A Matter of Time

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Authors: Glen Cook
Tags: Fiction, Science-Fiction, Fantasy
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knew Time Zero was approaching, that the Central Committee was watching closely.
     
    "Yes sir." Dunajcik eased the colonel's wheelchair into the corridor and started toward the elevators. His heart fluttered as they passed the emergency stairs. Dump the bastard down there someday, he thought. ISD could requisition a power chair for its director.
     
    Internal Security Division's primary responsibility was ferreting out enemies of the State hidden within the agency itself. It was the agency's most powerful, shadowed, and feared division, and Neulist made an erratic guiding spirit.
     
    The colonel was a dreaded man. His whim could terminate lifelines anywhere in Prague Zone. Dunajcik was one of a tiny handful of Central Europeans who did not hold the man in absolute terror. He just hated Neulist.
     
    The colonel's current obsession was nailing the Zumsteg brothers for the anticipated failure of the TDDTS. But his motivation was spite, not service to the State. Otho Zumsteg's physician daughter had rejected the colonel. And Otho had had the nerve to threaten personal violence after having learned of the advance.
     
    Dunajcik had witnessed that confrontation. He had come away with his hatred reconfirmed.
     
    The colonel would not tolerate rejection, much less threats. He seemed to feel he was a god, above any rules or control.
     
    Dunajcik's greatest failing was that he took as
ex cathedra
every encyclical published by the Central Committee.
     
    By their officially published guidelines, Neulist was guilty of gross abuse of power.
     
    Dunajcik had therefore pursued the only course he had seen as open to a minor cog in the State machine. He had approached Committeewoman Bozada, who was known for her dislike of the colonel.
     
    Was Neulist aware that he had become the woman's creature? The bastard was slick as a greased snake. He wriggled out of every trap.
     
    In the Zumstegs the colonel had met a match. They had patrons on the Committee. Their subdivision, a cornerstone of Security, Economic, and Agricultural Directives, was absolutely critical to the welfare of the State. Only Neulist had ever questioned their loyalty. And their genius was such that the TDDT System could not function long without them.
     
    Neulist had chosen a hard nut.
     
    Three floors up, Sergeant Helfrich managed his electronic sorceries from a room hardly larger than a closet. Dunajcik and Neulist were compelled to remain in the open doorway.
     
    "What're they up to?" the colonel demanded.
     
    Helfrich glanced at Dunajcik.
     
    "Go ahead."
     
    Was that a signal of trust? Or of imminent termination? At one time, before the Uprising had radically altered his life, Neulist had been an outstanding medical experimentalist at one of the secret research facilities. It would suit the man's sense of humor to condemn his aide to human guinea pig service in such a place.
     
    Helfrich was as near a friend as the colonel had, and even he walked on eggs.
     
    "They're setting up to transmit the final program. With triple fail-safes, all recorders going, like that. Frankly, I think the girl's with them because it's the one place you can't reach her."
     
    Neulist smashed his good fist against the arm of the wheelchair. The lieutenant and sergeant exchanged looks, anticipating one of the colonel's fits. Dunajcik reached back to make sure he still had the hypo kit attached to his belt.
     
    "What the hell's wrong with that picture?"
     
    "Static from the tachyon generator, Colonel. When my laser beam bounces off the back theater wall…"
     
    "Doesn't anything work in this place? Give it more power."
     
    "I can't, sir, without giving them interference readings that would tell them we're watching."
     
    "All right. All right. Damn you, Dunajcik. You brought me up here for nothing."
     
    Always his fault. Why hadn't they given him pilot's training the way he had asked? He swallowed an observation concerning the colonel's own stupidity. Any fool could have seen

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