Authors: John Denis
âWhat is it?' Philpott demanded. âTell us, C.W. It doesn't matter if you're wrong, because it's the only thing we've got to go on.'
âW-e-l-l,' the agent began, with infuriating slowness. âit's this: I stumbled into something curious in the basement inspection chamber. You know, the power lines are there. We were lacing cable into the mains supply; it was thirsty work, and I wanted a beer.' He stopped. They waited. âWell?' Philpott spluttered.
âI spotted a couple of beer tanks â cylinders with taps. They came in with the caterers. They were standing in the corner of the inspection chamber. I went to one and stuck my head under it. I turned the spigot â but nothing came out. Just â air.'
âAir?'
C.W. nodded. âCompressed air. Oxygen.'
Philpott's mouth opened and closed. He gnawed a fingernail; Poupon looked totally perplexed. Then Philpott snapped his fingers, and a look of sheer delight possessed his face.
âOxygen cylinders!' he roared. âThat's it! By George, C.W., that's it.' He rushed to the table and yanked the distinguished-looking City Engineer's superintendent out of his chair. Philpott thumbed through the maps, plans and sketches, and found the tower base section.
âThere!' he speared the lattice-work of cables and pipes. âSee? Water-mains. He's going to get out through a water-main! That's why he wants oxygen cylinders. The mains have got inspection and repair hatches, haven't they?' he barked at the public health man.
âThey have,' the superintendent agreed. âThere is one right here.' He traced with the tip of his pencil a dotted-line section of the pipe passing through the Eiffel Tower's basement chamber.
âWhere can he come out?'
âAnywhere he pleases, if he's got the right equipment,' the superintendent said, fetching over a sewage and water system plan.
âIn the Seine?' Poupon cut in.
The superintendent spread his hands eloquently. âOf course. The pipes empty straight into the river â the big main pipes, that is. It is much easier for a diver to examine them there than to dig up a length of road or install an inspection hatch under a manhole.'
Philpott scratched his head, and his eyes lit up once more. âIs there an outlet,' he asked, eager but reluctant to hear the answer, âanywhere near the Bateaux Mouches out there on the river?'
The superintendent again consulted the plan. âIndeed there is,' he announced. They drew back, and looked questioningly at each other.
âWorth the risk?' Philpott put to Poupon and C.W.
Poupon replied, âIt's your decision, Monsieur.'
Philpott duly debated it with himself for a full minute. âThen it's worth it,' he announced. âThis is what we do â¦'
As he started to outline the plan forming in his mind, a great shout went up from the crowd outside, lining the perimeter now in ever-growing
numbers since the TV outside broadcasts began. Sonya pushed her way to the door of the van, and gasped.
C.W. stood at her elbow, and gazed in astonishment at the tower. He whistled admiringly and muttered, âWill you look at that now? The crazy bastard's started a fireworks display. Real fireworks.'
Poupon chuckled. âSmith must be French,' he reflected. âHe may be mad â but he has a truly Gallic sense of style.'
Expert pyro-technicians in Smith's crew had arranged the display in the little top gallery. It was one of the most dazzling ever seen in Paris â like Bastille Day, the Fifth of November and the Fourth of July all rolled into one.
Stunning rainbow bursts erupted from the tower to bathe the night sky in vivid washes of spectral colours. Stars rained over the enthralled crowds, and mighty explosions sent jet-streams of gold and silver, green and blue, and garish orange soaring up to fizz and crackle, to subdivide, and eventually to die in cascades of glowing embers.
The watching people actually cheered themselves hoarse at the finale. Thin, strong poles projecting invisibly from the foot of the television mast supported a scale model, picked out in tiny Catherine wheels and modest little colour showers, of â the Eiffel Tower. For accompaniment, Roman Candles sent charges of silver diamonds and golden
sunbursts climbing ever higher into the wind, and the tower's public address system played the Marseillaise.
Poupon stood at attention until Philpott jogged his arm and said, âIt's probably only a cover for something spectacularly nasty.'
On the first landing. Smith looked out over the rolling parkland at the sea of upturned faces. âAdieu,' he whispered, âyou have given me a fitting salute to my victory. I shall remember you ⦠and you will remember me.'
