"Definitely bearish," Remo growled. "And I'm looking for your boss, Looncraft."
"Oh, he just stepped out," someone said. "Why do you want to see him?"
"Bear business," Remo said, lumbering forward.
The knot of traders separated before him like water beading on a hot skillet. Remo stumbled around the trading room, his clumsy bulk knocking over phones and Rolodexes, and once, a computer terminal.
Every eye followed him. A few pointed out that when the bear passed certain computer screens, the phosphorescent letters swam like water disturbed by a stick.
P. M. Looncraft's office was clearly labeled. It was also constructed of glass-walls and door. Remo put his big black nose to the glass because his vision was obscured by hair.
The desk was unoccupied. P. M. Looncraft was definitely not in.
"Okay," Remo said, facing his wide-eyed audience. "When's he due back?"
Glances were exchanged. Shoulders jumped in unknowing shrugs.
"No one knows," a woman volunteered.
"Okay" Remo, said snapping off a bear claw and tossing it to the woman who spoke. "You tell him I was here. I'll be back."
A shaky male voice lifted above the crowd, warning, "No, you won't."
Remo tilted his bear helmet doggy-style, the better to see the source of the warning.
A blue-uniformed security guard stepped through the crowd, a gun held before him. The gun was as shaky as his voice, maybe shakier, Remo saw. Remo rested defiant paws on his furry hips.
"You got a license to hunt bear?" he demanded of the guard.
The guard crept forward.
He sneered. "You're no bear."
"That's no bull," Remo shot back. "Okay, you got me. I surrender," he added, throwing up his paws.
"Good," the guard said, lifting out of his careful half-crouch. "Do as I say and you won't be hurt."
"Exactly what are you going to do?" Remo wanted to know.
"Handcuff you," the guard said firmly.
Remo's paws dropped together, outstretched. "My wrists are yours," he said.
Reaching behind his gunbelt, the guard pulled out a clinking pair of handcuffs.
Remo waited patiently. He didn't want to spook the nervous guard into any wild shooting. When one wristlet flopped into his arm, Remo swiped the gun from the other's grasp. The paw tangled up in the trigger guard, and the gun fell to the floor.
The guard reached down.
Remo stamped on the weapon, thinking the guard was going for it.
Unfortunately, the guard was going for his ankle-holstered backup gun. He brought it up and snapped off a hasty shot.
Remo sidestepped to the left. The bullet passed to his right, striking an acoustical ceiling panel. The guard corrected his aim. Remo slid aside so fast the guard was aiming at the spot where his eyes told him Remo was. But he wasn't there anymore.
The guard snapped off a shot he never heard. Remo's paws took him by the face and squeezed his nose and mouth shut. The guard fainted long before he would have lapsed into unconsciousness from asphyxiation.
Remo let him drop to the floor, and lifted quelling paws.
"Don't worry," he called out. "He just fainted. And I'm outta here. But keep watching the windows. I'll be back. "
Remo crawled out the window as a Polaroid camera flashed, capturing his buttoned-up rear end for posterity.
After he had vanished, the employees on the trading floor of Looncraft, Dymstar d took a hasty poll.
The consensus was that they would clean up the mess and not breathe a word of any of this to humorless P. M. Looncraft when he returned. There were no dissenting votes, not even from the security guard after he woke up screaming.
Chapter 9
Remo Williams was surprised that the address of Nostrum, Inc. was a modern twelve-story chrome-and-blued-glass building near Wall Street. He stopped in front of the building, thinking that he had misremembered the address Smith had told him.
"Smitty's too cheap to own a nice place like this," he muttered, going through the revolving door.
Remo went to the lobby directory. A maintenance man had the glass front open and was replacing white plastic letters.
"Say, buddy," Remo asked him, "is there a Nostrum, Inc. in this building?"
The workman finished what he was doing and closed the glass before answering.
"That's the old name," he said. "Now it's Nostrum, Ink. "
"What's the difference?" Remo asked.
"Take a look for yourself," the man told him, jerking a thumb at the directory.
Remo looked. He found a "NOSTRUM, INK" listed on the eighth floor.
"I hate to tell you this, but 'Ink' is misspelled."
"That's a matter of opinion. When the chief says to change it, I change it. We don't question the chief around here. "
"This chief," Remo inquired. "Would he be about five feet tall with the complexion of an eighty-year-old walnut?"
"That's the chief, all right. 'Cept he doesn't look a day over seventy-five."
"I guess I've got the right address after all," Remo said, catching an upward-bound elevator.
On the eighth floor, Remo walked down a very long corridor, at the end of which a woman squatted on the rug under a brass plaque that read "NOSTRUM, INK." A fax telephone, Rolodex, and open appointment book lay before her crossed legs. The nameplate by her knee read
"FAITH DAVENPORT."
"Someone steal your desk?" Remo asked, giving her the benefit of a friendly grin.
The grin was returned as a polite smile. She was a clean-scrubbed ash blond in a charcoal Lady Brooks pantsuit. Her eyes were the same blue as the sky, but Remo decided her uptilted nose was her best feature.
"The chief has liberated us from the tyranny of chairs and desks," she told him in a crisp voice. "We're very close to the earth here at Nostrum, Ink. Do you have an appointment?"
"Actually, no," Remo admitted.
The smile stayed in place but the warmth in Faith's eyes went cool. "I didn't think so," she said, eyeing Remo's T-shirt and chinos.
"I'm a friend of Chiun's," Remo explained. "You can tell him I'm here, and I'm sure it'll be all right. The name's Remo."
"Last name?" the blond said, picking up the phone.
"He'll know who it is," Remo assured her.
"Mr. Chiun," Faith said after a pause. "There is a gentleman here who claims to know you. Remo. He won't give his last name."
Faith looked up. "He insists upon having a last name."
"Oh, give me a break," Remo said. "Tell him it's Remo . . . Stallone."
"Remo Stallone," Faith said into the receiver. She listened briefly. "I understand." She hung up. "He asks that you make an appointment," she told Remo.
"He what?"
"The chief is a very, very busy man."
"All right, I'll play along. When's he free?"
"Actually, he's free right now. He hates appointments." Faith looked at her watch. "It's eleven-thirty-two now. Why don't we pencil you in for, say, eleven-thirty-three?"
"Are you serious?"
"Please take a seat," Faith said, gesturing to a bare spot by the wall.
Remo settled on the spot. In his head, he counted off the seconds until Faith called to him. Her watch was five seconds late by Remo's internal clock.
"I'll announce you now," she said, picking up the phone. "Mr. Chiun, Remo Stallone to see you. Yes, he does have an appointment."
Faith hung up. "Go right in."
"Thanks," Remo said, shaking his head in disbelief.
"I thought you looked Italian," she called after him.
Remo walked into a large room where suspender-festooned young workers sat behind banks of computer screens. The screens were on the floor. So were the telephones and other office impedimenta. Not to mention the workers. They looked uncomfortable, and a few could be heard complaining about their backs.
Remo breezed past them to a door on which the word "CHIEF" was painted in black lettering. He entered without knocking.