"MacLean, Alistair - The Satan Bug" - читать интересную книгу автора (Maclean Alistair)"Correct."
"On a record card, 'Resigned' looks much better man ' Dismissed.' Which is what you would have been had you remained another twenty-four hours. You do appear to have what amounts to a genius for insubordination. Something to do with an Assistant Commissioner, I understand. But you still had friends, quite powerful friends. Within a week of your resignation you had been appointed as head of security in Mordon." I stopped what I was doing, which was squaring off the papers on my desk, and said quietly, "Details of my record are readily available, if you know where to look. But you have no right to possess that last item of information." The Morden Microbiological Research Establishment in Wiltshire had a security rating that would have made access to the Kremlin seem simple. "I am perfectly aware of that, Mr. Cavell. I possess a great number of items of information that I shouldn't. Like the additional item that I know that, in keeping with your record, you were also dismissed from this post. Like yet another item --the real reason why I am here to-day: I know why you were dismissed." The accuracy of my first deduction in the detecting business, that my client was an accountant, spoke ill for my prospects: Henry Martin wouldn't have recognised a balance sheet if it had been handed to him on a silver salver. I wondered what his line of business might really be: but I couldn't even begin to guess. "You were dismissed from Mordon," Martin went on precisely, "primarily because you couldn't keep a still tongue in your head. Oh, nothing to do with security, we know that." He removed his rimless glasses and polished them thoughtfully. "After fifteen years in your line you probably don't even tell yourself half of what you know. But you talked to top scientists, directors, in Mordon, and you made no secret of your opinion of the nature of the work in which they were engaged. You are not the first person to comment bitterly on the fact that this establishment, referred to in Parliamentary estimates as the Mordon Health Centre, is controlled exclusively by the War Office. You knew, of course, that Mordon is concerned mainly with the invention. and production of microbiological organisms for use in war --but you are one of the few who know just how ghastly and terrifying are the weapons that have been perfected there, that armed with those weapons a few planes could utterly destroy all life in any country in the space of a few hours. You had very strong opinions about the indiscriminate use of such a weapon against an unsuspecting and innocent civilian population. And you made your opinion known in many places and to many people inside Mordon. Too many places, too many people. So to-day you are a private detective." "Life's unjust," I agreed. I rose to my feet, crossed to the door, turned the key in the lock and pocketed it. "You must realise, Mr. Martin, that you have already said too much. The sources of your information about my activities at Mordon. You're not leaving here till you tell me." Martin sighed and replaced his spectacles, "Melodramatic, understanding but totally unnecessary. Do you take me for a fool, Cavell? Do I look a fool? What I told you I had to tell you to gain your co-operation. I will put my cards on the table. Quite literally." He drew out a wallet, found a rectangle of ivory cardboard and placed it on the table. "Mean anything to you?" It meant a great deal. Across the middle of the card ran the legend. "Council for World Peace." At the bottom right-hand corner: "Henry Martin, London Secretary." Martin pulled his chair close and leaned forward, his forearms on my desk. His face was intent, serious. "Of course you know about it, Mr. Cavell. I don't think I exaggerate when I say that it is by far the greatest force for good in the world to-day. Our council cuts across race, religion and politics. You will have heard that our Prime Minister and most members of the cabinet belong. I do not wish to comment on that. But I can state that most of the church dignitaries in Britain, whether Protestant, Catholic or Jewish, are members. Our list of titled members reads like Debrett's, of other distinguished members like Who's Who. The Foreign Office, who really know what's going on and are more afraid than any, are solidly on our side. We have the support of all the best, the wisest, the most far-seeing men in the country to-day. I have very powerful men behind me, Mr. Cavell. He smiled faintly. "We even have influential members in Mordon." All he said I knew to be true --except that bit about Mordon, and maybe that had to be true, to account for his knowledge. I wasn't a member of the council myself, not being the right type for inclusion either in Debrett's or Who's Who, but I knew that the Council for World Peace, a society semi-secret in its nature inasmuch as it recognised that diplomatic negotiations were best not conducted through newspaper headlines, was of only the most recent origin but already regarded through the western world as the last best hope for mankind. Martin took the card from me and slipped it back in his wallet. "Ah I am trying to say is that I am a respectable man working for a pre-eminently respectable body." "I believe that," I said. "Thank you." He dipped into his brief-case again and brought out a steel container about the size and shape of a hip-flask. "There is, Mr. Cavell, a militarist clique in this country of whom we are frankly terrified, who promise to wreck all our dreams and hopes. Madmen, who are talking, every day more loudly, of waging a preventive war against the Soviet Union. Germ warfare. It is highly unlikely that they will win their way. But it is against the most unlikely contingencies that we have to be most warily on our guard." He spoke like a man who had rehearsed his speech a hundred times. "Against this bacteriological assault there could and would be no defence. A vaccine against this virus has been developed, after two years of the most intensive research, but the only supplies in the world are in Mordon." He paused, hesitated, then pushed the flask across the table to me." "A statement that is no longer quite accurate. This flask was removed from Mordon three days ago. The contents can be cultured to produce sufficient vaccine to immunise any nation on earth. We are our brothers' keepers, Mr. Cavell." I stared at him. I said nothing. "Please take this at once, to this address in Warsaw." He pushed a slip of paper across the table. "You will be paid a hundred pounds now, all expenses, and a hundred pounds on your return. A delicate mission, I realise, perhaps even a dangerous one, although in your case I should not think so. We have investigated you very carefully, Mr. Cavell. You are reputed to know the byways of Europe as a taxi-driver knows the streets of London: I do not foresee that frontiers will present you with much difficulty." "And my anti-war sympathies," I murmured. "Of course, of course." The first trace of impatience. "We had to check most carefully, you realise that. You had the best all-over qualifications. You were the only choice." "Well, now," I murmured. "This is flattering. And interesting." "I don't know what you mean," he said brusquely. "Will you do it, Mr. Cavell?" "No." "No?" His face became very still. "You say ' no'? This, then, is the extent of your precious concern about your fellowmen? All this talk in Mordon-----" |
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