Friday, July 16, 2021

CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE GREAT GOLD STEAL "Chapter 11: The Screaming Machines!"

CHAPTER 11
THE SCREAMING MACHINES

It was shortly after midnight that the anonymous late-model Ford turned off the FDR Drive at Houston Street, cutting west. Riding in the car with Sparrow were Randolph and Marcus. Marcus was checking out a bulky suitcase, the side of which had a set of electrical connections. Randolph was working with the contents of the other suitcase.

The weather had suddenly turned warm, a hollow echo of Indian summer. Gusty sou’wester breezes pushed through the half-open windows of the car. The East River, when they had come over the Brooklyn Bridge, had been obscured by fog, the bridge lights pale misty moons. Clouds of fog were blowing in from the river as they left it now, heading west on Houston.

At Avenue D, Sparrow swung the car right, heading north again. This was the worst part of the East Side, but at this hour all but deserted. Trash blew unhindered in the streets, rising in small clouds behind the car.

At 14th Street, they turned east again.

There is only a short block between Avenue D and the FDR Drive at 14th Street. On the south side sits a huge transformer switch yard, guarded by a high fence. On the north side sits the main Manhattan Consolidated Edison power generating plant. Even now its tall stacks belched pollution into the air. The city regularly fined the monolithic utility company, but Con Ed only shrugged, paid the fines, and added them to its already staggering consumer bills. Across the Drive, nestled between it and the East River, almost obscured by the fog now, and only a hulking blotch of darkness, was a coal elevator, into which coal was dumped from river barges. The coal was hauled up several stories and conveyor-belted across the Drive into the power plant, where it was burned, supplying energy for the giant generators that supplied most of Manhattan’s electric power, and then becoming soot, falling gently from the air onto thousands of window sills across the island.

It was a blot upon the city, Marcus felt. He felt a kind of boyish glee at what they were about to do. Perhaps someday the city would thank him. It was a thought worth smiling about.

Ralph Amberson, at fifty-three, was senior engineer in charge of the midnight-to-eight shift at the 14th Street plant. Four regular men worked under him—Milton Krankowitz, forty-eight; Jeff Jones, forty-four; Julius Postal, thirty-six; and Mark Redwing, forty. Ralph didn’t like Jones; he had no use for most Negroes. Jones did his job fine, but there was no denying that he didn’t belong there. Neither did that young Turkish Jew, Postal. The city was overrun with foreigners anyway. Look at them, not an honest name in the lot. Krankowitz, a Pole; Redwing—well, with a name like that, he had to have Indian blood, even if he didn’t show it.

Amberson was not a prejudiced man, he’d have you know. He didn’t hold with the way they did things down south, and Hitler—well, the man was an insane murderer, and you couldn’t make excuses for the extermination of six million Jews. On the other hand, now that they had their own country, why couldn’t they stop sponging off the goodwill and charity of other countries? Postal! That man couldn’t have known the war. He hadn’t fought in it, the way Ralph had. Why was he—and all the other Jews in the world—still trading on what happened over twenty years ago, still looking for the free ride?

He had never mentioned this to Julius, and he never would. It wasn’t something a polite man would bring up, much less discuss. He wasn’t a bigot. It was like he’d told his wife, Margaret, how could they call him a bigot? He lived on the same block with them. But it galled a man, nevertheless, to see the way they took over jobs, pushing their way in. They talked about anti-semitism, and discrimination against Negroes. He could show them a thing or two! How about that officious Negro clerk down at City Hall, when he’d tried to get a little action on a parking ticket? Hah! In this city, to get anywhere, you had to be Negro or a Jew. Then they leaned over backward. City Controller, Borough President, anything you wanted!

The outside door, just beyond his office, slammed. He dropped his newspaper and pushed to his feet. Before he could reach it, his door swung open, and a neatly dressed young man was standing in the doorway. What was the office doing, sending men around at this hour? Or was he from the city?

The neatly dressed young man pulled a revolver from under his arm. It was blued steel. The barrel was five inches long. It looked longer.

“You in charge here, Pop?”

“Yes, I…What’s going on?”

The terrifying gun exploded. Ralph Amberson’s body was driven back against his desk, his spine smashed, arms flailing. The bullet left a hole in the wall beyond. The hole was ringed with bits of flesh and blood.

Sparrow had explained it to them. “No witnesses. This is the biggest job that’s ever been pulled. It’ll make the Brinks robbery look like peanuts. We’re blacking out a whole city, just to pull it off. We don’t need witnesses.”

He was in his element now. There had been only five men they could find. He’d held one of them, a Negro, at bay with his own gun, while the two gunmen had gone hunting for the other three, their guns sounding occasionally over the throbbing roar of the generators. “Just five of you, eh?” he’d asked. The Negro had nodded, sweat pouring down his face.

“You wouldn’t be holding one or two back?”

“I wish I had.”

“Don’t be stupid.”

“You’re gonna kill me anyway, right?”

“Make it easy for yourself. Don’t make it hard.”

“Why should I? Why should I make it easy for you?” Jones leaped at him, clubbing at Sparrow’s gun hand with one arm, going for his body with the other.

Sparrow had to admire the fellow’s guts. He lifted his knee and chopped with his gun hand, driving the other’s head down, smashing the man’s nose. Then, as he collapsed at Sparrow’s feet, Sparrow put a bullet through the back of his head.

That had taken care of the opposition. Now for the work.

Randolph had assembled the laser gun from the second suitcase with care. Now he plugged its leads to the power pack in the other suitcase, and handed the weapon to Sparrow.

It didn’t look like much. It consisted mainly of a tube. It was one of the new gas types that didn’t use a jewel. Energy was pumped into the tubular chamber. It was converted into photons—light particles. These bounced back and forth between the mirrors at each end of the chamber until they were perfectly aligned, and could escape at one end as congruent light.

With the tight red beam of light, diamonds could be cut, messages sent to the moon, anything. The possible uses of the laser as a tool or weapon are almost unlimited.

Sparrow used the beam to carve through solid inches of steel, to cut through the heavy maintenance shielding of the bearing assembly at the hub of one of the huge powerhouse generators. He used it to fuse and destroy the bearing upon which the giant generator rotor spun.

There were nine generators in the powerhouse. Without pause, he moved on to the next. And then the next.

The instant the bearing had been damaged on the first generator, imbalance was introduced to the tons of spinning mass that was the rotor. A vibration was set up.

When the bearing was destroyed, vast amounts of friction were quickly created by the spinning shaft. The rotor, no longer on a true course, began scraping against the fixed fields. Showers of sparks began to fly from the wobbling generator, while the bearing journal heated to a red glow. The vibration was shaking the steel mounts imbedded in concrete and, through the concrete, the whole structure of the powerhouse. A terrible screaming filled the air, the keening screech of tortured metal.

Very quickly the agonies of the first generator were joined by those of the others. The place sounded—felt—like a madhouse. Sparrow was laughing insanely, tears streaking his face.

Smoke was filling the great room, and with it the smell of burning rubber and ozone. Marcus grabbed Sparrow’s shoulder, all but stumbling on the dancing surface of the vibrating floor.

“Boss!” he shouted into Sparrow’s ear. “We gotta get out!”

Sparrow shook the man loose, but nodded, and beckoned toward the entrance. Stumbling, running, the three ran for the doorway.

Outside the air was thick with fog, and the fog muffled the terrible death throes of the powerhouse. The pounding vibrations could still be felt through the pavement, but the machines were dying, and soon they would slow to a stop.

The street lights were already dimmer, Sparrow thought. Then he heard a pounding of footsteps running down the road. It was a guard, his gun drawn. “Hey! Hey you,” he was shouting. Randolph shot him.

The lights had not dimmed appreciably. If anything, they were brighter. The noise of the generators was a great deal less now. The power was not off.

Inside the building, they could hear a phone ringing.

“It didn’t work,” Marcus said.

“They switched in another power source,” Sparrow said.

“But, hey. We took care of all them guys.”

“It was automatic. After the last power failure—the big one—they must’ve installed a lot of new equipment.”

“So what do we do?”

“We find that equipment. We destroy it.”

Randolph spoke. “Wait a minute. How about over there?” He gestured across the street. “How about them things—all them wires?”

Sparrow’s face lit. “The transformers, of course! You’re right! We’ll try them. Bring the laser.”

They cut a hole in the fence, and stepped through.

The transformer yard was an incredible jungle-gym gone mad. Metal lattices crossed and criss-crossed, wires weaving webs among them. And, squatting bulks in their midst, like fat spiders in the centers of their webs, stood the heavy transformers.

