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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/31755-h.zip b/31755-h.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..53ef15a --- /dev/null +++ b/31755-h.zip diff --git a/31755-h/31755-h.htm b/31755-h/31755-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e4690af --- /dev/null +++ b/31755-h/31755-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,988 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> +<head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> + + <title>Political Application, by John Victor Peterson.</title> + <style type="text/css"> + body { + font-family: Georgia,serif; + margin-left: 15%; + margin-right: 15%; + } + + p { + text-align: justify; + margin: 0em; + text-indent:1em; + } + + h1,h2 { + text-align: center; + font-weight: normal; + margin-top:2em; + } + + .transcriber_note { + margin: 2em 10%; + padding: 1em 1em; + border:thin gray solid; + background-color:#eee; + color:#000; + text-align:left; + } + + .transcriber_note p {text-align:left;margin-top:.5em;text-indent:0em;} + + #editorial_note {margin:2em;border-top:1px black solid;border-bottom:1px black solid;} + #editorial_note p {text-indent:0em;font-size:.9em;font-style:italic;padding:.5em;} + #editorial_note p cite {font-style:normal;} + + #title_page {width:90%;margin:4em auto;} + #title_page p {text-indent:0em;} + #title_page h1 { + font-size:175%; + padding:1em; + } + #prolog { + margin: 4em 4em; + padding-bottom: 2em; + font-weight:bold; + text-align:justify; + } + + #author { + text-align:center; + font-size:125%; + padding:1em; + font-style:italic; + } + + .pagenum { + position: absolute; + left: 1%; + right: 87%; + font-size: 10px; + text-align: left; + color: gray; + background-color: inherit; + font-weight: normal; + font-style: normal; + font-variant: normal; + letter-spacing: normal; + text-indent: 0em; + } + + /*a[title].pagenum:after { + content: attr(title); + }*/ + /* Uncomment above to show original page numbers */ + + .first_word {font-variant:small-caps;font-size:1.25em;} + .first_paragraph .first_word {font-size:1.75em;} + .keep_together {white-space: nowrap;} + + hr.thoughtbreak {display:none;} + + .post_thoughtbreak { + margin-top:2em; + } + + /* framing decoration */ + #the_beginning { border-top:2px gray solid; margin:2em 0em;} + #the_end { border-bottom:2px gray solid; margin:2em 0em;} + + /* no underlines in links */ + + a:link { text-decoration: none; } + a:visited { text-decoration: none; } + + a:hover { + color: red; + background: inherit; + } + </style> + +</head> + +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Political Application, by John Victor Peterson + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Political Application + +Author: John Victor Peterson + +Release Date: March 24, 2010 [EBook #31755] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLITICAL APPLICATION *** + + + + +Produced by Greg Weeks, Barbara Tozier and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + +<div class="transcriber_note"> + <p>This etext was produced from Fantastic Universe, September 1956. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.</p> +</div> +<div id="the_beginning"> </div> +<div id="editorial_note"> + <p>John Victor Peterson lives in Jackson Heights, almost a stone’s throw from + La Guardia Airfield. But he doesn’t just stand and watch the big planes + roar past overhead. He has the kind of brilliant technical know-how which + makes what goes on inside of a plane of paramount interest to him. He’s interested, + too, in the future superduper gadgetry, as this hilarious yarn attests.</p> +</div> +<div id="title_page"><a class="pagenum" id="page108" title="108"> </a> + <h1>POLITICAL + APPLICATION</h1> + <p id="author">by … John Victor Peterson</p> + <p id="prolog">If matter transference really + works—neanderthalers can + pop up anywhere. And that’s + very hard on politicians!</p> +</div> +<div id="story"> + <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Some</span> say scientists should keep + their noses out of politics. Benson + says it’s to prevent damage to their + olfactory senses. Benson’s a physicist.