“And harass the foe from the rear,’. Joan said. “1111 requisition Illya’s inJT1unition —it was with the rest of his things in-the closet. I seem to recall a back stairs we might try…”

She cas t about th rough a coup le of corr i do rs .then nodded. l’Up here. ”

she said. “We shouldn’t take the light past here. There’s a door right at the top of the stairs. second flight. Let me go first.”

She led the way up narrow wooden steps and around a corner. The lantern was lost behind them. but gunfire from ahead echoed between the close plaster walls as they crept upward.

The door swung quietly open into chaos. Fumes reeked through the hall and guns barked on either side. “Here we go.” said Napoleon. “Stick close behind me. We’ll use silencers. snipe from cover and keep shifting around.

They may not even tumble we’re here.”

“A beautiful thought.”

“And remember. Joan —I love you.”

“I love you. Napoleon.”

“Now —let’s go!”

They ducked out the door and down the hall. A bulky desk athwart the corridor accorded them momentary shelter. and Napoleon took the opportunity to assemble his U.N.C.L.L. Special. He swiftly unscrewed the flash-shield and replaced it with the long barrel extension, drew the Bushnell Phantom 1.3X15

scope from its velvet-lined sleeve. slipped it into its shoe and tightened.

the locking screw. snapped the collapsing telescoping stock into its slot in the butt, pulled it out to full length and twisted it to lock it open. then folded out the shoulder-plate to latch at right angles. Finally he slipped out the eight-round magazine —still with five shots left —and replaced it with the sixteen-round clip. He snuggled the lean, gracefully ugly weapon to his shoulder and peered through its scope into the smoky darkness beyond.

Concussion shattered through a wall seventy feet behind them, and they ducked against flying rocks. A dozen Thrush Guards came running out of the smoke, and were cut down by steady fire from Napoleori and Joan. An automatic rifle snarled briefly from the other side and they dropped to the floor. swinging their muzzles in that direction. A moment later a spray of slugs blasted splinters out of their desk, and Napoleon broke into a sprint across the hall to an alcove already occupied bya bronze statue on a four-foot pedestal; shrinking behind it into the curve he directed one-handed shots into a pillared doorway down the hall.

Joan leaped to her feet and dashed along the wall to the next open door. where she paused and snapped a slug towards the end of the hall.

Instantly Napoleon moved again, directly toward her target, as chips of cement splattered beside him and battered slugs whined away into the flame-tinted darknes’s. As he approached her line of fire. she too broke from cover and followed him in a zig-zag dash into the vaulted room which opened before them.

Ruddy light danced on the domed ceiling of a generous rotunda dthrough

a half-circle of windows looking out over the lagoon. Booths line the wide walls. and large comfortable furniture and extinguished lamps dotted the floor. Men crouched behind shattered windows, firing and ducking back as bullets dug into the walls or splintered the edge of glass-sharded panes.

“This is the Library,” said Joan as they crouched together again behind a horL“ehair sofa. “We’re at the front of the house. facing east.

close to the south corner. There’s a big flight of steps to the porch just outside here.”

“Sounds like roost of the fighting is around on the side of the house.

Let’s reduce the local opposition.”

Five Guards fell among the defenders within a minute before the survivors began to react. Hapoleon and Joan ducked as they saw silhouettes tunn infrared sniperscopes in their directions.

“Stay low,” Napoleon whispered. MTheir rifles are sighted for a hundred yards. They’ll shoot high.”

“Check.”

A voice to their left yelled something and a slug burst through the sofa from that side. They’vanished ljke rabbits and fired futilely in the direction of the shout. Joan replaced her first clip and claimed another Guard with her next shot; they then had to move again. towards the sheltered rear conner of the room.

Napoleon dodged across an open space and around an armchair. and something like a truck bumper hit him in the side of the head. It knocked him sprawling across the polished floor, helpless before the impact, until he skidded half under a divan. He twisted, dragging his right arm around from under him. Half dazed, he saw a foot descending towards his face. saw his own hands grab for the foot and twist. He heard the Thrush yelp as he was flipped over backwards, his head hitting the padded arm of a chair.

Napoleon steadied himself against the divan as he tried to stand. His attacker rolled smoothly to all fours and flowed to his feet, pulling a long murderous Bowie knife from what must have been a specially designed sheath under his jacket. Seeing the gleam of steel in the uncertain light, Napoleon recognised the lean scarred face grinning like a skull a few feet away and realised exactly who his opponent was: Kiazim Refet, Thrush’s number one assassin. Illya had met him in Australia and escaped with his life —with a little help. Now it was Napoleon’s turn.

Refet crouched, shifting gently from side to side, the blade floating above his right hand. Napoleon felt instinctively into his defensive stance as adrenalin blazed into his system and focussed his clearing mind on the man facing him. He knew that at that moment, wielding twelve inches of steel, Kiazim Refet was the most dangerous man in the world. And he knew that unless he made the first move he would be dead in moments.

Napoleon feinted, kicking sharply out with his right foot and switching it aside as Kiazim slashed down with the vicious blade. As it flicked through the space beside his leg, he lashed up with a full kick, catching the Turk under his chin and driving him bac’k against the wall.

Refet rebounded like a rubber tire and lurched towards him, knife flailing as he recovered his balance. Solo stepped back, and his heel turned behind him on the stock of his fallen U.N.C.l.E. Special —his only possible defense. Swiftly he shrugged off his shoulder rig, catching the leather loop in his right hand, and whipped the empty holster forward as Kiazim lunged, slashing it across his face. Blood spurted just above the Turk’s left eye and he ducked back a step, half-blinded.

Napoleon dived to grab the Special lying at his feet as Kiazim leaped towards him again, his face a gory mask of hate. Evidently the Turk’s depth rception was impaired, for he struck two inches short as Napoleon snatched the Spial from the floor to catch the blade between the ‘scope and barrel of his gun and twisted the knife forward and down, out of Kiazill’s g-rasp.

Uncoiling like a spring. Napoleon drove forward from his crouch with every ounce of effort in his body behind the stiff-anmed U.N.C.l.E. Special.

slamming it up into the bridge of the Turk’s nose. Cartilage crunched as it burst like a pomegranate and blood gouted over the pistol.

With a hoarse groan, Kiazim staggered bacK, clutching his mutilated face with his left hand, snatching Solo’s flimsy turtleneck with his right.

Unable to swing his long barrel around to fire at this close range, Napoleon brought the gun down across the hairy arm with a dull slap. Kiazim shrieked as his hand was torn free of Napoleon’s shirt and flopped limply at the end of a splintered wrist.

Napoleon reversed his’ swing and launched the gun upwards a~ain with a force born of sheer terror; Kiazim, in a last desperate move, lashed out with a vicious, shattering kick across Napoleon’s right knee just as the heavy butt of the U.N.C.L.E. Special smashed into his nose again, driving the broken splinters of bone up into his brain. Both men hit the floor -Napoleon face down, his right leg twisted at an impossible angle under him, and Kiazim Refet on his back a few feet away, dead.