The 34th Golden Age of Science Fiction: C.M. Kornbluth

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The 34th Golden Age of Science Fiction: C.M. Kornbluth Page 17

by C. M. Kornbluth


  “Walk,” Anheier told him.

  In a fog, Novak walked. It couldn’t be happening, and it was. Anheier guided him through the office. “Back late tomorrow, Charles.” Yell for help? Break and run? Charles was an unknown, but the big black gun under the coat was a known quantity. Before the thing could be evaluated they were in the corridor. Anheier walked him down the lonesome stairs of the office building, sadly lit by night bulbs, one to a landing. Swell place for a murder. So was the parking lot back of the building.

  “I know you drive,” Anheier said. “Here.” He handed him car keys. “That one.”

  Use your head, Novak told himself. He’ll make you drive to a canyon and then you’ll get it without a chance in the world of witnesses. Yell here, and at least somebody will know—

  But the big gun robbed him of his reason. He got in and started the car. Anheier was beside him and the gun’s muzzle was in his ribs, not painfully.

  The Security man gave him laconic traffic directions. “Left. Left again. Right. Straight ahead.” Aside from that, he would not talk.

  After an hour the city had been left behind and they were among rolling, wooded hills. With dreamlike recognition he stopped on order at the police sentry box that guarded the wealthy from intrusion by kidnappers, peddlers, and thieves. The gun drilled into his ribs as he stopped the car, painfully now. Anheier rolled down his window and passed a card to the cop in the handsomely tailored uniform.

  Respectfully: “Thank you, Mr. Anheier. Whom are you calling on?” The best was none too good for the rich. They even had cops who said “whom.”

  “Mr. Stuart’s residence. They’ll know my name.” Of course. The gun drilled in.

  “Yes, sir,” said the flunky-cop. “If you’ll wait just a moment, sir.” The other man in the booth murmured respectfully into his wall phone; he had his hand casually on an elegant repeating shotgun as he listened. He threw them a nod and smile.

  “Let’s go, Novak,” Anheier said.

  The gun relaxed a little when the booth was behind them. “You’re all in it,” Novak said at last, bitterly.

  Anheier didn’t answer. When they reached the Stuart place he guided Novak up the driveway and into the car port. Lights in the rangy house glowed, and somebody strode out to meet them. Grady, the Stuart chauffeur. “Get out, Novak.” For the first time, the gun was down.

  “Grady,” Anheier said, “keep an eye on Dr. Novak here. We don’t want him to leave the grounds or use the phone or anything like that.” He stowed the gun in a shoulder holster. “Well, let’s get into the house, shall we?”

  The old man was waiting for them in his wheel chair. “What the hell’s going on, Anheier? You can’t turn this place into an office.”

  “Sorry,” said the Security man briefly. “It can’t be helped. The chief’s coming out to see Novak. He’s found out too much. We can’t leave him wandering around.”

  Wilson Stuart glared at Novak. “My daughter thinks you’re intelligent,” he said. “I told her she was crazy. Anheier, when’s all this going to happen?”

  “I don’t know. Overnight. He said he’d fly. I tried to talk him out of it.”

  “Grady,” the old man said, “put him in a bedroom and lock the door. I’ll have Dr. Morris mix something to give him a good night’s sleep.”

  Incongruously the chauffeur said: “This way, sir.”

  The bedroom was the same one Lilly had been put up in. Its solid door closed like the door of a tomb. Novak dashed to the long, low window and found it thoroughly sealed to the wall. The place was air-conditioned. Of course he could smash it with a table lamp and jump. And be brought down by a flying tackle or a bullet.

  Grady was back in five minutes with a yellow capsule in a pillbox. “Dr. Morris sent this for you, Dr. Novak,” he said. “Dr. Morris said it would help you rest.” Grady stood by expectantly as Novak studied the capsule. After a moment he said pointedly: “There’s water and a glass in the bathroom, sir.”

  Put on a scene? Refuse to take their nassy ole medicine? He cringed at what would certainly happen. These terrifying competent people would stick him with a hypodermic or—worse—have their muscle man hold him while the capsule was put in his mouth and washed down. He went silently to the bathroom and Grady watched him swallow.