</p> + + <p>I’ve known Allan Benson for a + long time. In fact I’ve bodyguarded + him for years and think I understand + him better than he does himself. + And when he shook security + at White Sands, my boss didn’t + hesitate to tell me that knowing + Benson as I do I certainly shouldn’t + have let him skip off. Or crisp + words to that effect.</p> + + <p>The pressure was on. Benson + was seeking a new fuel—or a way + of compressing a known fuel—to + carry a torchship to Mars. His loss + could mean a delay of decades. We + knew he’d been close, but not <em>how</em> + close.</p> + + <p>My nickname’s Monk. I’ve + fought it, certainly, but what can + you do when a well-wishing mother + names you after a wealthy uncle + and your birth certificate says + Neander Thalberg? As early as + high school some bright pundit + noted the name’s similarity to that + of a certain prehistoric man. Unfortunately + the similarity is not in + <a class="pagenum" id="page109" title="109"> </a>name alone: I’m muscular, stooped, + and, I must admit, not handsome + hero model material.</p> + + <p>Well, maybe the nickname’s + justified, but still, Al Benson didn’t + have to give the crowning insult. + And yet, if he hadn’t, there probably + wouldn’t be a torchship stern-ending + on Mars just about now.</p> + + <p>C. I. (Central Intelligence, that + is) at the Sands figured Benson + would head for New York. Which + is why the boss sent me here. I + registered in a hotel in the 50’s + and, figuring that whatever Benson + intended to do would have spectacular + results, I kept the stereo + on News.</p> + + <p>Benson’s wife hadn’t yielded + much info. Sure she described the + clothes he was wearing and said + he’d taken nothing else except an + artist’s case. What was in that was + anybody’s guess; his private lab is + such a jumble nobody could tell + what, if anything, was missing.</p> + + <p>C. I. knew his political feelings. + Seems he’d been talking wild about + the upcoming presidential election + and had sworn he’d nip the draft-Cadigan + movement in the bud. + Cadigan’s Mayor of New York + City. He’s anti-space. In fact, Cadigan’s + anti just about everything in + science except intercontinental missiles. + Strictly for defense, of course. + Cadigan says.</p> + + <hr class="thoughtbreak" /> + + <p class="post_thoughtbreak">A weathercaster was making + rash promises on the stereo when + the potray dinged. The potray? + I certainly wasn’t expecting mail. + Only C. I. knew where I was and + they’d have closed-circuited me on + visio if they wanted contact.</p> + + <p>The potray dinged and there + was a package in it.</p> + + <p>Now matter transference I knew. + It put mailmen out of business. + There’s a potray in every domicile + and you can put things in it, dial + the destination and they come out + there. They come out the same size + and weight and in the same condition + as they went in, provided + they didn’t go in alive. Life loses, + as many a shade of a hopeful guinea + pig could relate.</p> + + <p>So the potray dinged and here + was this package. At first glance + it looked like one of those cereal + samples manufacturers have been + everlastingly sending through since + postal rates dropped after cost of + the potrays had been amortized. + But cereal samples don’t come + through at midday; they’re night + traffic stuff.</p> + + <p>The package was light, its wrapping + curiously smooth. There was + an envelope attached with my correct + name and potray number. + Whoever had mailed it must be in + C. I. or must know someone in + C. I. who knew where I was.</p> + + <p>The postmark was blurred but + I could make out that it had been + cast from Grand Central. Time + didn’t matter. It couldn’t have + been cast more than a microsecond + earlier.</p> + + <p>The envelope contained a card + upon which was typed:</p> + + <p>“Caution! Site on cylinder of 2 + <a class="pagenum" id="page110" title="110"> </a>ft. radius and 6 ft. height. Unwrap + at armslength.”</p> + + <p>Now what? A practical joke? + If so, it must be Benson’s work. + He’s played plenty, from pumping + hydrogen sulphide (that’s rotten + egg gas, as you know) into the + air-conditioning system at high + school to calling a gynecologist to + the launching stage at the Sands + to sever an umbilical cord which + he neglected to say was on a Viking + rocket.