"That man who just
left is an esper," Jan Yargo told her father.
"An esper?" Ben Yargo, Prime Thinker of Earth, rose from
his chair, incredulous.
"Yes. I saw it in his mind." She frowned, seeing
his expression. "Is that bad?" she asked.
"Yes," he said, "if s
bad."
He had needed a man whose
every move was predictable. And he had got Max Krull.
The
fate of the world hung on an esper.
JEFF
SUTTON has also written:
FIRST
ON THE MOON (F-222) BOMBS IN ORBIT (D-377) SPACEHIVE (D-478)
Atom Conspiracy
by
JEFF SUTTON
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the
Americas New York, N.Y. 10036
the atom conspiracy
Copyright ©, 1963, by Jeff Sutton
An Ace Book, by arrangement with Thomas
Bouregy & Co., Inc.
All
Bights Reserved
Printed in U.S.A.
Ben Yargo, 90th Prime Thinker of the Empire
of Earth, broke the fateful news to the World Council of Six at the planet
capital in Sydney, Australia, on 26 November, 2449 A.D. An atomic conspiracy had been discovered.
History does not record the reactions of the
individual Council members. However, such a conspiracy directly violated the
First Law of Mankind—There
shall be no atomic research—as decreed by Edward Crozener, who founded the Empire of Earth some 450
years earlier, in 1999 A.D., resurrecting it from the remnants of civilization
which survived the day-long Atomic War of 1970. Crozener's decree, intended to
prevent another such holocaust, had been the Empire's most rigidly enforced
law. Such a conspiracy, at the time, was unthinkable. Yet the Council did not
order a sweeping investigation.
Curiously, a single agent was assigned to
look into the incident. ..
Blak
Roko's Post-Atomic Earthman.
Kim
Lee
Wong was last to enter.
He
came through the tall, gold-embossed doors of the Council Chamber hiding his
nervousness behind a mask of calm. The other members of the World Council of
Six already had gathered—statue-like and silent—around the long polished
table. By the wall he saw the ascetic face of Ivan She-vach, World Manager, and
wondered why he was there. Council meetings were usually secret, restricted to
members and, of course, the Prime Thinker, who ruled the planet. An emergency?
The
thought frightened him. He nodded deferentially while he took his seat,
conscious again that his official intelligence (IQ 208) placed him as the
body's junior member. Eve Mallon (IQ 213), mathematician and only woman on the
Council, inclined her head. The others didn't acknowledge him, nor did he
expect it. He returned her greeting almost gratefully (she represented North
America) before flicking his almond eyes around the table.
Taussig
of Europe ..."
Lincoln
of Africa ...
Serrano
of South America . . .
Sociologist,
lawyer, educator—faces of power and prestige —power won at the polls by virtue
of intelligence. Each represented the most brilliant mind in one of the
world's six major political subdivisions. Around them swirled the angry tides
of politics, lapping at the throne of the Prime Thinker. He looked last at . .
.
Kingman
of Anzaca . . .
The
face of the representative of the powerful Austra-New Zealand block was thin,
harsh, veined, with tight bloodless lips and eyes that were black pools. His
long hands were talons gripping the arms of his "chair. Wong shivered and
looked at the omate clock set high on the rear wall, facing the one empty chair
at the head of the table. Eight fifty-seven, three minutes before the Council
would come to order. More precisely, it would open with the arrival of Ben
Yargo, the Prime Thinker, for he was as punctual as the clock itself. A
revolving scale below the center of the dial face showed the date: 11:26:2449.
At
exactly 8:58 a.m., the tall doors opened and closed behind Ben Yargo, who
crossed the wide expanse of floor with the easy steps of a man who ruled a
planet. The Council and the Manager rose with one accord. Wong watched
covertly.
Yargo
was middle-height, stocky, with short-cropped iron-gray hair, undersized ears
pinned tight to his skull and a face of hewn granite. The skin was swarthy and
rough, the nose crooked, the lips full and sensuous. But it was the eyes that
Wong saw—chill, ice-blue, hard as diamonds, nestled deep under jutting orbital
ridges. He thought of a panther staring out from the dark places of a cavern.
Yargo's apparel, knee-length green shorts with' matching short-sleeved shirt
under the flowing purple cape of office, revealed heavily muscled arms and
legs. Little in his appearance suggested his background—philosopher and
ecologist—nor the fact he was, by official test, Earth's greatest intellect. He
had won office with an IQ 219 the last two terms.
The
Council members watched him with varying expressions: Eve Mallon's eyes were
tender, Taussig's appreciative, Kingman's vindictive; Lincoln and Serrano
appeared vaguely puzzled. Wong cast a sidelong look at the Manager; She-vach's
face held undisguised hostility. Only the Prime Thinker stood between the
Manager and supreme power. Yargo was chief world executive; Shevach was a whip,
but Yargo was the arm that wielded it.
Yargo
nodded curtly to the Council and fitted himself into the well-cushioned chair
set on a slightly raised dais. The members resumed their places and waited
expectantly. The clock struck nine, and Ben Yargo said, "Council is in session."
He paused, looking slowly around the circle
of faces before resuming. "I wish to apologize for calling this extraordinary
session, expecially"—he smiled at the Chinese biochemist—"just as
Wong was starting his vacation. I hope I haven't caused too much
inconvenience."
"It's an honor,"
Wong murmured politely.
"Hardly
that," Yargo countered gravely, "but an extraordinary emergency has
arisen." He paused to let his words sink in. Lincoln, the dusky-skinned
lawyer, looked faintly perturbed; Kenneth Kingman, the engineer, curled his
lips, and
Taussig, the sociologist, raised his
eyebrows. Yargo caught Ivan Shevach's bemused look and said slowly, "There
is evidence of atomic research."
"No!"
It was Lincoln who denied the statement. Yargo looked inquiringly at him; the
lawyer recognized the invitation to speak.
"Perhaps
I should apologize for the expletive." He bowed politely. "But the
fact is, I was astonished—I still am." He shook his head incredulously.
"I can't imagine that anyone . . . anyone would break the First Law."
"But
someone has," Yargo countered softly.
"The
proof?" Kingman interjected harshly.
"A
man was found dead in a Sydney hotel room yesterday—dead of radiation
bums."
Someone
gasped and Serrano asked sharply, "Who?"
"Identity
has just been established, only moments before this meeting. The victim's name
was"—Yargo watched the ring of faces carefully—"William Bixby
Butterfield." There was no change of expressions.
"Who was Butterfield?" Serrano pursued. He licked his
lips nervously. *
"A
physics professor on the faculty of the University of Palmerston North . . .
before he disappeared."
"Disappeared?"
"Some
five years ago, the fall of 2444," Yargo supplied. "Could the bums
have occurred any other way, perhaps excessive X-ray treatment?" Lincoln
asked. "Not in this case." "Why?"
"Expert
medical opinion," Yargo replied bluntly.
Lincoln
shook his head hopelessly. "It's bad."
Taussig
broke the following silence. "The point is, what are we going to do about
it? Or what can we do? If the news became public . . ." He left the words
dangling, watching the Prime Thinker.
"The
news won't . . . can't be made public," Yargo declared emphatically.
"The coroner is bound to absolute secrecy." He added, "So are
all persons present."
"The public would be highly
disturbed," Eve Mallon said softly.
"But we must
investigate," Lincoln insisted.
"Of
course. That's why I called this session. The Council is advisory in such
matters."
Kingman
said, "I suggest an immediate all-out investigation—that the Prime
Thinker commandeer the full resources of the Government's agents of
police."
Yargo remained poker-faced.
"Any other suggestions."
"The suggestion has
merit," Wong ventured.
Yargo nodded gravely.
"Any others?"
Lincoln
asked with great solemnity, "What alternative do we have? Atomic research
means world destruction. We can't risk that, gentlemen."
"Lincoln's
right," Kingman agreed. He shifted his head, caught Shevach's eye and
continued, "I realize it's irregular but I'd like the Manager to express
his views."
"Certainly."
Yargo's voice was tinged with annoyance. "Would the Manager have any
comments?"
"The
Manager would," Shevach replied. He rose, a slim elegant man of middle-age
with a high-domed forehead and sharp pale features. He was the only
non-elective official present, an appointee of Yargo's predecessor. As such, he
could be removed from office only by the Prime Thinker with unanimous Council
assent, a move that Kingman had repeatedly blocked.
"As
World Manager, I am naturally concerned with public reaction. No one needs
reminding that the ban against atomic research is our First Law. Nor does
anyone have to be told of the unrest—if not riots—that might occur if the
information we have becomes public. I heartily endorse the views expressed.
"With
the Prime Thinker's permission, I would be happy to launch an investigation
immediately." He let the words fall and sat down. Silence.
Yargo
studied each person in turn; he looked last at Eve Mallon and his eyelid
drooped, just a trifle. There was a bustle and she rose from her seat, a
slender, gracious woman in the late thirties, gowned in a golden-colored
semi-transparent tunic that showed the lines of her body in sharp relief. Her
blonde hair, lacquered in a high bun, sparked with jewels. She spoke with
assurance.
"With the Prime
Thinker's permission?"
"Certainly."
Kingman's lips curled as Yargo half-rose in a courtly bow. She was reputed to be his
mistress.
"First,
we can assume a conspiracy, or at least the beginnings of one. Atomic research
isn't a one-man operation. But even so, I must oppose the proposed plan. I can
give at least three reasons."
"Name them,"
Kingman snapped irritably.
"An
all-out investigation would alert the conspirators, assuming such a conspiracy
exists. It could in that case drive them underground—I believe that's the
historical phrase for going into hiding. Secondly, we can't have an all-out
investigation without alarming the public." She half-turned and smiled at
Ivan Shevach. "After all, that is one of the Manager's prime concerns,
isn't it?"
Kingman demanded.
"What else?"
"If
there is a conspiracy, we don't know who—or how many—are involved. Perhaps
persons high up . . ."
Kingman
sprang up. "I can't see the argument, but I can give an excellent reason
for an immediate fullscale investigation regardless of public reaction."
Yargo said softly,
"Give it."
"Espersl" He snapped the word.
"This has all the earmarks of an esper conspiracy—one that we've got to
crush before we wake up and find the damned peepers ruling the world."
Wong gave an audible gasp. Yargo smiled
faintly. The esper problem was Kingman's pet whipping post. Since the Sawbo
Fang affair, he'd used it on innumerable occasions in attempts to ram through
pet legislation. The quiet voice of Taussig with its soft inflection broke in.
"There
are only a few thousand espers in the world. With exception of a few hidden
cases, all are on public record. While they have, shall we say, full privileges
of citizenship, the possibility of danger is recognized. They are watched
carefully." He hesitated, then continued.
"I
don't believe it's any state secret that esper activities are closely
monitored, even to the extent of tapping their homes and businesses. Then, too,
we have the . . . searchers.' He seemed to hesitate over the last word.
"The Manager can testify to that," he concluded.
"That
is correct." Shevach rose languidly. "However, that in itself means
nothing."
"Explain," Taussig demanded.
"Certainly. What do we really know about
the espers?" "Plenty."
"We
know they possess the power of telepathy, the ability to read minds, but we
are prone to forget they are mutants . . ."
"What has that got to do with it?"
Taussig challenged.
"The
psychmasters point out that the ability to read minds is just one facet—the
beginning phase—of their eventual evolution. How about Sawbo Fang? How do we
know where the rest of the espers stand on the evolutionary ladder? What of
clairvoyance . . . psychokinesis?" He rapped the questions out in rapid
sequence. "I say they're dangerous."
"Poppycock,"
Taussig snorted indignantly. Mass peoples and cultures were his business. He
faced the Manager and spoke tolerantly.
"Telepadiy is a confirmed fact, yes, but
the Sawbo Fang affair was mass hysteria, born of ignorance. Sawbo Fang was a
Burmese boy of eight. A rumor started that he had wild talents . . . could lift
stones by mental powers, stir trees, even keep his body suspended in air. We
have to remember his background. The boy lived in a small mountain village
whose people were ridden with superstition and beliefs in black magic . .
."
"And died," Kingman interrupted.
"But
not because of Sawbo Fang," Taussig said pointedly. "An earthquake
leveled the village. He was blamed, killed by a mob, but that didn't make him a
psychokinetic."
"Then why die searchers?" Kingman
cut in.
"You know the answer as well as I
do," Taussig replied. "The affair created a public clamor that
started witch hunts. Thirty legal espers were stoned, burned, shot. The world
was in an uproar demanding action, so we acted. We created secret agents . . .
searchers ... to comb the world for
hypothetical pk's. That satisfied the public. Personally, I'd like to remind
my fellow Council members that the witches of pre-atomic Salem weren't really
witches, but they were burned." He smiled bemusedly and sat down.
Kingman
said angrily, "Reputable psychmasters have testified that Sawbo Fang was
a psychokinetic . . ."
"We're
getting off the track," Yargo broke in. "We're here to discuss a
possible atomic conspiracy—not espers."
"I say it's the same
thing," Kingman half-shouted.
"Rubbish,"
Taussig said, "there's never been a clairvoyant
or pk outside of TV and science fiction."
The
Prime Thinker broke the strained silence that followed. "I believe the
arguments in favor of an all-out investigation have merit. However, I have
decided against such action on the grounds offered by Council member Mallon. I
believe a covert investigation would serve
better."
"I
take it you intend to direct the investigation yourself?" Kingman
challenged.
"That is
correct."
"But irregular."
"Irregular?"
"Investigation
is a police function." Yargo waited.
"The
police function under the administration of the Manager," Kingman
continued belligerently.
"Yes,
for the purpose of administration, but the Prime Thinker may, at his
discretion, assume full direction of the police agency—for any reason
whatever."
Kingman
half-turned and looked inquiringly at the lawyer. Lincoln's dark face was
forcedly thoughtful.
"Prime
Thinker Yargo is correct. The Archon ruled in favor of Joseph Zwolinski, the
sixty-third Prime Thinker, when he took direction of the agents during the
worker rebellion in the submerged city of Molokai in the early part of the last
century."
"One other
point," Kingman persisted.
"Name it," Yargo snapped.
"It
seems unwise for the Prime Thinker to embark on an investigation which he may
not be able to finish." Yargo contemplated him coldly—he knew very well
what the engineer meant. Elections were less than three weeks away and, this
time, he faced formidable opposition in Ivan She-vach who, at IQ 217, was
considered his leading contender. They would face each other at the polls in a
battle of intelligence.
"In
event of a change in office, I would naturally acquaint my successor with all
the facts in the case. I can't see any problem there." He looked slowly at
each person in turn; only Kingman was openly hostile. Shevach, in the
background, smirked.
"Any other questions?"
Silence—broken only by the faint sound of Wong shuffling his feet under the
table. "Council is adjourned."
The
Council of Six rose as a body. Ben Yargo gripped the edge of the table with
strong, stubby hands and pushed himself back with a quick glance around, then
left as he had entered—with easy steps, looking straight ahead.
CHAPTER TWO
Max Ktitjll langorously moved his arms in a slow breast
stroke, feeling the pressure of the cool water against his flesh with almost
sensuous pleasure. Above him the rays of the tropic sun struck the lagoon in
dawn-slanted blows, giving the water a delicate shade of green. It darkened,
becoming a deeper forest color in the shadowy depths where grotesque
sculptured coral heads jutted from the ocean floor like calcerous ghosts. A
school of small fish, with oddly bulging eyes and narrow orange fins high on
their saucershaped bodies, swam past his faceplate and disappeared in a canyon
of twisted rock.
He
zoomed deeper, swimming between ledges of white coral and fronds that swayed
with the passage of his body until he reached a small amphitheater formed of
rock and fronds. He entered it and let his body drift, studying the familiar
forms of bottom life, now just feet below his faceplate: small red crabs
poised on shell-studded rocks, the black beads of their eyes unmoving; large
spider crabs that scuttled past with an odd sideways motion; hordes of shell
creatures of all shapes and colors. It was a world he loved —had loved since
his assignment to Waimea-Roa three years before.
He knew every foot of Abiang Lagoon, named
for the chain's principal atoll, just as he knew every sandy cove of the
twenty-two mile-long L-shaped string of atolls which formed the Waimea-Roa
group. They lay on the breast of the South Pacific like a carelessly-flung
string of pearls, except that their pearl-luster sands were dotted with waving
cocoa-nut palms and the lesser foliage of fern, pandanus, mulberry and
breadfruit. He knew its beaches and villages and people, knew them and loved
them and devoutly hoped he would never be transferred. Not that it was likely
with his IQ rating.
He rolled on his back and lay for a long
while watching the silvery bubbles of expired air shoot toward the paler
surface waters. Finally he pulled his waterwatch close to his face and sighed.
Seven a.m.—time for work. He twisted around and swam leisurely, breaking
surface close to the shore, pausing to admire the beauty of the sun-drenched
lagoon. Tall wind-bent cocoanut palms shaded beaches which gleamed like ropes
of coral sand. On the opposite side, by the low-lying barrier reef, the ragged
yellow sails of Paha Jon's outrigger lay idle.
He contemplated the scene with quiet
satisfaction. Waimea-Roa was a peaceful oasis in a turbulent yet strangely stagnant
world, where the future seemed but a mirror-reflection of the past. The
centuries had passed it by. Elsewhere men were mining and farming the
sea-bottoms, building domed cities on the ocean floors—living in crowded mainland
communities, packed so close together that, for the workers, all semblance of
privacy had long-since vanished. Elsewhere people were rigidly separated
according to caste— LIQ's and MIQ's and HIQ's, the low, middle and high IQs; a
man's standing was determined by his IQ rating. But not here. Waimea-Roa was
the backwash of the world.
He
raised his eyes. Several miles beyond the reef Black Chimney Rock jutted high
above the sea. The morning light gave it a brilliant sheen, more like a
man-made artifact than anything created by random nature. It was, he knew, the
hard core of a small volcanic mountain whose softer shell had eroded away. A
black dot moved reefward from the rock, splitting the combers like a playful
dolphin until, finally, it vanished beneath the waves. August Cominger riding
his torp, returning from one of his frequent explorations of the sea-bottom,
he thought.
Cominger
was a hermit who had appeared in the atolls years before, building a small
house on the bluffs of Te-Tai, a miniature atoll adjoining Abiang. He had
sought neither friends nor acquaintances and, in time, had become almost a
legend. Krull felt a tinge of envy. Torps were costly. The hermit owned the
only one in the atolls.
He
remembered the time, sighed and swam the remaining few strokes to the beach,
removed his gear and started along a well-worn path leading inland through the
dense foliage. The greenery abruptly thinned and he came to Abiang's central
village, a scattering of native huts and plastic houses along the atoll's
single road, which ended in a central square.
Krull's
house—a standard green plastic portable model, as befitted his station as an
agent of police—stood at one end of the square immediately adjacent to a
cubical concrete and plasto-glass building whose entrance bore the legend Headquarters, Agency of Police, Territory of
Waimea-Roa. A
smaller sign under it read Martin Jonquil, Inspector-Agent in Charge.
He entered his small bachelor quarters,
stripped and ducked under a shower. His strong slim body was burned to the
mahogany color of a native, a far call from the comparative
whiteness of his skin when he had lived alone the wind-swept shores of Cook
Strait, in his native New Zealand. He grinned ruefully. There was no question
why he'd drawn the atolls. He had stood at the foot of his class, IQ 113 on
SPIM, the Standard Police Intelligence Measure. His classmates had drawn
Greater London, New Berlin, Tokio Two, Nome, Sydney, the massive California,
all the large centers of population—and intrigue; and he had been sent to
Waimea-Roa. He was glad.
He dried himself and slipped into a pair of thigh-length tan trousers and matching short-sleeved shirt, put
on a sun helmet and sandals. Finally—it was a regulation requirement —he donned
a shoulder holster containing his snubbed service revolver and flinging the
black cape of office around his shoulder walked next door to the station.
"Morning, Derek."
A small wizened halfbreed of indeterminate
age and a perpetually-cheery smile returned the
greeting. "The old man's waiting for you."
"Thanks." He flung Derek a mock salute and crossed the small room, knocking lightly on the
Inspector's door.
"Come in."
He entered, idly wondering what was in his
superior's mind. "Good morning, Martin."
"Morning, Max." Jonquil briefly
glanced up from a paper he was studying. "Sit down—be with you in a
second."
"Thanks."
Krull slid into a bartered chair and idly studied his superior,
a middle-aged stocky man with slivers of silver coursing through his black
hair. His nose was prominent, beaked, his lips full and square chin cleft. His
fingers drummed restlessly on the desk while he read, a sign he was disturbed.
Krull's thoughts were pleasant. There had been a deep friendship between them
from the start. In a way, it was a father-son relationship, yet more comradely.
They swam the lagoon, dived, fished, drank together, and shared a mutual hobby, art. Krull rated himself as fair, excelling in figure
sketches; he rated the quiet Jonquil as tops. The Inspector's forte was
seascapes executed in sweeping strokes. Jonquil rated unusually high for an
agent: IQ 172. He could have been almost anything, Krull thought. But he had
chosen the police; ironically, he had been shanghaied to Waimea-Roa.
The
Inspector finished, pushed the paper aside and contemplated the younger man a
moment before speaking, his dark eyes grave and brooding. Krull grew uneasy.
"Max, you're going to leave the atolls ... for a while."
"Why?" Krull asked, startled.
"Orders." He indicated the paper on
his desk.
The
younger agent breathed deeply. "I suppose it had to come some day,"
he said simply, "but I won't like it. I'd always hoped to stay here."
"It's just a job—a special job. You'll
return when it's over."
"That's something. Where to?"
"Sydney."
"Sydney?"
"The House of the Prime Thinker."
^What!"
"You'll
report to him direct." His eyes met and held Krull's. "It's a
confidential job."
He sat back and stared at the Inspector.
"There must be some mistake."
"There's no mistake." Jonquil leaned
back and stared thoughtfully at the ceiling while he fished a cigaret from his pocket, lit it, and blew a cloud of smoke upward.
"I'm
not informed of the details," he said. "You know how orders
are—pieces of paper with times and dates and destinations. But I can surmise.
I suppose the Prime Thinker has some sort of investigation in which he can't
use local police. Perhaps the police are the subject of it. Perhaps it's a job that reouires an outsider, someone not committed to local politics.
Those are my surmises."
"But why me? I'm IQ 113. Why not a high-rated agent?"
"IQ 113's not bad."
"Don't sell me. I'm not sensitive on the
score." Krull grinned weakly. "Besides, it's a matter of public
record— and 113's not enough to solve a rape in a cage with two rabbits."
"I
don't know what the job is, but you can handle it," Jonquil replied
confidently. "The Prime Thinker wouldn't tab you without reviewing your
record."
"What
record—tossing a wife-beater in the cage for the night?"
"You can handle it," Jonquil asserted.
"Okay, so I can handle
it. When do I leave?"
"Tomorrow
morning, on the nine o'clock carrier. Reservations are made." Jonquil
smiled briefly. "Why not take the day off, rest up."
"Thanks."
Krull answered bleakly. He urgently needed to escape. "Think I'll go
swimming."
CHAPTER THREE
KnuLL managed
to. keep his composure as
he left the station. He nodded casually to Derek, remarking he wouldn't be
back for the day and returned to his house. He stood for a while with his hand
still on the doorknob, looking at a sketch of Paha Jon's grand-daughter, Rea.
She had large almond eyes above a straight nose, a heart-shaped mouth. Her
hair was long, straight, and wisps fell over one shoulder. She wore a
provacative smile—and little else. He knew the meaning of the smile. He sighed
and donned his trunks, then picked up his swim gear and headed for the lagoon.
The
cool green water felt good again, particularly after the session he'd just been
through. He swam beneath the surface until he reached a particular coral head
he knew— he and Rea sometimes played tag there—and allowed his body to relax
and drift.
He thought and felt the tension come, and
fear. Years ago he had learned to live with the fear; then, in the quiet backwaters
of Waimea-Roa, it had vanished, replaced with peace and security. Now it was on
him again.
Esper.
He was an esper. Worse, a hidden esper. If they caught him now he'd have to
undergo surgery, have the mind power removed. Not that he would mind that—he
very seldom used it—but it would cost him his job, place him under a social
stigma, make him an outcast. Paha Jon's granddaughter—no woman—would have him.
Not an esperl
He
looked across the years, resurrecting fragments of memory, his first knowledge
of what an esper was—what it meant. He had been playing games with his mother.
What games? He forgot now; but suddenly she had looked strangely at him. He
could see her eyes (they were brown) grow strange, then fearful. He remembered
his parents' whispers far into the night. There were more games, new games.
Guessing games.
His mother had appeared unnaturally
constrained; her smile was a mask of sorrow. What am 1 thinking of, Max? A big ship.
You're thinking of a big ship, Mama. Now what?
Mr.
Krinker's toy store. He's standing in the doorway. Now who?
He
didn't know. The pictures, never sharp, had faded away again as they so often
did; but his mother persisted. He remembered his parents' looks, the tears in
his mother's eyes. Finally they told him, explaining what a mutant tele-path
was in the simple kind words parents use when they try to explain things to
children. Esper—he was different.
There had been countless
admonitions.
Don't tell anyone.
Don't play guessing games.
She
reminded him before school, questioned him every evening. Cautioned him.
Don't put down what the teacher is thinking on tests. Don't . . . don't... don't.
Little Max didn't. He had understood the
meaning of some of the tests from the teacher's thoughts. So he grew, silent,
alone, shunning his playmates until his mother warned him it was dangerous. Don't he different.
He
decided early in life he couldn't shield his talent forever. If he erected a
mind shield—a simple thing for an esper, he later learned—the shield was the
give-away. If he didn't, the risk was equally great. Sooner or later he would
encounter a legal esper; and legal espers shunned their hidden cousins. In the
end he hid another thing—his IQ. At an early age he figured that the smart kids
would be placed with smart kids—greater danger. But if he were just a dumb kid .
. .
In
time he scarcely realized he was any different from his playmates. Most of his
school tests were ridiculously easy, but he seldom managed more than a passing
mark. It was fun, in a way, the careful calculations to determine the range of
scores he should make—the balancing to keep in the safe level of low-normals.
He
made one more decision while still a boy: he would be a police agent. Police
agents were mainly low MIQ's; a few —like those at the top—were superior. But
he wouldn't be at the top, or anywhere near it; and the safest place to escape
detection would be among the agents. He applied for admission to the World
Police Academy.
Well,
he was an agent now. But he was stepping into Ben Yargo's house, working under
the eyes of the most brilliant mind on the planet. How long could he escape detection?
How long?
CHAPTER FOUR
Edward Cfozener, founder of the Empire of Earth, made
Sydney, Australia, the planet Capital in 1999 A.D. (The old name Australia refers to the largest land mass in the world
state of Anzaca, which includes the former New Zealand and adjacent South
Pacific islands). The city was the logical choice.
Like other Anzaca metropoli, it escaped the
severest blows of the Atomic War due to downpole winds which held back
radiation-polluted air. In the dark decades following the war (1970-2000 A.D.),
it became the largest citadel of civilization—a beacon in a shattered world.
Crozener decreed the Capital should never be
moved. He wrote: It
shall remain as a symbol of human triumph over the madness of the atom.
Crozener's
Second Law of Mankind—The
world shall be governed by intellect—shaped planet government. Under his plan a Prime Thinker, who competed
for office in publicly administered machine-scored intelligence tests, headed
the planet. A Council of Six, elected in similar manner, with each member
representing one of the planet's six major political subdivisions served as the
advisory arm.
Under
Crozerian principles, the peoples of the world gradually fell into three
classes determined solely by genetics— the low, middle and high IQ's (commonly
called the LIQ's, MIQ's and HIQ's). Crozener's famous "60-35-5
proclamation" existed for generations: sixty percent manual laborers
(LIQ's), thirty-five percent high clerical and semiprofessional workers
(MIQ's), and five percent representing the higher sciences, arts,
administration and upper-govemment levels (HIQ's).
His edicts remained supreme
for centuries.
Blak Roko's Post-Atomic Earthman.
The great bluffs of the Sydney Heads—sheer
sandstone cliffs towering over the sea—wheeled toward Max Krull below the
seaplane carrier. Sydney Basin, enclosed on three sides by flat highlands, spun
into view; the city was below. Wharves, jetties, beaches, factories, the neat
geometric patterns of colored houses reaching to the far horizon whirled by;
the harbor was alive with the ballooning spinnakers of sailing yachts. A long
train of ore ships, their decks awash, threaded in through the narrow channel
from the sea, towed by a powerful subtug. Their cargo, Krull knew, would be
manganese, cobalt, iron and nickel ores from the sea-bottom mines off Melville
Deeps, a submerged city off the coast of Brisbane.
The
ore train was headed toward the southern side of the port, a part of the city
which housed both larger industrial plants and homes of the LIQ's, mainly
laborers of less than 100 IQ. It was a sprawling, dirty, crowded dark area,
quite unlike the clean tree-shaded northern part of the city where the intellectual
elite lived. The vastness of the city awed him. Fifteen million people. He
smiled. There had been less than four thousand in Waimea-Roa.
The
stewardess' voice broke into his thoughts. "Fasten your seat belts,
please."
The
plane banked, dropped toward the harbor, straightened and raced over a thin
channel of water lined with docks; the pontoons touched down with a slight jolt
and tiiey taxied toward a float based at the bottom of a wide gangplank leading
to street level. Krull loosened his safety strap and waited until the cabin was
empty before picking up his bag and leaving. He stood for a moment among the
milling people, trying to orient himself by the City's skyline. He would be
met by an agent named Cranston. ("Don't seek him out, let him find you.")
His hotel quarters had been reserved. He would be escorted to the House of the
Prime Thinker. He wouldn't wear police garb. He would be provided with
essential papers.
"Mr.
Krull." A hand tapped his elbow and it wasn't a question—it was a
statement. He turned, staring at a short, rotund man wearing a wide smile that
amply exhibited his dentures. His eyes were sky-blue, jovial, and although he
wore a weave hat Krull guessed that he was bald—it was that kind of face and
figure.
"I'm
Cranston." Krull gripped the almost dainty hand—it felt moist—and he
winced. "Come along, I'll show you to your quarters."
Krull
followed him up the gangplank. Cranston drove through a crowded thoroughfare,
past pastel-tinted stores jammed by early afternoon shoppers. Krull had almost
forgotten the LIQ section with its dirty narrow streets, jammed shops and
noise. Most of the people wore the somber grays or browns of workers, the men
in sandals, shorts and open shirts and the women in simple tunics. Here and
there he caught the flash of scarlets, emerald greens and lavenders, clothes
which marked their wearers as middle or high IQ's. Not that dress was a matter
of law, but few LIQ's could afford the luxury of color. Occasional huge
photographs plastered on buildings reminded him that election was only two
weeks away. He studied them curiously. Yargo . . . Shevach . . . Harshberg . .
. Sherif: the faces of the candidates for Prime Thinker stared out over the
crowd in black-and-white, color, and a few were animated for sound.
Sherif's
face intrigued him. It was a peasant face, hard, square and dark, but even in
the photographs the eyes seemed alive. He remembered hearing he was
anti-Crozener, a man who wanted to rebuild society and erase all class
differences. He had been stoned, berated, but refused to budge from his
principles. Krull found himself liking the man's looks.
A
huge cube suspended over one intersection displayed Yargo's face on each facet.
The lips moved and a voice intoned, Good government for all the people . . . Good government for all the
people ...
A
monorail slid by, momentarily drowning the voice. Noisy street hawkers peddled
their wares from plastic handcarts, competing with small dark shops that clung
to the edges of the street like rows of kennels, each distinguishable only by
its signs and displays of wares on outside racks. They came to another talkie
photo of Yargo.
