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satisfied expression on his wrinkled countenance. All was well with the world
once more, now that he had evaded the hostile takeover of Nostrum.
But the very instant he entered the room, his tiny nose wrinkled at a foul but
familiar smell. It was fear-the raw mingling of leaking sweat and openmouthed
breathing.
"What is wrong, my loyal minions?" he asked in shock.
A trader looked up with the hurt expression of a seal that had been hit by a
paddle.
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"We're bombed here!" he cried, his voice sick.
"Bombed!" Chiun demanded. "Where? I see no damage."
Remo stuck his head out of Chiun's office.
"It's just an expression," he said.
Another trader clutched his phone and moaned. "It's a massacre!" he wailed.
"Where?" Chiun asked, coming to his side. The trader cradled the receiver
between his chin and shoulder. "It's all up and down the street. The blood is
flowing."
"This is terrible," Chiun squeaked. "Is America at war?"
"It's just an expression, Chiun," Remo called again.
Chiun looked back to Remo. "What are you saying, Remo? My loyal minions would
never lie to me. You heard them. People are being bombed. There is blood
flowing in the street. It is a calamity. Such things are never good for
business."
"This is business," Remo said wearily. "The market is crashing. This is how
these people talk."
"Is this true?" Chiun demanded.
"The Dow's dropped seventy points in the last half-hour," the trader said in
anguish. "It's a rout."
"Never surrender!" Chiun cried. "No matter who the foe, Nostrum will prevail.
I promise you that." "Will you come in here, Chiun?" Remo called sharply.
The Master of Sinanju called out, "Take heart. I am with you now," and floated
into his office.
"The market's melting down," Remo told him tightly. "And forget that
double-talk. It's just business jargon."
"But it is war talk."
"That's how these people see business," Remo explained. "As war. They call it
competition. And listen, this is serious. Nostrum stock is dropping too.
Everything's dropping. "
"I have no fear," Chiun retorted, "for I have gold."
"Gold is dropping too."
Chiun started. "What is this? Gold is dropping?" He looked around frantically.
"Where is Faith? I must have her by my side. She will advise me what to do."
Remo tripped the floor intercom with a toe. He hastily shoved both hands in
his pockets when Faith stepped into the room moments later. Her blue eyes
sought Remo's half-hidden wrists and expressed heartrending disappointment.
"Gold is dropping," Chiun squeaked. "What do I do?"
"Buy," she said quickly. "Now is the time to pick up bargains."
"But these stocks are becoming more worthless by the hour. "
"That's this hour. In another hour they could double in price. I would go
long."
"Go along with whom?" Chiun asked.
"Not 'along,' " Faith said. "Go long on the stocks. Hold on to your positions
in anticipation of long-term growth. And buy more."
"With what?"
"Gold. Gold is dropping. If gold keeps dropping, it'll be worth less than most
blue-chip stocks.
Chiun turned to Remo. "Is she mad? Sell gold for paper?"
"Faith's been playing the market for years," he pointed out. "You should see
her apartment. I have."
Chiun stuck his head out the office door. "Buy! Buy everything!" he cried.
"Nostrum, Ink is paying gold for stock. Let the word go out. Strictly
cash-and-carry."
With a wild shout of "Let's go for it!" the traders got on their phones and
began trading.
Within ten minutes the messengers began arriving, followed by armored-car
drivers and even feverish individual brokers. They crowded the Nostrum trading
room and corridors, fighting one another to hand over folded stock
certificates in return for gold ingots. They hurried off; carrying them in
sacks and stuffed into suit pockets.
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As Remo and Faith struggled to keep order, Faith brushed up against Remo. Her
tongue tickled his right earlobe.
"Last night was wonderful," she whispered breathily.
"I'm glad it was for someone," Remo complained, shoving a frantic stockbroker
so hard his horn-rimmed glasses broke in two.
The phone rang and P. M. Looncraft's secretary informed him that it was the
chairman of the New York Stock Exchange.
Looncraft took the call. The market was down another dozen points in the last
nineteen seconds. At this rate, the bargains would be enormous, just as he had
hoped.
"Yes?" he said.
"We've suspended trading twice today."
"The circuit breakers are working admirably."
"Except every time trading resumes, so does the panic," the chairman said
grimly. "I'm polling all NYSE board members. We should consider suspending
trading for the remainder of the day. Give the institutions time to regroup."
" I think that would be premature," Looncraft said, smiling tightly to
himself. If the chairman was panicked, then it would be a rout. His avid eyes
slid to his Telerate screen.
P. M. Looncraft blinked. The market shot up two points. Then ten. Then twenty.
It was like a thermometer on an August day in Panama.
"Wait a minute," the chairman said, cupping his hand over the phone.
When his voice returned, it was jubilant. "The market's regrouping. There's a
buying frenzy going on."
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