Mack Reynolds - Deathwish World

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This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any
resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
Copyright © 1986 by The Literary Estate of Mack Reynolds
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises 260 Fifth Avenue New York, N.Y. 10001
First printing, February 1986
ISBN: 0-671-65552-3
Cover art by Wayne Barlowe
Printed in the United States of America
Distributed by SIMON & SCHUSTER TRADE PUBLISHING GROUP 1230 Avenue of the
Americas New York, N.Y. 10020
Foreword
The greatest land acquisitions by any power in the history of the world took place without even
the faintest threat of arms. Not a shot was fired by the conqueror in this unprecedented
colonization program. Alexander, Caesar, Genghis Khan, and Tamerlane were tyros, by
comparison, for none of them ruled a whole continent, much less two, with scores of neighboring
islands.
And it was possibly the softest sell of all time. The United States Government simply issued a
declaration that it welcomed any countries in North, Central, or South America, or the Caribbean,
to join it, conferring all rights pertaining to American citizens, including the Guaranteed Annual
Stipend, or GASsometimes called Negative Income Tax. Our English friends called it "the dole."
They had seen it before. The English had seen everything beforeincluding permanent decline.
Though the United States of America became the United States of the Americas without force, all
was not simplicity. Military dictatorships, particularly in the banana republics, did all in their
power to remain separate. Armies were ordered to fire upon mobs demanding admission to the
new United States. But the soldiers laughed. One had to reach the rank of major to attain an
income equal to that of a citizen of the United States on GAS.
So, with little strain on the Yankees, the Western Hemisphere assimilated into the United States
of the Americas.
And, in the eyes of some, that was only the beginning…
Chapter One: Horace Hampton
A battered hovercar pulled up in the parking lot behind the aged apartment building. There were
few other vehicles there.
Three men got out and headed across the parking area for the back door. The one in the middle
carried a cane and affected a slight limp. The other two carried tired-looking attaché cases. All three
were dressed neatly, though their clothing was only a thin cut better than prole level.
The one in the middle looked up at the paint-flaked wooden building which was their destination.
"You could sell it for an antique," he said.
One of the others grunted and told him, "You could sell all New Salem as an antique. Restore
it—something like colonial Williamsburg over in Virginia. You could put up a big sign for the
tourists: 'New Salem, Bible Belt Town, Circa 1900.' "
They ascended the stairs to the second floor. Thus far they had seen nobody at all, which was
understandable. They had counted on the total population being down at the park for the political
rally. Aside from Tri-Di, there was precious little in the way of local entertainment.
On the second floor, the largest of the three men looked up and down the hall, dipped a hand into
his side pocket, and brought forth a pair of thin black gloves. His right hand went back into the
pocket of his shorts and came forth with a key. He unlocked the door and all three filed through
quickly. He locked the door behind him.
The other two put their attaché cases and the cane on the room's center table and also donned
gloves. They seemed in no hurry. They took out handkerchiefs and carefully wiped the cane and
case with professional care.
Their leader, a black, went through the small apartment, which consisted of bedroom, bath, and
kitchen, besides the living room into which they had entered, and checked it out carefully. He, too,
had left his attaché case on the table after wiping it clean.
His companions looked about at the nondescript furniture, which included a broken couch and an
old-fashioned rocking chair.
The two were of dark complexion, but there the resemblance ended. One was tall, wiry, and
cougarlike of movement, black of hair and eye. The other was below average height, stocky,
muscular. He tended to smile, while his companion was stoic of expression in keeping with his
Amerind tradition. The smaller man was Latino.
The stocky one said, "Look, civilization." He pointed at the sole representative of modern
furnishing, a small Tri-Di set.
The black, who had checked out the other rooms, returned and said, "Wizard, let's get the show
roadbound."
Jose Zavalla took up the walking stick and began to unscrew the handle. His limp was gone. The
handle came away and he upended the cane to let its contents slide gently into his right hand. It was a
metallic tube about three feet long, threaded on one end externally, internally on the other. He laid it
back on the table.
"Jesus, it's light," he said.
Tom Horse, the Indian, who was opening the two attaché cases, said, "Titanium alloy."
The sole contents of the hand luggage consisted of seven items, all carefully wrapped in foam
rubber. Tom took them out gingerly, one by one, and laid them in a row on the table.
He said, "How's it look up the road, Hamp?"
