Dover Beach

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by Richard Bowker


  It occurred to me as they clomped up the stairs that these guys probably weren't interested in my professional services. Why would soldiers need a private eye? I tried to think if I had broken any laws lately that would merit an official visit. I was hardly a model citizen, but surely the government had more important things to do than bother with an insignificant private eye. Besides, the local police, not Federal troops, would be the ones to arrest the likes of me. But you never can tell.

  They rapped on the frosted glass door.

  "Come in," I said in a busy but welcoming tone.

  The door opened, and the two soldiers entered. The first one in was short and had a spray of acne on his face. The other was lantern-jawed and hung back a little, as if loath to deal with the strange creature sitting behind the desk. Both had the requisite army haircut, so short they might just as well have been bald.

  "Good afternoon," the short one said. "Walter Sands?"

  "That's me. Have a seat."

  "No thank you, sir," he replied. He had a flat Midwestern accent. He used the official tone of a soldier who is carrying out his orders and is therefore not required to think. "Mr. Sands, we'd like you to come with us, sir."

  "Am I being arrested?"

  "No, sir."

  "Then what's up?"

  "There is someone who wants to see you."

  "Who?"

  "We're not at liberty to say, sir."

  "What about?"

  "Don't know, sir."

  I could have continued the interrogation indefinitely, but it would have been pointless. I had been a soldier once, not so very long ago, and I knew the situation he was in. He was supposed to be as polite as possible but say nothing. And he was to come back with me. No excuses accepted.

  I decided to ask one more question. "What's your name?" I asked.

  The question caused a flicker of indecision to cross the short soldier's face. He hadn't received orders about this. "Smith, sir," he said finally. "Private Daniel Smith."

  I smiled. "Hi, Danny. And you?" I asked the lantern-jawed fellow.

  His comrade's response had given him courage. "P-p-private Gus Ziegler, sir."

  I kept smiling. "Pleased to meet you." They didn't smile back, but I think maybe they wanted to. It never hurts to be friendly. I stood up. "Shall we go, then?"

  "Yes, sir," Danny replied.

  I winked at Saint Humphrey as I followed the soldiers out the door.

  * * *

  I was a little excited as I got into the jeep. Anyone who could send troops to fetch me had to be a big shot. A government big shot, to be sure, but even dealing with the Feds was better than staring out the window.

  We headed up Washington Street, with Gus doing the driving. Except for another government jeep or two, and a couple of cop cars, we were in the only motor vehicle to be seen. Not that we had the streets to ourselves. Gus had to bully his way past the pedestrians and the cyclists and the horses and even a few pigs; traffic was actually pretty thick around Downtown Crossing and the Salvage Market. No one seemed particularly interested in getting out of our way; there were the usual sullen stares, and the occasional utterly hostile ones. But still we made progress.

  VOTE YES, the red, white, and blue posters urged us from the otherwise useless telephone poles and mailboxes.

  I did my best to ignore the posters. "Where are you guys from?" I asked.

  "Out of state, sir," Danny replied.

  "Ah." That was hardly news. The Feds don't let their troops serve in their native states; they also don't like for them to fraternize with the locals. If there's an uprising of some sort, they don't want a soldier facing friends and relatives at the other end of his rifle. Much easier to kill a stranger. "You like it here?"

  "It's fine."

  They hated it. They were scared and lonely and not used to being around people who didn't like or trust them. They couldn't figure out why they were being forced to do this, and they just wanted to get it over with and go home. At least, if they were anything like me when I was a soldier, that's the way they felt. "Write letters," I suggested.

  "Huh?"

  "Write long letters home. Describe everything you see and do. Even if it's all so boring you can't stand it. Even if you never send the letters. That's what I did. It helped."

  Danny stared at me, then nodded silently. It occurred to me that he might not know how to write.