Sparrow triggered the laser, sweeping its sharp lance of light across the yard. The metal beams glowed only momentarily from the heat, but thin wires snapped, a succession of rifle-shots in the foggy night.

Then he brought the beam to bear upon the nearest transformer. He trained it on the center of the dark object, watching in satisfaction as the heavy outer case of the transformer began to glow dully where the beam struck it.

Then, suddenly, the yard was brightly lit by showers of sparks. The transformer was arcing and spitting angrily, the outer case cracking, sparks flying. Then the whole transformer seemed to glow for a moment.

The street lights flickered, then dimmed perceptibly. The transformer ceased its showers of sparks, and its glow slowly dimmed.

There were only three transformers in the yard. The electrical displays as they shorted out internally were impressive.

On 63rd Street, in the Con Ed Energy Control System headquarters, a meter recorded a frequency drop in the power-net system. A load-shedding relay closed, and a link was cut from the system before it could drag the entire system into a second major blackout. Only two-thirds of Manhattan was affected. Only the lower two-thirds. It was late at night. Few people noticed.

And the fog rolled in, through darkened streets.

A police car, siren screaming, raced through the near-empty streets to the 14th Street plant. It was too late. The Ford carrying Sparrow, Randolph and Marcus had already left. Policemen poked flashlight beams incredulously through the wreckage of the transformer yards, and then moved silently past the dead bodies into the silent powerhouse.

When the lights died, Starling gave the signal, moving his car off Broadway onto Liberty Street, a caravan of trucks, led by Raven, following. The trucks turned up Liberty Place, the Continental hanging back until they had all entered, then moving across the narrow mouth of the street, blocking it.

The first truck rumbled to a stop in front of the warehouse door, and backed up onto the sidewalk. The truck’s back doors swung open and five men jumped down, each carrying a small sub-machine gun. Raven hopped down from the cab. He unlocked the door, and two men laid down their guns and helped him push it up. The elevator was at the bottom of the shaft, a much more decrepit one now at ground level. Raven climbed up its side, and over its open top, cutting into the dead wires of its motor system, splicing in wires that ran to the back of the truck, where a gasoline-powered generator was turning over.

It was a smooth operation. There were no guards stationed in the tunnel. The lights in the vault were off, and the four guards stationed there were shot. They had only one bad moment, when a police car turned into Liberty Place from Maiden Lane. But then Sparrow’s Ford turned in behind it, blocking it, and two officers in the car were marched down into the tunnels, where they were disposed of quietly and efficiently, without shots being heard on the street.

The men worked in teams, loading the heavy gold ingots onto carts which were then pulled down the long tunnel to the elevator, where they were taken to the street and the trucks. Each truck received several cartloads, the tonnage settling it heavily upon its springs. The men in the tunnels each carried guns in hip holsters. The men on the street patrolled each end of the block with their machine guns.

The fog was heavy, clammy now. The temperature had risen to a freak 67° from the below freezing of only hours earlier. The working men had shucked their coats. Sparrow and Raven stood smoking on the street, watching each truck loaded. The police car and the Ford had been moved onto the sidewalks, allowing each truck in turn to rumble up the street and out of the narrow block. Each truck carried a driver, and a guard with a sub-machine gun. Each truck’s engine labored under the load it pulled.

Captain America stared unblinkingly at the girl who faced him. A short cigarette was clenched between her lips.

“No,” she said. “I told you—shut up. Stop telling me these things. It won’t do you any good. What do you think, I’d turn informer and give up over a billion dollars? A billion dollars, Mister Goody-two-shoes! You know how many people in this world got a billion?”

“You must want it pretty bad.”

“Why not? What do I have now? It’s go for broke, fellow. You should know that. I’m in as deep as I’ll ever be now.”

“How did you get into this?”

She smiled. “What’s a nice girl like me doing in a racket like this? You guess.”

“Money, I suppose. That’s the usual excuse.”

“Excuse?”

“Sure. You think money will solve all your problems, whatever they may be, if you get enough of it. Funny thing, it never does. You just get new problems.”

“Sure. Like, should I get a black Rolls Royce or a gold one.”

“More likely, how will you make use of your billion?”

“Huh? Try that again, more slowly.”

“What will you do with your billion in gold?”

The girl stared at him, as if at a simpleton. Rogers smiled.

“Ever try cashing a gold bar at your local neighborhood candy store?”

Robin’s mouth dropped, the cigarette falling, forgotten, to the carpet.

“Gold is illegal for private possession in this country,” Rogers pointed out, “except as jewelry, and things like that. Private ownership of gold in ingot form, or as any kind of money except rare coins in collections, is illegal. Maybe illegal ownership doesn’t bother you, but how will you convert it to spending money?” He nodded. “That’s the least of your problems, of course.”

“What do you mean?”

“A billion in gold, that’s not something you can carry around in your purse. Gold weighs almost as much as lead. It’s a soft, heavy metal. You know how much a billion in gold weighs? Well over eight hundred tons. You know how much a ton is? How will you transport it? Where will you keep it? If you want to get out of the country with it, how will you take it?” He sighed. “The life of a master crook is fraught with problems, you see.”

“I—I could grind it to powder, and claim I’d mined it.”

“High-quality gold like this? Uh-uh. Besides, gold is easily traceable. Gold from different areas differs in ways any expert can detect. This gold is highly refined. You’d have trouble explaining it as just a little something you’d panned from the creek out back.”

A tear squeezed out from one eye. “Damn you, damn you!” the girl cried. “Why do you have to do this? Why are you ruining everything?”

“There’s still my offer,” Rogers said. “There’s still an out. It doesn’t pay so well, but the security is a lot better.”

She turned her back on him and moved, almost stumbling, across the room to the kitchenette. He heard her pulling out drawers, and the sound of silverware as she dug about. When she came back, she was holding a thin, wicked-looking knife.

(Yes, it's the book's title, but it's also this chapter's title!)
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Thursday, July 15, 2021

CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE GREAT GOLD STEAL "Chapter 10: Unmasked!"

CHAPTER 10
UNMASKED!

When the black Continental drew up inside the Raven’s garage, Starling and Robin watched while Randolph and Marcus hauled Captain America’s limp body from the car. They pulled him out feet first, his back and shoulders scraping over the car’s door sill, his head snapping back against the concrete floor with an ominous thunk.

“Careful, you fools,” Robin said. “The Eagle wants him captured—not killed. Not yet, anyway.”

Raven stared down at the costumed figure lying on his floor. Captain America’s body looked even bigger in this odd position. “I don’t get it,” he complained. “Why take him alive? Why not just deliver a clean hit? And if we gotta keep him in storage, why here?”

Starling smiled. “I’m afraid that if the Eagle wanted you to know, he’d have informed you.”

“Hah! I’m betting you don’t know either, fella.”

“Starling! Raven!” It was Robin. “Please. This is no time for pettiness.”

“Speaking of time,” said Starling, glancing at his chromium-steel wrist chronometer, “where’s Sparrow? He’s overdue.”

Marcus had gone over near the doors. “Hey, somebody’s poking around out there.” His gun was in his hand as he spoke.

“Put the gun away, idiot,” Raven snorted. “You’re paid to follow instructions—not to think.” He unbolted the doors, and inched one open. “Oh, it’s you.”

“I’m sorry to be late,” Sparrow said apologetically, as he pushed in through the narrow gap. “I’m not familiar with the subways in Brooklyn.”

“What could be easier?” Raven asked. “The 4th Avenue line runs right up there along Fourth Avenue. You’re two blocks away.”

“I got on the wrong train when I changed. The—um—West End Line, I believe.”

Raven shook his head. It was plain he had little respect for the fussy and incapable Sparrow. “Well, we’re all here, anyway. I mean, all of us except the boss.”

“I’ve never seen the Eagle,” Robin spoke up. “When am I going to meet him?”

“None of us have,” Sparrow replied in a kindly tone which he seemed to reserve for the girl. “His dealings with all of us have been over the phone. I have worked for him more years than the rest of you put together, and I’ve never met him. We are hardly his only um—employees. We simply represent the lieutenants for this operation.”

“Well, what about this operation?” Starling asked. “It’s finished, isn’t it?”

“Ah, that’s one of the things we have to discuss,” Sparrow said, shaking his head. “But first, there is the matter of our energetic friend on the floor.”

“What about him?” Raven asked. He drew the back of his hand over his stubbled jowls, then ran his fingers through his dirty blond hair. “Why are we holding him? And why here?”

“It bothers you?” Sparrow asked.

