TITLE: The Night of the Improbability Affair
AUTHOR:
Lady Ra and Joolz
E-MAIL
ADDRESS: ladyra11@yahoo.com
RATING:
NC-17
PAIRING:
Crossover with Wild Wild West and Man From
U.N.C.L.E.: IK/NS, Jim West/Artemus Gordon
EPISODE
WARNING: None
DISCLAIMER:
It all belongs to whoever the heck owns Man From
U.N.C.L.E. and Wild Wild West now. And that's not me. Girl Scout's Honor.
SUMMARY: Loveless uses one of his new machines on Jim
and Artie that thrusts them into the future.
Sequel to: The Night of the Missing Cattle Affair. You might want to read that first so this one
makes sense.
FEEDBACK:
Absolutely. Send feedback to either: ladyra11@yahoo.com or joolz4me@hotmail.com
THANKS: To Morr, Trish and Islaofhope for
beta assistance. What would I do without
you guys?
The Night of the Improbability
Affair
James West
hated Miguelito Loveless with a fiery passion. If he wasn't chained up, he'd have his hands
around the little man's throat in a heartbeat.
But his hands were cuffed, and Voltaire stood over him, watching him like
a vulture. So all Jim could do was watch
Loveless laugh maniacally while Antoinette played the piano in the background in
counterpoint.
Artie was
gone. Loveless had pushed him, bound and
unconscious, through the shimmering circle that was a part of the fiendish
piece of equipment the little scientist's warped mind had created.
"I
call it my probability horizon," Loveless chortled, leaping up and down
with glee. "Who knows where he's
gone. The past, back
with the dinosaurs, or into the future where the world is controlled by my
inventions and I'm famous beyond imagining."
"Bring
him back," Jim said through gritted teeth.
Loveless
clapped his hands. "I can't. That's the exciting part, don't you see? He could be anywhere."
"I'm
going to tear you apart," Jim threatened, meaning it to the bottom of his
heart.
"Now,
don't worry, my dear Mr. West," Loveless said, as if truly consoling
Jim. "I'll be pushing you through,
too." His eyes were gleaming. "Unfortunately, there's no way
back. And based on my probability
formula, you and your friend Artemus Gordon will live
out the rest of your lives in completely different centuries." He let out another burst of laughter, his
hand moving in a rhythmic wave to the music.
"Oh, Antoinette, I like this one."
Jim
wrestled with the cuffs again, desperate to be free. He hated feeling so powerless. The knowledge that Loveless was still alive
because of him made his stomach churn. If he'd known he'd pay for his mercy by
having Artie torn out of his life, he'd have put a bullet through the man's
heart the last time their paths crossed.
He didn't
want to think about where Artie might be right now, his hands bound, knocked
out cold. Fury rose in him again. "You bastard," he snarled at
Loveless.
Loveless
sighed. "Mr. West," he tsked at Jim. "I'm
afraid you're becoming a tiresome guest."
He gestured at his assistant. "Voltaire? I think it's time our guest left." He pursed his lips. "I shall miss you. You've been an entertaining adversary. And in recognition of that fact, I'm willing
to give you a fighting chance."
He held up
the key to the cuffs. "Voltaire? Put this key in the lock. Mr. West can turn it when he arrives." Voltaire took it and did as Loveless asked,
pushing it into the lock of the handcuffs but not turning it.
Jim did his
best to reach for the key, to get free, but Loveless cocked his pistol and
pressed it against his forehead, grinning.
"You see? This is what makes
you such a wonderful foil for me. You
never give up. Because of you I always
have to be thinking five steps ahead.
You've been good for me. I shall
dearly miss you."
Jim lashed
out his leg, hoping to take down the doctor, but Voltaire moved in between them
and took the kick instead. It was like
kicking a tree; Voltaire didn't even seem to notice. He lifted Jim up as if he were a child and
carried him to the machine.
"Bye,
Mr. West," Loveless said with a child-like wave. "Be sure to write." He laughed, his head thrown back in vast
amusement. It was the last thing Jim saw
as he was tossed into the shimmering circle.
It was cold
and hard to breathe and it seemed to take forever but then Jim was thrown out
of the circle into the other side. As he
fell to the ground, he immediately turned the key, releasing the handcuffs and
shoving them in his pocket. He found his
feet, looking around to figure out where the hell he was. Hoping against hope Artie was here, too.
Buildings.
Unbelievably tall buildings. He had to crane his neck to see to the top of
them. It was noisy, too. He took a step toward the sound of voices and
noticed how hard the surface of the ground was under his feet. That was when he saw Artie. Despite the mad doctor's predictions,
Loveless' probability machine had brought them to the same place and the same
time.
Artie was
on the ground, a man standing near him talking into a black object in his hand,
a spiral cord stretched from one end connecting to a large yellow and black…Jim
had no idea what it was. Something for transportation, perhaps.
Jim ran to
Artie, positioning himself between the man and his friend, assessing for
danger. The man acknowledged him with an
apprehensive glance, but turned away, still speaking. Deciding the black object wasn't a weapon,
and the man, at worst, was simply insane, Jim crouched down by Artie, immediately
horrified by what he was seeing.
His friend
was hurt badly. His shoulder was at an
unnatural angle, there was blood bubbling out of his mouth, and Jim could hear
his labored breathing. Artie's hands
were still cuffed behind his back, and his face looked like it had taken the
brunt of his fall.
Jim
scrabbled for the key and unlocked the cuffs, sliding them off Artie. Not that Artie was conscious enough to be
relieved about it; nonetheless, Jim was glad to see them off. Not that it would make any difference. Jim had seen men hurt this badly before, seen
the red-tinged froth coming from their mouth and they always died. Always.
Maybe they'd
stay alive long enough for some butcher masquerading as a doctor to cut them
open, muttering about internal injuries, but the outcome was the same: they
died on the table in excruciating pain.
Kneeling by
his friend, he cupped Artie's bruised cheek in his hand. It seemed inconceivable that this was where
it would end. Jim was paralyzed with
disbelief.
"Jesus,
buddy, he fucking appeared out of nowhere.
I hit him with my cab. You with him? Jesus. I know I shouldn't say anything without my
lawyer but Jesus. I'm sorry, man. Jesus."
Jim looked
up, realized the man was talking to him.
"What?" He knew the
words were English, but somehow it sounded like gibberish. He understood that
the man felt guilty, though, so he growled, "You did this? You killed my
friend?"
The man
didn't answer and his eyes looked a little wild. He said something else into the black object;
it sounded like it might be an address.
Jim paid
more attention to the…cab…but it was like no hansom cab he'd ever seen. In addition to its bright yellow color with
the black markings on it, it was the size of a carriage, but with nothing to
pull it. He ordered the man, "Help
me move him." He couldn't let Artie
die in the middle of a street. He had to
get him somewhere defensible and figure out what to do next.
"No,
don't move him," the man contradicted.
"I'm calling for help right now.
Jesus. This never happened…man,
he came out of nowhere. I mean it. Just, bam, there he was, and bam, I was
hitting him." He gave Jim a good
look. "You guys
actors or something? What's with the
costumes?"
Jim glanced
down at his boots, slim black trousers, white shirt, and red brocade waistcoat
and compared them with what the man was wearing-- loose, faded denim dungarees
and a thin, short-sleeved undershirt with the inexplicable words 'Def Leppard' on the front.
The guy was speaking English but Jim hadn't seen clothes like that worn
in the street anywhere in America or Europe.
Then the man
was speaking again into the black gadget.
"Yeah, yeah, he's hurt bad."
A squawk of unintelligible sound came from the cab interior and he
affected a listening pose. "Yeah,
yeah, I hear it. Okay, thanks. Jesus."
He leaned into an opening in the side of the vehicle and left the black
object inside.
Jim turned
his attention back on his partner. "Artie,"
he said softly, wishing he'd wake up, even though most of him was relieved
Artie was dead to the world and out of pain.
Hearing a high-pitched sound that grew steadily louder, Jim glanced up
and saw an even larger carriage more square in shape, like an undertaker's
covered wagon, screeching to a halt. The
back opened up and three people jumped out.
Two men and one woman all dressed in identical white shirts and dark trousers. They ran to where Artie lay, pushing Jim to
the side. One of them ripped open Artie's
shirt.
Jim tried to pull him away. "What
the hell are you doing? Don't touch him!"
The man who
owned the cab grabbed his arm. "Hey,
man, they're trying to help him. Let
them do their job."
Another
loud sound was approaching and a carriage similar to the first one, but black-and-white
in color stopped on the other side of the street. Looking down the smaller road they were
currently on, Jim saw it intersected with a bigger one where dozens of these
vehicles in all sorts of shapes and colors were driving at reckless
speeds.
Annoyed by
being so easily distracted when Artie lay dying, Jim focused back in on the
activity surrounding his friend. They
had his shirt cut off and a stiff white cuff wrapped around his neck. The woman was poking something into Artie's
arm that was attached to a thin tube that led to a clear container filled with
fluid. One of the men was holding Artie
up on his side a few inches so the other man could prod at his ribs.
He didn't
like seeing people handling Artie so impersonally, but their behavior was
reminiscent of the battlefield medics he had known during the War Between the
States. Despite similarities with some
of Loveless' torture techniques, Jim decided that the people were trying, in
their own way, to help Artie.
The man
from the black-and-white carriage approached him. "You the one who hit
him?"
Jim watched
the new arrival warily. The man carried
a gun, had a badge with a star on his chest and various other accoutrements
including a truncheon around his waist.
Jim guessed he was a lawman of some kind.
"No,
that was me," the first man said unhappily. "I hit him. Jesus, he came out of nowhere."
"License
and registration," the second man barked.
"Yeah,
yeah." The first man pulled out a wallet and opened
it, removing a small rectangle. "Here. Registration's in the car." He moved to the cab, opened the door, and
pressed something. A small drawer
opened, and he searched within. He found
a piece of paper and handed it to the second man. "Here, Officer."
Officer.
Jim let the word play in his mind.
The officer took the paper and then moved over to the action around
Artie, asking, "How bad is it?"
The woman
looked up. "He'll be fine. A couple broken bones in his arm, dislocated
shoulder, a punctured lung. Nothing to write home about."
Jim's eyes
opened wide and he felt dizzy. What were
they saying? That Artie would be
fine? Could it be possible?
"Got a
name?"
"Nope.
He's not carrying anything."
"His
name's Artemus Gordon," Jim informed the officer
helpfully. If this was a lawman then he
could be useful. Best
to establish a good rapport as soon as possible.
The officer
turned to him. "You know him?"
"I
do. He's my friend." Lover. Soulmate.
"You
saw what happened?"
Jim shook
his head. "No, I came around the
corner right after it happened," he lied.
He didn't think volunteering information about getting shoved into the invention
of a mad dwarf scientist would win him any credibility.
He saw that
Artie was being lifted onto a board of some kind and carried toward the back of
the wagon. He moved to go with him.
The man
holding open the door to the larger square car stopped him. "Sorry, you can't ride with us."
Placing a
firm hand on the man's arm and narrowing his eyes dangerously, he growled, "Try
and stop me." There was no way Jim
was going to allow Artie to be taken away from him.
The medic
pushed his hand off and shut the door of the wagon, blocking Artie from
view. "We're taking him to Mount
Sinai, you can see him there."
Jim reached
for his gun, but it wasn't there.
Loveless had removed it. "I'm
going with you," he insisted, feeling at a disadvantage without any
weapon.
The medic
wasn't intimidated and shrugged his shoulders. "No can do," he said
kindly but firmly. He walked around to
the front of the wagon and got in. Jim
considered tackling him and taking Artie back, but the lawman was standing
right there and besides, his instincts told him that they didn't mean Artie any
harm.
The loud
noise started up again and the wagon pulled away inordinately quickly. Jim ran after it, but the vehicles on the
main street slowed down and stopped, allowing the wagon egress. Once at the main road, it took off far faster
than Jim could ever hope to run.
Jim stood
for a moment watching the progress of the vehicle that was taking Artie
away. In addition to his worry for his
partner, he was suddenly aware of being utterly alone in a place more foreign
than he'd ever experienced. Even China had
made more sense than this.
He ran back
to the other men. "Where are they
taking him?" Jim questioned urgently.
Ignoring
him, the first man said to the officer, "Jesus, I feel like I'm gonna have
a heart attack. Are you gonna arrest me?"
The officer
shook his head. "No, but I am
giving you a ticket." He ripped off
a piece of paper and handed it to the man.
"Reckless
driving?" the man asked in a disbelieving tone. "Reckless driving? I wasn't driving recklessly, the guy
practically dropped out of the sky."
Jim placed
his hands on his hips and stared up at the lawman; he was several inches
taller. "Officer," he
interrupted, wanting to garner his attention.
"Tell
it to the judge," the officer said bluntly to the cab owner, taking no
notice of Jim.
The man let
out a curse like you might hear on the Bowery, checked the front of his cab,
let out another curse, then climbed into it. The whole contraption moved away, leaving
nothing but the stains of Artie's blood on the ground.
Jim started
thinking that maybe this wasn't really happening. He'd just let those people take Artie away
from him and done nothing. It was like
one of those dreams where you try and try and try to run but you can't
move. Maybe Loveless' machine made you
hallucinate. Maybe he and Artie were
still prisoners of the mad doctor's, twitching in a cell somewhere as Loveless
played tricks on their minds. It seemed
a better explanation than all of this being real.
But on the off-chance
that it was real, he didn't facts. He
needed to find Artie but had no idea where he was or how to get there. Could they be talking about Mount Sinai
Hospital, the Jewish hospital built a couple of decades ago on Manhattan
Island? Was that somewhere near? He suspected he needed one of these cars to
get there but he had no idea how to find one or how to work it.
The officer
approached him. "I'd like to see
some ID, please. I need to get your name
and address for the record."
"What?"
"Your
license. Let me see it."
"My
license?"
"You
been drinking, buddy?" the officer asked, narrowing his eyes.
Jim could
only wish. "No."
"Then
fork over your driver's license. Or a credit card, library card, whatever you got."
Driver's
license. The words sounded familiar. That's what it said at the top of the little
card given him three years ago by a friend from the future. For some reason Jim had always carried it
with him like a good luck charm. A part
of him was afraid if he left it behind it would simply vanish, Time trying to
put everything to rights.
Prompted by
whimsy, he reached within the waistcoat pocket where he kept it wrapped in a
handkerchief. He handed it to the
officer.
"Napoleon
Solo?"
Jim
hesitated, but then nodded. Stupid. He'd handed
over his good luck charm without thinking of the consequences. Napoleon's name. Napoleon's address. Now he was an imposter as well as a man
dispossessed. He could only hope his
talisman somehow worked in his favor.
"This
license has expired."
With a
puzzled glance, Jim looked at the license.
"Expired?"
"Yeah,
ten years ago. Is this some kind of joke?"
Jim shook
his head. Definitely
not a joke. There was nothing
remotely funny about what was going on.
His blood ran cold at the words 'expired ten years ago'. That would put him in a future even farther
away from his own than the time Napoleon and Illya had come from.
"You
drive a car?"
Jim shook his head again, growing more irritated with this pointless and
dangerous exchange. Artie was getting
farther away all the time. Still, he was
better off placating the lawman, so he reined in his temper.
"All
right, then," the officer said grudgingly.
"As long as you don't try to drive a car with this, there's no law
against carrying around an expired driver's license, but you're gonna need to
get something current for identification."
He frowned at the license and then looked at Jim. "Plus, you really need to get this
picture updated. It hardly looks like
you anymore."
"I'll
get a new one, officer. Thank you." Jim was grateful for the man's carelessness
in not noticing that Jim was supposed to be a little taller and have brown
eyes.
The officer
grunted. "This
still your address?"
Jim
nodded. The non-verbal communication
protected him from revealing too much.
The officer
wrote the information down and handed the license back.
"What's
your phone number?"
"I don't
have one," Jim said, hoping the answer would be acceptable. He didn't know what a phone was, but he knew
that he didn't have the number of one.
He held the license tightly in his hand, the edges pressing almost
painfully into the skin of his palm.
"You
live at that address and you don't have a phone?" the officer asked
skeptically. "That's a pretty ritzy
part of town."
Jim shook
his head. He needed to redirect the
conversation before the officer grew any more suspicious. "Where did they take my friend?"
"Mount
Sinai, didn't you hear the paramedic?"
Taking a
chance, Jim asked, "Mount Sinai Hospital?
The one by Central Park?"
The officer
nodded.
"Is
that far from here?"
"Couple
a' miles." He frowned at Jim. "How come you don't know that if you've
lived here so long?"
Wishing he
could change places with Artie, so Artie could use his cleverness and acting
abilities to come up with believable lies on the fly, he mumbled, "I've
been away for a while."
The officer
narrowed his eyes again. "It's on
Fifth Avenue, which happens to be the street you live on," he said
sarcastically. "How long you been
gone?"
"A
while," Jim said, concealing his shock.
"A friend's been watching my home." The officer's question told Jim that he was
indeed in Manhattan, a place he knew very well, at least back in his own
time. And, amazingly, not only was he in
Manhattan, but he was also near to where Napoleon lived, or used to live.
The man
glanced at an object on his wrist that looked like some sort of small pocket
watch. "I'm off duty in a few
minutes. I can run you up there." He headed over to the black-and-white
car.
Jim
followed him, blessing the kindness of strangers and hoping he didn't ask any
more questions. Too many other odd
answers and Jim was afraid he'd find himself in a jail cell.
The officer
opened up one of the doors to the car.
Jim fumbled with the door next to it, trying to figure out what the man
had done to open it.
"Nah,
you can ride in front," the officer said.
The man got in and reached across the car, pulling a black knob up. Jim moved around the car to the indicated
door, pulled out a lever that was the only thing visible on the outside and
when the door swung open, slid inside.
"It's
a little stiff, you really gotta yank it shut," the officer cautioned.
Jim wasn't
sure what he was talking about, but he followed the man's eyes to the
door. He took a look at it, saw
something that appeared to be a handle and pulled it toward him hard. It slammed shut, closing him into the small
space. He found it hard to breathe all
of a sudden.
The officer
put a small metal object into a slot and turned it. There was a grinding sound and the hum of an
engine, similar to the one on the train.
Then he moved a metal stick into a different position and, after a
movement of his right foot, the car sprang forward. Jim held onto the door with tightened
fingers. It was like riding in a
carriage but without the horses. It felt
un-natural. He distrusted the whole experience,
but since it was supposedly taking him to Artie, he gritted his teeth and went
along.