  Gus took us to Government Center, on the far side of Beacon Hill. I wasn't surprised. We stopped in front of the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Federal Building, and the two soldiers escorted me inside. There were more VOTE YES signs in the lobby. Seemed like a waste of time to me: preaching to the converted.

  The lobby was air-conditioned; soft fluorescent lights shone down on us; the elevator that we waited for actually worked. Sometimes I've thought that it would have been better if all the elevators had stopped working forever after the War, if there were no more touch-tone telephones and laptop computers and stick-shift sedans and CAT scans. If all of that stuff was just a temporary aberration of a society that didn't quite work out, then we could maybe shrug our shoulders and go back to living the way human beings had lived for thousands of years before such wonders existed. But the wonders still existed, damn them. You could get almost anything you wanted (short of a nuclear reactor, maybe) if you had enough money or ingenuity or luck; I had certainly proved that, when I jetted over to England for my first case, then jetted back in triumph (more or less). And that meant we had to live with these constant reminders of what had been lost, of what was once so common and now shimmered just out of our reach, and it was almost impossible to go through life without a daily dose of self-pity.

  Dealing with the Feds was a sure way to keep the dose high; they treated themselves pretty well, and were not inclined to hide it. To keep us all striving to regain what had been lost, their supporters might explain. Because they have the power and use it for their own benefit, their opponents would retort.

  Whatever the explanation, the elevator arrived and smoothly lifted us ten stories into the building. The doors opened onto a corridor. On the opposite side of the corridor, a soldier stood guard in front of a glass door. The sign on the door said:

  Francis Bolton

  Governor of the Commonwealth

  My, my, I thought. A big shot indeed.

  The guard gave a nod to my two pals. He frisked me, but I was clean—I had left my revolver back at the office. "You can go inside now, Mr. Sands," Danny said when the frisking had been completed.

  "Thank you. And thanks for the ride." I smiled.

  Danny looked uncomfortable for a moment, and then said, "Good luck." Then he and Gus walked off down the corridor.

  Why did I need luck? I wondered. I went inside.

  I was in a large reception area: potted plants, framed paintings, air conditioning, and a view of the city that you just don't get one story up on lower Washington Street. There was also the unavoidable VOTE YES poster. I walked over to a woman seated behind a large oak desk. "Hi," I said. "My name is Sands. I was summoned."

  "Yes," she agreed. "Please have a seat."

  She was a pleasant-looking blond, maybe a bit old for my taste, and maybe with a bit too much makeup on—nobody wore makeup anymore. But she had the kind of figure you can only get when you you're allowed to shop at the Feds' own grocery store. I smiled at her. "What's your name?" I asked.

  She stared at me as if I were a particularly disgusting mutant.

  Friendliness doesn't always work. I let the smile fade, and I wandered over to a leather couch, where I parked myself while the secretary ignored me and I awaited the governor's pleasure.

  I tried to imagine what he wanted with me. Something to do with the VOTE YES posters? Security at the polls, maybe. I'd rather be staring out my office window, I thought. But surely Governor Bolton didn't bother himself with details like who to hire for security. Maybe he had a priceless figurine....

  Whatever he wanted, I knew that this was goin
g to be an interview. So I tried to prepare. I considered Governor Bolton.

  He had been around for a long time now—about eight years, I figured. The Feds had appointed him governor of the New England region shortly after their troops came up from Atlanta and put a stop to the anarchy that had been plaguing us for years. And in the time since then he had become the symbol of the Federal presence here: tough, distant, and a little bit mysterious—at least to me, who didn't spend a great deal of time thinking about such things. What did the Feds want from us? What was in the occupation for them? The taxes they managed to collect didn't pay their expenses; the men and women they drafted (like me) didn't make up for the number of troops they had to commit to the region. So why bother?

