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The Enemy Within [Mission Earth Series 3] [Secure Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader]
eBook by L. Ron Hubbard
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eBook Category: Science Fiction
eBook Description: Will the galactic fate of Earth be determined by a mafia family run by a six-foot-six former Roxy chorus girl?
eBook Publisher: Galaxy Press, LLC
Fictionwise Release Date: March 2003
This eBook is also available in the following bundle(s):
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Available eBook Formats [Secure Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader - What's this?]: SECURE MOBIPOCKET FORMAT (405 KB], SECURE MICROSOFT READER FORMAT (994 KB] - Requires Microsoft Reader 2.1.1 for PCs, or Microsoft Reader 2.2.2 on Pocket PC 2002 handheld devices. Some older Pocket PCs can be upgraded. Learn More.
Microsoft Reader ISBN: 1592120989 MobiPocket Reader ISBN: 1-59212-076-8

"A thriller packed with lust, laughs, adventure and murderous intrigue."--Literary Guild
"...I am amazed, and indeed, overwhelmed by his energy."--Arthur C. Clarke

At first, I thought Heller and that ex-marine Bang-Bang were simply engaging in their novel way of going to college.
Their "command post" at Empire University seemed to be the reference room of High Library. Heller had apparently mastered the card catalogue system and the computers as well -- they were very elementary computers. He was going through card files. He was going a bit too fast for me to follow on the viewer, so I didn't know what he was looking for and I supposed he would be, faithful to his promises to Babe Corleone, pursuing his course of study. Bang-Bang was sitting next to Heller, reading something. Every now and then, he would make a pistol out of his fingers and fire it, saying "Bang" in a whisper out of deference to his surroundings. Sometimes he said "Bang, bang!" Heller got curious so I also found out. Bang-Bang was reading a comic book and I was startled to find they had a whole file of them in the reference section. I didn't see Bugs Bunny, though, so I lost interest. Heller now had a whole pile of books. They were a set, beautifully bound: Hakluyt's Voiages and, in smaller old-time print, The Principall Navigations, Voiages, and Discoveries of the English Nation ... (1589). He proceeded to demolish them at a much greater than usual pace as though he was looking for something. His progress was very jerky. I used a still frame to see what items were catching his eyes. They were odd. They could not possibly have related to anything he was studying in college. " ... and so we did suffere the loses of fifteen men who did go ashore on the coste." And " ... ye natives attkt us soare and we did lose the boatswain ...." Such things as that. Bang-Bang leaned over and whispered, "You asked me what I was reading. All right, what are you reading?" "I'm reading that anybody who tries to land around here gets the Hells attacked out of him by the natives," said Heller. "True," said Bang-Bang and went back to his comic books. Heller seemed to be looking at something else, though. And once more, I still-framed to see what it was. "... and ye natives saide that these theier golden necklaces did come from a mine three leagues into the forreste ..." And " ... vaste stores of minerales weere saide to be upon the highlande by ye Cape ..." And " ... so we journied up the rivere in smalle boates and there we founde the seaman of another shippe they thought had been eaten and we rejoiced to finde him but he woulde not come away afore he finished digging out the mine of gold he said laye up the rivere ...." There were an awful lot of different "voiages" to North America and Heller just kept plugging away reading stuff of men so long dead even their bones were gone. But he does crazy things. You can't tell what he'll get up to next. Impossible to predict him. But I had to try. My own life may have depended upon outguessing him. I wondered if it was cannibalism he was going to practice. Or maybe some scheme of kidnapping Miss Simmons, his Nature Appreciation teacher and number one barrier to getting his sheepskin, out of the hospital and setting her adrift in a small boat. At length, Heller said, "You got the command post?" And when Bang-Bang nodded, "I'm going to do a reconnaissance. Be back in a few hours." Heller turned in his books. He went out and found the bulletin boards. He was looking for something. A student was there putting up a sign: UFO PROTEST MEETING "What's a 'UFO'?" said Heller. "Unidentified Flying Object," said the student. "Flying saucers. Extraterrestrials." "You protesting them?" said Heller in an alert voice. "No, no. We're protesting the way the government keeps the sightings secret." "You've sighted some?" asked Heller. "There have been thirty thousand sightings to date," said the student. "They ought to be more careful," said Heller. "You're (bleeping)** right they should," said the student. "If the government don't quit sitting on what they know, we'll have a protest march, New York Tactical Police Force or no New York Tactical Police Force. You better come to this meeting -- it's in about three weeks. Down with the Establishment!" "I'll be there," said Heller. He went on groping through notices. Finally he found a fresh one. Nature Appreciation 101 This class has been transferred for this semester to Instructor Wouldlice. The schedule remains the same. That was what he was looking for. He