the club had a window, but it was high up, too high. Illya
and the girl looked around. There was no way out. The flames flowed inexorably
closer. Illya looked at the pretty, dark girl.
“There is only one
way,” he said. “We will have to go out through the fire.”
“They’re waiting,”
Mahyana said.
“There is no other
way,” Illya cried, raising his voice now as the flames licked at the buildings,
crackling in the night.
“All right,”
Mahyana said. “I’m ready. But we will have to leave Rillah. We.”
The sound came from
above. Illya whirled; his Special aimed, ready. But he did not fire. Above them
the window had opened high up. A face leaned out. A face with a black beard.
“Here, Dad—grab
on!”
It was the bearded
man calling down from the window. A rope came out, dropped. Illya looked at the
flames. He pushed Mahyana and she climbed up the dangling rope like a panther
up a tree. Bending, Illya quickly tied the rope beneath the inert arms of Azid
Ben Rillah. Then he swarmed up the rope himself.
Inside the window
he hauled the unconscious Rillah up and into the room, where they all stood.
Flames licked at the walls of the room. Fire engine sirens were wailing closer.
“You could of got
singed, man,” the bearded man said.
“Yes, we could have
been burned a little,” Illya said.
The bearded man
looked out the window once more.
“Say, that’s some
fire. I mean, how come it burns so good on stone like that, Dad?”
“It would take too
long to explain,” Illya said, “but we thank you. Now I suggest we leave. The
fire seems to be burning the building.
“I hear you, Dad.
We abandon the scene,” the bearded man said.
Illya and the
bearded man carried the inert form of Rillah out and down a flight of dark back
stairs. Mahyana led the way, the U.N.C.L.E. Special she had taken from the dead
Ngara ready in her hand.
“A cool chick,
man,” the bearded man said.
Illya studied his
new helper. A boy, really, not a man. But a boy who had had the right strength
at the right time.
The bearded kid saw
Illya watching him.
“I play banjo,
man,” the bearded boy said. “Joe Hooker.”
“Fighting Joe?”
Illya said.
“You beat me, man?
Just Joe Hooker from Hoboken. I play banjo with The Beavers, take a chorus
sometimes. We come out here for the loot. Out here it’s still beards. The long
hair ain’t made it yet.”
“Well, Mr. Joe
Hooker, I thank you.”
“Say no more, man,”
the bearded boy said.
They carried Rillah
to the cellar of the club and out a side entrance Mahyana knew.
The dark girl
surveyed the street carefully.
“Come,” she waved
with her pistol.
They carried Rillah
to her waiting car. Joe Hooker went back to his banjo. Illya drove fast away
from The Yellow Zebra toward a safe room where Mahyana directed him.
* * *
Napoleon Solo, a
bandage on his head, and wearing a fresh suit, watched Alexander Waverly study
the photographs he had taken in the THRUSH room.
“They will have
abandoned that place by now, of course,” Waverly remarked. “You say the voice
sounded mechanical?’
“Like wind through
metal and plastic,” Solo said.
“Yes,” Waverly said
as if thinking about it. “You have given our chemical people all you can about
the drugs they used on you? Well, what do you make of the pictures?”
Solo looked at his
copies of the blowups. “The one you can see I recognize. He was the baggage
handler at Idlewild. Hardly a council member.”
“No, I think not. A
chief agent, though, and we know him. Good work, that,” Waverly said. “Which
voice do you think he was?”
“The deep voice. He
had to be, sir.”
Waverly nodded,
looked for his pipe. “Unfortunate that the other is turned away. We can hardly
see his face at all in any picture. Still, we know he is small, rather thin,
and has an odd voice. From what you say, he may also be a chemist himself.
Council members are often scientists in their own right, you know.”
Solo studied the
pictures. “Research says that from the cut and the cloth of his suit he could
be British, or from any of the Commonwealth nations.”
Waverly found his
pipe. “A rather large Commonwealth, I should say.”
“What puzzles me, ”
Solo said, “is that voice. I’m sure it was his real voice, and how could he
hide it? Why don’t we have anything in our files? It stands to reason he’s an
important man—all THRUSH Council members are. We should have the voice on
file.”
Waverly searched
for his tobacco. “They ran it through. The result was negative. Possibly the
man never speaks in public. Have you seen my tobacco?”
“It’s in the second
drawer. You put it there,” Solo said. Waverly opened the second drawer. “Ah,
yes, thank you. I suggest we wait for a report from Mr.—ah—Kuryakin. It seems
he has good prospect in Kandaville.”
* * *
Azid Ben Rillah
came awake in the hidden room of U.N.C.L.E.‘s Section-II in Kandaville.
Illya sat in a
straight-backed chair, the chair turned so that he could rest his chin on the
back, and watched the Somali come awake. The room was as secure as human brains
could make it. It was high, with a wide view of the great river that skirted
the city.
Azid Ben Rillah
touched is face and looked at Illya. The small, blond U.N.C.L.E. agent smiled.
“It won’t come off,
the skin coloring,” Illya said. “But I removed the contact lenses. Your eyes
are blue again.”
Rillah nodded. “I
thought you spotted me.” The fake Somali lapsed into his native
language—Russian. “How have you been, Illya?”
“Quite well, thank
you, Alexy. Interesting that you kept the initials,” Illya said, also in his
native tongue. “Alexy Borayavitch Razov and Azid Ben Rillah. You were reported
dead.”
“Our homeland
dislikes defectors,” Alexy Razov said. “I felt safer to vanish after I turned
my coat, shall we say. And you? Since you were looking for me, I gather you
still work for our friends the secret police? Am I to expect a quick and secret
trip home? After ten years it will be strange. All that snow. Hard on a poor
Somali.”
“No, Alexy, home is
not where you are going. Exactly where you go will be up to you.”
Razov sat up on the
bed. He looked down at the chains on his hands and feet. Then the dark-skinned
man with the strange blue eyes looked at Illya.
“How is it up to
me?”
“If you like, you
can be safely in New York tomorrow. In London. Anywhere you choose. And with a
new face, a new identity.”
“New face? You can
do that?”
The turncoat
Russian was studying Illya very carefully. Razov seemed to be suddenly afraid,
very afraid.
“You could protect
me? Hide me?” Razov said.
“Yes,” Illya said.
The ex-Soviet agent was trembling. “In exchange for what?”
“For the meaning of
PowerTen. For where it is being made, and for what exactly it does.”
Razov seemed to
collapse on the bed. The dark-skinned, blue-eyed turncoat lay on the bed
shivering, his lips trembling. Razov’s whole body shook as if in the grip of
some terrible fever. His Russian was broken, shaking.
“You know! You know
what I am. Then.” Razov turned his face to stare at Illya, “then—you must be
with—U.N.C.L.E.! Yes I see it now, U.N.C.L.E.! I wondered about that girl, the
singer. Damn you to hell, you’re with U.N.C.L.E. and I’m done, finished.”
“We can hide you
from THRUSH,” Illya said.
“Oh, damn you! Why?
Why?” Razov cried. “We were friends!”
“It seems that we
took different paths, Alexy,” Illya said.
“Very different
paths.”
Razov sat up, his
fear gone for a moment. “U.N.C.L.E.! A pack of milk-sops, do-gooders, bleeding
hearts! What counts in this world but power, money, victory? THRUSH will be
everything soon! Everything!”
“No, ” Illya said.
“THRUSH will be nothing. They are nothing now and they will always be nothing
but an evil force doomed to failure.”
Razov turned white
under his dark tint. “Failure! You know who I am. I’m dead. I’m through. They
will kill me now.”
“We can protect
you, Alexy!” Illya said. Alexy laughed. A hollow, hopeless laugh. A laugh of
the dead and the damned.
“No one can protect
me, Illya,” the turncoat Russian said. “I can’t even make a deal. They will
kill me now.”
“Don’t be an utter
fool! They can’t reach you here,” Illya said testily. Razov began to laugh.
“They can’t get to
you. They can’t even know what room you’re in!” Illya cried. Razov laughed
harder, a wild, hysterical laugh made up partly of fear, partly of sardonic
amusement.
“They don’t have to
reach me, you fool. They don’t have to know what room you have me in. They only
have to know what building it is and they know that. Look!” The former Russian
agent pointed a long finger toward the window of the room. Illya whirled. At
first he saw nothing. Only a window nine stories above the street. The he saw
it.
Outside the window,
over a hundred yards away, he saw a kite flying. A large, flying toy. But it
was no toy. Illya took his binoculars and went to the window. The kite was not
a kite. It was a type of balloon; it had a small motor that could maneuver it.
And its long, stiff string that was not string but thin cable went down to
where two men stood on the roof of a building. The men were wearing earphones.
