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“It will set an example for others,” Belsky said.

“I understood that. Of course I didn’t expect to get caught before I’d finished.”

“Finished exposing us to Time Magazine?”

“Something like that.”

“Do you expect me to believe this?”

“Suit yourself. I’ve told you the truth.”

“It’s quite a neat explanation.”

“You just can’t comprehend that a man could transfer his loyalty to an adopted country?”

“Oh, I’m sure you’ve got an honorable cause. They always do.”

“But you still think I’m lying.”

“Yes.”

“That’s too bad. I don’t know what to tell you.”

Belsky made another signal to Hathaway and Hathaway left the room. Trumble said, “Now you’ll administer the scopolamine. It won’t do any good, you know. I’ve told you everything. Perhaps you’ll get a few details out of me, but since I didn’t get a chance to act they won’t make any difference.”

“We’ll see.”

“Scopolamine brings on a talking jag, doesn’t it?”

“And a bad hangover.”

“Was it you who smashed my shower stall? What the hell were you looking for?”

“You. Where were you?”

“Enjoying myself,” Trumble said, “for the last time in my life.”

A man who knew he was going to be killed regardless of what he said was under no inducement to tell the truth. That was the main reason for Belsky’s disbelief—that and the fact that Trumble had trotted out his explanation too readily.

Trumble said, “I’ve got to go to the bathroom.”

“Later.”

“You know what fear does to a man’s stomach. Do you want this room to stink?”

“Take off your belt and leave it on the bed. Let me see what’s in your pockets.”

Trumble emptied his pockets onto the bedspread. There was a penknife with which he might have done some damage. Belsky took him across the hall into the bathroom and removed Douglass’ safety razor and all the medicines and razorblades from the medicine closet. There were still the tiny glazed window and the bathroom mirror, but he would hear the noise if Trumble tried to smash them.

He left the bathroom door open. Beyond the tub enclosure he could see Trumble’s knees and the trousers bunched down around his ankles. He kept an eye on the knees. If Trumble had a cyanide tooth like his own it would be all over, but the possibility was remote; besides, if Trumble had possessed a death pill he could have used it without going to the bathroom.

Trumble grunted now and then with effort: fear could have that effect on the bowels, as he’d said.

Hathaway returned with the drug in a glass and set it on the bedside table and joined Belsky by the door. “He’s stalling.”

“Of course. But the longer he evades it the more time the fear has to work on him.”

The knees sagged outward like the splayed legs of a seated drunk. Hathaway made a face. “Hurry it up.”

“I’m coming.” Trumble’s voice was high-pitched, tremulous.

Torrio came into the bedroom by the outside door. “Douglass.”

Hathaway’s face snapped from Torrio to Belsky. “Want me to keep him out?”

“No, I’ve got to talk to him. Let him in.”

“I guess,” Torrio said. “It’s his house.”

Hathaway said, “Get back on guard.”

“Take it easy, Sarge, Corrigan’s out there.” Torrio backed out and shut the door.

Belsky heard Trumble grunt in the lavatory. The front door sounded and footsteps came through the house—Ramsey Douglass in a sweat-damp shirt. “What’s all this?”

“Never mind,” Belsky said. “I’ve got a chore for you.”

“Christ, I was about to turn on the air-conditioner and have a cold drink.”

“Some other time. There’s an Indian named Spode who works for Senator Forrester. Do you know him?”

“I know who he is. He’s expected at the base this morning with the Senator’s inspection party.”

“I had an encounter with Spode last night. It’s imperative that we find out whether he identified me.”

“I’ll see what I can do.”

“Another thing. Our job will be hard enough without having to deal with meddling outsiders on the Air Force Base. See if you can find a way to discourage the Senator from hanging around the place.”

“What do you suggest I do, take a potshot at him?”

“Your sarcasm can be annoying, Comrade. You’ll think of something, I’m sure. We don’t want him in our hair.”

“Anything else?” That too was sarcastic. “You realize I’m only Matthewson-Ward’s SATAF man, I’m not a Government employee. I haven’t got the run of Davis Monthan.”

“Your people have. Do I have to tell you how to delegate authority? Do you want a blueprint?”

“Now who’s sarcastic?”

In the bathroom one of Trumble’s feet stirred and just then the radio in the bedroom made a noise. Belsky wheeled to the writing desk and switched on the recorder, pressed the record button and started the high-speed tape. The incoming message was pitched above audible range but after the tape ran out in forty seconds he rewound it and set the playback speed at 1 IPS and hooked the output connectors into the radio’s small speaker. He stood over the notebook with a pencil and flicked the fast-forward dial until he reached the point on the tape where the message had been recorded, reversed to the beginning of the signal and wrote down the dots and dashes as they clicked out of the speaker. Then he erased the tape and straightened to face the others. “Are you still here?”

Douglass said, “I wasn’t sure you were through with me.”

“You’ve got things to do. Do them.”

“Isn’t there a chance the Federal types will pick up that signal? It’s on the normal radio frequencies.”

“It’s gibberish to them and besides they don’t know who’s receiving it. Stop asking questions—go.”

Douglass gave his uneven smile and went. Belsky heard the front door slam and Hathaway swung to yell into the bathroom. “Time’s up. For Christ’s sake you’ve had time to lay a ton of bricks.”

Trumble’s knees didn’t stir. Hathaway stiffened … and Belsky went past him into the bathroom and found Trumble slumped back against the toilet tank with both arms down in the bowl between his legs. The bowl was crimson with blood.

Hathaway said over his shoulder, “The bastard chewed through the arteries in both his wrists. He’s bled himself to death.”

“You and Torrio get rid of him. Spread some blood on the broken glass in the shower stall in Trumble’s house. Leave the body there—make it look like suicide.”

“Which it was.”

“Suicide because he didn’t want to talk. He knew something that we don’t know.”

Hathaway’s scowl lifted. “Maybe he’s already blown the whistle on us. You think you better shift your base of operations again? I know a place.”

“All right. As soon as you’ve finished with this. Now move.”

When Hathaway went outside to get the others Belsky went back into the bathroom and stood above the bloated corpse and tried to think it out. But Trumble kept getting in the way of his thinking. It had been a long time since anyone had got the better of him. His strength had always been his attention to detail, his resourcefulness in covering all possibilities. Trumble had upset everything. A gutsy son of a bitch: yes. He’d had to bite great chunks out of his own wrists to make the blood pour out fast. But he’d died knowing something, hiding something, and Belsky had to know what it was.

In the absence of certainty he had to assume Trumble had made preparations to expose the Amergrad network—in the event of his death or disappearance. All he had to do was to call a contact daily with the understanding that if he ever didn’t call, the contact should deliver information into certain hands. That would explain why there hadn’t been any sign up to now that the network’s cover had been broken. If vibrations had already reached Washington Belsky would have been informed: Rykov had ample sources in Washington. So the cover was still intact, as of this moment, but if Belsky’s reasoning was correct it was only a matter of hours, or at most a few days if Trumble’s system had depended on postal delivery of information.