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Alfred Bester. The Demolished Man











1



Explosion! Concussion! The vault doors burst open. And deep inside, the
money is racked ready for pillage, rapine, loot. Who's that? Who's inside the
vault? Oh God! The Man With No Face! Looking. Looming. Silent. Horrible.
Run... Run...
Run, or I'll miss the Paris Pneumatique and that exquisite girl with her
flower face and figure of passion. There's time if I run. But that isn't the
Guard before the gate. Oh Christ! The Man With No Face. Looking. Looming.
Silent. Don't scream. Stop screaming...
But I'm not screaming. I'm singing on a stage of sparkling marble while the
music soars and the lights burn. But there's no one out there in the
amphitheater. A great shadowed pit... empty except for one spectator. Silent.
Staring. Looming. The Man With No Face.


And this time his scream had sound.
Ben Reich awoke.
He lay quietly in the hydropatlhic bed while his heart shuddered and his
eyes focused at random on in the room, simulating a calm he could not feel.
The walls of green jade, the nightlight in the porcelain mandarin whose head
nodded interminably if you touched him, the multi-clock that radiated the time
of three planets and six satellites, the bed itself, a crystal pool flowing
with carbonated glycerine at ninety-nine point nine Fahrenheit.
The door opened softly and Jonas appeared in the gloom, a shadow in puce
sleeping suit, a shade with the face of a horse and the bearing of an
undertaker.
"Again?" Reich asked.
"Yes, Mr. Reich."
"Loud?"
"Very loud, sir. And terrified."
"God damn your jackass cars," Reich growled. "I'm never afraid."
"No, sir."
"Get out."
"Yes, sir. Good night, sir." Jonas stepped back and closed the door.
Reich shouted: "Jonas!"
The valet reappeared.
"Sorry, Jonas."
"Quite all right, sir."
"It isn't all right," Reich charmed him with a smile. "I'm treating you
like a relative. I don't pay enough for the privilege."
"Oh no, sir."
"Next time I yell at you, yell right back. Why should I have all the fun?"
"Oh, Mr. Reich..."
"Do that and you get a raise." The smile again.
"That's all, Jonas. Thank you."
"Thank you, sir." The valet withdrew.
Reich arose from the bed and toweled himself before the cheval mirror,
practicing the smile. "Make your enemies by choice," he muttered, "not by
accident." He stared at the reflection: the heavy shoulders, narrow flanks,
long corded legs... the sleek head with wide eyes, chiseled nose, small
sensitive mouth scarred by implacability.
"Why?" he asked. "I wouldn't change looks with the devil. I wouldn't change
places with God. Why the screaming?"
He put on a gown and glanced at the clock, unaware that he was noting the
time panorama of the solar system with an unconscious skill that would have
baffled his ancestors. The dials read:



