“Damn it Lisa, how many times do I have to
tell you not to come out uncovered!”
The old woman let out a sigh and backtracked
into the pottery shop. As always, she was clad in her baggy khaki work shirt
and WWII surplus fatigue pants. But that was
considered just one step up from naked. With a sour expression she reached for
the long hooded robe that hung on a wall bracket. Once back in her disguise she exited the shop a second
time.
“Where’s my regular driver?”
“By now---probably on some side street getting
the crap beat out of him,” responded her State Department contact.
Carl Schmidt was a most unremarkable looking
fellow with a receding hairline, weak chin and a suit that was uncomfortable,
but worn because it augmented his narrow shoulders. He had become friends with
Lisa because they both grew up with a German speaking elder. In Lisa’s case,
her father’s best friend had been a German Jew as well as an archeologist.
“Why---what’s happened?”
“It’s finally begun. Salah Jadid is making his
move. The Ba’ath Socialist Party is
taking over everything.”
“Oh bloody shit. Six more months and we would
have had enough trained people to keep the airwaves non political. But now,
complete censorship is a distinct possibility.”
“Yea, but the worst part is that Jadid can’t
micro manage what will happen over the next few
weeks. Some of his people will act sensibly, some won’t.”
“Getting back to my driver----“
“Don’t worry about him, he’s got relatives who
will come to his rescue. Same goes for your students. But you are a foreigner who needs relocating.”
“Very well. I suggest we contact Professor
Almaz and---“
“I don’t mean across town. I’m taking you to
the airport.”
“Bloody hell---and I’m supposed to trust that
you packed me a proper bag? I shall inspect the contents before I board the aircraft.”
Carl glanced over at his companion while
navigating the dark streets of Damascus. The
elderly woman was the very picture of austerity. Thin, wrinkles competing with
one another for space on a face that was well endowed with nose, chin and very high
cheek bones. She had been wearing dentures since the age of thirty-four, and
that was the same year she got her first pair of earrings. Raised by an
archaeologist father, she had grown up amongst the shifting sands of North Africa and the Middle East, and only began to
frequent flush toilets when her dad sent her off to get her academic
credentials in England.
“I brought you your drinking mug and a box of
tea bags.”
“You mean you left---“
With the speed of a striking cobra Carl
whipped out a compass attached to a long strap.
The woman visibly relaxed at the sight of her lucky heirloom.
“Where precisely are we
flying to?”
“We’ll drop you off in Adana, Turkey.”
“Light aircraft then.
Love a chance to practice a landing or three.”
“You’ll have to discuss that with the pilot.
I’ll be in the back seat with Frank, pretending that I barely know you.”
“All this fuss over a voluntary position with
a handful of young men. What a pity we’re not discussing sex.”
“You trying to tell me that all that feminism stuff about sexual harassment
is unwarranted?” teased a man who was trying to look calmer than he felt.
The old woman’s face turned deadpan. What the
world was in dire need of was more common sense. In any case, Lisa wasn’t
losing any sleep over the plight of young women in mini skirts.
“Dreadful bother, this. When I am invited back
by the new management, I shall return; confident that my father’s reputation
has preceded me.”
The American snorted.
“Thirty years ago maybe.”
“An Anglo
Saxon who speaks fluent Arabic has
little to fear in these parts.”
“And how many times so far has your character
been besmirched because you forget to cover your hair?”
“They’re just looking after the disposition of
my soul,” answered the woman.
Suddenly the stone buildings they were passing
reflected bright flashing red light.
Carl glanced in his rear view mirror and said,
“I don’t think they’re here for that tonight.”
The American pulled over and the police
cruiser parked close behind. Two uniformed men got out and approached the
French auto from both sides. When the officer next to Carl asked for
identification, Lisa was quick to offer her own documents, and Carl followed
suit while glancing momentarily at the police officer’s feet.
“Miss Sherman, we have orders to bring you in
for questioning. You are not being charged with a crime, but it is possible
that you will need to submit to an evaluation.”
“My Arabic is not perfect. I do not understand
what you mean by evaluation,” the
woman responded.
“All will be made clear to you at
headquarters,” promised the officer as he activated the door latch.
Carl understood that if the man in uniform
wanted to shoot him full of holes, the little French engine would not carry him
away fast enough to avoid that fate. But if they were needed for something,
hopefully that would keep them free of fast moving lead. That thought was more
after the fact as the American popped the clutch and sped out as fast as the
economy car would permit. Explicative after explicative followed until the men
in uniform lost the foot race with the little auto. Then it was time for Lisa
to convey her thoughts on this latest development.
“Are you out of your bloody Yank mind!?” the woman bellowed.
“The cops in these parts wear military Oxford shoes.
That guy was wearing slip ons.”
“Brilliant. So good to be in the company of a
footwear critic and fugitive!”
“He’s not a cop. The chief of D.P.D. was paid
off to give us an escape window if we should need such a thing. Like you, I
didn’t think we’d have to leave town, but my boss thought otherwise; and now
I’m thinking that he was right.”
The car turned right and headed for a dead
end----in a manner of speaking. At the end of the street there was a gap
between two buildings. Wide enough for pedestrians, but not meant for any
vehicle larger than a motor scooter. Carl headed for it with all the steam he
could muster in less than a block.
“It’s too narrow!” declared Lisa.
“Negative. I’ve spent a lot of time haunting
alleys and this one is---“
“A virgin alley,” muttered Lisa as the door
handles sprayed sparks along limestone walls.
As the car exited the other end of the stone
cleavage, a larger police cruiser halted at the entrance end and then proceeded
to back up with wheels squealing.
“They’ll still catch us. They’re just a couple
of minutes away.”
Carl spotted a construction site ahead and to
the left. He raced up to a large cement mixer that was turned over and opened
his ruined door.
“Will you build us a traffic barrier in the
next two minutes?” Lisa asked with heavy sarcasm.
The American ran around to the other side and
pulled the woman out of the car so roughly, for an instant she thought she was
about to be beaten. Instead the man picked the woman up with a surprising
amount of strength and dumped her unceremoniously into the mixing chamber.
“Use that compass to move northeast until you
reach the airport. Don’t know what your chances are but they gotta be better
than staying with me,” said the American as he jumped back into his heap and
threw the car back into gear.
Lisa was sorely tempted to climb back out of
the filthy enclosure, since she didn’t believe for an instant that either one
was them was in danger of being murdered. But for some reason she played along
with all the melodrama and remained hidden when the police cruiser arrived and
roared past her in hot pursuit. For twenty minutes thereafter Carl became
something of a public menace. He sideswiped a newspaper truck, a bread truck, a
mini-van and a very long melon stand. His destination was the U.S. Embassy,
which he was able to reach, but only because fraudulent police officers cannot
radio real police officers for help.
Bruised egos aside, it didn’t really matter
all that much to the pursuers. They just didn’t want the American to leave the
country, and he wasn’t doing that. In days to come he wouldn’t even consider
it. Lisa Sherman got picked up three blocks northeast of the cement mixer. She
was treated with the utmost courtesy, and looked forward to teasing her State
Department friend for the theatrics he had put her through. But then she was
taken to the basement of the Nazim Pasha Palace. There
things changed. In that place, Lisa would learn about men who are Muslims in name only. Where such men
came from was a question men of the west would ponder for many years to come.
They would speak English and be well
acquainted with the ways of the modern world; a world that they loathed as
unjust and sinful. Their numbers would steadily grow over the decades and
western military interventions would bring collateral damage, which in turn
would help create a terrible weapon; the suicide
bomber. Most important of all they would be devotees of the axiom: The end justifies the means.
The world was paying more attention to Southeast Asia, but the truly wise of
the world understood that in the future communism would take a back seat to
radical Islam. It was especially
difficult for Lisa Sherman to understand this. She knew the heart of the
average Muslim. She spoke their
tongue and didn’t see them as fanatics. But now she was in a place devoid of
sunlight, kindred spirits or reason. For her, the world had taken a turn for
the surreal.
“This can’t be about amateur radio,” she thought after being
shoved into a storage closet with no light.
Before long she would wish she could have
stayed in that closet. That peaceful, painless, sweet little closet.
Chapter Two
Thirty-two hectic hours after parting company
with Lisa, the State Department field worker was once again on the streets of Damascus. His
superior had been furious with him after receiving an initial verbal report on
the botched assignment. But when it was learned that Lisa Sherman was now in
the hands of a radical splinter group, Carl was told to go get some sleep and
leave the matter to a higher echelon of problem solvers.
Carl didn’t go along with that.
He got on a private phone line and began
making calls to people who knew Lisa. It didn’t take a genius to conclude that
Lisa Sherman had been targeted as a subversive. Today, teaching young men how
to communicate with foreigners. Tomorrow, teaching women how to do even worse.
It was vital that her captors see her rather as a minion, simply carrying out directives that had nothing to do with
social engineering. So Carl begged as many Syrians as he could to get the word
out that Lisa Sherman was nothing more than the daughter of a deceased
archeologist.
Amidst the chaos of a revolution, such an
effort might take many months to bear fruit, but Carl got lucky. (Sort of.) The
same idiots who concluded that Lisa was a threat to their way of life, also
concluded that Carl Schmidt was more than what he appeared to be. After all, only a high ranking operative would
dare run away from the police.(Albeit fraudulent ones.) In any case, Lisa
wasn’t standing up to physical abuse like a Mata
Hari, so when the involvement of Carl Schmitt came to their attention they
let it be known that they would consider a prisoner exchange. Of course they
fully expected the answer to be no. But
this way they could take the position that they were not at war with
innocents---only with cowardly infidels that liked to meddle in their country.
Carl really surprised them by calling their
bluff. He also surprised his own people by leaving the U.S. Embassy after
making unauthorized deals with revolutionaries. Such cowboy diplomacy was possible only because in twelve years of
service, Carl Schmitt never so much as padded his expense account. Now he was
doing considerably more than that. He was pulling into the parking area of a certain
coffee shop that had been deprived of its customers less than an hour ago. The
American entered the establishment feeling much like Daniel entering the lion’s
den.
There were three men waiting for him, but only
one spoke English. He was in his mid twenties and was wearing the traditional
one piece robe called a didashah. Carl
didn’t like dealing with young men in authority. There was just something
unnatural about the whole thing.
“I am Khaled al-Ayoubi. Am I addressing Mr.
Carl Schmidt?”
“Yes sir. Am I addressing a representative of
the Ba’ath Military Committee?”
“Not precisely
speaking,” the young man admitted. “You see, the Ba’ath party does not belong to any one man. Each prospective
leader must insure his position within the party before he can take effective
steps to protect the sovereignty of his government. I believe you Americans
refer to that as in fighting. In any
case, this will go on here at the capital for weeks to come.”
“Yea, that’s a bitch alright, but what I need
to know is, are you one of the guys holding Lisa Sherman?”
“Obviously,” the young man responded with a
hint of amusement. “My friends and I are not fettered by political necessities.
We are---technical people. When our
party leaders are all through putting together a chain of command, we will
offer up our humble contribution to the cause of Islamic Socialism.”
“Me.”
“If you can convince me that you are a bigger fish than the old woman.”
“That should be obvious enough,” mutter the
American.
“Not really. The woman speaks Arabic and has a
great many social contacts in this country. She could qualify as a great many
things---both good and bad.”
“Got your heart set on a position with
internal security?” Carl asked half jokingly.
“Only if it is God’s will, Mr. Schmidt. I do
not---“
Suddenly the exits to the coffee shop exploded
with men in combat fatigues.
“La tata harruk!!” (Don’t move.)
The command was not in the Syrian dialect but
the locals got the message and all made like statues. A Marine Corps captain
advanced on the table of men and leveled his .45 at the man who had been
speaking.
“Mr. Schmitt, you are the luckiest son of a
bitch I’ve known in years. Because this worked out so well, they probably won’t
fire you for going cowboy. But more than likely you’ll end up in a sandier
place than this. Mongolia maybe.”
Carl flashed an embarrassed smile and said, “I
suppose guarding an embassy is pretty dull work for a Marine. Ordinarily I
would be very happy for you, but you’re in the process of screwing up a
rescue.”
The officer’s name was Jesse Larca, a man of
Italian descent who was built like a refrigerator. (But Schmidt had yet to
learn whether or not the light stayed on when the door was closed.)
“Ah Jeez, you really believe that? Well, we’re
here to save you anyway.”
“Taking us into custody is a mistake,” warned
the Syrian.
“We’re not,” responded the marine officer.
“We’re only here for our own.”
“May we renew negotiations at a later time?”
Carl asked Khaled.
The Syrian’s eyebrows nearly came together in
suspicion.
“You---do not
have authority to deal with me?”
“He does not,” Larca answered flatly.
“Then why did he make the attempt?”
“Because he turned cowboy.”
“Cow-boy. Yes, I have heard this term before,
but I do not fully understand it.”
“Forget it. I shouldn’t have brought it up.
C’mon Schmidt, we need to get out of the neighborhood.”
“I would advise against it. It would be wiser
for us to renew our negotiations as you put it---here and now.”
“You just stay where you’re sitting and don’t
give me anymore trouble,” growled the captain.
Larca then lead the escort detail out of the
coffee shop with two of his men covering their departure. Outside two vans and
a vigilant guard were waiting. Everyone piled in and head back towards the
Embassy. Khaled rose from his table and
casually walked to the shop’s front window. There he waved to someone across
the street, who quickly raised a war surplus walkie talkie to his lips.
The American hand held devices were smaller
and considerably more powerful, but they only communicating a few yards between
vehicles when a truck loaded with bricks blocked the street ahead of the two
vans.
“Get up on our ass and stay there.” Larca
ordered the vehicle that was following him.
Cutting hard to the left, the lead van was then
compelled to shove against an old pickup that likewise sought to block them.
Back wheels spun and kicked up a cloud of dust as the pickup slowly slid
sideways. Then the back van pressed it’s front bumper against the lead van and
added its traction to the contest. When the pickup driver realized that his
roadblock was faltering he jumped out of the cab and swung a lead pipe against
the van’s driver window. Glass exploded but the marine behind the wheel kept
his vehicle moving.
The second van didn’t fare as well. The man
with the pipe really laid into it and the second driver caught a glancing blow
to the side of the head. Larca bailed out of his seat with a growl and ran back
to where the Syrian was still smacking away. The Marine next to the injured driver
had his pistol out and was yelling bloody murder for the assailant to back off.
That would have had the desired effect on any normal person, so the marines
being showered with glass had to assume that the Syrian was not a normal
person.
Larca was past caring. The Syrian turned to
face his approaching adversary, but all he expected was more threatening
gestures. The Colt .45 service
automatic didn’t zero in on the Syrian’s face like the last weapon. It was held
low, and the only thing that seemed to threaten was the Marine officer’s tense
jaw and dark glaring eyes. But before the lead club could rise and fall again,
the .45 roared in Larca’s hand, and the Syrian felt as though an anvil had been
dropped on his foot.
Larca pointed at the injured van driver while
his victim lay clutching a blood soaked shoe.
“Get Kelsi into the back and monitor his life
signs. George, take the wheel.”
The officer just made it back to his seat when
dozens of locals began to fill the street some one-hundred yards ahead of them.
Some were armed with clubs, others with rocks; but a couple were holding Molotov Cocktails.
“Those guys don’t look
like revolutionaries,” said Larca.
“These people are highly social,” explained
Schmidt. “One guy with a phone gets the word that a bunch of foreign soldiers
are on their turf. In just a few minutes you get a very big reaction.”
“In other words, ‘Yankee Go Home,” put in
Larca.
“All they see is your uniforms and your guns.”
“Well we’re not going to roll down the windows
and show them pictures of our families,” the captain retorted.
Schmidt watched the men up ahead ready
themselves in the street.
“It’s your call, Larca, but I don’t think
you’ll get past them without lethal force.”
The man with the hole in his foot suddenly
screamed out a long diatribe in his native tongue. That prompted the men in the
street to slowly advance.
“Captain, eight men with AK’s are walking up from the cement truck,” warned a lance corporal
from the rear.
“They push us into the rock throwers where we
furnish provocation for what comes next,” muttered Larca.
“We could
try using the guy on the ground as a hostage,” suggested Master Gunnery
Sergeant James Purdue.
Larca was the only officer in the small force
of Marines. He didn’t see any point in getting his exec in trouble should his diplomatic venture go awry.
“No---with our luck, one of the guys with the
Ak’s probably owes him a lot of
money.”
Larca then glanced at the rug shop they were
standing in front of.
“We’ll fort up in there. Leave the vans right
here in the street.”
Carrying their wounded, the Americans entered
the rug shop as the first projectiles smashed into the van’s windshields. Three
women and an old man were found inside. They were a bit startled by the
invasion, but the most surprising part of the experience was that the warriors
weren’t Syrian troops.
“Nelson, advise Lt. Baxter of our situation.
Tell him to fire up that A.P.C. I
want it to arrive at precisely sundown. Tell him to bring every tear gas
canister we have.”
Then the captain noticed that the civilians
were still just standing awe struck in the middle of the shop.
“Purdue, get those people out the back door.
Johnson, give each of them a stick of gum.”
“Casting bread upon the water?” inquired
Schmidt.
“I’m getting more and more pissed with you,”
warned Larca as he advanced to where the injured van driver had been laid out.
Carl went to the front window and grimly
watched as their vans were tipped over and then set on fire.
“Get away from that window, Schmidt!” the
captain bellowed.
“Captain, they’re not going to destroy the
property of their own neighbors as long as—“
A brick cut the sentence short and Carl was
more embarrassed than hurt when he realized that his cheek was bleeding. Larca
came over and fairly shoved the S.D. worker
into the nearest corner. Then he noticed the man with the white flag. It was
the same joker he had met in the coffee shop.
“Oh shit, I got a pretty good idea what he wants.”
“Carl snuck a quick peek and said, “Your man
on the floor there is the game changer. You
need to let me go with al-Ayoubi. For the sakes of two people now.”
“We are gunna wait for our ride out of here,
and you are gunna do it with your
mouth shut,” said the captain before giving Carl another shove.
“The guy with the flag is coming in,” warned
Purdue.
“Be sure and search his sorry ass when he
comes in,” instructed Larca who then turned to the man who was monitoring the
injured driver.
“Stay on top of those vital signs, Monnens.”
The young Marine didn’t need to be told that,
but he nodded sharply all the same.
A minute later the Syrian almost comically
knocked on the front door, despite the threat of an exploding gas tank so very
close behind him. He was quickly ushered in and searched.
“Well Captain---here we are again.”
“You can’t have him,” responded Larca.
“May I at least address the man who is the
subject of this negotiation?”
Since the armored personnel carrier wouldn’t
arrive for another hour and ten minutes, Larca pretended to be respectful of
the Syrian’s position. Larca took a step back and Carl took a few steps
forward.
“Is your man badly injured?”
“Only a doctor can make that determination,”
said Larca.
“Yes, I fear your Miss Sherman also requires a
medical examination. I was just informed by radio that she is spitting up some
blood. But apparently she is still able to breath well enough.”
“You asshole. You go fucking nuts when someone
a thousand miles away says something bad about your prophet. But you think its
ok to beat on a woman,” groused the captain.
“Most Muslims do not think that it is alright to harm an innocent person,” the
Syrian stated with a hint of annoyance. “But I do not get to pick and choose
who would join our cause. I was not there to supervise the woman’s treatment in
part because I could not immediately return with Mr. Schmidt.”
“Bottom line; the fist belonged to a Muslim,”
responded Larca.
“I’m willing to do the prisoner exchange,”
said Carl.
“You don’t listen very well,” Larca
interrupted.
Schmidt held up his hand and said, “I’m
willing but in truth I would be of no value to your superiors. I possess not
knowledge that would aid your military or your future leaders.”
“There has been much gossip to the contrary,”
said the Syrian.
“The hook has been
set. Now let’s see if I can reel this fish in,” thought Carl.
“My humble job is to operate as a low level
information conduit between the State Department and various people who want
what’s best for Syria, but would prefer to
live a life free of political conflict. Intellectuals and old women really
don’t need any aggravation. Such things should be left to people who feel they
have a ladder to climb.”
“Intellectuals create their own aggravation,
by dreaming up perfect worlds for people to live in,” said the Syrian.
“I thought socialists did that,” quipped
Larca. “Of course it also happens a lot in your average American bar. But
that’s because men get drunk and forget that life isn’t anywhere near perfect.”
“That is why Islam will embrace the entire
world in the end,” the Syrian said without malice. “A Muslim places God first,
and you cannot do that and wallow in decadence at the same time.”
Larca rolled his eyes slightly, but Carl wore
a more thoughtful expression. It was the look of a man filled with grim
resolve.
“If you want me to leave here with you, Mister al-Ayoubi, we’ll have to go
before dusk. That’s when the armored personnel carrier will arrive for us.”
“God damn you Schmidt, if we get through this
I’ll have your hide hanging on a barn door,” rumbled Larca.
“Captain, may we speak alone?”
Larca brought his anger under control and
marched into the shop’s back room. Schmidt followed and closed the door behind
them.
“You’ll be damn lucky if you walk out of this
room without any broken bones,” hissed the captain.
The smaller man gazed fearlessly at the Marine
and said, “A funny thing happened to me today. A choice was dropped in my lap;
a choice I wouldn’t wish on anyone I know.”
“Crap!” retorted the captain. “You don’t have any choice to make. You don’t have
the power. You’re a stupid little man who I’ve got to slap down or you’ll get
some of my men killed.”
“You’re wrong on one count,” Carl responded
evenly. “I’ve got a choice. It’s a rotten choice but it was put in front of me
and I’ve made it. As you have already gathered Captain, I’m not on your side.
I’m on Lisa Sherman’s side----and I’m going to stay there.”
“You’ve seen too many John Wayne movies,” said Larca.
“Good point, Captain. Americans go to the
theatre and watch some hero---and dream that they are that guy. Of course now I
know that being that guy really sucks. It’s a God awful experience. But it is
my opinion that it’s preferable to running away.”
“My men are not going to die because I’m in a
building with Don Quixote,” vowed Larca.
“Get them back home, and I’ll try to do the
same for Lisa.”
“I would bet my pension that they will keep
you both.”
“A distinct possibility, that would be reduced
if our guest remained with you,” Carl theorized.
“More dumb shit thinking. Everyone and his dog
knows that radical Muslims make bad hostages. They can hardly wait to get their
hands on them seventy virgins in heaven.”
“This one wants to be part of the new
management.”
That information was quickly assimilated.
“Modern thinker huh?----Ok, we’ll see if we
can do a deal.”
Larca paused with his hand on the old
fashioned door knob.
“I hope you end up sharing a crap bucket with
thirty fat bugger jockeys.”
“Just so
the answer is ‘yes,” Carl thought
with a tightness in his stomach.
Chapter Three
The man poised at the
top of the elevator shaft didn’t look like someone who belonged in coveralls.