  “Good night, Dr. Novak,” the chauffeur said, closing the door solidly and softly.

  The stuff worked fast. In five minutes Novak was sprawled in the bed. He had meant to lie down for a minute or two, but drifted off. His sleep was dreamless, except that once he fancied somebody had told him softly that she was sorry, and touched his lips.

  A man was standing beside the bed when he awoke. The man, middle-aged and a little fleshy, was neither tall nor short. His face was a strange one, a palimpset. A scholar, Novak fuzzily thought—definitely a pure-research man. And then over it, like a film, slipped a look so different that the first judgment became inexplicable. He was a boss-man—top boss-man.

  “I’m Daniel Holland,” he said to Novak. “I’ve brought you some coffee. They told me you shouldn’t be hungry after the sleeping capsule. You aren’t, are you?”

  “No, I’m not. Daniel Holland. A.E.C.? You’re—”

  The top-boss face grinned a hard grin. “I’m in this too, Novak.”

  What was there to do? Novak took the coffee cup from the bedside table and sipped mechanically. “Are you people going to kill me?” he asked. The coffee was helping to pull him together.

  “No,” said Holland. He pulled up a chair and sat. “We’re going to work you pretty hard, though.”

  Novak laughed contemptuously. “You will not,” he said. “You can make me or anybody do a lot of things, but not that. I guess just a few clouts in the jaw would make me say anything you wanted me to. Those Russian confessions. The American police third degree. If you started to really hurt me I suppose I’d implicate anybody you wanted. Friends, good friends, anybody. You can do a lot of things to a man, but you can’t make him do sustained brainwork if he doesn’t want to. And I don’t want to. Not for Pakistan, Argentina, the Chinese, or whoever you represent.”

  “The United States of America?” asked Holland.

  “You must think I’m a fool,” Novak told him.

  “I’m working for the United States,” said Holland. “God help me, but it’s the only way left. I was hemmed in with this and that—” There was an appeal in his voice. He was a man asking for absolution.

  “I’ll tell it from the beginning, Novak,” he said, under control again.

  “In 1951 a study was made by A.E.C. of fission products from the Hanford plutonium-producing reactors. Properties of one particular isotope were found to be remarkable. This isotope, dissolved in water and subjected to neutron flux of a certain intensity, decomposes with great release of energy. It is stable except under the proper degree of neutron bombardment. Its level of radioactivity is low. Its half-life is measured in scores of years. It is easy to isolate and is reasonably abundant. Since it is a by-product, its cost is exactly nothing.”

  “How much energy?” asked Novak, guardedly.

  “Enough to flash the solvent water into hydrogen and oxygen by thermolysis,” Holland said. “You’ve seen the drawings for Prototype’s fuel tanks, as we called them …”

  Anheier came into the room and Novak barely noticed him. His engineer’s mind could see the blue print unrolled before him again. The upper tank containing the isotope-water solution… the lower tank containing a small heavy-water “fish-bowl” reactor for the neutron source… the dead-end control systems completed, installed, one metering the fuel solution past the neutron spray of the reactor, the other controlling flux level by damper rods run in and out on servomechanisms… the fuel solution droplets flashing into hell’s own flame and roaring from the throat with exhaust velocity unobtainable by merely chemical reaction…

  Holl
and was talking again, slowly. “It was just numbers on paper, among thousands of other numbers on paper. It lay for years in the files until one of the high-ranking A.E.C. technical people stumbled on it, understood its implications and came to me. His exact words were: ‘Holland, this is space-flight.’”

  “It is,” Novak breathed. His voice became hoarse. “And you sold it …”

  “I saved it. I saved it from the red-tape empire builders, the obscurantists, the mystagogues, the spies. If I had set it up as an A.E.C. project, the following things would have happened. First, we would have lost security. Every nation in the world would shortly have known the space-flight problem had an answer, and then what the answer was. Second, we would have been beaten to the Moon by another nation. This is because our personnel policy forbids us to hire the best men we can find merely because they’re the best. Ability ranks very low in the category of criteria by which we judge A.E.C. personnel. They must be conservative. They must be politically apathetic. They must have no living close-relatives abroad. And so on. As bad as the personnel situation, interacting with and reinforcing it, is the fact of A.E.C.’s bigness and the fact of its public ownership. They mean accounting, chains of command, personnel-flow charts—the jungle in which third-raters flourish. Get in the A.E.C., build yourself a powerful clique and don’t worry about the work; you don’t really have to do any.”

