The Final Affair
by elfin
Previously on ' Man From U.N.C.L.E.'
"Good morning, Sir."
"Mr Solo, please take a seat."
"When you called...."
"I'm afraid I have some bad news. Mr Kuryakin's car was found in
a remote spot just outside Paris. The post-mortem of the driver
identified the charred remains as Illya's. This ring... it's his,
I believe."
Stunned. "Yes...."
"I'm very, very sorry, Napoleon."
~ ~ ~
Two months later
"So tell me, Andreus, what does Thrush want with Claude De Vris?
He's a mad millionaire, nothing more."
"Napoleon, Napoleon, shame on you! Where have you been?"
"Busy, as you know."
"Yes, well.... This should interest you then. Rumour has it
that Mr De Vris has had a houseguest for some considerable time.
A gorgeous blond they say. Apparently, he's had his fun and now
he's selling the blond to Thrush for a considerable price."
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The Final Affair
Act I - "They made me believe you were
dead."
"Mr Solo," Claude De Vris reached out, shook Napoleon's hand.
"I'm so glad Thrush agreed to my not inconsiderable sum."
Napoleon kept his anger reigned tightly, taking the offered hand but
not smiling. "If the... package is as good as you say it is, the
sum isn't nearly high enough."
De Vris nodded. "It is certainly as good, if not better."
"And in excellent condition of course. It's no use to us if it
breaks the moment it is put under pressure."
Solo didn't miss the dark expression that flashed momentarily across
the Frenchman's face. "Of course, of course. Um... if you
will excuse me a moment...."
"No." The false politeness was gone. "Thrush is very
impatient to get our hands on this man. Take me to him."
"And the money...."
"Once I've satisfied myself we're not buying a corpse."
Solo followed De Vris out into a large cobbled courtyard in the middle
of his sprawling estate. Dead centre, he stopped and crouched
down. Napoleon hovered at the man's shoulder and saw the large,
rusted metal ring that De Vris had pulled up from a curved valley in
the cobbles. Only when the heavy, circular stone trapdoor started
to lift did Napoleon actually see it.
There was a narrow metal ladder just inside, but De Vris dropped the
six feet to the inside of the underground cell.
"We call it an 'oubliette'," he explained to Napoleon as Solo too
dropped into the darkness. "We put people here to forget about
them."
The moment his feet touched the stone floor of the small, circular
room, the nauseating stench hit Napoleon hard. He gagged, choking
back the reflex.
It took a moment for his eyes to adjust to the damp darkness. But
when they did, he reached out, clawed his fingers in De Vris' fine grey
hair and smashed his head once and without warning against the edge of
the ladder as hard as his rage would allow him to.
The Frenchman crumpled silently.
Napoleon dropped to his knees next to the emaciated body of the man
he'd thought was dead.
By the light streaming in at the top of the ladder he could see Illya's
bruised and bloodied chest rising and falling with the shallow, pitiful
breaths the man was taking.
He'd been dumped by the looks of it, once De Vris' men had finished
with him. His wrists were fastened by manacles and chains to the
wall, as were his ankles, despite it being obvious that he was in no
state to attempt an escape.
"Illya. Oh God...."
A quick search of the dead Frenchman's pockets came up with a set of
small keys. It was still difficult to see in the gloom but as
Napoleon worked the manacles open, he mapped the injuries that were
immediately obvious.
Two broken fingers as well as lacerations to arms, chest and
legs. Dark bruises mottling what Solo could see of the fair - now
pale - skin.
Illya's lips were cut and swollen. His nose had possibly been
broken; it had bled copiously, over his lips and left cheek. He
was still in pants and shirt, although the pants were filthy and the
once-white shirt red with blood.
Napoleon removed the manacles from Illya's wrists, horrified to see the
raw flesh when the cuffs came off.
Next he freed the ankles, a sound of helplessness torn from his throat
when he saw the white of the anklebone through the bloody mess.
Scrambling on his knees up beside his partner, Solo slid his hand under
Illya's neck and lifted it. The blond head lolled back
sickeningly.
"Illya? Come on. Just give me a sign you're still in
there. Illya?"
He heard nothing more from the parched lips except each painful breath,
but he could make out shouting in the courtyard above him. Rising
to his feet, leaning down, he took his gun from his jacket and scooped
his friend's body up into his arms. Illya was ridiculously light.
He manoeuvred his ward over his shoulder as gently as he could and
started up the ladder - the only way out of the stone bunker.
As he poked his head above ground a bullet whizzed passed his ear and
hit the stones behind him. He brought up his own gun and fired
twice with deadly accuracy. Two men dropped and the court fell
silent for a precious few seconds. Napoleon hoisted himself and
Illya out of the cell, inadvertently cracking the blond head on the
edge of the circular hole on the way up.
He didn't have time to worry or apologise, not now. He ran for
the gates as fast as he could, relieved to find them open. His
car was waiting in the drive.
More shouting chased them out across the pebbled driveway but Napoleon
had already dumped Illya in the back seat and dropped into the driver's
seat himself. He ducked instinctively when a barrage of bullets
flew passed the car, one shattering the wing mirror. Still down,
he pushed the key into the ignition and gunned the engine. Only
once he had it running, in gear and the brake off did he lift his head
just enough to see where he was going, and put his foot on the
accelerator.
He drove from the estate into Paris, a journey of less than an hour but
it was an hour he wasn't sure Illya had to spare. Sheer willpower
had probably kept him alive thus far, a will to survive stronger than
any Napoleon had ever known. But he had to know something had
changed. Napoleon could hope that Illya had heard his voice, but
he doubted it. As far as he knew, Illya had known only
discomfort, humiliation, pain and misery for the last two months, while
Napoleon had been 'losing himself' in his work. As far as Illya
knew, this was yet another journey in a continuing nightmare.
He glanced back but his partner hadn't moved of his own accord.
The movements of the car were throwing him gently about the black
leather seat, knocking his head hard against the door.
"I'm sorry, Illya," Napoleon told him uselessly.
Paris was busy at this time in the evening. He managed to lose
the two cars that had been following them from the De Vris estate and
took them into the traffic, merged with the local rush hour. He
turned every corner and back tracked a couple of times. After
twenty minutes he was satisfied that they were no longer being followed.
"I have to make a stop, Illya," he explained, pulling the car into an
alley. Up ahead a narrow walkway opened out into a square popular
with locals. "I'll be back before you know it. Just wait
here for me, okay?"
Not expecting an answer and not getting one, he opened the car door,
checked around him and closed it again, heading silently for the square.
Napoleon was back at the car within five minutes, dropping his bundle
into the passenger seat, checking quickly on Illya - still lying
unmoving in the back - before backing the car into the road and heading
north to Montmartre.
He chose a rundown hotel on Rue Chaptal, hoping it would be the last
place, or among the last places, De Vris' men - along with any Thrush
backup they'd managed to collect on the way - would check.
He paid the uninterested desk clerk five francs for a room before
hauling Illya and his stolen bundle out of the car and up to the first
floor of the derelict building.
The room was cold and damp but it had to be more comfortable than the
cell that had been Illya's home when he'd rescued him. Locking
the door - thankful it had a lock - he crossed to where he'd
unceremoniously had to dump his partner again.
Sitting carefully on the mattress, he reached out to brush his hand
over Illya's matted blond hair.
"Illya?" He sighed softly. "I'm going to need to clean you
up and dress your wounds, all right? Be sure to tell me if I hurt
you."
He pushed the bathroom door open with some trepidation, given the
underlying dirt of the rest of the room. But to his surprise and
relief the toilet was clean, the bath was clean and the water was
lukewarm.
There was a glass next to the sink that Napoleon rinsed, filled and
drank down. When the water tasted fine, he half-filled the glass
this time and returned to Illya.
Perching on the bed he lifted the blond head carefully and tipped the
glass to the bloody, swollen lips, pouring a little water onto them.
"You need to drink, Illya," he told his unresponsive companion.
But he didn't get any assistance.
Eventually, with a great deal of patience and care, he managed to get
most the water down Illya's throat and only a few drops on his chin.
First task completed, Napoleon ran a bath, leaving the tub to fill
while he stripped the tattered remains of Illya's clothes from him.
The red stained shirt peeled back to reveal more evidence of
torture. He wondered what they'd managed to force from Illya's
lips and doubted it was anything. A truth serum was more use for
getting any actual information. Torture was used for the
entertainment of the abductor.
Dropping the shirt to the floor, Solo worked Illya's pants off.
The fly was broken, the material stained with many fluids. He
ignored the stink, working hard to fight the urge to return to De Vris'
home and tear everyone there limb from limb.
"Come on, Illya," he murmured softly. "Bath time."
Very gently, sliding his hands under Illya's shoulders and knees,
Napoleon lifted him, tipping his head slowly until it fell against his
shoulder. He walked through to the bathroom, leaning down and
testing the water running from the tap with his elbow. It was
nowhere near hot. He knew he'd have to get Illya out and dry as
soon as possible to prevent the possible onset of pneumonia; his
partner was in no state to fight anything else right now.
He lowered the body in his arms gently into the water, a small part of
him hoping for a struggle but knowing he wasn't going to get one.
Illya went without a sign that he was even alive. If it hadn't
been for the constant, harsh attempts for breath, Napoleon might have
believed him to be dead.
He made sure Illya at least looked comfortable in the tub. There
was no sponge, but there was a tattered cloth. He soaked it and
began to carefully clean the dirt, blood and filth from the injured
body, revealing little by little the whole story.
"They really made a mess of you this time, Vanya," he murmured softly
to himself, finding some comfort in his pet name for his partner.
It was Russian for 'Gift From God', or something like that. He'd
picked it up - he couldn't remember where now - and Illya had
translated it for him. So often he'd seen Illya standing in a
cell doorway or waving a gun at Napoleon's captor of the day and he'd
thought just that of him. A gift from God. Not that he
deserved someone like Illya.
He pushed those thoughts away, concentrating on lavishing some TLC on
his treasured Russian.
Napoleon lost count of the lacerations, some of them obviously
infected. He stopped himself from tracing a pattern of small
circular burns. At least the only broken bones seemed to be the
two middle fingers of Illya's right hand. He needed to set them,
he knew, but Illya wasn't suffering any pain right now. Napoleon
didn't want to think of the pain he had endured.
"No more," he stated as he worked. "If you get through this,
we're getting out, Illya. I'm leaving and I'm taking you with me."
But it was a big 'if'.
Once he'd cleaned Illya's body, he scooped up water into his cupped
hands and started to wash the mess from the dirty hair. Carding
wet fingers through the once silken strands again and again, he slowly
brought it back to its golden colour.
Finally he washed Illya's face with his fingers, being as gentle as he
could.
Then he found the only towel in the room - feeling lucky that there was
one at all - and laid it out on the floor. He lifted Illya from
the water and placed him on the towel, leaning him against the tub,
rubbing him dry as quickly and carefully as he possibly could.
Finally he got his partner back on to the bed and with the first aid
kit he'd brought from the car he started to dress each and every wound.
He started with the broken fingers, pulling on the digits to straighten
them - flinching in sympathy when he heard the crack of bone even if
Illya didn't even flinch - then binding them straight against the two
either side. It was crude but until he could get Illya to safety
and to a hospital, it would have to do.
He dressed all the other wounds, stitching where he needed to, wishing
he could see some reaction to the acute pain Illya would have felt if
he'd been conscious.
The cause of every mark was more than obvious to Solo, except for a
collection of small puncture wounds to his throat - just above his
Adam's Apple - that Napoleon didn't recognise. It was a strange
place to inject any kind of drugs.
Having attended to all the injuries he could find, Napoleon took up the
bundle and shook out the clothing.
The unfortunate Frenchman would hopefully have staggered home by
now. Napoleon had left him with his underwear at least.
He'd been the best target; alone, a little worse for drink, only a size
or two larger than Illya.
Solo had dropped him with a single blow to the back of the neck, at the
base of the skull. He'd stolen the man's knitted blue jumper and
black corduroy pants as well as his shoes and socks, and had made sure
to remove the man's wallet from his pants and tuck it into his
underwear. He didn't want the man's money.
As much as he regretted the need for his actions, Illya's safety and
relative comfort was Napoleon's top priority now. He would do
whatever it took to save Illya's life, to take him home alive and with
a fighting chance of surviving.
