"The Year of the Quiet Sun" - читать интересную книгу автора (Tucker Wilson)FOURBrian Chaney awoke with the guilty feeling that he was tardy again. The Major would never forgive him. He sat on the side of the bed and listened carefully for tell-tale sounds within the building, but none were audible. The station seemed unusually quiet. His room was a small one, a single unit sparsely furnished, in a double row of identical rooms fitted into a former army barracks. The partitions were thin and appeared to have been cheaply and hastily erected; the ceiling was less than three feet above his head — and he was a tall man. Larger common rooms at either end of the only corridor contained the showers and toilets, The place bore an unmistakable military stamp, as though troops had moved out the day before he moved in. Perhaps they had done just that; perhaps troops were now riding those armored trains serving Chicago and Saint Louis. Without armored siding, a passenger train seldom could traverse Chicago’s south side without every window in every car being broken by stones or gunfire. Chaney opened his door and peered into the corridor. It was empty, but recognizable sounds from the two rooms opposite his brought a measure of relief. In one of the rooms someone was opening and closing bureau drawers in frustrated search of something; in the other room the occupant was snoring. Chaney picked up a towel and his shaving kit and went to the showers. The snoring was audible all the way down the corridor. The cold water was “Stop!” Arthur Saltus was in the doorway, pointing an accusatory finger. “Put down the razor, civilian.” Startled, Chaney dropped the razor into the bowl of tepid water. “Good morning, Commander.” He recovered his wits and the razor to begin the shave. “Why?” “Secret orders came in the middle of the night,” Saltus declared. “All the people of the future wear long beards, like old Abe Lincoln. We must be in character.” “Nudists with bushy beards,” Chaney commented. “That must be quite a sight.” He kept on shaving. “Well, you bit hard yesterday, civilian.” Saltus put an exploratory hand under the shower and turned on the water. He had anticipated the result. “This hasn’t changed since boot camp,” he told Chaney. “Every barracks is allotted ten gallons of hot water. The first man in uses it all.” “I “This building? It must have been at one time or another, but the station wasn’t always a military post. I spotted that coming in. Katrina said it was built as an ordnance plant in 1941 — you know, during “That other building is new.” “The lab building is brand new. Katrina said it was built to house that noisy machine — built to last forever. Reinforced concrete all the way down; a basement, and a sub-basement, and other things. The vehicle is down there somewhere hauling monkeys back and forth.” “I’d like to “You and me together, civilian. You and me and the Major.” His head popped out of the shower and his voice dropped to a stage whisper. “But I’ve got it figured.” “You have? What?” “Promise you won’t tell Katrina? You won’t tell the man in the White House I broke security?” “Cross my heart, spit at the moon and everything.” “All right: all this is a plot, a trick to be ahead of everybody else. Katrina has been misleading us, We’re not going up to the turn of the century — we’re going back down, back into history!” “Back? Why?” “We’re going back two thousand years, civilian. To grab those old scrolls of yours, pirate them, as if they “But they seldom have titles.” Saltus was stopped. “Why not?” “Titles just weren’t important at the time.” “Well — no matter; we’ll make do, we’ll just copy everything we can find and sort them out later. And when we’re finished we’ll put everything back the way we found it and make our escape.” Saltus snapped his fingers to indicate a job well done and went back into the shower. “Is that all?” “That’s enough for us — we’ve scooped the world! And a long time afterward — you know, whatever year it was — some shepherd will stumble into the cave and find them in the usual way. Nobody but us will be the wiser.” Chaney wiped his face dry. “How do we get into the Palestine of two thousand years ago? Cross the Atlantic in a canoe?” “No, no, we don’t ride backwards Chaney said: “Fantastic.” A face emerged from the shower. “Are you being disagreeable, civilian?” “I’m being skeptical, sailor.” “Spoil-sport!” “Why would we want to copy the scrolls?” “To be first.” “Why that?” Saltus stepped all the way out of the shower. “Well — to be “I carry it in my pocket. How do we copy the scrolls in the dark, in a cave?” “Now that’s my department! Infra-red equipment, of course. Don’t fret about the technical end, mister. I’m an old cameraman, you know.” “I didn’t know.” “Well, I I remember. “I was right there on deck, mister. Photographer’s apprentice, stationed on the Chaney said: “I’ve learned something new.” “What s that?’ “Why you and I were brought in here. I map and structure the future; you will film it. What’s the Major’s specialty?” “Air Intelligence. I thought you knew.” “I didn’t. Espionage?” “No, no — he’s another desk man, and he hates it as much as I do. Old William is a brain: interrogation and interpretation. He briefs the pilots before they fly out, tells them where to find the targets, what is concealing them, and what is defending them; and then he quizzes the hell out of them when they come back to learn what they saw, where they saw it, how it behaved, how it smelled, and what was new firing at them.” “Air Intelligence,” Chaney mused. “A sharpie?” “You can bet your last tax dollar, civilian. Do you remember those maps Katrina gave us yesterday?” “I’m not likely to forget them. Top secret.” “Read that literally for the Major: he memorized them. Mister, if you could show him another map today with one small Illinois town shifted a quarter of an inch away from yesterday’s location, old William would put his long finger on the spot and say, ‘This town has moved.’ He’s Chaney nodded his wonder. “Do you see what kind of team Katrina is putting together? What kind the mystery man Seabrooke has recruited? I wish I knew what they really expect us to find up there.” Arthur Saltus left his room and crossed the corridor to stand at Chaney’s door, dressed for a summer day. “Hey — how do you like our Katrina?” Chaney said: “Let us consider beauty a sufficient end.” “Mister, did you swallow a copy of Bartlett?” A grin. “I like to prowl through old cultures, old times. Bartlett and Haakon are my favorites; each in his way offers a rich storehouse, a treasury.” “Haakon? Who is Haakon?” “A latter-day Viking; he was born too late. Haakon wrote “Photographs five thousand years ago?” “No; photographs of the remains of tribal life five thousand years ago: Byzantine dams, Nabataean wells, old Negev water courses still holding water, still serving the people who live there today. The Nabataeans built things to “I’d like to see that. May I borrow the book?” Chaney nodded. “I have it with me.” He stared at a closed door and listened to the snores. “Wake him up?” “No! Not if we have to live in the same room with him all day. He’s a bear when he’s routed out of his cave before he’s ready — and he doesn’t eat breakfast. He says he thinks and fights well on an empty stomach.” Chaney said: “The company is Spartan; see all their wounds on the front.” “I give up! Let’s go to breakfast.” They quit the converted barracks and struck off along the narrow concrete sidewalk, walking north toward the commissary. A jeep and a staff car moved along the street, while in the middle distance a cluster of civilian cars were parked about a large building housing the commissary. They were the only ones who walked. Chaney asked: “This is swimming weather. Is there a pool here?” “There has to be — Katrina didn’t get that beautiful tan under a sun lamp. I think it’s over that way — over on E Street, near the Officers’ Club. Want to try it this afternoon?” “If she will permit it. We may have to study.” “I’m already tired of that! I don’t “I’m fascinated by them — numbers and people. The relief of a plastic stomach may cause a citizen to switch from the activist Saltus said: “Excuse me. What problem?” “You’ve been away. The Lakes are at their highest levels in history; they’re flooding out ten thousand miles of shoreline. The average annual precipitation in the Lakes watersheds has been steadily increasing for the past eighty years and the high water is causing damage. Those summer houses have been toppling into the Lakes for years as the water eroded the bluffs; in a very short while more than summer houses will topple in. Beaches are gone, private docks are going, low land is becoming marshes. Sad thing, Commander.” “Hey — when we go into Chicago on the survey, maybe we should look to see if Michigan Avenue is underwater.” “That’s no joke. It may be.” “Oh, doom, doom, doom!” Saltus declared. “Your books and tables are always crying doom.” “I’ve published only one book. There was no doom.” “William said it was poppycock. I haven’t read it, I’m not much of a reader, mister, but he looked down his nose, And Katrina said the newspapers gave you hell.” “You’ve been talking about me. Idle gossiping!” “Hey — you were two or three days late coming in, remember? We had to talk about something, so we talked about you, mostly — curiosity about one tame civilian on a military team. Katrina knew all about you; I