The Silencers
Page 6
Mac shrugged. “I’m afraid you’re going to have to get used to prosecuting attorneys, Mrs. Hendricks. You’re apt to meet quite a few of them in the near future.”
She was on her feet, aghast. “What do you mean? I haven’t done anything! You can’t think—”
“What I think,” Mac said gently, “or what Mr. Helm thinks, is quite beside the point. The facts speak for themselves. You arrived at the Club Chihuahua at precisely the strategic time. When things went wrong, you were quick to take the secret material from your sister and receive her instructions. When an agent of the U.S. Government asked you, a loyal citizen, to turn this material and information over to him, you refused to cooperate, forcing him to resort to violence and intimidation. His actions weren’t quite legal, perhaps, but I doubt that he’ll be condemned for excessive zeal, under the circumstances.”
“But how could I believe him?” she demanded. “He had no identification, no—”
“Mrs. Hendricks, the taped record in the next room will show that Mr. Helm, before resorting to other means, did everything in his power to convince you of his genuineness, even to taking oath on the Holy Bible. I’m sorry, but I’m afraid you’ll have to consider yourself under arrest.”
She gasped. I refrained from looking in his direction. I suppose we can arrest people if we have to—any citizen can, under certain conditions—but we don’t make a habit of it. He was throwing a scare into her for some reason. Standard procedure required that, now that he was taking the heavy part, I should suffer an abrupt change of heart in the subject’s favor.
I said, “Sir, I don’t really think—”
He glanced at me impatiently. “What is it, Eric?”
“Isn’t it possible that Mrs. Hendricks has been just... well, a little naive and foolish?”
He said, “That may be, but let’s be practical. One of our agents has gone over to the enemy—this woman’s sister. Even though the girl is now dead, it puts us in a very bad light. Do you understand? We are also going to have to report the loss of a second agent, and the unpalatable fact that important government secrets have been compromised. The wolves in Washington will want blood. Well, let them chew on Mrs. Hendricks, while we continue our task of locating and dealing with the real villain. She was given every chance to cooperate and she refused. Innocent or guilty, she has earned no consideration from us.”
“But, sir, in all fairness—”
Gail Hendricks made an impatient gesture. “Oh, stop that silly dialogue. You don’t fool me one little bit, either of you. You’re both... both equally despicable!” She faced Mac defiantly. “If that microphone you showed me is working, how is the little speech you just made going to sound on your precious tapes?”
Mac spread his hands. “My dear lady, it will never be heard. If the technician was fool enough to record it... well, magnetic tapes are easy to erase and edit.”
“I see.” Her hands were clenched into fists. Her face was white. “It’s just a frame-up, is that it?”
“My dear lady—”
She made a strangled sound. “If you call me that again, I... I’ll scream!” There was a little silence. She glanced at me quickly. “What are you grinning at, you elongated ape?”
I didn’t answer. As a matter of fact, I wasn’t grinning. Mac said, “We are merely doing our duty, Mr. Hendricks, reporting matters bearing on national security that have come to our attention. I will send in no information that is not absolutely accurate, believe me. I may delete a few items I consider irrelevant, but that hardly constitutes a frame-up.”
She touched her lips with her tongue. “You’re being stupid and ridiculous, you know that, don’t you? Nobody’ll believe for a minute—”
“No?” Mac opened his hand and showed her the little film capsule again. “Less spectacular evidence than this sent Alger Hiss to the penitentiary and the Rosenbergs to the electric chair, Mrs. Hendricks. Would you like to see what is on this film you carried hidden on your person and refused to surrender?”
She hesitated and licked her lips again. “Yes.”
Mac studied her face for a moment. Then he pried open the small cartridge, and spoke without turning his head.
“Eric, you have a magnifier, haven’t you?”
I got it for him. He examined the film strip briefly, and passed it to Gail, with the glass. She frowned and squinted and moved the lens back and forth helplessly.
“Just hold it next to your eye,” I said, “and bring the films up into focus. It’s customary to look towards the light.”
