Frigid Fracas Part 17
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At the last moment, Joe suddenly struck out with his left leg, hooked with his foot the small table at which the three Sov officers had been sitting and twisted quickly, throwing it to the side and immediately into the way of his enraged opponent.
The other swore as his s.h.i.+ns banged the side and was thrown slightly forward, for a moment off balance.
Joe stepped forward quickly, precisely, and his right chopped down and to the side of the other's prominent jawbone. The Russkie, if Russkie he was, went suddenly glazed of eye. His doubling forward, originally but an attempt to regain balance, continued and he fell flat on his face.
Joe spun around. "Come on, Max, let's get out of here. I doubt if we're welcome." He didn't want to give the other two time to organize themselves and decide to attack. Defeat the two, he and Max might be able to accomplish, but Joe wasn't at all sure where the waiters would stand in the fray, nor anyone else in the small cabaret, for that matter.
Max, at the peak of excitement now, yelled, "What'd you think I been saying? Come on, follow me. There's a rear door next to the rest room."
Waiters and others were converging on them. Joe Mauser didn't wait to argue, he took Max's word for it and hurried after that small worthy, going round and about the intervening tables and chairs like an old time broken field football player.
XVIII
Joe Mauser had a.s.sumed there would be some sort of reverberations as a result of his run-in with the Sov officers, but hadn't suspected the magnitude of them.
The next morning he had hardly arrived at the small emba.s.sy office which had been a.s.signed him, before his desk set lit up with General Armstrong's habitually worried face. He said, without taking time for customary amenities, "Major Mauser, could you come to my office immediately?" It wasn't a question.
In General George Armstrong's office, beside the general himself, were his aide, Lieutenant Anderson who Joe had at long last sorted out from Lieutenant d.i.c.kson, Lieutenant colonel Bela Kossuth and another Sov officer whom Joe hadn't met before.
Everybody looked very stiff and formal.
The general said to Joe, "Major Mauser, Colonel Kossuth and Captain Petofi have approached me, as your immediate superior, to request that your diplomatic immunity be waived so that you might be called upon on a matter of honor."
Joe didn't get it. He looked from one of the two Hungarians to the other, then back at Armstrong, scowling.
Lieutenant Anderson said, unhappily. "These officers have been named to represent Captain Sandor Rakoczi, major."
Bela Kossuth clicked his heels, bowed, said formally, "Our princ.i.p.al realizes, Major Mauser, that diplomatic immunity prevents his issuing request for satisfaction. However"--the Hungarian cleared his throat--"since honor _is_ involved--"
At long last it got through to Joe. His own voice went coldly even.
"General Armstrong, I--"
The general said quickly. "Mauser, as an official representative of the West-world, you don't have to respond to anything as dashed silly as a challenge to a duel."
The faces of the two Hungarians froze.
Joe finished his sentence. "... I would appreciate it if you and Lieutenant Anderson would act for me."
Kossuth clicked his heels again. "Gentlemen, the _code duello_ provides that the challenged choose the weapons."
General Armstrong's face, usually worried, was now dark with anger.
"Choice of weapons, eh? Against Sandor Rakoczi? If you will excuse us now, gentlemen, Lieutenant Anderson and I will consult with you in one hour in the Emba.s.sy Club and discuss the affair further. I say frankly, I have never heard of a diplomat being subjected to such a situation, especially on the part of officers of the country to which he is accredited."
The Hungarians were unfazed. Kossuth looked at his wrist chronometer.
"One hour in the Emba.s.sy Club, gentlemen." The two of them clicked again, bowed from the waist, and were gone.
General Armstrong glared at Joe. "Dash it, if you hadn't been so confoundedly quick on the trigger, I could have warned you, Mauser."
Joe Mauser wasn't over being flabbergasted. "You mean to tell me," he said, "that those people still conduct duels? I thought duels had gone out back in the Nineteenth Century."