“That microphone
can pick up within six hundred feet,” Razov said. “They hear all I say.”
“But they still
can’t reach you, and we’ll soon stop their eavedropping,” Illya said calmly.
He took out his
U.N.C.L.E. Special, fitted the tubular metal stock, the telescopic sight,a nd
placed the weapon against his shoulder. He fired twice. One shot cut the thin
cable. The second shot punctured the balloon device and the kite fell. On the
roof below, the two men vanished.
“Now that they
can’t hear you or get to you,” Illya said. “Now you can tell me what PowerTen
is.”
“You fool,” Razov
said.
And laughed.
It was the last
sound Alexy Borayavitch Razov, alias Azid Ben Rillah, ever made.
There was a small
explosion, a puff of white smoke from Razov’s cnest, and the laugh died in a
strangled scream. Razov fell over backwards and lay with his dead eyes staring
up at nothing.
Later, in New York,
Waverly and Napoleon Solo listened to the report of Illya Kuryakin by overseas
relay on the miniature radio set.
“It was sewn under
his skin. It must have been there for years. A very powerful explosive pellet,
too thin to be seen. There was only the smallest scar, and no metal to be
detected.”
Illya’s voice, from
distant Kandaville, continued. “I would imagine all THRUSH agents must have
such a device inserted in their bodies. When they are caught, it is detonated
remotely to silence them—in most cases probably at once. This time they tried
their listening device first. They know we are on to PowerTen.”
Waverly was solemn.
“Very well, Mr. Kuryakin. It can’t be helped. Did you find any leads at all?”
“One,” the far-off
voice of the small Russian said. “It was in his shoe, under the inner sole. A
ticket, I think, admitting two to a performance of The Bedlam Trio in a Sydney
night club.”
Solo leaned across
the table in the New York office. “Sydney? Our unknown council member “N” could
have come from Australia, sir.”
“So I recall,”
Waverly said dryly. “Yes, I think Australia would be likely place to look next.
Do you hear me, Mr. Kuryakin?”
There was a chuckle
from distant Africa.
“Then I will meet
Napoleon in Bedlam.”
Waverly winced
noticeably. “Please keep your humor in some kind of check, Mr. Kuryakin. But,
yes, by all means, join Mr. Solo in Bedlam at once. Before Illya had apologized
for his bad joke, Napoleon Solo was on his way out the door to pick up his
tickets for Sydney, Australia.
The harbor of
Sydney is spanned by a giant semi-circular arched bridge that towers above the
water. It is the first thing you see as you fly in. Then came Customs. The
third would be, for more weary travelers, one of the Australian city’s modern
hotels, or perhaps the great beaches later for a swim.
For Napoleon Solo
and Illya Kuryakin, after Customs there was only a clandestine meeting, a
joining of forces.
After that came the
howling teenagers.
Four hundred
howling, screaming young people, dancing a frenzy to the music of five quartets
of long-haired, bearded young men under high hanging cages, where slim-legged
and full-breasted young girls danced behind the hanging bars.
The Bedlam.
The muscular man on
the door, far beyond his teens, checked their ticket.
“Sorry mate,
tickets only. That it? Right, go on in.”
The big man beamed
at them and turned his attention to the next group trying to enter the madhouse
of music and stamping young feet. For his sortie into Bedlam, Solo had changed
his usually impeccable clothes for a shoddy sweater and tight jeans.
Illya did not have
to change; his tight black trousers and usual black shirt, coupled with his
blond haystack hair, made him seem part of it all.
Behind them, with a
carefully procured ticket, was the dark, slim Mahyana.
Illya had brought
the African Section-II agent with him—what better agent for The Bedlam than a
girl singer?
Inside the door,
deafened by the howling mob of dancers and screamers, they appeared to meet,
Illya and Mahyana. Two young people with mutual interests, ready for life.
Solo led them
through the rocking room toward the first bandstand. Four young men with long
hair gyrated, handling their electronic instruments perfectly. Above them in
the cages the girls moved sinuously, their eyes closed, their young bodies
moving in perfect rhythm with the beat of the music.
“Four,” Solo said.
“Hardly a trio.”
Illya pointed out,
“The sign on the stand says they are the Waif Wailers.”
“I hope that
whatever PowerTen is, they don’t feed it to all of them here and send them
after us,” Solo whispered.
“You have the most
charming thoughts,” Illya said.
“Just what are we
looking for?” Mahyana wanted to know.
“If we knew that,
my dear, we wouldn’t have to look,” Solo said.
The beautiful
brown-skinned girl smiled at solo. Illya sighed. He hoped that both Napoleon
and Mahyana would remember that there was work to do, dangerous work. Illya
grinned wryly. Perhaps he was just jealous. And perhaps he had a right to be.
After all, he had seen the girl first. She had almost saved his life.
Solo whispered to
Mahyana, “I think our Illya would prefer it if we tended to business.”
“It is hard to look
into each other’s eyes and still look for trouble,” Illya said.
They had reached
the next bandstand now. Five young men with beards sang and stamped, banged
hard on their instruments. The sing on the bandstand read: The Beavers. The
banjo man suddenly bent down.
“Daddy, you
following me?”
Solo studied the
bearded young man who grinned down at them from the bandstand. “Is this a
friend of yours, Illya?”
“I would like you
to meet Fighting Joe Hooker from Hoboken,” Illya said.
“You puttin’ me on,
Dad?” Hooker said.
Mahyana smiled at
the bearded boy. “Fighting Joe Hooker was an American Civil War general, Mr.
Hooker. I think Mr. Kuryakin means it as a compliment.”
“I knew I should
have finished kindergarten,” Joe Hooker said, and smiled at the pretty singer.
“You brought the cool chick, Dad. That makes my night. Put away your weapons
and sing a chorus, doll.”
“All right,”
Mahyana said.
The girl climbed
onto the bandstand with her fluid motion, the slim brown body hiding the muscle
of an athlete. Illya and Solo circulated slowly, watching the room. Joe Hooker
strummed his banjo, beating time, grinning at the girl as she sang. Illya nodded
toward the other bandstands across the milling mob of teenage dancers.
“I see no riots,
Napoleon. Perhaps they are not here tonight?”
“Then why did the
doorman act as if they were?” Solo said without looking at Illya, his body
keeping time as if the music were his only interest.
“I don’t know.
Perhaps Mr. Hooker will tell us,” Illya said.
Solo nodded,
snapping his fingers, his eyes studying the room. Everything seemed normal: the
youngsters were dancing a storm, a bright happiness on all their faces. With
the exveption of the doorman outside and some of the musicians, it did not look
as though there was a person in the room over twenty years old.
“Nice, real nice,”
Joe Hooker said as Mahyana finished her chorus and The Beavers took a breather.
The bearded banjo man squatted down on the platform. “This moving is too much,
Dad. Yesterday Kandaville, today Down Under, crazy.”
“Mr. Hooker,” Illya
said.
“Joe, Dad, just
Joe. Mister is for TV stars over fifty.”
“All right, Joe,”
Solo said. “What can you tell us about The Bedlam Trio?”
“Local group. This
is home base,” Hooker said, “Only—”
“Do they travel a
great deal?” Illya broke in.
“No, man, they sit,
you know? I mean, this is their pad. Only thing is, they—”
“Is there anything
peculiar about them? Anything unusual,” Solo said.
“They’re on, Dad,
if that’s what you mean.”
“On?” Illya said.
“Turned on, man—the
pot, you know?”
“Marijuana?” Solo
said.
“They smoke up a
storm, and that’s kind of funny, you know? I mean, the new rock and roll boys
don’t usually make that scene. They’re the only group I know, way out. Only,
Dads, maybe you’ve got another sort of group in mind.”
“Why?” Solo
snapped.
“Well, The Bedlam
gang here ain’t a trio. They’re a quartet. See, over there.”
Illya, Solo and
Mahyana turned quickly to look at the four muscular young men on the last
bandstand across the dancing room. There were four-and they were also very
strange looking. They wore black leather jackets, bulky jackets that could hide
almost anything. But it was their eyes.
Solo whispered
“Look at their eyes!”
“The same as in the
pictures—maniacal,” Illya said.
“Are thinking what
I’m thinking?” Solo whispered, his voice still smiling as if he was talking
about nothing more important than the music.
“I am,” Illya said.
“A trap. That ticket was left for me to find. It must be a standard booby trap,
intended to bring anyone who captures or kills on of their men straight here.”
“I agree. And I
think we are going to have trouble getting out,” Solo said.
“I would say a
diversion is indicated,” Illya said.
“But we should talk
to them, The Bedlams,” Solo said.
“Later would seem
wiser,” Illya said.
“I agree,” Solo
said.