“It sure does. I’ve heard about this guy. He causes trouble. There are plenty who’d pay us good money to see him dead, and if it was somebody else holding him, I’d ante something into the pot myself, just on general principles. Here he is, lying right here on the floor, in the midst of a high-level meeting like this. It’s ridiculous! Besides, this is my garage.”

“Relax,” ‘Starling said. “He’s full of juice. Nothing can go wrong.”

“That’s what you said when you dropped that dynamite on him.”

“Gentlemen, please!” Sparrow held his hands aloft, summoning their attention. “The Eagle’s reasons for wanting to keep Captain America our hostage are, I am sure, reasonable and sufficient. We needn’t question them. However, I am aware that one of his reasons is that Captain America is highly valued by the law enforcement agencies of this country, and would provide an excellent exchange hostage, should any one of us—ah—become enmeshed in the traps of the law.

“As to your fear, Raven, I believe it is groundless. The ‘juice’ to which Starling refers, should be quite effective in rendering Captain America totally helpless.”

“Well, where’m I gonna put him?”

“I suggest we take him down to your apartment, and tie him to a chair.”

When Captain America regained consciousness, it was not all at once.

First there was a heavy, sluggish, dreamy quality to his awareness. It was vaguely as he remembered it when a dentist had given him gas. He had not gone completely under, but had become somewhat removed from the reality of what the dentist was doing to his teeth.

Just so—a man was hitting him. He couldn’t be sure if more than one man was hitting him, because the blows seemed unconnected one to another, and the drone of the man’s curses added up to nothing. He felt no personal animosity toward the man who was hitting him. He registered the blows to his ribs, his kidneys, his stomach, without feeling them. There was no pain, only a sort of irregular, ceaseless jarring.

He didn’t try to reason it out; that part of his brain was dead. He only experienced. He drifted, the jars and blows turbulences in the dreamlike current that carried him.

But gradually the shock, if not the pain of the body blows, began to cut through the mist of his mind. Like touches of ice in a steam bath, they restored contrast and, with that, greater consciousness.

He was propped in a sitting position, between two other bodies; occasionally he would feel the weight of one against him pushing him into the other, as they all swayed. There was a sour, sickly odor, although chill wind blasted against him. The man on his right was hitting him, steadily if neither regularly nor methodically. The other man seemed to be holding him. He couldn’t move. He couldn’t open his eyes. His body felt paralyzed. From the sounds that filtered through his consciousness, be decided they were in a car.

Someone else—a female voice—said something sharp.

The blows ceased. Without them, he lost some of his impetus toward wakefulness, but did not lose consciousness entirely. Instead, he drifted back into the deeper waters, coming near the surface only when the car’s direction or its speed would abruptly change. Even when the road surface became suddenly rougher he was roused only momentarily. The outside stimuli which reached him were incapable of exciting him.

Then the car had stopped. Without warning; hands roughly seized him, gripping his ankles and pulling them. He felt his body slip, flopping him flat on his back on the car seat, and then his ankles were jerked impatiently as he was dragged from the car. For a moment he was falling, free. Then his head struck the pavement.

The drug Starling had used on Captain America was a narco-depressant, a synthetic originally developed for use on drug addicts. Unfortunately, its side effects made it unpopular for this use, and it languished for several years until rediscovered by the Russian KGB for use not unlike that to which Starling had put it.

There was no particular secret about the drug, although it was now being used under several different trade names, and not only SHIELD, but various national agencies in the U.S. employed it upon occasion. It was inevitable that it would find its way into criminal hands; most of the world’s drug discoveries do, often even before any public announcement or release.

There was only one objection to using the drug on Captain America; it didn’t really work.

The drug normally enters the brain through the bloodstream, and attacks the nerve centers at the top of the spinal cord and the base of the brain. Its properties are largely anesthetic, but it also acts as a general depressant, reducing capillary circulation throughout the body, and most particularly in the brain.

But Captain America possessed an altered body. In his strengthened body, the influx of many drugs is treated much as would be the unwarranted entrance of any foreign object; antibodies are formed which attack and destroy the foreign object—in this case, the drug.

This was not done instantly. A massive dose had been injected directly into his bloodstream. He was already unconscious. Some of the drug was able to act upon him, unimpaired. It would be a matter of time—perhaps more than an hour—before the drug would be cleared from his bloodstream. It would be longer before all its effects had worn off. And they would not all disappear simultaneously. Repeated brain concussions from blows to the cranium would have their own effects as well. There was the possibility of blood clots forming in brain tissues. In a normal man, a head blow sufficient to cause unconsciousness can leave the victim with migraine headaches, dizzy spells and occluded vision, or minor sight difficulties, for days afterwards. It was fortunate for Captain America that he was no longer a “normal” man.

His hearing returned first, and imperfectly. There was a buzzing to every sound he heard, like distortion in a sound system, a radio not properly tuned. Voices cut and rasped, their meanings elusive.

Then bodily sensation. He was sitting again, in a straight chair. Tight bands—ropes, he guessed—held his hands behind the chair’s back. The stiff chair back cut into the insides of his arms. His hands had very little feeling.

More ropes held his legs to the chair legs, and bound his thighs to the seat. He was thoroughly trussed up.

He didn’t try to move or struggle. He didn’t lift his chin from his chest. Even his breathing didn’t quicken.

He knew he was in the den of thieves. It seemed important for the time being to lie doggo, to wait and listen.

“I don’t like it,” Starling was saying. “Of all of you, only I am familiar with the actual physical operation. Only I have seen the vaults, worked in the tunnels. And we don’t know how changed they are now. For instance, will the cart still go through?”

Raven laughed. “You’re forgetting, the cart was in your storeroom. It’s buried now. And if it isn’t, they’ve probably taken it out. We can’t count on it. We’ll have to take more in.”

“I don’t know,” Robin’s softer voice came. “I’m newest on this operation. But it seems to me that Starling has a point. All we know is that the main tunnel between the elevator and the vault is clear—for men to get through, anyway. We don’t know what conditions are like down there. We’ve already gotten a haul that anyone else would be satisfied with.”

“Not just anyone!” Sparrow’s voice, surprisingly crisp, cut through the conversation. “You’re overlooking something. This is not our operation. These are not our plans. And you are not totally aware of my own role in the situation. In any case, the Eagle has made these plans, and cast his vote. I need not remind you, his is the decisive, the only vote. So this argument is really quite pointless. We had best get onto the mechanics of it. We’ll need more trucks. Raven, that’s your department. Starling, you’ll round up your work crew. We’ll need more men. I want a constant stream of men loading and unloading—a steady flow to the trucks. I’ll take care of the power cut.”

“Wait a minute…” Starling said.

“What about me?” Robin interrupted.

Sparrow smiled at her. “You’ll stay here to keep the home fires burning, my dear. And, incidentally, to guard our captive, here.”

She pouted. “That doesn’t seem very important.”

“You’ll also be our message center. We’ll need someone to coordinate things, someone we can all get through to.”

“Why, Sparrow, I didn’t think you had so much to you,” Raven said with delight. “You’ve positively taken charge!” He laughed.

“What’s got into you?” Starling asked, testily.

“It’s a nice split, boys. Had you forgotten? Sixty per cent of the net to the Eagle; ten to each of the rest of us. Ten per cent of eight-hundred thousand; that’s only eighty thousand. But have you tried working out ten per cent of over twelve billion? People, you’re looking at billionaires! That’s worth a few chuckles, ain’t it?”

“What will you do with your share, Raven?” Robin asked curiously.

“I figure on buying me an island in the South Pacific,” he said happily.

“Maybe they’ll use it to test a new bomb on,” Starling rejoined.

“Enough,” Sparrow said, his thin voice again cutting through the dissension. “That’s quite enough. We have one other item of business yet to attend to.”

Rogers heard footsteps scuffing across a thick carpet, and then Sparrow’s voice again, almost directly over him.

His ears still buzzed, but he fought to catch the elusive familiarity of the man’s tone. He wished he dared open his eyes.

“This is a moment which I, personally, have long awaited,” Sparrow said, his voice rising in triumph. “The unmasking of Captain America!”

Then, his nails scraping along Rogers’ face, Sparrow dug his fingers under his cowl, and ripped it back. Rogers felt air strike his exposed cheeks and forehead. Then fingers clutched his blond hair and pulled his head back. “Behold!” Sparrow said.

Raven was first to speak. “Well, I dunno about you, Sparrow, but it rings no bells with me. I never seen him before.”

Starling agreed. “His face means nothing to me.”

“He could be anybody,” said Robin. “What good does this do?”