  The words were fierce; his tone was dispassionate. Throughout his denunciation he wore the pure-research man’s face, lecturing coolly on phenomena which he had studied, isolated, linked, analyzed endlessly. If any emotion was betrayed it was, incongruously, the residual affection of a pure-research man for his subject. When the pathologist calls it a beautiful carcinoma he is being neither ironical nor callous.

  “As you know,” Holland lectured quietly, “the nation that gets to the Moon first has the Moon. The lawyers will be arguing about it for the next century, but the nation that plants the first moon base need not pay any attention to their arguments. I wanted that nation to be the United States, which I’ve served to the best of my ability for most of my life.

  “I became a conspirator.

  “I determined to have a moon ship built under non-Government auspices and, quite frankly, to rob the Government to pay for it. I have a long reputation as a dollar-honest, good-government man, which I counted on to help me get away with quite outrageous plundering of the Treasury.

  “A study convinced me that complete assembly of a moon ship by a large, responsible corporation could not be kept secret. I found the idea of isolated parts manufactured by small, scattered outfits and then a rush assembly was impractical. A moon ship is a precision instrument of huge size. One subassembly under par would wreck the project. I admit I was toying with the idea of setting up a movie company and building the moon ship as, ostensibly, a set for a science-fiction film, when the A.S.F.S.F. came to my attention.

  “Psychologically it seems to have been perfect. You deserve great credit, Dr. Novak, for stubbornly sticking to the evidence and logic that told you Prototype is a moon ship and not a dummy. You are the only one who has. Many people have seen the same things you did and refused to believe it because of the sheer implausibility of the situation.

  “Hoping that this would be the case, I contacted my old friend Wilson Stuart. He and his company have been the pipeline for millions of Government dollars poured into the A.S.F.S.F. I’ve callously diverted thousands of A.E.C. man-hours into solving A.S.F.S.F. problems. I had you transferred within the A.E.C. and had your personality card altered so that Hurlbut would goad you into resigning—since the moon ship needed a full-time man with your skills.”

  “You dared—” choked Novak, stung with rage.

  “I dared,” Holland said matter-of-factly. “This country has its faults, but of all the nations in the world I judge it as least disqualified to operate a moon base. It’s the power of life and death over every nation on the face of the earth, and some one nation has got to accept that power.”

  Suddenly his voice blazed with passion and the words came like a torrent. “What was I to do? Go ahead and do it the wrong way? Go to the commissioners, who’d go to the congressmen, who’d go to their good friends on the newspapers? Our secrecy would have been wiped out in twelve hours! Set up a Government project staffed with simon-pure but third-rate scientists? Watch the thing grow and grow until there were twenty desk men for every man who got his hands dirty on the real work—and all the desk men fighting like wild beasts for the glory of signing memos? Was I to spare your career and let those A-bomb racks on the Moon go by default to the Argentines or Chinese? Man, what do you think I am?”

  “A killer,” Novak said dully. “Your man Anheier murdered my friend Clifton.”

  Anheier’s voice was cold. “Executed,” he said. “You were there when I warned him, Novak. The penalty for espionage is death. I told him so and he smiled at me to tell me that I wouldn’t dare. I told him: ‘The penalty is death.’ And he went to his home and telephoned his contact, Mr. Boris Chodorov of Amtorg, that he’d have something for him in a day or two. God almighty, Novak be reasonable. Should I have written Clifton a letter? I told him: ‘Import-export used to be a favourite, but it was too obvious.’ So he smiled at me and went home to call his contact. He had something juicy, something out of the general run-of-the-mill industrial-preparedness information he collected for the Soviets.

  “He may have thought he was just augmenting his income, that it wasn’t really espionage, that the United States hasn’t got the guts to hit back anyway—” His voice trailed off. “I killed him,” he said.

