"I'm from the paper," McLeod told them, whispering. "Here to cover the story."
The three faces stared back at him through the snow, crystalizing what he had felt all day but had not been able to explain. Those faces.
They had nothing against Mayor Spurgess. Perhaps they had never even seen him. If they didn't like him and had a reason and wanted to kill him, that wouldn't be so bad. That would be fine. But they were here to kill him because McLeod had signed the application along with Lantrel. They wanted to do the job and get back to warmer places and hot buttered rum or whatever they liked.
"He come out yet?" the older gunman asked.
"I don't think he will, not in this weather. What other plans have you got?"
"We'll just wait and see. We don't have to make the plans."
Had they been able to read McLeod's face as readily as he had read theirs? "I don't understand," he said. "You'll have to think of something else if he doesn't take his walk, won't you?"
"You say you were from the paper, guy?"
"Of course."
"Well, you're not making sense."
McLeod toyed with his parabeam, then watched as matching weapons leaped into the hands of the two younger gunmen.
"What paper, guy?" the older one drawled.
McLeod felt his heart flutter wildly and checked a strong impulse to laugh.
One of the young gunmen said, "I thought the big boy himself was covering this. Wainwright. I know what he looks like."
"Come on, guy. What paper?"
McLeod knew the mistake could be fatal. Somehow theWorldhad learned what theStar-Timeshad planned for Mayor Spurgess. These men wereWorldgunmen, come to thwart Lantrel's men. Perhaps they could, but McLeod might die in the process.
"Listen," he said desperately. "The other day, Weaver Wainwright made me a proposition."
"Whoareyou?"
"Darius McLeod. Hold on, damn it! If you freeze me now, you'll be making a mistake. Wainwright wanted me to work for theWorld. That's why I'm here, don't you understand? I can tell you exactly what theStar-Timesis going to do."
"We already know, McLeod. You're skating where the signs say not to, guy. I guess you know that."
"Won't Wainwright be here? Ask him."
"Don't know if he will or not."
One of the younger gunmen had circled around behind McLeod. The other one stood facing him, pointing the parabeam at his chest. The older man seemed to be enjoying himself.
"I don't want Spurgess killed," McLeod said. "That's the truth. I came here to prevent it myself."
"Can you tell me why?"
"No—yes. Because I want to accept Wainwright's proposition. TheWorldsaid I was going to die. Wainwright offered me life."
"We know that you're going to die."
McLeod sucked in his breath. This same wholesome trio had probably received the application for his own death, had probably studied his habit file. "Not before next week," McLeod said.
"Now, I don't know. It's a gift horse, guy. They won't hold up our checks for a couple of hours either way."
"No, but you'll spend the rest of your life as a gunman if you cross Wainwright."
The voice behind McLeod's back seemed bodiless and as cold as the falling snow. "What's wrong with that?"
"You wouldn't understand," McLeod said without turning. "He would." He would win his life the moment he won over the shorter man. His two companions did not matter. "Look. The Gunman Editor on theWorldis near retirement, isn't he? You look like you've been around, but you won't be considered for the job if Wainwright bears a grudge."
"He's pretty smooth," the young gunman with the parabeam said.
"Why do you think I'm here at all?" McLeod insisted. "I didn't know you were coming. I came to prevent this thing myself."
The man behind McLeod muttered a curse and said, "You came here for the same reason you always go out on an assignment. To get the story."
But the older man said, "Have you any proof?"
"Only Wainwright. Ask him when he gets here."
"Ifhe decides to come," said the man with the parabeam.
"And if he doesn't?" McLeod demanded. "Are you going to take a chance and—"
"It wouldn't be taking a chance at all," the older man told McLeod. "We could freeze you and box you and ask Wainwright about it later."
"You fool! I haven't told Wainwright one way or the other yet."
"Then we could unfreeze you and let him decide. Go ahead, George."
McLeod could never hope to freeze all three of them before they froze him. Their actions were cut from the same Kantian categorical imperative he had expected of himself and all newspapermen—until today. He felt sorry for himself because it no longer applied, but that hardly helped.
"Someone's coming," the voice behind McLeod said. He started to turn and got three quarters of the way around when the parabeam hit him.
After that, it was almost like watching a melodrama on television. He could watch the action unfold. His sympathies might be directed first one way, then another, but he had no part in the play. He was a statue, standing upright as the snow drifted down and coated him with white. His body-heat didn't escape the insulined jumper to melt it and in a few moments he was an incredibly manlike snowman with a human face. The last thing he wanted to do was stand there, frozen, and watch.
He stood and watched.
Half a dozen figures were clustered close by the white columns at the front of Mayor Spurgess' house. Then, as if they were puppets and all their strings had been pulled at once, they darted behind the columns.
TheWorldgunmen were caught in the open and knew it. Parabeams hissed as they fell toward the ground and the snow's protection. Only the shorter, heavier man tried to get up, waddling three or four yards on his knees before a parabeam caught him too and froze him.
Two figures detached themselves from the white columns and ran across the snow toward McLeod, parabeams ready.
"Hey, he looks familiar."
"That's Darius McLeod, stupid. Familiar, the man says. They probably caught him and froze him."
