Short Fiction Mack Reynolds (best ereader for pdf and epub .txt) đ
- Author: Mack Reynolds
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âI wouldnât think so,â the other said humorously. âSince 1919, when they were first organized, the so-called Communists in this country, from the lowest to the highest echelons, have been so riddled with police agents that a federal judge in New England once refused to prosecute a case against them on the grounds that the party was a United States government agency.â
Larry was in no frame of mind for the otherâs heavy humor. âLook, Hans,â he said, âwhat I want to know is what Frol is over here for.â
âOf course you do,â Hans Distelmayer said, unable evidently to keep note of puzzlement from his voice. âLarry,â he said, âI assume your people know of the new American underground.â
âWhat underground?â Larry snapped.
The professional spy chief said, his voice strange, âThe Soviets seem to have picked up an idea somewhere, possibly through their membership in this country, that something is abrewing in the States. That a change is being engineered.â
Larry stared at the blank phone screen.
âWhat kind of a change?â he said finally. âYou mean a change to the Soviet system?â Surely not even the self-deluding Russkies could think it possible to overthrow the American socioeconomic system in favor of the Soviet brand.
âNo, no, no,â the German chuckled. âOf course not. Itâs not of their working at all.â
âThen whatâs Frol Eivazovâs interest, if they arenât engineering it?â
Distelmayer rumbled his characteristic chuckle with humor. âMy dear friend, donât be naive. Anything that happens in America is of interest to the Soviets. There is delicate peace between you now that they have changed their direction and are occupying themselves largely with the economic and agricultural development of Asia and such portions of the world as have come under their hegemony, and while you put all efforts into modernizing the more backward countries among your satellites.â
Larry said automatically, âOur allies arenât satellites.â
The spymaster went on without contesting the statement. âThere is immediate peace but surely governmental officials on both sides keep careful watch on the internal developments of the other. True, the current heads of the Soviet Complex would like to see the governments of all the Western powers changedâ âbut only if they are changed in the direction of communism. They are hardly interested in seeing changes made which would strengthen the West in the, ah, Battle For Menâs Minds.â
Larry snorted his disgust. âWhat sort of change in government would strengthen the United States inâ ââ
The German interrupted smoothly, âEvidently, thatâs what Frol seems to be here for, Larry. To find out more about this movement andâ ââ
âThis what?â Larry blurted.
âThe term seems to be movement.â
Larry Woolford held a long silence before saying, âAnd Frol is actually here in this country to buck thisâ ââ ⊠this movement.â
âNot necessarily,â the other said impatiently. âHe is here to find out more about it. Evidently Peking and Moscow have heard just enough to make them nervous.â
Larry said, âYou have anything more, Hans?â
âIâm afraid thatâs about it.â
âAll right,â Larry said. He added absently, âThanks, Hans.â
âThank me some day with deeds, not with words,â the German chuckled.
Larry Woolford looked at his watch and grimaced. He was either going to get going now or forget about doing any fishing in Florida this afternoon.
Grudgingly, he dialed the phone companyâs Personal Service and said to the impossibly cheerful blonde who answered, âWhere can I find Professor Peter Voss who teaches over at the University in Baltimore? I donât want to talk with him, just want to know where heâll be an hour from now.â
While waiting for his information, he dressed, deciding inwardly that he hated his job, the department in which he was employed, the Boss and Greater Washington. On top of that, he hated himself. Heâd already been taken off this assignment, why couldnât he leave it lay?
The blonde rang him back. Professor Peter Voss was at home. He had no classes today. She gave him the address.
Larry Woolford raised his car from his auto-bungalow in the Brandywine suburb and headed northwest at a high level for the old Baltimore section of the city.
The Professorâs house, he noted, was of an earlier day and located on the opposite side of Paterson Park from Elwood Avenue, the street on which Susan Self and her father had resided. That didnât necessarily hold significance, the park was a large one and the Professorâs section a well-to-do neighborhood, while Selfâs was just short of a slum these days.
He brought his car down to street level, and parked before the scholarâs three-story, brick house. Baltimore-like, it was identical to every other house in the block; Larry wondered vaguely how anybody ever managed to find his own place when it was very dark out.
There was an old-fashioned bell at the side of the entrance and Larry Woolford pushed it. There was no identification screen in the door, evidently the inhabitants had to open up to see who was calling, a tiring chore if you were on the far side of the house and the caller nothing more than a salesman.
It was obviously the Professor himself who answered.
He was in shirtsleeves, tieless and with age-old slippers on his stockingless feet. He evidently hadnât bothered to shave this morning and he held a dog-earred pamphlet in his right hand, his forefinger tucked in it to mark his place. He wore thick-lensed, gold-rimmed glasses through which he blinked at Larry Woolford questioningly, without speaking. Professor Peter Voss was a man in his mid fifties, and, on the face of it, couldnât care less right now about his physical appearance.
A weird, Larry decided immediately. He wondered at the University, one of the nationâs best, keeping on such a figure.
âProfessor Voss?â he said. âLawrence Woolford.â He brought forth his identification.
The Professor blinked down at it. âI see,â he said. âWonât you come in?â
The house was old, all right. From the outside, quite acceptable, but the
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