As Napoleon dressed his partner in the stolen clothes, he wondered with
a brief smile what Illya would think of his tenderness. He could
hear the beloved voice in his mind,
'Stop Mothering me, Napoleon, it doesn't suit you.'
Chuckling fondly for just a moment, he rubbed the blond hair dry,
making sure he soaked up as much water from it as he could. Then
he eased Illya onto his side on the bed, wrapped the single ratty
blanket around him and crawled up to spoon behind him, to add his own
body warmth to the scant heat of the room and the cool temperature of
Illya's skin.
They couldn't afford the rest, he knew, but he needed to sleep.
His collapsing from exhaustion would do Illya no good at all. It
might even cost him his life and that was a price far too high to be
paid.
Wrapping his arms and his body around his inert partner, he closed his
eyes. But even with the initial surge of adrenaline gone from his
system, Napoleon couldn't settle. Whatever relief he felt from
holding Illya in his arms was mitigated by the knowledge that they were
far from safe.
De Vris' men as well as Thrush would be tearing Paris apart looking for
them. Before sunrise he'd have to start them on their journey
again. Before they left he would contact U.N.C.L.E. and get a
rendezvous point set up. He should have done it earlier but he
didn't want to take the risk that someone would trace the signal and
they'd end up sitting ducks in this dump of a hotel.
Without conscious thought he pressed his lips to Illya's hair,
reassuring himself that his partner was alive if unconscious. If
dying slowly here in his arms. Illya deserved to die somewhere
better than a damp, dingy room in a rundown hotel hiding from men who'd
made periods of the last few years of his life into a series of living
hells.
"It's over," he murmured to Illya, to himself. "I can't do this
anymore and I won't let you do it either." He sighed, turning his
face and resting his cheek against the crown of Illya's head.
"When did it become about saving you over saving the world?
Perhaps when you became more to me than any of it. We've done
enough. You deserve so much better. You deserve to be safe
and happy. You deserve to love and be loved. I'm starting
to think... maybe that's what I need too."
He was glad Illya couldn't hear him rambling. He wasn't certain
his stoic Russian friend would appreciate the sentiment. Having
said that, after what Illya had been through these last weeks, he
wouldn't be looking to go back into the field anytime soon and
U.N.C.L.E.'s doctors would have lengthy recuperation plans for him
anyway.
Napoleon considered that. Once physically recovered, Illya could
look forward to long sessions under the influence of various drugs as
U.N.C.L.E. worked to find out what he'd told De Vris; what securities
had been breached, which agents were in danger. Napoleon had no
doubts that his partner wouldn't have given up anything no matter what
they put him through. He was tough, the little Russian in his
arms, but thoughts of what U.N.C.L.E. was going to do to him after
everything else already done made Napoleon's fingers clutch
involuntarily into the thick blue jumper.
"I won't let them, Illya," he muttered softly. "No more hurt, no
more pain. It's enough."
Still his partner didn't react. He lay on his side where Napoleon
had placed him. He looked small and vulnerable in the too-large
clothes, hands out in front of him, fingers of his good hand slightly
curled.
Reaching for it, Napoleon took that cold hand into his own and held it,
willing himself to sleep, praying he wouldn't dream.
~
Napoleon woke suddenly but years of experience translated into instinct
kept him completely still. Illya was where Napoleon had placed
him. Unconscious, still wrapped gently in his partner's embrace;
Solo could feel the fine blond hair against his chin.
Under the blanket, he moved slowly. His right arm was over Illya, still
holding his hand. Releasing it, he tucked his own hand under the
pillow and curled his fingers thankfully around the butt of his
gun. The pillow muffled into silence the sound of the safety
catch being released. And in one graceful arc, Solo brought the
gun and his arm from under the blanket twisting onto his side as he
fired once.
The bullet hit the man at the edge of the bed right between the eyes
and he collapsed back without a sound.
In the flash of the gun, Solo caught movement out of the corner of his
eye. Following the shadow around the end of the bed, he waited
until the second man was almost level with them before firing
again. Two shots. Napoleon heard his body hit the carpet.
There was more movement and it took a moment for him to realise that
this time it was the man at his side.
Previously unresponsive, the gunfire had penetrated Illya's mind and
something - maybe pure survival instinct - had woken him from his
comatose state.
For a second, Solo felt an all-encompassing relief as he met reddened,
frightened eyes in the darkness. But before he could say
anything, Illya tried to get away from him.
"Whoa...." Turning, Solo reached for the switch on the shadeless
bedside lamp. Too bright. Illya's light-sensitive eyes
scrunched shut and his expression turned from fear to abject
misery. Solo scanned the room but there was no one else - nowhere
to hide. He dropped the gun to the mattress and sat up, gingerly
reaching out to his partner.
"It's all right, Illya, it's me. It's Napoleon. You're
safe." For now. But he didn't add the proviso. "It's
all right."
Illya's mouth formed his name, tasting it. And Napoleon
remembered that Illya had been abandoned, left to his fate. No
'nauseatingly punctual' rescue, no relief from the torture until his
captors had tired of him and he'd been dumped down a hole to die.
Then sold to Thrush so that they could start over. But Illya
didn't know that.
"They made me believe you were dead," Napoleon told him, almost
pleading. "I would never have left you...."
Tears blossomed in Illya's eyes but Solo knew they were simply the
body's way of trying to ease the pain. He doubted Illya had the
strength to mourn everything he'd lost. Not yet.
He reached for his friend's left hand and he took it carefully, feeling
the tremors driving through the pale, skinny form. Illya had just
woken from a coma. He needed to be in the hospital, in a warm bed
with doctors poking at him and nurses changing his saline drip every
couple of hours.
Reaching for the glass on the bedside table, Napoleon assured Illya
he'd be back before nipping into the bathroom to fill it.
On the bed, he helped Illya drink, easing his arm around his partner's
shoulders as he tried to sit up.
Still Illya hadn't made a sound.
"Talk to me, please," Napoleon urged, "say something." He was
terrified that Illya blamed him for what he'd been through.
Illya shook his head, one shaking hand rising to touch his own throat,
surprised a little at the dressing he found there.
"I've done what I can, Illya. If there's something I've
missed...." This time there was a shake of his head. Then
those fingers were pulling at the tape Solo had used to fix the sterile
patches in place. "Don't!"
But Illya succeeded in pulling one piece of tape from his skin, and
Solo realised he was pointing at the puncture marks.
"What did they do to you?"
Illya just shook his head again.
With a small sigh, Napoleon pulled his hand away and eased the tape
back in place.
"We have to go. They found us, I don't know how."
Reluctantly, he released Illya and rolled off the bed. He pulled
on his own shoes before picking up those he'd stolen from the Frenchman
in the square. Illya simply watched him as he slotted the shoes
on to his partner's smaller feet, pulling the laces as tight as they'd
go. "Can you walk?"
Again, Illya shook his head.
De Vris' car was still outside on the street, but Napoleon couldn't
risk it. De Vris' men would recognise it. Whoever had
attacked them in the hotel might have bobby-trapped it. There was
a battered Citroen a couple of metres down and he broke the small
window on the driver's side, opened the doors and helped Illya into the
passenger seat. Despite not having used his legs in a while,
Illya had managed to at least assist in getting himself downstairs and
out. Napoleon could read the terror in his eyes but he didn't
have any time to explain. Not here. He'd done his best to
reassure but he knew he'd hurt Illya in his hurry to leave the hotel.
As soon as he was in the seat, the blue eyes closed and Illya's body
gave up as sheer exhaustion pulling him back into unconsciousness.
Napoleon hot wired the car with ease and pulled them away from the
curb, keeping the lights off for now.
For a few minutes he had no idea where he was headed. He turned
as many corners as possible, keeping watch in the rear view mirror for
any company they might have. But to his surprise and suspicion it
seemed as if no one was following them.
He saw a sign for the main route out of Paris heading East and took it.
Twenty minutes later they left the outskirts of the city. Assured
for that for now at least they were alone, Solo pulled the car over to
the side of the road. It was still dark, still early.
He looked across at Illya, whose head had lolled to one side, against
the window. He didn't look comfortable but Napoleon could see his
chest rising and falling and his breathing sounded easier and less
painful than it had immediately after his rescue.
Cautiously, Napoleon raised his hand to reach across and stroke his
knuckles through the silken hair at Illya's temple. He allowed
himself a few moments of luxury - watching his partner sleeping -
trying to accept that he'd been lied to.
He straightened his fingers against Illya's head, glancing at the
narrow gold band that had adorned his ring finger since Waverly had
told him where it had been found.
Had Waverly lied to him? Had he known that the only way to stop
Napoleon risking his own life was to make him believe Illya was
dead? Or had De Vris set up the car crash, the body burned beyond
recognition, the ring on its finger?
Solo took a deep breath and reached for his communicator. He had
little choice at the moment. lllya's only hope was medical
help. Only U.N.C.L.E. could guarantee that.
"Open Channel-D."
There was a moment's static. "Channel-D open."
"Solo here, I need to speak to Mr Waverly."
Another pause, no static this time, and then his boss' agitated voice.
"Mr Solo! How nice of you to get in touch! I'm assuming the
recent unrest in Europe has something to do with you?"
Napoleon grimaced. "I have Illya, Sir."
He wished he could see the expression on Waverly's face, wished he knew
just how dangerous U.N.C.L.E. had become, and why. Whether this
was all in his imagination.
After a time, Waverly replied, "What's your status, Mr Solo?"
"Not good. He's badly hurt, needs immediate medical attention."
"Where are you?"
"On the road to Troyes."
Another pause as Waverly checked the mental map he relied on so heavily.
"Go to HQ in Geneva. I'm afraid you'll have to do what you can
for Mr Kuryakin until you reach safety."
Solo closed his eyes. It was around three hundred miles to Geneva
from their current position. Admittedly not an impossible journey
to do in a day. They could be there by this evening. He
just wasn't sure Illya had that much time. He had to have lost a
lot of blood. Whatever drugs they'd forced into his system could
be doing untold damage. He was dehydrated and starving.
He could hear Waverly's voice, tinny over the tiny speaker, asking if
he was still there.
"Solo out," was all he could manage to say.
Starting the engine again, he pulled onto the road and drove until they
arrived in the first small village. The sun was poking up above
the horizon and he got lucky - a woman was just opening up what looked
to be the only store in the village. Napoleon stopped the car and
jumped out, hoping he didn't look too dishevelled.
"Excuse moi!"
The woman turned. She was young, mid-twenties, Solo
guessed. And she had a nice smile.
"Bonjour," she greeted him, only slightly wary. "Peux-je vous
aide?"
"Oui, j'ai besoin d'un endroit pour reste, s'il vous plaît.
Mon ami est malade. Il a besoin de se repose."
She looked passed him to where Illya was still slumped in the car.
"Il y a un endroit près de par. La droite, part
alors. Rue de Espoir. Un petit hôtel, mais
confortable et bon marché."
Solo smiled. A small hotel in Rue de Espoir. Road of
Hope. Apt. "Merci."
She nodded and stepped into the shop. Solo got back into the car
and followed her directions.
It was a guesthouse more than it was a hotel, but it was a great deal
more than the hotel he'd found for them in Paris. Despite the
hour, the owner - an elderly woman just as friendly as the girl at the
shop - charged him a minimal price for what turned out to be a very
comfortable room.
He woke Illya in the car and the Russian managed to make it up to the
second storey room, leaning heavily on Napoleon.
He was asleep again the moment his body hit the bed. It was a
double room but Napoleon didn't care that there was only one bed.
He didn't want to sleep apart from his partner. He needed Illya
close by and put it down to his forced belief that he'd never seen the
man again. He refused to acknowledge the very real possibility
that he'd lose Illya anyway, to the injuries his body had sustained,
even though the thought danced constantly at the edges of his mind.
The first thing Solo did was to set up as much security in the room as
possible with the scarce resources at his disposal.
The second was to fill a glass of water and tip the liquid down Illya's
throat. The action disturbed but didn't completely wake
him. Napoleon made an educated guess that he'd been force-fed
like this sometime in the not-too-distant past.
He tried to put that too out of his mind, to package it up with his
rage and suspicions until Illya was tucked into a hospital bed and
Napoleon was settled in a chair at his side. Even then, he knew,
he wouldn't sleep, wouldn't rest. At this moment he wasn't sure
he'd ever be able to let Illya out of his sight ever again.
One last mouthful and the water would be gone.