</p> + + <p>I followed the instructions. As I + bent back the first fold of the + strange wrapping it came alive, unfolding + itself with incredible swiftness.</p> + + <p>Something burst forth like a + freed djinn—almost instantaneously + lengthening, spreading—a thing + with beetling brows, low, broad + forehead, prognathous jaw, and a + hunched, brutally muscular body, + with a great club over its swollen + shoulder.</p> + + <p>I went precipitously backward + over a coffee table.</p> + + <p>It stabilized, a dead mockery, + replica of a Neanderthal.</p> + + <p>A placard hung on its chest. I + read this:</p> + + <p>“Even some of the early huntsmen + weren’t successful. Abandon + the chase, Monk. I’ve things to do + and this—your blood brother, no + doubt—couldn’t catch me any more + than you can!”</p> + + <p>Which positively infuriated me.</p> + + <p>Do you blame me?</p> + + <p>A few cussing, cussed minutes + later I realized what Al Benson had + apparently done: solved the torchship’s + fuel problem.</p> + + <p>Oh, I’d seen Klein bottles and + Mobius strips and other things + that twist in on themselves and + into other dimensions, twisting into + microcosms and macrocosms—into + elsewhere, in any event. And here + I had visual evidence that Benson + had had something nearly six feet + tall and certainly two feet in + breadth enclosed in a nearly weightless + carton less than eight inches + on the side!</p> + + <p>Sufficient fuel for a Marstrip? + Just wrap it up!</p> + + <p>The stereo’s audio was saying: + “… from the Museum of Natural + History. Curators are compiling a + list of the missing exhibits which + we will reveal to you on this channel + as soon as it’s available. Now + we switch to Dick Joy at City Hall + with news of the latest exhibit + found. Come in, Dick!”</p> + + <p>On the steps of City Hall was + a full size replica of a mastodon + over whose massive back was + draped a banner bearing the slogan: + “The Universal Party is for you! + Don’t return to prehistory with + Cadigan! Re-elect President Ollie + James and go to the stars!”</p> + + <p>And there was a closeup of + Mayor Cadigan standing pompous + and wrathful—and looking very + diminutive—behind the emblem + of his opposition party.</p> + + <p>Dick Joy was saying, “Eyewitnesses + claim that this replica—obviously + one of the items stolen + from the Museum of Natural History—suddenly + <a class="pagenum" id="page111" title="111"> </a>materialized here. + Immediately prior to the alleged + materialization a man—whose photograph + we show now—ostensibly + bent down to tie a shoelace, setting + a shoebox beside him. He left + the box, walking off into the gathering + crowd, and this mastodon + <em>seemed</em> to spring into being where + the shoebox had been.</p> + + <p>“The mastodon replica has been + examined. A report just handed me + says it is definitely that from the + Museum and that it could not conceivably + have been contained in a + shoebox. It’s obviously a case of + mass hypnotism. The replica must + have been trucked here. There’s no + other possible explanation. Excuse + me!”</p> + + <p>Dick Joy turned away, then back.</p> + + <p>“I have just been handed a notice + that Mayor Cadigan wishes to say + a few words and I hereby introduce + him, His Honor the Mayor, Joseph + F. Cadigan!”</p> + + <p>His balding, fragmentarily curly-haired + Honor glared.</p> + + <p>“Friends,” he said chokingly, + “whatever madman is responsible + for this outrageous act will not go + unpunished. I call upon the City’s + Finest to track him down and bring + him to justice.</p> + + <p>“I am for justice, for equality + and peace. I—”</p> + + <p>His Honor was apparently determined + to use all the time he could. + Being a newscast, it was for free.</p> + + <p>I killed the stereo. And the visio + rang. It was Phil Pollini, the C. I. + Chief.</p> + + <p>“Monk,” he said, “guess you’ve + seen the stereo. Al’s out to fix the + Mayor’s wagon.”</p> + + <p>“Say that again,” I said, having + a brainstorm.</p> + + <p>“Now, look—” he started.</p> + + <p>“Maybe you’ve got something + there, Chief,” I cut in. “Cadigan’s + got the superduper of all wagons—a + seven passenger luxury limousine + with bulletproof glass, stereo, a bar, + venetian blinds and heaven knows + what else. Hot and cold running + androids, maybe. He prowls the + elevated highways with an ‘In Conference’ + sign flashing over the + windshield. So’s he can’t be wire-tapped + or miked, I guess. It’d be + a natch for Al Benson to go for.”