His custom fitted tuxedo, or one of his many Fifth Avenue suits best reflected his uncommon good looks, not to
mention his appreciation for the finer things in life. But there was something that went well enough with
the coveralls and the special climbing harness; namely the look of absolute
fearlessness that was as much a part of the man as his fingerprints.
Napoleon Solo took hold of his rappelling line
and launched himself into a manmade abyss. Seven floors down he stopped his
descent, knowing that he didn’t have nearly enough line to reach the bottom of
the skyscraper that he had infiltrated. Not three seconds after reaching the
elevator door, his line went slack as the elevator car high above him began to
descend down after him. Pulling out a portable pry bar he managed to open the
safety door and step into a corridor of artificial marble.
He then slipped out of his climbing harness
and drew out the weapon that showed him for what he was. The pistol had been
built on an earlier Walther P-38 design.
But every component was original and improved to be more reliable and
resilient. It was affectionately known as an
U.N.C.L.E. Special, and in order to qualify with the weapon, you had to be
able to hit a man sized target at thirty feet while snap shooting from the hip.
It most certainly was not a beginners pistol.
In fact it didn’t even have a front sight, but rather a locking receiver that
enabled the shooter to add a barrel extension. When combined with the
telescopic sight attachment, shoulder stock and extra long magazine, the snub
nosed pistol would become a remarkable long
gun. But in his present environment the urban warrior felt secure enough
with the pistol in his hand.
His boots were designed to make no noise on
the clean tile floor, and when the ceiling lights suddenly went out, he merely
reached into his coveralls and pulled out a pair of infra red goggles that also contained a homing scanner. The man’s
heart beat slowed perceptively, as did
his respiration. He was on the home stretch now and he was ahead of
schedule. That power failure was meant to catch him in the elevator shaft. Then
a quick cut of the rope and a most unfortunate fall to the ground floor. So
much easier to explain than a bullet in the head.
With the utmost confidence the intruder shoved
a wad of putty over a remaining door lock and when it was detonated the hallway
was illuminated by a shower of white sparks. Then the man threw himself against
the door, and on the other side he found a man with unruly blonde hair eating a
pizza that had been placed on a folding card table. Illya Kuryakin glanced at
his watch and nodded in satisfaction. His reputation for austerity was
confirmed as he immediately abandoned the food. Not surprisingly the man was
slight of build but an accomplished gymnast, dining on pizza only because he
had been stuck in the building for the last twelve hours.
“Not a bad entrance,” the blonde said with the
slightest hint of a Russian accent.
The intruder
holstered his pistol and scanned the confines of the deserted office.
“How is it that the hallway is dark but we’ve
got light in here?”
“That’s what I’ve been doing all day,
arranging so that you could experience your little black out without it affecting the front section of the building.
The last time we conducted an infiltration exercise, the city maintenance
people arrived and wanted to know why a man was climbing down an elevator
shaft.”
“Isn’t it someone’s job to make phone calls
and make sure that the fire department doesn’t arrive if we get a little carried away with our training
programs?”
“Anonymity is an on going challenge in the
heart of Manhattan,” said the blonde. “In
any case you shaved twenty-three seconds off your old time. Unfortunately Henderson is still the reigning
champion.”
“I’m going to recommend that we come up with a
new exercise. Maybe something involving a hang glider,” said the dark haired
man.
“If it means less preparation I’m all for it.
Now help yourself to some food and let’s be off.”
“I’m hardly dressed for dinner.”
“Well, at least you won’t get any tomato sauce
on your tie,” the blonde pointed out.
Twenty minutes later the two men entered a
tailor shop and proceeded directly to a dressing room that included the shop’s
west wall. The dark haired man (now shed of his coveralls) pulled on a coat
hook and quite nonchalantly passed through a secret door that lead from the
tailor shop to a foyer that didn’t exist on the floor plans of the neighboring
building. The receptionist on duty appeared to have the most boring job in the
world. All she did was pin a numbered badge on any visitor that entered. That
badge was chemically coated and designed to activate an alarm system should the
wearer stray off into a restricted area. Not that Solo or Kuryakin needed to
worry about that.
They were the two highest ranking field agents
employed by the United Network Command (for) Law Enforcement. U.N.C.L.E. was technically a branch of
the United Nations Security Council, but in fact no one there had any notion of
the organization’s operational status. It’s founding fathers for the most part
were veterans of such outfits as MI6, G2,
and the O.S.S. But the
organization also employed the talents of Russian and Chinese operatives.
Kuryakin was a splendid example of that. Whereas his partner Napoleon Solo was
ex-Air Force and as American as they come, Illya Nickovetch Kuryakin was ex Soviet Navy, but was also qualified to
fly an assortment of military aircraft.
Were such foreign operatives defectors then? Interestingly
enough---no. Their talents were contributed willingly by the communist
governments, because of a global peril that disturbed them almost as much as
the ever increasing arms race. From
the ashes of the Second World War arose a band of highly resourceful criminals
who understood the limitations of nationalism. Their tentacles had names such
as The Russian Mafia, and the Chinese Triads, but the head of the
monster was as intangible as the fabled Atlantis.
Eventually it gave
itself a name; Thrush. The
organization developed a genius for sponsoring scientific projects that could
be perverted for criminal use. The leaders of the world never spoke of it
openly, but while they played their Cold
War games, they also sent gifted young people to what was an ongoing
experiment. U.N.C.L.E. was the
world’s best answer to international despotism. It was non-political to the point of being miraculous. Even the senior
members had to marvel at their own existence, but only on a coffee break.
U.N.C.L.E.
Headquarters possessed a highly sterile work atmosphere. A bit of a cross
between a hospital and a submarine. It was a model of high tech efficiency, but
for some it took a little getting used to. Solo was grateful for the presence
of the women. They provided a much needed human element to the place. But they
wore white over black office attire and each carried an U.N.C.L.E. Special tucked neatly away in the small of their backs.
The receptionist could also discharge an anesthesia gas that would engulf the
foyer in an instant. But her main tool was a friendly smile.
“Mr. Kuryakin, Professor Lin would like to
confer with you on B Level of the Super Computer. He believes that the
communicator pens will now be able to interphase with the Information Conduit. Since you helped to modify the pens, he
thought you might want to be in on the first trial signal.”
The Russian displayed a smile that was brief,
modest and silent. He wasn’t afraid of women, but like so many intellectually
endowed men, he was a bit lacking in charm. It would certainly benefit the
Russian to know that the receptionist on duty was an ex beauty queen who was
tired of the likes of Napoleon Solo. Illya on the other hand was not only above
board, he was also a challenge to a girl’s femininity. Solo realized this and
did not begrudge his partner this small victory. The lady’s man flashed a whimsical smile and marched briskly to catch
up with the Russian.
“Say why don’t you ask Debbie out sometime?”
Solo inquired as soon as he got close enough to speak softly.
The Russian shrugged slightly.
“My reasoning is that if she won’t go out with
you, she’s probably one of those sensible women who never dates men from work.”
“Logical as always, but did it occur to you
that a receptionist wouldn’t have to know anything except that Professor Lin
wanted to see you? I think she’s trying to get close to you.”
“Probably to avenge herself for some past
misdeed that you perpetrated.”
“With Judy or Susan, yes, but in this
instance—“
“Napoleon, did you break Henderson’s record?”
Solo turned to face another attractive lady.
Albeit this one was middle aged and served as the boss’ secretary.
“Missed by a hair,” lied the agent. “Can’t
deny that climbing really isn’t my thing.
Anyway, I serious doubt that rappelling down elevator shafts will ever get
a place in the Olympic Games. A sad
thought for Henderson perhaps.”
“He just left Waverly’s office. Don’t be
surprised if you get called in next.”
“I’ll mosey on down then,” said Solo, who knew
better than to ask the secretary for what might be classified information.
The top ranking field agent proceeded to the
opposite end of the corridor and then took a left. Each door on that level
resembled an elevator entrance in that the doors slid open on tracks that were
air tight and sensitive to the chemicals on each person’s badge. It was just
one of many security precautions to get periodic upgrades. The survivors of the
long lamented Thrush attack on their
headquarters would not fail to remind the junior people how important those
precautions were. Solo utilized one of the latest by placing his thumb on a
press pad to the right of the door. His thumb print was then read, identified
and brought to the attention of the man on the other side of the wall.
That man was Alexander Waverly; Chief of
Operations for the Western Hemisphere. An Englishman and
veteran of MI6, Waverly was a retired
spy, not a professional administrator. For that reason he was highly
opinionated and not easy to work for. In fact he was impossible for some people, and the gruff old man
wouldn’t have it any other way. As a former deep
cover operative who had worked in Nazi
Germany, he appreciated the
absolute need for competency. If he sensed that a field worker didn’t have it,
he would hammer away at that person’s armor until the chink became plain to see. Napoleon Solo was one of the few men who
could stand before such a boss without trepidation.
“Excuse me sir, your secretary implied that
you might want to see me.”
The old man nodded slightly and finished
loading his pipe. It was often said that nobody could look more British than
Waverly. The bushy eye brows, the bloodhound like jowls, and of course the
daily propensity for wearing tweed. The stuff that office people had to talk
about. Solo stood in front of an old fashioned oak desk and waited to learn
what vaccinations he would likely need.
“How’s your stomach, Mr. Solo?”
“Sir?”
“Do you ever suffer from motion sickness?”
“Well sir, as you know I am an ex Air Force
fighter pilot. I um, don’t believe I ever experience trouble in that area.”
“I was thinking of sending Henderson to Syria. Tough nut to crack.
I’d rather have you there but this calls for a cast iron stomach.”
“I’m sure I can handle it sir.”
“You’re not saying that because there’s a flu
epidemic and we’re short handed in the records section?”
“Uh, no sir. I didn’t even know there was a
bug—“
“Very well then. Radio our man in Incirlik. He’ll get you your preliminary
data.”
“Yes sir.”
With that the field agent left the office and
headed back toward the central corridor.
A curious secretary just happened to meet up
with him and ask, “Did he pick you over Henderson?”
“Yes. What’s it about anyway?”
“Uh---well---it’s an extraction. Not for the
faint of heart.”
The agent’s grin was a tad on the smug side.
“I’m sure Henderson won’t be too offended.
Waverly’s judgment is pretty much flawless.”
“Yes---flawless,” responded the woman, who
could only hope that Solo would still feel that way when it was all over.
Chapter Four.
The prisoner was curled in a semi-fetal
position on the stone floor. He envisioned half a dozen jagged bones
threatening to puncture his lungs, heart and a few other organs that were
essential to his continued existence. Actually the ribs were only cracked, it
was the nose that was broken. Still, they hadn’t burned him or snipped off
anything that he’d hate to do without. With that in mind he forced himself to
his feet so he could void himself in the bucket that was at his disposal.
“Well,
at least I have this all to myself,” he thought with forced optimism. “And there’s no blood in the urine, hoorah.”
He was indeed alone in his improvised cell;
incarcerated in what used to be a smoke
house. The interior was solid and tomb like, but he had been given a
kerosene lantern and there was a ceiling vent that enabled the fumes from the
lantern to rise up out of his prison. He liked to think that a condemned man
would have been given less luxurious accommodations, but maybe the owner of the
smoke house contributed the bucket for his own sake. In any case, he had been
given his beating without a word spoken by any of the three participants. That seemed weird, and it
left him with no sense of accomplishment. Maybe Lisa was free---maybe not.
After a bit he got up the nerve to pound on
the door but there was no response. For a while he took heart in the fact that
no one had hooked him up to a car battery. But then came the memory of a
prisoner that had been rescued from Palestine. He
had been treated very well for several months. Then suddenly there was a change
in supervisory personnel and the poor guy got a drill bit driven through his
hand.
Carl ran out of kerosene long before he ran
out of solitude and imagination. Every now and then he would hear what seemed
like a volley of gunshots; like the sort that could make up a firing squad
detail. They were very far off, but not far enough to suit him. He had been
brought to an abandoned farm some ten miles outside the capital. The house had
been gutted by fire and the out buildings were all riddled by bullet holes.
Sadly, the holes his prison had been patched. It took a while, but eventually
Carl came to appreciate why the holes
had been closed, and also the psychology of being alone while at the mercy of
others. It was an education for him.
Then a constructive thought almost made him
smile. One of the holes in the wall had been caused by a 20mm. It was facing
the house and had been patched with simple clay. The latrine bucket had a metal
handle that had come loose once before. With a couple of hours of steady effort
he was able to remove it and shaped it into a crude auger. Now Carl had
something better to do than just sit and think. It took him half the night to
bore the hole back out, but he was rewarded with something more glorious than
what he had spied in the girl’s shower at summer camp many years ago.
The windows and doors of the house were gone,
but a guard within preferred the structure to the open air so there he sat. He
had just lit up a cigarette, creating a vague outline that was of interest to
the information starved prisoner. But the real
treat was still minutes ahead. It came when a phantom entered Carl’s field
of vision and aimed a pistol through the portal that had been a window. The
prisoner expected to hear a loud report, but there was none. He expected the
see a muzzle flash, but was disappointed there as well. But the intruder was
able to enter the ruined domicile and come back out with an Ak-47 and a hand held radio.
“Hey, I’m in here!” the prisoner shouted at
the wall.
Carl’s liberator was dressed in a black jump
suit and a strange harness of some sort. He was a handsome gent, but under the
circumstances, he would have been a sight for sore eyes even if covered with
warts.
“Keep your voice down, Mr. Schmidt. The
neighbors are not the sort that mind their own business.”
“Sorry. Where’s the car?”
“We’ll be flying out.”
Carl’s stomach tightened slightly. He had
noted on his arrival that the old farm consisted of maybe thirty acres. Almost
a hobby farm by American standards. The neighboring properties were roughly the
same. As it stood, the surrounding homes were about four-hundred yards off in
different directions. They could easily draw rifle fire while taking off in a
chopper. The full moon didn’t help, but Carl was none the less happy to be in
the hands of a fellow American.
His deliverer ushered him to a spot behind a
bullet ridden tool shed. On the ground lay a duffle bag containing a number of
items that were hard to identify in the poor light.
“Put this on.”
Carl was handed a harness similar to the one
worn by other man.
“Aw
nuts, the chopper isn’t going to land. They’re gunna winch us up to save time,”
Carl deduced.
Then a few more items were removed from the
bad and Carl’s stomach dropped down into his nether regions. A tank of
compressed hellium, a balloon, and a long length of nylon rope. The balloon was
inflated with a loud bang and sent
aloft into the inky sky. The special agent hooked the other end of the line to
Carl’s harness and then pulled out something that looked like a pen.
A moment later he said, “Illya, we’re ready on
this end.”
“I’ll
get it as close to stalling speed as I can,” a voice responded.
“I’m sure we’ll both appreciate that.”
“Sky Hook,” Carl half croaked.
“That which is preferable to certain death,”
the agent stated with gallows humor.
“But it’s really not all that
dangerous---right?”
“Well, compared to slipping in the bath tub—“
Suddenly the man wheeled about and drew a pistol
that looked different from the one he had been holding before. It had a shorter
barrel and reminded Carl of an old WWII German model he had seen once or twice.
The man peered around the corner of the building and spotted a pickup truck
with a heavy machine gun mounted in the back. Two men were in the box with only
the driver in the cab. One of the men in back jumped out and quickly ran into
the house to discover that a comrade was asleep with a hypo dark protruding
from his neck. He then advanced on the smoke house.
The agent did likewise, only now he had his
dart pistol in his left hand while also holding on to the more formidable eight
shot automatic. He crept forward, he listened, and he reached out with his
instincts. Among other things he was a modern day gunfighter, and his reflexes
were in perfect sync with a calm and well trained eye. So when the Syrian
leaned his upper torso out from the northeast corner he caught a dart before he
could level his heavy rifle. The assault rifle almost went off, but not quite.
The men back at the truck were alert, but not yet aware that a fight was in
progress.
The Syrians waited tensely for a rifle shot or
a call for help, but all they heard was the sound of an aircraft approaching.
The balloon was invisible floating so high in the night sky, but even without
running lights the large aircraft coming towards them would stand out under a
full moon. The gunner pulled back the bolt on his .50 Browning. He had been given no instructions pertaining to aircraft,
but he knew well enough that his comrades had none, and his enemies had plenty.
The truck crept along in the drive path to alter their view of the farm
buildings, but they were not anxious to get their vehicle shot full of holes
The man with the two pistols was running out
of time, but he needed to complicate things for the Syrians, or he might be hitching his wagon to a falling star.
(Quite literally.) So he picked up the assault rifle and moved forward to where
the pickup was about to roll into view. There was no time for plinking. The
weapon was set on full auto and the trigger held for a count of six. Then the
weapon was dropped and the man in black sprinted back to where a very unhappy
fellow American was waiting.
The driver panicked and bailed out of the car.
The Syrian gunner did exactly what he was supposed to do, namely give the smoke
house a new vent work of bullet holes. The tool shed beyond caught a few of
those rounds as well but they were easy to ignore. At that point the only thing
that mattered was the ground shaking roar of the CV-2 Caribou. The man in black hooked his harness to the line and
got Schmitt in a bear hug. Worst part of the ascent was the ear aching
explicative that Schmitt yelled until he realized that he wasn’t going to die.
Three minutes after being winched into the cargo section of the big aircraft,
the man in black placed a friendly hand on a trembling shoulder.
“You came through it just fine.
Congratulations.”
Carl lay curled up on the deck. His eyes
fluttering slightly and his breath uneven.
“Haven’t eaten in a while. Ribs cracked. But
I’m grateful to you sir.”
“Napoleon Solo.”
Carl forced himself into a sitting position
and then extended his hand in friendship.
“Did they---did they let Lisa Sherman go
free?”
“Yes sir, they did.”
The older man fought back the tears and said,
“My name is Carl.”
The agent smiled and nodded with a mixture of
amusement and respect.
“You just relax. We’ll be on the ground in
about an hour.”
Solo then went forward to where a single man
was piloting.
“Who’s turn is it to buy the drinks?”
“Yours, but since you had to do your flying outside the aircraft, I suppose I can
spring for it on this occasion,” said Illya Kuryakin.
“You’re a credit to the Soviet Navy,” Solo shouted
over the noise of the aircraft engines.
“Shows how little you know about my past,” retorted the Russian. “My commanding
officer didn’t care how many sailors got drunk and fell overboard, but a
fighter pilot was not allowed to take chances with a Mig 17. We took turns buying soft drinks and the occasional
sausage.”
“Then I would say that you were in the wrong
military,” responded the American. “In my old outfit that wouldn’t happen even
if the commander was a Methodist.”
Chapter Five.
Both Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin noticed
that their driver was a bit old to be chauffeuring people around Tel Aviv. Carl was the only one who felt
that all was as it should be. He was accustomed to seeing men working right up
until the time of their deaths. Retirement was pretty much a western thing, or
for the genetically disadvantaged. In most parts of the world a man was
considered really alive only so long as he was productive. If he could work
with a stooped back and thick glasses, he would do so. But when the cab stopped
at an intersection and then remained there after the light turned color, all
three passengers began to wonder if perhaps their ancient driver was suffering
a stroke.
Solo shifted forward in his seat and when he
did he was able to spot the strange device that was on the front seat next to
the old man. It was about the size of a transistor radio and featured a
horizontal bar that reminded Solo of a thermometer. There was a button
underneath the bar, and the old man’s finger was hovering over it. The U.N.C.L.E. drew out his pistol, sensing
that something was rotten in the state of
Denmark.
“You needn’t be concerned Gentlemen. This
device is not a weapon of any kind, and I am not your enemy.”
“But you’re not a cabbie either---and you’re blocking traffic,” Solo pointed out.
That actually pleased the driver. He needed
men of insight, and that’s exactly what he had.
“A subterfuge was required only up to this
point, Mr. Solo. From here, the great adventure begins.”
Suddenly there was a swirling kaleidoscope of
bending light, and the U.N.C.L.E. field
agents concluded that they were being gassed, stunned, or perhaps just plain
killed in their seats. But an instant later Solo judged that they were not at The Pearly Gates, because he still had
his pistol in his hand, and Illya was now drawing his.
“As I said, I am not
your enemy Gentlemen. Please be careful with your firearms. My machinery is not
bullet proof.”
The three men were seated on a bench that was
the same dimensions as the back seat of the cab. The significance of that was
lost on the newcomers. They were entirely focused on the fact that they were no
longer in a cab. They were seated in what appeared to be a huge horizontal
ventilator shaft. There was nothing but pitch blackness some twenty feet behind
them, but the length of shaft ahead of them featured a dim red glow. The tunnel
measured a good twelve feet across and was radiating a fair amount of heat.
“Don’t touch the tunnel with anything but
your shoes,” warned the old man, “and when we reach the maw be careful how you
step. There are several dozen power cables laid out just beyond the threshold.”
“If I’m dreaming, I sure hope I don’t wake up
back in that smoke house,” grumbled Carl.
“None of this is an illusion, Gentlemen, but
it is only logical to consider the possibility that it is.” said the old man as he lead the others to the front of the
tunnel.
Solo and Illya sensed no danger, but their
pistols remained in their hands. They cautiously walked one-hundred and twenty
feet from where their seats had been abandoned in order to stay with the old
man. He lead them into an excavated cavern that measured twenty feet high by
sixty feet by two-hundred feet. But what truly fascinated them was the fact
that every square foot of wall space in that chamber was occupied by computers.
The vast majority of the stone floor space was covered with heavy gauge cables
that often crisscrossed one another to converge on a floor section in front of
the immense metallic conduit they had just emerged from.
There were only two flood lights illuminating
the cavern. One was aimed at the cables closest to the tunnel entrance and the
other was focused on the center portion of the great ceiling. The combination
of natural stone and electronics reminded the agents of other places they had
visited in the past. It put them even more on their guard, despite an apparent
lack of doors in all four directions.
“Your machinery is under the conduit. The
conduit itself serves no purpose I can fathom,” said Kuryakin. “Surely you
don’t need it to dissipate heat.”
“It is true that the flux field generator is
under the tunnel,” responded the old man. “But the conduit is equally important
as it operates like an antenna. The primary power source feeds in from above
the back section of the tunnel. There is a nuclear reactor up above us. Of
course it is a tinker toy compared to what is below.”
Solo took out his communicator pen and
prepared it for use.
“I’m afraid that won’t work. The tunnel emits
a form of radiation that permits only hard wire communication within
five-hundred yards.”
“I can believe that. Damn creepy thing to wake up in. Now do you need a drum roll
to tell us what the hell it’s for?” asked Carl.
“It is not my intention to be mysterious
Gentlemen, but there is the not so small matter of credibility. When I tell you
what you are looking at, you most certainly will not believe me.”
“Hey, we’re one step away from putting a man
on the moon. Just tell us what you have here,” advised the State Department
worker.
“A time machine, Mr. Schmidt,” the old man
said with a deadpan expression.
While Carl silently rolled his eyes toward the
high ceiling, Illya stepped over a power cable and said, “As interesting as
that answer is, I would prefer to know where we are, and who you are.”
“My name is Professor Joshua Adams---and we
are inside Mount Hermon, in
northwest Syria.”