A beam sucked the sleep from McLeod's limbs and he was soon massaging his arms together. After two freezes in as many evenings, he'd really have a parabeam hangover in the morning.
"What about those three people, Mr. McLeod?" the man who had unfroze him asked.
"A natural," the other one said. "Here's our accident. Assault and robbery and accidental death. We even have the assailants. Strip these people of theirWorldidentification. I'll be right back—with the mayor."
Newshounds might trick and maim and kill one another, McLeod knew, but never frame other newspapermen for civil crime. You had to keep the public happy with all newspaper people. The police, of course, never investigated very thoroughly these days, since that would be poaching on newspaper territory. They handled traffic very well, though.
There was a commotion in front of the mayor's house, where only one of the gunmen was visible. Presently the door opened. There was loud talking, much pointing. The gunman's voice was pleading, the mayor's was indignant. Finally, the mayor ducked inside and McLeod hoped he would stay there. Soon he emerged, however, dressed in a jumper. He ran along at the heels of the gunman and neared McLeod just as the other man had finished removing identification cards from the three still figures.
"McLeod, is that you? I knew I could depend on you. You have no idea how much better I'm able to relax now. No, sir. If you said I don't have to worry, I don't have to. What's going on out here? He said you wanted to see me but couldn't move from the spot. Something I can do? What's wrong with them?"
There were not three figures in the snow, but four. "Take a look," the man with Mayor Spurgess said.
The mayor waited for McLeod to answer him, then shrugged and crouched. It was exactly as if he were still under the parabeam, McLeod realized. There was nothing he could say, nothing he could do.
TheStar-Timesgunmen had sized up the situation too well. The three men from theWorldwere as good as dead now, which would make it close to impossible for McLeod to turn on theStar-Timesand expect help from Wainwright, even if that were what he wanted. He had better play along. It was still a show on television and he could only watch. But now he knew the outcome.
The fourth still figure on the snow suddenly erupted into violent motion. A leg snaked out, an arm—the mayor grunted and fell, staring mutely at McLeod, surprised, offended and outrageously indignant the moment before he died. A knife flashed quickly, expertly, gleaming for a split second before it disappeared through the mayor's jumper.
The standing gunman twirled his parabeam to full intensity and sprayed theWorldmen with what was now lethal radiation, halting involuntary actions such as blinking—and breathing.
The gunman smiled at McLeod. "Well, you have your story now. We'd better get out of here while you phone for the police."
McLeod had his story, all right. He felt sick. He would call the police and then go write his story about how Mayor Spurgess had chased three unidentified vandals from his house, only to be stabbed to death while protecting his family. McLeod who was visiting the mayor on business, had naturally joined in the chase, in time to overtake and kill the unidentified vandals but not in time to save His Honor's life.
The police investigation, if any, would fail to uncover anything.
"Thanks a lot," McLeod said.
"Don't mention it." The two gunmen ran to join their companions and soon disappeared through the snow.
In tomorrow'sStar-Times, McLeod would be a hero.
CHAPTER VI
"Enough snow for you?" Overman asked jovially as McLeod removed his jumper the next morning in his office at theStar-Times. "We're ready to stop it now because theWorldweather bureau finally owned up to its red face. Thirty-two inches."
McLeod nodded. He'd had trouble reaching the slidewalk through the drifts and more trouble struggling through the few yards of high-piled snow to theStar-Timesbuilding.
"Rewrite showed me the story you sent in last night, Darius. Wonderful. Someone over at theWorldmust be biting his fingernails. They've got to be ready for split second changes in the newspaper business, though. If they don't, they're lost."
"What's that little bit of homely philosophy leading up to?" McLeod wanted to know. Overman rarely made his point without prefacing it with some mundane generalization. The more important the point, McLeod knew from experience, the triter the generalization.
"We've done a little G-2'ing these last few weeks, Darius." Overman seemed almost on the point of prancing nervously like an anxious racehorse at the starting gate. "I couldn't tell you until it was certain. Harry Crippens is a member of the Anti-Newspaper League." Overman grinned like a yawning owl. "Close your mouth, Darius. Stop gaping. It's the truth."
"But that doesn't make sense, chief." McLeod figured it made very good sense if Overman said so, but he needed time to collect his thoughts.
"Dirty doings at theStar-Times," preached Overman. "It's frightening, isn't it? If you can't trust your fellow reporters, just who in the world can you trust? You see, it's not merely Crippens. There's an Anti-News cell here.
"They usually work in pairs, Darius. One to get the information, another to see that editorial policy is not carried out. Don't ask me why they do it. Mis-guided anarchistic tendencies, I suppose. The first member of the pair very often poses as a turncoat with some other newspaper."
"I don't get you."
"It's simple. That way, he can play two papers against each other and try to make them both wrong. In this case,shecan. You see, Crippens' confederate is our number one co-respondent, Tracy Kent," Overman finished melodramatically.
"Tracy! That's incredible."Don't think, McLeod told himself.Don't think and let it show on your face. Just listen.
"At this moment, theWorldbelieves Kent is on their payroll. Kent keeps them informed of what's going on over here and draws two salaries. Crippens is her executioner. Crippens, for example, sees to it that Congressman Horner doesn't commit suicide."