The two agents
spoke low and casually to Mahyana. The girl nodded her understanding. Joe
Hooker squatted down again on the bandstand above them.
“If you’re
interested, Dads, The Bedlam boys look mighty interested in you.”
The bearded banjo
man nodded toward the far bandstand. The four muscular young men in the black
leather jackets had put down their instruments and were looking toward Illya
and Solo. Illya pointed to the doorman standing with them. Solo nodded.
“All right, now.
Listen,” Solo said. “We’ll head for the door together. If they start to cut us
off, I’ll drop a smoke bomb; that should shake this place up. When I do, make a
run for the door. I’ll cover the rear.”
“Now!” Illya said.
The three agents
started for the door. From the bandstand, the four leather-jacketed youths
began to move to cut them off. Illya and Solo pushed the girl ahead of them. It
looked for a moment that they would make it.
Then it happened.
From out of the
hordes of dancing teenagers, single young men and girls began to appear—all
wearing black leather jackets. The boys wore jackets and blue jeans, the girls
the same jackets and tight stretch pants. They seemed to appear all through the
room—and al their eyes had a steady, fixed, maniacal glaze. Eyes that were
almost insane, yet happy, exhilarated.
“They’ve got us
blocked off!” Solo said sharply. “If I throw the bomb it won’t stop them all.”
Illya looked around
quickly.
The three agents
had stopped now. They stood in the center of the room, surrounded by the wildly
dancing young people, the bands beating a frenzied rhythm. Everywhere in the
room the strange teenagers in the leather jackets seemed to come up out of the
floor. Then there was a voice.
“Looks like you
need the Paul Revere act again, Dads.”
Joe Hooker had come
up to them.
“I know the back
way. Make with the feet, fast!”
They nodded. Solo
suddenly threw his bomb. Smoke billowed up in a great cloud in the room.
The screaming
began.
Illya, Solo, and
Mahyana followed Joe Hooker toward the rear, under the rear bandstand and
crouched low, emerged into a concrete corridor.
Two black-jacketed
teenagers appeared with guns at the far end of the corridor, their eyes blazing
insane joy.
“This way,” Hooker
cried.
Illya snapped off
two quick shots from his Special at the two black jackets. The two did not even
duck. But they did not fire; they just came forward at a trot. Illya turned and
ran after the others.
They came out of a
door into a dark parking lot. Behind them black-jacketed teenagers poured into
the corridor like a boiling river. Now they began to howl like wild beasts on
the trail of food.
The three agents
raced across the parking lot, Joe Hooker with them.
Mahyana stumbled,
fell.
Joe Hooker stopped
to help her.
Another horde of
teenagers, all in black jackets, poured around the corner of the building.
Illya and Solo stopped for a second. Hooker and Mahyana were up again and
running.
“They’re cut off!”
Illya cried.
“We can’t help now;
too many of them.”
“Run, Napoleon!”
Illya cried.
Solo ran. Illya ran
behind him. They reached the far side of the parking lot, where there were
buildings and a street. Solo went around the corner of the first building, with
Illya twenty yards behind him. Illya cried out.
“I’ll lead them
off. They can see me.”
Solo did not pause.
He knew that Illya was right. He, out in front, could turn the next the next
building and be out of sight. The raging, howling mob behind was too close to
Illya. The weird horde of black-jackets had already swarmed over Mahyana and Joe
Hooker. One of them had to remain free.
Solo turned the
corner. He was out of sight for a full thirty seconds.
Illya came around
the corner, the mob in close pursuit.
Solo had vanished.
Smiling grimly,
Illya ran on down the dark Sydney street. They were persistent, the teenagers
behind him, not like a simple mob, but Illya was a trained athlete and he
slowly pulled away. He ran on toward the outskirts of Sydney.
The mob poured
after him.
For a long minute
the dark street was filled with howling, raging black jackets. Ten teenagers
forced Joe Hooker and Mahyana into a black car that appeared from nowhere. The
street shook as the horde poured on after the fleeing Illya Kuryakin.
Then, suddenly, the
street was empty again.
Nothing moved on
the dark Sydney street under the Southern sky.
Then a manhole
cover opened slowly. Napoleon Solo climbed out into the night. Alone, he
listened for a moment, then turned and walked quickly away in the opposite
direction.
The sun rose slowly
over Sydney. In his hotel room, Napoleon Solo spoke urgently into the tiny
radio set in his hand, the two threadlike antennae extended.
“Bubba, this is
Sonny! Come in, Bubba. Report, Bubba. Come in, come in, this is Sonny.”
Solo pressed the
receive button. There was only silence. He rubbed his chin. The set had a range
of five miles on local transmission. Illya knew that Solo would be in the
hotel. But Solo had been trying to raise the small Russian for hours. By now,
if Illya had escaped the mob, he should have managed to make his way to within
five miles of the hotel.
“Bubba, come in.
Sonny is here, come in. Bubba?”
There was only
silence.
Solo made a tiny
adjustment on his miniature set and pressed the send button again.
“Anzac, this is
Sonny. Come in.”
He pressed the
receive button. Immediately a crisp female voice spoke.
“Sonny, this is
Anzac Control.”
Solo spoke urgently
to the girl at U.N.C.L.E. in Sydney. “Has Bubba called in?”
“No report from
Bubba,” the crisp female voice said. “A report to the Sydney police detailed a
riot at The Bedlam. Many hurt—no mention of Agents Kuryakin or Mahyana. The
report stated that a musician, one Joseph Hooker, was missing.”
Solo thought for a
moment. Then he pressed his send button again. “Overseas relay to New York,
Section-I priority.”
“Immediately,
Sonny,” Anzac control said.
Solo waited. The
room had come to seem stifling now. Where was Illya? Had they caught him? And
where were Mahyana and Joe Hooker? Dead—or just captured? There was one hope:
THRUSH always tried to capture U.N.C.L.E. agents if it could.
Solo paced. Joe
Hooker was of no use to THRUSH. Solo only hoped the bearded musician had the
sense to let them think he was with U.N.C.L.E. It would be safer for now. Solo
paced. Where was he to go from here? The only lead was The Bedlam, and with his
escape they would have abandoned The Bedlam by now. He had to have a lead.
The tiny
transmitter-sender wailed its undulating bell-like signal. He pressed the
receiving button.
“Sonny, overseas
relay from New York. Proceed.” Anzac control said.
“Are you there,
Solo?” the familiar voice of Waverly said.
“Yes, I’m here,
sir. Illya is missing. They have Agent Mahyana, African Section-II, and a
musician named Hooker.”
The voice of
Waverly showed no emotion. “Very well, Mr. Solo. Section-II, South Pacific,
will conduct a search for Mr. Kuryakin. However, I think we must continue with
our problem. I have a possile area of investigation for you.”
“Yes, sir,” Solo
said. He did not protest. In the work of U.N.C.L.E., only the problem counted.
The people were expendable—all, including Waverly, if that had to be.
“With the aid of
South Pacific Section-II we have identified the suit worn by the council member
N in your picture. A tailor in Sydney, one Max Booth, verifies that he made it.
We do not wish to approach Booth for details with local people. So I think it
should be in your hands.”
“Yes, sir,” Solo
said.
The tiny set went
silent. Solo looked at it for a moment. Then he went to work. His weapons in
order, a clean suit on, he left the hotel and walked out into the Australian
sun.
A simple check of
the telephone directory showed that the shop of Max Booth was only a few blocks
form the hotel clerk. The hotel clerk informed Solo that Booth was a very good,
if expensive, tailor.
Solo found the
small, exclusive shop without incident. He walked in, the picture of the young
executive looking for a suit. A small, wizened man hurried to him.
“Yes, sir?”
“I’d like a suit,”
Solo said simply. The small man cocked his head. “American? May I ask how you
heard of me?”
“Through a friend.
He saw one of your suits on a man he met and liked it,” Solo said.
“You know this man
who wore my suit?”
“No, but he was
small, thin, about sixty, I’d say. My friend thought he was an industrial
scientist, probably a chemist. They were at a chemical convention.”
“Ah,” Max Booth
said. “Yes, small, thin, and a chemist. I made him a fine tweed.”
Solo nodded. “That
was it, a good tweed. Just what I had in mind. What did you say his name was?”
“Fitzhugh, Marcus
Fitzhugh,” Max Booth said. “A very wealthy man. One of my best customers. Ah,
he’s a great man, is Mr. Fitzhugh.”
Max Booth turned
and walked back toward a curtained fitting room.
“Tweed, you say?
Well, perhaps we can suit you. Of course, it will take some weeks. I have a
long list.”
Solo spoke to the
tailor. “He has a strange voice, this Mr. Fitzhugh?”