guess she read your dossier forward and backward. She said you were in trouble — trouble with your company, with reviewers and scholars and churches and — oh, everybody.” Saltus gave his walking companion a slanted glance. “Old William said you were bent on destroying the foundations of Christianity. You must have done Chaney answered with a single word. Saltus was interested. “I don’t know that.” “It’s Aramaic. You know it in English.” “Say it again — slowly — and tell me what it is.” Chaney repeated it, and Saltus turned it on his tongue, delighted with the sound and the fresh delivery of an old transitive verb. “Hey — I like that!” He walked on, repeating the word just above his breath. After a space: “What about those foundations?” “I translated two scrolls into English and caused them to be published,” Chaney said with resignation. “I could have saved my time, or spent my holiday digging up buried cities. One man in ten read the book slowly and carefully and understood what I had done — the other nine began yapping before they finished the first half.” His companion was ready with a quick grin. “William yapped, and Katrina seemed scandalized, but I guess Gilbert Seabrooke read it slowly: Katrina said the Bureau was embarrassed, but Seabrooke stood up for you. Now “An honest neutral, subject to intimidation.” “All right, mister: intimidate this honest neutral.” Chaney looked down at the commissary, guessing at the remaining distance. He intended to be short; the subject was painful since a university press had published the book and a misunderstanding public had taken it up. “I don’t want you yapping at me, Commander, so you need first to understand one word: “ “No — it’s Hebraic, and it means fiction, religious fiction. Compare it to whatever modern parallel you like: historical fiction, soap opera, detective stories, fantasy; the ancient Hebrews liked their “I guess nobody told them,” Saltus said. “All right, I’ll go along with that.” “Thank you. The public should be as generous.” “Didn’t you tell them about “Certainly. I spent twelve pages of the introduction explaining the term and its general background; I pointed out that it was a commonplace thing, that the old Hebrews frequently employed religious or heroic fiction as a means of putting across the message. Times were hard, the land was almost always under the heel of an oppressor, and they desperately wanted freedom — they wanted the messiah that had been promised for the past several hundred years.” “Ah — there’s your mistake, civilian! Who wants to waste twelve pages gnawing on the bone to get at the marrow?” He glanced around at Chaney and saw his pained expression. “Excuse me, mister. I’m not much of a reader — and I guess they weren’t either.” Chaney said: “Both my scrolls were Saltus was puzzled. “Well — what’s the trouble?” “Haven’t you read the Bible?” “No.” “Nor the Book of Revelations?” “I’m not much of a reader, civilian.” “The first scroll was an original copy of the Book of Revelations — original, in that it was written at least a hundred years earlier than the book included in the Bible. And it was presented as fiction. That’s why Major Moresby is angry with me. Moresby — and people like him — don’t Saltus whistled. “I should think not! He takes all that seriously, mister. He believes in prophecies.” “I don’t,” Chaney said. “I’m skeptical, but I’m quite willing to let others believe if they so choose. I said nothing in the book to undermine their beliefs; I offered no opinions of my own. But I Saltus said: “And old William went up in smoke. He blamed you for everything.” “Almost everyone did. A newspaper reviewer in Saint Louis questioned my patriotism; another in Minneapolis hinted that I was the anti-Christ, and a communist tool to boot. A newspaper in Rome skewered me with the unkindest cut of all: it printed the phrase They walked in silence for a space. A car sped by them toward the busy commissary. Chaney asked: “A personal question, Commander?” “Fire away, mister.” “How did you manage your rank so young?” Saltus laughed. “You haven’t been in service?” “No.” “Blame it on Chaney nodded. “I’ve heard the rumors, the stories. The Israeli papers were filled with Israeli troubles, but now and then outside news was given some space.” “You’ll hear the truth someday; it will jolt you. Washington hasn’t released the figures, but when they do you’ll get a stiff jolt in the belly. A lot of things are kept undercover in undeclared wars. Some of the things work their way into the open after a while, but others never do.” Another sidelong glance, measuring Chaney. “Do you remember when the Chinese lobbed that missile on the port city we were working? That port below