Sparrow let Rogers’ head fall back to his chest, and his voice when he spoke was defeated. “I don’t know. Nothing, I guess. I always wondered. I felt, if these guys—these costumed heroes—wore masks, it must mean something.”

“Captain America was missing for twenty years,” Starling said. “That could mean the first one died, and this one took his place. He looks awfully young.”

“Perhaps. It doesn’t really matter. Let’s get going.”

The carpet muffled their footsteps, but when it sounded as though they had all left, Captain America opened one eye, and peered upward—straight into the eyes of the young woman who called herself Robin.

Her open-handed slap threw his head back on his shoulders. He opened both eyes and stared at her. She stared back, angrily. He noted with interest that her eyes were brown at the pupil, but shaded into blue at the rim of the iris. She wasn’t wearing her glasses, and her hair fell part-way across her face. She was quite beautiful, in a not quite sane sort of way.

“So you’re awake?” She made it an accusation. “So much for Starling’s much-vaunted injections.”

“You never did get a chance to tell me what it was you’d called me about,” Rogers said. “Why not take the opportunity?”

In reply she slapped him again. Now both sides of his face stung.

“Don’t talk to me,” she told him. “Don’t say a word. I’d love to have an excuse to shut you up, permanently.”

She reached behind her for the gun lying on a small end table. “You were supposed to be no trouble at all. ‘Out for six hours,’ that slimy rat said. Sure! And now I’ve got to keep a double eye on you while I tend to the rest of my business.”

“Last chance,” Rogers said, his voice stony. “Replay the scene. You were just an agent for SHIELD who penetrated this operation, and had to go along with it in front of the others. Now, of course, you’re free. You can tell me all the details, and set me loose. That’s your chance—to play it that way.”

She stared mockingly at him. “And the other way?”

“They’ve abolished the death sentence in this state, but you can still get thirty years to life as an accessory to murder.”

“I haven’t killed you—yet.”

“I said accessory. Your friend, the Starling, has killed at least three men so far. One of them he shot in cold blood.” He gave her a grim smile. “You ever been in a women’s penitentiary? It’s not the most attractive place in the world. You think men can be tough? Try some of those sadistic matrons—and your cell mates; they can give you a real rough time of it. And there’s no escape.”

She stared at him broodingly, saying nothing. Her face seemed whiter.

“I’m offering you an out,” he said quietly. “It’s the best you’ll get.”

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Wednesday, July 14, 2021

CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE GREAT GOLD STEAL "Chapter 9: Robin's Song"

CHAPTER 9
ROBIN’S SONG

As they approached the corner booth in the fashionably dim-lit hotel bar, Bloody saw that Sparrow was not alone; another man and a girl were with him. Seeing Sparrow sitting with them, he was reminded again of the appropriateness of the man’s cover name; the little man looked like a bookkeeper or a bank clerk, not at all like one of the Eagle’s top lieutenants. They slid into the curved seat. “Ah, there you are, boys,” Sparrow said cheerfully. “I’d like to introduce you to a couple of my associates. Randolph and Marcus, this is Starling and Robin.” He turned to the couple on his other side and explained, “Randolph and Marcus were loaned us by Chicago.” He turned back to the pair of Ivy-League hoods.

“Starling and Robin will be working with you on your new assignment. Actually, you’ll be working under Starling on this occasion. It’s his job. Miss Robin will assist you.”

Randolph—Blondy—tried to size the girl up in the dim light. He could tell little. She wore shoulder-length strawberry-blonde hair. Her features seemed slightly exotic, but she wore simple glasses that tended to obscure the effect. She gave him a half-smile, her lips quirking up on one side. Her severely tailored business suit did not hide the fullness of her figure.

“If I might regain your attention…?” It was the fastidious bald man speaking—Starling. “We have an operation to be planned.”

Steve Rogers wiped his mouth and pushed himself away from the table. He’d eaten his fill now. Jarvis began clearing the dishes away, his movements silent, as if aware that he must not intrude upon Rogers’ thoughts.

His thoughts were largely unpleasant ones. He had gone from the bank to a conference with the police and the local head of the Treasury Department. It had not been a fruitful meeting.

He could tell them little; only what he had discovered, and what had happened to himself. They had little to add. The entire block of buildings on Liberty Place had been searched. The elevator had been tested. It was found to have been dropped down into an abandoned BMT subway tunnel—one never completed and long forgotten. When the elevator was up above, the tunnel beyond was open, and traces had been found of a man’s passage through a newly broken hole into the main subway line. This must have been the exit used by the man who had smuggled out the gold seal. A search of FBI fingerprint records revealed him to be one Andrew “Monk” Mayfair, a West Coast trigger-man with a long record. But there was nothing to connect him with this operation.

An upstairs room in a building two doors south of the warehouse—the building in which Ray Thompson’s body had been found—had shown signs of occupancy: a cot, a wardrobe, a dresser, all from the Salvation Army, and a phone which the telephone company had put in two months earlier in the name of Henry Starling. In the basement of the same building was a blocked shaft which presumably led down to the underground room. A set of wires came up the shaft and were clipped directly and illegally to an outside telephone company line.

Digging was still underway, but they hadn’t yet got through to the underground room. It would be hours yet before the remains of the other two bodies could be recovered. There were no clues to the whereabouts of the missing gold. An inventory showed the amount missing to be worth almost eight-hundred thousand dollars. “Apparently just a preliminary haul,” the Treasury man had observed wryly.

They had nipped the operation in the bud; a mere four-fifths of a million missing. And at the cost of two men, and another in the critical ward. It was nothing to be proud about. Gaughan’s words kept ringing in Steve Rogers’ head: “You are responsible.”

He was responsible.

He had led two good men, family men, to their deaths. And he had lost the only man who could have told them where the gold was. They were still digging, traces, clues might be found. But he doubted it. The responsibility was his. And he’d botched it.

The FBI was checking on Monk Mayfair’s recent associations, searching out the connections that had brought him to New York. There might be a lead there, a path might open up to Mayfair’s employers. But if it did, it would be the FBI’s baby. It required days and weeks of careful footwork in which the FBI excelled. There was nothing there for Captain America.

There was so little to go on—the gold seal, the tunnels themselves. About all it told him was that someone had great daring, great technical skills. Using a laser beam for an assassination! And using it to cut through the concrete floor of the vault as well. This wasn’t a common, unimaginative, syndicate job. It had been planned by a man with daring, and a man with the scientific know-how available to put his fantastic plan into operation. Who could it be?

Jarvis strode silently into the room again. “The phone, sir. The police, downtown.” He took it on the extension.

“A couple of patrolmen who have the squad car on that beat,” his caller told him. “They remember seeing a car parked on Liberty Place the night Mayfair was killed. Reason they remember it, it was parked there from early evening until sometime after midnight. They were going to ticket it, but it had diplomatic plates. A black, ’66 Lincoln Continental.”

“Do they remember the license number?”

“Nope; didn’t take it down. But we’re checking the registry for a Continental with DPL tags. There’ll be a god’s plenty of ’em, that’s for sure.”

It was a lead; it might develop into something solid, and it might not. But there was still nothing in it for now.

“The phone again, sir.” It was Jarvis. “A young lady. She refuses to identify herself, but wished to speak with you.”

A girl! Could it be the girl? The girl who worked for S.H.I.E.L.D., the Supreme Headquarters International Espionage Law-enforcement Divisions, whose life he had twice saved* without learning her name, and whose face reminded him of another girl he had known and lost, a lifetime before?

But when he heard her voice, he knew it was not she.

“Captain America? I must see you! I have valuable information for you.”

“Who is this?”

“My name doesn’t matter, you don’t know me anyway. I’m a SHIELD agent, and I’ve managed to work my way into a fantastic organization run by a man who calls himself the Eagle. Of his highly placed agents, I’ve met two—Sparrow and Starling.” Her voice was breathless. “I haven’t time to talk long. Where can we meet?”

“You could come here.”

“I dare not. I think they’re watching your place. They killed one man who tried to get through to you.”

“Did you…?”

“I sent him, yes. You found the gold seal, I know. But there’s so much more.”

Steve thought quickly. This could be a trap, but even if it was, it would lead him to the very people he sought. It would be best to play along. Besides, the girl might be telling the truth, in which case…

“Where do you suggest?”

“It’s got to be where we can talk, where no one can bug us. How about the United Nation Plaza? You know, where all the benches are? It must be deserted at this hour”—Rogers glanced at the clock; it was 9:07—“and it’s convenient.”

“All right. How soon can you get there?”

“I’ll have to get free here. Give me forty-five minutes. Okay?”

“Nine-fifty?” “Right.”

