Short Fiction Mack Reynolds (best ereader for pdf and epub .txt) đ
- Author: Mack Reynolds
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But, Holy Smokes, sheâd never do as a career manâs wife. He could just see the Bossâ ultraconservative better half inviting them to dinner. It would happen exactly once, never again.
He obtained his car, lifted it to one of the higher levels and headed for Newport News. It was a half-hour trip and he wasnât particularly expectant of results. The tip Sam Sokolski had given him, wasnât much to go by. Evidently, Frank Nostrand was a friend of the Professorâs but that didnât necessarily mean he was connected with the movement, or that he knew Vossâ whereabouts.
He might have saved himself the trip.
The bird had flown again. Not only was Frank Nostrand not at the Madison Air Laboratories, but he wasnât at home either. Larry Woolford, mindful of his departmental chiefâs words on the prestige these people carried, took a full hour in acquiring a search warrant before breaking into the Nostrand home.
Nostrand was supposedly a bachelor, but the auto-bungalow, similar to Larry Woolfordâs own, showed signs of double occupancy, and there was little indication that the guest had been a woman.
Disgruntled, Larry Woolford dialed the offices, asked for Walt Foster. It took nearly ten minutes before his colleague faded in.
âIâm up to my eyebrows, Larry. Whatâd you want?â
Larry gave him Frank Nostrandâs address. âThis guyâs disappeared, Walt.â
âSo?â
âHe was a close friend of Professor Voss. I got a warrant to search his house. It shows signs that he had a guest. Possibly it was the Professor. Do you want to get some of the boys down here to go through the place? Possibly thereâs some clue to where they took off for. The Professorâs on the run and heâs no professional at this. If we can pick him up, Iâve got a sneaking suspicion weâll have the so-called Movement licked.â
Walt Foster slapped a hand to his face in anguish. âYou knew where the Professor was hiding, and you tried to pick him up on your own and let him get away. Why didnât you discuss this with either the Boss or me? Iâm in charge of this operation! I would have had a dozen men down there. Youâve fouled this up!â
Larry stared at him. Already Walt Foster was making sounds like an enraged superior.
He said mildly, âSorry, Walt. I came down here on a very meager tip. I didnât really expect it to pan out.â
âWell, in the future, clear with either me or the Boss before running off half cocked into something, Woolford. Yesterday, you had this whole assignment on your own. Today, itâs no longer a minor matter. Our department has fifty people on it. The F.B.I. must have five times as many and thatâs not even counting the Secret Serviceâs interest. Itâs no longer your individual baby.â
âSorry,â Larry repeated mildly. Then, âI donât imagine youâve got hold of Frol Eivazov yet?â
The other was disgusted. âYou think weâre magicians? We just put out the call for him a few hours ago. Heâs no amateur. If he doesnât want to be picked up, heâll go to ground and weâll have our work cut out for us finding him. I canât see that itâs particularly important anyway.â
âMaybe youâre right,â Larry said. âBut you never know. He might know things we donât. See you later.â
Walt Foster stared at him for a moment as though about to say something, but then tightened his lips and faded off.
Larry looked at the phone screen for a moment. âDid that phony expect me to call him sir,â he muttered.
The next two days dissolved into routine.
Frustrated, Larry Woolford spent most of his time in his office digesting developments, trying to find a new line of attack.
For want of something else, he put his new secretary, a brightly efficient girl, as style and status conscious as LaVerne Polk wasnât, to work typing up the tapes heâd had cut on Susan Self and the various phone calls heâd had with Hans Distelmayer and Sam Sokolski. From memory, he dictated to her his conversation with Professor Peter Voss.
He carefully read the typed sheets over and over again. He continually had the feeling in this case that there were loose ends dangling around. Several important points he should be able to put his finger upon.
On the morning of the third day he dialed Steve Hackett and on seeing the otherâs worried, pug-ugly face fade in on the phone, decided that if nothing else the Movement was undermining the United States government by dispensing ulcers to its employees.
Steve growled, âWhat is it Woolford? Iâm as busy as a whirling dervish in a revolving door.â
âThis is just the glimmer of an idea, Steve. Look, remember that conversation with Susan, when she described her father taking her to headquarters?â
âSo?â Steve said impatiently.
âRemember her description of headquarters?â
âGo on,â Steve rapped.
âWhat did it remind you of?â
âWhat are you leading to?â
âThis is just a hunch,â Larry persisted, âbut the way she described the manner in which her father took her to headquarters suggests theyâre in the Greater Washington area.â
Steve was staring at him disgustedly. How obvious could you get?
Larry hurried on. âWhatâs the biggest business in this area, Steve?â
âGovernment.â
âRight. And the way she described headquarters of the Movement, was rooms, after rooms, after rooms into which theyâd stored the money.â
âAnd?â
Larry said urgently, âSteve, I think in some way the Movement has taken over some governmental buildings, or storage warehouse. Possibly some older buildings no longer in use. It would be a perfect hideout. Who would expect a subversive organization to be in governmental buildings? All theyâd need would be a few officials here and there who were on their side andâ ââ
Steve said wearily, âYou couldnât have thought of this two days ago.â
Larry cut himself off sharply, âEh?â
Steve said, âWe found their headquarters. One of their members cracked. Ben Ruthenberg of the F.B.I. found he had a morals rap against him some years ago and scared him into talking by threats of exposure.
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