A.D. 2301





Night, noon, summer, winter... without bothering to think, Reich could have
rattled off the time and season for any meridian on any body in the solar
system. Here in New York it was a bitter morning after a bitter night of
dreaming. He would give himself a few minutes of analysis with the Esper
psychiatrist he retained. The screaming had to stop.
"E for Esper," he muttered. "Esper for Extra Sensory Perception... For
Telepaths, Mind Readers, Brain Peepers. You'd think a mind-reading doctor
could stop the screaming. You'd think an Esper M.D. would earn his money and
peep inside your head and stop the screaming. Those damned mindreaders are
supposed to be the greatest advance since Homo sapiens evolved. E for
Evolution. Bastards! E for Exploitation!"
He yanked open the door, shaking with fury.
"But I'm not afraid!" he shouted. "I'm never afraid."
He stepped down the corridor, clacking his sandals sharply on the silver
floor, ke-tat-ke-tat-ke-tat-ke-tat, indifferent to the slumber of his house
staff, unaware that this early morning skeletal clack awakened twelve hearts
to hatred and dread. He thrust open the door of his analyst's suite, entered
and at once lay down on the couch.
Carson Breen, Esper Medical Doctor 2, was already awake and ready for him.
As Reich's staff analyst he slept the "nurse's sleep" in which he remained en
rapport
with his patient and could only be awakened by his needs. That one
scream had been enough for Breen. Now he was seated alongside the couch,
elegant in embroidered gown (his job paid twenty thousand credits a year) and
sharply alert (his employer was generous but demanding).
"Go ahead, Mr. Reich."
"The Man With No Face again," Reich growled.
"Nightmares?"
"You lousy blood-sucker, peep me and find out. No. Sorry. Childish of me.
Yes, nightmares again. I was trying to rob a bank. Then I was trying to catch
a train. Then someone was singing. Me, I think. I'm trying to give you the
pictures best I can. I don't think I'm leaving anything out..." There was a
long pause. Finally Reich blurted: "Well? You peep anything?"
"You persist that you cannot identify The Man With No Face, Mr. Reich?"
"How can I? I never see it. All I know is..."
"I think you can. You simply will not."
"Listen," Reich burst out in guilty rage. "I pay you twenty thousand. If
the best you can do is make idiotic statements..."
"Do you mean that, Mr. Reich, or is it simply a part of the general anxiety
syndrome?"
"There is no anxiety," Reich shouted. "I'm not afraid. I'm never..." He
stopped himself, realizing the inutility of ranting while the deft mind of the
peeper searched underneath his overturning words. "You're wrong anyway," he
said sulkily. "I don't know who it is. It's a Man With No Face. That's all."
"You've been rejecting the essential points, Mr. Reich. You must be made to
see them. We'll try a little free association. Without words, please. Just
think. Robbery...
"Jewels - watches - diamonds - stocks - bonds - sovereigns -
counterfeiting - cash - bullion - dort...
"
"What was that last again?"
"Slip of the mind. Meant to think bort... uncut, gem stones."
"It was not a slip. It was a significant correction or, rather, alteration.
Let's continue. Pneumatique..."
"Long - car - compartments - air - conditioned... That doesn't make sense."
"It does, Mr. Reich. A phallic pun. Read `Heir' for `air' and you'll see
it. Continue, please."
"You peepers are too damned smart. Let's see. Pneumatique... train -
underground - compressed air - ultra sonic speed---`We transport You Into
transports,' slogan of the---What the devil is the name of that company? Can't
remember. Where'd the notion come from anyway?
"
"From the pre-conscious, Mr. Reich. One more trial and you'll begin to
understand. Amphitheater...
"Seats - pits - balcony - boxes - stalls - horse stalls - Martian horses -
Martian Pampas...
"
"And there you have it, Mr. Reich. Mars. In the past six months, you've had
ninety-seven nightmares about The Man With No Face. He's been your constant
enemy, frustrator, and inspirer of terror in dreams that contain three common
denominators... Finance, Transportation, and Mars. Over and over again... The
Man With No Face, and Finance, Transportation, and Mars."
"That doesn't mean anything to me."
"It must mean something, Mr. Reich. You must be able to identify this
terrifying figure. Why else would you attempt to escape by rejecting his
face?"
"I'm not rejecting anything."
"I offer as further clues the altered word `Dort' and the forgotten name of
the company that coined the slogan `We Transport You Into---' "
"I tell you I don't know who it is." Reich arose abruptly from the couch.
"Your clues don't help. I can't make any identification."
"The Man With No Face does not fill you with fear because he's faceless.
You know who he is. You hate him and fear him, but you know who he is."
"You're the peeper. You tell me. "
"There's a limit to my ability, Mr. Reich. I can read your mind no deeper
without help."
"What do you mean, help? You're the best E.M.D. I could hire. If..."
"You're neither thinking nor meaning that, Mr. Reich. You deliberately
hired a 2nd Class Esper in order to protect yourself in such an emergency. Now
you're paying the price of your caution. If you want the screaming to stop,
you'll have to consult one of the 1st Class men... Say, Augustus Tate or Gart
or Samuel @kins..."
"I'll think about it," Reich muttered and turned to go. As he opened the
door, Breen called: "By the way... `We Transport You Into Transports' is the
slogan of the D'Courtney Cartel. How does that tie in with the alteration of
`bort' to `dort'? Think it over."
"The Man With No Face!"
Without staggering, Reich slammed the door across the path from his mind to
Breen and then lurched down the corridor toward his own suite. A wave of
savage hatred burst over him. "He's right. It's D'Courtney who's giving me
the screams. Not because I'm afraid of him. I'm afraid of myself. Known all
along. Known it deep down inside. Known that once I faced it I'd have to kill
that D'Courtney bastard. It's no face because it's the face of murder.
"


Fully dressed and in his wrong mind, Reich stormed out of his apartment and
descended to the street where a Monarch Jumper picked him up and carried him
in one graceful hop to the giant tower that housed the hundreds of floors and
thousands of employees of Monarch's New York Office. Monarch Tower was the
central nervous system of an incredibly vast corporation, a pyramid of
transportation, communication, heavy industry, manufacture, sales
distribution, research, exploration, importation. Monarch Utilities &
Resources, Inc. bought and sold, traded and gave, made and destroyed. Its
pattern of subsidiaries and holding companies was so complex that it demanded
the full-time services of a 2nd Class Esper Accountant to trace the
labyrinthine flow of its finances.
Reich entered his office, followed by his chief (Esper 3) secretary and her
staff, bearing the litter of the morning's work.
"Dump it and jet," he growled.
They deposited the papers and recording crystals on his desk and departed
hastily but without rancor. They were accustomed to his rages. Reich seated
himself behind his desk, trembling with a fury that was already goring
D'Courtney. Finally he muttered: "I'll give the bastard one more chance."
He unlocked his desk, opened the drawer-safe and withdrew the Executive's
Code Book, restricted to the executive heads of the firms listed quadruple
A-1-* by Lloyds. He found most of the material he required in the middle pages
of the book:



QQBA ........ PARTNERSHIP
RRCB ........ BOTH OUR
SSDC ........ BOTH YOUR
TTED ........ MERGER
UUFE ........ INTERESTS
VVGF ........ INFORMATION
WWHG ........ ACCEPT OFFER
XXJH ........ GENERALLY KNOWN
YYJI ........ SUGGEST
ZZXJ ........ CONFIDENTIAL
AALK ........ EQUAL
BBML ........ CONTRACT


