TWENTY-EIGHT
In Belgrade the president spoke with Yugoslavian Prime Minister Planinc and his Ministers of Industries and Planning. The next day, in Ankara, he spoke with Turkish Prime Minister Ozal and his Ministers of Development and Defense. He made no further public addresses. It was right after his Ankara meeting that he learned of the Calvert Cliffs disaster, less than an hour after it happened. There too, John Zale gave him Milstead's messages on the flap in Congress over his Warsaw speech.
From Ankara he flew to Frankfurt, where he transferred to Air Force One and took off for the States.
He'd thought about spending a day or two at Camp David, resting; he and Lois had never been to Camp David. But this was definitely not the time. He did pause long enough at the Air Force base in Frankfurt for a shower, and a rubdown by a military masseur.
He slept all the way from Frankfurt to Andrews Field, outside D.C. By the time he got back to the White House, it was little more than an hour short of breakfast. He dropped in at the White House kitchen and arranged for his breakfast to be delivered to his desk, then took another shower. After that he walked to the Oval Office and found waiting for him a brief preliminary report on the probable environmental impacts of the Calvert Cliffs bombing. He read it quickly, then began drafting a short speech on the disaster.
At eight o'clock Milstead came in, and the president agreed to meet with Brosnan, Kreiner, Bushnell, and Bender. They were the senior members from each party and each house on the Select Committee on the Emergency. The president also asked that Speaker of the House Lynch, and Senate president pro tem Grosberg be included. If the repeal bill couldn't be stalled in committee, perhaps Lynch and Grosberg would agree to stall it on the floor until he was ready to release his "breakthrough."
Milstead commented that the nuking of the Calvert Cliffs plant had drawn media attention almost entirely off the Warsaw speech.
At 0825, Milstead returned to tell him that the people from Congress would be over at ten o'clock if that met with the president's approval. It did. Haugen told Milstead to sit in on the briefing with them; that he needed to know too.
The president finished the last intelligence summary and looked at the clock. He'd been itching to talk to Dirksma. His secretary had said the director would be in about nine, and would call. It was 0854; that left six minutes or so. Haugen reached for the next report: the weekly summary of the Public Works Administration. It had lots of tables, but the summary table was the only one he gave more than a glance to. Then he scanned the summary list of narrative points: principal complaints, principal accomplishments, major difficulties... It was going better than he'd expected. Quite a lot of people were actually trying to make it work, to get something done, use it for more than a paycheck. Not everyone by any means, but a lot of them. Maybe he was seeing a resurgence of responsibility.
The security phone buzzed; he keyed it on and Dirksma's face appeared on the screen. The time readout at the bottom said 0859:37.
"Good morning, Mr. President. Are you interested in a report on the Blackburn investigation now?"
"Why not?"
"I thought perhaps your time was tied up with yesterday's nuclear bombing."
"Nope. There's nothing I can do about that except make appropriate noises. What have you learned?"
"There's quite a bit of it. I've had a full written report prepared—tabbed, indexed, and summarized. It'll be on its way to you in a few minutes, by courier."
Courier. Why not by modem? the president wondered.
"In brief though," Dirksma was saying, "we have depositions by three people at the CIA stating that when he took over as director, Dr. Blackburn assigned three men, men who'd written critical reports on him, to work with the guerrillas in Malaysia. That's considered the most dangerous project they have. One refused and resigned; no one seems to know where he is now. After being flown out of Manila, neither of the other two ever reported back, which, considering their experience and other qualifications, is surprising. We suspect they were actually killed enroute.
"Next, we've interviewed several people who've given us verbal data on several offenses Blackburn allegedly committed as an agent. There's no reason to think we couldn't establish some of these as fact, if we wanted to seat a grand jury. But a lot of sensitive information would be involved—a lot of contacts would be put at risk if anything was leaked—and you know the grand jury record on confidentiality."
Dirksma paused as if contemplating grand jury leaks.
