The Missing Man (v4.1)

Free The Missing Man (v4.1) by Katherine Maclean Page A

Book: The Missing Man (v4.1) by Katherine Maclean Read Free Book Online
Authors: Katherine Maclean
everything the kid said made sense?”
    “It didn’t,” Ahmed said impatiently.
“You made sense.”
    “But Larry said that techs are wiping out
nontechs.”
    “Maybe they are, but they aren’t killing
anybody. The kid kills.”
    George pushed his hands together, felt them wet
with sweat wiped them on his shirt. “I almost killed the kid. But it felt
right, what he was saying. He was talking for the way things are and for the
way they’re going to be, like Fate.”
    “Killing is unphilosophical,” Ahmed
said. “You’re tired, George Take it easy, we’ve had a long day.”
    They heard a police siren wail and then distant
shots. Ahmed plugged the earphone into his ear. “They just dropped
somebody in goggles, gas didn’t work on him. They had to drop him with hypo
bullets. Probably Larry. Let’s try to get out of here.”
    They put a wad of blankets out into the
corridor, head high. No shots, so they went out cautiously and started groping
down the long black hall, looking for an exit.
    Ahmed said, “So you think Larry was the
fickle finger of Fate on the groping hand of the future. No power on Earth can
resist the force of an idea whose time has come, said somebody once. But, good
buddy, when I was listening to you whilst lying in the ceiling with the spiders
crawling on me, I thought I heard you a new metaphysics. Didn’t you just
abolish Fate?”
    The corridor widened, and George felt a draft of
fresh air without dust, and saw a glimmer of light through a hole. They climbed
through and saw a doorway, and a broken door. “I don’t know,” Ahmed,”
he said vaguely. “Did I?”
    They climbed up the broken door and a flight of
stone steps and. found themselves in a deserted yard at the center of the ruin.
It was very quiet. In the distance around the edges of the block police copters
buzzed, landing in the streets.
    “Sure you did,” Ahmed said. “You
abolished Fate. I heard you.”
    George looked up at the moon. It was bright and
it shone across ‘. the entire city, like the evil Fate in his dream, but it was
only the moon, and the city was quiet. Suddenly George leaped into the air and
clicked his heels. “I did. I did.” He bellowed. “Hey, everybody!
Hey, I did it! I abolished Fate!”
    He landed and stopped leaping, and stood
panting. The red glow in the sky over New York blinked on and off, on and off
from the giant sign they could not see.
    “Congratulations,” said Ahmed, and
rested an arm briefly across his shoulders. “May I offer you a
tranquilizer?”
    “No, you may offer me a meal,” George
said. “No, cancel that too. Judd gave me money yesterday. Steaks, hot
showers, hotel room. Wow. I’ve got a job.” He turned abruptly and walked
away. “See you tomorrow.”
    Left alone, tall and tired, smeared with dirt
and itchy with cobwebs, Ahmed stared after him, feeling betrayed. Where was all
the respect George used to give him? George was a short fat kid once, and
treated Ahmed like a boss. Now he was beginning to loom like a Kodiak bear, and
he walked away without permission.
    Ahmed looked up at the lopsided moon.
“Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who’s the smartest guy of all? Don’t answer
that, lady. It’s been a long day. I’m tired.”
     
     

Similar Books

The Coal War

Upton Sinclair

Come To Me

LaVerne Thompson

Breaking Point

Lesley Choyce

Wolf Point

Edward Falco

Fallowblade

Cecilia Dart-Thornton

Seduce

Missy Johnson