"Thank you, Remo," Smith said quietly.
"Can you really drive like this?" Remo asked solicitously as he slammed the door closed.
"My legs will not support me just yet, but I can manage the pedals." Smith started the car up. "Please keep me informed," he said, and pulled away.
Remo watched him go, his face sad.
" I feel sort of sorry for him, you know. Even after all he's put me through.
"And me," Chiun said. "Do not forget his base trickery."
"That's Smith for you," Remo said. "Okay, let's get a move on. The corporate jet awaits . . . ."
Chapter 13
The private estate of P. M. Looncraft was a two-story manor in the Great Neck section of Long Island. Designed by a Welsh architect, it was built of firebrick inside and out so that in the event of a fire the ashes could be hauled away, the indestructible walls hosed down, and the old furniture replaced with new literally overnight. The house was also as earthquake-proof as it was possible to make a house. It was built to withstand hurricanes, tornadoes and any other natural cataclysm short of a direct nuclear strike.
A lead-lined fallout shelter fifty feet below the basement awaited that eventuality.
P. M. Looncraft had no more fear of fire than any homeowner, but he treasured his orderly, well-regimented life. He saw no one and engaged in no activity that would inhibit his six-day work week. And in its baronial splendor, his home was designed to shield him from outside intrusion.
Time was money to P. M. Looncraft. But his privacy was sacred.
So when the soft wind-chimelike tinkling of his front doorbell filtered into his cheery living room, P. M. Looncraft's long face collapsed in a disapproving frown. He detested visitors-especially unannounced ones.
Looncraft's butler padded out of the pantry and said in precise Oxbridge English, "I shall see who it is, master."
Looncraft said nothing. That in itself signaled that he neither expected nor welcomed whoever was at his door.
Taking a pinch of snuff from a monogrammed box, Looncraft put the unwanted visitor out of his mind as he delicately inhaled it through each nostril. His butler, Danvers, was a product of the finest English butlering school. No one entered Looncraft's firebrick castle unless Danvers allowed him in.
Danvers' low-pitched voice drifted in from the foyer, politely and precisely informing the visitor-whoever he might be-that Mr. Looncraft was not in to callers. Danvers' voice repeated the sentence in a slightly more insistent voice, and then again in a kind of high girlish skirl.
"Gentlemen, please! You are tresp-"
The abruptness with which Danvers' voice was cut off shocked P. M. Looncraft to his feet. He started for the fireproof safe that occupied one corner of the room. It covered a trapdoor that connected to the bomb shelter with a fire-pole. P. M. Looncraft was keenly aware of the threat kidnappers presented to the modern businessman.
Looncraft got halfway across the room before a cool and casual voice asked him a question.
"Where do you want him?" the voice said.
Looncraft turned. A lean young man of indeterminate age was coming into the room. He carried Danvers, all six-foot-one and 211 pounds of him, under one arm as if carrying a goose-feather pillow.
Even more remarkable, Danvers did not resist. He simply hung there, his arms and legs and neck frozen as if from sudden rigor mortis.
"Danvers! Good God, man! What's happened to you?" P. M. Looncraft called in his precise New England voice.
Danvers' mouth was locked in the open position. His tongue squirmed as if trying to make consonants, but the only sound came from his nose. It buzzed. Rather like a fly.
"What have you done to Danvers?" Looncraft said coldly.
"Long story," the intruder said unconcernedly. "So where do you want him?" He was dressed in his underwear, Looncraft saw to his horror. He wore a white T-shirt and chino pants. "C'mon, I haven't got all night."
"On the divan," Looncraft said. And because he pointed, Remo Williams, who didn't know a divan from Saran Wrap, knew enough to put him on the sofa.
Danvers settled on the cushions in a kind of upended-beetle position. He didn't move, even when he started to tip over. The man pushed him back with a casual if contemptible gesture.
"What is the meaning of this?" Looncraft asked stiffly. He took a step backward. The intruder appeared to be unarmed, but Looncraft knew that certain kinds of men, like other predators, would chase you if you ran from them. Looncraft would not run. He was a Looncraft. Except, of course, to preserve his life.
"Someone wants a meet with you."
"I am going nowhere with you, you interloper."
"That's fine. Because he's come to you."
Then a fantastic figure stepped into the room. He was a little man, of doubtful Asiatic heritage, Looncraft saw. He wore an outlandish blue-and-gold ceremonial garment. His hands were linked like an old-fashioned postcard Chinaman's in his touching wide sleeves.
"I am Chiun," he said formally, his hazel eyes glittering. "Chief of Nostrum, Ink."
"You have some nerve intruding upon my home," Looncraft said, curling his thin upper lip disdainfully.
"I will overlook your impertinence in not accepting my calls, white," the one called Chiun said as the other man folded his arms like some skinny eunuch in a high-school production of The King and I. "For I have come to make peace with you."
"Peace?"
"You covet Nostrum," said Chiun, stepping closer. His sandals made no sound on the bare brick flooring. "Yet I have reason to believe that it is not Nostrum you truly desire, but these."
The joined sleeves parted like a train uncoupling, to reveal a sheaf of folded papers clutched in one ivory claw. Looncraft recognized them as stock certificates.
"And what, pray tell, are those?" Looncraft wanted to know.
"I told you he sounded almost English," the lean man put in suddenly.
"He does not sound at all English," Chiun retorted, not looking away from Looncraft's gaze. "But he speaks like an inhabitant of Gaul."
Looncraft emitted a barking laugh. "Gaul! My dear heathen. "
"Do not call me that," Chiun said coldly. "My ancestors were known throughout the civilized world when yours were painting themselves blue and wearing animal skins."
Looncraft's disdainfully curled upper lip almost disappeared as it locked with his lower lip.
"I offer these stocks to you," Chiun continued, "because I have been advised that it is the prudent thing to do."
"At market or-?"
"In gold," Chiun returned. "No checks."
"I'm afraid I have no gold on hand," Looncraft said in an amused voice.
"Take cash," the man in the T-shirt put in.
Chiun hesitated. His clear eyes narrowed, and Looncraft wondered if he was some kind of half-breed. He detested people of diluted heritage.
"Very well," Chiun said unhappily.
"One moment," Looncraft said, going to his safe. He knelt and twirled the tumblers. Opening a box, he withdrew a stack of hundred dollar bills, broke the bank's paper band, and counted out a precise number of bills.
"If you are surrendering your entire holding," Looncraft said after he closed the safe, "this should cover the transaction."
The two men exchanged sheafs of paper. Chiun ran his fingers along the top of the stack of bills, his eyes focused.
"Not going to count it?" Looncraft said. "Trusting sort, eh?"
"You are right. I should recount," Chiun said. He fanned the bills again and, satisfied, tucked the money in one sleeve.
"These certificates seem to be in order," Looncraft said after going through the surrendered stock. "I trust that concludes our somewhat unorthodox transaction."
"You have what you covet, businessman," Chiun intoned coldly. "Now you will leave Nostrum alone."
"I am a businessman, as you say. I do only what is good for business. And I see you are very serious in your own way."