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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Code Three, by Rick Raphael
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Code Three, by Rick Raphael
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Code Three
+
+Author: Rick Raphael
+
+Illustrator: Schoenherr
+
+Release Date: August 24, 2006 [EBook #19111]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CODE THREE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Sankar Viswanathan, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="tr"><p class="center"> Transcriber's Note:</p>
+<p>This etext was produced from Analog Science Fact--Science Fiction, February 1963. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image_01.jpg" width="600" height="608" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img class="img1" src="images/image_02.jpg" width="400" height="555" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h1>Code Three</h1>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The cars on high-speed highways <br />
+must follow each other like
+sheep.<br />
+ And they need shepherds.<br />
+ The highway police cruiser
+of tomorrow<br />
+ however must be massively different&mdash;<br />
+as different as the highways themselves!</p></div>
+
+<h2>by Rick Raphael</h2>
+
+<h3>Illustrated by Schoenherr</h3>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/image_03.jpg" width="400" height="322" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/image_04.jpg" width="500" height="562" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+<p>The late afternoon sun hid behind gray banks of snow clouds and a cold
+wind whipped loose leaves across the drill field in front of the
+Philadelphia Barracks of the North American Continental Thruway
+Patrol. There was the feel of snow in the air but the thermometer
+hovered just at the freezing mark and the clouds could turn either
+into icy rain or snow.</p>
+
+<p>Patrol Sergeant Ben Martin stepped out of the door of the barracks and
+shivered as a blast of wind hit him. He pulled up the zipper on his
+loose blue uniform coveralls and paused to gauge the storm clouds
+building up to the west.</p>
+
+<p>The broad planes of his sunburned face turned into the driving cold
+wind for a moment and then he looked back down at the weather report
+secured to the top of a stack of papers on his clipboard.</p>
+
+<p>Behind him, the door of the barracks was shouldered open by his junior
+partner, Patrol Trooper Clay Ferguson. The young, tall Canadian
+officer's arms were loaded with paper sacks and his patrol work helmet
+dangled by its strap from the crook of his arm.</p>
+
+<p>Clay turned and moved from the doorway into the wind. A sudden gust
+swept around the corner of the building and a small sack perched atop
+one of the larger bags in his arms blew to the ground and began
+tumbling towards the drill field.</p>
+
+<p>"Ben," he yelled, "grab the bag."</p>
+
+<p>The sergeant lunged as the sack bounced by and made the retrieve. He
+walked back to Ferguson and eyed the load of bags in the blond-haired
+officer's arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Just what is all this?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Groceries," the youngster grinned. "Or to be more exact, little
+gourmet items for our moments of gracious living."</p>
+
+<p>Ferguson turned into the walk leading to the motor pool and Martin
+swung into step beside him. "Want me to carry some of that junk?"</p>
+
+<p>"Junk," Clay cried indignantly. "You keep your grimy paws off these
+delicacies, peasant. You'll get yours in due time and perhaps it will
+help Kelly and me to make a more polished product of you instead of
+the clodlike cop you are today."</p>
+
+<p>Martin chuckled. This patrol would mark the start of the second year
+that he, Clay Ferguson and Medical-Surgical Officer Kelly Lightfoot
+had been teamed together. After twenty-two patrols, cooped up in a
+semiarmored vehicle with a man for ten days at a time, you got to know
+him pretty well. And you either liked him or you hated his guts.</p>
+
+<p>As senior officer, Martin had the right to reject or keep his partner
+after their first eleven-month duty tour. Martin had elected to retain
+the lanky Canadian. As soon as they had pulled into New York Barracks
+at the end of their last patrol, he had made his decisions. After
+eleven months and twenty-two patrols on the Continental Thruways, each
+team had a thirty-day furlough coming.</p>
+
+<p>Martin and Ferguson had headed for the city the minute they put their
+signatures on the last of the stack of reports needed at the end of a
+tour. Then, for five days and nights, they tied one on. MSO Kelly
+Lightfoot had made a beeline for a Columbia Medical School seminar on
+tissue regeneration. On the sixth day, Clay staggered out of bed,
+swigged down a handful of antireaction pills, showered, shaved and
+dressed and then waved good-by. Twenty minutes later he was aboard a
+jet, heading for his parents' home in Edmonton, Alberta. Martin soloed
+around the city for another week, then rented a car and raced up to
+his sister's home in Burlington, Vermont, to play Uncle Bountiful to
+Carol's three kids and to lap up as much as possible of his sister's
+real cooking.</p>
+
+<p>While the troopers and their med officer relaxed, a service crew moved
+their car down to the Philadelphia motor pool for a full overhaul and
+refitting for the next torturous eleven-month-tour of duty.</p>
+
+<p>The two patrol troopers had reported into the Philadelphia Barracks
+five days ago&mdash;Martin several pounds heavier courtesy of his sister's
+cooking; Ferguson several pounds lighter courtesy of three assorted,
+starry-eyed, uniform-struck Alberta maidens.</p>
+
+<p>They turned into the gate of the motor pool and nodded to the sentry
+at the gate. To their left, the vast shop buildings echoed to the
+sound of body-banging equipment and roaring jet engines. The darkening
+sky made the brilliant lights of the shop seem even brighter and the
+hulls of a dozen patrol cars cast deep shadows around the work crews.</p>
+
+<p>The troopers turned into the dispatcher's office and Clay carefully
+placed the bags on a table beside the counter. Martin peered into one
+of the bags. "Seriously, kid, what do you have in that grab bag?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, just a few essentials," Clay replied "<i>Pate de foie gras</i>, sharp
+cheese, a smidgen of cooking wine, a handful of spices. You know,
+stuff like that. Like I said&mdash;essentials."</p>
+
+<p>"Essentials," Martin snorted, "you give your brains to one of those
+Alberta chicks of yours for a souvenir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look, Ben," Ferguson said earnestly, "I suffered for eleven months in
+that tin mausoleum on tracks because of what you fondly like to think
+is edible food. You've got as much culinary imagination as Beulah. I
+take that back. Even Beulah turns out some better smells when she's
+riding on high jet than you'll ever get out of her galley in the next
+one hundred years. This tour, I intend to eat like a human being once
+again. And I'll teach you how to boil water without burning it."</p>
+
+<p>"Why you ungrateful young&mdash;" Martin yelped.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The patrol dispatcher, who had been listening with amused tolerance,
+leaned across the counter.</p>
+
+<p>"If Oscar Waldorf is through with his culinary lecture, gentlemen," he
+said, "perhaps you two could be persuaded to take a little pleasure
+ride. It's a lovely night for a drive and it's just twenty-six hundred
+miles to the next service station. If you two aren't cooking anything
+at the moment, I know that NorCon would simply adore having the
+services of two such distinguished Continental Commandos."</p>
+
+<p>Ferguson flushed and Martin scowled at the dispatcher. "Very funny,
+clown. I'll recommend you for trooper status one of these days."</p>
+
+<p>"Not me," the dispatcher protested. "I'm a married man. You'll never
+get me out on the road in one of those blood-and-gut factories."</p>
+
+<p>"So quit sounding off to us heroes," Martin said, "and give us the
+clearances."</p>
+
+<p>The dispatcher opened a loose-leaf reference book on the counter and
+then punched the first of a series of buttons on a panel. Behind him,
+the wall lighted with a map of the eastern United States to the
+Mississippi River. Ferguson and Martin had pencils out and poised over
+their clipboards.</p>
+
+<p>The dispatcher glanced at the order board across the room where patrol
+car numbers and team names were displayed on an illuminated board.
+"Car 56&mdash;Martin-Ferguson-Lightfoot," glowed with an amber light. In
+the column to the right was the number "26-W." The dispatcher punched
+another button. A broad belt of multi-colored lines representing the
+eastern segment of North American Thruway 26 flashed onto the map in a
+band extending from Philadelphia to St. Louis. The thruway went on to
+Los Angeles in its western segment, not shown on the map. Ten bands of
+color&mdash;each five separated by a narrow clear strip, detailed the
+thruway. Martin and Ferguson were concerned with the northern five
+bands; NAT 26-westbound. Other unlighted lines radiated out in
+tangential spokes to the north and south along the length of the
+multi-colored belt of NAT 26.</p>
+
+<p>This was just one small segment of the Continental Thruway system that
+spanned North America from coast to coast and crisscrossed north and
+south under the Three Nation Road Compact from the southern tip of
+Mexico into Canada and Alaska.</p>
+
+<p>Each arterial cut a five-mile-wide path across the continent and from
+one end to the other, the only structures along the roadways were the
+turretlike NorCon Patrol check and relay stations&mdash;looming up at
+one-hundred-mile intervals like the fire control islands of
+earlier-day aircraft carriers.</p>
+
+<p>Car 56 with Trooper Sergeant Ben Martin, Trooper Clay Ferguson and
+Medical-Surgical Officer Kelly Lightfoot, would take their first
+ten-day patrol on NAT 26-west. Barring major disaster, they would eat,
+sleep and work the entire time from their car; out of sight of any but
+distant cities until they had reached Los Angeles at the end of the
+patrol. Then a five-day resupply and briefing period and back onto
+another thruway.</p>
+
+<p>During the coming patrol they would cross ten state lines as if they
+didn't exist. And as far as thruway traffic control and authority was
+concerned, state and national boundaries actually didn't exist. With
+the growth of the old interstate highway system and the Alcan Highway
+it became increasingly evident that variation in motor vehicle laws
+from state to state and country to country were creating impossible
+situations for any uniform safety control.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>With the establishment of the Continental Thruway System two decades
+later, came the birth of the supra-cop&mdash;The North American Thruway
+Patrol, known as NorCon. Within the five-mile bands of the
+thruways&mdash;all federally-owned land by each of the three nations&mdash;the
+blue-coveralled "Continental Commandos" of NorCon were the sole law
+enforcement agency and authority. Violators of thruway law were cited
+into NorCon district traffic courts located in the nearest city to
+each access port along every thruway.</p>
+
+<p>There was no challenge to the authority of NorCon. Public demand for
+faster and more powerful vehicles had forced the automotive industry
+to put more and more power under the touch of the ever-growing
+millions of drivers crowding the continent's roads. Piston drive gave
+way to turbojet; turbojet was boosted by a modification of ram jet and
+air-cushion drive was added. In the last two years, the first of the
+nuclear reaction mass engines had hit the roads. Even as the hot
+Ferraris and Jags of the mid-'60s would have been suicide vehicles on
+the T-model roads of the '20s so would today's vehicles be on the
+interstates of the '60s. But building roads capable of handling three
+hundred to four hundred miles an hour speeds was beyond the financial