She gave me an angry look, but followed instructions. I saw her get a sharp image at last. A startled expression came to her face.
“But this is—”
Mac said, “You undoubtedly have read about the project in the newspapers. It is known, picturesquely, as Operation Mole: the underground atomic explosion to be set off shortly in the Manzanita Mountains, not too far north in New Mexico. We’ve had hints that there might be trouble about it.”
“But—”
Mac went on: “What you have in your hands is a set of unauthorized copies of the basic instructions covering Operation Mole, as revised following a recent postponement. There is, you will note, a detailed diagram of the underground chamber in which the explosion will take place, as well as a map of the area showing the relative locations of the chamber and the above-ground monitoring station in the foothills a safe distance away where a group of selected observers will be with Dr. Rennenkamp, the director of the project and his staff. There are also a copy of the orders, two pages, covering the general security measures to be taken and a summary of the time schedule for the operation. Note the new date, December thirteenth, the date mentioned by your sister, according to your recorded testimony. This date, let me point out, has not yet been made public.”
She started to speak, then was silent. Mac took the film and began to roll it up carefully.
“Well, Mrs. Hendricks, what do you think? If you were on a jury, shown this evidence, and told where it was found, and if you heard how extremely reluctant the bearer was to part with it, what would your verdict be?”
She hesitated. “All right,” she whispered. “All right, damn you! It’s blackmail, isn’t it? You want something, don’t you? What do you want me to do?”
10
In the morning, it was snowing. To hear the Texans in the hotel lobby, this was a big thing in El Paso history. It snows every so often in El Paso, but they always act as if each time was the first in the memory of man. The clerk at the desk considered me foolish even to think of venturing out into the dangerous stuff. The very idea of driving north into the white wilderness of New Mexico, he said, was suicidal. The little town of Carrizozo, to hear him tell it, was as inaccessible, for the moment, as Point Barrow, Alaska.
When I came outside, after that build-up, expecting snowdrifts to the second story, I found the streets merely wet and black with big soft white flakes drifting out of the gray sky and a little slush building up where the traffic left it alone. I asked the doorman to retrieve my truck from the parking garage across the street and went back inside just in time to see Gail Hendricks emerging from the elevator, followed by a bellboy loaded with my luggage and hers which had been brought over from a motel, earlier.
She was certainly decorative, I reflected, watching her approach. The arrangement of her light-brown hair was still kind of elaborately loose and fluffy, but this morning she was quite simply dressed in a pleated skirt and a cashmere sweater that was neither sexy tight nor sloppy loose. It was blue and matched the subdued plaid of the skirt. A single strand of pearls dressed things up a bit. She was carrying a kind of twill greatcoat with a luxurious fur lining. I guess the height of snobbishness is wearing your mink so it doesn’t show.
I said, “Good morning,” in a neutral way as she came up. I had no idea what her attitude was going to be, except that it would probably be very hostile.
She surprised me by speaking quite reasonably. “You’re
exaggerating, aren’t you, Mr. Helm? It doesn’t look like a very good morning to me.” She frowned at the snowflakes drifting past the door to melt on the sidewalk. “Do you think it’s safe to start out? What if it keeps up all day?”
“That’s my brave tejano partner, Gail the fearless and intrepid,” I said. “I keep forgetting that all Texas comes to a shivering standstill when it snows.”
She made a face at me. “You can’t blame me for not being anxious to make this trip. It wasn’t my idea, remember?”
“I remember,” I said. “But you seem more resigned to the idea than you were last night.”
She laughed and shrugged. “What’s the saying? You can’t buck city hall, isn’t that right?”
She held out the big coat. I helped her on with it. We walked out, followed by the bellboy. I had him put the luggage into the bed of the pickup, which was protected by an aluminum canopy—not one of those fancy, trailer-like jobs, with stove, sink, and refrigerator, just a weatherproof shelter back there with windows and a door. There was space enough to sleep on an old cot mattress, even with all my camping gear aboard and generous headroom for sitting but not for standing. At the moment, it was the nearest thing to a home I owned.