There was a click, and the line was dead.

The Stark mansion was deceptive from the outside. A passerby would see it only as a town house. It was larger than its neighbors, being almost twice as wide, but its brownstone facade was set back from the quiet, tree-shaded side street, its miniature front yard, filled with ivy and shrubbery, filling the gap to the sidewalk. All the other houses on this block sat flush with each other. If one looked closely at the fittings—the brass door knocker, the stained-glass fanlight over the door, the dragon’s-claw foot-scraper at the side of the porch—one saw undeniable quality. The house appeared to be carefully kept as well. The woodwork was all freshly painted, unstained by the city’s soot and corrosive air. The windows were all sparkling clean, despite the fact that almost all were discreetly shaded by rich draperies.

But this view from the street showed only a wealthy town house. An aerial view would have shown much more.

Most of the houses on this block had back yards. These were small, but big enough for patios, a flower garden, even a small swimming pool. Each back yard abutted the back yard of the house on the opposite side of the block.

Both the house to the east, and the one to the west of the Stark mansion did not have back yards. Instead, they had high walls that extended to the center of the block on their outside property lines, where they met identical walls from the houses that backed them up. An aerial view would show that these two houses, and their counterparts on the opposite side of the block, extended back the full distance of their property, their backs directly touching. This, along with the two houses behind the Stark mansion itself, made up a square within the center of the block. And the open area between the back of the Stark mansion and the two houses opposite was a private plaza, with a landscaped garden.

Stark owned all seven houses, owned them in a block, and joined them so that their interiors were entirely linked to form one huge mansion, a bastion of complete privacy within the heart of the city.

Only portions of this vast building complex were used for living purposes—although each Avenger had his own apartment of rooms—for much of the remainder was taken up with labs, training areas, assembly rooms, and shops. Beneath the entire structure was an immense underground garage.

It was to the garage that Steve Rogers, back in a clean uniform, went now. The exit of the garage was not on the street on which the mansion fronted but on the street on the opposite side of the block, the next street north. Rogers could have instructed the girl to come to one of the addresses on that street, but he had sensed her reluctance to come into his own sanctum sanctorum. She had her own reasons for wanting to meet him elsewhere. He hoped he was wrong about what those reasons might be, but he had not wanted to scare her off. He had let her choose the place.

He stepped out of the elevator into a vast open area broken only by supporting columns and blocks of fluorescent lights, under which the hoods and bodies of many cars and vehicles gleamed darkly. Tonight he wanted something inconspicuous. He chose the Volkswagen.

The aluminum Buick V-6 engine started immediately, its ingenious muffler system accurately duplicating the sounds of a VW air-cooled flat-4. A special chain that ran uselessly between the fan and two dummy pulleys even re-created the distinctive sounds of the VW timing chain. He left the knob controlling the Paxton supercharger out; he wouldn’t need that extra performance boost just yet. The 176 horsepower of the hot-tuned V6 would be enough, even for the specially modified and heavier chassis of the bullet-proofed VW. He moved his shield to the back seat, where it could not slide into his legs, and engaged the clutch. The car moved easily out across the open floor, and up the ramp, where the outside door, responding to the signal from the car’s dash, was already up. Then he was turning east and heading crosstown.

There was no sign of pursuit, but just to be careful, he did not head directly for his destination. Instead he swung down into the midtown area, cutting through lights just turning yellow, watching for signs of anyone following, either directly on his tail, or a block away on the parallel. It was 9:45 when he turned north of First Avenue at 38th Street and, swinging into an outside lane to avoid the tunnel under 42nd Street drew up beside the U.N. rotunda.

There were only a few other cars parked here at this hour, most of them carrying the diplomatic licenses of the various legations located nearby. He drew the VW into the curb and parked it, retrieving his shield from the back seat. It was a replacement shield for the one he’d lost in the cave-in; he always kept spares.

When he entered the parklike plaza, the street lights from the avenue cast long shadows from the trees and plantings. At first he didn’t see her. There she stood, her full figure separating itself from the shrouded shadows of a bench.

“Captain America?” she called softly.

He walked toward her, the sound of his boots on the hard concrete loud in his own ears.

When he was closer, he could see full dark-blonde hair framing her face which itself remained shadowed. Light glinted from the lenses of her glasses. She was wearing a tailored business suit, and carrying a small purse.

“Captain America?” She smiled. “I’m Robin.” She clutched her purse tighter, and suddenly a vapor shot out of it, surrounding him in a mist.

“You were easy,” she said, as he started to fall.

Then, before she could regain her guard, he had rolled to the side, and was rising from his crouch. His shield held high on his left arm, his right hand knocked the purse from her grasp. It hit the pavement and slid away from her clutching fingers.

Then Randolph and Marcus were on his back.

Marcus was grunting as he swung his sap. “I toldja it wouldn’t be that easy!”

“Ahhh—!”

Captain America pivoted, suddenly slippery as an eel. This was his game they were playing now—no gas, no sudden explosions, just a close rough-and-tumble. He swung his fist at the blond man, catching him high on the jaw, and driving him back to the pavement. But before he could follow up the blow, the other one was on his back again. He ducked, throwing the man over his shoulders, pitching him into the other, who was starting to rise. “When’ll you guys learn not to hit a man when his back’s turned?” he grunted, gathering the nearest in his fist, and chopping him with a series of hard, fast rights.

“Is this it?” he asked. “Are you guys all they sent?” He knocked their heads together and dropped them to the ground, unconscious. “It hardly seems worth coming out on a cold night for.”

“Maybe this will,” he heard the girl mutter. But he hadn’t time to react. The heel of her shoe caught him at the base of his skull, at the neck. He dropped as though poleaxed.

“Good job, guys.” The girl spoke in derision as she looked down on the unconscious bodies of her two helpers. “Maybe I should just leave you here for the cops. Not likely. That’d be doing them a favor.”

Lifting her short skirt higher on her thighs, she ran awkwardly out of the plaza to a dark Continental. “Starling!” She rapped on the rear side window. “Hey! You’ve gotta help me.”

Starling pressed a button and rolled his window down. “What is it?”

“Come on. I got three guys out cold back there. If you think I can handle them all by myself…”

With Starling’s help, the two thugs, looking much worse for the wear, were dumped in the back seat, Captain America between them. Starling opened the glove compartment and removed a small black case. From it he took a loaded hypodermic. With a knife, he slashed the arm of Captain America’s uniform, baring his skin.

Then he gave him the injection. “That should keep him cold for six hours,” he told the girl. “And he won’t be feeling like much for the next eighteen.”

Robin slid into the front seat next to him and he started the big car, moving it out onto the one-way avenue, heading uptown.

They had turned onto the FDR Drive, heading downtown, when Randolph woke up. He announced this fact to the others in the car by vomiting on the floor.

“What a stink,” the girl said. “Clean it up!”

“So stop the car for a minute and I’ll be better,” he groaned. But Starling didn’t, and Randolph had to be content with using tissues while Robin sneered at him about his manliness, or his lack thereof. And Randolph, unable to put up with this kind of criticism, demonstrated his manliness by taking his frustrations brutally out on the unconscious form of Captain America.

Somewhat later that evening, after ticketing an illegally parked Volkswagen, a policeman discovered a small black ladies’ purse in the United Nation Plaza. When he opened it, a gas bomb exploded in his face, leaving him a huddled form on the cold concrete.

* It all happened in Tales of Suspense #’s 75, 76, 77, March, April, May, 1966, and #85, January 1967.—Reminiscent Stan

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Tuesday, July 13, 2021

CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE GREAT GOLD STEAL "Chapter 8: the Eagle Screams"

CHAPTER 8
THE EAGLE SCREAMS

When he awoke again, Captain America felt lightheaded. Cramping pains shot up and down his legs, his mouth was dry, his throat parched. He felt feverish, arid—that, he knew, was wrong. He was a man who was never sick.

He shook his head. It was the wrong thing to do. A wave of nausea attacked his stomach, while sharp hammers beat upon his skull. His ears still sang.

How long had he been unconscious this time?

Gritting his teeth, he willed his body to quiescence, and the pains began to subside. It was time now to make use of his own special abilities. If he couldn’t bring them into play soon, there would be no more chance at all.

He slowed his breathing until it was somnambulant, and brought his pulse down to forty. His conscious mind began to dim, but his subconscious knew exactly what must be done.

When he reemerged from his dreamlike state he had only vague memories of what he had done. But he could feel the difference. His ears were no longer ringing, his head felt clear, and his body was fit. The aches and pains were gone; he tingled with liveliness.

