Part 22 (1/2)

”You are frank.”

Temple could picture Lucy's shrug. ”I am a paid, professional spy. By now you have most of the information you need. I shall have the rest tonight.”

”I'll see you in h.e.l.l first!” Temple cried in rage, stalking into the room and almost smiling in spite of the situation when he realized how melodramatic his words must sound.

”Kit! Kit....” Lucy raised hand to mouth, then backed away flinching as if she had been struck.

”Yeah, Kit. A political cuckold, or does Charles get other services from you as well?”

”Kit, you don't....”

The man named Charles motioned for silence. Dapper, clean-cut, good-looking except for a surly, pouting mouth, he was a head shorter than either Temple or Lucy. ”Don't waste your words, Sophia. Temple overheard us.”

_Sophia?_ thought Temple. ”Sophia?” he said.

Charles nodded coolly. ”The real Mrs. Temple was observed, studied, her every habit and whim catalogued by experts. A plastic surgeon, a psychologist, a sociologist, a linguist, a whole battery of experts molded Sophia here into a new Mrs. Temple. I must congratulate them, for you never suspected.”

”Lucy?” Temple demanded dully. Reason stood suspended in a limbo of objective acceptance and subjective disbelief.

”Mrs. Temple was eliminated. Regrettable because we don't deal in senseless mayhem, but necessary.”

Temple was not aware of leaving limbo until he felt the bruising contact of his knuckles with Charles' jaw. The short man toppled, fell at his feet. ”Get up!” Temple cried, then changed his mind and tensed himself to leap upon the p.r.o.ne figure.

”Hold it,” Charles told him quietly, wiping blood from his lips with one hand, drawing an automatic from his pocket with the other. ”You'd better freeze, Temple. You die if you don't.”

Temple froze, watched Charles slither away across the high-piled green carpet until, safely away across the room, he came upright groggily.

He turned to the dead Lucy's double. ”What do you think, Sophia?”

”I don't know. We could get out of here, probably get along without the final information.”

”That isn't what I mean. Naturally, we'll never receive the final facts. I mean, what do you think about Temple?”

Sophia said she didn't know.

”Left alone, he would go to the police. Kidnapped, he would be worse than useless. Harmful, actually, for the authorities would suspect something. Even worse if we killed him. The point is, we don't want the authorities to think Temple gave information to anybody.”

”Gave is hardly the word,” said Sophia. ”I was a good wife, but also a good gleaner. One hundred thousand dollars, Charles.”

”You b.i.t.c.h,” Temple said.

”Later,” Charles told the woman. ”The solution is this, Sophia: we must kill Temple, but it must look like suicide.”

Sophia frowned in pretty concern. ”Do we have to ... kill him?”

”What's the matter, my dear? Have you been playing the wifely role too long? If Temple stands in the way of Red Empire, Temple must die.”

Temple edged forward.