I paid the storage charges, distributed tips all around, helped Gail inside, and we were off—blast-off time, approximately eight-forty-five. After a while, my companion, relaxing beside me, lit a cigarette and blew smoke at the windshield. Her resigned attitude bothered me a little. I hadn’t thought she was a woman to take coercion in such a docile fashion, and neither had Mac.
We have three things to work with, he’d said late last night when we were planning the operation, a place in Carrizozo, a film capsule and a lady who hates us but knows Gunther, perhaps better than we think. Put them all together and we may have a productive combination. It’s the best we can do with the limited time at our disposal.
Men were working in Mexico, of course, following the trail. There was an agent on his way to Midland, Gunther’s home town, and the motel where Gunther had stayed with Gail was being watched, but that was none of my concern. My job was to deal with him if he came to Carrizozo, one possibility out of many, but we thought a good one.
“Matt,” Gail said abruptly. “I’d better start calling you Matt, hadn’t I?”
“Permission granted.”
“I just don’t get it, Matt,” she went on. “Do we just walk up to this Wigwam place and march in the front door, or what? And those films, how are we supposed to use them? I suppose they’re still valuable to somebody.” They were, of course, so valuable that they were on their way to Washington right now. Even Mac didn’t swing enough weight to authorize one of his men to walk around with national secrets in his shoes, not without consulting a lot of important people first, so we had decided that, for bait, if I got a chance to use it, the capsule itself would have to do. But there was no need for her to know that.
“We don’t know exactly how valuable they are,” I said. “We can only hope the other side still wants them badly. It’s a pretty scrambled mess of an operation, Gail. Normally, two agents on a job like this would have rehearsed their cover stories for weeks in advance. As it is, we’re going to have to size up the situation when we get there, and improvise like hell.”
“And it’s really Sam Gunther you’re after? It’s... absolutely crazy! Why, I’ve known him for years!”
“People had known Klaus Fuchs for years. They thought him a nice, harmless sort of guy, I’ve heard.”
“If you catch him...” She hesitated. “When you catch him, what happens then?”
She had a knack of bringing up awkward subjects. I said, “Well, that kind of depends on Sam.” Well, it did, to a certain extent.
She said, “I’d hate to be the one responsible for... for getting him killed, or anything.”
I glanced at her. “The man is a murderer and a traitor, Gail. Both crimes carry the death penalty.” It didn’t seem necessary or diplomatic to point out that somewhere in the hierarchy above Mac sentence had already been passed on Sam Gunther, who was known as the Cowboy. People outside the business don’t like to think things are done that way, and it’s best to leave them their illusions whenever possible, but I told Gail as much of the truth as I thought she could stand. “Whatever happens, if we’re successful in our mission, Sam isn’t likely to survive it very long. You might as well face that now.”
We drove for a while in silence. She was looking straight ahead through the wet windshield. At last she said, “It’s not... a very nice thing to face. It won’t be a very nice thing to live with.”
I said, “Well, you can look at it one of two ways. Either you’re a brave lady patriot helping to dispose of your country’s enemy at the risk of your life, or you’re a cheap female Judas sending a man you know to his death to save your own skin. Take your choice.”
Her head came around sharply. “Damn you! You didn’t have to say that!”
“Don’t be a fool,” I said. “Of course I had to say it. It’s what he’ll say if he gets a chance, isn’t it?”
She hesitated then drew a long breath. “Yes, but you’ve got such a lousy, brutal way of putting things, darling.” She glanced aside and spoke in an even voice. “I suppose you know you’re on the wrong road. This highway leads to Las Cruces. We’re supposed to be heading for Alamogordo, on the way to Carrizozo, aren’t we?”
I said, “Yes, but I thought I’d take that fellow behind us for a little scenic ride, first. His persistence certainly deserves some kind of a reward.”