“Impossible, even if we were unconscious for
half a day,” muttered Carl half to himself.
“Actually you have been fully conscious for
twenty-three years in a manner of speaking.”
“Do you know what we do for a living,
Professor?” Solo asked while continuing to scan his surroundings.
“Yes indeed. You work for the United Network
Command for Law Enforcement. That is one of the reasons I selected you.”
“A more precise answer would be that we kill
people and blow things up. Secret installations for instance. That is the
reason why you do not want to play games with us. That is the reason why you
need to convince us very quickly that we can be pleasant with each other.”
“Which brings us back to the matter of
credibility, Mr. Solo. Did I not just warn you that I would have to prove myself to you?”
“How precisely will you do that?” asked the
Russian.
“Mr. Schmidt, would you please remain standing
right where you are? Mr. Solo and Mr. Kuryakin, please follow me.”
The two U.N.C.L.E. exchanged unhappy looks and
then followed as Adams proceeded to a spot on the floor that was forty
feet from where Carl had been left standing. The old man looked up at the
ceiling and said, “Computer, activate lift.”
Suddenly a gleaming steel pillar slowly
descended from a portal in the ceiling. It touched down on the floor and
connected with a circular platform that had been set flush with the floor’s
surface.
Adams stood with his back to the pole and
said, “This way Gentlemen.”
When all three men were on the disk, Adams gave the command to
lift and the platform rose slowly towards the ceiling. At the halfway point the
ceiling opened around the telescoping pole sleeve and the three men found
themselves on an entirely separate level. This one was small; a mere eight by
twelve by twelve. There was a control console that protruded out from one of
the four walls, and above that space age looking counter top was a wall monitor
that displayed long strings of symbols that came and went. On the other walls
were running movies of waterfalls, ocean surf and underwater marine life.
“I’ve never seen any of these symbols,” Illya
commented.
“That is because they make up a computer
language that only I understand. In a manner of speaking, Mr. Kuryakin, the
computer is talking to me.”
“But how will this diorama convince us that
you actually have a time machine?” asked Solo.
“Select a time period and a geographic
location,” instructed the host. “I will send Mr. Schmidt back to that place and
have him pick you up a souvenir.”
“Why him?” inquired Solo with a hint of
suspicion.
“Credibility, Mr. Solo. You make the choice, but a man who has no such thought on his mind
will go forth. Otherwise you might entertain the notion that you were
hypnotized or some such thing.”
“Alright, we’ll play this game,” Solo
responded with a nod. “I choose to have Carl visit the Island of Manhattan in
the early 19th Century.”
Adams frowned at that. A most logical choice
for you, Mr. Solo. But I would
recommend a larger target. You see, a time continuum is like a river; it can
split into a fork or twist around a promontory and land you short of your mark.
It would be prudent of you to select an area approximately one-hundred square
miles in size, and away from any large body of water.”
“I’m sure Mr. Schmidt won’t mind risking a
near miss,” Solo responded with an unyielding expression.
Adams let out a sigh and activated a
television camera and intercom.
“Mr. Schmidt, would you be so kind as to
return to the bench you were sitting on and take a little trip for us. I’d like
you to bring back some evidence that you actually went some place outside this
complex. Oh and don’t forget where you left the bench because I’m going to
return it to this complex in exactly five minutes. If you’re not on it, you
might be stranded in that location for the rest of your life.”
“More likely this thing turns into a giant
toaster,” Carl prophesized.
“Mr. Solo, will you please assist me here? I
cannot show you people anything if you’re not willing to contribute even a
minimum of cooperation.”
Napoleon let out a sigh and approached the
intercom speaker.
“Carl, please, just go back in and sit down
for a few minutes. That’s all we ask.”
“Said the man to the piece of bread,” muttered
the S.D. worker.
“Mr. Schmidt, you can swim, can’t you?” inquired the scientist.
“This thing could flood???”
“It’ll be ok, Carl,” Solo assured him.
Then the agent’s expression grew harder.
“The information we desire is coming to us far
too slowly, Professor. I want to know why you’re in this place all alone. Who
built this complex? What happens after Carl has taken his alleged trip.”
The old man showed just a hint of discomfort.
He had a lot on his mind and he was beginning to feel his age.
“Mr. Solo I am not mad,
nor am I stupid. You do no not believe a word I have spoken thus far. The proof will be in the pudding, so to
speak. Things must unfold in the proper order. Patience is more than a virtue,
Mr. Solo. It is an absolute necessity.”
“Apparently. Well---I hope my host will not be too offended by me
saying that if man could find a way
to travel through time, he’d be a fool to do it. Better to pretend you have
found a cure for cancer.”
The old man nodded and said, “precisely the
sort of attitude I want you to have, sir.”
“How long have you been working on this----
project?” asked Kuryakin.
“Fifty-seven years, not counting the time I
spent being mentored by Professor Vasiliy Kuzmin.”
“I’ve heard of him. One of the most gifted
scientists killed by the Nazis.”
“The most
gifted,” corrected the old man. “He was a miracle of sorts. I doubt that his I.Q. could have been measured. I suppose
I’ve made a few contributions of my own over the years. But without him, we’d be no closer to breaking the
time barrier than we were when we were riding horses.”
“Who is we,
Professor?” asked Solo. “You have yet to give us that very important piece of information.”
The old man ignored him and leaned over the
intercom.
“Mr. Schmidt, are you seated?”
“Yes!” shouted a voice from the tunnel like
structure.
“Remember, you will have five minutes,” warned
the master of the complex.
Then he pushed on a huge green button and
turned to face Solo.
“In truth the complex was built by Thrush, but I am not a loyal member of
that organization. I understand fully how those people function, and I will not
give them power over the time barrier. But I needed their help. This complex
cost half a billion dollars, and that is not including the expense of the nuclear
power facility that is shielded from aerial reconnaissance and half a dozen
middle eastern governments no less.”
Solo’s weapon returned to his hand.
“My associate needs to go back downstairs. Now.”
Adams waited until the blonde
agent was on the platform and then willingly lowered it so that Illya could
inspect the tunnel.
A moment later the Russian said, “He’s gone,
and so is the bench!”
“For another one minute and ten seconds,” said
Adams.
“Is that how long it will take for your troops
to arrive?” asked Solo.
“I wouldn’t want that any more than you
would,” the old man assured him.
“I’m going to take a closer look at the
tunnel,” said Illya.
“No! You must not be in it when Schmidt
returns,” insisted the old man. “Surely you understand that if Thrush wanted to capture a pair of U.N.C.L.E. agents, they wouldn’t need to
create such a large domicile in which to hold them.”
“But if they wanted to gaslight a pair of agents; and convince them that there is such a thing as time travel, they
would need something like this to begin with,” Solo reasoned.
“Er—yes, but now let us see what Mr. Schmidt
has to report. Shall we?”
Exactly on cue, the tunnel emitted a flash of
light and a wave of heat that took much of the humor out of Carl’s toaster
joke. Illya approached the threshold and strained to make out any movement at
the other end. When he spotted something he ventured inward, feeling the
residual heat through the soles of his shoes. A moment later both he and Carl
emerged from the tunnel. The older man was carrying some sea weed, and a soggy
piece of newspaper. The only thing that really mattered to Schmidt was the part
of the paper that featured a clear date.
“This guy should work for Disneyland,” said Carl as he neared the top of the lift. “I
just happened upon an issue of the New York Daily Tribune on what sure as
hell seemed like a beach. Paper is dated, June 12th,
1852. Beautiful set up. Kind of an insult to my
intelligence considering what I’m expected to believe, but just the same, a lot
of nice work went into it.”
Solo ignored the paper and asked, “Talk to me
about the surroundings.”
“Well for starters, now I know why he wanted
to know if I could swim. I found myself right on a shore line. Pretty much at
the bottom of a sea wall. It wasn’t sheer so I was able to climb it, but I lost
precious time in the process. What I found when I got to the top was a
replication of a mid 19th Century neighborhood. Saw some people
about a block away, dressed in costumes of the period. I suppose I should have
kept going, but I was more interested in how the hell this guy would put me back under in order to have me
carried back into the tunnel. Very interesting trick. Maybe there’s something
in the bench.”
Napoleon let out a deep
sigh.
“Alright, maybe the best way to get to the
bottom of all this is to ask what I hope is a logical question. Professor
Adams, how may we be of service to you in your efforts as a time travelling
pioneer?”
“Very Good, Mr. Solo. That question implies
that you are now ready for the most pertinent data. Professor Vasiliy Kuzmin
would have dwarfed Einstein if he had lived long enough. Tragically, he died of
typhus a mere six weeks before Bergen-Belsen was
liberated. I would have three men go back in time and cheat that fate. Three men
who speak German fluently and are skilled in the ways of espionage.”
“Jesus H. Christ, you mean you have a fake
Nazi prison camp set up someplace and that’s my next stop? Napoleon, I think
this guy wants us to be prisoners in some kind of fantasy land.”
“The truth cannot be accepted here and now,”
put in the old man, “but when you finally come to it, you must be equipped with
the knowledge that there is a way back. You must know that I am waiting for you
on this end.”
“Are we to believe that you are making unauthorized use of Thrush property?” asked Kuryakin who as always, did more listening
than talking.
“Yes. I have been deceiving them since the
beginning of the project. They think a functional prototype is months away.
When that hypothetical day draws near, they will increase their security and I
will no longer be able to toy with it.”
“So you are recruiting us to go back in time
and liberate a scientist from a Nazi camp. Then we’ll return to this time
period where you will be operating a time travel program that will not involve Thrush,” speculated the dark
haired U.N.C.L.E. man.
“Exactly. I couldn’t get the U.S. government to back my
work. Naturally they questioned my level of mental health. I don’t know how Thrush found out about me, or why they
chose to believe in me, but I suppose that is irrelevant at this time. Suffice
it to say if Professor Kuzmin had survived the war, the two of us could have
convinced the U.S. government---“
“I need to ask another question,” Solo broke
in with just a bit of a headache.
“Yes of course,” responded Adams.
“Why do we need to go back to the year 1945?
Wouldn’t it be easier to approach the target
ten or more years earlier?”
“No, because of gravimetric stresses that do
not diminish until 1945. Sorry but I can’t do anything about that.”
“I trust we will not suddenly find ourselves
in a prison camp. We must begin our adventure somewhere in eastern Europe and
approach Kuzmin when we have a plan in place,” said Solo.
“Yes. I can get you within one-hundred miles
but then you’ll be on your own. By the way, I have suitable clothing for you
all. Unfortunately you’ll have to come up with your own specific identity
papers. Being highly trained agents, I am hoping that you will be able to
surmount that obstacle at the proper time.”
“We’ll give it a try,” promised Solo, who
still held the look of a man who was being lied to.
“I hate to admit this,” broke in Carl, “but
I’m not in their league. My German would pass, but I don’t know much about
being a spy.”
“We’ll do our best to mentor you,” Solo half
joked.
“Don’t underestimate yourself, Mr. Schmidt.
You were not brought here by happenstance. You will be very useful in this
operation, despite your lack of experience as a covert operative.”
Kuryakin remained inscrutable as always, but
he kept staring at the computer readouts, and he had watched every move the old
man had made before that. His mind was
focused on that until the old man opened a hidden closet and displayed the wardrobe
within.
“Brought it in just this morning. Hope it all
fits. If not, perhaps Mr. Kuryakin can do a bit of last second altering. He’ll
be doing quite a bit of that after he retires from U.N.C.L.E.”
Napoleon’s eyes darted
to his partner who showed no hint of contradiction.
“We’re to put these on now?” asked Schmidt.
“I strongly recommend it. You wouldn’t want to
be seen changing clothes on the side of a road. I am no expert on spying but I
imagine that would look very suspicious.”
Solo ignored the last statement and pressed
Kuryakin for more input.
“What do you say---do we shoot him or continue
to play?”
“I prefer to avoid gunplay,” responded the
Russian. “Even in the Soviet Union such a course of action
would result in a mountain of paperwork.
“Then we play,” Solo concluded while guessing
which uniform was meant for him.
It was an SS captain’s uniform. Illya was
given the uniform of a an engineering captain belonging to the Wehrmacht, and Carl would be dressed as
a Colonel in the same branch of the service.
“Why does he outrank us?” asked Solo, who
wasn’t offended, merely suspicious.
“In the world you are about to enter, uniforms
alone will get you nowhere. You will need papers and that is where Mr. Schmidt
comes in. The nearby town of Celle has an army records
facility. Once in it he should be able to forge identity papers to get both you
and Mr. Kuryakin into Bergen-Belsen.”
“And then?” prodded Solo.
“I have no idea. My reasoning is that as an
engineering officer, Mr. Kuryakin should be able to bring about power failures,
tamper with the fencing, make off with tools; whatever would aid him in his
escape plan.”
“I’ve changed my mind. Shoot him,” said the
Russian.
“If you do, Thrush will---in perhaps ten years
or so, learn how to operate this facility. They will assume that U.N.C.L.E. has
found them out and they will move the facility and pour even more money into
the project. They are not entirely
convinced that I am sane either. If I am killed by U.N.C.L.E….”
“We get the picture, Professor, and we’re
already decided to play along with this for a time,” said Napoleon with his
pants off. “But if you ruin our day, we’ll get back here somehow and do
considerably more to you.”
“Yes, we all feel as though we are teetering
on the edge,” the old man assured his guests. “But we move forward; or perhaps
I should say backward.”
Carl shook his head and almost wished he was
still in the smoke house.
Chapter Six.
Solo felt ridiculous. He was now seated on
that silly bench with Illya and Schmidt while two squirrels chased each other
around a fallen tree some ten paces in front of them. Illya scanned the thinly
wooded countryside and wondered if there had been any risk of them landing in or on top of a tree.
“I hear diesels,” said Carl after doing a
quick scan of his own.
The three men rose from their supposed
transport bench and moved around the fallen tree and then up to the top of
small rise. There they surveyed a rural roadway presently being used by a
military truck convoy. The two U.N.C.L.E.
agents dropped almost to their knees; mindful not to get their uniform
pants soiled in the damp earth that was only partially covered by tall weeds.
Carl followed suit with a confused look.
“Trucks are the right vintage; late thirties or early forties,” observed Illya. “But what is truly fascinating is the
possibility that we are sharing all
this. Otherwise I must assume that I am actually conversing with a blank wall
in some laboratory somewhere.”
Solo took in the landscape and nodded
slightly.
“Yes, this is gas lighting at it’s finest.”
“Then why are we stooped over?” inquired
Schmidt. “Why don’t we pretend that we’re walking to the nearest town, where we
can pretend to have a few beers in a make believe bar?”
“I’m not sure I can answer that,” Solo
confessed. “It’s logical to assume that Thrush
wants something from us. I’d like to know what it is---before we take Carl
up on his suggestion.”
“So what would we do if we were actually trying to break a man out
of a concentration camp?” asked Carl.
“Hitch a ride to the town of Celle. Our
mad scientist friend was correct when he pointed out that we need papers. We’ll
fall flat on our faces if our good Colonel
here fails to get us useful documents,” answered Solo.
“Perhaps I should do that,” said Illya after
noting the look of discomfort on Carl’s face.
“No, our Sponsor
gave the job to Carl, so he’ll be
the one to tackle it. But we’ll be close by in case he runs into a snag.”
Carl could only follow along impassively;
reminding himself that it was all an illusion. But when Colonel Schmidt climbed into the cab of a transport truck that
Illya flagged down, he was very impressed with the sights, sounds and even smells of this fantasy mission he was
supposed to be a part of. The driver was an old man who had probably been in
the trenches during the first war. He was talkative, sensing he was in the
presence of a book keeper in uniform. The more the man talked, the more Carl
picked up on the Schnapps and sausage
the driver must have indulged in before getting behind the wheel. Slowly, ever so slowly Carl became
susceptive the the idea that it was all real. But the old man’s shtick was as hard to swallow as the
idea that they were all dead and in the afterlife.
It only got worse for Carl when they arrived
at the headquarters building for the 17th and 73rd
Infantry Regiments. The formally spacious interior of the old building had
become a bee hive of activity. Everything in the area changing under new
commands and new circumstances. Everything needing to be documented and given
official clearance. Fifty bureaucrats crammed into what once was a reception
room, operating out of file cabinets, portable desks and phone extensions.
Actually it gave Carl a sense of security. No one so much as glanced at him as
he slowly made his way along spaces between office furniture.
He used up twenty minutes just locating the
forms and stamps he would need to steal. Then more time to actually slip the
necessary materials into his waist band when the closest heads were turned. He
wondered briefly if thieves ever succumbed to nervous breakdowns. It certainly
seemed to him to be a nerve wracking way to earn a living. Then just when he
was about to make off with his ill-gotten gain, the State Department worker ran
out of luck.
“Excuse me Herr Colonel, but I am curious why
you would want to make off with an outdated stamp.”
Carl tensed inside. Not only had he gotten
himself caught, he got caught stealing something useless.
“Last month’s stamp?”
“That is correct sir. May I ask why you are
taking it?”
Under those circumstances Napoleon Solo would
have been in trouble. Even the brainy Illya Kuryakin would have been found
lacking. But Carl Schmidt was destined to gather many facts and figures while
serving with a U.S. Army occupational force. He would stumble onto a grim but obscure
reference to something called The Celle Hare Hunt. The nearby prison camp had taken a few stray
bombs from an air raid. Some prisoners took advantage of the damage and
confusion to escape into the forest that stood between the camp and the town of
Celle. A
number of the town’s citizens took up rifles and aided the SS by hunting down and shooting the fugitives. The memory flashed
before him in the nick of time.
“The hare
hunt; one of my relatives participated. I wish to have his name stricken
from a document I have in my office.”
The woman took a step closer. She was perhaps
forty, somewhat plump, and there was the look of the opportunist in her eyes.
“Unusual.”
“The war is almost over, why should anyone
around here take the risk of hanging alongside the SS?”
“You speak treason, Herr Colonel.”
“Then perhaps you should have me arrested
after dinner this evening.”
“A real hare?
I haven’t seen a slice of beef in ages.”
“Actually I have recently acquired a few tins
of caviar which was liberated from the Russians. What time do you get off
work?”
“Three hours from now,” the woman answered
with a slight smile.
“If the caviar were to come with a decent
bottle of wine, could I possibly borrow a current
stamp to go with the old one?”
The American was pushing his luck----and he
found it strangely exhilarating.
“Are you married, Herr Colonel?”
“Difficult question, my wife was in Paris when it became
liberated by the Americans. I suspect she will choose to remain there.”
The woman strolled over to another desk area
and returned with a stamp.
“A full bottle?”
“But of course, Fraulein—“
“Frau,” the
woman cut in, “but my husband is not likely to come back from the Eastern Front
with caviar.”
“Well, at least it’s not as far to travel
these days,” the American responded awkwardly.
Chapter Seven
In another building Illya stole a typewriter
and in no time the three men were in business.
“You know, back there in Syria I got in touch with
some pretty strange feelings when I thought I was going to die. But this is
just plain nuts,” said Carl.
“Actually it makes a great deal of sense when
you think about it,” countered Solo while the two men watched Illya type in a
wood shed they were occupying. “You can train a man to withstand torture. You
can convince him that he should die for a cause. But when you control his sense
of reality, you become his true master.”
“Fine, so this Thrush outfit fools one of you guys into divulging some piece of
info, but I’m living this too, and I don’t have anything that a brainwasher
could want.”
“Thrush can be very thorough,” commented
Illya. “You were with us during the capture, which might make you important
enough to work with. Not to mention that fact that we are apparently
interacting with one another, despite the logical assumption that none of this
is real. That skill becomes more useful as you increase the number of
participants.”
“I’m getting a headache,” grumbled Carl.
“You said that woman back in the records
building could be bought with food and drink. I suppose that’s for our benefit.
Illya will get you your victuals so you won’t have to disappoint the lady,”
said Solo.
“Aw come on guys, if this is all a set up you’ll be able to flash these
bogus papers, stroll across the camp and have this Russian genius talking to
you without further need of poor little Carl Schmidt,” theorized the cloak and dagger neophyte.
Once again Solo didn’t have a proper response.
Logic suggested that if their captors wanted the men from U.N.C.L.E. to have a fantasy conference with someone, the fates would somehow oblige. But Solo
couldn’t operate on any such assumption. Something compelled him to do things
by the numbers; the way he would if he truly was operating in Nazi Germany.
“Carl, I didn’t want to bring this up, but the
fact is our captors could have a squad of soldiers show up at any moment and
beat us all to a pulp. The means are beyond our comprehension, but in truth
we’ll be in for a very painful reality if we mess this up. So let’s just play
along as we all agreed to do.”
“Toward that end, the lady could assist us
with some sort of motor pool pass,” said the ever pragmatic Illya. “We would
look rather odd approaching the camp on foot.”
“I got a feeling that will cost me more than
wine and fish eggs,” Carl said half to himself.
Chapter Eight.
Solo and Illya had mixed
feelings as they rolled into the Bergen-Belsen prison
camp. They knew from their studies of recent history that the place was a house
of cards just waiting for a breeze to knock it down. Guard desertions had
already begun, and the men at the gates were more afraid of the approaching Allies than any SS officer who might
spot check the condition of their uniforms. The gate officer barely glanced at
their papers which was a very encouraging thing. But the bad news was carried
on the wind. The stench of disease and overcrowding was apparent even to men
who had never witnessed such things. Sixty-thousand prisoners crammed into a
camp designed to handle one-tenth that number.
Napoleon had seen a prison camp in Korea, and Illya had visited
a prison facility in the Soviet Union. But those were health
resorts compared to what they were entering now. Solo scanned his surroundings
in wonder as they proceeded on to the main administration building.
“Funny; I don’t just see a camp that on its
last leg---I can actually feel it.”
“That is because you know the future. The
guards fear what is coming, but they cling to the irrational hope that
reinforcements will come from the west,” said Illya. “They know they are criminals
in uniform. They fear they will be shot down by the liberators, or be handed
over to the prisoners on the spot.”
“I don’t know about the later,” Solo muttered
as he gazed at the distant walking skeletons. “The poor devils that I can make
out look like zombies.”
The Russian nodded.
“I’ve heard many stories about this sort of
thing. The minds of the prisoners turn inward, like a form of dementia. In part
because of malnutrition and in part because the brain can no longer process so
much despair. It is not as bad in communist gulags. Those prisoners are
constantly scheming to better their conditions. They never stop fighting to
survive---“
“Illya---let’s just focus on the job,
alright?” Solo cut in with a low voice.
The two men entered the main building and
requested permission to meet with the commandant. Ten minutes later they were
ushered into the office of Hauptsturmfuhrer
Josef Kramer. The U.N.C.L.E. men
were unaware of the fact that Kramer had been assigned to Auschwitz for seven months before
being given his current command. No bespectacled Himmler type this one. Kramer
looked like he could throw both agents out the window mussing his hair.
“SS Captain Nicholas Sommer and Captain Borris
Kunze of the 17th Regimental Engineering Unit,” announced the
secretary before turning smartly and returning to his desk.