  In a way, the most mysterious thing about Bolton was that he was a local. Somebody—probably my buddy Stretch—had told me that Bolton had sold real estate before the War. Not a lot of call for real estate salesmen in this new world, where mansions were free—all you had to do was be able to defend them. But somehow he had landed on his feet. And somehow he had made the Feds trust him enough to put him in charge of the region where he had grown up. And somehow it didn't bother him that many—perhaps most—of his fellow locals thought of him as a semi-traitor, zealously carrying out the edicts of the well-fed rulers from down south.

  Or maybe it did bother him. How would I know? To me, he was just a photo in the Globe and a bunch of rumors.

  After a while I began to wonder if he would ever be anything more. Men wearing suits and ties came and went. The blond secretary had a smile for most of them. No one paid any attention to me, except perhaps to glance at my Salvage-Market jersey and jeans and wonder how I had gotten past the guard. This was not much better than being in my office. I didn't even have a book to read.

  Finally the summons came. "The governor will see you now," the secretary said.

  I got up and smiled at her. "Thanks a lot," I said.

  She pointed silently to a door. I walked over to it and knocked. "Come in," a loud voice responded. I went in.

  Governor Bolton was sitting behind a huge mahogany desk, flanked by the American flag and some other flag with what looked like a Native American on it. It took me a second to retrieve the flag's identification from my freakishly complete memory. It was the Massachusetts state flag. This struck me as somewhat incongruous, since Massachusetts didn't really exist as a separate political entity in the Feds' scheme of things.

  There were no VOTE YES posters.

  Bolton was scribbling on a piece of paper—or maybe, I thought, he was pretending to scribble, so I could see he was a busy man and a great deal more important than me. I was willing to concede the point. "Have a seat," he said, continuing to scribble. I sat. The chair was a little too low; I found myself staring up at the governor. He had gray hair, cut short, and a long scar next to his right eye. I hadn't noticed the scar in the photos I had seen of him; it made him look even tougher than my image of him—he was a man who took risks, the scar said, a man who understood physical danger. He was wearing a white shirt. His tie was loose; his shirtsleeves were rolled up. He was ready for action.

  After an appropriate interval he put his pen down and looked at me. "Walter Sands," he said. His voice was deep and powerful. It sounded out of place in a private conversation; it should have been addressing a political rally.

  "Pleased to meet you," I said. I smiled.

  The governor didn't smile back. "Did my bodyguards treat you well?" he asked.

  "They were perfect gentlemen. They both deserve promotions."

  He nodded, although I got the impression he hadn't heard my answer. "I talked to Charles Moseby about you," he went on. "Mr. Moseby recommends you quite highly."

  I nodded in turn. Mr. Moseby is my pal Stretch, and I would have killed him if he hadn't recommended me quite highly. "How did you get my name?" I asked.

  "From that article in the Globe a few weeks back. Interesting business over there in England. Although why anyone would want to be a private detective nowadays is beyond me."

  "Uh-huh." The article in the Globe had been written by another friend, named Gwen Phillips. I have a lot of friends. Gwen and Stretch are the ones I live with.

  "Still, there might be circumstances where a person with your skills and contacts might be useful." He was dithering, I could tell. A common problem with clients, my extensive reading of private eye novels had told me. It's tough to tell someone you've got a problem. Maybe his wife is cheating on him, I thought. But no—I'd heard he was a widower.

  "Perhaps you could tell me what your particular circumstances are," I said in that smooth professional tone I had mastered over the course of my single case, "and then we can decide if I'm the man for the job."

  Bolton gazed at me. "Tell me," he said, still dithering, "what's your position on the referendum?"

  My heart sank. He did want me to guard some damn voting booth. The referendum was the latest development in the Federal government's relationship with its fractious stepchild. It was a simple enough question that the Feds wanted us New Englanders to answer: "Do you support the government of the United States of America?" But the ramifications of their asking the question, and our answering it, had kept a lot of people in a tizzy all spring.

  I knew what Bolton wanted me to say: I'm proud to be an American. I'm going to VOTE YES, and I don't care who knows it. But I figured we would both be better off if I didn't try to mislead him. "I haven't given it a great deal of thought," I said. "I'm an apolitical kind of guy."