It took her a moment to catch the meaning of what I’d said; then she started to swing around in her seat.
“No, don’t look back,” I said. “Use the mirror.”
She turned to an outside mirror. The truck sported two, one on each side, since visibility through the canopy was limited. She had to lean forward to get the proper angle. “The gray Olds sedan,” I said, “two cars back.”
She licked her lips. “You mean... somebody is following us?”
“Tailing is the technical word,” I said. “Yes, somebody’s tailing us. He picked us up right around the corner from the hotel. How’s your geography, Gail?”
“I don’t know... This road goes on up the Rio Grande Valley, doesn’t it?”
“That’s right,” I said. “And the road we want goes up the Tularosa Valley on the other side of those mountains coming up on the right. For the moment, of course, we don’t know anybody’s behind us. We’re just plugging northward innocently...”
“But shouldn’t we find a phone and call Mr. Macdonald before we’re too far out in the country?”
I thought of what Mac would say if one of his people called up in a sweat merely because somebody, mysterious and menacing, was trailing along behind.
“He’s on his way back to Washington, if his plane ever got off,” I said. “We’re kind of supposed to take care of ourselves. Besides, I’d like to find out what instructions the gent back there is carrying.”
I looked around. We were well out of El Paso now, traveling across a flat country flecked with snow that looked wet and gray in the bad light. The mountains to our right rose up into the low clouds. The higher visible slopes were solidly white; it was coming down more heavily up there.
I said, “In Las Cruces, some fifty miles ahead, if he hasn’t made a move by then, I’ll stop to have the tank filled and the tire chains put on. Let’s hope our friend is a good Texan. If he is, he’ll have a childlike faith in his snow tires and an abiding distaste for chains. When I lived in Santa Fe, farther north in New Mexico, we used to lose more Texans off the road to the nearby ski run. Even the cops couldn’t make them put chains on.” I glanced at the mirror. The gray Oldsmobile had dropped back a little now that we were on the open highway, but it was still coming right along. I said, “Leaving Las Cruces, I’ll suddenly discover that we’ve got company. I’ll put on speed, pathetically trying to outrun that guy’s three hundred horsepower with this old relic.
Failing, I’ll swing abruptly to the east and head over the pass towards White Sands and Alamogordo and the road we really want. Have you done any sports car driving, Gail? Do you know what it means to hit the cellar?”
“Well, I’ve ridden in them, of course, and driven a few, but they’re mostly so dreadfully uncomfortable and impractical—”
“Sure,” I said. It was no time for an argument on that subject. I pointed to the worn rubber mat under our feet. “Well, there’s your storm cellar. I want you to have your coat buttoned and your hood up; that’ll give you some protection. If we start to go and I give the word, you dive for the floor and cover your face with your arms. Got it?”
She had turned pale. “If we start to... What do you mean?”
I said patiently, “Look, glamor girl, we’ll cross a pass, San Agustin Pass, elevation damn close to six thousand feet.” I pointed. “It’s up there somewhere, but you can’t see it for the clouds. Beyond, there’s a nice stretch of mountain road heading into the other valley, with quite a steep drop-off on the outside, the side we’ll be on going down. It’ll probably be snowing pretty heavily up there. There’ll be fog by the looks of it. The visibility will be real lousy, so a gent with criminal intentions won’t have to worry much about witnesses. We’re carrying something somebody’s supposed to want, remember? Looking at it one way, this is a very encouraging sign, that they’re taking such an interest in us already.”
“But—”
“That lad behind us has a big, heavy, powerful car,” I said. “If he’s got orders to do something about this old pickup of mine, something that looks accidental, say, so he’ll have a chance to search the bodies—up there’s where he’ll probably make his play.”
“You mean—” Her voice was strained. “You mean he’ll try to run us off the road up there?”
I glanced at her and saw something that surprised me—she had freckles. It was completely out of character, but there they were, a faint dusting of color across the bridge of her nose.
I said, “Your freckles show when you’re scared, Gail. It’s kind of cute...”