The car
pulled out onto the main street and Jim got his first good look at the city he
was in. More
buildings. It boggled the
mind. He'd thought the New York of his
time was a large city, but it was nothing compared to this. It was crowded. Too many people, too many
cars, too many buildings. No
wonder Napoleon and Illya had looked at Jim’s and Artie’s version of a city
with such amazement. It must have seemed
like a ghost town compared to this.
They turned
onto Fifth Avenue and Jim looked around curiously. He'd ridden his horse down this street many a
time. Most of the buildings were big and
ugly, but now and then he would see the façade of something that looked vaguely
familiar.
What were
the odds that he and Artie had landed in the one possible future where they might
have someone they could count on for help?
Loveless would be gnashing his teeth if he knew.
"Hey,"
the officer said, interrupting his silent reverie. "What's with the outfits?"
Remembering
what the other man had said, Jim answered, "Actors."
"They shooting something around here?"
"Shooting
something?" Jim asked, hoping to solicit more information so he could come
up with a plausible answer. He didn't
have a gun and didn't know what shooting would have to do with actors anyway.
"Yeah,
you know, a movie." He gestured at Jim's
outfit. "What's the name of the
movie? The director
anyone good? Any
big stars in it?"
"Theatre,"
Jim managed to say. "Stage
production."
The officer
looked disappointed and lost all interest.
The rest of the journey continued in silence. The car stopped in front of a huge building
that bore little resemblance to the Jewish hospital he knew. "This is it."
Jim stared
out the window. "Here?"
"Yeah.
Just find the lobby. They'll tell
you where your buddy is." He glanced
at his timepiece again. "Gotta go. Gotta
get this report in and clock out."
It took a
few seconds, but Jim managed to get the door open. "Thank you, Officer," he said
courteously, glad to have gotten what he needed without giving himself away.
The officer
nodded. "Get that license
renewed. I hope your friend is all
right. And if this case goes to court,
someone might contact you to be a witness."
"All
right," Jim said, as he shut the door and then watched the black-and-white
car drive off. He'd cross that bridge
when he came to it; being a witness in a court case was nothing new. Turning to the huge building, Jim started
reading the signs, looking for something that indicated a lobby. Artie was in there somewhere and Jim would
keep looking until he found him.
*****
Jennifer,
secretary to the big boss, looked up as the head of U.N.C.L.E. security
approached her.
"Is
the old man in?" he asked.
She gave
him a scolding look. "You know he
hates it when you say that."
"Why
do you think I say it?" he answered with a sly grin.
She let out
a soft laugh. "Yes, he's in."
As usual,
he let himself in. No need to stand on
ceremony.
"Old
man?"
Napoleon said with a sneer.
Illya
grinned at him. "Why fight old
habits?" Not that Napoleon looked old. At forty-four he was still in his prime, only
the graying at his temples revealing his age.
"We both called Waverly 'old man'."
"He
was old," Napoleon protested. "And
we never said it to his face."
"I
didn't say it to your face; I said it to your secretary. I can't help it if you eavesdrop." He moved closer to Napoleon and pressed a
quick kiss on his lips. "Besides, I
happen to be quite partial to this particular old man."
Napoleon
glanced quickly around the room. "Are
you sure the cameras are off?"
Illya held
up a small remote control device in his hands.
"They're off."
"Good." Napoleon grabbed Illya and pulled him down on
his lap.
"Oof." Illya said, even as he allowed Napoleon to
demonstrate just how talented he was, at least in the kissing and groping
arena. When things started to get
heated, Illya pulled back. They'd
christened the conference table twice this year already. No need to do it again. He might only be forty-one but his body didn't
appreciate making love on a cold hard table as much as it used to.
Napoleon,
however, followed his lips, capturing them again. In between kisses, Illya asked, "Did
you…" kiss, "see…" kiss, "an accident today?"
Illya could
almost watch his words slowly seep into Napoleon's mind because, in the middle
of their next kiss, Napoleon frowned and pulled back. "I assume you're not talking about what
they were offering for lunch in the cafeteria?"
"No, I'm
not talking about that. Although that was a crime against man and nature. Can't you do something about that, or is your
title only an honorific?"
"Ha
ha. I dare you to take on the head of food
services."
Illya
shuddered. "I'd rather take on a THRUSH
satrap."
"Exactly."
With a sigh, he pushed Illya off his lap. Illya shifted to lean against the conference
table. "You know I didn't leave the
premises today," Napoleon whined. "If
I had, one of your moles would have ratted me out and
you'd have been on me like white on rice, probably before I hit the sidewalk."
With a
tight smile of satisfaction, Illya said, "That's how it should be. You are not allowed out without
security. You're a danger to others."
"And
again I say: ha ha.
So what accident are you talking about?"
"According
to a police report, you were listed as a witness to an accident earlier today."
"Why
did it have my name on it?"
"I don't
know," Illya groused.
"Remind
me why I pay you so much to be head of security?"
Illya
ignored him. "It also had your
address."
Napoleon
scowled. "My real
address or one of my fake addresses?"
"Your
real address." When he had become head of security for U.N.C.L.E.
Illya had tried, repeatedly and spectacularly unsuccessfully, to get Napoleon
to move. As head of U.N.C.L.E., Napoleon
was an even more attractive target than he'd already been.
But
Napoleon liked his penthouse apartment and refused to move.
So Illya
had started a huge misinformation campaign.
He'd pretended to have Napoleon move, had set up fake homes and
addresses for him all over the city and the country, even a few scattered
around the globe. They'd all been hit by
assassins at one time or another, and all of them had been apprehended as they'd
found Illya's people waiting for them as opposed to their intended target.
Meanwhile,
Napoleon had continued to happily live in his penthouse. Illya had purchased the floor below him and
then created access between the two, so under the guise of providing security
for U.N.C.L.E.'s Number One, Illya and Napoleon happily slept together every
night in their two-story penthouse.
Getting
Napoleon in and out of his penthouse every day without being seen kept Illya's
covert skills intact. Plus it was fun.
"My
real address is sitting in some police report?" Napoleon asked with some
pique. "Did you manage to pull it?"
"Of
course." Illya reached behind him for a file and handed
it to Napoleon. All records of the
report had been erased.
"How
long did they have it?"
"Forty-five
minutes."
Napoleon's
eyebrows went up. "That was fast
work."
Illya
scowled. "No, it took too
long. Unfortunately it sat on someone's
desk for thirty minutes before they put it into the computer."
"So it
was on a computer for fifteen minutes?"
Illya
nodded, disgusted. A minute was too
long.
Napoleon
flipped open the
file and noted the address of the supposed accident. "I wasn't there. I was here."
"I
know." Illya read it over his
shoulder. "Do you know the cop?"
Napoleon
shook his head. "No. Nor the guy who caused the
accident." He squinted. "I can't even read who the victim
was. Can you? This cop has terrible handwriting."
"The
last name is Gordon. First name begins
with an A."
"Artie?
Arthur?"
Illya's
eyes opened wide. "Artemus?"
"Yeah,
maybe." Napoleon didn't look convinced. "Funny, I was just thinking about them
today. Quite a coincidence. It's not the most common name."
"Do
you think it's another double of you?"
Napoleon
winced. "God, I hope not. They never get the hair right, and they never
dress them well enough. I swear the last
one was wearing a suit from Sears."
"Oh,
the horror," Illya said sarcastically.
"I'm surprised you ever recovered from the trauma."
"Scoff
all you want, but I have a reputation to maintain."
"Yes,
of vanity and conspicuous overconsumption."
"Says
he of the leather bomber jackets and silk pajamas."
Napoleon looked more closely at the file. "He wrote that the license expired ten
years ago. Why would someone go to all
the trouble of creating a double for me and then botch it all by getting the
date wrong on a license? What kind of
amateur was this?"
From the
look on Napoleon's face, Illya guessed that Napoleon was more affronted that
someone did a slipshod business of imitating him, than the fact that someone
was imitating him. God forbid if the man
was wearing sneakers.
"And
what's the point of pretending to be me," Napoleon continued to gripe, "when he already obviously knew where I lived? And why get involved in an accident
scene? I don't get it."
"Perhaps
it is an elaborate scheme to get you to leave headquarters."
"Stupid
scheme." Napoleon stared at the report and pursed his
lips. "Although
it's working. Where did they take
the guy who got hurt?"
"Mount
Sinai."
"Let's
go see him."
"I can
go see him, Napoleon. You can stay here."
"Right,
because we know once you leave, I'll stay here like a good boy and won't even
think about trying to sneak out to follow you."
Illya
sighed. "You don't pay me enough,
Napoleon, for how casually you take your safety."
Napoleon
pulled him down until Illya was straddling his legs. "But there are some excellent fringe
benefits," he argued.
Illya could
hardly argue with that. He nuzzled
Napoleon's neck, loving the scent of his lover combined with his
aftershave. Nothing smelled as good to
Illya. "Maybe we should go home
early today."
"This
boss of yours must be a real gem to let you get away with being such a slacker,"
Napoleon said as he kissed along Illya's jaw.
Illya had a
very sudden and disconcerting thought. "You
gave Jim your license."
"What?"
Napoleon said, still nibbling.
"You
gave Jim your license."
"Jim
who?"
"James
West. Remember him? The other half of Artemus Gordon?"
Napoleon
leaned back, frowning. "Oh, that
James West," he said snidely. "For
a moment I thought you were talking about the Jim from the eleventh century. I get them confused."
"You
gave him your license. A license that would now be expired."
"True. But, we also left them back in 1872, and
somehow I find it hard to believe that they managed to build a time machine and
decided to visit 1980 on a whim.
Especially when they had first hand knowledge of how wrong playing with
time can go."
That was
true enough. "But it could be them." Illya had no idea why he was persisting. The whole idea was ridiculous. Although it was odd that
he, also, had been thinking of both men earlier today.
"Yeah,"
Napoleon agreed, cheerily lying, "and it could be Arthur Gordon and his
trusty sidekick King Henry the Eighth."
Illya
shrugged.
Napoleon
stared at him. "Illya. Even if it was them, which it isn't, why
would Jim still have my license? Why
would he give it to the police officer?
Why pretend to be me? There's no
law against being named James West."
He shoved Illya to his feet.
"Give
me another scenario that fits the facts as well."
"You
mean one that isn't insane?"
Illya
encouraged him with a challenging wave. "I'm
waiting."
Napoleon
pursed his lips, tapping his bottom one with a knuckled fist, eyes narrowed at
Illya as if trying to decide if he should call security to have him put in a
straitjacket. Not that they'd do it,
Illya thought smugly. His employees were
far more frightened of him than they'd ever been of Napoleon.
"Okay,
how about this one?" Napoleon offered.
"Someone bought my license in some wacky garage sale that had Jim's
stuff, and somehow it's made its way down through the decades until today."
"Yes,
that's very believable."
"Okay,
someone saw my name somewhere, thought it was regal sounding, and made
themselves a shoddy fake ID proclaiming them to be of age so they could
drink. When the cop asked them for an
ID, they used the fake one to keep out of trouble."
Illya
scowled. "All
right. That one I could believe." He was disappointed. He didn't want to find a reasonable excuse
for the events of the day. He, as
impossible as it might be, wanted it to be Artie and Jim.
Napoleon
stood and shrugged into his suit jacket.
"Let's go see this guy, see if there's anything to be worried
about."
"It
would be easier if I went on my own," Illya futilely protested.
"But nowhere
near as entertaining."
Illya let
out a sigh, but headed for the door.
Truthfully, he'd rather have Napoleon go with him. He felt better when Napoleon was within view.
As they
left the office, Napoleon said to his secretary, "I'm leaving for a
while. I'll be with you-know-who."
She blinked
at him in surprise, but then nodded.
Illya didn't expect a fight. He
was the only one who argued with the boss.
Besides, everyone knew he was Napoleon's bodyguard. "Come on, old man," he quipped at
his lover.
Napoleon scowled
at him. "You'll pay for that later,"
he threatened under his breath.
"Good,"
Illya said with a grin. "I'm
counting on it."
*****
Jim paced
the length of the waiting room, but then forced himself to sit down. Artie was out of surgery and in a place they
called the recovery room. It would be at
least an hour until Jim could see him.
According to the doctor, he was fine and was expected to make a complete
recovery.
Jim could
hardly believe it. He wouldn't believe
it until he saw Artie open his eyes and smile at him.
One of the
nurses had attempted to help Jim contact his friend by looking up Napoleon's
telephone number but it wasn't…what had she said…listed? Something like
that. The thought of using numbers to
talk to someone sounded like magic or make believe, anyway. Jim gave some thought to walking down Fifth
Avenue until he found Napoleon's home, but he couldn't leave Artie.
When he'd
arrived at the hospital, they'd asked him confusing questions that Jim had finally
decided were about money. They wanted to
know who was going to pay for Artie's care.
When Jim said he'd pay for it, they'd wanted a card of some sort which,
needless to say, Jim didn't have. The
person at the desk had finally given up and told him in a fairly frigid tone to
take a seat in the waiting room. Jim had
been more than happy to obey.
Once
seated, he began to peruse the literature lying around and ascertained that it
was 1980. It wasn't clear what month it
was. Each piece of literature seemed to
claim a different one. Stunned, he sat
there for a long time, letting the date settle.
1980. One hundred-and-twenty-five
years into the future.
In time,
the needs of his body began to demand attention. His bladder was about to burst when he saw a
small child grabbing his crotch, clearly in the same condition. He followed the boy, accompanied by his
mother, to a room with the word Women on it.
Directly next to it was one that said Men. The future version of
Ladies and Gents.
Once
inside, it wasn't too hard to figure everything out. He couldn't wait for Artie to see the way hot
water came out of the pipes so freely and the clarity of the mirrors. The towels felt harsh and fell apart easily,
but he still managed to clean up a little from his time under Loveless' less-than-tender
mercies.
Back in the
waiting room, Jim helped himself to a cup of coffee. When his stomach growled, he roamed a little
and found a doctor's lounge that had a large selection of, apparently, free
food. Waiting until no one was around, he went in and helped himself to a sandwich and a
small bag of something called Cheetos. When he was done eating, he wiped his orange
colored fingers on his pants, and then went back to the waiting room and sat
down.
There was a
box in the waiting room that talked and had moving pictures on it. A show called Family Feud was on and it made
absolutely no sense. Nor could he figure
out where the picture was coming from.
Jim wished Artie were with him; he'd figure out how it worked.
A longing
for his friend shot through him. He
wanted Artie to walk through the door with a laugh about all the fuss. Or maybe Napoleon and Illya could just appear. Jim was desperate for a friendly face.
"Jim?"
Blinking,
Jim stared as Napoleon and Illya walked into the waiting room. It was as though the wish had conjured them
up. They were older. Still in great shape, but quite a few years
must have passed since Jim had seen them last.
But other than a fully recovered Artie, they were the best thing he
could have seen. He stammered out their
names. "Napoleon. Illya."
They were
looking as flummoxed as he'd ever seen them.
Even more than when they realized they'd ended up back in his time of 1872.
Napoleon
sank down next to him. "What…why…how…?"
Illya
rolled his eyes, rallying a little. "What
Napoleon's trying to ask so eruditely is how did you get here? The last time we saw you it was…" he
leaned in and whispered, "1872, and it's been fourteen years since then."
"Fourteen? It's been three for us."
"Before
you try to explain," Napoleon interrupted.
"How's Artie?"
"The
doctor said he was all right. He has a
broken arm, a dislocated shoulder, and something called a pneumo…"
He shook his head, not remembering the full word. "I didn't understand a lot of what he
said," he confessed. He didn't appreciate
feeling like a fish out of water.
"Pneumothorax?" Illya guessed kindly.
Jim
nodded.
"No
reason you should understand, Jim," Napoleon said. "Life's gotten exceedingly more
complicated in the last hundred years."
Jim gazed
at the two men. "I can't believe
you're here. That you
found me. That I'm
here. I never thought I'd see you
again." He was like a babbling
brook.
Illya sat
on his other side. "Us,
too. Although,
oddly, we were both thinking of you today."
Jim couldn't
get over it. They really were
there. Even though he wasn't the sort to
rely on much of anybody except Artie, these two men were the exception. They would help him and Artie navigate their
way through this time and, hopefully, back home. He closed his eyes and sagged back in the
chair, just now feeling how tightly he'd been fighting for control. "How did you find us?"
"Police
report," Illya said. "I have
Napoleon's name flagged so I'm instantly notified if his name goes on a
computer." At Jim's confused look,
Illya made a dismissive motion with his hand.
"I'll explain later. So he's
all right?"
Jim
nodded. "And so am I, now that you're
here." All he wanted to do was take
a nap. It had been well over thirty-six hours
since he'd last closed his eyes.
"Have
you eaten anything?" Napoleon asked.
Jim
nodded. "Doctor's
lounge."
"Is
Artie still in surgery?"
Jim shook
his head. "No, he's in…" What he now knew to be a phone, setting on the
desk by the door, rang, interrupting him.
Illya got
up and answered it. "Yes?" There was a pause. "He is, hold on." Illya held out the phone, mimicking how to
hold it as Jim took it.
Holding it
to his ear, Jim followed Illya's lead. "Yes?"
"Your friend is in his room now, Room
417. You can go see him, if you want."
Confused by
the disembodied voice, but relieved by what it was saying, Jim nodded. He held up the phone. "It says he's in Room 417. Do you know where that is?"
Napoleon
and Illya nodded so Jim thanked the voice and handed the phone back to Illya
who put it down on the machine's base. Taking
his elbow, Napoleon directed him out of the waiting room. Jim decided he must look as bad as he
felt.
"When's
the last time you slept?" Napoleon asked, confirming Jim's last thought.
"A
long time."
"We'll
go see Artie, then take you home for a few hours to sleep."
Jim didn't
want to leave.
Illya must
have seen it on his face. "I know
you don't want to leave, but Artie will be safe here, and I'm guessing he'll
take one look at you and order you to get some sleep."
That was
probably true.
They were
standing in a hallway and Napoleon pushed a small button with an arrow pointing
up. "What's this?" Jim asked.
"An
elevator. The twentieth-century
version."
There was a
ding and the doors opened up. Several
people got out and once it was empty Napoleon prodded Jim in, followed by
Illya. "Is it safe?" Jim asked
as the doors shut, sealing them in.
Every elevator he'd ever been in had been open so you could watch your
ascent or descent. This was
unnerving. He saw a row of numbers,
watched as first the two and then the three, followed by the four, lit up. The numbers went up to eight.
"It
is," Illya assured him.
