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"A snack."

Chiun's wizened cheeks puffed out in indignation. "Remo!"

"Sorry, Little Father."

As Remo watched, Delpha squared her wan shoulders and began to chant, "Max Pax Fax. Spirits of darkness, dispel before my feminine talismans."

She threw up her arms. Nothing happened, except that Remo reached up to pinch his nose. The toadstool odor was there again. He realized it was coming from under Delpha's armpits.

"Is it working?" Cheeta breathed.

Remo looked up. He saw a gray-streaked pigeon attempt to land on one of the trees that decorated the lower setbacks of the Tower and fall through, only to jump out of the trunk in a scattering of frantic wings. "No."

Delpha frowned. "My female powers are not strong enough."

"Tell that to my aching nose," Remo muttered.

"Is there anything I can do, as a female?" Cheeta called.

Delpha looked back over her shoulder.

"Do you shave your armpits?"

"What kind of question is that?" Cheeta wondered.

"Do you?"

"Of course."

"Then you are powerless," Delpha said flatly.

Remo looked at Chiun. "Anything about this you care to explain to a skeptic?"

Chiun sniffed. "It is white magic. It may not be as good as yellow."

"Yellow couldn't smell as bad, that's for sure."

Delpha continued to hold her pose. She stood rigid and unmoving. In the distance, the cacophony of New York traffic noise came and went. It was quieter than usual, and had an almost frightened quality.

Remo noticed that the crawling fireman had finally reached police lines, and was being lifted over the barbed-wire barrier by helpful hands.

His "Thank God!" was probably audible in Hoboken.

When Remo's attention returned to Delpha Rohmer, he saw nothing that made any more sense than before.

Curious, he moved to a better angle.

He saw that under Delpha's armpits were two clots of black hair, thick enough to pass for twin muskrats.

"Is there a name for what you're trying to do?" Remo called. "Or are you just imitating Elsa Lancaster?"

"It is hair magic."

"Hair magic?"

"A potent talisman," Delpha explained, straining to keep her arms high. "Modern women have been brainwashed into shaving their bodily hair."

"I heard it had something to do with good hygiene."

"It is a scheme by men to deprive them of their most attractive lures, their greatest power, before which most gods and male demons are powerless. Delilah understood this."

"Yours aren't exactly raising the dead here," Remo pointed out.

"You are right. I must unveil my most fearsome talisman." Her hands dropped to her shoulder straps.

Remo's eyes went surprised. "Not-"

"I must be skyclad!"

At that, Delpha shrugged her shoulders and her black spidery gown slipped to the sidewalk, revealing a third muskrat.

Remo looked to Chiun. The Master of Sinanju brought one sleeve of his kimono up to his eyes to shield them from the white woman's shameful nakedness. Cheeta was positioning the cameraman and hitting the zoom button.

Remo decided to withdraw.

"Nice show, huh, Little Father?" he asked dryly.

"Why is she naked?" Chiun asked.

"She's trying to flash the goat's head into surrendering."

"Ah, Flash Magic. I have heard of this. Is it working?"

"Well, she is turning bluer."

The Master of Sinanju stole a peek, then quickly looked away again. "Remo, this is embarrassing."

"Glad you've come around to my way of thinking. How about we ditch the two dips and get down to work?"

"Cheeta is not a dip," Chiun sniffed.

"Okay. She's a dipette. My offer stands."

"Quiet," Cheeta hissed. "You'll ruin the magic spell. "

"Perish the thought," Remo said. To Chiun he added, "I rest my case."

Remo folded his arms. "Then I wait here until the moon turns blue."

Chiun looked up. The moon was high overhead, very full and not at all blue.

"It is no such color," he sniffed.

"That isn't the moon I meant," Remo said, pointing to Delpha's pale, goose-bumpy backside.

Chiun hid his face anew.

Remo was saying, "Give it up, Delpha," when the helicopter arrived with a noisy clattering.

"Get a shot of that!" Cheeta told her cameraman, slapping him on his head like a spotter signaling a mortar man to fire.

The cameraman pointed his videocam up at the descending helicopter, an eggshell-colored Bell Ranger with a red stripe.

It settled into the middle of Fifth Avenue, revealing the world-famous BCN logo.

Cheeta screeched, "You idiot! That's us!"

"But you said-"

"Never mind," Cheeta said, rushing to meet the pilot, who was braving the prop wash to come in her direction. He actually saluted before speaking.

"Miss Ching. The station just received a call from Randal Rumpp. He's offering you an exclusive if you'll meet with him."

"But we can't get in!" Cheeta fumed. "We tried."

"The news director said to do whatever you had to.

Cheeta looked at the pilot, at the helicopter, and back at the streaked-by-sunset Rumpp Tower.

She wrapped her bloodred fingernails about the pilot's tie. "How do you feel about flying into Randal Rumpp's office?" "Miss Ching?" Cheeta grinned like a happy moray eel. "I promise you the ride of your life," she said.

Chapter 12

Randal Rumpp was explaining to the mayor of New York City the facts of life.

"Look, you can't collect property taxes on it, you can't move it, you can't sell it, and let's face it, Mr. Mayor, you run the greatest city on the face of the earth. Do you want an embarrassment like a sixty-eight-story skyscraper that no one can enter on your hands?"

The mayor's voice was suspicious and taken aback at the same time. A unique combination.

"What do you . . . propose?" the mayor asked.

"You waive all property taxes for the next hundred years, provide the manpower and the material, and I'll build a new, bigger, and brassier Rumpp Tower on this exact spot," Randal Rumpp said quickly.

"Can you . . . do that?"

"Why not? You can't touch, taste, or feel the current one. It's as useless as tits on an avocado. So we build up from the current foundation, and through it. Make it taller. Of course, I'll need a piece of all frontages."

"Why?"

"We gotta bury the old facade, don't we? You don't want it to show through. It'll ruin the effect. I think the new one should be green. Like glass money."

While the mayor was digesting all this, Randal Rumpp took a sip of Marquis Louis Roederer Cristal champagne from a Baccarat crystal goblet with the name "Rumpp" carved into the base. It was the only one of its kind. Rumpp had had two made, but upon delivery smashed one, in order to make the survivor more valuable. In another year, Randal Rumpp figured, it would be a collector's item and he had plans to move it through Sotheby's.

The mayor's voice came again.

"What about the people trapped inside? What about you?"

"I'm working on that, Mr. Mayor. It took a lot to pull this off. It's going to take a lot to undo it."

"This is insane, Rumpp. You can't get away with something this big."

"Everything I ever got away with in my life was big," said Randal Rumpp coolly, draining the goblet. "Get back to me when you have something I can work with."

He hit the OFF button on the cellular, then bounced out of his seat, humming.

"It's working!" he chortled. "It's really, truly working! I'm going to get a higher tower, and I won't even have to pay for it. This will be the deal of the century!"

In the outer reception room, a phone rang. Rumpp marched in and confronted his executive assistant.

"I thought I told you to leave every phone off the hook!" he snapped.