Supposing
he loses Krull
thought. The possibility momentarily startled him. What then?
They came to an area where the stores were
spacious, well-lighted, almost stately in appearance. The streets were broad,
lined with graceful eucalyptus trees and free of the numerous public TV screens
found in the LIQ quarters: The crowds had vanished, the noisy hawkers gone,
replaced by a scattering of unhurried shoppers. The men wore pastel-colored shorts,
open shirts and sheer capes that seemed to serve no purpose other than to
testify to the affluence of the wearers. The women wore sheer clinging tunics
(yellows and pinks were in vogue) designed to reveal more than conceal, and
elaborate lacquered hair-styles—knots, buns and conical designs sprinkled with
gems. All wore colored sandals. Sleek white bubble-topped Capricoms and
luxurious Regals lined the curbs while uniformed chauffeurs passed the time
watching dashboard TV's. Most of the buildings were topped with copter landings
and a number of the small craft were darting between the building-formed
canyons. Even the air seemed cleaner.
Cranston
kept up a steady line of chatter, pointing out the highlights as if Krull were
a complete stranger to the world capital. The wide thoroughfare narrowed, the
trees vanished and they entered a busy area that seemed a curious mixture of
LIQ and MIQ, with businesses of all varieties. Cranston turned abruptly down a
ramp leading to a subterranean garage.
"The
Edward Crozener Hotel, not fancy but comfortable." He turned the car over
to an attendant and led Krull to a lift. The room assigned him proved light and
airy, with a view overlooking St. George Avenue. It contained besides the few
pieces of furniture a small private bath, the inevitable wall TV and a movie
box with portable screen.
"Any
kind of pix you want. Just ask the desk." Cranston inspected the room.
"Take it easy for the afternoon. I'll pick you up at nine
tonight—sharp." He tossed the keys to Krull, gave a toothy smile and
departed.
That's that, Krull thought, everything
according to schedule, including a night visit with the ruler of the world.
After
a while he turned on the TV. The screen glowed to life—a man who looked like a
cross between a mortician and an educator was making a pitch for distinctive
clothing.
"Zarkman's
clothes of distinction are the mark of high IQ. Look about you. When you see a
man dressed in Zarkman's super togs, chances are he's IQ 150 or above.
Remember, Zarkman's clothes come in all pastel shades—darker if desired—and
are tailored to fit all occasions. Zarkman's clothes mean high IQ . . .
Zarkman's clothes mean high IQ . . • Zarkman's clothes mean ..."
He
reached over disgustedly and snapped off the set, looking ruefully at his own
dress. He didn't think they gave the impression of IQ 150.
The knock came at the door at precisely 9:00
a.m., followed by the single spoken word: "Cranston." Krull opened
it and the fat man beamed at him. "Ready?"
He
nodded, closed the door behind him and followed Cranston to the car. They drove
slowly through traffic, then faster as they reached the outskirts of the city
where the crowded noisy streets gave way to wide tree-lined avenues lined with
large well-lighted homes set amid spacious lawns. He turned into a shady lane
that spiraled upward toward a massive house, its lights agleam against the starry night. He stopped at
a sentry box, nodded genially without producing credentials and drove up the
hill, parking under a portico. Nodding familiarly to the guard, he led Krull
directly into the house. Krull had no time to look around; the agent headed
directly toward a staircase.
I'm
here. The thought startled
him. Somehow he was there without being prepared for it. Did Yargo keep a
peeper agent? He suppressed a touch of panic, trying to stifle his thoughts. No mind shields . . . No mind shields. Don't
think the word esper.
Think
of the lagoon, he told himself. Think of the formless swirling waters, fish
schools, fronds and coral. No, that wasn't natural. An esper would recognize
such thoughts in a place like this as a deliberate evasion.
Don't
think of espers.
Cranston started up the stairs with Krull at
his heels. He felt sweaty, nervous, anxious, all at the same time. No mind shields.
Think
of Rea Jon—that day on the beach—how you tried to capture her provocative smile
in a sketch. They were halfway up when a woman appeared above them and started
down the stairs. Krull had the impression of youth, vitality, a well-formed
body.
No
mind shield. Think of Rea Jon.
Cranston
nodded familiarly to her, then she was past. Krull heard the tattoo of her
sandals suddenly cease, had the feeling she had stopped, turned—was watching
himl
No
mind shields.
The
thought popped unbidden into his mind and he desperately tried to concentrate
on Rea Jon as Cranston led him through a door.
CHAPTER FIVE
A squahe man with dark—was there some silver?—hair rose
from a desk at the far side of the room and the agent halted.
"The
Prime Thinker . . . Agent Krull." Cranston wheeled and left, leaving Krull
to stare at the solid figure advancing toward him. For an instant he was
speechless.
Yargo
extended a hand and smiled. Krull grasped it feeling bewildered. He looked so
natural, so friendly—not at all like the stem visage so often seen on the TV's;
not like the world's number one brain. What was it? IQ 219. Yargo indicated a
seat across from his desk saying something about being happy he had consented
to the assignment.
Consented?
Krull answered automatically, "It's an honor, Sir."
His
eyes dropped to the desk and he saw a thick volume with the name Alexander embossed in gold across the cover. Yargo
caught his look and smoothly swept the book to one side without appearing to do
so, then went through the formalities, went through them nicely, Krull
thought. He asked a few questions about the atolls, hoped Krull would enjoy his
present assignment—stated he had chosen him on the basis of his record. All
very smooth. The name "Alexander" popped into his mind while Yargo talked.
Alexander—who was Alexander? Alexander the Great was an obscure figure in preatomic
history; it must be some other Alexander.
Yargo
offered him a cigaret, which he accepted, extending a light in return. The
older man leaned back and took a few puffs.
No
mind shields.
The
thought popped into his mind and he tried to banish it by concentrating on the
figure opposite him.
Don't
think it. . . Don't think it: No mind shield.
There, he had thought it and Yargo hadn't batted an eye. Concentrate, don't think that
word. Esper—the word formed in his brain and he
concentrated harder on the features of the man sitting opposite him.
Yargo's
expression altered, became serious and Krull tried to follow his words, feeling
all at once easier. The Prime Thinker was saying he had chosen him because he
needed an agent with no local ties—Jonquil's wordsl—either with the police or
other Government officials. Krull felt his tensions melt.
The
Prime Thinker paused, then added, "Before I describe your present
assignment I would like to caution you on the need for absolute secrecy."
"I understand."
Yargo
hesitated then said slowly, "It's an investigation into the possibility of
illegal atomic research."
Krull
started imperceptibly, but Yargo didn't appear to notice. He related the
evidence, and Krull made a mental note of the name, William Bixby Butterfield,
the radiation victim, thinking it might provide a starting point.
"There
are a few points you might consider," Yargo pointed out. "The police
intelligence appears to know nothing of the situation. Assuming that's true,
and assuming there is some sort of conspiracy involving atomic research, it
must be small. Also, for obvious reasons, it must be centered in a fairly
remote place. Finally, it must be restricted to the research phase because of
the obvious impossibility of building an actual reactor without the knowledge
leaking out." He studied the agent casually, but Krull had the distinct
impression he was being disected atom by atom.
"In other words, the Prime Thinker
doesn't believe the danger is . . . perhaps . . . critical?" he asked,
after an interval of silence.
"Any
atomic research is dangerous," Yargo replied. "If it exists, I don't
believe it has reached an advanced state. But that's why you're here—to nip it
in the bud, to quote a pre-atomic saying." He hesitated, and described the
reaction of each Council member to the proposed investigation. "That's so
you'll get a clear mental picture," he added.
Krull
nodded and Yargo continued. "One other thing. I realize it'll make your
task much more difficult but you'll have to mask your activities. We can't
afford to alarm either the conspirators—if they exist—or the public. No one
must know what you're looking for but myself, and of course the Manager and the
Council."
Krull
readily saw his point but remembering his supposed IQ managed to retain a blank
look.
"Dope—you'll
be investigating a supposed dope ring. You're working for me because the ring
may involve members of my Government. But don't give any explanations unless
you have to." There was a note of pity in his voice—the pity a genius
might feel for a moron, Krull thought. He allowed a look of comprehension to
cross his face.
"Dope,
of course. I'm glad you thought of it. A perfect cover." He hesitated, as
if momentarily confused. "What land of dope?"
"Heroin," Yargo snapped
impatiently.
"Yes,
heroin," Krull echoed slowly. The interview closed with Yargo's repeated
caution to maintain secrecy; he rose, pumped Krull's hand again and escorted
him to the top of the stairs. Cranston was waiting at the bottom. Krull started
down. No mind shield. He began hurrying, as if anxious to return to
the cover of night.
The door had scarcely closed behind Krull
before the girl he had passed on the stairs started toward the library with
rapid steps. She knocked at the door and opened it without waiting for an
answer. Yargo looked up inquiringly and his face softened; in the eight years
since his wife had died his daughter had become his whole world. Or almost.
"Father, who was that man who just
left?"
"Why?"
He looked curiously at her. Jan seldom bothered with his visitors and was even
less seldom disturbed; now she was visibly agitated.
"He's an esper."
"What?" Yargo rose from his chair,
incredulous.
"Yes,
he's an esper." Jan repeated calmly. "I saw it in his mind when I
passed him on the stairs."
He looked alarmed. "Do you think he . .
. ?"
"No," she cut in, "he wasn't
paying attention to me."
Yargo
gave an audible sigh of relief. Jan was a telepath. Fortunately, he had
discovered it when she was little more than a babe, had tutored her so well
that no one ever suspected. Now that her mother was dead, only he knew. Not
that it was a crime to be an esper. Still. ..
"Is it bad?"
"Yes,
it's bad," he said simply. "Tell me exactly what you saw—or should I
say read?"
"He
was scared—tried to keep thinking about mind shields." "What
else?"
"He was trying to mask his thoughts,
keep them innocuous—tried to resurrect strong memories in an effort to override
the word mind
shield."
"What thoughts?"
She
hesitated. "The information may be important," Yargo said sharply.
"A Polynesian girl on a beach—a naked
girl."
"Oh." Yargo masked a smile.
"At least our esper appears normal."
"Can I be of any help?"
"You
stay out of this," he observed quietly. "You can't take a
chance."
"I
wouldn't be," she replied. "I know how to use mind shields even if
your visitor doesn't."
"We'll see."
He watched her leave, engrossed in thought,
and thanked God she had learned to use mind shields.
Stirring,
he reached into a desk drawer for a dossier and began scanning it, information
he had already digested. But there might be a clue. His eyes flashed down the
sheet. Max Krull, IQ 113, graduate of the World Police Academy, Sydney Campus,
class of 2446 A.D., 5'10", 170 pounds, dark short-cropped hair, muscular,
small mole on left ear lobe. He dropped his eyes: unimaginative, steady, loyal,
dependable, unsophisticated; no highly placed friends or relatives; no
political affiliations; normal sex life, friendly, unobtrusive . . . only
talent appears to lie in art—a good hand at sketches; excellent memory for
detail. He read the last line: Capable of only limited mental work. The dossier was signed: Martin Jonquil,
Inspector-Agent of Police, Territory of Waimea-Roa.
He thoughtfully tucked it back into the
drawer. So, Max Krull, IQ 113, was an esper—a hidden esper. No doubt the IQ rating was as false as his talent was real.
He cursed softly. The future of mankind, perhaps, hung on the agent's
performance; what he did, whom he saw, what he said . . . what he found. He had needed a man whose every move was predictable.
And he had got Krull.
The fate of the world hung on an esper.
He
held his hand out and studied it curiously. Steady. Strange, it should be
shaking. He forced Krull from his mind and picked up the thick volume he had
been reading before the agent's arrival. Its archaic cover proclaimed it a
pre-atom-ic publication: Alexander. He
read it far into the night. Alexander the Great.
He had use for Alexander.
CHAPTER SIX
Ivan
Shevach, World Manager,
thoughtfully pursed his lips while scanning a photostatic copy of a dossier on
his desk. His face, pale under the indirect lighting, was puzzled, as if some
obvious fact were eluding him. He reached the end of the record and
backtracked, picking out isolated bits of information of particular interest.
Max Krull, Agent of Police, Territory of Waimea-Roa, had, it seemed, an IQ 113.
Then there was the end notation: Capable of only limited work. It didn't jibe with his idea of the kind of agent needed for such a job.
After a while he looked up. Jordan Gullfin, his chief of special agents, was
watching stolidly. The Manager contemplated the man's flat face and smashed
nose before murmuring, "Interesting—very interesting."
"That's what I thought." Gullfin's
voice was a husky hom in the small office.
Why did Yargo pick an IQ 113 agent? And why
one from Waimea-Roa? Why that particular man?"
"Maybe
he didn't want someone too bright. This guy sounds like a fishbrain."
"That's
the whole point." Shevach looked up sharply. "You're keeping him
under constant surveillance?"
"Not
around the clock. I didn't think it was that important."
"I do. From now on it's around the
clock—and let me do the thinking. I want to know every move he makes, everything
he learns, every contact—and the
reason for the contact." He smiled narrowly. "It could make the
difference whether or not you become Chief of World Agents."
"You'll
get it," Gullfin promised quickly. "He won't get a second of
privacy."
"Are his rooms bugged?"
"They will be."
"Cameras?"
"We'll even have them in the
bathroom." "You're keeping Yargo covered?"
"Every
move. We got Saxon, his confidential secretary, in the bin."
"You can trust him?"
Gullfin
grinned evilly. "With those pleasure palace photos we got of him, we sure
can. He'll come through, all right, and he's got Yargo's complete confidence .
. ."
"Excellent," Shevach cut in,
"I want to know every development, immediately, and that applies to all
of Yargo's contacts."
"You'll
get em." Gullfin rose to go. "Personally, I think this guy Yargo is
loose upstairs, at least according to Saxon."
Shevach became instantly
alert. "How so?"
"Hell,
he goes to sleep nights reading about some stiff that's been dead a century, at
least."
"Oh . . . ?" The
Manager looked curious. ''Who?"
"Alexander—some bird
named Alexander."
"Alexander the Great?"
"Yeah, that's the
guy."
Shevach
watched his lieutenant depart, then snapped on the intercom.
"Gelda,
get me all the books and tapes available on Alexander the Great—biographies,
histories, everything." He cut the connection and sat musing. After a
while he got up, walked across the room and opened an inlaid paneled door,
staring for a moment at the array of dials exposed. He moved a switch, punched
a button, and a counter began spinning. Behind the panel a selector moved across tables of random numbers and finally stopped: the
number 11234 appeared in a glass window. He moved his hand to another circular
dial and spun the number of the indicator reading. Something wh'rred inside the
machine and a small booklet popped into a slot at the base of the console.
He
picked it up and eyed it curiously: CLOIM, the Crail-Levy-Osman Intelligence
Measure. He returned to his desk, read the instructions on the first page, slid
out the answer sheet, glanced at his desk clock and went to work. He finished
with three minutes left to go, sighed with satisfaction, then returned to the
machine and inserted the answer sheet in another slot. A mechanism hummed to
life as electronic scanners scored the paper. Within seconds a red light
blinked above another window and the number 216 appeared. IQ 216 on a randomly selected subject wasn't too bad, he thought.
Habit was stronger than comfort. Max Krull
awoke at dawn despite the fact the city still slept, elated with realization
he was on his own. It was his second full day in Sydney. He had spent the first
getting acquainted with the city again and, incidentally, learning the names of
leading Government officials he might have occasion to contact. Yeah, he was on
his own. He had a job to do—clear cut— and no one to tell him how to do it.
He
relived the interview over morning coffee. There were things he liked—and
didn't like. But he definitely liked the feel of freedom. Cranston's last act
(who was Cranston, by the way?) had been to deliver his official credentials,
together with a short speech. He couldn't forget the speech. Summed up it gave
him full freedom of action—to go where he wished, see whom he wanted, request
assistance and a lot more. The credentials witnessed the fact the roly-poly
Cranston hadn't exaggerated. They gave him the full stamp of authority; they
also bore the Prime Thinker's official seal and counter-signature.
Against
this was the fact he knew virtually nothing of the task confronting him. A man
had died of radiation; an atomic conspiracy might exist—somewhere in the world.
That could mean Antarctica, Tibet, the upper Amazon, Sydney, or one of the
floating or subsea cities. It could be anywhere.
Why
had Yargo picked an IQ 113 Agent?
He was at the door of the Bureau of Public
Records at 8:00 a.m. sharp, much to the annoyance of an LIQ
clerk, a gaunt middle-aged woman with a tired face.
"Good
morning," he said cheerfully. "I'd like to see the autopsy report on
the death of William Bixby Butterfield." He gave the place and date of
death and watched her disappear between two ceiling-high rows of ledgers. He
noticed a picture of Shevach tacked to one wall underscored by the words: I promise Government reform.
The
reminder of the coming election made him grimace. He wasn't certain he wanted
to be in Sydney when the event occurred, or in any large city for that matter.
The election of the Prime Thinker was a world holiday for all except skeletal
maintenance, police and public utility crews. It was a day when all laws except those governing felonies were suspended, when
revelry and debauchery reigned. It was the one day of every five years when all
class distinction was cast aside. He wasn't at all certain he was prepared for
it, especially after the quiet of the atolls. He saw the clerk returning with
a puzzled look.
"Mind repeating that
name?"
"Butterfield-William
Bixby Butterfield."
"That's what I thought you said." Her
face wrinkled in thought followed by startled comprehension. "Just a moment."
She briskly turned away and headed for an office at the far end of the room.
She emerged from the office followed by a man.
Her
boss? He took a second look and decided against the conjecture. The fellow
accompanying the clerk was tall, thin; a lantern-shaped face with a beaked nose
and livid slash across one cheek giving it the impression of a perpetual sneer.
An LIQ or MIQ who lived for the semblance of authority he enjoyed over his
fellow men, Krull thought. An agent.
They
reached the counter and the clerk stepped deferentially aside. Her companion
fixed Krull with gimlet eyes and rasped, "You the fellow asking about
Butterfield?"
"That's right."
"Why?"
"That's my business.
It's a public record."
"Maybe
it's my business, too." He reached up and moved his cape back, displaying
an agent's badge—and a small automatic in an underarm holster. He looked at
Krull as if expecting him to flinch.
"Okay, so you're an agent," Krull
said calmly. "Now just trot out the ledger like a nice fellow."
"Maybe you don't know it but you've got
some questions to answer."
Krull sighed and reached toward his pocket—Hardface's
body stiffened. His hand came back with his credentials and he shoved them
under the agent's eyes.
"Okay, there they are," he said.
"Now let's get the files, like a good public servant."
Hardface
glanced at the credentials, took a longer second look, then squinted at Krull.
"Don't mean a thing to me. I don't work for the gent."
"Okay,
give me your boss. Maybe he's heard of Ben Yargo."
"Maybe,"
the agent said, and added, "I work for Jordan Gullfin." He stared at
Krull as if the name should have brought awed recognition, and appeared
disappointed when it didn't. "He's the Manager's special agent," he
added.
"The Manager works for
my boss," Krull said drily.
"He
won't—after this month." Hardface spun on his heel and moved toward the
phone. So, that's it, Krull thought, the Manager's boys are already savoring
victory. Hardface
dialed, spoke briefly into the instrument, cupping the mouthpiece with his
hand. He finished and came back.
"Gullfin
says okay." He gave Krull a malignant look, nodded toward the clerk and
vanished back into the office.
The
file on William Butterfield was interesting. William Bixby Butterfield, age 52,
had checked into the New Empire Hotel at 7:00 p.m. on November 23—the last he
was seen alive. A curious maid found him dead in bed. Reason for the death:
Coronary occlusion. The doctor had had the sense to falsify the record and
contact Yargo immediately. But if the real reason for bis death was secret, why
Hardface? It was obvious the Manager didn't intend to keep the file secret. He
merely wanted to ascertain who might be curious about it—and why.
Krull
picked up the details: identification, physical description, IQ, occupation,
and all the facts that survive a man who departs the world via the coroner
route. Farther down: survived by George Henry Butterfield, IQ 138, public works
engineer. His address was listed as Number 27, Cell A-15, Benbow Deeps, a
submerged city lying below the shallow waters of the Pacific west of the Mala
Take Atolls. So, William Bixby Butterfield had a living brother. Yargo hadn't
mentioned that. He studied the notation carefully. It was made in a slightly different hand and there were faint differences in the
intensity of stroke and color of ink. He made a few pertinent notes, slid the
ledger back across the counter, smiled at the clerk's suspicious look and
departed.
His
next stop was the Bureau of Missing Persons. He didn't expect it to yield
much—it only included local disappearances—but it was a start. The Bureau
turned out to be under the charge of a beetle-browed agent with heavy jowls and
a cigar shoved deep into his mouth. As in the
case at the Bureau of Public Records, his request was passed from the clerk to
the heavy-faced man now staring at him. The latter eyed him suspiciously while
he gave his request: a look at the files of persons who had dropped from sight
during the fall of 2444. The agent looked incredulous.
"That
runs into the hundreds." He spoke with the tone of a man humoring a child.
"I know."
"What's your reason?"
"Do I have to have one to look at a public record?" "You do—in this case."
Krull
sighed and produced his credentials. The agent stared at them, then back at
Krull. "Your reason?" "An investigation," Krull snapped. "Oi what?" "That's my business."
The agent dropped his eyes
to the credentials again and a look
of fear suffused his face. Krull took a chance and did something he had seldom
done before: he peeped him.
Fear,
formless chaotic fear mingled with hate, a kaleidoscopic pattern of shifting
emotions without clear form or content; fear and hate and suspicion, welded
together and reaching out to engulf Krull. A name flashed into the mental
pattern, blinking on and off like a neon sign: Gullfin . . . Gullfin . . .
Gullfin. The thought-pattern jelled and the name was accompanied by the imagery
of a bullet-skulled man with mean black eyes, a smashed nose and a forehead that reminded him of pictures he had seen of
ancient cavemen.
His
mouth was heavy-lipped, sensuous, his skin swarthy, splotched and unhealthy. GuUfin!
The
name screamed in the brain of the agent sitting opposite him. Krull felt his
hands grow sweaty and recoiled involuntarily, quickly withdrawing from the
hateful mind. It was like suddenly returning to consciousness again—he became aware
of the agent staring oddly at him. Momentarily he felt scared, but he had
learned something: Gullfin had his slimy fingers in a lot of pies. Gullfin—or
his master, the Manager.
"All
right," the agent snarled. Suddenly he stopped. He was staring past Krull's
shoulder with a look of half fear, half respect. He started to say something
but couldn't seem to get the words out.
"Mr.
Krulir
He
turned at the well-modulated voice and looked at an extremely tall thin man
with a lean, almost skeletal face, framed by shaggy locks of gray hair. He
topped Krull by a good six or eight inches.
"I'm
Peter Merryweather." He struck out a large bony hand, smiling pleasantly.
Krull shook it automatically.
"Let's
step into a private office and have a chat." Merry-weather's face was
open, honest, clearly devoid of any guile. Almost too forthright! He nodded and
followed him into a room marked Albert Skoda, Captain-Inspector of Agents. A
short burly man rose at their entrance, his face immediately respectful.
"Mind if we use your office a moment,
Al?"
"Not
a bit, Mr. Merryweather." The agent's deferential tone told him his host
was a person of standing. As the agent slipped out the door, Merryweather
motioned to a chair and sat down behind the desk.
"You're
probably curious, Mr. Krull." His eyes twinkled. "Gullfin reported
your encounter with Agent Cathecart at the BuPub Records. I thought you'd
probably show up here so I came over."
Krull made a mental note of Hardface's name. He asked, "You are . . . ?"
"An
assistant to the Manager, sort of public relations function. At least that's
one of my jobs." His lips wrinkled pleasantly. "By Crozener's ghost,
work for the Government and they pile the jobs on until you really don't know
what you're doing. But I don't think I can complain."
Krull masked his surprise.
"I
know what you're thinking: What the hell am I doing in the act?"
"Something like
that," Krull admitted.
"When
Gullfin told me about your credentials, I figured Cathecart probably gave you a
rough time. Thought I'd better step in and smooth the path."
"Why?"
"Public
relations. If you've got a job
to do, I'm here to help, not hinder. Just let me know how I can be of
aid."
"Sounds good,"
Krull admitted. "How about . . . Gullfin?"
"To
hell with Gullfin." He continued amiably. "He's playing
politics—things Shevach's due to win the election and he's trying to butter
himself up for the post of Chief of World Agents." He caught the surprised
look on Krull's face and smiled.
"I serve the Manager, too," he said
slowly, "but I try to do a conscientious job. Shevach's not really a bad
sort when you get to know him. If he seems hard, it's because he's got a tough job. You can't penalize a man
for being ambitious."
"No—I suppose
not."
"Anyway, the doors are open. If you need
anything—or run into any obstacles—just give me a buzz. You can catch me at this number." He tore a sheet off the
desk pad, scribbled briefly on it and shoved it across the desk, then rose.
Krull pocketed the paper and scrambled to his feet, trying to assess
Merryweather's role. His ready admission that the Manager was his master was in
his favor, but the tall man was too genial, too ready to help.
"We'll
start in by clearing the way for you to get access to all the records—every
damn one." Merryweather promised.
"Follow me." He led the way to the
outer reception desk, gave brief orders to the beetle-browed agent in charge
and waved toward the files.
"They're
all yours. Webster here will be glad to help you." He shook hands with him
and left. Krull turned to face the scowling agent.
He
quickly found Webster had been right. People seemed to be disappearing by the
scores—for the most part, harassed, debt-ridden fathers who just gave up the
struggle; to a lesser extent, drunks, the unstable and ill. In the end he
wearily closed the file, thinking he would check again when he had more time.
Just now the lead on Butterfield seemed too hot to let hang.
Krull
got off the monorail from Tonga surface station and looked curiously around the
main station of Benbow Deep. He had never been to a submerged city before,
although he had seen them often enough on,TV.
He felt momentarily uneasy. For one thing, he could look up through the cell's
plastitex ceiling—the monorail station was located in cell T-12—into the ocean.
It was a darker shade than the clear bottom waters of Abiang Lagoon but, he
thought, the city was built on a sea bottom plateau at the hundred meter level.
The long reds and yellows of the spectrum had been filtered out, leaving only
the deepened blues. He searched the ceiling carefully until he caught movement.
It was true, then, you could see the marine life from the city streets. He had
heard that. He recalled that the first subsea city had been made of opaque
materials and mass claustrophobia had resulted. Since then transparent
materials had been used. Everyone was happier—so the psychmasters claimed—but
he wasn't so sure. The idea of three hundred feet of ocean pressing down on
him wasn't exactly reassuring.
He
studied his surroundings curiously. The cell had a long rectangular shape
beneath its cylindrical roof and narrowed abruptly at either end where it
joined adjacent cells. The narrow street running down the center of the cell
was lined with businesses on one side—extremely crowded by surface
standards—while the monorail station occupied the other.
In
case of disaster, each cell could be isolated by electrically-controlled doors
fitted in slots below street level where the cells adjoined. The entire system
was monitored at a central station where watchmen scanned the city's warning
devices around the clock. If he were asked to describe the general topography
of Benbow Deeps, he would liken it to a string of sausages, he decided. The
cell was illuminated by soft indirect lighting; the temperature was pleasantly
cool and the filtered air clean and fresh. Life under the seas had its benefits
as well as dangers. For one, there was perfect control of the environment.
Weather, to the dwellers of the deep, was an almost forgotten topic. A cab drew
up. "Transport, sir?"
"Yes,
thanks." The rear door slid open and he sank into a deep foam cushion,
noting the small vehicle was equipped with a panel which, if desired, could be
raised to afford complete privacy.
"Where to?"
He
gave Butterfield's address and settled back as the vehicle jerked into motion.
He watched the passing cells with interest. Each was dedicated to a specialized
activity—sea-farm products processing, commercial business, a mining cell where
great trains of carriers traveling on sea-bottom rails came through the locks
bearing manganese, cobalt and nickel ores from the depths beyond the city. They
passed through a clinical cell containing a hospital and small mental ward and,
adjacent to it, an educational cell which housed the city's schools at all
levels. Most of the buildings were of plastic materials in various pastel
shades; a few were ornamented in solid brick, coral block, or synthetic stone
or wood. His interest perked up when they reached the recreation cells. One
was devoted to swimming and aquatic sports, another to gymnastics and games. A
third, constructed of pink plastitex, was illuminated by indirect rose
lighting.
"Pleasure cell,"
the driver informed him. "Want to stop?"
"Maybe
later." Krull grinned. "Just now I'm a working man."
They entered the residential cells and he saw
the houses were much like any others except for the scale: miniaturization was
the rule. The cab abruptly slowed in front of a small plastic house that was distinguishable
from the others only by its number. He dropped a bill in the driver's hand, got
out without waiting for change, and headed for the door.
.
George Henry Butterfield was prim, slender, with a narrow face, pointed jaw and
thin lips. A fringe of gray hair circled a shiny pate and, together with face
lines, added up to about fifty years. He looked inquiringly at Krull, his body
braced against the partially open door. Krull stated his mission, clearly,
everything but his real reason. He finished and waited expectantly.
"You
came all the way from Sydney to ask about my brother?"
Krull nodded cheerfully. "It's not
far." "Why?"
"Because we need answers," Krull
stated calmly.
Butterfield hesitated. "What do you want
to know?"
"All
about him—his life, hobbies, friends, what he did, said, believed, and any
letters you might have."
"I
can't see the reason for all that," the face in the door said indignantly.
"My brother's dead. It seems ...
an unwarranted invasion of privacy." He started to close the door but
Krull's foot was in the way.
"I
assure you, it's not." He adopted a conciliatory
tone. "Let me explain, Mr. Butterfield. Your brother was well-known,
respected, then he vanished—inexplicably. Five years later he was found dead.
Don't you think it logical we try to establish the facts concerning his
whereabouts during the years he was lost to sight?"
"Who
are you?" Butterfield's face took on a look of resentment. Krull
displayed his credentials. The little man's mouth fell open and he managed to
say: "Won't you come in, Mr. Krull?" He stepped to one side and the
agent entered, trying to conceal a faint smile.
Butterfield
retreated and indicated a soft chair in one comer of the room, then sat facing
him.
"It must be quite important if the Prime
Thinker is concerned."
"Very
important," Krull said gravely. "Now Mr. Butter-field . .
."
Butterfield
talked, talked in a barely audible voice with Krull occasionally interrupting
with a question. He continually shifted his eyes and his fingers intertwined
nervously. He told of his brother's boyhood, school life, friends (he had
few)—his love of math, electronics, physics, his flights into fantasy and his
dreams, little odds and ends concerning his likes and dislikes. Despite his
nervousness and low-pitched voice he made his brother live again, until Krull
felt almost a personal relationship with the mysterious professor who had,
somehow, tampered with the atom—and died.
George
Henry Butterfield narrated his brother's life up to the moment he had accepted
the position on the faculty of the University of Palmerston North—and abruptly
stopped.
"What then?"
"Nothing."
"Nothing?"
"I
didn't hear from him again. He never wrote." "Not at all—ever?"
"After he disappeared, there were a few
mquiries from the police. That's all." Butterfield sucked his lip.
"But nothing from your brother?"
"Nothing."
He looked a trifle defiant. "The only thing I heard was . .
. about his death. They
informed me, just a few days ago."