Marking his place in the code book, Reich flipped the v-phone on and said
to the image of the interoffice operator: "Get me Code."
The screen dazzled and cut to a smokey room cluttered with books and coils
of tape. A bleached man in a faded shirt glanced at the screen, then leaped to
attention.
"Yes, Mr. Reich?"
"Morning, Hassop. You look like you need a vacation." Make your enemies by
choice
. "Take a week at Spaceland. Monarch expense."
"Thank you, Mr. Reich. Thank you very much."
"This one's confidential. To Craye D'Courtney. Send..." Reich consulted the
Code Book. "Send YYJI TTED RRCB UUFE AALK QQBA. Get the answer to me like
rockets. Right?"
"Right, Mr. Reich. I'll jet."
Reich cut off the phone. He jabbed his hand once into the pile of papers
and crystals on his desk, picked up a crystal and dropped it into the
play-back. His chief secretary's voice said: "Monarch Gross off two points one
one three four per cent. D'Courtney Gross up two point one one three oh per
cent..."
"God damn him!" Reich growled. "Out of my pocket into his." He snapped off
the play-back and arose in an agony of impatience. It would take hours for the
reply to come. His whole life hung on D'Courtney's reply. He left his office
and began to roam through the floors and departments of Monarch Tower,
pretending the remorseless personal supervision he usually exercised. His
Esper secretary unobtrusively accompanied him like a trained dog.
"Trained bitch!" Reich thought. Then aloud: "I'm sorry. Did you peep that?"
"Quite all right, Mr. Reich. I understand."
"Do you? I don't. Damn D'Courtney!"
In Personnel they were testing, checking, and screening the usual mass of
job applicants... clerks, craftsmen, specialists, middle bracket executives,
top echelon experts. All of the preliminary elimination was done with
standardized tests and interviews, and never to the satisfaction of Monarch's
Esper Personnel Chief who was stalking through the floor in an icy rage when
Reich entered. The fact that Reich's secretary had sent an advance telepathic
announcement of the visit made no difference to him.
"I have allotted ten minutes per applicant for my final screening
interview," the Chief was snapping to an assistant. "Six per hour, forty-eight
per day. Unless my percentage of final rejections drops below thirty-five, I
am wasting my time; which means you are wasting Monarch's time. I am not
employed by Monarch to screen out the obviously unsuitable. That is your work.
See to it." He turned to Reich and nodded pedantically. "Good morning, Mr.
Reich."
"Morning. Trouble?"
"Nothing that cannot be handled once this staff understands that Extra
Sensory Perception is not a miracle but a skill subject to wage-hour
limitations. And what is your decision on Blonn, Mr. Reich?"
Secretary: "He hasn't read your memo yet."
"May I point out, young woman, that unless I am used with maximum
efficiency I am wasted. The Blonn memo has been on Mr. Reich's desk for three
days.
"
"Who the hell is Blonn?" Reich asked.
"First, the background, Mr. Reich: There are approximately one hundred
thousand (100,000) 3rd Class Espers in the Esper Guild. An Esper 3 can peep
the conscious level of a mind---can discover what a subject is thinking at the
moment of thought. A 3rd is the lowest class of telepath. Most of Monarch's
security positions are held by 3rds. We employ over five hundred..."
"He knows all this. Everybody does. Get to the point, long-wind!"
"Permit me, if I may, to arrive at the point in my own way. Next, there
are approximately ten thousand 2nd Class Espers in the Guild," the Personnel
Chief continued frostily. "They are experts like myself who can penetrate
beneath the conscious level of the mind to the preconscious. Most 2nds are in
the professional class... physicians, lawyers, engineers, educators,
economists, architects and so on."
"And you all cost a fortune," Reich growled.
"Why not? We have unique service to sell. Monarch appreciates the fact.
Monarch employs over one hundred 2nds at present."
"Will you get to the point?"
"Finally there are less than a thousand 1st Class Espers in the Guild. The
1sts are capable of deep peeping, through the conscious and preconscious
layers down to the unconscious... the lowest levels of the mind. Primordial
basic desires and so forth. These, of course, hold premium positions.
Education, specialized medical service... analysts like Tate, Gart, @kins,
Moselle... criminologists like Lincoln Powell of the Psychotic Division...
Political Analysts, State Negotiators, Special Cabinet Advisors, and so on.
Thus far Monarch Utilities has never had occasion to hire a 1st."
"And?" Reich muttered.
"The occasion has arisen, Mr. Reich, and I believe Blonn may be available.
Briefly..."
"It says here."
"Briefly, Mr. Reich, Monarch is hiring so many Espers that I have suggested we
set up a special Esper Personnel Department, headed by a 1st like Blonn, to
devote itself exclusively to interviewing telepaths."
"He's wondering why you can't handle it."
"I have given you the background to explain why I cannot handle the job,
Mr. Reich. I am a 2nd Class Esper. I can telepath normal applicants rapidly
and efficiently, but I cannot handle other Espers with the same speed and
economy. All Espers are accustomed to using mind-blocks of varying
effectiveness depending on their rating. It would take me one hour per 3rd for
an efficient screening interview. It would take me three hours per 2nd. I
could not possibly peep through the mind-block of a 1st. We must hire a 1st
like Blonn for this work. The cost will be enormous, of course, but the
necessity is urgent."
"What's so urgent?" Reich said.
"For heaven's sake! Don't give him that picture! That isn't diversion.
It's waving a red flag. He's sore enough now.
"
"I have my job to do, Madam." To Reich, the Chief said: "The fact is,
sir, we are not hiring the best Espers. The D'Courtney Cartel has been taking
the cream of the Espers away from us. Over and over again, through lack of
proper facilities, we have been mouse-trapped by D'Courtney into bidding for
inferior people while D'Courtney has quietly appropriated the best."
"Damn you!" Reich shouted. "Damn D'Courtney. All right. Set it up. And tell
