The Old Man nodded, cocked his head, and grunted. "You look like the cat that swallowed the canary."
"In a manner of speaking, I am."
The Old Man leaned an elbow on the arm of his swivel chair. The seams on his face deepened as he squinted inquiringly.
"We took him," Solo said. "Albert Stanley. Yesterday."
The Old Man sat up. "Tell me."
Solo told him. The Old Man's face remained an inscrutable mask.
"Good work. Where's Mr. Kuryakin?"
"Sleeping, probably."
The squint was back on Waverly's face.
"We've had a rough vigil since Tuesday," Solo said. "And you weren't due back today until one. He'll be here by then, I assure you."
"Um, yes, of course, of course. Where's Stanley now?"
"Downstairs in Section Five. Detention. They've fed him, shaved him, bathed him, given him fresh linens. A gentle little man. Monsters come in all guises."
"Who talked to him?"
"Nobody. He's being saved for you, as you instructed."
"And that portable radio? That infernal machine?"
"Upstairs in the lab. The technicians are having a ball with it."
"And that report?"
"Being held for you, as you instructed."
"Um, yes." Waverly dialed the telephone.
"McNabb?... Waverly here. You can go into that room now... Stanley's. But be careful. Keep Johnson in the corridor as the lookout. I don't want you seen going in or coming out. What's that?... Yes, that's right. I want you to bring out whatever's important. I want all that stuff down here. Use the freight elevator… Yes... Yes, that's right. Then I want Johnson, O'Keefe, and Gaines staked out inside the room. Any visitors are to be taken in... Yes. Very good. See you soon. 'Bye." He hung up.
Solo said, "May I?" and sat down in a deep leather chair.
The Old Man pressed a button on the console
The overhead loudspeaker said, "Laboratory. Phil Bankhead."
"Waverly."
"Yes, Chief?"
"On that Stanley business. I want the report."
"Written or verbal?"
"Both."
"Yes, Chief."
"Now."
"At once, Mr. Waverly."
Phil Bankhead was fat, bald, and brilliant, a scientist of the highest rank. Solo winked at him when he came in, but Bankhead did not return the wink. That put Solo forward on the edge of his seat. Bankhead was usually a jovial soul. Today he appeared anything but that. He was pale, his jowls hung loose, and his dark, bulging eyes smoldered. He acknowledged Solo with a curt nod, went to Waverly, laid a sheaf of papers on the desk. Bankhead's controlled consternation was not lost upon the Old Man. Quite mildly, obviously in an effort to calm Bankhead, he said lightly, smiling, "And what earthshaking information do you bring us, Mr. Bankhead?"
"In one word," Bankhead said, "exitron."
"Exitron," the Old Man said. He clung to his smile but now, as Solo could plainly see, with effort. It hung on his face grotesquely, like a badly adjusted mask, but he kept smiling. He was, after all, the Old Man. "Do tell us about exitron," he said calmly and turned on the tape recorder.
"We thought it was all ours," Bankhead said. "Top-level, top-secret. We thought we were at least six or seven years ahead of them. Seems we're not."
"Tell us about exitron," the Old Man repeated.
"A nuclear explosive, small but clean, no fallout. Small. What is small? A comparative term. This particular atomic concentration hasn't yet been developed for massive warheads, for city-leveling bombs, for the rockets that overnight would change the power structures of the world. Small, the exitron concentrate, but indescribably destructive, and Stanley's device was powered with exitron. The tiny bomb contained in that confounded radio had the explosive equivalent of five thousand tons of TNT."
"And if exploded? What effect on Liberty Island, the Statue, the soldiers of Fort Wood, the civilian personnel, the many sightseers?"
Bankhead's expression said more than a thousand words.
"First things first," the Old Man said. "Please sit down, Mr. Bankhead."
Bankhead sat limply in a chair near Solo. Waverly put through a call to the Pentagon and transmitted his information. It took time. When he hung up he said, "We've exploded our own little bomb in their laps. And now, if you please..."
The buzzer rasped. Waverly flicked a key.
"Mr. McNabb," his secretary said through the intercom.