+and engineering capabilities of individual states and nations. Thus
+grew the continental thruways with their four speed lanes in each
+direction, each a half-mile wide separated east and west and north and
+south by a half-mile-wide landscaped divider. Under the Three Nation
+Compact, the thruways now wove a net across the entire North American
+continent.</p>
+
+<p>On the big wall map, NAT 26-west showed as four colored lines; blue
+and yellow as the two high and ultra-high speed lanes; green and white
+for the intermediate and slow lanes. Between the blue and yellow and
+the white and green was a red band. This was the police emergency
+lane, never used by other than official vehicles and crossed by the
+traveling public shifting from one speed lane to another only at
+sweeping crossovers.</p>
+
+<p>The dispatcher picked up an electric pointer and aimed the light beam
+at the map. Referring to his notes, he began to recite.</p>
+
+<p>"Resurfacing crews working on 26-W blue at milestone Marker 185 to
+Marker 187, estimated clearance 0300 hours Tuesday&mdash;Let's see, that's
+tomorrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>The two officers were writing the information down on their
+trip-analysis sheets.</p>
+
+<p>"Ohio State is playing Cal under the lights at Columbus tonight so you
+can expect a traffic surge sometime shortly after 2300 hours but most
+of it will stay in the green and white. Watch out for the drunks
+though. They might filter out onto the blue or yellow.</p>
+
+<p>"The crossover for NAT 163 has painting crews working. Might watch out
+for any crud on the roadway. And they've got the entrance blocked
+there so that all 163 exchange traffic is being rerouted to 164 west
+of Chillicothe."</p>
+
+<p>The dispatcher thumbed through his reference sheets. "That seems to be
+about all. No, wait a minute. This is on your trick. The Army's got a
+priority missile convoy moving out of the Aberdeen Proving Grounds
+bound for the west coast tonight at 1800 hours. It will be moving at
+green lane speeds so you might watch out for it. They'll have
+thirty-four units in the convoy. And that is all. Oh, yes. Kelly's
+already aboard. I guess you know about the weather."</p>
+
+<p>Martin nodded. "Yup. We should be hitting light snows by 2300 hours
+tonight in this area and it could be anything from snow to ice-rain
+after that." He grinned at his younger partner. "The vacation is over,
+sonny. Tonight we make a man out of you."</p>
+
+<p>Ferguson grinned back. "Nuts to you, pop. I've got character witnesses
+back in Edmonton who'll give you glowing testimonials about my
+manhood."</p>
+
+<p>"Testimonials aren't legal unless they're given by adults," Martin
+retorted. "Come on, lover boy. Duty calls."</p>
+
+<p>Clay carefully embraced his armload of bundles and the two officers
+turned to leave. The dispatcher leaned across the counter.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Ferguson, one thing I forgot. There's some light corrugations in
+red lane just east of St. Louis. You might be careful with your
+souffles in that area. Wouldn't want them to fall, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Clay paused and started to turn back. The grinning dispatcher ducked
+into the back office and slammed the door.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The wind had died down by the time the troopers entered the
+brilliantly lighted parking area. The temperature seemed warmer with
+the lessening winds but in actuality, the mercury was dropping. The
+snow clouds to the west were much nearer and the overcast was getting
+darker.</p>
+
+<p>But under the great overhead light tubes, the parking area was
+brighter than day. A dozen huge patrol vehicles were parked on the
+front "hot" line. Scores more were lined out in ranks to the back of
+the parking zone. Martin and Ferguson walked down the line of military
+blue cars. Number 56 was fifth on the line. Service mechs were just
+re-housing fueling lines into a ground panel as the troopers walked
+up. The technician corporal was the first to speak. "All set, Sarge,"
+he said. "We had to change an induction jet at the last minute and I
+had the port engine running up to reline the flow. Thought I'd better
+top 'er off for you, though, before you pull out. She sounds like a
+purring kitten."</p>
+
+<p>He tossed the pair a waving salute and then moved out to his service
+dolly where three other mechs were waiting.</p>
+
+<p>The officers paused and looked up at the bulk of the huge patrol car.</p>
+
+<p>"Beulah looks like she's been to the beauty shop and had the works,"
+Martin said. He reached out and slapped the maglurium plates. "Welcome
+home, sweetheart. I see you've kept a candle in the window for your
+wandering son." Ferguson looked up at the lighted cab, sixteen feet
+above the pavement.</p>
+
+<p>Car 56&mdash;Beulah to her team&mdash;was a standard NorCon Patrol vehicle. She
+was sixty feet long, twelve feet wide and twelve feet high; topped by
+a four-foot-high bubble canopy over her cab. All the way across her
+nose was a three-foot-wide luminescent strip. This was the variable
+beam headlight that could cut a day-bright swath of light through
+night, fog, rain or snow and could be varied in intensity, width and
+elevation. Immediately above the headlight strip were two red-black
+plastic panels which when lighted, sent out a flashing red emergency
+signal that could be seen for miles. Similar emergency lights and
+back-up white light strips adorned Beulah's stern. Her bow rounded
+down like an old-time tank and blended into the track assembly of her
+dual propulsion system. With the exception of the cabin bubble and a
+two-foot stepdown on the last fifteen feet of her hull, Beulah was
+free of external protrusions. Racked into a flush-decked recess on one
+side of the hull was a crane arm with a two-hundred-ton lift capacity.
+Several round hatches covered other extensible gear and periscopes
+used in the scores of multiple operations the NorCon cars were called
+upon to accomplish on routine road patrols.</p>
+
+<p>Beulah resembled a gigantic offspring of a military tank, sans heavy
+armament. But even a small stinger was part of the patrol car
+equipment. As for armament, Beulah had weapons to meet every
+conceivable skirmish in the deadly battle to keep Continental Thruways
+fast-moving and safe. Her own two-hundred-fifty-ton bulk could reach
+speeds of close to six hundred miles an hour utilizing one or both of
+her two independent propulsion systems.</p>
+
+<p>At ultra-high speeds, Beulah never touched the ground&mdash;floating on an
+impeller air cushion and driven forward by a pair of one hundred fifty
+thousand pound thrust jets and ram jets. At intermediate high speeds,
+both her air cushion and the four-foot-wide tracks on each side of the
+car pushed her along at two hundred-mile-an-hour-plus speeds. Synchro
+mechanisms reduced the air cushion as the speeds dropped to afford
+more surface traction for the tracks. For slow speeds and heavy duty,
+the tracks carried the burden.</p>
+
+<p>Martin thumbed open the portside ground-level cabin door.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll start the outside check," he told Clay. "You stow that garbage
+of yours in the galley and start on the dispensary. I'll help you
+after I finish out here."</p>
+
+<p>As the younger officer entered the car and headed up the short flight
+of steps to the working deck, the sergeant unclipped a check list
+from the inside of the door and turned towards the stern of the big
+vehicle.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Clay mounted to the work deck and turned back to the little galley
+just aft of the cab. As compact as a spaceship kitchen&mdash;as a matter of
+fact, designed almost identically from models on the Moon run&mdash;the
+galley had but three feet of open counter space. Everything else,
+sink, range, oven and freezer, were built-ins with pull-downs for use
+as needed. He set his bags on the small counter to put away after the
+pre-start check. Aft of the galley and on the same side of the
+passageway were the double-decked bunks for the patrol troopers.
+Across the passageway was a tiny latrine and shower. Clay tossed his
+helmet on the lower bunk as he went down the passageway. At the
+bulkhead to the rear, he pressed a wall panel and a thick, insulated
+door slid back to admit him to the engine compartment. The service
+crews had shut down the big power plants and turned off the air
+exchangers and already the heat from the massive engines made the
+compartment uncomfortably warm.</p>
+
+<p>He hurried through into a small machine shop. In an emergency, the
+troopers could turn out small parts for disabled vehicles or for other
+uses. It also stocked a good supply of the most common failure parts.
+Racked against the ceiling were banks of cutting torches, a grim
+reminder that death or injury still rode the thruways with increasing
+frequency.</p>
+
+<p>In the tank storage space between the ceiling and top of the hull were
+the chemical fire-fighting liquids and foam that could be applied by
+nozzles, hoses and towers now telescoped into recesses in the hull.
+Along both sides and beneath the galley, bunks, engine and
+machine-shop compartments between the walls, deck and hull, were
+Beulah's fuel storage tanks.</p>
+
+<p>The last after compartment was a complete dispensary, one that would
+have made the emergency room or even the light surgery rooms of
+earlier-day hospitals proud.</p>
+
+<p>Clay tapped on the door and went through. Medical-Surgical Officer
+Kelly Lightfoot was sitting on the deck, stowing sterile bandage packs
+into a lower locker. She looked up at Clay and smiled. "Well, well,
+you DID manage to tear yourself away from your adoring bevies," she
+said. She flicked back a wisp of golden-red hair from her forehead and
+stood up. The patrol-blue uniform coverall with its belted waist
+didn't do much to hide a lovely, properly curved figure. She walked
+over to the tall Canadian trooper and reached up and grabbed his ear.
+She pulled his head down, examined one side critically and then
+quickly snatched at his other ear and repeated the scrutiny. She let
+go of his ear and stepped back. "Damned if you didn't get all the
+lipstick marks off, too."</p>
+
+<p>Clay flushed. "Cut it out, Kelly," he said. "Sometimes you act just
+like my mother."</p>
+
+<p>The olive-complexioned redhead grinned at him and turned back to her
+stack of boxes on the deck. She bent over and lifted one of the boxes
+to the operating table. Clay eyed her trim figure. "You might act like
+ma sometimes," he said, "but you sure don't look like her."</p>
+
+<p>It was the Irish-Cherokee Indian girl's turn to flush. She became very
+busy with the contents of the box. "Where's Ben?" she asked over her
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Making outside check. You about finished in here?"</p>
+
+<p>Kelly turned and slowly scanned the confines of the dispensary. With
+the exception of the boxes on the table and floor, everything was
+behind secured locker doors. In one corner, the compact
+diagnostician&mdash;capable of analyzing many known human bodily ailments
+and every possible violent injury to the body&mdash;was locked in its
+riding clamps. Surgical trays and instrument racks were all hidden
+behind locker doors along with medical and surgical supplies. On
+either side of the emergency ramp door at the stern of the vehicle,
+three collapsible autolitters hung from clamps. Six hospital bunks in
+two tiers of three each, lined another wall. On patrol, Kelly utilized
+one of the hospital bunks for her own use except when they might all
+be occupied with accident or other kind of patients. And this would
+never be for more than a short period, just long enough to transfer
+them to a regular ambulance or hospital vehicle. Her meager supply of
+personal items needed for the ten-day patrol were stowed in a small
+locker and she shared the latrine with the male members of the team.</p>
+
+<p>Kelly completed her scan, glanced down at the checklist in her hand.
+"I'll have these boxes stowed in five minutes. Everything else is
+secure." She raised her hand to her forehead in mock salute.
