The Ming Vase and Other Science Fiction Stories. E.C. Tubb

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Ming Vase and Other Science Fiction Stories - E.C. Tubb страница 2

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
The Ming Vase and Other Science Fiction Stories - E.C. Tubb

Скачать книгу

too little of understanding or patience. “You’ve found what you said to look for. Now, what’s the answer?”

      “We’ve found something I said might possibly happen,” corrected Don. “It has. What answer are you looking for?”

      “Are you crazy?” Penn surged out of his chair. “You know what the top-priority is! Find Klieger! What other answer would I be interested in?”

      “You might,” said Don quietly, “be interested in finding out just why he left in the first place.”

      Penn said a word. He repeated it. Don tensed then forced himself to relax. Slowly he lit a cigarette.

      “Three weeks ago,” he said, “Albert Klieger decided to leave Cartwright House and did so. Since then you’ve had all field units concentrate on the one object of finding him. Why?”

      “Because he is the greatest potential danger to this country walking on two legs!” Penn spat the words as if they were bullets. “If he gets to the other side and spills what he knows, we’ll lose our greatest advantage in the cold war and the hot war when it comes. Gregson, you know all this!”

      “I’ve been told it,” said Don. He didn’t look at the congested face of the general. “And if we find him and he doesn’t want to return, what then?”

      “We’ll worry about that when we’ve found him,” said Penn grimly. Don nodded.

      “Is that why Bronson is always with my team? Why other men just like him accompany all field units?” He didn’t press for an answer. “Have you ever wondered why the English stopped using the Press Gang system? They knew it wasn’t humane from the beginning but, for a while, it worked—for a while and up to a point. Maybe we could learn something from that if we tried.”

      “You talk like a fool.” Penn slumped back into his chair. “No one press-ganged Klieger. I found him in a third-rate carnival and gave him the chance to help his country. He took that chance. It’s fair to say that we’ve given him far more than he’s given us. After all, Klieger isn’t the only one.”

      “That,” said Don, “is the whole point.” He stared directly at the general. “How long is it going to be before others in the Project...sorry, Cartwright House, decide that they’ve had enough?”

      “There’ll be no more walking out.” Penn was very positive. “I’ve tripled the security guards and installed gimmicks which makes that impossible.”

      It was, of course, a matter of locking the stable door after the horse had been stolen, but Don didn’t point that out. Penn, with his reputation and career in the balance, could only be pushed so far at a time. And, to Penn, his career was all-important. Not even Cartwright House came before that.

      Which, thought Don bitterly, was the inevitable result of a military machine based on political manoeuvrings. What a man was, what he could do, that was unimportant against who he knew, what he could do for others. Don himself had no illusions. He was useful but he could be branded, damned, kicked out and made the scapegoat if Penn felt he needed a sacrifice. And time was running out.

      “We’ve got to find him.” Penn drummed on the desk. “Gregson, why can’t you find him?”

      “You know why. I’ve trailed him and found where he’s been a dozen times. But always too late. To catch him I’ve got to be where he is when he is, or before he gets there. And that’s impossible.”

      “This theft.” Penn’s mind veered to the latest scrap of information. “Money I can understand, but why a Ming vase? The guy must be crazy.”

      “He isn’t normal, but he isn’t crazy.” Don crushed out his cigarette. “And I’ve an idea that he has a very good reason for wanting that vase. The chances are that he will be collecting other, similar things, how many depends on circumstances.”

      “But why?”

      “They’re beautiful. To those that appreciate them such objects are beyond price. Klieger must have an intensely artistic streak. He has a reason for wanting to own them and it worries me.”

      Penn snorted.

      “I need more information.” Don was decisive. “Without it I’m fighting a shadow. I’ve got to go where I can get it.”

      “But—”

      “I’ve got to. There’s no other way. None in the world.”

      * * * *

      No one called it a prison. No one even called it a Project because everyone knew that a ‘Project’ was both military and important. So it was called Cartwright House and it was a little harder to get into than Fort Knox and far more difficult to leave than Alcatraz.

      Don waited patiently as his identification was checked, double-checked, cleared to a higher level and then checked again. It took time but finally he faced Leon Malchin, tall, thin, burning with frustrated zeal and with the courtesy rank of colonel, which meant nothing until he tried to act like a civilian when he felt the full impact of military discipline.

      “General Penn has contacted me,” he said. “I am to offer you every assistance.” He stared at Don through old-fashioned spectacles. “How can I help you?”

      “Question,” said Don. “How do normal men catch a clairvoyant?”

      “You mean Klieger, of course?”

      “Of course.”

      “They can’t. They don’t.” Malchin settled back in his chair, a glint of amusement in his eyes. “Next question?”

      “There is no next question—not yet.” Don took the other chair and proffered his cigarettes. Malchin shook his head and sucked at a brier.

      “I am a hunter,” said Don abruptly. “I hunt men. I’m good at it because I have a knack, talent, skill—you name it—for being able to outguess my quarry. You might say that I have a series of lucky hunches. Somehow, I don’t know how, I know what they will do next—where they will be and when. I have never yet failed to get my man.”

      “But you haven’t got Klieger.” Malchin nodded as if he had expected this visit for some time. “And you want to know why.”

      “I know why. He is a clairvoyant. What I want to know is how. How does he do it? How does he operate? How effective is he?”

      “Very effective.” Malchin took his pipe from his mouth and stared into the bowl. “He is, or was, our star resident. He could see further than anyone I have ever investigated—and I have invested psi phenomena all my adult life.”

      “Go on.”

      “I don’t think you fully realize just what you are up against in Klieger. He isn’t a superman, of course; nothing like that, but he has this one talent. You are, in a sense, a blind man trying to trap a man who can see. Trap him in broad daylight on an open plain. You are also wearing a bell around your neck to attract his attention. Personally I do not think you have a ghost of a chance.”

      “How,” Don insisted, “does this talent work?”

      “I don’t

Скачать книгу