Tracy had put two and two together with a blithe ease which had left McLeod wondering. Tracy had seemed to be aware of the alternative which Weaver Wainwright had offered him at the Fourth Estate. But Tracy hadn't balked because she was a loyal member of theStar-Timesstaff. She should have favored the plan, anyway, since it meant saving Crippens' life. But she hadn't favored it at all.
Because she'd held out hope for McLeod?
"How did you find all that out?" McLeod demanded.
"We suspected someone. We didn't know who. We planted television receivers and let them talk. Darius, I think you know my position. I'm a newspaperman because I think the public is so muddle-headed and mediocre it can't make its own decisions. Democratic governments try to make those decisions and fail because the people play too large a role and mess things up. Totalitarian governments fail because they're too obvious, especially when the guy next door happens to live in a democracy.
"The answer is the obvious evolution of the newspaper to policy-making journalism. People don't associate us with policy-making any more than they think short story writers or television script writers develop schools of psychology. We're both before the fact and after the fact, but they wouldn't believe that if we ran it in banner headlines.
"That's what the Anti-Newspaper League is after. They don't want us to look forward. They don't want us to predict the future and then make it happen. They make inane pronouncements about the essential dignity of man and the necessity for him to work out his own destiny. They sneer at Ortega y Gasset and deify Tom Paine. They shun authoritarianism in any form and blandly forget that Mr. Average Citizen has always yearned for his little niche in a totalitarian system because he actually wants decisions rained down on him like manna.
"I hate them, Darius. It isn't logical, but I hate them. Between you and me, I would like to strangle them with my bare hands, slowly, forgetting I am a civilized man, forgetting even that we can still use them. But the opportunity is a magnificent one. You could spend all your life G-2'ing after Anti-News people and come up with nothing but wrongos. From now on they'll be playing their little game where I can watch it."
"What about my obituary?" McLeod demanded. "It's the first of the week. I thought you said we were going to substitute Crippens for me."
"I did. I still do. Cripp we will have to sacrifice. But—I apologize in advance, Darius, because I know you won't like this—our G-2'ing was thorough. We received in your apartment, too."
"Don't tell me you can't trust me?"
"Calm down. That's just it, I can. The cell is spread thin at theStar-Times, so thin that we'll have to watch our step until it's uncovered. You see, Darius, you are going to take Crippens' place in it. When Cripp dies Tracy will turn to someone for sympathy. If it looks like you tried to save Cripp because you believed as he did—well, I'm sure you see the possibilities."
McLeod nodded vaguely. Anti-News. He was playing the game, almost, the way he felt. But he lacked the name. It was strange how you could amble cheerfully through life accepting or ignoring certain things until you woke up one morning and everything looked different. Whoever had decided leopards don't change their spots was all wet.
"... sorry if this sounds cloak-and-daggerish," Overman was saying, "but don't tell anyone. I can trust you. If the conspiracy is as big as I think, the good people at theWorld, the sensible ones, can probably trust a man like Weaver Wainwright. The rest must be suspect."
McLeod grinned. "Why trust me, chief?" he said easily, "I've never been a bug for ideology either way."
"That's precisely why. Newspapering is a job with you, but a good one. You're our highest-paid reporter. You have a reputation to maintain. A man gets muddle-headed if he starts delving too deeply into ideologies. He's afraid to see black-and-white because the other muddle-heads insist there are such things as grays. You follow?"
"Yeah," said McLeod. He followed, all right. It was all right if you thought for yourself, according to Overman, provided you didn't think too hard. You could attend all the high-brow confabs you wanted, safe in the security of your tailor-made answers. Never doubt. Never guess. You know. You just know. This is so and this is not so and there's never any in-between. The insistence on shadings of opinion between truth and error was a stumbling-block in the path of knowledge. Gray was for people who didn't know the truth about black-and-white.
"Yes, I can trust you. Thank God for that."
"I ought to get a raise," said McLeod, smiling and playing the role Overman had selected for him.
"Very funny. You ought to get a move on. We still have to worry about Wainwright and his men. There's no telling when they'll strike."
"So I have to strike first, at Crippens."
"Naturally. Have you filled out an application on him?"
"No," McLeod said easily, and raised a hand for silence when Overman was about to start yelling. "It's too important. I want to do the job myself. It's my life we're playing around with."
"I don't know if I approve. There's something to be said for professional efficiency. The gunmen know their work."
"I don't care if you approve or not. It's my life."
"You see, Darius. That's what I like about you. You always know where you stand."
"Thanks. I'll need some security, though."
"Now I don't follow you."
"Some bargaining power. In case I'm not as efficient as your gunmen. The proof that Tracy Kent and Harry Crippens are Anti-Newspaper."
"It's safe."
"I've got to know more about it."
"On the contrary. Simply carry this weapon with you: if there's trouble, have them contact me. Or contact me yourself. But that would ruin everything, Darius. I suppose if you have to bargain for your life, you wouldn't care."
"That's right. I wouldn't."
Overman chuckled. "You're a good man."
