In our original code, as it's in asynchronous mode, Shell has not read the script file before you removing it.
Now I suggest a self-destruction mode.
As comments, we run .vbs again in an asynchronous mode, but the script file will be removed at the end of the vbscript, ie, inside the script itself. The deletion instructions are appended at the end of the VBScript to be created:
Sub sof20351356RunVbScript()
Dim intFileNum As Integer
Dim agentNr As Long
Dim sFileName As String, s As String
Dim wshShell
agentNr = 5
' Write VBScript file to disk
sFileName = ActiveWorkbook.Path & "\Thread_" & agentNr & ".vbs"
'
' In the file, we do our job normally,
' at the end, we kill the vbscript inside the script itself:
'
s = "MyVar = 1" & vbCrLf _
& "'... do foo bar" & vbCrLf
'
' now add the Killing order:
s = s _
& "Set fso = CreateObject(""Scripting.FileSystemObject"")" & vbCrLf _
& "fso.DeleteFile """ & sFileName & """" & vbCrLf
intFileNum = FreeFile
Open sFileName For Output As intFileNum
Print #intFileNum, s
Close intFileNum
' Run VBScript file
Set wshShell = CreateObject("Wscript.Shell")
'
' in synchronous mode:
'wshShell.Run """" & sFileName & """", 0, True
'
' in asynchronous mode:
wshShell.Run """" & sFileName & """", 0, False
'Kill sFileName
Set wshShell = Nothing
End Sub
Ref: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/d5fk67ky(v=vs.84).aspx
As I tested so confirmed, before a script begins to run, it's read at 100% in memory by the Shell (Windows Script Interpreter), so the file itself has no more any importance when it starts executing. As a consequence, you can even add the destruction instruction at the beginning of the VBscript, before your true job.
But cmd.exe .bat file cannot be handled as this.