Krull nodded sympathetically and asked more
questions. He drew blanks. As far as his brother was concerned, William Bixby
Butterfield had been born in Benbow Deeps, educated, had shunned girls, loved
the physical sciences, had taken a job in New Zealand—had vanished. Krull tried
a new line of questioning with the same result. No go.
"It's
no use," Butterfield finally said. "I guess I just can't help you,
Mr. Krull. I wouldn't keep any secrets— not from the Prime Thinker. I wouldn't
do that." He spoke the denial in a burst, twisting his fingers furiously.
Deciding there was nothing more to be gained Krull rose, thanked him, and
started toward the door; the engineer followed him.
As
he started to leave Butterfield blurted, "This must be awfully
important."
"It is."
"The Prime Thinker really sent
you?"
"That's
right, Mr. Butterfield, and I'm afraid he'll be terribly disappointed."
"Oh
. . ." The little man hesitated as if torn with indecision, then drew his
shoulders up sharply and looked at the agent with brave resolution. "Mr.
Krull, there is one other thing."
"Yes ...r
"William had a secret..."
"Go on," Krull
prompted.
"He ... he was a hidden esper."
CHAPTER SEVEN
Before
he'd taken a dozen steps
from Butterfield's door, Krull knew he'd had it. The little man's words had
given the investigation an ominous twist. Espersl
He
momentarily clutched at the hope that William Bixby Butterfield only
incidentally was an esper, that no real relationship existed between that fact
and his toying with the atom. But he knew better—knew it absolutely. He cursed
sofdy. He couldn't enter their lonely world without revealing his own talents.
He
took the tube to Tonga and made connections with the Sydney carrier, glad of
the few solitary hours the trip afforded. He had to think. He decided on one
thing: he'd be prepared. He'd read the esper tapes, the psychmaster studies,
learn their organizations—determine his own powers. Up till now he'd hidden his
talents, avoided using them. Okay, he'd test them, develop them, and the hell
with consequences.
He reached Sydney and
strolled toward the hotel with a pleased feeling. The decision to draw out his
talent—use it-was almost a physical release. He peeped several passing
pedestrians, catching odd fragments of thought; none were very clear and he
wondered if it were because they had been picked out of context.
He
entered the lobby of the hotel, absently peeping, and was startled by a thought
of such vivid clarity that he stopped abruptly, staring at a young woman
entering the lobby. She clutched the arm of a middle-aged man whose clothing
proclaimed him an MIQ. He peeped again, fascinated, then withdrew from her
mind and saw her clearly for the first time. She had a serene open face with
candid blue eyes, which could be termed either vacuous or innocent. She
appeared over-dressed in a pale blue semi-transparent tunic, matching sandals,
and elaborate freshly lacquered top-knot hairdo. He watched the couple stroll
toward the lift and grinned, deciding he had learned two things: one was about
innocent faces; the second was the reason es-pers were feared.
He
had scarcely entered his room when the phone rang —he debated answering it.
After a moment he lifted the receiver.
"Mr. Krull?" He didn't recognize
the voice.
"I have a message for
you . . ." The voice paused.
^Well. . . P"
"Are
you interested in knowing the whereabouts of William Bixby Butterfield before
he died?" Krull was startled. "Who is this?" "Just answer
the question." "I am," he snapped.
"Meet
me in front of the Edward Crozener statue in Cro-zener Park at twelve
midnight—tonight. And come alone." "Who is this?" Krull demanded.
"Remember,
come alone—if you want the information." The phone clicked in his ear. He
looked thoughtfully at the instrument, glanced at the clock, debating if he
should call Cranston. He decided against it.
Krull reached the park with an hour to spare
and strolled around its borders once to get his bearings. Crozener's statue was
located in a small plaza boxed in by shrubbery and overhanging trees. He walked
to the far end of the park and, certain he wasn't observed, stepped into the
shrubbery and backtracked toward the plaza keeping in the shadows of the tree.
He halted at the border of the clearing, spread the bushes carefully apart and
peered out. The square was empty.
He
looked around until he found a tree that afforded a good view and silentiy climbed
it, then glanced at his watch —11:15. Plenty of time. Almost immediately he
heard low voices. A couple strolled into view, talking and laughing in intimate
tones. He peeped them, got a few details and grinned. The next passerby was a
lone man who paused to light a pipe. His mind was pleasant, mellow. Krull grew
uncomfortable. A tree limb pressed sharply against his stomach and his
muscles ached.from the cramped position. He was trying to get more comfortable
when an elderly couple airing a dog passed by.
Midnight.
Starting
to shift his body again, he caught a glimpse of movement in the bushes beyond
the square. Illusion? It had been but a flash of black against black. No, there
it was again. Someone crouched, waiting, he thought. Smiling tightly, he
slipped his gun loose while trying to steady himself, then peeped the
shadows—no answering thought came. He tried again, comcentrating on the
blackness, and failing to get even the suggestion of imagery. Perhaps telepathy
required having the subject in close visual range.
The
shadow ceased moving and he decided the watcher had settled down to wait. After
a while a leg began to cramp and he cautiously moved it, aware the pain was
spreading up his thigh. Hours seemed to pass. He cursed softly and waited, silendy
moving to ease the muscle. At twelve-thirty the black shadow opposite him moved
again; a figure stepped to the edge of the square and looked in all directions.
Krull strained to see, simultaneously trying to peep him—no results. He was
shifting position again when the limb under him cracked. The shadow came to
life, leaped to one side and three slugs ripped up through the tree. Krull
cursed, fired twice, released his hold and dropped to the ground just as
another slug whammed past his ear. He fired twice more; his attacker half-spun
and dropped heavily. Shouts came "rom the distance. He ran to the side of
the fallen man and flipped the body over.
Cranston's dead face stared
up at him.
Releasing
his hold, he fled, keeping in the shadows until he was several blocks from the
park. Sirens screamed in the night and he smiled grimly, thinking Cranston's
troubles were over—the roly-poly man with the cheerful voice had smiled his
last smile. For him the conspiracy was ended; but, he thought, his own troubles
had just started. He entered the hotel through the garage and reached his room
unobserved, pausing to peep the interior before entering. Not that he expected
to read the mind of any chance intruder—he had failed to read the mind of the
shadow that had been Cranston—but he did suspect he could discern the presence
of another mind, even though it might come through as a patchwork of formless
imagery. He locked the door behind him, conscious that he was breathing hard.
Cranston's
attempt to kill him left him standing at the fork of a road. Either Yargo had
ordered his murder—or the conspiracy extended into the Prime Thinker's
household. Which? He weighed the possibilities, and he made his decision.
One a.m.
He picked up the phone and called the Prime
Thinker's secret number.
Yargo answered on the second ring. That was
suspicious— almost as if he had been waiting for the call. Confirmation from
Cranston? But Yargo probably worked three-fourths of the way around the clock.
No, it wasn't unreasonable for him to be at his desk. He thought about it while
making his request—an immediate audience.
"Is it that important?"
"It is," Krull said firmly.
"Where are you now?"
"My room—at the Edward Crozener."
"There'll
be a car to meet you at the garage in fifteen minutes." The phone clicked;
he replaced the receiver in the cradle thoughtfully. He didn't particularly
like the idea of being whisked away in the dead of night by Yargo's men, but
all depended upon whether he had guessed right about Cranston's loyalties. Then
there were three minutes left to go, he checked his gun and headed for the
garage. At exactly one-fifteen a white Capricorn rolled down the ramp and
stopped. He approached it from the rear, one hand gripping his gun, and
stopped, bewildered. The driver was a woman.
For
a moment he thought he had made a mistake and started to retreat when she
called after him. "Mr. Krull?"
He
hesitated, cautiously returned to the side of the car. She smiled. "If you'll
get in . .
For
an instant he struggled to remember where he had seen her before, but gave up
and went around to the opposite side and slipped in beside her. She pushed the
car into gear, reached the thoroughfare and turned in the direction of the House
of the Prime Thinker.
She
finally broke the awkward silence. "You seem surprised."
He
grinned sheepishly. "To be frank, I wasn't expecting a woman."
"I was pressed into service. I happened
to be with Dad when your call came." "Dad?"
"I'm Jan Yargo,"
she exclaimed.
"Oh,
I didn't know." He shifted in his seat until he could see her face in
profile. Her eyes were large—blue, he guessed—and her nose was a straight line
above a well-formed mouth. Her hair was piled high in the elaborate lacquered
hairdo currently the style among HIQ's; it dazzled with jewels. She was more
than pretty, he decided, and placed her age in the early to middle twenties.
The conversation died down.
After a while she turned into a lane leading
to the House of the Prime Thinker and a sentry waved her through. She parked
under a portico and said, "Please follow me."
She
led him upstairs to the library and knocked lightly before entering. Ben Yargo
was busy at his desk. He rose and came around to the center of the room,
extended his hand and smiled briefly. "Good evening, Krull. Or should I
say, good morning?"
"I'll be saying
goodnight," Jan said.
Krull
turned toward her. "Thank you very much, Miss Yargo."
"I'm
glad to have been of help." She smiled at him and withdrew; he turned back
to face the Prime Thinker.
"It
is late—I'm sorry," Krull said. He saw that Yargo was wearing an open
dressing gown thrown over a pair of tropic shorts, and sandals; his face was
drawn and tired, all but the eyes. They were bright, alive and disconcertingly
penetrating. He released Krull's hand and indicated a chair opposite his
desk.
Krull
sat down and waited until Yargo was settled before he spoke. "I wouldn't
have bothered you at this time if something important hadn't come up."
"I'm sure of
that." (A touch of irony?)
"Someone
tried to murder me tonight." He paused . . . waited. The eyes watching him
were unmoving.
"Well . . . p" Yargo uttered the
single word. Krull blinked. For an instant he wondered if he dared peep the
mind of the man opposite him and as quickly discarded the idea. Too dangerous.
Yargo was too sharp, too alert, would sense the act. Instead he said, "The
assassin was your man —Cranston."
Yargo didn't change expression. "What
happened?"
"I killed him," Krull said. v
"Good, I'm glad you came through.
Anything else?"
Krull
was momentarily shaken. Yargo's calm, in view of trie implication, seemed
unnatural. He hesitated, groping for words before he spoke.
"Yes, there is . .
." The room became so still he heard the ricking of a clock on the
opposite wall. "Either Cranston acted under your orders or he was a
traitor."
"I'd
already considered the implications from your point of view." Yargo leaned
forward and rested his arms on the desk, his eyes searching the agent's face.
He spoke quietly. "The conspiracy has reached high places."
He
leaned back and contemplated Krull for a long moment. His face was a mask and
when finally he spoke his voice was crisp. "As an agent of the State, I
expect you to proceed with the investigation. As far as I'm concerned, nothing
has changed. Agents—by the nature of their work—are expected to face intrigue
and death."
Krull
flushed, starting to protest when Yargo unexpectedly smiled. "So are
Prime Thinkers," he said.
"I
would like your permission to investigate Cranston's connections."
Yargo
shrugged. "If you're convinced it's related to the Butterfield case—yes. I
usually don't tell an agent how to do his job. To that extent, I won't dictate
your actions, so long as you don't deviate from the original intent of the
investigation—to determine whether or not there is an atomic conspiracy—and if
there is, the persons involved."
"I won't
deviate," Krull informed him.
"No, I'm sure you won't." Yargo got
up as if to terminate the meeting.
"One other thing ..."
Yargo looked expectant.
"William Bixby
Butterfield was an esper."
"Oh!" He sat down again.
CHAPTER EIGHT
The first mutant telepath (esper), a boy named George Gollar,
was discovered in Wellington in 2010 A.D., forty years after the Atomic War. It
was disclosed that his grandparents had been among the few survivors of
Greater London.
Gollar was declared a freak, a mutant spawned
by radiation-altered genes. Soon after, other mutant telepaths were detected.
They were few in number, at first. Freaks . . . mutants . . . telepaths.
Peepers I In time, the words took on an ominous note. Whispers grew, were
fanned into fears and, in the end, open hostility.
Public
demands led to the rigid "Esper Control Laws" of 2036, promulgated by
Paul Bertocci (IQ 207), the Eighth Prime Thinker. These required the screening
of school children for telepathic taints, the registration of all adult telepaths,
and their prohibition from holding any public office. Severe penalties were
imposed on "hidden espers," defined as "persons not registered
under the laws governing mutants and found to have telepathic traits."
Despite
public unease, the esper problem did not flare into public prominence until the
"Sawbo Fang affair."
The Searchers were
established soon after . . .
Blak Roko's Post-Atomic Earthman
An alarm bell rang in his
brain.
Krull
froze by the door of his room with the key half-inserted in the lock, feeling
his heart thump against his chest walls while he tried to discern the cause.
The warning in his brain had subsided, but he had the distinct feeling of
another presence, as if someone were standing next to him. He looked swiftly
along the halls. Empty.
He
deliberately finished turning the key, stepped aside and pushed the door ajar.
A shaft of light came from the room. He caught his breath. There was a moment
of stark silence followed by a feminine voice.
"Please come in, Mr.
Krull."
He
started involuntarily. The voice was low, pleasant. He tried to peep the room.
There was no returning thought; neither was there any hint of danger. To the
contrary . . .
He
threw caution to the winds and stepped quickly throught the door. A young woman
was sitting in the room's one soft chair by the lamp watching him with bemused
eyes. She was slim, dark, with unlacquered black hair and lashes, and a
slightly almond cast to her eyes that reminded him of Rea Jon except for a
strange wistfulness of expression. He took in her figure with a swift glance:
the soft lavender, semi-transparent dress she wore emphasized the lines of her
body. Her legs were long, slender and bare, and her simple sandals matched the
yellow sash at her waist. He pegged her for a MIQ by her colored dress and
simple hairdo.
"Do
I meet with your approval, Mr. KruH?" He reddened and finally found his
voice. "Who are you?" "Anna." The single word was uttered
with an almost musical quality. "Anna who?" "Just Anna."
"Well,
Miss Anna whoever-you-are, you're in the wrong room."
"No
. . . I'm not."
"What
do you want?" He said roughly. "To help you."
He
thought of the help Cranston had tried to give and smiled grimly. "No
thanks."
The
girl arose with a single graceful movement and took a few steps toward him. Her face was appealing, devoid of guile, but the
lithe lines of her body, visible through the dress, disconcerted him. He caught
the fragrance of a delicate perfume.
"Are
you afraid, Mr. Krull?"
His
lips pulled into a sardonic smile. "Frankly, yes." "Of
what?"
"Of
getting murdered."
"Do
I look like a murderer—or should I say murderess?"
"No—but
you might lead me to someone who is."
"Oh,
no." She appeared aghast at the thought. "I don't represent violence.
I'm only here to help you—or, rather, take you to someone who can help
you." Again he caught the fragrance of perfume and was stirred by the
softness of her voice.
"What
kind of help?"
"Information
. . . just information." "From whom?"
"Mr.
. . . Mr. Bowman." She seemed to hesitate before uttering the name.
"And
who is Bowman?"
"The
person who wants to help you."
He
couldn't suppress a grin. "That's a nice circular explanation. Bowman is
the guy who wants to help me and the guy who wants to help me is Bowman. You'll
have to do better than that . . . Anna."
"Don't
I look trustworthy, Mr. Krull?" There was reproach in her words, just the
right amount, he thought. He tried to peep her again while appearing to think.
If he had expected a clear thought pattern he was disappointed. He had the
momentary sensation of standing in a light and airy garden, cool with soft
breezes, fragrant with the scent of flowers. He half-expected to hear the trill
of birds but the garden was silent. The pleasant sensation subdy changed; the
beginning of imagery came, the jelling of color and form into a geometric
partem. A face emerged from the partem, that of an old, old man, pale and
drawn, with lively bright eyes set under thinning wisps of snow-white hair.
(Pictures instead of pure thought!) Focusing on the details, he caught the
pallor of the skin, the thin nets of blue veins traversing the temples, giving
the face an almost ethereal quality. There was no discordant line, no
harshness—only complete harmony and tranquillity as if the face mirrored a
saint's soul. He didn't know how long he held the vision before it began to
fade, vanishing into a formless pattern of color—the live brown eyes went last.
Next he was looking into a gray field, and became aware he was standing
stiff-legged, staring into the lovely face of the girl who called herself
Anna. It was expectant.
"Who
is Bowman?" he asked again, seeking time to think. He was scarcely aware
of the answer, gripped with the elation of the successful mind probe, the
second since peeping the girl in the lobby. (His power was growing!) Anna's
thoughts had been so clear and vivid he had gotten the most minute details of
the face in her mind; he had no doubt it was Bowman. He mentally conceded the
old man didn't look like a murderer. No, never. He stalled a moment longer.
"Exactly
why does Mr. Bowman want to see me?" She smiled faintly. "To give you
information." "You told me that before. What kind?" "About
atomic research, Mr. Krull."
The car zoomed west along the freeway leading
from South Sydney. It was a small, two-passenger Tropics-6 with a tan finish
and bubble-canopy to allow full vision in all directions. The girl drove
silently, swiftly, skirting the end of the harbor and heading toward North
Sydney, the major residential area of the city, where, he knew, large new
apartment developments constructed of plastics and lightweight block housed
the MIQ's, mainly middle class workers. The seat was narrow and Krull
occasionally felt the pressure of her thigh but she didn't appear to notice;
indeed, she seemed completely oblivious of his presence.
He
tried to piece the puzzle together. To the best of his knowledge only Yargo,
the members of the Council of Six, the Manager and, yes, the coroner knew the
real secret behind William Bixby Butterfield's death. Now, Mr. Bowman and the
girl beside him. That made, not counting himself, eleven people who knew that
William Butterfield had died tampering with the atom, for it seemed almost
certain Anna and the man called Bowman must know the whole story.
The
girl turned off the wide avenue onto a narrow road and began climbing toward
the crest of a hill. Off to one side the lights of the city fell away to the
bay, a dark expanse broken by the occasional running lights of ships and
smaller craft. The new Sydney Harbor Bridge was a lighted arc against the
night, connecting the north and south sides of the harbor. The red and green
running lights of cargo copters moved high above the span. He turned. The multicolored
lights and flashing neons of South Sydney had been swallowed in a light haze,
leaving only a bright hue in the sky. He made mental note of the street names.
The car abruptly slowed and swung into the driveway of one of the newer apartments. The girl turned off the engine and lights.
"We're here."
"Wherever that
is."
She
didn't answer. He followed her to the door of a ground-level unit. She opened
it—the interior was softly lit. He hesitated. She turned, her face only inches
from his, and smiled. "Still worried, Mr. Krull?"
"Puzzled."
She laughed lightly and entered the room. He grinned sheepishly and followed,
closing the door behind him, wondering what would happen if there were no Mr.
Bowman. He followed her over to the fireplace, and for the first time saw the
frail figure sitting in a deep chair next to the hearth. It was the man he had
seen in her mind.
"Mr. Bowman, this is
Mr. Krull," Anna said.
"Ah
. . . yes, I know." The old man smiled gendy and extended a bloodless
hand, cold to Krull's touch. "Anna, get a chair for our guest."
Krull
placed the chair so he could see both Bowman and the door.
"I'll
be in the next room," Anna said. She smiled and left. He watched her go,
then turned back; Mr. Bowman was smiling gently.
"Thank you for
coming."
He
debated. "I have some questions to ask," he said
final-"Certainly—feel free."
"You
appear to have certain knowledge that could get you into serious trouble."
He continued briskly, "I should wam you, I'm an Agent of Police."
"Yes,
Agent Max Krull, Territory of Waimea-Roa, graduate of the Sydney Branch of the
World Police Academy, class of 2446 A.D. with an IQ 113 rating. I know all
that, Mr. Krull, and the fact you're conducting the Prime Thinker's
investigation into circumstances surrounding William Bixby Butterfield's death
as result of radiation bums."
"You know too much, Mr. Bowman. You
could be considered dangerous."
"Nonsense,
how can a man of eighty-seven be dangerous?"
"The
knowledge you have is dangerous," Krull corrected. "No—I don't
believe so," Bowman said gently. "How do you know of Butterfield's
activities?" "That's not important."
"I consider it important," Krull
said stiffly. "Are you a member
of the conspiracy?" "Do I look like a conspirator?"
"Let's
start over," he said woodenly. "Why did you bring me here?"
"To
ask you not to try and unmask the conspiracy." "If there is one . . .
and if I find it," Krull said acidly. "There is one—and you'll find
it." "You sound certain," Krull said. "I am certain."
He
was momentarily nonplussed. The frail man opposite him spoke with absolute
conviction. More, he had the audacity to ask him to break his oath. He watched
the aged face. "Then you are a conspirator."
"No." It was a
gentle denial.
"But you speak in
their behalf."
"Yes."
"With
their consent?" "No."
"Then—why?"
"Because the objective of the conspiracy
is essential."
"What objective—the
destruction of the world?"
"No,
Mr. Krull, the conquest of the solar system, then the stars—the fulfillment of
human destiny."
"Fantastic . . ." He snapped the
word out and stopped, leaving the sentence unfinished. "They'll never get
the power for that."
"They
have the power," Bowman observed quietly. "Atomic power?"
"Yes, of course."
"That's
where Butterfield got burned." "It was unfortunate."
"You
speak as if the conspirators were all ready to hop off," Krull said
derisively.
'Yes,
soon," the old man replied imperturbably, "at least on the first
exploratory ventures."
"Fantastic,"
Krull reiterated.
"Fantastic?"
The ancient eyes contemplated him serenely. "Yes, perhaps in this age of
denial of reason, of mental and cultural stagnation. But it wasn't fantastic
once. Men were poised, on the verge . . ."
"And
almost destroyed the world," Krull interjected.
"Not in trying to get to the
stars," Bowman reminded. His eyes seemed to look into vast distances and
it was a moment before he resumed. "No, we have denied our heritage
through fear. The shadow of the Atomic War has never lifted. Now we live only
for today, afraid to plan or think of the morrow . . ."
"You
might explain that," Krull said ruffled. "I don't regard Edward
Crozener as stupid, yet you propose violation of his first law—the First Law of
Mankind."
"Edward
Crozener was a great man," Bowman agreed. "I have studied his life
intensively. But he was a man of a certain age, a certain social pattern,
dealing with circumstances of his day. I'm sure he didn't intend his law as a perpetual ban, but only as a stopgap
precaution until humanity learned to direct its destiny. No, with all due respects
to Crozener, I am acting on philosophical motives I am sure he would approve were he here today."
"What
philosophical motives?"
"Philosophical
and ecological," Bowman corrected. "Philosophical because man would
be destitute were his future limited to this . . . clod. It would be
tantamount to racial death, for man can only survive while he can progress.
Stop progress and you stop evolution—and all else dies. The spirit can't
survive in a stagnant state, Mr. Krull."
"I
don't see that."
"You've
never really thought about it," Bowman countered,
"but
the seeds of stagnation have already set in. Look about you: over half the
world are the drones we smugly call LIQ's. For them there is no tomorrow. But
even the MIQ's and HIQ's are stopped, for there is no progress. We drive
virtually the same cars, live in virtually the same houses and pursue the same
sort of life as the pre-bomb man. In short time, as race history is charted,
man would be at the end of his road. Ecologically, Earth is limited in the size
population it can support."
His
eyes fastened on Krull and he said softly: "If the saturation limit were
reached, either man would perish in a world
battle for individual survival or—worse—he would adapt to his environment, with
all the limitations it would impose. That would end his upward climb. He'd be
just a bigger ant culture."
"We
have the sea-bottoms, surface seas and lands yet untouched," Krull
remarked drily.
"People can worry when
the time comes."
"No, the time is now. We can't afford
more lost centuries. That is important, Mr. Krull. There must be a continuity
of knowledge."
|]It's illegal."
"Mr.
Krull, there are people who ... at
this moment . . . are preparing for the next step, the stars. The new frontiers
aré very close. I'm not a conspirator"—he
chuckled— "I'm much too old for that, but I do ask your aid in one
respect: don't try to unmask the conspirators."
"I couldn't consent to that."
"I know that."
"You know it?"
]Tes."
"Then
why bother to ask—why bring me here?" "Because that's my role, my
minor part in destiny, Mr. Krull. I am ...
a faint force ... in the causal
chain." "You believe that?" "I know it." "You
sound certain."
"I am." The ancient head nodded and
the eyes closed, as if he had suddenly fallen asleep. Krull studied the lined
features. He hadn't learned a thing. The old man knew . . . knew. He felt the
inclination to shake him to life, demand that he speak. All at once a weariness
came over him and he got to his feet.
The
girl called Anna drove him back to the hotel. It was late and she drove fast,
without speaking, but she didn't appear angry. He maintained silence until she
reached his destination, then got out and held the door a moment.
"Thanks, Anna."
He lingered over the name.
"Thank you, Mr.
Krull."
"Sorry I couldn't go
along with Bowman."
"He
didn't expect you to." Again he caught the suggestion of sorrow in her
face.
"So
he said." He stepped back almost reluctantly and watched the car thread,
into the traffic pattern. When its taillights merged with those of other cars
he hailed a cab.
"Anzaca Press,"
he snapped, getting in.
"Right-o."
The cab screeched around a comer, mingled with traffic a few blocks and pulled
to the curb in front of a squat, three-storied building topped by a gigantic
public news screen. Krull dropped a coin in the driver's hand and entered the
lobby. The directory said the news room was on the second floor.
He
reached it and looked around. It was late, close to midnight, but there was
still the stir of life amid endless empty desks. On one wall a huge screen
flashed news scenes from other parts of the world while beneath it a machine
cranked out radio pictures. The size of the room and number of typewriters and
tape recorders strewn around suggested the activity which must prevail during
the day.
He
spotted an elderly graying man sitting off to one side with a limp cigar
drooping from his lips. His feet were propped on a desk and he was reading a
copy of After
Dark. He didn't bother to
look up at Krull's approach.
Krall
glanced around, found several pieces of copy paper, and sat at an empty desk
and began sketching. Anna's face came to life under his pencil but, several
times, he caught himself confusing her features with Rea's. He finished, studied
the sketch critically, then slimmed the cheeks slightly and added a touch of
shadow to the eyes. Anna's face stared back at him.
Bowman's
face was easier to do. The details were vivid in his mind and he translated
them to paper easily and quickly. He thinned the eyebrows and added the
suggestion of veins to the temples. Satisfied, he approached the elderly man.
"Are
you one of the newsmen?" "You might say so." "Mind if I
trouble you a moment?" "You already have."
"I'm
a stranger in Sydney and there's a couple of people I'm trying to locate."
Krull tried a smile. "I've always heard a newspaperman knows everyone, so
I thought you might be able to help."
"Maybe." He
grunted noncommittally.
"Ever
see that face before?" Krull slid the sketch of Anna across the desk. The
tired eyes studied it a moment.
"No, but I can see
your interest. She looks pretty smooth."
"Right,"
Krull rejoined. "How about this fellow?" He dropped the sketch of
Bowman on the desk. The man's eyes flicked down, then fastened curiously on
him.
"You pick strange
friends."
"Oh . . ." Krull
felt elated. "You know him?"
"Who doesn't?"
"Who is he?" Krull asked
impatiendy.
"I
don't know what your interest is but your friend here" —he tapped Bowman's
face with a pencil stub—"is Herman Bok."
"Bok . . ." Krull stood frozen. The
world spun and for an instant the room was deathly still.
"Herman Bok," the voice was saying,
"President of the World Council of Espers."
CHAPTER NINE
Krull spent the day trying to piece together bits of information
about the world esper organization headed by the frail aged
man named Herman Bok, who paraded under the pseudonym of "Mr.
Bowman," and who seemed to know more about his job than he did himself.
Bok's entrance into the case scared him. Had the old man discovered he was an esper?
He
quickly found himself against a blank wall. Bok was a name, world-known; but he
was also a shadow, a man without substance. In desperation he turned to Peter
Merry-weather.
Shevach's
assistant had an office on the top floor of the PAB, the
Planet Administration Building. It was finished in decorative plastics and
adorned with exotic tropic plants and an inch-thick rug. Krull paused to admire
a painting on the wall—an original by Surrey depicting the launching of the
weather satellite Atea-Rangi—before taking a chair across from Merryweather's expansive desk.
"Like
it?" Merryweather inclined his head toward the painting.
"Beautiful,"
Krull said. "I've never seen a SurTey original before."
"They're not too plentiful," the
gaunt man modestly admitted. "Interested in art?" "I like to
sketch."
"I try." Merryweather sighed and
leaned back. "Always wanted to be an artist but I can't seem to get past
the beginner stage."
He chuckled. "But I don't think you came
to talk about that."
"No, I came to talk about. . . Herman
Bok." Merryweather's expression didn't change. "I take it you can't
find out much," he said drily.
"Practically nothing," Krull
admitted cheerfully.
"That's not surprising. Bok's pretty
much of a mystery despite the fact he's the world's number one esper. However,
as I said, I'm here to help."
He
flicked a switch and spoke into an intercom. "Chen, get me all the tapes
we have on Herman Bok." Cutting the connection, he looked shrewdly at
Krull.
"Must be some case
you're on," he observed quietly.
As it turned out, there wasn't much to go on.
The official name of Bok's organization was the World Council of Es-pers. It
seemed to be largely a social group tied together through the exchange of
tapes, films and letters. There was a world convention once every five years to
elect officers. He didn't think it amounted to much: Bok, alias Mr. Bowman,
was serving his eighth consecutive term as president. But he did leam one
thing: the king esper had a confidential secretary named Anna Malroon who
lived at the address where he'd met Bok the previous night. Bok's official residence
was called the House of Espers, a mansion sprawled atop a hill in the HIQ
section of northwest Sydney. It was the property of the esper organization but,
he thought, the old man seemed to have made it a monopoly. There was a lot
more, but nothing that really told him anything. As Merryweather remarked—Bok
was a shadow.
He left the hotel at dusk. The street lights
were blinking on, yellow in the light ground haze, and the air was heavy with
harbor scents. The raucous homs of tugs and the deeper voice of a freighter
spoke from the waterfront. He had scarcely left the hotel before he sensed
someone fall into step behind him.
His scalp prickled, a warning flashed in his
brain and he started to whirl when a harsh voice gritted, "Keep walking .
. . slow. Don't turn or I'll burn you."
The
voice wasn't joking. Krull kept his pace steady, feeling his tensions ebb.
This was the kind of action he understood. A man with a gun was real,
something that could be tackled—like Cranston. He tried to peep his shadow. No
good. He got the fleeting impression of savage brutality, hate, but no coherent
thought pattern. He drew near the end of the block just as a black car slid
alongside the curb and stopped. "Our cab?" he murmured.
"Get
in," his shadow spat. Krull turned toward the car and someone inside
obligingly opened the rear door. He tensed, then relaxed, thinking he didn't
have a chance. When he got in a gun jabbed his ribs.
"Sit back and relax .. . don't try anything funny."
"Sure,
relax," he grunted. The weapon jabbed his ribs again and he winced. His
captor climbed in alongside the driver and the car swung into a stream of
traffic. Krull studied him. The man had a bullet-shaped head, close-cropped
hair, ears pinned close to the skull. He turned and Krull gave a start.
Gullfin—the Manager's chief of special agents.
The
flat face with the smashed nose and pig eyes grinned. "So, Yargo's pet got
himself snared."
"Have
a good time while you can," Krull said complacently. "You'll play
hell trying to hold me."
"Think
so—killer!" Gullfin spat the word in his face. "Not even Yargo can
pull you out of this one."
"That
remains to be seen." Krull added, "Who am I supposed to have
murdered?"
"You'll remember when
I get the rubber hose working."
