Short Fiction, Mack Reynolds [best book reader txt] 📗
- Author: Mack Reynolds
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Larry said, “It was information we needed, and Foster gave me the go ahead on locating Frol Eivazov. Maybe I’d better see the Boss.”
LaVerne said, “I don’t think he wants to see you, Larry. They’re up to their ears in this Movement thing. It’s in the papers now and nobody knows what to do next. The President is going to make a speech on Tri-D, and the Boss has to supply the information. His orders are for you to resume your vacation. To take a month off and then see him when you get back.”
Larry sank down into a chair. “I see,” he said, “And at that time he’ll probably transfer me to janitor service.”
“Larry,” LaVerne said, almost impatiently, “why in the world didn’t you take that job Walt Foster has now when the Boss offered it to you?”
“Because I’m stupid, I suppose,” Larry said bitterly. “I thought I could do more working alone than at an administrative post tangled in red tape and bureaucratic routine.”
She said, “Sorry, Larry.” She sounded as though she meant it.
Larry stood up. “Well, tonight I’m going to hang one on, and tomorrow it’s back to Florida.” He said in a rush, “Look LaVerne, how about that date we’ve been talking about for six months or more?”
She looked up at him. “I can’t stand vodka martinis.”
“Neither can I,” he said glumly.
“And I don’t get a kick out of prancing around, a stuffed shirt among fellow stuffed shirts, at some goings-on that supposedly improves my culture status.”
Larry said “At the house I have every known brand of drinkable, and a stack of … what did you call it? … corny music. We can mix our own drinks and dance all by ourselves.”
She tucked her head to one side and looked at him suspiciously. “Are your intentions honorable?”
“We can even discuss that later,” he said sourly.
She laughed. “It’s a date, Larry.”
He picked her up after work, and they drove to his Brandywine auto-bungalow, largely quiet the whole way.
At one point she touched his hand with hers and said, “It’ll work out, Larry.”
“Yeah,” he said sourly. “I’ve put ten years into ingratiating myself with the Boss. Now, overnight, he’s got a new boy. I suppose there’s some moral involved.”
When they pulled up before his auto-bungalow, LaVerne whistled appreciatively. “Quite a neighborhood you’re in.”
He grunted. “A good address. What our friend Professor Voss would call one more status symbol, one more social-label. For it I pay about fifty percent more rent than my budget can afford.”
He ushered her inside and took her jacket. “Look,” he said, indicating his living room with a sweep of hand. “See that volume of Klee reproductions there next to my reading chair? That proves I’m not a weird. Indicates my culture status. Actually, my appreciation of modern art doesn’t go any further than the Impressionists. But don’t tell anybody. See those books up on my shelves. Same thing. You’ll find everything there that ought to be on the shelves of any ambitious young career man.”
She looked at him from the side of her eyes. “You’re really soured, Larry.”
“Come along,” he said. “I want to show you something.”
He took her down the tiny elevator to his den.
“How hypocritical can you get?” he asked her. “This is where I really live. But I seldom bring anyone here. Wouldn’t want to get a reputation as a weird. Sit down, LaVerne, I’ll make a drink. How about a Sidecar?”
She sank onto the couch, kicked her shoes off and slipped her feet under her. “I’d love one,” she said.
His back to her, he brought brandy and cointreau from his liquor cabinet, lemon and ice from the tiny refrigerator.
“What?” LaVerne said mockingly. “No auto-bar?”
“Upstairs with the rest of the status symbols,” Larry grunted.
He put her drink before her and turned and went to the record player.
“In the way of corny music, how do you like that old-timer, Nat Cole?”
“King Cole? Love him,” LaVerne said.
The strains of “For All We Know” penetrated the room.
Larry sat down across from her, finished half his drink in one swallow.
“I’m beginning to wonder whether or not this Movement doesn’t have something,” he said.
She didn’t answer that. They sat in silence for a while, appreciating the drink. Nat Cole was singing “The Very Thought of You” now. Larry got up and made two more cocktails. This time he sat next to her. He leaned his head back on the couch and closed his eyes.
Finally he said softly, “When Steve Hackett and I were questioning Susan, there was only one other person who knew that we’d picked her up. There was only one person other than Steve and me who could have warned Ernest Self to make a getaway. Later on, there was only one person who could have warned Frank Nostrand so that he and the Professor could find a new hideout.”
She said sleepily, “How long have you known about that, darling?”
“A while,” Larry said, his own voice quiet. “I figured it out when I also decided how Susan Self was spirited out of the Greater Washington Hilton, before we had the time to question her further. Somebody who had access to tapes made of me while I was making phone calls cut out a section and dubbed in a voice so that Betsy Hughes, the Secret Service matron who was watching Susan, was fooled into believing it was I ordering the girl to be turned over to the two Movement members who came to get her.”
LaVerne stirred comfortably and let her head sink onto his shoulder. “You’re so warm and … comfortable,” she said.
Larry said softly, “What does the Movement expect to do with all that counterfeit money, LaVerne?”
She stirred against his shoulder, as though bothered by the need to talk. “Give it all
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