"And one who knows black from white, remember? Let's be honest with each other, chief. You're lying to me. You really figure if I fail, I fail. You wouldn't be willing to bargain in my behalf with what you have, and you know it. If I can kill Crippens and give Wainwright his substitute story and win Miss Kent's confidence, you'd love it. If I can't, you'll try to find another way. Sure, you think I'm good. But you know I'm expendable."
Overman thumped him soundly on the back. "Darius, we should have been brothers. Is there anything else?"
"Yes. How long would you want me to play this Anti-News game?"
"Until we get all the facts."
"Too dangerous," said McLeod. "Unless you make it worth my while."
Overman hadn't stopped grinning. "Maybe you will get a raise, at that."
"Not maybe. Definitely. Twenty per cent."
"Twenty?"
"Twenty."
"All right, Darius. Twenty it is. You'd sell your mother, wouldn't you?"
"Don't have to worry about it. The Anti-Newspaper League hasn't that kind of money. You're safe."
"I knew it," Overman said. "I couldn't have picked a better man."
"I'll keep you informed," said McLeod, and put on his jumper. He walked out congratulating himself on the way he'd convinced Overman.
Only trouble was, he now knew there was more than black-and-white in the world but wasn't sure he knew what to do about it.
CHAPTER VII
"I'm sorry," the recorder said when McLeod called Tracy's apartment. "Miss Kent is not at home. Is there any message?"
"No," said McLeod, then lied: "This is Harry Crippens talking."
"Miss Kent left a message for you, Mr. Crippens," said the recorder. "She will wait for you at the Fourth Estate. She says it is important."
"Thank you," said McLeod. "If Miss Kent should check in, will you tell her Darius wants to save Cripp's life if he can? Will you tell her Darius has come to his senses?"
"Darius wants to save Cripp's life if he can. Darius has come to his senses. Yes, sir."
McLeod had left theStar-Timesafter a hurried lunch in the newspaper cafeteria. He'd placed the call to Tracy's apartment from his own because the wires might or might not be tapped in his office.
Suddenly he began cursing silently.
Overman had rigged receivers in various apartments—including Darius'—to uncover the Anti-News cell. If Overman had heard his conversation with Tracy's recorder, Weaver Wainwright wouldn't be the only one gunning for McLeod.
He found the receiver rigged to his TV set, unhooked it, but the damage had been done. He doubted that Overman would constantly monitor the set, yet Overman would see the damning evidence eventually. McLeod could save Cripp's life by simply not killing him, but then what? He smiled grimly. It posed a considerable problem for Overman too, for the City Editor wanted to dump a fat wrongo in theWorld'slap but now would also want to see McLeod dead. One seemed to preclude the other ... unless Overman decided to give McLeod a week of grace, then kill him. McLeod was still smiling. Perhaps the situation confronting the fictional lady-or-tiger man had been more aggravating, but it was less deadly.
McLeod taped a second parabeam to his right arm and took the escalator to the roof and his copter.
"Hi," the weaponcheck girl greeted him as he entered the Fourth Estate. "How are you today, Mr. McLeod?"
"Never better." As she approached him, McLeod removed the first parabeam from his trick sleeve and handed it to her. "I'm ticklish today," he told her and saw that she was about to say something until she noticed the folded bill wedged between trigger and trigger guard. She nodded, patted his shoulders quickly without searching, and wagged away. It happened all the time, McLeod knew. He wouldn't be the only one.
"You hurry up inside," the weaponcheck girl called over her bare shoulder. "They're doing a combo-tease."
As McLeod made his way through the darkened room, he saw a well-built man and a delightfully built women performing the combo-tease on stage. Sweat glistened on their sleek dark skins as red lights shifted and flowed across the stage. It was more suggestive than French pictures, combining features of an Apache dance and a conventional strip. It had been outlawed everywhere but at the Fourth Estate and had everyone's rapt attention.
Everyone except Cripp and Tracy. McLeod found them in a distant corner of the great room, hunched toward each other across a small table and talking in low tones.
"Mind?" McLeod asked.
"You have your nerve," Tracy hissed at him, but people to left and right were muttering angrily at them as the combo-tease neared its conclusion. "Well, I guess you're harmless enough in here."
"Sit down," Cripp said.
"Overman knows about you two," McLeod told them quickly. "The works."
"You mean that we're going to get married?" Tracy demanded. "It's no secret."
"I mean that you belong to the Anti-Newspaper League. Tracy, you're pretending to spy on us for theWorld, he knows that, Cripp, you thwart bad news when you can. You both belong to the Anti-Newspaper League. To Overman, you're both anarchistic. He'd like to see you dead."
The woman on stage had seemed spent but now rallied and held her own as they danced a frenzied Apache battle from wing to wing. Tracy, who was facing the stage, said, "That's positively lewd. We've all degenerated so much, Cripp."
McLeod shrugged. "Overman would say that's part of your Anti-News tendencies."
"And you?"
McLeod grinned. "I'm not much for spectator sports."
"No, I mean about the Anti-Newspaper League. I'm not admitting anything, but I just wonder what you think."
"You wouldn't believe me."
"Why don't you try us, Darius?" Cripp suggested.
"You don't have to admit anything," McLeod informed them. "Overman plugged a receiver into your TV sets and monitored them. Mine too, by the way. I called you a while ago. Which put me in hot water too."