this Blonn to start mouse-trapping D'Courtney. You'd better start, too."
Reich tore out of Personnel and over to Sales-city. The same unpleasant
information was waiting for him. Monarch Utilities & Resources was losing the
gut-fight with the D'Courtney Cartel. It was losing the fight in every
sector-city---Advertising, Engineering, Research, Public Relations. There was
no escaping the certainty of defeat. Reich knew his back was to the wall.
He returned to his own office and paced in a fury for five minutes. "It's
no use," he muttered. "I know I'll have to kill him. He won't accept merger.
Why should he? He's licked me and he knows it. I'll have to kill him and I'll
need help. Peeper help."
He flipped on the v-phone and told the operator; "Recreation."
A sparkling lounge appeared on the screen, decorated in chrome and enamel,
equipped with game tables and a bar dispenser. It appeared to be and was used
as a recreation center. It was, in fact, headquarters of Monarch's powerful
espionage division. The Recreation Director, a bearded scholar named West,
looked up from a chess problem, then rose to attention.
"Good morning, Mr. Reich."
Warned by the formal `Mister,' Reich said: "Good morning, Mr. West. Just a
routine check. Paternalism, you know. How's amusement these days?"
"Modulated, Mr. Reich. However, I must complain, sir. I think there's
entirely too much gambling going on." West stalled in a fussy voice until two
bona fide Monarch clerks innocently finished their drinks and departed. Then
he relaxed and slumped into his chair. "All clear, Ben. Shoot."
"Has Hassop broken the confidential code yet, Ellery?"
The peeper shook his head.
"Trying?"
West smiled and nodded.
"Where's D'Courtney?"
"En route to Terra, aboard the `Astra'."
"Know his plans? Where he'll be staying?"
"No. Want a check?"
"I don't know. It depends..."
"Depends on what?" West glanced at him curiously. "I wish the Telepathic
Pattern could be transmitted by phone, Ben. I'd like to know what you're
thinking at."
Reich smiled grimly. "Thank God for the phone. At least we've got that
protection from mind readers. What's your attitude on crime, Ellery?"
"Typical."
"Of anybody?"
"Of the Guild. The Guild doesn't like it, Ben."
"So what's so hot about the Esper Guild? You know the value of money,
success... Why don't you clever-up? Why do you let the Guild do your
thinking?"
"You don't understand. We're born in the Guild. We live with the Guild. We
die in the Guild. We have the right to elect Guild officers, and that's all.
The Guild runs our professional lives. It trains us, grades us, sets ethical
standards, and sees that we stick to them. It protects us by protecting the
layman, the same as medical associations. We have the equivalent of the
Hippocratic Oath. It's called the Esper Pledge. God help any of us if we break
it... as I judge you're suggesting I should."
"Maybe I am," Reich said intently. "Maybe I'm hinting it could be worth
your while to break the peeper pledge. Maybe I'm thinking in terms of money
... more than you or any 2nd Class peeper ever sees in a lifetime."
"Forget it, Ben. Not interested."
"So you bust your pledge. What happens?"
"We're ostracized."
"That's all? Is that so awful? With a fortune in your pocket? Smart peepers
have broken with the Guild before. They've been ostracized. So what?
Clever-up, Ellery."
West smiled wryly: "You wouldn't understand, Ben."
"Make me understand."
"Those ousted peepers you mention... like Jerry Church. They weren't so
smart. It's like this..." West considered. "Before surgery really got started,
there used to be a handicapped group called deaf-mutes."
"No-hear no-talk?"
"That's it. They communicated by a manual sign language. That meant they
couldn't communicate with anybody but deaf-mutes. Understand? They had to live
in their own community or they couldn't live at all. A man goes crazy if he
can't talk to friends."
"So?"
"Some of them started a racket. They'd tax the more successful deaf-mutes
for weekly hand-outs. If the victim refused to pay, they'd ostracize him. The
victim always paid. It was a choice of paying or living in solitary until he
went mad."
"You mean you peepers are like deaf-mutes?"
"No, Ben. You normals are the deaf-mutes. If we had to live with you alone,
we'd go mad. So leave me alone. If you're nursing something dirty, I don't
want to know."
West cut off the phone in Reich's face. With a roar of rage, Reich
snatched up a gold paper-weight and hurled it into the crystal screen. Before
the shattered fragments finished flying, he was in the corridor and on his way
out of the building.
His peeper secretary knew where he was going. His peeper chauffeur knew
where he wanted to go. Reich arrived in his apartment and was met by his
peeper house-supervisor who at once announced early luncheon and dialed the
meal to Reich's unspoken demands. Feeling slightly less violent, Reich stalked
into bis study and turned to bis safe, a shimmer of light in the corner.
It was simply a honey-comb paper rack turned out of temporal phrase with a
single-cycle beat. Each second when the safe phase and the temporal phase
coincided, the rack pulsed with a brilliant glow. The safe could only be
opened by the pore-pattern of Reich's left index finger which was
irreproducible.
Reich placed the tip of his finger in the center of the glow. It faded and the
honey-comb rack appeared. Holding his finger in place, he reached up and took
down a small black notebook and a large red envelope. He removed his index
finger and the safe pulsed out of phase again.
Reich flipped through the pages of the notebook... ABDUCTION...
ANARCHISTS... ARSONISTS... BRIBERY (PROVEN)... BRIBERY (POTENTIAL)... Under
(POTENTIAL) he found the names of fifty-seven prominent people. One of them
was Augustus Tate, Esper Medical Doctor 1. He nodded with satisfaction.
He tore open the red envelope and examined its contents. It contained five
sheets of closely written pages in a handwriting that was centuries old. It
was a message from the founder of Monarch Utilities and the Reich clan. Four
of the pages were lettered: PLAN A, PLAN B, PLAN C, PLAN D. The fifth was
headed INTRODUCTION. Reich read the ancient spidery cursive slowly:



