Alan E. Nourse & J. A. Meyer (9 page)

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"Julian,
you just won't understand." She turned away, but he jerked her around. The
enthusiasm was gone from his face now, and there was anger in its place.

"You'd
like to stop me, wouldn't you?" he said. "Push me back in the rut.
Punch some new holes in my Stability Card and dump me back at the bottom of the
heap again. That's what you want, isn't it?"

"It
isn't what I want or don't want," Libby said wearily. "If you won't
step down now, I can't protect you
any more
. You'll
have a DEPCO man in your office before you can turn around. You'll never know
what hit you. They'll find that you're unstable and dangerous for anything but
a greencard job. They'll get one look at your Stability profile and downgrade
you right into Critical Ward. Then they'll give you
recoop
and shock-analysis, and if there's anything left you'll spend the rest of your
life picking oranges somewhere. That's not what 7 want, Julian. That's the
law."

He looked at her and suddenly laughed.
"I don't believe you," he said. "You've been handing me this
Stability garbage for five years now. Acting like I'd committed some crime
that you were covering up for me.
Always trying to make me
stop pushing.
Why, every time I took a step up the ladder you'd nearly
have a fit.
As if I couldn't handle the job."

"It's
not that," she said. "It's what you might
do
in the job. And I've been covering for you, believe me, but I can't do
it any longer. If you don't quit this job right now, I can't help you
any more
."

He
walked around the room, slamming his fist into his palm. "Okay," he
said unexpectedly. "
Ill
quit, then.
But not now.
Not today. Project Frisco is urgent, and
there's nobody else to take over.
Ill
need time to
get it straightened out."

"How much time?
Two days? Three?"

"God,
nol
I
couldn't get anything done that soon."

She
shook her head. "No good, Julian. I've got to have a definite date. You're
up for an automatic DEPCO check right now. You can't get away from it . . . the
best I can do is stall them. And if you won't give me a definite date,
111
call them right now."

"For
Christ sake, what do you want me to do?" Bahr burst out. Then he stopped,
searched her face. "Libby . . ."

"I mean it, Julian."

"You're bluffing," he said.
"You won't call them." "I took an oath when I joined DEPCO. I
can't leave you in this job."

"Oath, garbage!
You haven't lived up to that thing since the day you signed it. If I
get my Stability clearance revoked, it's your neck, too. There goes your
career. Think about that."

"I
already have." Libby turned and picked the phone off the desk that used to
be his desk, and dialed the DEPCO exchange.

Bahr
watched her make the connection all the way through to Adams' office. Then he
hit her with it.

"You'd
better think about Timmy before you make that call," he said.

Very
slowly, Libby put the phone back on the hook, turned to face him. All the fight
was gone from her suddenly. She felt weak, and sick. "You couldn't be
that rotten," she said. "Not even you."

"I want this job." He wouldn't look
at her face.

"Julian, you promised."

"Sure, I promised. Things are different
now, that's all. I'm not going to do any parting favors for somebody who's
going to sell me down the river."

"Julian,
he's your child, too. I'm entitled to one child, with my job rating. Ill
raise
him and support him. I won't tie you down or ask for
partial support. All I want is your signature and a BHE test. Is that asking a
favor?"

"You
can stand a five-point cut in your Stability rating," Bahr said. "I
can't. I can't even stand a DEPCO review. Particularly when my therapist has
been . . ."

"I
can claim it was part of the therapy," she pleaded. "I'm willing to
take the blame."

"They'll put you under
polygraph."

"I have contacts. Some of my father's
friends . . ."

"Then get me a white card!" Bahr
said.

"I
can't do that. Julian . . . he's your son. I don't want to lose him. Do you
want him to go through the same thing you did: the
Playhome
,
and Playschool, and
Techschool
and everything? You
don't know what those schools are like now. They didn't experiment with the
children when you went. . . ."

"Those are DEPCO projects," Bahr
said. "That's your out-lit running them. Don't you like them?"

"There's
a lot about DEPCO I don't like, but that's neither here nor there. . . ."

"Then get them changed!"

"They're
all right, most of the time. Most of the kids come through all right, as long
as they're not too stubborn or independent. But what if he's like you, Julian?
What if he lights back?"

"Then good for him.
I took it, he can."

Libby
pushed away from him, looked at him coldly. "I could name you anyway, and
have you dumped as a Stability risk for refusing to accept paternity."

"And I can get eight men to swear you
picked them up and look them to bed without a prostitute's license.
Eight men who can keep up the story under polygraph."

"Julian," she said, "what
makes you such a rotten bastard?"