There was a price, of course. He felt hungry. And well he might, for he had lost seven pounds in the last few minutes, the weight having been converted into caloric energy to rebuild and revitalize his muscular tissues, and to clear the toxins from his body.

His hearing was restored, but he heard nothing—nothing save a slow dripping sound somewhere not too far away. The glimmer of a distant light bulb was still there when he turned his head, but it gave him no useful illumination. He was still trapped, still buried to his chest in the heavy earth.

Quietly, with determination, he began using his hand to dig himself out.

The heavy gauntlets helped; he blessed them many times over. Without them his fingers would be raw and bleeding by now. But even with them, the going was painfully slow. For every handful of dirt he pushed aside, a new handful would collapse upon him. It was a slow and tedious business.

At last he was free to his thighs. Pushing his hands against the firmer ground, he arched his body and yanked.

He catapulted out, bootless.

He thought about that for a moment, grinned to himself in the darkness, and then reached through the looser rubble, down through the twin tunnels in the packed dirt where his legs had been, and freed his boots. He hadn’t relished going out barefoot.

Only one bulb was burning near the elevator; the others had shattered. He’d been thrown halfway down the side tunnel before it had collapsed on him. The main tunnel, even in this weak light, was a sight for sore eyes.

But not for long.

First he found the guard. He was unconscious, blood oozing in a thin trickle from the corner of his mouth. When Rogers turned him over, he saw blood in his nose and ears. The effects of the concussive power of the explosion, obviously. He applied first aid, doing the best he could. The rest was up to the emergency ward teams, as soon as he could get them down here.

He wondered where the rescue teams were. He had been down here, conscious and unconscious, for what seemed like hours. Where was everyone?

Then he remembered the room he’d been in; the thug and the other guard. He hadn’t had time to warn them. They must be dead. It was only a freak accident that had prevented his own death.

Or had he had time?

It was so difficult to remember. Everything was so packed into those last split seconds. Could he have grabbed the other two and thrown them out, ahead of him?

His head was starting to throb again. This was no time to rehash the past. He had to assess the rest of the damage.

He didn’t have to blunder far up the tunnel to find the reason for the temporary absence of any rescuers; the old timbers, temporary supports in the first place, had collapsed. The tunnel was totally blocked.

That left the elevator. No one had had time to check it out; he had to hope it would still run, still get him up to the surface. If it was undamaged it should; it had to be the route by which the gold had been taken.

He carried the still unconscious bank guard into the bed of the elevator, and then pushed the heavy switch. Immediately a motor, somewhere up above, began to hum. Cables snapped taut, and the elevator made its slow assent.

Captain America gave a heartfelt sigh of relief.

Starling stared around in surprise as Raven led him down the stairs to his basement apartment beneath the tin-sided garage. It was not at all what he had expected.

In his own mind he had cast Raven as a cloddish oaf when he had first met him. He imagined Raven living in some squalid little flat somewhere not far from the waterfront, sitting in front of his TV set in the evenings, a can of beer in his hand. He had not added it to his mental picture, but flies buzzing about Raven’s dirty undershirt would have been totally in keeping. Raven was a mechanic, that was about all he knew of the man. Both of them, Starling and Raven, were only lieutenants, along with one other, Sparrow, and undoubtedly others of whom Starling hadn’t heard, for the boss, Eagle. He had never met Eagle, and doubted privately that he ever would. The boss kept himself removed from the scene of his nefarious schemes, manipulating his lieutenants instead as a man might puppets on a string. This much Starling knew; his contacts with Eagle had been entirely over the phone.

The stairs had led down from a partitioned-off area in the back of the garage. He had expected a low-ceilinged basement area, dank, not so different from the dirt-floored tunnels he had himself dug, rusting beams and pillars supporting the concrete floor overhead.

Instead, he found himself standing on a lush-piled carpet, indirect lighting softly illuminating somber paneling on the walls and boxed stanchions that did, indeed, support the floor above. The furniture was polished wood, deceptively plain; he knew it was expensive. Portions of the walls were draped with richly textured fabric, softening the fact that there were no windows.

There was a TV screen, but it was custom-fitted into a wall of bookcases. On either side, also recessed, were large AR3 speakers and, below the books, cabinets, one door of which was partially open, revealing neat rows of record albums. It was a complete stereo system.

“Sit,” Raven said. “Surprised, eh?”

Starling mumbled something indistinct.

“Everyone has their secrets,” Raven said. “This is mine.”

“You keep the gold down here, too?”

Raven guffawed. “Sent that out on the boat last night. You think I’m gonna carry that stuff down all these stairs?”

“Oh.” Starling felt deflated and somehow defeated, as though by the simple act of having this secret apartment, Raven had gained the upper hand.

“Okay, now let’s hear it. How’d you blow it?”

“Me? Why, you stupid…!” Reflexively, Starling’s hand reached inside his topcoat for his gun.

“Ease off, fella. Touchy, eh?” Raven smiled, showing a mouthful of brown stubs for teeth. “What I mean is…”

“Touchy?” Starling cut him off “Touchy? The biggest operation of its kind in the world, and it’s shot, and you’re surprised I’m touchy!”

“Aww, come on now. You didn’t expect it to go on forever? You think we’d have milked the whole bank? They’d have caught on, sooner or later; had to. A little skimmed off the top they mightn’t miss, but more’n that? So we don’t set up in competition with Fort Knox, we still cleared a tidy sum.”

“What are you talking about? You didn’t expect us to succeed?”

“I guess the boss ain’t told you everything, huh?”

That was galling. The knowledge that this oaf might be more in the Eagle’s confidence than he, Starling, was too much. “Shut your mouth!” He turned away from the other man, then whirled back on him. Raven was still grinning. “What hasn’t he told me?”

“Ohhh,” Raven rolled his eyes in mockery. “My lips are sealed.”

“Well, for your information, there was a leak. I don’t know how it happened. One of the men, a guy named Monk, he slipped out. At the time we thought he was just trying to sell information. I told the boss; he had the man taken care of. Then, after our boys left the scene, we found a bar of gold—one of the first ones we’d taken after we’d broken through—with the seal cut off it. Monk must’ve had it. It must’ve been found on him. That’s what blew it.”

“Monk, huh? An undercover cop?”

“I don’t know. I don’t think so. He made a beeline for the Stark mansion.”

Raven whistled, tonelessly. “The Avengers, huh?”

“Captain America. The others are away. He came down to the bank this morning. I got the warning, but all the men were out except for Bruno. He was no use. I had to use the dynamite.”

“Well, that takes care of one of those costumed nuts.”

“Let’s hope so. But it also takes care of two months’ planning and hard work. It’s not a fair trade.”

“That’s from your point of view. Maybe…”

The quiet buzz of a phone cut Raven off. He ambled across the room. “It’s an unlisted number; the safe wire. Must be the…” He picked up the phone. “Yeah. Hullo, Boss.”

Raven listened for several moments. “Yeah, he’s here. Yeah.” He held out the phone to Starling. “He wants to talk to you.”

Starling took the handset. “Yes?”

“You failed.”

“What?”

“You failed. Captain America is still alive.”

“But, but—he can’t be! I mean, the dynamite! I felt the explosion myself! It must’ve sealed off the whole underground!”

“It did. But nonetheless, he got free. He is free. I have a new assignment for you.”

Starling felt a sinking sensation in the pit of his stomach.

“I want you to capture Captain America. I want you to get him, and bring him to me!”

When the freight elevator had reached street level, Captain America found and worked the controls that opened the door.

A man in a business suit was staring at him in consternation when he stepped out onto the chill gray sidewalk. “You! What are you doing in my store?”

“I beg your pardon.” Captain America smiled. “I’d appreciate it if you’d call an ambulance. I have a badly injured man here.”

“But, but,” the man sputtered. “That’s my freight elevator, my warehouse! It hasn’t been opened in years! What do you think you…?”

“What’s going on here?” a new voice inquired. It was a uniformed policeman, the cop on the beat. “Oh, hello there, sir.” He nodded at Captain America.

“You’re just the man I wanted to see,” Captain America said. “I’ve got a man here” —he gestured into the gloom of the elevator—“and he needs medical attention. Will you get an ambulance?”

“I’ll phone in right now, sir,” the policeman nodded.

“But, but, my warehouse,” the man was still protesting. “What’s been going on in my warehouse?”

Captain America was already striding off down the street. The cop nudged the other man with his billy club. “Better pipe down, fellow. Looks like there’s trouble here.”

“Who was that man, in that wild get up?”

“You don’t know who that is? That’s Captain America, that’s all,” the cop said. He shook his head, as if in total disbelief of such ignorance.

