The Fracas Factor

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The Fracas Factor Page 17

by Mack Reynolds


  The presiding general said respectfully, “Would you give your testimony of the events on the hill during your fracas with General Langenscheidt?”

  Stonewall Cogswell looked over at the defense table and at Joe Mauser. Then Cogswell’s eyes came back to the general presiding. He said, “I was unconscious, as a result of my wounds. I might add, in the way of a character reference that former Major Joseph Mauser has been an acquaintance for at least a decade and a half. I have been in the dill with him more than once. I have always found him the epitome of a capable officer and a most gallant one.”

  The prosecutor groaned. This was being televised. The former Marshal Cogswell was possibly the most celebrated of all fracas commanding officers. In his time, he had won more battles than Napoleon. Besides that, the country was up in arms against what had transpired on the hill in Langenscheidt’s attempt to finish him. And the general’s wounds were obvious. He had lost his leg.

  The general presiding said courteously, “Thank you General Cogswell.”

  He looked down at the papers before him. “Fredric Soligen, Category Communications, Subdivision Telly, Branch Fracas News, Low-Middle. Citizen Soligen, will you give your testimony?”

  The feisty cameraman came to his feet belligerently, took the oath, and said, “I don’t know what in Zen this is all about. Joe got kicked out of the Category Military and dint know what to do with his time. He was like an old warhorse with nothing to do. So I kind of took mercy on him. I gave him a job as an assistant…”

  “Just a moment,” the prosecutor said sharply, “Are you saying that the former Major Mauser has switched categories to Category Communications?”

  “Well, no. Not yet. What we wanted to do was get him a good send off, something impressive so he’d get a good rank in Telly, Branch Fracas News. With his experience, he was a natural. Nobody’s had more experience in the fracases than Joe Mauser.” Freddy apologetically looked over at Stonewall Cogswell. “Except the Marshal, of course.”

  The presiding general said, “All right, all right. Go on, Citizen Soligen.”

  “Well, anyway, Joe had fought on that reservation before. He knew the terrain. He’d even been on that knoll where the Marshal was pinned down. He figured if we could get up there—the telly pillbox had been knocked out—we’d have a telly-beat. It wasn’t being covered from the Marshal’s side.”

  “The general’s side,” the prosecutor said impatiently.

  Freddy Soligen looked at him. “Ye, sir,” he said. “But I’ll always think of him as Field Marshal Stonewall Cogswell, and so will most fracas buffs.” Freddy knew damn well he was on lens and that every fracas fan in the United States of the Americas was taking this in.

  Every knowledgeable buff in the country was lined up on the side of the Marshal and the perennially unlucky Joe Mauser. Freddy was losing no points.

  “Go on,” the presiding general said.

  Freddy said, “It was all Joe’s idea to get the coverage for the fracas-buffs.” Freddy looked noble. “That’s the job of Telly, Branch Fracas News. Getting the coverage for the fans. It’s a pretty inspiring way of making a living.”

  “Good Jumping Zen,” the prosecutor blurted out.

  “That will be all, Colonel,” the presiding general said sharply: “Go on, Citizen Soligen.”

  “Well, Joe knew about this little path up an arroyo, and he figured we could get up there and….”

  “Was he armed?” the prosecutor interrupted.

  Freddy looked at him blankly. “Armed? He was all loaded down with my equipment. You think a telly reporter just carries a camera with him? He’s gotta have all sorts of special lenses and a tripod and all that sort of thing. It’s not as easy a job as you think, Colonel.”

  “All right, continue. What happened when you got to that Vickers gun emplacement with four of General Langenscheidt’s men manning it?”

  Freddy stared at him. “What’d you think happened? Lieutenant Colonel Warren, who was usually a member of the Marshal’s staff, and Rank Private Max Mainz, a lad who had fought under the Marshal before, took them from behind. Their gun was pointed the opposite way. They weren’t expecting anybody to come up from the rear.”

  The prosecutor asked sharply, “And the former Major Mauser didn’t participate?”

  Freddy was still looking at him with disbelief. “How could he? He was carrying all this here equipment of mine.”

  The presiding general looked at Stonewall Cogswell.

  The former marshal said, “Lieutenant Colonel Paul Warren has been on my staff in many a fracas. He was a gallant officer. Knowing that my situation had pickled and that I was in the dill, he would have given his life, and did, to come to my aid.”

  The prosecutor groaned inwardly again and said aloud to Freddy Soligen, “All right, all right, go on.”