  “Clifton a spy,” Novak said stupidly. He began to laugh. “And Lilly?”

  “Just a stupid woman,” Anheier said. “We monitored the Cliftons for a long time, and nothing ever emanated from her.”

  Novak couldn’t stop laughing. “You’re quite wrong,” he said. A hundred little things slipped suddenly into place. “There is no doubt in my mind that Lilly was the brains of the outfit. I can see now that Lilly was leading me by the nose for weeks, getting every scrap of information I possessed. And when she got just one chance she landed Friml and is now milking him.”

  Anheier had gone white. “How much does Friml know?” asked Holland.

  The Security man said: “Friml knows he’s employed by Wilson Stuart. And he can guess at a lot of the rest. The way there’s always enough material on hand when we order it from a jobber—even grey-market stuff like copper and steel. Our work. And he knows there are calls to and from Washington that have a connection. Between his brains and Mrs. Clifton’s, I think we’d better assume that secrecy is gone.” He looked and sounded sick.

  “Novak,” the general manager asked softly, “are you in this too?”

  Novak knew what he meant. “Yes,” he said. “It looks like the right side of the fence to me.”

  Holland said: “I’m glad… how close to finished is the moon ship?” He was the boss-man again.

  “Is the fuel solution ready and waiting?”

  “It is. Waiting for word from me. I’ve also oiled the ways for the diversion of a fish-bowl reactor for your neutron source. It’s going to go astray on its way to Cal Tech from Los Alamos.”

  “EBIC’s got to work out my math and I’ve got to fabricate the liner and vane. At the same time, the ship could be stocked with water, food, and the pressure dome. At the same time the dead-end circuits can be completed. Do you have the food and water and airtanks and lockers?”

  “Yes. Give me a figure!” Holland snapped.

  Novak choked on it, terrifyingly aware that no man ever before had borne such tidings as he spoke in the bedroom of a rich man’s house in Beverly Hills. “It could take off in two weeks,” he said. Here we are at last, Novak thought. Time to close the old ledger on man. Add it up, credit and debit, and carry your balance forward to the first page of the next ledger…

 
“And now,” said Holland grimly, “we ought to go and see some people. They’d both be at her house?”

  Novak knew what he meant, and nodded. “I suppose so. It’s Saturday.”

  He led the way to the garage. Amy Stuart’s little sports car was at home.

  “Mr. Holland,” Novak said, “there’s going to be a hell of a smash when this comes out, isn’t there?”

  “We hope not,” the general manager said shortly. “We have some plans of our own if they try to jail me for fraud and Anheier for murder and the rest of the crew for whatever they can think of.”

  “Why should Amy be mixed up in this?”

  “We need her,” Holland snapped. His manner ruled out further questions. They got into Anheier’s car and the Security man drove them to the house in Cahuenga Canyon.

  XV.

  Lilly met them at the door in a housecoat. “Hallo, Mike,” she said. “Who’re these people? Oh, you’ Anheier, ain’t you?”

  “My name is Daniel Holland, Mrs. Clifton,” the general manager said. She didn’t move a muscle. “Do you mind if I come in?”

  “I t’ink I do,” she said slowly. “Mike, what is all this?”

  Novak looked at Holland, who nodded. “Espionage,” he said.

  She laughed tremulously and told him: “You cra-a-azy!”

  “Lilly, you once asked me to find out who killed Cliff. I found out. It was Anheier. Cliff was a spy.”

  Her expression didn’t change as she said: “Cliff was a damned bad spy. Come on in. I got somet’ing to tell you too.”

  They filed into the living room. “Where’s Friml?” Novak asked. She jerked her thumb carelessly toward the bedroom door.

  “He’s a lot smarter than any of you t’ought,” she said, making a business out of lighting a cigarette. “He telled me what he saw and figgered out, and I did some figgering too. You’ a very smart man, Mr. Holland. But what I got to tell you is I got this stuff to a friend of mine already. If he don’t hear from me by a certain time, he sends it on to the newspapers. How you like that, killer?” She blew a plume of smoke at Anheier.

 

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