I sat back proudly to eye my masterpiece.
Then my eye caught a flick of movement on the viewer. A knife was being drawn through a piece of meat.
THE COUNTESS KRAK.
I shuddered.
I looked back at the plan before me. I sheltered it so it could not be visible from the viewer. There was a flaw in my master plan.
The moment anyone drew a bead on Heller, he himself would be in the telescopic sight of a sniper rifle in the hands of the Countess Krak!
I thought about this for a time. Yes, it was a definite flaw.
In order to successfully gun down Heller, it was vitally necessary to get rid of that witch.
I thought and thought. I paced back and forth. I had been unsuccessful in this before. I must not be unsuccessful now.
Suddenly a basket caught my eye. There were many communications in it, untouched, unread, an accumulation of my long absence. The germ of an idea began to penetrate my mind.
I went to the basket. Right on top was a card from Widow Tayl.
Yoo-hoo, wherever you are.
Why don't you write?
I can feel him kick. He's almost ready to arrive. Looking forward to a happy marriage.
Pratia
To Hells with her. When I was Chief of the Apparatus, I'd have her exterminated. I threw the card on the floor.
There were some overdue Voltar bills. I threw those on the floor.
The next one made my hair rise. It was deep in the pile but the date stamp on it was not two hours old! It was from the unknown assassin Lombar had assigned to kill me if I failed! It said:
KILL OR BE KILLED
IS THE LAW.
It was signed with a blood-dripping dagger.
It made me very nervous. I had long since ceased to try to figure out who this must be. But it did look like it was connected with the Blixo for that time-date was an hour after its arrival.
How cruel it would be if, just as I was on the verge of total success, almost ready to become the head of the whole deadly organization, this assassin might make some kind of a clown blunder and kill me in error!
Oh, I had better look very busy indeed!
What I was looking for wasn't in there. My eye strayed. THERE IT WAS!
A messenger had slipped it under the door, probably in the last few minutes. HELLER'S CABLE!
He said that he was sending it. Yes, there were two other cables, much older, lying there in the dust.
I opened the last one:
SULTAN BEY, ROMAN VILLA,
AFYON, TKY
PLEASE EXPEDITE REPLACEMENT OF BOX NUMBER FIVE. IT IS DELAYING THE MISSION COMPLETION. JH.
The other two older cables said much the same thing. But I did not want to know what they said; I wanted to be sure he knew and she knew that they had been sent.
I knew I had this thing solved now.
But I only needed one thing. I did not have it yet.
I went to bed and rolled and tossed restlessly. I rose early and puttered about, cleaning guns.
When they got up in New York, I sat tensely at the viewers, watching, listening, lying in wait.
I prayed for luck. I did not have all that much time.
I loaded both viewers with the strips I had run out of in New York. I must be able to backtrack in case, while I was eating, they said the thing I was looking for.
Evening came. The Blixo took off.
I spent another feverish night. I paced through another wasted morning. I had only a week or so before someone noticed Black Jowl was gone. Heller and Krak were just delaying so as to spite me. I needed just a few magic words.
My afternoon came and they got up.
And then at their breakfast I GOT MY KEY MESSAGE.
Heller and Krak were at a breakfast table on the condo terrace surrounded by greenery.
"Dear," said Heller, "I'm sorry to have to be running about so much, but this afternoon Izzy wants me to go with him to Washington. Wonderful Oil for Maysabongo is going to take options on every drop of fuel in the United States, all reserves. Izzy doesn't know how to calculate capacities and I am pretty close to the Maysabongo ambassador from last fall."
"ALL the fuel?" said the Countess Krak. "Where will you put it?"
"We don't have to put it anywhere," said Heller. "You can buy options to buy anything. If we have the option to buy it at a certain price, then, if we do buy it, they have to sell it to us at that price. So we're purchasing a six month's option. The companies are so money hungry and the option sellers so eager that it is no trick. They don't think we'll ever complete the purchase and they'll just be in pocket half a billion for the options and still have their oil. Anyway, we're going down there and brief the ambassador. And then we're going to fly over to Detroit tomorrow afternoon and I'm going to test drive one of the new gasless cars to give it an okay for the production line. I'll try to be home about midnight tomorrow night and if not then, certainly by the next morning."
"No women in Washington," said the Countess Krak.
They both laughed.
"I'm leaving on the one o'clock plane," said Heller.
My prayers had been answered. This time I would not miss!
I reached for the two-way-response radio. I called Raht. He was at the New York office.
"At 2:30 this afternoon," I said, "you are to make a phone call." And I gave him the number.
"That's the Royal officer's condo," he said.
"Precisely," I said. "But he won't be there. His woman will have returned from the airport. I want you to say that you have an urgent personal message from Officer Gris. Then you are to give it to her. The message follows: 'I cannot possibly send you the replacement for Box #5 as I am afraid Jettero might hurt himself with them.'"
"Is that all?"
"That's all," I said.
"Wait a minute," said Raht. "That message sounds fishy to me."
"It will make sense to her. Do what you're told!"
"Listen," he said, "I know how your mind runs. I've seen that female. She must be one of the most beautiful women in the Confederacy. She compares to Hightee Heller, the dream girl of poor Terb. Are you absolutely sure that this isn't going to hurt her in any way?"
"No, no," I said easily. "Of course not. It's just a sort of code message and she'll be delighted to have it."
"I hope so," he said. He clicked off.
Who the Hells cared what he thought. He was paid to do his duty just like I was.
At 9:30 P. M., my time, I was glued back to that viewer. She had seen Heller off at La Guardia Airport and at 2:00 P. M., her time, had returned home to the condo.
At 2:30 the butler Balmor came into her study where she was grading student papers and said, "Madame, there is an urgent phone call for you. I have switched it to your line there."
In a panic, maybe thinking something had happened to Heller, she picked the instrument up.
Raht gave her the message flawlessly.
"Who is this?" she demanded.
But Raht had hung up.
She rose. And then she said the very thing I knew she would. "Heavens, what have I done?"
I laughed with glee. It was working. She thought the hypnotic suggestion she had given me was still in place and that it was blocking my shipment of Box #5.
She walked back and forth a couple of times. Then she reached for the phone. I couldn't believe my luck. She was falling for it. She believed, of course, that the only way she could handle that was with another hypnotic session. And the only way she could deliver that...
"Give me Airline Central Reservations," she said. She got it. "What is your next direct connection to Istanbul?" They told her there was no direct connection. Due to schedule changes, the best they could do for a reservation left at ten o'clock tonight and had a six-hour layover in Rome.
"I'll take it," she said. "Make the reservations on through to Afyon, Turkey. The name is Heavenly Joy Krackle."