Krull
didn't reply. He had little doubt the Manager's chief of special agents was
right; Gullfin looked like a sadist. There was no further conversation until
the car turned down a ramp and stopped in an underground garage. Gullfin
e-merged first, made motions of patting his shoulder holster and rasped:
"Out."
A gun prodded Krull's ribs and he obeyed; his
companion in the back seat followed, a short heavy man with odd yellow eyes.
'Take killer boy to the reception room."
Gullfin leered at Krull. "Make him comfortable until I get there."
"Right." Yellow Eyes hefted his
weapon. "Straight ahead."
Krull
sighed and started in the direction indicated, thinking he wasn't going to
like the next few hours. He contemplated tackling Yellow Eyes but decided
against it when he heard the driver following a few steps behind. He was directed
down a flight of stairs to a passage ending at a steel-barred door. The driver
waited half a dozen paces behind while Yellow Eyes pushed past Krull and opened
it, then stepped aside.
"In," he said briefly.
"Looks
comfortable," Krull murmured. He paused on the threshold and turned.
"I suppose you know it's illegal to toss a man in the cage without booking
him."
"I know. Get in there and quit
stalling."
Krull
shrugged and entered the cell. It contained a single metal cot, a couple of
stools and little else. The door clanged shut behind him and footsteps receded
down the hall. He made a few peeps and drew blanks.
After
a while he heard the clatter of feet and the rumble of voices echoing in the
stairwell; Gullfin turned into the passageway followed by his companions. True
to his word, he carried a short flexible length of hose. He opened the door and
entered with Yellow Eyes at his heels while another man remained outside.
Gullfin slapped the hose against his thigh, nodding to Yellow Eyes.
"Stand up, killer." Krull rose from
his cot; Yellow Eyes slipped behind him and applied an armlock. "Don't
worry, we're not going to beat a confession out of you."
"We
want more than that and we got scientific ways of getting it, huh,
Kruper?" So, Yellow Eyes' name was Kru-per. Krull tucked it in his mental
file without removing his eyes from Gullfin's flat face.
"We're
real scientific." The agent's small eyes glittered and Krull peeped him.
The imagery came with a smashing shock —a picture of himself reefing.
"All
I want is to warm you up first." Gullfin raised his arm and chopped the
hose down in a short hard arc that ended against Krull's shoulder.
Sickening
pain shot through his body; he felt nauseated and the sweat began to come.
"Warm-up," Gullfin said. He shifted
slighdy and whipped half a dozen slashing blows back and forth across Krull's
arms and ended with a slashing chop against the cheek. Krull staggered and
would have fallen were it not for Kruper's hold. His head was spinning.
Gullfin stepped back. "How
did you like that?"
Krull raised his head and
cursed him.
Gullfin
responded with another series of lashes before stepping back, breathing
heavily. He nodded. Kruper released his hold and Krull fell to one knee
feeling sick. Gullfin laughed, spun around and left the cell with Kruper at
his heels. The steel door clanged and their footsteps echoed down the hall.
Krull
staggered to th&. cot. His body was stiff, sore, and his bones felt as if
they were on fire; the harsh lights burned his eyeballs. A short time later he
heard voices and struggled to a sitting position. Feet clomped on the stairs
and Gullfin turned into the passageway with Kruper and several more men. Krull
rose, startled. Merryweather! The tall cadaverous man was shambling behind
Gullfin wearing a genial smile, as if he were a host come to welcome him. They
reached the cell door before he saw Merryweather's companion; the sweat began
to come.
Shevach.
Ivan Shevach.
"Nothing
to worry about," Gullfin taunted. "I forgot the rubber hose." He
roared with laughter, slapping his thigh as if it were a huge joke.
Gullfin
opened the door and entered with Shevach and the shambling Merryweather
following while Kruper stationed himself outside. The Manager's eyes probed
Krull curiously. Merryweather smiled pleasandy. The smile told Krull all he
needed to know about Shevach's so-called public relations man. The Manager's
voice broke into his thoughts, a cold, precise voice that set Krull's already
ragged nerves on edge.
"You are agent Max Krull, IQ 113, Territory
of Waimea-Roa." It was a statement of fact and he didn't bother to answer.
"You arelQ 113?"
Krull felt the beginning of
panic.
"Silence
won't help," Shevach said in a low flat voice. "We have ways of
finding what we want to know—for instance, why you murdered Cranston."
Krull
watched him, trying to conceal a tremor. Gullfin was brutal but Shevach was
deadly, much the more dangerous of the two. He had to be on guard.
"We
know you murdered him," Shevach taunted, "but why? Who ordered it?
Yargo?" He rapped the questions out with gunfire rapidity, his eyes boring
into Krull's skull. He ceased speaking and the cell was absolutely still. Krull
looked at Merry-weather. The, smile was there, but his eyes were two drills,
two slivers of ice stabbing into his brain. The beginning of a thought nibbled
at Krull's mind, tantalizingly beyond his reach. It had something to do with
the gaunt man. Shevach broke the tableau by stepping back.
"Now
we'll get down to business," he said. "First about your supposed IQ .
. ."
Krull
never had a chance to discover what he was driving at. There was a commotion
in the hall, several loud voices and the Manager turned with a startled look;
Yargo pushed his way into the cell followed by a tall square man with silvery
hair and a hard face mellowed only slightly by jovial blue eyes. The Prime
Thinker glanced at Krull, Merryweather, and looked last at Shevach.
"You have booked agent
Krull?"
"Not yet." The manager compressed
his lips in a thin slit. "We will."
Yargo turned to his silvery-haired companion.
"Grimhorn, this is illegal. Agent Krull hasn't been booked." Krull
looked up with sudden interest. Joseph Grimhorn was another of those names very
seldom accompanied by a face. He was Chief of World Agents.
"You will bear witness
to the fact?"
"I
will," Grimhorn replied softly. Krull watched the blue eyes. They were
open, candid, with a tinge of laughter, yet hard. He swung his gaze to Gullfin.
Shevach's chief of special agents didn't look overly perturbed. Yargo contemplated
Shevach's pale features before speaking.
"On what charge did you intend to book
Agent Krull?"
"The murder of agent Oliver
Cranston."
"Murder?"
Yargo seemed astonished. "Since when is an act of self-defense construed as murder?"
"Self-defense?"
Shevach smiled thinly. "The court might hold a different view—will, I
think."
"There will be no court trial."
"You
are setting yourself up as the law? The public would be interested to leam
that."
Yargo
looked musingly at him and finally said, "The matter of Agent Krull's
guilt will be handled by the Prime Thinker. Release him."
"Not
without a trial," Shevach snapped. "I know
the law . . . even if the Prime Thinker doesn't."
"It
is within the province of my office to grant pardons," Yargo reminded. He
turned to the Chief of World Agents. "Grimhom, you will bear testimony to
the fact that the Prime Thinker has granted an unconditional pardon to Agent
Max Krull, Territory of Waimea-Roa, effective immediately."
"Certainly,"
Grimhom replied. He swung toward Gullfin. "Release him."
Gullfin's flat face was venomous but the
Manager had regained his composure. Disregarding Yargo, he turned to Grimhom,
compressed his lips and said softly, "I don't believe a man can be
pardoned prior to a finding of guilt by a legally
constituted court. I wouldn't be surprised if Krull were arrested and
tried—after the coming election. It also looks as if we might need a new Chief
of World Police."
"It's
possible," Grimhom conceded. His voice grew hard. "It's also possible
that the Chief of World Police might file charges against the Manager for
malfeasance in office. I might' remind the Manager that the law
prohibits a person found guilty of such a charge from
holding government office."
"Malfeasance?" Shevach arched his
eyebrows.
"Yes,
malfeasance," Grimhom said, "subjecting a prisoner to a third degree without booking him. Krull was denied due
process of law. That makes it malfeasance."
Shevach's
face was a study in anger and frustration. He sucked his underlip, started to
speak, then swung around and left the cell with Gullfin at his heels.
Yargo
looked at KruU's bloodied face. "Feel up to leaving?"
"Can't
be too soon for me." He grinned. "Personally, I was beginning to get jittery."
Grimhom
laughed and Yargo said, "I can understand that. Let's go." Krull
nodded and followed him from the cell with Grimhom following. They reached the
street and stopped.
"Thank
you for coming, Chief. You've been a big help," Yargo said.
"Glad
to have had the opportunity." Grimhom pursed his lips thoughtfully.
"Sort of a revelation. Maybe my department needs an overhaul."
"The sour lemons are probably few,"
Yargo encouraged. They bid him goodnight and Krull followed the Prime Thinker
to his private car.
Yargo
remained silent until the driver pulled away from the curb. "I came as
soon as I learned what had happened."
"How did you find out?"
"A
call over my private wire: the details of your arrest and Gullfin's rubber-hose
persuasion."
"Even
that? I'd like to thank your tipster, whoever he was."
"Oh,
he gave a name all right, but I think it was
false." "False?"
"Yes,
a Mr. Bowman—just Mr. Bowman. I've heard from
him before," he added wryly.
Krull
concealed his amazement. The president of the World Council of Espers seemed to
possess an ominiscience litde short of uncanny. And there was his penchant for
using a false name. He started to blurt Bowman's true
identity and stopped. Something told him to keep the information to himself—at
least until he learned more about the mysterious old man. Another thought
occurred.
"How did Gullfin tie me so definitely to Cranston?"
"Bowman
explained that, too," Yargo said grimly. KruU looked expectant. "It
was Saxon."
"Saxon—your personal aide."
"Saxon
teas my personal aide," Yargo corrected. He
didn't amplify the statement.
CHAPTER
TEN
Yargo's
visitor came
at midnight, a tall, cadaverously thin man, egg-bald, with luminous myopic eyes
tucked behind eld-fashioned thick-lensed glasses. The agent who met his car had
taken extreme precautions to assure his arrival—and departure—went unheralded.
Even the customary guard at the entrance had been removed.
The
agent led him directly to Yargo's study. The visitor followed, walking with a slight limp and appearing to be trailing his long, high-bridged nose as
if it were some kind of direction finder. Despite the severe architecture of
his features, he had the strangely whimsical expression of an adult watching
the cavorting of playing children. His name was Karl Werner and he was Chief
Psychmaster of the world. Yargo rose to meet him, smiling cordially, but waited
until the agent discreetly withdrew before speaking.
"Karl, it's good to
see you again."
"Good to see you, Ben." The voice
was a flat, precise razor. "You look in good
shape, but tired. You're working too hard."
"It's a salt mine," Yargo agreed.
"But come, sit down. Care for a drink?" "The old standby."
Yargo mixed two drinks at a wall cabinet and handed one to Werner. "Here's to your health,
Karl."
"And yours, Ben." They touched
glasses and drank, then Yargo sat on the edge of his desk facing the psychmaster.
He said solemnly, "I should apologize
for pulling you all the way from Africa, Karl. I hope I didn't disrupt anything
too important."
"You did."
"How important?"
"More important than
anything you have to say."
"I doubt it, but tell me," Yargo
said expectantly.
"Last month we got word of a seven-year
old boy in Tanganyika who passed the Breck-Munson Intelligence Measure with an
IQ 212 . .."
Yargo
whistled softly and looked thoughtful a moment before speaking. "Hidden
esper?"
"Right,
he was reading the testmaster's mind. But that part's not important."
Yargo became instantly alert.
"Another Sawbo Fang?"
Werner
nodded grimly. "I tested him, Ben. He made . . . pencils . . . move."
He dropped each word, watching the Prime Thinker's face.
"A
psychokinetic . . ." Yargo's face was a cross between excitement and
anxiety. "Does the boy realize his talent?"
"No,
he's too young. He didn't realize the nature of the tests. I made sure of
that."
"But he will know . . . soon?"
"Very
soon. He's just learning to handle the talent . . . can just manage to jiggle
small articles by intense concentration. But give him another few years . .
." He left the thought unspoken.
"What's the full
potential, Karl?"
"Frankly,
we don't know. But we don't think it's like dynamite."
"Explain that."
"The energy released by dynamite is in
ratio to the a-mount used. Psychokinesis seems more an
all-or-none power. If he could shake a pencil, he could shake a mountain."
"Or the Universe . . ."
"Perhaps," Werner said grimly.
"That's three counting Sawbo Fang,"
Yargo mused. He seemed to be looking into a great distance, scrutinizing times and places to come.
The
psychmaster spoke softly, "Yes, a pk, like Sawbo. The other, a girl of
eight, is a down-through
. . . can read the future.
And see around corners," he added.
"We're
coming to a new era, Karl. The new race is coming but the world isn't
prepared."
"No, it's not,"
the psychmaster soberly agreed.
"How about the
searchers?"
"They don't know,
won't know . . . can't know. We've got
to save them, Ben."
"How are you handling
it?"
"Playing
safe, we hope. We've isolated them . . . are going to control every facet of
their lives, hypnotically indoctrinate them to high moral standards and raise
them to become members of the Psychmasters Guild—hope to God they use their
talents for the betterment of the race."
"You're
wide open, Karl. The Guild, by its better nature, is always suspect. I happen
to know the searchers keep it under eye."
"We
know, but we have an ace in the hole. We've placed the children under the wing
of a man who isn't a member of the Guild. Isn't even a psychmaster, in fact. But he's got the power to shield them."
"Oh. Is he safe?"
"Absolutely." Werner studied the question
in Yargo's eyes. The Prime Thinker waited. "Hans Taussig," he added
sofdy. "I'll be damned."
"He's their shield against the world and
I know we can trust him," Werner said absolutely.
"Yes,
you can trust him," Yargo agreed. The sociologist was also a consummate
actor.
"We
can't take chances," Werner observed. Yargo nodded slowly. "But
that's not what worries me, Ben."
"It's the ones we don't detect. My God,
imagine what could happen if just one slipped through and used the power for
selfish ends."
"I know." Yargo smiled curiously.
"Sometimes you feel inclined to favor the searchers."
"Not
that," Wemer exclaimed harshly. "You can't deny we've got to live
with the fact. More, we've got to protect them, nourish them, feed them the
reins. They're the only hope of this damned stagnant mudball, the only hope
that humanity will rise above the present mediocrity and make itself known in
the Universe. If we let the searchers find them we're as guilty as the mob that
killed Sawbo Fang."
"I
didn't mean that, Karl. I fully realize the world needs new blood. That's why I
summoned you. Would you jump if I told you that what I have to say is even more
important than your newfound pk?"
The psychmaster tilted his head back and
peered down the long bridge of his thin nose. "I would," he finally
said.
Yargo
set his glass on the desk and began talking, carefully selecting his words as
if he didn't want Werner to miss a single detail. The psychmaster's face took
on an initial look of astonishment, gradually replaced by absolute absorption,
nor did his myopic eyes ever leave the Prime Thinker's face. Yargo finally
finished and leaned back. "That calls for another drink."
"Yes,
I believe it does, in view of the fact you're asking me to become an arch
criminal."
"You're already one," Yargo said
urbanely, "hiding the new race progeny from the searchers."
"Before I came here I would have
considered such a request unthinkable. Now . . . I'm not so sure."
Yargo
slowly exhaled, visibly relieved. He went to the cabinet, speaking while he
mixed drinks. "You've got to admit this is more important than your pk,
Karl."
"Yes,
but only because of its immediacy. My God, Ben, will the world pull through?
The future scares me."
"It
scares me, too, but I have faith in the future." He turned with a smile. "That's the good thing about the human race: it always has
an ace in the hole."
"It needs a royal
flush."
"I've put the cards down. What does it
look like?"
"A royal flush," Werner admitted.
"Right.
You can see the necessity of what I'm asking?" "Yes, Ben, I
can."
"Needless
to say, I've placed myself in your hands." He returned with the drinks and
placed one before the psych-master, and again perched on the edge of the desk.
"You're in a position to scuttle me, Karl. I've never trusted anyone that
far before."
"I
appreciate that. Of course, if I go
along with you, the shoe will be on the other foot."
"It's for humanity," Yargo said
solemnly.
"I know that."
"I've delayed because of ethical considerations,
Karl. Have I allowed enough time?"
"Just..."
After
they finished their drinks, Yargo went to a wall safe and returned with a heavy
volume, handing it to Werner. The myopic eyes glanced at the tide—Alexander—before he slipped it into his brief case.
"Alexander rides again," he
quipped.
"I hope so, Karl, I hope so."
Krull caught the morning carrier to
Waimea-Roa. He was stiff and sore and his jaw ached intolerably but his
physical discomfiture seemed minor compared with his other problems. He felt
like the proverbial sparrow caught in a badminton game.
He
was relieved when Waimea-Roa finally crawled over the horizon and pushed his
troubles aside, momentarily excited at the prospect of seeing the atolls
again. And Jonquil. Jonquil knew the ropes. The Inspector had not only been
around but he was IQ 172, with plenty of extra savvy thrown in. He had no doubt
but that Jonquil could tell him plenty about the power politics involved,
perhaps help him chart a course through the maze of intrigue in which he was
snared. He might even have time to see Paha Jon's granddaughter.
There were other things he would like to do,
too, such as loafing in the shade of Alba Hoyt's thatch-roofed garden and
drinking beer, exploring the barrier reef in search of octopus—or lolling in
the sun in Paha Jon's yellow-sailed outrigger while the old man spun tales of
his ancestors, the early Polynesians who had sailed their huge twin-hulled log
ships across the uncharted wastes of the Pacific to find and people Waimea-Roa
centuries before the Atom War. But, he thought glumbly, there would be no time.
Not this trip. He'd have to wind the job up first—if someone didn't wind him up
in the process. He grinned weakly.
The
atoll chain came up like a string of green-tinted pearls flung randomly on the
sea, the white arcs of its coves gleaming against the pale green water on one
side and the darker green interior foliage on the other. The barrier reef
joining the two ends of the atoll to create the triangular-shaped Abiang Lagoon
appeared like a thin rope awash in the sea. Abiang Village on the central atoll
came into view, its coral-pink and emerald-green plastic houses and shops
mterrnixed with thatched native huts, making a neat geometric pattern between ocean and lagoon. Chimney Rock was a
black splotch against the sea. The larger plastic-block headquarters of the
Agency of Police hove into view, then the plane banked, dropping, and the
waters of Abiang Lagoon rushed to meet it.
Krull
and another passenger, who looked like a commercial
salesman, were put ashore and the plane rose again, climbing into the tropic
sky in a northwesterly direction. He paused on the
landing to breathe the clean warm air; caught the musky fragrance of the
verdure beyond the clearing. He walked from the landing to Aala Road, the village's
only thoroughfare; his step quickened as he drew near his house. The friendly
nods and waves of the villagers—he knew almost all of them—gave him a warm
feeling and he wondered why anyone would ever want to live anywhere else.
He
stopped at his place long enough to glance around and deposit his bag.
Everything looked the same—the untidy bed, dirty breakfast dishes in the sink, a roughed-in sketch of Pahara Rua, one of the village elders. His eyes
rested a moment on the sweeps and planes and tilts of Rea Jon's body and face,
struck again by her similarity to Anna Mal-roon. There was one noticeable
difference. Rea John's face was saucy, provocative, while Anna Malroon's held a
note of deep sorrow. He weighed one against the other, decided he liked them
both, and went next door to the Agency pf Police. "Hi, Derek."
The
wizened desk clerk looked up, startled, and his face wreathed in a smile.
"Glad to see you, Krull." His eyes grew curious. "I though you
were transferred?"
"Vacation," Krull said cheerfully.
"Jonquil in?"
"Isn't
he always?" Derek answered. Krull laughed and knocked on the Inspector's
door. He went in at the answering grunt—Jonquil's face lit up with pleased
surprise.
"Krull, I'm glad to see you. How come
back so soon?"
"You
won't be so happy when I give you my load of troubles," Krull said
humorously, "but it's good to be home."
"Home is the hunter," Jonquil
quoted.
"A
nice kettle of fish you stuck me in." Krull grinned. "Now you're
going to have to bail me out."
"Rough,
eh? I thought it might be." He extended a pack of cigarets. Krull lit his
and inhaled deeply.
"Advice
is what I need—plenty of it. He looked intently at the Inspector. "Are you
acquainted with my assignment at all?"
"No—only that they needed a good
man." "Good, hell, they needed a goat."
"I've found that to be one of the prime
requirements for the force." Jonquil chuckled. "Don't be
bitter."
"Not
bitter—just puzzled," Krull confessed. "I've broken every other law
so I might as well break another and spill the works."
"Let's have it." The Inspector
leaned back and clasped his hands behind his head as Krull began talking. When
Krull finished, he remained silent, idly watching his ciguret smoke curl
upward. Finally he said, "You really do have problems."
"Enough to strain my
113 IQ," Krull wryly commented.
The
inspector was thoughtful. "I don't know how much help I can give
you," he said finally. "Frankly, I don't understand the implications
any better than you do.".
"It's
not the assignment that has me baffled, it's the people." Krull shrugged
helplessly. "I don't know enough about the background politics to make any
assessment."
"Perhaps
I can help there." He learned back and puffed on his cigaret. "You
probably don't know that I served with the Agency of Police in Sydney for
several years." His eyes met Krull's.
"I
still have friends there and, of course, have maintained a certain amount of
communication. I know a little about the backgrounds of some of the people you've
mentioned—a gread deal about several of them. I only mention this so you can
assess my opinions."
"A
run-down on personality profiles is just what I need," Krull affirmed.
"Right now I can't pick the villains from the heroes—except in the
Manager's setup," he added.
"Okay,
let's start there," Jonquil suggested. "I can tell you this much:
Ivan Shevach is arrogant, ambitious, ruthless—and brilliant, but his mind has
a twist. I think he's capable of anything to achieve his end which, of course,
is power. Now, with elections so close, he'll do anything he thinks will help
him—or hurt Yargo."
"That's about the way
I sized him up."
"He
uses people like Gullfin and discards them when their value is lost. His
tactics are both intellectual and physical, which makes him doubly dangerous.
He's a mean one, Max. Don't underestimate him, and try to steer clear of him.
That's the best information I can"give you."
"It's
not a question of steering clear of him, but of eluding him. His men are bird
dogs."
"That
could be a problem." Jonquil looked up interestedly. "Did anyone get
off the plane with you?"
"Some
guy that looked like a commercial traveler—a tall, lanky bird lugging a sample
case."
"It's my guess he'll board the plane
with you again."
"A shadow?"
"I would guess so. I don't think Shevach
would let you out of sight a minute after what's happened." "Okay,
I'll watch him."
"Gullfin's
probably a bigger danger because he's unpredictable," Jonquil offered.
"He's a sadist and a killer and, unlike Shevach, has no mental brakes to
control his emotions. Shevach's a logician. Because of that there's a certain
predictability about his actions. That doesn't hold with Gullfin. He's an
out-and-out killer with no thought of consequences." He paused.
"I
can't place Kruper or Cathecart, but they're probably latecomers, of Gullfin's
ilk."
"How about a gent
named Peter Merryweather?"
The
Inspector's head jerked up, startled. "Merryweather— is he in it? You
didn't mention him before."
Krull
nodded. "He didn't seem to be too important." He caught Jonquil's
intent look. "Or is he?"
"Tell
me about him," he brusquely ordered. Krull related their meeting and the
gaunt man's offers of aid. The Inspector smiled faintly when he gave
Merryweather's job as public relations for the Manager. Finally he asked,
"Max, you've heard of the searchers?"
Krull was jolted. "But
they hunt hidden espers."
"And
pk's and other dangerous mutants," Jonquil finished grimly.
"Merryweather—a searcher?"
"The Searchmaster," Jonquil corrected.
"He heads the thing. His agents are all over the world."
"Oh," Krull said in a small voice.
Jonquil's face was perplexed. "I can't
figure out what he's after."
"I'll watch him," Krull supplied
quickly. "How about Yar-
g°r
"You
can trust Yargo implicitly," he flatly stated. "He's a rock of
integrity."
"I would have guessed so," Krull
broke in, "only several things disturbed me."
"Such as ... T
"His
apparent disinterest in what I do, almost as if he weren't too concerned about
the case . . . aside from lip service."
"Typical
of him," Jonquil interjected. "That's the way he operates—confidence
in the men he selects."
"What did he know about me?" Krull
challenged.
"Don't
make any mistake," Jonquil advised. "He studied your record
exhaustively—enough so that he was completely satisfield you were the man he
needed."
Krull grinned wryly.
"At IQ 113?"
"Intelligence
is not the only attribute," Jonquil rebuked. "Perhaps, in this case,
he was more interested in loyalty, dependability and courage ... as well as mental attributes. Knowing
what I do of him I can tell you this: He made his evaluation and is willing to
back it by not tying your hands."
"There's
one other thing," Krull reminded. "Cranston. Cranston was Yargo's
man—and he tried to kill me."
"You
don't know that he was Yargo's man," the Inspector pointed out. "It's
more probable he cast his lot with Shevach."
"Why would Shevach
want to kill me?"
"Why
would Yargo?" Jonquil countered. He leaned back in his chair and gave him
a fatherly look. "Max, you've got one strike against you—one thing to
leam, which you couldn't be expected to know from atoll duty. A position of
power is always a center in intrigue—and the office of the Prime Thinker is the
biggest such center in the world. No one knows that better than Yargo, which is
probably the reason your revelation didn't shake him. He's dealing with dozens
of intrigues, Max, and the Cranston affair was just another twig on the blaze.
You can't hold him responsible on that account. My best advice would be—trust
him implicitly, but don't always try to understand him. That's just my opinion,
but that's the way I'd play it."
"Well,
I feel somewhat better," Krull confessed. "Frankly, that was my own
opinion, but it's nice to have it confirmed." He paused a moment.
"That takes us to Bok."
"Herman Bok, President of the World
Council of Espers."
Jonquil
spoke the words half-aloud, then his voice rose. "That's the man I can
tell you most about."
"Glad to hear it—he really has me
stumped."
"You
and lots of other people." His eyes narrowed slightly and when he spoke
his voice was grim. "Herman Bok is an old man with the face of a saint and
a voice to match. He leaves the impression of righteousness and dedication to
his fellow men—just a shade short of appearing sanctimoni-ous.
"The way he struck
me," Krull admitted.
"Don't
let it fool you. He's dangerous, cunning, with a lust for power that probably overshadows even
Shevach's."
Krull
lifted his head, surprised, and found himself echoing Bok's words: "How
can a man of eighty-seven be dangerous?"
"What's
age got to do with lust?" Jonquil rasped. "He's a master schemer,
plotter, but too wily to pin down." He looked inquiringly at Krull.
"Doesn't it strike you as strange that he's hung onto the presidency of
the espers for eight consecutive terms? That's power, boy—power that's secured
by harsh means."
"I did think of that," Krull
confessed. For a moment his eyes avoided the Inspector's. "Of course I
don't know much about the esper set-up, or about espers."
"The
espers are dangerous," Jonquil said point-blank. "They believe they
are some kind of super race, destined to rule the world. That's their prime
objective. It's not just persecution that has led the Government to keep sharp
strings on them. Give 'em half a chance and we'd be under their heel. That's
why the searchers."
"I never particularly considered them
dangerous, perhaps due to their small numbers," Krull said mildly.
"The
ruling class is seldom large," Jonquil pointed out. "History will
authenticate that fact. But there's never been a ruling class as potentially
dangerous as the espers. Think, Krull, of the power that resides in the ability
to read minds and, far more dangerous, mutants like Sawbo Fang." He smiled
half-apologetically. "Maybe I'm a crank
on the subject but that's the way I feel."
"Guess I'll have to
reappraise my thinking ..."
"Not
on my say," Jonquil interrupted quietly. "I'm just telling you my
viewpoint—but I could be wrong." The tone of his voice indicated he didn't
think he was.
Krull
hesitated as if loath to ask the next question, but finally did: "Do you
know anything about his secretary, Anna Malroon?"
"Not
a thing," Jonquil replied promptly. "She is, of course, a peeper, but I never heard her name until you mentioned it." He
grinned knowingly. "A man could use up a lot of secretaries in
eighty-seven years."
"Yeah,
I can see that," Krull said drily. They fell into a discussion of the pros and cons of Krull's position and what steps he
might take next. Jonquil was of the opinion he should stick to the elusive past
of William Butterfield in an effort to reconstruct the conspiracy and,
secondly, keep open the strong possibility that Herman Bok had a long finger in
the case.
When
they finally finished, the Inspector asked, "When will you be
returning?"
"Morning
carrier." Krull grinned. "I'm going to make the most of my
vacation."
"Do that." Jonquil glanced at his
watch. "Let's tie on the feed bag."
After
lunch Krull returned to his quarters debating how to pass the afternoon.
Merryweather was a disquieting figure in his mind. The searchmaster! There was
something sinister about him. Was he suspected? He tried to push Merryweather
from his mind by thinking of Rea Jon. She lived on Ati-Ronga, the northernmost
atoll—he decided to go swimming and see her later.
He stripped, donned a pair of trunks and
sandals, got his swim gear and sheath knife and headed for the lagoon. At the
beach he adjusted his oxygen equipment, donned his goggles and flippers and
tucked his knife in his belt, studying the scene a moment before entering the
water. There were several sails in the distance and the hulk of Paha Jon's
outrigger. Beyond, Chimney Rock protruded black and shining above the sea; the
base must be a fantastic jungle, he thought. If he had a torp like the hermit .
. . He regretfully dismissed the conjecture and entered the water, swimming
along the bottom in the direction of the reef.
He
paused to explore some coral heads and investigate a niche where a giant crab
had scuttled at his approach; he swam leisurely, feeling his tensions gradually
melt away. This was a peaceful secure world, with its waving sea fronds and familiar
bottom life. He paused occasionally, watching the bubbles from his exhalation
valve slide upward through the water like gleaming silver spheres. He came to a
coral garden filled with odd toadstool formations, arches, and bizarre limbs
reaching crookedly through the deeps, the ghost arms of a stone forest. It was
a favorite spot of his, an enchanted fairyland built from the calcerous
skeletons of untold eons of marine zoophytes. He knew its every turn and twist
and passage from countless hours of exploration. He dived deeper, made a loop
in the water and shot into a naiTOw tunnel,
stroking toward the pale circle of light at the opposite end. As he emerged, he
glimpsed movement out of the comer of his eye and automatically spun around and
withdrew into the shadows.
Swimmer—another
swimmer in the green depths of the lagoonl It wasn't one of the
natives—somehow, he knew that with certainty. He was startled momentarily; one
didn't expect to encounter anyone in such a spot. The thought flicked through
his mind that the unknown swimmer was seeking him—trailing him. He moved
forward to get a better look; the newcomer was swimming with a slow leisurely
breast stroke but moved with purpose, turning neither left nor right. Krull saw
he would pass just to one side of him. His curiosity was aroused and he moved
out from the shadows—the strange swimmer instantly altered his course and came
toward him. Krull saw the bubbles rising from his exhalation valve and caught
the impression of a long lean body, whiter than that of a native. Suddenly the
newcomer stopped, kicked himself into upright position and started to fumble
with something in his hands. Speargunl
Krull
froze, whirled, dived and began stroking furiously toward the protecting arms
of coral. He reached the tunnel and cast a backward glance—the other swimmer
had lowered the gun and was moving toward him with a powerful leg kick. Krull
swam through the tunnel, emerged on the other side and began treading his way
into the network of coral, twisting among the bizarre formations in an effort
to shake his pursuer or, at worst, keep him from getting a clean shot. Halfway
through the stone jungle he reached a clearing and looked back. The strange
swimmer was closer than ever. He struck out again, expecting to feel the fish
spear rip through his body. He reached the end of the stone jungle, hesitated,
and headed toward the roof with powerful strokes. Just this side of it was
another skeletal forest, where he could twist through to safety. He was almost
there when a danger signal flamed in his mind—he automatically veered to one
side and dived deeper. He felt the stir of the spear, heard it clump against
the coral just inches from his body, and noted it had no line attached—a sign
that his pursuer probably had a quiver of the missiles.