+"Medical-Surgical Officer Lightfoot reports dispensary ready for
+patrol, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Clay smiled and made a checkmark on his clipboard. "How was the
+seminar, Kelly?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Kelly hiked herself onto the edge of the operating table. "Wonderful,
+Clay, just wonderful. I never saw so many good-looking, young, rich
+and eligible doctors together in one place in all my life."</p>
+
+<p>She sighed and smiled vacantly into space.</p>
+
+<p>Clay snorted. "I thought you were supposed to be learning something
+new about tissue regeneration," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Generation, regeneration, who cares," Kelly grinned.</p>
+
+<p>Clay started to say something, got flustered and wheeled around to
+leave&mdash;and bounded right off Ben Martin's chest. Ferguson mumbled
+something and pushed past the older officer.</p>
+
+<p>Ben looked after him and then turned back to Car 56's combination
+doctor, surgeon and nurse. "Glad to see the hostess aboard for this
+cruise. I hope you make the passengers more comfortable than you've
+just made the first mate. What did you do to Clay, Kelly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hi, Ben," Kelly said. "Oh, don't worry about junior. He just gets all
+fluttery when a girl takes away his masculine prerogative to make
+cleverly lewd witticisms. He'll be all right. Have a happy holiday,
+Ben? You look positively fat."</p>
+
+<p>Ben patted his stomach. "Carol's good cooking. Had a nice restful
+time. And how about you. That couldn't have been all work. You've got
+a marvelous tan."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry," Kelly laughed, "I had no intention of letting it be all
+study. I spent just about as much time under the sun dome at the pool
+as I did in class. I learned a lot though."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/image_12.jpg" width="500" height="537" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Ben grinned and headed back to the front of the car. "Tell me more
+after we're on the road," he said from the doorway. "We'll be rolling
+in ten minutes."</p>
+
+<p>When he reached the cab, Clay was already in the right-hand control
+seat and was running down the instrument panel check. The sergeant
+lifted the hatch door between the two control seats and punched on a
+light to illuminate the stark compartment at the lower front end of
+the car. A steel grill with a dogged handle on the upper side covered
+the opening under the hatch cover. Two swing-down bunks were racked up
+against the walls on either side and the front hull door was without
+an inside handle. This was the patrol car brig, used for bringing in
+unwilling violators or other violent or criminal subjects who might
+crop up in the course of a patrol tour. Satisfied with the appearance
+of the brig, Ben closed the hatch cover and slid into his own control
+seat on the left of the cab. Both control seats were molded and
+plastiformed padded to the contours of the troopers and the armrests
+on both were studded with buttons and a series of small,
+finger-operated, knobs. All drive, communication and fire fighting
+controls for the massive vehicle were centered in the knobs and
+buttons on the seat arms, while acceleration and braking controls were
+duplicated in two footrest pedals beneath their feet.</p>
+
+<p>Ben settled into his seat and glanced down to make sure his
+work-helmet was racked beside him. He reached over and flipped a bank
+of switches on the instrument panel. "All communications to 'on,'" he
+said. Clay made a checkmark on his list. "All pre-engine start check
+complete," Clay replied.</p>
+
+<p>"In that case," the senior trooper said, "let's give Beulah some
+exercise. Start engines."</p>
+
+<p>Clay's fingers danced across the array of buttons on his seat arms and
+flicked lightly at the throttle knobs. From deep within the engine
+compartment came the muted, shrill whine of the starter engines,
+followed a split-second later by the full-throated roar of the jets as
+they caught fire. Clay eased the throttles back and the engine noise
+softened to a muffled roar.</p>
+
+<p>Martin fingered a press-panel on the right arm of his seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Car 56 to Philly Control," Ben called.</p>
+
+<p>The speakers mounted around the cab came to life. "Go ahead Five Six."</p>
+
+<p>"Five Six fired up and ready to roll," Martin said.</p>
+
+<p>"Affirmative Five Six," came the reply, "You're clear to roll. Philly
+Check estimates white density 300; green, 840; blue 400; yellow, 75."</p>
+
+<p>Both troopers made mental note of the traffic densities in their first
+one-hundred-mile patrol segment; an estimated three hundred vehicles
+for each ten miles of thruway in the white or fifty to one hundred
+miles an hour low lane; eight hundred forty vehicles in the one
+hundred to one hundred fifty miles an hour green, and so on. More than
+sixteen thousand westbound vehicles on the thruway in the first one
+hundred miles; nearly five thousand of them traveling at speeds
+between one hundred fifty and three hundred miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>Over the always-hot intercom throughout the big car Ben called out.
+"All set, Kelly?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm making coffee," Kelly answered from the galley. "Let 'er roll."</p>
+
+<p>Martin started to kick off the brakes, then stopped. "Ooops," he
+exclaimed, "almost forgot." His finger touched another button and a
+blaring horn reverberated through the vehicle.</p>
+
+<p>In the galley, Kelly hurled herself into a corner. Her body activated
+a pressure plant and a pair of mummy-like plastifoam plates slid
+curvingly out the wall and locked her in a soft cocoon. A dozen
+similar safety clamps were located throughout the car at every working
+and relaxation station.</p>
+
+<p>In the same instance, both Ben and Clay touched another plate on their
+control seats. From kiosk-type columns behind each seat, pairs of
+body-molded crash pads snapped into place to encase both troopers in
+their seats, their bodies cushioned and locked into place. Only their
+fingers were loose beneath the spongy substance to work arm controls.
+The half-molds included headforms with a padded band that locked
+across their foreheads to hold their heads rigidly against the backs
+of their reinforced seats. The instant all three crew members were
+locked into their safety gear, the bull horn ceased.</p>
+
+<p>"All tight," Ben called out as he wiggled and tried to free himself
+from the cocoon. Kelly and Clay tested their harnesses.</p>
+
+<p>Satisfied that the safety cocoons were operating properly, Ben
+released them and the molds slid back into their recesses. The cocoons
+were triggered automatically in any emergency run or chase at speeds
+in excess of two hundred miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>Again he kicked off the brakes, pressed down on the foot feed and Car
+56&mdash;Beulah&mdash;rolled out of the Philadelphia motor pool on the start of
+its ten-day patrol.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The motor pool exit opened into a quarter-mile wide tunnel sloping
+gently down into the bowels of the great city. Car 56 glided down the
+slight incline at a steady fifty miles an hour. A mile from the mouth
+of the tunnel the roadway leveled off and Ben kicked Beulah up another
+twenty-five miles an hour. Ahead, the main tunnel ended in a series of
+smaller portal ways, each emblazoned with a huge illuminated number
+designating a continental thruway.</p>
+
+<p>Ben throttled back and began edging to the left lanes. Other patrol
+cars were heading down the main passageway, bound for their assigned
+thruways. As Ben eased down to a slow thirty, another patrol vehicle
+slid alongside. The two troopers in the cab waved. Clay flicked on the
+"car-to-car" transmit.</p>
+
+<p>The senior trooper in Car 104 looked over at Martin and Ferguson. "If
+it isn't the gruesome twosome," he called. "Where have you two been?
+We thought the front office had finally caught up with you and found
+out that neither one of you could read or write and that they had
+canned you."</p>
+
+<p>"We can't read," Ben quipped back. "That's why we're still on the job.
+The front office would never hire anyone who would embarrass you two
+by being smarter than either of you. Where're you headed, Eddie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Got 154-north," the other officer said.</p>
+
+<p>"Hey," Clay called out, "I've got a real hot doll in Toronto and I'll
+gladly sell her phone number for a proper price."</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't want to hurt you, Clay," the other officer replied. "If I
+called her up and took her out, she'd throw rocks at you the next time
+you drew the run. It's all for your own good."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, go get lost in a cloverleaf," Clay retorted.</p>
+
+<p>The other car broke the connection and with a wave, veered off to the
+right. The thruway entrances were just ahead. Martin aimed Beulah at
+the lighted orifice topped by the number 26-W. The patrol car slid
+into the narrower tunnel, glided along for another mile and then
+turned its bow upwards. Three minutes later, they emerged from the
+tunnel into the red patrol lane of Continental Thruway 26-West. The
+late afternoon sky was a covering of gray wool and a drop or two of
+moisture struck the front face of the cab canopy. For a mile on either
+side of the police lane, streams of cars sped westward. Ben eyed the
+sky, the traffic and then peered at the outer hull thermometer. It
+read thirty-two degrees. He made a mental bet with himself that the
+weather bureau was off on its snow estimates by six hours. His Vermont
+upbringing told him it would be flurrying within the hour.</p>
+
+<p>He increased speed to a steady one hundred and the car sped silently
+and easily along the police lane. Across the cab, Clay peered
+pensively at the steady stream of cars and cargo carriers racing by in
+the green and blue lanes&mdash;all of them moving faster than the patrol
+car.</p>
+
+<p>The young officer turned in his seat and looked at his partner.</p>
+
+<p>"You know, Ben," he said gravely, "I sometimes wonder if those
+old-time cowboys got as tired looking at the south end of northbound
+cows as I get looking at the vanishing tail pipes of cars."</p>
+
+<p>The radio came to life.</p>
+
+<p>"Philly Control to Car 56."</p>
+
+<p>Clay touched his transmit plate. "This is Five Six. Go ahead."</p>
+
+<p>"You've got a bad one at Marker 82," Control said. "A sideswipe in the
+white."</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't be too bad in the white," Ben broke in, thinking of the
+one-hundred mile-an-hour limit in the slow lane.</p>
+
+<p>"That's not the problem," Control came back. "One of the sideswiped
+vehicles was flipped around and bounded into the green, and that's
+where the real mess is. Make it code three."</p>
+
+<p>"Five Six acknowledge," Ben said. "On the way."</p>
+
+<p>He slammed forward on the throttles. The bull horn blared and a second
+later, with MSO Kelly Lightfoot snugged in her dispensary cocoon and
+both troopers in body cushions, Car 56 lifted a foot from the roadway,
+and leaped forward on a turbulent pad of air. It accelerated from one
+hundred to two hundred fifty miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>The great red emergency lights on the bow and stern began to blink and
+from the special transmitter in the hull a radio siren wail raced
+ahead of the car to be picked up by the emergency receptor antennas
+required on all vehicles.</p>
+
+<p>The working part of the patrol had begun.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Conversation died in the speeding car, partly because of the
+concentration required by the troopers, secondly because all
+transmissions whether intercom or radio, on a code two or three run,
+were taped and monitored by Control. In the center of the instrument
+panel, an oversized radiodometer was clicking off the mileage marks as
+the car passed each milestone. The milestone posts beamed a coded
+signal across all five lanes and as each vehicle passed the marker,
+the radiodometer clicked up another number.</p>
+
+<p>Car 56 had been at MM 23 when the call came. Now, at better than four
+miles a minute, Beulah whipped past MM 45 with ten minutes yet to go
+to reach the scene of the accident. Light flurries of wet snow bounced
+off the canopy, leaving thin, fast-drying trails of moisture. Although
+it was still a few minutes short of 1700 hours, the last of the winter
+afternoon light was being lost behind the heavy snow clouds overhead.
+Ben turned on the patrol car's dazzling headlight and to the left and
+right, Clay could see streaks of white lights from the traffic on the
+green and blue lanes on either side of the quarter-mile wide emergency
+lane.</p>
+
+<p>The radio filled them in on the movement of other patrol emergency
+vehicles being routed to the accident site. Car 82, also assigned to
+NAT 26-West, was more than one hundred fifty miles ahead of Beulah.
+Pittsburgh Control ordered Eight Two to hold fast to cover anything
+else that might come up while Five Six was handling the current
+crisis. Eastbound Car 119 was ordered to cut across to the scene to
+assist Beulah's crew, and another eastbound patrol vehicle was held in
+place to cover for One One Nine.</p>
+
+<p>At mile marker 80, yellow caution lights were flashing on all
+westbound lanes, triggered by Philadelphia Control the instant the
+word of the crash had been received. Traffic was slowing down and
+piling up despite the half-mile wide lanes.</p>
+
+<p>"Philly Control this is Car 56."</p>
+
+<p>"Go ahead Five Six."</p>
+
+<p>"It's piling up in the green and white," Ben said. "Let's divert to
+blue on slowdown and seal the yellow."</p>
+
+<p>"Philly Control acknowledged," came the reply.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The flashing amber caution lights on all lanes switched to red. As Ben
+began de-acceleration, diagonal red flashing barriers rose out of the
+roadway on the green and white lanes at the 85 mile marker and lane
+crossing. This channelled all traffic from both lanes to the left and
+into the blue lane where the flashing reds now prohibited speeds in
+excess of fifty miles an hour around the emergency situation. At the
+same time, all crossovers on the ultra high yellow lane were sealed by
+barriers to prevent changing of lanes into the over-congested area.</p>
+
+<p>As Car 56's speed dropped back below the two hundred mile an hour mark
+the cocoon automatically slid open. Freed from her safety restraints,
+Kelly jumped for the rear entrance of the dispensary and cleared the
+racking clamps from the six autolitters. That done, she opened another
+locker and reached for the mobile first-aid kit. She slid it to the
+door entrance on its retractable casters. She slipped on her work
+helmet with the built-in transmitter and then sat down on the seat by
+the rear door to wait until the car stopped.</p>
+
+<p>Car 56 was now less than two miles from the scene of the crash and
+traffic in the green lane to the left was at a standstill. A half mile
+farther westward, lights were still moving slowly along the white
+lane. Ahead, the troopers could see a faint wisp of smoke rising from
+the heaviest congregation of headlights. Both officers had their work
+helmets on and Clay had left his seat and descended to the side door,
+ready to jump out the minute the car stopped.</p>
+
+<p>Martin saw a clear area in the green lane and swung the car over the
+dividing curbing. The big tracks floated the patrol car over the
+two-foot high, rounded abutment that divided each speed lane. Snow was
+falling faster as the headlight picked out a tangled mass of wreckage
+smoldering a hundred feet inside the median separating the green and
+white lanes. A crumpled body lay on the pavement twenty feet from the
+biggest clump of smashed metal, and other fragments of vehicles were
+strung out down the roadway for fifty feet. There was no movement.</p>
+
+<p>NorCon thruway laws were strict and none were more rigidly enforced
+than the regulation that no one other than a member of the patrol set
+foot outside of their vehicle while on any thruway traffic lane. This
+meant not giving any assistance whatsoever to accident victims. The
+ruling had been called inhuman, monstrous, unthinkable, and lawmakers
+in the three nations of the compact had forced NorCon to revoke the
+rule in the early days of the thruways. After speeding cars and cargo
+carriers had cut down twice as many do-gooders on foot at accident
+scenes than the accidents themselves caused, the law was reinstated.
