Lillie's tone was as calm as if he were describing the fractured surface of the moon.

'Kind of makes you wish you were back in St. Louis running the brewery, doesn't it?'

'Not really. Dear old Dad never had much confidence in his only son. If I… if I'm not alive and kicking when you come back, tell him-'

'Read him the riot act yourself. Besides, my heart wouldn't be in it.' Pitt had to fight to keep his voice from faltering. 'I never liked Lillie beer anyway.'

He turned away and knelt over Tidi.

'Where did they hurt you, dearheart?'

'My ankles are a little off center.' She smiled gamely. 'Nothing serious. I'm just lucky, I guess.'

'I'm sorry,' Pitt said. 'You wouldn't be lying here if it wasn't for my bungling.'

She took his hand and squeezed it. 'It's more exciting than taking dictation and typing the admiral's letters.'

Pitt bent over and lifted her in his arms and carried her tenderly a few feet and laid her beside Lillie.

'Here's your big chance, you little gold digger. A real live millionaire. And for the next few hours he's a captive audience. Mr. Jerome P. Lillie, may I present Miss Tidi Royal, the darling of the National Underwater Marine Agency. May you both live happily ever after.'

Pitt kissed her lightly on the forehead, stumbled awkwardly once more to his feet and walked unsteadily over the water-soaked ground to the old man he knew simply as Sam. He thought of the distinguished manner, the warm, piercing eyes he had seen in the trophy room as he stared down and saw the legs, twisted outwards like the crooked branches of an oak tree, the blue eyes dulled by pain, and he forced himself to smile a confident, hopeful smile.

'Hang in there, Sam.' Pitt leaned over and gently grasped the old man's shoulder. 'I'll be back with the prettiest nurse in Iceland before, lunchtime.'

Sam's lips gave the barest hint of a grin. 'To a man my age, a cigar would prove much more practical.'

'A cigar it is.'

Pitt leaned over and shook Sam's hand. The blue eyes suddenly came to life and the old man raised up, griPPing Pitts outstretched hand with an intensity that Pitt didn't think was possible, and the lines of the tired, drawn face lightened into determined hardness.

'He must be stopped, Major Pitt.' The voice was low, almost an insistent whisper. 'James must not be allowed to go through with this terrible thing. His purpose glories in goodness, but the people he has surrounded himself with, glory only in greed and power.'

Pitt only nodded without speaking.

'I forgive James for what he has done.' Sam was talking, almost rambling to himself. 'Tell him his brother forgives-'

'My God!' Pitts shock showed in his face.

'You're brothers?'

'Yes, James is my younger brother. I remained in the background these many years, handling the financial details and problems that plague a giant multinational corporation. James, a master at wheeling and dealing, enjoyed the center of attraction. Until now, we were a pretty successful combination.' Sam Kelly bowed his head in a barely perceptible sign of farewell.

'God bring you luck.' And then a smile slowly stretched across his face. 'Don't forget my cigar.'

'You can count on it,' Pitt murmured. He turned away, his mind swirling with conflicting images and emotions, then slowly clearing and settling on one permanent irresistible purpose that held his mental processes in a viselike grip. The driving force, the hatred that had been smoldering within him since Rondheim lashed out with the first crippling blow, now exploded into an intense burning flame that consumed his mind to the expulsion of all else, but then his thoughts were pulled back to reality by the low voice of the Russian diplomat, Tamareztov.

'The heart of a good Communist goes with you, Major Pitt.'

Pitt barely paused to reply. 'I'm honored. It's not often a Communist has to rely on a capitalist to save his life.'

'It is not an easy pill to swallow.'

Pitt stopped and looked down at Tamareztov in slow speculation, noting the arms lying limply on the ground, the unnatural angle of the left leg. Then his face softened.

'If you promise not to hold any party indoctrination lectures while I'm gone, I'll bring you back a bottle of vodka.', Tamareztov stared back at Pitt curiously. 'A display of Yankee humor, Major? But I think you really mean what you say about the vodka.'

A grin touched the corners of Pitts lips. 'Don't misread my intentions. Since I'm already taking a short walk to the corner liquor store, I merely thought I'd save you the trip.' Then, before the uncomprehending Russian could reply, Pitt turned and began climbing the embankment toward the top of the ravine.

Cautiously at first, a few inches at a time, trying to move at a pace that favored his cracked ribs, Pitt clawed at the soft, slippery earth and pulled himself upward without looking in any direction except straight ahead. The first twenty feet were easy. Then the slope steepened and the soil became more firm, making it difficult to dig the shallow hand and toeholds which afforded his only source of support.

The climb itself became a purgatory, unctuated by the agony of his injuries. All emotion had drained away, his movements became mechanical, dig and pull, dig and pull. He tried to keep count of each foot gained but lost track after thirty, his mind totally void of all mental function.

He was like a blind man moving through the daylight in a blind world, and the only sense he still possessed was the sense of touch. Then for the first time fear came to him-not fear of falling or fear of injury, but the honest, cold fear of failing over twenty people whose lives depended on his reaching that line between earth and sky that seemed so far above him. Minutes passed that seemed like hours. How many? He didn't know, would never know. Time as a means of measurement no longer existed. His body was simply a robot going through repeated motions without the benefit of constant commands from the mind.

He began counting again, only this time he stopped at ten. Then one minute of rest, he told himself, no more, and he began again. His breath was coming in heaving gulps now, his fingers were raw, the ends of the nails jagged and spotted with blood, his arm muscles aching from the continuous effort-a sure sign his body was about spent. Sweat trickled down his face, but the irritating tickle could not be felt through 'his agonized flesh. He paused and looked up, seeing little through the swollen slits that were his eyes. The edge of the ravine blended into a nebulous line of angles and shadowy profiles that defied any judgment of distance.

And then suddenly, almost with a sense of surprise, Pitts hands found the soft, crumbling edge of the slope. With strength he didn't think was possible, he pulled himself up onto flat ground and rolled over on his back, laying inert and to all appearances, dead.

For nearly five minutes, Pitt lay rigid, only his chest moving with the pulsating rise and fall of his breath. Slowly, as the waves of total exhaustion receded to a level of sufferable tolerance, he pulled himself to his feet and peered into the bottom of the narrow chasm at the tiny figures below. He cupped his hands to yell, then decided against it. There were no words he could think of to shout that had any meaning, any encouragement. All the people below could see was his head and shoulders over the level of the steep cliff. Then with a wave of the hand, he was gone.

Chapter 17

Pitt stood like a solitary tree on a great empty plain. A dark green mosslike vegetation spread in every direction as far as he could see, edged on one horizon by a range of high hills and cloaked by a sun-whitened mist on two others. Except for a few small rises dotting the desolate landscape, most of the ground was nearly flat. At first he thought he was completely alone. But then he saw a tiny snipe that soared across the sky like a dart in search of an unseen target. It came closer, and from a height of two hundred feet it circled and looked down at Pitt, as if curiously inspecting the strange animal that stood out so vividly in red and yellow plumage against the center of the unending green carpet. After three cursory sweeps, the little bird's inquisitiveness waned and it fluttered its wings against the air and continued on its seeming flight to nowhere.

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