He
breathed easier as the shadows of the coral outcrops closed around him, and
twisted through the labyrinthine formations searching for a spot he knew, a
natural cavern with an opening just large enough to accommodate his body. He
rounded a familiar formation and saw it, a black hole crouched deep in the
pinkish-white rock. He cast one hurried backward look before darting into the
narrow opening into a world of stygian darkness. He paused, treading water, and
drew his knife, moving into a position where he was facing the opening. He
waited, aware that his heart was pounding furiously. If he were trapped inside
...
The
water beyond the entrance seemed peaceful and undisturbed. A school of small
fish swam past and disappeared and a large crab scuttled across the floor of
the lagoon, moving between waving sea fronds. Still he waited. An odd silvery
fish with bright red stripes and a hideous mouth paused to gape in front of him
and suddenly darted away. He tensed, bracing his legs against the back of the
shallow cave. An instant later his pursuer came into view, swimming cautiously,
holding the deadly speargun ready, peering ahead and to both sides as he kicked
his way along.
Krull
drew his body backward, tensed, and propelled himself violently outward just as
the other passed the mouth of the cave. He crossed the swimmer's back, reached
down and managed to circle his arm around his throat. A strong hand reached up
and caught Krull, pulling his head violently down in an effort to break the hold.
Krull brought his knife down in a short sweeping arc—once, twice, thrice. His
assailant's body contorted and went limp.
The
pale green waters took on a pinkish tint, and he could see the ugly red where
he had struck. He moved forward again, got hold of an arm and tore the goggles
and oxygen mask from the dead face. The sightless eyes of the supposed
commercial traveler stared blankly at him.
He
shivered. His victim was tall, well-muscled, with a broad flattened nose, high
cheek bones and heavy ridged brows over "sunken eyes. In life the face
might have been classified as tough, he thought. He shuddered again and pulled
the body through the narrow opening of the cavern, wedging it between two coral
outcrops. He pushed back and grimly surveyed his work.
Mr. Mystery Man had found his niche in
eternity.
Two
killings in almost as many days. He was beginning to see why Yargo had selected
a low IQ agent. He felt like the executioner on a whale farm—except these were
humans. Well, he'd better get used to it. He swam thoughtfully back to the
beach. His victim had come fully prepared for the death struggle, had known
that Krull wouldn't leave the atolls without at least one swim in the lagoon.
It meant that his moves were being assessed, predicted.
He removed his goggles and fins on the beach
and started a slow search of the sands. Just yards away
from where he had entered the water he found footprints and, in the nearby
shrubbery, a sample case. It contained sandals and some clothes. His fingers
extracted a wallet from one of the pockets and he flipped it open; there was
an I.D. card and a miniature gold shield pinned to the inside flap. He studied
the card curiously; it identified its owner as Winslow J. Earlywine (IQ 121).
Agent of Police, Sydney District. He wasn't surprised. He returned the contents
to the case, pushed it back into the bushes and started back toward the
village.
Cranston.
Earlywine.
Who next?
CHAPTER
ELEVEN
Although the Empire of Eardi was founded upon Crozer-ian
principles, dissidents appeared from time to time. Some early writers (e.g., Huxtel, 2210, and Brinkton, 2309) saw Crozener as harsh, unjust, a
dictator who imposed his philosophy of government upon the planet without the people's
consent. Huxtel portrayed civilization as "...
a monstrous vegetable, devoid of thought."
Chau,
in his Regression Into
Stagnation (2356),
followed Brinkton's earlier thesis that human progress had stopped, the world
was static and mankind was living "in an intellectual vacuum, much like a
hive of bees."
Kloppert's
Slumbering Race (2395) argued that humanity had cut itself
off from its natural destiny, the conquest of the stars. He referred to space
as "the waiting cosmic biosphere" and termed human efforts to develop
a far-flung empire of submerged cities as an "escape into a womb"
symbol. Wallfort, in his remarkable biography, Edward Crozener, The Saintly Benefactor (2396), argued against Klop-pert, stating
that only dangerous progress had been stopped (i.e., atomic research). Wallfort
noted that Leon Konstantine (IQ 213), the seventh Prime Thinker, had ruled that
satellites used as weather stations and communications relays did not violate
Crozerian principles, and that such space vehicles had been used for these
purposes since Konstantine's time. He saw this as proof that mankind had not
abandoned space. Far from being in a state of slumber, as claimed by Kloppert,
Wallfort contended that planetary civilization had achieved a serene equilibrium,
in which the very predictability of the future was its greatest assurance of
security.
In
2410 A.D., Kemal Nazir (IQ 198), the 82nd Prime Thinker, made opposition to
Crozerian principles a felony.
Blak
Roko's Post-Atomic Earthman.
Krull returned to Sydney with a sense of
urgency, a feeling he had to conclude the investigation to Yargo's satisfaction
and get back to Waimea-Roa before he was caught in a political explosion. The
election was only days away. If Ivan Shevach won . . . the prospect wasn't
pleasing. The revelation of Merryweather's true role shook him.
When
the carrier landed, he hurriedly disembarked, almost bumping into Hardface
Cathecart coming down the ramp. Krull recoiled and managed a grin.
"Nice to see you
again."
Cathecart
tried to conceal his surprise. He grunted and walked past him, stationing
himself on the float. When the last passenger emerged, he turned with a frown.
Krull grinned. He wanted to tell him that Earlywine must have missed the
plane, but refrained. He returned to his room to formulate a plan of action:
the esper seemed his best bet. He discarded the idea of working through Anna
Malroon; that-would forewarn Bok.
After
dark he took a cab to an address a few blocks from Bok's house. His destination
turned out to be an area of rolling tree-shaded hills occupied by spacious
mansions that clearly spelled HIQ. When the cab's lights receded, he started
toward Bok's address.
The^ House of Espers proved to be a spacious
two-story residence of pale green plastiglass and brick with a large pyrmont
stone fireplace climbing up one side. It was, he noted, more pretentious than
the mansion allotted Yargo. At the moment it seemed dark and lifeless except
for a yellow shaft of light from an upper window that made a long rectangle
across the ground. He paused a moment before going to the porch. The wind
stirred through the trees but the house was still. He reached the door,
hesitated, rang the chimes and waited. No answer. He tried again with the same
result. He tried the knob; it turned.
He
paused inside to get his bearings, aware that he was perspiring and his nerves
were on edge. Because he was going to face the esper? That was silly. Bok was a
doddering eighty-seven. There was a flight of stairs that led toward the place
he had seen the streamer of light. He reached the top of the stairs and spotted
a half-open door leading to the room he sought. He moved quietly, and stopped
with his eye against the opening. The opposite wall of the room was lined with
books and, lower, the top of a nearly bald head protruded above the top of an
easy chair. Beyond was the reflection of flames from an open hearth.
He was congratulating himself when an ancient
voice wheezed, "Come in, Mr. Krull. I've been expecting you." He
pushed the door open sheepishly and entered. "Come, sit by the fire."
Krull glanced around. Bok—for it was Bok—was alone. He tried to conceal his
discomfiture as he walked over to the hearth.
"Old
bones like fire," Bok said. "Sit down, Mr. Krull." He motioned
toward an easy chair.
"Thank
you, I will." He studied the old man while trying to pull his thoughts
together. If Bok felt the victory, his face didn't show it. It bore a look of
welcome, as if a dear friend had come to visit.
"I've
always liked an open hearth," Bok continued conversationally, "much
better than electrical heat." He chuckled. "A psychmaster would
probably say it's related to racial memories, when man had no other form of
heat. Or maybe it's because a hearth always seems conducive to dreaming."
He smiled gently. "Old men do fall into that habit, you know.
In
fact, their lives center around their dreams. But I suppose you wouldn't know
that—yet."
"We all dream,"
Krull retorted.
"Yes, I suppose so,
but with a difference."
"What's that?"
"Young
people dream of the future—old men of the past. Your dreams, I suppose, are
largely hopes. Ours . . . are regrets, mixed with pleasant memories—thoughts
of what might have been as well as what was." He looked gently at Krull.
"But I don't suppose you came here tonight to hear an old man
reminisce."
"No,
as a matter of fact, I didn't." He tried to introduce a note of harshness into his voice and failed. "You have information
I need, Mr. Bok. Need and intend to get."
"Ah, yes, Mr. Butterfield again,"
"And the rest of the
facts about the conspiracy."
"I'm not a
conspirator," Bok remonstrated gently.
"I
won't argue the point," Krull said coldly. "You've already admitted
extensive knowledge of the conspiracy. Now I want the rest of it."
Bok
smiled. "I'm afraid I can't
supply the information you want, Mr. Krull."
"Can't or won't?"
"I'm
only interested in guiding you into proper channels of thought. Have you ever
considered the satellites, Mr. Krull? Aren't they more to you than mere
weather-forecasters-TV relays?"
"I
don't know what you're driving at," Krull snapped. "I'm interested in
conspirators, not weather stations in space."
"Ah,
yes, just weather stations." Bok contemplated the flames. 'Yes, they go
around and around, unvarying, telling us about such things as monsoons and
sunny days. Very practical, Mr. Krull, but consider their history."
"I'm not
interested."
"The
conspirators are." Bok's pale eyes caught and held his. "The first
satellites were put up before the Atom War —Sputniks, Explorers, Vanguards and
dozens more. Mechta still circles the sun. Probes lie on the barren deserts of
Mars and beneath the mists of Venus. The heavens are not entirely alien to the
hand of man. The moon was circled and televised. In time men went up, Mr.
Krull, went up and rode the fringes of space in manned orbital vehicles. Do you
know why? It was the first step into space. All they needed was more
power—atomic power. They built the first interplanetary vehicle, were ready to
strike out when the Atom War dawned . . . and darkened the world." Bok's
voice dropped.
"Now
we use satellites to tell us about winds and rains and we've forgotten our
dreams. We send satellites into orbit to use as TV relays. Do you know why,
Mr. Krull? To transmit lurid pictures and sensational plays, to keep the
populace amused and"—he chuckled whimisically—"to transmit
commercials. That's what we do with our knowledge, Mr. Krull—prostitute it. But
the men you call conspirators remember. They know that man has a destiny far
beyond the borders of this speck of dust we seem to prize so highly. Now they
have the power . . ."
"To
wreck the world," Krull grimly cut in. "Do you want that to happen?
Do* you want to see Earth wiped out?"
"I
want to see mankind realize its destiny," the old man said.
"Unfortunately, I won't be here when that event occurs. But it will
occur. I can tell you that much."
"You
couldn't know so much without being a member of the conspiracy," Krull
accused.
"Wrong,"
Bok replied, "but my role is more than that of a sympathizer. They haven't
asked my aid, but I'm giving it . . . freely."
"They're
undoubtedly appreciative," Krull said drily. "Yes and no."
"Explain that."
"Only
a few of the conspirators are aware of my—shall we say—sympathy toward their
cause. None know I hold the key to their success."
Krull was startled. "Key?"
"Yes."
He felt the ancient eyes, the color of sunstruck ice, rest on his face.
"You see, the conspirators are working in the blind . . . lack the
knowledge of how to make the final step come true. They know, only, that some
miracle will happen to make the dream live. They are working on faith, Mr.
Krull." "And you . . . f
"Will
help the miracle come true." "How?"
"You
will see, but it's no honor to me. I'm merely a link in the causal chain, a
pawn that moves and acts according to destiny. Not that I have any alternative.
'Tis all a chequer-board
of nights and days where Destiny with men for pieces plays—but perhaps you've never heard of Omar, Mr.
Krull." He chuckled softly.
"Men
. . . men with dreams. That's all I can tell you. The rest you'll have to find
out for yourself."
"I
could force it from you."
"No—no,
you couldn't. My frail body couldn't take any force, and you couldn't get
information from a corpse. But you wouldn't use force." He smiled faindy.
"It even makes you wince to contemplate it."
He
felt trapped. No, he couldn't use force, not on such a harmless old man as Herman Bok.
Bok said thoughtfully, "My murderer will
be a much more brutal man, Mr. Krull."
"Your
murderer?"
"Yes,
I suppose you would call it murder. As I said, I'm frail. It would take but
slight force."
"No,
I don't think anyone would use force on you."
"You're
wrong—unfortunately."
"You
seem to know."
"I
know."
"You're
a fatalist."
"With
good cause."
"Or,
perhaps, I should say a pessimist." "No, not a pessimist,
Mr. Krull. To the contrary, I'm exceedingly optimistic about the future."
"Even if you're going to be murdered?" "My optimism is not for
me." Bok chuckled. "A man of
eighty-seven would have to be optimistic,
indeed, to see a good
future in terms of himself. No, I'm optimistic for mankind. I see a glorious
future."
"But
there's nothing you will tell me?"
"Nothing
beyond what I've already said. Except, when the time comes, you won't disappoint
me." "What do you mean by that?"
"You'll
see, you'll see." Bok smiled. "Don't be discouraged, though. You'll
find your conspirators. I can promise that." "Thanks," Krull
said drily. He got up to go. "Be ready when you leave the house," Bok
said. "Why?"
"There's
a man waiting for you." Krull was startled. "Why?" "To kill
you." "Is that a joke?"
"Do I look like a
joker, Mr. Krull?" He searched the ancient face. No, he thought, he
didn't. The old man who headed the espers might be mad but he wasn't a joker.
"How
do you know someone's waiting to kill me?"
"I
know." The words were uttered with finality.
"How?"
Bok smiled faindy; his eyes closed and his
head nodded as if he were falling asleep. Krull studied the fragile figure; the
narrow chin was slumped forward and his hands, blue-veined talons, lay relaxed
on the arms of the chair. He turned and stole from the room, pausing at the
door for a final backward glance before leaving, then descended the stairs.
He hesitated at the front door. Was Bok mad?
A dreamer? A senile old man with an overworked imagination? He decided he was
none of those and drew his gun, then opened the door a few inches and peered
out. The porch and sidewalk seemed clear, but the latter was hedged in with
tall shrubbery and overhanging trees. He decided he'd have to chance it and
stepped out on the porch, glanced nervously around and started down the walk.
He had taken only a few steps when he sensed rather
than saw movement in the bushes beside him
and automatically ducked and whirled just as a hand came through die bushes.
A gun blasted alongside his
face.
He
brought his weapon up and triggered it three times, leaping backward. A dark
form stumbled from the shrubbery, and slumped to the ground at his feet.
He
held his gun ready and bent over, grasping the man's arm and flipping him over.
Kruper's face stared vacuously at him. The Manager's manl He dropped the dead
arm just as a voice grated in his ear:
"Stand still—don't move."
Krull
froze, feeling his heart rise to a hammer in his chest; slowly, deliberately,
he turned his head. Gullfin's flat face stared at him and his hand gripped an
automatic that resembed a field piece.
"Drop the gunl"
Krull
straightened his fingers—his weapon clattered on the walk.
"I'm going to kill
you, rip you open."
"No you won't," Krull countered,
trying to sound calm. He heard a thumping and realized it was his heart.
"Why not?" Gullfin sneered.
"Because—if you were going to kill me,
you would have done it already."
"Wrong.
I want to see you squirm—feel it, taste it, sweat a little, then I'll let you
have it right in the middle. I don't want it to be easy."
"Bastard!" Krull spat the word
without losing his watchfulness. When Gulffin's finger started to tighten . .
.
"I
know what you're thinking but you won't have time." Gullfin's eyes became
pinpoints, his lips pulled tight against his teeth. The gun moved upward
slightly.
The
front door opened ... a sharp scream
. . . Gullfin whirled with a startled curse and Krull twisted, bringing a
smashing right against the stocky agent's jaw. Gullfin staggered backward, and
he followed through with hard lefts and rights, dropping him with a hard rabbit
punch.
"Quick—inside." Krull whirled
toward the porch and.saw Anna Malroon standing at the door. He stooped to
retrieve his gun and took the steps four at a time. She stepped back into the
house and slammed the door behind him. "Follow me—out the back," she
gasped.
She
turned without waiting for his answer and darted down the hall, Krull at her
heels. She fled through the rear door and across the lawn, keeping in the
shadows of the trees until she reached the street. There she stopped, motioning
him to silence, before starting down the sidewalk.
He reached her side and
whispered, "Where to?"
"Don't
try to talk now," she gasped. "My car's parked a-round the next
corner." She walked quickly.
"Take
it easy," he counseled. She didn't answer. When they reached the next
intersection she motioned to a car parked halfway down the block. When tb#y
reached it, he saw it was the same one she had used the first time he'd met
her. She had the engine started almost before he got in beside her, and pulled
away from the curb. She pushed to a high rate of speed, twisting down the hill
to the freeway, turned and reduced her speed until she was moving with the
flow of traffic.
Krull broke the silence. "You showed up
just in time."
"Yes, I was on
schedule."
The
way she said it made him turn toward her. "Sched-"Mr. Bok's
schedule," she explained. ■
"At
least he's Bok instead of Bowman," Krull observed. When she didn't reply,
he asked, "What does Bok do, schedule things like this for a hobby?"
"He
didn't schedule it, really. He just told me of the schedule," she
explained. "He was a wonderful man."
"Was?"
"Yes,
Mr. Bok is dead, now." "What do you mean dead? I just saw him."
"Gullfin just killed him—a moment ago." "How do you know
that?"
"When Gullfin regained consciousness, he
was enraged.
He
figured Mr. Bok was in league with you and he . . . handled him roughly. Too
roughly."
"How do you know? You
weren't there."
"Mr. Bok told
me."
"Oh
. . ." He slumped back in the seat and gave up trying to solve the puzzle.
Anna was talking riddles. The fact she was an esper didn't answer anything.
The
car swung off the freeway, climbing along a narrow road which led to the brow
of a hill. He recalled the route from the first visit; Anna's apartment lay
just ahead. She turned into the driveway and parked.
"Wait
here," she said hurriedly, and got out of the car without waiting for a
reply. He heard her sandals receding down the drive toward the front of the
house. A door banged, then there was silence. She returned a short time later.
"I've called a
cab."
He
looked inquiringly at her, but she didn't offer any further information. She
looked nervously over her shoulder and said, "Let's wait in front."
"Okay."
He crawled from the car and walked with her back along the dark driveway to the
front of the apartment, halting in the shadows of a lace fern tree. She was
visibly nervous and kept scanning the street in both directions.
"Do you have a light, Mr. Krull?"
"Sure,
but call me Max." She smiled wanly, fumbled in her purse for a pack of
cigarets, extending it toward him.
"Thanks,
Anna." He took one and held a light for her, looking down into her face.
He wanted desperately to ask questions but refrained—she seemed to have a
course of action in mind. They smoked in silence. After a while a cab cruised
up and halted at the curb. Anna flipped the stub of her cigaret into the
shrubbery, looked nervously up and down the street and started toward it. Krull
followed at a more leisurely rate.
"Emberly Hotel," she told the
driver. He nodded and pulled away from the curb, heading back down the hill.
Krull watched the flashing colored neons of the town draw near while he tried
to fathom his position. The cab pulled up in front of the Emberly; Anna paid
the driver and got out before Krull could offer a protest. He followed sheepishly.
She waited quiedy until the cab pulled back into the stream of traffic before
speaking.
"Let's
get another one." She looked both ways along the street and started in the
direction of another parked taxi. He nodded and followed, getting the idea.
They changed cabs several times before they finally reached the center of the
LIQ business district.
The
cab passed through a series of narrow streets lined with small plastiglass
houses of soiled shades onto an older street dominated by small businesses and
somewhat decrepit hotels. The driver stopped at the address Anna had given,
and this time Krull was ready with the change. After the cab left, she led him
down the street to a shabby building whose flashing red neofl proclaimed it
the Charles Hotel. She paused and turned toward him, looking up into his face.
"Take
my arm," she murmured. "For the time being we are Mr. and Mrs. Bowman
. . . Chester Bowman." He grinned. "I like the idea, but why
Bowman?" "It's as good a name as any." "I suppose Bok
dreamed this up." "As a matter of fact, he did."
"Well, bless him." He took her arm
possessively as they entered a dilapidated lobby and approached the desk clerk,
an ancient bespectacled man. He lowered his girlie magazine and got slowly to
his feet. Krull was momentarily alarmed—were they already registered?
She
saw his predicament and spoke up, "Room 211, please."
"Yes, Mrs . . ." The clerk fumbled
for the keys and waited.
"Bowman . . . Chester
Bowman," Anna supplied.
"Yes,
Mrs. Bowman." He slid the keys across the counter and returned to his
magazine. Krull held Anna's arm up the stairs. She steered him to the right at
the second floor and stopped before Room 211. He followed her in and looked around
curiously at the large, square, somewhat old-fashioned room with its sagging
divan, double bed, battered chairs and small wall TV. There were a couple other
items of equally dilapidated furniture and, off to one side, a door leading
into a bath. At the opposite side of the room was a small pantry-type kitchen
from which he could hear the steady drip of a leaky faucet.
"Looks homey," he observed.
"Part of the plan?"
"Yes."
He
glanced around, then looked at her. "I think I'm going to like it,"
he said firmly.
"I
hope so—Max." She looked wistfully around the room. "It's not the
best blace in the world but it's . . . it's anonymous, safe."
"Bok said that?"
"Yes . . ."
"Then it's safe," Krull decided.
"Coffee?"
"Ummm,
yes, please." He heard the rattle of pots in the kitchen and mused over
his situation while waiting for her to return. Mr. and Mrs. Bowman—he liked the
idea. She was a strange girl—beautiful, but her dark eyes were haunted; her
olive face was taut, expectant, as if she were awaiting some blow.
"The
news should be on," she called. He walked over, pressed a button and the
screen came to life. The fat face of a well-known newscaster looked out at him.
The lips were moving rapidly but it was a moment before the sound came on. When
it did, Krull caught his breath.
". . . IQ 113, Agent of police,"
the voice was saying. He heard Anna's quick footsteps coming from the kitchen.
". . . Wanted for the brutal double murder of Herman Bok, President of the
World Council of Espers, and Joe Kruper, a fellow agent who had been instructed
to question Krull on a routine matter . . ."
"They can't hang Bok's murder on
me," Krull said.
"Listen . . ." Anna beckoned for
silence.
"Bok was slain in his quarters in the
House of Espers, located in the exclusive HIQ district of northwest Sydney
just moments ago." The announcer paused to lick his lips.
"Krull
was believed fleeing the house when he met and killed Agent Kruper, IQ 116.
Gordon Gullfin, Chief of Special Agents for the Manager, witnessed the fatal
shooting and immediately subdued Krull, but in turn was attacked from behind
and slugged unconscious by an accomplice of the slayer. Regaining
consciousness, he sought aid at the House of Espers and subsequently discovered
the body of the esper leader. Bok was serving his eighth consecutive term as
President of the World Council of Espers . . ."
"This
makes it rough," Krull said. She nodded silendy and he saw her eyes were
tear-filled.
".
. . Agents of police believe Krull was engaged in a secret conspiracy with the leader of the espers, who was eighty-seven
years old, and killed him following an altercation. All agents of police,
troop police and private citizens are warned to watch for the killer and
immediately report his presence to the nearest police agency, or directly to
Gordon Gullfin, who is spearheading the search. Now . . . here is what the
killer looks like . . ."
The
announcer held up an enlarged photo. Krull was startled, recognizing it as a
picture taken in his room at the Edward Crozener; every detail was clear. The
announcer lowered the photo.
"Next
we will have a brief word from our Submarine Seafood
announcer about a new process which makes Submarine Seafoods
the world's most delicious . . ." Krull reached over and snapped it off.
"I won't be able to budge from this
trap," he said grimly. Anna watched him quietly. "I can't risk trying
to call Yar-go from here—they'd nail us in a second."
She looked thoughtful. "The clamor will
die down in a day or two, at least so far as the general
public is concerned."
"Can we risk it here
that long?"
"There's no other choice. I don't feel
any sense of immediate danger." She went to the kitchen and he heard some
cups rattle before the significance of what she had said struck him.
She
returned with Uieir coffee and he thoughtfully said, "I forgot you were an
esper. Can you really sense danger— at a distance?"
"It
depends . . ." She set the cups on the table. "It's related to, well,
the intensity of the thought. A hateful, violent mind like Gullfin's is like a
broadcasting station. . . . You should know that." Of course, she would
know, he thought.
"I
don't really know if I am an esper," he replied truthfully. "I seem
to draw mostly blanks."
"Of
course, it takes practice, like learning anything else. It's not much use in
the latent state." Her lips pursed speculatively. "You've spent your
life hiding your talent, submerging it, denying it was there. That was a
mistake, Max. There's nothing wrong with being an esper . . ."
"Except
that it gives you an advantage over other people that they resent," he cut
in.
"So does a high IQ."
"I don't have that trouble." He
grinned. "I'm 113."
"Part of your hiding role," she
said softly.
"Besides,
a high IQ doesn't bear the same connotation. There's no invasion of privacy
involved. That's the difference: the LIQ's and MIQ's and HIQ's aren't peeping
one another."
"Good
espers don't invade the privacy of others either," she said.
"Telepathy is just another form of communication —another sense receptor
put to use."
"But you peep non-telepaths?"
"Occasionally,"
she said calmly, "but only as a means of self-preservation.
"Bok must have done it on a mass
scale."
"Oh no," she denied, "Mr. Bok
never peeped people."
"Never?
Come now, that's a big statement in view of what he seemed to know."
"Never,"
she repeated stoutly. "You see, Mr. Bok wasn't a telepath."
"Not ...
a telepath?" Krull uttered the words slowly, with disbelief. There was a
span of silence before he continued. "But he was an esper—President of
the World Council of Espers."
"The greatest
esper," she affirmed.
"How can an esper not
be an esper? Tell me that."
"Don't growl. You
sound perfecdy horrid."
"Answer me."
"I
didn't say Mr. Bok wasn't an esper. I distinctly said he was the greatest
esper."
"You said he wasn't a
telepath," he accused.
She
faced him, a look of understanding growing in her face. "All the known
adult espers—all members of the World Council of Espers, as far back as we
know—have been tele-paths. All but Mr. Bok—that's what made him the greatest.
He was a down
through. He
saw down through time."
"Impossible,"
Krull snapped.
"Down
through is a case of special clairvoyance." She looked speculatively at
him. "You've heard of clairvoyance?"
"Certainly,"
he said, ruffled. "The theoretical ability to see objects or events not
present to the known senses, but it's stricdy a psychmaster's dream."
"Have you heard of
precognition?"
"A fancy word for
prophecy—also a theoretical possibility."
"Mr.
Bok combined them," she said simply. "He saw . . . future
events."
He started to protest and
abrupdy closed his mouth.
Bok
had seen him entering before, perhaps, he had left the hotel. It also explained
his knowledge that Kruper would try to murder him. A telepath might have
detected Kruper's presence, but Bok had known his physical location; had also
stated that Krull would uncover the conspiracy—stated it with undeniable
certainty.
A
sudden humility gripped him. It must have shone on his face for Anna said,
"Now you believe . . ."
"Yes,
I believe." He was silent a moment, absorbing the drama in the life of the
fragile old man who had so calmly planned Kruli's deliverance in the face of
his own imminent death. Jonquil had been wrong. But, of course, he couldn't
have suspected the esper's special talent. He had forgotten die presence of
Anna until she spoke.
"I'll be going now."
"Going?" he asked, startled.
"We're
hiding out—remember?" She flung a cape over her shoulders and drew it
together at the neck. "My name's Ruth Bowman, IQ 90, and I'm a poor
^working girl."
"Is this a joke?"
"Not at all. It's part of the
camouflage." "What kind of work—where?"
"The Cassowary Cabaret, up on the next
block. I got the job last week when . . . when . . ." "When Bok told
you to?"
"No,
when Mr. Bok told me I was going to," she corrected. "There's a
difference." Her eyes were grave. "If I acted on Mr. Bok's orders, he
would be influencing the future, but when he tells me what is going to happen,
he is merely reporting the future."
"Supposing
you don't do something he says you're going to do—that is, you know what's
ahead and deliberately take another route, so to speak. Then the future would
be different."
"No,
that's not possible," she contradicted. "When Mr. Bok reported what
he saw in the future, that meant it would actually happen. But if the causal
chain which led to the event were changed—which isn't possible—he could not
have seen the event but, rather, the event which would have occurred in its
place. Can't you see that?"
"It's not crystal clear," he
confessed, grinning.
"I'd better hurry. I'm going to be late
as it is."
He
looked ruefully around the room. "I thought we were supposed to be married,"
he complained. She laughed and went to the door, then turned and gave him an
impish look.
"Not that married."
CHAPTER
TWELVE
Krull
slept. He kicked off his
sandals and flopped on the divan the moment the door closed behind Anna's slim
figure, and was asleep almost immediately. It was a deep, undisturbed sleep,
without dream or awareness; when he woke, the pale dawn light was filtering through
the smudged lace curtains of the room's single window. He raised to his elbow
and looked around—Anna had returned sometime during the small hours of the
morning and was asleep on the bed. Her bosom rose and fell gendy under the thin
covers and her face, in repose, had lost its haunted look.
He
swung off the divan, slipped on his sandals and left the room without
disturbing her. He passed through the deserted hotel lobby—the clerk was
nodding behind the counter—and paused when he reached the sidewalk. The street
was just awakening to the day's activity. A few cars and trucks were on the
move, and farther down the block a couple
of pedestrians were ogling a drunk lying on the sidewalk. The air held the
tang of the harbor, the industrial odors of smoke, coal tars and fish scents
from nearby canneries.
An
elderly couple pushed a handcart laden with junk toward some unknown
destination, their heads bent into the morning chill. Krull wondered if this
was what Bok had meant when he referred to the people for whom there was no
tomorrow. But there had to be workers—society couldn't be blamed for the
vagaries of genetics. Still, the sight disturbed him. He walked down the block
until he found a place where he could buy a morning paper and
breakfast.
A
tired, middle-aged waitress with shadowed eyes looked up at his approach,
closed the magazine she was reading and smiled artificially. He nodded,
glancing around, disturbed to find he was the only customer; it would make him
more conspicuous. Sighing, he sat down and gave his order. As the waitress
shambled toward the kitchen he opened the paper.
A
picture of himself leaped to meet him. He quickly scanned the accompanying
story, conscious of mounting tension, then looked at the headlines again:
BOK'S
KILLER LINKED TO ATOMIC CONSPIRACY
The picture was the same one shown on the
screen. He read the story again, this time more slowly. According to the paper,
"... A high government official
who refused to allow his name to be used last night disclosed that the renegade
agent, Max Krull, sought for the murders of Herman Bok, President of the World
Council of Espers, and Agent Joe Kruper, was believed implicated in a secret
atomic conspiracy that had seizure of world power at its goal."
Krull
whistled softly. The story named him as a special
agent assigned to the Prime Thinker's personal staff. Farther down it stated
Yargo had secured his release from police a few days before, following his cold-blooded slaying of Oliver Cranston,
another agent assigned to investigate him. The story obliquely inferred that
his activities had Ben Yar-go's sanction.
Shevach—it's
Shevach, Krull thought. The Manager was using him to undermine Yargo. The
article was calculated to arouse public anger on one issue that was practically
a world phobia—atomic research.
Was
there some other motive? More important, could Yargo ride it out? The waitress
slid the coffee and hot rolls in front of him. "Anything else?"
"No
thanks." He glanced up. Her face held a coquettish look.
