Alan E. Nourse & J. A. Meyer (32 page)

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BOOK: Alan E. Nourse & J. A. Meyer
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Chapter Eighteen

Once the wall
was broken down, Bahr moved fast, driving
ahead with the bulldozer force that meant safety and security and hope to the
people who looked to him to lead them.

Even
Alexander and
MacKenzie
had not anticipated the speed
with which the man would move. For
MacKenzie
, there
was endless work and a nightmare of administrative detail in the BRINT field
offices. For Alexander it meant a growing desperate urgency to develop and
crystallize the plan he had seen only in its barest outlines, an urgent
necessity to re-evaluate the situation continually, with the
everpresent
responsibility of picking the right time, the
exactly right time, to move.

He spent days on the flat, multi-volume
dossier on Julian Bahr from the BRINT top-sec files, the thousands of feet of
recording tape, the miles of motion picture film, and the endless succession of
documents, memos, notes, affidavits, opinions, history-segments that the BRINT
network had so painstakingly accumulated.

And through it all he saw the governmental
structure of Federation America tremble, totter and crumble under the driving
force of one man and a project called Project Tiger.

The
changes were sweeping, and fundamental. With die
Robling
combine under national—and Bahr's personal—control, the first moves were
swift. At White Sands, for thirty years a ghost town, the shabby, burned out,
gutted and abhorred remains of the old XAR project were exhumed. Like a phoenix
rising from its own ashes, White Sands became a booming metropolis. The
buildings were rebuilt; the country was combed for scientists, engineers,
technicians, craftsmen —anyone who had contributed or could contribute, until
the newly organized technical schools could pour out their new blood.
Blueprints were drawn from dusty files, materials poured
South
,
and the abandoned shell of the final XAR ship disappeared beneath a new
scaffold crawling with workmen.

As
the progress reports and development plans were read, the research director for
the defense section of the old DEPEX rose in protest. "What you are
proposing is impossible," he told Bahr in the hot, crowded conference
room one morning. "The economy cannot support it. It would require an
effort equivalent to a major war, and even then I could never guarantee
success."

"We
are
engaged in a major war," Bahr said,
"and there will have to be changes in the economy."

"But
the changes you are talking about aren't possible without reducing the
population to a starvation level."

"That
may not be true," Bahr said, "and it certainly is immaterial. We
have no choice in the matter, and starvation is the least national threat we
are facing. Above all, we cannot afford to sentimentalize." The research
director was encouraged to accept a job in another highly non-critical organization,
and Bahr named a suitable replacement.

Thereafter,
steps were taken to alter the economy to comply with the demands that Project
Tiger was already making.

Bahr's
manner of dealing with DEPCO was swift as the stroke of an axe, though far more
humane. He did not arrest anybody in DEPCO. He simply cut off their funds, and
red-carded every man, woman, and stripling in the DEPCO organization. A few
hundred people were picked up for questioning, but there was no purge. Adams'
subsequent suicide was unquestionably a suicide. Bahr did not even forbid the
DEPCO people to go to work, or continue their research, but he told them in a
firm, quiet voice that the economy was being reorganized to accomplish Project
Tiger, and that long-range research programs which would not contribute to the
major effect were being temporarily suspended. He promised them that as soon as
funds were available, their pay would start again, but he conveyed to them in
various subtle ways that there might be some delay.

And
through it all, an infiltration of trusted DIA men began into the bureaus, the
planning commissions, the offices, and a slow, inexorable tightening of control
began, a rerouting of the channels of authority in an upward pyramid which led,
ultimately, into the office and the hands of a single man. There were more
alien incidents, with the usual publicity and no captures, but the panic and
terror which ensued was channeled and held in the rigid program which was to
rid the skies of the aliens forever.

It
was a pattern as old as time, moving step by step in its dreadful familiarity,
and Alexander and
MacKenzie
watched it. Every real
tyrant in history had followed the pattern. . . . Napoleon, Hitler, Stalin,
Khrushchev . . . they all knew it well.

But
to Julian Bahr a far more important war, a private, personal war, was
progressing, and he drove his fist into his hand again and again as die coal of
rage burned brighter and brighter.

It took the BRINT network and Harvey
Alexander almost a week to pick up her trail, but he finally located her, in
the filthy third-floor room in a run-down Boston suburban apartment house. He
had only the BRINT profile of her to go on, which he had thought was remarkably
complete, and it took him three days of surveillance to be sure that he had the
right woman.

When
he was finally certain that she was not under DIA stakeout, he went up to the
third-floor room, and knocked.

She
was staggering drunk, and her voice was hoarse and ragged. When she opened the
door she had on a dirty bathrobe, with a towel around her hair, and she reeked
of gin and cheap perfume. Behind her the room was a mess, clothes strewn
around, makeup scattered, the bed disheveled. "You want something?"
she said harshly. "I don't want to stand in this doorway all night."

Alexander pushed past her into the room and
closed the door. She looked at him, and shrugged, and went across to the
half-finished drink on the bureau. "Sure, all right, come in," she
said. "Who asked you in here?" Then her eyes opened wider, and she
seemed to see him for the first time, and her face was frightened.
"DIA?" she asked.

"Make
some coffee," Alexander said. "I want to talk to you."

"Thanks, I'll stay
drunk."