“I had all but given up
hope,” said the commandant while rising from his chair. “How many machines are
we getting?”
“Sir?” queried the dark haired visitor.
“Bulldozers
Captain. How many?”
“Er, excuse me, Herr Hauptsturmfuhrer, but we
are not here for that reason. We are here to begin a prisoner training program.
We are going to teach them how to build larger sanitation facilities. If the
program is a success here, it will be implemented—“
“This is just the sort of outdated foolishness
I have been enduring since I took charge of the camp,” Kramer interrupted. “We
have so much typhoid my gutless medical staff doesn’t even want to go to work
anymore.”
“Precisely why the sanitation facilities are
so vital, sir,” pressed Solo in his best German.
“Your reasoning is six months late sir,”
retorted the commandant. “We have dead and dying to attend to now. We have to dispose of the corpses
and thin out the prisoner population right
now, or we’ll be joining them in hell.”
Solo pretended to look confused.
“Sir, we shall of course assist you anyway we
can, but the fact is our plans only pertain to the large scale elimination of
human waste matter. After all, you cannot have sixty-thousand people defecating
improperly in a confinement area seven-hundred meters square.”
“Half that number will be rotting corpses
before the British arrive. They cannot be disposed of by slave labor. I need
bulldozers, Captain. Is there any chance you can get me any?”
“I can try sir, but if I don’t report back to
headquarters with an up to date assessment of the—uh—conditions, my superiors
will not be very receptive to any requests made through me.”
The commandant let out a sigh.
“I’ll have a current body count ready for you
before you leave; which I hope will be soon. I need you pleading my cause
Captain, not bothering with volunteer shovel work.”
“Yes sir. Captain Kunze and I will be out
before nightfall.”
“If that is the best you can do,” grumbled
Kramer. “I’ll have Lieutenant Forstmann report to you outside. I am confident
that the number of bodies out there will convince you that your superiors are
placing the cart before the horse.”
Late that evening Solo and Kuryakin allowed
themselves the luxury of a beer joint meeting.
“Two-hundred marks per man. I think that’s more money than U.N.C.L.E. would be paying us if it existed in this time period,”
joked Napoleon.
His partner didn’t smile, but merely stared at
his glass of beer.
“You think it’s all real, don’t you?” queried
Solo after a long pause.
The blonde agent ran his fingers through the
altered hair style that was the result of Solo’s amateur barber work.
“You saw everything I saw Napoleon. So much
abomination, and yet---it suggested to me like nothing else could that it’s all
real.”
“But time travel is impossible, and
brainwashing is not,” Solo pointed out.
“And how many times has Thrush come close to
conquering the world because they invested in some crackpot scientific
concept,” Illya countered. “Ever super weapon they ever came up with was a
lunatic dream until we saw it and destroyed it.”
“This is different Illya.”
“Is it? Let’s give the Devil his due Napoleon. Thrush does a magnificent job of locating and sponsoring scientific genius. They have always understood that the only real power in this world is technology.”
“Is it? Let’s give the Devil his due Napoleon. Thrush does a magnificent job of locating and sponsoring scientific genius. They have always understood that the only real power in this world is technology.”
“Alright, in either case, we need to contact
Professor Vasiliy Kuzmin. While we were pretending to measure the camp for
bigger washrooms, did you come up with a plan to get the professor out?”
“Three, actually.”
“Good man. Can any of them be executed in the
time remaining to us?”
“No, not unless we could bribe a senior prison
official, and I would not advise trying.”
Napoleon pondered that in silence, then said,
“A Thrush fantasy would include a method of escape if it was required.
Therefore, it is not required. Apparently all we need to do is talk to this
Russian scientist.”
To what end?” Kuryakin asked with a hint of
frustration. “How could such a dialogue possibly benefit Thrush?”
“The fact that I have no answer does not mean
that there are none,” reasoned Solo.
“There is another way to look at this,” said
the blonde Russian. “Our mission is to keep Kuzmin from dying. We don’t
necessarily have to extract him from prison to do that. All we have to do is
keep him from dying of typhus.”
“With German antibiotics? Carl is going to
love that.”
“It is preferable to a tunnel project that
would take too long, or a Trojan Horse lumber
truck that couldn’t possibly be kept a secret.”
“I see the logic in that, but if I’m right
about Thrush I don’t think they’ll want us going in that direction. My gut
tells me that they want Kuzmin moved.”
“And my instincts tell me that all this is
real, and we will become irreversibly dead if we try to extract Kuzmin without
a detailed and well staffed operation,” said Illya.
Napoleon let out a sigh.
“Alright, you steal the drugs and I’ll check
on Carl.”
“Do you think that’s wise?”
“The woman is useful but not trustworthy. I
just want to make sure she hasn’t turned Carl over to the Gestapo.”
The blonde agent almost
smirked at that.
“You wouldn’t be worried about that if you
truly believed that Thrush was guiding us along through a carefully
orchestrated delusion.”
“As I said before my friend, we must operate
under the assumption that all this is real, even though can’t be.”
Kuryakin let go of his end of the argument. He
didn’t need to convince his friend of anything at the moment.
“Perhaps I should be the one to check on Carl.
If you find it necessary to make the woman’s acquaintance, she just might fall
victim to that thing of yours.”
Solo suppressed a grin.
“What thing
of mine?”
“That borderline unnatural ability you have to
turn an otherwise intelligent woman into a drooling, blithering idiot.”
“Are we talking about love?”
“Hell
hath no fury like a woman scorned,” warned the Russian.
“Your point being…?”
“She will drop Carl like the proverbial hot rock and—“
“A hot rock is not proverbial.”
As the blonde rose from
their table he half grumbled, “I speak seven languages fluently, and I feel
that I’m entitled to make an occasional mistake where it will not get us
killed.”
Chapter Nine
Carl woke up with an arm that had lost its
circulation. Frau Gertrude Hoffman could sleep on a rock, or under one if she
had enough of the bubbly in her.
“Two
years of celibacy made it possible,” the American thought with mixed
emotions.
The woman wasn’t exactly homely, but Carl
couldn’t help but recall the comical explanation for the term Badger Ugly. A badger will gnaw his own
leg off if caught in a trap. Such misfortunes are rare in the world of humans,
but should you wake up some morning and find yourself in bed with an ugly
woman, you might want to leave quietly without waking her up. Now, if she is
resting on your arm, and you are willing to chew your own arm off in order to
make your silent get-a-way, THAT is Badger
Ugly.
Briefly musing over the
fact that some enemy could be responsible for such an illusion, Carl pulled his
arm free and began to restore circulation to the limb. The woman woke up
slowly, exposing flesh that might be best appreciated by vengeful Russian
soldiers.
“Oh---guten
morgen, Herr Colonel. I half expected you to be gone by now; since you
military men are so accustomed to rising early.”
“Well, it has been
awhile since I----had a good night’s sleep so I suppose the wine sedated me a
bit more than usual.”
Gertrude liked to think that she had something
to do with that but now it was time to get down to business.
“Perhaps the Sandman is your guardian angel. It is to your advantage that you
did not run off. I am now able to warn you that if you go to the camp today,
you will be questioned by their security staff. Two officers visited the other
day and after they left it was discovered that they were misrepresenting
neighboring units. That of course does not happen very often.”
“Why do you feel that this should concern me?”
asked the make believe colonel.
“Two men nose around a concentration camp and
then disappear. A third man wants to falsify some records at the same time, and
all three men materialize out of thin air.”
“You did a background check on me?”
“Stand operating procedure if you are thinking
of black mailing someone. Very soon I will be out of a job, and perhaps a
grieving widow as well.”
“I don’t have a great deal of money.”
“You have something better than money. You
have the ability to get me through the British lines before a certain SS officer manages it.”
“What in God’s name are you talking about?”
“I admit that I was originally after money,
but when a friend of mine couldn’t come up with the colonel I was interested
in, I concluded that I had stumbled onto a spy. How very fortuitous for us
both.”
“Don’t accuse me of that---even when naked.”
“Your German is good, but your acting is bad.
At this point, I’m not even going to ask you why you and your associates would
want to sneak into Bergen-Belsen. I will just tell you that I have
something far more interesting for you to concern yourself with.”
“Which would be…?”
“A fortune in Jewish diamonds, hidden in Bremerhaven.”
“But there is an SS
officer who also knows where they are hidden and if he gets to them first, you
will be just another German woman with an empty stomach.”
“Now you are looking focused. I can see you’re
not acting anymore. Yes, soon there will be a race, and with your help I shall
win it.”
“You mentioned the British Army. They haven’t
taken that port city yet. Why aren’t you running up there now?”
“Its complicated. Suffice it to say I must
wait until the British are there.”
Carl thought about that for a moment and
asked, “Would the prospect of two fortunes
please you, or would the added responsibility prove too nerve wracking?”
The woman’s face went blank for an instant,
then it lit up with both comprehension, and insatiable greed.
“You’re in the same game. You know of a camp
inmate who has jewels hidden away and you need to make a deal before the whole
country falls apart.”
“Not jewels, technology that could make
millions after the war,” Carl decided to admit.
“That sounds very time consuming, and it
probably hinges on some Jew staying alive and cooperative.”
Carl shrugged slightly and said, “Yes, but my
associates are strongly committed to the program. In fact, I think they would
kill me if I told them that I wanted out.”
“Not the sort of people I need in my life,”
grumbled the woman as she started getting dressed. “I suppose you want me
involved because you need more help than I would give while sober.”
“Or perhaps even while drunk, but you needn’t
meet with any new people or do anything out of the ordinary while waiting for
the Allies to advance. Just a few more pieces of paper, properly stamped will
get you a piece of the action, as the
Americans might say.”
“At the proper time I will measure your worth
to me and do what seems logical. I never make life and death decisions before
my morning coffee,” explained the woman.
“Very sensible, I—“
Suddenly there was a knock at the apartment
door.
“Damn,” muttered the woman as she threw on her
house coat and marched into the living room.
A moment later she was facing a handsome SS
officer with the most disarming smile she had ever seen.
“Frau Hoffman? I am Captain Nicholas Sommer. I
am an acquaintance of Colonel Schmidt’s and I am searching for him. Should you
see him today, would you please—“
Carl stepped into view
and almost got in front of the woman.
“I’ll be out in two minutes. Sorry for the
late start; too much wine last night.”
As a senior officer Schmidt was entitled to
limit the exchange. This he did, closing the door with mild embarrassment.
“He is one of your associates?” queried the
woman.
“Yes, he was one of the men who went to the
camp.”
“You should quickly inform him that he is not
a person of interest to the authorities.”
“Don’t worry, I’m certain he didn’t let anyone
get a good look at him coming over here, and he won’t be returning,” Carl
assured her.
“Not in
the daytime,” the woman thought to
herself, “and not with anyone tagging
along.”
Chapter Ten
Carl approved of the plan to inoculate Kuzmin
rather than extract him. He sang the praises of the plan right up until the
moment he was told that he would be
the next man to venture forth into a man-made hell. It wasn’t an easy decision
but Napoleon and Illya concluded that it would be too risky having Colonel
Schmidt report to the camp commandant for proper sanctioning. Better to bribe a
kapo (prison trustee) and go directly
to the inmate who had so much to offer a future scientific community.
Of course this would only be possible because
most of the guards were afraid of disease. The unburied dead and dying were
feared even more than the insane officers who acted as though the Allied armies
were still thousands of miles away. Carl steeled himself for what he knew would
be an ugly fantasy. The camp was made up of over sixty buildings; filled to
overflowing with human skeletons. He would have to keep reminding himself that
none of it was real; that it was an elaborate nightmare designed to trip him up
for some reason. Nothing more. But the brain is dependent on the senses in so
many complex ways. Short term virtual reality movies could make a man lose his
balance or even faint. Carl was experiencing something infinitely more
elaborate. His sense of logic told him one thing, but his five senses had been immersed in this artificial reality for
some time now.
When he met the kapo who had been recruited earlier by Illya, he didn’t want to
speak to him. He just wanted to follow the man-weasel in the filthy improvised
suit and be rid of him as soon as possible. The trustee had other ideas. He
wanted to stay with the colonel and find out what he was up to. Information was
everything to a kapo, like blood to a
vampire. Carl noted approximately forty inmates walking between barracks in a
trance like state. They were the crazy ones. The sane prisoners remained lying
or sitting to conserve energy. When he entered the eleventh barracks building
from the camp entrance, half the residents stared at his with curiosity and
half did not.
The kapo
pointed to a man who was playing chess with a homemade board and pebbles
that represented the different playing pieces. The man weighed perhaps
one-hundred and ten pounds and was covered with sores that could not heal. He
looked to be about seventy, but then, so did most of the men in the barracks.
One lens was missing from his wire spectacles but he didn’t seem to have any
trouble reading the lopsided board.
“He’s the one. He was a bit uppity when he
first arrived but I showed him who’s boss around here and he’s behaved since,” the trustee said with a
smirk.
“Alright, wait outside,” said Carl.
“Er, begging your pardon, sir, but there are a
lot of rumors going around that the British are going to be marching up the
road any day now. So some of these mangy curs are close to finding the spines
they lost some months back. I don’t its safe for you to—“
“My assignment is of a highly confidential
nature. So much so that if anyone were to witness any facet of it, that witness
might find himself full of bullet holes even in his bed. Very soon you will be
burying corpses while looking over your shoulder. Unless you are wise enough to
get out of this camp before that happens. In any case, you are dismissed,” said
Carl who had never sounded more authoritarian.
The American waited until the two legged rat
was gone before approaching the chess player.
“I see no opponent,” Carl stated in the way of
a greeting.
“I am not playing anyone, Herr Colonel, I am
merely reviewing the particulars of a game I played some three years ago.”
“Do you remember all the games you play?”
“Yes, but that is probably because few people
bother to play with me. My reputation precedes me I’m afraid.”
“You mean you rarely lose?”
“Still waiting for the first time. Someday
there will be machines that will play the game. What a pity I won’t live long
enough to see that.”
“As a matter of fact, that is the very reason
I am here. My name is Colonel Schmidt, and presuming that you are Vasiliy
Kuzmin, I am here to give you a bit of help.”
“I am Kuzmin, and I can assure you that I have
nothing to exchange for your bit of
help.”
“I didn’t come here to barter. May we go
someplace private?”
The prisoner issued a weak smile and replied,
“We’re five people to a bunk in this building. I would suggest hanging a
blanket but we don’t have any of those anymore.”
Carl nodded with embarrassment.
“Well, I’m not about to do this outside where
more kapos could be watching,” the
colonel said in a low voice. “I suppose it will have to be here. You see, I
have two hypodermic syringes with me. One contains a powerful anti-biotic and
the other contains a sort of nutritional concentrate that might help for a
while. You see, this camp will be liberated in less than a month, but I don’t
think you will survive that long without this bit of help I’m talking about.”
The old man’s eyes suddenly seemed to go
blank. It was as though all that genius within him had been short circuited by
a hope he had long abandoned. Carl perceived as much and slowly brought out a
small packet which he shielded with his body.
“You just sit quietly, Professor. This will
only take a second….”
“What? No---wait. You need to be told
something. I have a friend,” the old man muttered awkwardly. “I owe him
everything. He was what you call a scrounger.
His older brother was a student of mine in the good old days. I never would
have lasted this long if not for him.”
Carl shrugged internally. He supposed that the
people who were washing his brain would want him to see this Kuzmin fellow as a
noble sort. At the very least grateful to anyone who might have shown him
kindness.
“Yea, well, I can pass that on to my contact.
Anyway, I think these injections would work best in your rear end. Your arm
doesn’t have---“
“No, I want you to give
them to Danya. He is lying in the nearest corner over yonder. He is only
twenty-three years old. He will have his whole life ahead of him if he can
survive these next few weeks.”
Carl let out a sigh. Was he supposed to
explain to this phantom scientist that his genius was more important than the
life on one prisoner? Why did he have to say it? Why couldn’t he just follow
Solo’s instructions and get the hell out of there?
“Sir---I’m not a real German officer, but I am a man who has to follow orders. My orders are
to give you a couple of shots and then get out of here before I am discovered.”
“Are you doing it for money?”
“No.”
“Then you are risking your life because you
are an idealist. The Allies are about
to win the war. No one is asking you to shoot a family man or drop on bomb on
city with civilians in order to contribute to the victory. My jailors will be
tried and convicted by men in clean shirts and all that matters now is that a
friend needs my help.”
Carl grew even more irritable.
“Ok, you want to wax philosophic? Fine. We all
grow old and die. What we leave behind is important. I was told that you are a
genius who could usher in a new civilization that could eradicate all the
shitholes that spawn people like the Nazis. I’ll bet any noble friend would
vote for that. Shall we ask your buddy?”
“Yes by all means,” agreed Kuzmin, who then
forced himself to move faster than was his habit.
Carl was already regretting his last few words
as he followed the old man past a dozen sitting or lying lethargic onlookers.
“Danya wake up. There is a man who can give
you some medicine. He came to give it to me but I have explained to him that
you need it more than I.”
A pair of oversized gray eyes opened slowly to
focus on a familiar face, then on a uniform that fanned a low burning hatred.
“What does he
want?”
“He has medicine,” Kuzmin repeated.
“Antibiotics. He’ll give them to you on the condition that I work for someone
after the war is over and I said yes.”
“Tell this man the truth or I’ll pin you to
the floor and inoculate you right here and now,” Carl warned the old man.
“You tell me, Fascist Pig, it will save time,”
growled the sick young man.
“I’m a member of the Underground,” Carl half lied. “I’m here to help your professor
friend. It’s his idea that the drugs
should go to you.”
The prisoner’s eyes were as empty as his
stomach.
“I must be dreaming. There is no underground here. No gun smugglers. No
short wave radios. Just delusions.”
The young man smiled slightly and said, “Have
this fellow sit someplace else, Professor. At least until his uniform turns
back into stripes. Not long ago I would have preferred the illusion of a naked
woman. But now, it would please me to have my toy terrier pay me a visit.
Hopefully I would not suffer the sight of him being eaten.”
With that Danya allowed himself to slip back
into a dream world where bread and butter could be taken for granted.
“He was---more lucid, this morning,” Kuzmin
muttered half to himself.
“Then I’m glad I showed up late. I don’t need
to be mistaken for a naked woman,” Carl responded.
“If you give him the shots, I will give you
information that could make you a rich man someday,” said the old man.
Carl tensed slightly and then asked, “does it
have anything to do with breaking the time
barrier?”
Kuzmin blinked several
times and then pressed his face close to Carl’s.
“How in God’s name could you know about that?”
“I will only tell you if you first take the
shots,” Carl responded while thinking himself quite clever.
“Then keep your secrets, as well as your offer
of help. The science that you speak of may very well be a blasphemy in any
case.”
“Faith and intelligence are compatible,
Professor, but intelligence and short sightedness are not,” grumbled the
American. “Did it occur to you that a time traveler could go back to when
Hitler was first getting started and make sure that he never amounts to
anything?”
“And who would be the custodian of such
power---the British perhaps?”
“Would you have a problem with that?”
“I would
sir. I would tell them to get out of India first.”
“India doesn’t have any gas
chambers,” retorted Carl. “You are just stalling because you don’t want to
admit that you are more important than that man lying there, or any of these
other poor devils.”
“I think that uniform suits you. I give the Allies just ten years to play with the
toys that the Nazis have and they will blow the world to bits.”
“That is another thing a time traveler might
change. Maybe all it would take is one ethical man.”
“Whoever sponsors the research will also select
the man who plays God. That man would be erasing the fates as though they were
chalk marks on a black board.”
Carl took another cautious look around. Most
of the inhabitants were napping, with only a handful staring blankly at the
sight of a German colonel amongst them. They were probably questioning their
own sense of reality, just as he continued to do.
“Ok, I can understand your misgivings
concerning government. Believe me, I’ve been there. But that just means that
you’ll have to be strong and maintain control over your intellectual property.
It won’t be easy, but that will be your challenge.”
“My challenge
is to put honor above all else,” responded the genius.
“If you were an ordinary man, I would
appreciate your point of view,” conceded the American, “but as we have just
discussed, you could bring about a much greater good in time, by surviving this
place.”
“Until mankind is no longer capable of
creating nightmares like the one I am in, I choose personal honor over the
wishes of any existing government. I choose loyalty to a friend over
technological advancement,” Kuzmin stated as if to the whole wide world.
“Wait a minute---you did offer to make me rich if I gave the drugs to your friend. Are
you rescinding that proposition?”
“I wasn’t talking about building a time
machine,” the old man clarified. “I was thinking about a device that would
enable you to turn on the lights with your voice.”
Heaving a sigh of resignation, the American
brought out the syringes and prepared to apply brute force to achieve his
objective. But at the last moment his thoughts went to an old woman who had
been judged expendable by everyone except a minor official named Schmidt.
“Oh hell and bother,” Carl hissed out loud.
“None of this is real so I might as well give you what you want and be done
with it all.”
Carl then promptly administered the two hypos
to the young man and rose to his feet.
“I hope God pays attention to dreams. I got a
feeling that when we report back to Adams, the game playing will
end and so will my stay on a real, non-imitation Earth.”
“Adams?” queried the
professor. “I worked with a student from America before the war. He was
a protégé of a sort. His first name was Joshua.”
“That’s right,” Carl responded with a snide
expression. “Professor Joshua Adams, brain washer extraordinaire.”
“Why do you say that?” Kuzmin asked with
increasing interest.
“Because he’s been trying his damnedest to
convince me that I’m a time traveler, and I ain’t buying it or any bridge
neither.”
“You mean---he is an old man---and he sent you
back to help me?”
Kuzmin nearly had a heart attack right on the
spot. Carl’s expression softened just a tad, but he was still of the opinion
that he was talking to a blank wall somewhere.
“He said he had worked on his time travel
project for half a century. I’m supposed to be part of a three man team to get
you out of here so that you could help him after the war. That was a pretty
stupid idea---for a genius to act
on.”
“Why didn’t he send you back to the time I was
offered an opportunity to leave the continent? It doesn’t make any sense that
he would have a time traveler meddle with this ghastly period in time.”
“You mean you don’t know anything about gravimetric stresses?” asked Carl with
suspicion.
Kuzmin paused for a moment, then breathed out
the word, “fascinating---oh, and quite believable I assure you.”
“Uh huh. Well, I’m going to head back to a
better neighborhood now. Sorry I have to leave you but one of my associates
warned me that if I defy the bad guys, I’ll get the crap beat out of me and
it’ll hurt just like the real thing so I guess I’ll pass on that.”
“No wait,” pleaded Kuzmin. “I need to know: is
there a younger man prepared to carry on after Adams? How close is he to
solving the problem of the gravimetric black out?”
“He claims that he’s being sponsored by
organized crime. I don’t know anything besides that,” Carl responded with a
dour expression.
Kuzmin did some fast thinking. (Which he was
good at even in his malnourished state.)
“Could you pass on some information without
the criminals seeing you?” asked Kuzmin.