The tailor stopped,
turned. “Voice? Hardly, young man. Marcus Fitzhugh is a deaf-mute. Are you sure
you have the right man?”
“I never met him,
myself,” Solo said, but he was thinking of something else. A deaf-mute! Of
course. No wonder they had no record in the files of that voice! A man like
Marcus Fitzhugh was certainly in U.N.C.L.E.‘s files, but without a voice to
cross-reference.
Marcus Fitzhugh
never spoke in public, he had said that himself! No wonder. Now all he had to
do was contact Waverly and run a check on Marcus Fitzhugh. The man was sure to
be in the files. All.
Solo looked up. The
tailor was gone. His sixth sense was suddenly alert. It had been too easy. The
tailor had told him too much. Why? To throw him off guard. It was a trap.
Solo whirled, half
ran for the door. He reached the door and opened it. No one was in the shop or
on the street. He pulled on the doorknob.
A puff of cool
vapor struck his face.
Solo froze like a
statue with his hand still on the doorknob. He could see, think, but he could
not move.
* * *
Illya waited four
hours in the dank cellar of the Sydney slum. The mob did not return. By the
time Illya cautiously left the shelter of the cellar the sun was up over the
city. He took out his miniature sender-receiver.
“Sonny, this is
Bubba. Come in?”
He pressed the
receive button. There was no response. Illya put his tiny set away. Napoleon
had certainly gone back to the hotel if he had escaped. The hotel was out of
range, and so was Anzac control from here.
Carefully, cleaning
up his clothes as much as possible, he worked his way toward the center of
Sydney. The people going to work stared at him. He knew he must look odd—a
small blond man wearing a black shirt and tight black trousers all stained with
mud.
To be sure, Illya
took evasive action every time a long black car came near. He wondered about
Mahyana and Joe Hooker. He felt angry about the innocent young musician. Still,
they would probably be safe enough for now. THRUSH would want to `talk’ to them.
His progress was
slow. The sun was halfway up the morning sky when he reached the range of the
hotel. He took out his radio set again and raised the two threadlike antennae.
He sat in a hidden doorway to be unobserved.
“Sonny, this is
Bubba! Sonny, come in.”
Solo did not
answer. Illya felt cold. He made the tiny adjustment on his set.
“Anzac, this is
Bubba.”
The female voice
was cool. `Bubba, Anzac control. Where are you?”
“Safe,” Illya said.
“Have you heard from Sonny?”
“Yes, an hour ago.
He was instructed by New York to proceed to Max Booth’s tailoring shop. Are you
well?”
“As well as can be
expected,” Illya said dryly. “Any word on Mahyana or Hooker?”
“None on Agent
Mahyana. Hooker is reportedly missing.”
“No other word?”
“No. You are coming
in? Arrange contact.”
“No,” Illya said
grimly. “I am not coming in.”
He clicked off his
set and went to the nearest telephone. He located the address of Max Booth’s
shop. As fast as he could he walked toward the shop. The address was in range
of his radio set, and Napoleon had not answered. Illya walked faster.
When he reached the
street of Max Booth’s shop he stopped. The street was deserted. That was
strange at this hour. Then he saw the policeman directing traffic away from the
street. What had happened? Had something happened to Napoleon? He was about to
approach the policeman when he saw the long black car drive up.
The policeman waved
this one through!
Illya flattened
back against the wall in the shadow, where he could see the street.
The black car
glided to a halt in front of a shop. It was Max Booth’s tailor shop! Illya
watched. Moments later, two men—a giant and a big, dark-haired man—came out of
the tailor shop. Napoleon Solo walked between them.
Except that
Napoleon was not walking. He was being carried by the two men—carried upright,
rigid, like a statue carved out of stone.
Behind the two men,
and the grotesque Solo, Illya saw a third man. This man was small, thin. The
small man turned to look up and down the street. Illya shuddered. The man’s
face was only half a face—the left half was a mass of scars.
The three men
pushed Solo into the black car, climbed in after him. The car turned and came
back the way it had come. As it paused at the corner near Illya, the policeman
who had been directing traffic, suddenly jumped into the car.
The car roared
away.
But in the instant
of pause to pick up the policeman, Illya had run quickly to a parked car. It
was only a matter of seconds for the blond U.N.C.L.E. agent to press his small,
round electronic circuit activator to the ignition. The car started with a roar.
Illya drove off in
pursuit of the black car.
Solo was aware of
all that was happening. He could see the giant shape of Gotz in the front seat,
the man in police uniform driving. He could see the big, deep-voiced chief
agent of THRUSH on his right, and the small, thin, horribly disfigured man on
his left. The small man had not yet spoken, but solo knew that this was Council
Member N—Marcus Fitzhugh, famous and respected scientist and industrialist.
He was aware of the
barren land. It stretched all around the speeding car as far as the eye could
see. Bleak, hot and dey, with twisted trees. Low sand hills, patches of tough
grass, rocks and glaring clay. Here and there tall structures stood above the
parched earth. They were, Solo guessed, the heads of mine shafts. This was
Central Australia.
It looked more like
the surface of Mars—deserted, barren, malignant.
He was aware of it,
as he had been aware of the whole trip the thousand miles or more from Sydney.
First the black car to a small airport, then the cargo aircraft with the car
loaded right in it, then the hours of driving since they landed here in the center
of nowhere—a nowhere that looked like the borders of hell. A dry, empty land
like the white and glaring land around Green River, Wyoming.
He was aware of all
of this, and of the fact that he was alone.
But he could
neither speak nor move.
Rigid, propped
upright in the seat, even the muscles of his eyes were frozen; he could see
only what was directly in front of him. But his brain was as clear and active
as ever, and he could hear.
Marcus Fitzhugh
talked in that horrible hissing voice. “You see, Solo, your escape was only
temporary. You have caused us far too much trouble. Because of you we have lost
men, have had to close down two of our operational centers, and been put to all
the inconvenience of chasing you. Such foolishness slows down my work.”
“It won’t slow us
down long,” the deep-voiced chief agent said.
“Gotz has a score
to settle with you, Mr. Solo.”
“First we learn
what he knows,” Marcus Fitzhugh said. “And this time, Herarra, we must not
fail. This time we have tall the time we need.”
“He won’t get out
The Belly,” Herarra said. “Gotz will make him talk.”
“Just keep your
monster in hand, Herarra. We want answers, not smashed bones—not at first,”
Marcus Fitzhugh said.
Solo tried to move.
He forced the orders from his clear brain to his muscles. He did not move a
hair. His brain reeled with the effort. It was no use. The drug they had used
rendered him totally rigid. He heard Marcus Fitzhugh laugh—a terrible sibilant
sound like escaping air.
“I believe an
eyelid actually twitched that time, Mr. Solo,” Fitzhugh said. “You are a
remarkable man. I can’t remember when anyone managed even a hair twitch under
that particular little drug of mine. Yes, a remarkable man. It is too bad. Our
poor stupid Maxine was right. It is too bad you are U.N.C.L.E.”
The disfigured
industrialist laughed his reedy hiss again. “But, I too am a remarkable man.
The world failed to see that. Because I am disfigured, my larynx and vocal
chords destroyed, they think I am only a freak. The fools!”
“The fools, they
believe the accident in my laboratory not only made me a horror to look at, but
a deaf-mute. And I wa mute. This voice you hear, terrible though it is, is a
voice I created for myself. Yes, I build a new power of speech with plastic and
metal. I can do as much for others, and I will when we of THRUSH rule this
stupid world.”
“We must rule
because we can rule. Have you read Plato? Of course you have. He was a genius.
Only those who can rule should rule. The herd cannot rule. Look at what they
have done? Stupid children are allowed to run free, to do as they want. What
idiocy! Children, teenagers, must be shaped, told, commanded.”
Solo tried again.
His brain commanded, cajoled, begged his muscles to move. It was no use. He
could do nothing but listen to this madman, stare at the back of Gotz’s bull
neck. The sight of the giant made him as afraid as he could be. He had seen the
look in the pig eyes of the giant. Gotz would not forgive him for knocking him
out. That blow would have killed anyone on earth except the giant.
Solo felt the car
turn off the dirt road onto a smaller one. Clouds of dust rose in the hot
Australian air. The car bucked and slewed, but Solo felt nothing. It was his
hope. They would have to free him from this paralyzing drug to torture him. His
only hope was that they would torture him, not kill him at once.
He strained again.
Useless. Marcus Fitzhugh laughed his hissing laugh. Solo stared ahead beyond
the bull neck of the giant to where the desolate countryside was visible as the
car climbed a small hill. Sky and sand hills and glaring sun—a vast, empty desert.
Not a stick of cover anywhere, only the tall mine shafts standing up against
the blue sky.
