Wilson Tucker - Wild Talent.pdf

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WILD TALENT
By
WILSON TUCKER
Rinehart & Co., Inc. New York Toronto Published simultaneously in Canada by Clarke, Irwin
& Company, Ltd., Toronto Copyright, 1954, by Wilson Tucker Printed in the United States of
America All Rights Reserved For Paul Breen, wherever he may be hiding
One: 1953
The microphones were dead, had been disconnected for many days. No one cared
any more. No one bothered to keep up the pretense. She had angrily broken all the
connections, but no punishment had come. The hard decision had been made
downstairs, and there was no turning back from that decision—so there would be no
retaliation no matter what she did. The sham had been abandoned.
She spoke aloud, keenly enjoying the novelty of being able to speak without fear of
the listening microphones. They couldn't listen any more; she had smashed the things.
She asked a question aloud but didn't really expect an answer.
"They intend to kill you? Now? Today—tomorrow?"
She was a pale, tensed woman who stood beside the window and stared down at the
immaculate green lawn three stories below. Figures moved about down there, manlike
figures who carefully avoided looking up at the third-floor windows. Strolling puppets,
and the other puppets who spied on the puppets. The unnatural whiteness of the young
woman's face, the nervously playing fingers clasped behind her back—these were the
only outward indications of her anxiety. She stood erect, tautly waiting and watching at
the window, waiting for anything at all to happen.
 
"Paul...?" He hadn't heard, wasn't listening. He was reading again.
Her resentful gaze followed the puppets on the lawn, judging them, measuring them.
An occasional figure in trim military uniform strolled across the well-kept lawn and
across her line of vision; sometimes the military figures were accompanied by still other
men in civilian clothes. She knew those other men. She knew which of them were
security agents and which were staff members of the house, although they strove to
intermingle and thus hide their numbers and their identities. She knew who were the
clerks who carried on the routine things and who were the government agents watching
over the clerks; she knew the cable and wireless operators, the decoding experts, the
maids and butlers and cooks and houseboys, the bodyguards. She knew the men who
had only recently given up their earphones when she disconnected the listening ears. All
of them, all the puppets were like an open book—once the cover was turned they could
not hide their secret identities from her. Nor from him, from Paul.
Without turning from the window she spoke again, raising her voice to carry through
his absorbed attention.
"Paul—this decision to kill. Is it definite?"
"Yes." The man answered absently, his thoughts away. He was immersed in a heavy
book.
"Which one? Who is to do it?" Her quick gaze darted over the strolling men. "Do you
know which one?"
"I'm not sure," he said slowly. "I think it may be that new one, they call him Colonel
Johns. But I'm not sure."
The woman lifted her eyes from the tended lawn and the trim uniforms to seek the
horizon, to seek the high stone wall and the heavy growth of timber that was their
enforced horizon. The timber was old and tall and beautiful against the blue Maryland
sky, but the wall was new and rough, its top strewn with broken glass and alarm wires.
She could see the late afternoon rim of the low-lying sun above the graceful trees, the
roseate clouds formed in gentle ridges above the sun and flapping birds blackly
silhouetted against the clouds, but her concentrated stare could not penetrate the stone
wall. Something else was needed. The wall was new and had been built only a few years
before, a disgrace in its picturesque setting. Her eyes could see nothing beyond the wall,
nothing in or among the trees although she knew what moved there.
She knew men were there, just over that wall and scattered among the trees, men who
watched and guarded those inside without ever knowing whom they guarded. The
snipers crouched in concealing branches, stiff in their long-unmoving positions while
below them the machine gunners patrolled the ground in pairs. Wild life was
unwelcome, the small game and birds had fled with the coming of the soldiers. Their
abrupt, ringed horizon was scarcely a mile from the big house.
"Colonel Johns," she mused, her voice now low and emotionless. "He is army, I think.
And the others?"
"A friend of Slater, a hand-picked friend for this job. He's army—yes." Paul moved
slightly in the chair, the better to catch the light on the book he held. "The rest of them
are keeping hands off. Somewhat afraid, I suppose, and not sure it's the right thing to do.
Outwardly they agree with my sentence, but they personally refuse to carry it out."
 
