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Their boots touched the meadows again. The gloom had dissipated somewhat here in the flatlands. Still, the mists and clouds did not vanish entirely. Both men were concentrating on the cemetery behind them. Suppose something went wrong with the timing device? It had happened before. It could happen again. Nothing, nobody was infallible. And there was always the unpleasant possibility that the mysterious Golgotha had returned to spot their handiwork and had only waited for them to leave to destroy the mechanism.

They stumbled on over the hard ground. Time was passing quickly. Surely the five minutes time allowed for the fuse had passed—

“Napoleon—”

“Don’t talk. Walk.”

“The plane. There it is—”

Ahead, looming on the lighter patch of ground, was the mammoth bird which had dropped them into Golgotha’s graveyard.

The savage backwash of propellers had flattened the blades of grass like a field of rice to be reaped. Solo helped Kuryakin toward the ship, waiting for the sound that did not come.

Would it?

The air door was flung backwards, spilling light onto the darkened field. A helmeted officer stood framed in the entrance, beckoning. Solo saw Jerry Terry poised at his shoulder, peering anxiously into the darkness.

He began to run, pulling Kuryakin with him. The shadow of the ship loomed in his eyes, bigger than his fondest hopes, larger than the wildest dreams of a monster named Golgotha.

“Solo!” Jerry Terry called. “Is that you—“

“Napoleon,” Illya Kuryakin’s voice came bitterly, close to his ear. “I make out six minutes. Something has gone wrong. We—”

Solo laughed. “I made it seven minutes. I didn’t know how much you would slow us up, you lame wolfhound.”

“Seven minutes,” Kuryakin echoed. “Why you doublecrossing—”

The rest of the diatribe was lost in the distant thunderclap of the violent explosion rocking the flatlands behind them. The ground heaved, the earth trembled, the wind increased in fury and velocity. A high keening of destruction filled the shadows of the night.

Orangeberg lit up the sky.

And Jerry Terry fell laughing and sobbing right into Napoleon Solo’s outstretched arms.

The bomber crew helping them on board exchanged impressed looks.

“That’s it, huh?” a freckle-faced Sergeant asked, poking a thumb in the direction of the blast.

‘Yes, that’s it,” Illya Kuryakin said flatly. But his eyes were shining.

“That’s it, all right,” Solo agreed, surrounding Jerry Terry’s lithe body with his arms. “But it’s also the sound of something else.”

“What’s that?” Sergeant Freckles wanted to know. Solo stared at him, no longer smiling.

“It’s the sound of a man named Stewart Fromes having the very last laugh there is.”

Freckles grinned. “That’s the best kind of laugh there is.”

“Sometimes, fellow. Sometimes.”

The air door closed and the bomber rumbled forward, aiming its streamlined nose toward the east. Motors thundered, propellers churned, temporarily drowning out the reverberating destruction behind them. The Orangeberg cemetery was dying noisily.

“Napoleon,” Jerry Terry said seriously, “I want to apologize.”

“What for?” he asked, still studying the night sky over Orangeberg from the port window.

“I behaved like a kid back there. That Fairmount woman. I’m sorry I acted like a schoolgirl. You did what you had to do.”

“Thanks,” he said dryly. “But you’re not a Girl Scout. People die in our business. They have to. Being a woman doesn’t change things one way or the other.”

“Am I forgiven?”

“Completely,” he said, still looking toward Orangeberg. A bright orange flash burst skyward, lighting up the darkness.

“Burn in hell, Golgotha,” Napoleon Solo whispered fervently.

ANOTHER SOLO PERFORMANCE

“REALLY, Solo,” Partridge protested in a low voice so that no one else standing at the bar of the Paris Overseas Press Club could hear him, “I do think you could fill me in a bit about this Orangeberg thing.”

Napoleon Solo shrugged characteristically.

“I thought the AP covered it rather thoroughly.” Partridge made a face. “Oh, yes. Strange explosion in German cemetery. Whole bloody place destroyed. Authorities at a loss and a confounded etcetera. Really, Solo.”

“Really nothing, Billy.”

“Yes, of course. I suppose you’re right. But you chaps in the field always seem to get the best of it. Old I may be and I do have a touch of arthritis in several places but you see, one wants for a little excitement now and then. Keeps the endocrines working properly and all that.”

Solo smiled. “I suppose it does, at that. I usually prefer beautiful women, though.”

“Like your girlie from Army Intelligence?”

“You’re getting warm.”

Partridge smiled sourly. “Not as warm as you, I’ll wager.”

Napoleon Solo slid off his stool. “And here is our beautiful leading lady now.”

Coming toward them was the vision who went by the name of Geraldine Terry. She was tall and athletically graceful in a beige woolen sheath dress, her long, copper colored hair neatly swept to one side in a fashionable one-shoulder fall. Her firm, high breasts made more than one man at the bar turn to cast appreciative eyes at her.

“Hello, Miss Terry,” Partridge brightened. “Buy you a drink?”

“Thank you, Billy, you may.” She smiled at Solo. “Am I late?”

He made a show of consulting his watch.

“Exactly three seconds. I counted.” Partridge sniffed the air as if he didn’t approve of all this romantic nonsense between fellow agents. Yet, even as he ordered a martini for Miss Terry, he was wistfully approving of her fine figure. Rather lean for his tastes, but then, Americans did tend to starve themselves for their appearance.

“Solo,” he began again, manfully.

“Yes, Billy?”

Solo’s dark eyes mocked him, waiting. Confound the fellow. He was as tightly buttoned as a cheap ulster.

“Forget it. Passing thought.”

“I’ll mail you a report, Billy. Scout’s honor.”

Jerry Terry laughed and speared the olive in her martini.

“What shall we drink to?”

Partridge reached for his glass. “I have one. Let’s drink to agents who keep their mouths sealed and don’t confide in fellow agents.”

“Ouch,” said Solo.

They each sipped their drinks. Partridge cocked an eye at Geraldine Terry.

“And you, my girl. Back to the States?”

She looked sober for an instant and then it passed.

“Yes, I’m afraid so. I have to check back to the Pentagon by Friday.”

“We have two whole days, then,” Solo reminded her, staring at her evenly across the rim of his glass. “That can be a lifetime when the people are right.”

Before she could answer, a white-jacketed house boy appeared at Partridge’s elbow. The Englishman scanned him dourly.

“Well, garçon?”

“Pardon,” the Frenchman apologized. “Is this gentleman with you Mr. Napoleon Solo?”

Solo tensed. He suddenly had the old feeling of the world closing in again, enfolding him. Trouble never knew the time of day, the hour or the minute.

“Yes,” he said tightly. “I’m Napoleon Solo.”

The houseboy smiled. “Phone call, sir. Long distance. A Mr. Alexander Waverly. He said it was urgent—”

The man from U.N.C.L.E. kissed Jerry Terry on the cheek as he walked swiftly by her to take the call.