The Probability Broach
“Nice try.” He punched out a bank transfer and tossed it at her. “There’s more where that came from, Your Honor. I’ll see you in court … in thirty days! Somehow, I suspect you won’t be able to make it.” He continued in a whisper, “I guarantee your cocomplainants won’t.”
CONGRESS DIED WITH a whimper. There was nothing else it could do. Weeping openly, Jenny declared, “Individual rights are sacred. We can’t touch you, John Jay Madison, without destroying everything we believe. Perhaps, in the end, you will destroy us, but let it be said that we refrained from murdering the Confederacy ourselves … I will hear a motion to adjourn.”
“Quick, Lucy,” I said. “Do you have some gloves?”
“What?—oh, I see. You are a romantic. Wish I’d thought of it myself. Y’don’t need gloves, dear, just go to it!”
“So moved,” said a dispirited voice.
I hurried, trying to remember the appropriate customs.
“Is there a second to the motion?”
I began running, tripping over feet in the process, some of them mine. Others were heading the same way, probably with the same idea. Captain Couper, for one. I stopped to untangle my cloak from someone’s terminal, finally ripped it from my shoulders and left it, running as fast as I could.
“Second,” came the halfhearted reply.
“It’s been moved and seconded that Congress adjourn. All in favor, say ‘are.’”
I fixed my gaze on Madison and half a dozen others converging on him. Leaping the row of consoles, I strode along the table, not caring whose fingers I stomped. I leaned on Couper’s shoulder, braced myself, and raised a hand. Suddenly Madison was pushed aside. I struck the upraised arm of Oscar Burgess, who grinned. “Say your piece, so we can get it on, Bear!”
I ignored him. “Madison, my quarrel’s with you!”
Madison looked innocent. “Then why did you challenge Mr. Burgess?”
“What?”
“There are a thousand witnesses around us who saw it. Correct, Captain?”
Couper looked daggers at Madison, then: “Hope you shoot straighter than you punch, kid.”
“Madison, when I’m through with this dirt, you’re next. Or are you afraid?”
“Lieutenant, when you burglarized my home, you encountered a cabinet in which there are eighty silver goblets, one for each of my solo air victories during the War in Europe. All told, I have killed one hundred ninety-three men in single combat, just as Mr. Burgess is about to kill you. Whatever happens, no one will ever be able to say—”
“Enough talk,” Burgess spat. “Let’s do it.” He rubbed his palms on his thighs, leaving grimy creases.
“This Congress stands adjourned.” Slam! went the gavel. So did my stomach.
CONFEDERATE CUSTOM REQUIRES a cooling-off period between a challenge and its “execution.” As far as I was concerned, etiquette could take a flying leap, and a barbaric disregard for protocol seemed to suit Burgess as well. I remembered him so well from CLETA. How many times had he insinuated that killing is the same as, possibly better than, intercourse? How many times had we heard his sickening war stories—from Vietnam and the streets of America—always with a twisted sexual ending?
But to get at Madison, I had to go through Burgess. I was short on sleep, felt like something the Salvation Army would turn down, and I’d never been able to beat Burgess before. I was a dead man. Well, it had been an interesting life, if not a very edifying one.
The crowd began drifting back in. We were soon ringed with spectators, and technicians zeroing in their cameras. At least I’d go out in living color, on a nationwide hookup.
I tried to remember more. Burgess favored a Luger with a modified safety. My.41 Magnum gave me the edge in everything but speed. I was getting scared. My old instructor had a psychological advantage, and knowing it didn’t seem to help. My little engrams—not to mention my knees—weren’t listening.
They cleared the center of the hall. Once the dueling ground was oriented, people began making room at each end. We stood in clumps, Burgess with his friends, I with mine. Captain Couper offered to serve as referee. He called us to the middle, to examine our weapons. “You’re going to fight with these little things?” he asked. “If you want to hurt each other, I can scare you up some real guns.” We both refused. There’s something to be said for sticking with what you’re used to—I don’t know what, but something. “All right, we’ll do this by the book.” I scarcely heard him. My legs felt weak, I couldn’t see very well, and a dull ache was beginning where Clarissa had put the cast on my shoulder. Burgess grinned, flushed and excited. From his warped point of view, we were about to make love. I wanted to throw up.