"It's
awful about that killer, isn't it?"
"Pretty
bad." He stirred his coffee, keeping his face a-verted.
"Imagine,
a man wanting to blow up the world." "What?" he asked, startled.
"That's
what it says—he's making atomic bombs, just like the kind that wrecked the
world before."
"Hadn't read that part," he
admitted. The waitress got an interested look.
"With
a killer like that around, I'm almost afraid to go to my room . . .
alone." Her eyes flicked to the clock. I'm off in half an hour. I feel
afraid . .. living alone."
"You don't have to
be," he consoled.
"Why not?" Her
face perked up.
"He only kills
agents—not pretty girls."
"Oh
. . ." She looked pleased until he returned to the paper. When she saw he
had no intention of following her lead, she sauntered disconsolately back to her
magazine. Finished with his coffee and breakfast roll, he tucked the paper
under his arm, left some change on the counter, and returned to the hotel.
Anna was in the kitchen making coffee.
"A working girl needs
more sleep than that," he said.
"I'll
nap in the afternoon," she promised. She saw the worried expression on his
face and came out to meet him. "Trouble?"
"A
storm brewing." He forced a smile and indicated the paper. "Now I'm a
member of the atomic conspiracy—along with the late Mr. Bok." He heard the
sharp intake of her breath and handed her the paper, pouring himself a cup of
coffee while she read it. She finished and looked up at him with fear in her
eyes.
"You didn't expect
that?" he asked.
"No, of course
not."
"I thought you knew
the future?"
"Only milestones along the way."
Her eyes met his. "It would be terrible to know every moment of the
future. There would be nothing to live for—no anticipation or expectation
because the end would already be known. Mr. Bok knew that. That's why he only told
me certain things—and even his telling was part of the causal chain in events
to come. No, I couldn't bear to know the entire future."
"Bok did."
"That was his tragedy. He even knew ... his murder."
"Yet he didn't try to change
things," Krull mused.
"He couldn't. He was seeing what was to
happen . . .
just
as a historian sees what has happened. But neither has the power to change what
he sees." "No, I suppose not."
She
glanced toward the TV; he nodded and turned it on, discovering he had become a
world villain overnight. The announcers had tried and convicted him of triple
murder, and violation of the First Law of Mankind. He was pictured
manufacturing atom bombs in a secret laboratory, plotting to destroy the world.
Anna got more coffee.
"Good for the nerves." She set a cup in front of him and sat down, smiling faintíy. The commercials were followed by a geography
professor who used a large globe to show how radiation from the Atomic War had
blanketed all but a few areas of the world.
"But
we could not expect to be so fortunate next time," he concluded. He
smirked at the audience and withdrew and the Zarkman suit man came on with a pitch for high IQ clothing. Krull flipped the switch.
"That's
where we came in." He looked at Anna. "What now?"
"Wait.
We'll have to wait."
"Wait and get trapped. I think we ought to be getting out of here." "Where to?"
"I'll
have to figure that out."
"We'll
be safe ... for a while." Her
eyes were pleading.
"I
won't do anything rash," he promised,
"You
did this morning."
"I
didn't think it was rash, then."
"But you won't leave again? Everyone
will be watching for you."
"Not until I can figure a plan of
action," he promised, "a safe way of getting in touch with
Yargo."
"That
might be the answer," she mused. They fell silent for a while, then she
began talking about telepathy. He got the idea she didn't think he was much of
an esper. She switched to Bok and her face became almost reverent.
"I'm
glad I'm not like Bok," he cut in.
"No, you're not like Mr. Bok," she
said quiedy. Her eyes got a strange look. "Max .. ." "What?" "Nothing."
"You were going to say
something."
Her
eyes brimmed with sudden tears. "Max, I'm frightened for you."
"Why?" he
demanded.
"Mr.
Bok's burden was easy in comparison." She rose suddenly and left the room;
he heard her heels echoing through the hall. Now what in hell, he thought
savagely.
Krull stayed close to the room the rest of
the day, occasionally turning on the TV to catch the news. The story had blown
big and before evening dominated the world news. According to the announcers,
Yargo had declined to give an official press release; the Manager stated that
Krull had been assigned to Prime Thinker's staff "... in a secret capacity that Ben Yargo declined to reveal
to the public."
Rumors
were legion. Krull variously was reported spotted in Wellington, Melbourne, the
floating city of Kulahai, and as far away as Leningrad and Capetown. A man
answering his description had been arrested boarding the Hawaii carrier at
Honolulu, and agents of police had picked up a number of suspects, including a
wino, an IQ 50 farmhand with a record of window peeping, and an IQ 90 laborer
who had just been released from the Dreamland Mental Hospital as a cured manic
depressive. All espers suspected of political activities, or who had majored in
physical sciences at a postgraduate level, had been rounded up for questioning
by the searchers. Anna returned in time to hear the last bit of news.
"Regular
witch-hunt," Krull growled.
"Dangerous. Everyone
will be watching for you."
"Maybe not so
dangerous," he reflected aloud.
"How do you
mean?"
"By
now I've been reported seen all over the globe. Everyone will think I'm
somewhere else."
"I know." She was quiet a moment.
"I worry, even though I know you'll . . . come through, all right."
She went to the kitchen leaving him to ponder her meaning. After supper they
talked until it was time for her to go to work. She made him promise he would
remain in the room.
"Cross my heart,"
he told her.
"I'd
be afraid if you went out." Her eyes were soft; she turned suddenly and
departed. After a while he kicked off his sandals and lay on
the divan.
Sleep came slowly.
"Max
. . ." He woke with a start,
pushing himself to his elbow.
"Max
. . ." He saw her or, rather, her shadowy form. "What is it?" he
asked guardedly.
"Max,
there's not much time left." Her voice was low, husky, intense.
"Not
much time . . ." His vision cleared and he cut the words off abruptly,
catching the reflection of dim light through the window on the dusky skin of
her body.
He
got up, slowly, and moved toward her, realizing that, somehow, time was running
out—for Anna Malroon.
They were subdued during breakfast but Anna
looked happy, contented and, for the first time during wakefulness, had lost
the haunted look. She hummed softly while she returned to the kitchen for more
coffee. It was good to see her so cheerful, yet he was uneasy. He had the
feeling she had come to a crisis, had met it in her own way, and now was
waiting for the predetermined to come to pass.
How much had Bok told her?
They spent the day as they had the previous
one—listening to news broadcasts; but, unlike the day before, she avoided any
talk of the future. When night came, she prepared for work, only this time she
didn't caution him against leaving the room. She merely said, "Goodnight,
darling."
Her
eyes flooded with tears. She closed the door and rushed down the hall before he
could stop her. He waited, half expecting her to return—knowing she wouldn't.
He was awakened by a sensation almost as sharp as an electric shock. He sat upright on the
divan, feeling his heartbeat rise to a fast hammering, conscious of a warning
signal flashing in his brain like a signal light blinking on a dark sea.
Dangerl
The
warning screamed in his brain. He leaped from the couch, shoved his feet into
his sandals and stole to the door. The faint sound of music came from somewhere
down the hall; the warning came again, sharp as a rapier—the slow shuffling of
feet in the hall came to a halt
at his door.
"Here."
He
heard the low single word and backed quickly into the room, peeping the hall.
He got the vague impressions of several forms, a towering figure, a mixed
jumble of thought. He grabbed his gun and moved to the single window which
overlooked a dark alley—closed his eyes and concentrated. The sense of danger
diminished; he deliberately concentrated on the hall again—the warning rose to
a high jangle in his brain.
Danger . . .
Runl Run!
He
raised the window without hesitation, slipped through feet first and hung from
the sill while trying to see the ground below. No use; it was lost in shadows.
The door splintered inward and he released his hold, flexing his legs to absorb
the impact. He struck hard—involuntarily winced— and fled down the alley toward
the nearest corner, slowing his pace when he reached it. A few pedestrians were
abroad and several small groups of loafers stood before a bar on the opposite
side of the street. The garish reds and greens of neons gave the scene an odd
pattern of shifting light and movement. A few cars and trucks were parked at
the curbs but moving traffic was light—nothing that resembled a police car.
The flick of danger came again, this time
from the alley at his rear; he started hurriedly down the street. He reached
the next corner, glancing over his shoulder in time to see several figures
emerge from the alley and start in his direction. He turned the corner and
increased his pace, conscious that his shadows were closing in. Faster . . . Fasterl
He
was halfway down the block when a police car rounded the corner, a spotlight
combing the street. He cursed and ducked into a dark doorway, hugging the wall.
He sensed his pursuers—how many?—drawing near. The danger signal rose to a
discordant howl and he tried to peep the source. A now-familiar mental pattern
filled his mind, movements in various shades of gray; it sharpened and the imagery
of a face took form.
A face . . .
His facel
He
was startled until he remembered. Of course, they were concentrating on him; he
was picking his picture from their minds. The police car swept its torch across
his hiding place and moved on. He exhaled slowly and fled down the street. He
spotted a bar garishly lit by green and red neons and filled with the sound of
raucous music. It would be jammed, noisy, filled with people.
A place to hidel
He
slowed down and pushed through the door. It was crowded. Most had their backs
toward him—they were watching a tall blonde perform a strip tease. He elbowed
his way to the rear and, as he hoped, found an exit. He turned the knob and
looked out; it opened onto a dark alley.
The jangle rose in his brain again and he
quickly looked back. The dark, lantern-shaped face of Henry Cathecart was
framed in the door. Another figure loomed behind him, thin, gaunt, tall . . .
Merryweather .. .
The Searchmaster!
A
lean arm swept up and pointed in his direction; Krull flung the door open and
fled into the night, his mind a jumble of thoughts. He heard feet pound the
pavement behind him and gave an extra burst of speed, rounding the corner onto
the street without slacking his pace. Several startled pedestrians stepped
aside without trying to stop hirn. Run. Run.
He
reached the next corner, fled halfway down the block, ducked into a recessed
doorway to get his bearings. His heart pounded and sweat dripped from his body
and stung his eyes. He gripped his gun and peered back down the street. Empty.
He was starring to breathe easier when three figures rounded the comer. One of
them crossed the street—all three moved in his direction. Merryweather was
tall, thin, an ominous skeleton towering above his companions. Krull cursed,
debating whether to try and ambush them.
He watched, gripping his gun, feeling his
heart thump against the rib case. Suddenly they stopped and the bony hand came
up again, pointing toward his hiding place. He broke and ran, trying to fathom
Merryweather's uncanny ability to detect him. Run, dodge, hide . . . He twisted
through the dark narrow streets of the LIQ section, frantically trying to
elude his pursuers—trying to shake the gaunt lean figure of Merryweather.
He
ducked through several groups of bystanders and rounded corners at top speed,
fearful he would encounter a police car. He was halfway down another block when
the alarm sounded in his brain. He stopped abruptly. It was ahead of him . . .
No, behind him. He turned bewildered. Boxed in! Trapped! He spotted an alley
almost across from him and fled toward it. If he could reach it, reach the
shadows . . .
"Stop that man!"
The cry was harsh in his ears and it took him
a second to realize it was a human voice and not a telepathic warning. Several
men standing in front of a bar ran to intercept him—he tried to dodge them. A
hand caught him and he slugged out, feeling the crunch of bone beneath his
fist, followed by a sharp cry of pain. Before he could twist free someone
struck him a glancing blow on the jaw. His head reeled and he staggered, his
gun clattering against the pavement as he broke free and darted into the black
mouth of the alley. Shouts . . . the sound of running feet . . . the
jangle of danger . . . darkness . . . the
thump of his heart.
Something
stung his shoulder. A bullet whizzed past his ear and he broke into a frenzied
burst of speed. A whistle shattered the air—the noise behind him grew until he
couldn't separate the jangle in his brain from reality. Hide. He had to hide!
He raced into the alley. There were more shouts, another whistle, this time
ahead of him. He stopped abruptly, breathing heavily, conscious of a dull
burning ache at the top of his shoulder.
Boxed in—done for . . .
He
hurriedly studied the sides of the alley and tried to allay his panic. His
breath was a hoarse rasp in his throat. He saw the dim outlines of a door and
twisted the knob. Surprisingly, it was unlocked. He leaped in, closed it behind
im. His hand located a small bar lock and slipped it in place—he leaned against
the door trying to control the harsh sound of his breathing. Feet pounded up
the alley; they stopped—silence—followed by a faint shuffling.
"Here," a
monotone voice said, "he's inside."
Krull
recoiled, feeling a stab of fear. Merryweather! Only Merryweather wasn't the
genial man he had met. This Merryweather was a bloodhound.
"Krull—give yourself
up or well kill you."
He
froze, immobile. It struck him then. Merryweather—an esper! Suddenly he saw the
whole picture. His first encounter with Merryweather hadn't been happenstance.
No, the gaunt man had met him for the sole purpose of peeping him. He was
Shevach's eyes and ears, Shevach's hidden power. Then Shevach knew he was an
esper, knew it and feared him. That explained the attempts on his life.
"Krull—we're coming
in!"
He
turned, moved deeper into the cellar, feeling his way and tiying to find an
exit.
"Krull
. . ." The voice was soft, almost at his side. He recoiled instinctively.
"Follow me—I'm a friend."
"Who?"
He whispered harshly, girding himself to either fight or run.
"There's no time to explain. Follow
me." The voice was soft, yet imperative, and all at once he saw the
oudines of a man's body. A small man. "This
way!"
The
figure started to retreat and he followed carefully, watchful, certain it was a trap. If he had a gun . . . Behind him the door splintered inward and a
beam of light caught him in full circle. He whirled toward it and froze,
half-blinded, conscious that his breathing was harsh in his ears. He tensed his
body to spring.
"Don't
try it," a voice grated. A figure moved into the circle of light and Krull
struggled to clear his vision. Hard-face Cathecart, holding a gun.
"Not so damned mighty
this time, are you?"
Krull
moved his eyes sideways from the center of the light, trying to see the man
holding the beam.
"You've come to the end of the
rope—Killer." Cathecart's eyes swung around the cellar, as he reached over
and took the flashlight from his companion:
"Leave
us alone, Peter. I'll handle it from here." Krull heard a merry chuckle;
the door opened, outlining a tall gaunt figure for a moment before it closed
behind him. He was alone with Cathecart—except for the mysterious man hiding
somewhere in the shadows behind him.
Cathecart
glanced around the cellar. "Nice execution chamber you've selected."
Krull
cursed him calmly. The hand holding the gun moved up; he found himself looking
down its barrel. "You've murdered a couple friends of mine. Seeing as
we're alone, and you're attempting to excape . . ."
His finger tightened on the
trigger. "So long—killer!"
Krull
dropped to a crouch and sprang sideways at the same time; flame lanced past his
ear. He sprawled off balance, hearing the sound of bullets thudding into flesh.
Cathecart staggered and grunted. The flame lanced out again and this time he
saw it came from his rear. Cathecart swayed, tried to raise his gun, half-spun
on buckling legs, gasped, and slumped to the floor.
"Let's
get the hell out of here," the voice behind Krull growled. "My car's
around the comer." The shadow broke into a blur of movement and Krull
scrambled after him. His companion broke into a sprint when they reached the
street, but Krull noted that his unknown benefactor was short, slender. They
reached the comer—there was a small black car parked against the curb. The man
pulled open the door and leaped in; Krull followed. The engine roared to life.
He
pulled the car away from the curb, rounded the first corner too fast for
comfort, zig-zagged for several blocks and finally turned onto a freeway. Krull
studied his profile; it was familiar, a face he knew and couldn't place. He remembered
the voice ... it was familiar also. A
name was surging at the back of his mind.
"Dutterfieldl"
The little public works engineer from Ben-bow Deeps. Butterfield turned and
looked at him full-faced.
"Butterfield."
He repeated the name, stupidly, then a wave of anger struck him. "Just who
the hell are you?"
"Oh,
I guess you could call me the head of Yargo's special agents. Sort of an
honorary title."
Krull
was jolted. Butterfield, the timid engineer, wasn't an engineer. Further more,
he wasn't timid. Krull's anger turned to Yargo. The Prime Thinker had suckered
him, played him for a clay pigeon. Why?
Butterfield
spoke. "Looks like I got to that cellar just in time."
"Yeah
. . . you did. How did you know? I picked that particular spot on the spur of
the moment."
"Damned strange."
The engineer's lips pursed thoughtfully.
"How
did you know that I'd be there ... at
that particular spot, at that moment?" Krull demanded.
"Like
I said—damned strange. All I know is that Yargo got a letter saying you'd be
there . . . and under what circumstances. So he sent me."
"Who was the letter from?" Krull
asked harshly.
"Bowman.
Some guy named Bowman, but I can't get a line on who he is."
"Was . . ." Krull corrected
automatically.
"Was?"
"Listen," he interjected,
"you've got some questions to answer.
"Not I," Butterfield said.
"Ask Yargo." "Damned right IT] ask him."
"You
might ask him about Bowman, too," Butterfield said hopefully. "That
one's got me baffled."
"No
problem there," Krull answered maliciously. The engineer turned toward
him mquiringly, but he remained silent. If Butterfield wouldn't talk, neither
would he.
CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
Khull idly watched the lights of oncoming cars sweep past.
Herman Bok knew the end of the story; otherwise he wouldn't have bothered to
post the letter that had brought Butterfield to Krull's rescue after his own
death. Anna Mal-roon had known what was going to happen. Why hadn't she warned
him? Had she known he would be saved?
His
companion swung the car into the lane leading to the House of the Prime Thinker
and Krull's interests perked up. How would Ben Yargo explain Butterfield—the
use of Butterfield to decoy him to Benbow Deeps? They passed the sentry box and
the house came into view, a black square against the sky with only a single
lighted window at the upper story. The car rolled to a stop under the portico
and Butterfield got out.
"Wait
here," he ordered softly. He walked toward the porch; a shadowy figure
emerged to meet him. They huddled a moment before he returned and beckoned
Krull.
"Follow
me." He led the way into the house, went upstairs in the dark and opened
a door at the end of a second floor corridor, stepping aside to let Krull
enter. He closed the door behind them and switched on the lights.
"Part
of the family quarters," he explained. "You're to stay here until
Yargo decides what to do with you. Don't leave—and keep out of sight."
"How about seeing Yargo?"
"In the morning."
"Is he up now?"
Krull asked doggedly.
"I wouldn't
know."
"Listen . . ." he
started to protest.
Butterfield
opened the door and cut in decisively, "It'll keep."
Krull
watched the door close behind him and fumed inwardly.
He
looked around; the room was large, comfortably furnished and possessed a wall
TV and—yes—a phone. He listened—the house was quiet. He crossed to the phone,
looked up a number and dialed, waiting impatiently while the phone at the other
end rang. It occurred to him that the room was probably bugged, but he didn't
care.
Someone answered,
"Cassowary Cafe."
"I'd
like to speak to one of your employees—Ruth Bowman," he said.
"The cigaret girl. . .
she's not here."
"Where is she?"
"Can't
say. She didn't show tonight . . . left us short-handed."
"Thanks."
He hung up thoughtfully. Sure, she had known what was coming—had taken off.
Yet, there had been something more in her voice than just the end of their
short masquerade when she had said: There's not much time left, not much time ...
She
had sounded more as if she had been referring to herself.
He
moodily undressed for bed when he saw blood on the shoulder of his shirt, and
remembered the stinging bite of the bullet that had struck him in the cellar.
He went to the bathroom and examined it—the wound was superficial, creasing the
top of the shoulder. He found a tube of antibiotic salve in the medicine
cabinet, rubbed some into the wound and dropped into bed. He was just getting
to sleep when a light knock at his door jolted him to sudden wakefulness.
Instantly alert, he shoved his hand to the gun under his pillow, and waited.
The knock was repeated.
"Come in," he called softly. The
door opened, framing a slender figure against the rectangle of dim
light; it closed and he caught a whiff of fragrance.
"Mr.
Rrull." The voice was soft, husky and definitely feminine, but he wasn't
about to be caught off guard. He kept his fingers curled around the gun.
"What do you
want?"
"To
talk with you." The voice was faindy familiar, but he couldn't place it.
"At this time of
night?" he asked sarcastically.
"Yes,
at this time of night," she answered calmly, adding, "I'm Jan
Yargo."
"Oh
. . ." Sure, he placed the voice now. He snapped on the bedside lamp, at
the same time rehnquishing his grasp of the gun. The girl watching him from the
foot of the bed was Yargo's daughter, all right. Her blue eyes held a bemused look. She wore a light house cape
over a negligee-more revealing than concealing, he thought—and she hadn't
forgotten to make up her face. He was pondering the proper etiquette of his
next move when she solved the problem by coming around to the side of the bed
and sitting on it.
"What now?"
"Please don't be rude."
"Excuse
me," he said stiffly, "but I didn't expect the Prime Thinker's
daughter after midnight—in my bedroom." She smiled. "You sound like a
stuffed shirt." "Don't make that mistake," he advised sofdy. Her
smile sobered. "I won't." "How did you know I was here?"
"Butterfield told me." "I suppose I'm a prisoner."
"No—not
that." She looked levelly at him. "But it wouldn't be safe to
leave."
He
deliberately moved his eyes the length of her body, taking in the curving lines
beneath the thin attire and ending at her face. She didn't alter expression and
he said, "At least I've got a lovely jailer."
"Not a jailer, Mr. Krull."
"Call me Max."
She laughed softly.
"And I'm Jan."
"Okay,
Jan, now that we're on first-name terms, why did you really come here?"
"Because
. . . well, for my father." "Does he know you're here?"
"No,"
she confessed, looking suddenly defiant. "You represent a danger to my
father."
"I
didn't ask for the job." He suppressed the desire to peep her.
"No, I suppose
not," she said finally.
"If your father's on
the level, why the run-around?"
"Run-around?" She
looked puzzled.
"The
agent," he said softly, watching her face. "He's no more
Butterfield's brother than I am."
She
regarded him calmly. "No, his name's Foxhill . . . Raymond Foxhill."
"Why
did Foxhill—if that's his real name—tip me off about Butterfield being an
esper? Was that hokum, too?"
"No, it was true . .
."
Another
thought occurred to him. "If Butterfield had just been dead a few days,
how did your father know he was an esper?" He watched her, sharp-eyed.
"He was informed of
it," she said simply.
"By whom?"
Her face clouded. "A Mr. Bowman, but I'm
not quite sure who he is. Dad didn't explain."
He
dropped the subject of Bowman. "Why the wild-goose chase in the first
place? Why did he have Foxhill pose as Butterfield's brother?"
She
deliberated a long moment, watching him enigmatically. "He had to be sure
of you—he needed time."
"Benbow Deeps was just a stall?"
^Yes."
"But
why the tip about Butterfield?" "He wanted to know your
reaction." "Why?" he asked curiously. "He wasn't sure of
you."
"If he wasn't sure of me, why did he
summon me in the first place? It doesn't make sense."
"No,
I suppose not." She bit her lip. "It was because of some developments
that came up after he talked with you."
"What
developments?" he challenged. She hesitated, obviously nervous, and he
repeated the question without taking his eyes from hers.
"You
. . . you weren't truthful about your past and . . . he found out."
Krull was startled.
"Not truthful?"
"You didn't tell him
you were an . . . esper."
"What?"
He stared incredulously at her, and broke into a mirthless laugh. "Who told Yargo
that—Mr. Bowman?"
"No."
"Who, then?" he persisted.
"Can I trust you to
keep it in confidence?"
He looked curiously at her.
"Yes, certainly."
She hesitated before
answering. "I did."
"You?" he
blurted.
"Yes."
He didn't bother to deny the accusation. The
certainty of her words told him she knew it was true, knew it beyond any shadow
of doubt. His eyes searched her critically. She was an overly-tall, slender
girl with evenly-chiseled features, disarming blue eyes, a mass of red curls
piled high and just now—dressed in disturbingly scanty attire. She was, he
thought, every bit as lovely and desirable as Anna Malroon, but with a
difference. The girl sitting on his bed didn't possess the dark girl's haunted
look. Her face was calm', certain, and it was evident she knew exactly what she
was saying. He measured her again before speaking.
"Who told you
that?"
She
pursed her lips, abruptly got up and moved toward the door. When she reached it
she turned, with one hand on the knob, and looked at him over the span of long
seconds.
"No one told me," she said quiedy.
"I'm like you, Max."
She
was gone—the door closed silently behind her. He was falling asleep when the
real reason for her nocturnal visit came to him. She had peeped himl All the
time they had talked she was searching his mind, finding out exactly how
trustworthy he was.
The
sunlight filtering through the window from a position high in the sky awoke
Krull. He had slept long and, for the first time in days, felt completely
rested, as if a burden had been lifted from his shoulders. His secret was
out—his days of hiding over. For better or worse he was no longer a hidden esper. Jan knew and Ben Yargo knew, and how many others?
Merryweather.
Shevach.
He
slowly showered, shaved and dressed, luxuriating in the knowledge that for the
time being he faced nothing worse than a pleasant confinement, cared for by a
quite lovely jailer. He finished and turned on the TV.
Another
murder had been pinned on him—this time the killing of Agent Henry Cathecart,
IQ 115. The announcer named Cathecart a representative of Gordon Gullfin, Chief
of Special Agents for the Manager. According to the broadcast, he had shot the
agent to death in the deserted cellar of a furniture
warehouse after Cathecart had recognized him and pursued him into the dark
building. The Searchmaster wasn't mentioned. The announcer pictured him as a
maniacal murderer rumored to be allied with a secret group plotting to build
atomic weapons; also recalled that Krull was the handpicked choice of Prime
Thinker Ben Yargo. Yargo seemed the prime target; Krull was merely an
instrument for his destruction. Shevach—for he was sure it was Shevach —was
using him to undermine public confidence in their leader.
His thoughts were interrupted by a knock at
the door. It was Jan with a tray of food.
"Too late for breakfast and too early
for lunch," she greeted. "I brought along a bite to tide you over."
"Hello, fellow esper."
"Hello." Her eyes held his and she
whispered softly, "I've never known anyone like myself, before. I'm glad,
Max . . . glad." She turned quickly and left. He started to call after
her, but desisted. She had told him all he wanted to know.
Yargo
stopped by in the early afternoon, looking calm and at ease. He greeted Krull
cordially—nodiing in his demeanor suggested he owed him any apologies. The
agent marveled at his composure, thinking an outsider would never guess that
the square, graying figure was the focal point of a vicious intrigue and, within
hours, would be battling for the highest office on earth at what promised to be
a bitterly-contested election. Yargo went through the pleasantries of a good
host, before plunging briskly into the real reason for his visit.
"It's
going to be necessary for you to remain here until after the elections."
"Dutterfield told me
that," Krull replied drily.
"He
also indicated you weren't pleased with the idea— that you might have thoughts
of leaving." Yargo looked sharply at him. "That would be
unwise."
He
wanted to reply that it wasn't true, so long as Jan was his keeper, but didn't.
Instead he said, "There's no worry on that score. I'll stay."
"Good,"
Yargo said, pleased. "As soon as the elections are over we'll get this
little matter cleared up and you can get back on the job."
"Shevach won't let it
die so easily."
"To
hell with Shevach," Yargo replied amiably. "The computers indicate
I'll have a more favorable crew next term. With a unanimous Council behind me I
can remove him from office." He paused and eyed the agent keenly. Krull
wondered if he would try to explain his duplicity in sending him on the wild
goose chase to Benbow Deep—or his espership. He didn't. He made fight
conversation for a moment longer, repeated his advice to stay close, and departed
abruptly.
Krull
passed the remainder of the day alternately reading and watching TV. The
announcers were whooping it up and he was, he thought, becoming more of a
menace by the moment. Not that he gave a damn. He had all his chips in the pot
and there was only one way to win—break the conspiracy. In the meantime, it
didn't matter what people thought. Except Jan. And Anna, he added as an afterthought.
Wherever she was, he hoped she was safe. Later that evening an announcement
sobered him a little.
The
miners of Melville Deeps had gone on strike, demanding that the Government do
something about the atomic conspiracy. The something they demanded was vague, but the main fact
was they had struck, had quit work. He tried to recall when he had last heard
of a strike against the Government and couldn't. It was a bad omen.
A
computer extrapolation of preliminary returns of the latest UPOP results showed
Yargo's popularity taking a sharp
dip. Seventy-three percent of the people polled expressed the belief Yargo
knew where Krull was hiding. Sure, Yargo knew—and so did Shevach and
Merryweather, he thought grimly.
Jan
brought his supper that evening but, to his disappointment, lingered only a
moment. She appeared disturbed. He watched the door close behind her. Well,
tomorrow was it.
CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
He
awakened to
the high clear sound of a txumpet, opening his eyes with a start, and
remembering. Election Day. The trumpet heralded the formal ceremonies to come.
He grimaced, thinking his fate hung on the outcome. If Ben Yargo won, he'd have
a breathing spell; Shevach would be off his neck. If Yargo lost. . .
He hurriedly shaved and showered. It would be
a day of rigidly prescribed formalities until the new Prime Thinker and Council
of Six were elected. A world wide celebration would follow; all laws except
those governing felonies would be suspended. Festivities, carnivals, brawls—the
world would go wild. Social and intellectual barriers would be brushed aside,
the rich and poor would mingle and hilarity would be king. Until dawn. To some
it would be a time of debauchery, to some a time of prayer.
He finished dressing and went to the window
overlooking an open square alongside the house. It was already thronged widi
uniformed police, black-caped agents, dignitaries of Government; a portable
platform had been erected and the drive was filled with gleaming open-topped
limousines flying purple streamers. Below him a TV crew was positioning
cameras.
The
crowd stirred as a portly litde man wearing a voluminous white cape fringed
with red braid started up the platform. His face brimmed with importance. He
reached the top and faced the house. The cape denoted his position as Caller of
the Bureau of Elections, an honorary position highly sought for its prestige.
Krull idly scanned the crowd. A figure caught
his eye and he stepped back, startled, then moved to one side where he could
peer out without being seen. Yes, he was right—Menyweather. The Searchmaster
stood at the rear of the square.
The
Searchmaster's head was pivoting like, he thought, a radar scan. Suddenly die
face stopped, turned toward the window. He knew.
Krull's
apprehension was replaced by a feeling of defiance. To hell with him, he told himself, and deliberately stepped
into full view, disregarding the gaunt man. From time to time the Caller
glanced at his watch, finally motioned toward the TV crew and lifted a mike to
his hps. A hush fell over the square.
"Hear ye, hear ye,
hear ye . . ."
His
voice twanged from the speaker with a nervous tremor. He paused, took a deep
breath and continued.
"Now
the person of Ben Yargo, having been found qualified on appropriate tests, and
having been adjudged IQ 219 by the World Board of Psychmasters, is hereby
invited . . . invited . . ."—he glanced desperately at his notes—"by
the people of the world to participate in election for the office of Prime
Thinker."
He
paused; a trumpet sounded, followed by the low roll of drums, then silence. The
Caller threw back his shoulders and boomed, "If you accept, come forth and
so state."
Drums rolled, trumpets blared, the crowd
milled expectantly and here and there a voice cried: "Come forth."
The call became a chant; the Caller threw up his hands for silence. The noise
died away, quiet except for the resdess shuffling of feet. A moment passed.
Ben
Yargo strode purposefully from the house, his formal tri-cornered hat and
purple garb designating bis candidacy for office. The crowd parted before him.
He reached a point a dozen yards from the base of the platform and halted,
looking up at the Caller. There was an awed silence before he spoke.
"I accept."
