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hell did she have to choose the cello? There was something almost indecent in
the idea of this bulbous, ungainly instrument between her splayed thighs. Of
course Suggia had managed to look elegant, and so did that girl Amaryllis
somebody. But they should invent a way for women to play the damned thing
sidesaddle.
From his side Captain Sender said, "Seven o'clock. Nothing's stirred on the
other side. Bit of movement on our side, near a cellar close to the frontier.
That'll be our reception committee two good men from the Station. Better stay
with it until they close down.
Let me know when they take that gun in." - "All right."
It was seven-thirty when the KGB submachinegun was gently drawn back into the
black interior. One by one the bottom sashes of the four windows were closed.
The coldhearted game was over for the night. 272 was still holed up. Two more
nights to go! - Bond softly drew the curtain over his shoulders and across the
muzzle of the Winchester. He got up, pulled off his cowl, and went into the
bathroom, where he stripped and had a shower. Then he had two large
whiskeys-on-the-rocks in quick succession, while he waited, his ears pricked,
for the now muffled sound of the orchestra to stop. At eight o'clock it did,
with the expert comment from Sender
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"Borodin's
Prince Igor, Choral Dance Number 17, I think." who had been getting off his
report in garbled language to the Head of
Station.
"Just going to have another look. I've rather taken to that tall blonde with
the cello," Bond said to Sender. "Didn't notice her," said
Sender, uninterested. He went into the kitchen. Tea, guessed Bond. Or perhaps
Horlick's. Bond donned his cowl, went back to his firing position, and
depressed the sniperscope to the doorway of the Haus der Ministerien. Yes,
there they went, not so gay and laughing now. Tired perhaps. And now here she
came, less lively, but still with that beautiful careless stride. Bond watched
the blown golden hair and the fawn raincoat until it had vanished into the
indigo dusk up the Wilhelmstrasse. Where did she live? In some miserable
flaked room in the suburbs? Or in one of the privileged apartments in the
hideous lavatory-tiled Stalinallee?
Bond drew himself back. Somewhere, within easy reach, that girl lived. Was she
married? Did she have a lover? Anyway, to hell with it! She was not for him.
* * *
The next day, and the next night watch, were duplicates, with small
variations, of the first. James Bond had his two more brief rendezvous, by
sniperscope, with the girl, and the rest was a killing of time and a
tightening of the tension that, by the time the third and final day came, was
like a fog in the small room.
James Bond crammed the third day with an almost lunatic program of museums,
art galleries, the zoo, and a film, hardly perceiving anything he looked at,
his mind's eye divided between the girl and those four black squares and the
black tube and the unknown man behind it the man he was now certainly going to
kill tonight.
Back punctually at five in the apartment, Bond narrowly averted a row with
Captain Sender because, that evening, Bond took a stiff drink of the whiskey
before he donned the hideous cowl that now stank of his sweat. Captain Sender
had tried to prevent him, and when he failed, had threatened to call up Head
of Station and report Bond for breaking training.
"Look, my friend," said Bond wearily, "I've got to commit a murder tonight.
Not you. Me. So be a good chap and stuff it, would you? You can tell Tanqueray
anything you like when it's over. Think I like this job? Having a Double-O
number and so on? I'd be quite happy for you to get me sacked from the
Double-O Section. Then I could settle down and make a snug nest of papers as
an ordinary staffer. Right?" Bond drank down his whiskey, reached for his
thriller now arriving at an appalling climax and threw himself on the bed.
Captain Sender, icily silent, went off into the kitchen to brew, from the
sounds, his inevitable cuppa.
Bond felt the whiskey beginning to melt the coiled nerves in his stomach. Now
then, Liselotte, how in hell are you going to get out of this fix?
It was exactly six-five when Sender, at his post, began talking excitedly.
"Bond, there's something moving way back over there.
Now he's stopped wait, no, he's on the move again, keeping low. There's a bit
of broken wall there. He'll be out of sight of the opposition. But thick
weeds, yards of them, ahead of him. Christ! He's coming through the weeds. And
they're moving. Hope to God they think it's only the wind. Now he's through
and gone to ground. Any reaction?"
"No," said Bond tensely. "Keep on telling me. How far to the frontier?"
"He's only got about fifty yards to go," Captain Sender's voice was harsh with
excitement. "Broken stuff, but some of it's open.
Then a solid chunk of wall right up against the pavement. He'll have to get
over it. They can't fail to spot him then. Now! Now he's made ten yards, and
another ten. Got him clearly then. Blackened his face and hands. Get ready!
Any moment now he'll make the last sprint."
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James Bond felt the sweat pouring down his face and neck. He took a chance and
quickly wiped his hands down his sides and then got them back to the rifle,
his finger inside the guard, just lying along the curved trigger. "There's
something moving in the room behind the gun. They must have spotted him. Get
that Opel working."
Bond heard the code word go into the microphone, heard the Opel in the street
below start up, felt his pulse quicken as the engine leaped into life and a
series of ear-splitting cracks came from the exhaust.
The movement in the black cave was now definite. A black arm with a black
glove had reached out and under the stock.
"Now!" called out Captain Sender. "Now! He's run for the wall! He's up it!
Just going to jump!"
And then, in the sniperscope, Bond saw the head of Trigger the purity of the
profile, the golden bell of hair all laid out along the stock of the
Kalashnikov! She was dead, a sitting duck! Bond's fingers flashed down to the
screws, inched them round, and as yellow flame fluttered at the snout of the
submachinegun, squeezed the trigger.
The bullet, dead-on at three hundred and ten yards, must have hit where the
stock ended up the barrel, might have got her in the left hand but the effect
was to tear the gun off its mountings, smash it against the side of the window
frame, and then hurl it out of the window. It turned several times on its way
down and crashed into the middle of the street.
"He's over!" shouted Captain Sender. "He's over! He's done it! My God, he's
done it!"
"Get down!" said Bond sharply, and threw himself sideways off the bed as the
big eye of a searchlight in one of the black
15
windows blazed on, swerving up the street toward their block and their room.
Then gunfire crashed, and the bullets howled into their window, ripping the
curtains, smashing the woodwork, thudding into the walls.
Behind the roar and zing of the bullets, Bond heard the Opel race off down the
street, and, behind that again, the fragmentary whisper of the orchestra. The
combination of the two background noises clicked. Of course! The orchestra,
that must have raised an infernal din throughout the offices and corridors of
the Haus der Ministerien, was, as on their side the backfiring Opel, designed
to provide some cover for the sharp burst of fire from Trigger. Had she
carried her weapon to and fro every day in that cello case? Was the whole
orchestra composed of KGB women? Had the other instrument cases contained only
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