"You mean he'll monitor the call?" asked Cripp.
"Maybe he already has. You can check with your recorder if you want to, Tracy."
"Tell me what you told the recorder?"
"That I was going to try and save Cripp's life. That I had finally come to my senses, I guess."
"All you have to do to save Cripp's life is nothing. I was told by someone on Lantrel's staff that you hadn't applied for Cripp's death."
"Another part of the cell," McLeod mused. "Just how extensive is it?"
"I wouldn't know," Tracy told him coolly. "Anyway, you said Overman knows."
"He does. I don't."
The Apache strippers had leaped from the stage and now were cavorting acrobatically about the dance floor. A single red spot followed them as they pounced after each other, working their way toward the rows of tables and then among them. McLeod heard quick, eager breathing in the shadowy audience.
"I never knew they came off the stage," Tracy said.
McLeod winked at her. "Maybe one of these days they'll want audience participation."
"Very funny. If you're telling us the truth, Darius, what are you going to do?"
"You tell me. Overman wanted me to kill Cripp, win your confidence and take Cripp's place in the cell. I had to make it look like it wasn't me who did the job. But if Overman monitored my TV, he'll realize I'm not his boy. He'll have to do without an informant. He knows I'm wise to him but probably doesn't want to know. Which means he'll have to act fast."
"But if he eliminates you, Wainwright and theWorldget their scoop," Cripp pointed out.
"I know, I can't figure it. Overman's got a man-sized problem, but so have you. I don't think you have much time to leave the city. Get lost somewhere. Change your names. Anything."
Tracy bristled. "We haven't admitted a thing."
"There's no time for that. Please, Tracy," Cripp pleaded. "I think Darius is on our side. We're making a mistake if we reject him."
"Unless I'm wrong," McLeod said, "Overman hasn't told anyone but me. He just doesn't know who to trust."
"So he settles for Mr. Judas Iscariot himself," Tracy said.
Cripp slammed his hand down on the table and drew angry oaths from the tables around them. "Cut it out," he said. "Let's listen to Darius. Can you think of anything else to do?"
"Well—"
"If I'm the only one he told," McLeod went on, "and then if he found out about me and decided to come here in a hurry, we can hope he hasn't told anyone else. Chances are, he hasn't. If he found out he can't even trust me, he won't know which way to turn, not until he clears this whole mess up."
"What are you driving at?" Tracy asked him.
"Reporter, City Editor. It's close enough. Maybe Wainwright can still get his story."
"You mean Overman? You wouldn't dare."
"It isn't just Cripp's life, or even yours, if you still have your mind made up about me. It's my life too. If we can make Wainwright settle for Overman, all this doesn't have to go any further."
"What's your price?" Tracy demanded.
"For Heaven's sake!" Cripp cried.
"I can't blame her, Cripp. I was pretty nasty about it before, and I tried to be pretty tricky as well. I'm still all mixed up. I think I know where I stand now but I can't guarantee anything."
"You mean after all this is over you're liable to change your mind again?" Tracy asked him, giving Cripp an I-told-you-so smile.
"No. Definitely not. At worst, I'll be neutral. At best—"
"At best," Cripp finished for him enthusiastically, "you'll probably be made City Editor in Overman's place. You're the obvious man for the job, and if you could see your way clear to joining us, there's no telling what we might accomplish. Don't you see it, Tracy?"
"All I can see is the combo-tease. They'll be dancing on our table if they come any closer."
The team struggled three tables away to a subtle, wild, barely audible rhythm. The man had regained the offensive, but it had cost him everything he wore except for a pair of tight trousers and one billowing, ruffled sleeve which flapped ridiculously from shoulder to wrist.
At the last moment, McLeod thought he saw a leather strap under the sleeve. The couple had reached their table; the man forced the woman back over it, still dancing. The red spotlight winked out like a snuffed candle flame.
Tracy screamed.
The audience had interpreted the darkness and Tracy's scream as the act's final, breath-taking garnish and now buzzed in isolated knots of whispered excitement before the applause rolled deafeningly across the room.
McLeod leaped to his feet, groping blindly in the darkness with his hands. He heard Cripp shout Tracy's name and began to yell himself for someone to turn on the lights. Something struck his head above and behind the right ear and he felt himself falling to his knees. He grabbed at air, then made contact with two bare legs. Still yelling, he guessed it was the woman—then felt unseen hands tugging at his hair, fingers raking his face. He got up and was grappling with a supple-swift invisible opponent when the lights went on and blinded him.
There were shouts and restraining arms and when he could see again the woman dancer, now almost naked, was pointing an accusing finger at him. "He deliberately attacked me!" she wailed.
McLeod wiped blood from his face and said, "That's crazy." These were more than combo-strippers, he knew. They might be in Wainwright's pay or Overman's. Either way, he was in for it. "They're a couple of gunmen," he said.
The male dancer was covering Tracy and Cripp with his parabeam, which had been hidden under the flapping right sleeve. "See?" McLeod said to the circle of people around them. "He's armed."
The crowd parted to admit the weaponcheck girl to its center. With a quick, deft movement she found McLeod's second parabeam, withdrew it and told him, "So are you."
