Ron Goulart - Gadget Man.pdf

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Gadget Man
Ron Goulart
CHAPTER 1
The mad girl flashed angrily across the bright tower room and interfered with the view of the riot.
Two plainclothes therapists dived into the big circular room on her trail, apologetic, and hunkered so as
to leave the tinted windows clear for watching. The girl, thin and fair, shrugged out of reach of the lead
therapist and ran straight at Sergeant James Xavier Hecker. He was already up out of his vinyl wing
chair, reaching one calming hand to her. "Just be easy now," he said.
In the chair next to his, Therapist-in-Chief Weeman said, "Halt, Mrs. Gibbons." He stretched
over and slapped the slim girl with his clip-on stunrod. She stiffened just short of touching Hecker.
"Why that?" asked Hecker, steadying the girl's now paralyzed body.
"We strive to give our more hopeful patients a semblance of autonomy and free motion," said
Weeman. He breast-pocketed the stunrod in his lime-green tunic. "Incidents can't be encouraged, but on
the other side of the token, neither should they be subdued with too drastic means."
The two therapists hesitated, hands extending, unobtrusively, for the caught patient. Hecker said,
"It'll take her two hours to come out of that." He let the two wide men carry the girl away and out of the
top tower of theRehabCenter.
Weeman tugged at his blond beard, as though he suddenly suspected it was false. "I find your
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concern for a disturbed suburban housewife, a girl you don't even know, to be almost fascinating."
"Why don't you turn those Kendry files over, and I'll take off." Hecker was a lean man, tall and
slightly bent, with a bony face and too big hands. The Social Wing of the Police Corps had allowed him
to grow a shaggy mustache, but would probably not promote him much beyond sergeant.
Therapist-in-Chief Weeman's small, tidy lap was filled with carded microfilm. He let some of the
fingers of his left hand dance on the film and nodded at the view windows. "I wish you shared my
fascination with these riots, though your reasons for not doing so are best known to yourself. That one
occurring down there in Citrus Knolls right now seems rich in fascination. I've monitored all the recent
suburban riots in the area, but this is the first one to take place in, as you might say, my own back yard."
Far below and across an artificial river, a troop of cub scouts had just put torches to the
community recreation center, and to the immediate left of that a mob of graying matrons were lobbing
plastic bombs into the main building of the tennis club. The majority of the members of the Veterans of
the Chinese Invasion were chucking surplus grenades into patios and rock gardens all along Citrus
Knolls's wide and neatly pastoral streets and lanes. Over two thousand of the residents of the planned
suburb, a good third of its population, were involved in the rioting and looting. "Here come the troops,"
said Hecker, turning his back on the windows.
Weeman toggled a switch on his chair arm, and television screens on the blind wall of the
rehabilitation center tower snapped alive. "I want a better look at all this. These initial confrontations
between the dazed citizens and the Army of theRepublicofSouthern Californiaare little less than
fascinating."
Hecker glanced up at the images of the lime-and-lemon uniformedRepublicofSouthern California
soldiers marching with locked arms down the main esplanade of Citrus Knolls. "The Kendry files," he
repeated.
"What do you, as a representative of the Social Wing, a division of our Southern California
government I can't help believing is more liberal than necessary, think causes these outbreaks in our best
suburbs, Sergeant?" Weeman twisted new curls into his full beard, ticked his head forward. The army
was apparently using stun gas, and the screen showed people slowing and freezing, still clutching torches
and bombs and bright new rifles.
"The riots are the Junta's business," said Hecker. "They govern theRepublicofSouthern California
."
"You seem reluctant to express an opinion that is solidly yours, Sergeant Hecker."
"I just work here."
"Look at that," said Weeman. "That little old lady sniped one of the cameramen off the roof of the
United Methodist." He studied then the microfilm between his legs, watched Hecker for several long
seconds. "Some people, a small but vocal minority, consider the cause of the riots to be the recent
tightening of law enforcement and the additional troops being garrisoned in some of our larger secured
towns and cities. What do you, Sergeant Hecker, feel about the notion that the Junta has ruled the
Republic with undue strictness in recent years?"
"Since my branch of the Police Corps is under the jurisdiction of the Junta, you don't have to
ask," Hecker told him. He paced away from the seated therapist, watching, briefly, the smoke columns
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fuse into a thick black smear in the bright afternoon sky.
