"Me? Don"t be silly, Zack."
"Look, Joe, you don"t have to kid me. I"m your friend. Even if you did tell me it wouldn"t matter. In the first place, I wouldn"t have any proof. In the second place, I"m sympathetic to the Underground - any American is. I just think they"re wrong-headed and foolish. Otherwise I"d join "em myself."
"They"re foolish all right! You can say that again."
"So you were in it?"
"Huh? You"re trying to trap me. I gave my word of honor - "
"Oh, relax!" Moyland said hastily. "Forget it. I didn"t hear anything; I can"t tell anything. Hear no evil, see no evil - that"s me." He changed the subject.
The level of the bottle dropped while Moyland explained current events as he saw them. "It"s a shame we had to take such a sh.e.l.lacking to learn our lesson but the fact of the matter is, we were standing in the way of the natural logic of progress. There was a time back in "45 when we could have pulled the same stunt ourselves, only we weren"t bright enough to do it.
World organization, world government. We stood in the way, so we got smeared. It had to come. A smart man can see that."
Benz was bleary but he did not find this comment easy to take. "Look, Zack-you don"t mean you like what happened to us?"
"Like it? Of course not. But it was necessary. You don"t have to like having a tooth pulled - but it has to be done. Anyhow," he went on, "it"s not all bad. The big cities were economically unsound anyway. We should have blown them up ourselves. Slum clearance, you might call it."
Benz banged his empty gla.s.s down. "Maybe so - but they made slaves out of us!"
"Take it easy, Joe," Moyland said, filling his gla.s.s, "you"re talking abstractions. The cop on the corner could push you around whenever he wanted to. Is that freedom? Does it matter whether the cop talks with an Irish accent or some other accent? No, chum, there"s a lot of guff talked about freedom. No man is free. There is no such thing as freedom. There are only various privileges. Free speech - we"re talking freely now, aren"t we?
After all, you don"t want to get up on a platform and shoot off your face.
Free press? When did you ever own a newspaper? Don"t be a chump. Now that you"ve shown sense and come in, you are going to find that things aren"t so very different. A little more orderly and no more fear of war, that"s all.
Girls make love just like they used to, the smart guys get along, and the suckers still get the short end of the deal."
Benz nodded. "You"re right, Zack. I"ve been a fool."
"I"m glad you see it. Now take those wild men you were with. What freedom have they got? Freedom to starve, freedom to sleep on the cold ground, freedom to be hunted."
"That was it," Benz agreed. "Did you ever sleep in a mine, Zack? Cold. That ain"t half of it. Damp, too."
"I can imagine," Moyland agreed. "The Capehart Lode always was wet."
"It wasn"t the Capehart; it was the Harkn - " He caught himself and looked puzzled.
"The Harkness, eh? That"s the headquarters?"
"I didn"t say that! You"re putting words in my mouth! You - "
"Calm yourself, Joe. Forget it." Moyland got up and drew down the shade.
"You didn"t say anything."
"Of course I didn"t." Benz stared at his gla.s.s. "Say, Zack, where do I sleep? I don"t feel good."
"You"ll have a nice place to sleep any minute now."
"Huh? Well, show me. I gotta fold up."
"Any minute. You"ve got to check in first."
"Huh? Oh, I can"t do that tonight, Zack. I"m in no shape."
"I"m afraid you"ll have to. See me pull that shade down? They"ll be along any moment."
Benz stood up, swaying a little. "You framed me!" he yelled, and lunged at his host.
Moyland sidestepped, put a hand on his shoulder and pushed him down into the chair. "Sit down, sucker," he said pleasantly. "You don"t expect me to get A-bombed just for you and your pals, do you?"
Benz shook his head, then began to sob.
Hobart escorted them out of the house, saying to Art as they left, "If you get back, tell McCracken that Aunt Dinah is resting peacefully."
"Okay."
"Give us two minutes, then go in. Good luck."
Cleve took the outside; Art went in. The back door was locked, but the upper panel was gla.s.s. He broke it with the hilt of his knife, reached in and unbolted the door. He was inside when Moyland showed up to investigate the noise.
Art kicked him in the belly, then let him have the point in the neck as he went down. Art stopped just long enough to insure that Moyland would stay dead, then went looking for the room where Benz had been when the shade was drawn.
He found Benz in it. The man blinked his eyes and tried to focus them, as if he found it impossible to believe what he saw. "Art!" he got out at last. "Jeez boy! Am I glad to see you! Let"s get out of here - this place is "hot"."
Art advanced, knife out.
Benz looked amazed. "Hey, Art! Art! You"re making a mistake, Art. You can"t do this - " Art let him have the first one in the soft tissues under the breast bone, then cut his throat to be sure. After that he got out quickly.
Thirty-five minutes later he was emerging from the country end of the chute. His throat was burning from exertion and his left arm was useless - he could not tell whether it was broken or simply wounded.
Cleve lay dead in the alley behind Moyland"s house, having done a good job of covering Art"s rear.
It took Art all night and part of the next morning to get back near the mine. He had to go through the hills the entire way; the highway was, he judged, too warm at the moment.
He did not expect that the Company would still be there. He was reasonably sure that Morgan would have carried out the evacuation pending certain evidence that Benz"s mouth had been shut. He hurried.
But he did not expect what he did find - a helicopter hovering over the neighborhood of the mine.
He stopped to consider the matter. If Morgan had got them out safely, he knew where to rejoin. If they were still inside, he had to figure out some way to help them. The futility of his position depressed him - one man, with a knife and a bad arm, against a helicopter.
Somewhere a bluejay screamed and cursed. Without much hope he chirped his own identification. The bluejay shut up and a mockingbird answered him - Ted.
Art signaled that he would wait where he was. He considered himself well hidden; he expected to have to signal again when Ted got closer, but he underestimated Ted"s ability. A hand was laid on his shoulder.
He rolled over, knife out, and hurt his shoulder as he did so. "Ted! Man, do you look good to me!"
"Same here. Did you get him?"
"Benz? Yes, but maybe not in time. Where"s the gang?"