The
elevator came to a smooth stop and the doors opened. Napoleon, again with his hand at Jim's elbow,
escorted him out. Signs were read and
Illya led them down the hallway to the left.
As the numbers neared 417, Jim moved quicker, anxious to see Artie with
his own eyes.
He found
the room and entered. There were two
beds in the room, but only one was occupied.
Artie lay on it and Jim was next to him in seconds. "Artie. Artie."
Artie's
eyebrows went up as if trying his best to get his eyes opened but finding it
required more energy than he had at his disposal. Finally they opened a crack. "J'm,"
he eeked out.
"Yeah,
Artie," Jim said, his own voice sounding a little shaky. "Yeah, it's me."
Artie
smiled crookedly at him. Then his eyes
shifted to behind Jim and they widened.
He looked back at Jim. "Am I
dead?"
Jim let out
a quick laugh. "No. Loveless' machine threw us into the
future. He'd be beside himself if he
knew we actually had friends here."
He gently squeezed Artie's hand. "They
found me. Us."
Artie
squeezed back. "What happened to
me?" The words were clear but
drowsy.
"You
got hit by a car. Kind of a horseless
carriage," Jim explained. "I
thought you were dead." His grip
tightened on Artie’s hand, fighting to lose the memory of Artie bleeding,
dying.
"Am I
hurt bad?"
Jim shook
his head. "The doctor says you'll
be fine. You broke a couple of bones and
did something to your lungs, but you'll be okay. You just need to heal." Now that he'd spent some time drinking in
Artie's bruised face, Jim started paying attention to all the gadgets around
his lover's body. "What is all
this, Napoleon? What is it for?"
Napoleon
started explaining. "These are IV
pumps. They're pumping these fluids into
Artie's veins." He moved a little
closer, inspecting the bags. "This
one is blood," he said, touching the first one. Touching a second, he said, "This one is
a normal saline solution, used to help replace fluids. And this one," he added, touching the
third one, "is an antibiotic to make sure he doesn't get any infections."
Jim remembered
that word. Remembered not having any
available back in 1872 when Illya's infection was slowly killing him.
Napoleon
moved on. "This is a chest tube." He showed Jim the thick tube coming out from
Artie's side. "It's draining out
blood and helps keep the lung inflated while it's healing." He kept moving. "This is a urine bag; it's connected to
a catheter that is in his penis. It
catches all his urine so they can measure how much he's making."
Jim
frowned. "Why do they do that?" It made him want to grab himself, not liking
the idea of something that big going there.
"Torture,"
Illya said, with an air of someone who knew exactly what it felt like.
Napoleon
rolled his eyes. "It's not
torture. They're putting so many fluids in, they like to keep track of what's coming out. Too much extra fluid can be a bad thing. Plus it keeps Artie from having to use a
bathroom right now when moving is hard for him."
That made
sense. It didn't keep Jim from flinching
at the thought, however.
Artie followed
the explanation with dazed but attentive eyes.
"And
this is a cast." Napoleon gestured
at the white hard casing around Artie's arm.
"Illya and I have had all this stuff in us or on us during our
career."
Illya
scowled. "And
worse."
For some
reason that made Jim feel better. Badly for them, but better for Artie. "So he really will recover," he
stated with certainty.
Napoleon
nodded. "He'll be all right. They'll keep him here for a few days and then
we'll take him home. That cast will be
on him for several weeks, and he'll be miserable because they itch and they're
cumbersome but once it comes off, he'll be good as new."
Artie had
worn a cast before, so at least that much was familiar. "You hear that, Artie?" Jim asked,
squeezing his hand again. "You'll
be just fine."
Artie
nodded wearily. "You look
terrible. Go get some sleep."
Illya
grinned. He gestured at Artie. "Say goodbye while I make sure this room
stays a private room. I'm also going to
have someone from U.N.C.L.E. security come and watch Artie while we're gone."
Jim
frowned. "Do you think he's in
danger?"
Shaking his
head, Illya pulled out a gadget that looked like a pen. "No, I do not," he answered
him. "But I'll feel better about
it, and I suspect you will, too."
Jim would
feel better. Much
better. He wasn't sure he'd have
left otherwise. Overwhelmed by
weariness, his bruises, his fear, and now his gratitude, Jim dropped his head
onto Artie's hand.
Artie freed
his hand from Jim’s hold and caressed Jim's hair. "Go get some sleep, James. Let Napoleon and Illya spoil you a
little. I promise I'll be right here."
Jim wanted
to go to sleep right then, with Artie's hand on his head, his voice soothing
his fractured thoughts. He wanted to be
home on their train, stripping each other's clothes off, tripping over boots in
their haste to make it to their bed.
He had to
admit, though, the thought of getting clean and lying down on a soft bed with a
pillow and a blanket sounded like heaven.
Just another minute and he'd get up.
A hand
shook his shoulder. "Come on, Jim,
time to go."
He lifted
his head, blinking, narrowing his eyes at the light. "What?"
Napoleon
grinned kindly at him. "You took a
little nap. Figured we'd leave you be
until we got everything taken care of."
He gestured at a man who hadn't been there before. "This is Jerry. He'll be staying with Artie until we get
back. Illya made sure no one else will
use this room, and U.N.C.L.E.'s taking care of the bill. The hospital has Illya's phone number so they
can call us if anything should happen. Which it won't."
Jim sized
up Jerry to see if he trusted the man to protect his partner. The agent looked soft, but if Napoleon felt
he was capable then Jim would have to take his word for it. He looked at Artie to find him fast asleep.
"They
just gave him some drugs to help with the pain," Illya said. "He should sleep for several hours."
That made
it easier to get up, although Jim's body protested the movement. He nodded at Jerry,
almost sorry he was there because it kept him from leaning over and kissing
Artie. Then, he decided to do it
anyway. He leaned down, whispered, "I
love you," and kissed him gently on the forehead.
He shot a
defiant look toward Jerry only to find he wasn't paying any attention, too busy
getting his marching orders from Illya.
With one last look at Artie, Jim let Napoleon and Illya push him out of
the room.
*****
When they
got to Illya's car, Napoleon opened the back door. Sweeping his arm out in a grand gesture, he
invited Jim into the back seat. "Take
a nap," Napoleon encouraged. "This
might take a while."
"I
thought you lived on this street," Jim countered.
"I do,
but we try not to let anyone else know it," Napoleon said.
"Napoleon
is the number two target of THRUSH this week," Illya crowed.
Scowling at
his lover, Napoleon said, "Enjoy it while it lasts. I'll be number one next week." He and Illya had occupied the number one and
number two positions on THRUSH's
Most-Wanted-Captured-Alive-But-If-Necessary-Dead list for years now. Sometimes he topped the list. Sometimes Illya did. Actually Illya did more than Napoleon.
Napoleon found it insulting. He should
be their number one target. Just because
Illya was one of the most, if not the most, lethal agents in the world,
with a mind like a steel trap, privy to all of U.N.C.L.E.'s secrets, and access
to Napoleon Solo, didn't excuse the inexcusable.
And the
fact that Illya always mocked him about it just made it worse.
Jim's
confused look prompted an explanation out of Napoleon, although he first took a
few seconds to explain seat belts to Jim.
Considering the way Illya drove, it was a requirement. "We will have a tail." He waited a moment to make sure Jim
understood the idiom. When Jim nodded,
he continued. "We always have a
tail. Illya will need to shake them and
sometimes it takes a while."
Sometimes it didn't. There didn't
seem to be any rhyme or reason to the quality of THRUSH agents watching
them.
Sometimes
they were laughable. Sometimes Napoleon
was tempted to stop and recruit the good ones to U.N.C.L.E.. Illya had once. A very persistent THRUSH agent had stuck with
them for five hours, had managed to convince Illya he'd lost him and then shown
up outside the elevator when they reached the penthouse. Illya had hired him on the spot for twice the
money THRUSH was paying him.
He was one
of their better Section Two agents. The
fact that it drove THRUSH crazy made it well worth his salary.
"Illya
has one hundred and thirteen ways to get us home. Some of them can also take some time."
"One
hundred and fourteen. I thought of another one this morning."
Napoleon
grinned but then waved at Illya with a how's-a-man-supposed-to-get-home-on-a-timely-basis-with-someone-like-you-around-so-get-to-it
kind of flourish. When Illya was in
super-duper spy mode, it sometimes felt like Napoleon would get home only to
find Illya already scheming on how to get him back to work.
On
occasion, Napoleon thought it was payback for insisting on staying at the penthouse. Illya took revenge very seriously and nursed
a grudge like a professional wet-nurse.
Every day, Napoleon loved him more and knew he couldn't do his job one tenth as
well without Illya watching his back.
He gazed
fondly at his partner, then turned to speak with Jim
again only to find that he'd taken his advice and was sound asleep. Napoleon took a moment to stare at him. "How did they get here?" he asked
Illya softly.
"He
said something about Loveless. I
remember hearing that name when we were back in their time."
Napoleon
remembered the name as well. He was
tempted to wake Jim up and get some answers.
"What happens if they can't get home? What happens if they don't do something they
needed to do before they die?"
Illya shook
his head. "I don't know. We saw how relentless Time was to us. At least we know the same thing can't happen
to them because dying will only make the effects of their time travel
permanent."
Napoleon
considered his partner, remembering how helpless he'd felt as Illya was dying,
both from the cougar attack and the ravages of trying to exist in a time not
their own.
"Napoleon!" Illya suddenly said excitedly.
Glancing
around for danger but seeing none, Napoleon furrowed his brow. "What?"
"The
letter. The letter Artie and Jim sent us right after
we got home from their time. We know
they got home. They wrote us that letter
after they retired."
Napoleon's
jaw dropped open, but then he frowned. "Why
didn't they tell us about seeing us again in the letter?"
Illya shrugged. "Probably to make sure they didn't
influence the future. Telling us might
have made us turn left when we should have turned right at some point. If things changed, we might not have been
here when they arrived, and they might not have made it home."
Napoleon
rubbed his eyes. Time paradoxes made him
nuts. "You see the tail? Green sedan?"
Illya nodded. "There're two of
them. Blue Volkswagen
behind them."
Napoleon
let out a disparaging sound. No
self-respecting spy should be using a Volkswagen, especially in that shade of
blue.
"Hold
on."
Napoleon
held on. He'd learned the hard way what
happened when he didn't.
Illya made
a sharp right and then a left, raced through an intersection, and then made
another right. Napoleon checked on Jim
to make sure he didn't get whiplash.
Then he glanced out the rear window.
"Nothing so far."
Making
another series of turns, Napoleon saw that Illya was almost back where he'd
started from. "There's one,"
Napoleon called out, seeing the green sedan one street over to the right,
driving slowly, looking for their car.
Illya drove
forward, out of his line of sight. "Any
sign of the Volkswagen?"
Napoleon
shook his head, then pointed. "Up ahead about two blocks. See him?"
Illya took
a left at the next intersection. It gave
him easy access to Broadway, which he turned onto and then accelerated to a
healthy speed. Napoleon watched for the
next five minutes but couldn't find any signs of a tail. "Amateurs tonight."
"A
five-year-old would have done better," Illya sneered.
"Might
have had trouble reaching the pedals, though."
"Child's play."
For
a five-year-old Illya maybe. At six he'd probably been making mustard gas
bombs in his basement.
"Dare
I hope, now that we've lost our tail, that we'll be heading home by a fairly
direct route?" Napoleon asked wistfully.
"I
believe we shall park at the bakery," Illya said.
Napoleon
grinned. He liked that plan. Illya knew the back exits and subsequent
alleys better than the back of his hand.
The bakery was only two blocks from the penthouse and had the added
advantage of allowing Napoleon to pick up a favorite dessert for after dinner.
*****
"Jim,
wake up."
Jim grunted
and tried to turn over only to realize that he couldn't. He was tied down. His eyes opened in a flash, expecting to find
Loveless laughing over him, but instead he found Napoleon. His memory flooded back. "We here?" he croaked out. He cleared his throat.
"Sort
of," Napoleon answered with a grin.
"We're using plan number 19 to get home which, fortunately,
involves purchasing something sweet to eat.
So, get out and come see the twentieth-century version of a pastry shop."
Jim moved
too quickly and bit back a moan; he hurt all over. He wasn't sure if it was the beating one of
Loveless' thugs had treated him to, the forced landing when he'd ended up here
in 1980, or just some sort of physical reaction to being forced one hundred
years into the future. Whatever it was,
he felt one hundred years older.
He forced
himself to move. Once he got outside the
car, his nose perked right up. Something
smelled wonderful.
Illya held
up a gadget and pushed a series of numbers.
The car beeped back at him and the lights flashed. He put the gadget in his pocket. "It alarms the car. I'll know if anyone's touched it. It helps to keep us from being blown up."
With that,
Illya headed toward the source of the wonderful smell.
Jim caught
Napoleon's eye. "Do people try to
blow you up regularly?" If so, it
would be something they shared. Nice to
know not everything was different in the future.
"Either
they're trying to blow us up, or we're trying to blow them up. Illya's easy either way. He's just as happy making a bomb as he is
defusing one." Napoleon gestured
for Jim to follow Illya.
Jim was
glad to obey. Even though he'd eaten
lunch, that smell made his stomach grumble in anticipation. They entered a small shop and Jim's eyes
widened at the wide variety of items for sale.
"Get
anything you want," Napoleon offered grandly. He was already strolling down the length of
the display. Illya seemed to know
exactly what he wanted, as he was talking with the clerk, pointing. The young woman was assembling a pink box and
withdrawing items from the display case at Illya's direction.
Jim moved
behind Napoleon and peered through the glass, reading the placards. Some of them he recognized. Curious as to whether they'd taste the same
now, or if the ingredients had slowly changed over time, he chose a fruit
cobbler and a slice of Boston crème pie.
He ordered some ladyfingers for Artie, one of his favorites.
When
Napoleon paid for it with some paper, Jim began to realize that he was like a
baby in this century. Economics,
politics, communications, medicine, weaponry. He didn't know any of it. Ignorance was dangerous. Assuming Napoleon and Illya were willing, he'd
start learning tonight. Hopefully, he
and Artie wouldn't be here long, but Jim felt like a sitting duck the way he
was now.
They went
out the back door of the bakery, ending up in a long convoluted hallway, the
light being provided by…he pointed up. "What
are those?" They'd been all over
the hospital, but with everything else going on, he'd forgotten to ask.
"Light
bulbs," Illya provided. "Electricity. It's
passed through a filament that acts as a resistant conductor."
Artie had
been working with electricity. Obviously
he'd been on the right track.
They passed
one door that said Exit, and another that looked like a bathroom for both men
and women. Eventually they came to another
door that had a red light blinking and a box with numbers attached to the door
knob. Illya pressed a sequence of
numbers and the door unlocked. Napoleon
withdrew his gun and cautiously opened the door.
Jim wished
he was armed. As if Illya had read his
mind, he handed Jim a dangerous looking knife.
Jim had no idea where Illya had been hiding that. It wasn't a gun, but it felt good to have a
weapon. He flashed Illya a tight smile.
Illya went
through the door first. They ended up in
a room filled with empty shelves. It
looked like an abandoned storage room.
There were two other doors, one on the opposite wall, and one on the
left. Both had the same sort of
lock. Illya moved to the left, pressed
numbers again, and opened the door.
Meanwhile, Napoleon locked up behind them.
This door
led to some stairs. As they proceeded
down, Illya locked up behind them. "We're
under the street now," Illya explained, pointing up.
Jim could
hear the cars. "You go through this
every night?" he asked, amazed.
"And
every morning," Napoleon said with a sigh.
"Illya takes his job as bodyguard a little too much to heart."
Illya sent
him a narrow-eyed stare.
"What?"
Napoleon asked innocently.
Illya
snorted, but then headed resolutely down the under-street corridor.
"I
have requested that Napoleon move into a more secure location but he
refuses. This is his own fault,"
Illya said sternly. "Too many
people have access to the building."
They arrived at another door, which Illya unlocked, bringing them to
another room and another door until finally they were facing another set of
elevators.
"There
will be a bomb," Illya announced morosely.
Napoleon
clapped him on the shoulder. "Christmas
has come early for you, then," he said cheerfully.
"Stay
back until I find it."
"There
really is a bomb?" Jim asked, eyebrows lifted
skeptically.
"Probably.
Illya's got a sixth sense about explosives. And when you used my license our address got
made public. It wasn't for long because
Illya's network of security agents pulled it quickly, but I'm sure someone
unfriendly got a hold of it."
Jim
winced. "I'm sorry."
"Don't
be," Napoleon assured him. "It
happens every now and then." He
pointed at the elevator that had just arrived in response to Illya's pushing
the button. "People do have access
to the building, but they can't actually touch our home, so if they want to try
to take us out, they have to use the common areas."
Illya
entered the elevator and pushed something to make the door stay open. Jim moved closer to the opening so he could
see what Illya was doing. He watched as
Illya sprayed something over the buttons that chose the destination. The "P" button turned purple. "Is the bomb hooked up to blow when you
push the "P"?" Jim asked.
Illya
nodded. He glanced up at the vent. "Napoleon, give me a hand."
Napoleon
entered the elevator and made a stirrup out of his hands. When Illya had his foot firmly planted, he
hoisted him up. Illya pushed out the
vent and poked his head through the opening.
"Got it." Napoleon gave him another boost and Illya
pulled himself up and out of the elevator car.
Napoleon
sat on the padded bench outside the elevator, wiped his hands off with a
handkerchief, and opened one of the pink boxes, breaking off a piece of a
dessert. He handed half to Jim. "Éclair," he said as way of
explanation.
Jim sat
down next to him, taking a bite. It was
good. Very good. He listened to Illya tinker, every now and
then letting out some expletive in one language or another.
"You
almost done?"
Napoleon called out. "I'm hungry."
"Atebis'," came the terse
reply.
Napoleon
grinned. "Ooh, he said a bad word."
"And
you better not eat my baklava," Illya warned.
"I'd
never dream of it," Napoleon assured him blithely as he opened the box and
started poking around. "He shouldn't
be much longer," he said to Jim. He
closed the box, leaving Illya's dessert be.
"We'll feed you, throw you into bed, and we can figure out what's
going on when you wake up."
That
sounded wonderful to Jim. He could barely
keep his eyes open.
"Got
it," Illya announced, dropping through the hole and landing easily on the
floor of the elevator, hands filled with the remains of whatever explosive
device he'd just disarmed. "I don't
think it's a THRUSH design."
Napoleon
pursed his lips. "So, did THRUSH
use someone else's design to throw us off, or is it someone else entirely who
planted the thing?"