"You're the psych doc. You ought to
know." He looked at her, and suddenly, inexplicably, she was in his arms,
and he was crushing her against him, his face in her hair, his hands digging
desperately into her shoulders. "Oh, God, Libby, I don't want to fight
you. I didn't mean it about Tim. I swear I'll quit this job just as soon as I
can get things under control, but it means too much to me right now. It just
means too damned much. You've got to go along on my terms for now . . ."

"I
know." She tried to keep the tears back, clinging to him. "But
believe me, I'm going to watch you, and if you start to go off the deep end,
I'll turn your case over to DEPCO lock, stock and barrel."

Bahr
laughed, the old confidence returning, and he tipped her chin up gently, kissed
her. "That's fair enough. You watch me."

On
the desk behind them the intercom crackled. "Julian? Frank. We've got a
BRINT man on the wire here."

"What does he
want?" Bahr snapped. "I can't talk to him."

"I
think you'd better," Carmine's voice said. "There's been a landing up
in Canada. BRINT won't let us into the area unless you head the team yourself.
They want to know right now."

"Christ!" Bahr said. He pushed
Libby away. "Look, Frank, tell them yes. I'll be in the air in three
minutes." He snapped the speaker switch to off.

"Julian . . ."

"Not now, not now. This is
important." He paused at the door, looked back at her. "You stall
that DEPCO team," he said. "I don't care how you do it, but stall
them. This may be the break we've been waiting for."

Then
he was gone. She walked around the room, trying to smooth her dress, straighten
her hair, fix her make-up, cursing him for the things he could do to
her,
and herself because she couldn't fight him.
Two people.
A man who could not possibly
understand, or give a damn, and a woman who could not help loving him.

She found the elevator and
started down for street level.

Part
II
THE
MAN IN THE MIDDLE
Chapter Five

Harvey Alexander
accepted the proffered capsule without a word
and popped it into his mouth while the nurse and attendant watched. He took a
mouthful of water, tossed his head back and swallowed, coughed a couple of
times, and took another swallow of water to stop the coughing.

The
nurse nodded. "That should hold him for another eight hours," she
said.

"He'll
be on the list for
recoop
in the morning," the
attendant said. "Doc says around nine."

Alexander
leaned weakly back against the pillow. His eyes were already beginning to
blink. He groaned, rolled his head for a moment, and lay still, his breathing
returning to the slow steady respiratory rate of the drugged.

As
the nurse and attendant left, he opened his eyes and turned his head sharply,
listening to hear if the door locked from the outside. The solenoid lock did
not buzz, and he leaned back with a sigh. Very sloppy, but then they probably
counted on the sleeper to keep him immobilized until dawn. He opened his mouth
and lifted the not-yet-
dis
-solved capsule from under
his tongue and stuffed it under the pillow.

They would not be back. He had eight hours.

During
all the dizzy, kaleidoscopic period while he had been recovering from the
deep-probe, a single idea had been evolving in his mind—escape. His treatment
at the hands of Bahr and his men convinced him that he could not expect their
investigation to clear him, even if McEwen would back him to the hilt. The
chance of even the legal process of a court-martial seemed remote. He would be
recooped
, and treated with chemo-shock, and wind up in a
fruit-picking

battalion
with a new name, a new identity, and a blacked-out memory.

He
looked out the window of his room. The hospital was surrounded by a ten-foot
brick wall, with guards at the gates. He had only a limited view of the
building itself. He was undoubtedly in a maximum-security wing that could be
reached only by elevator, or by passing guards. It was, surprisingly, a
suburban hospital. From the rows of dingy apartment flats spreading out beyond
the wall, he guessed it was probably twenty miles or so out of Chicago.

He
thought over the hospitals he knew of in the Chicago suburbs. Only two had
psychotic-security facilities: the' George Kelley and the Sister Andrea
Farri
. The Kelley seemed more likely, especially since the
DIA was involved.
And if he were in the Kelley . . .

Five
years before, three max-security patients had escaped from the Kelley. They
were of course picked up again inside of two hours, but the incident had shaken
the administration, and the entire security system had been revamped to make a
similar occurrence impossible.

But
Alexander, when he was assigned to the Wildwood Plant, had spent several weeks
studying all the major security systems of note in the world: prisons,
psychotic wards, A-plants, computing centers, the Kingsley mines,
the
Chinese and Soviet political camps. He had also spent
three months in the Army hospital in Buenos Aires after the Antarctic incident,
where as an esteemed guest he had had the run of the place, and had learned a
certain amount about hospital customs and routines.