"Later, as a field project supervisor, Blackburn also worked on a research project to develop a reliable means for erasing memories and data regarding especially sensitive matters, in covert operations personnel who were going to leave the agency. We've got several notebooks of material on this; it was in a personal code, but we had no trouble breaking it. We've verified some of the contents, and there's more than enough incriminating evidence there to jail him, if he hadn't suicided. He brought foreign employees in to experiment on, and a couple of them died. We have no evidence that the procedures were ever used by the agency though, not even while Blackburn was director. Their legality is extremely dubious, even if they worked properly, and for erasing memories, they simply were not accurate. They could leave you with a vegetable or an amnesiac or an unpredictable psychotic, any of which could have brought about an investigation."
The president stared grimly into the CRT; Dirksma went on with his report.
"But maybe the most interesting thing was that he set up a private office, and presumably a private practice, in Waterbury, Connecticut. He only flew up there occasionally, and whatever he did there, he apparently kept no records and operated on a cash-only basis. We may have a lead though; we're pulling the string on that. The lab there contains the same kinds of equipment as his lab at Langley—the same stock of hypnotics, an electroshock table, and a wheeled control unit that's a lot more technical looking than usual for electroconvulsive therapy. All very expensive. We're looking into the possibility that he set it up with equipment obtained with government purchase contracts.
"And that's the bare bones of it, Mr. President. Blackburn's death still hasn't been made public, and he has no close family except a sister whom he apparently didn't get along with. Unless you prefer otherwise, we'll leave it that way, on the legal basis of national security.
"Meanwhile we'll keep digging. This could lead to some very important information."
After they ended their conversation, the president buzzed Martinelli. "Jeanne," he said, "get me General Cromwell, please."
While he was waiting, he picked up the next report, and read the cover. A Summary of Public and Other Surveys on Justice and the Law, by Allenby, Mildred S., University of Iowa School of Law. Haugen's eyes lit up; he'd been looking forward to this one. It should help him pitch his legal reform package when it was ready.
***
The people from Congress weren't overjoyed with the promise of silence the president exacted before briefing them. But they were impressed with the briefing, and assured him they could hold off on a repeal bill vote for at least a week. The bombing, they said, would help on that; it certainly established a continuation of dangerous disorder.
A week, Haugen thought to himself, would be more than long enough.
***
Cromwell arrived with Gupta after lunch. Haugen rolled his chair to the file cabinet beside his desk, talking as he sorted through the hanging files.
"I certainly stirred up a hornets' nest," he said. "I got caught in my inexperience. For some reason it never occurred to me that people here wouldn't accept my remarks without evidence."
Somehow, Jumper Cromwell found the admission reassuring. Not because it showed Haugen as willing to admit error, but because it showed him able to commit error.
The president pulled out two copies of a bound report and turned back to his guests. "I'm going to tell the two of you something that, for security reasons, I didn't tell the people from Congress." Grinning, he handed the report to the general and the physicist. "Here. Give a look. It's a draft of the presentation we planned—that Duluth Technology put together—for release to the press. It's been waiting till the first installations are in operation."
Frowning, lips pursed, Cromwell opened the report and began to read the frontal summary. His brows unknitted, rose. "Jesus Christ, Mr. President! This is bigger than transistors!" He stared. "And you're going to give this to the Soviets? The Chinese?"
"The Chinese. The Soviets already have it. That's the part I wasn't ready to talk about to the congressmen."
Cromwell's mouth opened.
"And let me correct something," Haugen said. "I don't have complete proof that the Soviets have it, but the evidence is compelling."
"But—if they have this, why don't we see evidence of it?"
"The evidence is there. It's just that no one's paid attention. To the Soviets it's an ultra secret part of a weapon system. They haven't used it beyond that because they don't want us to know there is such a thing."
Cromwell looked warily at the president. "What weapon system? And why don't they know we've got it ready to release? Christ, they knew about the Manhattan Project in World War Two before President Truman did! Let's face it: They've got the best military intelligence system in the world, bar none."