To those who come after me: The test of intellect is the refusal to belabor
the obvious. If you have opened this letter we understand one another. I have
prepared four general murder plans which may help you. I bequeath them to you
as part of your Reich inheritance. They are outlines. The details must be
filled in by yourself as your time, your environment, and necessity require.
Caution: The essence of murder never changes. In every era it remains the
conflict of the killer against society with the victim as the prize. And the
ABC of conflict with society remains constant. Be audacious, be brave, be
confident and you will not fail. Against these assets society can have no
defense.
Geoffry Reich



Reich leafed through the plans slowly, filled with admiration for the
first of his line who had had the fore-thought to prepare for every possible
emergency. The plans were out-dated but they kindled imagination; and ideas
began forming and crystallizing to be considered, discarded, and instantly
replaced. One phrase caught his attention:


If you believe yourself a natural killer, avoid planning too carefully.
Leave most to your instinct. Intellect may fail you, but the killer instinct
is invincible.


"The killer instinct," Reich breathed. "By God, I've got that."
The phone chimed once and then the automatic switched on. There was a quick
chatter and tape began to stutter out of the recorder. Reich strode to the
desk and examined it. The message was short and deadly:
CODE TO REICH: REPLY WWHG.
"WWHG. `Offer refused.' Refused! REFUSED! I knew it!" Reich shouted. "All
right, D'Courtney. If you won't let it be merger, then I'll make it murder."





2



Augustus Tate, E.M.D. 1, received Cr. 1,000 per hour of analysis... not a
high fee considering that a patient rarely required more than an hour of the
doctor's devastating time; but it placed his income at Cr. 8,000 a day or well
over Cr. 2 million a year. Few people knew what proportion of that income was
paid into the Esper Guild for the education of other Telepaths and the
furthering of the Guild's Eugenic plan to bring Extra Sensory Perception to
everyone in the world.
Augustus Tate knew, and the 95% he paid was a sore point with him.
Consequently, he belonged to "The League of Esper Patriots," an extreme
right-wing political group within the Guild, dedicated to the preservation of
the autocracy and incomes of the upper grade Espers. It was this membership
that placed him in Ben Reich's BRIBERY (POTENTIAL) category. Reich marched
into Tate's exquisite consultation room, glanced once at Tate's tiny frame---a
figure slightly out of proportion but carefully realigned by tailors. Reich
sat down and grunted: "Peep me quick."
He glared in concentration at Tate while the elegant little peeper examined
him with a glittering eye and spoke in quick bursts: "You're Ben Reich of
Monarch. Ten billion credit firm. Think I should know you. I do. You're
involved in a death struggle with the D'Courtney Cartel. Right? You're
savagely hostile toward D'Courtney. Right? Offered merger this morning. Coded
message: YYJI TTED RRCB UUFE AALK QQBA. Offer refused. Right? In desperation
you have resolved to---" Tate broke off abruptly.
"Go ahead," Reich said.
"To murder Craye D'Courtney as the first step in taking over his cartel.
You want my help... Mr. Reich, this is ridiculous! If you keep on thinking
like this, I'll have to commit you. You know the law."
"Clever-up, Tate. You're going to help me break the law."
"No, Mr. Reich. I'm not in a position to help you."
"You say that? A 1st Class Esper? And I'm supposed to believe it? I'm
supposed to believe you're incapable of outwitting any man, any group, the
whole world?"
Tate smiled. "Sugar for the fly," he said. "A characteristic device of---"
"Peep me," Reich interrupted. "It'll save time. Read what's in my mind.
Your gift. My resources. An unbeatable combination. My God! It's lucky for the
world I'm willing to stop at one murder. Together we could rape the universe."
"No," Tate said with decision. "This won't do. I'll have to commit you, Mr.
Reich."
"Wait. Want to find out what I'm offering you? Read me deeper. How much am
I willing to pay? What's my top limit?"
Tate closed his eyes. His mannequin face tightened painfully. Then his eyes
opened in surprise. "You can't be serious," he exclaimed.
"I am," Reich grunted. "And what's more, you know it's an offer in good
faith, don't you?"
Tate nodded slowly.
"And you're aware that Monarch plus D'Courtney can make the offer good."
"I almost believe you."
"You can believe me. I've been financing your League of Esper Patriots for
five years. If you've peeped me deep enough yon know why. I hate the damned
Esper Guild as much as you do. Guild ethics are bad for business... lousy for
making money. Your League is the organization that can break the Esper Guild
some day..."
"I've got all that," Tate said sharply.
"With Monarch and D'Courtney in my pocket I can do better than help your
faction break the Guild. I can make you President of a new Esper Guild for
life. That's an unconditional guarantee. You can't do it alone, but you can do
it with me."
Tate closed his eyes and murmured: "There hasn't been a successful