“Each of you will take his position, preparing his weapon at my command. You will observe the handkerchief I hold out. When I drop it, draw from the leather and fire. Shoot again after your opponent has fallen, and I’ll personally splash your brains all over this auditorium.” He drew an Antarctic War-vintage .476. “After the drop, you may move in any way—duck, even charge and kill your opponent point-blank, if he doesn’t kill you first. But I will remind you once again, you are barred from shooting at a fallen man. Clear?”
Dianetically.
“Take your positions.” I walked to one end, Burgess to the other, perhaps twenty yards between us. “Turn your backs and check your weapons.” I wondered if Burgess would risk back-shooting me. Not with tough old Couper watching. I rolled out the cylinder. The 240-grain semiwadcutters glinted dully in my hand. I reloaded, closed, and holstered my weapon, leaving the safety strap unsnapped.
“Gentlemen, resume your places! I pivoted, facing Burgess—a ghastly skeletal leer on his face—and began having an idea (that last had landed me in this mess, I reminded myself). If you could move after the flag, then I knew what Burgess would do. He’d taught a variation on FBI tactics: draw, shift a fast yard to the right, and snap your shots. I’d trained under him, but now preferred to stand and slug it out, holding the revolver in both hands. It was riskier, but a hell of a lot more accurate. Works swell against paper silhouettes, anyway.
Burgess would assume I’d dodge, and fire to my right. I’d nail him, I hoped, before he got in a second shot. Lugers don’t have a lot of stopping power. If he didn’t miss, and I could stay on my feet after being hit, I might still be able to nail him.
I kept telling myself.
Couper raised the handkerchief. Everything became very still and clear. The cloth fluttered to the ground. I went for the forty-one, watching Burgess draw and shift. I brought my gun to bear, too late. Over my front sight, Burgess’s muzzle blossomed brightly. A sharp bite in my right forearm, and I knew I was hit. He’d corrected faster than I’d counted on. I pulled the trigger once, twice, hoping to connect before he fired a second shot. I pulled the trigger once again.
The Smith & Wesson bucked and roared, spewing fire at Burgess. Two fist-size crimson gouts splashed his shirt-front, and his head exploded in a hazy red mist. His feet left the floor, he slammed against a desk and sank, blood obscenely pumping from his wounds, head smoking hideously where the upper half had vanished, mocked by the smoking Luger in his hand.
I swayed, still holding my weapon extended, aware of the peppery powder odor hanging in the air. I looked along my arm for brittle ends of shattered bone, and was astonished. My sleeve was torn from wrist to elbow—a round brass button from my cuff was imbedded in the fleshy part of my forearm, a smeary dent in its top. I plucked the button out and stuck it in my pocket.
Fuck you, Burgess—another rattlesnake exterminated.
I pried the empties out and replaced them, holstering the S & W “Okay,” I rubbed my slightly damaged arm. “What now, Captain?” I glanced around, trying to locate Madison.
Couper shook his head. “You go on living for a while. Who’s going to clean up this mess?”
Slap! Slap! I wheeled around, unconscious that I’d drawn my still-warm revolver until its sights rose before my eyes. Above them, Freeman K. B
ertram, an automatic in his outstretched hand, pointed not at me but at the crumpled ruin of Hermann Kleingunther’s face. I looked again for Madison. He was gone!
Bertram’s pistol thumped to the floor. “I couldn’t let him—” He collapsed. I covered the distance in three steps.
“Bertram!” I’d never seen a belly wound like that, the insides churned like goulash, the outer edges charred. Kleingunther had been a laser man.
“Win Bear!” Bertram whispered. I put an ear down to his face. Lucy and Couper were behind me, trying not to look away. “Never shot a man before. Your friends … Ham-Hamilton House. It’s so cold! Cold!” He stopped talking and gurgled. I knew that sound. I closed his eyes, holding them until they’d stay shut by themselves.
“Win, what the plague are you doing?”
