
"Thank you, Haigh, but that won't be necessary." John recognized the voice emanating from out of the
nearer woods as that of Rose Yacubian, but it sounded tight, strained, almost on the point of hysteria.
"And why the hell not?" he thought. "This kinda fucking shit's enough to put anyfucking-body over the
edge. Damn, I've been hanging around with these Armenian jarheads too long. I'm even beginning to
think in dirty words, just like they talk all the fucking-there I go again, dammit-time."
Arsen just lay in the casket for long minutes after the metal cap had left his head and been drawn back
into its recess. He now knew exactly what the casket was, how to use it, and how to use most of the
items it had contained. He knew, now, that he could be back in his own time and world at any time he
wished. "How 'bout right now?" he thought gleefully, then stopped with a finger poised at the control
mounted in the lid above him. "But what about the rest of them? This carrier will only work for one
person, the instructor said; for more than the operator, you need a Class Seven projector, and I don't
recall having seen one around here, though I will look again, in a minute.
"Sweet Christ, I'm lying here thinking to myself pure science fiction crap. But it's real, I know it is, it's got
to be, 'cause there's just no other fucking explanation that fits as good as this does. Unless . . . unless I've
flipped my fucking gourd and imagined everything. Well, there's one surefire way to prove whether it's
true or I'm nuts."
Kogh Ademian, Sr., President and Chairman of the Board of the far-flung conglomerate that Ademian
Enterprises had become since the immigrant blacksmith Vasil Ademian had founded it in the depths of the
Great Depression, had taken to working late-very late, sometimes all night-at his office since the
mysterious and still-unexplained disappearance of his eldest son, his elder brother, and assorted other
relatives some seven months before. Working himself into a stupor, keeping going on copious quantities
of ouzo and one Havana puro after another, was just better than trying to have any peace and quiet at
home anymore, where his wife could suddenly go into a screaming tizzy at the drop of a hat and start
throwing things, clawing at his face and demanding that he find out what had happened to their son or
else she would kill him and/or herself.
He had had to regretfully cold-cock the woman he still loved after all these years more than once in pure
self-protection, and that pained him; his brother-in-law, Dr. Boghos Panoshian, was of the opinion that
she should be placed in a private psychiatric facility and had recommended a few, and such thoughts
pained Kogh even more, though as her fits became more frequent and more violent, he was beginning to
seriously consider the well-meant suggestions.
He, too, wanted to know what had happened to Arsen and the rest, particularly Brother Rupen
Ademian, but he had pulled every string he could- and that was quite a number, some of them reaching
up into the very highest echelons of the United States Government and not a few other governments,
worldwide, as well as governments in exile, intelligence groups, terrorist organizations, underground
political parties, and even organized crime- and, seemingly, no one had any knowledge of how or why or
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