Illya
shrugged. "I'll take it apart
upstairs. I might be able to answer you
then."
Jim forced
himself to stand but Napoleon ended up grabbing his elbow again. "Come on. Maybe we'll skip feeding you and just park
you in bed."
Jim nodded
dully. With Napoleon at his side, he
entered the elevator. He tensed for a
second when Illya hit the "P", but nothing happened. The elevator shot up at an unsettling speed
and Jim felt his ears pop as if he'd dived deeply under water. He swallowed and was relieved when they
cleared.
The
elevator arrived with a ding. Napoleon
and Illya both had their guns out again.
Jim clenched the knife, hoping he wouldn't actually have to use it. His reflexes were shot, and he'd hate it if
something happened to Napoleon and Illya because he couldn't respond quickly
enough.
"Nothing,"
Illya reported. "Apparently they
were counting on the bomb to do their dirty work." He almost sounded disappointed.
Jim
followed them a short distance down the hall to another door that had a very
sophisticated assortment of gadgets attached to it. Illya took some readings and grinned. "They tried very hard to get in."
Napoleon
grinned back. He explained to Jim, "No
one can get in. Illya's made it
impenetrable."
Jim found
it hard to believe that any place was truly impenetrable, but he was too tired
to argue. It took Illya about two
minutes to cycle through all the gadgets.
Finally the door opened, and the three men entered. It took Illya another minute to get it locked
up again. Napoleon let out a happy
sigh. "Now we're safe." To put action to his words, he took off his
suit jacket and hung it up, then took his gun and holster and laid them on the
table by the front door.
Jim was
willing to take him at his word, so he handed the knife back to Illya.
Napoleon
took him in hand and dragged him farther into the apartment. "Shower, then bed. You can eat when you get up. I also want to check you out for any wounds
we should pay attention to."
When Napoleon
stopped, Jim saw he was in a bathroom.
Napoleon adjusted some knobs and water began streaming out of the
overhead spigot. In a short time, steam
was filling the room. The only showers
Jim had ever taken had been with cold water.
If he wanted warm water to clean with, he'd always had to take a
bath.
"Strip,"
Napoleon commanded him.
Jim obeyed,
finding sense in having Napoleon check him over. Artie would normally do it, but Artie wasn't
here. Jim felt a moment's guilt at
leaving him, even if he knew he'd do his lover no good in the shape he was in.
Napoleon
told him to leave his clothes on the floor.
Jim felt his impersonal touch as he investigated the bruises Loveless'
men had left behind and the impact upon arriving. "Nothing too bad," he was
reassured. Napoleon pulled back the
curtain. "We've got loads of hot
water, so take your time." He
pointed to various containers. "They
all say what they are, but the blue stuff's the shampoo. The soap's right underneath it. Here's a washcloth. I'll bring you a pair of Illya's
pajamas. When you're done, hit that
button first, it diverts the water to the lower spigot, and then turn the knobs to the right to shut them off. Left one is hot, right one is cold, you turn
them to adjust the temperature."
Jim could
do that. As Napoleon scooped up his
clothes, Jim tested the temperature of the water. It felt like a slice of heaven. He got in, closed the curtain and let the
water cascade over him. The force of the
water almost hurt, but as he moved his body, the pressure acted like a massage,
working out tired knots.
This alone
was worth traveling to the future.
Mustering the energy, Jim poured some shampoo on his head and began to
scrub. When he was done with his hair
and then his body, Jim stood under the spray a little longer. When he felt himself start to nod off, he
followed Napoleon's instructions and shut off the water.
He found
some navy blue pajamas on the counter and put them on, finding them to be a
little large but a reasonable fit. He
opened the door and found Illya waiting for him. Illya prodded him down the hall and opened
another door. "Here's your
room. That's water by your bedside."
Jim nodded
gratefully.
"Sleep
yourself out," Illya ordered. He picked up a weapon Jim hadn't
noticed.
"That
looks like a Colt .45 Peacemaker," Jim said,
surprised. It was odd to see something
that might have sat on his own dresser at home.
"It is. I thought you'd feel more comfortable having
a weapon nearby you were familiar with.
We are safe here, but…"
Illya shrugged. "It is
loaded with five bullets…that's correct, yes?"
Jim
nodded. "Yes." He took the gun from Illya and checked it to
find that the hammer was resting on the empty chamber. "Yes.
It keeps you from shooting your foot accidentally."
Illya
grinned at him. "There are more
bullets in that bowl." The bowl was
also sitting on the dresser.
Jim was
touched by the gesture, and the research.
He did feel better knowing there was a weapon here he could shoot
without difficulty and that Illya had taken such care with it. "You collect guns?" It was the only explanation for why Illya had
such an old gun in his possession.
Illya nodded. "Yes.
Weapons of all sorts. I can show you if you wish, but for now, go
to sleep. We'll talk more tomorrow."
Needing no
further invitation, Jim crawled onto the bed, taking a brief moment to admire
how comfortable it was and how soft the sheets were, before he sank his face
into the pillow and fell fast asleep.
*****
Jim slowly
awoke, too comfortable to want to fully relinquish sleep. But finally he was fully awake, his eyes
blinking. "Artie?" He patted the bed next to him, but he was
alone. Then his eyes took in the room
around him, and he remembered where he was.
Where Artie was.
He quickly
sat up. There was a timepiece by the bed
but, since Jim had no idea when he'd fallen asleep, knowing it was now eleven
didn't help. He could see the sun
shining brightly outside, so it was clearly eleven in the morning. It had been half-dark when he'd arrived at
his friends' home, but Jim honestly didn't know if it had been a nighttime
half-dark, or early morning darkness. He'd
lost track of time at the hospital.
He stood,
realizing he felt much better. The aches
were largely gone. Jim stretched, drank
some of the water and noticed there were clothes sitting on a chair with a note
attached.
'We're
downstairs,' it read.
Cryptic
and not much help. Downstairs where?
First
things first. Jim used the bathroom and then dressed in the
borrowed clothing. Presumably they were
from Illya, and Jim was grateful they were fairly similar in size. He eyed the revolver, debating whether to
take it with him or not. Remembering
Napoleon's surety that they were safe here, Jim left it on the dresser.
Once in the
main room, Jim heard Napoleon's voice so he knew that downstairs had to be
close by. Following the sounds, he found
a circular staircase and descended. The
voices pulled him toward a room where the kitchen had been located in the above
apartment. He poked his head inside and
found what looked like a control center.
There was a
huge map on the wall which appeared to be powered by more electricity. Colored lights were lit up sporadically
across the pictorial representation of all the countries of the world. Napoleon saw him and gestured him in. "Ah, our time traveler is awake,"
he said with a smile. "How do you
feel?"
"Good,
actually. How long have I been sleeping?"
Napoleon
noted the timepiece on the wall. "Sixteen
hours."
Jim couldn't
remember the last time he'd slept so much.
And to leave Artie alone all that time was unforgivable.
As if
reading his mind, Napoleon said, "Don't worry. Illya's been over to see Artie. He's fine and is glad to hear you're getting
the rest you need. There's a driver
downstairs ready to take you over as soon as I've forced you to eat. Artie's words, not mine."
Typical
of Artie to be taking care of Jim, even from a hospital bed.
"What is this place?"
"It's
a secondary U.N.C.L.E. control room. The
main one is at U.N.C.L.E. headquarters, but Illya recreated it here for those
times when we need to stay home. I can
do everything I need from here as well as at our main office."
He gestured
at the map. "All the white lights
reflect the locations of our agents working on some mission or other. The red lights indicate some danger. Either something is going down, or a rescue
is urgently required. Yellow indicates
status quo, either reconnaissance or the mission is going as planned. Green indicates the action is over and clean
up is underway."
There were
only three red lights. He moved to the
wall-size map and pointed to one in Texas.
"What's happening here?"
"A
couple of our agents literally tripped over a huge THRUSH compound. One of them was taken, but the other got away
and notified us. I have a slew of agents
on their way to affect the rescue and sweep the compound."
“You used
that word yesterday. Thrush. What does it stand for?”
“It’s an
organization comprised of people whose primary goal is to create anarchy so
they can take control of the world. They
believe in the two-party system: the masters and the slaves. The initials stand for Technological
Hierarchy for the Removal of Undesirables and the Subjugation of Humanity.”
“Charming,”
Jim said. It sounded like something
Loveless would have created. There was
another wall of machines that had whirring wheels and blinking lights. “What's that?"
"Our
computer system." Napoleon stared at it through narrowed eyes. "Despite my usual aptitude for
computers, this particular one and I have an agreement. I leave it alone and it leaves me alone. Illya's the only one it likes. It's...," he thought for a moment, "it
actually works very similarly to the brain.
It stores information we give it which can be retrieved at any
time. It can correlate data and draw
conclusions. It can also talk to others
like it."
"It's
how Illya found out about my license," Napoleon continued. "Illya has this one set up to instantly
recognize key names, mine among them.
When the police entered my information into their computer, this one
noticed it and alerted Illya."
Jim wished
Artie were here to see this. He could
imagine the look of utter astonishment and delight on his friend's face. Jim felt an urgent need to be by Artie's
side. "Maybe I could eat at the
hospital," he suggested.
"I'd
get skinned alive by Illya and Artie," Napoleon said with a shudder. "I don't think I could handle both of
them." His eyes lit up as a chime
sounded. "That's Illya. He's home sooner than I expected."
By the time
they ascended the staircase, Illya met them at the top. He smiled at Jim. "You look better."
"I
feel better. I can't thank you two
enough."
"We
owed you a few favors," Napoleon said as he ushered them all into the
kitchen. He opened the refrigerator door
and began throwing sandwich fixings on the table.
Illya got
out plates, glasses, and silverware.
Jim started
taking off the outer wrapper from the items Napoleon had tossed. The variety was stunning. In his time, even a large restaurant wouldn't
have this many types of meats and cheeses available. Once Illya and Napoleon sat down, Jim started
happily assembling a sandwich fit for a king.
"Have
any trouble getting in and out?" Napoleon asked Illya.
Illya shook
his head. "I have placed agents
around the building. With Jim and Artie
here I decided we might be coming and going more frequently. I was concerned that with Artie in a cast, he
will not be able to maneuver quickly if we are attacked."
Jim
appreciated that. "Why don't you
have agents here all the time?"
"They
are needed all over the world. They don't
need to waste their time protecting two fully qualified agents."
Illya
looked as if he didn’t quite agree with Napoleon, but other than a look sent
Napoleon’s way, Illya kept his mouth shut.
Jim wasn't
exactly sure what their positions were with U.N.C.L.E., but they were clearly
more important than agents. However, it
wasn't any of his business as long as he could keep Artie safe. "You said this place was impenetrable,"
he said. "How do you know that?"
"The
entire two floors are wrapped in a very fine wire," Illya explained. "It
is similar to chicken wire, made of the strongest steel. It is alarmed and electrified. The windows and doors cannot be opened
without first disarming a series of alarms, and if it is not done properly, our
unwelcome guest will feel even more unwelcome." Illya grinned as he bit into his sandwich.
"Couldn't
someone blow up the entire building?"
"Yes,"
Illya said darkly. "It is why I
keep trying to get Napoleon to move to a secure building."
"Fortunately,
they've only tried a few times," Napoleon said brightly, ignoring Illya's
comment, as he opened up a bag of something.
Jim read the name. Lays Potato Chips.
He ate
one. Then he took a handful.
"He is
why I now have gray hair," Illya said grumpily.
"You
don't have gray hair," Napoleon countered.
"I have more gray hair than you." He tapped his temples.
"You
must look closely, but there is definitely gray." Illya rolled his eyes up as if he could see
his hair that way.
"And
you call me vain," Napoleon huffed.
"You have given me more gray hair than I've ever given you." He turned to Jim. "Do you want to know why I said this
place was impenetrable?"
Jim nodded.
"It's
because he tried for six hours to get in and got nowhere. He wouldn't have stopped then except that he
got a nasty jolt of electricity that stopped his heart. I did CPR on him for five minutes before it
started up again." He pointed an
accusing finger at Illya. "You are
why I have gray hair."
Illya waved
a casual hand at him as if his heart ceasing to beat was all in a day's work. "I needed to be sure no one could get
in."
"CPR?" Jim asked for clarification,
privately admiring Illya's doggedness.
"Cardio-pulmonary
resuscitation," Illya said. "You
press on the chest to mimic a heart beat, and you breathe into the victim's
mouth to mimic them breathing. You can
keep someone alive for quite a while that way."
More things
Jim didn't know. "I need you both
to start teaching me about this century.
There's too much I don't understand." He didn't miss the look Napoleon and Illya
exchanged. "What?" he
asked.
"We've
been thinking about that," Napoleon began.
"Let's finish lunch, and then we can go see Artie and talk about it
together."
Swallowing
down his impatience, wanting to know what they were thinking, Jim refocused his
attention on his lunch.
*****
They all
drove in together; Jim was beginning to realize that Napoleon went nowhere
without his blond Russian shadow. After
Jim incorrectly called something a car, Napoleon corrected him. “They're all vehicles, but that's a car,"
he said, pointing at the vehicle next to them.
"And that's a truck."
He pointed at a larger one.
"How
about that one?" It was a size in-between the smaller and
larger vehicles.
"That's
a truck, too, but it's a personal truck, as opposed to a commercial truck." Hands on the steering wheel, Napoleon pointed
ahead with an index finger. "That's
a car, but it's also referred to as a sedan, that basic car shape." He pointed to another. "That's a van."
Jim watched
as they passed the boxier vehicle. "What
was the name of the wagon that took Artie to the hospital?"
"That
was an ambulance." Napoleon pointed
to the right, his hand coming perilously close to Illya's nose. "That's a convertible." Illya batted his hand out of the way. Napoleon frowned. "Although why anyone would have the top
down when it's this chilly…"
Hearing
something in Napoleon's voice, Jim took a careful look at the car next to them,
which was why he saw the weapon being raised and aimed at Illya. "Illya," Jim cried, "get down." He grabbed for the gun that lay on the seat
next to him and aiming as carefully as he could in a moving car, he fired.
Just as he
got the shot off, Napoleon braked sharply.
Jim saw the red bloom of a direct hit grow on the man's chest, and the
assassin fell against the driver, jerking the wheel. Their car hit the curb on the side of the
road, bounced back into traffic, hit a car, and then slammed into a telephone
pole on the side of the street, stopping the car sharply.
Napoleon
pulled off to the side of the road, and he and Illya were out of the car,
approaching the disabled vehicle, guns out.
Illya was also talking on the thin metal object he'd identified to Jim
as a communicator.
Jim
reloaded his gun and got out of the car as well. But by then, Illya and Napoleon were at the
other car, putting their weapons away.
The one man was dead and the other was out cold. "That was a nice shot," Illya said,
as he admired Jim's handiwork.
"That's
another favor we owe you," Napoleon said with a look of gratitude.
"I
suspect we'll be collecting all those favors over the next few days," Jim
said with a wry grin.
Shortly,
two dark sedans pulled over to the side of the road. When Illya and Napoleon didn't react, Jim
assumed they were other U.N.C.L.E. agents.
They swarmed over the car, securing the unconscious man, starting their
search of the vehicle. An ambulance
arrived next, discharging more agents who removed the dead man from the car.
Illya
snapped out a few commands. Once
everything seemed under control, the three of them returned to their own
car. Napoleon tapped his temples. "Gray hair, Illya. That weapon was meant for you. If Jim hadn't been with us, you'd be dead."
Illya
shrugged.
Napoleon
rolled his eyes and started up the car, shaking his head. Jim could understand why Illya shrugged. If you came out of it alive, that was all
that mattered. It was Artie who got more
caught up in the 'what if' game. Artie
would be properly sympathetic to Napoleon's plight. Meanwhile, if Jim was going to be hanging
around these two, he needed a better weapon.
*****
When they
arrived at the hospital, Napoleon made sure the agent guarding the door looked
sufficiently alert, and then pushed by him after Illya and Jim, closing the
door behind them. The wide window in the
door made privacy difficult, but Napoleon yanked the curtain closed around the
bed closest to the door, shielding all four of them from view.
Pulling
Artie's curtain closed as well, giving Jim and Artie some privacy, Napoleon
used the other cubicle to draw Illya into his arms to hold him tightly. At least Illya allowed him this. Illya had no interest in belaboring a near
miss with death, but he allowed Napoleon to touch him.
"I
will be more careful, Napoleon," Illya said. He also always said that. Not that he meant it. How death had allowed them the barely casual
courtesy they paid it continued to baffle Napoleon. They had always taken too many chances; probably
would until the day they died. He kissed
Illya gently, allowing his lover's gentle touch to calm him down.
An hour
later, after they'd caught Artie up on events and he'd been able to see for
himself how well Jim looked, Napoleon was glad that someone was as disturbed as
he was about Illya's brush with death.
After all this time you'd think he'd be used to Illya's easy dismissal
of a near-hit, but every time it gave Napoleon the shakes.
It wouldn't
last. Another hour and he'd be fine, but
right now all he really wanted to do was hold Illya and keep him safe from all
the crazy people out there who thought nothing of putting a bullet through his
brain.
*****
Jim took
advantage of the unexpected privacy to kiss Artie; it seemed like years since
they had touched. Jim almost laughed at
that. It had been years. One hundred-twenty-five of
them to be exact. "You
scared me, Artie. I really thought I'd
lost you this time. Thought
I'd lost everything."
With his
good hand, Artie caressed Jim's face. "I'm
pretty hard to kill. Besides, I have no
intention of leaving you alone."
"You
better not," Jim warned. "I
don't want to try living without you."
He grinned. "You're too good
a cook." He touched Artie's
cast. "And don't think I'll buy
this as an excuse."
"Ah,
James, you're on to me. I was hoping you
wouldn't see through this façade of mine but you did. You're right.
This was all to try to get you to do the cooking."
Listening
to Artie tease him brought home again just how close it had been this
time. "I wish there was room in
that bed of yours for me," he whispered.
"So do
I," Artie whispered back. "It was lonely without you last night."
"I'll
stay with you tonight," Jim promised.
"You'll
do no such thing," Artie argued. "You'll
go home with Napoleon and Illya and sleep in a real bed and eat real food. Granted, I'm not allowed a full diet yet, but
even still, the stuff they're giving me has as much taste as sawdust. I ate better in the Army."
"Artie…"
"Jim," Artie said kindly with a smile. "You need to rest up, because when I get
out of here you'll be waiting on me hand and foot. I won't be able to do much of anything
myself. I'm sure to run you ragged in no
time."
