Highways in Hiding

Chapter 17

"Yes, and a good one."

#Who else is awake?#

"Just me, so far," she replied quietly. "But I"ll be glad to call out--"

#Keep it quiet, Sister Macklin.#

"Stop thinking like an idiot, Mr. Cornell. Quiet or not, you"ll not leave this house until I permit you to go."

I let my esper roam quickly through the house. An elderly couple slept in the front bedroom. A man slept alone in the room beside them; a pair of young boys slept in an over-and-under bunk in the room across the hall. The next room must have been hers, the bed was tumbled but empty.

The room next to the medical office contained a man trussed in traction splints, white bandages, and literally festooned with those little hanging bottles that contain everything from blood plasma to food and water, right on down to lubrication for the joints. I tried to dig his face under the swath of bandage but I couldn"t make out much more than the fact that it was a face and that the face was half Mekstrom Flesh.

"He is a Mekstrom Patient," said Miss Macklin quietly. "At this stage, he is unconscious."

I sort of sneered at her. "Good friend of yours, no doubt."

"Not particularly," she said. "Let"s say that he is a poor victim that would die if we hadn"t found his infection early." The tone and expression of her voice made me seethe; she sounded as though she felt herself to be a real benefactor to the human race, and that she and her outfit would do the same for any other poor guy that caught Mekstrom"s--providing they learned about this unfortunate occurrence in time.

"We would, Mr. Cornell."

"Bah-loney," I grunted.

"Why dispute my word?" she asked in the same tone of innocent honesty.

I eyed her angrily and I felt my hand tighten on the revolver. "I"ve a reason to become suspicious," I told her in a voice that I hoped was as mild-mannered as her own. "Because three people have disappeared in the past half-year without a trace, but under circ.u.mstances that put me in the middle. All of them, somehow, seem to be involved with your hidden road sign system and Mekstrom"s Disease."

"That"s unfortunate," she said quietly.

I had to grab myself to keep from yelling, "Unfortunate?" and managed to m.u.f.fle it down to a mere voice-volume sound. "People dying of Mekstrom"s because you"re keeping this cure a secret and I"m batted from pillar to post because--" I gave up on that because I really did not know why.

"It"s unfortunate that you had to become involved," she said firmly.

"Because you--"

"It"s unfortunate for everybody," I snapped, "because I"m going to bust you all wide open!"

"I"m afraid not. You see, in order to do that you"ll have to get out of here and that I will not permit."

I grunted. "Miss Macklin, you Mekstroms have hard bodies, but do you think your hide will stop a slug from this?"

"You"ll never know. You see, Mr. Cornell, you do not have the cold, brittle, determined guts that you"d need to pull that trigger."

"No?"

"Pull it," she said. "Or do you agree, now that you"re of age, that you can"t bluff a telepath."

I eyed her sourly because she was right. She held that strength that lies in weakness; I could not pull that trigger and fire a .375 inch slug into that slender, silk-covered midriff. And opposite that, Miss Macklin also had a strength that was strength itself. She could hold me aloft with one hand kicking and squirming while she was twisting my arms and legs off with her other hand.

She held all the big cards of her s.e.x, too. I couldn"t slug her with my fist, even though I knew that I"d only break my hand without even bruising her. I was in an awkward situation and I knew it. If she"d been a normal woman I could have shrugged my way past her and left, but she was determined not to let me leave without a lot of physical violence.

Violence committed on a woman gets the man in dutch no matter how justified he is.

Yet in my own weakness there was a strength; there was another way out and I took it. Abruptly and without forethought.

X

Shifting my aim slightly, I pulled the trigger. The .375 Bonanza went off with a sound like an atom bomb in a telephone booth, and the slug whiffed between her arm and her body and drilled a crater in the plaster behind her.

The roar stunned her stiff. The color drained from her face and she swayed uncertainly. I found time enough to observe that while her body was as hard as chromium, her nervous system was still human and sensitive enough to make her faint from a sudden shock. She caught herself, and stood there stiff and white with one delicate (but steel-hard) hand up against her throat.

Then I dug the household. They were piling out of the hay like a bunch of trained firemen answering a still alarm. They arrived in all stages of nightdress in the following order:

The man, about twenty-two or three, who skidded into the room on dead gallop and put on brakes with a screech as he caught sight of the .375 with its thin wisp of blue vapor still trailing out of the muzzle.

The twins, aged about fourteen, who might have turned to run if they"d not been frightened stiff at the sight of the cannon in my fist.

Father and then Mother Macklin, who came in briskly but without panic.

Mr. Macklin said, crisply, "May I have an explanation, Mr. Cornell?"

"I"m a cornered rat," I said thickly. "And so I"m scared. I want out of here in one piece. I"m so scared that if I"m intercepted, I may get panicky, and if I do someone is likely to get hurt. Understand?"

"Perfectly," said Mr. Macklin calmly.

"Are you going to let him get away with this?" snapped the eldest son.

"Fred, a nervous man with a revolver is very dangerous. Especially one who lacks the rudimentary training in the simpler forms of burglary."

I couldn"t help but admire the older gentleman"s bland self-confidence.

"Young man," he said to me, "You"ve made a bad mistake."

"No I haven"t," I snapped. "I"ve been on the trail of something concrete for a long time, and now that I"ve found it I"m not going to let it go easily." I waved the .375 and they all cringed but Mr. Macklin.

He said, "Please put that weapon down, Mr. Cornell. Let"s not add attempted murder to your other crimes."

"Don"t force me to it, then. Get out of my way and let me go."

He smiled. "I don"t have to be telepath to tell you that you won"t pull that trigger until you"re sorely driven," he replied calmly. He was so right that it made me mad. He added, "also, you"ve got four sh.e.l.ls left since you carry the firearm on an empty chamber. Not used to guns, are you, Mr. Cornell?"

Well, I wasn"t used to wearing a gun. Now that he mentioned it, I remembered that it was impossible to fire the sh.e.l.l under the hammer by any means except by pulling the trigger.

What he was telling me meant that even if I made a careful but b.l.o.o.d.y sweep of it with my four sh.e.l.ls, there would be two of them left, and even the twins were more than capable of taking me apart inch by inch once my revolver was empty.

"Seems to be an impa.s.se, Mr. Cornell," he said with an amused smile.

"You bland-mannered bunch of--"

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