premeditated murder in 79 years. Espers make it impossible to conceal intent
before murder. Or, if Espers have been evaded before the murder, they make it
impossible to conceal the guilt afterwards."
"Esper evidence isn't admitted in court."
"True, but once an Esper discovers guilt he can always uncover objective
evidence to support his peeping. Lincoln Powell, the Prefect of the Police
Psychotic Division, is deadly." Tate opened his eyes. "D'you want to forget
this conversation?"
"No," Reich growled. "Look it over with me first. Why have murders failed?
Because mind-readers patrol the world. What can stop a mind-reader? Another
one. But no killer ever had the sense to hire a good peeper to run
interference for him; or if he had the sense, he couldn't make the deal. I've
made the deal."
"Have you?"
"I'm going to fight a war," Reich continued. "I'm going to fight one sharp
skirmish with society. Let's look at it as a problem in strategy and tactics.
My problem's simply the problem of any army. Audacity, bravery, and confidence
aren't enough. An army needs Intelligence. A war is won with Intelligence. I
need you for my G-2."
"Agreed."
"I'll do the fighting. You'll provide the Intelligence. I'll have to know
where D'Courtney will be, where I can strike, when I can strike. I'll take
care of the killing myself, but you'll have to tell me when and where the
opportunity will be."
"Understood."
"I'll have to invade first... cut through the defensive network surrounding
D'Courtney. That means reconnaissance from you. You'll have to check the
normals, spot the peepers, warn me and block their mind-reading if I can't
avoid them. I'll have to retreat after the killing through another network of
normals and peepers. You'll have to help me fight a rear-guard action. You'll
have to remain on the scene after the murder. You'll find out whom the police
suspect and why. If I know suspicion is directed against myself, I can divert
it. If I know it's directed against someone else, I can clinch it. I can fight
this war and win this war with your Intelligence. Is that the truth? Peep me."
After a long pause, Tate said: "It's the truth. We can do it."
"Will you do it?"
Tate hesitated, then nodded with finality. "Yes. I'll do it."
Reich took a deep breath. "Right. Now here's the course I'm plotting. I
think I can set up the killing with an old game called `Sardine.' It will give
me the opportunity to get at D'Courtney, and I've figured out a trick to kill
him; I know how to fire an antique explosive gun without bullets."
"Wait," Tate interrupted sharply. "How are you going to keep all this
intent concealed from stray peepers? I can only screen you when I'm with you.
I won't be with you all the time."
"I can work up a temporary mind-block. There's a song-writer down on Melody
Lane I can swindle into helping me."
"It may work," Tate said after a moment's peeping. "But one thing occurs to
me. Suppose D'Courtney is protected? Do you expect to shoot it out with bis
body-guards?"
"No. I'm hoping it won't be necessary. A physiologist named Jordan has just
developed visual knock-out drops for Monarch. We intended using it for strike
riots. I'll use it on D'Courtney's guards."
"I see."
"You'll be working with me all along... doing reconnaissance and
intelligence, but I need one piece of information first. When D'Courtney comes
to town he's usually the guest of Maria Beaumont."
"The Gilt Corpse?"
"The same. I want you to find out if D'Courtney intends staying with her
this trip. Everything depends on that."
"Easy enough. I can locate D'Courtney's destination and plans for you.
There's to be a social gathering tonight at Lincoln Powell's house,
D'Courtney's physician will probably be there. He's on Terra for a week's
visit. I'll start the reconnaissance through him."
"And you're not afraid of Powell?"
Tate smiled contemptuously. "If I were, Mr. Reich, would I trust myself in
this bargain with you? Make no mistake. I'm no Jerry Church."
"Church!"
"Yes. Don't act surprised. Church, the 2nd. He was kicked out of the Guild
ten years ago for that little junket of his with you."
"Damn you. Got that from my mind, eh?"
"Your mind and history."
"Well, it won't repeat itself this time. You're tougher and smarter than
Church. Need anything special for Powell's party? Women? Clothes? Jewels?
Money? Just call on Monarch."
"Nothing, but thank you very much."
"Criminal but generous, that's me." Reich smiled as he arose to go. He did
not offer to shake hands.
"Mr. Reich!" Tate called suddenly.
Reich turned at the door.
"The screaming will continue. The Man With No Face is not a symbol of murder."
"What? Oh Christl The nightmares? Still? You God damned peeper. How did
you get that? How did you
---"
"Don't be a fool. D'you think you can play games with a 1st?"
"Who's playing, you bastard? What about the nightmares?"
"No, Mr. Reich, I won't tell you. I doubt if anyone but a 1st can tell you,
and naturally you would not dare to consult another after this conference."
"For God's sake, man! Are you going to help me?"
"No, Mr. Reich." Tate smiled malevolently. "That's my little weapon. It
keeps us on a parity basis. Balance of power, you understand. Mutual
dependence ensures mutual faith. Criminal but peeper... that's me."


