His gun dropped from nerveless fingers and his flexed knees flopped loosely. The hand released its numbing grip and he fell, gasping, every muscle tingling. Stiffly his neck turned to follow his eyes, and he saw the lean, wiry figure of Sakuda Matsujiro standing over him, flexing his knobbed hands slowly.
Illya's arms trembled violently as he tried to raise himself, and one collapsed. The face of the little Oriental was a mask of amber as he knelt and set his hand to Illya's knee. Needles of pain lanced through his leg, and he thought for a moment his kneecap had been broken. He managed to roll himself halfway over and clutched for his gun, but a sandaled foot came down on his wrist, and the slender knotted fingers closed around his shoulder and dug into his armpit.
His throat constricted against the scream that choked to his lips. As the incredible grip relaxed he writhed on the ground, tortured nerves aflame with the pain of returning life. Slowly his vision cleared as the grip did not return. He rolled his head, gasping for breath, his heart pounding, and saw his killer standing a few feet away. He was looking past Illya with an unreadable expression on his face.
Illya rolled his head back and felt a neck joint snap into place with a brief twinge that blinded him momentarily. As his vision cleared he saw a stranger standing on the other side of the clump of bushes—a little old man, dressed in faded gray. He must have been almost ninety years old, and his face was shrunken and wrinkled, but his eyes were the coldest and most compelling Illya had ever seen. He spoke softly in Japanese.
Sakuda stammered uncertainly as he answered. Illya couldn't quite follow the exchange—his head was ringing, and his body was still a mass of pins and needles. But Sakuda took a step back as the old man came forward through the bushes, and said something loud. The old man continued to speak softly and chidingly as he stepped over Illya and advanced toward the other man. He was perhaps two inches under five feet tall and couldn't have weighed one hundred pounds with heavy sandals—but Sakuda retreated from him.
Illya propped himself to a sitting position, bracing himself nearly erect as the two moved a few feet away from him. Suddenly the little old man seemed to reach across almost twice as much distance as his arms should have been able to span, and Sakuda dropped and rolled backward. He regained his feet and said something desperate. Illya's head ached fiercely now but his eyes were focusing, and he saw the fight—for the few seconds it lasted. He could never have described, even from his experienced professional viewpoint, exactly what moves were made in the five or ten seconds between the old man's first attack and the moment when Sakuda's last cry faded. There were blurred movements, but at a distance of fifteen feet with imperfect vision, he saw only a tangle of arms and legs.
The old man stood, head bent, over the body for several seconds. Then he turned toward Illya and bowed very low. His voice was soft and dry as he spoke.
Please to forgive this poor teacher, whose student proved false to the ancient honor of his people. I am responsible for what he has done, and now he is punished. He died with honor, and it shall be written so.
He bent to Illya and helped him to his feet, and his wrinkled hands moved swiftly and surely over the throbbing arms and legs, and the pain flowed away before them. He pressed on Illya's shoulder and ran a hand lightly down his spine. He pressed once and for a moment Illya felt a red-hot knife stab into his back; before he could catch his breath the pain passed.
The little old man spoke from behind him. "You will be very well," he said. "Do not think unkindly of my brother—his punishment was deserved, but he had been a fine man one time. For his memory, please to forgive."
Illya turned around, but the little old man was gone. Open grass, scarcely knee-high, covered the field for many yards in every direction, but Illya stood alone. Slowly he stretched his arm and leg muscles—they creaked slightly but made no further complaint. He looked dispassionately at the body of the ex-Thrush assassin, and wondered what his thoughts had been when his master appeared to punish him for his misuse of the secrets he had been taught. He walked away from the body, downhill, without bothering to keep to cover. Somehow, he thought, he wouldn't have much to worry about for the rest of his stay there.
If Miss Williamson was shocked when she walked into Mr. Solo's office to find him with his feet on Mr. Waverly's desk and a smoldering pipe clenched in his teeth as he scanned through a fat folder of reports, she gave no sign. As she placed the tray of sandwiches on the shelf beside him, he glanced up and gave her a wink, then made a long arm over to answer a call.
"Solo here," he said as he turned another page in the report. Miss Williamson watched as he handled the queries with all relevant facts of the situation clear in his memory. He might work out after all, she thought, and was turning to go when his voice rose after her.
"Miss Williamson. Would you find out the name of the Monitor Operator for me? And bring me her personnel card when you get a chance."
She paused at the door and turned, eyelashes fluttering. "Why, Mr. Solo, that's a standard communications acknowledgment tape. The voice is artificial. I believe Mr. Simpson prepares the actual voice pattern to Mr. Waverly's specifications."
She was gone in a quick flicker of her miniskirt. Solo set down the sandwich he had picked up and looked after her. Was she putting him on? He'd have to check with Simpson. He'd probably be recovered from that trip around the world dropping monsters—though that trouble they'd run into in Saigon hadn't helped his nerves any.
There'd be time enough to investigate when he was off this job. Another six days until Waverly would be home again, and then he could go back to nice simple work like being shot at. Apparently Thrush had spent their final effort in that big move timed to coincide with his absence from command. He'd dropped a lot, but he'd recovered some, and they seemed to be easing off to regroup their forces. And somehow the odds in the endless struggle of good against evil looked a little bit better for our side. He took a puff and started the next report.
A handsome blonde woman typed a message for transmission into a computer in a stone-walled room under a mountain just north of Christchurch, New Zealand, and a small receiver half a world away in Bogotá, Colombia, lit up and chimed softly.
0512672100 Z DE: CENTRAL TO: WATERLOO OPERATION TERMINATED. NO BLAME. STAND BY.
A moment later the audio circuit hummed to life and a flat, familiar voice spoke to three silent listeners.
"This is Greaves, speaking for Central. You three have done your jobs well and will be rewarded suitably. Although your primary goal, that of completely destroying Napoleon Solo, was not achieved, you did sufficient temporary damage to enable us to complete several important operations. I trust you also gathered additional data on his reaction pattern which may enable us to plan another attempt at another time."
"Quite possibly," said Dr. Pike, "when all data is correlated."
"Very well. You are each granted two weeks vacation credit, with full travel privileges from where you are now or from your home Satrap, usable now or later. Standard scale plus twenty-five percent bonus is also deposited to your home accounts. On behalf of Central and the entire Hierarchy I would like to thank you for a job well done. Greaves out."
A crescent moon rode low above the sunset beyond the wooden railing, and candle flames in glass chimneys danced and flickered in the mild evening breeze. Silverthorne and Dodgson relaxed over dinner with a discussion of their recent campaign and the meal as it passed.