"Colonel Johns came in from Washington a few hours ago."
Paul nodded. "Slater was with him."
"Here? He's here in the house now? That is unusual."
He nodded over the book. "They brought the decision. I'm sure of that."
"From Washington?" she questioned. "From how high up?"
"No higher than Slater. He made it." Paul glanced up from the page. "Not what you
are thinking—not the top. Top man will be told that I met with an accident, a very
common but believable accident. Everyone will express keen regret at my unfortunate
demise, crying the tremendous loss to the nation." He smiled briefly and dryly. "Top
man is not an unduly suspicious man. He believes in those he trusts and he's had no
reason to distrust Slater." His eyes were locked with hers, calm and warm, revealing his
affection for her.
"Paul!" She quickly left the window and crossed the room to him, pushing the book
from his hands. Softly and tenderly she raked his cheek with the diamond in her
engagement ring. "How can you read...?"
Paul retrieved the book from where it had fallen, awkwardly open. He closed it and
put it down on the table beside his chair, to reach out and pull her into his lap.
"I hadn't read Robinson before," he told her, tapping the volume with a finger. "I
wanted to finish it."
She relaxed in his lap and laid her head on his shoulder, burying her lips on the soft
skin just above his collar. "Paul, what if...?"
"Don't," he cautioned, and glanced by habit at the corners of the ceiling. "Let's not
discuss that."
Her answer was muffled against him. "All right." The lips moved on his neck. "But
how can you read!" She put her arm around his head, drawing him closer.
"Too bad old Robinson isn't here to witness the answer," he told her and wrapped his
arms about her waist. "He would have enjoyed it, in a way. Someone decided to solve
his Situation Thirty."
She moved her head. "I don't know that."
"Robinson was a classroom strategist of the military school. He posed problems and
the students had to solve them. Among those problems was a classic, one seemingly
without an answer, and then he pointed to a solution if anyone dared take it. The
student was expected to solve the solution as part of the problem, I gather.
"Robinson's problem was a simple one. It consisted of two fighting ships, enemies,
who chanced upon one another suddenly in the darkness and then uneasily stood off,
watching each other. Neither could attack the other with hope of victory because they
were absolute equals; neither could turn and run for port, for such a move would reveal
the direction and perhaps the location of that port. All that apparently could be done
was to stand and watch until eternity, always waiting for the other to move first.
"Robinson then advanced to the next step. The men of one ship, in plain view of the
other, threw overboard a mysterious hollow sphere which in time drifted across to the
second vessel. It was not a mine, obviously, so the second ship took it abroad. The war
 
