“Sir?”
“Fulks, would you show this gentleman out of my chamber, please? He has no further wish to remain with me.”
“Right away, Mr. Walton.”
“Before you throw me out,” Fred said, “let me tell you one more thing.”
“Go ahead.”
“You’re acting stupidly—though that’s nothing new for you, Roy. I’ll give you a week’s grace to make up your mind. Then the serum goes into production.”
“My mind is made up,” Walton said stiffly. The door telescoped and Fulks stood outside. He smiled obsequiously at Walton, bowed to Fred, and said to him, “Would you come with me, please?”
It was like one of those dreams, Walton thought, in which you were a butler bringing dishes to the table, and the tray becomes obstinately stuck to your fingertips and refuses to be separated; or in which the Cavendishes are dining in state and you come to the table nude; or in which you float downward perpetually with never a sign of bottom.
There never seemed to be any way out. Force opposed force and he seemed doomed always to be caught in the middle.
Angrily he snapped the kaleidoscope back on and let its everchanging swirl of color distract him. But in the depth of the deepest violet he kept seeing his brother’s mocking face.
He summoned Fulks.
The gnome looked up at him expectantly. “Get me a jetcopter,” Walton ordered. “I’ll be waiting on the west stage for it.”
“Very good, sir.”
Fulks never had any problems, Walton reflected sourly. The little man had found his niche in life; he spent his days in the plush comfort of the Bronze Room, seeing to the wants of the members. Never any choices to make, never any of the agonizing decisions that complicated life.
Decisions. Walton realized that one particular decision had been made for him, that of seeking the directorship permanently. He had not been planning to do that. Now he had no choice but to remain in office as long as he could.
He stepped out onto the landing stage and into the waiting jetcopter. “CullenBuilding,” he told the robopilot abstractedly.
He did not feel very cheerful.
The annunciator panel in Walton’s office was bright as a Christmas tree; the signal bulbs were all alight, each representing someone anxious to speak to him. He flipped over the circuit-breaker, indicating he was back in his office, and received the first call.
It was from Lee Percy. Percy’s thick features were wrinkled into a smile. “Just heard that speech you made outside the building this morning, Roy. It’s getting a big blare on the newsscreens. Beautiful! Simply beautiful! Couldn’t have been better if we’d concocted it ourselves.”
“Glad you like it,” Walton said. “It really was off the cuff.”
“Even better, then. You’re positively a genius. Say, I wanted to tell you that we’ve got the FitzMaugham memorial all whipped up and ready to go. Full channel blast tonight over all media at 2000 sharp… a solid hour block. Nifty. Neat.”
“Is my speech in the program?”
“Sure is, Roy. A slick one, too. Makes two speeches of yours blasted in a single day.”
“Send me a transcript of my speech before it goes on the air,” Walton said. “I want to read and approve that thing if it’s supposed to be coming out of my mouth.”
“It’s a natural, Roy. You don’t have to worry.”
“ I want to read it beforehand!” Walton snapped.
“Okay, okay. Don’t chew my ears off. I’ll ship it to you posthaste, man. Ease up. Pop a pill. You aren’t loose, Roy.”
“I can’t afford to be,” Walton said.
He broke contact and almost instantly the next call blossomed on the screen. Walton recognized the man as one of the technicians from Communications, floor twenty-three.
“Well?”
“We heard from McLeod again, sir. Message came in half an hour ago and we’ve been trying to reach you ever since.”
“I wasn’t in. Give me the message.”
The technician unfolded a slip of paper. “It says, ‘Arriving Nairobi tonight, will be in New York by morning. McLeod.’”
“Good. Send him confirmation and tell him I’ll keep the entire morning free to see him.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Oh—anything from Venus?”
The technician shook his head emphatically. “Not a peep. We can’t make contact with Dr. Lang at all.”
Walton frowned. He wondered what was happening to the terraforming crew up there. “Keep trying, will you? Work a twenty-four-hour-a-day schedule. Draw extra pay. But get in touch with Lang, dammit!”
“Y-yes, sir. Anything else?”
“No. Get off the line.”
As the contact snapped Walton smoothly broke connection again, leaving ten more would-be callers sputtering. A row of lights a foot long indicated, their presence on the line. Walton ignored them and turned instead to his newsscreen.
The 1400 news was on. He fiddled with the controls and saw his own face take form on the screen. He was standing outside the Cullen Building, looking right out of the screen at himself, and in the background could be seen a huddled form under a coat. The dead Herschelite.
Walton of the screen was saying, “… The man was asking for trouble. Popeek represents the minds and hearts of the world. Herschel and his people seek to overthrow this order. I can’t condone violence of any sort, naturally, but Popeek is a sacred responsibility to me. Its enemies I must regard as blind and misguided people.”
He was smiling into the camera, but there was something behind the smile, something cold and steely, that astonished the watching Walton. My God, he thought. Is that genuine? Have I really grown so hard?
Apparently he had. He watched himself turn majestically and stride into the Cullen Building, stronghold of Popeek. There was definitely a commanding air about him.
The commentator was saying, “With those heartfelt words, Director Walton goes to his desk in theCullenBuilding to carry out his weighty task. To bring life out of death, joy out of sadness—this is the job facing Popeek, and this is the sort of man to whom it has been entrusted. Roy Walton, we salute you!”
The screen panned to a still of Director FitzMaugham. “Meanwhile,” the commentator went on, “Walton’s predecessor, the late D. F. FitzMaugham, went to his rest today. Police are still hoping to uncover the group responsible for his brutal slaying, and report a good probability of success. Tonight all channels will carry a memorial program for this great leader of humanity. D. F. FitzMaugham, hail and farewell!”
A little sickened, Walton snapped the set off. He had to admire Lee Percy; the propaganda man had done his job well. With a minor assist from Walton by way of a spontaneous speech, Percy had contrived to gain vast quantities of precious air time for Popeek. All to the good.
The annunciator was still blinking violently; it seemed about to explode with the weight of pent-up, frustrated calls. Walton nudged a red stud at the top and Security Chief Sellors entered the screen.
“Sellors, sir. We’ve been looking for this Lamarre. Can’t find him anywhere.”
“What?”
“We checked him to his home. He got there, all right. Then he disappeared. No sign of him anywhere in the city. What now, sir?”
Walton felt his fingers quivering. “Order a tracer sent out through all of Appalachia. No, cancel that—make it country-wide. Beam his description everywhere. Got any snaps?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Get them on the air. Tell the country this man is vital to global security. Find him, Sellors.”
“We’ll give it a try.”
“Better than that. You’ll find him. If he doesn’t turn up within eight hours, shift the tracer to world-wide. He might be anywhere—and he has to be found!”