This time they had
searched him completely, removed everything except his clothes. If he ever got
free, that would be their mistake. The thin thread of silicon carbide woven
carefully into his trousers, saw edged and hard enough to cut all but a
diamond. The loop of the same material, thin as hair, that was, in the hands of
an expert, a deadly weapon, and that was sewn, woven into his jacket.
“Well, my dear
Solo, here we are. There you see my true home. The Belly, they called it when
there were people here. There are no people within two hundred miles, I saw to
that. They called it The Belly, because that is what it is—a great belly inside
the earth. NO hill, just flat earth, unseeable from the air or anywhere.”
Solo saw it ahead.
A shabby mine-shaft exactly like all the others they had passed. Yet there was
a difference. To his trained
eye, the shabby
shaft was not wood at all but metal. The dilapidated two by four hanging at the
top was a radio antennae. The circular shaped bucket lift was a radar pickup.
There was nothing
else as far as he could see except flat land—treeless, coverless, empty.
And he could guess
that beneath the disguised mine shaft was the stronghold of Marcus Fitzhugh.
Hidden in the bowels of a flat earth, with no clues as to its location from the
land or sky—The Belly.
To Illya Kuryakin,
the desolate country looked like the arid deserts in the southern part of
Siberia. He had been to that harsh area once on a job before he came to
U.N.C.L.E., and he had thought then that there was no land on earth so
abandoned, forgotten, like a piece of some distant and dead planet. But he had
been wrong, this land was as utterly desolate and silent.
To follow them had
been as difficult as it had been bizarre. First to the airport near Sydney,
where he had managed to attach the directional signal device to the black car
before it had been loaded into the giant cargo plane. Then, in the air, at the
controls of the fast Beechcraft, maintaining contact by the directional signal
and by radar.
Finally he had
found a man at the bush airport, where they had landed, who had a battered
jeep—for a price.
Now he drove along
the dusty road, with the very faint cloud of dust from the black car far ahead.
He drove much too far behind them to be detected, following his directional
signal. Grimly he continued the long chase, awaiting only the chance to move in
with some hope of success.
There had been time
in Sydney only to report the description of the small man with the disfigured
face. After Sydney, the distance had become too great, and there had been no
time anyway. Only at the bush airport had he managed to leave a message-a carefully
coded message locating where he was, that would be telephoned to U.N.C.L.E.
Headquarters in Sydney.
There was nothing
more he could do now but follow the black car, check his weapons, and hope.
The distant, faint
dust cloud continued to move steadily across the vast and deserted land. The
glare of the sun reflected as if from water. Nothing at all moved in the land,
not an animal, not a lizard.
Illya had not seen
a human being or a house since leaving the bush airport-and they had been
driving all day. At least a hundred and fifty miles had been covered already
without a trace of human life or habitation.
The sun itself was
low in the sky when, at last, the signal on his direction finder told him that
the black car had turned off the dusty main road. Illya slowed down. If they
were looking for pursuers it would be now that they would leave a man to check.
From the aspect of the countryside, he guessed that any vehicle would be
suspect, it was that deserted.
He drove ahead very
slowly, letting the car move on ahead of him. The beep of the direction signal
showed that the car ahead was proceeding slowly and at right angles to the road
they had been travelling. The only danger was that it would move out of range
before he found the side road, but he did not think that was likely at the
speed it was maintaining now.
Then the car ahead
stopped.
Illya stopped,
leaned down to listen closely to his direction finder. There was no doubt, the
signal was no longer moving. The black car had stopped somewhere less than ten
miles ahead. Illya started the jeep and moved on very slowly. Then he stopped
again. There was no sense in taking chances by becoming too hasty. The sun was
low; he could wait for night. And he would avoid the road ahead if he could.
He got out of the
battered jeep. He took out the small box of the miniature direction finder all
U.N.C.L.E. field agents carried disguised as a box of wooden matches. With the
small box in his left hand and his U.N.C.L.E. Special, loaded, cocked and ready
in his right hand, he left the jeep and the road and started out across the hot
land.
There was no cover,
but he did not think they would look for a man on foot. In any case, it was a
chance he had to take. The open, completely empty aspect of the country worked
for him as well as against him. There were no high hills, no trees, no cover of
any kind for an observer. There were only low, flat rises bare on top, and
shallow gullies that might once have contained water.
He moved ahead,
taking advantage of every gully, every hollow. It was slow work, and the last
rays of sun beat down on his bare head. Already the air was growing chill. He
stumbled ahead, his head broiling in the sun, his body beginning to feel the
chill of the approaching night.
The sun was like a
copper disk sitting on the horizon of the yellow land when Illya topped a low
rise and saw it ahead. He dropped to his face at once. Slowly, then, he raised
his head to look again. He rolled behind a small boulder and looked.
It was a
shaft-head, like all the others he had passed, but not quite like them. His
trained eye detected the radio antenna, the radar disk, the solidity of the
seemingly broken down building.
And the black car
was parked in front.
As he watched, the
man in the policeman’s uniform appeared from out of the shaft-head and walked
to the car. The car moved off and vanished behind the building. Illya waited
for it to appear on the other side. It did not. He backed off down below the
crest of the small rise, circled, and looked again.
There was nothing
behind the shaft-head. The car had vanished.
Illya bent to his
direction finder. It was still operating, the faint bee-beep-bee-beep showing
that the car was close by, even though he could not see it. He crawled back
down into the hollow behind the small rise to wait for the night.
Night came in this
barren land as it came to all deserts, suddenly and completely. One moment
there was light and the last heat of the day; the next instant there was only
darkness and the rising cold chill of the night.
Illya checked his
weapons; the Special, his small bombs, the camera, his tiny radio, the thermite
foil in his shoe, the special belt, and all the other miniature devices that
made all U.N.C.L.E. agents walking arsenals.
Then he stood up
and moved off in the night.
He reached the
shaft-head without incident. There was no guard above ground. He found the
disguised elevator. It looked exactly like an abandoned shaft elevator, but
Illya touched its walls and found them solid steel.
It was locked. In
the night he considered. He could break into the elevator, but there were
probably alarms. Anyway, the operation of the elevator would certainly be
noticed.
He went back out of
the shaft-head and began to search the area in a wide circle, his infra-red
flashlight revealing the ground but not revealing his presence. At last he
found what he wanted-a cleverly disguised inspection ladder which ran down the
inside wall of the elevator shaft. With a deep breath, moving slowly, he
started to climb down.
He lowered himself
a long distance. At last he felt the in-rush of cool air. It was probably an
air-conditioning intake, which meant that he had to leave the shaft before he
reached the air conditioning unit, which evidently fed into the passage. At the
first cross duct, he turned and crawled until he found a frill. He burned the
grill off, and dropped down.
He stood in a
darkened corridor of steel. Far off he heard the sound of machinery. He bent to
his direction finder. The signal was strong from the left. He moved cautiously
to his left. He heard and saw no one. Whoever operated this hidden center was
highly confident.
Illya smiled. They
would find that even here in the center of nowhere, they were not safe.
The signal grew
stronger.
He rounded a corner
carefully and saw an opening ahead. There was a faint light inside. The car
must be inside the opening. Illya moved carefully. He reached the opening and
looked in.
He saw a bare room
with a single tiny spotlight.
In the center of
the bare steel floor, in a small circle of bright light, was a tiny object.
Illya stared at it and froze.
The object was his
tiny directional signal device!
It lay there, the
only object in the bare room.
A hand clamped on
his neck. A giant hand. He twisted. A second hand gripped his waist as if he
were no bigger than a toothpick. Other hands worked swiftly, stripping him. He
was held there naked while something was passed over his body-a metal detector.
Helpless and naked, he waited.
Then he was flung
forward. He lay on the floor beside his directional signal. His clothes were
flung after him, shirt, trousers, and belt, all searched.
The small spotlight
went out.
“Welcome, Mr.
Kuryakin,” a horrible inhuman voice hissed. “Rest now. You can join your
friends later.”
And the hissing
laugh chilled the darkness.
The loud machinery
pounded somewhere all night. It seemed to pound in Illya Kuryakin’s brain. He
dreamed of witches and giant hands. He floated helpless in a cauldron of
blinding sun and empty dark.
When he opened his
eyes he saw that he was not alone. Nor was he lying down in the room where he
had been caught.
“Hello, Illya,”
Solo said. “Welcome to the club.”
They were all
standing against the walls, one in the center of each wall. They were shackled
to the walls, spread-eagled, wrists and ankles shackled. Illya faced Napoleon
Solo across the room. Mahyana stood pale against the wall to Illya’s left. Joe
Hooker was shackled to the wall to Illya’s right.