+The lives of the many were more vital than the lives of a few.</p>
+
+<p>Martin halted the patrol vehicle a few feet from the wreckage and
+Beulah was still rocking gently on her tracks by the time both Patrol
+Trooper Clay Ferguson and MSO Kelly Lightfoot hit the pavement on the
+run.</p>
+
+<p>In the cab, Martin called in on the radio. "Car 56 is on scene.
+Release blue at Marker 95 and resume speeds all lanes at Marker 95
+in&mdash;" he paused and looked back at the halted traffic piled up before
+the lane had been closed "&mdash;seven minutes." He jumped for the steps
+and sprinted out of the patrol car in the wake of Ferguson and Kelly.</p>
+
+<p>The team's surgeon was kneeling beside the inert body on the road.
+After an ear to the chest, Kelly opened her field kit bag and slapped
+an electrode to the victim's temple. The needle on the encephalic
+meter in the lid of the kit never flickered. Kelly shut the bag and
+hurried with it over to the mass of wreckage. A thin column of black,
+oily smoke rose from somewhere near the bottom of the heap. It was
+almost impossible to identify at a glance whether the mangled metal
+was the remains of one or more cars. Only the absence of track
+equipment made it certain that they even had been passenger vehicles.</p>
+
+<p>Clay was carefully climbing up the side of the piled up wrecks to a
+window that gaped near the top.</p>
+
+<p>"Work fast, kid," Martin called up. "Something's burning down there
+and this whole thing may go up. I'll get this traffic moving."</p>
+
+<p>He turned to face the halted mass of cars and cargo carriers east of
+the wreck. He flipped a switch that cut his helmet transmitter into
+the remote standard vehicular radio circuit aboard the patrol car.</p>
+
+<p>"Attention, please, all cars in green lane. All cars in the left line
+move out now, the next line fall in behind. You are directed to clear
+the area immediately. Maintain fifty miles an hour for the next mile.
+You may resume desired speeds and change lanes at mile Marker 95. I
+repeat, all cars in green lane...." he went over the instructions once
+more, relayed through Beulah's transmitter to the standard receivers
+on all cars. He was still talking as the traffic began to move.</p>
+
+<p>By the time he turned back to help his teammates, cars were moving in
+a steady stream past the huge, red-flashing bulk of the patrol car.</p>
+
+<p>Both Clay and Kelly were lying flat across the smashed, upturned side
+of the uppermost car in the pile. Kelly had her field bag open on the
+ground and she was reaching down through the smashed window.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it Clay?" Martin called.</p>
+
+<p>The younger officer looked down over his shoulder. "We've got a woman
+alive down here but she's wedged in tight. She's hurt pretty badly and
+Kelly's trying to slip a hypo into her now. Get the arm out, Ben."</p>
+
+<p>Martin ran back to the patrol car and flipped up a panel on the hull.
+He pulled back on one of the several levers recessed into the hull and
+the big wrecking crane swung smoothly out of its cradle and over the
+wreckage. The end of the crane arm was directly over Ferguson. "Lemme
+have the spreaders," Clay called. The arm dipped and from either side
+of the tip, a pair of flanges shot out like tusks on an elephant. "Put
+'er in neutral," Clay directed. Martin pressed another lever and the
+crane now could be moved in any direction by fingertip pulls at its
+extremity. Ferguson carefully guided the crane with its projecting
+tusks into the smashed orifice of the car window. "O.K., Ben, spread
+it."</p>
+
+<p>The crane locked into position and the entire arm split open in a "V"
+from its base. Martin pressed steadily on the two levers controlling
+each side of the divided arm and the tusks dug into the sides of the
+smashed window. There was a steady screeching of tearing and ripping
+metal as the crane tore window and frame apart. "Hold it," Ferguson
+yelled and then eased himself into the widened hole.</p>
+
+<p>"Ben," Kelly called from her perch atop the wreckage, "litter."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Martin raced to the rear of the patrol car where the sloping ramp
+stood open to the lighted dispensary. He snatched at one of the
+autolitters and triggered its tiny drive motor. A homing beacon in his
+helmet guided the litter as it rolled down the ramp, turned by itself
+and rolled across the pavement a foot behind him. It stopped when he
+stopped and Ben touched another switch, cutting the homing beacon.</p>
+
+<p>Clay's head appeared out of the hole. "Get it up here, Ben. I can get
+her out. And I think there's another one alive still further down."</p>
+
+<p>Martin raised the crane and its ripper bars retracted. The split arms
+spewed a pair of cables terminating in magnalocks. The cables dangled
+over the ends of the autolitter, caught the lift plates on the litter
+and a second later, the cart was swinging beside the smashed window as
+Clay and Kelly eased the torn body of a woman out of the wreckage and
+onto the litter. As Ben brought the litter back to the pavement, the
+column of smoke had thickened. He disconnected the cables and homed
+the stretcher back to the patrol car. The hospital cart with its
+unconscious victim, rolled smoothly back to the car, up the ramp and
+into the dispensary to the surgical table.</p>
+
+<p>Martin climbed up the wreckage beside Kelly. Inside the twisted
+interior of the car, the thick smoke all but obscured the bent back of
+the younger trooper and his powerful handlight barely penetrated the
+gloom. Blood was smeared over almost every surface and the stink of
+leaking jet fuel was virtually overpowering. From the depths of the
+nightmarish scene came a tortured scream. Kelly reached into a
+coverall pocket and produced another sedation hypo. She squirmed
+around and started to slip down into the wreckage with Ferguson.
+Martin grabbed her arm. "No, Kelly, this thing's ready to blow. Come
+on, Clay, get out of there. Now!"</p>
+
+<p>Ferguson continued to pry at the twisted plates below him.</p>
+
+<p>"I said 'get out of there' Ferguson," the senior officer roared. "And
+that's an order."</p>
+
+<p>Clay straightened up and put his hands on the edge of the window to
+boost himself out. "Ben, there's a guy alive down there. We just can't
+leave him."</p>
+
+<p>"Get down from there, Kelly," Martin ordered. "I know that man's down
+there just as well as you do, Clay. But we won't be helping him one
+damn bit if we get blown to hell and gone right along with him. Now
+get outta there and maybe we can pull this thing apart and get to him
+before it does blow."</p>
+
+<p>The lanky Canadian eased out of the window and the two troopers moved
+back to the patrol car. Kelly was already in her dispensary, working
+on the injured woman.</p>
+
+<p>Martin slid into his control seat. "Shut your ramp, Kelly," he called
+over the intercom, "I'm going to move around to the other side."</p>
+
+<p>The radio broke in. "Car 119 to Car 56, we're just turning into the
+divider. Be there in a minute."</p>
+
+<p>"Snap it up," Ben replied. "We need you in a hurry."</p>
+
+<p>As he maneuvered Beulah around the wreckage he snapped orders to
+Ferguson.</p>
+
+<p>"Get the foam nozzles up, just in case, and then stand by on the
+crane."</p>
+
+<p>A mile away, they saw the flashing emergency lights of Car 119 as it
+raced diagonally across the yellow and blue lanes, whipping with
+ponderous ease through the moving traffic.</p>
+
+<p>"Take the south side, 119," Martin called out. "We'll try and pull
+this mess apart."</p>
+
+<p>"Affirmative," came the reply. Even before the other patrol vehicle
+came to a halt, its crane was swinging out from the side, and the
+ganged magnalocks were dangling from their cables.</p>
+
+<p>"O.K., kid," Ben ordered, "hook it."</p>
+
+<p>At the interior crane controls, Clay swung Beulah's crane and cable
+mags towards the wreckage. The magnalocks slammed into the metallic
+mess with a bang almost at the same instant the locks hit the other
+side from Car 119.</p>
+
+<p>Clay eased up the cable slack. "Good," Ben called to both Clay and the
+operating trooper in the other car, "now let's pull it ... LOOK OUT!
+FOAM ... FOAM ... FOAM," he yelled.</p>
+
+<p>The ugly, deep red fireball from the exploding wreckage was still
+growing as Clay slammed down on the fire-control panel. A curtain of
+thick chemical foam burst from the poised nozzles atop Beulah's hull
+and a split-second later, another stream of foam erupted from the
+other patrol car. The dense, oxygen-absorbing retardant blanket
+snuffed the fire out in three seconds. The cranes were still secured
+to the foam-covered heap of metal. "Never mind the caution," Ben
+called out, "get it apart. Fast."</p>
+
+<p>Both crane operators slammed their controls into reverse and with an
+ear-splitting screech, the twisted frames of the two vehicles ripped
+apart into tumbled heaps of broken metal and plastics. Martin and
+Ferguson jumped down the hatch steps and into ankle-deep foam and oil.
+They waded and slipped around the front of the car to join the
+troopers from the other car.</p>
+
+<p>Ferguson was pawing at the scum-covered foam near the mangled section
+of one of the cars. "He should be right about," Clay paused and bent
+over, "here." He straightened up as the others gathered around the
+scorched and ripped body of a man, half-submerged in the thick foam.
+"Kelly," he called over the helmet transmitter, "open your door. We'll
+need a couple of sacks."</p>
+
+<p>He trudged to the rear of the patrol car and met the girl standing in
+the door with a pair of folded plastic morgue bags in her hands.
+Behind her, Clay could see the body of the woman on the surgical
+table, an array of tubes and probes leading to plasma drip bottles and
+other equipment racked out over the table.</p>
+
+<p>"How is she?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not good," Kelly replied. "Skull fracture, ruptured spleen, broken
+ribs and double leg fractures. I've already called for an ambulance."</p>
+
+<p>Ferguson nodded, took the bags from her and waded back through the
+foam.</p>
+
+<p>The four troopers worked in the silence of the deserted traffic lane.
+A hundred yards away, traffic was moving steadily in the slow white
+lane. Three-quarters of a mile to the south, fast and ultra high
+traffic sped at its normal pace in the blue and yellow lanes.
+Westbound green was still being rerouted into the slower white lane,
+around the scene of the accident. It was now twenty-six minutes since
+Car 56 had received the accident call. The light snow flurries had
+turned to a steady fall of thick wet flakes, melting as they hit on
+the warm pavement but beginning to coat the pitiful flotsam of the
+accident.</p>
+
+<p>The troopers finished the gruesome task of getting the bodies into the
+morgue sacks and laid beside the dispensary ramp for the ambulance to
+pick up with the surviving victim. Car 119's MSO had joined Kelly in
+Beulah's dispensary to give what help she might. The four patrol
+troopers began the grim task of probing the scattered wreckage for
+other possible victims, personal possessions and identification. They
+were stacking a small pile of hand luggage when the long, low bulk of
+the ambulance swung out of the police lane and rolled to a stop.