During his Mexican tour he had worked with a
special Army Central Intelligence team that was trying to break up the
Qualchi
ring of smugglers who were constantly moving
Chinese guerillas, weapons, and supplies into the southwestern United States.
After six weeks of intensive coaching, and with a cyanide capsule adequately
concealed, he was methodically beaten up, flogged, and dumped in a filthy
Mexican
bastille
where three known
Qualchi
agents had been incarcerated, after much careful maneuvering, for slugging and robbing
a couple of American
touristas
(actually CI agents) who were slumming in
Mexicali.

The
whole affair had been so neatly staged that even the Mexican police did not
know they had
Qualchi
agents in their jail; the three
agents were completely duped, especially since they were not interrogated, and
cursed their ill luck rather than Army CI.

Alexander was turned over to Mexican
authorities when he tried to accuse the Army of sweating him over to make him
confess to being a
Qualchi
agent, instead of merely a
petty thief who was broke and hiding out in Mexico. His charges were of course
denounced as preposterous by the same Army CI Major who had supervised his
mauling. The Mexican police, while they believed his story, were still quite
willing to lock him up anyway, because the Army was good for their whorehouses.

He
was soon on confidential terms with the three
Qualchi
agents, who turned out to be part of an isolated cell and had no real
information. They did, however, have certain contacts in Nuevo Laredo, so
Alexander, unable to notify the CI people, planned and executed a breakout from
the
bastille
that he had thought beyond his
capabilities, taking the three
Qualchi
men with him,
and heading south.

For
the next four months Alexander was on the CI report as a deserter and bug-out
(an agent who went over to the enemy camp
);
they posted substantial rewards for him or
liis
cyanided body. He turned up one day in Des Moines, Iowa, and furnished an order
of battle for the entire Texas-New Mexico-Oklahoma-Kansas
Qualchi
net, having worked himself up to the rank of Supervisor of Local Theft and
staging six still-unsolved supply raids on warehouses in the area for the
benefit of guerilla troops.

With
twelve other
Qualchi
agents he was arrested, interrogated
for two days without breaking (before witnesses who were returned to the
Qualchi
six months later on a prisoner exchange) and then,
like three other top
Qualchi
agents, one of whom
turned out to be a BRINT man, he simply vanished. In the ensuing roundup, carried out strategically over a nine-month period, 120
Qualchi
agents were captured and interrogated, the un-co-operative ones being turned
over to BRINT for unrestricted examination, and over 600 Chinese troops from
the tough Mukden school were trapped and committed suicide. The operation was
considered to be a major coup, even by BRINT. Consequently, as is customary in
intelligence work, all the credit was given to a few CI and DIA figureheads who
were military-looking,
telegenic
, and willing to
accept the risk of assassination that accompanied such notoriety. Alexander, like
the other CI main links, had his face altered slightly by surgery and was given
a new assignment halfway around the world, with his Army records adjusted to
cover the five month lapse.

The
only records of the affair were in the central CI files where his name had been
replaced by a meaningless cover number. There was no decoration, commendation,
record of service, or even mention of his CI experience after that. Most of the
CI people who had worked most closely with him did not know his real identity,
and the trail of Agent C451933 ended as abruptly as if he had never existed, as
was customary in intelligence work.

But
Alexander had never forgotten the experience, particularly the breakout from
the
bastille
, which he had considered a maneuver
with overtones of brilliance. As a result of his intimate acquaintance with
intelligence operations, he always, in any new assignment, imagined himself in
the role of an intelligence agent and/or prisoner, and studied the existing
security system for loopholes.

This
was not merely a hobby or diversion; he had no way of knowing when the dead
trail of Agent C451933 might be reopened by a chance recognition, or when he
might have to worry about getting people into places or getting himself out.

The
fact that he was confined in an American hospital in the outskirts of Chicago,
rather than in a Chinese or satellite compound, was slightly irrelevant under
the circumstances. There was no question in his mind that his neck at the
present moment depended upon his finding out what had actually happened at the
Wildwood Plant, and he was satisfied that Bahr's DIA henchmen were at least as
dangerous an enemy, to him personally, as a dozen
Qualchi
knife-men.

But the Kelley Hospital was a break. He had
studied the Kelley system—modeled on the
Bronstock
system used in the Eastern European "rehabilitation" centers—when he
had developed the Wildwood plan. He had found no noticeable weakness in the
Kelley system at that time, but then he had been on the outside, not inside.

And
that, he decided, made a very great deal of difference.

Moving
out of his bed, he put his ear to the door. There was no sound in the corridor.
He opened the door a crack, ear pressed against the aluminum sill, listening
for the telltale vibrations of the alarm gongs used in the Kelley. There was
nothing. No ringing, no pounding of feet. Somewhere below, he knew, a
master-panel lit up any time a patient's door was opened, but it was nearly
dinner time and most of the personnel would be occupied. A blue light might go
unnoticed for a while. Even the hall TV scanners were dim, though he knew the
slightest alarm would throw the hallways and rooms under surveillance in ten
seconds flat.