of nerves then set in, which was the real intention behind the launching of the sphere.
The commander of the second ship was afraid to open the sphere for fear such
tampering might cause an explosion. Similarly, he was afraid not to open it, for the thing
might prove to be a time bomb. And finally, he could not afford to simply throw it back
into the water, for it occurred to him that a second contact with the sea might be just the
trigger to set it off—if it was a mine. The explosion would take place against the side of
his ship. The problem devolves upon man's imagination and fear of the unknown. The
ship's commander would eventually destroy himself with his own uncertainty, and that
collapse might bring about the bloodless victory the first ship awaited."
"So he must retaliate," she offered.
"He must; he sends back a sphere of his own, and the stalemate is as before. Robinson
pointed to the only solution. One commander must set a blowtorch to the sphere and
open it, prove it harmless. Either it explodes and sinks him, or it doesn't and he is free to
plan something else. The question is—what else?" Paul hugged her to him. "Downstairs,
or in Washington, they've at last decided to solve Robinson's problem. Colonel Johns
has probably been chosen as the blowtorch."
"How will he do it?" she asked quietly.
"They don't know—yet."
"When?"
"Tonight, I think. But before sunrise tomorrow, surely."
She jerked up. "So quick? So soon?"
Paul echoed her words. "So quick, so soon. While they still have the nerve up."
Despite her rigid self-control she found herself shivering. "I can't help it, Paul. I'm
frightened, inside."
"Don't be, angel, don't be." He drew her back to him for warmth, to stop her quivering,
and pulled her head down on his shoulder. Beyond her the afternoon light was fading
from the window.
As though knowing he was looking out, she said, "It's a lovely Maryland sunset."
"I've seen Maryland sunsets. Many of them."
"Aren't you afraid?"
"Of them? Or what they will do? No. I only regret it, all of it."
"Paul, Paul, how did you ever get into all this, why did you ever get mixed up in it?"
His gaze remained on the sky beyond the window, on the tips of the trees moving
slowly against the sky. "A little boy got me into it, a young fellow on the streets of
Chicago named Paul Breen. A little boy who knew too much, but not enough to keep his
mouth shut, and who wanted to play G-man."
"And finished here," she said bitterly.
He nodded silent agreement. "And finished here."
A little boy who grew up, and finished here in a large old Maryland mansion which
resembled nothing so much as an army staff headquarters perpetually on the eve of a
major campaign. The uniformed officers constantly parading the well-kept lawn,
 
entering or leaving the house on mysterious errands of their own, or strolling with no
apparent purpose. While in and out among them wove a formless pattern of civilians, a
clerk, a butler, a radioman or a secret service agent, pretending to be something else.
And none of those with knowledge would glance directly at the third-floor windows.
Beyond the beautiful lawns, beyond the ugly wall were the far woods and more men
paraded there, watching the wall and that part of the house that could be seen above the
wall; watching the fields in the opposite direction. Nothing moved through the woods in
either direction, nothing passed the lines of picketing soldiers. Nothing alive, or lacking
a pass. The Maryland mansion represented the tightest security stronghold since the
days of the old Manhattan District, more than a decade before. More guarded than Fort
Knox, than Oak Ridge or Han-ford, than the White House.
All because a young boy named Paul Breen discovered a wild talent and knew too
much and too little.
Paul broke the silence between them. "I once had a very good friend who guessed this
might come. He called me a name and called himself another."
"Slater stopped that," she responded bitterly.
"Slater stopped them all, one way or another. One by one he robbed me of my friends
and—removed them. I owe him something for that."
The distant sun sank behind the trees, trees thick with men and guns, giving warning
of the coming twilight. The house was fairly quiet with only the subdued talk of many
men gathering for a meal, coming in from the outside. Paul spanked the girl lightly,
fondly.
"Dinner should be ready. See about it, will you?"
She hugged him the tighter, refusing to move. "Oh, Paul!"
"Now stop that!" he warned. "Don't lose your head, don't be panicky. You aren't
included in the decision, so you will have to take care of yourself. Watch for the breaks
and use them."
"I wish they had included me!"
"No you don't." He touched the ring on her finger. "You aren't dangerous to them;
they know very little of you. They know nothing important. And they used that to keep
you here, to keep you quiet." He moved the ring with the tip of his finger. "Take
advantage of it. This will be awfully rough, so take care of yourself."
"I don't care if it is rough. I can take that. I can stand it. I'm not afraid of them."
His hand closed around hers, encompassing the ring. "The important thing to
remember is that you don't know anything. The less you know, the longer you will live.
You aren't supposed to know anything about me, about what I've been doing here; you
know nothing of what is to happen. You've never heard of Colonel Johns and what he's
going to do to me. Remember that!"
"All right, Paul." She kissed him tenderly. "I'll remember. And afterward...?"
"Afterward, do just as you planned to do. Watch for a break. When it comes, run for it
and don't stop running. If they catch you...well."
"They'll never catch me, Paul. I promise you that."
 
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