</p> + + <p>Pollini grinned.</p> + + <p>“So if you were Benson what’d + you do to fix the Mayor’s wagon?”</p> + + <p>“Hitch it to a star,” I said, “and + the closest spot to a star would be + the observation platform of the + Greater Empire State.”</p> + + <p>“You’re probably right,” the + Chief said. “Get going!”</p> + + <p>I got.</p> + + <p>Ten minutes later I walked out + onto the observation platform on + the 150th floor of the Greater + Empire State Building—and found + an incredulous crowd gathered + around the mayor’s limousine. I + felt good. I’d predicted.</p> + + <p>I asked a guard, “How’d it get + here?”</p> + + <p>His eyebrows were threatening + a back somersault.</p> + + <p>“Don’t know,” he said. “I was + looking over the side; then turned + <a class="pagenum" id="page112" title="112"> </a>around and here it was! You have + any ideas?”</p> + + <p>Which is when I spotted Al + Benson.</p> + + <p>I settled for shoving Benson toward + the elevator, being careful + since he had a box under each arm. + We made the elevator and went + down and it stopped on the 120th + floor and the operator said, + “Change here for all lower floors + and the street—”</p> + + <p>As we waited on the 120th for + the down elevator, the P. A. system + barked:</p> + + <p>“Attention all building occupants. + By order of the Mayor no + one will be permitted to leave the + building until further notice. Please + remain where you are. We will try + not to inconvenience you for any + great time.”</p> + + <p>There was no one close to us.</p> + + <p>“Al,” I said, “look, stinker, + you’ve had your fun but this is it. + I don’t know what you’ve got in + those boxes but you’ve got to turn + them over—and yourself—to the + next copper who shows. This is a + civil matter, strictly local, and not + C. I.”</p> + + <p>Benson grinned. “Got to make + a delivery first, Monk. Look, there’s + a potray over there. Can I use it?”</p> + + <p>His grin was infectious. “So + what are you going to send + where?” I asked as sternly as I + could.</p> + + <p>“The Mayor’s personal files,” he + said. “I managed to carry them + out of City Hall—once they’d been + suitably wrapped, of course! I’m + sending them to the Senate Investigation + Committee. Don’t worry, + Monk, His Honor won’t be President + this or any year!”</p> + + <p>I helped him dial the SIC number.</p> + + <p>“What about the other package?” + I asked him then.</p> + + <p>“Insurance,” he said. “Come out + on the setback.”</p> + + <p>He placed the last package on + the mosaic tile of the terrace, untied + its string, flipped open the edge + of the Benson wrapping and jumped + back.</p> + + <p>It was an NYC police helicopter.</p> + + <p>We potrayed it back from the + Sands. Suitably wrapped, of course.</p> + + <p>That was a month ago. Most of + it never came out in the papers. + Nothing of Benson’s invention. + C. I. thought it should be squelched, + at least until Benson and the + boys get back from Mars.</p> + + <p>Which would be the end except + for the packages. Yes, Benson left + a gross of them with me and I’ve + been mailing them one a day to + the leaders of the opposition party. + I don’t truly know what’s in them, + of course. But it’s very curious that + the day before the torchship left + exactly one hundred and forty-four + cylinders of hydrogen sulphide + were missing from quartermaster + stores. Coincidentally one of my + C. I. friends tells me Benson had + him rig up a gross of automatic + releases for gas cylinders.</p> + + <p>Adding it up, it could be a good + lesson for politicians to keep their + noses out of science.</p> +</div> +<div id="the_end"> </div> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Political Application, by John Victor Peterson + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLITICAL APPLICATION *** + +***** This file should be named 31755-h.htm or 31755-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/7/5/31755/ + +Produced by Greg Weeks, Barbara Tozier and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Political Application + +Author: John Victor Peterson + +Release Date: March 24, 2010 [EBook #31755] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLITICAL APPLICATION *** + + + + +Produced by Greg Weeks, Barbara Tozier and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + This etext was produced from Fantastic Universe, September + 1956. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the + U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed. + + + + + _John Victor Peterson lives in Jackson Heights, almost a + stone's throw from La Guardia Airfield. But he doesn't just + stand and watch the big planes roar past overhead. He has the + kind of brilliant technical know-how which makes what goes on + inside of a plane of paramount interest to him. He's + interested, too, in the future superduper gadgetry, as this + hilarious yarn attests._ + + + + +POLITICAL APPLICATION + +_by ... John Victor Peterson_ + + + If matter transference really works--neanderthalers can pop up + anywhere. And that's very hard on politicians! + + +Some say scientists should keep their noses out of politics. Benson +says it's to prevent damage to their olfactory senses. Benson's a +physicist. + +I've known Allan Benson for a long time. In fact I've bodyguarded him +for years and think I understand him better than he does himself. And +when he shook security at White Sands, my boss didn't hesitate to tell +me that knowing Benson as I do I certainly shouldn't have let him skip +off. Or crisp words to that effect. + +The pressure was on. Benson was seeking a new fuel--or a way of +compressing a known fuel--to carry a torchship to Mars. His loss could +mean a delay of decades. We knew he'd been close, but not _how_ close. + +My nickname's Monk. I've fought it, certainly, but what can you do +when a well-wishing mother names you after a wealthy uncle and your +birth certificate says Neander Thalberg? As early as high school some +bright pundit noted the name's similarity to that of a certain +prehistoric man. Unfortunately the similarity is not in name alone: +I'm muscular, stooped, and, I must admit, not handsome hero model +material. + +Well, maybe the nickname's justified, but still, Al Benson didn't have +to give the crowning insult. And yet, if he hadn't, there probably +wouldn't be a torchship stern-ending on Mars just about now. + +C. I. (Central Intelligence, that is) at the Sands figured Benson +would head for New York. Which is why the boss sent me here. I +registered in a hotel in the 50's and, figuring that whatever Benson +intended to do would have spectacular results, I kept the stereo on +News. + +Benson's wife hadn't yielded much info. Sure she described the clothes +he was wearing and said he'd taken nothing else except an artist's +case. What was in that was anybody's guess; his private lab is such a +jumble nobody could tell what, if anything, was missing. + +C. I. knew his political feelings. Seems he'd been talking wild about +the upcoming presidential election and had sworn he'd nip the +draft-Cadigan movement in the bud. Cadigan's Mayor of New York City. +He's anti-space. In fact, Cadigan's anti just about everything in +science except intercontinental missiles. Strictly for defense, of +course. Cadigan says. + + * * * * * + +A weathercaster was making rash promises on the stereo when the potray +dinged. The potray? I certainly wasn't expecting mail. Only C. I. knew +where I was and they'd have closed-circuited me on visio if they +wanted contact. + +The potray dinged and there was a package in it. + +Now matter transference I knew. It put mailmen out of business. +There's a potray in every domicile and you can put things in it, dial +the destination and they come out there. They come out the same size +and weight and in the same condition as they went in, provided they +didn't go in alive. Life loses, as many a shade of a hopeful guinea +pig could relate. + +So the potray dinged and here was this package. At first glance it +looked like one of those cereal samples manufacturers have been +everlastingly sending through since postal rates dropped after cost of +the potrays had been amortized. But cereal samples don't come through +at midday; they're night traffic stuff. + +The package was light, its wrapping curiously smooth. There was an +envelope