“I could do that,” answered Carl, who was
mindful of what Solo had stated earlier.
“Do you have anything I can write on?”
“Yea, I’ve got a note book and pencil…”
The old man took them and began to scribble
with the urgency of a man trying to save the world. He nearly filled half the
book and pushed Carl’s patience to the limit.
“With these computations Adams should be able to
reduce the flux derributor to a much narrower beam. One that will carry a
subject at least one-hundred years back in time. Most certainly back to the
1930s.”
“Ok,” the American responded awkwardly while
stuffing the book back into his pocket.
“I will say God speed to the angel that
may erase this foul page in human history.”
“I’ll deliver the notebook,” Carl promised,
“but I have no idea what will happen after that.”
The American nodded good bye to the man in
striped rags, then headed out to where the kapo was waiting for him. Heading
back across the compound was unnerving, but Carl was pretty sure he would make
it out; and he was also sure that Napoleon Solo would find the contents of the
notebook very interesting. Hopefully the notebook would give the three men a
way out of their dilemma. In any case, Carl was more uncomfortable than ever,
and he wasn’t entirely certain why.
Chapter Eleven
Carl was very unhappy when he took a peek at
the notebook and discovered that Kuzmin had written his notes in Greek. Solo and Illya were even more vexed when Carl insisted on taking
the notebook to the University of Hamburg
to have it looked at. But Illya could only decipher some twenty percent of
the writing and they dared not enlist the aid of the local community. So with great trepidation, the State
Department worker was allowed to venture forth on his own with notes that could
make Einstein’s Theory of Relativity look
like something the Greek playwrights dreamed up.
All the while Solo and Kuryakin kept
relocating. From a church to a grave digger’s cottage to the Mayor’s basement.
Scrounging for food along with a few thousand other people, and all the while
wondering how they could possibly experience so many sensations that could not
be real. At least that was Solo’s wonder. Illya had become a convert to the
idea of time travel. For that reason he was especially concerned for Carl since
there would be no waking up from a rifle or machine gun bullet.
On the third day Napoleon checked the
downspout in back of the local bakery. It had finally been shifted ninety
degrees to the left. With a smile he took out a piece of paper and shoved it
into the spout. On that parchment Solo had written his most current address.
Three hours later Carl Schmidt quickly entered the back of a vacant butcher’s
shop.
Looking fearfully about he asked, “What if
someone wonders in?”
“The few people who have meat are not getting
it from any public establishment,” explained Kuryakin. “We should be safe for
the night if we don’t light any fires, and if you haven’t been followed all the
way from Hamburg.”
“Well sir, I did everything short of changing
my gender to keep from being tailed. One guy was definitely following me after
I left the college, but I gave him the slip by pretending to board a train and
then jumping off just as it was gathering speed. I sure am glad that little
trick worked, cause I needed to get back to you gents real bad.”
“I know, the cat and mouse game can be very unnerving even when you’re not new
at it,” consoled Solo.
“It certainly is that, confirmed the older
American. “But I needed to get back to you boys to let you know that we are really truly in Nazi Germany. The
toughest part of that assignment was sneaking away from the egg heads in that
school after they got a look at this notebook. I mean I had to climb out a
bathroom window.”
Napoleon smiled and shook his head.
“Carl, I don’t pretend to know how they can
work on three subjects at the same time, but if we are going to further explore
the possibility that you are right, then I need to ask you something. If a huge
and very powerful organization had possession of a time machine, would they
allow one old man to tamper—all alone mind you---with the machinery?”
The bureaucrat shrugged and said, “I suppose
it would be less difficult to pull off than time travel, but I need to make a
point here. You believe that we are fed our
reality, the way a cook decides what to place in a meal. The idea is that they
can get something out of one of us by convincing us we are living in the year
1945.”
“Yes---what of it?”
“So, they are giving us what they have knowledge of---not what we have knowledge of.”
Solo took a deep breath and replied, “Yes,
they need to trick us out of the knowledge that we alone possess. What is your
point?”
“I have been to Hamburg before. En route to the
college campus I saw a graffiti on the side of a building that was put there in
the 1920s. I only found it because I got lost while walking through the area on
my first visit.”
Solo glanced over at Kuryakin’s intent stare
and said, “Well, maybe they can mix their
spoon fed images with some of our memories. I did state a moment ago that we don’t know how this dream world
functions exactly. But the brain is less of a miracle than time travel. When
you forget that, you are playing right into their hands.”
Kuryakin smiled at Carl’s frustrated
expression and said, “I’m on your side, Carl, but it is only logical to guard
against the possibility that we are being manipulated as Napoleon believes.”
“Yea yea yea,” Schmidt acknowledged irritably,
“I’m all for expecting the unexpected, but
no one has asked us any questions
confidential or otherwise. Bottom line Mr. Solo, if we get all the way
back to that weird bench we flew in on, without anyone pumping us for info, I
think that will be the end of your theory.”
Illya’s head slightly to one side, and his
hand dropped to the flap of his military holster. But it remained immobile at
that point as a dozen black clad men burst into the empty store with machine
pistols at the ready.
The only officer stepped forward when he was
certain that no panic shooting was about to take place. He had a Walther PP automatic in one hand and
with the other he reached into Kuryakin’s holster and removed a bigger Walther P-38.
“My name is
Sturmhauptfuhrer Luca Becker, and I have a great many question that need to be
answered.”
Solo looked up into the predatory eyes of the
SS officer and asked, “Are you down from Hamburg by chance?”
“Ya, this fool showed some very interesting
papers to a rocket scientist who was visiting the university at the time. We
were notified immediately.”
“Oh yea, the short guy who went to find a
slide rule,” Carl muttered half to himself.
“We came so close to being rich,” Napoleon
said with a cavalier smile, “and now all we can hope for is to survive the
war.”
“All you can hope for,” corrected the Nazi,
“is a relatively painless death. Men who steal state secrets are interviewed
with extreme prejudice.”
“By your superiors back in Hamburg?” asked Solo.
“Not immediately. First we will take you to
the Bergen camp to see if you are
the same officers that visited that facility earlier.”
“I suppose we could own up to that, if you ask
us nicely,” said Solo.
“Ya, it would please me if I could avoid the
stench of the place. But the commandant of the camp was able to ascertain what
business you have with his camp and it would be discourteous to take you into
custody in his backyard and not give him an opportunity to view the catch.”
The three men were manacled with their hands
in front and loaded into the back of a truck that contained a guard for each
prisoner. Twenty minutes later the prisoners were standing a few meters in
front of the commandant’s headquarters building in a chilly rain that would
accelerate the death toll among the sick.
“I just received word that the road to Hamburg is being strafed by
fighters. Perhaps you would prefer to remain here for a time and interrogate
the prisoners in one of the medical examination rooms,” suggested Kramer.
The sturmhauptfuhrer understood full well that
Kramer didn’t want any bloodstains in his office, but fully supported the idea
of body fluids spilling out someplace else.
“A most gracious offer, Herr Commandant.”
“Not at all. These men have shown a very
mysterious interest in my camp. It goes without saying that I would like to
know why. I have already learned that it has something to do with a prisoner
named Kuzmin. I fear that if these men were to proceed immediately to Hamburg, I might find myself outside of the loop as the Americans
say.”
“Then of course we shall have your most
trusted subordinate witness the interrogation,” said Becker.
“Very good. That would be my camp physician
Dr. Fritz Klein. He has been complaining of stomach ailments lately, but he
should be up to something as effortless as being a witness. Sergeant Luger will
escort you and your group to the medical complex and I will have Klein meet you
there.”
The officers exchanged salutes and the
prisoners were then marched to the far end of the third building to the west of
the headquarters complex. After passing
through a vacant reception area they entered a barn sized work place that was
part hospital and part slaughter house. A long row of porcelain examination
tables were on the right side of the room. They were designed so that no matter
how much blood a patient might lose, it could hosed down and drained like a
wash tub.
Along the opposite wall were open shower
stalls and oversized sinks. Despite all the efforts at maintaining a clean work
environment, there were blood stains everywhere and the place reeked of
fermented bodily fluids. But the most notable point of interest lay on the far
table. Nude, better fleshed than the walking skeletons in the neighboring
buildings, and immediately recognized by a now queasy Carl Schmidt. It was the
kapo who had guided Carl to Kuzmin earlier. Five bullet holes formed extended
in a diagonal line across the heart. Solo and Kuryakin saw it as a well placed
machine pistol burst meant to kill quickly at close range.
“Judging by the fleshy limbs, I would guess
that he was a recent arrival,” Solo said in a cool, conversational tone.
“He was a kapo,”
said Dr. Klein as he arrived on the heels of the others.
“Ah, well then I don’t suppose there were many
tears shed.”
“About as many as you would find at the
execution of a spy,” quipped the doctor.
“Actually we’re not spies,” contradicted Solo,
“we are delivery boys that fell in with the wrong crowd.”
“You are a talkative sort. That is good. The
silent ones are always so very-----time consuming,” said Becker.
“Oh I’m a regular chatter box,” said Solo,
“ready willing and able to answer all questions.”
“You will get your chance,” promised the SS
man, “but to start out, I would like to hear a few words from the gentleman
who’s lack of skill made this meeting possible. What would you like to
contribute to this interview, Colonel
Schmidt?”
Carl stole another
glance at the bullet ridden kapo. Maybe he was real, maybe not, but he was a
disquieting sight to behold in any case. The American cleared his throat and
was careful not to make eye contact with his fellows.
“Uh---our plans pretty much hinged on not
getting caught, but now that we’re prisoners, I suppose there is no harm in
asking you gentlemen what you intend to do when the war is over. I don’t mean
to anger anyone, but the truth is, pretty soon you’ll be hanging up your
uniforms and starting a new life in a country that’s in bad shape. I was
thinking that perhaps we can accomplish something together, if you’re not
intending to shoot it out with the British or maybe even the Russians out
east.”
“We are still listening,” Becker prodded after
a moment of silence.
“Jewels or bank accounts might escape the
scrutiny of captors until a prisoner becomes convinced that he’s going to die
in captivity. But there is another form of wealth that might present itself to
an enterprising German officer. Namely scientific
wealth.”
Becker made no attempt to hide his
disappointment. It was the distant lightning flash of an approaching storm.
“We know that Kuzmin is a mathematical genius.
I do not doubt that he would have been given a prestigious position with a well
funded research group somewhere. But do you actually believe that we could gain
some favor from our victors by keeping highly intelligent prisoners alive?
Really Schmidt, you are as dull witted as you look; and that is a greater
misfortune than near starvation.”
“His equations will bring about a technology
worth many billions of dollars,” Carl retorted. “What was given to me could
just as easily be given to you; data that would be useful to competing
scientific minds. But the first step is to get some food into Kuzmin’s stomach
so you will have something to work with in the next few weeks. Unless of course
you only care about killing and imprisoning, in which case you have very little
time left in which to enjoy yourself. Hitler will be blowing his own brains out
before the flowers bloom.”
Becker took a step
towards the American prisoner but then restrained himself. Klein was like the sphinx, and Carl’s companions were both
hoping that Carl would quit while he was ahead.
Suddenly the dangerous look in Becker’s eyes
vanished and he shrugged inside his black uniform.
“Very well, I shall ask the commandant for
permission to take this Kuzmin fellow with us; in the interest of thoroughness.”
“Then---may I conclude that this interview is
at an end?” the camp doctor asked with some awkwardness.
“Yes, Doctor. Kindly have Kuzmin cleaned up a
bit, and let us hope that he does not foul the interior of our staff car on the
way up north. Bloodstains are bad enough.”
Chapter Twelve
He might have been guilty of aiding a hostile power, but Solo
recommended that Becker promise the commandant a bulldozer in exchange for
permission to move Kuzmin. Every man has his price, and when Kramer got his the
front prison gate swung open easily enough. The extra prisoner required an
improvised diaper and two army blankets, but when Kuzmin realized that he
wasn’t imagining things, his spirits rallied and he walked with only a minimum
of assistance.
Curiously enough, the SS officer had Kuzmin
ride with him in the backseat of the staff car. The transport truck followed
with the healthy prisoners, three guards and the driver. The men from U.N.C.L.E. did not require a meeting of
the minds to conclude that they needed to escape before reaching Hamburg. No doubt Becker
realized this as well, but was confident that adequate security was in place.
All three men were handcuffed and each man’s guard had a Schmeisser MP-40 machine pistol pointed at them.
While still south of Bockel the two vehicles were
forced to straddle the shoulder of the road in order to get around less
fortunate vehicles that had been rendered immobile by fighter strafing. In the
process of skirting the hulks the passengers were bounced around, and Solo had
already perceived that his guard kept his finger inside the trigger guard.
Napoleon Solo was an intelligent man, but that was not the reason he had been
recruited for U.N.C.L.E. In the blink
of an eye he grabbed the barrel of the Schmeisser
with a pair of manacled hands and pulled on the weapon while pointing it at
Carl’s guard. Solo’s opponent involuntarily brought his finger to the surface
of the trigger and activated the killing machine.
Because of its high rate of fire, half the
magazine was emptied into a uniformed chest. The bullet ridden guard also fired his weapon, but Carl had the
luck of the Irish at that moment. The muzzle had strayed just far enough so
that the stream of bullets passed him and entered the truck cab. Carl was still
marveling at it all while Solo struggled to turn a weapon against its owner.
Kuryakin had grabbed the barrel that had been threatening him, while Carl’s guard was in the process of being perforated. The
blonde Russian fought for his life, shoving against his guard with such force
as to cause the German to topple over the raised tail gate. But the guard got
hold of the Russian’s handcuff chain just as he was losing his match with
gravity.
Both captor and captive hit the road hard as
the truck veered off the road entirely and crashed into a nearby tree. That
helped Solo out tremendously since his manacles placed him at a martial
disadvantage. The collision brought Solo’s body mass forward with additional
force and when the muzzle of the weapon came to press against a German cheek,
Solo’s finger pressed down on top of the German’s causing the remainder of the
magazine to empty. The guard screamed as a trench was dug across his cheek
bone. By then Carl had gotten hold of the dead man’s weapon and used it like a
club to hammer down on the German’s left wrist.
With a second weapon empty, Solo was free to
double hammer fist at his opponent’s throat while Carl angrily pounded away at
the soldier’s helmet. In the meantime Becker and his driver had bailed out of
their staff car and were sprinting back to the truck with pistols in their
hands. They rounded the back of the transport just as Solo was about to put a
fresh magazine in the weapon that was now his.
“You are most formidable opponents,” growled
Becker. “I will take great delight in conducting an in depth interrogation that
will leave you wishing that your misbegotten mothers never met your misbegotten
fathers!”
Becker’s angry expression took on a hint of
confusion as Solo gestured to the Germans to lower their weapons. The officer
was about to respond with a snide remark when suddenly his feet were swept out
from under him. Both he and his driver were now withering in agony as blood
seeped from numerous bullet holes in their legs.
“I was gesturing to my partner,” explained
Solo. “I didn’t want him to shoot too high. Now kindly leave your pistols where
they’re lying. You can still die a warrior’s death if you want to, but in a few
weeks your superior won’t remember you, much less what happened this day.”
Illya closed in on the wounded men holding the
heavy machine pistol with two hands on the grip. When he was close enough to
kick the discarded handguns away, he ordered the men to give up the handcuff
key.
“Holy nuts, the driver is dead!” exclaimed
Carl with trembling hands.
“If any
of this is real,” Solo silently
reminded himself before looking at the Russian.
“Mine has a caved in throat. He’ll be dead in
minutes,” Kuryakin assured his partner.
“You won’t get----to the nearest town,”
declared a pain racked Becker.
“You mean we
won’t,” corrected the Russian who then quickly brought the staff car back
for easy loading. Then he hastily placed improvised tourniquets on uniformed
legs.
“Lucky for us the air raids have minimized the
flow of traffic,” muttered Carl as he helped Kuryakin load the wounded Germans
into the trunk.
“Yes, the Allied pilots
will get the blame for all this, for a little while at least. But do we chance
another encounter with Frau Hoffman, or do we proceed directly to the rabbit hole and lay low until the magic
bench takes off again?”
“I vote for the latter,” said Carl.
“Aren’t you forgetting something?” asked Solo
while opening a back door.
Solo quickly assessed the gaunt, shivering man
wrapped in blankets and said, “Our situation has improved somewhat Professor.
Can you bear up for a few more hours?”
“Yes of course,” responded the scientist, “but
to what end may I ask?”
“We’re going to take you to a church in Bispingen. When we were hiding in Celle, a
church caretaker informed us that we might be safe there; meaning you might be
safe there. Only catch is, the place doesn’t seem to have a name. Supposedly
the residences just call it Old Church
for some reason.”
“But---I am in poor health. My bowels are
giving me terrible trouble,” the scientist confessed unnecessarily. “I require
more than just a place to hide. How much can I ask of a strange priest who sees
so much turmoil around him?”
“I don’t know,” responded Solo. “We were given
a place to take you so we’ll head for it.”
“What of the men in the trunk? They will bleed
to death if you leave them that way.”
“First we get away from here. Then we make the
next decision,” Solo explained as Kuryakin took the wheel and started them
north.
Fort twenty minutes Solo felt Kuzmin’s eyes on
him. It was unsettling, and the highly trained agent was unhappy with himself
for being so vulnerable.
“They are the enemy. We should have put a
bullet in each of their heads,” Napoleon stated after he had enough.
“Somewhere in both chest cavities,” corrected
the Russian. “Otherwise someone might have suspected an execution.”
“I sense you are trapped in a gray area of
morality,” said Kuzmin.
“I have no idea what that means,” responded
Solo.
“Finishing them off would have been the proper
thing to do. Instead you let them die very slowly, just as hundreds of people
are doing back in the camps. It is a game that men sometimes choose to play.
Don’t kill people outright, just make it impossible for them to survive the
existing conflict. They become casualties of war, not the victim of a bullet
fired by a murderer.”
“I’m sure that is true in many cases,” said
Solo, “but it hardly concerns Mr. Kuryakin and myself. We have two live
prisoners in the trunk because they could be of use as hostages or decoys.”
“Until they bleed to death,” pressed Kuzmin.
“The femoral
arteries were not hit. Yes, they are
in bad shape but they should last a few hours at the very least. Hopefully
we’ll be in easy reach of that church before they become so much dead weight.”
Carl sat up front beside Illya and silently
contemplated the last conversation while the staff car rolled along through the
heart of Germany. But he just had to throw in his two cents worth
before they could reach their destination.
“Professor, after what you’ve been through,
I’m surprised you didn’t ask for a gun so you could shoot them yourself.”
The man wrapped in blankets let out a long and
meaningful sigh.
“When you visited me in the camp, what did you
see?”
“People starving to death by the hundreds. I
was so pissed, if the Germans would have discovered me, I would have pulled my
piece and gone down fighting,” answered Carl.
“Meaning you would have crossed over with hatred in your heart, instead of peace. That
would have been unfortunate. I am glad it did not happen.”
“Yea, me too,” said the American who’s eyes
rolled slightly upward.
“My life has always been filled with numbers,
and theories pertaining to the great externals,” Kuzmin continued. “When I was
brought to that dying ground, I was
introduced to what I call The Dire
Dimension. It is the threshold between this dimension and the next. It
awaits both the dynamic and the tranquil, but tranquility is the great teacher.
The fury of conflict teaches us nothing. That
my friends is why war is such a terrible misfortune. But in that dying
ground, I became receptive to a great truth that shows hatred for what it is.”
“Yea, we pretty much know where you’re going
with this,” said Carl. “The Budda and
Jesus were what you might call advanced enough
to remain free of worldly concerns. But we gotta settle for less. Take me for
instance: I turned rogue against the
government agency I was working for because I felt honor bound to save a
helpless woman. Sure, I could have told myself that she is a good person and
will go to some wonderful afterlife---but I couldn’t let it go at that. Yea,
those people I saw back in the camp weren’t clawing at the walls of a gas
chamber, but I still think that their deaths are wrong, wrong, wrong.”
“But surely your superiors must have known
that you would act as you did. I suspect that you were manipulated, sir.
Meaning no dis-respect; would your immediate supervisor have gone with you to
free the woman if that would have been necessary?”
“Alright, we should be on the outskirts of the
Bispingen area,” Solo interrupted. “Illya, park us behind that grove of trees
and stay behind the wheel. Carl and I will look for a discreet route to that
church we’re looking for. Still wish we had a name to go on.”
Carl though it strange that Solo would choose
the more able Kuryakin to remain behind, but then, if Kuzmin needed protection,
the blonde haired Russian would certainly handle that duty better than Carl could. When they were one-hundred yards
from the car, Solo brought them to a halt and scanned a cemetery that was
located dead ahead, some eight-hundred yards from where they were standing.
“Quiet---sparsely populated area,” observed
Solo. “In a way that’s good, but we might have to do quite a bit of hiking to
find that church.”
“Yea, when I first came to Germany, I was kind of amazed
at all the undeveloped countryside. I just figured that any country that is
both old and industrialized would be covered with cities,” Carl mused.
Solo ignored the casual observation and said,
“I think our phantom professor was about to probe you for information. I think
you’re the reason we’re being gaslighted. Some facet of your little adventure
has become very important to Thrush.”
“That doesn’t make sense. The U.S. State
Department is an open book compared to U.N.C.L.E.
What I phoned in to my bureau chief was kind of sketchy, but if they were
listening in, they couldn’t have heard anything that would cause them to smell
money.”
“Thrush isn’t about money, it’s about power,” Solo quickly explained. “Their leaders knew
from the very beginning that racketeering isn’t as lucrative as pulling the
strings on a less than perfect statesman. Maybe they’re looking at some part of
the State Department, or maybe they’re interested in a person you came in
contact with in the field. Either way, it’s my hunch that we’re in Wonderland because of you.”
Carl grinned at that and said, “You hold on
like a bulldog, Solo. Your partner thinks we’ve gone back in time, and I’m
ninety-nine percent convinced myself. Sure, the idea is fantastic, but a man
can only doubt his senses for so long.”
Solo didn’t bother to
respond as they approached the back of the cemetery. His eyes scanned the
twenty acre collection of tombstones with no thought of what was underneath
them. Solo never worried about death. He focused rather on the route that lay
before him, always presuming that he’d live long enough to take another step.
Enough steps would make up a day, and those would come and go without
reflection.
“Of course if we’re right and you’re wrong,”
Carl continued, “we’ll have to decide what to do with that time tunnel, and the
fellow who claims to be its creator.”
Carl waited for a response, but Solo’s gaze
was no longer sweeping the width of the burial ground. It was now focused on a
bit of movement to the side of a tombstone some thirty yards ahead and to the
left. Solo marched briskly in that direction until he could make out the
features of a girl who was perhaps eight, digging on hands and knees with a
small hand spade. Beside her was a box perhaps two feet in length. The girl’s
eyes widened and she sucked in her breath at the sight of the two uniformed
men.
“Don’t be frightened,” Carl stated quickly.
“We’re just looking for a place called Old Church. Can
you help us with that?”
