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He stood up, saying, "Enough. It is time to yudge the tyrant. I say, 'Death to Castro!' " He turned his thumb downward. "What say jou, members of the yury?"

One by one, the others followed suit. Mongo turned his white-gloved thumb downward. Dingbat dropped a webbed hand. Wacky Wolf lowered his shortest claw.

The verdict was unanimous. Except for Uncle Sam Beasley. His thumb was occupied at the moment, as he continued to squeeze the white man's fist into submission.

"I say when we vote!" he snarled.

"We are wasting time," Revuelta complained. "We must launch our attack. My Ultima Hora jearn to liberate Cuba!"

"No," said Chiun. "They writhe and groan in the holds below. I have accepted their surrender."

"Bullshit!" said Beasley hotly. He squeezed his unfeeling hand in anger, producing a yelp from Remo.

"Look," Revuelta protested. "I am to be the new El Presidente!"

"Think again," snapped Beasley. "You're just a puppet. I'll pull the strings and you'll dance."

Revuelta looked horrified. "What are jou saying to me?"

"And if you get out of line," Beasley added, "I'll just have my Concepteers make an animatronic copy of you. One that won't get out of line."

"Jou are a fraud!" cried Revuelta, reaching for Beasley's throat. "Jou-"

Beasley was too quick. With his free hand, he whipped off his eye patch. Dr. Osvaldo Revuelta's face was less than a foot in front of the exposed electronic eye. When it exploded like the biggest flashbulb in the universe, he was looking directly at it.

Revuelta reeled back, howling and covering his eyes.

"Blind! I am blinded!"

He stumbled in the direction of the Master of Sinanju, who calmly tripped him and stepped on his writhing neck. A dull crunching came, and Revuelta was still after a moment's busy quivering.

Remo Williams drained the pain coming down his right wrist into the rest of his body, diffusing it, absorbing it. His teeth ground together. Sweat was coming off his brow. He was regaining control. With his free hand, he clutched the tablecloth. It slipped off the table.

And he happened to see a black box under the long banquet table. It looked like a boom box, except there was no speaker or tape deck. But there were lights and digital displays.

One continued to count off numbers sequentially until it got to 26. Then the indicator reset to zero, and started over.

A spectrographic indicator coursed up and down a calibrated scale. It matched exactly the humming vibration coming from the chest of Uncle Sam.

Through the receding pain, Remo Williams made a connection. Between the bar and the heart hum. Between the number twenty-six and the human heart.

He steeled himself for more agony. And reached under the table for the black box.

"What the hell are you doing down there?" Sam Beasley roared suddenly.

Remo's fingers touched something. Then the pain came slamming back, and he was being hoisted off his knees.

But not before he turned a dial.

Remo was lifted face-to-face with Sam Beasley. The man's stale breath was in his face, filling him with revulsion. But Remo had already made up his mind. He knew what he had to do.

This was not Uncle Sam. Not the Uncle Sam of his childhood. Maybe that Uncle Sam had never really existed. Maybe he was just as much a fantasy as Mongo Mouse. Whatever he was, he had to die. Even if the act would haunt Remo Williams for the rest of his life.

Remo's free hand formed the tip of a spear. He willed his fingers into absolute rigidity. There was no telling what they would have to penetrate-soft loose flesh or armor plate. He brought the hand up with deliberate control. He would have only one shot. It had to be good.

Uncle Sam Beasley snarled at him. Then, his face went pale. His mouth opened and closed spasmodically. His good eye rolled up into his head. The other, a machined steel orb with a pulsing red light in the center, began to dim.

"You bastard!" he hissed, and the red pinpoint pupil exploded in a laser burst designed to destroy the sight of anyone looking into it.

Remo, hearing a cybernetic relay click, shut his eyes a split-second ahead of the red-hot flash.

The light seared through his eyelids, and his vision became a very shocking pink color riddled with delicate red veinwork.

Sam Beasley emitted a strangled sound and began to wheeze like an accordion. His vise-like hand stopped squeezing Remo's hand, and he began to gasp and flail with his free hand. It reached up for his own throat.

And while he was doing that, Remo reached out blindly and pried the hydraulic fingers free of his own hand. One snapped off.

He stepped back, clutching his mangled fingers in a fist.

The Master of Sinanju rushed up to meet him. He grasped Remo's hand, turned it over and back, examining it critically.

"I do not think it is broken," he muttered.

"I can't tell," Remo gasped.

"There is one way to find out," said Chiun, suddenly unbending Remo's clenched fist.

Remo screamed louder than ever.

Chiun beamed back. "The bones work. It is fine."

Which was more than could be said for Uncle Sam Beasley. He lay on the ground, thrashing and gasping like a beached fish. His teeth chattered as if from cold. He was turning blue.

His assorted creations hovered around him, crying plaintively.

"Uncle Sam! Uncle Sam! Don't leave us! Not again! We need you, Uncle Sam!"

The Master of Sinanju swept into the middle of the creatures, scattering them and crying, "Begone, vermin!"

He looked down upon the face of Uncle Sam Beasley and, with an extended fingernail, imploded the electronic laser eye.

Uncle Sam paid the maiming no heed. He continued to writhe in his slow death-throes. His peg leg pounded the floor like a slow drumstick. His voice was a croak. "Maus . . . Maus . . . shield . . . mouse."

"What's he saying?" Remo asked.

"He is calling for someone," Chiun said slowly.

Remo listened. "Sounds like 'mouse.' Must mean Mongo. Where is he, anyway?"

The Master of Sinanju raked the demoralized jury with cold eyes. He pointed an accusing finger at Mongo Mouse.

"You! Remain where you are, if you value your scalp. I know how treacherous is your kind."

Mongo Mouse proffered open hands, in a clear gesture of compliance.

The President of Cuba cautiously approached. He pointed to the box. "That is what is keeping him alive. We must destroy it." And he lifted a combat boot.

The Master of Sinanju swept a hand out and found the sensitive back of the Cuban leader's knee. He used his fingernails to inflict maximum pain on the Maximum Leader.

And the Maximum Leader of Cuba hopped away, holding his leg and howling Spanish invective through his beard.

Remo looked down. "We can't let him die, can we?"

"No," said Chiun.

Remo knelt and examined the box. The digital readout was counting only up to 7 before resetting itself. Remo touched the dial he had hit before. He turned it one way. The number reset to 0, and Sam Beasley began to quiver and gasp for air.

"Oops!" Remo turned it the other way. The man began to breathe, jerkily but more regularly. The number cycle climbed to 15.

Remo experimented with the heart cycle until he had found a setting-19-that kept Beasley on his back and breathing, but still helpless.

He stood up. "I think that does it."

The President of Cuba limped up. His face was pale and incredulous.

"Jou have saved my Revolution," he whispered hoarsely. "This lunatic was going to try me for imaginary crimes."

Chiun eyed him coldly. "Speak to me not of your crimes, preempter of beauty."

"Que?"

"He means," Remo said dryly, "you knocked his favorite TV show off the air."

The Maximum Leader of Cuba blinked. "Are jou all mad? First this one complains that I am stealing his cartoons. Now jou are angry because I have interrupted a mere television program."