"Younger people," said Weeman, "forget how things were back in nineteen eighty-one and those
years. Before the Chinese Commandos were defeated in the Battle of Glendale, there were many, not
deluded but calm and rational people, who felt Red China would successfully carry off its land invasion of
Southern California."
"If Southern California hadn't seceded from the Union in nineteen-eighty, things wouldn't have
happened as they did."
"The President of the United States, even though his country was falling apart, should have
supported us," said Weeman. "Had the Junta not been formed, merging our best Southern California
military and industrial brainpower into one dedicated and loyal ruling think tank, there would have been
black days for the Republic. You, a man in his middle or late twenties, don't remember those bad times."
"Probably not." Hecker returned and sat next to the Therapist-in-Chief. "I have a contact point to
be at by tonight."
"This has been, thanks to younger residents of the Republic such as yourself, Sergeant Hecker,
rightly christened the `Age of Anxiety'."
Weeman twined his stubby fingers in the swatch of beard beneath his chin. "Myself, Sergeant
Hecker, I favor the conspiracy theory to explain the riots. These most recent suburban riots-- there's a
strange and fascinating quality to them." He freed his fingers from his facial hair and indicated the burning
and fighting below. "Social repressions, supposed injustices and unlawful restraints, don't invoke the kind
of mania we're witnessing at this moment, Sergeant Hecker. A thoughtful examination of the sweeping
panorama of riot history tells us that citizens in comfortable one-hundred-thousand-dollar homes in
landscaped and secured areas should not loot and burn. They're not blacks, are they, most of them?" He
bundled the microfilm cards and tossed them across to Hecker. "The classic riots in the United States
and, especially because of our near-tropic climate, in Southern California, have traditionally been the
work of militant black men, Sergeant Hecker. And sometimes the fiery Mexican-American. Though you
may not be aware, at this remote place in time, of that."
"We studied those riots in school," said Hecker. He thumbed through the cards, holding them
next up to the overhead lights in turn. "Most of this information on the Kendry family we have in our
Social Wing files. I thought you had some extra stuff that couldn't be trusted to transmission."
Weeman drew a last card from beneath his narrow thigh. "Some background material on Jane
Kendry. Tests and projections done during the brief period when she was a ward of the Rehab system.
What exactly is your mission for S.W., Sergeant?"
Hecker took the new card in one big-knuckled hand, walked to a wall microfilm reader and
inserted the card. "You were told that when the Social Wing requested this interview."
"That story wasn't a cover then? Somebody in the Kendry clan has sent the Social Wing word
that they have information on the cause of the riots?"
"The nature of the information sent and the procedures suggested tend to indicate the Kendry
family or some of their followers may be involved," Hecker said. The-young face of a lean, intense girl
rolled into view on the screen of the reader. She had smooth, tan skin, hair of a red-gold color, long.
"Jane Kendry," muttered Hecker to himself.
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"Seven years ago," said Weeman. "She was fifteen then, coltish. Her wild father and a bunch of
the clan broke her out of a minimum-security Rehab Center down near the Laguna Sector. Lovely marine
view there. She's a quirky girl, and I believe that it is Jane Kendry who runs that band of guerrillas, that
growing band of guerrillas. Her father, old Jess, is in his middle sixties now, ridden with addictions and
badly healed wounds. At first the guerrillas were all Kendry family, but in recent years the ranks have
been swollen with other types of dissidents and anarchists. Jane is a tough girl, Sergeant Hecker, and you
won't find that hopeful look the picture there shows us. Not any more with Jane Kendry. Is she your
contact?"
"I don't know," said Hecker. "Our information isn't that specific. We have a contact point fairly
close to one of the unsecured towns the Kendrys are thought to sometimes operate in. There's a
safe-conduct pass of sorts. I came here to fill myself in on the Kendrys more thoroughly."
Therapist-in-Chief Weeman rose up behind Hecker. "You look quite unlike a policeman, even a
Social Wing one, in your civilian clothes." He flickered a sequence of toggles and the view windows
blanked, the monitor screens died. "Listen to me now, Sergeant Hecker. I worked on the Kendry girl's
case down there in Laguna Sector seven years ago. I liked her and felt I was reaching her. We could
work together on her problems and conflicts. Then those wild men came in and smashed things and
wrenched her away."