Out
in the hall he padded across to the men's lavatory and ducked inside. There were
commodes, a urinal, and sinks. He collected all the toilet paper rolls and hand
towels he could find and crossed swiftly back into his room again.

It
took only moments to crumple the paper and towels, wrap them in a sheet from
the bed, and stuff them under the sponge-plastic mattress. There was a
bed-light on the wall; he pulled out the plug, ripped the lamp off the wire,
and bent the naked copper ends into a neat pair of lobster claws.

Finally,
he dropped the three metal toilet-paper rollers into a pillow case stripped
from the bed. Pulling all his clothes off, he plugged the lamp cord back in the
wall socket and touched the lobster-claws together near the nest of torn paper.
There was a shower of sparks, and the fuse blew, but he blew gently into the paper
nest and was rewarded by a tiny flame.

The
power came back immediately on an emergency circuit. He heard a buzzer down
the corridor summon the maintenance men. The smoke was already beginning to
pour from the heated sponge mattress, stinking and acrid. Choking, Alexander
threw the door into the hall open and peered out as smoke began to billow out.

As
he had expected, there was a
tumoff
at the end of the
corridor, with a civilian guard just settling back to his magazine after the
buzz for the blown fuse. Alexander waited until the smoke in the corridor grew
thick enough to haze out the nearest TV scanner. Then he screamed,
"Fire!"
and began running toward the guard, with the
pillow-case blackjack held out of sight.

The
guard jerked up in surprise, staring incredulously at the man running at him
stark naked down the corridor. Instead of blasting at him with the stunner he
was wearing, the guard stood open-mouthed, as Alexander had anticipated,
expecting that the last thing a naked man fleeing a fire would do would be to
slug him. On the dead run, Alexander swung the pillow case, and the three metal
rollers slammed into the guard's head.

As
soon as the guard hit the floor Alexander unzipped the front of his light blue
duty coveralls. Then he hoisted the limp form to his shoulder and hurried back
to the room. Smoke was billowing out the door, and in the distance he heard the
fire gong clanging. He held the coveralls and let the guard slide out of them
like an egg yolk. Once into the coveralls, he shoved the guard's body into the
smoke-filled room.

At the end of the corridor there was a sudden
burst of noise . . . undoubtedly the fire squad. Alexander took a deep breath,
and plunged into the smoke. He seized the guard's ankle and began to back out
slowly, coughing noticeably as the first of the emergency crew arrived.

Eager
hands assisted him to get the guard, face down, out of the room. Someone
started artificial respiration, and Alexander coughed into his hands and
backed away as more people and equipment began to arrive. An extinguisher began
to spray the smoldering mattress, which threw up great clouds of acrid black
smoke. In twenty seconds Alexander was walking slowly away, past several
interns who were hurrying toward the noise, and into the main-wing corridor of
the George Kelley Hospital.

With the first step behind him, Alexander
moved swiftly toward the service elevator which had brought up the
fire-fighting equipment. It was only a matter of time before somebody noticed
that the victim in the smoke-filled room was a guard and not a patient; he had
to get beyond the hospital walls before the security alarm went off.

He
had long since discarded the idea of posing as a
dischargee
,
impossible because discharge hours were over for the day; or as a guard or even
a doctor, impossible because the fingerprint-check would stop him cold at the
gate. He knew the hospital used plastic sheets and gowns which were sterilized
and remolded after use, so no laundry trucks ever left the compound. Food
cartons and supplies came in from outside on standard conveyor strips, X-ray
checked as they entered. Garbage and trash were similarly conveyed out in
sealed drums.

But
in Buenos Aires, Alexander had noticed a curiosity in that hospital's security
procedure which he thought should be present in the Kelley's system as well.

He
found the morgue in the basement, adjacent to a loading platform in the rear
of the main part of the building. He reached it through an employee's stairwell
and a concrete tunnel leading past the power pile.

Chicago,
like all major cities, had a central autopsy room; and the Kelley, like other
hospitals in the city, shipped all its cadavers there on a day-to-day basis.
The transit was usually made at night to avoid traffic on
Wahanakee
Drive. Now Alexander saw that the truck was still waiting, backed up to the
loading platform while the drivers were in the cafeteria for coffee. There were
four wheeled stretchers, with sheets covering the bodies, loaded into the back
of the refrigerated truck.

Alexander
scrambled up the tailgate, peering into the truck. Back of the stretchers the
undomed
gyro was spinning, an almost inaudible high-pitched
hum coming from the flywheel. Back of the gyro unit was a two-foot work space
with a spare wheel and half a dozen plastic sheets.

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