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Under scopolamine Trumble might have disclosed his arrangements and Belsky might have reached the contact before the contact had time to release the information. So knowing he was to die anyway, Trumble had killed himself to safeguard the information.

It might not be the truth but the probability was good. On the other hand it might be a massive and ultimate bluff—just a desperate attempt to persuade Belsky the network’s cover was about to be blown, so that Belsky would abort and withdraw.

Belsky left the bathroom and sat down on the bed to decode the signal from Moscow. While he was working he heard Torrio and Corrigan grunting with the effort of removing the fat corpse from the bathroom. Hathaway waited in respectful silence with his big shoulders filling the bedroom doorway, keeping his distance while Belsky worked his ciphers. The message took shape and Belsky’s face contracted.

PRIORITY UTMOST

DANGERFIELD TUC

VIA NUCSUB 4

KGB 1

CIPHER 1541 SG

SENT 1308 GMT D ACKNOWLEDGE

MESSAGE BEGINS X EXECUTE PLAN B3 DATE 7 APR IGNITION

TIME 1830 X REPEAT X EXECUTE PLAN B3 DATE 7 APR IGNITION TIME 1830 X VR X MESSAGE ENDS 17652 42 5474

About fifty-five hours from now, Sunday at 6:30 P.M., Belsky had to fire the missiles.

By the time Belsky taped a quick acknowledgment and broadcast it, Hathaway’s men had driven their car around into the alley behind the house and wrapped the corpse in a plastic cover and stowed it in the trunk compartment of the car. Belsky stood in the back door of the house and said, “Do it fast and get back here.”

“Something up?”

“Everything’s up. Where’s the nearest public phone?”

“Booth by that gas station on Elm just the other side of North Park. Three, four blocks.” Hathaway pointed west-southwest.

In the bedroom Belsky tested the radio batteries and packed the apparatus into its compact case. Folded up and closed, it looked like a large but ordinary portable transistor radio. Essentially that was what it was, with the addition of the miniature recorder and the shortwave transmitter. At one corner of the case was the socket which enclosed the telescoping aerial and at the other corner was a small red globe which would wink with a bright rapid flash when an incoming signal activated the receiver to self-start automatically and record the signal on high-speed tape. The Japanese toy’s low output signals had to be relayed and amplified by intermediate stations but nevertheless it took hardly twenty minutes for a message to travel the distance between Belsky and Rykov.

He drove down to the filling station and filled the tank of his rented car, took his change in dimes and carried the transceiver into the curbside booth and set it on the seat by his elbow where he would see the red flasher if it began to blink: from now on, he’d have to watch the radio at all times; if a countermand came he had to be prepared to abort the mission he was now starting.

His first call was to Lieutenant Colonel Fred Winslow at Davis Monthan; it took five minutes for the switchboard to find him for “Colonel Dangerfield” and when he came on the line Belsky barked at him: “Henceforth leave word where you can be reached. They’ve been tracking you down for five minutes. What if this had been a no-notice ORI?”

“I’m sorry, sir. I did leave word but it must have got tangled up.”

Belsky had to talk like an Air Force coloneclass="underline" there was no reason not to assume there were other ears on the line besides his own and Winslow’s. The enlisted people on the switchboards wouldn’t know there was no Colonel Dangerfield in the chain of command but they would recognize it instantly if Dangerfield didn’t sound right.

He said, “I understand the Wing Commander will be absent from the base for the next seventy-two hours and that means you’ll have command. You’d better keep on your toes, Fred.”

It was meant to sound like a tip-off that the brass was planning to spring a no-notice Operational Readiness Inspection. In actuality it was an instruction: Winslow had to get rid of the Wing Commander for seventy-two hours and take over the wing himself. It was up to Winslow to work out the details.

Winslow said, “I, ah, haven’t been informed yet as to how soon Colonel Sims will be leaving for the, ah, weekend.”

Winslow was unnerved; that was bad.

Belsky said, “Well, I hear he’ll be up in Colorado Springs tonight for a conference with General DeGraff at twenty-two hundred. I guess he’d have to leave there by eight o’clock tonight if he’s flying up to NORAD.”

“Yes, Bud mentioned something about it but it slipped my mind,” Winslow lied. He was doing better now, getting the hang of it.

Belsky said, “It’s too bad you’ll miss the party. It ought to be quite a bash. Half-past six Sunday night. Maybe Colonel Sims will be back by then and you’ll be able to come. We’ll save some Scotch in case you show up late.”

“Yes, I’d hate to miss it, sir. Been a long time since the old gang got together. Christ, do you remember that blowout we had in Darmstadt?” Now Winslow was winging it; the sudden shock had induced a talking jag and Belsky had to cut him off.

“Yeah, that was sure a lulu, Fred. And I wouldn’t be surprised to see a few ICBMs go off right in my living room at this one. Some of the boys can really put it away. I hope you’ll be able to make it.”

“Six-thirty Sunday evening, huh? I’ll sure try, Colonel, and thanks for inviting me.”

“Won’t be the same without you.”

“I’ll find out when Bud Sims plans to get back here.”

“Do that. And don’t forget to bring that gorgeous wife of yours, Fred. You know where the place is.”

“No. That is, it’s been a long time, Colonel. As I recall it’s kind of hard to find.”

“I’ll get a little map of the roads over to you, Fred.”

“That’d be mighty kind, sir. I mean I’d feel like a fool if I got all dressed up and didn’t know where to go.”

“Okay, Fred, I’ll shoot it over to you.” They were talking about the identity of the targets and those could hardly be given by telephone.

“See you, Colonel. And thanks again.”

“Sure enough, Fred.” Belsky broke the connection. Now Winslow knew he had to activate the final firing sequence at half-past six Sunday evening.

Belsky plugged another coin into the phone and made the second of the dozen calls he would have to make. He felt nerveless and unhurried. His only concern was tidiness: the operation had to be performed exactly as ordered.

Chapter Twelve

The broadcast studios of KARZ-TV occupied a low cinder-block building on Drachman Street about a mile north of downtown Tucson. Ramsey Douglass felt edgy and irritable when he parked at the curb and walked to the heavy glass doors. The waiting room inside was freezing cold; the air-conditioning had been built for 120-degree summers and nobody had adjusted it for the 85-degree outside temperature of early April.

The skinny man at the reception desk sat with a telephone against one ear and a finger stuck in the other to block out the piped music that flooded the room like an oil spill. An American flag hung limp on a standard in the corner and above it, suspended from the ceiling, an animated color cartoon flickered on the screen of a television monitor, without sound. Douglass waited for the receptionist’s attention; finally the man at the desk hung up the telephone.

“My name is Douglass, to see Miss Lawrence. It’s important.”

“I’ll see if I can locate her.” The bow tie bobbed up and down at his throat.