Saigon?” “No one can forget that.” “Well, mister, our side retaliated in kind, and the Chinese lost two railroad towns that same week — Keiyang and Yungning. Two holes in the ground, and several hundred square miles of radioactive cropland. Their missile was packing a low-yield A, it was all they could manage at the time, but we hit Chaney digested the information with some alarm. “What did they do, to retaliate for “Nothing — yet. But they will, mister, they will! As soon as they think we’re asleep, they’ll clobber us with something. And hard.” Chaney had to agree. “I suppose you’ve had more than one tour of duty in the South China Sea?” “More than one,” Saltus told him. “On my last tour, I had two good ships torpedoed under me. Not one, but two, and Chinese subs were responsible both times. Those bastards can really shoot, mister — they’re good.” “A Lieutenant Commander is equal to what?” “A Major. Old William and me are buddies under the skin. But don’t be impressed. If it wasn’t for this war I’d be just another junior grade Lieutenant.” The desire for further conversation fell away and they walked in pensive silence to the commissary. Chaney recalled with distaste his contributions to Pentagon papers concerning the coming capabilities of the Chinese. Saltus seemed to have confirmed a part of it. Chaney went first through the serving line but paused for a moment at the end of it, balancing the tray to avoid spilling coffee. He searched the room. “Hey — there’s Katrina!” “Where?” “Over there, by that far window.” “I don’t believe in waiting for an invitation.” “Push on, push on, I’m right behind you!” Chaney discovered that he Arthur Saltus was there first. He promptly sat down in the chair nearest the young woman and transferred his breakfast dishes from the tray to the table. Saltus put his elbows on the table, peered closely at Katrina, then half turned to Chaney. “Isn’t she lovely this morning! What would your friend Bartlett say about this?” Chaney noted the tiny line of disapproval above her eyes. “Her very frowns are fairer far, than the smiles of other maidens are.” “Hear! Hear!” Saltus clapped his hands in approval, and stared back impudently at nearby diners who had turned to look. “Nosey peasants,” was his loud whisper. Kathryn van Hise struggled to maintain her reserve. “Good morning, gentlemen, Where is the Major?” “Snoring,” Arthur Saltus retorted. “We sneaked out to have breakfast alone with you.” “ “These peasants aren’t romantic,” Saltus disagreed. “They lack color and Old World charm.” He stared bleakly at the room. “Hey — mister, we could practice on Katrina made a hasty sound of warning. “Be careful of your conversation in public places. Certain subjects are restricted to the briefing room.” Chaney said: “Quick! Switch to Aramaic. These peasants will never catch on.” Saltus began to laugh but lust as suddenly shut it off. “I only know one word.” He seemed embarrassed. “Then don’t repeat it,” Chaney warned. “Katrina may have studied Aramaic — she reads everything.” “Hey — that’s not fair.” “I do unfair things, I retaliate in kind, Commander. Last night, I sneaked into the briefing room while you were all asleep.” He turned to the young woman. “I know your secret. I know one of the alternative targets.” “Do you, Mr. Chaney?” “I do, Miss van Hise. I raided the briefing room and turned it inside out — a very thorough search, indeed. I found a secret map hidden under one of the telephones — the red phone. The alternative target is the Qumran monastery. We’re going back to destroy the embarrassing scrolls — rip them from their jars and burn them. There.” He sat back with barely concealed amusement. The woman looked at him for a space, and Chaney had a sudden, intuitive torment. He felt uneasy. When she broke her silence, her voice was so low it would not carry to the adjoining tables. “You are almost right, Mr. Chaney. One of our alternatives Chaney was instantly wary. “I will have nothing to do with those scrolls. I’ll not tamper with them.” “That will not be necessary. They are not an alternate target.” “What “I don’t know the correct date, sir. Research has not been successful in determining the precise time and place, but Mr. Scabrooke believes it will be a profitable alternate. It is under active study.” She hesitated and dropped her gaze to the table. “The general location in Palestine is or was a site known as the Hill of Skulls.” Chaney rocked in his chair. In the long silence, Arthur Saltus groped for an understanding. “Chaney, what — ?” He looked to the woman, then back to the man. “Hey — let Chaney said quietly: “Seabrooke has picked a very hot alternative. If we can’t go up there for the survey, our team is going |
||
|