“We seem to be
caught,” Illya said, still half stupefied.
Joe Hooker looked
sad. “Man, I thought you could run faster. When I stopped for the chick, they
put me away.”
A voice seemed to
come from the ceiling. The hissing voice of Marcus Fitzhugh.
“Mr. Hooker, I
truly regret your part in this. I realize now that you were merely a helpful
American. But, alas, it is too late. You must, I fear, share the fate of your
Uncles.”
Illya looked up at
the ceiling. “Please, spare us the bad jokes. We have troubles enough.”
“Of course, Mr.
Kuryakin,” Marcus Fitzhugh said.
The small,
disfigured man had suddenly appeared inside the steel room. They all blinked. A
door in the wall had opened and closed so quickly they had not seen it. Marcus
Fitzhugh was not smiling. His hissing voice came seriously.
“I apologize. No
jokes, no sadistic toying with helpless victims. And I will not reveal all you
need to know about PowerTen. Those movie villains are so ridiculous, aren’t
they? Who knows-you might still escape, and then wouldn’t I seem foolish?”
“You understand the
program ahead, I’m sure. You all have knowledge we can use—Mr. Hooker excepted,
of course. We will torture you, until you tell us or die. That is it.
Naturally, we will try to keep you alive as long as possible, but we are only
human.”
“You will die
whether you tell us or not. It is really only a matter of pain. We have drugs;
we shall try to break down your conditioning. Miss Mayhana may not be
conditioned, my agent Herrara tells me. And I will not insult either her or
your gentlemen by suggesting you talk to spare her pain. I think we are all
aware that the stakes are far too high for chivalry. Miss Mahyana, I’m sure,
knew what she was getting into when she joined you.”
“So, that is the
schedule. It begins at once. First, experts want to study your pain thresholds,
so we can make an intelligent working schedule. For that, you will all go
together this time, Mr. Hooker excepted. You will only be killed, Mr. Hooker.”
Joe Hooker said,
“How do I thank you, let me count the ways. Is the creepy one for real?”
“I’m afraid he is
very much for real, Joe,” Illya said.
Marcus Fitzhugh did
not answer either of them. The small, disfigured man with the metal and plastic
voice had vanished through the same swift and silent secret door. There was a
silence in the steel room.
Suddenly, as if
pushed, flung down, all four prisoners fell forward to the steel floor. The
chains had been removed by some remote control. There was a sharp rattling
sound as the shackles scraped the walls, steel against steel.
From where they
lay, their muscles cramped from the long chaining, the four prisoners watched
as the shackles and chains vanished into the walls.
Illya stood up. He
had been chained the shortest time and he was not numbed like the others. He
crossed to where the shackles had been. There was nothing but smooth walls. His
slender fingers could feel no trace of a break. He crossed the room to where he
thought the door was. The wall was smooth, unbroken, not a hairline crack.
“Excellent
engineering,” Illya said.
“Excellent
methods,” Solo said. “Not even a guard to unshackle us and give us a chance to
jump him. All done with mirrors.”
“Electronics and
complicated engineering,” Illya said. “And what is complicated is easiest to
sabotage. It is typical of THRUSH to equate complexity with efficiency and
progress. Of course, they have us under surveillance and voice monitoring. Is
that not so, Mr. Fitzhugh?”
It was the deep
voice that answered. “Quite true, Kuryakin. And I don’t think you will sabotage
us. Mr. Fitzhugh is preparing for you now. I’m sure Gotz will enjoy another
meeting with Solo.”
Silently the hidden
door slid open. They waited, the four prisoners, but nothing happened. Then the
voice of Herrara came again.
“Step out, except
Hooker.”
They looked at each
other.
“Come on,”
Herrara’s voice said impatiently. “We can prod you, but why make it hard? You
might as well walk where we tell you.”
Illya shrugged.
“Why not? Come.”
The three agents
stepped through the door, which instantly closed behind them, shutting off Joe
Hooker. But the door did not close fast enough to stop the bearded boy’s
gallant parting message.
“Stay loose, Dads,”
Joe Hooker said.
Then they were
alone in a long silent corridor. They walked ahead. As they neared the end of
this corridor another door slid open. They passed through, and the door closed
behind them. Smoothly and simply they were forced along corridors by doors that
opened and closed. The steel corridors were smooth and doorless. They were
under constant scrutiny. At last they entered a series of corridors that were
different.
“Keep walking,”
Herrara’s voice said.
They had seen no
human being, nothing they could attack even with bare hands. Herded by opening
and closing doors, watched on closed-circuit television, they marched now in
corridors that reminded them of U.N.C.L.E. Headquarters. There were doors,
windowless and smooth, but marked with small metal plaques. Casually, Illya
looked at the plaques on the doors.
At last, after what
seemed like a walk of a mile in the maze of corridors, a door opened and they
saw the figure of the giant Gotz standing before them.
There were three
men in the torture room. The giant, Gotz, and two smaller men in white coats.
All around the walls were the instruments of torture—some old, like a simple
hot iron glowing white in its brazier, some new, like a simple square box with
electrodes for the temples.
Gotz was grinning,
his eyes fixed on Napoleon Solo. One of the men in white stared at Illya, and
the third man seemed to wet his puffy lips as he watched Mahyana enter the
room. The voice of Marcus Fitzhugh came over the loudspeaker.
“Now we will learn
about your pain levels,” Fitzhugh said. “The three men who will, ah,
accommodate you, have been very carefully chosen. Gotz, of course, will enjoy
his work on Solo. The man staring at Kuryakin is a former Soviet scientist Mr.
Kuryakin was involved in exiling in his early days. The third man takes
particular pleasure in handling women, especially pretty ones. Proceed,
gentlemen.”
Gotz stepped
forward, his huge hands reaching for Napoleon Solo.
“Now,” Solo
snapped.
With a leap, turn
and karate cry, Solo delivered a perfect karate kick to Gotz’s stomach. The
giant doubled over, but did not fall. Solo smashed an elbow thrust into the
giant’s face. Gotz staggered. Breathing heavily now, Solo kicked the giant
where it would hurt the most. Gotz screamed, doubled over.
Solo smashed the
giant down with a two-handed blow to the back of the neck. The giant rested on
hands and knees, trying to rise. Solo kicked him on the point of the chin. The
bull neck gave way with a loud, sickening snap, and Gotz collapsed.
While Solo had been
struggling with the giant, Illya had disposed of his man with a single thrust
to the throat. Mahyana had handled her man with a judo throw, hurling the
startled sadist against a wall.
The attack had
taken seconds, but already Marcus Fitzhugh was shouting. “Guards! Go in! You
stupid fools! How can you escape? Guards!”
The door opened.
As if this were a
signal they had been waiting for, Illya and Solo leaped to either side of the
door. Their actions were quick, smooth, and automatic, with no need to have
planned it with talk.
The guards ran in.
Two guards armed with machine-pistols. Solo chopped one. Illya tripped the
other, kicked him in the face as he tried to rise. Mahyana had the two guns.
They were through the door just before it closed.
“The left
corridor,” Illya cried out.
Mahyana handed one
machine-pistol to Solo.
Marcus Fitzhugh was
shouting. “They are out! Blue alert!”
Alarms clanged.
“Where are we
going?” Mahyana gasped.
“There is always an
Achilles’ heel,” Illya said. “I know where it is.”
Four guards
appeared. Solo and Mahyana shot them down. The girl took a bullet that creased
her shoulder, drawing quick blood. Illya had reached a door they had passed
earlier.
The Russian tore at
his belt-the belt they had left him when they took all they thought was a
weapon. He tore off a piece of the belt, pulled a thread on the edge and
shouted.
“Back, flat down!”
They fell to the
floor. A shattering explosion shook the steel corridor. The door in front of
them blew open with the force of the powerful explosive. The special belt was
an explosive in itself, fused by the threads at the edge. The three agents were
up and through the door.
Mahyana stared at
the small, closet-like room that seemed totally empty. “There’s nothing in here!
What-?” she cried.
Illya smiled. The
Russian pointed to a large box against the wall. Metal conduit went in and out
of the box. Thick sheaves of conduit like bundles of spaghetti.
“The main circuit
box, fuses and all. The place is all electric, and this is the Achilles’ heel.”
Illya Kuryakin took
the rest of his belt, wrapped it over the metal box, and pulled the thread. He
pushed Solo and Mahyana out into the corridor again.
Marcus Fitzhugh’s
voice hissed savagely. “There they are, Corridor 72, all.”
The explosion
seemed to burst their eardrums, shattering the steel walls, shaking the floor
beneath them.
Then all was
suddenly quiet.
Illya and Solo
raised their heads.