"To answer your first question, the weapon system is their scalar resonance network." He looked at Gupta. "You told me the transmitters required huge amounts of electric power. And that the Soviet transmitters were more powerful than ours were until superconductors came along." He turned to Cromwell. "So why was that? And remember I asked Jim to check and see if there are nuclear reactors at those locations? He found out there aren't. There isn't even evidence of high capacity transmission lines.
"They're generating their power on-site, without nuclear reactors; without any visible power generating system at all."
He looked intensely at Cromwell. "And if you know enough to build and use scalar resonance to manipulate weather and induce earthquakes, then you have the basic concepts that allow you to develop the geogravitic power converter. All it takes from that point is some tangential investigation and enough luck and persistence. Or maybe Tesla's notes."
Cromwell stared. "Shee-it!"
"I got into it with sort of a Sherlock Holmes approach," the president went on. "Six years ago, reading on Tesla, I ran across a quote from a 1931 Time Magazine; I can damn near recite it verbatim. Tesla said he was working on a new source of power that, as he put it, would clear up a lot of puzzling phenomena in the universe. That's what he said: the universe. Then he went on that this was a source no previous scientist had turned to, so far as he knew. And that when the concept first hit him, it was a tremendous shock.
"Of course, Tesla was never a man to understate things, but I always read him with an open mind, considering the things he actually pulled off.
"Unfortunately he could also be coy. It's a valuable ancillary skill for an inventor.
"Anyway, he said it was an entirely new and unsuspected power source that would be constant day and night and at all times of the year. The apparatus for converting it into electricity would be simple, with both electrical and mechanical features, and it had nothing to do with the power of the atom."
Haugen chuckled. "Tesla didn't think atomic energy would ever be practical. He missed on that one.
"Anyway, I looked at what he'd said from every angle I could think of, and drew nothing but blanks. I tried doodling on paper, idly, waiting for something to appear out of the doodles; that's worked for me a time or three. Nothing. Then, one morning in the shower, this idea hit me: gravity! And I got goose flesh like hell wouldn't have.
"I never questioned whether I was right or not, just went on the operating assumption that gravity was it. So how had Tesla expected to convert gravity into electricity?" Haugen spread his hands. "Something simple, he'd said. Simple but apparently not easy. If it was easy, he'd have designed and built it, and died rich instead of poor.
"But I knew he'd been interested in scalar waves and resonance, including resonances transmitted through the Earth."
He chuckled. "Unlike a lot of people, I don't strain when I'm working on something. If the ideas aren't flowing, I work on something else. But I keep putting my attention back on the problem area, on the target so to speak, especially when I'm ready for bed at night. And every now and then, pop! I'll get an idea on it, most often in the morning, in the shower or on the ceramic throne, or maybe shaving.
"And that's the way it worked. After a few months I had enough of the concept to start actual research and development."
Cromwell looked at Haugen in awe. "And this thing really works? Christ on a crutch! It'll change the world!" His eyes went thoughtful. "OPEC isn't going to like it worth a damn, and neither is Standard Oil. Consolidated Edison is going to hate it!"
"Yeah. But the environmentalists will love it, and so will everyone who pays an electric bill. And world oil reserves will last a helluva lot longer; their main use will be as raw material in synthetics manufacture. That and aircraft fuel for a while. I've even designed and patented a prototype car that'll run on it, with as much power as you'd want."
He grinned at the general. "Tractors, ships... And cheap, Jumper, cheap! When Tesla's AC transformer made electricity practical, it remade technology within a few decades, with relatively cheap, clean, safe, transmittable energy. This will make at least as big a difference, and a lot more quickly because of the technical base we've got now. And because this is cheaper, a lot cleaner, and you don't need to transmit it if you don't want to; you can even ride around on the generator.
"And all that without considering what it's going to do to physical theory."
Cromwell wasn't ready yet to ask what it would do to physical theory. Gupta didn't ask either; he looked as if he was already working on it mentally. "And it's ready to release?" Cromwell said. It was part question, part statement.