He
hit her viciously across the face twice, and dragged her by the collar of her
bathrobe over to the wash basin. He made her throw up, and wiped her face off
with a wet towel. He made some
surro
-coffee, and she
sat bent over drinking it, her eyes closed, tired and defeated and sick. She
threw up the second cup; by then she was fairly sober, and her face was dead
with exhaustion and fear. "Who are you? What do you want? Why can't you
just leave me a-lone?"

It
looked bad, and Alexander shook his head. Her red hair was an unkempt mop, and
her mouth sagged open in a stupid, beaten expression. He saw the bruise under
one eye, the black-and-blue marks on her neck, and he ground his teeth.
"For God sake clean up and get some clothes on," he said. "You
make me sick to look at you."

She
did not protest, but picked up some clothes and headed for the bathroom.

It
was bad, far worse than he had expected. How could a woman go to pieces like
that? He paced the floor, lit a cigarette, wondering if he had made a terrible
error. He needed her, everything he had planned depended on her, but she would
have to be strong, not broken and washed out.

Clothes
and make-up made a change. She seemed a little more alive when she reappeared.
He stood up. "All right, my name is Alexander, and I'm not DIA. I'm with
Army Intelligence, assigned to BRINT. I want to talk to you, but it's nearly
dinner time. I have a car outside. Where do you want to eat?"

Libby
looked at him for a moment, confused and disbelieving, and her face colored.
Then she seemed to stand a little straighter, to look more like the attractive,
intelligent girl the BRINT dossier had described. "Do you know
Boston?" she asked.

"Chicago,
yes.
Boston, no."

"I
know a place . . ." She smiled at him. When they reached the car, he
opened the door for her, and her eyebrows lifted slightly. "If this is an
arrest," she said, "I hope they're all this way."

It
was not an arrest, and it was critical that she be made to understand that.
Making friends with her, Alexander decided, had indeed been the right policy.
A good meal, a couple of cocktails, some small talk, a little light banter—the
rituals of a culture that had twice been eroded out of society, and Libby
Allison was a new person. Her self-respect had been knocked apart. He would
have to have the details, later, but she was basically a strong person, and
Alexander began to feel that just possibly he might still accomplish what he
wanted.

He
didn't question her that night, even though he was eager to sound her out. She
looked exhausted, and her apartment was still a mess. He said he would be back
in the morning, and left her at the door. Before he left the neighborhood, he
made certain that the BRINT stakeout understood its job. She was to be there
when he came back.

As
he had expected, the morning saw a new person. Drab as it was, the apartment
was in order, and she offered him coffee when he came in. They talked, and
Alexander told her enough to make it clear that he knew a great deal a-bout
her, and about Bahr.

And
then, quite abruptly, the pain and terrible grief came out in a torrent, a
storm of emotion that she had been tormenting herself trying to hold in.
Alexander listened, and knew for the first time that he was going to win.

"I
knew he would be angry when I left him," she said. "I didn't realize
that he would be so violently, vindictively furious. It wasn't just me, it
couldn't
have been just me; he never cared that much
about me. It was something else that he had to make me suffer for.

"The
morning after I left, he canceled DEPCO. People were picked up for questioning,
and the files cleaned out. He canceled my clearance and my stability rating,
though of course those don't mean much now, unless he
wants
them to mean something.
That first day his men found
out where I was staying.
When I came back home my car had been stolen
and my apartment looted. I took Timmy and found another place. I thought if we
could just wait it out for a few days he would forget it, it would blow
over."

She
looked up at Alexander, and the fear and grief were still in her eyes. "I
was wrong, oh, but I was wrong. The second day they attached my bank account,
and I had no money. That afternoon the police came, with a committee of
Education and Conditioning people. They were very regretful, but very firm. I
didn't have a
job,
I didn't have an income, so
obviously I could not adequately support a child. They took Tim away. I thought
I knew Julian, but I couldn't believe that he'd let his own son go into the
Playschool system. He did it just to hurt me. I tried to get in touch with
him, but all I got was the run-around. Inside of three days I didn't have
enough money to eat with Then Bahr nationalized my apartment building, and I
was out. He put in this miserable currency reform, and I didn't have a bond or
security that was worth the paper it was written on. Even my life insurance . .
. well, you know the hell he's been raising with this economic mobilization

She broke off, and poured
herself a drink.

"Why did you leave
him?" Alexander said.

"I
wish I knew that. I wish I knew, for sure." The girl threw herself down on
the sofa, searching his face as if somehow she might find the answer written
there. "Mark
Vanner
wasn't really my uncle, but
he brought me up from the time I was a little girl. He was a national figure
when Julian Bahr was a scrawny little road-rat smuggling watered-down
antibiotics for a living. Mark
Vanner
held this
country together for years on just faith, and respect and decent, honest
leadership. Do you think Julian Bahr could have done that?" She spread her
hands helplessly. "
Vanner
was a man, a
magnificent man. When he became chief of economic planning there wasn't a
factory in operation anywhere in the country. He didn't have money, or a gang
of gunmen to back him up. But he talked to people, and he went around to the
colleges and defense agencies, and the people volunteered by the hundreds and
thousands—the best minds in the country. They came to Washington, knowing that
they weren't going to be paid, sincere people who believed in Mark
Vanner
and believed that his social-economic system •was
the only thing that could pull us together again. Harrison,
Kronsky
, Williams, Otto
Lieblitz
. . . my mother and father before they were killed . . . those were the kind of
people who started DEPCO."

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