McNabb carried in two large valises. One contained, carefully wrapped in heavy cloth, four portable radios similar to the one confiscated at Liberty Island. Bankhead examined them. "Exitron—all of them," he said.
"Dangerous, Mr. Bankhead?" the Old Man asked.
Bankhead pointed. "Not unless this switch key is on. Then this timing device is adjusted. Then the electric current from the batteries triggers the detonator. Beautiful job, really. Most ingenious."
"I'd appreciate it if you'd get those deadly little things out of here," the Old Man said.
"Yes, sir." Bankhead repacked them in the suitcase. "One was good. Four more are better. My people will enjoy working them over."
"Enjoy away," the Old Man said.
The other suitcase contained maps, photographs, and booklets of minute detail relevant to five famous sites on the eastern seaboard—including the Statue of Liberty.
"Time we brought in the star of the show," Waverly said.
McNabb packed the suitcase and put it in a closet.
Waverly looked at his watch, then looked at Solo. "And where's our Mr. Kuryakin?"
"I hope not still asleep."
"Perhaps you ought to call him."
Solo called. There was no answer.
"Probably on his way."
"We won't wait." The Old Man punched a button on the console.
The loudspeaker announced, "Detention. Tom Dailey."
"Waverly. Bring up Albert Stanley."
Stanley was small between two burly, armed guards. He nodded to Solo, smiled toward Waverly. His face was composed. His brown eyes were round, innocent, gentle.
"Here, please," Waverly said, indicating a chair by the desk.
The guards let him go forward. He sat in the chair facing Waverly. Primly he crossed his legs. He flicked lint from a knee with slender, graceful fingers.
Waverly glanced at the tape recorder. It churned silently.
"You know where you are, Mr. Stanley?"
"I assume at a depot of UNCLE. United Network Command for Law Enforcement." The voice was soft, smooth, unexcited, the diction clear and precise.
"And you know who I am?"
"A man I greatly admire. Alexander Waverly."
"And I know who you are."
"Thus we start even," Stanley said.
Waverly filled his pipe, lit it.
"You've been treated fairly?"
"Perfectly so."
"And so it shall continue—if you cooperate."
"I believe in cooperation, Mr. Waverly. He who cooperates today lives to cooperate another day."
"Quite the philosopher, aren't you?"
"I pride myself that I am, Mr. Waverly."
The Old Man puffed on his pipe. "All right, let's have it. What the devil are you doing here?"
"Here?"
"In this country. In the United States."
Stanley smiled. He had little yellow teeth. He lifted a hand and wriggled a finger at Solo. "This young man can tell you. If I may so presume, he has told you."
"I'm not asking him. I'm asking you."
"Quite. Well, to begin with, the Statue of Liberty..."
"And Grant's Tomb, the Verrazano Bridge, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial."
"Ah, I see you've studied my maps. Yes. They would have followed one another in quick succession, perhaps several in one day, had I not been—er, apprehended."
"But why? In heaven's name! Why?"
"They are great works, world famous shrines in this country
, national monuments—even the bridge, the longest and heaviest in existence."
"To what purpose their destruction?"
The little man patted his pockets. "May I have a cigarette, please?"
McNabb brought him a cigarette and held the match for him.
"Thank you."
McNabb made no reply, but moved off to the side of the room.
"Mr. Waverly," Albert Stanley said. "The Cold War. Propaganda, influence, spheres of influence, world opinion. There are many uncommitted nations Asia, Africa, South America. The two great powers hold off from each other in hot war—there is a stalemate, a balance of weaponry, a balance of terror. But each seeks to win the uncommitted nations, to tilt the delicate balance of the Cold War, to loosen allies, and to defeat treaties by the use of different kinds of weapons—ideas, propaganda, subtle acts, even sensational acts. Our purpose at this time is to make the United States a laughingstock."
"By the commission of this terrible kind of sabotage?"
"Precisely. First these five sites here in the East; later on five more in the Midwest; more, later on, on the Pacific Coast. We believe the time to be ripe to create confusion and terror within the United States itself, to make it an object of world ridicule, and to precipitate the United States into unwise and unfortunate acts—and thus, aside from influencing the uncommitted nations, to cause division and foment discontent between the United States and its allies."