  "Now is no time to be apolitical!" Bolton thundered.

  It seemed to me to be as good a time as any to be apolitical. "Why not?" I asked.

  Bolton gave me a disgusted look. "At least you're not one of those sniveling isolationist types who prefer savagery to civilization—are you?"

  Well, when you put it like that... I shook my head. "No sir, I'm not one of those."

  "And you have no objection to working for the Federal government?"

  That was a little trickier. "Um, perhaps if you could give me a few more details..."

  Bolton tapped the fingers of his right hand on his desk. The dithering was about to come to an end, I figured. Either he'd give me the case, or he'd throw me out of the office. "Mr. Sands," he intoned, "the president of the United States of America is corning to Boston."

  He sounded as if he was expecting a round of applause from his audience. "That's great," I said.

  "It's the first time since before—" He waved his hand. I knew what the wave of the hand meant. People still had difficulty mentioning the War. Maybe if we were all very quiet about it, it would retroactively go away.

  "She's coming here to get us to vote for the referendum?" I guessed.

  "Precisely." Bolton stood up and stared out his window. He was shorter than I expected. Maybe that's why my chair was so low. All of a sudden he looked a little silly to me as he stood next to the American flag—as if he were playing at being governor. And I wondered just how tough he really was. Maybe he still thought of himself as a real estate agent, and couldn't really believe where life had brought him. I wondered if, in his heart of hearts, he thanked God for the War and the opportunity it had granted him. There had to be a few people around who thought like that.

  My mind was wandering. It returned when Bolton started to speak. "This referendum is important, Sands," he said. "New England is part of America. People have to understand this—they have to believe this. They complain about the emigration controls and the out-of-state troops and the privileges for government workers, but they forget about what the government saved them from—and they forget about their heritage. We can't just let our heritage slip away from us.

  "So that's why President Kramer proposed the referendum. She believes that, if people can be made to focus on the positives, they will understand what we're trying to do, and they will support us. And once she has New England's support, she can lead America back to the forefront of the world's nations once again. S
o she is coming to Boston to give a speech a few days before the voting—a speech that will make people realize just what is at stake here, that will convince them to give her the vote of confidence she needs."

  Bolton sounded as if he were giving a speech himself. But his delivery was curiously rushed, as if this was a speech he was rehearsing for a different audience. I didn't mind, but I was still trying to figure out what all this had to do with me. "You want me to protect the president while she's here?" I guessed.

  "Not quite." He returned to his desk. He took a piece of paper out of the top drawer and handed it to me. I read the message typed on it.

  We know Kramer plans to come.

  Boston is ours. If she comes, she faces our wrath.

  THE FEDS MUST GO!

  The Second American Revolution

  The Second American Revolution: TSAR. I didn't like the sound of that acronym. I studied the message, and then returned the sheet of paper to Bolton.

  "Have you heard of this group?" he asked.

  I shook my head.

  "Neither have I. This sheet appeared on the outer door to my office this morning. I need to know who's behind it."

  "And that's my job?"

  Bolton nodded. "We have to find The Second American Revolution and prevent them from doing anything to President Kramer."

  I thought about it. "Why me?" I asked finally. "You've got your troops, you've got the local police—and the president has her own security people, I imagine. Can't they take care of this?"

  "Maybe. They'll be on the case too. But I thought a local might bring something to it that they can't. You know what I'm talking about, Sands. Contacts. Sources of information. No one around here talks to the Feds; that's part of our problem. But they'll talk to someone like you."

  Quite true. But... Bolton studied me as I tried to think it through. People weren't standing in line to obtain my services. Maybe they never would be. But I didn't like this case. Didn't like the way I got it, didn't like what I'd have to do to solve it. "I'm sorry," I said finally. "I don't think I'm right for this."

 

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