“Can’t you see, Lucy? He saved my life. Now he’s dead!”
“We’ve got to get him into stasis,” Captain Couper said, lifting me away. “The ambulance is already here because of the duel.”
I looked at Lucy in disbelief. “He’ll be okay?”
“Will be if y’don’t put his eyes out.”
“You mean I’m going to have to kill Burgess all over again?”
“Are you kidding? Boy, you blew his head clean in half! Let me be the first to congrat—”
I didn’t hear the rest. I was busy puking in living color on a nationwide hookup.
XXI: Escape Velocity
The source of every human misery, the cause of every war, the great issue before every society for six thousand years has been the question, “Who shall have the power?” The significance of the Whiskey Rebellion is that, for the first time in history, individuals created a civilization in which the answer to that question is “Nobody!”
—Rosalie Wilderlane
The Invention of Liberty
We jumped into the hovercraft to find Olongo Featherstone-Haugh at the wheel. “Hold onto your hat, Lieutenant!” Before he’d finished the sentence, we surged toward the end of the alley behind Liberty Hall. Leaning on the horn, he swerved right, and was doing three hundred before we hit the next intersection.
“I called the dispatcher,” the gorilla said. “Your transport should be hot by now. How’s the arm?”
“Only a scratch,” I mumbled, cringing as we whipped through another turn. “Did I really say that? Feels more like an amputation!” Another corner whirled sickeningly around the car.
“Don’t forget Captain Forsyth,” Lucy reminded. “Don’t wanna rush into a fracas without backup!”
“I’ll call as soon as you’re off,” Olongo promised. At the edge of town, the road curved around the mooring area, but he cut straight across, flashing beneath leviathan shadows, leaning on the horn as simians and humans scattered like fruit flies on a melon rind. We did a sudden nose dive as he killed the lift. “Here we are! Wish there were room for three in that cannonball! Keep me posted, and cheerio!”
There wasn’t time to answer. Attendants hustled us out of the hoverbuggy toward a stubby metal cylinder the size of a Volkswagen bus. The nose was sandblasted and missing paint, the stern scorched and blistered. Between them was an oval hatch, and the legend Columbiad. Then we were through the six-inch hull, being belted into deeply cushioned seats. The machine’s interior was almost featureless: two couches in tandem facing a Telecom screen, no windows, and, when the door slammed shut like a coffin lid, dimly lit by a few instrument pilots. “It itches!” Lucy complained. “Every time I get strapped down for acceleration, my uninsurable nose itches!”
As the vehicle began moving ponderously, a man appeared in the screen, head and shoulders, wearing coveralls like the attendants who’d sealed us in. “Columbiad, Traffic Control. We’ll have you chambered in a moment. Please don’t touch any controls, keep your arms and legs within the couches. You’ll be pulling close to six G’s. Questions?”
The vehicle slanted downward ominously, rocking from side to side. “Where will this frammis dump us out?” Lucy asked unperturbed.
The controller glanced down at his keyboard. “Right now you’re simply routed for LAP. You have a specific destination in mind?”
“How about eighty-nine Tucker Circle?” I asked sarcastically, trying to ignore my heartbeat. He punched his console, paused, punched some more, then looked up.
“We’ll shunt you into the underground system, to the south-east corner of that block. Be prepared to exit quickly—I could only get a thirteen-second window between two scheduled trains. Your restraints will release when you drop below five mph, door-releases to your left will be illuminated. Good luck. Keep your hands and feet inside the couches.”
The view cut to a circular metal tunnel-mouth in the center of a familiar-looking hill, the median crest of Greenway 200 seen in cross-section. Now I knew what a rifle shell feels like. We entered with a loud thump as they slammed the breech behind us. “Acceleration, five seconds … four, three, two, one, fire in the hole!”
An invisible hippopotamus suddenly draped its full weight the length of my body. I tried screaming, but couldn’t even breathe. My bruised arm began burning; I couldn’t move to see whether it hung over the edge of the couch. Too late anyway, I figured. I found myself wishing I’d taken time to arrange certain private parts a little more carefully. I was going to have bruises in some strange places.
