Returning her smile: 'I do believe your sense of duty is boundless.' He took the hand that reached up for him, eased down beside her.

'Never think that,' she whispered, graceful fingers sliding along the muscles corded at his neck. 'I told you I was selfish.' She felt his hands on her, tremblingly tentative, gentle in their vitality. 'I won't break,' she laughed, and thrust her breasts against his cupped hands. Murmuring with pleasure, she kissed his throat and then, her eyes wide and unfocused on his own, traced the surface of his lips with her tongue.

Maurice Everett, maltrained by a lifetime of cinema caresses, roamed weightless in the depths of the artless green-flecked eyes. It was a token of commitment, of sharing, that ravished him in its directness.

'When did you decide this was what you wanted,' he asked, his hand moving down the voluptuous swell of her hip.

'When you called me `babe'.' she murmured, lips fluttering against his, 'and I didn't mind. Shut up and give me.'

That lesbian contralto had fooled him badly. The moon was well up before he thought of snowshoes again.

Mr. and Mrs. Marks left their cabin on Monday, after defacing many kilometers of snow with their prints and breaking two slats in the bed. They found a motel in Socorro, New Mexico that night but were abashed into more quiescent love-making at two A.M. by the insomniac pounding on their wall. Tucson boasted a wealth of motels, at least one with a vibrating mattress and naughty movies on television. When Everett showed up Wednesday at the Tucson office of the FBI he was four kilos thinner, randy as a goat, and full of ideas for further weight reduction. Gina Vercours drove the Firebird on to Phoenix. En route, she saw the contrail of a commercial airliner at it lanced toward Los Angeles from El Paso. Gina stroked her thigh and smiled, think­ing of the contrails Maury Everett made when loping over snowdrifts. She did not consider the passengers of the aircraft, who included Hakim Arif and, several seats ahead, Leah Talith.

Neither Bernal Guerrero nor Chaim Mardor were on the flight, having driven the little van earlier with its fresh Quebecois supplies. There was just no way to get surface-to-air missiles through a baggage inspection, not even the little shoulder-fired SAMs Hakim had earmarked for his war on media...

SATURDAY, 27 DECEMBER, 1980:

Charlie George's solution to the security prob­lem was outlandish. He had paid a slather of money to NBN's best sound stage architect and three slathers to several independent special ef­fects crews. The moving van that had backed up to his earth berm in Palm Springs contained twelve blue-tinted, shallow reinforced fiberglass trays, each nearly three meters across; enough structural aluminum to erect a small dirigible; and panel after panel of clear two-centimeter polycarbonate lying atop ultramodern furnish­ings.

It had taken twelve days and over two hundred thousand dollars to put the materials in Palm Springs in holiday season. After another five days of furious labor by picked men, Charlie's atrium had disappeared. Now, in its place, was a pond formed by the interconnected trays, hold­ing eleven thousand kilos of water, complete with fountain and a ridiculous naked cherub for lagniappe. In the geometric center of the pond was a gorgeous rectangular dwelling, mostly clear polycarbonate and white aluminum, conforming to Charlie's idea of a three-holer by Mies van der Rohe. Anyone who climbed the new stairs over the berm could see, though not learn much from, the pair of armed churls who kept house there. He could not see into the fake fieldstone bathroom, which hid the stairs lead­ing down to Charlie's original lair.

The pond and the bulletproof plastic house rested on tubular aluminum columns that rose here and there from the atrium floor. Since the house and pond also had translucent floors, Charlie still had some daylight in the place. The sight of the aluminum maze in his atrium only made him madder, more determined to press his peculiar attack on the shadowy bastards who made it all necessary.

At least Charlie could feel secure behind rammed-earth walls, below the liquid armor, and beyond his stolid guards. He churned through his pre-opened mail alone on a warm Saturday afternoon in late December, fighting post-Christmas anomie, wishing there were some way he could tempt Rhone Althouse from his hideaway at Lake Arrowhead. The highly publicized fates of Maurice Everett and espe­cially of Dahl D'Este had reduced Althouse to something that approached paranoia. Surely, thought Charlie, I can jolly Rhone out of this mood. So far, he had been unsuccessful; even Charlie could not cheer a melancholy gagman.