Jim didn't
care as long as he got to sleep next to Artie.
How he'd gone most of his adult life without Artie next to him was
beyond him. "When are they letting
you out?"
"Four
days, they said."
"Four
days too long," Jim complained.
Artie
motioned him closer and kissed him again.
"I love you."
Jim felt a
horse-sized lump in his throat and couldn't have spoken if his life depended on
it. He hoped his eyes were communicating
his love. They must have because Artie
beamed back at him.
"Safe
to come in?"
Napoleon called, a teasing tone in his voice.
"It's
safe," Artie assured him.
Napoleon
pulled back the middle curtain, leaving the one by the door closed, affording
them continued privacy. "Ready to talk?"
Artie and
Jim both nodded. Illya and Napoleon
pulled up extra chairs until they were all sitting around Artie's bed.
Napoleon
started off. "Time travel is an
interesting paradox. We were concerned
at first that you being here might change the past, but once we thought about
it, we realized we have proof that you made it back safely. So, either you didn't affect the future
because you got back and lived the life you were meant to live, or you've
already affected the future by going back and living the life you weren't meant
to live." He frowned. "Did that make sense? It seemed to make so much more sense this
morning."
Artie smiled. "Little about any of
this makes sense. Just think about the
supposed linear aspect of time. When you
left us by jumping through that light, you ended up here, because, well, after
all, here you are. So, you left our time
and in seconds were here. So was this time already here, existing in a parallel sort of
universe, next to ours? Because if time was truly linear, it should have taken you close to
a hundred years to get here. Or
maybe you were in that light for all that time, in some sort of suspension."
"This
stuff really gives me a headache," Napoleon complained.
"What
proof do you have that we made it back?" Jim asked, focusing in on the one
thing that made some sense to him.
Illya
scowled. "This is where it gets
difficult. As Napoleon said, we know you
made it back, but we don't know what we did to get you back, or what we told
you while you were here so the past wouldn't be affected. And we're not sure what to tell you now."
"Some
damage has already been done," Napoleon said, "unless we give you an
amnesia pill, because you've both seen too much." He pointed at the IV tubing and other
paraphernalia. "For example, Artie,
next time you take care of someone who's been hurt, you'll know what can be
done to help, and you'll end up figuring out a way to do it. Could you see yourself not using what you now
know?"
Artie shook
his head. "It's there in my
mind. It would be hard to ignore, even
knowing I should ignore it." He
frowned. "You have amnesia pills?"
Napoleon
nodded. "But I wouldn't recommend
them. Sometimes they wipe out a little
too much memory."
Jim was
still thinking about what Illya had said, puzzling it through. "We died. That's how you know we got back, right? You have records of our death."
Napoleon
nodded. "Yes, we know when and how
you die."
The
question went unasked, but a tense silence filled the air.
"We
can't tell you much, but I will tell you this," Illya finally said, "because
it's what I'd want to know. You die
together."
Jim blew
out a breath of relief. That was exactly
what he wanted to know. "Thanks,
Illya."
"I
just hope knowing that doesn't make you relax or give up when you shouldn't,"
Illya said nervously.
"It's
odd," Artie said, "knowing you know when we die. I'm trying to imagine what my life would be
like if I knew the circumstances and timing of my death. Would I live my life more fully, or spend it
wincing in anticipation?" He shook
his head. "I'm not really sure I
know the answer to that. But I don't
think I want to know any more than you've told us. You've relieved my greatest fear." He smiled at Jim, squeezing his hand. "I'd hate to live my life without Jim,
and I'd feel just as badly leaving him alone.
We've gotten quite accustomed to each other."
Jim grinned
at him.
"The
next issue," Napoleon brought up, "which is why I put you off in the
kitchen, Jim, is deciding what to tell you about the time you now live in. A part of me feels we ought to find some
cabin deep in the woods and drop you off there until we figure out how to get you
home. The less you know, the less you
see, the less the chance you take home knowledge you shouldn't have."
"Or
should have," Artie countered. "Perhaps
we see things now that save our lives in the past, or save the lives of others."
Illya
scowled. "This is why it's
difficult to know what do to." He
gestured at Artie. "One of the
problems is that we'd like to keep you both here in this time until Artie
recovers. If you went home now, and he
got an infection or developed a problem with the cast, he'd be in serious
trouble."
"But,"
Napoleon added, "that means keeping you here for
weeks. And Jim's right, if you're going
to stay here that long, you need to have some current knowledge. Even keeping you cloistered in our apartment
won't help, unless we remove all the books and the TV and blacken the
windows. And I can't see doing that to
you."
"Just
talking to you and Illya tells me things about the future," Artie
confessed. "The phrases you use,
the way you speak to the people around you."
Illya
slumped back in his chair. "So,
that leaves us here, having no idea what to do."
"When
you researched our deaths, did you happen to look up Dr. Miguelito
Loveless? He's the madman who sent us
here," Artie explained. He shifted
in the bed.
"Are
you hurting?" Jim asked, just now noticing the tight lines around Artie's
eyes.
"A
little," Artie confessed.
Napoleon
reached over and pushed the call button.
"No,"
Illya said, answering Artie's question. "But
maybe we should."
Artie's
question prompted Jim toward an intriguing thought. "Maybe some of the machine that sent us
here still exists." He looked at
Illya and Napoleon. "He often
abandoned his inventions once they'd fulfilled his purpose or broke down. I think it was easier to just find a new
place to start over again."
Artie
nodded. "It also kept him one step
ahead of us a good deal of the time."
A voice
came out of the little box. "Yes?
May I help you?"
"Artemus needs some pain medication," Jim informed the
voice, hoping he wasn't making a fool out of himself.
"I'll tell the nurse."
Apparently
that had worked. One more thing learned.
"Where
were you when Loveless forced you into the device?" Illya asked. "Do you remember the location?"
"Mid
New York State," Jim said. "If
you had a map, I could probably figure it out."
"A map
from then, or a map of now?" Illya clarified.
Good
question. "A map of then," Jim
decided.
The nurse
entered the room, syringe in hand. She
swabbed off a port, and then slowly shot the pain medicine into the IV
tubing. Jim watched it take effect. The pain lines went away, and Artie's eyes
began to glaze.
Artie
smiled goofily up at the nurse, and Jim let out a half-laugh. "That's done the trick."
She smiled
at all four men, stumbled over one of the chair legs, blushed when Napoleon
caught her, and left the room quickly. "You've
lost your touch, Napoleon," Illya teased.
"They used to stay when you caught them."
"I
caught the one I wanted, so I let the rest of them go now." Napoleon winked at Illya, laughing when Illya
reddened. He glanced over at Artie,
laughed again at the blissful look on Artie's face. "They gave him the good stuff."
Jim grinned
at him. "I think our conversation
is over for the time being."
Illya
stood. "Napoleon and I will go do
some research and find a copy of a map of New York circa 1870. I assume you will stay here?"
Jim nodded.
Napoleon
pulled out his wallet and handed Jim three bills with twenties on them. "These should cover anything you might
need to buy. There's a gift shop on the
first floor that sells books and magazines.
I'm not sure whether to tell you to avoid them or not. There's also a cafeteria if you get
hungry. This currency looks different
but works just like what you're used to.
Everything will cost more than you would expect, however."
"Thanks,"
Jim said taking the money. "Wish I
could say I'll pay you back, but I probably won't."
"You
already did on the ride in," Napoleon reminded him. "I'd give you everything I own if you
needed it."
Jim put the
money in his pocket, acknowledging Napoleon's words with a nod. He felt similarly indebted.
Illya
pointed to the phone. "If you need
us, push the numbers written on the pad."
He showed Jim where he'd left the phone number for U.N.C.L.E.. "If we call you…" He put out his hand. "Napoleon, let
me have your communicator."
Napoleon
handed it over. Illya made some
adjustments and then handed it to Jim. "If
it beeps just twist it like so," he demonstrated, "and
it will be us calling. If you need us
urgently, do the same thing and we will answer."
Jim nodded,
willing to take it on faith. Apparently
there was no limit to the things that could produce voices.
Illya said,
"We'll be back in a few hours, and we'll bring you something to eat."
Jim
grinned. "Artie will be glad to
hear that, assuming they're letting him eat regular food by then."
"Hospital
food," Illya said disparagingly and shivered. "It's a bad thing."
"You'll
be all right?" Napoleon asked Jim.
"I
will."
"I'm
leaving the guard here," Illya reminded him. "So you won't really be alone. If you need something, he will help you."
Jim decided
it was time to push his mother hens out of the roost. "Go.
I'm fine." He shooed them
toward the door.
Napoleon
frowned at him and looked at Illya. "I
think he's kicking us out."
"I
think it is a not-so-subtle hint that we are being pests," Illya said in a
very loud whisper.
They did
walk to the door, however, and with a last grin, headed out.
As they
turned the corner, Jim almost called them back.
He took a deep breath. He could
do this. He was an armed and fully
capable Secret Service agent. Whatever
happened, he could bluff his way through it.
This certainly wouldn't be the first time he'd found himself in the
middle of something bizarre.
Mostly
reassured, he moved back to Artie's bedside, sitting down and recapturing his
lover's hand. This was all he needed to
do. Sit here and feel the warmth of
Artie's hand and just be glad they were both alive and together.
*****
When Illya
and Napoleon reappeared several hours later they came bearing a scroll and
white bags of something that smelled divine.
Jim hadn't moved from Artie's side except to use the bathroom, and he
was hungry.
He'd needed
the time to just be with Artie. He hadn't
wanted the distraction of something to read or eat. Jim had just wanted to sit with him, watch
him, do for him when he needed something, and talk softly with him when he
woke.
The
afternoon had been healing for the both of them. They had each other; they could get through
anything.
"Chinese
food," Illya said when he saw Jim sniffing the air.
"Hey,
Artie," Napoleon said cheerily. "Are
they letting you eat yet?"
"You
ask me that now," Artie scowled, "after bringing in that heavenly
smell to taunt me?"
"I
take it that's a no?"
Artie
sighed dramatically. "They want me
on liquids for one more day."
"Do
you want us to take this down to the cafeteria to eat?" Jim asked.
"No,
the company is worth the price of the deprivation," Artie said bravely.
Illya
grinned at him. "We will bring you
whatever you want for your first real meal."
"Something
Italian," Artie mused. "Or maybe German.
I love a good Bratwurst."
"We
will bring both, so you do not have to decide," Illya reassured him.
Artie
smiled. "Good man." He proffered his bedside table. "Eat, eat. I shall enjoy the aroma."
The other
three men took him at his word and spread out, sharing the different dishes
until their plates were overflowing.
Silence reigned as the men ate, only
interrupted for the request of more chow mein or
another serving of rice. Every time Jim
glanced up at Artie it was to find Artie's eyes on him. Or on his mouth.
Jim couldn't
wait until he had Artie to himself.
Casts and injuries aside, he'd find a way to put his mouth to good use
to make Artie feel better.
Finally,
they were done. Napoleon found a trash
can they crammed their empty plates into.
Illya cleaned off the bedside table and returned it to Artie for his
use.
Mindful of
Artie's injury but not wanting to leave him out, Jim had Napoleon unroll the
old map on Artie's bed so he could see it as well. He and Artie took a good look at it. "We were up here," Artie said,
tapping the map. "We were by this
lake."
"I
agree," Jim said. "Artie and I
had dinner here," he tapped a small dot on the map representing Otsego
County. "A town called Exeter. We'd been following Loveless' trail, hearing
rumors that he was up to something."
"Jim
and I spent the night in a bed and breakfast there and then headed out the next
day going southeast, toward Cooperstown," Artie added. "We were waylaid by some of Loveless'
goons and made the rest of the trip unconscious, but we couldn't have gone far."
"Were
you in a building? A
basement?" Illya asked.
"No, but
we were underground. Loveless loved
secret hiding places that no one could find.
Part mole I think," Artie said with a grin.
"More rat, I'd say," Jim amended. "I remember they had fish for dinner,
fresh fish, so we had to still be near the lake."
Illya
nodded. "Jim, maybe you and I can
go up there tomorrow and take a closer look and determine the most likely
location. Once we get a clearer idea of
where to look, I can send a team out to scour the area."
More than
willing to do that, Jim agreed. He
glanced at Artie. "You'll be all
right?"
"You
know I will. We do have to get
home. If we could actually find Loveless'
abandoned site, that will take us quite a few steps
closer to getting there." Artie
glanced at Illya. "Did you find
anything out about Loveless?"
"He
died and was listed as a maverick inventor who never really amounted to much."
Jim
grinned. "I'm sure he's spinning in
his grave hearing you tell us that.
Where was he when he died? Did we
have anything to do with it?"
Illya
hesitated as if questioning the wisdom of answering but then shrugged and said,
"No. It's hard to tell, but it
appears he died of heart failure."
Only
because Artie was going to be all right was Jim able to spare any pity for the
little man. Unsung and
gone with a whimper instead of a blaze of glory. Jim caught Artie's eyes, could see the same
thoughts going through his head. While
Jim had no idea of the actual circumstances of his death, at least he'd be with
Artie when it happened. That would make
up for anything else.
The four
men visited for another hour, and then Illya and Napoleon stepped out to give
them some privacy before taking Jim home.
"I'm a
lucky man, James," Artie said, running the backs of his fingers across Jim's
lips.
Jim sent a
chagrined look at Artie's cast and various tubes. "Not so lucky."
"Luckier
than most. I'm alive.
We're in safe hands. And I have
you. I feel like a cat who's used up fifteen of his nine lives." He shifted in the bed.
"Are
you hurting?"
"Yes,
but I can wait until you leave to ask for some pain medicine to help me sleep."
Jim didn't
want him to wait that long. He pushed
the call bell and told the nurse Artie needed more pain medication. Then he leaned down and gave his lover a
thorough kiss.
"Hmm.
That's a better cure than any pain draught," Artie said with a
smile. "Do that again."
Only too
happy to comply, Jim kissed Artie again, refamiliarizing
himself with the strength of Artie's tongue and the taste of his mouth. This he could do all night. But he heard the door opening and reluctantly
pulled back. "I'll see you
tomorrow, Mr. Gordon," he said softly, "as soon as we get back."
"I'll
be waiting," Artie promised.
With one
last look, Jim left the room to search for Illya and Napoleon.
*****
The next
evening, after Illya and Jim had spent most of the day scouring the area in New
York, Illya put Jim in a cab to go to the hospital. He and Napoleon were dealing with some
mission gone awry and wouldn't be free for a few hours.
Jim couldn't
believe how much it cost, but when they arrived at the hospital, he dutifully
paid the cab driver his fee and added in a tip as instructed. Within minutes he was with Artie.
Artie was
watching something on the television and his brow was furrowed. Jim sat down next to him on the chair. "What are you watching?"
"Something
called Battlestar Galactica. Did you know that man's gone to the moon?"
Jim's eyes
widened. "The
moon?"
Artie
nodded, still caught up in the show.
Jim watched
it for a minute. "Is this real?"
"No. It's a story."
"So
there aren't cities in space?"
Artie shook
his head. "No. They've got a United States flag up on the
moon, but that's it."
Jim got up
and moved to the window, gazing up at the moon that cast a radiant glow on the
view outside. Almost inconceivable to
think that way up there was an American flag.
"There
are fifty stars on it."
"Fifty? There are fifty states?" There were only thirty-seven back in their
time.
Artie
nodded. "And did you know that
there are flying machines?"
Jim
snorted. "Besides the one that goes to the moon?"
"People
use them to fly all over the world. They
can fly hundreds of people at a time.
They can fly from the United States to Europe in less than a day."
Jim couldn't
quite imagine that. "Have you been
watching television all day?" Jim
noticed that Artie's eyes looked a little glazed and he didn't think it was
from pain or pain medicine.
Riveted on
the television, Artie nodded again.
Standing,
Jim moved to the device and shut it off.
Artie blinked at it, and then looked at Jim. He could see the moment it fully sank in that
he was there. "Jim." Artie blinked again. "Thank you. That machine's worse than mesmerism."
Jim leaned
down and, after making sure no one was around, kissed him. "You look like you feel better."
"I do." He directed Jim's eyes to his side. "They took out that chest tube and
stitched me up. I feel much better
without it." He reached out for Jim's
hand and pulled him down to sit on the bed.
"And they took out that blasted catheter, so I feel like a new man."
Jim grinned
at him, wanting to give him another kiss.
He got up and pulled the curtain shut, giving them some semblance of
privacy. Sitting back down, he put his
hand over Artie's genitals, enjoying the natural feel of them now that the
catheter was gone.
It made him
want to strip off his clothes and crawl into bed with
his lover. "God, I want you,"
he said huskily. He could feel Artie's
cock harden a little under his hand.
Artie let
out one of those moans that came from deep in his throat. The sound made Jim's trousers start to feel
uncomfortably tight. He loved Artie's
moans. They drove him crazy.
"I
want you, too," Artie said huskily.
"But as much as it pains me to say it, this isn't the time or
place."
Jim
reluctantly moved his hand with a last squeeze.
"How many days until you can leave?" he asked impatiently,
knowing full well the answer. One day
less than yesterday. Still
too many damn days.
Artie just
reached for his hand and held it. "How
did it go today?" he said, changing subjects.
Just
touching Artie had thrown the events of the day clear out of his mind. Jim forced himself to concentrate. "I think we found the entrance to
Loveless' underground laboratory, but it looks like there was a rockslide as the
entrance is buried. Illya will have a
team go there tomorrow to excavate."
"Handy
having powerful friends, isn't it?" Artie said with a grin.
Not that
they hadn't had some powerful friends back home, but Napoleon and Illya had a
lot of power. More than
the President in some ways because their influence was global. Illya had explained a lot about U.N.C.L.E.
today while they were wandering the countryside. Speaking of power…"He let me drive part
of the way home," Jim said, remembering the feel of all that speed when he'd
stepped on the gas pedal.
Artie
sighed. "You're having all the fun,
James. It's not fair."
Jim tapped
Artie's leg affectionately. "I'm
sure you'll get a chance before we go home."
"Well,
in the meantime, maybe you could give an injured man a back rub."
"Gladly,"
Jim said. He'd spotted some lotion here
yesterday. He opened the small drawer of
the bedside table and found it in there.
Jim arranged pillows until Artie was lying on his side, broken arm resting
on a thick roll of blankets. Jim poured
some lotion on his hands, and warmed it up, glad to be putting his hands on his
partner--even if it wasn't exactly where he wanted his hands.
*****
A couple of
days later Illya walked into Napoleon's office.
