P.J. O'Reilly, the chief of staff, was the first man through the door. The dog growled, then went over to a corner to rearrange itself well out of O'Reilly's way. Brilliant, arrogant, utterly devoid of humor — and humanity, some said— O'Reilly was the most intensely political creature the president had ever had the misfortune to meet. No one liked him, not even the current Mrs. O'Reilly. One of his many enemies had said he had the soul of a lizard. With a resume like that, the president thought, he was perfect for the job of chief of staff.
'I had the television on as background noise,' O'Reilly told the president. 'I heard it.'
'Be nice if our spies knew what was going on in France.'
'They don't,' O'Reilly said bluntly. 'And I don't think the French government has a clue either.'
'Boy, I certainly would enjoy being a spy in France. It would beat the heck out of this job. Nice climate, great food, wonderful wine, beautiful women…' The president sighed wistfully. 'Oh, well. What is a beam generator, anyway?'
'A searchlight would be my guess.'
'Mine too. Or maybe a laser.'
The president wriggled his toes and popped a potato chip into his mouth. After he swallowed it, he said, 'Glad I'm not the premier of France.' And he chuckled.
When the telephone in his pocket rang again, Rip was on the porch with one of the state police lieutenants. 'Excuse me a moment,' he said. 'I must take this call.' He walked to the end of the porch and opened the cover of the phone.
'Hello.'
'It's me.'
'The police are here. We're certain the two dead kidnappers are French. One of them even had a French passport in his pocket.'
'Pierre Artois sent them.'
'How in hell did you get mixed up with that bastard?'
'I made a mistake. All right? Rip, I need your help.'
'So does Egg.'
'Have the police check bizjet flights to France. I can't see two Frenchmen holed up with Egg in a hideout in the Ozarks.'
'Okay,' he said briskly.
'Are you willing to help me?'
'This isn't Rent-a-Hero.'
'I need you, Rip.'
'Okay.'
'And I need to hear you say it about me.'
Rip Cantrell took a ragged breath. Well, there it was. Yes or no.
'I deserve that, I suppose.'
'On the other hand, if I'd worked harder at being someone you wanted to be with, maybe you wouldn't have been bored.'
'Yes.'
'What say we get Egg back? When we get out of jail, we'll go on from there.'
'Deal! But let's try to stay out of jail, for a little while, anyway. This is what I want to do.' And she told him.
The warm glow of triumph suffused Julie Artois as she stood watching her husband and Claudine Courbet completing the final preparations for the testing of the antigrav-ity beam. Henri Salmon stood beside her. There were three other men in the chamber, all engineers. The men had the dust covers off the telescope and beam generator; the reactor was producing power, and the computers calculating aimpoints and angles. Signals from the computer were gently moving the telescope and beam generator, aiming them. All the personnel were wearing space suits, although they had yet to don their helmets and pressurize the suits, and would not do so until they were ready to depressurize the chamber and roll back the roof cover.
Years of dreaming, scheming and planning were coming to fruition in the next few moments. The antigravity beam had been the final piece in the puzzle. A beam generator on the moon that could strike any spot on planet Earth was the ultimate weapon, against which the nations of the earth had no defense.
Finally, after eons of war, strife, starvation and disease, the rule of might makes right was going to be used for good. Henceforth she and Pierre were going to right the wrongs, cure the sick, feed the starving… lift mankind from the eternal struggle for every morsel to the enlightened benefits of a new civilization, one built on compassion for the needs of all.
Of course it would not be easy. Many would resist. Yet in human affairs the truth was indisputable: The ends do indeed occasionally justify the means. On the bright side, this would be the last great struggle. She and Pierre would lead mankind into a new and brighter tomorrow. Lead them kicking and screaming, but they were going — or they would die.
She was up to the task.
Pierre, of course, thought it was his. Suffused with testosterone, the males of the species needed to believe in something, and being simple-minded fools, they usually believed in themselves. Every woman with a lick of sense understood that reality and worked with it. Pierre did as Julie wished him to do and believed it was his own idea. Watching Pierre now, Julie Artois smiled.
Her gaze switched to Courbet, and the smile faded. These engineers were true believers, but they lacked judgment. They would obey orders; they would have to, the stakes were too large. If they didn't— She became acutely aware of Salmon standing beside her. The man had an animal presence.
If they didn't obey, she would tell Salmon. He would fix things.
Julie Artois did not believe in heaven or hell or life after death.
She was about to create an inferno that would forever change the nations of the world. Once the people of the earth saw the benefits of the new world order, it would become the new paradigm. National pride, war and the all-consuming, eternal quest for the all-mighty dollar would become ancient history. World peace would be her monument, and it would outlast the pyramids.
Her reverie came to an end when Pierre announced, 'We are ready.'
Claudine Courbet nodded her concurrence. She had helped design this entire installation. She seemed absorbed in the technical minutia and had personally supervised the connection of every cable and the testing of every component in the system. The success of the beam generator would be her triumph, Julie believed, against all those people who believed women were good for only one thing.
The people in the chamber donned their helmets, then pressurized their space suits and checked each other's suits. Pierre checked Julie's and he checked hers. Julie saw that he was smiling inside his helmet. He touched his helmet to hers and whispered, 'This is the moment.'
When everyone was ready, the depressurization of the cavern began. It took about five minutes to pump all the air out. When the pumps had extracted all the air they could, the overhead door was cracked open, allowing the last of the air to escape. Then the doors began their mechanical journey to the fully opened position. As they rolled back, sunlight at a low angle flooded one corner of the cavern. It was so bright that those who had forgotten to lower the sun visors on their helmets were dazzled by the brilliance.
Julie took two long steps to the beam generator and looked up. The earth hung in the black sky above like a round blue jewel, although one side was shaded in darkness.
With the door fully open, Pierre announced, 'Let us begin.'
One of the engineers manned the console that controlled the telescope. He brought up the picture on the monitor as Julie and Pierre watched. They found they were looking almost straight down at a brown landscape, a desert. The engineer used the computer to zoom in on the center of the picture. A square object was there, slightly