Illya was starting to struggle in earnest now and Napoleon had to grasp
his chin to hold him in place, a little of the violence inside him
escaping his strained control. As his fingers tightened, a sound
- a choked whimper - was torn from Illya's throat.
Napoleon let go immediately, his composure shattered as he realised he
was simply causing his partner more pain. He dropped the glass to
the floor, unable to stop tears leaking from his eyes. For the
first time in his life he felt completely helpless and utterly without
hope.
Leaning down he scooped Illya into his arms, crushing the blond against
him, unable to think straight and knowing just that he couldn't do
anything to change what was happening.
For a minute Illya struggled wildly. Then he stilled.
Napoleon started to speak; started to mutter strings of apologies and
half-sobbed explanations.
Illya wrapped his wiry arms around his partner's neck and slowly buried
in face in the crook of Napoleon's shoulder.
The rough whimper came again. This time Napoleon felt the
vibration against his throat and it suddenly righted him.
He recalled the wounds he would be aggravating, the pain he'd be
causing simply with this embrace and he immediately let go, loosened
his arms with a heartfelt apology.
He realised something else too. It was the first sound he'd heard
Illya make since pulling him from the cell.
Tipping the slight man back a little in his arms he stroked the blond
hair gently, coaxing Illya to raise his head. When he did, when
Napoleon looked into those pale blue eyes, his tears stopped.
"Illya?"
Illya opened his mouth, obviously tried to speak, but what came out was
a breath of air and nothing more. He tried again and again while
Napoleon waited, petting his hair gently, willing now to give him all
the time in the world.
After a long couple of minutes, Solo's patience and Illya's
determination were rewarded with a whisper. A beautiful sound.
"Napasha."
Napoleon swallowed back more tears and resisted the urge to hug Illya
again. "Illyushka." He smiled, inordinately proud.
Illya touched fingertips to the dressing at his throat.
"Injection," he whispered.
Napoleon frowned. "In your throat? But why?"
"Stop me screaming."
Solo felt a flash of rage so immense it blotted out everything for just
a moment. He closed his eyes, feeling his limbs stiffen with the
surge of adrenaline.
And then there was a touch to his face and Illya's forehead came to
rest against his own. He sighed, holding his partner with
infinite care.
If they'd stopped Illya from screaming, they'd stopped him from
speaking too. If they didn't want him to tell them anything then
the torture was simply for their sick entertainment. Napoleon
didn't want to think of the despair Illya must have felt knowing that
he couldn't end it - there was no goal, nothing he could offer them to
end the pain. And how long before he gave up hope that Solo would
find him, would stop this never-ending cycle?
His arms tightened reflexively and Illya whimpered a little; was
immediately released.
"Sorry. Sorry...."
Illya moved his head once and settled into the safety of Napoleon's
embrace. The adrenaline surge gone, exhaustion was overwhelming
Solo as effectively as it was Kuryakin. Carefully, he moved them
so that they were lying down, Illya tucked into him even as his partner
faded once again into sleep.
~
Napoleon made himself a coffee.
He should have been hungry but he wasn't. He wondered if Illya
was. He would be loathe to offer his partner anything to eat
before a medical team had checked him over, pumped him full of
counteragents and saline and confirmed he still had a stomach lining.
He woke Illya half an hour later and got him to drink several glasses
of water. Illya asked to be helped into the bathroom where
Napoleon attempted to give him some privacy, doing what he needed to
for his partner, letting Illya instruct him.
"I need you to tell me what hurts," Napoleon asked of Illya as he sat
on the edge of the bathtub. "And no false bravado this time,
Vanya."
Not that Illya could have pulled off any kind of lie in his
state. He stepped back from the toilet, leaning on the
cistern. His urine was red, not a good sign. Embarrassed at
what he had to do, he indicated the bowl, showing his partner.
Napoleon didn't feel the need to comment. He simply nodded and
asked gently, "What else?"
"My belly hurts," he whispered in reply. "My head aches."
Both those complaints had to be understatements, Napoleon
thought. "Illya?" he pushed.
"My fingers hurt."
"They're broken. I'm sorry I couldn't do a better job. Once
we reach Geneva you'll be safe at the U.N.C.L.E. infirmary."
At the mention of U.N.C.L.E., Illya glanced up with fear in his eyes, a
fear Napoleon completely understood.
"Don't worry. I'll make sure you're safe. I'll keep the
dogs from your back, that's a promise."
With a hitching sigh, Illya nodded. Napoleon was definitely the
only one he trusted at that moment - it showed on his face.
His partner helped him with his trousers and assisted him back into the
bedroom before gently hugging him. "I won't leave you again."
For now it was enough.
They were on the road again twenty minutes later.
~
Napoleon stopped at a café in a small village after an
hour. Illya was asleep and Napoleon was growing more and more
concerned. He left his partner inside the car, wanting to leave
the engine running but worried that someone would simply drive off with
Illya while he went inside and purchased a large coffee and some water.
Returned, he hated to wake Illya but knew he had no choice.
"Come on, Vanya," he murmured, sweeping his fingers through the blond
hair, "I need you to drink this."
Illya stirred but didn't wake.
"Illyushka...."
The trill of his communicator startled them both. Napoleon jumped
a little, causing a few drops of cold water to splash onto Illya's
hands. Blue eyes opened and Illya's lips moved but no sound came.
"It's okay." Napoleon reached for his communicator. "Solo."
"Napoleon? It's Mark - Mark Slate. I need to talk to you."
Napoleon hesitated, confused. "Mark, I'm on my way in."
"I know. You've been sent to Geneva HQ by Mr Waverly.
Please, meet with me before you take your... package to HQ."
It would have been gratifying to have his suspicions confirmed but he
wasn't sure he could trust Slate either.
"We're running short of time," Napoleon spoke slowly.
"I don't doubt it. There is a small, private clinic in Lousanne,
Clinique de Bonne Sante. Go there, April and I will meet you."
"How do I know this isn't a trap?" he asked straight out, looking
directly into his partner's eyes.
"Illya's ring. It was given to Mr Waverly by a man named Claude
De Vris. There never was a body, Napoleon. There never was
any car accident."
He still wasn't sure, but he was willing to believe Mark. He and
Illya had worked closely together on a couple of missions. In the
field you depended on your partner and asked him or her to depend on
you. It defined a trust that was difficult to break.
"All right. We'll be there by this evening. But I'm warning
you, if anything bad happens to Illya I will kill you."
There was no hesitation. "I know."
Closing the communicator, he pocketed it and went back to helping Illya
with the water.
After a few gulps, Illya whispered, "You think... U.N.C.L.E... betrayed
me?"
Napoleon glanced away. "I don't know. But I can't risk it,
I won't. I won't risk you." When he looked back, acutely
embarrassed, he saw fear in Illya's eyes.
"I'm scared, Napoleon."
Touched, knowing how difficult it had to have been for his
self-sufficient partner to admit that.
"Me too. But I'll look after you, Illya, I promise. No one
is going to hurt you."
"If U.N.C.L.E. left me to die...."
He shivered a little in the cold and wondered how Illya was managing to
survive all this. Digging the car keys from his pocket, he put
them into the ignition and started the engine, switching on the
pathetic heaters to full blast.
Turning in his seat he reached for his partner's hand. "I'm not
going to leave you. I have to get you to a hospital. After
that... we'll deal with it. Okay?" He knew it sounded like
he was talking to a child. At the moment he didn't think Illya
could care less.
Illya nodded once, quickly, before finishing the water Napoleon had
brought for him and closing his eyes again. He hurt, inside and
out. The pain went from a dull ache to sharp intensity without
warning. He tried to bite back his silent groan, folding himself
as best he could into the uncomfortable car seat.
Napoleon drank his hot coffee in five scolding gulps before throwing
the empty polystyrene cup onto the back seat and starting the engine.
He drove as fast as he could, stopping once for gas and a second time
for coffee and water for Illya. But this time, he couldn't wake
his partner.
Every ten minutes for the rest of the trip he'd taken one hand from the
wheel and checked Illya's pulse.
It was dark by the time they reached Lousanne, and the pulse below
Napoleon's fingers was weak and thready.
He vaguely wondered how he would find the clinic but he needn't have
worried. As he'd passed the city borders a white Mercedes had
pulled out of a side road in front of him and flashed its indicators in
a complex pattern Napoleon had quickly recognised as Morse code.
Mark.
He couldn't remember feeling so relieved.
The clinic was an anonymous building on a cobbled street in the centre
of the old town.
Outside it April was waiting for them, along with a middle-aged man who
was infinitely gentle with Illya when Napoleon opened the passenger
seat door.
"We must get him inside quickly," the stranger instructed them.
Mark and Napoleon carried Illya into the house. There was a
treatment room on the ground floor, which the man - Doctor Nathan
Luchand - directed them into. A nurse joined them
immediately. Napoleon insisted that he stay as they treated Illya
and backed up his insistence with his gun.
Luchand wasn't phased. He shrugged and started to remove the
clothes Napoleon had stolen for his partner in Paris.
"What is his name?"
"Illya."
"Hello, Illya. We're going to take care of you now, all
right?" No answer. He hadn't expected one. "I'm
giving you an injection of morphine so it's safe to come round and talk
to me if you don't like anything I do."
As he cared for each of Illya's visible injuries and checked for those
that couldn't be seen, the nurse deftly set an intravenous line into
the back of Illya's left hand and started saline and blood. Mark
fetched a small bottle and a syringe from a chiller bag Napoleon
assumed he'd brought with him and handed both to the nurse.
"Counteragents," he explained to Napoleon, not needing the silent
question in the brown eyes to be spoken aloud.
Exhaustion was starting to touch the edges of his mind but Napoleon
refused to give in to it. He couldn't, not until he'd convinced
himself that Illya was safe, that they were safe here.
There was another injection, again into the IV port. Blood
pressure and temperature were checked. Napoleon winced as the
doctor did some gentle probing around Illya's genitals and anus and was
glad that the doctor seemed satisfied and left well alone, except to
insert a catheter.
The nurse set Illya's two broken fingers with a splint and a fresh
bandage. It looked painful and a part of Napoleon was glad Illya
was so utterly out of it.
It was over two hours and yet another injection before Luchand helped
his nurse dress an unconscious Illya in a white gown and called for two
orderlies to take his new patient to a room on the first floor.
Napoleon and Mark went with them, Napoleon giving his partner's fingers
a squeeze as they went.
Luchand followed, waited for Illya to be settled in a bed in the small,
private room with the IV line still running saline and blood into his
system.
Only then did Napoleon collapse into the only chair in the room.
Mark watched him with concern.
"Are you injured?"
"No." He shook his head.
"Would a coffee and a sandwich help?"
Napoleon nodded thankfully.
Luchand let the innocuous conversation pass before leaning back to
explain the situation.
"You saved his life. Your stitching was almost perfect and those
wounds will heal given time. He's severely dehydrated and
malnourished. The cuts in his wrists and ankles are down to the
bone - I'm guessing from his attempts to escape from binding wire - and
they're infected. He also has an infection that probably started
in his urinary tract and moved to his intestines and stomach.
I've started him on a course on antibiotics to combat that. There
is evidence of several injections into his throat, to paralyse his
vocal chords, yes?" Napoleon nodded. "Nasty but not
permanent. It will wear off, he will soon be talking again."
"Thank you." He sounded incredibly grateful and was glad of it.
"Do not worry." Luchand pushed himself from the wall on which he
was leaning. "Now, I have other patients who require my time,
although I will say not one of them is in such dire need as Illya
here. I will be back to check on his progress in a couple of
hours. You need to eat and rest, you brought him this far but
soon I fear I will have a second unexpected ward if you do not follow
my instructions."
Napoleon smiled a weak smile.
"You are welcome to find a free room in which to sleep, but something
tells me you will be napping in that chair. Eat, drink.
Look after yourself with the care you extend to Illya."
Luchand left them alone then. Napoleon sighed softly and moved
the chair close to the bed, stripping off his worse-for-wear jacket and
taking Illya's fingers into his own. Between the bandaging around
the broken bones of his right hand and the tape around the IV port on
his left, it was all Napoleon could do.
Mark reappeared a few minutes later and Napoleon tucked into the
sandwich with more relief than actual hunger. The coffee was hot
and strong, although he doubted even the wickedest Espresso would keep
him awake for much longer.
Sitting on the floor, his back against the wall, Mark spoke quietly.