Hamp was the black, a well-built, dark-chocolate man with features more Caucasian than Bantu. He
went over to the middle of the three curtained windows that lined the street side of the room. He
pulled one curtain aside a bit and peered out, looking toward the north. From a jacket pocket he
brought forth a small monoscope, twisted it open, and took off both lens shields. He put the
eyepiece to his right eye, adjusted the focus.
He said, "Quite a turnout. Must be triple the population of the town."
"You don't hear the governor sound off every day in New Salem and environs," Tom told him,
unwrapping his packages with love care.
"Nice big banner above the speaker's stand," Hamp said. "Says, America for the Americans. Very
sentimental. American flags at both ends. They look a little out of date. How many stars in the flag
these days?"
"Who keeps track? About a hundred," Tom said. He had taken up the tube Joe had extracted from
the hollow cane and was carefully screwing one of the other objects—a stubby rectangular
affair—into the threads of its interior.
He said bitterly, "America for the Americans. You can be an Englishman or German whose parents
came over twenty years ago and took out citizenship papers and you're an American. But you can
have ancestors going back twenty thousand years on this continent and you're on the shit list."
Hamp said, still surveying with his monoscope, "You damn redskins are always complaining. Wait
a minute, I think they've erected that speaker's stand thirty meters farther up than we figured on."
"Hell," the Indian said, taking up an aluminum rod from the table. One end of it was threaded. "I
had it all zeroed, sighted-in, calibrated."
Joe, watching the assembly job, said, "That's the smallest breech I've ever seen."
"Uh huh," Tom said, winding the aluminum rod into a hole at the end of the deadly device. "This is
a single-shot bolt action. But the bolt doesn't stick out to the side, it's this little knob on the top."
"What's that?" Joe said of the steel rod the other was manipulating. He had obviously never seen
the thing before, assembled or otherwise.
"Part of the skeleton stock," Tom told him, tightening it firmly. The rod canted downward from the
breech at an angle.
Hamp came back to the table where Tom Horse and Jose Zavalla were assembling the gun.
Tom was saying to Joe, "Hand me that other rod."
Hamp brought a quarter-liter bottle from an inner pocket. He studied its label for a moment, then
unscrewed the top. He held it to his lips and took a long pull.
"What's that?" Tom said, not looking particularly happy as he twirled the new rod into its place.
"Cognac," Hamp told him. "Brandy. Have a slug. Listen, what effect is it going to have, their
erecting that stand in the wrong place?"
"No thanks," the Indian said, still not happy about the liquor. "I'm driving. Besides, didn't you
know we savages can't handle firewater?"
Joe said, "Brandy?" reaching for the bottle. "You mean aguardiente? Man, you blacks really live it
up. I haven't had anything but syntho-gin for as long as I can remember." He took a hearty pull,
brought the bottle down, and stared at the label admiringly. "V.S.O.P. What the hell's that mean?"
"It means it's worth its weight in diamonds," Hamp said. "Cloddies like us can't afford it. It's
forced on me by admiring women who lust for my body. I brought it along as medicine—never
know when I might get sick. How about the range, Tom?"
Tom had finished screwing the shorter aluminum rod into the back of the breech. It stuck out at a
shallower angle, so that the two rods looked like two sides of a narrow triangle. Joe handed him the
short, curved base, padded with holes drilled into it near both ends. There was no threading now.
Tom simply inserted the aluminum rods in the holes and gave the base a whack with the heel of his
right hand, driving it tightly home.
He said to the black, "It's not important. This scope we've got is an Auto-Range. Latest thing.
Combines a range finder with a regular telescopic sight. No sweat. Hand me that silencer, Joe."
"You're sure?" Hamp said, pushing the back of his left hand over his mouth.
"Sure I'm sure," the other told him. "Take a minute or so to get it all sighted in again.'' He took the
long tube Joe handed over and began screwing it into the barrel. It projected about a foot and a half
when he had it tightly fitted. The silencer was about two and a half times the diameter of the barrel.
Tom said, "Where'd you get this sweetheart, Hamp? It's a handmade work of art."
"News reporter I used to know. Used to collect offbeat guns. He picked it up in one of the bush
wars over in Africa. Assassin gun. For all I know, it's the only one ever made."
"He was crazy, giving this away," Tom said. "It's a real collector's item."
Joe handed him the telescopic sight. There were grooves gouged into the metal top of the barrel.
The Indian carefully eased the sights into them. On the top and right-hand side of the instrument were
small vernier screws for adjusting the crossed hairs inside the scope.