went to a phone kiosk and looked in the yellow pages so quick, I didn't get it. Then he went trotting off to the Empire Subway Station. He was playing hooky! He caught a train and went roaring downtown and presently was clickety-clacking into an elevator of a big building. It dawned on me that he was wearing another pair of baseball spikes! The elevator mirror showed he was in tennis flannels with his red baseball cap on the back of his head. I had learned what that cap meant: he thought he must be working. He stopped before a door marked Geological Survey and United States Government. Then he went in. A clerk was behind a counter. "I'm looking for gold mines," said Heller. "Who isn't?" said the clerk. "I'm studying gold mines along the New England coast," said Heller. "Oh, hell, you must be a fan of old Cap Duggan," said the clerk. "Cap!" The clerk pointed, "Go on in there and wake him up. He'll chew your ear for hours." Heller went in. An old man was sorting charts. Heller told him what he wanted. "Yeah," he said, "I wrote a book on colonial mines and minerals once. Nobody ever read it though. The publisher sent me a bill. Sit down." Cap Duggan, being a government employee, was not pushed for time and he proceeded to tell Heller the story of his life. He was a surveyor, too old to push a transit anymore, and put out to grass pending retirement. Heller heard all about the Seven Cities of Cibola and lost mines and Indian fights, and they went out and Heller bought him a lunch and then heard all about Alaska and the Klondike and the days of '49. Aside from the fact that it was all about gold -- which never fails to interest -- I could not see how Custer's Last Stand really was caused by gold in the Black Hills. But Heller just sat there lapping it all up. Three solid hours and a lunch and they got down to absolutely nothing! Finally old Cap Duggan ran out of steam and decided to discuss the subject to hand. "These are what you are looking for, young fellow," he said as he managed to wrestle open a huge drawer. "They're photostats of charts that are in National Archives down in Washington." They were bad copies of charts that must have been so old and stained in the first place that not even the originals could have been made out. Cap Duggan spread some out. "They're colonial surveys. See here? This top one was done by George Washington himself. The scale is all perverted on most of them as the original charter companies was trying to convince the king they had less than they wanted, but you can make them out." Heller was going over them with a microscopic eye. He found one marked Connecticut. "Hey," he said suddenly, "here's a creek named 'Goldmine'! Empties into the Atlantic. Right there -- only twenty or thirty miles northeast from where we are right now!" "So 'tis," said Cap Duggan. "Probably some local name." "Can I see the current charts of that area?" Cap Duggan got them. "Well, well," he said. "It's on the current chart, too. Look, there's even some mineral indicators. Oh, yeah. I know that place. Lost mine. Never found. I remember about forty years ago somebody that was adjusting boundaries around there. Probably never was a mine, just somebody's idea to attract colonists or something. Now look, way up to the northeast of there, almost in the middle of the state, there's a real mine -- near Portland, Connecticut. The Strickland Quarry. Lot of rock hounds go there. There's also quarries at Roxbury, Branchville, East Hampton and Old Mystic right down on the coast. They dig gemstones, garnets and such like. Lot of stuff like that in Connecticut. Just drive up to Westchester and get on the New England Thruway -- that's really U.S. 95 -- and have at it. Connecticut's awful pretty this time of year. I wished I wasn't stuck in this God (bleeped) office! Well, I'll be retired soon and they'll let me out of the cage." Heller bought a stack of maps down to the tiniest sections. He also bought twenty copies of Cap Duggan's book -- autographed! And really left the old man beaming. When he left, he made one more stop. At a flower shop. He ordered that, every day, Miss Simmons was to get a bunch of beautiful flowers in the hospital. He got back on the subway and very soon was sitting in High Library again. Bang-Bang came in from a tape-recorder pickup and planting, Heller's sneaky way to avoid attending classes. "What's new?" said Heller. "Nothing," said Bang-Bang. "Going to college is great." And he got back to reading his comic books. But the day left me in a spin. Heller was now up to something else. I could feel it. I was really frustrated. I did not know where he was going to break out next. He was milling around. And I knew he was up to no good. And then I really got upset. About midnight I went into my bedroom. There was a card lying on my pillow! Nobody could have gotten into that room! But there was the card! The message was addressed to me in a scrawled hand: SOLTAN GRIS: I WAS TOLD TO REMIND YOU FROM TIME TO TIME THAT SOMEBODY UNKNOWN TO YOU IS AROUND WITH ORDERS TO FINISH YOU OFF IF YOU MESS UP. HISST LEFT THE CHOICE UP TO THAT PERSON. A KNIFE? A GUN? AN AUTO ACCIDENT? MAYBE SOME POISON IN THE FOOD? YOU HAVEN'T GOT A CHOICE. EXCEPT NOT TO MESS UP. SO, GRIS, DON'T MESS UP. And then a dagger drawn! The only signature! Who was it? One of the Turkish help? Somebody in Afyon? Somebody on the base? Time after time I was certain I had it. I didn't get any sleep. Copyright © 1986 by L. Ron Hubbard
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