"April and I were on a mission in Lyon. We found a file that we
believe Thrush stole from the U.N.C.L.E. offices in Geneva a couple of
weeks ago. It contained two communications - one from the Russian
government to U.N.C.L.E. and one from De Vris to an unnamed
recipient. The one from the Russians was requesting... requesting
Illya's execution."
Napoleon's grip tightened momentarily on Illya's fingers but he said
nothing.
"The one from De Vris said something like - 'one gold ring in exchange
for the partridge.'"
"What made you suspect U.N.C.L.E.?"
Mark looked uncomfortable at the question and Napoleon couldn't blame
him. They were talking about an organisation they'd pledged
themselves to. The idea that U.N.C.L.E. could have deliberately
left Illya out in the cold was unthinkable.
"It was April's... thought. U.N.C.L.E.'s resources are such that
a full investigation should have been held into Illya's death but there
never was one. There was also no attempt to return his remains to
Russia, or to bring them back to the US for burial befitting an
U.N.C.L.E. agent. She said that it was as if he'd never lived...
or maybe he'd just never died.
"When I heard Waverly was flying to Geneva I looked into it and found
out you'd contacted him. You'd found Illya. April couldn't
bear to take the risk that U.N.C.L.E. had a hand in his disappearance,
whether deliberately or simply because the opportunity arose. I
have to admit, I could only agree with her."
Napoleon placed the empty mug onto the floor and leaned back in the
chair. "How do know about this place? About Luchand?"
"He's a old friend of April's family. You're both safe. No
one knows you're here but us. You have many, many friends and
even more allies, Napoleon. Never think that the world is against
you."
"Thanks, Mark." They were his last words before sleep took him.
~ ~ ~
The Final Affair
Act II - "And you think I lied to you."
The sun was shining bright through a window Napoleon hadn't even
realised was there the previous night.
He opened his eyes and sat up, wincing as every muscle in his body
protested.
Illya was sleeping soundly, curled on to his side with the IV lines
hooked precariously over his blanket-covered body. Standing,
Napoleon loosened the narrow tubes so that they weren't pulling on the
needle in Illya's hand.
Hovering for a moment he pushed the unruly blond hair back from over
Illya's eyes and rubbed the backs of his fingers over one pale
cheek. However uncertain their future now he couldn't help but be
relieved that Illya was finally where he needed to be.
He checked the drip and found that the blood had been stopped but there
was a new saline bag attached. He'd probably missed another
couple of injections too - counteragents to the cocktail of drugs De
Vris had loaded into Illya's system, antibiotics to counter the
infection in his digestive system and morphine to prevent the
debilitating effects of the pain he would be in when he woke.
Napoleon started when the door opened.
April put her head inside the room and smiled.
"Morning, Sleepyhead," she murmured softly, as if anything could
disturb Illya right now.
"Hey."
"Want me to sit with him while you take a shower? Mark has
brought some clothes for you - and for Illya. Hopefully they'll
do until you can get into town."
"Thanks. For everything." He hoped one day he could repay
her and Mark adequately.
"Don't mention it. Anything for Illya. And you, of
course." She winked and he smiled.
"Point me in the direction of the shower?"
~
The water was hot and the spray was powerful. Napoleon stood
under it for a long time, letting the grime of Paris wash away.
The dirt had a red tinge to it that he knew was his partner's
blood. He let the nausea roll over him and it passed quickly.
When he eventually stepped out of the shower, Mark was waiting for
him. The junior agent gave Napoleon a critical once-over,
checking for injuries, before handing him a towel and indicating the
pile of warm clothes on the toilet seat.
"Tell me about the letter from the Russians," Napoleon instructed,
completely comfortable with his own naked body. Working so
closely with other agents left very little room for
self-consciousness. Not even Illya had managed to hang on to that
trait for too long.
Mark perched on the small radiator. "It stated that Illya was the
property of the Russian government. They required his immediate
removal from duty and if at all possible his death under what it
termed, 'expected and usual circumstances'."
Napoleon had pulled on the sweater and jeans and was staring at himself
in the tiny mirror. There was a rage building inside of him that
was becoming more and more difficult to control. "Who was it
addressed to?"
"U.N.C.L.E., Geneva. It simply said, 'To Concerned
Parties'. But it was signed one General Ivan Nostov."
The name rang lots of bells in Napoleon's head but he couldn't pin down
the source.
The familiar trill of Napoleon's UNCLE communicator brushed his
thoughts aside.
He plucked it cautiously from the pocket of his shirt where it lay on
the floor of the small bathroom and stared at it.
"It'll take them four minutes to trace you through that." Mark
reminded him. "And we disabled the homing device in your watch
last night while you were asleep. Just in case."
Napoleon smiled. Unscrewing the tiny microphone from the base of
the 'pen' and slotting it in the top, Napoleon made the connection and
Channel-D was open.
"Mr Solo?" The concern in Waverly's voice made him feel a little
bit sick again.
"Yes."
"Is everything all right? We were expecting your arrival sometime
during the night."
He hesitated. "Yes. We made a detour."
"Ah." A pause on the other end this time. "In that case
you've probably run into Mr Slate and Miss Dancer." It wasn't a
question and Napoleon didn't answer. "It appears they've run
across some confidential information that relates to your Mr
Kuryakin. I can assure you, Mr Solo, that the information has
been wrongly interpreted."
Napoleon considered that, registering the suggestion of
ownership. "Nevertheless, Sir, if it's all the same to you, we
won't be coming in until I can assure Illya's safety."
"Of course it isn't 'all the same to me'!" The anger in the
usually gently sarcastic voice took Napoleon by surprise. "I have
four agents running around Europe undermining everything U.N.C.L.E. is
working for."
Napoleon struggled to remain calm. "With all due respect, Sir,
what exactly is U.N.C.L.E. working for?"
Another pause. "Don't push your luck, Mr Solo. You have
twenty-four hours to bring Mr Kuryakin, Miss Dancer and Mr Slate
in. After that time, I can't be responsible for the actions this
organisation may decide to take against you."
The connection was broken.
Solo grabbed the slim tube in his hands and snapped it in two, unable
to stop the cry of frustration from leaving his lips.
"It may be that he's telling the truth," Mark ventured, although he
sounded unconvinced himself.
"He knew about the letter, he knows about the file. Where is it?"
"It's in our room."
Gathering his things, Napoleon followed Mark through the narrow
corridors of the old house, up to the third floor that appeared to be
accommodation for the doctor and nurses.
The bedroom was small with an unmade double bed taking up most of the
space. Napoleon perched on the corner of the mattress and took
the file that Mark pulled from a secret flap of material at the base of
his suitcase. It was a slim manila folder with 'U.N.C.L.E.
Geneva' printed in red at the top. Inside was the letter from the
Russians and a note scrawled in bad handwriting - the note from De Vris
that they were assuming had accompanied Illya's ring.
"Even if UNCLE didn't set Illya up to be captured, someone inside
U.N.C.L.E. knew that there was no car accident and no burnt
corpse. Someone knew that De Vris sent the ring and that same
someone kept the real circumstances to themselves when you were told
Illya was dead."
Napoleon closed the folder carefully and laid it down on the rumpled
sheets. Slowly, he rose to his feet and crossed to the tiny
window.
He took a deep breath before his anger exploded outwards and he smashed
his clenched fist into the wall next to him.
The shock of pain lanced across his mind for a single moment and then
cleared.
He leaned his forehead against the glass, looking out onto the small
courtyard at the back of the building.
Silence stretched between them until Mark cautiously spoke.
"Napoleon?"
"I need to know if Waverly was in on this."
Mark nodded.
"And I need to work out where we can go, where Illya will be
safe. I need to guarantee that somehow."
The other agent's mind had caught on the 'we'.
"Napoleon... you're one of the best agents U.N.C.L.E. has, if not the
best. If you left...."
Napoleon turned, folding his arms. "I won't work for an
organisation that abandons its operatives out in the field and leaves
them to die. If Waverly lied to me about Illya - if he knew...
I'll kill him myself."
Mark stared at his colleague, eyes widening as he realised Napoleon
meant what he said. "My God, you're serious."
There was no warmth in the chocolate stare now. "No one has the
slightest clue how much Illya means to me. He isn't just another
agent to be played with. He's my partner. He's my
life. When I saw him in that dungeon... I killed De Vris without
a thought."
"De Vris is dead?" Mark wasn't sure what he should be feeling
after Napoleon's confession. Horror was what he'd felt upon
seeing Illya the previous night. Disgust had been his reaction to
finding the communications about the Russian in an U.N.C.L.E. file.
"They could have been planted - those letters. Thrush could have
stolen the file and just put those inside." He was grasping at
straws, back-peddling in the sheer force of Napoleon's fury, and he
knew it.
"Nostov's letter was sent to U.N.C.L.E."
"It could have been faked."
"Why would they bother?"
"To bring us to this! To turn us against our own organisation,
our own boss." Mark could hear the slight note of panic in his
own voice but did nothing to disguise it. "We don't know who to
trust, Napoleon!"
Unimpressed, Napoleon pushed away from the windowsill and crossed the
room in three paces. "We're going to find out." He closed
the door behind him.
~
Quietly, April opened the door of the small room and glanced from Illya
- where he still slept, curled on to his side on the bed - to Napoleon
sitting motionless in the chair.
"How's he doing?" she murmured.
Solo looked up and smiled. "Luchand says he's doing well."
The smile faded. "I need to leave him here for a little while,
there's something I need to do."
She nodded. "I know. Mark told me."
Napoleon turned back, eyes settling on Illya's peaceful face. "I
don't want to leave him again," he whispered mostly to himself.
"He is safe, Napoleon. But if he wakes and you're not here...."
"If I wait until he wakes he'll try to come with me, no matter what
state he's in. I won't risk that."
"What do we tell him?"
Reaching out to cover Illya's hand with his own, Napoleon murmured,
"Tell him I love him. I won't be gone long."
~
Mark handed Napoleon the keys to his Mercedes.
"Take care of her. And of yourself. If anything happens to
you, Illya will kill me."
Solo laughed despite himself. "I absolve you of any
responsibility."
Mark shook his head wryly. "That won't matter where your Russian
assassin of a partner is concerned."
"I have to find out about Waverly," Napoleon tried to reassure.
"How? What are you going to do?"
With a soft sigh, Napoleon turned. "Just look after Illya for me."
Standing on the front steps of the clinic, Mark watched the car pull
away and speed off up the cobbled hill. He waited for sixty
seconds before taking the second set of keys from his pocket and
sliding into the driver's seat of the Napoleon's stolen Citroen.
~
Illya woke to a world of hurt.
Without opening his eyes - terrified of what he'd see - he knew he was
in a strange room and that his partner wasn't with him.
His body was a jumble of flaring nerves, every part of him putting too
much demand on his limited resources. He had no control over the
sound that scraped rough over his vocal chords - his throat so sore he
almost couldn't bare to swallow.
A gentle hand touched his arm and a female voice spoke his name softly.
He opened his eyes, his vision blurring.
"Illya, it's April. Do you remember me?"
He had no idea if he did or didn't. He tried to recall his last
memory and found he couldn't.
"Napasha?" He heard the croak of his own voice and winced.
April wasn't sure what he'd been trying to say, but she made an
educated guess. "Napoleon's all right, Illya, he was sitting with
you all night. You're at a Clinic in Lousanne, Switzerland.
You're safe and you're going to be fine. You're in the best
hands."
Illya listened to the words as best he could. He wanted Napoleon
with him, but more than that at that moment he wanted to pain to
stop. "Bolna."
"I'm sorry, Illya.... What?"
"Hurts," he managed with some considerable effort. The burning at
the back of his throat was a warning against any further attempts to
speak but he tried anyway. "Please...."
He wasn't sure how long it was between people moving about and the
world fading again into blissful unconsciousness. It seemed like
forever. But finally there was no longer any pain and he let
himself fall gladly into the darkness.
Luchand carefully drew a small syringe of blood from Illya's arm.
"He is healing," he reassured April, feeling her eyes following his
every move. "He is trained to survive. For the last couple
of months, that is what he has been doing. Now he is safe.
His body knows that it is being given what it needs to heal and
therefore it has stopped trying to fight and started the healing
process. He feels every injury now." Placing the syringe
into a petri dish he checked Illya's chart. "The counteragents to
the drugs may have an adverse effect on him. He may be sick, in
which case he might start coughing up blood from his stomach. He
may just feel unwell. We will watch for his reaction and deal
with it."