Like all upper-grade Espers, Lincoln Powell, Ph.D. 1, lived in a private
house. It was not a question of conspicuous consumption, but rather a problem
of privacy. Although thought transmission was too faint to penetrate masonry,
the average plastic apartment unit was too flimsy to block this transmission.
Life in any such multiple dwelling was life in an inferno of naked emotion for
an Esper.
Powell, the Police Prefect, could afford a small lime-stone maisonette on
Hudson Ramp overlooking the North River. There were only four rooms; upstairs
a bedroom and study, downstairs a living room and kitchen. There was no
servant in the house. Like most upper-grade Espers, Powell required large
quantities of solitude. He preferred to do for himself. He was in the kitchen,
checking over the refreshment-dials in preparation for the party, whistling a
plaintive, crooked tune.
He was a slender man in his late thirties, tall, loose, slow moving. His
wide mouth seemed perpetually on the verge of laughter, but at the moment he
wore an expression of sad disappointment. He was lecturing himself on the
follies and stupidities of his worst vice. The essence of the Esper is his
responsiveness. His personality always takes color from his surroundings. The
trouble with Powell was an enlarged sense of humor, and his response was
invariably exaggerated. He had attacks of what he called "Dishonest Abe"
moods. Someone would ask Lincoln Powell an innocent question, and Dishonest
Abe would answer. His fervent imagination would cook up the wildest tall-story
and he would deliver it with straight-faced sincerity. He could not suppress
the liar in him.
Only this afternoon, Police Commissioner Crabbe had inquired about a
routine blackmail case, and simply because he'd mispronounced a name, Powell
had been inspired to fabricate a dramatic account involving a make-believe
crime, a daring midnight raid, and the heroism of an imaginary Lieutenant
Kopenick. Now the Commissioner wanted to award Lieutenant Kopenick a medal.
"Dishonest Abe," Powell muttered bitterly. "You give me a stiff pain."
The house-bell chimed. Powell glanced at his watch in surprise (it was too
early for company) and then directed Open in C-sharp at the TP lock-sensor. It
responded to the thought pattern, as a tuning fork will vibrate to the right
note, and the front door slid open.
Instantly came a familiar sensory impact: Snow / mint / tulips / taffeta.
"Mary Noyes. Come to help the bachelor prepare for the party? Blessings!"
"Hoped you'd need me, Linc."
"Every host needs a hostess. Mary, what am I going to do for Canapes... ?"
"Just invented a new recipe. I'll make it for you. Roast chutney&."
"&?"
"Thats telling, my love."
She came into the kitchen, a short girl physically, but tall and swaying in
thought; a dark girl exteriorly, but frost white in pattern. Almost a nun in
white, despite the swarthy texture of externals; but the mind is the reality.
You are what you think.
"I wish I could re-think, darling. Have my psyche reground!"
"Change your (I kiss you as you are) self, Mary?"
"If I only (You never really do, Linc) could. I'm so tired of tasting you
tasting mint every time we meet.
"
"Next time I'll add brandy and ice. Shake well. Voilal Stinger-Mary."
"Do that. Also SNOW."
"Why strike out the snow? I love snow."
"But I love you."
"And I love you, Mary."
"Thanks, Linc." But he said it. He always said it. He never thought it. She
turned away quickly. The tears within her scalded him.
"Again, Mary?"
"Not again. Always. Always." And the deeper levels of her mind cried: "I
love you, Lincoln. I love you. Image of my father: Symbol of security: Of
warmth: Of protecting passion: Do not reject me always... always...
forever...
"
"Listen to me, Mary..."
"Don't talk. Please, Linc. Not in words. I couldn't bear it if words came
between us.
"
"You're my friend, Mary. Always. For every disappointment. For every
elation.
"
"But not for love."
"No, dear heart. Don't let it hurt you so. Not for love."
"I have enough love, God pity me, for both of us."
"One, God pity us, is not enough for both, Mary."
"You must marry an Esper before you're forty, Linc. The Guild insists on
that. You know it.
"
"I know it."
"Then let friendship answer. Marry me, Lincoln. Give me a year, that's
all. One little year to love you. I'll let you go. I won't cling. I won't make
you hate me. Darling, it's so little to ask... so little to give...
"
The door-bell chimed. Powell looked at Mary helplessly. "Guests," he
murmured and directed Open in C-sharp at the TP lock-sensor. At the same time
she directed Close a fifth above. The harmonies meshed and the door remained
shut.
"Answer me first, Lincoln."
"I can't give you the answer you want, Mary."
The door-bell chimed again.
He took her shoulders firmly, held her close and looked deep into her eyes.
"You're a 2nd. Read me as deeply as you can. What's in my mind? What's in my
heart? What's my answer?
"
He removed all blocks. The thundering plunging depths of his mind cascaded
over her in a warm, frightening torrent... terrifying, yet magnetic and
desirable; but... "Snow. Mint. Tulips. Taffeta," she said wearily. "Go meet
your guests, Mr. Powell. I'll make your canapes. It's all I'm good for.
"
He kissed her once, then turned toward the living room and opened the front
door. Instantly, a fountain of brilliance sparkled into the house, followed by
the guests. The Esper party began.