"Jumper, we'll have one powering an entire municipal electric system within a few days. And others are being installed, plus we've got a couple of warehouses full, ready to ship."
Cromwell sat still, awed. "Gravity! When do we get antigravity?"
Haugen laughed. "Hard to tell. Me, I'm just a jackleg engineer. Wait till the theoretical physicists start playing with this; antigravity might not take all that long."
Some jackleg engineer, Cromwell thought. Then a question occurred to him. "How come..." he said slowly, "How come this hasn't leaked?" And with the question, he felt a twinge of doubt. If this was real, then without the constraints of a government security apparatus, surely it would have leaked. Maybe Haugen was nuts, had dreamed all this.
"If the government had developed it," Haugen replied, "or some big university, it would have leaked. Almost surely. The GRU monitors them constantly; you don't need me to tell you about that. Companies like mine though, not connected with the arms industry, they apparently don't pay much attention to. And I've been calling it a geopetroleum sounder; no big deal. Told my people, those who didn't need to know the truth, that we were making them for the Arabs."
He chuckled. "As for the Patent Office—I patented it as part of something else that's not very interesting: as the power component of a track layer for heavy transport on swamplands."
Cromwell nodded. "Another thing's come up," he said. "There's a fuss over at Foggy Bottom."
"Right. The congressmen asked about that too. It seems to have started with my firing Ambassador Tyler. The man was an utter fuckup; ignorant, insolent and arrogant. An example of someone who can parrot back course material on an exam without having any idea of what it means or how to use it.
"And Coulter sponsored him. Good old Coulter, who also sponsored Blackburn. I'm offloading him, Jumper. I don't trust his competence and I don't trust his purposes. Grosberg and Kreiner are helping Milstead sort out three or four candidates for the job. Then Charles will get dossiers prepared on them."
Cromwell nodded. The president's comments had reminded him that Trenary had been sponsored for Air Force Chief of Staff by Campbell, and Campbell was Coulter's buddy. And now Trenary seemed to be.
"Sounds good to me," he said, then told the president about Trenary's upset, and the Trenary-Campbell-Coulter connection. Haugen looked interested but didn't comment.
As Jumper Cromwell came out of the president's office, his bodyguards fell in beside him. "Guys," Cromwell said, "you people better take damn good care of that guy in there. We sure as hell can't afford to lose him."
***
The general had hardly closed the Oval Office door behind him when the president's phone buzzed. He answered it.
"Mr. President, Director Dirksma is on line one."
"Thanks, Jeanne, I'll take it."
Dirksma's face popped onto the screen. "Mr. President, a man and woman have been arrested in Virginia. The man claimed they were the ones who dropped the A-bomb in Delaware. Of course, several others have confessed to the same thing; you expect that sort of thing after a spectacular crime. But the woman agreed with him, and they knew right where the plane was parked. They're the McCoy.
"The woman named three other people who were involved as accessories, and where they could be found; we've got two of them now, a husband and wife, and they've confessed too. The third one, a man, had blown."
The president eyed Dirksma thoughtfully. "So far, so good. You people do excellent work.
"Now I've got another job for you. It's not a criminal investigation; a lot of it can probably be done without anyone having to leave the Justice Building." He gazed levelly at the FBI director. "I want you to put together the background of Secretary Coulter."
"The Secretary of State?"
"Right. I want his full professional history, people and organizations he's been associated with, that sort of thing. Especially any history he has with Blackburn and Defense Secretary Campbell. And Air Force General Ewell Trenary. And I want to be informed as you go; don't wait till you've got the whole thing put together before you call me. Any questions?"
"No questions, sir. If any occur to me, I'll call, but that seems to be pretty straightforward."
"Good. I'll let you go now; I know you're busy."
The president disconnected, got up and started for the coffee machine; then changed his mind; he'd been pouring too much gunk in his stomach. Instead he walked to the pool-gymnasium area. He'd been exercising again, spasmodically, but not enough and not often enough. It was time to correct that; he'd promised Lois he'd take better care of himself.