Part 5 (1/2)
The CIA chief grinned sourly at his own allusion.
The next night, the big news was the countdown in process at Canaveral to put a functioning ”dome” on the moon. If the dome could be landed successfully, complete with live animals, a man would follow shortly.
That was foregone. The question was landing the dome, just a small s.p.a.ces.h.i.+p body, but completely equipped to keep a man alive for two years, in case anything went wrong with plans to bring him back p.r.o.nto.
Bill Howard's voice was excited, and he ran his fingers through his hair, pus.h.i.+ng it back as he leaned across the desk, the map of Florida behind him.
”To the statesmen, this is a question of who is first and who is second, and perhaps who will control the s.p.a.ceways,” he said after describing the countdown in process.
”But to the peoples of the world, this is mankind, reaching for the stars.
”It is not known,” he said solemnly, ”whether the failure of many of our shots has been human error or sabotage. Human error is a frailty of the race. Sabotage is a frailty of statesmans.h.i.+p, that the world is still divided as it reaches for the stars. Yet each is possible.
”Is there a mechanical error built in by human frailty in tonight's shot? Is there a saboteur at work?
”Or, as the countdown reaches zero, one hour from now, will the dome tear through the atmosphere of Earth in man's first real step to the stars successfully? Is our bird perfect this time?” he asked, as the break came.
The witches danced on crying their chant ... ”Witches of the world, unite to make it clean, clean, clean, Witch clean,--NOW!”
Randolph was chewing his lip still as he went to bed that night. The man from the Narcotics Squad had left peaceably. There were answers to all the questions, and it wasn't his worry anyway. He'd be glad when the little girl had her operation. Grafting bones and muscles might be miraculous, but they were explicable and everybody understood them.
Talk of the FCC investigation had died aborning, but talk like that was enough to upset anybody. Everything had been upsetting recently, even though the up-curve on Witch products was holding steady.
The American dome landed on the moon the morning of the day that the crippled child was scheduled to come on the Witch program.
For the American people it was a day of celebration comparable to the Fourth of July. In the White House gloom hung like a palpable shroud.
”They'll have to move fast now,” the Secretary of War was reporting to his chief. ”They can't afford to let us get our man up there. Even if we could shoot him off successfully.”
”We can't shoot a man up there until we've proved in at least two more successful shots that we can get him there,” Security declared forcefully. ”The threat from our enemies is as nothing to the threat from the vote-wielding public if we tried and failed when a human life is at stake.”
”Formosa is leaking,” admitted the CIA chief. ”We can't hold it more than three days now at the outside.”
The President rested a hand on his desk. ”Two more shots mean at least six months before a man is up there, armed. Three days means Formosa is in the news this week. When the news breaks, credit our doctors and bacteriologists with being on the way to a cure. Fix it so that if they clean up their epidemic, the way they did Suez, we get the credit.
”That's the best we can do right now. Besides looking for a miracle.
But miracles are popular these days,” he added ruefully.
It was Bill Howard who stood outside when Randolph answered his doorbell next morning. He let the big, homely, almost shambling figure in without a word.
”I came to ask you a question I don't think you can answer,” Howard said morosely, not moving farther than the foyer.
”I came to ask you what it is about the witches?”
Randolph chewed his lip, standing there beside his much-larger guest, conscious of his own prim--almost prissy--neatness as it contrasted to the other's s.h.a.ggy look. s.h.a.ggy dog, thought Randolph. Big, unkempt, s.h.a.ggy St. Bernard.
”What about the witches?” he asked finally.