Waverly sat back, his teeth clenched on the stem of his pipe.
"And you were to be this saboteur."
"I am the best in the world, Mr. Waverly."
"But you have failed!"
"Failed?" The little man smoked his cigarette calmly. "We cannot always all succeed. Happenstance, chance, circumstance—who knows? Maybe the entire plan was doomed to failure. Perhaps its effect would have been the reverse of that intended." He shrugged. "I am not the commander, the general, the architect of plans. I am but one small soldier."
"Soldier! A soldier who murders hundreds, perhaps thousands, of innocent bystanders."
The little man uncrossed his legs. A crease appeared between his eyes. For the first time he seemed to be offended.
"I am not a murderer! I am a soldier assigned to destroy certain targets. As in bombing raids, the death of innocent civilians does occur. But that is not the purpose. That is incidental, cannot be helped. The purpose is the destruction of the targets, and I am the soldier assigned."
"Well, you're one soldier THRUSH will no longer have."
"I wouldn't be so sure of that, Mr. Waverly."
"What?"
The little man crushed his cigarette in an ash tray. He looked toward McNabb. McNabb tossed the package of cigarettes. Stanley caught it skillfully. He drew out a cigarette and lit it with a lighter from Waverly's desk. Solo watched, fascinated.
"They now know you have me, Mr. Waverly," Stanley said. "I'm certain they shall attempt a means for my rescue."
"Who do you mean by 'they'?"
"My people."
"And how do they know?"
"Quite simple. I was to call a certain number every four hours precisely on the hour. If my call did not come through, they would know."
"What number?"
"What difference? There's no longer anyone there."
"What number!"
Stanley gave him the number. Waverly made the call. There was no answer. Waverly hung up, tapped ash from his pipe, relit it.
"I want to know all about your people, Mr. Stanley."
"Happy to oblige you, sir. I'm not one for keeping secrets, as they well know; perhaps that's why they don't impart too many of their secrets to me. I'm unique unto myself—and so they must countenance me. I work with dreadful explosives. I am an expert, the best there is. I live with danger. I expose myself, risk my life, every time I do a job. I am paid well, but I make no pretense at being a hero, and they know it. In my life I've been caught a few times. I've talked—to mitigate my punishment. I'm a soldier, not a martyr. It is my pattern for survival. I cooperate. You know my motto, sir." The little man grinned with yellow teeth. "He who cooperates today lives to cooperate another day."
"Tell me, please, about your people. Who is here in the States with you?"
"Leslie Tudor, Eric Burrows, Pamela Hunter."
Solo braced. Now here was a sudden stroke of luck. In the new reorganization of the British Sector of THRUSH, Eric Burrows was second in command and Leslie Tudor was the new chief. UNCLE knew all about Burrows, but UNCLE knew absolutely nothing about Leslie Tudor. Now here was an unexpected break. He wondered how the Old Man would handle it.
Waverly showed no excitement. His seamed face remained placid. Contentedly he puffed his pipe, and he started with the least important name.
"Pamela Hunter?" he inquired.
"A beautiful young woman recruited to THRUSH," Stanley said. "Her first important job. Two bigwigs are breaking her in."
"Ah, yes, bigwigs. Burrows is an old and respected antagonist. Tell us a bit about your new chief."
"Nothing to tell."
"Well, anything." Waverly smiled encouragingly.
"I wish I could oblige you, Mr. Waverly. I can't. Tudor has a passion for anonymity. He works through Eric Burrows. I know Burrows well. Tudor—nothing. I've never seen him. I've never heard his voice. All I know is the name— Leslie Tudor."
Waverly sucked on his pipe, hiding his disappointment behind a cloud of smoke. "All right. We know how and when you came here. When did they come?"
"Last week."
"How?"
"By private jet to a private airstrip in Nova Scotia. Then by private helicopter to an estate here on Long Island. Burrows is an expert pilot. So is Leslie Tudor."
"How do you know?"
"Burrows told me."
"Where is this estate on Long Island?"
