"Forty-five?" Illya looked astounded. "Twenty, perhaps."
"Forty-five-twenty-four-thirty-six," Solo said smiling. The girl smiled too, unwillingly. "That's better, Mam'selle. I wondered when you'd admit to speaking English."
"M'sieur Caillou still doesn't arrive until eleven," she said.
"We are old friends," Solo said. "Would he mind our waiting in his office?"
He walked past her and opened the door. She caught at his arm and he heard her sharp intake of breath.
Her gasp matched his own.
In the inner office, staring at him, stood Albert, Gizelle and a young blonde woman who appeared possessed of more physical assets than the World Bank itself.
The blonde also sported a swollen, purpled eye, and her left arm rode a sling. In her other hand she held a small, snubbed .25 caliber pistol.
"Do come on in, Mr. Solo," she said.
Across her shoulder, Solo spoke five sharp words: "Get out of here, Illya."
Illya beat a hasty retreat toward the connecting office door, but Solo barred their way.
The blonde said, "Don't force me to shoot you, Mr. Solo. Because of you, I'm lucky to be alive."
"You don't drive well, do you?" Solo said.
"Don't push it," she warned.
Albert and Gizelle caught him roughly, pulling him into the inner office.
Solo saw in surprise that the secretary followed.
"I don't understand this," she said shakily. "I don't know these people."
"You don't have to know us, Yvonne," the blonde said. "Just keep your mouth closed and do as you're told."
Yvonne sagged against the door, watching them.
The blonde nodded toward Solo. "Search him, Albert."
Albert moved warily around Solo, gripping his arms, pinning him helplessly. He motioned to Gizelle, who removed Solo's gun from its shoulder holster and then retreated as if relieved to be out of Solo's reach. Gizelle had learned one thing this morning: a healthy respect for her enemy.
"That's all," Gizelle said.
"Secure him," the blonde ordered.
"You'll look pretty wild walking me through the Rothschild bank building in handcuffs," Solo said.
She did not smile. "Allow us to fret over details."
With Albert holding Solo, Gizelle moved in warily. She clipped chained cuffs to Solo's wrists. The chains in turn were fastened to a metal belt about his waist, concealed by his jacket. The hidden chains permitted little movement of his arms but were unnoticeable unless one searched purposely.
"Ingenious," Solo said.
"You'll find we get everything we want—eventually," the blonde said. "All right. Let's go. You walk out between Albert and Gizelle. The first move you make, I fire this gun into your spine. You have a great deal more to lose at this moment than we do."
The corridor was vacant. The blonde nodded and Albert nudged Solo forward.
Solo walked between the hoodlums, aware the blonde was immediately behind, the small automatic concealed by her purse.
The elevator opened. The operator looked bored. "Down?"
"Ground floor," the blonde said.
Solo took one last check of the corridor. There was no sign of Illya. He sighed heavily, entered the ornate brass cage between Albert and Gizelle.
The blonde stood behind the operator, some feet from Solo.
Solo watched the floor-indicator, saw the red light calling for a stop at the third floor. He set himself.
As the operator lifted the handle to stop at the third floor, Solo brought his hand forward as far as the metal permitted, then slapped backward upon Albert's gloves as hard as possible.
His hunch was correct. Albert cried out in sudden pain. Gizelle screamed in reaction, lunging back away from Solo.
Solo snagged the tails of Gizelle's jacket, wrenching her between himself and the armed blonde.
The lift stopped, but before the door slid open the blonde acted.
She jabbed the gun in the operator's back. "Don't open that door—"
"But, madame—"
She pressed the gun harder. "This is police business. You will proceed to the ground floor. At once, without stopping."
By now, Albert had his agony under control. He held his painful hands out at his side, but used his bulky body to bull Solo back against the wall.
"Now, Mr. Solo," the blonde said. "What have you gained with your foolish games?"
Solo shrugged. "A good question. Unfortunately, I have no good answers."
At eleven Lester Caillou entered his inner office, accompanied by his secretary.
Caillou stopped so abruptly just within his door that Yvonne walked into him, and flustered, cried out apologetically.
Illya Kuryakin perched at ease in the window seat beyond Caillou's desk. He swung his legs, watching them with intent interest.
Caillou gazed at him blankly, and then peered at his secretary. "Who is this man, Miss Petain? What is the meaning of this intrusion?"
Yvonne Petain was unable to reply. Flustered and unnerved by this incredible morning, she burst into tears.
"There you are," Illya said. "That explains everything."
Caillou stared a moment at his secretary, then he said placatingly, "It's all right, Yvonne. I will call you later. You may go now."
Yvonne stopped crying, gazing at her employer, her eyes red-rimmed. "You don't wish an alarm?"
"Of course not. This is no time for notoriety. I'm quite capable of handling this young man." He turned again toward Illya as the secretary closed the door behind her. There was still no faint light of recollection in his dark eyes. "How did you get in here?"
Now Illya stood up, finding that he gazed at Caillou as puzzedly as Yvonne had. First, Caillou seemed at ease, master of all situations as Illya remembered him from the wild days in Iran.
Yet hadn't Solo pegged Caillou's behavior at Orly Airport as surreptitious, the actions of a man sick with fright'?
And most mystifying of all, why couldn't Caillou remember him? If it hadn't been for him and Solo, Caillou's carcass would now be rotting under a few feet of desert sand.
Still, the shaky condition of world finance, of the World Bank itself, could explain erratic behavior, even Caillou's not recognizing him at once, unexpectedly confronting him in his own office.
"Why shouldn't I get in here?" Illya asked, watching the banker. The years had made inroads. The thin face was lined, the hair grayer, the eyes less lively. "In France one can always find someone to bribe, eh?"
Caillou did not smile.
Illya laughed. "And anyhow, an old Arab buddy of yours from firing squad days like me—who would be heartless enough to deny me entrance through your private exit?"
Caillou studied him intently. A look of relief washed across his face. He came around the desk, hand extended. "Of course! How stupid of me! Of course, you're Il1—Illya—"
"Kuryakin," Illya said warmly, shaking hands.
"Kuryakin, the man who saved me from a firing squad. How good it is to see you again, ma chere ami."
He nodded toward a leather chair pulled near his ornate desk. He placed his hat upon a hat tree, studied himself in the dark mirror, sat behind his desk.
"You met another old friend a few nights ago, Lester," Illya said. "At Orly Airport. You didn't recognize him, either."
Caillou appeared to search desperately in the files of his mind. "Solo—Napoleon Solo?"
Illya smiled. "He was upset when you brushed him off."