The alarms had
stopped. The voice on the loudspeaker had been cut off. The noise of
air-conditioning machinery ceased. The underground complex was as silent as a
tomb.
“And blind,” Illya
said. “All their power is off. Now they are deaf and blind, no better than we.”
“Look!” Solo said.
All down the
corridors doors stood open. Illya laughed.
“I expected that.
The doors are spring loaded and open when the power is off.”
“All the doors are
open?” Mahyana said.
“I’m sure of it.
Now, all we have to do is evade the guards. First we leave this corridor. Our
position is reported. I don’t imagine they have many guards, they would rely on
their electronic devices in this wilderness.”
They moved quickly
and silently until they had put three other corridors between them and the
point of the explosion. They had seen no one, but they could hear voices
somewhere. Illya faced Mahyana.
“I think the main
elevator shaft is straight ahead. It will be out of order, but there will be a
cable to climb. They will expect us to break out. That is your job, Mehyana. Go
up the cable, try to reach the surface.”
“And you?” Mahyana
said.
“We came here for a
reason,” Solo said. “We can’t leave without trying to find out what PowerTen
is.”
“But.” the girl
said.
“No but, my dear,”
Illya said. “We have to try.”
The brown-skinned
girl nodded and turned without another word. She slung the machine-pistol over
her shoulder, and entered the open door of the elevator shaft. Then she was
gone.
“This way, I think,
Napoleon,” Illya said. “The sound of machinery has to be the manufacturing area
and it is this way.”
The two agents
moved silently along the corridors. Twice they encountered pairs of armed
guards. They killed them quickly and simply with bursts from the
machine-pistols. They had five machine-pistols now.
At last they came
to their goal. A great cavern was hollowed out beneath high steel walkways.
Complex chemical equipment stood silent, motionless below. Men down there moved
frantically trying to make repairs.
Illya located the
office and laboratory. They shot down the three guards there. Solo laid all the
machine-pistols on the floor beside the open door.
“Go ahead,” Solo
said. “I’ll hold them off when they come. Mahyana will lead them off for a
time, but they’ll be back.”
Solo lay on the
floor, the machine-pistols ready. Illya began to search the office laboratory.
All was silent in
the vast underground complex called The Belly.
Until the voice
hissed, “I admire you, gentlemen. Perhaps you cold have escaped.”
Marcus Fitzhugh
stood in the room, a Luger in his hand. He stood there behind Solo, facing
Illya. Behind him Herrara held Mahyana. There were two other guards behind
them. They all stood before an opening in the office wall that had not been
there.
“You see, Mr.
Kuryakin, not all our little secrets were operated on the main power lines. I
was aware of our weak spot. I prepared a small circuit of secret corridors on
standby power. It seems I was wise. You will now please stand closer together,
and do not attempt to reach those weapons.”
Fitzhugh smiled
again, his horrible burned face twisting with a certain admiration. His hissing
voice spoke quietly.
“You will be killed
at once, of course. But such devotion to duty deserves the reward of knowledge.
You want to know about PowerTen? Very well, I will tell you.
Solo and Illya
stood there and looked at each other as they heard the nature of PowerTen.
“So you see, it is
really a very interesting substance. Once ingested it will raise any neurotic
impulse to a power of ten-ten time the urge, the obsession, the drive of a
normal neurosis. Think of it! I can see that Mr. Kuryakin understands the
chemical data I have outlined, but for Mr. Solo and Miss Mahyana let me
simplify. Like all alkaloids, say, marijuana or peyote, it induces a state of
heightened hysteria. However, unlike anything else known, it has the effect of
hypnosis—it can be directed. Under its influence, a man can be made to do what
he is instructed, mindlessly and without fear or hesitation, provided the
tendency was already there. For example, if some young man, obviously neurotic
and disturbed by the power structure of our foolish world, is given PowerTen he
will kill a political leader he only wanted to defy before he took the drug.
You see the implications? All we have to do is locate young people with the
neurotic desire to defy, steal, attack, rebel, destroy, give them PowerTen—and
tell them to do what they desire. They will do it!”
Illya nodded
slowly. “Happily, without remorse or hesitation. They will feel exhilarated.”
“Precisely!” Marcus
Fitzhugh said eagerly. “And certain subjects can even be directed to do
specific acts, as you well know from our recent results with the African
president, the gold theft, the laboratory fire, and the deputy chief.”
“Certain subjects?”
Solo said.
Fitzhugh frowned,
his grotesque face distorted. “At present the drug is still under development.
You see, at the moment it will only work on the young, the teenagers. That is
because older people have more resistance. They are under longer social conditioning.
They subconsciously resist the effects of the drug. But the young! Ah, they are
so eager, so vulnerable, they have not had the time to become emotionally
cautious.”
“The tendency must
be there?” Illya said. “Then that.”
“Explains the
suicides, the mad swimming out to sea, of course,” Fitzhugh said. “The drug is
still in its early stages. WE hav eto experiment. When we gave it to those
young people it heightened their self destructive desire and they acted.”
“And the
black-jackets, the mob in New York?” Solo said. “This must be your great.”
“They are our
triumph,” Fitzhugh hissed in his un-human artificial voice. “I call them my
teen corps. All are perfectly controlled subjects, as long as they get their
dosage of PowerTen. They do exactly as we tell them. We find one in a hundred
like that, and they are my pride. Once under the drug, they are my tools. You
see, PowerTen is also an addictive drug!”
The disfigured
genius laughed, “Like marijuana the drug can be ingested by smoking, by
chewing, or by injection. Think of it, gentlemen! A drug that will enslave
some, cause many to run wild and do what they only had a tendency to do before,
cause others to destroy themselves with a smile! A drug which can be
distributed in cigarettes, in chewing gum! All the eager, vulnerable young of
the world, the unformed teenagers—they will be in our hands, and we will rule
the earth with them! A world where we own the souls of all the young people!”
Illya shuddered in
the silent office. Solo’s hands twitched as if to reach out and strangle the
evil genius with the un-human voice. A world of teenagers addicted to a drug
controlled by THRUSH! THRUSH would be destroyed by their own suicidal hands
under its baleful influence.
“Conceive of
it—all teenagers a weapon of THRUSH!” Marcuc Fitzhugh said. “Ruined, destroyed,
rendered into mindless weapons who are happy when they kill and destroy! We
will own them all! And I, Marcus Fitzhugh, will rule the council of THRUSH
because PowerTen is my work, my secret! They are mine, the teenagers of the
world.”
At that instant the
noise suddenly began again. The machinery below began to hum; alarms began to
ring. Herrara walked to a box on the wall of the office and opened it to pull a
switch and shut off the alarms. The power lines had been repaired.
Fitzhugh seemed to
relax, his eyes calming and turned on Solo and Kuryakin. He raised his Luger.
This time the new
voice spoke from behind the two guards holding Mahyana.
“Dad, you forgot
one little teenager. Man, that was a real boo-boo.”
Fitzhugh whirled,
an automatic reaction.
The bearded face of
Joe Hooker stood behind the two guards. Hooker leaped on the two guards.
Mahyana threw one of them. Herrara, caught at the control box, was attacked by
Solo. Illya went for the back of Fitzhugh.
But the disfigured
insane genius recovered himself. Before Illya could reach him, he fired at Joe
Hooker. Hit, the bearded boy was knocked over backwards.
Fitzhugh leaped
forward, kicked Mahyana out of his path, and hurtled through the open door,
which instantly closed behind him. The disfigured man was safe inside his
emergency corridors.
Illya swore softly.
The rest of the enemy had been subdued. Solo stood now, holding a
machine-pistol. Mahyana stood up, blood still on her shoulder, a dark bruise on
hr pretty face where Fitzhugh had kicked. Joe Hooker lay on the floor.
“Like, Dads, he got
me some.”
“Where?” Illya
said, bending over the bearded boy.
“Nowhere, man, like
the shoulder. It smarts, you know, like it was crazy. There I was in that box
looking to meet the big banjo man and Shazam, the door opened! I split but quick,
you know? All the doors was open, and they just plain forgot about little Joe.
I saw them taking the chick down some little passageways. I followed, and they
never remembered. Crazy.”
“Crazy,” Illya
said. “Can you walk?”
“If I can’t, I’ll
fly. Man, let’s split this scene!”
Solo had walked out
to the steel walkway above the vast cavern of chemical machinery. Now he called
out.
“Look!”
Below, on the floor
of the vast chemical plant, Marcus Fitzhugh was shouting to the workers, waving
his arms wildly. AS one man, the workers began to run in a howling mob behind
Fitzhugh.
They were running
for the stairways up toward the office.
Illya ran back to
the control box Herrara had used to shut off the alarms. Quickly he pulled a
switch and whirled.