But Charlie found a way, beginning with the package from the office of Commissioner David Engels. It contained an individualized tele­phone scrambler, and a number with a six-oh­-two area code. He called the number. Two min­utes later he was struggling with tears of repressed joy, partly because he no longer felt guilt over the Everett affair. The voice on the other end had the right scrambler, and he asked if Charlie still lived in a vacant lot.

'Maury, God damn, you sound terrific,' Charlie stammered into the scrambler. He carried the wireless phone extension into his kitchen for a beer, knowing he sounded like a manic-depressive caught on the upswing, caring not a whit. 'You weren't? It was all hype, the coma, the kidnapping, all of it?' He listened to the explanation, his expressions a barometer of his moods as he followed Everett's tale.

After twenty minutes, a sobering thought began to nag him. 'As much as I like knowing you're skinny and tan and full of garbanzos, why'd you tell me? I mean, how d'you know I'm not another jabbering D'Este, God rest him?' He took a swallow of beer and nearly choked on it. 'A JOB? You mean a real, union-dues-paying, NBN-salaried job?' Long pause before, 'Nobody has to know your function but me, Maury; hell, even I don't know what some of my retinue do. And if you really want to work for nothing, yeh, I see your point; it'd be legal. But don't blame me if you get zapped for conflict of interest, one day.'

The woman was another matter, but: 'So long as NBN doesn't realize she's an armed guard. If I pass you off as a situations consultant, she can be your aide; carry a clipboard, gopher coffee, all that crap.' He listened for another moment. Then, 'I'll have to tell Althouse, you know. He'll see you on the sets anyhow and you won't fool him for long.'

Charlie listened again, starting to laugh. 'I know what he'll say; having the FCC doing unpaid liaison is like having God cry at your wedding ... All right, then, private consulting; don't go bureaucratic on me now, for Christ's sake.'

When Charlie broke the connection, his cheeks ached from smiling. He immediately made a call to Lake Arrowhead, a two-hour drive away, and enticed Rhone Althouse to risk the trip. It was news, said Charlie, too heavy and too light to carry aver telephone lines.

There was heavier news to be shared by the time Althouse drove up in his cover identity, carrying a five- gallon bottle of distilled water into the van der Rohe miniature. As Charlie had spoken with Maurice Everett, a traffic watch helicopter had exploded in midair over South Pasadena while airing its live remote broadcast on a Los Angeles station.

The debris had fallen on a freeway cloverleaf to tangle in the clotted weekend traffic, with eight known fatalities and over thirty injuries, including the chain-reaction wrecks that resulted. Eyewitnesses had seen the faint scrawl of smoke that led from the ground to terminate in the aerial firebloom of metal, fuel, and flesh. Again, the group calling itself Fat'ah clamored for recognition of a direct hit with its SAM. But this time the news services reported no compet­ing claims. On the contrary, both the Palestine Liberation Organization and the more recent Chicano `Raza' group called to make specific denials.

It was hideous news, Althouse agreed, dropping into his favorite chair in Charlie's living room. 'But there's a meta-message under it,' he said. 'It says maybe there's hope now. Three months ago, every unshelled nut in California would've been jostling the others to claim responsibility. At least today they're making a show of clean hands for a pure civilian atrocity.' He glanced sharply at Charlie. 'Now for the good news I risked my ass for.'

Charlie told him.

The Althouse reaction was mixed and thoughtful: 'I'll be glad to see Maury when I wander onto the set, but —I dunno, Charlie, all of us eggs in one basket?' He lifted one hand, made it waver in the air.

'If you're going to lay Cervantes on me, try Twain: he said put all your eggs in one basket, and watch that basket,' Charlie retorted, pleased to recall his classics.

'Twain was a lousy administrator,' Althouse grunted. 'It's getting pretty late in the game for aphorisms, Charlie. You and I and Maury Everett shouldn't even occupy the same hemisphere!'

'Aw, Rhone, don't be skittish,' Charlie said gently. 'We've started a war, right?' He got an answering nod. 'So think of this as a nonstop, floating summit meeting.'

'All right,' Althouse flashed, jerking a thumb toward the sky, 'and you can think of that SAM as a commando

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