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The Emir nodded. "Why would they try to kill you and not me? Assuming that I am the eventual target?" he asked.
there is some feeling between us that goes back many years?"
"We have not met," Chiun said. "But our ancestors did many years ago."
"On a battlefield?" the Emir said.
"No. The House of Sinanju was retained to work for your royal house. The Master at that time did his task, but was not paid. If I could only keep you alive, I would send you a bill for the amount."
"And if I could stay alive, I would pay it gladly," the Emir said. "The House of Sinanju," he said softly. "Of course, I have heard of it, in the archives of our land. I thought it was just a myth, a legend."
"A legend," Chiun said. "But not a myth. I will leave now."
"Perhaps they are waiting for the price to reach f As he was at the bedroom door, the Emir called
its highest level," Chiun said. "After we were at- I his name softly. When Chiun turned, the deposed
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ruler said, "I trust not the Americans. They were once my friends, but now I think I am an embarrassment to them. I think they would like it better if I were dead. Once it was not like this," he said but his voice trailed off into the mists of memory, and sleep came over his tired body.
"You will not come to harm while I live," Chiun said. "Or there will be many who pay the debt of your death." But the Emir was not listening; he had lapsed into sleep.
"Where've you been?" Remo asked when Chiun returned to their hotel room.
"I must account for my whereabouts now like a school child?" Chiun said.
"No, I guess you don't," Remo said.
"So have I," Remo said. "If that guy who tried to hit me tonight was a federal agent, it might just mean that our government is involved in an attempt to put away the Emir. Now if you still want us to protect him, we will. But we might wind up killing a lot of our own. Do you want to chance it?"
"That's just what I was thinking about," Smith said. "So I checked it out again. The man who tried to kill you tonight, well, his identification was that of an FBI agent. But he wasn't the man. I had the fingerprints checked. He wasn't the real agent."
"Who was he?"
"I don't know, but he wasn't an FBI agent."
Something was nipping at Remo's mind and memory. "Listen," he said. "The real agent. Was he assigned to guard the Emir?"
"I went to see the Emir." i "Yes. He had been before he quit," Smith said.
"And?" I «All right. Now the guy who's in charge of that
"I wanted to hear what he thought about his sis-
ter," Chiun said.
"What does he think about her?" Remo asked.
"He trusts her." «No Yqucheck y0Uf ffles mifind out what
"And you don't?" Remo said.
'T only know that the lady is clever and strong-willed, and that she has blinded you so you fail to see beyond her skin."
"Well, maybe not after tonight," Remo said. Quickly, he told Chiun about the attempt on him as he was leaving Sarra's apartment building.
"That woman is always close when death arrives," Chiun said.
The telephone rang. It was Smith.
"Remo," he said, "I've been doing some think-
detail . . . what's his name . . . Randisi. What does he look like?" Remo asked.
"You saw him," Smith said. "You tell me."
description is. I'll wait."
Remo heard the telephone being laid down and he could hear the desk-top computer screen slide open. He could hear typewriter keys being depressed, and then a faint whir. A few moments later, Smith was back on the line.
"He's thirty-five, salt and pepper hair, brown eyes, six-foot-two, two-hundred pounds. A small scar alongside the right corner of his mouth."
Remo shook his head as he listened to the rest of
ing." I the description.
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"Swell," he said. "That's not the guy, Smitty." I «Wre on our waVj» Rem0 said< «a^ Smitty # # #»
"What do you mean?" I "What?"
"That's not the man Chiun and I saw on the is- I «If he's dead when we get therej don't ^ t0 pm
land. Somebody's brought in a ringer. For all we I q¿s one onme>'-know, the real Randisi might be dead. Maybe the guy who tried to kill me tonight too."
There was silence on the other end of the line.
Then Smith said, "That means . . ."
"That means that every agent we have on that island could be a phony. They could be members of a hit squad to kill the Emir."
"But why haven't they done it by now?" Smith said.