+Longer than the patrol cars but without the non-medical emergency
+facilities, the ambulance was in reality a mobile hospital. A full,
+scrubbed-up surgical team was waiting in the main operating room even
+as the ramps opened and the techs headed for Car 56. The team had been
+briefed by radio on the condition of the patient; had read the full
+recordings of the diagnostician; and were watching transmitted pulse
+and respiration graphs on their own screens while the transfer was
+being made.</p>
+
+<p>The two women MSOs had unlocked the surgical table in Beulah's
+dispensary and a plastic tent covered not only the table and the
+patient, but also the plasma and Regen racks overhead. The entire
+table and rig slid down the ramp onto a motor-driven dolly from the
+ambulance. Without delay, it wheeled across the open few feet of
+pavement into the ambulance and to the surgery room. The techs locked
+the table into place in the other vehicle and left the surgery. From a
+storage compartment, they wheeled out a fresh patrol dispensary table
+and rack and placed it in Kelly's miniature surgery. The dead went
+into the morgue aboard the ambulance, the ramp closed and the
+ambulance swung around and headed across the traffic lanes to
+eastbound NAT-26 and Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/image_22.jpg" width="300" height="418" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Outside, the four troopers had completed the task of collecting what
+little information they could from the smashed vehicles.</p>
+
+<p>They returned to their cars and One One Nine's medical-surgical
+officer headed back to her own cubby-hole.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>The other patrol car swung into position almost touching Beulah's left
+flank. With Ben at the control seat, on command, both cars extended
+broad bulldozer blades from their bows. "Let's go," Ben ordered. The
+two patrol vehicles moved slowly down the roadway, pushing all of the
+scattered scraps and parts onto a single great heap. They backed off,
+shifted direction towards the center police lane and began shoving the
+debris, foam and snow out of the green lane. At the edge of the police
+lane, both cars unshipped cranes and magnalifted the junk over the
+divider barrier onto the one-hundred-foot-wide service strip bordering
+the police lane. A slow cargo wrecker was already on the way from
+Pittsburgh barracks to pick up the wreckage and haul it away. When the
+last of the metallic debris had been deposited off the traffic lane,
+Martin called Control.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>"Car 56 is clear. NAT 26-west green is clear."</p>
+
+<p>Philly Control acknowledged. Seven miles to the east, the amber
+warning lights went dark and the detour barrier at Crossover 85 sank
+back into the roadway. Three minutes later, traffic was again flashing
+by on green lane past the two halted patrol cars.</p>
+
+<p>"Pitt Control, this is Car 119 clear of accident," the other car
+reported.</p>
+
+<p>"Car 119 resume eastbound patrol," came the reply.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/image_23.jpg" width="500" height="382" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The other patrol car pulled away. The two troopers waved at Martin and
+Ferguson in Beulah. "See you later and thanks," Ben called out. He
+switched to intercom. "Kelly. Any ID on that woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a thing, Ben," she replied. "About forty years old, and she had a
+wedding band. She never was conscious, so I can't help you."</p>
+
+<p>Ben nodded and looked over at his partner. "Go get into some dry
+clothes, kid," he said, "while I finish the report. Then you can take
+it for a while."</p>
+
+<p>Clay nodded and headed back to the crew quarters.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Ben racked his helmet beside his seat and fished out a cigarette. He
+reached for an accident report form from the work rack behind his seat
+and began writing, glancing up from time to time to gaze thoughtfully
+at the scene of the accident. When he had finished, he thumbed the
+radio transmitter and called Philly Control. Somewhere in the bloody,
+oil and foam covered pile of wreckage were the registration plates for
+the two vehicles involved. When the wrecker collected the debris, it
+would be machine sifted in Pittsburgh and the plates fed to records
+and then relayed to Philadelphia where the identifications could be
+added to Ben's report. When he had finished reading his report he
+asked, "How's the woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Still alive, but just barely," Philly Control answered. "Ben, did you
+say there were just two vehicles involved?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's all we found," Martin replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And were they both in the green?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, why?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's funny," Philly controller replied, "we got the calls as a
+sideswipe in white that put one of the cars over into the green. There
+should have been a third vehicle."</p>
+
+<p>"That's right," Ben exclaimed. "We were so busy trying to get that gal
+out and then making the try for the other man I never even thought to
+look for another car. You suppose that guy took off?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's possible," the controller said. "I'm calling a gate filter until
+we know for sure. I've got the car number on the driver that reported
+the accident. I'll get hold of him and see if he can give us a lead on
+the third car. You go ahead with your patrol and I'll let you know
+what I find out."</p>
+
+<p>"Affirmative," Ben replied. He eased the patrol car onto the police
+lane and turned west once again. Clay reappeared in the cab, dressed
+in fresh coveralls. "I'll take it, Ben. You go and clean up now.
+Kelly's got a pot of fresh coffee in the galley." Ferguson slid into
+his control seat.</p>
+
+<p>A light skiff of snow covered the service strip and the dividers as
+Car 56 swung back westward in the red lane. Snow was falling steadily
+but melting as it touched the warm ferrophalt pavement in all lanes.
+The wet roadways glistened with the lights of hundreds of vehicles.
+The chronometer read 1840 hours. Clay pushed the car up to a steady
+75, just about apace with the slowest traffic in the white lane. To
+the south, densities were much lighter in the blue and yellow lanes
+and even the green had thinned out. It would stay moderately light now
+for another hour until the dinner stops were over and the night
+travelers again rolled onto the thruways.</p>
+
+<p>Kelly was putting frozen steaks into the infra-oven as Ben walked
+through to crew quarters. Her coverall sleeves were rolled to the
+elbows as she worked and a vagrant strand of copper hair curled over
+her forehead. As Martin passed by, he caught a faint whisper of
+perfume and he smiled appreciatively.</p>
+
+<p>In the tiny crew quarters, he shut the door to the galley and stripped
+out of his wet coveralls and boots. He eyed the shower stall across
+the passageway.</p>
+
+<p>"Hey, mother," he yelled to Kelly, "have I got time for a shower
+before dinner?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but make it a quickie," she called back.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later he stepped into the galley, his dark, crew-cut hair
+still damp. Kelly was setting plastic, disposable dishes on the little
+swing-down table that doubled as a food bar and work desk. Ben peered
+into a simmering pot and sniffed. "Smells good. What's for dinner,
+Hiawatha?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing fancy. Steak, potatoes, green beans, apple pie and coffee."</p>
+
+<p>Ben's mouth watered. "You know, sometimes I wonder whether one of your
+ancestors didn't come out of New England. Your menus always seem to
+coincide with my ideas of a perfect meal." He noted the two places set
+at the table. Ben glanced out the galley port into the headlight-striped
+darkness. Traffic was still light. In the distance, the night sky glowed
+with the lights of Chambersburg, north of the thruway.</p>
+
+<p>"We might as well pull up for dinner," he said. "It's pretty slow out
+there."</p>
+
+<p>Kelly shoved dishes over and began laying out a third setting. About
+half the time on patrol, the crew ate in shifts on the go, with one of
+the patrol troopers in the cab at all times. When traffic permitted,
+they pulled off to the service strip and ate together. With the
+communications system always in service, control stations could reach
+them anywhere in the big vehicle.</p>
+
+<p>The sergeant stepped into the cab and tapped Ferguson on the shoulder.
+"Dinnertime, Clay. Pull her over and we'll try some of your gracious
+living."</p>
+
+<p>"Light the candles and pour the wine," Clay quipped, "I'll be with you
+in a second."</p>
+
+<p>Car 56 swung out to the edge of the police lane and slowed down. Clay
+eased the car onto the strip and stopped. He checked the radiodometer
+and called in. "Pitt Control, this is Car 56 at Marker 158. Dinner is
+being served in the dining car to the rear. Please do not disturb."</p>
+
+<p>"Affirmative, Car 56," Pittsburgh Control responded. "Eat heartily, it
+may be going out of style." Clay grinned and flipped the radio to
+remote and headed for the galley.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Seated around the little table, the trio cut into their steaks. Parked
+at the north edge of the police lane, the patrol car was just a few
+feet from the green lane divider strip and cars and cargo carriers
+flashed by as they ate.</p>
+
+<p>Clay chewed on a sliver of steak and looked at Kelly. "I'd marry you,
+Pocahontas, if you'd ever learn to cook steaks like beef instead of
+curing them like your ancestral buffalo robes. When are you going to
+learn that good beef has to be bloody to be edible?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl glared at him. "If that's what it takes to make it edible,
+you're going to be an epicurean delight in just about one second if I
+hear another word about my cooking. And that's also the second crack
+about my noble ancestors in the past five minutes. I've always
+wondered about the surgical techniques my great-great-great grandpop
+used when he lifted a paleface's hair. One more word, Clay Ferguson,
+and I'll have your scalp flying from Beulah's antenna like a coontail
+on a kid's scooter."</p>
+
+<p>Ben bellowed and nearly choked. "Hey, kid," he spluttered at Clay,
+"ever notice how the wrong one of her ancestors keeps coming to the
+surface? That was the Irish."</p>
+
+<p>Clay polished off the last of his steak and reached for the individual
+frozen pies Kelly had put in the oven with the steaks. "Now that's
+another point," he said, waving his fork at Kelly. "The Irish lived so
+long on potatoes and prayers that when they get a piece of meat on
+their menu, they don't know how to do anything but boil it."</p>
+
+<p>"That tears it," the girl exploded. She pushed back from the table and
+stood up. "I've cooked the last meal this big, dumb Canuck will ever
+get from me. I hope you get chronic indigestion and then come crawling
+to me for help. I've got something back there I've been wanting to
+dose you with for a long time."</p>
+
+<p>She stormed out of the galley and slammed the door behind her. Ben
+grinned at the stunned look on Clay's face. "Now what got her on the
+warpath?" Clay asked. Before Ben could answer the radio speaker in the
+ceiling came to life.</p>
+
+<p>"Car 56 this is Pitt Control."</p>
+
+<p>Martin reached for the transmit switch beside the galley table. "This
+is Five Six, go ahead."</p>
+
+<p>"Relay from Philly Control," the speaker blared. "Reference the
+accident at Marker 92 at 1648 hours this date; Philly Control reports
+a third vehicle definitely involved."</p>
+
+<p>Ben pulled out a pencil and Clay shoved a message pad across the
+table.</p>
+
+<p>"James J. Newhall, address 3409 Glen Cove Drive, New York City,
+license number BHT 4591 dash 747 dash 1609, was witness to the initial
+impact. He reports that a white over green, late model Travelaire,
+with two men in it, sideswiped one of the two vehicles involved in the
+fatal accident. The Travelaire did not stop but accelerated after the
+impact. Newhall was unable to get the full license number but the
+first six units were QABR dash 46 ... rest of numerals unknown."</p>
+
+<p>Ben cut in. "Have we got identification on our fatalities yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Affirmative, Five Six," the radio replied. "The driver of the car
+struck by the hit-and-run vehicle was a Herman Lawrence Hanover, age
+forty-two, of 13460 One Hundred Eighty-First Street South, Camden, New
+Jersey, license number LFM 4151 dash 603 dash 2738. With him was his
+wife, Clara, age forty-one, same address. Driver of the green lane car
+was George R. Hamilton, age thirty-five, address Box 493, Route 12,
+Tucumcari, New Mexico."</p>
+
+<p>Ben broke in once more. "You indicate all three are fatalities. Is
+this correct, Pitt Control? The woman was alive when she was
+transferred to the ambulance."</p>
+
+<p>"Stand by, Five Six, and I'll check."</p>
+
+<p>A moment later Pitt Control was back. "That is affirmative, Five Six.
+The woman died at 1745 hours. Here is additional information. A
+vehicle answering to the general description of the hit-and-run
+vehicle is believed to have been involved in an armed robbery and
+multiple murder earlier this date at Wilmington, Delaware. Philly
+Control is now checking for additional details. Gate filters have been
+established on NAT 26-West from Marker-Exit 100 to Marker-Exit 700.