"He will be okay?" she asked cautiously. Yesterday, when Napoleon
had laid his ward on the gurney with infinite care, she didn't believe
Illya could still be alive.
"He will live. His body tells tales of past abuse. He has
survived before, he will again."
April watched her old friend leave the room, taking Illya's blood to be
analysed. Then she returned her attention to where Illya slept
soundlessly. For a couple of moments she allowed herself the
luxury of admiring the silk of his blond hair, the long eyelashes and
full mouth. He was too pale, too thin. And utterly
beautiful.
She considered Napoleon's care of him, his words to her before he
left. And she knew then that Illya was never returning to
UNCLE. She knew Napoleon was planning on making them both
disappear.
Two top spies, experts at not being seen when they didn't want to
be. One of Kuryakin's roles in the KGB, Solo had once told her,
was counter-intelligence. He could make it as though they had
never existed. She wondered what that meant for her and Mark and
decided not to think about that now.
~
It was with some trepidation that Napoleon walked into the Geneva
Headquarters of UNCLE.
He'd always felt as at home in any of the regional offices as he did in
New York, but right now he trusted U.N.C.L.E. less than he trusted
Thrush. What was it Illya had once said? At least you knew
where you stood when someone was pointing a gun at your head.
Waverly had been alerted of Napoleon's arrival; he was waiting just
inside the first set of doors and lead his second into an interrogation
room, citing the need for privacy.
As soon as the door was closed, Waverly turned the force of his
fiercely controlled anger onto Solo.
"Just what in hell did you think you were doing in Paris?" he bellowed.
Napoleon held his ground, despite his boss seeming to grow to fill the
whole room. "Rescuing my partner," he replied calmly, keeping his
own rage in check for the moment.
"Your orders were to track down a man in Hamburg called Perion and
bring him into custody. You weren't even supposed to be in
France."
"I had a tip that Illya was a prisoner of Claude De Vris, who was about
to do a deal with Thrush for his life."
"And you decided to step in."
Napoleon let slip a little of his tight rein. "I wasn't about to
let that bastard sell my partner."
"I was under the impression that you believed Mr Kuryakin to be dead."
"That was the impression you gave me." The words were carefully
chosen.
Waverly nodded. "And you think I lied to you." Napoleon
didn't answer. "Well, Mr Solo... you'd be right."
It took a moment for the words to sink in.
"What?" He had never expected the number one man in U.N.C.L.E. to
confirm his suspicions outright.
Waverly shook his head. He at least deflated a little although
the anger remained in his eyes.
But Napoleon could not have guessed, however wildly, at the explanation
that followed.
"Mr Kuryakin was under deep cover."
Feeling dizzy, Napoleon reached out, put his palm flat on the table,
staring at the old man incredulously.
"What?"
"Claude De Vris was working against the Russian Government. They
suspected involvement from the inside but couldn't prove it. They
requested our help. We made De Vris believe that a small clique
of U.N.C.L.E. agents shared his views. They delivered Mr Kuryakin
in a double set-up."
Napoleon wasn't sure he could speak. He tried it once, took a
deep breath, and tried it again. "Did Illya know what he was
walking into?"
"Of course he knew! His mission was to gather as much information
as possible from De Vris and find out who was working inside the Soviet
Government."
"And he volunteered for this?"
"He was the perfect choice. The letter Mr Slate and Miss Dancer
happened to find from the Russians is a fake, drawn up to make De Vris
believe Mr Kuryakin had sensitive information about the Soviet
government."
He still couldn't believe what he was hearing. "Why didn't Illya
tell me?" More a thought out loud than a question, but Waverly
answered it.
"We told him not to. And he didn't have time. He was told
about the mission on the same day the exchange was planned for - about
an hour before. We made it look like he was being set up by our
own people, of course. The note we received back from De Vris -
with Mr Kuryakin's ring - told us that he'd taken the bait."
"But... who was Illya's back up?"
"He had no back up. It had to look real or there was a real
danger De Vris would simply kill him without a thought."
Napoleon felt himself losing control. His anger was burning
through him like fire, licking at every nerve.
"When I found him he was half-dead. He's lucky to be alive.
De Vris tortured him and then when he realised Illya knew nothing, he
paralysed his vocal chords and continued to torture him until he tired
of it and dumped Illya in a hole TO DIE! Selling him to Thrush
was an afterthought!"
Waverly at least looked uncomfortable to admit, "We lost contact with
him soon after the exchange. He had a small transmitter just
under the skin of his chest. We assumed De Vris' men had found
it. We also assumed that Mr Kuryakin would affect his
escape. When he didn't... we had to assume he was dead."
Napoleon's fist clenched. He stepped forward but instead of
hitting his boss he slammed his hand hard on top the tabletop.
"Why didn't you tell me then? I could have gone in. I could
have pulled him out!"
"I knew you'd take every risk."
"You abandoned him. You left him out in the cold to die."
"I couldn't lose both of you!"
Shaking his head, Napoleon stepped around his boss. "That's
exactly what you did."
Waverly didn't seem to hear him. "Where is Mr Kuryakin? He
may have information about De Vris and others close to him."
"Whatever information he had, I doubt he still remembers it. It's
a miracle he remembers his own name." He reached for the door
handle.
"Mr Solo! You will bring Mr Kuryakin in immediately!"
"I won't. Illya and I are resigning, effective yesterday."
He opened the door. "If anyone comes after him, I will shoot
them. You can trust us to keep our mouths shut but if anything
happens to either of us, I'll make sure Thrush is the recipient of a
few very important names and locations."
"Mr Solo!"
But Napoleon was out of the door, slamming it shut behind him.
He expected someone to try to prevent him from leaving, but no one did.
He dropped his badge at reception but kept his ID card and his
gun. He hoped he was doing the right thing for Illya. He
had no idea, he realised, what his partner's situation was politically.
He sighed. If it came to it, he'd marry Illya just to get him his
green card.
The idea made him smile.
Settling into the car, Napoleon checked the rear view mirror and saw
the Citroen peeking out from around the corner. He smiled to
himself and keyed the engine.
All he wanted now was to get back to Illya.
Mark pulled away from the curb a couple of cars back from
Napoleon. He watched for tales but there were none. No one
had come near the car while it had been parked outside U.N.C.L.E. HQ,
but as he expected, Napoleon pulled over half way between Geneva and
Lousanne.
Mark stopped behind him and they swapped cars.
"Thanks for covering me," Napoleon said with a tight smile.
"I'll take her for a spin and see you back at the ranch. You can
tell me all about it."
With a nod, Napoleon took the proffered car keys and slid into the much
less expensive car. Somehow, it felt more comfortable now.
~
"Illya?"
Napoleon gently rubbed his partner's slightly curled fingers where they
lay on the mattress in front of his face. Illya's right hand was
held close to his chest even in sleep. He'd woken twice according
to April; disorientated and confused, asking for Napoleon.
"I'm here now, Vanya," he assured quietly.
Soft breath breezed over his fingers, rhythmic, steady.
Reassurance enough for Napoleon. He looked up when Luchand
stepped into the room.
"His blood work shows some improvement from last night," he explained
without preamble. "Of his open wounds, his ankles and wrists are
the worst. I have the nurse changing the dressings every six
hours. At the moment he is not strong enough for them to start to
heal." The doctor checked his patient's chart, interpreting the
figures and the points on the temperature graph. Replacing it at
the foot of the bed, he met Napoleon's questioning gaze.
"Mr Solo... Illya is very poorly. He is going to need a long time
to recover. It will be some time before he has the strength to
run from... anything; to fight the bad guys." He smiled a little
smile. "Given the right care he will make a full recovery - or as
full as can be expected after what he has evidently been through."
"He's safe here," Napoleon repeated Mark's words from earlier. "I
can give him all the time in the world." Luchand nodded,
obviously pleased. "There is... one issue. Insurance...."
"Do not worry about money. When Illya is recovered and you are
all away from here, I will have my colleague in Lisbon bill U.N.C.L.E.
for the full amount. He will undoubtedly enjoy that."
Napoleon wasn't sure how they'd drawn such allies, but he could only be
thankful.
"One of my patients was released this morning. His wife was
staying in the room next to April and Mark. Please feel free to
make yourself at home - sleeping in that chair each night will not do
your neck any good at all."
"Thank you, but I don't like the idea of him being alone."
"Then at least rest during the day." Shaking his head at the
stubborn American agent, he went to leave. "Please,
Napoleon. I have enough trouble with one of you under my care."
"Believe me, Doc, I wouldn't want...." He stopped mid-sentence
when the fingers under his own moved. "Illya?"
"Pasha...." A whisper. And blood-shot blue eyes found his.
"I'm here, Illya."
"Bolna."
"I know, lyubimaya." He glanced at Luchand. "He said it
hurts."
"Ah. Excellent! A translator. Could you ask him
where, specifically?"
"Illya? Gdyeh?"
His eyes had closed again, but Napoleon caught a whispered reply.
"Vezde."
Napoleon winced in sympathy. "Everywhere."
"His morphine isn't due for another hour. Get him to sleep
if he can."
Leaning forward, Napoleon started to card his fingers through Illya's
hair; a gentle stroke that had helped with migraines in the past.
"Zasnut, Illyushka."
"Nyet." But Napoleon could hear his partner's breathing evening
out again as he slipped back into unconsciousness.
"'Nyet'," Luchand repeated. "Doesn't that mean 'no'?" he asked,
an amused smile playing on his lips.
Napoleon turned his head, smiling, keeping up the steady play through
Illya's hair. "He's a stubborn bastard."
"Stubborn and cheeky. Tell him he is not allowed to argue with
his doctor who always knows best."
"Believe me, Illya will argue with a Thrush agent holding a loaded gun
to his head."
Luchand grinned. "My kind of man."
Napoleon waited until they were alone before giving Illya his full
attention. "Mine too."
~
Mark shook his head. "I don't believe it."
Napoleon scowled. "I wouldn't make something like this up just to
confirm my...."
"No, no. I believe you. I just don't believe
*it*. That U.N.C.L.E. would risk an agent so recklessly,
send him into an impossible situation without backup and then abandon
him when it goes wrong." He sighed softly. "What did you...
say? What did you do?" He was a little scared.
"I told him Illya and I were resigning."
Mark's eyes widened. "What?"
"U.N.C.L.E. had some sort of claim on Illya's life. Not
anymore. How can I work for them now? Knowing what I know?"
"What about Illya?"
Sighing softly, Napoleon rubbed his eyes with his fingers. "It'll
be months before he's fit to even think about going back to work.
And I... I can't let him go out alone."
"Aside from it being his choice," Mark continued carefully, "what about
his official position with his government?"
"I don't know," Napoleon admitted. He was so tired all of a
sudden. "I just wanted free of it all. I want Illya to be
safe."
"I know." Mark found himself wondering what engendered such
incredible loyalty between the two men. "But there must be
repercussions. We know that no one resigns from Thrush and
lives. I don't know of anyone who's resigned from U.N.C.L.E.
before they're retired from the field due to age."
"We'll disappear," Napoleon told him straight. "Illya has
contacts. We won't have ever existed."
"Except to U.N.C.L.E. and Thrush. They won't stop chasing you
just because you've resigned."
"Why not? What makes us interesting is what we know, not who we
are."
"You're sure about that?"
Napoleon rose from the bed. "I'm not sure about anything."
The door to the guestroom opened and April poked her head around the
door. "Sorry. Napoleon?"
He was already at the door. "What's wrong?"
"He's awake and asking for you."
Stepping around her, he took the stairs down, two at a time.
"Illya?"
"Pasha." He was trying to sit up in bed, obviously in pain and
obviously too weak to support his own weight on his hands or elbows.
"It's okay." Napoleon perched on the edge of the bed.
Despite the current limitations of his own body, Illya was still
pushing himself.
"Illya...."
With an affectionate and slightly frustrated sigh, he moved around to
sit next to the pillow, sliding one arm around his partner. Illya
settled against him, exhausted by the simple manoeuvre.
Napoleon reached back, pulled the pillows up against the head board so
that he could lean on them and dropped back slowly, taking Illya
with him.
The blond head came to rest against his shoulder, eyes already closing.
Somehow sitting like this, holding Illya, it felt as if everything was
going to be all right. Whatever would happen would happen and
they'd survive it. They'd come out of the other side of this
stronger than ever. Together they were incredibly strong, they
always had been.