attached with my correct name and potray number. Whoever had +mailed it must be in C. I. or must know someone in C. I. who knew +where I was. + +The postmark was blurred but I could make out that it had been cast +from Grand Central. Time didn't matter. It couldn't have been cast +more than a microsecond earlier. + +The envelope contained a card upon which was typed: + +"Caution! Site on cylinder of 2 ft. radius and 6 ft. height. Unwrap at +armslength." + +Now what? A practical joke? If so, it must be Benson's work. He's +played plenty, from pumping hydrogen sulphide (that's rotten egg gas, +as you know) into the air-conditioning system at high school to +calling a gynecologist to the launching stage at the Sands to sever an +umbilical cord which he neglected to say was on a Viking rocket. + +I followed the instructions. As I bent back the first fold of the +strange wrapping it came alive, unfolding itself with incredible +swiftness. + +Something burst forth like a freed djinn--almost instantaneously +lengthening, spreading--a thing with beetling brows, low, broad +forehead, prognathous jaw, and a hunched, brutally muscular body, with +a great club over its swollen shoulder. + +I went precipitously backward over a coffee table. + +It stabilized, a dead mockery, replica of a Neanderthal. + +A placard hung on its chest. I read this: + +"Even some of the early huntsmen weren't successful. Abandon the +chase, Monk. I've things to do and this--your blood brother, no +doubt--couldn't catch me any more than you can!" + +Which positively infuriated me. + +Do you blame me? + +A few cussing, cussed minutes later I realized what Al Benson had +apparently done: solved the torchship's fuel problem. + +Oh, I'd seen Klein bottles and Mobius strips and other things that +twist in on themselves and into other dimensions, twisting into +microcosms and macrocosms--into elsewhere, in any event. And here I +had visual evidence that Benson had had something nearly six feet tall +and certainly two feet in breadth enclosed in a nearly weightless +carton less than eight inches on the side! + +Sufficient fuel for a Marstrip? Just wrap it up! + +The stereo's audio was saying: "... from the Museum of Natural +History. Curators are compiling a list of the missing exhibits which +we will reveal to you on this channel as soon as it's available. Now +we switch to Dick Joy at City Hall with news of the latest exhibit +found. Come in, Dick!" + +On the steps of City Hall was a full size replica of a mastodon over +whose massive back was draped a banner bearing the slogan: "The +Universal Party is for you! Don't return to prehistory with Cadigan! +Re-elect President Ollie James and go to the stars!" + +And there was a closeup of Mayor Cadigan standing pompous and +wrathful--and looking very diminutive--behind the emblem of his +opposition party. + +Dick Joy was saying, "Eyewitnesses claim that this replica--obviously +one of the items stolen from the Museum of Natural History--suddenly +materialized here. Immediately prior to the alleged materialization a +man--whose photograph we show now--ostensibly bent down to tie a +shoelace, setting a shoebox beside him. He left the box, walking off +into the gathering crowd, and this mastodon _seemed_ to spring into +being where the shoebox had been. + +"The mastodon replica has been examined. A report just handed me says +it is definitely that from the Museum and that it could not +conceivably have been contained in a shoebox. It's obviously a case of +mass hypnotism. The replica must have been trucked here. There's no +other possible explanation. Excuse me!" + +Dick Joy turned away, then back. + +"I have just been handed a notice that Mayor Cadigan wishes to say a +few words and I hereby introduce him, His Honor the Mayor, Joseph F. +Cadigan!" + +His balding, fragmentarily curly-haired Honor glared. + +"Friends," he said chokingly, "whatever madman is responsible for this +outrageous act will not go unpunished. I call upon the City's Finest +to track him down and bring him to justice. + +"I am for justice, for equality and peace. I--" + +His Honor was apparently determined to use all the time he could. +Being a newscast, it was for free. + +I killed the stereo. And the visio rang. It was Phil Pollini, the