A
cheer swept the square and trumpets and drums added to the din. He stood with
face turned upward until the roar died away; then, to the measured roll of
drums, marched to the official limousine which would bear him to the Hall of
Elections. Engines roared to life and the cavalcade started slowly down the
drive. It was a scene enacted in four parts of the city simultaneously—the
official invitation to each of the candidates for Earth's highest office.
Krull
tried to spot Menyweather but he had disappeared. Within minutes the House of
the Prime Thinker was shrouded in silence. Alone and forgotten, his brief
moment of glory past, the Caller descended from the platform and walked slowly
across the deserted grounds.
There
was a knock at Krull's door. It was Jan with coffee. She greeted him with a
nervous smile.
"Mind if I share your
screen?"
"Not a bit," he prompdy declared.
He didn't worry her about Merryweather. He turned on the TV while she poured
the coffee. Yargo's cavalcade was winding through streets lined with cheering,
flower-bedecked crowds whose dress proclaimed a mixture of IQ's. A closeup of
the lead car revealed him smiling, waving, being pelted with flowers. Signs
proclaiming We want
Yargo and large photos of
him were hoisted in front of the camera. Krull caught a glimpse of a sign
reading, Down
with the atom men before
the camera hurriedly swung away. The cavalcade was met by three similar ones,
each bearing an official candidate, and the entire procession moved on to the
Hall of Elections. It halted in front of the building, where cordons of police
held back the crowds until the candidates descended, bombarded -by flowers and
shimmery streamers of colored tape.
The
camera moved in on Yargo's face: it was square, hard, but a crinkling around
the lips gave him a slightly paternal expression. He nodded. The camera swung
toward Shevach; his face was lean, saturnine, pale, with the broad high
forehead somehow oddly out of proportion with the delicate bone structure
beneath.
The
lens moved again. Sherif was a squat dark figure with bushy brows and piercing
eyes set deep in a confident face. He was, Krull knew, a controversial figure.
His chief platform was based on what he termed the equality of man. He was outspoken in his opposition to castes
founded upon IQ, which made him the darling of a large segment of the LIQ's.
Watching him now, Krull had the feeling he was sincere; there was a quality
about the dark eyes that suggested compassion. Only William Harshberg,
scholarly and pale, with a narrow intelligent face and watery eyes, was visibly
nervous. The camera recorded the slight quivering of his lips. The candidates
met at the bottom of the steps, formally shook hands, and marched into the
building flanked by a guard of special agents in spit-and-polish splendor.
"I'm
glad this only happens once every five years," Jan said nervously.
"Don't worry, hell
come through."
"Sometimes I wish he hadn't tried again.
Two terms are enough to give." "It's for the world." "I
know—he had to run."
The candidates were entering the main
auditorium. One end contained a large stage holding the election booths and
computers. A podium in the center was occupied by a florid-faced man whose
ceremonial dress identified him as the official Host: behind him sat Karl Wemer,
Psychmaster of the World, and Marvin Chadwick, the Archon, who headed the World
Court. Eight subarchons dressed in formal scarlet tophats and matching capes
sat behind them. The Host, whose name was Clender, pompously held up a hand for
attention; the auditorium grew silent.
"Elections
are in order. The Right Honorable Archon, Marvin Chadwick, will attest to the
procedures." He turned and bowed as Chadwick came to the mike.
"Ladies and gentlemen
of the world—Archon Chadwick."
The
Archon nodded, adjusted the mike and looked solemnly at the row of
scarlet-clad official judges. He was a tall, lantem-faced man with sharp brown
eyes and brisk movements.
He
announced that a Pime Thinker and six members to the World Council of Six would
be elected, in that order. He spoke slowly, measuredly, conscious that his
audience was the world. He explained that election to the office of Prime
Thinker would be by test. Each candidate would take three tests—the same
three—and the person having the highest total score would be adjudged winner.
The tests would be machine-scored with the results automatically translated
into IQ values. He paused occasionally while the official judges nodded
agreement.
Krull listened interestedly. There were an
even twelve thousand tests, of which three would be selected on the basis of
random numbers. The scoring and converting to IQ values would be recorded by
cameras so the citizens of the world could judge the fairness of the
procedures.
He
finished. The subarchons nodded and Clender resumed his place at the microphone
and announced he would introduce the candidates with precedence based on
present IQ raring. He turned toward the entrance and nodded. Ben Yar-go rustled
forward, his face a mask.
"Ben
Yargo, IQ 219, philosopher-ecologist . . ." Clender pumped Yargo's hand
vigorously, dropped it and signaled the attendant. Yargo smiled faintly and
retreated to a row of chairs set in front of the election booths as Ivan
Shevach came to the mike. The Manager smiled sardonically when his IQ rating
was announced as 217. He turned abruptly from the mike and sat alongside Yargo.
Mustapha Sherif (IQ 216) and William Harshberg (IQ 214) followed. Sherif's
expression was wooden, all except the dark eyes glowing under bushy brows.
Harshberg appeared jittery and had some difficulty controlling a facial
twitch. When he was seated, a trumpeter appeared, sounded a silvery blast and
disappeared into a wing. The elections had begun.
Clender
beamed into the camera. "Citizens of the world, Dr. Karl Wemer,
Psychmaster, will activate the election computer for selection of test number
one. Dr. Werner . . ."
Wemer
stared myopically through thick-lensed glasses, nodded briefly and limped
toward the election machine. The camera moved in until only his hand was
visible, one finger pointing to a red button. The finger moved, pressed the button,
and the camera focused on a spinning counter, which gradually slowed and
finally stopped at number 8250. Another camera cut in with an overview of the
chamber.
The Psychmaster announced: "The official
number is 8 ... 2 ...
5 ...
0." The Archon rose, repeated the number and the judges nodded
confirmation. Wemer came into view again with his hand poised above the control
panel. He turned a pointer to figure "4" and moved his hand to a
selector dial. Again only his finger and the dial face were visible. He slowly
dialed the official number. Another camera cut in to show the face of the
computer. Lights blinked, the machine hummed and four booklets tumbled into a
slot at the base of the console. Wemer scooped them up and held them toward the
lens to display the number for the world to witness. An overview came on and
Clender said:
"The
election booths . . ." An attendant opened the booths to display their interiors.
Each was furnished identically— a straightback chair and writing table holding
several pencils.
"They keep it honest," Krull
observed. "Of course," Jan chided.
The Psychmaster placed a booklet on each
table and limped to his seat. Clender ordered the candidates to station
themselves by their booths and read the instructions.
The
test would start at the sound of a gong,
would last exactly sixty minutes, and would be terminated by a second gong. Any
candidate not leaving his booth within ten seconds of the final gong would be
automatically disqualified.
The
Archon rose. "That is the law and I so testify." The subarchons
nodded assent. Silence.
A gong sounded.
Harshberg popped through the door of his
booth like a scared rabbit. The others followed more
slowly. When the doors were closed, the Psychmaster dropped a note on the
podium. Clender examined it.
"Ladies
and gentlemen, the first official test is titled, Test of Motives Behind Historical Political
Actions. Needless
to say, this test definitely favors William Harshberg who is a political scientist. For example . . ."
Jan moodily snapped the screen off, turning
pensively toward Krull. "I'd forgotten, you haven't had breakfast."
"I'll help," he offered.
"You won't budge from this room,"
she replied firmly. "Until after your father gets elected." He smiled
crookedly. "He'd better." "He will."
"Sure." After she left he turned on
the screen. The camera had returned to the outside of the building. The streets
were jammed with jostling, singing crowds bearing placards and huge pictures of
the candidates. A woman tried to thrust a Yargo
poster in front of the camera and was shoved aside by a rough-looking LIQ
bearing a Shevach placard. Two men hoisted a thin
elderly woman in front of the camera and she shrilled, "Down with the atom
fiends!"
Hands
reached up, caught her and she was pulled back into the crowd. The camera
rested for an instant on a young blonde with a brilliandy painted face. She saw
the camera, winked and started to pose. The celebration was starting early.
He snapped the scene off when Jan returned.
They ate in silence. She didn't turn the set on until the time for the candidates
to emerge from the election booths. Yargo and Sherif appeared stolid-faced,
unconcerned; Shevach seemed a bit anxious; Harshberg was plainly jittery. The
Psychmaster gathered the tests and held them so the audience could see the
numbers, then limped to the computer and fed the first one into a slot.
"Test number one . . .
Ben Yargo," he called.
Clender
broke in. "The test will be scored automatically and translated into IQ
points, which will flash on the master screen at the top of the panel." He
broke off as a light winked; there was a low hum1 followed by a
number on the screen: 212.
"Two-twelve, pretty
good," Krull mused aloud.
"Yes, it's good,"
Jan agreed.
"Test number two . . .
Ivan Shevach."
They waited, tense. The light blinked again
and number 210 appeared on the screen. "Beat him," Krull said
gleefully. "Of course."
The Manager's face was slighdy furrowed.
Sherif scored 214; his expression didn't change.
There
was an agonizing moment. The thin political scientist tensed in his seat and
leaned slightly forward, his eyes riveted on the computer. The screen came to
life: 223. Jan gasped involuntarily. A smug smile creased Harshberg's face.
Shevach looked visibly perturbed. Yargo didn't change expression and the squat
Sherif merely glanced at the reading.
"Don't
worry," Krull consoled, "the subject matter was in his field. He
won't get that break again."
"I
hope not." Jan was shaken. The camera flashed to the exterior of the
building. The crowds were noisier. Elect Ben Yargo and We want Sherif banners competed with signs backing Shevach
and Harshberg. One sign borne by a grim-faced delegation proclaimed: Down with the atomic conspirators. The camera paused at a comer to show several
women dancing, cheered on by a ring of festively-clad celebrants.
The
second test turned out to be the analogy variety-things that resembed other
things in obscure ways. It was strictly a powerhouse affair and, as Clender
explained, was more nearly related to pure IQ than the mere possession of
factual knowledge.
To
Krull's disappointment, Jan left and didn't return until almost time for the tests
to be scored.
The scene was a replica of
the first, except for the results:
Yargo:
219 Shevach: 220 Sherif: 217 Harshberg: 214
Krull relaxed with a satisfied smile. That
put Yargo's total one above Shevach, a tie with Sherif, and only six behind the
political scientist. Jan didn't share his enthusiasm.
"It's too close," she murmured.
"He's got it
whipped."
"I
hope so, I hope so," she said pensively. "If only he can overcome
Harshberg's lead."
"That's
the least of his worries," Krull said. "It's Shevach I'm worried
about."
"Sherif's strong,
too."
"Yes
. . ." They turned back to the screen. Yargo and Sherif remained
impassive, Shevach was sucking his long un-derlip nervously and Harshberg
seemed vacillating between elation and despair. If the next test were
favorable, he could easily become the 91st Prime Thinker.
The Psychmaster pushed the button to activate
the random number dial for test number three. The dial was a blur of movement,
gradually slowing, stopping on number 7777. He read the official number and the
Archon testified to its correctness. The doors closed behind the candidates.
"Test
number 7 ... 7 ... 7 ...
7, selected at random, is entitled Alexander the Great—simply Alexander
the Great. Ladies
and gentlemen, this test is unusual in that it takes us into ancient history.
It is noteworthy . . ."
Jan snapped the set off.
"That's strange."
"Yeah," Krull
said thoughtfully. She started to say something and abruptly stopped. He
looked puzzled. The test struck an odd chord, but. ..
Everyone's
heard the name Alexander,"
Jan replied evenly. All at
once she seemed anxious to drop the subject. She smiled and grasped his hand.
"But I feel better. Shevach was the only one Dad was afraid of and he's
beating him. I'm glad." Krull looked into her eyes and she dropped his
hand and retreated toward the door.
"I'll get some more coffee."
"No—stay."
She
smiled demurely. "No." She whirled and disappeared through the door
and he heard her laugh echoing in the hall. He looked at his hand. The spot she
had touched felt warmer than the rest of his body. Strange, she was no more
beautiful than either Rea Jon or Anna, but she was more»exciting.
He
browsed restlessly around the room but she didn't return until time for the
test scores to be read. He turned to the set while she poured the coffee,
impatiendy watching the returns.
The
camera closed in on the candidates. Yargo was grim. Shevach's face glistened
with perspiration; he was sucking his lower lip and his eyes seemed to have
become small gimlets. Sherif remained imperturbable; Harshberg's face muscles
were twitching and his jaw hung slack. The camera swung back to the
Psychmaster.
"Test
number one . . . Ben Yargo." Werner inserted the test into a slot; a light
came on accompanied by a hum which ended suddenly as a number flashed on the
screen: 229.
"Wonderful." Jan's face was
jubiliant. An awed sigh rose from the auditorium. Werner inserted another
paper. "Test number two—Ivan Shevach."
The
lights and humming came and died, and both Krull and Jan leaned involuntarily
toward the screen. The number was 227.
"He's won, he's won," Jan
whispered. "Wait," he cautioned.
Sherif scored 220. There was a moment of
anxious waiting while Harshberg's test was fed into the machine. He scored
211.
"He's
won," Jan exclaimed. She impulsively flung her arms around Krull's neck
and suddenly drew back, as if appalled at her action.
"I
don't mind," he said, grinning. He was elated. Now, maybe, his troubles
were over. Perhaps Yargo could get Shevach appointed inspector of oyster beds
off Easter Island. He turned back to the screen.
The
Archon was giving Yargo's official—and winning—IQ as 220, one higher than
Shevach and three above Sherif, who led Harshberg by one point. Krull started
to snap the set off, then froze. The door of the chamber burst open and a squad
of armed agents marched in.
"What's
happening?" Jan worriedly asked.
"I don't know."
The
agents halted. A stalwart, familiar-appearing gray-haired man strode to the
center of the room. Krull was startled. It was Joseph Grimhorn, Chief of World
Agents.
"What's
the meaning of this?" The Archon eyed Grimhorn caustically.
"Your honor, I am sorry but a felony
charge has been placed against two persons present." "Is there a
court order?"
"There is, your honor, initiated
earlier. My office just received it a few moments ago." "And the
nature of the complaint?"
"Fraud—fraud
involving the operation of the computer." "Whatl" The Archon was
startled. "Sworn out against whom?"
"Karl Werner, the Psychmaster,
and"—Grimhom's face became sad—"Ben Yargo, the Prime Thinker."
"And the complainant?"
Grimhorn swung angrily on his heels and
leveled a long finger. "Ivan Shevach."
CHAPTER
FIFTEEN
Ben Yargo came home that evening—came without trumpet
or drum or waving banner, came without the cheering throngs and honor guard
that had escorted him to the Hall of Elections. He was still Prime Thinker,
still free, but only because of the privilege of immunity accorded his office.
He returned to a house that lay on the hill like a shadow-box, brooding and silent, seemingly deserted—an oasis unmindful
of the raging political fires.
Krull
sat alone, watching the screen, half his mind occupied by the sudden change in
Yargo's fortunes. Jan had fled precipitously following Grimhom's charge, nor
had he seen her since. Once he had heard her footsteps echoing in the lower
hall as she rushed to greet her father.
The stillness had come
again.
Psychmaster
Werner had been booked and released on his own recognizance without making a
statement; a team of engineers were methodically examining the election computer
under the watchful eyes of Grimhom's chief deputy and a squad of agents. The
Archon had suspended elections of the Council of Six on the legal requirement
they follow the declaration of election of a Prime Thinker—an act which hadn't
come off. The old council remained, sadly divided between an outraged Kingman
and a calm Eve Mallon.
The-scene
in the Hall of Elections had immediate worldwide repercussions. Supporters
carrying Yargo banners were mobbed, their signs shredded. There were riots in
New Berlin, Greater London, Rio de Janeiro; California mobs stormed government
offices and Shanghai was in the throes of looting. The Capetown Royal HIQ
Society ("All members above IQ 160") demanded immediate self-rule;
the Turkish Council of Mayors called for recognition of Sherif as Prime Thinker.
New Delhi was in flames. But the public would not be robbed; along with the
riots were wild celebrations as the world workers claimed their long-awaited
holiday.
The Archon immediately called a special session of the
World
Court to decide what action should be taken if election fraud were determined.
Yargo's current term expired in ten days. Who would succeed him if the election
were found invalid? It was a situation that never before had occurred, one that
threatened to split the government right down the middle.
Harshberg
demanded the court void the entire election and set an immediate date for a new
one. Mustapha Sherif told a TV audience: "I have faith in Ben Yargo's
integrity. Let's wait and see." He was stoned leaving the station.
She-vach was vociferous. He demanded Yargo's test scores be voided and the
office conferred on the highest scoring candidate of the remaining three—which
happened to be himself.
Eve Mallon told a press conference that Shevach's charge of fraud had been made prior to
the election, thus his participation in an election believed by him to be
fraudulent made him a party to the fraud. Shevach claimed he had acted in the
interests of good government on the basis of anonymous information; he had
merely held off having the warrant served until the selection of the test
verified the charge.
Eve Mallon countered by producing evidence
that Shevach's secretary had withdrawn all books and tapes of Alexander the
Great from the public library long before the election. Shevach couldn't
explain that. Grimhorn promptly charged the Manager with "participation in
a felonious act," which, if proven, would bar him from public office.
Shevach responded by attempting to have Grimhorn removed from his post; he
suggested Gordon Gullfin as interim Chief of World Agents. Eve Mallon hurriedly
formed a council block consisting of herself, George
Lincoln, Kim Lee Wong and Hans Taussig that effectively stymied the move
despite Kingman's angry opposition. UPOP rushed out a spot survey which showed sixty-seven percent of the people believed
Yargo guilty, twenty per cent thought him innocent and thirteen percent gave no
opinion. Broken down by IQ, most of the twenty per cent supporting Yargo were
HIQ's.
The
fast-breaking news answered the question perturbing Krull. Alexander the
Great—he remembered now—he had seen the book on Yargo's desk. It could be a
coincidence, of course, but it looked bad.
Shevach
stated Yargo was harboring the fugitive killer, Max Krull, and demanded his
immediate arrest. The words had scarcely ended before there was a sharp rap on
the door, followed by an imperative exclamation.
"Krull!"
He opened it and faced Yargo's chief of special agents.
"Hello
. . . Foxhill." There was no reaction to the name. "Let's get the
hell out of here," he barked. "Why?" "Mob coming."
Sure,
there would be a mob. Shevach would see to that. Gullfin and the Searchmaster
were probably behind it stirring it to a frenzy. But what of Jan?
The
agent saw the question in his eyes and said, "The Prime Thinker and his
daughter have gone. They're safe."
"Where to?"
"I
wouldn't know," Foxhill snapped, "but you'd better step on it if you
want to beat your admirers."
"Okay," Krull
said shortly, "I'm ready. Where to?"
"Wherever
you want. You're on your own now," the agent responded grimly. "Ill
drive you to any place of your choosing."
"Why?"
"Yargo's orders." Krull tried to
assimilate the information. Yargo's sole motive was to get him out of his hair.
That made sense. It would leave him an outlaw, exposed to every hand, but if he
could crack the conspiracy he could still vindicate himself. He followed
Foxhill out the back of the house to his car. They got in and the agent started
the engine.
"Where to?"
Krull hesitated—one place was as good or bad
as another. He decided on the LIQ district, thinking the crowd would be a good
mask until he could formulate a plan of action. He spoke briefly, the agent
nodded and started down the drive. They had scarcely reached the main
thoroughfare before they passed a cavalcade speeding in the opposite direction,
horns blaring. Krull looked back; the procession turned into Yargo's drive.
"Just
beat "em," Foxhill muttered. Krull nodded grimly. It had been close.
The crowds thickened as they drew closer to the heart of the city. People were
dancing, shouting, hoisting botdes and waving banners bearing Shevach's name
and picture; here and there large photos of him were plastered on buildings.
Krull smiled sourly. It was too neat; it smacked of long planning. The crowd
grew thicker and Fox-hill was forced to stop.
"You'll
have to take it from here," he said. Krull nodded and jumped out, then
looked back.
"So long, and
thanks."
"Don't mention
it."
He moved away, threading through the crowd
without any particular destination. He needed a place to hide . . . a place to
think. But where? He couldn't risk a hotel, not even a rat-ridden hole in the
LIQ district. Gullfin's agents would be making the rounds.
And the Searchmasterl
He
damned the gaunt man mentally, pushing through the mob. He was jostled and
hemmed in until his progress practically came to a standstill. A drunk in an
LIQ tunic wearing an expensive pink HIQ cape waved a bottle in his face and
shouted, "We want Shevach . . . We want Shevach . . ."
A
hand reached out and snatched the bottle—and the drunk turned, cursing. A woman
grabbed Krull's arm.
"Everybody
celebrate, honey." He pushed the hand off and forced his way next to the
buildings. People shouting, pushing, singing, dancing—people and banners and
laughter and screams. People . . . Dusk. The shadows came, reached out. He
reached a corner and found himself staring into a public screen diagonally
across the intersection. Suddenly it was filled with a face—his face! A voice
from the speaker rose harshly above the noise.
Watch
for killer Krtdl. . . Watch for killer Krull...
He
stared, fascinated, waiting for the picture to change. It didn't.
Watch
for killer Krull...
He
turned his head down and pushed away from the intersection, threading deeper
toward the heart of the LIQ quarters. Damn, Shevach wasn't missing a bet.
They'd keep his picture on the screens, keep shouting his name. If someone saw
him, gave the alarm . . . The crowd would tear him to pieces. That's what
Shevach wanted. He stepped into a doorway, hurriedly retreating when he found
it occupied by lovers.
Shevach
... Shevach .. . Shevach ...
Someone
started the refrain; it caught on—everyone was shouting the name. After a while
it died out. Night came on and the faces under the yellow street lights looked
like those of animals; faces and half-naked bodies and the smell of liquor and
tobacco smoke. Bedlam. A fight haze was coming in, the lights took on a
yellowish hue. More screens, each with the image of Krull staring out over the
crowd.
Watch
for killer Krull...
He hastily retreated. Hide. Hide where? He
gave thanks for the crowd; it had forgotten the screens, forgotten KrulL
forgotten everything but the revelry at hand. Several times he caught sight of
black capes and stopped, watching until they melted away. Agents—there must be
a hundred of them watching for him, combing the LIQ quarters. Maybe he'd picked
the wrong place. Next time he looked up he was diagonally across from the
Edward Crozener Hotel. A screen above street level was filled with his image.
He started to turn a corner and stopped abrupdy. A gaunt figure stood by the
comer of the hotel, towering above the revelers.
The Searchmaster!
Krull's
blood ran cold but he remained watching. Mer-ryweather was pivoting his head
from side to side, covering the intersection. His face looked like a mask
under the garish yellow light and where his eyes should be were two black
holes. He looked as if he were sniffing the wind. He thought again that the
gaunt man was a bloodhound, a shadow
he couldn't shake.
The
festivities and sounds of occasional brawls grew louder. He liked that . . .
something comforting in the din, the press of bodies, the sweat and the odor.
Even Merry-weather couldn't pick a single mind from a throng like this.
But when the crowd thinned? He'd have to
hide.
A black cellar?
He remembered.
The
cellar where Foxhill had killed Cathecart. It was the perfect spot, the last
place they'd look. It would give him time to think, to plan, time to tie the
threads together. He traversed several blocks trying to recall its location.
After a while he spotted the bar where he'd taken refuge and remembered.
Keeping his face turned down he pushed through the crowd. Capes. Black capes.
The agents seemed all around. Another scream, another image, a jumble of milling,
sweating bodies blocking his path, a voice
calling his name. He held his head low and hurried.
Noise ...
Screams . . .
Wild laughter . . .
A young LIQ with purpled lips and hair
lacquered in a spiral cone stopped his progress, swaying in
front of him supported by the arms of two escorts who, he thought, resembled
stevedores. She swayed and looked blurry-eyed at him.
"Come along, honey, join the
party."
"Get
along," one of the drunks growled, looking meanly at Krull. He pushed
around them, followed by her shrill laughter. It took him a while to find the
alley. It was a black maw opening into the street. Its entrance was blocked by
the mob—some still carrying Shevach banners. He managed to gain the entrance
and slip into the shadows.
He probed his way by memory, occasionally
circling to avoid a whispering voice or the dim outiines of swaying bodies. The
din gradually receded and, as his eyes became dark-adapted, the outlines of
buildings took form.
He
finally located the door he was seeking, more by feel than by sight. He twisted
the knob and it opened. He waited, trying to discern thought in the blackness
of the cellar, and failed. After a moment he stepped into the blackness,
conscious that he was sweating and breathing heavily. He stood for a while,
hearing his heart thud against his ribs. Nothing happened. Strange—he had
half-expected Peter Merryweather. He hesitated. Distant cries and laughter came
from the street but the cellar was a tomb.
He saw nothing, heard nothing, nor did his mind register any cause for alarm.
After a moment he breathed easier and felt his way toward one wall where he
remembered seeing a jumble of old furniture.
He
rummaged around until he found a comfortable place to he down; in moments he
was asleep. Once he woke to the sound of shrill voices and screams, revelry
from the streets. His muscles ached from the hard floor; he shifted position
and drifted off to sleep again.
Next
time he woke it was early morning. Pale light filtered in through cracks above
the door and half-covered window. He felt a sudden fear, rose and peered
cautiously around. He debated sneaking out for something to eat and discarded
the idea. He'd be too conspicuous on the almost deserted streets. Well, he'd
found himself a hideout, all right. Now the trick would be to get out of it. He
grinned ruefully and settled back to wait it out, thinking that night was a
long time off. During the day he heard activity in the building above him; once
someone entered the far end of the cellar and rummaged around a pile of boxes. Krull hid under the plastic tarp until he left.
He
passed the hours debating his course of action. He wasn't getting any place
this way—he'd have to make a break.
How? Bok—but Bok was dead. Still . . . the esper would have a successor. It
seemed logical that this person would have been a party to Bok's activities.
He'd go to the House of Espers and force the
information.
CHAPTER
SIXTEEN
The
day seemed eternal, but
finally the half-light of the cellar darkened and the shadows around him jelled
into a solid black. He waited a while longer, planning his exact moves as
carefully as he could, knowing that success or failure perhaps depended upon
the next few hours. Finally he emerged from hiding and started toward the door.
"Max ..."
He froze and his heart suddenly sped up
again, booming inside him.
"Max
. . ." It was a soft voice, husky and low. He turned slowly.
"It's . . .
Anna."
"Anna."
He repeated the name huskily, without believing; saw the shadow of her body
moving toward him. "How did you know I'd be here? . . . Herman Bok?"
"Yes," she admitted. She was next to him. "Oh Max . . ."
"What else did he tell you?" "Nothing."
His eyes were becoming
dark-adapted and he saw the paleness of her face; even in the darkness he knew
it was wistful, filled with sorrow. He spoke more gendy.
"Nothing at all,
Anna?"
She hesitated. "Nothing, Max, but he
gave me some orders." Her voice trailed away. "Go on," he
ordered. "I'm to take you to the conspirators." ' "What?"
She repeated the statement, and added,
"But, please, follow me. There's a schedule, Max."
As
she started to withdraw, he caught her hand and pulled, gendy. She came back,
looked into his face a mo ment, and flung herself in his arms. He felt her body
trembling, heard her sob. He lifted her chin and kissed her. Her hps were
cold. She broke away again. "Please, we have to hurry."
She
led him through the same passage Butterfield had taken. They reached the alley
and walked toward the corner. He heard the voices ahead and hesitated.
"Please
don't worry, Max. I'll get you there safely," she said, as if reading his
thoughts.
Did
Bok tell you that, too?"
"Yes,"
she said simply.
"Okay."
He followed her to the mouth of the alley, took her arm and walked by her side
until they reached her car. She pulled into the stream of traffic and headed
toward the bay.
"Where
to?" Krull asked curiously.
"The
seaplane ramp."
"The
police will be there."
"Yes,
but they won't stop us."
"If
Bok was right."
"He
was right," she said simply.
"Okay,
111 take a chance." After a moment another thought struck him.
"Who
are the conspirators?"
"That
I can't say," she answered simply.
"Can't
or won't?"
"Max
. . . please, I've told you everything I can." "Except the
destination .. ." She turned and
looked soberly into his face. "Well?" he demanded impatiently.
"Waimea-Roa,"
she said simply. She turned back to the traffic, leaving him for the minute
speechless.
Anna
reached the seaplane ramp and headed directly toward the ticket booth. Krull
nervously followed—Shevach wouldn't leave any of the transportation routes
unattended. There, ahead, just as he feared, he saw a bulky man lounging
across from the ticket window watching the crowd.
AGENT
was stamped across his features. Krull tugged Anna's arm.
"It's watched."
"Bok said we would be
safe."
He
hesitated, shrugged and followed, covertly watching the man. Krull studied him
out of the corner of his eye, prepared to either fight or flee, trying to play
it by ear. To his amazement, the watcher didn't seem to notice them. They
turned down the ramp, and Krull could almost feel the cold eyes follow them.
They reached the bottom.
Anna excused herself a
moment.
Krull
fretted nervously until she reappeared. Just in time. Five minutes later the
seaplane engines roared to life; it taxied into the stream and started its
sluggish take-off. Minutes later Sydney was a sea of fights rapidly falling
astern.
The floating city of Kulahai fled past; there
was only a vast expanse of stars and black sea beneath until the scattered
lights of Abiang Atoll rushed toward them from the heart of Waimea-Roa. The
plane dropped lower, banked, let down to a smooth landing on the surface of the
lagoon and taxied toward the ramp.
"Okay," Krull
said harshly, "now what?"
"Wait. . . until we're
alone."
"That'll be a couple of minutes,"
he promised grimly.
They
were the only passengers to disembark, he noted. At least Shevach didn't have a
shadow on his heels yet. He steered Anna to the top of the ramp, halted and
faced her.
"Let's have it," he said quietly.
"I know every person on the atolls. Start spilling names."
"But I don't know them," she
protested. "All I know is the place."
"Where?"
"Chimney Rock."
"What?" He spat the word
incredulously, then laughed mirthlessly. She watched him, puzzled. "Bok's
been taking us in," he said finally. "Chimney Rock is just a pillar, a
massive black chunk jetting up from the sea. Even birds have a tough time getting a toehold,"
he added grimly.
"Not on the rock—under the rock," she said quiedy.
"Under . . ."
"A
cavern, a huge grotto. There's a laboratory,
factory, places to live ..." "You've
seen that?" "Bok told me," she said simply. "Impossible. It
couldn't go undetected." "It's been built over the years .. . decades." "I don't believe
it." "I do."
"Then why are you leading me
there?" he challenged. "Why would Bok undo the work he says he
believes in? No, it doesn't make sense."
"Because you're not going as an agent,
Max."
"I'm not?" He smiled sardonically.
"No—Mr.
Bok says you're necessary to ... to
its completion."
"No,"
he said stonily. Another thought struck him. "How do we get there?"
"There's a way. I can't tell you yet.
I'll have to . . ." "Yeah, there's a way," he cut in. "Follow me." "Max . . ."
"Follow me," he repeated roughly.
He started down the main street of Abiang Village and, after a moment, heard
her footsteps behind him. He reached the small pastel house that had been his
home since coming to the atolls, unlocked the door and beckoned her to precede
him. She walked past him tight-lipped.
"Make yourself at home," he mocked.
"I'll be back."
She turned and her voice was a plea.
"Max . . ."
He had one hand on the door when she
screamed, "Max —you've got to listen."
He
spun back. "Okay, make it short." He held the door ajar and waited.
"Herman
Bok was a great man," she said, "great because
he was different . . . because he was a down
through, Max,
could see the future."
"I know that," he cut in.
"Yes,
but you don't know what it does to a man . . . the damnation of being able to
see every moment of every day ahead of time; being able to see your own
personal failures and disasters, your own death, not being able to change
things . . ."