“I’ve opened all
the doors again. Run for the elevator as fast as you can. I don’t know how much
time we’ll have.”
“Go!” Solo
commanded.
Solo helped Joe
Hooker along the walkway and into the first corridor. Mahyana came behind them.
All the doors were open again.
In the control
office and laboratory, Illya bent over a console of dials and gauges. He
studied the labels for a moment, then quickly turned four dials to full open.
The needles on the dials that controlled the process in the vast cavern began
to climb toward the red danger areas.
Illya ran after the
others.
The first wave of
workers was coming up the stairs from the factory floor below. Illya squeezed
off a volley from the machine-pistol he carried.
The first four men
screamed and fell back against those behind. Somewhere the hissing voice of
Marcus Fitzhugh was shrieking in mad anger, forcing the workers on.
Illya raced down
the corridors after the others. Two guards appeared in his path and he shot
them down, their shots going wild above his head. Illya ran on over them
without looking down. The mob of workers was crowding into the narrow steel
corridor behind him.
An explosion
somewhere behind on the floor of the cavern rocked the corridor. One of the
pieces of equipment had gone up. Illya reached the elevator. He turned to fire
one more burst before jumping into the elevator-and saw the thick cloud of
greenish-yellow gas flowing along the narrow and windowless corridor.
Caught like rats in
a narrow sewer, the mob of workers began to scream, to choke, as the gas flowed
over them. The narrow corridor was like a long gas chamber.
Illya leaped into
the elevator.
Solo closed the
door and the elevator began to rise quickly.
Below them they
could hear the screams and groans of the mob caught in the deadly gas from the
exploded chemical equipment. Another explosion rocked the elevator shaft. The
elevator slowed, hesitated, then surged upward. Moments later they were at the
top. They stepped out into the fake shaft-head. It was daylight out in the
world.
Joe Hooker slumped
to the ground in the glaring sun.
Mahyana bent over,
trying to catch a breath.
Another explosion
shook the earth.
Below, faint and
horrible, the screams and groans rose up to the sunlight from the bowels of the
earth.
Illya pulled at Joe
Hooker. “Hurry. I don’t know how long we have before it all blows. That gas can
still reach us.”
“Lead on kindly
light,” Hooker said.
Staggering in the
blazing heat of the sun, the four beaten, disheveled refugees from the pit
below moved across the desolate land, away from the disguised shaft-head. Every
few yards the ground shook, heaved to explosions far below.
The screams of the
dying continued to reach faintly to the surface. Streamers of greenish-yellow
gas seeped up out of the elevator shaft behind them.
They reached the
first low rise from where Illya had first spied on The Belly. The sun blazed
down. There was not a breath of wind. Mahyana, her shoulder bleeding again, the
bruise on her face swollen, ugly, sagged to the ground. Hooker fell and lay
there in the broiling sun.
“Can’t we rest?”
Mahyana gasped.
“Well, perhaps we
are far enough, perhaps for a second or two we.”
Illya stopped. He
and Solo stood there on the small rise of arid burning land and looked back to
the fake shaft-head.
Impossibly,
unbelievably, four figures had emerged from the towering shaft-head, had come
up somehow from the holocaust below. The four wore gas masks and carried guns.
Even as Solo and
Illya watched, prepared to battle the last attack, one of the figures tore off
its mask and stood shaking its fist crazily toward them.
Marcus Fitzhugh
stood in the sun and cursed the men who had destroyed his work.
It was the last
gesture of his life.
There was a
shuddering heave of earth. Illya and Solo were knocked down.
Then the earth
seemed to raise up under the blazing sun.
The tower of the
shaft-head leaned, crashed down in a shower of debris.
Heaved once more in
a mammoth shuddering surge.
And collapsed.
Far off, the echo
of the underground explosion reverberated through the sunny sky, bounced off
the low sand hillocks, rolled away into the vast distance.
A great gaping hole
lay before the eyes of the four prisoners who had escaped-a hole that still
shivered and shook in the sun. All trace of the four enemies who had managed to
come after them was gone. Marcus Fitzhugh would do no more work for anyone, unless
it was for the devil.
From the gaping
hole that was the only visible sign of the holocaust below, streams of gas
seeped, lying heavy to the ground in the windless land.
“We had better move
on,” Illya said at last.
Solo helped Joe
Hooker to his feet.
They staggered off
in the blazing sun toward the distant road. Illya was not surprised to find his
Jeep gone.
After a while, they
lost track of everything-everything but the endless miles and the searing sun.
They staggered on, falling, getting up to stagger again. There was no water, no
food. They had not eaten for a day. As far as their burning eyes could see there
was nothing but emptiness.
“How long can we
last, Dads?” Joe Hooker said.
“We’ll last,” Solo
said.
“Don’t put me on,
Dad. I know. There isn’t a living cat within two hundred miles, that hissing
nut told me,” Hooker said. “We’ll never make two hundred miles.”
“We will make it,”
Illya said.
“Leave me, Dads. I
can’t help no more. When you get back you can give me a medal. I always wanted
a medal. One thing, like who’ve I been working for? I mean, who’s the leader,
Dads?”
“U.N.C.L.E.,” Solo
said. “But you’ve really worked for the whole world.”
“You had better
leave me, too,” Mahyana said. “I can help Joe, and I slow you down. Get out and
get help. We’ll try to stay alive.”
Illya and Solo
looked at each other. They knew that Hooker and Mahyana were right. Only Solo
and Illya, trained and uninjured, could hope to make it out of this endless
desert. And then the hope was slim. They had done their work, but was this the
end?
“It will be very
cold soon,” Illya said. “Lie close together for the warmth. Move slowly, but
keep moving as long as you can.”
“Crazy,” Hooker
said, smiling weakly.
Mahyana suddenly
stared upward at the glaring blue of the sky. Solo whirled. The helicopter
seemed to slide sideways in the sky. They all stood and watched with their
mouths open as the helicopter touched gently down not fifty yards away. A man
stepped out and walked toward them.
Alexander Waverly
said, “I see you accomplished your mission. I suggest we all leave this area
without delay. I think the Australian people can clean up the miserable
remains.”
“Yes, sir,” Solo
said. “But how—”
Waverly tapped at
his empty pipe. “I began to wonder about that Max Booth tailoring
establishment. It seemed too simple. When I arrived in Sydney, Mr. Kuryakin’s
message was there. It was not too hard to identify Marcus Fitzhugh from the
description.”
“And you got my
message about where we were?” Illya said.
“No, I’m afraid the
man you entrusted that to was one of their men. However, the Australians
managed to locate this particular piece of Fitzhugh’s property. He owned it in
his own name. THRUSH can sometimes be so careless, almost arrogant. Now, shall
we return to Sydney? Miss Mahyana is needed in Africa, I believe.”
The owl-eyed
U.N.C.L.E. leader turned and walked calmly back to the helicopter. Solo helped
Joe Hooker. The bearded boy was staring after Waverly.
“Like, crazy,” Joe
Hooker said. The bearded youth was in bad shape, but he could still manage a
wan smile.
Looking at him,
Illya nodded.
The forces of evil,
all over the world, could do their damndest, he was thinking. But for every
weakling they seduced, every poor unfortunate they trapped, the essential
decency in mankind was bigger, stronger than all of them. In the end, it would
have to destroy them.
It was a good
thought. It would help to make bearable the memory of the unspeakable hours
that had passed.
After a while, the
taut nightmare memories left Hooker and he could sleep.
The helicopter took
off, circling once over the gaping hole in the vast wasteland that still
steamed fingers of gas into the sky. Already, helicopters were below as men in
gas masks approached the stronghold and factory of Marcus Fitzhugh.
“THRUSH will need a
new member of council, it seems,” Waverly said. “Unfortunately, we need a new
chief enforcement agent for Section-II, Africa. Would that appeal to you, Miss
Mahyana?”
“Yes, sir, and
thank you,” the lithe brown girl said.
“We will have to
watch for the remains of the teen corps,” Illya said, his Russian mind still on
the problem. “They will be very sick without their PowerTen.”
“The hospitals have
been alerted, and the police,” Waverly said grimly.
“What about Maxine
Trent?” Solo asked.
“Her body was found
in the river,” Waverly said, looking for his tobacco in his old tweed suit.
“But I have my doubts it was really her, Mr.—uh—Solo.”
Solo smiled. He had
his doubts that Maxine would be ended so easily. He thought he would probably
meet her again. Strangely, the thought did not displease him, deadly though she
certainly was. A little danger was always interesting. And Maxine Trent was born
for danger.
“You know, The
Beavers are going to seem mighty square after you swingers,” Joe Hooker said.
“I mean, crazy.”
The helicopter
whirled off toward the jet that waited for them at the bush airport.
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