Resigning from U.N.C.L.E. might have landed them in a world of trouble
or it might have been the best thing he'd ever done. Whichever
way, they'd deal with it.
The biggest problem as he saw it was that his feelings were all mixed
up with this.
His life had been shattered by the news of Illya's death. For the
first two weeks he hadn't left his apartment, had spent every night
getting drunk and every day waking from bad dreams into the nightmare
of his existence.
Mark had visited after the second week. He'd not said a word
about the state of Napoleon or the state of his apartment. He'd
taken some of Napoleon' washing down to the laundry room in the
basement of the block and a half-hour later, Solo had joined him
there. Sitting on the floor in the humid heat of that room, back
against the wall, he had cried himself out while Mark watched the
washing going around and around in the machine.
All Napoleon could remember saying that afternoon was, "I miss him."
And all he could remember Mark saying was, "I know."
Illya had been torn from him and he hadn't been there to hold his
partner in his last seconds, to hear his last words. That right
as Illya's partner had been taken away and he'd been more angry than
he'd ever been.
Simmering under the grief had been a rage that had festered. He'd
returned to work the next day after Mark's visit, thrown himself into
assignment after assignment. He'd killed Thrush agents with the
same coldness, the same careless attitude Illya always had. He'd
ignored the women sent to seduce him and dismissed the innocents he'd
always accommodated in the past.
He'd refused another partner and on the one occasion Waverly had sent
another agent out with him, Napoleon had ditched the unsuspecting man
in the first hour.
All he'd wanted was to see Illya's scowling face when he turned
around. To feel the Russian's solid presence at this shoulder.
He'd walked into the same dangers they'd walked into together a hundred
times before but now he did so alone. There was no one to watch
his back any longer and there was a part of him that hoped a bullet
would take him down and end his life.
At some point, without him even noticing, the quiet, surly Russian had
become as essential to him as breathing.
"I love you, Illya," he murmured into the silken hair under his chin.
He had thought never to get a chance to tell his partner that.
Once Illya was strong enough to hear it, he swore to himself that he
would tell it all, whatever the consequences. Illya could believe
him or not, he could rant and rage. It didn't matter.
Of course, there was a whole range to his words. He wasn't
altogether sure what he meant by them now. The grief of the last
two months, the terrible fear of the last two days, had focused his
emotions on protecting Illya, saving his life, unable to face losing
him a second time, knowing it would destroy him if Illya were to die.
Still the residue remained, firing along his nerves whenever he wasn't
in this room, turning his stomach if he remained away from Illya's side
for too long or thought of the future too much.
He was taking Illya with him, but what did that mean? The
practicalities of his rash promises seemed faintly ridiculous when he
was thinking straight. He couldn't see them doing anything but
what they were trained to do. Illya wasn't going to settle down
and sell flowers. Napoleon truthfully couldn't imagine spending
his days in an office.
Had he burned too many bridges? Were they even the ones he might
want to cross again one day?
He considered his own words again, his need for Illya to know he was
loved. Searching his feelings too deeply felt like touching a raw
wound. Still too close, still too painful.
What did it mean if his words went beyond the platonic? Weren't
he and Illya already far closer than that? The old 'a partnership
is like a marriage' thing was so true for them. A marriage
without the sex.
Napoleon's whole being caught on the idea. His cock
twitched. His heart swelled. How good would it be to take
Illya in his arms and make love to him? How amazing would those
lips feel against his own? He already knew the silk of his
partner's hair, the warmth of his body, the tenderness in the strong
hands. How would those agile fingers feel wrapped around his
cock? Stroking his balls? Filling him?
Guilt followed the arousing thoughts quickly enough to douse the
momentary hardness in his groin.
Illya was badly hurt, relying on him for his very survival, and he was
thinking like a sex-starved... spy! He didn't even have the first
clue about Illya's feelings for him. He was making life-changing
decisions for the both of them without a whisper of consent from his
partner.
One thing, just one thing, he knew for sure. Nothing would ever
be the same again.
He looked up as the door opened, freezing for a moment like a naughty
school boy caught in the act.
Luchand smiled. "Good evening."
"Good evening, Doc. He... he was trying to get up and I
thought...."
Luchand waved his hand dismissively. "Do not feel the need to
explain. I know about the special bond you partners
develop. April and Mark have been sharing a double bed since they
arrived here and yet they assure me there is nothing going on between
them." He shook his head. "Not that I understand how he
could share a bed with such a stunning woman and not be tempted."
Reaching for the chart at the end of Illya's bed, he flipped the pages
of notes made by the nurses who checked on the patient every
hour. For a minute or so he studied the results, then he put the
clipboard back.
"He's doing well. In a couple of days he will undoubtedly be
calling me some choice names and giving you a hard time."
Napoleon almost laughed. "You sound like you know him."
"From what April and Mark have told me I know his personality
type. He has been through much, as you know, and I would expect
lots of defences to be in place when he wakes proper. Have
patience with him, Napoleon. He will make a full recovery in
time."
Napoleon gave Luchand a knowing look. "You keep reassuring me."
"Well, the night you brought him in here you refused to leave the
treatment room and backed up your refusal with a large gun." He
smiled. "I gathered from that you were concerned about him."
Napoleon had the common decency to look a little ashamed of his
actions. "I'm sorry about that."
"Do not feel you need to apologise. As I said, I can understand
your protective nature. It will be nice to know Illya a little,
after stitching him back together again from the inside out."
Waving his hand, he left them alone again. It was an hour before
Mark brought Napoleon something to eat.
~
Suz looked up from her book and sized up the two men who had stepped
into the clinic.
"Can I help you, Sirs?"
They leaned on the desk and smiled at her. She kept the suspicion
from her face and voice.
"We were told a friend of ours had been brought here."
"Do you have a name?"
"Certainly. Illya Kuryakin. He was badly injured and
accompanied by another friend, Napoleon Solo."
Suz frowned. "I don't recognise the names but I will check with
Dr Luchand's nurse. Excuse me a moment?"
They nodded and she opened a door behind her.
"Cath?" she asked the empty room, "Is Nathan treating an 'Illya
Kuryakin'?" She paused and then closed the door again. "I'm
sorry, gentlemen, there's no one of that name here. Are you sure
you have the right place? We're a private clinic, emergency cases
aren't usually brought to us."
"This is Clinique De Bonne Sante, isn't it?"
She nodded. "But we're not the only one. The clinics are
owned by a Doctor Michael Chance. There are Bonne Sante clinics
in Geneve, Montreux, in Lisbon, Mahon, Hamburg...."
One of the men was looking at the other. "Geneva?"
"Yes. Along the Rue Ferdinand."
They flashed her more smiles. "Thank you."
"It's no problem. I'm sorry I couldn't be of more help."
She waited until they were gone and then another couple of minutes
before going to find Mark Slate.
~
"Hello, Illya."
Luchand smiled as he looked into his ward's bright blue eyes for the
first time. Napoleon was asleep in the chair next to the
bed. It was late, or early, depending on your perspective.
Luchand would usually have been asleep but he'd lost a patient tonight.
Eighty-five year old Jean Frank had passed away in the arms of his wife
after a long battle with throat cancer. Luchand made a point of
always being with his terminally ill patients at the end and with their
families for some time afterwards. He offered them hospitality
and comfort while they endured the final months, weeks or days of the
life of a loved one. And after it was over he offered peace.
Margaret Frank was sleeping now, with the aid of a mild sedative.
Luchand was on his way home, just a couple of doors down from the
clinic. But something had made him check on his sickest patient
before leaving.
Illya was awake, obviously in some discomfort. Luchand perched on
the edge of the bed where he could be seen.
"Do you know where you are?"
Illya regarded him for a moment.
"I'm sorry. My name's Doctor Nathan Luchand. I've been
looking after you."
The blue eyes closed for a moment and Luchand couldn't help but smile
to himself when Illya's mouth opened in a gaping yawn.
"Don't worry about sleeping," Luchand reassured. "It's the best
thing for you right now."
But Illya looked up at him and whispered, "Doctor?"
"Yes."
"I'm hurt."
Luchand nodded, schooling his expression and choosing his words
carefully. "Yes. Badly. I won't lie to you. But
you're going to be okay. You have two broken fingers, some very
nasty wounds and a couple of infections. We're looking after you
and you're going to make a full recovery."
Illya seemed to absorb the information and Luchand gave him time.
"Napasha?"
It took him a moment to think about the translation.
"Napoleon? He's here." Stating the obvious, as Solo's hand
was - as usual - wrapped carefully around Illya's fingers. Then
he understood. "He's fine, Illya. No injuries. He's
exhausted but he's absolutely fine."
Illya's eyes closed. "He saved my life."
"Yes he did."
Luchand stood as his patient fell asleep. He couldn't help but
feel his faith in life restored.
~
Napoleon watched the surveillance tape from reception the next morning.
"U.N.C.L.E. or Thrush?" Mark asked from where he saw at his colleague's
shoulder.
"U.N.C.L.E. John Coops and Andrew Worthy, section two agents from
the Geneva office." Napoleon sighed.
"I guess they weren't here to give you your release papers."
"I doubt it."
"Then what?"
Napoleon shrugged. "I have no idea. Listen, Mark... you and
April have risked enough. Go back. Tell Waverly you met
with me, passed me the file. Tell him Illya and I stayed with you
at your hotel and you helped me treat his wounds. Tell him we
left and you don't know where we were headed."
As much as he hated it, as much as he didn't want to leave, he knew
Napoleon was right. Unless he and April wanted to resign, they
had to go back.
"What will you do?" Solo's hesitation was enough. "You're
right. It's best I don't know. That way when they inject
the truth serum, I won't have anything to tell them."
"I'll get Illya as far from here as I can."
"Napoleon...." But he didn't have to state the obvious.
"Please be careful."
"Absolutely not!" Luchand was appalled by the suggestion that his
patient was in any fit state to be moved. "He can't walk, can
barely talk. He needs full medical care." He stared at the
two determined men standing before him. "Try to understand, when
you brought Illya in he'd endured two months of torture and
starvation. The little reserved strength he had he used to assist
you in his rescue. He is going nowhere for at least a week and
after that he will need rest and medicine and much care."
Napoleon stared at Mark. He and April couldn't return to
U.N.C.L.E. while Napoleon and Illya remained. U.N.C.L.E. would
know where their renegade agents were within twenty-four hours.
"I've dragged you into this...."
"No. April and I involved ourselves. We contacted you,
remember? If Illya can't leave then we stay until he can."
Sighing, closing his eyes, Napoleon decided he'd never felt so very
tired. There was nothing he could do. It was as if his
whole body just stopped.
Mark caught him before he hit the floor.
~
Illya woke to April's welcoming smile.
"Good morning, Blue Eyes," she murmured softly.
He managed a smile, wishing his head didn't hurt so much.
"April." It was more than a whisper and it still hurt to speak,
but the sound cheered him a little, like a small victory over his
demanding body.
She stroked her thumb over the backs of his fingers. "That's
right. How are you feeling?"
Illya didn't answer the question. 'I'm fine' wouldn't have been
remotely believable and it would have taken too long to tell the
truth. All in all, he considered the question mute and asked one
of his own. "Where's Napasha?"
"He's sleeping, love. He was completely exhausted."
"He's all right?"
"He's fine. Don't worry."
Thinking it was typical of his partner to drive himself to the edge of
exhaustion, Illya accepted her explanation.
Gently taking his hand from under hers, he pressed his palm to the bed
and tried to push himself up. A blinding pain sliced up from his
wrist along his arm and into his skull. He bit back his own
scream as he wrenched his hand back up, but his throat still burned
from the use of it. He felt sick suddenly.
April had responded in a heartbeat, knowing what he was going to do and
not being fast enough to stop him, she cradled the back of his head in
her palm as she eased him back to the pillows.
"Easy, love," she murmured, seeing the agony in his face, curled lips,
in the scrunched eyelids and tears leaking from under them.
"Easy."
She took his upper arm in her other hand and let his wrist and hand
rest along her arm, almost breathing with him.
"Your wrists and ankles are badly damaged."
As soon as he could think clearly again, Illya knew why. He'd
torn them apart trying to free himself from the wire bindings. It
had hurt like hell, he knew he'd bled from the wounds. But after
a while they'd gone numb, he hadn't realised he'd made such a mess of
them.