The commandos and remaining hostages poured into the elevator on Smith's instructions. He took a key from his pocket and handed it to Pei.
The Asian inserted it into a keyhole in a red box bearing a DANGER! stamp. Next to the key sat an innocent-looking black button. Smith nodded briskly and said, âArm it.'
Pei pressed the button. âThe â the â d-detonators are now fully armed. Mister Smith,' he stammered. âWe have ten minutes. And there is, I'm afraid, no way you can change your mind.'
Smith replied, âI am not in the habit of changing my mind.'
He glanced at the set of stout canvas bags leaning against the railing. Pei stood over them, and looked up at Smith. âShall I put them in the elevator?' he asked.
Smith grinned â a knowing, sinister smile. âNo, Pei,' he said, âI'll take charge of the money now. You get into the elevator with the others.'
There was a mutter of alarm from the lift. Smith stalked to the rail and stood with his back to it. His machine pistol was levelled at the crew. âPei,' he waved the gun at the Asian, âdo as you were told.'
Pei squeezed into the elevator next to Graham and Sabrina, and Smith rapped at the newly released liftman, âClose the gates.'
The heavy iron gates crashed into position. âGentlemen, and Miss Carver,' Smith sneered, âyou have all performed magnificently. However, from this point I no longer have any need for your services. I thank you warmly for what you have done for me, and I sincerely wish you were able to enjoy the successful conclusion as much as I shall.
âBut that cannot be,' he went on, as a paralysing fear overcame the commandos in the elevator. âSince I am leaving with only half the ransom I claimed, you are â how shall I put it? â ah ⦠an unwarrantable expense. I simply cannot afford the luxury of paying you. Goodbye â and God speed.'
He chuckled, and shouted âDown!' at the petrified lift operator. The man pressed the button as a reflex action, and the elevator sank complainingly out of sight.
Smith fingered the transmit button of his walkie-talkie and said to Leah, âAre you ready?' From the small red box came the steady, relentless tick of the metronome timer. Leah replied that she was. âThen proceed, please,' Smith ordered.
Leah's hand hovered over a lever on the wall
â the isolator to the mains power supply to the tower, though not affecting the secondary generators which powered the lasers. She threw the switch, and Smith, peering into the lift shaft, watched with satisfaction as the elevator shuddered to a halt.
The ransom bags were linked at their necks by a leather thong, and Smith took a nickel pro tection tag from his pocket and clipped it to the strap. Then he stooped, hoisted up the bags, and heaved them over the side.
The two west facing laser-guns followed the same path as Smith's eyes in tracking the bags to the ground. The mouse-ears moved, but the guns obeyed the metal tag.
Smith moved further along the railing to a coil of rope already looped around it and fastened tightly. The rope led to one of the four massive arches between the legs of the tower. He shinned down it and dropped to the ground. He smiled at the thought that his descent had been a great deal easier than C.W.'s ⦠the black agent had had to drop through the structure of the tower, carrying a burden which, Smith admitted, most men would have found insupportable.
With the generators roaring defiantly at the massed troops and guns, and still in the circle of protection afforded by his trucks, Smith made for the electrical inspection chamber on the last lap of his escape from the hostage tower.
On the way, almost as an afterthought, he
scooped up fifteen million dollars that someone had left lying around â¦
Panic spread like a forest fire through the elevator. Graham clutched Pei's arm and gritted, âThe charges? Are they armed?' Dumbly, Pei nodded. He sought Tote, and rested his head on the big man's shoulder.
Mike pounded the glass side of the lift in rage and fear. âThat bastard!' he shouted, âOh, that â bastard.' Then his eye fell on the metal bench that formed the only seating in the lift.
âGive me a hand,' he shouted to Pei. The Indonesian leapt to the other end of the bench and grasped it. Together they lifted it up, and used it as a battering-ram to smash one of the windows of the elevator.
There was a mad scramble to get to the shattered window, but the opening was too small. âAgain!' Mike screamed, âagain!' They backed a few paces, and charged once more at the windows. Another went under the hammer-blows â and another; and a central strut.
It was enough, and Sabrina was brutally felled to the floor in the heedless stampede. Graham helped her to her feet, and said swiftly, âYou realize what you have to do.' He jerked his head aloft. She said, âYes ⦠if there's time.'