Almost as an afterthought, I noticed the noise, the loudest thundering I’ve ever heard. More than noise, really; a bellow that excluded anything else, made it impossible to tell which was crushing me, the acceleration or the roar. And suddenly, it was gone. The screen glowed softly, the tunnel walls rushed toward us faster than anything has a right to be traveling. Blessed silence, and the weight had gone away.
“Lucy?”
“Mmph?”
“Lucy!”
“Aw c’mon, Pete, roll over! I can’t breathe!”
“Lucy!”
“What? Oh, sorry. What is it, Winnie?”
“What the hell is this thing?”
“Hunh? Oh—Express. Fastest transport on the planet, whatever needs hurried: rattler antitoxin, bodies in stasis, but mostly talent.”
“Talent?” I squirmed around in my seat, trying to get a look at her.
“Only irreplaceable commodity. You need a surgeon fast, you need the genius who puts out oil-well fires, you need Express. Knew a virtuoso banjoist who did it once, too. Expensive, but he was in time for the concert.”
“Talent,” I muttered. “Well, what is it—a rocket? Olongo called it a cannonball.”
“Sorta halfway between,” she said. “Up front it’s vacuum, maybe twenty miles ahead—big metal doors like a camera iris. During the squishy part of the trip, they were pouring in liquid hydrogen and oxygen behind us and torching ’em off. If we weren’t down in this titanium wormhole, we’d just shoot off the horizon and wind up in orbit. Planes goin’ this fast spend delta V just to stay down!”
“Are you serious? Wouldn’t we burn up or something?”
“If that vacuum fails ahead of us, you’ll see some fireworks! Rode one of these contraptions with Pete once, all the way from Tierra del Fuego. They haven’t made ’em any more comfortable since. I feel like a sack of broken—Whoops! Here comes turnaround!”
“Deceleration, five seconds …” A red light flashed above the view screen. I braced myself, but never heard the count. The chair slewed wildly, my insides going the opposite way. That hippopotamus hiccupped and sat down again. Another sudden lurch and the deceleration eased off. Suddenly we were in an ordinary subway tunnel. We rocked, gasping and screeching, to a halt. I let the belts fall from me, saw Lucy hit the door, and followed her into the coolness of a shopping center, up the escalator as fast as our elbows could push us, and out, blinking in the sunlight.
I’d left my coat in North Dakota. I wondered who was paying for the ride.
I SPENT AN exhausted moment leaning on the wrought-iron fence outside Madison’s front yard. A hovercraft on full fans skated up to the curb
. Pistols drawn, Forsyth and two of his men jumped out.
I straightened. “Let’s hit the door!” I charged up the steps, bounded onto the porch, drawing my forty-one, and blasted the lock panel with three quick shots. The door creaked open. No one was there to greet us.
“Search the place!” I ran wildly through deserted corridors, nearly shooting several man-size pieces of covered furniture. The entire house seemed empty. I could hear the captain’s men rummaging around in other rooms. “Anybody find anything?” I hollered.
“Nary a sign,” Lucy said quietly. “Watch where you’re pointing that antique, will you son?”
“I’m sorry, Lucy. Where the hell do you suppose they are?”
“Vamoosed. Forsyth’s checking upstairs. Wanna try the basement?”
“I’ve seen it, thanks. I’ll bet it’s empty, too. That was Bealls’s equipment they shipped out in the freighter, had to be. Question is, did they take Clarissa and Ed too?” I sat down, scratching a vagrant itch with the front sight of my revolver.
Suddenly Lucy looked old and close to tears. “Might’s well face it—they only got shipped outa here one way. They’re no use to Madison, now we’ve testified. Ed and Clarissa are—”
“Here! According to Bertram, they are. You sure he won’t be conscious for—”
“At least a month.” She shook her head. “He was shot up something awful, Win. They’ll keep him quick-frozen and—”
“I know. Ed was right about lasers. Bertram tried to tell me they were here, but—Cold! He wasn’t talking about himself! Come on! We might still be in time! Forsyth!” I raced down the hallway, skidding on the turns. An eternity later, we finally reached the kitchen—and the freezer door.