+Also, filters on all interchanges. Pitt Control out."</p>
+
+<p>Kelly Lightfoot, her not-too-serious peeve forgotten, had come back
+into the galley to listen to the radio exchange. The men got up from
+the table and Clay gathered the disposable dishware and tossed them
+into the waste receiver.</p>
+
+<p>"We'd better get rolling," Ben said, "those clowns could still be on
+the thruway, although they could have got off before the filters went
+up."</p>
+
+<p>They moved to the cab and took their places. The big engines roared
+into action as Ben rolled Car 56 back onto the police-way. Kelly
+finished straightening up in the galley and then came forward to sit
+on the jump seat between the two troopers. The snow had stopped again
+but the roadways were still slick and glistening under the headlights.
+Beulah rolled steadily along on her broad tracks, now cruising at one
+hundred miles an hour. The steady whine of the cold night wind
+penetrated faintly into the sound-proofed and insulated cabin canopy.
+Clay cut out the cabin lights, leaving only the instrument panel
+glowing faintly along with the phosphorescent buttons and knobs on the
+arms of the control seats.</p>
+
+<p>A heavy express cargo carrier flashed by a quarter of a mile away in
+the blue lane, its big bulk lit up like a Christmas tree with running
+and warning lights. To their right, Clay caught the first glimpse of a
+set of flashing amber warning lights coming up from behind in the
+green lane. A minute later, a huge cargo carrier came abreast of the
+patrol car and then pulled ahead. On its side was a glowing star of
+the United States Army. A minute later, another Army carrier rolled
+by.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the missile convoy out of Aberdeen," Clay told Kelly. "I wish
+our hit-runner had tackled one of those babies. We'd have scraped him
+up instead of those other people."</p>
+
+<p>The convoy rolled on past at a steady one hundred twenty-five miles
+an hour. Car 56 flashed under a crossover and into a long, gentle
+curve. The chronometer clicked up to 2100 hours and the radio sang
+out. "Cars 207, 56 and 82, this is Pitt Control. 2100 hours density
+report follows...."</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburgh Control read off the figures for the three cars. Car 82 was
+one hundred fifty miles ahead of Beulah, Car 207 about the same
+distance to the rear. The density report ended and a new voice came on
+the air.</p>
+
+<p>"Attention all cars and all stations, this is Washington Criminal
+Control." The new voice paused, and across the continent, troopers on
+every thruway, control station, checkpoint and relay block, reached
+for clipboard and pen.</p>
+
+<p>"Washington Criminal Control continuing, all cars and all stations,
+special attention to all units east of the Mississippi. At 1510 hours
+this date, two men held up the First National Bank of Wilmington,
+Delaware, and escaped with an estimated one hundred seventy-five
+thousand dollars. A bank guard and two tellers, together with five
+bank customers were killed by these subjects using automatic weapon
+fire to make good their escape. They were observed leaving the scene
+in a late model, white-over-green Travelaire sedan, license unknown. A
+car of the same make, model and color was stolen from Annapolis,
+Maryland, a short time prior to the holdup. The stolen vehicle, now
+believed to be the getaway car, bears USN license number QABR dash 468
+dash 1113...."</p>
+
+<p>"That's our baby," Ben murmured as he and Clay scribbled, on their
+message forms.</p>
+
+<p>"... Motor number ZB 1069432," Washington Criminal Control continued.
+"This car is also now believed to have been involved in a hit-and-run
+fatal accident on NAT 26-West at Marker 92 at approximately 1648 hours
+this date.</p>
+
+<p>"Subject Number One is described as WMA, twenty to twenty-five years,
+five feet, eleven inches tall, medium complexion, dark hair and eyes,
+wearing a dark-gray sports jacket and dark pants, and wearing a gray
+sports cap. He was wearing a ring with a large red stone on his left
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Subject Number Two is described as WMA, twenty to twenty-five years,
+six feet, light, ruddy complexion and reddish brown hair, light
+colored eyes. Has scar on back left side of neck. Wearing light-brown
+suit, green shirt and dark tie, no hat.</p>
+
+<p>"These subjects are believed to be armed and psychotically dangerous.
+If observed, approach with extreme caution and inform nearest control
+of contact. Both subjects now under multiple federal warrants charging
+bank robbery, murder, and hit-and-run murder. All cars and stations
+acknowledge. Washington Criminal Control out."</p>
+
+<p>The air chattered as the cars checked into their nearest controls with
+"acknowledged."</p>
+
+<p>"This looks like it could be a long night," Kelly said, rising to her
+feet. "I'm going to sack out. Call me if you need me."</p>
+
+<p>"Good night, princess," Ben called.</p>
+
+<p>"Hey, Hiawatha," Clay called out as Kelly paused in the galley door.
+"I didn't mean what I said about your steaks. Your great-great-great
+grandpop would have gone around with his bare scalp hanging out if he
+had had to use a buffalo hide cured like that steak was cooked."</p>
+
+<p>He reached back at the same instant and slammed the cabin door just as
+Kelly came charging back. She slammed into the door, screamed and then
+went storming back to the dispensary while Clay doubled over in
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p>Ben smiled at his junior partner. "Boy, you're gonna regret that.
+Don't say I didn't warn you."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Martin turned control over to the younger trooper and relaxed in his
+seat to go over the APB from Washington. Car 56 bored steadily through
+the night. The thruway climbed easily up the slight grade cut through
+the hills north of Wheeling, West Virginia, and once more snow began
+falling.</p>
+
+<p>Clay reached over and flipped on the video scanners. Four small
+screens, one for each of the westbound lanes, glowed with a soft red
+light. The monitors were synchronized with the radiometer and changed
+view at every ten-mile marker. Viewing cameras mounted on towers
+between each lane, lined the thruway, aimed eastward at the on-coming
+traffic back to the next bank of cameras ten miles away. Infra-red
+circuits took over from standard scan at dark. A selector system in
+the cars gave the troopers the option of viewing either the block they
+were currently patrolling; the one ahead of the next ten-mile block;
+or, the one they had just passed. As a rule, the selection was based
+on the speed of the car. Beamed signals from each block automatically
+switched the view as the patrol car went past the towers. Clay put the
+slower lane screens on the block they were in, turned the blue and
+yellow lanes to the block ahead.</p>
+
+<p>They rolled past the interchange with NAT 114-South out of Cleveland and
+the traffic densities picked up in all lanes as many of the southbound
+vehicles turned west on to NAT 26. The screens flicked and Clay came alert.
+Some fifteen miles ahead in the one-hundred-fifty-to-two-hundred-mile an
+hour blue lane, a glowing dot remained motionless in the middle of the lane
+and the other racing lights of the blue lane traffic were sheering around
+it like a racing river current parting around a boulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Trouble," he said to Martin, as he shoved forward on the throttle.</p>
+
+<p>A stalled car in the middle of the high-speed lane was an invitation
+to disaster. The bull horn blared as Beulah leaped past the two
+hundred mile an hour mark and safety cocoons slid into place. Aft in
+the dispensary, Kelly was sealed into her bunk by a cocoon rolling out
+of the wall and encasing the hospital bed.</p>
+
+<p>Car 5 slanted across the police lane with red lights flashing and edged
+into the traffic flow in the blue lane. The great, red winking lights
+and the emergency radio siren signal began clearing a path for the
+troopers. Vehicles began edging to both sides of the lane to shift to
+crossovers to the yellow or green lanes. Clay aimed Beulah at the
+motionless dot on the screen and eased back from the four-mile-a-minute
+speed. The patrol car slowed and the headlight picked up the stalled
+vehicle a mile ahead. The cocoons opened and Ben slipped on his work
+helmet and dropped down the steps to the side hatch. Clay brought Beulah
+to a halt a dozen yards directly to the rear of the stalled car, the
+great bulk of the patrol vehicle with its warning lights serving as a
+shield against any possible fuzzy-headed speeders that might not be
+observing the road.</p>
+
+<p>As Martin reached for the door, the Wanted bulletin flashed through
+his head. "What make of car is that, Clay?"</p>
+
+<p>"Old jalopy Tritan with some souped-up rigs. Probably kids," the
+junior officer replied. "It looks O.K."</p>
+
+<p>Ben nodded and swung down out of the patrol car. He walked quickly to
+the other car, flashing his handlight on the side of the vehicle as he
+went up to the driver. The interior lights were on and inside, two
+obviously frightened young couples smiled with relief at the sight of
+the uniform coveralls. A freckled-faced teenager in a dinner jacket
+was in the driver's seat and had the blister window open. He grinned
+up at Martin. "Boy, am I glad to see you, officer," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the problem?" Ben asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I guess she blew an impeller," the youth answered. "We were heading
+for a school dance at Cincinnati and she was boiling along like she
+was in orbit when blooey she just quit."</p>
+
+<p>Ben surveyed the old jet sedan. "What year is this clunker?" he asked.
+The kid told him. "You kids have been told not to use this lane for
+any vehicle that old." He waved his hand in protest as the youngster
+started to tell him how many modifications he had made on the car. "It
+doesn't make one bit of difference whether you've put a first-stage
+Moon booster on this wreck. It's not supposed to be in the blue or
+yellow. And this thing probably shouldn't have been allowed out of the
+white&mdash;or even on the thruway."</p>
+
+<p>The youngster flushed and bit his lip in embarrassment at the giggles
+from the two evening-frocked girls in the car.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, let's get you out of here." Ben touched his throat mike. "Drop
+a light, Clay and then let's haul this junk pile away."</p>
+
+<p>In the patrol car, Ferguson reached down beside his seat and tugged at
+a lever. From a recess in Beulah's stern, a big portable red warning
+light dropped to the pavement. As it touched the surface, it
+automatically flashed to life, sending out a bright, flashing red
+warning signal into the face of any approaching traffic. Clay eased
+the patrol car around the stalled vehicle and then backed slow into
+position, guided by Martin's radioed instructions. A tow-bar extruded
+from the back of the police vehicle and a magnaclamp locked onto the
+front end of the teenager's car. The older officer walked back to the
+portable warning light and rolled it on its four wheels to the rear
+plate of the jalopy where another magnalock secured it to the car.
+Beulah's two big rear warning lights still shone above the low
+silhouette of the passenger car, along with the mobile lamp on the
+jalopy. Martin walked back to the patrol car and climbed in.</p>
+
+<p>He slid into his seat and nodded at Clay. The patrol car, with the
+disabled vehicle in tow moved forward and slanted left towards the
+police lane. Martin noted the mileage marker on the radiodometer and
+fingered the transmitter. "Chillicothe Control this is Car 56."</p>
+
+<p>"This Chillicothe. Go ahead Five Six."</p>
+
+<p>"We picked up some kids in a stalled heap on the blue at Marker 382
+and we've got them in tow now," Ben said. "Have a wrecker meet us and
+take them off our hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Affirmative, Five Six. Wrecker will pick you up at Marker 412."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Clay headed the patrol car and its trailed load into an emergency
+entrance to the middle police lane and slowly rolled westward. The
+senior trooper reached into his records rack and pulled out a citation
+book.</p>
+
+<p>"You going to nail these kids?" Clay asked.</p>
+
+<p>"You're damn right I am," Martin replied, beginning to fill in the
+violation report. "I'd rather have this kid hurting in the pocketbook
+than dead. If we turn him loose, he'll think he got away with it this
+time and try it again. The next time he might not be so lucky."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose you're right," Clay said, "but it does seem a little
+rough."</p>
+
+<p>Ben swung around in his seat and surveyed his junior officer.
