The Golden Gate

The Golden Gate Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Golden Gate Read Online Free PDF
Author: Alistair MacLean
Tags: Fiction, thriller
inhalation of that gas produced immediate unconsciousness. After ten seconds he left, walked round the front of the bus where he was joined by Van Effen. Reston and his companion had already closed and bolted the main entrance. Now they were stripping off their overalls to reveal the conservative and well cut suits beneath.

Reston said: 'Over? So soon? Just like that?' Branson nodded. 'But if one whiff of that can knock a man out, surely it's going to kill them-if they keep on sitting there, I mean, inhaling the stuff all the time?'

They left via the side door, not too hurriedly, locking it behind them. Branson said: 'Contact with oxygen neutralizes the gas inside fifteen seconds. You could walk inside that bus now and be entirely unaffected. But it will be at least an hour before anyone in that bus comes to.'

Harriman stepped out of a taxi as they came round to the garage front. They boarded, the coach-now the new rear coach of the motorcade-and Van Effen headed for Nob Hill. Branson made a switch in the fascia.

'P2?'

'Yes.'

'How are things?'

'Quiet. Too damned quiet. I don't like it.'

'What do you think is happening?'

'I don't know. I can just see someone on the phone asking for permission to launch a couple of guided missiles at us.'

'Permission from whom?'

"The highest military authority in the country,'

'Could take time to contact Washington.'

'Take damn-all time to contact Nob Hill'

'Oh, my God!' Momentarily, even Branson's habitual massive calm was disturbed. The highest military authority in the country was, indeed, in the next suite to the President in the Mark Hopkins hotel. General Cartland, Chief of Staff and adviser extraordinary to the President, was indeed participating 'in that day's motorcade. 'You know what happens if they do contact him?"

'Yes. They'll cancel (he motorcade.' Chief of the Armed Forces though the President might be, he could be over-ruled in matters of security by his Chief of Staff. 'Hold it a minute.' There was a pause then Johnson said: 'One of the guards at the gate is on the telephone. This could mean anything or nothing.'

Branson was conscious of a slight dampness in the region of his neck collar. Although he had given up the habit of prayer even before he'd left his mother's knee, he prayed it was nothing. Perhaps the call to the guard was perfectly innocuous: perhaps the outcome of the call might be innocuous : if it were not, the many months and the quarter million dollars he'd spent in preparation for this coup was so much irrecoverable water under the bridge.

'PI?'

'Yes?' Branson was dimly aware that his teeth were damped tightly together.

'You're not going to believe this but tower has just given us permission to lift off.'

Branson remained silent for a few moments while someone lifted the Golden Gate Bridge off his back. He was not one much given to brow-mopping but this, if ever, seemed a warranted occasion. He refrained. He said: 'Never look a gift horse in the mouth. How do you account for this?'

"The guards must have said that they'd checked our identity papers and that they were in order.'

'Start up, will you? I'd like to find out if I can hear you over the racket of the rotors.'

Twin lines of security men, back to back at a distance of about six feet and facing outwards, formed a protective lane for the short distance between the hotel and the waiting Presidential coach, which seemed rather superfluous as the streets had been barricaded off from the public for a hundred yards all around. The visiting dignitaries from the Persian Gulf seemed to be in no way put out by this nor to be suffering from any claustrophobic sense of imprisonment: in their own homelands, where the fine art of assassination had reached peaks as yet undreamed of in the United States, this was part and parcel of their everyday lives: not only would they have felt naked without this overt show of protection, they would have been offended if not humiliated by the very concept that
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