"How's the digging going?" Napoleon asked, as he watched some
footage sent to him by an agent in Pakistan.
"It's
going," Illya said. "And going
and going and…" He started paying
attention to what Napoleon was watching.
"Was that the THRUSH satrap in Pakistan?" It was going down in flames.
"Yes,"
Napoleon said in satisfaction. "Was being the operative word." He turned the tape off. "I never get tired of watching that,"
he said with a grin. "What do you
mean, going and going? I thought they
got through the entrance."
"They
did, but it emptied into a long series of caverns and a good deal of it has
collapsed. They're shoring it up as they
dig."
"Jim's
sure this is the place?"
"Yes."
Illya had taken him there by helicopter
yesterday to make sure before they kept digging.
Napoleon
nodded. Short and to
the point. That was his
Illya. "When are they releasing
Artie?"
"Tomorrow."
"Are
we putting them in the suite downstairs?"
Uncharacteristically,
Illya hesitated. "Actually, I
thought I'd put them in our suite. Artie
will still be recovering, and I wouldn't want him to have to climb stairs to
get to the kitchen."
Napoleon
sighed. It was probably the best
solution, but he liked their room. "Fine. I'll help
you move stuff tonight." He wiggled
his eyebrows at Illya. "We'll have
to christen the bed, you know."
"Of
course," Illya said in a deadpan voice.
"Far be it from me to stand in the way of tradition."
"All
right, then." Napoleon was suddenly liking this idea. Bed christenings were always nights to remember. "Tonight?"
Illya
finally grinned at him. "I'll put
the rubber sheets on."
Napoleon
barked out a laugh. "I'll be sure
to take my vitamins." His eyes
raked over his lover's body. It never
got old. Even after all these
years. "Get out of here, or we'll
be putting this conference table to the test again."
Illya put a
hand on the table, shaking it, as if testing its durability.
Napoleon
groaned. "Out."
With a last
grin, Illya obeyed.
"Jesus,"
Napoleon muttered. Temptation, thy name
is Illya.
*****
Finally.
Artie had been discharged and driven back to Napoleon and Illya's in a
large limousine. He'd been settled in,
bathed, fed, and now, finally, finally, they were alone and in bed.
Jim lay
next to Artie, snuggled into his good side, soaking in his warmth.
Artie let
out an expansive breath. "I've
missed you terribly."
Jim just
grunted into Artie's shoulder. He was
enjoying the sensation of an uninterrupted and non-furtive moment with his
lover. The twentieth century may have come
a long way, but in many ways they'd gone backwards in their acceptance of
relationships between men. Napoleon had
warned him to be circumspect, even with fairly benign touching.
So this was
heaven. Just this
simple touch. Jim let out a
contented hum.
"You
sound like a purring cat," Artie said, a smile in his voice.
"A cat
who wants some cream," Jim said smiling right back. He kissed Artie's neck, moved down to lick
his collar bone, nibble his jaw. He
continued his explorations and latched onto one of Artie's nipples, sucking,
playing with the hardening nub with his tongue.
Artie did
his deep-throated groan again, his hips arching. "The way you touch me," he said
huskily.
Jim loved how
Artie's responses were so genuine. No
artifice, no acting to please his partner, just a hedonistic pleasure in Jim's
touch.
Artie tried
to touch him back, but Jim pressed him down.
"Don't try to move around. I
don't want any of this to hurt you."
"But I
want to touch you. It's been as long for
me as it's been for you," Artie protested, even as he let out a nice
throaty sound as Jim lapped at his navel.
Jim grinned
through his ministrations. "Don't
worry. I won't leave you out. Just let me do this for you right now."
Artie lay
back against the pillows, surrendering. "I'm
all yours."
Jim knew
that. Rejoiced in
that. Depended
on it. And taking instant
advantage, Jim reached his goal, Artie's large and very hard cock. Their job had often forced them to be apart,
and often for far longer than a week, but being this close together and not
being able to touch had seemed like torture.
With a rapacious grin, Jim licked his lips and took Artie's cock in his
mouth.
The noises
Artie made were everything he'd hoped for.
He hollowed his cheeks and sucked while using his tongue to drive Artie
crazy. His lover's hands were gripping
his hair hard enough to hurt. Jim didn't
care. All it meant was that he was doing
this right.
He used a
hand to fondle Artie's balls, his other to stroke in time to his sucking. Jim could already feel Artie's balls start to
tighten. It wasn't surprising this would
be quick. Jim didn't expect to last any longer. Tomorrow night they could take their time.
Artie let
out a bellow and his cock jerked, releasing its orgasmic load into Jim's
mouth. Jim swallowed every drop, holding
the cock in his mouth until it softened and Artie sagged back down onto the
bed. Finally, Jim released it and looked
up at Artie to find him almost asleep with a sated look on his face.
Not
completely asleep, though. He managed to
pry open his eyes and patted his chest. "Come
here."
Jim lay
between Artie's thighs, against his chest.
Artie reached down with his good hand and took Jim's painfully hard cock
in hand. He'd be lucky to last a minute,
especially under Artie's oh-so-talented hand.
Trying not
to move too much heightened the sensation.
He didn't want to knock into Artie and cause him any discomfort. It felt as if he was held in invisible
chains.
He didn't
last long, quickly spilling his seed over Artie's hand. Jim reached for the towel he'd grabbed before
coming to bed and cleaned them both up.
Then, moving to Artie's side, he nestled against his lover's larger
body. "Good night, Artie."
Artie
kissed his forehead. "Good night,
James."
Thoroughly
content, Jim slept.
*****
Napoleon
watched Artie and Illya as they concentrated on the remains of Loveless'
lab. "Can it be moved?" he
asked, much preferring the safety of an U.N.C.L.E. lab
than this place in the middle of nowhere.
Illya shook
his head. "It's amazing. He's actually used part of the cave wall to…"
he stopped, looking closer.
"To
what?"
"Could
there be something in this stone he used as a power source?" Illya asked
Artie. "This ring seems to be
imbedded in the wall."
Artie
stared at all the debris and then at the ring.
"I don't know. I'd need to
study it to be sure and, even then, I might not know. Loveless, for all the fact he was a maniacal
fiend, was also a genius." He
shrugged. "Unfortunately, I didn't
even see it work; I was unconscious when he used it on me."
Illya
grunted, moving so close to the wall it looked like he was going to merge with
it. "I don't think we can move it,
Napoleon," Illya finally answered. "It's
possible Loveless found something in the actual compound of this cave, this
wall, that's essential to the experiment.
While we can take some of this stuff back to U.N.C.L.E. for reassembly,
I believe we'll have to use the machine here."
"Can
you put it back together?" Napoleon asked, gesturing at the remains of the
lab. While there were several sections
of the machine still intact, most of it seemed to be in pieces all over the
large room. "It looks like a
cyclone went through here."
"Probably
Loveless having a tantrum," Jim suggested.
Napoleon
was impressed. For a little guy, he
could do a lot of damage.
Artie
grinned at Jim. "Probably
angry that you were out of his reach, James. You know how he loved to show off for you."
Illya
nodded. "That seems to be a
universal trait of megalomaniacs the world over. Our THRUSH enemies love to share their evil
plans so they can gloat." He
glanced at Jim. "Did you see it
work?"
"Yes." Jim moved over to where Illya was
standing. "This was filled with a
shimmering sort of light. He called it a
probability horizon." He pointed to
where a bank of antique monitors stood. "Those
were beeping and flashing, and something over there," he pointed toward a
heap of metal, "was making a tapping noise like a telegraph."
Illya
looked at the pile of debris and pursed his lips. "This will take some time, Napoleon." With that, he crouched by the pile and began
to investigate some of the items, handing them to Artie, the two of them
conversing in low tones.
Napoleon
watched them fondly. "Like two kids
in a candy store," he said with a grin.
Jim grinned
back at him.
"We
better get out of here," Napoleon whispered. "Right now they're not paying attention
to us, but pretty soon they'll turn us into lackeys." Crooking his finger at Jim, he encouraged him
out of the cave. "I brought some
toys for us to play with just in case we found ourselves with time on our
hands."
Opening up
the left rear door to the helicopter, Napoleon flipped a latch that revealed a
storage container. A moment later he was
handing Jim some impressive hardware.
"Thought
you could try a few of these out," he said to Jim, smiling at the gleam in
the lawman's eyes.
*****
Two hours
later, Jim was in love. He wanted to
take all of it back with him. The
accuracy, the firepower, all the attachments from the suppressors to the
telescopic rifle scope filled him with envy.
If he had weapons like this at his disposal…he sighed. Even if they did take some of it with them,
they couldn't make the bullets or replace broken parts.
Not to
mention the potential consequences if any of it fell into the wrong hands. The ramifications of that didn't bear
thinking about. One hundred years of
advanced technology could completely change the face of the future, possibly
with disastrous results.
He held the
assault rifle, admiring the grip and how light it was compared to the rifles of
his day. Something seemed to gleam off
the scope for a second but then disappeared.
The hairs rose on the back of his neck.
"Napoleon," he said softly.
He was appreciative
of the fact that Napoleon knew instantly that something was wrong. He moved to Jim quickly. "What is it?"
"I
thought I saw something. I think someone
may be watching us."
"Maybe
it's someone from the town," Napoleon suggested.
That was
possible, Jim thought. They'd been
shooting for a while now. It wasn't
unreasonable for someone to have come investigating. But he didn't think so, and a look at
Napoleon's face told him he didn't think Napoleon thought that either.
There was a
sound of an engine, and the rotors of the helicopter began rotating. "They're taking the helicopter,"
Napoleon hissed, taking off toward it at a run.
Jim was
right beside him. They weren't more than
a few hundred yards from where Illya had landed the helicopter, so it didn't
take them long to get there. A pilot was
getting ready to lift off, and a second man was about to get in.
Napoleon
lunged for the man, yanking him away from the helicopter. Jim leaped around them and jumped inside,
pointing his gun at the thief. "Turn
it off," he demanded.
The pilot
ignored him, flipping switches. Jim felt
the thing start to hover. He held his
position, switching off the safety on his weapon, and pointing it again. "Put it back on the ground." Jim had enjoyed the helicopter flight more
than most things he could remember, but doing it again with someone other than
Illya in control was not something he wanted to do. Especially if things went
wrong. It would be a long first
step. "Put it down," he
demanded again.
The pilot
smiled at him, the sort of smile a soldier on the front line smiles when he
doesn't care if he lives or dies. The
helicopter began to rise. There was a
thump, and the vehicle dipped sharply.
The pilot compensated and righted it and then rose at a precipitous
rate. "Go ahead and shoot,"
the pilot dared. "Hope you know how
to fly one of these things," he taunted.
Needless to
say, Jim didn't. And a self-taught crash
course would end up being exactly that. A crash. "I
could just shoot you in the foot," Jim said bitingly. He aimed the gun at the man's feet.
"Shooting
a gun in a helicopter's not a good idea," the man said scathingly. "But feel free."
Jim hated
that he had no idea if the man was bluffing or not. Damn.
He should have paid closer attention as Illya flew the damn thing. He glanced down at the ground that was
falling away at an alarming rate.
Frowning, he realized he only saw one body. One. That meant…
Just as he
was forming the thought that maybe that thump had been Napoleon hitching a
ride, the pilot's door was pulled open, and Napoleon swung in with both feet,
kicking the pilot in the face, knocking him over and out at the same time. Jim dragged him out of the way. "Please tell me you know how to fly this
thing," Jim asked urgently.
Napoleon
grinned at him, seizing the controls. "Piece of cake."
And it was. In only a couple of
minutes he was landing it right back where they started from. Jim took the time to truss up their thief,
searching his pockets for identification.
"Russell Thanson," he read off a
business card.
"Don't
know him," Napoleon said. "But
I do know the man on the ground. One of our THRUSH friends."
"Why
are they here?" Jim asked. "They
couldn't possibly know about Loveless' machine." Even Loveless couldn't have set up some
posthumous revenge on the faint hope that Jim and Artie would show up
here.
"The
helicopter," Napoleon said. "It's
our newest design filled with all sorts of gadgets they'd love to get their
hands on. They probably tracked us from
headquarters."
Jim had
been shown some of their tracking devices.
Obviously THRUSH had them, too.
He nodded. "Is that one
dead?"
Napoleon
nodded. "Very. I'll call headquarters and have someone come
to take them both off our hands. Maybe
this one," he nudged the unconscious man with his foot, "will have
some answers for us as to whether anyone else will be paying us a visit. If so, we'll need a security contingent to
keep them safe," he added with a jerk of his chin toward the cave.
Napoleon
cuffed the unconscious man to one of the struts of the helicopter, patted him
on the head and headed at a fast pace toward the cave. When they got there, Illya and Artie were
piecing things together, totally unconcerned.
Napoleon
rolled his eyes. "Didn't you hear
the helicopter taking off?"
Illya
nodded. "Yes."
"And
you didn't think you should investigate?"
With a
furrowed brow, Illya looked up at him. "Why? We were in here working. You were out there shooting guns." Despite his cavalier words, Jim noticed him
giving Napoleon a careful look, as if checking for wounds. "I take it you weren't giving Jim a
flying lesson?"
"No, THRUSH
was trying to steal your newest toy."
Illya's
eyes narrowed. "They did not
succeed, I trust?"
"No,"
Napoleon answered with a frown. "They
did not succeed." He did a good job
mimicking Illya's deadpan tone. "Glad
to see you're so worried about the helicopter."
"I am
just glad you found something to occupy your time instead of standing around
here distracting us."
Napoleon
looked toward heaven for strength and pulled out his communicator to call for a
pick-up.
*****
Bedtime
came early that night, and the next morning they all sat down to omelets made
by Napoleon. Artie wondered if he could
take one of those omelet pans home with him.
If there was a way to do it without causing harm, he'd take a trunk home
of all the items they'd used since being here, wondering how they'd lived
without them. Post-it notes, ballpoint
pens, disposable razors, scotch tape, mint-flavored toothpaste. The list was endless.
He didn't
waste his time drooling about the electronics.
There wasn't any way to use them back home. Although he'd have sold his back molars to
take home a computer.
Illya
joined them a few minutes later, and Napoleon slipped an omelet onto the plate
in front of him. With a smile, Illya dug
in. "Our little friend yesterday
was definitely THRUSH," Illya informed them.
"Was
he alone?" Napoleon asked. "Other than his deceased partner in crime?"
Frowning,
Illya finished a bite. "Yes."
"And
their mission?"
"To
steal the helicopter," Illya answered, still frowning.
"But
you don't believe it?"
"Why
go there to steal a helicopter?"
Napoleon
shrugged. "Because
it was there?"
Illya shot
Napoleon a look that made Artie grin.
Trying
again, Napoleon said, "Illya, do you really think someone could resist our
veridicals? Especially a bozo like that?"
"No,"
Illya said shortly.
"But
you still don't believe it?"
"You
think it has something to do with the cave?" Artie asked Illya.
"Napoleon
and I searched the cave and the open tunnels leading in and out of it, and
other than a few old sticks of dynamite we didn't find anything or anyone,"
Jim said. "What else could they be
looking for? They couldn't possibly know
about Loveless' invention."
"Maybe
they do," Artie said. "Maybe
he left behind journals. Based on what
you've told me of THRUSH, it sounds as if Loveless' inventions would have fit
right in. Maybe they've been searching
for this particular one, and we led them right to it."
Jim
scowled. "I hate the idea that
Loveless is still managing to cause us trouble."
"He
always was the most tenacious of criminals," Artie said. "Somehow it doesn't surprise me that his
ghost is managing to hound us even a hundred years in the future." He let out a mirthless but admiring laugh.
Illya's
eyebrows went up and then furrowed. "Perhaps
they were stealing the helicopter to pull us out of the cave."
Napoleon
grinned at him. "Goes to show how
little they know you once you've got your grips into a science project." He got up to pour everyone more coffee.
Maybe they
could take back some of this coffee as well, Artie mused, as he buried his nose
in the aromatic steam rising from his mug.
"I
assume you have a security detail at the cave?" Napoleon asked.
"Of
course," Illya snapped, looking insulted to even be asked.
Napoleon
handed Illya the last biscuit as an apology, and it was snatched quickly and
buttered heavily. "Well, as much as
I'm enjoying myself, and as much as I give my agents a bit more autonomy than
Mr. Waverly did, I still need to show my face at the office now and then. What are everyone's plans for the day?"
"Artie
and I will be in the lab for the foreseeable future."
Jim
grinned. "I'll be down at the
shooting range."
Illya
glanced at Artie. "You might find
yourself being replaced by an automatic rifle one of these days."
Artie
barked out a laugh. "Cold comfort come dark of night, James, my boy. Keep that in mind."
Jim leaned
in toward Artie and whispered in his ear.
"After last night, I'm unlikely to forget."
Artie was
appalled to feel himself blushing, the situation only
made worse by Illya and Napoleon's knowing grins. He couldn't have possibly made that much
noise during their lovemaking.
Napoleon
chuckled a little and ordered up a helicopter to take them all into U.N.C.L.E.
headquarters.
*****
"You
realize, Napoleon," Illya said later that evening, "that using U.N.C.L.E.
security to guard this place for all this time will ensure that everyone knows
you live here."
Napoleon
scowled at him. "I'm not moving."
Illya scowled
at him.
Jim caught
Artie's eyes and grinned. Illya might
bitch and moan about the penthouse and its cadre of security nightmares, but it
was clear Illya loved the place. Jim
would have bet money that if Napoleon suddenly agreed to move, Illya would be
backpedaling as fast as he could.
Jim had
cooked tonight. Basic
steak and potatoes. Illya had
pulled together a salad. It was odd to
be sitting down every night for dinner.
Back home, if he and Artie spent three nights out of seven having a
relaxing dinner at home it was something to talk about. They were so often on missions, or en route
to or from one, that many of their meals were taken on
the road. And there were plenty of times
when they went without.
Napoleon
had told him that there were weeks when he and Illya never came home at all,
sleeping at Headquarters, taking all their meals there. Apparently the world was behaving itself
right now. “Which,” Napoleon said, “bodes
poorly for the future, because it means everyone is busy hatching schemes.”
"Did
anyone disturb the cave at all last night or today?" Jim asked.
"Last
night, no," Illya said, cutting his steak into small bite-sized pieces. "But today, they found more dynamite."
"And
this is a problem?" Napoleon asked with a twinkle in his eye. "You love dynamite."
"Illya
and I did some studies on the samples of the rock the ring is resting in,"
Artie said. "It's quite
explosive. It's a miracle the cave didn't
blow up when he turned the damn thing on.
