

He rides the dispatch route, disguised as the dispatch rider, and manages to kill the assassin just before the Soviets can kill him.īond then goes back to the clearing, where he has backup hidden, disguised as the assassin, and signals for the bad guys to open up. Bond sets up a plan to get inside the bunker before the assistants can destroy whatever they have inside. He comes back in camouflage gear and stakes the clearing out, witnessing the motorcycle assassin leaving a hidden underground bunker with the help of two assistants to go cruising for another possible catch. Bond goes to the clearing where they stayed and finds marks that look as if a motorcycle was brought through the woods. Bond plugs away without expecting to get anywhere, but latches onto one stray fact that seems like the only possible clue: a band of gypsies that had stayed the winter near the rural road where the killing took place cleared out around the same time.

The case seems to be a dead end, with little evidence and the assassin long gone, and Bond doesn't get along with his NATO liaison. She takes him to the local commanding officer, the American SHAPE head of security, Colonel Schreiber whom does not see eye to eye with Bond. James Bond, taking a break in Paris from a failed assignment in Austria, is called in to investigate and meets a young woman from the local station sent to pick him up, Mary Ann Russell, whom he is rather attracted to. The rider was en route from SHAPE, the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, then located in Versailles, to his base, Station F, in Saint-Germain in France. The rider kills an actual NATO dispatch rider carrying reports from NATO headquarters to an MI6 station. He sees a similar messenger in front of him. He is outfitted as a Royal Corps of Signals messenger, but he carries a Luger. In a rural part of northern France, a motorcyclist screaming down a forest road. The original name for the story was "The Rough with the Smooth", which was also the original title of the books, before For Your Eyes Only was chosen for publication. The title is taken from a version of the words to a traditional hunting song, "D'ye ken John Peel?": "From a find to a check, from a check to a view, from a view to a kill in the morning". The story was one that Fleming had drawn up for an unproduced television series. "From a View to a Kill" is a short story written by Ian Fleming featuring his fictional secret agent James Bond, first published in 1960.