Hecker stopped reading the micro file. "So?"
"I have authority to bring her in for rehabilitation," he said, moving closer to the Social Wing
sergeant. "If she wishes, we can help her. Fit her back into the legitimate processes of the Republic of
Southern California. She's a girl with fascinating potential."
"She may not want back in. Her exile is probably voluntary."
"We often think that, Sergeant, and we are often wrong," said the therapist. "If you see Jane
Kendry, offer. Tell her Therapist-in-Chief-- No, she knew me as Associate Therapist and without the
beard, younger-- tell her Dr. Weeman can get her safe conduct here to the Pasadena Rehab Center. It
could be her only chance."
Hecker frowned. "Wait now. Why her only chance?"
"You may, Sergeant Hecker, have some competition in your quest for Jane Kendry."
"And I may not even see her," he said. "But who else is searching for her?"
"Are you familiar with Second Lieutenant Same?"
"Norman Same? He's with the Manipulation Council. Why do they want Jane Kendry?"
"Why does Manipulation usually want people?" said the therapist. "The Junta must have locked
her away or - forgive the dark thought - simply killed her. The guerrillas are trouble, and Second
Lieutenant Same, who has been here too, seeking background material, believes Jane Kendry leads the
guerrillas."
"Maybe there's been a leak in the Social Wing, if Same has been here already." Hecker clicked
his bony thumb against his teeth. "We'll see, then."
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"You get to her and tell her to be careful," said Weeman. "Once she's here in Rehab I can
guarantee they won't touch her. Believe me, Sergeant Hecker, when I tell you I can really help Jane
Kendry."
"I'll tell her," said Hecker. "Now I'll retrieve my hopper from your roof port and get on."
On the highest roof of the five-towered Rehab Center, Hecker could see Citrus Knolls burning
away, blackening the day. His unmarked Social Wing hopper was not in the reserved slot of the rooftop
landing area. Two orange-uniformed soldiers of the R.S.C. Army were squatting where the small
heliplane had been.
"Looking for your machine?" asked one of the soldiers, bouncing inquisitively and making his
buttocks smack the topping lightly.
"Yes, indeed," said Hecker. He, being in civilian clothes, had his blaster pistol cupped under his
arm and not quickly accessible. "You boys take it?"
"Sorry, Sarge," said the other soldier. They were both young privates. "We needed extra wings,
and the order went out. Your Social Wing reported an unmarked hopper parked here, signed out to
Sergeant James Xavier Hecker, and it was picked up. They got your hopper over to Citrus Knolls, using
it to dust stun powder on the folks trying to dismantle the shopping plaza."
Hecker surveyed the roof. There was a pitted old surplus hopper, with the A.R.S.C. insignia still
vaguely visible on its side, parked nearby. "Who does that one belong to?"
"That's for you if you want to use it," said the bouncing private. "Corporal Bozes said you could
use it. That's why we hung around - to be helpful. That clunk isn't much for altitude, and there's not
enough armor on its belly. Those humping snipers can set your tail on fire easy enough as it is, without
flying over in a thing like that."
"I hope it'll do for me," said Hecker. "I have an appointment."
"Plenty good for Social Wing purposes," said the private and bounced again.
In five minutes Hecker was in the air. He had to be in San Emanuel Sector, a beach town beyond
the Laguna Sector, by nightfall. The town was not one the military rated as secured, and he could expect
no help from any officials of the R.S.C. or the Police Corps once he got there. The old army hopper,
which he'd have to ditch before he got in sight of San Emanuel, chugged through the sky. It strained for
altitude, whining, for nearly a half hour, then began making rumpling, pocking sounds and dropped from
the sky toward a stretch of scrubby beach. Hecker's safety straps snapped as he tried to right the ship.
When the crash came, he was slammed hard into the control panel.
CHAPTER 2
The hopper was moving away from him in pieces, like a jigsaw puzzle dissolving. There were
weathered, gritty hands all around him and raw smells of the sea and strong spices. Gray clothes and
close-cropped hair. Hecker caught at himself and sat back. Hands were sliding through his clothes, and
one hand snapped out his packet of identification material, another got his pistol. Since he'd passed into
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