The Second Randall Garrett Megapack. Randall Garrett

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      She nodded. “You’ll probably have to push them out of the way to get out of Surgery.”

      * * * *

      Her prediction was almost perfect. The group of men in conservative business suits, wearing conservative ties, and holding conservative, soft, felt hats in their hands were standing just outside the door. Dr. Mallon glanced at the five of them, letting his eyes stop on the face of the tallest. “He may live,” the doctor said briefly.

      “You don’t sound very optimistic, Dr. Mallon,” said the FBI man.

      Mallon shook his head. “Frankly, I’m not. He was shot laterally, just above the right temple, with what looks to me like a .357 magnum pistol slug. It’s in there—” He gestured back toward the room he had just left. “—you can have it, if you want. It passed completely through the brain, lodging on the other side of the head, just inside the skull. What kept him alive, I’ll never know, but I can guarantee that he might as well be dead; it was a rather nasty way to lobotomize a man, but it was effective, I can assure you.”

      The Federal agent frowned puzzledly. “Lobotomized? Like those operations they do on psychotics?”

      “Similar,” said Mallon. “But no psychotic was ever butchered up like this; and what I had to do to him to save his life didn’t help anything.”

      The men looked at each other, then the big one said: “I’m sure you did the best you could, Dr. Mallon.”

      The neurosurgeon rubbed the back of his hand across his forehead and looked steadily into the eyes of the big man.

      “You wanted him alive,” he said slowly, “and I have a duty to save life. But frankly, I think we’ll all eventually wish we had the common human decency to let Paul Wendell die. Excuse me, gentlemen; I don’t feel well.” He turned abruptly and strode off down the hall.

      One of the men in the conservative suits said: “Louis Pasteur lived through most of his life with only half a brain and he never even knew it, Frank; maybe—”

      “Yeah. Maybe,” said the big man. “But I don’t know whether to hope he does or hope he doesn’t.” He used his right thumbnail to pick a bit of microscopic dust from beneath his left index finger, studying the operation without actually seeing it. “Meanwhile, we’ve got to decide what to do about the rest of those screwballs. Wendell was the only sane one, and therefore the most dangerous—but the rest of them aren’t what you’d call safe, either.”

      The others nodded in a chorus of silent agreement.

      Nocturne—Tempo di valse

      “Now what the hell’s the matter with me?” thought Paul Wendell. He could feel nothing. Absolutely nothing: No taste, no sight, no hearing, no anything. “Am I breathing?” He couldn’t feel any breathing. Nor, for that matter, could he feel heat, nor cold, nor pain.

      “Am I dead? No. At least, I don’t feel dead. Who am I? What am I?” No answer. Cogito, ergo sum. What did that mean? There was something quite definitely wrong, but he couldn’t quite tell what it was. Ideas seemed to come from nowhere; fragments of concepts that seemed to have no referents. What did that mean? What is a referent? A concept? He felt he knew intuitively what they meant, but what use they were he didn’t know.

      There was something wrong, and he had to find out what it was. And he had to find out through the only method of investigation left open to him.

      So he thought about it.

      Sonata—Allegro con Brio

      The President of the United States finished reading the sheaf of papers before him, laid them neatly to one side, and looked up at the big man seated across the desk from him.

      “Is this everything, Frank?” he asked.

      “That’s everything, Mr. President; everything we know. We’ve got eight men locked up in St. Elizabeth’s, all of them absolutely psychotic, and one human vegetable named Paul Wendell. We can’t get anything out of them.”

      The President leaned back in his chair. “I really can’t quite understand it. Extra-sensory perception—why should it drive men insane? Wendell’s papers don’t say enough. He claims it can be mathematically worked out—that he did work it out—but we don’t have any proof of that.”

      The man named Frank scowled. “Wasn’t that demonstration of his proof enough?”

      A small, graying, intelligent-faced man who had been sitting silently, listening to the conversation, spoke at last. “Mr. President, I’m afraid I still don’t completely understand the problem. If we could go over it, and get it straightened out—” He left the sentence hanging expectantly.

      “Certainly. This Paul Wendell is a—well, he called himself a psionic mathematician. Actually, he had quite a respectable reputation in the mathematical field. He did very important work in cybernetic theory, but he dropped it several years ago—said that the human mind couldn’t be worked at from a mechanistic angle. He studied various branches of psychology, and eventually dropped them all. He built several of those queer psionic machines—gold detectors, and something he called a hexer. He’s done a lot of different things, evidently.”

      “Sounds like he was unable to make up his mind,” said the small man.

      The President shook his head firmly. “Not at all. He did new, creative work in every one of the fields he touched. He was considered something of a mystic, but not a crackpot, or a screwball.

      “But, anyhow, the point is that he evidently found what he’d been looking for for years. He asked for an appointment with me; I okayed the request because of his reputation. He would only tell me that he’d stumbled across something that was vital to national defense and the future of mankind; but I felt that, in view of the work he had done, he was entitled to a hearing.”

      “And he proved to you, beyond any doubt, that he had this power?” the small man asked.

      Frank shifted his big body uneasily in his chair. “He certainly did, Mr. Secretary.”

      The President nodded. “I know it might not sound too impressive when heard second-hand, but Paul Wendell could tell me more of what was going on in the world than our Central Intelligence agents have been able to dig up in twenty years. And he claimed he could teach the trick to anyone.

      “I told him I’d think it over. Naturally, my first step was to make sure that he was followed twenty-four hours a day. A man with information like that simply could not be allowed to fall into enemy hands.” The President scowled, as though angry with himself. “I’m sorry to say that I didn’t realize the full potentialities of what he had said for several days—not until I got Frank’s first report.”

      “You could hardly be expected to, Mr. President,” Frank said. “After all, something like that is pretty heady stuff.”

      “I think I follow you,” said the Secretary. “You found he was already teaching this trick to others.”

      The President glanced at the FBI man. Frank said: “That’s right; he was holding meetings—classes, I suppose you’d call them—twice a week. There were eight men who came regularly.”

      “That’s

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