“No problem,” Beloit said.
“Thank you, very much.” He turned away, then stopped, and shook Beloit’s hand. “I would like to sit on the edge of your marsh with your family and yourself some day,” he said, and went. He waved to Clementine and got into the Oskar beside Mr Samir. The lowering door interposed tinted glass across her startled expression. She turned to Campion and nudged his arm. They both looked toward the Oskar as it snapped sideward out of its parking groove and oriented on the outer portal. Mr Samir himself was driving, his shirtsleeves rolled back from forearms like Indian clubs; the crew, looking curiously forward toward Michaelmas, were still latching down gear and strapping themselves to their seats in the back cargo space.
“I’ll call you,” Michaelmas pantomimed toward Clementine, holding up his telephone and mock-punching numbers. But what will I call you? he thought, pushing the phone back into his jacket. He waved to Papashvilly, who raised his eyebrows. Mr Samir accelerated. The portal opened, closed behind them and, computer-monitored, stayed obstinately closed when one news crew tried to follow the famous Mr Michaelmas and learn what he might be after.
Mr Samir drove hard. The bristling white van hissed wickedly down the highway eastward. “The airport, please, Mr Samir,” Michaelmas said.
“The military gates,” Domino said.
“There are no commercial flights to anywhere for some time,” Mr Samir said. “Do you wish a charter?”
“No, Mr Samir. Charters file flight plans. I will go to the military end of the field, please.”
Mr Samir nodded. “As you wish. We shall probably remember that you asked to be taken to the Hilton.”
“That is always a possibility. My thanks.”.
“I regret that our opportunity to serve has been so limited.”
“I will be sending you back to Star Control as soon as you’ve dropped me. And there will be other times we can work together in person. I anticipate them with pleasure.”
“It is mutual.”
Domino said: “Gately has a call in for Norwood. They’re holding; Norwood should be free in a few minutes. I think UNAC’s anticipating a simple message of congratulations from the US administration. They’ll put it through quickly.”
Michaelmas’s mouth thinned into an edged smile. “Good.” He watched the desert hurtling past.
“Douglas Campion,” Domino said.
“Say again.”
“While in Chicago at WKMM, Campion was on the crimecopter crew for a year and a half. They flew a model identical to the one in which Watson crashed. They never had any mechanical failures. But the pilot had had a coil freeze-up while flying the earlier model. The station used one until a few months before Campion joined their staff. The pilot put it down in Lincoln Park without further incident and not much was made of it. But in a year and half of making conversation five days a week, he probably would have mentioned it to Campion. That could have led to a clinical discussion of causes and cures. I think Campion could have learned how to work latches and Pozipfastners I think he would know which wire to pull.”
Michaelmas bowed his head. “That’s pretty circumstantial,” he said at last.
“Campion is also on the short list of persons who could have gotten to the machine; Watson was busy talking to his staff, but Campion would already know what he was going to say, and could wander off.”
“Being on the list doesn’t prove…”
“I have attempted to establish corroboration. I found that National Geographic had leased facilities on an AP News-features satellite that was passing over Switzerland at the time. They were using its infra-red mapping capabilities for a story on glacial flow. I went through their data and played a few reprocessing tricks with a segment covering Berne. I have identified thermal tracks that correspond to Watson, the helicopter pilot, and several people who must number Campion among them. I have isolated one track as being Campion with eighty-two percent certainty. That track leaves the knot of people around Watson, walks around a corner to the helicopter, pauses beside the fuselage at the right place for the proper amount of time, and then rejoins the group.” Michaelmas bit his upper lip. He stared straight out through the windshield with his fists in his lap. “Eighty-two percent.”
“Eighty-two per cent probability that he’s the particular member of a restricted group in which only the pilot seems to have been equally qualified to arrange her own death.”
Michaelmas said nothing. Then after a while he said : “I hate acting on probability.”
“You go to your church and I’ll go to mine.”
Michaelmas shook his head. Mr Samir, who doubtless had excellent peripheral vision, appeared to blink once, sharply, but he continued to drive relentlessly.
Oh, yes. Yes. It was as plain as the nose in your mirror, The poor, silly, ambitious son of a bitch had known exactly what would happen. The helicopter would ice up, set down uneventfully in the local equivalent of Lincoln Park but at some remove from the nearest cab stand, and Douggie Campion instead of Horse Watson would be the main spokesman on worldwide air. Afterwards, Horse would be rescued, and it would just have been one of those things.
And how did he salve himself now, assuming he felt the need? That, too, wasn’t particularly difficult. He’d understood all the factors, hadn’t he? He’d calculated the risk exactly. All right, then, he’d done everything needful; bad luck had killed two people, one of whom happened to be his professional superior, thus creating a permanent vacancy at a higher rung on the ladder; it was funny how Fate worked.
“Keep him busy,” Michaelmas growled.
“It’s done,” Domino said at once.
“Thank you.”
“I have Gately’s call to Norwood,” Domino said as they swept out of the hills and plunged towards the city. “Norwood’s in Wirkola’s office now.”
“Put it on.”
“Right.”
Michaelmas sat still.
“Walt? Walt, hey, boy, this is Willie!” began in his ear, and continued for some time, during which the expected congratulations and the obligatory God-damns were deployed. Then Gately said : “Listen, son. Can I ask you about something, between the two of us? You got many people looking over your shoulder right this minute?”
“No, not too many, sir. I’m in Mr Wirkola’s office, and there’s no one here who isn’t UNAC.”
“Well, that—forgive me, son, but that may not be—”
“It’s okay, Mr Secretary.”
There was a pause. Then Gately made a frustrated, snorting noise. “Okay. What the hell. Have a look-do you recognize this?”
Domino said : “It’s his recording of the sender holo.”
“Yes, sir, I do,” Norwood said. “I’m a little surprised to see you have a picture of it.”
“Walter, I’ve got my sources and I don’t mind if UNAC knows that. I’m sure they recognize my right to keep in touch. What about this thing, son? Do you feel you can tell me anything about it over this line at this time?”
“Up to a point, sir. Yes.”
“What’s that mean?”
There was the sound of a palm being placed over a microphone, and then being lifted off.
“Mr Secretary, have you heard that thing is Russian?”
“That’s exactly what I’ve heard. I’ve also heard UNAC won’t let you say so. How are you today, Mr Wirkola?”
Norwood said: “Mr Secretary, I’m looking at a materials analysis print-out that says the core component was made by spark-eroding a piece of GE Lithoplaque until it looks a lot like USSR Grade II Approved stock. You’d think that could work because Grade II is manufactured some place south of Kiev using equipment purchased from GE and utilizing GE processes under licence. But GE went to a smooth from a matte finish on Lithoplaque last year, whereas Grade II didn’t. You might figure you could carve back to the old configuration. But you can’t; GE also changed the structure a little. And it’s only in limited distribution as yet. According to what I see here, the only place you could get that particular piece we’re talking about is GE’s central mid-western supply warehouse in St Louis.”