The little girl tilted her head in thought and
said, “Last year I was hiking with my aunt and we passed a very old building
made of huge stones. People were getting married inside. I think that could be
the place.”
“What’s your name?” asked Solo.
“Greta.”
“Well Greta, I don’t think your mother would
approve of you getting your dress dirty in a cemetery. What are you doing,
burying a pet?” asked Solo.
The girl nodded solemnly.
“My older sister was killed by airplanes. Last
night a car ran over her cat. I just wanted them to be together.”
“That’s very thoughtful Greta. But you need to
understand that your sister isn’t in the ground. She’s in heaven, and if she
wants her cat there, it will be with her regardless of where you bury the cat’s
body,” explained Carl.
“But I already dug the hole,” the girl pointed
out.
“Yes, go ahead and put the box in the ground,”
instructed Solo, “but can you tell us where this old church is?”
“You need to find a
place to eat called the Konig Stuben. My
aunt and I ate there after passing the church. I can’t say how to get there,
but it is far away in that direction,” the girl said while pointing vaguely to
the northwest.
Solo noted that there was a small service road
circumnavigating the cemetery grounds, so getting their car to the starting
point wouldn’t be a problem.
“Bury the box quickly Greta. This is no place
for you,” Solo said in the way of a farewell.
When the two Americans were halfway back to
the car Schmidt asked, “If you still think all this is an illusion, why did you
bother to advise the girl to hurry up and get out of there?”
“Have you forgotten? We agreed to treat this
adventure as if it’s the real thing. Besides, when Illya says something I keep
it in mind, even if I’m not betting on it. Now let’s double time it back to the
car. We’re running out of daylight.”
Chapter Thirteen.
The Church had been constructed nearly six-hundred years
ago, and it looked the part. Actual boulders had been used to construct it’s
base walls, and the roof looked as if it had recently been replaced. (Certainly
not for the first time.) This was a concern to the new arrivals because the
modest little structure didn’t look as though it received visitors more than
once a month. It stood on it’s own acreage, ignored by the distant neighbors
which was good, but not entirely so.
“Well, I suppose one of us will have to run
over to the neighboring restaurant and ask who is the officiator of this
domain,” said Solo.
“I’ll do it,” said Carl, “and I’ll get us some
take out food while I’m at it.”
“Soup for the professor,” cautioned Solo.
“I would think a make believe scientist could
swallow a steak whole and wash it down with whiskey,” joked the other American.
“You’ve been doing just fine with all this,
Carl. Don’t trip up on the last lap by becoming an irritant.”
“Is that any way to speak to a superior
officer?” responded Carl as he turned towards the distant eatery.
The counterfeit colonel only got fifty feet
when Kuryakin’s voice floated up to them from somewhere behind the little stone
church.
“I’ve found someone back here!”
The two Americans headed around the church and
then towards a pile of firewood where Illya was facing a man with an ax.
“My word, I have not seen so many officers
since the time I went to the big city to get a tooth pulled,” quipped the ax
holder.
“May I present Father Sebastian Renke,” said
Illya.
“You will not introduce your associates?” the
priest asked after a brief silence.
“They would be false, as is mine,” said
Kuryakin.
Solo drew closer to the puzzled clergyman and
asked, “Do you know the caretaker at St. Ludwig?”
“Max? Yes indeed. I got him his job. Is he in
trouble?”
“We can only hope not,” said Carl
“Father, we’ll get right to the point,” Solo
cut in. “We have an escapee from the Bergen-Belsen camp. His name is
Vasiliy Kuzmin. Perhaps Max shouldn’t have done it, but he suggested we bring
Kuzmin here for hiding.”
“What did Father Schumacher have to say about
that?” inquired the priest.
“Max didn’t say why, but he chose to keep
Schumacher out of this.”
“Ah, that is good. Max has proven to be wiser
than I would have supposed. Yes, this place is farther way from that great
evil, and I am farther along in years, so if I am caught it will not be as
great a blow to the church.”
“Father, we must rely on your confidence that
you are capable of hiding a man for at least a month or so. Also, you need to
understand that this Kuzmin in is poor health. He will need a certain degree of
nursing I’m afraid.”
“Then he will have to stay in my cottage,”
said the priest. “I am semi-retired and I officiate over this old church only
on a part time basis. It is a quaint place to wed or bury someone when the
weather is bad, but it would serve poorly as a hospital.”
The four men then proceeded to the front of
the building where the staff car awaited. Solo had a bad feeling as he opened
the right rear door and gazed at the still figure within. Moving aside the
blanket, he checked for a pulse and then paused with a thoughtful expression.
“Is he alright?” asked Carl with a concerned
look.
“We’ve lost him,” Solo reported.
“We still have his notes,” Illya pointed out.
“It will be interesting to see if we still
have them when we get back,” muttered Solo.
“I can arrange for a discreet burial. Do you
know what his denomination was?”
“I think he sort of created his own,” said
Carl.
“In times like these, I think many people do,”
added the cleric.
“Well, Kuzmin will need fewer casket bearers
if we stay here until it’s time to catch
our flight out of here,” Carl half joked.
Solo nodded slightly and said, “We’ll give it
try. But Carl, If you should find yourself conversing with any of the natives,
keep it simple, like perhaps the weather.”
“Yea sure. Mums
the word,” Carl responded while
getting into the car.
Chapter Fourteen.
Solo took another glance
at this watch; something that had become a habit in the last few hours. If old
man Adams could be trusted, then departure time would be one hour and six
minutes from now. All very well and good, but now the road below them was
choked with military vehicles, and hundreds of foot soldiers were trudging
along the sides of the road in response to increased action up north. Every now
and then a soldier would leave the road and select a patch of brush that would
afford him necessary privacy, then jog back to his comrades who would crack a
joke about one biological thing or another.
Every few minutes
Kuryakin would glance apprehensively over his shoulder, then return to the view
that the three men were sharing. His fellow U.N.C.L.E.
agent looked thoughtful but remained silent.
“I’m telling you it’s just an echo off the
woods behind us,” said Carl, who was now acquainted with the blonde man’s
growing hunch.
“No, conditions aren’t adequate for that,”
muttered the Russian.
“But you went back and looked twice,” Carl
pointed out.
“Not far enough perhaps. These woods are
patchy. Likely there is open ground just a few hundred meters back.”
“But the brush in our perimeter hasn’t been
disturbed since the last growing season. Surely we’ll be safe for another hour,” reasoned Carl.
“The air strikes were part of something. All
this mobilization is part of a reaction to that air raid,” Illya reasoned.
“Something fairly large. Something going on all around us; not just in front of
us.”
“Yes, right. But like I said, we only need
another hour,” Carl declared in a highly opinionated tone.
“Then let us take steps to secure that hour,”
said Kuryakin.
“Alright, but open you com channel and keep it
open. We’re so close to zero hour we don’t need to conserve on batteries,” said
the other U.N.C.L.E. man.
“Your presuming that our work will be all but
done when we return to the time tunnel,” said Illya. “I rather doubt that.”
“I didn’t say that,” Napoleon replied softly
to his partner’s shrinking back.
“One lousy stinking hour,” Carl echoed
stubbornly.
Illya heard Carl on the communicator and
sighed as he weaved between the young trees. When he reached the last turn
around point he dropped to his belly and began to crawl with the radio pen
still in hand. He covered another sixty yards that way before stopping and
focusing on a metallic sound. There was no mistaking what it was: tank tracks
rolling at a leisurely pace. That meant that there was a road at the back of
the woods that paralleled the one they had been monitoring. Well, at least now
he knew. There was nothing Kuryakin hated more than being in the dark about
something. Discovering the second road and noting that the traffic was steady
and northward bound placed him somewhat at ease.
He began his crawl back to the other side of
the woods and got about half way there when a flight of P-47 Thunderbolts supported
Kuryakin’s long standing theory that Murphy’s
Law was written by a Russian. He didn’t need to see the column of military
vehicles scatter to know that in fact, that was what was happening. Illya
didn’t know if there was any woods on the other side of that road, but he
certainly knew what was on his side.
Five trucks and three command cars pulled off the road and stabbed into the
formation of trees in order to become invisible to the fighters that were now
coming around for another strafing run.
Illya was tense but not overly concerned. The
Germans would return to the road as soon as the planes were gone, and they most
certainly wouldn’t penetrate the woods more than a few yards, since they didn’t
want to get stuck in the soft moist earth. But just as Illya was about to buy
into the idea, a young tree was pushed over and it’s uppermost branches fell no
more than twenty feet from the Russian’s head. The sounds of aerial assault
gave way to a clanking sound that was a bit louder than it had been before.
The Russian crawled forward and to his left
until he could match a sound with an unpleasant image. He found it, and it was unpleasant. In fact it caused him to
breath a Russian explicative that caused Solo to frown on the other end.
“Any
trouble back there? Our road just got strafed.”
“There’s another road
some one-hundred and fifty meters from yours, and it was attacked as well,”
reported Kuryakin. “A tank is seeking cover in the trees. I’m not entirely
convinced it is necessary but then I’m not the commander.”
“How far
away is he?”
“Keep your voice down.” Illya muttered back.
“Well, get back here
then,”
responded Solo. “Carl misses you terribly.”
Kuryakin would have liked nothing better, but he remained where he was until
the steel monster finally came to a complete stop. Then the turret hatch popped
open and the vehicle commander got out to inspect his surroundings. Illya
didn’t even bother to draw his pistol. The German was standing on top of a
Henschel built Panzerkampfwagon VI. Affectionately
known throughout the military as a Tiger.
Forty-five tons of killing machine with an 88 millimeter turret gun that
was as much a visual deterrent as it
was an actual killer of Allied machines.
Kuryakin vaguely surmised that the machine probably had to be taken from a
railroad car because of the bombing, and then needed to relocate under it’s own
power. Most unfortunate from the standpoint of the Germans, since a Tiger tended to wear out its
transmission very quickly.
The only thing that mattered to Kuryakin was
the two 7.92 machine guns that could complicate things for the men from the
future, even if the tank itself couldn’t reach them because of the larger
trees. Illya was extremely mindful of this as the tank commander dropped off
the deck of his machine and began to stroll forward like some uniformed
birdwatcher. The German strolled almost straight to the blonde fugitive. Then,
not surprisingly, unbuttoned his pants and watered the ferns. Kuryakin eyed the
stream of urine warily, until a most unfortunate thing occurred.
The U.N.C.L.E.
communicator pen had been designed to emit a single, relatively quiet beep
when the tiny battery’s power level reached ten percent. No one in the tank
could have heard it, but the man with the handful of membrum virile heard it and looked down and to his right. Kuryakin
actually felt sorry for the unfortunate soldier, but not enough to cause any
hesitation. The Russian sprang to his feet and threw a straight punch that came
up under the taller man’s jaw. The German went down semi conscious but that
didn’t mean much. Kuryakin was on him in an instant and punched downward into
the throat four times in rapid succession.
The agent from the future then dropped down
next to his victim and eyed the tank with renewed apprehension. Tense moments
followed and Illya wrestled with the temptation to call for Solo.
Needless to say the other Germans didn’t
remain silent forever.
“Sarge, can we stretch our legs too or are we
going to move out?” queried a muffled voice from within the monster.
The Russian let out a
sigh and spoke into his tiny radio.
“I’m going to need a little help here. Better
bring Carl with you---but quietly.”
“On the tail end of that entreaty another head
popped out of the rolling fortress.
“Sarge?”
Kuryakin’s eyes turned hard. He was now
convinced that the entire tank crew would have to die. If they could use their
pistols it would be easy, but there was an entire column of troops within
shouting distance, and after that fighter sweep, the birds and squirrels could
be looking at more humans than they’ve ever seen before. To his credit, Solo
was able to find his partner without calling for help. The Russian had always
marveled at that. Napoleon Solo was an urbanite through and through, but you
could drop him into any environment and somehow he would find his way around.
Carl wasn’t quite up to that, but he was smart
enough to follow Solo’s lead and keep quiet when it really mattered. The two U.N.C.L.E. agents used sigh language to
communicate for a time, while the German on the tank gazed on with eyes that
were not accustomed to wooded surroundings.
Solo then rolled closer to Carl and whispered
in his ear, “Wait here until I’m on the
tank, then hook to the left and stand guard between the tank and the back road.
Don’t shoot unless you absolutely have to.”
Carl felt ice barbs in his gut, but he nodded
with a grim resolve. Illya was already crawling towards the right side of the
tank. The Germans had no reason to suspect an enemy lurking in the woods, so it
was assumed that their commander just wanted a bit of privacy while performing
his necessaries. Such naiveté was becoming increasingly rare in the German military.
As always, Kuryakin thanked his lucky stars that his victims lacked
imagination. Expecting the unexpected can keep a soldier alive, but admittedly,
it is a hard frame of mind to maintain day after day.
The corporal finally made his fatal mistake and
jumped down onto the soft earth. With eyes scanning ineffectively he blundered
forward. Illya had farther to go this time and when he came in contact with his
next opponent, he needed to grab the wrist of a man now holding a pistol.
Fortunately for Illya, the German forgot that his pistol safety was on. He was
able to take it off safe with minimum effort, but that made a life or
death difference in the Russian’s advance.
The tank soldier struggled to bring the muzzle
of his little Walther PP inward, but
the more experienced Kuryakin brought his knee into the soldier’s testicles and
then released on wrist in order to go for his favorite target. But the German
swung a feeble hook that got by sheer chance deflected a blow. Fear of the
unknown gave the young tanker an extra helping of adrenaline and his pistol
managed to get lined up with the cold eyed assailant. Illya was about to go for
the pistol with two hands when a pistol butt crashed down on the tanker’s
skull.
No hint of gratitude could be seen in Kuryakin’s
eyes as Napoleon Solo turned his back on the ended conflict and moved swiftly
to the tank turret hatch. The remaining men inside the tank were astonished to
see an officer lower himself down amongst them. They were even more astonished
when he coldly brought his P-38 back
out and shot each of them in turn. The reports of the pistol had a strange
hollow sound outside of the tank, and all three men hoped that no one nearby
would be able to identify the sound and raise a hue and cry.
Getting the driver and gunner out was the most
physical labor Solo had indulged in that year. (No pun intended since it was
1945.) He and his companions had assumed that they could get the bodies out
through the tank’s belly escape hatch, but they discovered to their dismay that
the Tiger didn’t have a belly hatch. The ponderous suspension system coupled
with a larger drive system had required additional space where the hatch would
go. So the men had to be pulled up out of their hatches, but it would have been
grunt work either way.
“Was all this really necessary?” asked Carl
while covering a body with brush. “I’m thinking the tank could probably reach
our spot if it hooked over there to the left and took down a few of those
younger trees. But hypothetically speaking, Kuryakin could have just gotten to
his feet and confessed that he was banging a farm girl and she ran off when she
saw the tank.”
“Bit of a walk to the nearest farm, and
presuming that my partner would not want to lead the sergeant to our brush
covered staff car, he would have to fabricate a story that would have a great
many holes in it,” said Solo.
“Maybe so, but a tank commander isn’t likely
to be as inquisitive as the Gestapo,” argued Carl.
“We have twelve minutes to go, and we cannot
afford even the risk of being
detained by someone in a uniform,” said Solo.
As usual, the senior field agent from U.N.C.L.E. was right. But being right
isn’t always a prelude to a positive experience.
“Schneider you idiot, get that machine of
yours back on the road!” shouted a man who could barely be seen in the
distance.”
“We gunna shoot him too?” Carl asked in
English.
“Carl, you’ve got the most rank. Run over and
tell him you found the tank deserted. Tell him to go find a Ordnungspolizei or something,” ordered
Solo has he quickly climbed up to the turret hatch.
Illya took the driver’s compartment.
The State Department worker couldn’t believe
his ears, but to his credit, he got his legs moving in the direction of the
nearest standing German.
“Oh, excuse me Colonel,” the major said in a
now respectful tone. “I mistook you for the commander of the tank.”
“Obviously,” Carl responded with what he hoped
would be a mildly amused look.
“I am Major Hartman and I am directing this
section of the north bound convoy. The tank carrier for this box of bolts broke
down and it became necessary for the tank to progress under its own power to a
spot where it could be reloaded onto another truck. Unfortunately the Americans
chose that moment to strafe us and Sergeant Schneider foolishly thought he
needed to hide in these trees to save
the tank. Ha, as if a 12.7 millimeter round could hurt that monster.”
“You mean the .50 caliber?” asked the fake
colonel. “That is what the Allies designate
the projectile. Yes, very foolish, but let us focus on the mystery at hand. The
crew is missing. I came out here to give them a good chewing out and I was
amazed to discover that the vehicle had been abandoned. Very suspicious. I want
you to go back to town and find out who is responsible for the transporting of
this piece of hardware. You need to get to the bottom of this.”
“Bottom
of this?” queried the major.
“Yes. Er---I grabbed a couple of men who had
been set afoot to figure out how to move the tank back onto the road. But you
need to find out who is responsible for this tank immediately.”
“But Herr Colonel, I am responsible; for all the vehicles in this section of the
convoy. We have but one Tiger tank, which constantly threatens to become a road
block. That is why I am somewhat acquainted with that dummkopf Schneider. It is
hard to believe that he and his crew deserted though. I will have searchers
brought in.”
“But of course, Major. Have one team begin to
work their way north from that point over there, and the other team begin their
search to the south from over where that small gully cuts through.”
“But we need to search to the east as well,
Colonel.”
“You mean the other highway that parallels the
one your convoy is using. I have already dispatched my driver to that artery. I
will remain with the tiger until we can get this steel beast to it’s hauling
vehicle. I must confess I find it somewhat entertaining. Pity we only have a
few of them in these dark days.”
“Yes sir, but I have a Captain Kline who will
take charge of the tank as soon as he is appraised of the situation. He is
manning a check point only a few hundred meters from here.”
“To the north?”
“Jawohl, Herr Colonel.”
“Very good. We will simply try to back this
beast out of the trees then.”
“But Colonel, my man has experience, and he
can be here in three minutes---“
“Well then go and get him, Major. I will go
disappoint my volunteers, who are probably very excited at the prospect of
driving a Tiger tank.”
The Major saluted quickly and began jogging
back the way he came.
Carl glanced at his watch. Seven minutes
remaining. He ran back to the tank and became a bit unnerved when he saw the
tank turret slowly turning in his direction.
“This is your colonel coming towards you!” he
shouted in German.
“Don’t be frightened, we’re just setting up Contingency Plan A,” Solo responded, also in German.
“But we’re almost home,” argued Carl as he
climbed onto the metal monster.
“What if our mad scientist is delayed? What if
he experiences a technical difficulty?” asked Kuryakin as he studied the
driving controls.
“And what if the whole idea is to have us
captured after fighting in German uniforms,” added a cynical Napoleon Solo.
“Just another load of stress placed on minds that are being conditioned for
something.”
“Man, if the average marriage could work as
well as your partnership….You guys agree to disagree better than anyone I’ve
ever seen. But putting that aside, we got less than six minutes to get back to
the magic launch point. So don’t you think your preoccupation with this tank is
a bit counter productive?”
“We’re going to ride it back. Illya, you may
now indulge yourself.”
“But the trees…” Carl protested.
“We’ll be very respectful to the older ones,”
pledged Solo. “Now you better get down and man the other machine gun because it
will be hazardous staying topside.”
Carl did as he was told but he paid little
heed to his battle station. All he could think about was the silly little bench
that they needed to be seated on in another five minutes. He watched through
his view port as the mobile fort roared forward, snapping trees as though they
were pencils and finally bringing their precious piece of furniture into view.
“Jez, don’t run over the thing!” Carl
exclaimed in a state of near panic.
Illya applied the brakes when the metal beast
was five feet from the bench.
“Don’t trip at the finish line, Carl,”
Kuryakin advised with a deadpan expression.
“Well, it’s hard to judge distance from this
angle,” grumbled the State Department worker, who didn’t want to admit even to
himself that he was beginning to lose his nerve.
“We’re good,” Napoleon said with a look of
confidence.
“Hierher kommen!” someone shouted on the tail
end of Solo’s appraisal.
“What?!” demanded Carl.
“That major you were talking to must have sent
a few minions into the woods to keep us company. Sadly, one of them stumbled
onto a body. Thank goodness I’m not in a casino today. Lady Luck doesn’t seem to be smiling.”
“Illya, turn us around.”
“But we need to get out of the tank,”
complained Carl.
“Not too soon, and not too late,” muttered
Solo as he peered through his tactical periscope.
Illya’s job would have been easier if not for
the closeness of the bench. (Especially with Carl fretting over it to the point
of whimpering.) All weapons finally came to bear with two minutes and forty
seconds remaining on the clock.
“Are they still keeping their distance?” Carl
asked at that point.
“Yes, and that is the only reason we haven’t
opened fire on them yet.”
“You mean with the machine gun?”
“Both of them, Carl. Is yours ready?”
“Uh, wait a second….”
Solo never took his eyes off the soldiers as
they set about the task of finding additional victims of foul play. There were
five searchers that he could see now and thankfully they were fanning out in
every direction except toward the tank.
“Funny they don’t suspect us,” muttered Carl.
“Maybe they do, but they don’t want to be the
first brave souls to venture our way,” put in Solo. “Probably waiting for the
major to return. Bless them for knowing their place.”
As if on cue the officer in charge of traffic
control suddenly reappeared with two other men and they jogged towards the
corpse as soon as the discovery was shouted to them.
“We’ll be the next stop,” warned Carl.
“Hopefully after a degree of pause and reflection,”
responded Solo as he then lowered the huge eighty-eight millimeter turret gun.
The Germans, (every mother’s son of them) fled
back far enough to be totally cloistered by the young trees.
“They’ll call in reinforcements and perform a
flanking maneuver on both sides,” Solo predicted. “Let’s make sure they use
lots of trees. Open fire at ten o’clock and rake towards the
center.”
Carl did as he was told and Solo sprayed in
from the right. Then Illya wordlessly handed Solo a small explosive that was normally
used to blow off door locks. Solo attached the small device to the war head of
an artillery round.
“Is that a detonator?!” Carl asked
incredulously. “We’re too close to the bench for God’s sake!”
Illya threw the tank into gear and plowed
ahead. Solo calmly exited his hatch and Carl did the same.
“What about Illya?!” Carl shouted as he and
Napoleon jumped off the back end of the tank.
“He’ll be along.”
“We’ve only got forty-five seconds!” wailed
Carl.
Both men halted just short of the bench and
turned to search for the third member of their team. Kuryakin jumped off to one
side of the forest juggernaut and began his short sprint for life and home. But
a third of the way back he was swept off his feet by a soldier’s lucky shot.
Solo bolted forward without hesitation while the other American scowled at his
time piece and then summoned the last of his courage.
“I’m alright,” stated the Russian as he
struggled to his feet.
“Yes, I can see that,” responded Solo, who
noted the trough that had been cut across the outer right thigh.
“Would you guys like to know what time it is?”
asked Carl as he grabbed Kuryakin’s other arm and swung it around the back of
his neck.