âThere's
got
to be,' Mike returned. âAt least we have to try. You know that, Sabrina.' She blinked and said, âOK, Mike. And you?'
âI'm going after Smith,' he said grimly. She turned to scale the cab and the tower, and Graham called softly, âSabrina.' She looked back. âGood luck, sweetheart,' he said. âAnd take care. Please?' She nodded. âAnd you, Mike.' He thought she had never looked lovelier â or more terrified.
Graham perched on a cross-beam and saw Smith's escape rope swaying just out of reach in the wind. He clasped an upright and leaned out. His finger-tips barely touched the hempen strands, and as they did the rope moved tantalizingly away again.
Mike breathed a heartfelt sigh and muttered, âC.W., C.W., where are you?'
Then he took a firm, balanced stance on the cross-beam, lowered his body into a crouch, cursed Malcolm Philpott quite vilely, and sprang into the night. His fingers clutched frantically for the rope â and found it. He shed some skin from his burning hands as he slithered at least eight feet, but then he caught the rope in a firmer grasp, and slid to the foot of the tower, searching in vain for any trace of the vanished Smith â¦
Sabrina sighted her target â the nearest explosive charge â ten feet above her head.
She estimated she had probably six minutes in which to disarm not one, but four, bombs.
Dangling outside the ribs of the tower she spotted Smith's rope, which Graham had just abandoned. She calculated she could reach two charges on the rope, which would save her precious climbing time.
She made for it, caught it more easily than Mike had done, and swarmed up the tower to the bomb that, on the west-facing side, was furthest away from her.
Sabrina planted her feet on a cross-strut, anchoring the rope between her legs. She studied the plastique charge, wedged into the hollow of the box girder. Deep inside the cloying, deadly putty was the live detonator. Cautiously, she reached out a hand, fingers trembling, her teeth trapping her full bottom lip.
A hurricane gust of wind rose up behind her and howled through the tower. She was literally blown into the girder, her face no more than six inches from the bomb, her questing fingers splayed out over the plastique, yet not touching the wired detonator. She clung there, knuckles white, eyes rounded in horror.
The timer in the little red box ticked round to 5.15, 5.14, 5.13 â¦
Graham combed the vault beneath the tower, but Smith had left no trace of his presence. âWhere in hell's he gone?' Mike queried to himself.
The smallest of sounds came from behind him, and Graham whirled round, alarm on his face but savage power in the set of his body and the menace of his arms and hands. C.W. sauntered out past a generator truck and drawled, âHi.' He still wore Claude's safety tag.
Mike relaxed. âSmith?' he asked. âAny ideas?'
âSho' has, boss,' C.W. replied, then dropped his
bantering tone. âHe's in the inspection chamber in the basement. We figure he's getting out through a water-main.'
âA water-main!' Mike groaned. âChrist alive, of course. That'd be the only thing that makes sense.'
âWhere's Sabrina?' C.W. put in.
Graham pointed upwards. âShe's got her hands full,' he said. âFive minutes or so to disarm four bloody great bombs â or “bingo”, and up she goes.'
âShit,' said C.W. âOK, I'm on my way.'
He jumped for the rope, and made it to the first level almost as quickly as Mike had climbed down â¦
Leah Fischer lifted a red âbeer tank' and settled it on Mister Smith's back, alongside a bulky pack. The tank now had straps fixed to it, and tubes ran from the top. She turned a tap.
As C.W. had discovered, the tanks contained not beer, but oxygen. For Leah and Smith, they served as aqualungs.
Smith winked at Leah behind his face mask. Like her, he had a breathing tube clamped between his teeth.
Smith had already removed a manhole-sized inspection plate from one of the huge conduits carrying water power beneath the streets of Paris. He peered into the hole. The pipe had a diameter of four feet, and foaming water raced through it under pressure.
He had hooked the loop of a nylon line over one of the rusting bolt-heads. The end of the line disappeared into the rushing torrent â¦
Hundreds of feet above them, on the wind-battered Eiffel Tower, Sabrina Carver's slim fingers reached out once more to stop tentatively a centimetre short of the embedded detonator.