More figures joined them, in police uniforms, the polished leather harness for twin parabeams creaking on each pair of hips, the gaudy blue and gold uniforms starched stiffly. "You're under arrest," one of them told McLeod. "You'll have to come with us."
"You're no more police than I am. Since when do police do anything more than direct traffic?"
"You'll have to come with us, sir."
"And then get killed trying to escape? Keep your hands off me."
At that moment, Weaver Wainwright made his way inside the wide circle of onlookers, his long sad nose drooping over his upper lip as he smiled at McLeod. "When our police reporter said it was you, I rushed right over."
"Sure," McLeod said bitterly. "Police reporter. Why don't you admit these people are a bunch of your killers? You've really tailor-made your accident this time, Wainwright. I guess I'll be killed trying to escape."
Wainwright regarded him with bland curiosity. "What I want to know is why you attacked the girl."
"He didn't attack her," Tracy said. "I was right here."
"In pitch darkness," the weaponcheck girl reminded her. Apparently McLeod's bribe had been topped.
McLeod let his eyes scan the crowd, seeking a friendly face. Here were the minor luminaries of the fourth estate gazing upon their fallen idol. For McLeod, like Weaver Wainwright, had been almost a legendary figure. But Wainwright had engineered the fall and now, like those South American fish which can strip the flesh from a man in seconds, they clustered about McLeod's social corpse. They sensed his demise as surely as if it had been something physical. They waited with avid eyes at the bottom of the ladder for him to fall. Then each figure would ascend one rung upward and so, each with his own capable hands and thinkwriter, control human history a little more.
If only he could somehow contact Overman, McLeod thought. How much time did he have? He wasn't sure but thought it could be measured in minutes.
"I'd like to call my City Editor," McLeod said.
Wainwright chuckled. "A good reporter to the last. But I see Crippens and Miss Kent here."
"It's my right."
"TheStar-Timeswill get its story. Won't you see to that, Mr. Crippens?"
McLeod stared mutely at Cripp, who finally said, "How do you knowIdidn't attack the woman?"
The stripper pouted and pointed a manicured finger at McLeod. "It was that man."
"You see?" Wainwright demanded.
"No," Cripp told him. "It was dark. She couldn't tell. If McLeod is arrested, they'll have to take me, too."
A muscle twitched in Wainwright's face, tugging the long nose down and to the left. "Very well. But Miss Kent still represents theStar-Times."
Cripp shook his head. "A co-respondent?"
"She's capable."
"Too damned capable," McLeod said. "I have positive proof that Tracy Kent is employed as a spy by theWorld." He turned on Wainwright with what he hoped would pass for righteous indignation. "Is that the kind of fair break you try to give the opposition?"
The encircling crowd stirred, trembling with whispers. McLeod pressed his advantage by jabbing a finger at the captain of police. "I demand the right to call my newspaper."
"Well, I don't know." The man looked to Wainwright for help.
"Never mind him," McLeod said. "You tell me. I'm within my rights as a newspaperman, or wouldn't you know about that?"
Someone brought out a portable phone and thrust it at McLeod. The captain of police looked at Wainwright, who shook his head quickly from side to side. It was all right. Sure it was all right. McLeod could make no accusations in public, the law said. If he started, he would forfeit his right to complete the call. He could tell Overman that Tracy and Cripp had him, instead, but he doubted if the City Editor would act on that basis.
Wainwright grinned. "There's your phone, McLeod. We're waiting for you to call."
"Thanks a lot," McLeod told him, and hurled the instrument at his face.
He heard a thud and a startled oath and didn't wait to see the results. He whirled and struck out with the edge of his hand, slicing it expertly at the police captain's Adam's Apple. McLeod vaulted over the gagging man as he went down and plunged, head tucked against his chest and knees kicking high, into the first rank of the crowd. He fought elbows, fists, shoulders, legs, warm human breaths, reaching the front of the room and sprinting past the weaponcheck arsenal and out into the green, summery glade that surrounded the anachronism of stone and glass that was the Fourth Estate.
Protected by a force field, the grounds around the Estate knew nothing but summer. But elsewhere, McLeod thought as he plunged on toward the copter field, man's control over the elements vied for headlines.
McLeod saw the figure of a man up ahead as he rounded the final turn in the path, still sprinting. The man stood squarely in front of him, blocking his way with a drawn parabeam.
"Did he come this way?" McLeod cried. "Talk, man! Did McLeod come this way?"
"No, sir. He, wait a minute...."
But McLeod was upon him, using the same judo-cut that had floored the captain of police. McLeod wrenched the parabeam from the man's fingers as he fell, then found his copter and was airborne by the time the vanguard of his pursuers appeared as tiny dots on the field below.
Less than an hour later, McLeod landed on the roof of theStar-Timesbuilding, where a slowly circling plow was scooping up the snow, digesting it and spitting out great jets of steam. McLeod doubled the speed of the escalator with his own flying feet and was soon striding across the City Room, nodding briefly to the sychophantic waves and smiles which greeted him as theStar-Times'ace reporter.
"Chief," he said, entering Overman's glass-walled office without bothering to knock, "the wolves are after your fair-haired boy—but good!"
"Wainwright?" Overman guessed, drumming nervous fingers on his desk.