"Where's the fuckin' trigger?" Tom said, holding out his hand.
"Mind your fuckin' language," the Chicano told him. "I'm a lady on my mother's side." He brought
forth from one of the attaché cases a twirl of tissue paper, unwrapped it, and handed the contents
over.
The sliver of a trigger was slightly curved and there were threads on one end. Tom Horse began
screwing it into place below the breech.
"Why couldn't that have been built in?" Joe said.
The Indian took up the assembled gun and handled it admiringly. "Same reason there's no
protruding bolt. This whole thing is constructed to disassemble into parts that any man could carry
around while wearing an overcoat. Most of it would go into deep pockets. The barrel would be the
only thing that's clumsy. You'd have to suspend it from your belt, or maybe by a strap under your
shoulder."
Hamp took another slug of the cognac and looked at his watch. He said, "The governor and his
committee ought to be showing up any time. Let's move this table over to the window."
While the others were doing that, Tom went to one side of the room and selected a straight chair.
He put the chair next to the end of the table, which now stood against the middle window, and took
from one of the attaché cases a very light, bipod rifle support. It was of aluminum, held in place by
an elastic strap. He slipped it over the end of the rifle and its attached silencer.
He said to the black, "How does it look now, Hamp?"
Hamp had his monoscope to his eye again. "Wizard. They're filing onto the speaker's stand,
everybody shaking hands and smiling at each other. Very jolly. They've really got a turnout. The
crowd must have come from all over the county."
"The more the merrier," Joe growled. "Bastards will have something to see this time."
Hamp said, "Now here's the setup, one last time, Tom, just to be sure. The speaker's stand is
about twenty-five feet high. Old Drive 'Em Out Teeter stands way above the assembled mob so that
they have to throw their heads back to gawk at him. He likes to speak with a rail before him so he
can lean on it and thump it from time to time. Somewhere along the line he must have seen some of
the old historic films of Mussolini hassling the wops from his balcony."
"All right, all right," Tom said impatiently, bringing forth from one of the attaché cases a black
rubber block in which were stuck three long, pointed cartridges. They were of small caliber but
necked down from a large casing. He pulled one round out and put it on the table next to him. The
brass casing gleamed softly in subdued light.
Hamp was saying, "Teeter doesn't like to speak directly into a mike. Instead, he has two of them
hooked into the railing to each side of him, about two meters apart."
"Right," Tom muttered, brushing the window curtain slightly to one side so that he could see up
the street. "So I focus a meter beyond the mike nearest us."
Hamp pushed his left hand over his mouth again. "Wizard."
Joe had stationed himself at the window behind where the Indian was setting up his assassin rifle.
He said, "You better get your ass in a hustle. Here comes the chairman."
"Plenty of time," Tom said evenly.
Hamp took up the small bottle of brandy, now nearly empty, and took a quick swig before setting it
down on the table. Tom shot him a disapproving glance but said nothing.
The Indian glued his right eye to the telescopic sight. It had already been sighted in, but he reached
out delicately and adjusted the focus. The chairman's face leapt into clarity before him.
The marksman took the nub of the bolt in his thumb and index finger and gave it a
counterclockwise twist, pulling the bolt back in its groove to reveal the trough for the long bullet. He
took up the cartridge and inserted it, thumbed the bolt back home and flicked it clockwise, smoothly
locking it into place.
He settled comfortably into his chair, pushed the curtain of the window back a little more.
"Open it," he said softly.
Hamp pushed the window up sufficiently to make room for firing.
The Indian snuggled into position behind the scope eyepiece. "All right, Governor Teeter, last of
the racist rabble-rousers," he murmured softly. "You've sounded off once too often."
On the outskirts of the teeming crowd which had gathered to hear Teeter, two blacks stood
inconspicuously in the shade of an ancient live oak, near the trunk. From their distance, the
white-clad speaker was hardly distinguishable, but the loudspeaker system brought his words clearly
enough and his fist-shaking gestures of emphasis could not be misunderstood.
One of the blacks said softly, "Old Drive 'Em Out is in full voice today. I'm beginning to suspect
he doesn't like bloods."
Without warning, the figure on the speaker's stand came to a shocked stiffening; red blossomed
out in a large blot on his white shirt. He staggered for a moment and then slowly crumbled, falling out
of sight.
One of the blacks shook his head. "Drunk as a lord," he said.