When he got to the bank, Captain America made directly for Gaughan’s office. A startled secretary stepped back as he pushed open the door without knocking. Except for her, the room was empty.

“Where’s Gaughan?”

“Oh, you startled me! Why, you must be Captain America!”

He smiled, patiently. The tantalizing smell of coffee lingered in the room, reminding him of his hunger. “I’m looking for Mr. Gaughan,” he said.

“Oh, he’s in the director’s office,” the girl said. “He’s in conference,” she added in confusion.

“Will he be long?”

“I—I have no idea.”

The door opened.

“Ah,” Captain America said. “Just the man I was looking for.” John B. Gaughan stopped in the doorway.

“Captain America! You’re alive!”

“Yes, just barely.”

“We’d had reports—half the tunnels are totally caved in. We’ve got men down there now, digging.” He shook his head distractedly. “How did you get out? Did you bring any of the others with you?”

Rogers held up his hand. “One at a time. I—do you have, could you send for some coffee?”

The girl nodded. “I’ll get you some. Can I get anything else? Coffee cake?”

“Yes, fine.” He returned his attention to Gaughan. “I managed to dig my way out of a cave-in.” He shrugged down at his dirt-smeared uniform. “I brought out one of your men. He’s suffering from the effects of the explosion. The others? I don’t know about one of them—he went up a ladder to the building above. But the one with me, I’m afraid he’s…”

“Dead?”

“Yes.”

“Couldn’t you do anything?”

“Mr. Gaughan, I may wear a fancy uniform, but I cannot see through walls, stop bullets with my skin, or do any of those other comic-book things. My strength, my powers of recuperation, my reflexes—they’re all superior, but they’re not superhuman.”

“So a man died.”

“Two men died. We’d caught one of the gold robbers. The explosion went off before I could get anything from him?”

“Two men died then, and you escaped.” Twin patches of angry color dotted Gaughan’s cheeks. “I sent those men down with you. What am I going to tell their wives? I…”

The phone on his desk rang.

“Yes?” He turned in his chair to stare directly at Captain America. “Yes, I see. Yes, thank you. Thank you, sir.” He hung up.

“That was the local precinct. After you showed up with one of my boys in bad shape, they sent a couple of men through the nearby buildings. They found another of our men, Thomas. He was in the hall of a building. The front hall. Dead. He’d been shot.”

“The one who went upstairs…” Rogers mused. “Shot, you say?”

“Three times.”

“Then whoever triggered that explosion must’ve been in the same building. He must’ve surprised the man.”

“Thompson has been with us five years. He was a trusted employee. He had a wife and three children. The youngest can’t be a year old yet.” Gaughan struck his desk with his fist, a surprising gesture, coming from him. “We don’t hire these men to risk their lives. They wear guns, but that’s largely a precautionary measure. Two of them dead, the other in the hospital.” He shook his head. “I’m afraid I’ll have to consider you responsible, sir.”

In a midtown hotel room, two men rested on twin beds, their shoes off, watching a TV set across the room. They had the bland look of corporation men. Each looked younger than his age; one was dark-haired, the other blond. Their luggage was stacked in the clothes closet. The bottom suitcase held a neatly stowed-away laser-gun unit.

The phone rang, and the blond-haired man reached for it. “Yeah?” He listened quietly for a moment, then nodded. “Yeah, sure. We’ll meet you in the bar. Ten minutes. Sure.”

He hung up.

“Our money?” the other asked.

Blondy shook his head. “More work.” He swung around and sat up. He nudged his partner. “Come on, let’s go. We gotta see the Sparrow downstairs, in ten minutes.”

“So, ten minutes. How long can it take in the elevator?”

The blond-haired man grinned and laughed. “Move it. It’ll take you half that time to get your shoes on.” He tied his own, and slung on his shoulder holster. He tested the action, slipping his 38 magnum revolver in and out several times. The spring clip worked fine.

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Monday, July 12, 2021

CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE GREAT GOLD STEAL "Chapter 7: Captain America is Dead!"

CHAPTER 7
CAPTAIN AMERICA IS DEAD!

The underground explosion shook the old building’s very foundations. Starling listened for another moment to the dead phone, then replaced it. Damn that man! He had cut short what might have been the greatest criminal coup in the history of the United States! They’d managed to get out only one load of gold; less than a million dollars’ worth—a drop in the bucket. And now the scheme was smashed, the entire plan, the underground tunnels, approaches, all shot.

His fingers shook as he dialed another number and misdialed the last digit, forcing him to hang up and dial over. Then he had an open line.

“Yes?”

“This is Starling.”

“What? Not now, not here!”

“I had to. I…”

“I know, you fool. I know. Captain America has discovered the tunnels.”

“Yes. Yes, I…”

“Did you manage to take care of him? I realize that the operation has been blown, but…”

“Yes, I think so. I mean, I don’t know. But he must be dead. I had the circuit open. I’d left Bruno in charge, as you’d said. I heard everything that happened. Bruno couldn’t stop him. He must’ve noticed the phone. He picked it up. I exchanged a few words with him to hold him there while I threw the switch. I know the stuff went off. I could feel it up here.”

“We’ll have to scrub operations there. Don’t call me at this number again. I’ll get in touch with you through Raven.”

“Yes. Okay, Boss.”

Starling hung up slowly. He moved with equal slowness across the dim-lit room. From the cot in the corner he picked up his topcoat, his hat. He put them on almost abstractedly. Captain America was almost certainly dead. But so was their plan to loot the greatest stockpile of gold in the United States. It was bitterly galling. If there had been another way… But there could have been no other way. He’d had to let the men out for a little air and recreation. He’d done that even before the boss’ call, earlier that morning. Only Bruno had been there. And Bruno had been an inadequate defense.

If he could have stopped Captain America without destroying the tunnel network…

But it would have been no good. Too many others knew by now. In a sense, the explosion of dynamite had been a pointless, almost petty thing—a futile revenge, nothing more. No, it had been good for more than that; it guaranteed confusion, and escape. He slammed the door to the room without locking it, and hurried down the stairs.

Ray Thompson was a hardworking, underpaid (in his wife’s opinion) bank guard. Until today, his life had been a dull one. It had been one free of taint, his record clean. There had been no trouble with his application to be bonded when he was accepted as a guard.

The sight of the gold bars it was his duty, in part, to guard, didn’t affect him particularly. He couldn’t connect those dull-yellow leaden bars with money; not with his monthly paycheck, with bills, with a Friday night beer at the bar on the corner, with infrequent movies with his wife (when a babysitter could be found). Money was an official light-green IBM card with his name typed on it, and the respective holes punched, that came every fifteenth of the month, was deposited in his checking account, and went out again in the form of rent, utility bills, and time-payments on his TV set, his wife’s washing machine and dryer (a necessity since the kids), the new living room set, his car.

Sometimes his palms itched when it was his duty to carry or guard bags of bundled bills, or boxes of rolled coins. Then he felt himself to be in the presence of money, real and palpable money. Sometimes he thought, in a wistful, daydreaming sort of way, of helping himself to a stray bundle of bills—tens or twenties, say—not enough to be missed; just enough to get a few of those monthly payments out of the way, and maybe make his ownership of just one appliance free and clear.

But he had never given way to such an impulse, and he never would. Ray Thompson was that rarity—an honest man, even in the face of temptation.

The thought of anyone stealing those heavy gold ingots, stacked so evenly, row upon row, in the subterranean vaults of the Reserve Bank, came almost as a surprise to him. An equal surprise had been the sight of the almost-mythical uniformed figure of Captain America, as he had led them down into the clandestine tunnels beneath the vaults. He had wondered, briefly, if a man like Captain America ever knew the pinch of too many bills, had ever felt desperate over the arrival of yet another mouth to feed. But, of course, Captain America had no family, and would hardly concern himself with such matters. It didn’t occur to Thompson to wonder if this in itself might not be something for which to pity Captain America.

He had been standing in the darkened cellar above the linked tunnels, the concealed shelf-door closed, when the explosion came. It came through two closed doors, and up a long shaft. It flung the heavy shelves over on him, knocking him to the floor.

The thunderclap had been muffled but, as he pulled himself out from under the collapsed shelves, he coughed rackingly. The cellar was chokingly full of dust. It tickled his nose and throat, turning his coughs into painful sneezes.

He moved stumblingly for the stairs, and fresher air—what there was to be had of it. Then duty overtook him again, and he moved back, into the cellar.

The lights, when he switched them on, still worked. They received their power from above, not below.