"Wainwright. Something about attacking the female member of a combo tease. If his police ever had a chance to take me, I'd have been killed trying to get away."
"So, what happened?"
"What happened, the man says. They're probably on their way here right now. In order for me to get away, Cripp had to claim he attacked the girl too."
"That's wonderful. Doesn't that take care of Mr. Crippens for us? Well, doesn't it? Incidentally, that was a stroke of genius on your part, telling Tracy Kent you had a change of heartbeforeanything happened. Paving the way, eh?"
"Something like that," McLeod mumbled. Then Overman had monitored his call to Tracy's apartment, but had misinterpreted what he heard—
"Sit down, Darius. There. Are you armed?"
"Yes, but you don't think they'd try to take me right here, do you? That would be an open declaration of war." McLeod took out the parabeam and placed it on the edge of Overman's desk.
"It would be war—unless I surrendered you to them." Overman scooped up the parabeam and thumbled it to high intensity. "At first I thought that was a stroke of genius on your part, but I wasn't sure. So I had you followed. Your conversation with Crippens and Tracy Kent was ingenius, all right. But it puts us on opposite sides now, doesn't it?"
McLeod had never seen Overman so calm. His fingers no longer drummed their incessant rhythm on the desk, his legs were still. He sat motionless, like a tri-di picture of himself. McLeod said, "Not at all. I only wanted to gain their confidence."
"The one thing that bothers me is this: it looks like I'm going to give Weaver Wainwright his story after all, although there's a chance I can save something for theStar-Times. I suspect he'll take you off somewhere and have you killed, but the moment he leaves this office with you, you'll be denounced in theStar-Times. Wainwright won't be killing a top reporter. He'll be killing a member of the Anti-Newspaper League."
"You're crazy," McLeod said. "It might have sounded bad, but it was all part of the same thing. I wanted to gain their confidence and—"
"And offer me in your place to Wainwright's hatchetmen? That's interesting."
"I was lying to them."
"No. You're lying to me. I'll tell you this, Darius. It comes as a great disappointment. Suddenly, all at once, a man finds his organization is riddled with subversives. That's bad enough, but at least he has one man he can trust. He thinks. He thinks, Darius. But he's wrong there, too. Now he can trust no one. Perhaps he'll have to fire his entire staff and start from the beginning again. But it's the one man, the Judas, who hurts most. Even if Wainwright gets you and gets his story—and I get mine—I'll never be able to trust anyone again. Don't you see the position you've put me in? I'm a lonely man, Darius."
McLeod stood up and leaned across the desk. "We've both been playing God all our lives. What do you think happens when a God loses his worshippers?"
"I haven't lost them. Just the acolytes. There are others."
"There are the people," McLeod said. "Waiting for the medical cures we promise them but never give. The farmers, praying to their own God while we ruin their crops capriciously to scoop theWorld. The dead citizens of a dozen bombed out cities in a dozen unnecessary wars. The people who haven't read Ortega y Gasset and maybe never even heard of him and can't be convinced they're too stupid to seek their own destinies."
"Ortega was right. Mass man can't discriminate. He's incapable of logical, creative thought. He blunders from catastrophe to catastrophe and grovels at the feet of demagogues."
"He can't be herded and led to slaughter."
"He can't be the master of his own fate, you fool!"
"Perhaps not. But there are people who can create, who can lead. People who pave the way and let the masses follow where they lead."
"What do you think we do? We pave the way. We make the future."
"There's a difference."
"I can't see it."
"You don't want to. The truly creative man merely does his work. The masses will follow of their own free will. Maybe they'll follow the wrong leader as often as not, but we've still come a long way in a few thousand years. It's wrong if they're led, or pushed, or tricked or—"
"Sit down, Darius. Don't move. The trouble with you anti-news people is you're too romantic. You think because God or Nature created man at the top of the evolutionary ladder, man is good, man can do nothing but move forward in the long run. You think it's a mistake for one man—or a group of men, or an institution—to channel that movement.
"But of all the institutions in man's civilization, the newspaper is the most logical one for the job. We inform, Darius. We are the essence of life. Life perceives and, after perceiving transmits information. Or builds machines to do the job. Sensation, perception, information—the same thing. We're at the top. We belong here."
"Perception should be objective, un-colored. But there's no sense talking to you."
"Perception is never objective, my dear Darius. An individual perceives. Some men are tone-deaf, others color-blind. We all taste the same foods, liking some and disliking others. I say the newspaper belongs on the top like this. I say our creation of news is no different from the hundred varied opinions of a hundred members of the rabble. Unless it's better. We're a cohesive force, Darius. We simplify. We unite."
"You hamper and destroy."
"We don't rule by force. Have they ever tried to overthrow us? Have they? You see, they don't dislike us. They have faith in us. They can grow roots and feel secure. They don't have a myriad of possibilities confronting them. They have only two on any given subject, except in purely local situations which we don't consider important. Either theStar-Timesis right, or theWorldis."
"Why are you telling me all this?"
"It's very important to me. I believed in you, Darius. I still think you've made a mistake. While it's too late now—you see, we can't really controlallevents, can we?—I would like to hear you admit your mistake. I can never trust anyone again."
"If I admit it?"
"I'll thank you...."