The other surreptitiously brought a transceiver from his pocket, activated it, and said softly,
"Bullseye." He put the communication device back into his pocket and said urgently, "Let's get the
hell out of here, Jackie."
In the run-down apartment, Hamp picked up the assassin rifle by its fore end, its bipod still hanging
free, and took it into the bedroom. He pulled the bipod off, held up the aged mattress with one hand,
and stuck the gun and stand under it. He smoothed out the bed neatly and returned to the other two.
Joe said, in deprecation, "It won't take them long to find that."
"Who cares?" Hamp said. "It's untraceable."
He picked up the rubber container holding the two unspent rounds and dropped it into a side
pocket, then took the small flask of brandy. After offering it to both Tom and Joe Zavalla, who
shook their heads, he finished it. "Let's drag ass," he said.
He unlocked the door, let them precede him, and then relocked it. They headed for the stairs,
unhurried as before. They'd left the cane and attaché cases behind.
Down in the parking lot, they stopped before a waste receptacle, stripped the gloves from their
hands, and dropped them in. Hamp also discarded the empty bottle and the unused ammunition after
wiping them.
They got into their hovercar, all three in front, the black driving, and unhurriedly left the parking
area.
They emerged onto the main street and headed away from the park where the rally had been taking
place. Even at this distance, they could hear the swell of shouts and screams, though almost
drowned by police sirens.
"Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy," said Joe, who was sitting by the window, his vague smile
on his lips. "I wonder how many men, women, and children have been killed as a result of his racist
rantings?"
They left the environs of New Salem and headed, at a moderate speed, out into the countryside.
They passed a sign welcoming all to New Salem.
"Salem," Tom said, musing. "Wasn't that where they burned all the witches?"
"Yes," Hamp told him softly. "This time we reversed it and clobbered a witch hunter. Joe, there's a
bottle in that glove compartment."
But the Indian beside him shot the black one of his looks from the side of his eyes and said
quickly, "Take it easy, Hamp. The day's not over. We wouldn't want them to hang a drunk driving
romp on you."
"Wizard," Hamp said. "But I'm not drunk."
"You don't have to be. They'd book you anyway, if you showed any indication at all of drinking.
Joe, throw that bottle out."
Joe took the half-liter of booze from the dash compartment and looked at the label sadly before
tossing the bottle far off the road into a field of sweet corn.
For a while, they drove along silently, each absorbed in his own thoughts in the anticlimax of what
they'd just been through.
Joe said finally, "That was a good spot to pot him from. How'd you locate it?"
Hamp said, "Not much trouble. Teeter always starts off his campaigns in New Salem. It's the
oldest town of any size in the state. That apartment was ideal. The renter lives alone and goes up to
Chicago six months of the year to work on some part-time job. He hates the big city, so he returns
here for the rest of the year. As it turned out, we needed the place just when he didn't."
Tom looked over at him. "How'd we find out about it?"
"One of our whitey members came to town and hung around for a while in bars in the
neighborhoods we were interested in. He finally got to talking to this fellow."
They held silence for a while. There was a certain tenseness in waiting for what they knew was to
come, the inevitable.
Hamp said, "Oh, oh. Here it is. Road block."
Up ahead were two State Police vehicles barring the way. There were also two police hovercycles.
Of the seven officers, two carried automatic Gyrojet carbines; the others, bolstered side arms. There
were red lights flashing above the cars.
Hamp said, "Play it cool. No temper, Joe, and no wisecracks." They came to a halt some thirty feet
from the barricade.
Two of the police troopers strolled toward them. About twenty feet off, one of them stopped and
stood there, his legs parted, his holster unsnapped. The second trooper came up to the driver's
window and looked in at them.
Hamp said, his voice modulated, "What's the difficulty, officer?"
The state trooper said, "I'll ask the questions, boy. Now, you three get out of there and line up
against the side of this here car. Spread your legs and lean your hands up against it."
Hamp said, his voice still quietly even, "What's the charge, officer?"
Joe had brought a pocket transceiver out, flicked back the cover, activated it, and said, "We have
been stopped by police and ordered from our vehicle, evidently to be searched. The police officer's
badge number is 358."
The trooper looked at him coldly. He was a rawboned, lanky type, probably in his late twenties.
His uniform boasted all the glory of a Hungarian brigadier. He said, "Who you talking to?"
Joe smiled. "A friend."
Hamp repeated, "What is the charge, officer? Isn't a warrant required to search a citizen?"