+"Sometimes I think you spent four years in the patrol academy with
+your head up your jet pipes," he said. He fished out another cigarette
+and took a deep drag.</p>
+
+<p>"You've had four solid years of law; three years of electronics and
+jet and air-drive engine mechanics and engineering; pre-med,
+psychology, math, English, Spanish and a smattering of Portuguese, to
+say nothing of dozens of other subjects. You graduated in the upper
+tenth of your class with a B.S. in both Transportation and Criminology
+which is why you're riding patrol and not punching a computer or
+tinkering with an engine. You'd think with all that education that
+somewhere along the line you'd have learned to think with your head
+instead of your emotions."</p>
+
+<p>Clay kept a studied watch on the roadway. The minute Ben had turned
+and swung his legs over the side of the seat and pulled out a
+cigarette, Clay knew that it was school time in Car 56. Instructor
+Sergeant Ben Martin was in a lecturing mood. It was time for all good
+pupils to keep their big, fat mouths shut.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember San Francisco de Borja?" Ben queried. Clay nodded. "And you
+still think I'm too rough on them?" Ben pressed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image_32.jpg" width="600" height="200" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Ferguson's memory went back to last year's fifth patrol. He and Ben
+with Kelly riding hospital, had been assigned to NAT 200-North,
+running out of Villahermosa on the Guatemalan border of Mexico to
+Edmonton Barracks in Canada. It was the second night of the patrol.
+Some seven hundred fifty miles north of Mexico City, near the town of
+San Francisco de Borja, a gang of teenage Mexican youngsters had gone
+roaring up the yellow at speeds touching on four hundred miles an
+hour. Their car, a beat-up, fifteen-year-old veteran of less speedy
+and much rockier local mountain roads, had been gimmicked by the kids
+so that it bore no resemblance to its original manufacture.</p>
+
+<p>From a junkyard they had obtained a battered air lift, smashed almost
+beyond use in the crackup of a ten-thousand dollar sports cruiser. The
+kids pried, pounded and bent the twisted impeller lift blades back
+into some semblance of alignment. From another wreck of a cargo
+carrier came a pair of 4000-pound thrust engines. They had jury-rigged
+the entire mess so that it stuck together on the old heap. Then they
+hit the thruway&mdash;nine of them packed into the jalopy&mdash;the oldest one
+just seventeen years old. They were doing three hundred fifty when
+they flashed past the patrol car and Ben had roared off in pursuit.
+The senior officer whipped the big patrol car across the crowded high
+speed blue lane, jockeyed into the ultra-high yellow and then turned
+on the power.</p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image_33.jpg" width="600" height="342" alt="Illustration" />
+</div>
+
+
+<p>By this time the kids realized they had been spotted and they cranked
+their makeshift power plant up to the last notch. The most they could
+get out of it was four hundred and it was doing just that as Car 56,
+clocking better than five hundred, pulled in behind them. The patrol
+car was still three hundred yards astern when one of the bent and
+re-bent impeller blades let go. The out-of-balance fan, turning at
+close to 35,000 rpm, flew to pieces and the air cushion vanished. At
+four hundred miles an hour, the body of the old jalopy fell the twelve
+inches to the pavement and both front wheels caved under. There was a
+momentary shower of sparks, then the entire vehicle snapped
+cartwheeling more than eighty feet into the air and exploded. Pieces
+of car and bodies were scattered for a mile down the thruway and the
+only whole, identifiable human bodies were those of the three
+youngsters thrown out and sent hurtling to their deaths more than two
+hundred feet away.</p>
+
+<p>Clay's mind snapped back to the present.</p>
+
+<p>"Write 'em up," he said quietly to Martin. The senior officer gave a
+Satisfied nod and turned back to his citation pad.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>At marker 412, which was also the Columbus turnoff, a big patrol
+wrecker was parked on the side strip, engines idling, service and
+warning lights blinking. Clay pulled the patrol car alongside and
+stopped. He disconnected the tow bar and the two officers climbed out
+into the cold night air. They walked back to the teenager's car. Clay
+went to the rear of the disabled car and unhooked the warning light
+while Martin went to the driver's window. He had his citation book in
+hand. The youngster in the driver's seat went white at the sight of
+the violation pad. "May I see your license, please," Ben asked. The
+boy fumbled in a back pocket and then produced a thin, metallic tab
+with his name, age, address and license number etched into the
+indestructible and unalterable metal.</p>
+
+<p>"Also your car registration," Ben added. The youth unclipped similar
+metal strip from the dashboard.</p>
+
+<p>The trooper took the two tabs and walked to the rear of the patrol
+car. He slid back a panel to reveal two thin slots in the hull. Martin
+slid the driver's license into one of the slots, the registration tab
+into the other. He pressed a button below each slot. Inside the car, a
+magnetic reader and auto-transmitter "scanned" the magnetic symbols
+implanted in the tags. The information was fed instantly to
+Continental Headquarters Records division at Colorado Springs. In
+fractions of a second, the great computers at Records were comparing
+the information on the tags with all previous traffic citations issued
+anywhere in the North American continent in the past forty-five years
+since the birth of the Patrol. The information from the driver's
+license and registration tab had been relayed from Beulah via the
+nearest patrol relay point. The answer came back the same way.</p>
+
+<p>Above the license recording slot were two small lights. The first
+flashed green, "license is in order and valid." The second flashed
+green as well, "no previous citations." Ben withdrew the tag from the
+slot. Had the first light come on red, he would have placed the driver
+under arrest immediately. Had the second light turned amber, it would
+have indicated a previous minor violation. This, Ben would have noted
+on the new citation. If the second light had been red, this would have
+meant either a major previous violation or more than one minor
+citation. Again, the driver would have been under immediate arrest.
+The law was mandatory. One big strike and you're out&mdash;two foul tips
+and the same story. And "out" meant just that. Fines, possibly jail or
+prison sentence and lifetime revocation of driving privileges.</p>
+
+<p>Ben flipped the car registration slot to "stand-by" and went back to
+the teenager's car. Even though they were parked on the service strip
+of the police emergency lane, out of all traffic, the youngsters
+stayed in the car. This one point of the law they knew and knew well.
+Survival chances were dim anytime something went wrong on the
+high-speed thruways. That little margin of luck vanished once outside
+the not-too-much-better security of the vehicle body.</p>
+
+<p>Martin finished writing and then slipped the driver's license into a
+pocket worked into the back of the metallic paper foil of the citation
+blank. He handed the pad into the window to the driver together with a
+carbon stylus.</p>
+
+<p>The boy's lip trembled and he signed the citation with a shaky hand.</p>
+
+<p>Ben ripped off the citation blank and license, fed them into the slot
+on the patrol car and pressed both the car registration and license
+"record" buttons. Ten seconds later the permanent record of the
+citation was on file in Colorado Springs and a duplicate recording of
+the action was in the Continental traffic court docket recorder
+nearest to the driver's hometown. Now, no power in three nations could
+"fix" that ticket. Ben withdrew the citation and registration tag and
+walked back to the car. He handed the boy the license and registration
+tab, together with a copy of the citation. Ben bent down to peer into
+the car.</p>
+
+<p>"I made it as light on you as I could," he told the young driver.
+"You're charged with improper use of the thruway. That's a minor
+violation. By rights, I should have cited you for illegal usage." He
+looked around slowly at each of the young people. "You look like nice
+kids," he said. "I think you'll grow up to be nice people. I want you
+around long enough to be able to vote in a few years. Who knows, maybe
+I'll be running for president then and I'll need your votes. It's a
+cinch that falling apart in the middle of two-hundred-mile an hour
+traffic is no way to treat future voters.</p>
+
+<p>"Good night, Kids." He smiled and walked away from the car. The three
+young passengers smiled back at Ben. The young driver just stared
+unhappily at the citation.</p>
+
+<p>Clay stood talking with the wrecker crewmen. Ben nodded to him and
+mounted into the patrol car. The young Canadian crushed out his
+cigarette and swung up behind the sergeant. Clay went to the control
+seat when he saw Martin pause in the door to the galley.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to get a cup of coffee," the older officer said, "and then
+take the first shift. You keep Beulah 'til I get back."</p>
+
+<p>Clay nodded and pushed the throttles forward. Car 56 rolled back into
+the police lane while behind it, the wrecker hooked onto the disabled
+car and swung north into the crossover. Clay checked both the
+chronometer and radiodometer and then reported in. "Cinncy Control
+this is Car 56 back in service." Cincinnati Control acknowledged.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, Ben reappeared in the cab, slid into the left-hand
+seat. "Hit the sack, kid," he told Ferguson. The chronometer read
+2204. "I'll wake you at midnight&mdash;or sooner, if anything breaks."</p>
+
+<p>Ferguson stood up and stretched, then went into the galley. He poured
+himself a cup of coffee and carrying it with him, went back to the
+crew quarters. He closed the door to the galley and sat down on the
+lower bunk to sip his coffee. When he had finished, he tossed the cup
+into the basket, reached and dimmed the cubby lights and kicked off
+his boots. Still in his coveralls, Clay stretched out on the bunk and
+sighed luxuriously. He reached up and pressed a switch on the bulkhead
+above his pillow and the muted sounds of music from a standard
+broadcast commercial station drifted into the bunk area. Clay closed
+his eyes and let the sounds of the music and the muted rumble of the
+engines lull him to sleep. It took almost fifteen seconds for him to
+be in deep slumber.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Ben pushed Beulah up to her steady seventy-five-mile-an-hour cruising
+speed, moved to the center of the quarter-mile-wide police lane and
+locked her tracks into autodrive. He relaxed back in his seat and
+divided his gaze between the video monitors and the actual scene on
+either side of him in the night. Once again the sky was lighted, this
+time much brighter on the horizon as the road ways swept to the south
+of Cincinnati.</p>
+
+<p>Traffic was once again heavy and fast with the blue and green carrying
+almost equal loads while white was really crowded and even the yellow
+"zoom" lane was beginning to fill. The 2200 hour density reports from
+Cinncy had been given before the Ohio State-Cal football game traffic
+had hit the thruways and densities now were peaking near twenty
+thousand vehicles for the one-hundred-mile block of westbound NAT 26
+out of Cincinnati.</p>
+
+<p>Back to the east, near the eastern Ohio state line, Martin could hear
+Car 207 calling for a wrecker and meat wagon. Beulah rumbled on
+through the night. The video monitors flicked to the next ten-mile
+stretch as the patrol car rolled past another interchange. More
+vehicles streamed onto the westbound thruway, crossing over and
+dropping down into the same lanes they held coming out of the
+north-south road. Seven years on patrols had created automatic
+reflexes in the trooper sergeant. Out of the mass of cars and cargoes
+streaming along the rushing tide of traffic, his eye picked out the
+track of one vehicle slanting across the white lane just a shade
+faster than the flow of traffic. The vehicle was still four or five
+miles ahead. It wasn't enough out of the ordinary to cause more than a
+second, almost unconscious glance, on the part of the veteran officer.