"Well, you're mistaken," Armstrong bit out. "It seems to be a practice that can crop up in any decadent society. Remember Hitler reviving it among the German universities? Well, it's all the rage now among the officers of the Sov world. Limited, however, to Party members, the lowly proletariat are a.s.sumed not to have honor."
Joe shrugged, "I'm not exactly an amateur at combat, you know."
The general snorted his disgust and turned to his aide. "Lieutenant, go find Dr. Haer for me. Then wait in the outer office until it's time for us to meet those heel-clicking Hungarians."
"Yes, sir," Andersen saluted, shot another look at Joe as though in commiseration, and left hurriedly.
"What's wrong with him?" Joe said.
Armstrong pulled open a desk drawer, brought forth a bottle and gla.s.s, poured himself a strong one and knocked it back without offering any to his junior officer. He replaced the bottle and gla.s.s and turned his scowl back to Joe. "Haven't you ever heard of Sandor Rakoczi?"
"No."
"He happens to be All-Sov-world Fencing Champion and has been for six years. He also is third from the top amongst the Red Army pistol and rifle marksmen. I once saw him put on an exhibition of trick handgun shooting. Uncanny. The man has abnormal reflexes."
The door opened and Nadine was there. "Joe," she said. "d.i.c.k Andersen says you've been challenged to a frame-up duel by Sandor Rakoczi." Her eyes hurried on to Armstrong. "George, this is ridiculous. Joe has diplomatic--"
Joe wasn't getting part of this. He broke in. "What do you mean, frame-up, Nadine? We got into a ha.s.sle in a nightspot last night."
Armstrong said. "Everybody simmer down, dash it!" His eyes went to Joe. "Sandor Rakoczi doesn't get into ha.s.sles in nightspots--not unless he's been ordered to. Captain Rakoczi is what in the old days was known as a hatchetman." He snorted in deprecation. "The Party no longer conducts purges amongst its own. Everything is all buddy-buddy now. Purges are something from the past. However, those on the very top sometimes find this unfortunate. One manner that has been devised to remove such Party members who have become a thorn in the side of the powers that be, is to have them challenged by such as Sandor Rakoczi."
Joe settled down into a chair, more dumbfounded than ever. "But that's ridiculous. _Why?_ Why should they want me eliminated?"
Nadine said hurriedly, "You don't have to accept."
Joe said, "If I don't, I'll be laughed out of town. Remember that big banquet the Pink Army gave me when I first arrived? The celebrated Major Joseph Mauser fling? What happens to West-world prestige when the celebrated Joe Mauser backs down from a duel?"
General Armstrong mused, "If Mauser refuses the duel, he's right, he'll be laughed out of town. If he accepts it, and is killed, he is still removed from the scene." He looked from Joe to Nadine. "Somebody evidently doesn't want Joe Mauser in Budapest."
Pieces were beginning to fit in.
Joe looked at George Armstrong. "You're one of us, aren't you? One of the Phil Holland, Frank Hodgson group." He looked at Nadine. "Why wasn't I told? Am I a junior member or something, that I can't be trusted?"
Armstrong snorted. "You should study up on revolutionary routine, Joe.
The smaller the unit of organization, the better. The fewer members you know, the fewer you can betray. Here in the Sov-world, back before the Sovs came to power, the size of their cells was five members, so the most any one person could betray was four."
The tic started at the side of Joe's mouth.
Armstrong said hurriedly. "Don't misunderstand. Your fort.i.tude isn't being questioned. Bravery no longer enters into it. There are methods today under which n.o.body could hold up." He seemed to come to a sudden decision. "We can't let this take place. You'll have to back down, Mauser. Somehow, there's been a leak and your real purpose in being in Budapest is known. Very well, Phil Holland and the others will simply have to send someone else to replace you."
But Joe had had enough by now. "Look," he said. "Everybody seems to think I can't take care of myself with this foppish molly and his fancy swordsmans.h.i.+p. I've had fifteen years of combat."
"Joe!" Nadine said, "don't be silly. The man's a professional a.s.sa.s.sin. This is his field, not yours."
Frigid Fracas Part 17
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Frigid Fracas Part 17 summary
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