"And hand me over to Weaver Wainwright?"
"And hand you over to Weaver Wainwright."
There was a disturbance outside, the sound of running feet in the City Room, of many voices. Overman cocked his head to one side, listening to the tiny receiver in his ear then picking up his microphone hose and saying, "In a moment. That's right, I said let them in. But give me five minutes." He dropped the hose. "They're here for you, Darius."
"I gathered."
"Would you make a man who once was your friend happy before you go? Just tell me you were wrong. Tell me if you had your way over again you would remain loyal to me even if you were confronted with the same faulty philosophical notions."
"At the point of a parabeam? What good would it do?"
"Forget the parabeam. I'm two people now. I'm guarding you and I'll kill you if you come any closer to me, but I'm also pleading with you. I'm asking you to give me my salvation."
"I wonder which one is stronger," McLeod said, standing again and leaning across the desk. "Why does it mean so much to you, chief? Let me tell you. Is it because you have doubts yourself and want me to resolve them for you?"
"Keep back, I'm warning you. That isn't it at all. You've made me lose my faith in people."
"I thought you didn't have any."
"In a few people. Please, Darius. Don't come any closer. A man has to trust someone."
"You can't do anything about your doubts. You're hoping I can."
"I'm going to kill you if you come any closer." Overman was still standing like a statue, the parabeam an extension of his right hand. It was as if he would never move again unless McLeod freed him with a word. It was as if the heart too had stopped its beating and only the lips were alive, the pleading lips, begging for a reprieve.
McLeod leaped across the desk, his middle slamming down on the hard surface, his diaphragm squeezing all the air from his lungs. His fingers closed on Overman's wrist and forced it back as the parabeam hissed from his cheek.
Now the lips were still. Now the muscles which had remained so inert for many moments were writhing with activity, each individual cell adding its strength to the whole, to the wiry arms, the thin legs, the twisting, heaving torso. The only sound was the harsh rasping of Overman's breath as they grappled, tumbling over and over, rolling across the floor.
The parabeam was between them, separating their chests. Overman butted with his head, bit, gouged, used his knees and elbows while he held the weapon. The lungs filled with air—McLeod could feel the torso lifting, the rib-cage expanding. The mouth opened to scream for help....
McLeod got a hand over it, felt teeth clamp on his fingers, very white, very sharp. The mouth opened again as McLeod rolled suddenly clear to avoid an up-thrusting knee.
Knee hit elbow and hand tightened convulsively. The parabeam hissed against Overman's chest and up, bathing his chin and face and the lips which, instead of screaming, formed the words "tell me" and then closed slowly. Afterwards, McLeod always thought Overman's ears must have retained their sentience longest as the man died, waiting for an answer which would never come.
The door opened. People stood around, looking down at them. Wainwright. The phony police. Tracy and Cripp. SomeStar-Timessecurity agents.
McLeod stood up slowly, his own muscles twitching. He looked at Wainwright, then pointed to Overman's body on the floor and said, "There's your story. You were modest in your prediction. Not a reporter, but the City Editor. Dead. And listen to me, Wainwright. It's the only story you'll ever get. Try anything else and there'll be open war between our papers. You understand?"
Wainwright considered, head down, arms folded in front of him, long nose hiding lips from that angle. "They'll probably make you City Editor," he mused. "I'll take the story. You're in the clear, McLeod."
"I want to be exonerated from that false charge."
But Wainwright shook his head. "Do it yourself. You have a newspaper, too. Incidentally, how did Overman die?"
"Say he was looking for something, something important—so important that when he couldn't find it he killed himself."
"That's no story."
"It's a story," said McLeod, "We can make it a story."
"There are hundreds of us," Tracy said later. "All over the country. All over the world. We're badly organized. We need organization. You're in a position to give it to us."
"Not overtly," Cripp warned. "But under cover at the beginning, until we build up strength. We'll have to re-indoctrinate young reporters and then forget about indoctrination when we can. We'll be fighting a war all our lives."
"Men like Overman and Wainwright are the alternatives," McLeod said. "I think even Overman knew, at the end, that he was wrong. But it went against everything he ever thought or believed. I almost could have been another Overman."
"You're not," Tracy said. "You just had to be goosed."
"It's going to be interesting," McLeod told them. "We'll still predict. To stay in business, we'll have to predict, at least to start with. But we'll give our scientists and social workers a free hand, and our predictions will all be practical. Do you realize there hasn't been a substantial scientific discovery put to use in the last fifty years?"
Cripp seemed worried. "Their approach is more sensational. They'll draw the readers. But we have to—to stay in business."
"That was your trouble all along," McLeod said. "You were a bunch of snipers. I think you're wrong. What's not sensational about a trip to the moon or a cure for cancer or controlled weather that actually helps the farmers or campaigning for the better man in an election because he truly has something to offer? We're liable to put theWorldright out of business."
"We can try," said Tracy, smiling.
"Not you, young lady. No more co-respondents. How would you like to be a bonafide social worker?"
But Tracy squeezed Cripp's hand and said, "No, thank you. I'd rather be a housewife."
McLeod thought he'd have to settle for loving both of them like a brother—then realized he'd be too busy to do anything of the sort.