  “What else is there? We went on up and got to the knoll, and me and Joe Mauser got some good coverage. And then we all got out of there before old Bitter Dave could come up with his heavy mortars.”

  “And did former Major Mauser give military advice to Marshal Cogswell or his surviving officers?”

  Freddy said plaintively, “He didn’t have to. They could all see the way we’d come up. And the Marshal, like he said, had already passed out.”

  The prosecuting colonel rolled his eyes upward. He knew perfectly well that the little man was lying. So did everybody else. He said, “Next witness.”

  The next three witnesses were Captains Bowles and Fordham and Lieutenant Vance. They lied like gentlemen.

  At the end, the prosecutor brought Joe to his feet again. He said, “Joseph Mauser, all testimony has indicated your innocence of the charges. Why, then, should it be necessary for you to plead the Fifth?”

  Joe said evenly, “I plead the Fifth Amendement to that question and refuse to answer on the grounds that it might incriminate me.”

  The prosecutor sighed and turned to the general presiding. “The case rests,” he said in resignation.

  The general looked at the other four members of the court. He said, “Gentlemen, is there any necessity for us to leave the bench to deliberate?”

  The colonel to his left growled, “I believe he’s guilty as charged, damn it. However, there is no evidence. I vote, not guilty.”

  The other three said:

  “Not guilty.”

  “Not guilty.”

  “Not guilty.”

  Two of them, in their time, had participated with Joe in the fracases. The others knew him by reputation. Joe’s reputation in the Category Military couldn’t be higher.

  “The case against Joseph Mauser is dismissed.”

  After the others had filed out and Joe had thanked Cogswell, Soligen and the others, a court attendant approached him and said, “Major Mauser, a representative of the North American Bureau of Investigation wishes to speak with you. He is in the adjoining office.”

  Joe thanked him and made his way to the indicated room. As he opened the door he noted that the room was soundproofed. Frank Hodgson, Nadine Haer, and Philip Holland were there.

  Joe said, “Case dismissed.”

  The three of them sighed with relief.

  Hodgson said, “And Soligen?”

  “Wild horses couldn’t drag information about the organization out of him. However, behind the scenes it wouldn’t hurt to have he and his son bounced up to High-Middle.”

  “We’ll see what we can do,” Holland said.

  Frank Hodgson took a deep breath and looked from one of them to the other. He said, “We have found it impossible to convert any reasonable number of either Middles or Lowers. We’re stymied in our efforts to overthrow People’s Capitalism. The organization is just going to have to continue as best it can until we can come up with some gimmick to get the country moving.

  Are all of you still in?”

  Phil Holland chuckled sardonically and didn’t bother to answer.

  “Nadine said, “Yes.”

  And Joe Mauser said,
“I’m still in.”

  THE END

  Also by Mack Reynolds

  Ability Quotient

  After Some Tomorrow

  After Utopia

  Amazon Planet

  Black Man’s Burden

  Border, Breed nor Birth

  Brain World

  Code Duello

  Commune 2000AD

  Computer War

  Computer World

  Dawnman Planet

  Day After Tomorrow

  Depression or Bust

  Equality in the Year 2000

  Galactic Medal of Honour

  Lagrange Five

  Looking Backward from the Year 2000

  Mercenary from Tomorrow

  Of Godlike Power (aka Earth Unaware)

  Perchance to Dream

  Planetary Agent X

  Police Patrol: 2000AD

  Rolltown

  Satellite City

  Section G: United Planets

  Space Pioneer

  Space Search

  Space Visitor

  The Best Ye Breed

  The Computer Conspiracy

  The Cosmic Eye

  The Earth War

  The Five-way Secret Agent

  The Fracas Factor

  The Rival Rigelians

  The Space Barbarians

  The Towers of Utopia

  Time Gladiator

  Tomorrow Might be Different

  Trample an Empire Down

  Mack Reynolds (1917-1983)

  Dallas McCord (‘Mack’) Reynolds was born in California in 1917. His father was the Socialist Labor Party Presidential Candidate on two occasions, and Reynolds’ life and work were deeply affected by his political upbringing. After early careers in newspapers and computing, Reynolds returned from the Second World War and began to write science fiction. Based in Mexico but travelling widely in his role as Travel Editor for a men’s magazine, he started slowly but surely to sell his work. Mack Reynolds wrote the first Star Trek novel, Mission to Horatius, and was once voted Most popular SF Author by the readers of Galaxy Science Fiction magazine. He died in 1983.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

 

 

 


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