The Greatest Works of Randall Garrett. Randall Garrett

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Название The Greatest Works of Randall Garrett
Автор произведения Randall Garrett
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"are the first adult ever to learn the use of psionic powers from scratch."

      "Oh," Malone said. "And that's why Mike Fueyo, for instance, could learn to teleport, though his older sister couldn't."

      "Mike was an experiment," Sir Lewis said. "We decided to teach him teleportation without teaching him telepathy. You saw what happened."

      "Sure I did," Malone said. "I had to stop it."

      "We were forced to make you stop him," Sir Lewis said. "But we also let him teach you his abilities."

      "So I'm an experiment," Malone said.

      "A successful experiment," Sir Lewis added.

      "Well," Malone said dully, "bully for me."

      "Don't feel that way," Sir Lewis said. "We have--"

      He stopped suddenly, and glanced at the others. Burris and Lou stood up, and Sir Lewis followed them.

      "Sorry," Sir Lewis said in a different tone. "There's something important that we must take care of. Something quite urgent, I'm afraid."

      "You can go on home, Malone," Burris said. "We'll talk later, but right now there's a crisis coming and we've got to help. Leave the car. I'll take care of it."

      "Sure," Malone said, without moving.

      Lou said, "Ken--" and stopped. Then the three of them turned and started up the long, curving staircase that led to the upstairs rooms.

      Malone sat in the Morris chair for several long minutes, wishing that he were dead. Nobody made a sound. He rubbed his hands over the soft leather and tried to tell himself that he was lucky, and talented, and successful.

      But he didn't care.

      He closed his eyes at last, and took a deep breath.

      Then he vanished.

      Chapter 16

       Table of Contents

      Two hours passed, somehow. Bourbon and soda helped them pass, Malone discovered; he drank two highballs slowly, trying not to think about anything, and kept staring around at the walls of his apartment without really seeing anything. He felt terrible.

      He made himself a third bourbon and soda and started in on it. Maybe this one would make him feel better. Maybe, he thought, he ought to break out the cigars and celebrate.

      But there didn't seem to be very much to celebrate, somehow.

      He felt like a guinea pig being congratulated on having successfully resisted a germ during an experiment.

      He drank some more of the bourbon and soda. Guinea pigs didn't drink bourbon and soda, he told himself. He was better off than a guinea pig. He was happier than a guinea pig. But he couldn't imagine any guinea pig in the world, no matter how heartbroken, feeling any worse than Kenneth J. Malone.

      He looked up. There was another guinea pig in the room.

      Then he frowned. She wasn't a guinea pig. She was one off the experimenters. She was the one the guinea pig was supposed to fall in love with, so the guinea pig could be nice and telepathic and all the other experimenters could congratulate themselves. But whoever heard of a scientist falling in love with a guinea pig? It was fate. And fate was awful. Malone had often suspected it, but now he was sure. Now he saw things from the guinea pig's side, and fate was terrible.

      "But Ken," the experimenter said. "It isn't like that at all."

      "It is, too," Malone said. "It's even worse, but that'll have to wait. When I have some more to drink it will get worse. Watch and see."

      "But Ken--" Lou hesitated, and then went on. "Don't feel sad about being an experiment. We're all experiments."

      "I'm the guinea pig," Malone said. "I'm the only guinea pig. You said so."

      "No, Ken," she said. "Remember, all of us in the PRS got early training when it was new and untried. Some of those methods weren't as good as we now have them; that's why a man like your boss sometimes tends to have a little trouble."

      "Sure," Malone said. "But I'm your guinea pig. You made me dance through hoops and do tricks and everything just for an experiment. That's what." He took another swallow of his drink. "See?" he said. "It's getting worse already."

      "No, it's not," Lou said. "It's getting better, if you'll only listen. I wasn't given this job, Ken. I volunteered for it."

      "That isn't any better," Malone said morosely.

      "I volunteered because I--because I liked you," Lou said. "Because I wanted to work with you, wanted to be with you."

      "It's more experimenting," Malone said flatly. "More guinea-pigging around."

      "It isn't, Ken," Lou said. "Believe me. Look into my mind. Believe me."

      Malone tried. A second passed...

      And then a long time passed, without any words at all.

      "Well, well," Malone said at last. "If this is the life of a guinea pig, I'm all for it."

      "I'm all for guinea pigs' rights," Lou said. "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Me."

      "Agreed," Malone said. "How about that crisis, by the way? Are you going to have to leave suddenly again?"

      Lou stretched lazily on the couch. "That's all over with, thank God," she said. "We had to get our agent out of Miami Beach, and cover his tracks at the same time."

      "Tricky," Malone said.

      "Very," Lou said.

      "But--" Malone blinked. "Wait a minute," he said. "Your agent? You mean you had Governor Flarion killed?"

      Lou nodded soberly. "We had to," she said. "That paranoid mind of his had built up a shield we simply couldn't get through. He had plans for making himself president, you know--and all the terrifying potentialities of an embryonic Hitler." She grimaced. "We don't like being forced to kill," she said, "but sometimes we've got to."

      Malone thought of his own .44 Magnum, and the times he had used it, and nodded very slowly.

      "There are still a couple of questions, though," he said. "For instance, there's that trip to Russia. Why did you make it? Was it your father?"

      "Of course it was," Lou said. "We had to get him back in and make sure he was safe."

      "You mean that Vasili Garbitsch is a PSR member?" Malone said, stunned.

      "Well, really," Lou said. "Did you think my father would really be a spy? We had to get him back to Russia; he was needed for work in the Kremlin. That's why we nudged Boyd into making the arrest."

      "And the others?" Malone said. "Brubitsch and Borbitsch?"

      "Real spies," Lou said. "Bad ones, but real. Any more questions?"

      "Some," Malone said. "Were you kidding about that drink in Moscow?"

      She shook her head. "I wish I had been," she said. "But I was concentrating on Petkoff, who didn't know a thing about the drugged drink. I didn't catch anything else until after I'd swallowed it. And then it was too late."

      "Good old Petkoff," Malone said. "Always helpful. But he was right about one thing, anyway."

      "What?" Lou said.

      "The FBI," Malone said. "He told us it was a secret police organization. And, by God, in a way it is!"

      Lou grinned. Malone started to laugh outright. They found themselves very close and the laughter stopped, and there was some more time without words. When Malone broke free, he had a suddenly sobered expression on his face.

      "Hey," he said. "What about Tom Boyd? He knows a lot but he hasn't got any talents, as far as I know, and--"

      "He'll be all right," Lou said. "Andrew