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“I know the man you mean, sir,” the admiral had said, “and once more I agree with your conclusion. I don’t question his integrity, but in plain language he lacks guts.”

“That he does. So you have until I step down to get the job done. After that I can’t promise you a thing; so you’d better stash away whatever you’ll need now. Let me know how you’re getting on. Do you trust Colonel Gifford?”

“Totally.”

“Then I’ll see that he makes BG more or less immediately to give him a little more muscle and turn him over to you. He’s one of the most resourceful men I’ve ever met. I’ll set him up with a cover job and let him be the liaison man between us.”

At that point the admiral had gotten to his feet. “Time’s a wastin’, Mr. President, and I have an awful lot to do. I’ll send you my requisitions, personnel and otherwise, through Gifford. Have you a suggestion for a code name?”

The President had looked out of the window for a few moments while he thought. “Politics aside, there’s one American I've always admired tremendously. He was way ahead of his time and I’m not sure that he isn’t ahead of us right now. Thomas Jefferson.”

“Tom Jefferson it is, then, sir.” He had shaken hands and left. As he had climbed into his waiting staff car with the starred plate out front, his mind had already been busy planning, considering, sifting, and projecting.

All that had been a while ago, but not a long enough while for Barney Haymarket to accomplish everything that he would have liked to have done? Ten years would not have been enough, but he had put first things first and he had been helped by some of the best planning brains the country had had available. As a result he had been able to stuff enough aces up his sleeve to be in a position of some strength, although it was pitiful when compared with the total military posture of the enemy who now stood on the nation’s shores.

As he walked into the command post he had provided for the operation which would now go into effect, he knew that it was totally secure from any kind of eavesdropping activity. Delicate electronic devices in duplicate monitored the premises with a ceaseless vigil. For a bare moment he looked at General Gifford and the few others who had assembled at his bidding and who were waiting for him, on their feet, around a plain, functional table.

“Sit down, gentlemen,” he invited. “It’s time to put Tommy Jefferson to work.”

Some thirty-nine hours later the body of retired Admiral Barney Haymarket, one of the most colorful and efficient Chiefs of Naval

Operations that the service had ever known, was found in the wreckage of his car where it had gone off the road during a heavy night rainstorm in the Rocky Mountains.

As he went through the motions of installing himself in his new office, Hewlitt kept forgetting where he wanted to put things because of the many thoughts which were seething in his brain. He was beginning to awake to an uncomfortable realization, and he did not like it at all. He was thirty-two years old, by any reasonable calculation his life was at least one-third over, and he had never as yet made a conscious decision as to what he wanted to do or what he hoped ultimately to accomplish.

His collegiate career had been appropriately distinguished, particularly since he had been born with a quick ear and a gift for languages. He had studied for a year abroad; after that the suggestion had been gently made to him that now that his education in the formal sense had been concluded, it was time for him to go to work. It pained him now to realize that he had not made a decision then either — he had simply taken the path of least resistance. A job had been available in the State Department, it had been offered to him, and he had accepted it. Every move he had made after that had been decided for him. While up until a few weeks ago most of his various friends had agreed that he had “made good,” he was now beginning to be conscious of the fact that all he had really done was go where he had been pushed.

He adjusted the reading light on the desk and set his typewriter where it would be conveniently at his elbow. Now, he knew, from that minute forward he would have to lead a very different life. He would be right under Zalinsky’s nose, his every word and action subject to scrutiny and analysis. He could play it two ways: he could do as he was told and keep his nose clean, or he could go for higher stakes with his life on the line. That was a helluva lot different, he thought, from being on the collegiate tennis team, where a victory or a defeat meant very little when you came right down to it.

As he put a supply of freshly sharpened pencils into the center desk drawer, he wondered just how much chance he would have of accomplishing anything if he did elect to try to fight back. The entire American military establishment had been overcome by swift, brilliant, almost bloodless action. Billions of dollars in defense preparation had proven ineffective. Now he proposed to try to reverse that outcome with a team which so far consisted of two stenographically skilled, reasonably willing girls. Bob Landers had tried it and Bob Landers had lost his life within a matter of days.

But, dammit, that kind of defeatist attitude was what had beaten the country in the first place! It had not been overcome on the field of battle or by warfare at sea, it had been outmaneuvered from without and within. Leftist subversion and the attitudes of people like Fitzhugh, the peace-at-any-price boys, had caused the military to be in an understaffed, demoralized posture when the enemy had hit. Hewlitt was not a militarist, and he had never served in any branch of the armed services. But now his spirit cried for action. Bitterly he knew that it was too late; he should have felt that way before instead of filling out his deferment papers as he had done. Of course if this disaster had not overtaken the country, a military career would not have appealed to him at all.

When his desk was finally in order, he sat down to think. He didn’t want to leave things as they were — he wanted for the first time in his life to make a decision — probably the most important one he would ever face. He had to make it to establish his own self-respect. He was aware that his position was unique in the country; he was sitting at the nerve center of Zalinsky’s administration, that meant that he would be in an invaluable position to help any bona fide underground movement. It also meant that he would be exposed to far greater jeopardy than would be the case almost anywhere else.

He was startled when he looked up and found Zalinsky himself at his elbow. Without thinking, he rose to his feet. “You have of everything you need?” he was asked.

“Everything, Mr. Zalinsky. As far as I know now.”

“It is good. You will soon become very busy. When I wish to call you, what is the name you employ?”

Hewlitt thought rapidly, but he could not find the words he needed. “My friends call me ‘Hew,’ ” he said. He was reluctant to put Zalinsky in that category.

“But that is not your initial name.”

“No, my first name is Raleigh; I never use it.”

Zalinsky considered the information. “I have not yet the fullest awareness of this country, but that name I have never heard before.”

“Our family is distantly related to the Raleighs of Virginia. When I was born, my mother evidently decided to make me the connecting link. So she gave me that name.”

“It was a bad idea,” Zalinsky said.

Hewlitt nodded. “I agree; I don’t like it either.”

“So there is one thing about which we are not enemies.” With that Zalinsky disappeared into the Oval Office.

Perhaps the man had been trying to be friendly, but Hewlitt doubted it; more likely it had been an invitation to him to let his guard down.

Then, quite simply, he made his decision; he would fight back. He was in it all the way — to do the best that he could. A surge of fierce pride took hold of him; he was not doing now merely what was expected of him, he was not reacting automatically, he was undertaking something with his eyes open, on his own initiative, and God willing, they would know that he had been in the battle before it was through.