    Frankly Canapes? Why
    Ellery Thanks delicious. Yes.
    I Mary, they're Tate,
    don't I'm
    think treating
    We you'll Canapes? D'Courtney.
    brought be I
    Galen working expect
    along for him
    to Monarch in
    help him celebrate, much town
    He's longer, very
    just The shortly.
    taken his Guild Exam
    If is and
    you're just been
    interested about classed
    Powell, we're ready 2nd.
    to
    run rule
    you Monarch's
    for espionage
    Guild Canapes? unethical.
    President.
    Canapes?
    Why yes.
    Thank
    Canapes? you,
    Mary...



"@kins! Chervil! Tate! Have a heart! Will you people take a look at the
pattern (?) we've been weaving...
"
The TP chatter stopped. The guests considered for a moment, then burst into
laughter.
"This reminds me of my days in the kindergarten. A little mercy for your
host, please. I'll jump my tracks, if we keep on weaving this mish-mash. Lets
have some order. I don't even ask for beauty.
"
"Just name the pattern, Linc."
"What'll you have?"
"Basket-weave? Math curves? Music? Architectural design?"
"Anything. Anything. Just so long as you don't make my brains itch."



    Sorry, Lincoln. We weren't party-minded Enough
    Tate thought Esper
    but Alan Men
    I'm Seaver remaining
    Not that a Pres was ever elected still unmarried
    at coming can
    liberty but ruin
    To be generous, I feel Al's a man to loa the
    reveal don't Guild's
    anything TP entire
    about him eugenic
    D'Courtney if arriving according to plan
    yet



There was another burst of laughter when Mary Noyes was left hanging with
that unreticulated "yet." The door-bell chimed again, and a Solar Equity
Advocate 2 entered with his girl. She was a demure little thing, surprisingly
attractive outwardly, and new to the company. Her TP pattern was naive and not
deeply responsive. Obviously a 3rd.
"Grettings. Greetings. Abject apologies for the delay. Orange blossoms &
wedding rings are the excuse. I proposed on the way over.
"
"And I'm afraid I accepted," the girl said, smiling.
"Don't talk," the lawyer shot at her. "This isn't a 3rd Class brawl, I
told you not to use words.
"
"I forgot," she blurted again, and then heated the room with her fright and
shame. Powell stepped forward and took the girl's trembling hand.
"Ignore him, he's a 2nd-come-lately snob. I'm Lincoln Powell, your host. I
Sherlock for the cops. If your fiancè beats you, I'll help him regret
it. Come and meet your fellow freaks...
" He conducted her around the room.
"This is Gus Tate, a quack-one. Next to him, Sam & Sally @kins. Sam's another
of the same. She's a baby-sitter-two. They're just in from Venus. Here on a
visit...
"
"H-How---I mean, how do you do?"
"That fat man sitting on the floor is Wally Chervil, architect-two. The
blonde sitting in his (lap)² is June, his wife. June's an editor-two.
That's their son, Galen, talking to Ellery West. Gally's a
tech-undergrad-three...
"
Young Galen Chervil indignantly started to point out that he'd just been
classed 2nd and hadn't needed to use words in over a year. Powell cut him off
and below the girl's perceptive threshold explained the reason for the
deliberate mistake.
"Oh," said Galen. "Yep, brother and sister 3rds, that's us. And am I glad
you're here. These deep peepers were beginning to scare me."
"Oh, I don't know. I was scared at first, but I'm not any more."
"And this is your hostess, Mary Noyes."
"Hello, Canapes?"
"Thank you. They look delicious, Mrs. Powell."
"Now how about a game?" Powell interposed quickly. "Rebus, anyone?"
Outside, huddled in the shadow of the limestone arch, Jerry Church pressed
against the garden door of Powel's house, listening with all his soul. He was
cold, silent, immobile, and starved. He was resentful, hating, contemptuous,
and starved. He was an Esper 2 and starved. The bend sinister of ostracism was
the source of his hunger.
Through the thin maple panel filtered the multiple TP pattern of the
party; a weaving, ever-changing, exhilarating design. And Church, Esper 2,
living on a sub-marginal diet of words for the past ten years, was starved for
his own people---for the Esper world he had lost.
"The reason I mentioned D'Courtney is that I've just come across a case
that might be similar.
"
That was Augustus Tate, sucking up to @kins.
"Oh really? Very interesting. I'd like to compare notes. Matter of fact, I
made the trip to Terra because D'Courtney is coming here. Too bad D'Courtney
won't---well, be available.
" @kins was obviously being discreet and it
smelled as though Tate was after something. Maybe not, Church speculated, but
there was some elegant block and counter-blocking going on, like duellists
fencing with complicated electrical circuits.
"Look here, peeper, I think you've been pretty snotty to that poor girl."
"Listen to him shoot off his mind," Church muttered. "Powell, that holy
louse who had me kicked out, preaching down his big nose at the lawyer."
"Poor girl? You mean dumb girl, Powell. My God! How gauche can you get?"
"She's only a 3rd. Be fair."
"She gives me a pain."
"Do you think it's decent... marrying a girl when you feel that way about
her?"
"Don't be a romantic ass, Powell. We've got to marry peepers. I might as
well settle for a pretty face.
"
The Rebus game was going on in the living room. The Noyes girl was busy
building a camouflaged image with an old poem:



      The vast,
      sea and
      is out Glimmering
      calm in the stand,
      tonight, tranquil bay England
      The Come to the window of
      tide sweet is the night cliffs
      is air. Only the
      full from the gone;
      the long line is
      moon of spray and
      lies Gleams
      fair light
      Upon the straights;---on the French coast the



What the devil was that? An eye in a glass? Eh? Oh. Not a glass. A stein.
Eye in a stein. Einstein. Easy.
"What d'you think of Powell for the job, Ellery?" That was Chervil with
his phoney smile and his big fat pontifical belly.
"For Guild President?"
"Yes."
"Damned efficient man. Romantic but efficient. The perfect candidate if
only he'd get married."
"That's the romance in him. He's having trouble locating a girl."
"Don't all you deep peepers? Thank God I'm not a 1st."
And then a smash of glass crashing in the kitchen and Preacher Powell
again, lecturing that little snot, Gus Tate.
"Never mind the glass, Gus. I had to drop it to cover for you. You're
radiating anxiety like a nova."
"The devil I am, Powell."
"The devil you're not. What's all this about Ben Reich?"
The little man was really on guard. You could feel his mental shell
hardening.
"Ben Reich? What brought him up?"
"You did, Gus. It's been moiling in your mind all evening. I couldn't help
reading it."
"Not me, Powell. You must be tuning another TP."
Image of a horse laughing.
"Powell, I swear I'm not---"
"Are you mixed up with Reich, Gus?"
"No." But you could feel the blocks bang down into place.
"Take a hint from an old hand, Gus. Reich can get you into trouble. Be
careful. Remember Jerry Church? Reich ruined him. Don't let it happen to
you.
"
Tate drifted back to the living room; Powell remained in the kitchen, calm
and slow-moving, sweeping up broken glass. Church lay frozen against the back
door, suppressing the seething hatred in his heart. The Chervil boy was
showing off for the lawyer's girl, singing a love ballad and paralleling it
with a visual parody. College stuff. The wives were arguing violently in sine
curves, @kins and West were interlacing cross-conversation in a fascinatingly
intric

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