She waited for him to ride out the pain before sliding her hand out
from behind his head and laying his arm down onto the mattress.
"You okay?"
He nodded cautiously, not trusting his burning throat right now.
"You're going to have to give yourself time on this one, Illya," she
told him gently. "No whistle-stop stay in medical this time."
~
The Final Affair
Act III - "U.N.C.L.E.'s no better than
Thrush."
Three Days Later
Illya stood as still as he could as Luchand's warm fingers impersonally
held his penis to remove the catheter.
As uncomfortable as it was, it was over in less than a minute.
"You can sit back down now," he was instructed and he did as the doctor
said, pulling down the gown as he did so.
"How are you feeling?"
"Sore." He almost spat the word. He couldn't recall when
his life hadn't involved others being taking liberties with him.
He knew how much he owed Luchand, he just couldn't bring himself to
admit it right now.
Luchand knew. He understood and he didn't hold any of Illya's
moods against him. Pain played with the brain's chemistry and his
patient had been in almost constant pain for almost three months.
"I want you to tell me if you experience any problems when you urinate
- any pain at all. I want to know if there is blood in your
urine. We are lucky your kidneys and liver are all still working,
I would like to keep it that way. For now you are on liquids only
- no solid food for at least another two to three days. You are
going to be exhausted while your body is healing; sleep whenever you
need to, do not fight it." He smiled to himself at the expression
on his patient's face. "Just one more thing. Napoleon - it
seemed - thought you were dead, he grieved. Do not close yourself
off from him. Do not deny him your life now he knows you are
alive."
Luchand left him sitting on the edge of the bed. It was where
Napoleon found him half an hour later.
"Illya?"
Cautiously, Napoleon sat next to him, careful not to touch.
"I'd like some clothes," Illya said softly, his tone apologising for
any lack of greeting.
With a smile, Napoleon left him for a couple of minutes, returning with
some new clothes April had bought in Montreux the previous day.
"They would have been in your size if you hadn't lost so much weight,"
he murmured, helping Illya into the crème, woollen sweater and
the soft, faded jeans.
Single, sterile dressings covered the wounds Napoleon himself had
stitched back together. Thicker, padded dressings covered the
deep, expertly stitched wounds at wrists and ankles, where internal
suturing had been necessary.
His youngest bruises were fading to a dull purple from the livid red
they had been at the time of his rescue. Older bruises were
almost completely faded now. The infection in his injuries as
well as the one in his digestive system were clearing up well, the
antibiotics doing their job.
His blood work showed his system almost clear of the cocktail of drugs
De Vris had had pumped into him.
Physically he was healing, as Luchand kept telling them both. But
no one except for Illya knew what his mental state was, how fragile his
grip on his sanity had become in De Vris' hands.
Dressed, Illya glanced at his partner. "Thank you."
"Don't mention it." Napoleon sat back, watched while Illya
shifted until he was comfortable on the bed.
For a short time they sat in silence, neither fidgeting, neither
uncomfortable. And then Illya raised his head.
"I thought I was going to die. I never thought...." He
sighed softly. "I didn't think you were coming this time.
And I know... I know it was my fault. I should have told you,
should have found some way of telling you before I went but.... I
was undercover." He looked away unhappily.
For Illya, it was a speech of epic proportions.
"I know," Napoleon told him as calmly as he could. "I saw
Waverly. He told me."
Blue eyes met his again, pleading. Miserable. "I am sorry,
Napasha."
"Why? You have nothing to be sorry for."
"I betrayed... us."
"You didn't, Illya. U.N.C.L.E. betrayed us both. In no way
was this your fault."
At the mention of U.N.C.L.E., Illya raised his left hand to his face,
agitated, upset. Scared, Napoleon realised.
"Napoleon, what's going on? This isn't an U.N.C.L.E. medical
facility, is it? There haven't been any shrinks hounding me, any
debriefings. Just Mark and April. You saw Waverly... but
we're in... Lousanne...." Napoleon could practically see the cogs
turning.
He reached across, took Illya's hand carefully in his own, bringing it
away from his face.
"This is a private clinic run by a friend of April's family.
U.N.C.L.E. doesn't know where you are. I went to see Waverly and
he told me about your secret mission."
"That's how you knew where to find me?"
"No.... Two months ago... Waverly told me you'd been involved in
a car crash. He told me you were dead. He gave me
this." Letting go of the other's hand, he slipped the ring from
his finger and he held it out for Illya who took it with trembling
fingers.
"I thought it lost...."
"I had no reason to doubt Waverly, Illya, I'm the one who's
sorry. I believed him. I mourned you. I missed you...
so much. And then... I was on a mission in Paris and I heard
about De Vris and a 'houseguest'. I knew it was you. I went
for you, pulled you out as soon as I knew you were still alive. I
was almost too late. I thought... I really thought you were going
to die on me. I couldn't take you to U.N.C.L.E., Mark contacted
me and told me about the files they'd planted about your mission.
Only we had no idea they were fake. I didn't know who to
trust. I chose Mark because I knew you trusted him."
Illya hesitantly reached for Napoleon's left hand. He slid the
ring back onto the finger he knew Napoleon had been wearing it
on. Warily, he looked up, met his partner's wide-eyed expression.
"Keep it. As a... thank you for saving my life again."
Napoleon ran his fingertips over the cool gold band. Twice he
opened his mouth to speak and twice the words failed him.
"If you'd rather not.... It might put off any willing females...."
"No. I mean... yes. I want to wear it. It does put
the women off and I've been glad of that these last few weeks."
He lowered his voice, embarrassed but wanting to say it. "I'll
wear it for you, Illyushka."
Illya stared at him but both men knew it would be a while before either
could understand what Napoleon's words meant for them.
For a time the silence hung heavy between them. Napoleon knew he
had to tell his partner everything.
"Illya... I resigned. For both of us."
It was becoming too much, he knew. Illya's already damaged world
was being shattered, piece by piece, into painful shards. Soon
there would be nothing left that he recognised, nothing that
represented safety. Apart from Solo himself.
He knew little about the Russian's childhood. He understood that
he'd known his family and had been loved by them, but not for very
long. He'd been a child in a labour camp, a student in the
Ukraine and in England. He was a trained KGB interrogator and a
once-valued U.N.C.L.E. agent. Now it must seem to him that he was
valued by no one, had nowhere to go.
"I... don't understand," Illya stammered. "Why? Why would
you...?"
Shouts from downstairs interrupted him.
Without hesitation, Napoleon reached forward and took the gun he'd
placed in the narrow bedside cabinet the day after they'd
arrived. Illya regarded it with wide eyes, watching Napoleon rise
from the bed and head for the door with murder in his gait.
Illya shook his head. "No...." But he didn't understand his
own denial. "Napasha...."
"It's all right. No one's going to hurt you, I swear."
He was out of the door.
"Napoleon!" Illya sighed softly as the door closed with a quiet
click. "What about you?"
Napoleon ran into the two strangers on the stairs. Both men were
toting semi-automatics but he didn't recall hearing gunshots.
Hopefully no one had been injured in their obvious hurry to get into
the clinic.
"Can I help you gentlemen?" He didn't recognise either man,
didn't know if they were U.N.C.L.E. or Thrush. Not that it really
mattered anymore.
They both came at him, guns aimed. He fired twice but only one
bullet hit home. It caught the first man in the shoulder, causing
him to stumble at the hot agony as the metal pieced flesh and muscle,
lodging in bone.
Napoleon re-aimed, but the second man hadn't slowed as his partner had
been shot. The butt of the semi-automatic cracked against the
side of Napoleon's skull and he dropped.
Stepping over the fallen agent, plucking the gun from his fingers, the
large stranger glanced back to see if his colleague was still
standing. There was a slightly panicked look on the man's face
and his hand was pressed over his wound, blood seeping through his
fingers.
"Take him," he instructed, lightly toeing Napoleon's inert body with
the tip of his shoe. "Dump him in the trunk."
His bleeding companion asked him something but he wasn't
listening. He peered through the glass of the first two doors
along the wide corridor and opened the second one with his elbow, two
guns primed.
Stepping into the small room he felt a sudden sharp pain in his arm and
yelped, turning furiously as an awkward left hook connected with his
chin.
Growling with anger, he raised his right arm and hit the blond man
across the face with the back of his hand.
Illya stumbled back with the force of the blow, his left wrist
protesting the abuse, slicing pain along his left arm. He
struggled to reclaim his balanced but as he lifted his head, the handle
of Napoleon's pistol was brought down hard on the back of his neck.
He crumpled to the ground, fighting to remain conscious through the
blinding pain and the sparkling darkness behind his eyes. His
head connected hard with the wall and the wave of nausea washed over
him. Instinctively he turned onto his side.
His attacker took two steps forward and Illya let loose a howl of pain
beyond anything he'd known as his broken fingers were mashed into the
carpet under the heel of the man above him.
His stomach retched moments before he passed out.
Turning his head, the stranger saw the syringe sticking out of his
right arm. Pulling it out with a grunt, he kicked Illya savagely
in the head.
~
Napoleon stood panting for breath in the midst of the wrecked
interrogation room.
At least he knew now that the two men had been U.N.C.L.E. agents and
not Thrush. The knowledge had simply made him more angry.
He'd woken in a corner of a familiar room. This room. One
chair, one table, no window. A two-way mirror behind which, he
knew, was a camera, a monitor and maybe someone watching him.
He'd hammered on the toughened glass for what had felt like an
eternity, demanding to know the whereabouts of his partner until his
throat hurt.
Then he'd launched a full-scale attack on the furniture, smashing it to
pieces against the wall and using the legs of the table to make another
attempt on the mirror.
Now he stood amongst the destruction, feeling a little better and ready
to kill.
When the door finally opened, Waverly stood before him taking leisurely
draws on his ever-present pipe.
"Why don't you come to my office? At least there we can sit down."
~
Illya came to slowly, listening to then dismissing most of the
complaints his body offered up. His head was throbbing. He
felt marginally sick although he'd nothing solid to eat for the last
couple of weeks he was sure. His left hand hurt like hell while
his right felt numb. That relieved and scared him at the same
time.
He opened his eyes. The scent was the same as in the clinic but
he wasn't in the same room and something told him he wasn't in
Lousanne.
"Welcome back, Mr Kuryakin."
The smooth, German accent sounded familiar and he tried to sit
up. Adrenaline immediately flooded his system when he found he
was restrained at the ankles and wrists. He pulled on the thick,
wide leather straps, trying to free himself in all the ways that had
served him in the past.
The pain he caused himself, rubbing the existing wounds raw once again
through the dressings, sapped the little energy he had and he soon
flagged.
His captors watched with quiet chuckles until their prisoner collapsed
back to the hard mattress.
"No need for such a struggle, Mr Kuryakin. And no point, don't
you agree? You know who I am?"
He knew. Doctor Hans Narvelt. U.N.C.L.E. had recruited him
only a year or so ago when Thrush had betrayed him. He was a
first class interrogator, prized by U.N.C.L.E. and used on the
strongest of Thrust minds when U.N.C.L.E. got the chance to probe one.
"I see that you do." Illya cursed himself silently. His
poker face had obviously slipped. Or maybe he no longer had the
strength to construct his careless façade. Too many long
hours at the hands of De Vris' men. He could hardly believe that
U.N.C.L.E. was about to set its most brutal interrogator onto one of
its own men. Then he remembered Napoleon's words.
'I resigned. For us both.'
And he realised suddenly that Napoleon had meant that he'd resigned
them both.
He was no longer an U.N.C.L.E. agent thanks to his partner. He
was a liability. Perhaps he would have been even if Napoleon
hadn't lost his mind.
"Please...."
Narvelt stepped into view beside the bed. "It's too early in our
game for pleas, Mr Kuryakin." He held a long syringe up to the
light, tapping the wicked needle until a drop of clear liquid appeared
at the tip. "Save them until later."
Illya could feel the fear creeping up on him. He didn't want this
anymore. He'd hurt enough at the hands of the enemy and now he
was being terrorised by his own side. He had no information to
give them. De Vris had known his captured was a set up from the
very start. Illya had been chained, beaten and drugged from the
moment he'd entered De Vris' house.
"I don't know anything," he told them, hating himself for the note of
pleading he could still here in his own voice. "I'd tell you if I
did."