"Don't smartass me, boy," the trooper said grimly. He dropped his hand to his Gyrojet pistol.
The black said, still mildly, "My name isn't Boy. It's Horace Greeley Hampton. And I consider
myself acting under duress."
He opened the door of the hovercar and got out, followed by Tom and Joe, but not until Joe had
said into his transceiver, "The police officer called Mr. Hampton 'boy' contemptuously and made a
gesture toward his sidearm, reinforcing his demand that we be searched."
The three lined up against the car, as ordered, and the second trooper came up to help in frisking
them. They were thorough.
The second state policeman said, as though disappointed, "They're clean, Ranee."
Ranee said, "Go through the car." While the other was obeying, he said to Hamp, Tom, and Joe,
"Okay, you three. Let's see your ID."
They handed over their Universal Credit Cards, which performed the functions of identity cards,
driver's licenses, and everything else a prole needed for identification.
He looked at them carefully, brought forth a police transceiver, and read off names and identity
numbers into it, then asked for a police dossier check of the data banks.
He turned his pale eyes to them. "Horace Greeley Hampton, Tom Horse, Jose Angel Mario Zavalla.
Born in Ohio, Colorado, and Texas. All on Guaranteed Annual Stipend." He sneered at that—an
overly done, artificial sneer. "What're you doing in this state?"
"We are on our way through," Hamp said, his accent still that of an educated man.
"Where'd you just come from?"
"New Salem."
"Oh, you did, eh? What were you doing there?"
"We went over to see the rally, listen to the governor's opening campaign speech."
"Then what're you doing here?"
"The crowd was so large that we couldn't get anywhere near the speaker's stand. Besides, there
had been quite a bit of drinking. Some of the, ah, gentlemen in the crowd didn't seem to like our
complexions. At any rate, we decided to return to where we're staying."
"Where's that?"
Joe said into his transceiver, "We're being questioned, although thus far no charge has been made
and we have not even been told whether or not we're under arrest. Our vehicle is being searched
without our permission and without a warrant."
Ranee glared at him but forced his eyes back to Hamp, who seemed to be the spokesman of this
unorthodox trio.
Hamp said, "We're staying at the We Shall Overcome Motel, near Leesville."
The washed out, grayish eyes of the trooper tightened infinitesimally. He looked at Joe and said,
"And that's who you're talking to?"
Joe smiled his constant smile. "That's right, Mr. Policeman, sir."
Hamp looked over at him and slightly shook his head.
The second trooper emerged from the vehicle. He said, grudgingly, "It's clean, Ranee."
Ranee's police transceiver buzzed and he listened to the report on the police dossiers of the three,
his face less than pleased.
Joe said, in his communication device, "We have been checked out in the police data banks and
have obviously been cleared; however, we are still being held without charge, without warrant,
and…"
Ranee began to go red around his neck. "Take that damned thing away from him," he snapped to
the other trooper, who was leaning back against the car, arms folded. He came erect gladly and
started in the Mexican-American's direction.
Joe began to retreat backward, saying quickly into his transceiver, "State Police officer Number
358 has ordered my transceiver taken. One of us is a black; notify the nearest Nat Turner Team. One
of us is an Amerind; notify the Sons of Wounded Knee. I am a Chicano; get in touch with the Foes
of the Alamo. Notify our legal department! Notify Civil Liberties. Alert the Reunited Nations Human
Relations…"
The trooper was on him, grabbing the transceiver away. Joe smiled and winked at him.
Hamp, his face very serious, turned to Ranee and said, "You're in the dill now, officer."
The trooper's face was suddenly wan and he was breathing deeply. He looked from Hamp to Tom
and Joe, then back again. His tongue came out and licked dry lips.
"All right," he said. "Okay. You can go. We have nothing to hold you on. The governor was shot
in New Salem an hour or so ago." He took in a deep breath. "It's our job. No hard feelings, fellas."
Joe smiled, "In that case, fuzzy, how about a donation for the Anti-Racist League?"
"Get the hell out of here," Ranee snarled. He turned to the other trooper, who was looking at him in
surprise. "Give them back that transceiver and their IDs."
When the three had left, the second trooper looked at his companion. He said, "What the hell,
Ranee. You practically kissed their asses and they were driving right from New Salem."
The other glowered at him. "How'd you like somebody to toss a grenade into your living room?
