"And Sinanju is a village on a bay. It will go before Paris."
Suddenly the room was filled with shattered console, broken drums, parts resembling shrapnel. In a smoking heap, the beams were done for.
The American monster was gasping for breath. The Oriental's kimono was wet with perspiration. "Good-bye, treasure of Sinanju. Thank you, Remo," said Chiun.
"Stand down your missiles, Russian," said Remo.
"Of course. Why not? We never wanted a war."
"You did well enough for someone who didn't want one," said Remo. But he insisted on waiting for verification that the missiles had been stood down.
"I am trusting you not to build another one of these weapons."
"Big deal, trust," said Remo. "Why would we want to destroy ourselves, too?"
"For me, it is trust. You are the first one I have ever trusted, monster. And I trust you because you know no fear. You have no need to lie to me. So be it."
When verification came from the American satellites and was transmitted through Smith to Remo, Remo allowed as how the deal was done, and hoped they would never fight again.
"Not with those missiles. They are so crude that, once stood down, they can never be used again. It was a very raw button," said Zemyatin.
"You mean on that order, the new missiles are down forever?"
"Forever," said Zemyatin.
And on that, the American he trusted said softly: "Thanks, sweetheart. And I am the first you ever trusted?"
"The first since I was a young man. Yes," said Zemyatin at the irony of that first person being an American enemy.
"You lose," said Remo, taking out Zemyatin's frontal lobe with a simple precise backhand that left the front of the face work for the wax embalmers of the Kremlin if they ever wanted to stick what was left in a museum alongside Lenin and Stalin.
Zemyatin could not in the least have improved America's position anymore by living.
"Done," said Remo.
"Not done," said Chiun, who understood the move Remo had made against the Russian to be correct.
The important thing was that the treasure of the House of Sinanju had been lost, lost because Remo had failed to join Chiun in favor of running after white interests. The least Remo could do to partially make up for that lack of gratitude was to write in his own hand a small sentence saying that he very well could have had a Korean mother because he didn't know who his mother was, being an orphan.
"I can't do that, Little Father," said Remo. "I am who I am. And that's it."
"Only a white would be so ungrateful as to not admit he was a Korean," said Chiun.
THE END
* * *
Aftermath: Reemer Bolt went on to become president of a major corporation on the strength of a resume that showed he had been responsible for a fifty-million-dollar project with international ramifications both scientific and commercial. Guy Philliston, of the top-secret British intelligence organ called Source, was called in to handle another problem. According to the Americans, the Russians had placed a mole high up in British intelligence. The man was of a better British family, believed to be homosexual, and of course a total traitor to his country and the whole Western world. Philliston's only comment on getting the assignment to ferret out this blighter was: "Hardly narrows it down, you know."