Narvelt said nothing and Illya felt the heel of his foot taken in an
iron grasp. He tried to pull it back but only succeeding in
scraping the leather strap even deeper into his wounded ankle. He
bit back his own cry but couldn't hold in the yelp as the metal tip of
the syringe was pressed into the base of his foot. The needle
sank deep and Illya held his breath as the truth serum washed into his
system.
~
"Where's Illya?" Napoleon sat opposite his ex-boss, the wide
expanse of mahogany separating them.
"I can assure you he's fine. Unlike the two men I sent to collect
you both. Mr Kuryakin managed to inflict a couple of nasty wounds
on Mr Madison before he was persuaded to come quietly."
He didn't want to think about what that meant. "Where is he?"
"He's in Medical. I'll take you to him once you and I have
talked."
"You can't keep us here indefinitely."
"Believe me, Mr Solo, I have no intention of doing so."
Shaking his head, rising to his feet, Napoleon started to pace.
"Why are you doing this? Why can't you just leave us alone?
You can trust us to keep our mouths shut."
Waverly regarded him thoughtfully. "Do you know something, Mr
Solo? I believe you."
"Then why...?" He extended his arms, indicating the building in
general, their presence inside it.
"Because Mr Kuryakin has information that we need. Once he's
imparted all he learnt while a guest of our Mr De Vris, you'll both be
free to go."
"He's badly hurt. What if he can't remember?"
"Don't you worry about that, he's in the best hands."
Something about the reassurance sent a shiver down Napoleon's
spine. He tried to keep his frantic concern over Illya to himself
though, knowing it could only make matters worse, and gave the old man
his full attention.
"Tell me, Mr Solo, why are you doing this?"
"I told you. You left my partner to die."
"And I told you, he volunteered."
"To take the mission, yes. But not to commit suicide on
U.N.C.L.E.'s behalf."
Waverly chuckled softly. "I don't recall phrasing it that way
when I asked him to participate."
Napoleon felt sickened. "To bail out the Soviet Government?"
"Yes. As I explained before. Mr Kuryakin was the Soviet
choice for the mission. Part of the deal was dual citizenship
which was automatically granted to him when he left for Paris."
He didn't let his surprise show but Napoleon felt a thread of hope
start to wind itself around his mind. Illya was free from the
Soviets. Free from the KGB and the fate that had always awaited
him just around the corner. A year, ten years, twenty years from
now when U.N.C.L.E. no longer had any use for him and sent him home to
face the business end of a machine gun and execution in a cold, empty
courtyard.
"His own government granted him that?"
Waverly hesitated, and Napoleon suddenly saw something else.
Something not right with the story he'd been told. There was only
one question his brain kept snagging on; why Illya?
"Actually... U.N.C.L.E. granted it to him, with the permission of the
Soviet Government and the KGB. They have their own concerns, Mr
Solo, without having to worry about a Russian U.N.C.L.E. agent
returning to the fold after years of corruptive living in the USA."
Napoleon frowned. Why Illya?
"I'm curious," he started cautiously. "Why did you partner Illya
and I years ago?"
Waverly glanced at him, chewing on the flat end of his pipe. He
was searching for the catch in the question, Napoleon realised.
He schooled his expression and waited.
"I thought he would be good for you," the reply came finally.
"You were a little wild. Too... unpredictable. I thought Mr
Kuryakin would have a positive influence on you." He paused,
sighed. "Little did I know."
Napoleon swallowed. He knew. Something in the quietly added
words, something in the way Waverly wouldn't meet his eyes
directly. Something in the distance, in the way he'd been
treated. In the way Illya had been treated.
"On our first mission out," Solo spoke with carefully chosen words,
"Thrush approached us. No force, no capture, no torture. We
were in Istanbul. We had drinks in a bar, a good meal;
expensive. And they offered us both jobs." He was glad to
see the horrified expression on Waverly's face. "You know, we
actually considered it for a couple of seconds. Both of us.
Although of course neither of us admitted it until much later in our...
relationship." He selected the word deliberately and saw the
flash in Waverly's eyes. Jackpot. "Now, looking back, I
wish we'd accepted."
"No, you don't." There was hope in the old man's words.
"Why not? What difference would it have made in the long
run? U.N.C.L.E.'s no better than Thrush."
"How can you say that?"
"You're both about control! In some ways, U.N.C.L.E.'s
worse. You ask us to give up everything, those we love, those we
care about, and devote ourselves to the cause of the day. At
least Thrush demands loyalty without sacrifice."
Waverly stared at him. "What are you talking about?"
Napoleon's anger reached flashpoint. "Why did you send Illya on
that mission?" he shouted.
"I told you," the old man was having difficulty holding his own rage in
check, "the Soviet government requested that he...."
"Bull. Shit. They didn't request him. You could have
sent any one of us. You could have given him backup. You
could have informed me. Why did you send him? Why
Illya? Why alone?"
Waverly finally dropped the pretence of ignorance. He regarded
Solo with barely disguised disgust. "You know why."
"I want to hear it for myself. I want to hear the bigotry spoken
by the man I once admired."
"If you're trying to justify your own behaviour...."
"WHY?"
At the same volume; "Because I won't have two of my agents behaving
like fairies!"
The silence in the room was deafening.
Napoleon dropped his face into one hand, pinching the bridge of his
nose, a gesture unconsciously picked up from his long, close
association with his partner.
But not that close. Not yet.
"You think Illya and I... were lovers."
Waverly's expression turned sour, as if he couldn't bear the taste of
the words. "I know you were."
It was all Napoleon could do not to laugh. He couldn't keep the
ironic smile from his face.
"You were wrong. I won't deny my feelings for him but I honestly
have no idea how Illya feels about me. Not even now." He
approached the desk, palms flat on the wood, leaning over even as
Waverly rose uncertainly to his feet. "You sent Illya to his
death for something he hadn't done, probably hadn't even
contemplated. You close-minded, bigoted bastard."
Waverly composed himself. "Common insults are below you, Mr
Solo. I accept that I might have made a mistake in believing you
and Mr Kuryakin to be engaging in... homosexual activities, at least
with each other." The mere idea of Illya having sex with another
man rankled Napoleon but he didn't let it show. "But as you've
admitted, your feelings for him are inappropriate. Eventually
you'd have wormed your way into his bed, seduced him as the expert you
are."
Napoleon bristled. Illya wasn't a one-night fling. He
wasn't a notch on Napoleon's bedpost.
"Or maybe he would have corrupted you," Waverly was continuing.
"Used those pretty looks, batted his eyelids and coaxed you into his
bed." Napoleon resisted the urge to lash out. "Either way
it's against the rules for field agents to have such
relationships. And even if it wasn't... the thought of it still
makes me sick."
It was enough. Napoleon turned, heading for the door.
"Mr Solo."
"I'm leaving. Illya's coming with me."
Waverly shrugged. "By now, Narvelt should have gleaned all the
information Mr Kuryakin has to give."
Napoleon had paled at the name. "Narvelt? You set Narvelt
on Illya?"
At Waverly's small, smug nod, he gave into his urge and punched his
boss. By the time the old man had recovered, Napoleon was running
down the corridor toward the elevators.
~
"Who was working with De Vris?"
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. How
many times?
Illya felt sick, his stomach rolling, his head pounding. He could
feel the drug in his veins, thick and sticky.
Narvelt had discovered quickly that the best way of inflicting pain on
this particular subject was to let him do it to himself. A quick
jab of a needle or a mild electric shock into hands or feet would cause
Kuryakin to pull away.
Blood was slowly soaking through the dressings on the man's wrists and
ankles. No heed had been paid to the already broken fingers that
Madison had trodden into the carpet at the clinic.
"My patience is infinitely more than your tolerance for pain, Mr
Kuryakin. Please, tell me what you know. Who was working
with De Vris?"
"I. Don't. Know." He ground the words out between his
teeth, squeezing his eyes closed, ashamed of the tears had escaped from
under his lids. He was so tired now and it hurt so much. He
didn't know the answers. In some ways it was worse than De Vris'
torture because this was U.N.C.L.E., this was where he was supposed to
be safe.
"I have other methods you know," Narvelt was crooning away to himself,
"I seldom use them because they are particularly crude. But if
what Mr Waverly tells me is correct perhaps you would appreciate them
more than others."
Illya wasn't listening. His body had become too painful a place
and his mind was drifting. He thought about Napoleon, believing
that he could hear his partner's voice calling for him. Another
time, another place. He had no idea where Napoleon was now, even
if he was alive. He remembered hearing gunshots back at the
clinic, just before U.N.C.L.E.'s hooligan had burst into his room.
The thought that Napoleon might be dead upset him. He didn't want
to lose his partner. For the first time since his realisation
that he was no longer an U.N.C.L.E. agent he was glad of it. He
wanted to leave with Napoleon, to go somewhere away from all the pain
and... and what? He didn't know, wasn't sure. But Napoleon
was wearing his ring - that meant something, didn't it?
If Napoleon was still alive of course.
"ILLYA?!"
Throbbing pain beat out a rhythm behind his eyeballs and he moaned
softly. He was back in his body. His ankles were free and
there were hands on him, removing his jeans, pushing his knees up.
He yelled, as loud and as hard as he could.
A second later the door crashed open and his object rape was prevented
by Napoleon throwing himself bodily at Narvelt.
The orderlies had backed away from him and he kicked out just in case
any were in still in range. He could hear Napoleon's fight with
the famous interrogator but saw nothing until Napoleon stepped into
view brandishing a blood-covered scalpel.
"Illya.... Are you all right?"
Illya declined to answer such a blatantly stupid question. He
waited patiently for Napoleon to release the leather straps at his
wrists before struggling into a sitting position and pulling his jeans
back up over his hips.
"Let me," his partner requested gently. Illya's fingers were
useless, his left hand trembling, his right hand mutilated.
Napoleon carefully fastened the buttons at his fly for him. Once
done up, Napoleon turned his attention to the crimson dressings.
"Jesus, Illya... I'm sorry...." He started to remove the first
one but Illya pulled his hand away, cradling his right in his left.
"Let's just get out of here," he insisted.
Napoleon agreed.
Three agents tried to stop them from leaving but Napoleon dissuaded two
of them and Illya head-butted the third, an unexpected move that
bemused Napoleon as much as the dizzy man on the floor.
But Napoleon didn't hear nor see Waverly during their escape, and after
the initial attempt no one got in their way.
Stepping outside the U.N.C.L.E. offices confirmed they were in
Geneva. Napoleon had one or two contacts here, all of whom were
loyal to U.N.C.L.E. of course but they were possibilities. He was
still considering their options when Mark's Mercedes screeched to a
dramatic stop beside them.
"Can I offer you gents a ride anywhere?"
Napoleon wanted to lean inside and kiss the man on the lips.
Instead he bundled Illya into the back seat and joined him there.
"Lousanne, please."
Mark winked and pulled away from the curb.
Safe on the open road, Mark glanced at his passengers in the rear view
mirror.
Napoleon was seated, looking none the worse for wear. Illya was
curled next to him, lying uncomfortably across the back seat, his head
rested on Napoleon's thigh, his eyes closed. The sleeves of his
new sweater were pulled down over his wrists and Mark could clearly see
the scarlet stains seeping through.
"He okay?" he asked softly.
"No," Napoleon answered truthfully. A few minutes later, he
added, "It's my fault, Mark."
"What is?"
"All of this. Waverly sent Illya on that mission because he
thought we were sleeping together." Napoleon carded his fingers
through Illya's hair, being careful not to disturb his rest.
Mark said nothing for a moment before turning his head just a
little. "Napoleon, everyone thought you were sleeping together."
"You're talking about the rumours. There are rumours about every
partnership, you and April in particular. It was
ridiculous! Waverly had no proof and based on rumour he sent
Illya to his death."
Mark smiled into the mirror. "Not so ridiculous, Napoleon," he
murmured.
~
None of the clinic staff had been injured in the U.N.C.L.E. agents'
hasty entrance. Luchand was relieved to see his patient back
under his care. He treated and redressed Illya's wounds, reset
his broken fingers. Napoleon assured him that the truth serum
would work its way out of Illya's system with no more side effects than
they were already seeing.
It was the first time that Luchand was able to get Illya to tell him
exactly what parts of him hurt and how much. On the 1-10 scale,
Illya was giving him decimal points.
"I want some of that for all my patients," he muttered, settling Illya
into Napoleon's bed and watching him slip into sleep, utterly
exhausted. "He's going to be sore for a time, but what your
sadist interrogator put him through was nothing compared to