The light that spilled from the landing beyond the collapsed wall of shelves was foggy, and his moving shadow cut thick holes in it. He tugged at the shelves, groping at them to pull them aside. His gun was under them and, without thinking beyond that, he knew he needed his gun.

He didn’t think about the explosion below, and what must have happened to the men down there. Instead he searched methodically for his gun and, finding it, holstered it and moved into the landing area, to the ladder.

The lights showed only halfway down the shaft. But he climbed carefully down the unsteady ladder until he reached that point. He could go no further. It was caved in below.

He poked with one foot, halfheartedly, as though poking might unstop the shaft like a momentarily plugged drain, and free the way. But he was rewarded only by a quiver from the ladder, and it was with the haste born of caution that he reascended it.

There was nothing to be gained by remaining in the cellar now. It no longer connected with the tunnel network below; there was nothing to guard against. Leaving the lights untouched, he trudged up the stairs to the grimy hallway that led to the street.

The clatter of running feet on the stairs above stopped him. It was probably only someone alerted by the subterranean explosion, a curiosity seeker, but it paid to be on one’s guard. The building itself had not yet been explored.

He had his gun drawn when Starling turned the corner of the last flight of stairs.

When Starling saw the man in the dark-blue uniform, standing there with a drawn gun and covered with dust, he had no doubts in his mind. He plunged his hand under his coat, drew his slim 25 caliber automatic, and squeezed off three fast shots. The sound was like that of three sharp slaps in the dim hallway. The uniformed man fell.

He hadn’t been able to make out the man’s features, and had only begun to be surprised at the sight of a man so elegantly dressed in these shoddy surroundings, when the man’s arm had made a quick motion, and something was flashing at him.

From a vast distance he heard the shots, and understood their meaning. He had never been fired upon before. He had never fought in a war. There was nothing real about this situation. It was barefaced melodrama.

And grossly unfair. He felt the shock of the bullets’ impact. One of them hit his chest, striking bone. The second collapsed his left leg under him. Such tiny things, bullets. The third lodged in his brain as he was folding.

Starling stared down at the dead man. His thoughts raced close to panic. He’d killed a man. Had anyone heard the shots? Were there more people about? Where had the man come from? He forced himself into a calmer deliberation.

The cellar lights were off. Yet if the dust on his clothes was any indication, the man had come from there.

Okay, he’d been in the cellar, above the explosion when it had come. He’d come up. Alone. No one else had responded to the shots.

It was safe.

He slipped the gun into an outer pocket, where he could touch it, feel its reassuring grip easily, without appearing suspicious. Then he stepped over the body, and walked quickly to the door.

He pulled the door open, and eased his way out. There was no sign of police. In measured strides, he walked down the block to Maiden Lane. He glanced to the right. The forbidding bulk of the Federal Reserve Bank seemed to glower back at him from a block away. He turned left instead, and headed west. At least he’d got out free.

When Captain America awoke, there was a loud ringing in his ears, and his body was racked with pain. He wondered at first if he was also blind, but when he moved his head he caught a glimmering of light.

Where was he? What had happened to him?

The only thing he could remember was that voice on the phone—that slightly oily voice. It had threatened him; he remembered that. The voice had seemed too certain of itself, too undisappointed. That had warned him. But what then?

His head ached. Something pounded at it, rhythmically, in cadence with the ululations in his ears. He tried to shift to a more comfortable position.

Something pinned down his legs. There was no distinct pressure at any one spot; he couldn’t sort out any special sensations in his legs beyond that ache that seemed to permeate his body. He felt as though he’d been worked over by a meat grinder. He let himself relax again. He had detected the warning. After that?

He fought to reconstruct it in his mind. It was important. Perhaps he’d understand where he was if he could remember what had happened.

He’d dropped the phone—there was something odd about the phone. Yes, he remembered now. It was a lineman’s phone. That meant…

He began rebuilding his memory forward and backward. He’d been in an underground room, a room he’d reached through—through tunnels! Tunnels—from the vault, the bank vault, the gold depository.

The voice on the phone had held a note of triumph, as though another card was yet to be played. He’d felt the warning, the urgency. He’d dropped the phone, sprinted for the tunnel. The guard, the captured thug? He couldn’t remember. The last thing he remembered was a blow, a jarring concussion. After that, darkness.

At least he had some idea of where he was now. He was in one of the tunnels.

Carefully, he raised his right arm. He felt as weak as a baby. Sweat broke out on his forehead under his cowl mask, trickling an itchy path down his face. His fingers touched something that crumbled.

Dirt.

He was buried under a pile of dirt. He felt a smothering wave of claustrophobia sweep over him.

Buried, yes. But his exploring fingers found the dirt covered him only midway up his chest. His upper chest and shoulders, his head, were free.

He craned his head, and again caught the far-off glimmer of a light. It didn’t move, but it was reassuring. A way was open—that far, at least.

He wished he could hear. Or, rather, hear more than the nerve-jangling ringing that pervaded his ears.

Raising his arms, he dug down with his hands, and tried to sit up.

Nausea hit him like a club to the side of his head, knocking him flat. He passed out.

The big black Continental took the 39th Street ramp off the Brooklyn Belt Parkway elevated expressway, coasting down to the stop sign at Second Avenue. Straight ahead lay a freight yard, a few rusting freight cars surrounded by tall grass. Beyond, the squat building of the 39th Street Pier, and the oily water of the bay. If you squinted closely, you could separate the haze from the water, and make out between them, across the bay, the equally squalid New Jersey shoreline, with its own rundown industrial area.

Diagonally across the intersection was a yellowed concrete building, from which came the staccato chatter of many small machines. In the center of Second Avenue were two pairs of railroad tracks, recessed like old trolley-car tracks. Every few yards, a pair of tracks would split off into the yards and warehouses. On a gray day like this, Starling found it particularly depressing.

Ignoring the Right-Turn-Only sign, he swung the car left, onto the jouncing cobblestones, and south, down the avenue. A city bus, lumbering into the intersection, honked its impotent horn at him. He replied by goosing the gas, his tires chirping on the uneven surface of the street.

As he drove down the narrow avenue, past trucks angled out into the street, cars double-parked, and darting oncoming cabs that swung into his lane, and then ducked back into their own, he watched the street signs closely. On his right were warehouses, industrial lofts, trucks backed against their loading bins. On his left, going up the hill away from the water, rows of narrow tenements, paint peeling, dirty children in inadequate clothing swarming in the streets, playing their arcane games.

When he reached the fifties he slowed, and paid closer attention to street signs and addresses. He had been here only twice before, both times at night, when things were quiet. He chuckled as he remembered the first time, when he’d come down off the expressway to be confronted by a freight train in the center of the avenue, its big single light gleaming like Cyclops’ eye, an incongruously tinny bell jingling. This wasn’t his New York. This was Brooklyn.

Up ahead, on his right, was a tin-sided two-storied building, flush against a taller, concrete building. The gray paint was peeling from its corrugated sides, leaving blood-brown patches of rust. He angled his car into the curb, and tapped his horn lightly. One of the huge twin doors that covered the face of the building swung inward, and he drove up, over the sunken curb, and into the building.

A man in shirtsleeves, heavy blond hair a crop over his face and down the back of his neck, his belly joggling, pushed the door shut and ambled over. “Staying long?”

“What do you mean by that?” Starling snapped.

“Nothing much. Just, if you intend to make a day of it, I’ll put the car on the elevator. Otherwise it can stay.”

Starling shrugged. “The operation is blown. I’ll be here till the boss calls. Better put it on the elevator.” He slid the door open and climbed out, leaving the engine running.

The other took his place and, revving the engine, backed and angled it over onto an elevator.

“Watch it, Raven,” Starling said nervously. “You’re no parking-lot attendant.” The floor of the building was littered with odd pieces of heavy machinery. In the back stood an old van.

Raven slid the car onto two parallel skids. Then he leaned across the seat to the nearby wall, and punched a switch.

Immediately, the elevator began to rise, the thick column pushing the skids, lifting the Continental ponderously into the air.

Above, a section of the flooring overhead swung open and up.

The elevator didn’t pause at six feet, nor at nine. It didn’t stop until the skids were even with the floor above, and the car had all but vanished. Raven engaged the transmission and slowly backed the Continental out of sight. There was a pause, then the elevator mechanism began to sigh, and the skids started dropping.

Soon the ceiling was solid again, and the elevator was on the floor. There was no sign of a car in the dimly lit building. Raven came whistling down some side stairs, his feet heavy on the squeaking steps.

“Okay,” he said, fixing Starling with a sudden stare.

“Tell me about it.”

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