“NO!” declared both U.N.C.L.E. agents in unison.
Suddenly a chunk of wood was blown out of the
bench as they neared it. Then a bullet took Carl’s hat off.
“Holy shit! When is that tank going to blow
up?”
Solo and Schmidt
informally dumped their comrade over the back rest of the bench and then helped
the Russian get upright after they were both seated. Bullets were now droning
all around them and now they could catch glimpses of advancing soldiers. Carl
raised his arms over his head and began to shout, “We surrender!” in German
while kneeling on the bench.
“I think you should scrunch down now Carl,”
advised Napoleon.
Carl didn’t seem to hear and focused on the
ass end of the slowly rolling tiger. At that terrible instant, he couldn’t make
up his mind which frightened him more; the advancing riflemen, or the explosion
that couldn’t wait another thirty-five seconds. More soldiers appeared from
behind trees and two of the bravest ignored the strange trio seated on a forest
bench and nimbly mounted the tank from the harmless rear. They needlessly fired
their machine pistols into the hatches until they realized that the machine had
been set to run on its own. Then one of the men lowered himself through the
driver’s hatch to stop the tank before it could reach the nearby road.
Solo grabbed Carl by the coat lapel and almost
forced him into Kuryakin’s lap. Then a shockwave ripped through the woods
smearing the trees nearest to the tank with crimson gore and causing thousands
of nearby Germans to think that another air raid was in progress. The major and
all those assigned to the area were now either dead or dying. A larger force of
men would pour into the smoldering woods with no clue as to what had happened.
The men from U.N.C.L.E. had covered
their tracks in superb fashion; blowing the top off the tank, eradicating the
police force that was closing in, and creating a thick blanket of oily smoke
that screened them, albeit to the point of smothering them.
Incident reports would vary slightly in
content, but the general consensus was that the tank crew abandoned their tank
under duress. The tiger was then rigged to explode in such a way as to inflict
maximum damage to forces of the Third
Reich. This conclusion was reached when they found the staff car that had
been hidden not far away. As for the enemy agents; the search for them would
continue until the German authorities reached the end of their road. It was
just as well. They could have searched for a year and it wouldn’t have done
them any good.
(Of course twenty
years would have worked for them…..)
Chapter Fifteen.
Carl was allowed to roll
away from Illya and finally onto the dust free floor. Eight shrapnel wounds
were now denying him the joy he would have felt getting back to his own time
period. In fact it was a painful homecoming for all around. Solo had also
caught a piece of hot steel in the left shoulder, but fortunately none of the
men had been hit in a vital organ. Small comfort to Carl though, who thrashed
about on the floor while little demons continued to poke him with their red hot
pitch forks.
The more experienced U.N.C.L.E. agents were focused on the here and now with their
weapons back in their hands.
“I’ll be right back,” Solo promised his
partner unnecessarily.
The Russian nodded slightly and tried to
assess Carl’s condition, but that was a difficult thing to do in the time
tunnel. Illya waited patiently, bleeding as quietly as he could on that silly
bench that would require a bit of repair. Then over a period of thirty seconds
or so, the Russian slipped into the arms of Morpheus.
So did Carl, and when they finally returned to the miracle in the mountain,
they found themselves in a small improvised medical ward made up of four
standard issue M.A.S.H. cots, a large
folding table with a pile of emergency triage equipment and very little else.
Each man noted almost immediately upon
wakening that he was handcuffed to his cot. Each man also noted that there was
a fourth patient occupying the remaining cot, and his identity caused everyone
a great deal of concern.
“Professor. Professor Adams,” Solo hailed in a
strong voice.
The old man’s chest slowly rose and fell, but
he remained unresponsive; and interestingly enough, he was also handcuffed to
his cot. Adams was wearing an oxygen
mask and an I.V. fed into one arm. Solo stared at the pile of medical
equipment, searching for any tidbit of data that might be useful. His shoulder
hurt like hell but obviously someone had worked on them all and that was
encouraging if somewhat puzzling.
“A penny for your thoughts, Mr. Solo,” said
Carl in a low voice.
“I think we should remain quiet, and patient,”
muttered Solo.
So they did, and this wise course of action
was soon rewarded by a very faint tapping sound that came from somewhere close
by. Solo immediately recognized it as Morse code.
W-e-a-r-e-m-o-n-i-t-o-r-e-d, was tapped out over and
over. Solo was close enough to Illya and Carl to conclude that neither of them
was doing the sending. Could it be the old man? Quite possibly.
“Hey guys, do you---“
“Remain quiet, Carl,” Solo ordered with an
edge to his voice.
After one more send, the tapping ended.
“I need some painkiller,” Carl put in a moment
later. “I don’t want to sound like a crybaby, but I’m really hurting.”
“We all are,” responded Solo, who was relieved
that Carl wasn’t about to mention the tapping.
“Yes, our physician was probably a
veterinarian,” Kuryakin joked for the benefit of whoever was listening to them.
An hour dragged by and there was no more
tapping.
“Sorry we got you dragged in to this, Carl. I
thought we could take better care of you than this,” said Solo.
Carl laughed nervously while struggling with
the pain.
“Oh hell---I would’ve died in that smoke house
if not for you. You know, I joined the Army thinking that I’d be doing all
kinds of interesting intelligence work with my knowledge of German. But that
damn Patton just had to go and win the war before I could even get past Paris. I hate to admit this
to you guys, but I even ended up doing some work as a V.D. control officer.”
The U.N.C.L.E.
agents didn’t laugh, but Solo smiled while staring at the floor and Illya
needed every ounce of self discipline to maintain a bland expression.
“Damn State Department promised me adventure,”
Carl droned on, “but I spend all my time worrying about political correctness
in a country where everyone is convinced that I’m the spawn of Satan. Anyway,
when Lisa got into trouble back there---I guess I got what I always secretly
wanted: a chance to be a real honest to God hero. Man---those John Wayne movies
sure did a number on me….”
Suddenly the room’s solitary door opened and a
middle aged man entered with an escort of two security soldiers. Napoleon and
Illya recognized the escort uniforms instantly. They belonged to Thrush.
The man in charge was wearing a light colored
suit without a tie. He was bald and pot bellied and was sweating because he had
just gotten off the phone with a superior who was more than a little
intimidating. Of course that’s the way the chain of command worked in the
criminal organization, and you had to be very greedy or ambitious to put up
with the pressures that went with rank.
“Mr. Napoleon Solo and Mr. Illya Kuryakin,
what a pleasure it is to make your acquaintance.
I am Jonathan Barkley,
and I will remain your host for another few hours until the helicopter arrives.
I um---- was wondering if perhaps we could make a deal. An exchange of
information. Nothing that would make or break your organization you understand;
just a few harmless facts that won’t make any difference in the long run.”
“I would call that a very bizarre proposition,”
commented Solo.
“Oh I don’t know,” Barkley responded with a
shrug. “As I understand it, U.N.C.L.E. agents are among the most inquisitive
beings on this Earth, and any information that I could obtain might take some
of the sting out of your---unauthorized entry
into this facility.”
“My mother taught me never to talk to
strangers on the subway or strike bargains with Thrush,” Solo responded.
“Ah yes, there is that credibility problem.
Alright, I’ll give you something on faith, just to show you that you are
dealing with a better man than you think. That old man over there is genius of
the first magnitude. He builds a time machine that won’t be ready for several
more years, which turns out to be a lie. Then he invents a super computer,
which is probably better than your U.N.C.L.E. model no offense, then he uses it
against us. Oh yes, we insisted on writing the programs for the computer and do
you know what, he hacked them anyway. He convinces us that there can be no
motion within this gravimetric field he
kept talking about. All part of the building process you see. We figure that’s
alright because the inside of the complex is guarded by an alarm system.”
“But the alarm system is controlled by the
computer,” put in Kuryakin.
“Oh yes,” lamented Barkley. “We had guards
monitoring the cameras and sensors, but the computer had the ability to present
us with false images and sensor data. Fortunately for us, it became necessary
to wake him in the middle of his sleep period or we might not have caught him
with equipment that he claimed was not yet operational. Regrettably the strain
of getting caught was a bit much for him and he suffered a heart attack. The
chopper is bringing in a heart specialist, as well as someone to interrogate
the three of you. He might or might not have a cattle prod in his travel bag.”
“So we should wisely decide to deal with a
prince of a fellow like yourself instead of the ogre that is flying in,”
speculated Solo.
“Well you have to admit that I did bother to get a doctor to patch the
three of you up.”
“You brought in the doctor to see to Adams,” Solo corrected, and
I’m amazed that your all important patient is being left unattended.”
The doctor informed me that nothing more can
be done for the man short of surgery. The heart specialist will evaluate the
patient and then he will be flown to a hospital that has suitable facilities.
Besides, it is quite possible that we don’t need him anymore.”
“Why do you say that?” inquired Schmidt.
“Because now we have this,” said Barkley, who then pulled out the notes that had been
written by a genius in a Nazi concentration camp.
“Ha! That won’t help you if Adams dies, he’s the only one
who can read it,” declared Carl from his pain racked cot.
Napoleon and Illya rolled their eyes in
unison.
“That is
bad news,” conceded the host, “but then, we thought our time machine was
non-functional until just a few hours ago. Now we know it is anything but. That
is how Adams recruited the three of
you, and got you into this complex. My superiors will be elated.”
“With the machine, yes, with your handling of
security, no,” put in Solo.
Barkley turned grim.
“We are talking about a genius who has had
many years to outwit Thrush. I have been overseeing this project only a few
months. Besides, I needed to give the old man enough rope so that he could hang
himself as the saying goes. He just---fell into my trap.”
“Got any subordinates that might not want to
back you up with that?” Carl asked with a smirk.
Barkley’s confidence returned, albeit not in
full measure.
“Obviously you are not an U.N.C.L.E. agent. If
you were you would know that all Thrush supervisors keep their underlings at a
distance. Loyalty, as you inferred, is not something we bet our careers on. No,
I do not require any verification from anyone---and that includes the prisoners
I am holding.”
“But you did
come here hoping to make a deal,” pressed Solo, “and I never said that we
are all ready to die for king and country.”
“Finally,”
Barkley responded with mock impatience. “Intelligent men do not die for a
cause. Intelligent men risk their necks to a reasonable degree and then
negotiate for their continued existence. What are your terms, Mr. Solo?”
“We learned something when we went back in
time. Something that could put you on the Thrush High Council even if those
notes you are holding never get decoded. But if the man with the thumbscrews
works us over, then takes us to a Thrush holding facility, you’ll be left here
and you’ll have to explain why the old man was treated so roughly.”
“He wasn’t
treated roughly,” countered Barkley. “It was the simple shock of being
caught that brought him down. He may have an I.Q. that’s off the scale but he’s
no U.N.C.L.E. agent. All that emotional stress was too much for him, but the
doctor was very optimistic about the old man’s chances. More optimistic than I
am about your chances, unless you get
around to saying something truly useful.”
“Adams is a genius alright,
but he was mentored in his youth.”
“Well of course he was,” interrupted Barkley.
“I read his dossier. Every university dean in the civilized world wanted Adams to attend their school.
He met the finest minds while being shared on three continents.”
“But the one that had ideas about time travel
was not interested in academic publicity. He’s in your records, but he doesn’t
stand out. You might figure out who he is in a year or two, but I think you’ll
need to improve your standing with Thrush long before then.”
“I take it he is deceased and for some reason
you could not alter his fate. All you could do is bring back those notes that I
suspect belonged to him.”
“We were thrown a few curves,” Solo could
honestly say. “But there is no reason you can’t travel back again and avoid the
first round of mistakes. Mr. Kuryakin watched the machine being demonstrated
earlier. He can send you to the same time and place in history.”
“And how pray tell shall I succeed where you
gentlemen failed?” asked a cynical captor.
“We went in posing as German officers,”
explained Solo. “It was the professor’s idea but I can’t say that it was all
together foolish. We might have succeeded if not for a few random elements that
no one could control. But what you need
to do is calculate the distance and compass heading from the landing zone to
the prison barracks where Adam’s mentor is being held.”
“Landing
zone?” Barkley asked with a puzzled look.
“I don’t know what else to call it,” confessed
Solo. “It’s the place where the bench will materialize, hopefully in the year
1945.”
“So---we make our calculations within an
agreed time span. Then we’re brought back. Then we go in again with a different
destination plotted, and pick up the mentor,” guessed Barkley.
“That’s it. A bit risky, but if you succeed
you’ll be out of trouble and in line for a very substantial reward I would
think.”
“And how many guards can I take with me?”
“Well, the bench is built for three people. I
don’t know how much extra weight can be transported.”
Solo looked over at Illya.
The Russian shrugged and said, “I only know
how to duplicate what the professor had set up. If we change the perimeters of
the launch stats, I don’t know what will happen.”
“How do we measure this all important distance
you speak of?”
“With aerial reconnaissance. There are light
aircraft between the L.Z. and the concentration camp. I’ll steal one, and you
provide a camera, smoke flares for the guard and communicators.”
“I said the guard will be dedicated to
security.”
“We need someone to mark the location of the
L.Z. when we fly over it.”
“Alright, but that brings us to a very interesting
point in the negotiations. What must I do for you in exchange for your
services? Obviously you want to escape this place, but I need to agree on the
specifics.”
We get to pick up three automatic rifles at
random while heading back to the tunnel. Illya will keep mine for me. You and
your guard disarm just seconds before we are transported back. Then you will be
our hostage escort as we take our leave.”
“I was afraid of this,” put in Barkley. “The
last part of your proposition is unworkable. I cannot trust you because you
cannot trust me. Surely you realize that you cannot leave this mountain region
with me as a prisoner; and without me as a hostage you would die even sooner.
But you have given me the information that I needed. If Mr. Kuryakin could work
the control panel, that means that our tech people will be able to figure it
out in much less time than we imagined just one day ago. I conclude that this
interview has had positive results.”
“No,” responded Adams in a weak voice.
“Kuryakin managed to memorize steps that you will not replicate by accident.
Give these men what they want, or you will not gain what you want.”
“But even if this all works out as planned,
how do I get the name of your mentor?”
“He is a celebrity in his barracks building. I
swear it,” put in Carl.
Adams lapsed back into unconsciousness and
Barkley could only sigh.
“Alright, I know you’ve got something up your
sleeves but I need to get the key to this time machine riddle before the ax men
arrive. Let’s get a move on.”
Chapter Sixteen.
The men from U.N.C.L.E. (and Carl) looked on in interest as Barkley and his
chosen guard donned special body armor and holsters containing extra ammunition
magazines. Then they both hefted their Thrush rifles.
“You don’t believe the L.Z. is what we claim
it is?” queried Solo.
“All I know is that you all came back with
holes in you,” grumbled the captor.
“Good point.”
The three men entered the tunnel and sat
themselves in the slightly damaged woodwork.
“I can’t believe we’re actually going to
travel back through time,” said Barkley.
“Those were my thoughts exactly,” muttered
Solo.
“And you’re sure you can steal us a light
aircraft in the time allotted?”
“Yes. I hope that camera is a good one. Also,
we need to have at least half a dozen colored smoke flares; and of course the
communicators.”
“All set to go,” Barkley assured him with a
pat on the bag he had placed between himself and the guard.
“Well, then I guess we’re ready to go back to Germany.”
“You have my permission to pull the switch,
Mr. Kuryakin, but remember, whatever happens to me will also happen to your
associate.”
“Not exactly,” muttered the Russian in
response to what he heard over the intercom.
Solo took a deep breath and steeled himself
for what was coming. The water was cold and approximately twenty feet deep.
Barkley and his guard dropped into the depths like a pair of stones. Solo
floated on his back for as long as he needed to, then suddenly he found himself
sprawled out on the tunnel floor. The tunnel surface began to burn Solo’s hands
despite the sea water so he quickly got to his feet even though his shoulder
was aching.
“We lost the bench,” Solo called into the
intercom.
“Hopefully
it won’t matter---much,” responded Illya’s voice.
“Hopefully I won’t have to attend your college
graduation,” said Solo.
“Or Lisa’s abduction,” Carl said hopefully.
“Anywhere but here. Even if it has to be the
delightful day we met,” put in Kuryakin.
Solo smiled and crouched
down slightly.
“Just nudge her back a smidgeon,” he advised
his friend.
“May the
luck of a ladies man be with you,” said Kuryakin before tapping slightly on
a pressure bar.
An instant later Solo was on a street corner
in Manhattan. Quickly he sought out
a newspaper stand to check on the date. He almost did a cart wheel at the sight
of a front page. He was nine days from Lisa Sherman’s abduction. His
communicator had been destroyed by sea water so he had to hike to the nearest
police station. There he acquired transportation back to U.N.C.L.E. headquarters. Two hours later he was in fresh clothes
and seated in front of Alexander Waverly’s desk
“Mr. Solo I think it would be better if our
friends in Israel sent someone to Mount Hermon to investigate this
Thrush satrap of yours.”
Solo immediately became concerned. Waverly was
suggesting that he was not buying into Solo’s story about an informer. That was
bad, because Solo didn’t dare give his superior the truth.
“Sir, I know it goes against policy to
implement a taskforce on hearsay data, but I am being completely factual when I
say that my informer is as trustworthy as any person in this building.”
“Present company
excluded I presume.”
“No sir, I am including
you.”
Waverly puffed thoughtfully on his pipe.
“I must say, Mr. Solo, you have brought with you
a most intriguing mystery. But perhaps you are unaware of the fact that Syria could be on the brink
of civil war. The sort of aircraft needed to fly one-hundred men and equipment
into a remote area, would most certainly stimulate their already active imaginations.”
“I don’t need that many men, sir. A platoon of
Marines should suffice. We could rappel from choppers.”
“You surprise me for the second time, Mr.
Solo. You are well aware of the security precautions that Thrush takes in the
guarding of a typical satrap. You might take your objective with the element of
surprise, but your losses would be unacceptable. Why do you suggest such a
thing?”
“Because sir the satrap is not operational
yet, and has only a skeleton crew.”
“And you have no idea what the proposed
function of the satrap will be?”
“They’re sporting a miniature nuclear reactor.
Perhaps the size of what you would find on a modern submarine. The facility
needs power but it also needs to remain invisible. A complex of that sort
depends on the ability to remain hidden. I believe the informant when he says
that the security force will be small.”
“Small and dug into a mountain,” countered
Waverly. “You will take two platoons and you will have pathfinders in place
before the rappelling commences.”
“Sir, pathfinders might give us away. The area
is bound to be equipped with alarms.”
“Agreed. That is why you and Mr. Kuryakin will
handle that facet of the offensive.”
At that point in time Illya Kuryakin was
working on the U.N.C.L.E. super
computer with a lovely Nicaraguan woman who Solo couldn’t even get to first
base with. Solo didn’t care a whole lot about that. After all, his love life
had always dwarfed that of the brainy Russian. Still, he couldn’t help feeling
just a tiny bit insulted by the fact that the woman regarded him as somewhat
shallow, while Illya was considered the better man because of he was more
reserved. Solo would have preferred to lose out simply because the brainy
couple was brainy.
“Sir, would you mind sending word to Kuryakin?
I don’t think he will take this as good news, and I don’t like to climb
mountains with a sore head.”
“Kuryakin is a professional,” Waverly
responded.
“Sir, have you seen who he’s working with?”
The Englishman puffed thoughtfully on his pipe
for a moment and then said, “Very well. I shall distance you from Mr.
Kuryakin’s impending disappointment. In the future I trust, you will distance yourself from this sort of thing. It is a bit childish don’t you think?”
“I consider it the result of an unbalanced lifestyle,
sir. Illya is a workaholic. That makes him a bit vulnerable where women are
concerned.”
“Hmm, I shall bring the matter to the
attention of our local expert.”
“Our P.H.D. in psychology?”
“Baxter? No, I would judge him to be less
conventional than Kuryakin. Actually I was referring to my wife.”
Chapter Seventeen.
Mt. Hermon is actually three
peaks, all of them too easy for climbers yet inhospitable to those who have
something else in mind. Thrush needed a rock formation with a blind side,
sparsely populated, and the local inhabitants had to be the sort that could be
easily manipulated. But there was one other essential element: the magnetic
fields had to be perfect for the project in mind. That was determined by only
one man, and Solo’s chief objective was to keep that man alive no matter what.
Toward that end, he and his partner made their way on hands and feet towards a
wide barren pinnacle.
Every few feet Solo would push a button on a
small box that was clipped to his utility harness. The tiny scanner would
search for photo electric light beams while the U.N.C.L.E. agent kept an eye out for old fashioned trip wires.
Kuryakin was doing the same thing approximately one-hundred feet to Solo’s
right. Behind and below them, U.S. Marines cradled their M-14 rifles and belly crawled up the frozen slope that could easily
spill a man if he failed to hug mother earth with all of his body parts.
The men from U.N.C.L.E. proceeded upward one slow foot at a time until Kuryakin
got a reading. The Russian quickly took out his already assembled communicator
and gently blew into the microphone. That was the unspoken signal that he had
found one of the light beams they were searching for. Now Kuryakin gestured for
the platoon leader to close the distance between them so that he could whisper
instructions as to how to step over the beam. The Marines would have to do this
one at a time---but not yet. They needed to remain on their bellies for the
time being while Kuryakin proceeded the rest of the way up the slope.
Solo found his end of the beam fence and
briefed his group leader as well. By the time he reached the same level as the
Russian, the blonde agent was squatting in front of a ventilation grill that
was painted the same color as the mountain landscape. It was just a tad over
two feet square; inviting if you don’t have claustrophobia. The grill work was
understandably heavy and was welded into place on an even heavier steel
framework. But Kuryakin had come to break into something and he was equipped with
a chemical that was the pride of his old chemistry professor. He sprayed the
foul smelling stuff on four bar ends and waited but a minute. Then he took out
his silencer equipped pistol and fired at the treated spots. The steel
fractured as if made out of slag.
Solo found a huge artificial stone that was
covering a hatch set into the mountain surface. It radiated heat and was in
fact a service crawlway that ran along the back side of the small nuclear
reactor shielding. More than likely it would be locked, but that was no concern
Solo’s. He took out what looked like a tube of toothpaste and squeezed the
contents out onto the surface of the hatch in the shape of a large circle. The
group leader had already been taught how to ignite the substance, then kick
hard on the center of the hatch after the burning process was completed. Then
they’d have to pass through A.S.A.P., because they’d be in a bottle neck until
they reached the cavern portion of the complex. At that point there would be no
thought of withdrawing. They would either win, or go down fighting.
They would never know it but the Marines were
lucky from the very start. The metal door was alarmed but not yet armed with
the poison gas jets that had been installed in the three main entrances down at
the base of the mountain. Solo and Kuryakin didn’t know anything about that,
they chose to attack from the top simply because they desired the element of
surprise. Toward that end they would have the Marines remain on the frozen
ground for a full hour while the U.N.C.L.E.
agents set themselves to strike from within.