In fact, him using it was probably what caused
all the rockslides."
"Which
might be why everything is still there," Jim mused. "Loveless, Antoinette and Voltaire must
have gotten out somehow through a hidden passage."
Illya
frowned. "So there might still be
such a passage?"
Jim
nodded. "There might. And there might be more dynamite. I think that while you two play in the lab
and Napoleon pretends to rule the world, I'll go hunting for dynamite."
Napoleon
shot him a narrowed-eyed glare, but then turned back to Illya. "Did they report anything else
happening?"
"A
group of young boys showed up," Illya answered, perking up with interest, "wanting
to get into the cave to look for buried treasure."
Artie
smiled. "Buried treasure?"
Jim
snorted. "These mythical journals
of Loveless' were probably as misleading as he was. Instead of saying he had a madman's invention
in the cave, he probably described it as a jewel
beyond price, a gambler's dream."
Napoleon
considered his words as he took a sip of wine.
He looked at the bottle. "Nice."
"Artie
chose it," Illya said, toasting his glass toward Artie.
"Quite
odd to select a bottle of wine that was bottled long after I'll be dead,"
Artie said with a rueful smile. "Next
time we drop in, we'll try to bring a bottle or two with us."
"Please,"
Napoleon said. "It's the only
polite thing to do when you drop in unannounced." After smiles were exchanged he glanced at
Illya. "Do you think they were just
boys?"
"That's
the interesting part. When questioned,
they admitted that a group of strangers in Exeter had encouraged them to poke
around."
"Strangers?
You think it's THRUSH?" Napoleon asked with concern.
"I
think that we are going to find out," Illya said with a grim smile.
Jim wasn't
sure what to believe. He addressed the
only thing he was really concerned with.
"Is the machine safe enough?"
All he needed was for a bunch of kids to get in there and vandalize the
place, much less evil criminals.
"Yes,"
Illya said firmly.
That was
good enough for Jim. "How close are
you to figuring out the machine?" he asked Illya and Artie. When he'd popped in to visit with Artie at
U.N.C.L.E. headquarters, he and Illya had been too busy to even notice
him. He'd sat down anyway, making
himself at home, enjoying the rare opportunity to watch Artie at his craft.
Too often,
when Artie was busy in his laboratory coming up with some chemical means to
foil their enemy, Jim was off on his own, doing the same through a more
physical means. Being able to watch,
having nothing of his own to do, was a treat.
Despite
Artie being hindered by his cast and having come from the past, he more than
held his own with Illya, offering up as many suggestions as the Russian, both
of them enjoying the scientific stimulation of the other.
"It's
a bit like putting a giant jigsaw puzzle together," Artie said. "Some of the pieces seem to be in good
shape, and for those that were broken or dented, Illya already has the Research
and Development folks repairing or replacing them."
Illya
scowled. "If I could just
understand how it all fits together, and how it harnesses enough energy to
throw someone across time, we'll be all set." He beat out a tattoo on the table. "I've been wondering if it might not be
easier to try to recreate the THRUSH machine that took us back in time. Perhaps we could send you back that way."
"You'll
figure it out, one way or the other," Napoleon announced with complete
faith. "It's not like we're in a
rush. We need to let Artie heal before
we can even try."
Still
annoyed, Illya said, "That's another thing. What is a probability horizon? How do we know it will even take you
home? Isn't it just as probable that it
will throw you another twenty years into the future?"
"If it
does, drop us a line when you get there.
We'll come by for dessert," Napoleon said jauntily.
Jim had
wondered the same thing. Wondered if he
and Artie might not be so lucky, maybe ending up in two separate places this
time. There was a lot he'd been
wondering about and he voiced one of his thoughts. "How does Time know when to let the
changes show?"
Artie
furrowed his brow. "What?"
"Right
now we're here, instead of at home. We're
not where we're supposed to be, meeting the people we're supposed to be
meeting, and stopping the crimes we're supposed to be stopping. How long does Time wait around, assuming we're
going to get home? What happens if we
decide to stay here? When is the cutoff
for the future to change?"
"We
know you go home," Illya said.
Jim
nodded. "I know, you said you found
out when we die. But, meanwhile we're
here, so how does Time know, right now, that we'll go home? How long can we be here before us being here
affects the past?"
Napoleon
let out an exaggerated sigh and leaned back in his chair. "Have I mentioned how much I hate these
questions?"
"You
write us a letter," Illya said suddenly.
"Western Union delivered it a few days after we returned from our
visit with you, but you wrote it in 1895."
"I
thought we weren't telling them that," Napoleon said with a frown.
"I
know. But it seemed the right thing to
say." Illya leaned forward. "It's not just that we know when you
die, but we hear from you twenty years into your future. So we know you get home, live full lives,
retire together." He toasted them
with his glass. "Make wine."
"Bring
us some of that next time," Napoleon requested.
Artie
grinned at Jim. "We live to retire." His voice reflected some astonishment.
Jim could
understand his amazement. There weren't
too many men who enjoyed retirement in their line of business. He watched Illya and Napoleon exchange
glances. Their line of business,
either. His question hadn't really been
answered, but he was more sure of getting home
now. His own government could have
declared them dead at some point when they didn't return and that could have
been what Illya had found. It didn't
necessarily have to mean that their bodies were actually buried under American
soil somewhere.
But
an actual letter. He liked that idea. Even if it was eerie knowing they really had
been dead and buried by the time it was delivered.
Napoleon
glanced at his watch. "You'll have
to excuse us, gentlemen. Illya and I
have a conference call to make to Hong Kong.
We might be a while, so consider the evening yours."
Illya
gestured at the dishes. "I'll clean
up later," he said, then followed Napoleon out of the room.
Jim might
only be the most basic of cooks, but he could clean up with the best of
them. He did it almost every night when
they were home, as Artie did most of the cooking. He got up and started stacking dishes.
The grin on
Artie's face drew him in, and he leaned down to kiss his partner. Artie was still grinning when he pulled
back. "Winemakers, Jim. I think that's a fine idea. Land to call our own, rich
soil, hot sun, teasing a bountiful harvest out of the earth." He let out a contented hum, then reached out to grab Jim's hand. "And we do it together."
Needing to
be closer, Jim carefully straddled the chair sitting on Artie's lap. "You all right? I'm not hurting you?"
Artie's
answer was to hold him close with his one good hand. "Never, James."
The dishes
could wait.
*****
Two old men
ambled into the Red Indian Café, the only eating establishment in Exeter, and
sidled up to the counter, claiming two stools not far from a table of six men
in black suits.
One, with a
wizened face and gray, bushy eyebrows, called out loudly, "Coffee over
here, girlie. And cream with it. You ain't gonna
catch me eatin' that powdered stuff everybody's usin' nowadays."
The other,
more slightly built with a moth-eaten knit cap pulled low over his forehead and
a wispy beard, added, "That's right, Gordie. You go ahead and have cream. I'll say I told you so when I'm standing over
your grave. That stuff'll
clog your arteries and end up giving you a heart attack. I'll take Coffee Mate any day. Better living through chemistry, I say."
His Russian
friend's makeup and disguise materials were similar to what Artie was
accustomed to, but much more comfortable.
Nothing itched or made him sweat, which he was thoroughly enjoying. The two doctored and worshiped their coffee
cups and turned their ears to the nearby table.
Totally
oblivious to the arrival of the cantankerous pair, the men were deep in
conversation. The youngest at the table
asked, confused, "So whatever's down there is over a hundred years
old? Why are we bothering, then?"
Another
laughed scornfully. "What are they
teaching you kids in training these days?
Didn't they tell you about Miguelito Loveless?"
The young
man blushed. "Er,
well, they may have mentioned him. I might
not have been paying complete attention."
"Your
loss, then. Loveless is considered one of the forerunners
of our organization. The man was a genius. Way ahead of his time."
Artie cast
a look at Illya and waggled his eyebrows. He no longer felt sorry for his
nemesis. The general public might not
know his name, but he had the feeling that Loveless would be pleased as punch
that criminals and villains held him in such high regard.
The man
continued to educate his young colleague.
"If Loveless had access to today's technology, I bet we'd be
working for him. Even with what he had
available back then, he came up with some fantastic
stuff. Did they tell you about the
machine that could turn all the fresh water in the world to salt?"
The younger
man nodded. "Yeah. I remember that. And THRUSH had the only way to turn it back
again. That plan almost worked, didn't
it?"
The others
at the table nodded sadly. One
responded, "And it would have, too, if it weren't for those U.N.C.L.E.
bastards. Anyhow, that was based on one
of Loveless' prototypes. We've found
several of his laboratories over the years, and there's always something good
in them. A lot of us think that it'll be
a lead from Loveless that will put us over the top. That's why we have to get in there and get
our hands on whatever he left before U.N.C.L.E. does."
The Secret
Service agent shifted on his stool and almost knocked over his cup with the
cast hidden under his thick jacket sleeve.
He snarled at the waitress, "More coffee. Sometime today if you don't
mind."
Another of
the THRUSH agents joined the conversation.
"But obviously U.N.C.L.E. is already in the laboratory. Won't they have taken anything worthwhile?"
The first
man answered, "Not necessarily.
That's where we have the advantage over them. We know Dr. Loveless." He snorted derisively. "They think he
was a midget of all things. He had all
kinds of hidden compartments and rooms everywhere he worked. We'll know what to look for while U.N.C.L.E.
will only scratch the surface."
Another man
added, "But still, the sooner we get down there the better. It'd be a shame to have them stumble on
something useful by accident. Think of
all the extra work if we have to go to the trouble of stealing it back."
"That's
why we're going in tomorrow night. We'll
take them by surprise and steal the treasure right out from under their noses."
The young
agent asked, "But how will we get in?
It's pretty well guarded."
"Now
that we know where it is, we have a map to find a secret way in. We just never knew exactly where the damn
cave was located before. We can thank U.N.C.L.E.
for finding it for us."
They all
laughed. "Yeah, we'll thank
them. We'll thank them real good."
The old men
paid their bill and shuffled to the door.
As they wandered down the sidewalk on the way back to the U.N.C.L.E.
van, Artie asked quietly, "So do these THRUSH fellows of yours always
discuss their plans in crowded cafes?"
Illya
chuckled. "They are clever and
dastardly, but few of them have ever been accused of conspicuous
intelligence. It makes our job much
easier. Unfortunately they're like a
flock of pigeons. You can scatter them
over and over again, but they always come back."
Artie
nodded. Miguelito
Loveless would truly find them kindred spirits.
*****
Jim lay on
his belly in the dry grass behind a hillock.
The night was unseasonably cold, and he had to wear gloves to keep the
night-vision binoculars from shaking as he looked through them. He swept the horizon, alert for the arrival
of the enemy.
Next to
him, Napoleon did the same, except he did it with a satisfied smile on his
face. The U.N.C.L.E. chief said happily,
"Any time now."
Jim couldn't
help but grin. "You're enjoying
this, aren't you?"
"You
have no idea. I know that what I do now
is important and I know that I do it well, but nothing gets the blood flowing
like fieldwork. I've found myself
starting to feel old the last few years behind a desk. Tonight I feel young again."
Jim could
well imagine. He expected that at some
point his superiors would want to shift him to a supervisory position in the
Secret Service, or even get him into an office in Washington, but he didn't
plan to cooperate. When that day came,
it would be time to take his partner and head to wine country. After riding the open range most of his life,
to be trapped behind a desk would be like dying. He wouldn't do it, not even at the direct
request of the President.
Checking on
the slight glow indicating the location of the other agents, he noticed some
moving spots. "There they are."
Napoleon
followed his line of sight and whispered into his communicator, "Little
birdies flying in from the east.
Maintain position."
As the men
drew closer, Jim switched to regular binoculars and studied them. They were wearing all black with
high-collared sweaters and face masks.
There could be no mistaking them for midnight ramblers. One man held a map under a small flashlight
and then directed the others to follow him.
Soon they stopped and started digging on the far side of the hill from
the entrance guarded rather obviously by U.N.C.L.E. agents.
Jim and
Napoleon waited in silence. The plan was
to let them get inside before taking the THRUSH men down. There was less chance of them escaping that
way, and U.N.C.L.E. would also have the secret passage opened for them.
One by one
the men dropped into a hole in the ground, leaving a single agent on the
surface.
Napoleon
ordered, "All right, move in."
He and Jim
were the closest to their target, so they stealthily crept across the hillside
until they were directly behind the enemy agent. Napoleon motioned for Jim to go ahead, but
Jim whispered, "Oh, no. By all
means you should have the pleasure."
Napoleon
flashed him a wide smile, moved in behind the man and knocked him out with one
chop from the side of his hand to the man's neck. As Napoleon dusted his hands with energetic
satisfaction, Jim stepped up next to him.
"As
good as you remember?"
The other
man beamed. "Even
better."
They waited
for several minutes, slowly joined by the other agents. Then Napoleon's communicator chirped. He said into it, "So how did it go?"
Illya's
voice answered, "All the little birdies are in a cage. We let them open a secret compartment before
we thought it best to intervene. They
were right, there was a device hidden in it.
Artie is poking at it now."
Napoleon
praised, "Well done. Another small
affair successfully completed."
Illya
warned, "And you, my friend, are going back into your own cage."
His face
falling, Napoleon sighed. "Yes,
mother."
Jim slapped
him on the back. "But not quite
yet. Shall we go down and see what our
partners have found?"
The smile
returned. "Ah, yes. Once more into the breach," he
proclaimed as he disappeared into the hole.
*****
The next
few weeks flew by. Artie and Illya
continued to work in the U.N.C.L.E. labs or the caves, rebuilding the machine. The device found by THRUSH had helped Illya
better understand the logistics of Loveless' invention, a lucky stroke of
luck. Illya suspected it was another
prototype of a time travel device, although he wasn’t sure if it had been
hidden away because it was a failure, or if it was hidden because it was even
more valuable than what Loveless had left hanging around.
Jim spent
his time on the firing range, or scouring the cave for what seemed to be a
never-ending cache of dynamite, no doubt set up that way by Loveless as a means
of protection or escape. He also
supervised the permanent closure of the escape tunnel, which had to be done
carefully to avoid endangering the rest of the structure.
In between
those activities, he spent time with Napoleon studying current espionage and
infiltration techniques, knowing he was garnering odd looks from U.N.C.L.E.
staff for being an unknown visitor with apparently unheard of access to the
Number One of Section One; only Illya took more liberties. Jim developed even greater respect for Solo's
abilities, but didn't envy him the job at all.
Right this
particular moment, though, he had nothing to do. Illya and Napoleon were both in a highly confidential
meeting from which Napoleon had apologetically excluded him. So Jim decided to go find Artie and have
lunch. Not surprisingly, he found him in
the lab. He was sitting there in a chair
staring off into space, a frown on his face.
"Artie,
is something wrong?"
Artie
looked up at him, startled, then flashed him a
strained grin. "No. Not really.
I just…" He raised his good
hand, gestured around the room, as if it presented a problem.
"You
just?" Jim prompted, leaning against a counter, making sure he wasn't in
danger of knocking anything over. He'd
done that once in Artie's lab, a result of some energetic kissing that got out
of control. Whatever it was he'd knocked
over had spilled on him and had burnt like fire. To add further insult to injury, Artie had
stopped his lovemaking to drag him outside and throw him in the trough.
Needless to
say, the injury and subsequent cold bath had installed a watchful air when
leaning up against counters.
"I
appreciate what Napoleon and Illya are doing for us, telling us anything we
want to know, sharing all the secrets of the last hundred years, but it worries
me."
"Why?"
"How
can I not use any of this knowledge if it could save your life one day? I would need to study for years to have Illya's
understanding of science and physics, but seeing the things I've seen and
listening to what he tells me has advanced my own learning to more than I could
ever have hoped for in my lifetime."
"I
keep remembering about that letter," Jim said slowly, thinking it
through. "We get home, and whatever
we do once we get there helps to build this future." It was his turn to gesture around the
room. "Not U.N.C.L.E.
specifically, but this world. We've
already done it, whatever it was. We've
already gone back with the knowledge we garnered from here, and put it into
play."
He moved
over to Artie, stood behind his chair, encouraging his lover to rest his head
against his stomach. Then he carded his
fingers through Artie's hair.
"Winemakers,"
Artie said, craning his neck to look up at Jim.
"The two of us."
Jim smiled
down at him. "The
two of us." He looked around
the room again. "I've had the same
thoughts. I've learned so much about the
weapons of today and the political upheavals around the world that occurred
over the last hundred years. I've seen
who becomes President after Grant and who among the Presidents' most trusted
officers become traitors. How can I act as if I don't
know all of this when we get home?"
"Do
you wish they'd done as they'd originally suggested? Taken us somewhere out in the woods where we'd
have seen nothing and learned nothing?"
Jim shook
his head, resting his hands on Artie's shoulders. "No." He was sure about that. "That would have been torture." He would have gone crazy being sequestered
like that. So close to all this
knowledge, yet having it locked away from him.
Artie
reached up and patted one of his hands. "Regardless,
James, you're right. We have already
done it." He grinned. "Napoleon's right not to like these
conversations. The more you think about
it, the crazier it sounds."
"You
hungry?"
Jim asked, remembering the reason he'd come down here.
"Yes,
I am." Artie set the file that had
been on his lap on the countertop.
Jim noticed
something else on the counter: the gadget used to bring Napoleon and Illya to
the past. "Has Illya had any luck
with that?" he asked, pointing at it with his chin.
Artie shook his head. "No. He can't figure out how to get it to
work. Illya hasn't been able to find any
reference to it in any of the THRUSH reports they've appropriated, and the THRUSH
agents responsible for finding it had no idea what it was they were looking
for, just that they had to locate it. Whatever
substance Loveless used has gone entirely inert, so it can't be analyzed."
"So
that leaves us with Loveless' machine," Jim stated unhappily. Ever since Illya had mentioned it, he'd been
hopeful they'd find a surer way home than the probability ring.
"Illya
will keep working on both, but, yes, it most likely leaves us with Loveless'
machine."
"And
how do we know it won't send us someplace further into the future, or back to
our prehistoric past?"
"Because
I believe Time will try to right things if we jump in it again. We'll go back. We know we go back." He grinned at Jim. "Apparently we both need to be reminded
of that on a regular basis."
Jim
nodded. He did need to be reminded. Every five minutes or so it
seemed. "I'm ready to be
home." Maybe that was why he was
growing more and more anxious. He wanted
to be home in their own time, in their own bed, even if it meant they were
leaving long hot showers and sheets that felt like silk behind.