C. +I. Chief. + +"Monk," he said, "guess you've seen the stereo. Al's out to fix the +Mayor's wagon." + +"Say that again," I said, having a brainstorm. + +"Now, look--" he started. + +"Maybe you've got something there, Chief," I cut in. "Cadigan's got +the superduper of all wagons--a seven passenger luxury limousine with +bulletproof glass, stereo, a bar, venetian blinds and heaven knows +what else. Hot and cold running androids, maybe. He prowls the +elevated highways with an 'In Conference' sign flashing over the +windshield. So's he can't be wire-tapped or miked, I guess. It'd be a +natch for Al Benson to go for." + +Pollini grinned. + +"So if you were Benson what'd you do to fix the Mayor's wagon?" + +"Hitch it to a star," I said, "and the closest spot to a star would be +the observation platform of the Greater Empire State." + +"You're probably right," the Chief said. "Get going!" + +I got. + +Ten minutes later I walked out onto the observation platform on the +150th floor of the Greater Empire State Building--and found an +incredulous crowd gathered around the mayor's limousine. I felt good. +I'd predicted. + +I asked a guard, "How'd it get here?" + +His eyebrows were threatening a back somersault. + +"Don't know," he said. "I was looking over the side; then turned +around and here it was! You have any ideas?" + +Which is when I spotted Al Benson. + +I settled for shoving Benson toward the elevator, being careful since +he had a box under each arm. We made the elevator and went down and it +stopped on the 120th floor and the operator said, "Change here for all +lower floors and the street--" + +As we waited on the 120th for the down elevator, the P. A. system +barked: + +"Attention all building occupants. By order of the Mayor no one will +be permitted to leave the building until further notice. Please remain +where you are. We will try not to inconvenience you for any great +time." + +There was no one close to us. + +"Al," I said, "look, stinker, you've had your fun but this is it. I +don't know what you've got in those boxes but you've got to turn them +over--and yourself--to the next copper who shows. This is a civil +matter, strictly local, and not C. I." + +Benson grinned. "Got to make a delivery first, Monk. Look, there's a +potray over there. Can I use it?" + +His grin was infectious. "So what are you going to send where?" I +asked as sternly as I could. + +"The Mayor's personal files," he said. "I managed to carry them out of +City Hall--once they'd been suitably wrapped, of course! I'm sending +them to the Senate Investigation Committee. Don't worry, Monk, His +Honor won't be President this or any year!" + +I helped him dial the SIC number. + +"What about the other package?" I asked him then. + +"Insurance," he said. "Come out on the setback." + +He placed the last package on the mosaic tile of the terrace, untied +its string, flipped open the edge of the Benson wrapping and jumped +back. + +It was an NYC police helicopter. + +We potrayed it back from the Sands. Suitably wrapped, of course. + +That was a month ago. Most of it never came out in the papers. Nothing +of Benson's invention. C. I. thought it should be squelched, at least +until Benson and the boys get back from Mars. + +Which would be the end except for the packages. Yes, Benson left a +gross of them with me and I've been mailing them one a day to the +leaders of the opposition party. I don't truly know what's in them, of +course. But it's very curious that the day before the torchship left +exactly one hundred and forty-four cylinders of hydrogen sulphide were +missing from quartermaster stores. Coincidentally one of my C. I. +friends tells me Benson had him rig up a gross of automatic releases +for gas cylinders. + +Adding it up, it could be a good lesson for politicians to keep their +noses out of science. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Political Application, by John Victor Peterson + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLITICAL APPLICATION *** + +***** This file should be named 31755.txt or 31755.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/7/5/31755/ + +Produced by Greg Weeks, Barbara Tozier and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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