The first step was easy to the point of being
fun. The vent shaft was angled forty-five degrees and their only fear was that
there would be an equally heavy grill at the other end of the shaft. Luckily,
at the end of their little slide the shaft straightened out and offered some
light about forty feet ahead. The Russian silently held to the belief that he
should have gone first. He had the cutting tools and was a bit more experienced
with this sort of thing. But Solo led the way because he judged it to be the
more dangerous position. Solo and Kuryakin had this understanding you see:
Illya was more intelligent, and stronger. But Solo got recruited into U.N.C.L.E. first. That made him senior
agent, which annoyed Kuryakin only every now and then.
Belly sliding silently inside a ventilation
shaft required patience, nerve and the ability to stifle a sneeze or two.
Experience had taught them both that extracting themselves from the shaft was
always the hard part. Vent grills were placed where inhabitants could
appreciate the warm or cool air being pumped to them. Worse yet, many were
situated high above the floor where you could break a leg vacating the shaft.
But as Solo already knew, the complex was not manned by a skeleton staff,
partially because of a aged genius who claimed that his miracle machine would
never get calibrated without a partial quarantine.
The director of the complex had initially been
both cynical and suspicious, but after many months of watching the boring old
geezer, everyone in the mountain came to the conclusion that they would all retire before anything
interesting would happen in their out of the way local. That was the reason why
Solo was willing to return with a minimum fighting force. Thrush didn’t know it
was about to lose the most important invention in the history of man, and Solo
couldn’t begin to guess what the free world would do with it.
“Three minutes left. If we’re going to create
a diversion, we’ll need to get out of this tube right now,” advised Kuryakin
who spoke just above a whisper.
Solo nodded, while craning his neck to peer
through the grill. Then he threw caution to the wind and shoved hard against
the light duty metal. The sheet metal squeaked slightly as it gave way, but at
least it didn’t have to fall anywhere because that section of the vent shaft
was at floor level. Everything seemed to be going wonderfully and Solo poked
his head out of the vent opening with just a minimum of apprehension. Then a uniformed
man with a Thrush rifle appeared out of nowhere and Solo froze.
“I want to see both hands,” growled the
rifleman.
“I never realized that chimney sweeping could
be this dangerous,” joked Solo as he extended both arms out into plain site.
“Keep coming,” ordered the guard.
“I’ve a got a pistol. I’ll take it out with
two fingers and put it down with the butt towards you,” said the semi helpless
intruder.
“No tricks,” warned the sentry.
“Not with me stuck in this vent,” Solo
responded with a slightly embarrassed smile.
True to his word, the prisoner slowly took out
his handgun with thumb and forefinger and carefully laid it on the floor with
the barrel pointing at himself.
“Slide it closer to me,” demanded the
rifleman.
Solo complied with enough force so that the
pistol sideswiped the section of the vent where Illya was hiding. The guard
carefully lowered himself so that he could get hold of the pistol, and Solo
kept his hands immobile so as to not ruin what had thus far been a very fine
day. It was a tense moment, made ever so loud when Illya fired six rounds
through the sheet metal that separated him from his target. Two of the rounds
found their mark and knocked the guard off his feet, but they had gone into the
hip and upper thigh so the sentry only lost control of his weapon for a moment.
“Illya, a bit lower please,” muttered Solo
while staring into the eyes of a man who was determined to bring the heavy
Thrush rifle back up.
The U.N.C.L.E.
Special normally used an eight round magazine, but when the Russian heard
an unfamiliar voice, he quickly loaded the fifteen round magazine that is
normally kept with the rifle conversion kit. Both Solo and Kuryakin were
excellent pistol marksmen, and would not need a telescopic sight for indoor
use, but the extra long clip might save prove useful. Shooting blind was a fine
example of this. The wounded sentry was now in extreme pain, but not so much
that he couldn’t kill a man stuck in a vent opening. Solo hadn’t gone for his
own gun reasoning that such an action would galvanize his opponent into quicker
action. It was one of those split second decisions that you make when you’re
standing on the edge of a razor.
More holes appeared in the length of sheet
metal and this time the guard took a round through the heart. Solo began his
frantic crawl as the guard dropped onto his side for the second and final time.
They were in a kind of improvised machine shop where prefabricated parts could
be altered or assembled for use in this secret domain. U.N.C.L.E. was the antithesis of Thrush in many ways, but they did have one thing in common: they
both kept their facilities hidden from the local population. Solo never ceased
to marvel at how men could sneak highly elaborate equipment into places that a
goat or bird would seldom find. Then Solo would get his marching orders and go
blow the place up. Well, here he was again, only this time he was looking for a
man who had to be kept alive at all costs. A stranger, but only from his point of view.
Solo reached the door with pistol in hand and
could hear the sound of men running on limestone that had been cleared of dust
several years ago. Two of them; he was almost positive. A quick glance over his
shoulder showed Illya worming his way through the vent opening. Solo knew the reinforcements
would stop running before Illya could join him and a running man is a poor
marksman. Once again the man from U.N.C.L.E.
deliberated for only a moment, then popped through the doorway with his
pistol leading the way. Sure enough, there was two of them, with the heavy
rifles that were a bit awkward when not standing still.
Solo dropped one with a snap shot from chest
level. The other guard got off a shot but as predicted, it went wild. Solo’s
second shot was easier because his target had almost come to a halt. A moment
later Illya was beside him with the first guard’s rifle.
“You sure you want that thing? It didn’t do
its owner much good.”
Kuryakin didn’t answer, and the two men then
walked briskly with weapons pointed down a corridor that contained only half a
dozen doorways. That wing of the complex contained the workshop they had just
vacated. Door 2: a huge storage room. Door 3: a chiller room for the computer’s
main frame. Door 4: a room filled with a mile of intricate copper piping that had
to do with a nuclear cooling system. Door 5: similar to the copper piping room
except it was filled with a jungle of electrical conduits and thick cables.
Most of it rose up to pass through the ceiling and Solo suspected that it all
connected to the cables he saw in the time tunnel room which would have to be
above them somewhere. Door 6: was a staircase that could take them down to the
receiving level or up to the cavern where the time tunnel where the professor
would likely be.
The doors were far apart, indicating that each
room was very spacious. Perhaps the complex had been built here because someone
had found a series of caverns to exploit. The doorways were prefab, built into
polished limestone walls. Ceiling and floor likewise. It was almost always like
this. Interiors that reflected a combination of the caveman and the M.I.T. graduate. Hopefully the whole
thing would cave in nicely. A Thrush lair was a difficult thing to burn.
They had no way of knowing it, but there was a
staircase on the other side of the receiving level that lead up to the living
quarters. That was a separate cavern free of the noises and odors that would
prevail in the maintenance wing when the facility became fully operational.
Solo and Illya were just happy that they hadn’t bungled into the guard’s movie
theatre. But even though they had happened upon the best place to create a
diversion, they now realized that the Marines would have to descend a very long
stairway in order to link up with them.
“We can’t hold our own at the entrance to the
wing. We need to get within firing range of that staircase the Marines will be
using,” said Napoleon.
“I was tempted to argue your decision to
forbid the use of hand grenades,” replied Kuryakin.
“They have to make due with smoke at the entrance.
We don’t know where the old man will be so we need to take the heart of the
complex the hard way. He must not be part of the collateral damage.”
“Better dead than spirited away to another
satrap that we don’t know about,” argued the Russian.
Solo didn’t respond to Kuryakin’s logic. It
wasn’t an easy thing to do even in a nice safe place. The two agents went into
combat mode. Solo taking the right half of the corridor and the Russian taking
the left. Advancing forward, the men bet their lives on their ability to cover
one another. The guards were responding from different sections of the complex.
The happy result was that they were trickling in, rather than advancing in a
overwhelming force. That was one of the things that had kept the men from U.N.C.L.E. alive in the past. Guards
could be given orders in advance, but when U.N.C.L.E.
came calling, defenders would revert back to the second rate thugs that
they had been before putting on their pretty uniforms.
Solo’s gun would fire, then the Russian’s. The
wing of the complex was being conquered one yard at a time. Alarms could now be
heard, and that seemed a bit comical. The Thrush rifles made almost as much
noise and they left no doubt that the emergency was not the result of a false
alarm. The agents advanced on their objective; the end of the limestone
corridor. But they they would not give in to the temptation to break into a
jog. Runners couldn’t shoot very well and they needed to be in top form under
the circumstances. For over a solid minute their position was precarious in the
extreme; staying alive only because the opposition kept blundering around the
far corners only to face superior marksmanship. But the closer the range, the
less need for the kind of skill that had worked for them thus far.
Yet another uniformed target swung his bulky
rifle around that far corner to engage the intruders. He was on Illya’s side
and again the Russian scored a hit to the center of a chest cavity. The brainy
Kuryakin had once predicted that someday there would be video games that would
simulate indoor combat. Solo had laughed it off, theorizing that nothing could
replace sports. For an U.N.C.L.E. agent,
there could be no substitute for living on the edge. Case in point: two Thrush
guards tried something cute. At the very end of the corridor of death, a guard
brought his weapon around while down on one knee. His buddy stood over him and
poked his upper body around at the same time.
Solo naturally took the target that was in a
normal stance. He saw the man closer to floor, but like in a bad dream was
powerless to send two bullets out at different angles. But both men did in fact shudder under the impact of
bullets and fall to add more blood to the limestone floor. Illya had broken the
rule and come over to the other side.
When
outnumbered---attack. Solo couldn’t remember who had dreamed up that
tactic, but it was often forced upon him and it sometimes caused him to doubt
his own sanity. In any case, the luck of the valiant seemed to be with them.
That, and the fact that an additional outside alarm had betrayed the Marines
just two minutes ago. They finally reached the end of the corridor and were
relieved to discover that they had expended
all of the security that had been sent to deal with the crisis on that side
of the complex. The Marines would have whatever was left in the labyrinth.
Kuryakin started to head down. Solo was
tempted to go up, just long enough to see if the professor was in his control
room above the time tunnel cavern. But he dared not leave his partner alone for
an instant, and the Marines needed the other half of their pincer tactic executed a.s.a.p. The two agents descended the
stairwell at the risk of broken ankles because experience had taught them that
there no worse place to have a shoot out. The Marines would testify to that.
The survivors that is.
Exiting the stairwell was more startling than
dangerous. A few of the higher placed Thrush bureaucrats were opting to move
their confidential records to the emergency escape tunnel. Using his silencered
weapon Solo shot the first one he saw, but spared the next two because they
were unarmed and he wanted to save ammo.
Every Thrush rifleman assigned to the opposite wing was already in
defensive positions, firing at any Marine who dared to show himself at the
halfway point of the maintenance stairway. The Marines were lucky in a way.
Their attack route had a ninety degree turn in it at the N.W. corner of the
nuclear shielding framework. That meant that the Marines could get within
eighteen steps of the bottom of the stairs before drawing fire from the
defenders. But eighteen steps was a lot when fifteen riflemen were all shooting
at the same descending framework.
The leader of the strike force ordered
grenades made ready, even though Solo had expressly forbidden them. He would
give the U.N.C.L.E. agents just three
more minutes to create a diversion before lobbing his pineapples. He didn’t
much care if it got him court-martialed. He wasn’t going to order men into a
hail of lead when it wasn’t absolutely necessary. When Solo and Kuryakin got a
good look at things (from the back) he regretted his order concerning the use
of grenades. But it didn’t matter. The agents rounded one last corner and came
upon the pleasant sight of Thrush men with their backs turned to them.
Solo started pumping rounds into backs as fast
as he could. Kuryakin had changed the setting on his borrowed rifle to full
auto and mowed down four men as they all attempted to pivot in their kneeling
positions. Other men moved off to their right side, realizing that they had
been sandwiched. The two agents split up and took cover inside office doorways
while slapping fresh magazines into their weapons. The Marines threw caution to
the wind in the meantime and bounded down the stairs with fatalistic yells. The
first two were cut down but the rest overwhelmed the hallway intersection after
a brief and bloody encounter.
“Lead on!” shouted the senior Marine, but only
because he was now half deaf.
“Split into four groups and
scout out the rest of this level,” ordered Solo. “When it’s all secured you can
meet with us upstairs.”
“If the objective is up a different stairwell,
then that’s where we should all go together,” argued the team leader who’s name
was Hendricks.
“You have been given your orders,” Solo
responded in his old Air Force tone.
He briefly wondered what the Jar Heads would think if they knew they
were being ordered around by an ex-pilot and a man who once served in the
Russian military. The Marines certainly didn’t have any reason to feel
contempt. Fifteen riflemen were on the floor bleeding their lives out and the
invading force only lost two. It was far better than what was expected, and
there was no doubt as to who deserved most of the credit.
“Very well, sir, I will regard the two of you as a scouting party,” said
Hendricks. “But if I hears weapons fire, I’m coming after you.”
The two U.N.C.L.E.
agents returned to their previously used stairwell and started their climb.
“IF he
hears gun fire,” said Solo.
Kuryakin got the message and dropped the
Thrush rifle. He pulled out his own weapon and quickly attached the silencer
that came with it. When they reached the top of the stairs they discovered that
it actually ran all the way to the top level where the control room was. It was
unattended but that did not mean that there was nothing to look at. Through the
observation window Solo could see Barkley, Adams and what was probably
the last remaining Thrush soldier in the complex. A secret entrance was
standing open halfway down the length of the north wall of the cavern, and it
looked like Barkley was ordering Adams at pistol point to move towards it.
Solo picked up a chair and said, “When I open
the window, you take out the man with the pistol first.”
“The soldier is the greater danger,” pointed
out the Russian.
“To us, yes. But Barkley is likely to
terminate the professor.”
Illya nodded unhappily. Solo knew things that
he did not. That was a rare thing and not at all to his liking. But the three
men below were now heading for the exit, so Kuryakin shouldered his weapon and
waited for his chance. Solo shattered the glass patrician and then went for his
own weapon. Illya drilled Barkley cleanly through the forehead, causing the
head to snap back with unnatural speed. The Thrush rifleman was the best of his
ilk, which is why he had been assigned to assist Barkley with his prize. The
soldier and the U.N.C.L.E. agent
exchanged shots simultaneously and both scored hits. Kuryakin caught a round in
the shoulder that slammed him down onto the floor. The soldier took a hit in
the right lung and would die en route to the nearest hospital.
“Are you alright?” inquired Solo with a frown.
“That would pass as a rhetorical question,”
muttered the Russian.
“You gentlemen have my thanks,” called Adams as he stood over his
two former captives.
“Professor Adams, you are now in the
protective custody of a United Nations peace keeping organization,” declared
Solo.
“You mean U.N.C.L.E.?”
inquired the old man.
“Yes sir. I have a wounded comrade here but a
force of Marines should be joining you in seconds.”
“I’m afraid not sir,” responded the old man.
“What I possess is too dangerous to trust to anyone in this day and age.”
“If you feel that way, why did you invent the
machine in the first place?” inquired a slightly irritated Solo.
“For the same reason we’ll go to the moon
someday,” responded the old man. “We need to prove that it can be done.”
“Two men on our side died today because of
that.”
“Three, in
a manner of speaking,” replied Adams. “But none of us were dragged into
danger against our will. Be you a soldier or a scientist---you move forward. Of
course, that makes this machine a bit of a cheat---I suppose. Ah well, it is
time to do something about that.”
Suddenly Hendricks appeared with a squad in
tow. The old man took a small black box out of his pocket and casually strolled
to the entrance of the time tunnel. He was deep within before the Marines could
get halfway across the cavern.
“Don’t go in there!” Solo shouted to the
Marines as the instrument board came alive in the control room.
“What’s happening?” Kuryakin demanded to know.
“He had that little box with him. The one he
had in the cab. I think its some sort of remote control device.”
“What are you talking about?”
To his chagrin, Solo had forgotten that his
partner would have no memory of their first encounter with Adams because from the
Russian’s point of view, it never happened.
“I’ll explain later. Then hopefully I’ll still
have a job. Bottom line is that I’m pretty sure the good professor is making a
getaway, and there isn’t much we can do about it.”
Solo was quite correct in his assumption.
When the instrument panel finally returned to sleep mode, the Marines
cautiously entered the tunnel and found nothing. Illya and the fallen Marines
became the most important concern after that. Scientists would stare
thoughtfully at what had been left behind by Adams, but without his genius
to point the way, all future evaluations would be fruitless.
But not forever.
Adams would spend his remaining months in
quiet contemplation somewhere in the Bahamas under
the watchful eye of a nephew who thought his uncle was a plain ordinary retired
marine biologist. But in a safety deposit box back on the mainland there was an
envelope containing micro film. That film was actually an instruction manual on
how to build a time machine. It would be opened by a lawyer in fifty years,
when hopefully mankind would no longer be pointing nuclear weapons in every
direction.
Illya Kuryakin and the rest of U.N.C.L.E. had no choice but to believe
Solo’s claim that he had traveled through time twice, the last time with Illya at the control panel. It was
certainly a flattering tale from the Russian’s point of view. To think that he
successfully operated a device that kept scientists scratching their heads
experiment after experiment.
While the Russian agent mended in a hospital,
Solo studied up on the Ba’ath Socialist
Party.
His part of this whole episode was not quite
over with yet.
No, not yet.
Chapter Eighteen.
Captain Jesse Larca sat
in the lead van with Napoleon Solo and watched attentively as a car pulled up
in front of a store that had gone out of business. The street lighting was poor
but that was of no consequence. The Marine Corps officer picked up his night
vision binoculars and focused them on the man who was now speaking to someone
who had just vacated the building.
“Yup, that’s Schmidt alright. Now I think it’s
time you explained what my mission is. Are we going to arrest those two?”
“Nothing of the sort. We are here to provide
escort to Mr. Schmidt’s destination,” responded Solo.
“Then why didn’t we link up with him back at
the embassy?” asked the captain.
“Because I would have to explain myself to
your superior, and my superior
wouldn’t allow that.”
The officer let out a sigh. It was always like
that. Somebody thousands of miles away was hung up on anonymity. Well, it might
keep someone alive someplace so he wasn’t about to complain.
“Whatever you say sir. Just so my boss is
pacified by the time we roll back into the embassy.”
“Guaranteed. This time around everyone will be
happy and safe and eager to embrace the next chapter in their lives.”
“Suffer a mishap a while back sir?” inquired
Larca as the four van motorcade proceeded to follow Carl Schmidt’s smaller
vehicle.
“Actually a very brave friend of mine. His
life turned sour for a while, but at least he got a chance to find out what
he’s made of. So for him, it worked out alright.”
When the police cruiser finally pulled the
little French auto over, Solo judged that it was time for them to move. The two fraudulent police officers were up to
their necks in American made guns before they could even get their doors
opened.
“Thank you locating Miss Sherman for us,
Gentlemen. We’ll take it from here.” announced the Marine captain in a tone
that softened the martial atmosphere.
Then the captain stepped up to where Schmidt
was parked and said, “Mr. Schmidt, Miss Sherman, would you please gather your
belongings and be seated in my van. One of my men will drive the car back for
you.”
Carl was surprised by this development but at
least it was a pleasant surprise. He and Sherman were introduced to Solo who
grinned knowingly at the low level bureaucrat.
“My compliments Mr. Solo. I have a feeling
that those cops were up to no good.”
“Very perceptive of you, Mr. Schmidt. In fact
you are part of the reason I’m here. My organization could use a man who speaks
fluent German. I was wondering if you would be interested in a type of law enforcement
position.”
Carl blinked a couple of times and said,
“Well, I was very fond of Germany. Am I to understand
that I would be relocating there?”
“Yes, for the most part. Mind you, your duties
could get a bit stressful from time to time. You would be required to carry a
firearm…”
“It does sound interesting,” put forth
Schmidt.
“Perhaps we could meet in my hotel room
tomorrow morning to discuss the details. I haven’t checked in anywhere yet but
I have your office number.”
“Fine,” Carl responded with a heavy nod.
“You’ll be getting a good man,” piped in Lisa
Sherman. “Also his common looks will help him blend in with his surroundings.
You wouldn’t want him standing out the way you
would, Mr. Solo.”
Napoleon returned the old woman’s telling
smile, and Carl did his best not to seem ungrateful for the woman’s left handed
endorsement.
After the motorcade returned to the embassy
the Marine Captain lagged behind a bit so he could have a chance to speak
privately with Solo.
“Excuse me sir, but I’m not certain you’ll be
doing Mr. Schmidt a service by taking him away from his present
responsibilities.”
“How is that Captain?”
“Well sir, I’ve read the files on everyone who
works at the embassy. The most interesting thing Schmidt did in the military
was function as a V.D. Control Officer. I don’t mean to be disrespectful of the
man, but he’s kind of a Walter Mitty type of guy if you understand me.”
“Oh, you mean the kind of fellow who dreams
about doing brave things but if a crisis ever arose he’d pretty much cave?”
“Well sir, I guess it would depend of the severity of the crisis.”
“Alright---do you think he could stand up to
you, if his principles were on the line?”
“Hardly,
sir.”
The man from U.N.C.L.E. smiled and said, “Well, at least he won’t be giving you any headaches where he’s going.”
The Marine frowned at that, while Solo headed
for the embassy’s visitor entrance.
Epilogue
Solo was happy to find his partner on the
parallel bars back at U.N.C.L.E. H.Q. Solo
used to think that Illya’s preoccupation with gymnastics was related to his
rather limited love life, but since then he had come to realize that physical
fitness is more than just lifting weights and running. Besides, there were a
lot of women who used the bars to stretch their legs.
Kuryakin didn’t bother say hello, he just
waited until Solo was closer to the bars and then he launched himself up and
over to land with a thump in front of his friend.
“Is the shoulder as good as new?”
“I suspect it will depend on the weather. But
if Waverly refuses to complain, I don’t see any reason why I should.”
“Stout fellow. Now you better take a shower.
We’re due in the main conference room in twenty minutes.”
Solo turned and headed for the door but the
Russian had been waiting to ask him a question.
“Napoleon---you were extremely vague when you
reported that I operated the time machine. I would appreciate it if you could
be more specific.”
Solo let out both a sigh and a shrug and said,
“The symbols on the control screen were totally unique. It was a language all
its own. You couldn’t read what it was saying, but you remembered which symbols
were in the screen’s launch box when
the professor used the controls the other time. As for setting a date. You just
scrolled the content list back until a little voice in you said far enough. It was a gamble to be sure.
But it worked out wonderfully.”
Kuryakin shrugged.
“They placed me under hypnosis, hoping I would
remember everything, but it’s not working.”
“Maybe that’s because you don’t really think
we’re ready for that kind of power just yet.”
“It is not for me to decide,” the Russian
answered stonily.
“Looks to me like it is.”
“Napoleon, you are the last person who should try and get psychoanalytical with me. I am
not repressing anything. I would be the happiest man in the world if I could go
back to the controls of that time machine and send you---back to Waverly when
he was our age. That would be interesting.”
“I suppose it would be,” Napoleon responded
with a shrug. “Say did you know that psychology is largely made up of sexual
content?”
“I’ve got to take that shower,” grumbled
Kuryakin as he turned his back on his friend.