"It's
been a fine adventure," Artie agreed, "but I'm ready to be home, as
well. It will be very relaxing to be
back in a time when I understand everything, and there isn't something that
makes my jaw drop around every corner."
"How
long do you think it will be before you have the thing reassembled?"
"Probably
just about the time I'm due to get this cast off, in about two weeks." Artie winked at Jim. "And I'm looking forward to that, too."
Jim was,
too. He and Artie had made love almost
every night, but with the cast on Artie's arm they were restricted to certain
positions. Not that there was anything
wrong with the positions they were using, but still…. Grinning at Artie, he said, "It sounds
like we'll have a lot to celebrate, then."
*****
"What favors
did you use up to pull this off?" Napoleon whispered to Illya as they all
walked into the Smithsonian, into a wing that had been closed off to everyone
but themselves.
It was
Friday. Artie had gotten his cast off
the day before, and Sunday was the big day.
The machine was reassembled and all that remained was turning it
on. Given the age and delicacy of the
machine, there wouldn't be a trial run.
Either it worked or it didn't. If
it didn't, Illya would go back to the THRUSH gadget in hopes of figuring it
out.
Today and
tomorrow was a reward for all their hard work.
Plus, Illya had something he wanted to show their friends before they
went home. So they had all climbed
aboard the U.N.C.L.E. Cessna and Illya had flown them to Washington, D.C.
All week, Illya had been very secretive about it and, to Napoleon's annoyance,
had refused to let him in on the surprise.
Based on their lovemaking, Illya was very excited about it. Very.
"Next
time you check out our wine cellar, you'll find out," Illya whispered
back.
Napoleon
frowned at him. "Nothing I like, I
hope," he said bitingly.
Illya shot
him an innocent grin. "What kind of
fool do you take me for, Napoleon? Surely
you don't think I'd give away something I like?"
Napoleon
glowered at him. "It better not be
the case of wine I got from Pierre as a Christmas gift."
"I am
surprised you do not sleep with a bottle or two under your pillow," Illya
said with a wounded air.
"Because
you'd drink it all when I was sleeping," Napoleon accused. "Tell me it wasn't that wine, please."
Illya
relented. "Fine. It was the champagne the Gettys
sent."
Napoleon
made a face. "I hate that
champagne."
"I
know," Illya said.
Napoleon
grinned at him. "Smart
Russian." He turned to look
back at Artie who was slowly ambling behind them, looking at everything, Jim by
his side. Napoleon glanced at
Illya. "Have you gotten their first
aid kit all packed?" Illya had been
assembling a large assortment of medicines for them to take home, including
antibiotics, aspirin and pain killers.
It wouldn't last them a lifetime as the drugs would expire long before
then, but it might get them through a scrape or two.
Illya
nodded. "I added a couple of truth
serums for them to use during interrogations."
Napoleon
was sure there were a few other surprises in there as well. Illya was nothing if not thorough. They arrived at another door and a guard
opened it for them. Illya glanced up at Napoleon,
his eyes dancing. Napoleon took a look
around but couldn't see right off the bat what had Illya all worked up. They waited for Jim and Artie to catch up to
them.
Then, Illya
took them around the corner and there it was.
The Wanderer.
In all its restored glory, part of a Secret Service display. The look on Jim and Artie's face was a wonder
to behold, and Napoleon wanted to take Illya back around the corner and kiss
him senseless. Instead, after making
sure the guard had gone back to his post on the other side of the door, he
wrapped his arms around his lover from the back, kissing the golden hair. "Have I told you today that I absolutely
adore you?" he asked softly.
Illya shook
his head, his eyes on Jim and Artie, his body all Napoleon's. As he moved, his hair tickled Napoleon's
nose.
"I
do. Madly," Napoleon assured him.
Illya
teased him by rubbing his delectable ass against Napoleon's groin.
"We
may be rechristening the bed again tonight," Napoleon warned him with a
bitten off groan.
Illya
grinned up at him, then spoke to Jim and Artie. "All the dates have been removed just
for today, so you can read anything you want.
And you can also go inside. After
all, it was yours."
Artie's
eyes were suspiciously bright as the first thing he did, after hearing Illya's
words, was to head for the steps that would take them into the train.
"We'll
be over here," Napoleon called, waving vaguely in the opposite
direction. "We'll be at least a
half an hour." With that he tugged
Illya in that direction. He wanted to
let Artie and Jim have some time to themselves and,
even more importantly, to find a quiet corner where he could show Illya just
how much he adored him.
*****
Jim stayed
close to Artie as he climbed the steps and within seconds they were inside. "James, it's our home."
It felt
like home. Or as close
to home as they could get in 1980.
Jim was overwhelmed with the gift, even if it was only theirs for a
short time. He headed toward the main
room, astonished to find it so much the same.
The wallpaper was different, and the fabric on the couch was a new
shade, but other than that, it was so familiar.
"I was
almost afraid to come in," Artie confessed. "I was afraid it would look entirely
different, that whoever used it after us would have redecorated it. I don't think I would have wanted to see
that."
Jim picked
up a brochure lying on the coffee table.
It was about the Wanderer and--his eyebrows went up--about them. "Artie, no one used it after us. They retired it when we retired."
Artie sank
down on the couch. "Oh, I'm
glad. I know it's a waste, but I'm
terribly glad to hear that. It really
does make it ours, then."
Jim kept
reading. "It's been on exhibit in
California in an historical museum there.
That's where we retire." He held
the flyer up to the light.
"What
is it?"
Jim smiled
ruefully. "Illya had someone cross
off the dates of our death. I know I
didn't want to know, but it's strange that all that stands between me and
knowing is a few strokes of a pen."
Artie
picked up a second copy of the flyer and smiled as he read: "This exhibit
is dedicated to all the Secret Service men and women who have served this
country." He looked around the
room. "It's nice to think that we've
been remembered this way. As a memorial to all our brothers and sisters to the cause."
Jim poked
his nose into the small kitchen area. "Odd
to think we'll be back here on Sunday, without, I might add, all the
conveniences of a modern kitchen."
Artie stood
and moved to join Jim, resting an arm across his shoulders. "But it will have our bed and our
clothes and our belongings."
"Speaking
of beds," Jim said with a grin.
They both headed down the hallway, opening up
the door to the room they shared. It
looked as if they'd left it yesterday. Dingier, yes, the years having taken their toll on the linens, but
all there. Jim sat down on the
bed.
Artie
joined him and grimaced. "I've
grown soft. Too
accustomed to those new-fangled mattresses of Napoleon and Illya's."
Jim laced
his fingers through Artie's. "If
you're in it, I don't much care what I'm sleeping on."
Leaning in,
Artie kissed Jim. "A
fine sentiment, James." His
eyes twinkled. "But I expect you'll
be doing your share of complaining when we're sleeping here again."
Jim let out
a laugh. "I'm sure you're already
working on ways to improve our bed, along with a thousand other things."
Artie
chuckled. "I am at that." He glanced at the door. "As tempted as I am to remain here,
shall we investigate the rest of it?"
Jim was
tempted as well, but Napoleon had said they'd only be gone for half an hour and
the first time Jim had Artie back in this bed, he planned to take a lot longer
than that to welcome him home. He nodded
and helped Artie up, following him out the door and down the hall to Artie's
lab.
Artie spent
a few minutes opening drawers and checking out his journals. His brow furrowed.
"What
is it?" Jim asked, perched on a stool.
"It's
very odd. I can see that time has passed
and new things have been invented, but I don't see anything that would tell me
that we had spent two months in the future learning unimaginable secrets."
"Nothing?"
Artie shook
his head. "Nothing. Everything here looks familiar to me, more
advanced, but familiar. I would think,
even if we kept it to ourselves, that I'd see something that represented our
new knowledge." He flipped through
a journal and displayed it. "There's
nothing in here about our trip to the future."
Jim got up
and headed back down the hall to where he kept his weapons. When he started looking through what was
there, he came to the same conclusion Artie had. It appeared he had done nothing with all he'd
learned. He stared at the revolver in
his hand. "Do you suppose," he
asked when he saw Artie had joined him, "that the machine sends us back to
before we get taken by Loveless, so we don't get captured and don't get sent
through the ring, so we never really go?"
"I don't
know." Artie moved back to the
bedroom, started opening drawers. "Is
it possible imposters live out the rest of our lives there, and we end up
staying here?" He shut the last
drawer. "Nothing. None of the things I was planning to bring
back with us."
"Maybe
we kept it all someplace else," Jim suggested. "Someplace safer, on the off-chance
someone broke into the train, or took it all with us when we retired." It made sense. More sense than there being nothing to remind
them of their journey.
"Maybe,"
Artie said. He sat on the bed
again. "Very odd."
"What
are you thinking?"
"That
it's more proof that Time takes care of things.
That it won't let itself be thwarted."
A shiver
went down Jim's spine. "As long as
it gets us home," he said. "I
want our lives back, and I want to grow old with you and retire and make wine."
"And
make love," Artie added, pulling Jim closer, kissing him hungrily.
A throat
clearing made him pull away and he glanced up to see Napoleon and Illya doing
their best not to grin.
"Should
we go away again?" Napoleon inquired teasingly.
Jim was
tempted to say yes, but he shook his head no.
They'd have all night, and God willing, a long life of kissing ahead.
*****
Dinner
Saturday night was a quiet affair. Artie
wasn't quite sure how to feel. Glad to
leave, sorry to go. Looking forward to
his own bed, but loathe to leave this inordinately
comfortable one. Enjoying the prospect
of seeing old friends, knowing he would be leaving the best friends he and Jim
had ever had. Would
ever have. And leaving meant they'd
never see them again. Probably.
He grinned
at that. What did he know about
life? Who would have thought they'd ever
meet once, let alone twice. Artie picked
up his wine glass. "To
the best of friends, to beating the odds, and to love."
There was
an enthusiastic, "To love," and glasses clinked together.
"We'll
miss you," Illya said morosely. "I've
gotten used to having you here."
Jim
grinned. "But now you can let the
security go and get back to your in-depth plans for getting Napoleon in and out
of the apartment every day."
Illya
brightened at his words.
They sat
there in silence for a few moments, then his and Illya's communicators went off
at the same time. They excused
themselves and headed downstairs to the control room.
Jim took
another sip of his wine, looking at Artie.
It was likely they would have the evening to themselves. Usually when their hosts got called away,
whatever they were dealing with took hours.
"What
should we do for the evening?" Artie asked, his eyes a mixture of mischief
and sorrow.
There was
an obvious answer, of course. Spend
their last night in bed, loving each other, just in case tomorrow's exercise
tore them apart. But Jim wasn't ready
for bed. Wasn't ready to do something
that really meant it was their last night.
Once they fell asleep, when they woke up, they'd have to say goodbye and
then somehow summon the faith to purposely jump through that ring, a machine
his arch-nemesis created, certainly with no good in mind.
They stared
at each other for a while, and Jim knew they were thinking alike in this, as in
so many other things. They might not
even make love tonight, choosing instead to savor their last night in the
twentieth century, having no way of knowing if they'd even be alive when the
year turned from 1899 to 1900.
"How
about a little music?"
Artie suggested, answering his own question.
Jim nodded,
and after helping Artie clear the table, they moved to the living room and
Artie selected an album, putting it on the stereo. Music from a jazz quartet filled the
air. Moving to the windows, Artie pulled
open the curtains, revealing the extraordinary view of New York City sparkling
with lights.
They both stood there for a few minutes, drinking it in. Then, as if choreographed, they moved into
each other's arms and slowly began to dance the evening away.
*****
"Maybe
you two should leave," Artie said, glancing at the cave walls and ceiling.
"This
part of the cave held up last time," Illya said. "We should be safe enough." He and Napoleon were standing close to the
machine.
"But
the rest of it caved in. How will you
get out?"
"It's
been reinforced," Illya argued. "It
should hold. I need to be here in case
something goes wrong."
Artie
sighed. It was true that this room had
gone largely unscathed last time, but it didn't mean it would this time. But between Jim's removal of all the dynamite
and the improvements Illya spoke of, it was, Artie supposed, as safe as it was
going to get.
Napoleon
and Illya looked tired. Artie wasn't
sure they'd gotten any sleep last night.
Not that he and Jim had fared better.
They'd napped a little but had been awake to watch the last sunrise in
their temporary home.
"I don't
know how to say goodbye," Artie said.
"I wish we didn't have to."
Illya shook
his head. "Then don't. We may yet see each other again. Our paths do seem destined to cross."
"Besides,"
Napoleon said with a strained grin, "you owe me money and a case of your
wine."
Jim smiled,
but Artie could tell his heart wasn't in it.
Even the lure of their own home and their own
bed couldn't wipe the sorrow of the moment away.
Squaring
his shoulders, Artie nodded. "Then
this will simply be a farewell. And a thank you from the bottom of my heart."
"From
both of us," Jim added.
"You're
welcome. Glad we could return the favor." Napoleon grinned. "Drop in anytime."
Illya
turned on the power. The bank of lights
lit up, and the larger box started humming.
"You should both jump at the same time, I think, just in case it
decides to act up. I'd hate to end up
with one of you here and one of you there."
Artie moved
closer to Jim, and felt Jim lace his fingers tightly with his. Artie squeezed back, glad to feel Jim's touch
as they took this next step in their adventure.
With the exception of Artie's shirt which hadn't survived his accident,
they'd dressed in the clothes they'd come in.
They both had bags slung over their shoulders filled with goodies from
Illya and Napoleon.
There was a
rumbling throughout the cave. Then, the
ring lit up and a mist began forming in the place of what had seemed to be hard
rock. Another rumbling was heard, and
the ground trembled. Not much, but
enough to worry Artie. "I think you
two should go."
Even as he spoke the words, he knew they were falling on deaf ears. Or at least Illya's ears were deaf. Napoleon was looking around with a
frown. Illya was watching the ring with
that focused look that Artie had come to recognize as intense
concentration. It would take an
explosion to get his attention.
Several
things happened at once. With a loud
concussive noise, an arc of lightning flew from one end of the ring to the
other. Another rumbling was heard, and
the ground shifted again, enough to make them all stumble. And then with an ear-splitting noise, the
mist that had been occluding sight of the rock wall was replaced by the
shimmering circle Jim had spoken of.
"That's
it," Jim yelled over the din.
Artie tried
to figure out where the noise was coming from, realizing with horror that the
cave was starting to collapse. "Napoleon,
Illya, run!"
Too
late. A huge chunk of rock came down, hitting Illya
on the shoulder, knocking him to the ground and falling on his legs. The pain on his face paralyzed Artie.
Napoleon
ran to Illya, trying to move the rock, proving unsuccessful. More rocks began to fall. Artie made as if to move in their direction
to help but Napoleon waved him back. "Go. Go now!"
Artie
glanced at Jim, saw the same indecision on his face.
A rock
glanced off the ring, and the shimmering circle faltered, then grew in strength
again.
Napoleon was
sheltering Illya with his body as more rocks began to fall. "Go," he yelled again. "We won't be able to rebuild it. Don't make this be for nothing."
Artie
caught a glimpse of Illya's face, and he looked dangerously still. Blood on his face. Blood on Napoleon's hands. He had to help. He couldn't just leave them.
"Please,"
Napoleon begged. "Go."
More large
rocks were starting to fall, and one hit Napoleon on the back. There was an audible snap, and Napoleon let
out a cry, falling over Illya.
Tears
streaming down his face, Artie turned to Jim.
He was incapable of making a decision.
Jim made it for them. He grabbed
Artie hard and yanked him to the ring, jumping, his strong grasp pulling Artie
with him. As Artie hit the probability
horizon, it seemed as if the entire cavern exploded. Then they were hitting the ground hard, Jim
cushioning his fall by landing first so Artie could land on him.
Artie
jumped to his feet, a small part of him glad he was in one piece, but most of
his heart was still in that cave. "Are
they dead? Did we kill them?" He didn't think he could bear that. "Oh, God, James. What have we done?"
Jim found
his feet, looking as shaken as Artie felt.
"I don't know." He
looked around. "I don't know." He rubbed at his face, and when he pulled his
hand away, there was blood on it.
Artie moved
to him, investigating, saw a cut where a rock must have hit. That was when he noticed that their bags hadn't
made it through with them. He knew his
had been on his shoulder, was reasonably certain Jim had been carrying his as
well. "Our bags are gone."
Jim looked
around to confirm. "Maybe we couldn't
come back with anything we didn't take with us."
That was a
price Artie was willing to pay. But if
Time's price for making things right was Napoleon and Illya's lives, it was too
steep a one. "Jim," Artie said
painfully.
Jim held
him tightly. "I know."
There was
some comfort to be had in the knowledge they were together, but it was not
enough. "We have to do something."
Jim nodded
against his shoulder. He pulled
back. "First we need to figure out
where we are. Then we'll figure out what
to do."
Artie tried
to pull himself together, having a difficult time ridding his mind's eye of
Illya's too-still face and the crack of bone when that large rock had hit
Napoleon's back. He watched Jim stride
off a few yards. Jim pointed. "The cave's over here."
Artie
joined him and they walked together to the cave. The entrance was sealed off by rock
fall. Jim crouched down, leaned against
one of the rocks. "This just
happened. I can still feel the
vibration."
Glancing
around, Artie almost expected to see the U.N.C.L.E. helicopter. But he could tell they weren't when they'd
been. The air smelled different, and
there were many more trees. "Did we
get home?" Maybe Loveless and his
gang were making their escape as he and Jim stood there. Artie couldn't find it in himself to
care. Let them go.
Jim
shrugged. "I don't know. I won't know until we hit a town." He pointed north. "I think Exeter's closer than
Cooperstown."
Artie
nodded, heartsick.
Silently,
they started walking. Artie was afraid
he'd weep if he opened his mouth and attempted to speak. It wasn't until they climbed a hill and
looked down on the small and well-remembered town of Exeter that Jim
spoke. "I think we're home."
Artie
wished he could relish the feeling.
Jim
suddenly snapped his fingers. "Artie,
we can send them a letter.
Remember? They already told us we
sent them one."
Artie's
brain felt like mush. "What? What do you mean?"
"A
letter. I'll write them a letter, tell them what
happened. They can keep you from getting
hurt, and we can tell them they can't be in the cave. We can keep it from happening. It hasn't happened yet."
"It
hasn't happened yet," Artie repeated, feeling
like Jim was speaking a foreign language.
"It
happens to them in 1980. It's only 1875."
It was
starting to sink in. Artie's broken
heart began to mend. "We can write
them and keep them safe."
Jim grinned, nodding. "We can keep them safe.&q