"I don't know. I came in by commercial plane Tuesday morning. I brought in nothing. They brought in all my equipment. On Monday Burrows took the suite in my name at the Waldorf. That was my base of operation. Of course, I'd been thoroughly briefed in England. By Burrows. Monday, when he took the suite, he brought in two suitcases with all the equipment I needed—also, fifty thousand dollars in American money."
McNabb said, "Yes, we have most of that."
"Mission accomplished, I would return the way I had come. If Burrows—or Tudor––wanted any changes, they knew where to reach me. That's it, Mr. Waverly—so help me."
Solo knew—as he was certain Waverly knew—that the man was telling the truth. It matched their own knowledge; his statements aligned with the meager but incontrovertible facts they themselves had deduced. Waverly sighed. "Well, now, Mr. Stanley..."
The loudspeaker came alive.
"Mr. Waverly! Television Section! Mitchell here! Emergency! Please come up at once, sir!"
Waverly pressed a button of the console board. "Right away, Mr. Mitchell."
"Is Mr. Solo in your office, sir?"
"Yes."
"Mr. Solo, too, please."
"Yes."
Waverly punched the disconnect button, stood up, and waved to the armed guards. "Take Mr. Stanley back to Detention. Thank you."
As soon as he entered the Television Room, Solo heard the beep of Illya's code signal and the additional signal of their code for SOS—emergency! The large room was crowded with electronic equipment. The technicians stood by. Waverly pointed at Frank Mitchell.
"Extrapolate!"
Mitchell moved quickly to a huge scanning board. He pulled a lever and the board lit up, showing maps slowly revolving behind cross hairs. He put a headset over his ears and plugged the line into an outlet. The fingers of both hands took the control knobs, and he nodded toward Waverly.
"You, Mr. Solo!" Waverly said.
Solo positioned himself in front of the eye of a camera in another wall. He flicked a switch.
"Napoleon Solo. Go ahead, Illya. Over."
He pushed down on the switch.
A small scree
n showed Illya's face. He was using the micro-TV, transistorized receiver and sender, tiny, cigarette-package-sized, standard equipment for special agents of UNCLE. The beam was on his face for identification. He would have moved the instrument to give them some idea of where he was. He did not. Solo understood. Illya could not. There was, in all probability, a gun leveled at him.
Mitchell turned the control knobs. The maps behind the cross hairs revolved more slowly.
Illya spoke tensely.
"I have been taken by agents of THRUSH. Also taken is Steven Winfield, son of Sir William Winfield, British Ambassador to the UN. We are being held as hostages for the return of Albert Stanley." Illya smiled wryly. "Two for one. Tell Mr. Waverly to reassure Sir William and warn him that there be no outcry. You, Napoleon, will be contacted by phone at your apartment some time after nine o'clock tomorrow morning. No tricks. Take care." Illya smiled again, and his picture disappeared from the screen.
Solo pushed up the switch.
"Are there any other instructions? Over."
He pushed down the switch.
There was no sound. The screen was black.
He tried again. Nothing.
Grimly Waverly said, "All right. Kill it." Turning to Mitchell, he queried, "What've we got?"
Mitchell removed his headset.
"Not enough time to pinpoint anything, but I did get the general location."
"Where?" Waverly asked.
"He's somewhere out on Long Island."
5. "No Way Out"
THEY WERE NOT uncomfortable, although they had no idea where they were or when it was day or night. It was a large, windowless room fitted with a prison-type steel door. They could hear no sounds from outside. Illya believed it to be a basement room because of the feeling of dampness and because, by tapping and testing, he had found the walls to be of concrete, even the ceiling. He had stood on Steve's shoulders and rapped his knuckles at the ceiling.
"All concrete." And he had leaped off. "A concrete room."
"What are those up there, Mr. Kuryakin?" Steve pointed to the holes.
There were four of them, two-inch holes, one in each corner of the ceiling.
"For ventilation. So we can breathe."
"You mean if they turned it off—the ventilation, I mean—we would—well—like choke to death?"
MFU Whitman - The Affair of the Gentle Saboteur Page 3