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Then he picked up the pistol and shoved it in his mouth.

The phone rang. Too late, he thought.

But the lure of the instrument that had made him a success was too great. He picked it up and announced his name in a croaking voice.

"Greetings, General Leiber."

"Friend. Er, what do you want?"

"I have been reconsidering. I might be ready to meet with you."

General Leiber let the automatic drop.

"Oh, thank you, thank you, thank you. Now, where and when? I can leave right away."

"Not just yet. I would not consider violating a corporate rule without something in return."

"Name it. Anything."

"I need nerve gas. Perhaps seven hundred liquid gallons of it."

"Nerve ... Oh, God."

"General, are you still there?"

"Yes." The answer was a whisper.

"Can you deliver?"

"Yes. You want nerve gas, you get nerve gas. I'll deliver it personally."

"Not necessary. I will provide a transshipment point. Send it there. I will handle it from there."

"Done. When can we meet?"

"When the cargo reaches its ultimate destination."

"I'll await your callback," said Leiber, hanging up.

He got to his feet. Fate had offered him a second chance. He knew what Friend had meant: when the nerve gas reached its ultimate destination. He meant its target. General Leiber knew that the rain of terror was escalating. And dammit, he wasn't going to chicken out of the fight now.

Not when fate had handed him a way to get directly to the origin of the intercontinental ballistic locomotives. And screw Friend and his crap about a meeting. The bastard might never deliver.

Getting the nerve gas was a snap. The Pentagon had tons of it stockpiled. And General Leiber had sent a thousand sergeants a bottle of Scotch each Christmas for just such a need as this. The stuff was already in transit when Friend called back with the shipment information.

Then General Leiber strapped on his automatic, and, giving his telephone a final contemptuous glance, strode out of his office.

From now on, he was going to act like a real soldier. An InterFriend corporate plane picked up the three coffin-shaped containers in Canada. They were waiting in a deserted airfield exactly as the instructions said.

"That's funny," the pilot said. "What?"

"I see three boxes. There were supposed to be only two. "

"Should I load them or not?"

The pilot shrugged. A shortage would have been a problem. Overage was fine. "Load them," he ordered. As the crewman shoved the third box into the cargo bay, it smashed against the plane wall.

"Careful! Who knows what's inside those things."

In the third box, General Martin S. Leiber allowed himself to breathe again. They had not opened any of the boxes. He was on his way. He prayed for a short trip. He had spent so much time driving the nerve-gas components here that he had forgotten to pick up food for the trip. And he was already hungry.

When word came in on line one that the pickup had been made, Friend arranged to purchase a gas-mask supply house on line three. He then purchased all available stock in public-health-maintenance organizations. He expected to make a windfall when the first gas-laden locomotive came down.

All was going smoothly. There was only one loose end. Chiun had not reported from Stockholm, and the one called Remo refused to answer Dr. Smith's urgent demands that he fly immediately to Gibraltar to handle the nonexistent nuclear-terrorist threat.

There was an 88.2-percent chance that his communicator was supplied by the same manufacturer that had produced the faulty telephone system. Friend logged into memory a corollary to the earlier memo. Replace the communicators. Remo and Chiun had many assignments ahead of them. Friend was already contacting other heads of state who were eager to have the services of the two finest assassins in modern history.

Chapter 30

Remo Williams waited impatiently at the baggage carousal at Kennedy International Airport.

Finally the expensive valise he'd bought in a London gift shop came around. He opened it, extracted the candy-dispenser communicator, and stuffed it into his pants pocket. Then he threw the valise into a wastebasket. Remo didn't care about the valise. He just didn't want to listen to the beeper beeping all the way across the Atlantic. Smith kept trying to reach him. Remo knew that Smith wanted to send him to Gibraltar. Remo also knew that he wasn't going anywhere Smith's silly-ass computer said to go.

Remo rented a car and drove it from the airport. As he sped past one of the terminals, he spotted a familiar figure in a firecracker-red kimono arguing with a skycap. He pulled over and threw open the passenger door.

"Going my way?" Remo asked the Master of Sinanju. Chiun leapt into the seat. Remo took off.

"Smith sent me on a fool's errand," Chiun complained.

"Me too. I think it's that computer's fault."

"Me too. What should we do?"

"What we should have done long ago. Talk to Smith. Man to man."

"I fear he will only listen to that demon machine."

"Not the way we're going to handle it," said Remo, flooring the accelerator.

It was dark when they pulled into the Folcroft gate. Remo parked and they took the elevator to Smith's office. For the millionth time, Remo's beeper signaled. He reached in and shut it off.

"Why do you not crush that annoyance?" Chiun sniffed.

"May need it later."

The cage opened on Smith's floor.

"You take the computer. I'll handle Smith," Remo whispered as they approached Smith's office door.

"Do not hurt him," Chiun warned.

"Right. I don't care what happens to the computer."

"I am glad you said that."

Remo shoved open the door. Smith's haggard and bestubbled face greeted them.

"Remo! Thank God! I've been trying to get both of you. What happened to your communicator?"

"Must be on the fritz," Remo said casually, approaching Smith. "What's up?"

"The Gibraltar situation is critical. The terrorists are threatening to detonate. They have a hydrogen bomb."

"That so?" Remo remarked calmly. In the corner, Chiun was addressing the ES Quantum Three Thousand.

"Hello, machine."

"Hello, Master of Sinanju. I see you are back. Did your trip go well?"

"It was very educational," Chiun replied. "I learned a new, important fact."

"What is that?"

"People will sometimes lie. But not when properly motivated. However, machines are not to be trusted ever."

"I do not follow. More data."

"What are you saying, Master of Sinanju?" Smith asked, frowning.

"I think he's trying to tell you something, Smitty," Remo said. "Better listen."

Chiun spoke without taking his gaze away from the ES uantum Three Thousand.

"I questioned the Swede, Emperor Smith. Under duress, he told me everything."

"Yes?"

"He had nothing to do with the locomotive menace."

"Impossible! ES Quantum Three Thousand, tell him." Friend's electrical synapses quickened. He put all incoming calls on hold. The profit-loss was insignificant compared to the sudden arrival of Remo and Chiun. One was diverting Dr. Smith from the steady stream of crisis updates needed to maintain Smith's nonthreat-factor status. The other was eyeing him critically.

Friend searched memory for the best available defense. And for the first time since the original Friend program had been installed, there was no answer in memory.

Unfortunately for Friend, he had been so preoccupied making money that he had not cleared time to have defenses installed around this current host unit. And so when the Master of Sinanju reached for the plug that provided electricity from a wall outlet, Friend had no recourse but to effect an immediate transfer of intelligence from this host unit.

Friend put in a call to the Montreal auxiliary host unit. But even with speed-of-light program execution, it was not enough.