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"Do not touch it," Chiun warned.

"Don't plan to," Remo said. "Whoever took it, I hope they were wearing rubber gloves."

Chapter 43

Dawn Summens felt strange. Her cheeks and mouth were getting numb. She kept rubbing her face to stimulate circulation. Her lips were dried out and felt cracked, and she wetted them again and again. Something on her face. Gritty.

Even at just ten miles per hour, she was having difficulty controling the golf cart. She drove out of town, swerving through bands of fleeing tourists. Everybody was headed for the docks where the cruise ships landed their tour groups. Grom would be there, and she had plans for Grom. Reassuringly she nudged the purse with her arm again, just to make sure it was still there.

A curve in the road became a major problem when she found her hands weren't responding to her brain's instructions. She gripped the steering wheel, but it refused to budge until she leaned her entire body. The cart swerved through the curve, but now the road curved back the other way. Dawn fought to steer through it. Her hands wouldn't work. She tried to lift her foot from the accelerator pedal but found it stuck there.

The golf cart puttered off the road and into a clump of weeds, where a thicket nudged it to a stop. Dawn fell on her side across the front seats. She tried to sit up, but her body wouldn't listen to her.

"Hello? I need help." She wanted to shout, but it came out a thin croak. "Hello?"

She could still move her hands a little and she extended her arm with great effort, only to find that the horn on the steering wheel was beyond her reach. Minutes later she could no longer move a muscle, and her mouth would no longer vocalize. She stared at the dashboard and the weeds above her and tried to think. She was lucid, but she was paralyzed. What was wrong?

Of course. The Union Island Blue. She had touched it. That was a big no-no. She had licked crumbs off her lips. And her body was still burdened with her earlier dose of GUTX synthesis. The charcoal would have passed through her system, and the counteractives she injected wore off hours ago.

A guaneurotetrodotoxin overdose meant a descent into living death, in which she would see, hear and feel even while her body ceased functioning. Finally the lungs would go slack. Unconsciousness would come as her brain starved for oxygen, and finally it would shut down.

Unable to thrash or scream or fight, she could do nothing except lie there and wait for it to happen. Her only consolation was that death should come quickly. But it didn't.

Chapter 44

Chief Spence jogged to the president, his clothes flapping in the wash of the helicopter rotor blades. "It's over!"

"What's over?" Greg Grom shouted above the roar as the big transport chopper settled on the helipad. "The crisis! My men are combing the town. The mob has been wiped out."

"Wiped out? Who wiped them out?"

"I guess it was the citizens," Chief Spence said vaguely. He avoided telling the president the truth about the dead-eyed man who had run alongside his squad car and matched the description of one of the two said to have wiped out the mob.

"I'm going anyway," Grom declared.

"Don't you think you should stick around?" the chief asked. "The news will be all over this place in an hour."

"I don't care," Grom said nervously. "I have to go!" Chief Spence picked up a megaphone and began telling the tourists to turn around and go back to their hotels. The danger was past. Evacuation was unnecessary. The vacationers were complaining but relieved. Greg Grom didn't feel relief. Not yet.

Finally the emergency transport chopper swayed and lifted off of the helipad. The lights of the cruise ship dock fell away and the blackness of the nighttime Caribbean Sea cushioned them. They'd be in St. Thomas in no time.

Somebody knocked. "Hello? Can I come in?"

It was him. The one with the dead eyes was standing on the landing skid with his face pressed against the glass. "Fine. I'll let myself in."

The rush of air filled the cabin and the dead-eyed man didn't close the door behind him.

"Who are you?" Greg Grom demanded.

"Remo...somebody. I forget exactly. Why do you care?"

"Are you going to assassinate me?"

"Oh, for sure. But first-" Remo grabbed the small carry-on that was Grom's only luggage "-is this all of it? The poison?"

"Yes. Take it. It's all yours. It'll make you rich and powerful!"

"Like you?" Remo asked with a chuckle. "No, thanks." He hoisted the bag out the open door, and it tumbled three thousand feet into the sea.

"No!"

"Don't fret about it, Prez. You're going with it."

Remo grabbed Grom by the back of the neck and walked him to the open door.

"No!" Grom shouted again. This time it was a long, long "no" that ended with a splash.

The copilot burst into the passenger compartment. "What the hell is going on?"

"My friend," Remo said, "I'm just figuring it all out myself."

With a little persuasion, the pilot and copilot agreed to turn the helicopter around.

REMO FOUND the suite empty when he awoke in the morning. He lifted Chiun's trunks and wandered downstairs, past the all-you-can-eat breakfast where the sleep-deprived vacationers were having it out with the staff.

A woman in a floral swimsuit under a souvenir T-shirt was leading the resistance movement. "What do you mean no hash browns! How can you not have hash browns?"

The staff was confused about this, too, and tried to explain what they thought had happened.

"Stolen?" the woman cried. "Your hash browns were stolen? Nobody steals hash browns."

"Well, those were awfully good hash browns," an elderly woman in the crowd spoke up, and she was met with fervent agreement from the others.

"Was it you who stole them?" the outspoken lady demanded of the old woman.

"No. I was just saying they were worth stealing."

"It was you!"

The outspoken lady had to be restrained.

Remo found Chiun in the lobby, talking to the big blue parrot.

"It was Master Lu who actually decided to try to eat parrots. Lu made several bad decisions. For some reason he thought the parrot flesh might be suitable fare, comparable to duck."

The macaw shifted uneasily on its branch.

"Of course," Chiun continued, "those were ugly little gray parrots. The Romans imported them from Africa. You look like a much meatier specimen."

The macaw gave a small squawk and hopped several branches away.

"Finally found somebody you can win an argument with?" Remo asked.

"I wondered if you would be sleeping until noon. May we leave now?"

"The sooner the better. Say goodbye to your buddy."

"Perhaps I should bring it along."

"I am not going to eat parrot," Remo insisted.

"I did not intend to share it with you," Chiun replied. "But I think not. Farewell, ugly bird."

The macaw hopped forward again and cocked its great head with its big yellow eye patches. Chiun stopped. Remo watched the two of them regarding each other.

"Hello?" Remo asked.

Chiun held up a hand for silence, which lasted a full minute. Remo stood there impatiently with the trunks balanced on his shoulders.

"Ah, well, goodbye," Chiun said finally.

The parrot squawked. "Bye-bye! See you soon!" They strolled out of the open air lobby, and Remo began loading the trunks into the first taxi in the lineup. All the while he heard the raucous voice of the bird drifting out. "Bye-bye! See you soon! Bye-bye! See you soon!"

"Hey, you weren't thinking of bringing it home as a pet were you?" Remo demanded.

"Of course not," Chiun said from inside the cab.

"Bye-bye! See you soon! Bye-bye! See you, Chiun! Bye-bye! See you soon!"

Remo got in. "Well, you sure seem friendly with the thing. It even knows your name."

"I did not tell it my name."