Those bastards never quit, once you're on their list. They don't care if it takes years. Sooner or later
they hit you."
Hamp, Tom, and Joe drove along in silence for a time, letting the tension drain away, until Hamp
turned to Joe and said, "What in the hell's a Nat Turner Team?"
And Tom Horse added, "Or the Sons of Wounded Knee?"
"Damned if I know," Joe said, grinning. "I made them up as I went along. Same with the Foes of
the Alamo. What's the old gag? If there'd been a back door to the Alamo there would never have
been a Texas."
The We Shall Overcome Motel was well done. Extending over quite a few acres, it was completely
surrounded by a high, heavy, barbed-wire fence. A strong steel gate spanned the dressed stone
entrance and, behind it, several public buildings, including a large store, a recreation hall, and a
restaurant. An auto-bar clubroom stood off to one side of these, near a good-sized swimming pool,
which was crowded with swimmers and sunbathers, mostly of dark complexion but with a scattering
of whites.
In the center of the compound was a sizable grove of trees, largely pines. A person could wander
into the pine grove, find a bit of a clearing, and spread out on his back, to stare up at clouds or stars
and feel, so temporarily, free.
The area around the little forest was devoted to mobile homes and campers of all varieties. At
present, a small mobile town with an art colony theme—some forty homes in all—was temporarily
parked en route to Mexico and parts south. Not all proles on GAS crammed themselves into
mini-apartments in high-rise buildings in the cities.
Hamp pulled up before the administration building, dropped the vehicle's lift lever, and switched
off the engine.
Maximillian Finklestein issued from the office and strolled over toward them. He was a tallish,
sparse, stoop-shouldered man of about forty-five. As they emerged from the hovercar he came up
and said, "How was the rally, chum-pals?"
Tom shrugged and said, "We didn't stay. Too big a crowd. We heard there was a lot of excitement
after we left. Somebody took a shot at the governor."
Finklestein clucked his tongue. "Imagine that. Was he hurt?"
Joe said, "We got the impression he was hit. Didn't you see it on Tri-Di?"
"I was working," Max told him. "Come on in and have a drink; we'll check the news."
Hamp said, "Your invitation appeals to me strangely, especially the drink part, but I want to stretch
my legs a little first."
"Me, too," Tom said. "A little stroll before the firewater."
The three of them, accompanied by Max, set out leisurely for the wooded area.
They entered the trees, for the time holding silence. After a couple of hundred feet they reached a
small clearing, the ground well covered by pine needles and leaves. Then, in silent agreement, they all
stretched out on their faces in a starlike arrangement, their heads close together. Their faces were to
the ground, partially into the needles and leaves. Even the best shotgun mike would play hell listening
to them now.
Max said softly, "What happened?"
"Plumb center," Tom whispered. "The capslug shattered right on his chest and splattered red goo
all over his shirt. I could see his face go pale and his eyes pop. He fainted."
The motel manager growled, "The loudmouth bastard'll know it could have been the real thing.
Might even rethink his racist campaigning if he's smarter than he is bigoted. How tough were the
fuzzies?"
Hamp took over the report, also whispering into the leaves. "About as expected. They hated it,
every minute of it, and they hated us and our uppity ways, but they weren't about to stick their necks
out. They'll toss it all into the laps of the IABI. They've heard all the silly rumors about how tough
we are. They had no intention of becoming martyrs for a state cop's pay."
Finklestein said, "I've already got instructions for you. You three will be under special observation.
The IABI isn't completely dull. They might not dig up proof but they'll strongly suspect you of the
burlesque assassination. Your dossiers will tell them you're members of the Anti-Racist League. You
were admittedly present in New Salem and Governor Teeter was an anachronism, the last of the
really all-out rabid politician racists. They know it was just a matter of time before we zeroed in on
him. They'll probably be surprised we didn't actually bump him off."
"Swell," Tom said into the leaves, a note of extreme weariness in his voice. "So what do we do
now?"
"You break up as a team. None of you will continue to operate in this section." Max fished in a
jacket pocket. "Tom, you go to southern Illinois. You're an unknown there. Go to a town named
Zeigler and report to the section leader. Here's the address." He handed the paper over.
Tom looked at it and said, "What do I do there?"
Max seemed surprised at the question. "I haven't the vaguest idea," he told the Indian. "I
understand that it's a pretty backward part of the country: fundamentalists, high illiteracy
rate—you've seen it all before. But I don't know what they'll have you doing. You might as well take
off. No need for you to know where Hamp and Joe are assigned."