"So
...r
"Why do you think Herman Bok considered
it so important that you find the conspirators?" "I don't
know."
"Mr.
Bok said you would save the conspiracy. Do you hear that, Max? You're going to
save it." She laughed hysterically and he felt a desire to take her in
his arms and soothe her. He took a step toward her.
"No, I'm not crazy, if
that's what you think."
"All
right, you're not crazy," he said quietly, "but Bok was, at least
with regard to me."
"He wasn't," she
whimpered. "You don't know . . ."
"No
. . . P" He leaned against the door and contemplated her bemusedly.
"Look, Anna, I'm supposed to be an esper. Well, I've tried it. I can get
vague impressions from people's minds, but I really can't read them. Once in a
while I get sharp images but not often. As an esper, I'm a dud, and I know it .
. ."
"You don't know..."
"I can't see into the future," he
said bluntly, "so don't try and give me that." There was a tinge of
regret in his voice. "I'm just an agent—a plain agent. But right now I'm
going to make the damnedest haul. . ."
He yanked the door open and stepped into the
night, gritting his teeth savagely. Damn, all his life he'd hated the knowledge
he was an esper. Now, when he wanted to be an esper, he wasn't; all Bok's
ravings couldn't alter that. He stomped into the station surprised to find
Derek behind the desk. The wizened clerk gasped a flustered welcome.
"What are you doing here at this time of
night?" Krull asked.
Derek
nodded toward the door. "The Old Man's in. There's something hot."
"You
can say that again," Krull snapped. He walked past the clerk and entered
the Inspector's office without knocking. Jonquil looked up in surprise and his
face wreathed into a smile.
"Welcome
home, Max. I wasn't expecting you but I'm sure glad to see you."
"I'm
glad, too," Krull said fervendy. He plopped into a chair opposite the
littered desk. "The chips are down and we're going to work."
Jonquil
abruptly rose, motioning him to silence, and drew him to the corner of the
room.
"You've located the
conspiracy?"
Krull nodded.
"That
ties in. I've got orders to marshal my agents and stand by."
"Then why the need for secrecy?"
Jonquil looked grim. "The orders were
from the Manager. He's coming personally—due to land shortly." Krull
digested the information.
"I
also got an order from Yargo not to assist Shevach— I'm in the middle."
"Don't help him,"
Krull urged.
"We've
got to plan but I think we'd better get out of here," Jonquil murmured.
"Right now I don't even trust Derek."
"Listen,
I've got to break that conspiracy myself," Krull said desperately.
"It's the only chance I've got for vindication. Besides, if Shevach beats
me, he's got the world in his hand."
"I
know. So does Yargo. But he won't beat you. Go over to Dying Girl Point—111 meet you there in a few moments. Maybe
there's a way but we'll have to work fast."
Krull
nodded assent and began talking in normal tones for the benefit of any possible
electronic listener: "111 see you in the morning. Right
now I'm going to turn in and get a good night's sleep."
Jonquil
winked. "Good night, Max," he replied conversationally.
Krull
left the station, hesitated, then popped his head in the door of his house.
Anna was studying the sketch of Rea Jon; she turned at the sound of the door.
"Wait, I'll be
back," he snapped.
"Max
. . ." Her eyes were pools of sorrow again. "I have something to
say."
"Say it," he
spat. "I've got work to do."
"Next time you see me,
read my mind." / "Why?" He was startled.
"I can't say . . .
now. Just read my mind!"
Mystery.
Hell, couldn't she ever come out and say what she thought? He yanked the door
shut without giving her time to protest and struck off toward Dying Girl Point.
The night was cool in his face and his clothes were damp on his body. He walked
swiftly to the promontory which jutted into the sea, picking his way more
cautiously until he reached its end. The point was a favorite spot, filled with
fond memories. He and Jonquil had set their canvases there, had fished from its
heights with both line and speargun. On nights like this he had come here with
Rea Jon. He looked upward. Stars—millions of stars pinned against the sky all
the way down to where it merged with the blackness of the Pacific.
Stars.
Espers.
Atoms. The world was all
fouled up.
He
heard footsteps and turned; Jonquil came out of the night, a lean silhouette.
Krull moved to meet him and they stopped, facing each other across the span of
feet. He saw that the Inspector was disturbed. There was a heavy silence before
Jonquil spoke.
"Max, you are my friend." .
"And you are mine." .
"You've been like a
son to me." The anguish in his voice startled Krull. He's worried, he
thought. I'm putting a load on his shoulders, asking liim to share
my job. He felt guilty.
"I
didn't mean to burden you, Martin, but I need help. You're the only one I can
trust."
"Don't say that,"
Jonquil replied sorrowfully.
"Why
not?" Krull asked. "It's true." He looked at the Inspector's
face. Even in the dim light he could see it was a mask of sorrow. A gaunt hand came out from under the cape holding a
snub-nosed automatic.
"Because I have to
kill you."
CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN
Kbull stepped back, startled, and fought to relax, conscious
that his life span had become measured in moments. He kept his eyes riveted on
the Inspector's face. "Why?" he asked simply.
"I
love you," Jonquil said. "You've been like a son to me —the son I
never had—but this is bigger than us. I've been asking myself if I could really
do this—kill you. Now I know I can—must. But it'll be like killing myself, Max.
Worse, for you have been dearer to me than life."
"Then, why?" Krull asked, conscious
of a deep inner sorrow, not for himself but for the man standing in front of
him. Jonquil didn't answer. Krull turned and took a few slow steps toward the cliff,
speaking as he did.
"You
are my friend, Jonquil, more than a friend. We have lived and played and
dreamed together—swum these waters together . . ."
"Stop," Jonquil rasped harshly.
"I
don't know what drives you," Krull continued, trying to keep his voice
free of the touch of panic he felt, "but I know it can't be bad enough to demand such a price."
"Stop—don't
move another step," the Inspector warned. Krull hesitated, deliberately took
the last step which separated him from the edge of the cliff, momentarily
expecting a burst of slugs to rip his body. He turned slowly, saw the muzzle of
Jonquil's gun move slowly upward and said, "You are one of the
conspirators."
Jonquil
stopped the weapon in midair, hesitating as if to voice a denial.
Krull
did something he had never done before—did it feeling as if he had violated a
sacred trust. He peeped his friend; he closed his mind to everything except the
In-pector's face and concentrated on his mind. In the first seconds it was like
looking into a whirlpool, a maelstrom of flurried thoughts, resolution and
decision surcharged with pain. The jumbled thoughts focused and became imagery;
but it was the imagery of a bizarre montage in which he simultaneously glimpsed
a series of pictures, one merging into another. There were faces, an
odd-fantastic structure that appeared like a rocket, a grotto bustling with men
and machines, filled with a blue dancing light resembling the harsh brittle
glare of an arc welding torch—a hand holding a spitting automatic. The imagery
suddenly vanished, replaced by a formless gray mosaic, an unbroken pattern of
nothingness. He came back to reality, with a start.
"You
are one of the conspirators," he repeated.
"I
am ... if you call us that,"
Jonquil replied woodenly. A touch of pity came into his eyes. "You
wouldn't understand, Max."
"What
wouldn't I understand?" he asked curiously.
"Why
I have to kill you." Jonquil's voice was toneless. "This conspiracy,
as you call it, is the work of decades, Max. Untold men have sown seeds that
their brothers might reach the stars. The harvest is here and no single man can
stand in the way . . ."
"Harvest
of death," Krull broke in bitterly. "You've sold yourself a bill of
goods and turned against the law, the First Law of Mankind. Turn back, Martin.
Turn back now and no one need ever know," he pleaded.
"No,"
Jonquil said harshly. His body stiffened.
"Jonquil—wait
. . ." He suddenly knew only split seconds of life remained.
Jonquil's hand was moving
up.
KruD
brought his foot up through the sand, kicking it into the agent's face; at the
same instant he spun around and leaped from the cliff, hearing the staccato
bark of the automatic behind him. He straightened his body in midair and struck
the water at a steep angle . . . swam along the bottom with powerful breast
strokes. Have to get out of range, he thought desperately. Jonquil would be
waiting for him to come up. He finally broke water long enough to catch a
breath and throw a fast backward look. Jonquil's body was silhouetted against
the sky. When he came up again, the Inspector was gone.
He
debated, then swam toward the beach. Jonquil or no Jonquil, he would smash the
conspiracy. There was a conspiracy and it was in the grotto; he knew
that from the Inspector's mind. Anna had been right on that score. He smiled
grimly. From here on out it was going to be rough.
He
clambered up onto the beach and stood for a moment breathing heavily, looking
upward into the night. The stars glittered in savage splendor, magically
mirrored again in the black water at his feet. Strange, he had never particularly
thought of the stars before. He had read some, of course—remembered a
description of space that had likened it to a vast box without sides or top or
bottom. To the mind of man space is infinite. Logic and reason proclaim the
fact; yet the word vast itself implied a finite quality that puzzled him. He
knew about the solar system, galaxies, inter-galactic space; but it struck him
forcibly that man —here and now—could envision it in terms of conquest.
What
power moved men like Jonquil that they were willing to forsake the laws of
their kind? His eyes fastened on a brilliant red star and he watched it
fascinated. There was a hypnotic quality about the baleful eye and he reluctantly
looked away. Was that it? Did men look at the stars and lose their reason? He
wondered. He had always considered the sky an artistic creation; but it was
more, far more, to Bok . . . Jonquil—how many others? It wasn't the beauty of
the Universe that caught them. They didn't see it as artistic, not as an
awesome and God-formed cosmos, but as something to be conquered. Power—it was
the symbol of power. Men looked skyward and became power-mad. Even Jonquil. He
returned his thoughts to his predicament.
Traitors,
conspirators, the Manager's killers—he was besieged on every side. But he knew
the secret, knew it beyond the shadow of a doubt. Incredible as it seemed, the
conspiracy was centered under black, forbidding Chimney Rock. Okay, he'd dig it
out, single-handed if need be. Do that and no man could touch him. Not even
Shevach if he became Prime Thinker. But he needed help.
Whom could he trust?
The
agents of police were out. Wait—Grimhorn, he was the man. The Chief of World
Agents was a man of integrity. But at the moment he couldn't wait. Jonquil
couldn't afford disclosure; even now he'd be organizing a net to snare him.
Kill him. Alba. The innkeeper was a good friend. Alba would hide him, handle
the message to Grimhorn.
He
abruptly turned and plunged into the shadows of the trees, cutting across the
atoll. If Jonquil were right, Shevach knew the secret of the Rock, was rushing
to break the conspiracy and grab the glory. Damn, he thought frantically,
there wouldn't be time to wait for Grimhom. He cursed without slowing his pace.
He broke out on the opposite shore and
halted, momentarily puzzled. The seaplane ramp was flooded with light, light
and movement and sound. He heard the creak of winches and voices born on the
night breeze, caught sight of a moored seaplane carrier. He moved closer,
keeping in the shadow of the foliage until he reached the edge of the circle of
light.
Shevach! There was no mistaking the Manager's
slim figure; the burly Gullfin and cadaverous Merryweather loomed beside him.
He cursed at the sight of die Search-master, stopping as he spotted Jonquil and
Anna. They were cagey, he thought. The conspiracy was collapsing like a house
of cards and they were joining the winners. Merryweather began pivoting his
head with his chin tilted up as if he were sniffing the wind. Krull stepped
back in alarm. The man was a bloodhound. Inhuman.
The
creak of a winch caught his attention. TorpsI They were moving torps from the
seaplane carrier. Police torps with weapon compartments in the hull. The
conspirators wouldn't have a chance. That explained Anna's presence. She was
there to guide them.
A
traitor 1
He wheeled
aroung and raced back along the beach. Damn Shevach! Damn the traitor Jonquil!
They couldn't rob him now. He'd beat 'em, beat 'em. The words became a refrain
in his mind and he forced his body to greater effort. At the end of the atoll
he splashed across the partially submerged bar to Te-Tai and forced his tired
legs to a dead run. He was gasping, his lungs burned and sweat stung his eyes.
He saw fights on the headland and began shouting while still a hundred yards
away.
"Comingerl
Cominger!" The name came with a wheeze from his tortured lungs. He had
almost reached the porch when a door swung open, framing the hermit's lean
figure in a shaft of light. Krull pulled to a stop, breathing harshly, trying
to get his voice.
Cominger
looked worriedly at him. "What is it?"
"Your
torp," he gasped. Cominger took a backward step and eyed him owlishly.
"What
about it?"
"I
need it."
"Why?" The hermit seemed to compose
himself with effort.
"Chimney
Rock—I've got to get to the rock." Cominger's body stiffened. "No."
"I'm ordering you as an agent of police." "No," Cominger
repeated desperately. "Give it to me, or 111
take it."
"Why?" the hermit parried, his
voice suddenly curious. "What's the emergency?"
"Damn
you, Cominger, there's trouble at the rock. The police—Ivan Shevach—are
unloading torps at the ramp. They're heading there but it's my baby. I cracked
it and I'm going to get there first."
"Shevach
I" The name dropped from the hermit's lips in disbelief. Suddenly he drew
himself up. "Listen, you don't know the area. You'd wreck the torp, kill
yourself. But I know it. I'll take you."
"Then let's get
going."
"Follow
me." Cominger raced to the far end of the porch with Krull at his heels.
"Grab
some gear." He dived into a pile of underwater equipment and Krull sprang
to help him. They quickly stripped to their shorts and strapped on compressed
air tanks and breathing masks.
"One
second." Cominger dashed into the house and returned with a small rubber
sack that he hooked to his gear. Gun, Krull thought—he's afraid of me. He made
a mental note of it. At least he knew where a gun was when the time came.
The
torp was a long cylindrical affair just now above the tide line. The hermit
rolled the vehicle into the water and tugged it into position. Suddenly he
straightened and raised a hand for silence.
"Listen!"
Krull tilted his head, straining to hear. The
sound of a muted roar over-riding the night breeze came to his ears; it grew
louder, the noise of spitting motors, and he realized he was listening to the
voices of torps boring along the surface of the lagoon. He swung in the
direction of the sound in a futile effort to see, then whirled toward the
hermit.
"Hurry."
"They're nearer to the reef than we
are." They hurriedly positioned and checked their masks and Cominger said:
"We'll ride the surface to the reef, then we'll have to go under. It'll be
slower but you couldn't hang on in the waves."
Krull
nodded, anxious to get started. He had hoped they could ride the surface all
the way out but the hermit was right; the waves would rip him loose. Cominger
positioned the torp and kicked the starter. The engine barked to life and spat
angrily for a moment before settling into a steady roar. He laid his body
lengthwise on the sleek hull, grasped the steering bar and hooked his feet
through the end stirrups, then motioned Krull to hang on. The agent checked
his face mask, slanted his body down and hooked his arms and legs around the
hermit's, hoping the swirl of water wouldn't tear him loose.
Cominger
gave a hand signal, cut in the drive lever, and the torp moved sluggishly into
the lagoon and began picking up speed. Water sloshed against Knoll's body and
the stars became blurry lights swimming across his faceplate. He tried to catch
a sign of Shevach's torps but they were lost, the sounds of their motors masked
by the roar of the powerful engine under him. They cut across the lagoon at an
angle toward the break in the reef, picking up speed in the smooth water
despite the double load.
Shevach would beat him.
No,
he couldn'tl But he would. Okay, he'd take it from there. Just let him get to
the rock.
They passed Paha Jon's yellow-sailed
outrigger and the torp began pitching in the swells rolling in through the
narrow mouth of the reef. Krull clung to the hermit desperately. Water smashed
against his faceplate and his body yawed from side to side. The break in the
reef rushed toward them, then fell off on either side as they breached the
open sea. A wall of water smashed against him and the blurry stars vanished;
Cominger had dived the torp beneath the surface.
They
rushed through the black night of the subsea with water tearing at their
bodies. Krull's arm and leg muscles ached from his tight hold and he shivered
in the colder ocean water. A leg muscle began to cramp. He flexed it but the
muscle gripped spasmodically, becoming a hot pain. The noise of the engine and
the swirling waters drummed against his ears with a tickling sensation. He
strained to see ahead, fearful his companion would smash into a submerged rock.
But—no!
Cominger was too certain; he drove the torp through the ebony depths at full
speed with the certainty of a pilot bringing a ship to safe anchorage. He
neither slowed nor deviated; clearly he knew every inch of the sea as well by
night as by day. Knew every inch?
It
struck him then that Cominger hadn't bothered to ask questions. He had merely
said, I'll take you.
The
hermit was delivering him into the hands of the outlaws. Cominger, the
hermit—the man with the torp. Only it was Cominger, the contact man for the
conspirators. He clung to his back and debated. He could lack free and swim to
the reef but he'd be no better"off than before; Shevach would still grab
the glory and he'd be branded a public enemy. No, let Cominger deliver him;
he'd pull the net closed and snare him with the rest of them. Just now he
hadn't the slightest idea how he'd go about it but, once in the grotto, he'd
figure a way, he savagely promised himself. He couldn't come this far and fail.
The
torp slanted downward and the pressure on his ears increased. A beam shot out
from the torp, licked across the looming faces of ocean-bottom rocks and waving
fronds and blacked out again. The hermit moved the speed lever and the torp
slowed, began swinging in a wide half-circle, dropping lower in the velvet
water. He periodically flicked the beam on and off, steering through a stone
jungle. Krull felt the torp losing speed, swinging; the beam came on again and
it seemed as if they must surely ram the base of an undersea cliff. At the last
instant the hermit dived it toward the base of the rock bastions; they shot
into a narrow tunnel whose walls glowed iridescent under the glow of the beam.
The tunnel slanted upward; the hermit gave the torp a burst of power, climbed,
leveled off and cut the engine.
Krull
felt his body emerge from the water. The torp jarred against sand and he
struggled to his feet, staring into the muzzle of a submachine gun. Gordon
Gullfin's flat face leered at him from the other end.
"Well, look who's here . . . just in
time for the party."
CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN
Krull froze at the tableau that met his eyes. He was
standing knee-deep in water in a black chamber illuminated by a bluish light
emanating from some unseen source. The floor was a smooth rocky shelf which
retreated and became lost in shadow. The stone walls, floor and ceiling formed
a fantastic stage peopled by immobile manikins, garish in the blue light.
Yargo! The identity of the actors struck him
with full force. Ben Yargo, Jan, and the short slim Foxhill were huddled in a
group off to one side, with a woman whose face was familiar despite her swim
attire. Eve Mallon! He was startled until he remembered the rumor she was
Yar-go's mistress. Now they stood, dripping in swim gear, frozen into momentary
immobility.
Ivan
Shevach, flanked by two swarthy men armed to the hilt, stood a few yards beyond
Gullfin's shoulder; behind them towered the lean skeleton of Peter
Merryweather, the Searchmaster.
A few yards beyond, Martin
Jonquil stood alone.
Off
to one side, Anna Malroon—thin and wet and shaking with cold—watched him with
tragic eyes. He captured the scene in a flash. Gullfin's voice boomed again.
The tableau was magically
broken.
"Over
there." He waved the gun menacingly. "Both of you over by
Yargo."
Krull
stood his ground. "I'm an agent of police. I'm here to enforce the
law."
"I'm
the law," Gullfin snarled. "Get moving—both of you."
"Max
Krull is not one of us," a voice said. Krull looked up. The speaker was
Yargo. So, the Prime Thinker was one of the conspirators; and Jan, Foxhill, and
Eve Mallon of the Council of Six. He wasn't surprised.
"He dies anyway," Shevach cut in
icily. He smiled balefully at Krull. "You won't get out of this one so
easily . . . esperl"
"Sentence
without due process of law? I'm shocked," Yar-go mocked. Shevach regarded
him scornfully.
"You
talk about law—you, who rigged the election with that phoney Alexander
test?"
Yargo
didn't flinch. He stared at the Manager for a long minute before answering,
"True, but I didn't do it for my own self-gain."
"No?" It was Sheyach's turn to
mock.
"No,
I did it for this." His hand swept toward the rear of the grotto. "I
had to insure that the work would be finished. Fortunately, it has been."
If
Krull were startled, he hid it. Shevach merely arched his brow.
"Finished?"
"You
might kill us, here, but you can't stop what's beyond this grotto,
Shevach."
"I
didn't intend to stop your work, Yargo." The Manager smiled thinly.
"I merely intend to take it over, and will, thanks to the young lady who tipped
us in Sydney, then met us at Abiang and led us here." He nodded toward
Anna. Krull was startled but didn't bother to deny the charge; the girl's face
gave him the truth. She, like Jonquil, had played both ends. Why?
"She
betrayed you, too," Shevach added, looking vindictively at Yargo,
"including the fact that your mistress had fled here with you."
Yargo
returned his look calmly, without answering. Jan's face was white, frightened,
but Eve Mallon stood straight, a whimsical smile on her hps.
"She
must have been a member of the conspiracy to have known so much," Shevach
resumed. "Therefore she dies."
"No," Krull exploded.
"Ah, the lover," Shevach sneered
disdainfully.
"You're
wrong, Shevach." The soft voice of Martin Jonquil was a velvet note
tinged with death. "You've miscalculated." Krull stared at him in
surprise. A moment before, the Inspector apparently had been unarmed. Now he
held a wicked-looking automatic with its black muzzle centered on the Manager's
breast.
"I came to save the
conspiracy."
The
Manager's face turned white and he nervously bit his thin lip and tried to form
words. None came. The silence was heavy.
Wham!
Wham! Krull heard the bullets thud into the Inspector's body; he staggered,
dropped to one knee, slipped backward to the floor, his dead eyes staring
terribly toward the blue-black ceiling.
Peter
Merryweather grinned amiably, bringing the concealed gun into view. A wisp of
smoke curled upward from the barrel.
"Read
it in his mind," he said pleasantly. He smiled at the dead agent's body.
"Fool."
"No
matter. He would have died anyway." Shevach's voice rose to a hard rasp.
"I almost wish you could live, Yargo. You'd see how a real ruler
operates."
"You
didn't intend to smash the conspiracy. You merely intended to use the power for
your own means."
"Certainly,"
Shevach snapped, "do you take me for a fool? I agree with you that we need
atomic power, Yargo, and now—thanks to your blundering conspiracy—I have it.
But not for the stars. That's for fools and dreamers . . ."
"You would enslave the
Earth?" Krull cut in.
"I'll
rule the Earth, if that's what you mean." His eyes gleamed triumphantly.
"I'll rule it for my lifetime, an emperor . . . pass it to my heirs. I'll
make the miserable LIQ's and MIQ's . . ." He cut off whatever he was going
to say and stepped back, breathing heavily. His hps compressed tightly and he
snarled, "Kill these scum!"
"Max!"
Anna's scream rang terribly in the grotto, reverberating from wall to wall.
"Remember what I told you."
Gullfin
snapped the submachine gun up, grinning viciously, and his finger came back on
the trigger.
"Hold
it!" Shevach snapped. Gullfin stopped, bewildered, glancing from Krull to
his chief. Shevach disregarded him and turned to the shaking girl. "Maybe it's
something I should know. What did you tell Krull that's so important?"
Anna
didn't reply. She looked at Krull. Her wan face was filled with anguish, and
her eyes were enormous limpid pools.
He peeped her.
A thought screamed in her
mind.
Screamed, jolted him,
numbed him with its force.
"What
did you tell Krull?" The Manager's words jerked him back to reality.
Anna
pulled herself together with difficulty, staring at the Manager with large
tragic eyes. When she spoke, her voice was so soft Krull could scarcely hear
her.
"You're
right," she said. "I am one of the conspirators." She
half-turned, smiled apologetically at Yargo, and turned back to the Manager.
"Only they didn't know."
"Didn't know?"
Shevach sneered.
"No, I was working for a man who wasn't
a conspirator, but was guiding it. I was his messenger." "Who?"
Shevach snarled.
She
looked at him, silently. Shevach lifted his face arrogantly. "Keep the
name," he rasped. "It doesn't make any difference. Die with it."
He started to motion to Gullfin.
"But it does,"
Anna said softly.
"Oh . . . ?"
Shevach observed sardonically.
"I
didn't betray the conspiracy by bringing you here. I did it because it was part
of my job—to make sure no one remained alive who might stop us . . ."
"Explain
that," Shevach rasped, visibly disturbed at her words.
"I
was ordered to bring you here for your own execution, even though I would die
first."
"Whoever gave that
order was a fool. Who was it?"
"Got
it." Merryweather's voice cut through the grotto like a sliver of ice. His
bony face was searching the girl's—he stepped back, white and shaken.
"Bok," he
whispered. "Herman Bok . . ."
Anna
pulled herself erect and looked defiandy at him. "Mr. Bok," she said
calmly, "and he was no fool."
"Herman Bok . . ." Shevach spoke
the name wonderingly, then snapped it out like an epithet. "Herman Bokl
Doddering esperl" He spun toward Gullfin.
^Kill them."
"Max . . ." Anna
shrieked.
Gullfin's
gun came up . . . swung toward him. Krull looked desperately at him, trying to
control and shape his mind to do what he had never done.
What Anna said he could dol
Pk,
pk, pk—pk could control
matter. That was why Bok had guided him to the cavern; he was a latent pk. The
submachine gun centered on him; Gullfin's face was a grinning evil mask and
his body was tensed for the recoil of the weapon.
Shevach
. . . Shevach . .. Kill Shevach and
his men.
The
thought streamed from Krull's mind; he tried to focus it, point it at the evil
visage behind the weapon. A gun crashed and his concentration was broken.
Gullfin turned, startled, for a moment lowering the weapon.
Anna
was swaying, blood welling from her breast. The Searchmaster stood frozen . . .
smoke curled from his gun ... his
eyes were frightened.
Krull
pushed Anna from his mind and forced himself to concentrate.
Kill
Shevach . . . Kill Shevach . . .
Gullfin
swung back, bringing the submachine gun to bear. Kill Shevach . . . kill Shevach ...
The
gun barrel wavered and he concentrated on the thought, oblivious to everything
except Gullfin's hideous face which now seemed to fill the cavern.
Kill
Shevach .. . Kill Shevach . ..
The
face grew larger in his eyes until nothing seemed to remain but a single
gigantic galeful eye; he sped into the eye, along the optic nerve and stared at
the greasy gray coils and crevices of Gullfin's brain.
Kill
Shevach, he
screamed at the brain, kUl,
kill, kill . . .
Abruptly
Gordon Gullfin stiffened. He spun around. Shevach screamed incoherently, a
high falsetto scream like a wounded
cat. Menyweather's gun came up. Wham! Wham! Bullets thudded into Gullfm's body.
The burly agent staggered backward, yanked back on the trigger and staccato
blasts ripped the cavern. Acrid fumes stung Krull's eyes, bringing him back to
reality. Shevach was screaming horribly, bending forward with pieces of flesh
jumping from the side of his head; he collapsed, gurgling, atop the bodies of
the two agents flanking him. Merryweather stood straight and tall, swaying, his
eyes rolling wildly; blood gushed from his middle and he slowly bent forward,
toppling down across the bodies of Shevach and his men.
The
chattering of the gun abruptly stopped. Gullfin stepped back with a bewildered
look; his eyes went to Shevach, to Krull, back to Shevach again. The machinegun
slipped from his fingers and clattered to the floor. He moved a hand up and
rubbed his chest, looked blankly at the blood on his fingers. Krull hesitated,
and sprang to Anna's side. He bent down and lifted her head, cradling her in
his arms.
"Max . . . look out!"
He
twisted his head in alarm. Gullfin, breathing heavily, had yanked an automatic
from his belt and was aiming it pointblank at him. He felt death coming and
tried to twist aside. Another roar shattered the grotto and Gullfin stumbled,
holding the weapon numbly. He tottered, swayed, a glazed expression clouded his eyes and he fell, slowly, a-cross the body
of Peter Merryweather. August Cominger stared at the weapon in his hands, let
it clatter to the floor.
"I never killed a man before," he
said quiedy.
Krull
stared thankfully at him, and turned back to Anna. Blood was welling from her
breast ' and her eyes were closed; he knew she had already fled the dark
cavern. He held her head in his lap and looked up, filled with sorrow,
remembering the sadness in her eyes. She had known, had known . . .
He
looked at the body of Jonquil, who had hated espers and, unknowingly, had
served one faithfully. Martin had been faithful to the conspiracy. Faith . .
. faith in man's future.
"The
story is written," Ben Yargo said gently. "The story of man on Earth
lies behind—ahead is the story of the stars. If we conspired, Krull, it was for
the future." He came forward and rested his hands on his shoulder.
"Will you join us?"
Krull
looked somberly at him; he turned toward Jan. Her hps were parted, expectandy,
waiting his answer. There was nothing left on Earth for him—not any more.
"I
will," he said steadily. He laid Anna gently on the floor of the grotto
and rose, looking down at Martin Jonquil's body. Martin, you were right, he
thought.
"Look,"
Ben Yargo said. He took his arm and walked with him into the deep shadows of
the grotto. They came to the end and a door opened; beyond he saw a vast cavern
flooded with brilliant blue light, heard the whisper of machines, saw the
distant figures of men and women working around the base of a tremendous
rocket that reached almost to the ceiling of the cavern. It was thick of girth,
monstrous, nestled in a crosspatch of framework set on tracks.
He
thought: But
they can't get it out.
"We
can get it out," Jan whispered, reading his mind. She had come up behind
him and slipped her hand in his. "Don't you see, Dad had to remain in
office long enough to protect the ship. That's what he didn't know: how or when
it could be gotten out. All he knew was that it would happen someday."
"How . .
. ?"
"You
found out tonight—in Anna's mind . . ." "I don't understand . .
." "Psychokinesis."
He
stepped back, awe-struck. Suddenly he felt very humble. This great ship . .
. the labor of decades . .
. the dreams of men had
awaited his coming. He, alone of men, had the fantastic power to move the
mountain shielding the rocket from the stars. A lonely feeling swept over him.
In that moment he knew how the leader of espers had felt. He looked into the
cavern, then he saw them. Children.
A young boy—and a girl.
He looked questioningly at
Jan.
"The children of
tomorrow," she said quietly.
"Children—of tomorrow?"
"Children,
with great talents. We have to save them from the searchers. They will be the
new beginning, Max—they and the children of the pioneers."
He felt a sense of wonder. Thank God there
had been dreamers—and men of action. He sensed someone at his side and turned.
It was the hermit. He saw his eyes for the first time; they were vistas of
distance. He looked at Krull and uttered three words: "I knew—look!"
He raised a pointing
finger.
Krull
lifted his eyes. Across the nose of the rocket he saw its name.
The first spaceship, the Herman Bok, lifted from Earth early in January, 2450
A.D., following inauguration of Mus-tapha Sherif as 91st Prime Thinker of the
Empire of Earth
. . . Blak Roko's Post-Atomic Earthman, Venusian Press, 2672 A.D.
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THE ATOM CONSPIRACY
There
shall be no atomic research! That was the basic law upon which the Empire of
Earth was founded and on which it had kept the world peaceful and prosperous
right up to 2449 A.D.
And
then an atomic plot was discovered. Who was behind it? What motivated it? Was
the Earth face to face now with the one challenge it feared most?
Max
Krull secret agent of the future, was given the case. And that itself was the
first mystery he had to solve — because he was apparently no James Bond (up to
then), he had to work alone (why?), and he held only an average rating (or so
it seemed).
THE
ATOM CONSPIRACY is an exciting cloak-and-dagger adventure in the
super-scientific future, by the author of THE MISSILE LORDS, BOMBS IN ORBIT,
etc.