The Last President: A Novel of an Alternative America

The Last President: A Novel of an Alternative America Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Last President: A Novel of an Alternative America Read Online Free PDF
Author: Michael Kurland
Tags: Fiction, General, Science-Fiction, Fantasy, Alternative History
few questions?”
    “Have you any identification?” Kit asked. The question was reflex.
    “Right. Here.” The young man pulled cards from his wallet that showed him to be Ralph Schuster, 28, of the Washington Post city desk. He had a District of Columbia Police press pass and a congressional press pass to go along with his D.C. driver’s license. The three photographs on the documents showed that he varied between sporting a beard and going clean-shaven. At the moment he was clean of face.
    “Okay,” Kit said, handing the cards back. He waved Schuster to a chair and flopped back into his own. “You can ask whatever you like. You understand that I reserve the right not to answer.”
    “Of course,” Schuster said. “Is it true that you’re the White House Liaison for Intelligence Matters?”
    “That’s what it says on the organizational charts.”
    “Is it true that you moved into this job on the nineteenth of June?”
    “I think that’s also a matter of public record,” Kit said. “Why?”
    “Mr. Young, I want you to help me. Anything you can say will be of help, either on or off the record. Your confidentiality will be completely respected.”
    Kit leaned back. “What are we talking about?”
    “Let me lay my cards on the table,” Schuster said. “Here’s what I’ve got: On the night of the sixteenth of June the offices of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate Towers were burglarized by five men. They were arrested in the offices by plainclothes officers of the Metropolitan Police. A camera was left behind when they were removed. The film in that camera had not yet been exposed. The men were released at the request of the CIA, and the operation was hushed up to the extent that the boys of the DNC didn’t even find out that the men had been arrested. DNC was told that they were apprehended in the building but released at that time for lack of evidence, whereas actually they were taken to the station house and booked before they were released.
    “I traced the camera back by its serial number. It was one of several purchased by the Fleming Importing Company, which a cursory check showed to be a CIA front operation.
    “You were the CIA man on duty at the Washington DOD desk that night. You were called to the police station. You met with the men. You made a mysterious phone call. The men were then released. Two days later you suddenly take a job with the White House.”
    Schuster paused and lit a fresh cigarette from the stub of his last. Then he crushed the stub out in the glass ashtray on Kit’s desk. “That’s what I’ve got,” he said.
    Kit stared at him. “That was five months ago,” he said finally. “Isn’t that a long time to be following up a minor burglary?”
    “That’s the trouble,” Schuster said. “I’ve been doing this pretty much on my own time. The city editor thinks it’s a minor story, too. I don’t. I smell something big in it. I’m learning to trust my nose, and, Mr. Young, this story smells. What do you think, Mr. Young? Was it a minor burglary? Who were the five John Does, Mr. Young? What were they after in the DNC headquarters?”
    “You put me in a difficult position, Mr. Schuster,” Kit said. “As you must know, I can neither confirm nor deny any part of your story. I do have a job in the Executive Office. So do about two thousand other people. I did come from another branch of government; so did most of them. I did come to work on a certain date, two days after an event you claim happened. I’m sure that most of the other people here come to work within a day or two of something significant happening somewhere.”
    “You could deny my story, Mr. Young,” Schuster said. “If you wanted to, you could deny it. If it wasn’t true. If any part of it isn’t true, you could deny that part. Supposing I go over it again, point by point, and if there’s any part of it you’d like to deny, stop me when I reach that point. Okay?”
    Kit laughed.
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Tumbling in Time

Denise L. Wyant

Zigzag

Bill Pronzini

Pam-Ann

Lindsey Brooks

Still the One

Debra Cowan

Of Light and Darkness

Shayne Leighton

Love, Lies & The D.A.

Rebecca Rohman

Cruelest Month

Aaron Stander

The Means

Douglas Brunt

Stillwatch

Mary Higgins Clark