"Yeah," Tom said, scrambling to his feet and stuffing the address into his shorts pocket. He
looked down at the other two, hesitated for a moment, then said gruffly, "Hang loose, chum-pals."
They both looked up from the leaves and nodded. The team hadn't operated together for very long,
but they'd been more than unusually compatible.
"So long, Redskin," Joe said softly.
When the other was gone, the remaining three returned their lips to the pine needles and leaves.
Max said, "Joe, you head south for Mexico City. Here's your contact." He handed another note to
the Chicano.
"Mexico?" Joe said. "I've never been down there. What do I do?"
"No need for me to know. But the way I understand it, there seems to be an unlikely situation,
particularly in the big centers like Mexico City and Monterrey, where all the best positions wind up in
the hands of whites of Spanish descent. Next in the highest job and power echelons are those with a
high percentage of Spanish blood. Mestizos, they call them. And, surprise, surprise! Guess who's
the low man on the totem pole?"
"The full-blooded Indian," Hamp growled. "How do they get around the computers supposedly
selecting the best citizens for whatever job comes up?"
Max grunted at that. "Undoubtedly, the same way they do here. The rumors continue that
sometimes the data banks are jimmied, rigged. But the programmers know angles. And that will
probably be one of Joe's tasks."
Joe sighed. "Same old story," he said. "Fuck the colored races. What's my cover?"
"The obvious one, most nearly the truth. You're on GAS and can't find a job up north. So, since
you're bilingual, you head south hoping to use your two languages to advantage in getting work."
Max hesitated a moment before adding, "You'd better get underway, too. You never know. The
IABI could show at any time to pick you three up."
Joe came to his feet. He smiled at Hamp, warmer than his usual humorless smile. "Nice knowing
you, Blood."
Hamp said, "Feeling's mutual, companero. Luck."
Joe left.
The two remaining readdressed themselves to the ground.
Hamp said, "What about me?"
Max said, "Your request for a leave of absence has been okayed." He looked over at the black
from the side of his eyes. "How come, Hamp? There's a hell of a shortage of top men and, from
what I understand, you're continually taking leaves."
"Wizard," Hamp said in deprecation. "But we'll have fewer field men than ever if you wear us down
to the point where we lose efficiency. I've been in the trenches too often in the past couple of
months. I need a breather. I think I'll spend some time in New York. Where do I report when I'm
unwound?"
Max handed him a note. "To me. As usual, I haven't the vaguest idea of what your next assignment
will be. However, there's one item of business on your way back east, a new contact. A Lee Garrett,
who lives in Greenpoint, Pennsylvania."
"A new contact?" Hamp said, moderately indignant. "Have I sunk to the level where you're using
me for elementary propaganda?"
"Headquarters seems to think that this one is a better prospect than usual. A whitey. Not on GAS.
Better than usual education. Our local section isn't too top-level, so they want a good agent to make
the initial contact with Garrett." Max handed the black another note.
"Wizard," Hamp said, coming to his feet and brushing pine needles from his shorts and jacket. "Do
I leave now, like Tom and Joe?"
Max stood, too. "Why don't you come over to my place and we'll talk some shop and have a
couple of quick ones. Tom and Joe never did get that drink I promised them."
"They're dedicated," the other snorted. "Both of them hardly touch the stuff. Lead me to it. As a
matter of fact, I've got some good French brandy in my luggage. We can crack that."
Max Finklestein wondered vaguely how the other could afford a bottle of imported brandy. It
would take a month of GAS credits to buy such a potable.
Chapter Two: Franklin Pinell
When the two corrections officers from the prison handed Franklin Pinell over to the court bailiffs
in the Justice Department Building, he was still handcuffed to the heavier-set, tougher-looking guard.
While the second officer was getting a bailiff to sign the receipt for their charge, the prisoner was
freed of his cuffs. The guard dialed the appropriate number on the shackles and then put his
thumbprint on the tiny screen. The titanium alloy handcuffs came away.
摘要:

Thisisaworkoffiction.Allthecharactersandeventsportrayedinthisbookarefictional,andanyresemblancetorealpeopleorincidentsispurelycoincidental.Copyright©1986byTheLiteraryEstateofMackReynoldsAllrightsreserved,includingtherighttoreproducethisbookorportionsthereofinanyform.ABaenBooksOriginalBaenPublishingE...

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