+He kept his view shifting from screen to screen and out to the sides
+of the car.</p>
+
+<p>But the reflexes took hold again as his eye caught the track of the
+same vehicle as it hit the crossover from white to green, squeezed
+into the faster lane and continued its sloping run towards the next
+faster crossover. Now Martin followed the movement of the car almost
+constantly. The moving blip had made the cut-over across the half-mile
+wide green lane in the span of one crossover and was now whipping into
+the merger lane that would take it over the top of the police lane
+and drop down into the one hundred fifty to two hundred mile an hour
+blue. If the object of his scrutiny straightened out in the blue, he'd
+let it go. The driver had been bordered on violation in his fast
+crossover in the face of heavy traffic. If he kept it up in the
+now-crowded high-speed lane, he was asking for sudden death. The
+monitors flicked to the next block and Ben waited just long enough to
+see the speeding car make a move to the left, cutting in front of a
+speeding cargo carrier. Ben slammed Beulah into high. Once again the
+bull horn blared as the cocoons slammed shut, this time locking both
+Clay and Kelly into their bunks, sealing Ben into the control seat.</p>
+
+<p>Beulah lifted on her air cushion and the twin jets roared as she
+accelerated down the police lane at three hundred miles an hour. Ben
+closed the gap on the speeder in less than a minute and then edged
+over to the south side of the police lane to make the jump into the
+blue lane. The red emergency lights and the radio siren had already
+cleared a hole for him in the traffic pattern and he eased back on the
+finger throttles as the patrol car sailed over the divider and into
+the blue traffic lane. Now he had eyeball contact with the speeding
+car, still edging over towards the ultra-high lane. On either side of
+the patrol car traffic gave way, falling back or moving to the left
+and right. Car 56 was now directly behind the speeding passenger
+vehicle. Ben fingered the cut-in switch that put his voice signal onto
+the standard vehicular emergency frequency&mdash;the band that carried the
+automatic siren-warning to all vehicles.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The patrol car was still hitting above the two-hundred-mile-an-hour
+mark and was five hundred feet behind the speeder. The headlamp bathed
+the other car in a white glare, punctuated with angry red flashes from
+the emergency lights.</p>
+
+<p>"You are directed to halt or be fired upon," Ben's voice roared out
+over the emergency frequency. Almost without warning, the speeding car
+began braking down with such deceleration that the gargantuan patrol
+car with its greater mass came close to smashing over it and crushing
+the small passenger vehicle like an insect. Ben cut all forward power,
+punched up full retrojet and at the instant he felt Beulah's tracks
+touch the pavement as the air cushion blew, he slammed on the brakes.
+Only the safety cocoon kept Martin from being hurled against the
+instrument panel and in their bunks, Kelly Lightfoot and Clay Ferguson
+felt their insides dragging down into their legs.</p>
+
+<p>The safety cocoons snapped open and Clay jumped into his boots and
+leaped for the cab. "Speeder," Ben snapped as he jumped down the steps
+to the side hatch. Ferguson snatched up his helmet from the rack
+beside his seat and leaped down to join his partner. Ben ran up to the
+stopped car through a thick haze of smoke from the retrojets of the
+patrol car and the friction-burning braking of both vehicles.
+Ferguson circled to the other side of the car. As they flashed their
+handlights into the car, they saw the driver of the car kneeling on
+the floor beside the reclined passenger seat. A woman lay stretched
+out on the seat, twisting in pain. The man raised an agonized face to
+the officers. "My wife's going to have her baby right here!"</p>
+
+<p>"Kelly," Ben yelled into his helmet transmitter. "Maternity!"</p>
+
+<p>The dispensary ramp was halfway down before Ben had finished calling.
+Kelly jumped to the ground and sprinted around the corner of the
+patrol car, medical bag in hand.</p>
+
+<p>She shoved Clay out of the way and opened the door on the passenger
+side. On the seat, the woman moaned and then muffled a scream. The
+patrol doctor laid her palm on the distended belly. "How fast are your
+pains coming?" she asked. Clay and Ben had moved away from the car a
+few feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Litter," Kelly snapped over her shoulder. Clay raced for the patrol
+car while Ben unshipped a portable warning light and rolled it down
+the lane behind the patrol car. He flipped it to amber "caution" and
+"pass." Blinking amber arrows pointed to the left and right of the
+halted passenger vehicle and traffic in the blue lane began picking up
+speed and parting around the obstructions.</p>
+
+<p>By the time he returned to the patrol car, Kelly had the expectant
+mother in the dispensary. She slammed the door in the faces of the
+three men and then she went to work.</p>
+
+<p>The woman's husband slumped against the side of the patrol vehicle.</p>
+
+<p>Ben dug out his pack of cigarettes and handed one to the shaking
+driver.</p>
+
+<p>He waited until the man had taken a few drags before speaking.</p>
+
+<p>"Mister, I don't know if you realize it or not but you came close to
+killing your wife, your baby and yourself," Ben said softly, "to say
+nothing of the possibility of killing several other families. Just
+what did you think you were doing?"</p>
+
+<p>The driver's shoulders sagged and his hand shook as he took the
+cigarette from his mouth. "Honestly, officer, I don't know. I just got
+frightened to death," he said. He peered up at Martin. "This is our
+first baby, you see, and Ellen wasn't due for another week. We thought
+it would be all right to visit my folks in Cleveland and Ellen was
+feeling just fine. Well, anyway, we started home tonight&mdash;we live in
+Jefferson City&mdash;and just about the time I got on the thruway, Ellen
+started having pains. I was never so scared in my life. She screamed
+once and then tried to muffle them but I knew what was happening and
+all I could think of was to get her to a hospital. I guess I went out
+of my head, what with her moaning and the traffic and everything. The
+only place I could think of that had a hospital was Evansville, and I
+was going to get her there come hell or high water." The young man
+tossed away the half-smoked cigarette and looked up at the closed
+dispensary door. "Do you think she's all right?"</p>
+
+<p>Ben sighed resignedly and put his hand on the man's shoulder. "Don't
+you worry a bit. She's got one of the best doctors in the continent in
+there with her. Come on." He took the husband by the arm and led him
+around to the patrol car cab hatch. "You climb up there and sit down.
+I'll be with you in a second."</p>
+
+<p>The senior officer signaled to Ferguson. "Let's get his car out of the
+traffic, Clay," he directed. "You drive it."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Ben went back and retrieved the caution blinker and re-racked it in
+the side of the patrol car, then climbed up into the cab. He took his
+seat at the controls and indicated the jump seat next to him. "Sit
+down, son. We're going to get us and your car out of this mess before
+we all get clobbered."</p>
+
+<p>He flicked the headlamp at Ferguson in the control seat of the
+passenger car and the two vehicles moved out. Ben kept the emergency
+lights on while they eased carefully cross-stream to the north and the
+safety of the police lane. Clay picked up speed at the outer edge of
+the blue lane and rolled along until he reached the first "patrol
+only" entrance through the divider to the service strip. Ben followed
+him in and then turned off the red blinkers and brought the patrol car
+to a halt behind the other vehicle.</p>
+
+<p>The worried husband stood up and looked to the rear of the car.
+"What's making it so long?" he asked anxiously. "They've been in there
+a long time."</p>
+
+<p>Ben smiled. "Sit down, son. These things take time. Don't you worry.
+If there were anything wrong, Kelly would let us know. She can talk to
+us on the intercom anytime she wants anything."</p>
+
+<p>The man sat back down. "What's your name?" Ben inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Haverstraw," the husband replied distractedly, "George Haverstraw.
+I'm an accountant. That's my wife back there," he cried, pointing to
+the closed galley door. "That's Ellen."</p>
+
+<p>"I know," Ben said gently. "You told us that."</p>
+
+<p>Clay had come back to the patrol car and dropped into his seat across
+from the young husband. "Got a name picked out for the baby?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>Haverstraw's face lighted. "Oh, yes," he exclaimed. "If it's a boy,
+we're going to call him Harmon Pierce Haverstraw. That was my
+grandfather's name. And if she's a girl, it's going to be Caroline May
+after Ellen's mother and grandmother."</p>
+
+<p>The intercom came to life. "Anyone up there?" Kelly's voice asked.
+Before they could answer, the wail of a baby sounded over the system.
+Haverstraw yelled.</p>
+
+<p>"Congratulations, Mr. Haverstraw," Kelly said, "you've got a
+fine-looking son."</p>
+
+<p>"Hey," the happy young father yelped, "hey, how about that? I've got a
+son." He pounded the two grinning troopers on the back. Suddenly he
+froze. "What about Ellen? How's Ellen?" he called out.</p>
+
+<p>"She's just fine," Kelly replied. "We'll let you in here in a couple
+of minutes but we've got to get us gals and your new son looking
+pretty for papa. Just relax."</p>
+
+<p>Haverstraw sank down onto the jump seat with a happy dazed look on his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>Ben smiled and reached for the radio. "I guess our newest citizen
+deserves a ride in style," he said. "We're going to have to transfer
+Mrs. Haverstraw and er, oh yes, Master Harmon Pierce to an ambulance
+and then to a hospital now, George. You have any preference on where
+they go?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gosh, no," the man replied. "I guess the closest one to wherever we
+are." He paused thoughtfully. "Just where are we? I've lost all sense
+of distance or time or anything else."</p>
+
+<p>Ben looked at the radiodometer. "We're just about due south of
+Indianapolis. How would that be?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's fine," Haverstraw replied.</p>
+
+<p>"You can come back now, Mr. Haverstraw," Kelly called out. Haverstraw
+jumped up. Clay got up with him. "Come on, papa," he grinned, "I'll
+show you the way."</p>
+
+<p>Ben smiled and then called into Indianapolis Control for an ambulance.</p>
+
+<p>"Ambulance on the way," Control replied. "Don't you need a wrecker,
+too, Five Six?"</p>
+
+<p>Ben grinned. "Not this time. We didn't lose one. We gained one."</p>
+
+<p>He got up and went back to have a look at Harmon Pierce Haverstraw,
+age five minutes, temporary address, North American Continental
+Thruway 26-West, Mile Marker 632.</p>
+
+<p>Fifteen minutes later, mother and baby were in the ambulance heading
+north to the hospital. Haverstraw, calmed down with a sedative
+administered by Kelly, had nearly wrung their hands off in gratitude
+as he said good-by.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll mail you all cigars when I get home," he shouted as he waved and
+climbed into his car.</p>
+
+<p>Beulah's trio watched the new father ease carefully into the traffic
+as the ambulance headed down the police-way. Haverstraw would have to
+cut over to the next exchange and then go north to Indianapolis. He'd
+arrive later than his family. This time, he was the very picture of
+careful driving and caution as he threaded his way across the green.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if he knows what brand of cigars I smoke?" Kelly mused.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The chrono clicked up to 2335 as Car 56 resumed patrol. Kelly plumped
+down onto the jump seat beside Ben. Clay was fiddling in the galley.
+"Why don't you go back to the sack?" Ben called.</p>
+
+<p>"What, for a lousy twenty-five minutes," Clay replied. "I had a good
+nap before you turned the burners up to high. Besides, I'm hungry.
+Anyone else want a snack?"</p>
+
+<p>Ben shook his head. "No, thanks," Kelly said. Ferguson finished
+slapping together a sandwich. Munching on it, he headed into the
+engine room to make the midnight check. Car 56 had now been on patrol
+eight hours. Only two hundred thirty-two hours and two thousand miles
+to go.</p>
+
+<p>Kelly looked around at the departing back of the younger trooper.
+"I'll bet this is the only car in NorCon that has to stock twenty days
+of groceries for a ten-day patrol," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Ben chuckled. "He's still a growing boy."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if he is, it's all between the ears," the girl replied. "You'd
+think that after a year I would have realized that nothing could
+penetrate that thick Canuck's skull. He gets me so mad sometimes that
+I want to forget I'm a lady." She paused thoughtfully. "Come to think
+of it. No one ever accused me of being a lady in the first place."</p>
+
+<p>"Sounds like love," Ben smiled.</p>
+
+<p>Hunched over on the jump seat with her elbows on her knees and her
+chin cupped in both hands, Kelly gave the senior officer a quizzical
+sideways look.</p>
+
+<p>Ben was watching his monitors and missed the glance. Kelly sighed and
+stared out into the light streaked night of the thruway. The heavy
+surge of football traffic had distributed itself into the general flow
+on the road and while all lanes were busy, there were no indications
+of any overcrowding or jam-ups. Much of the pattern was shifting from
+passenger to cargo vehicle as it neared midnight. The football crowds
+were filtering off at each exchange and exit and the California fans
+had worked into the blue and yellow&mdash;mostly the yellow&mdash;for the long
+trip home. The fewer passenger cars on the thruway and the increase in
+cargo carriers gave the troopers a breathing spell. The men in the
+control buckets of the three hundred and four hundred-ton cargo
+vehicles were the real pro's of the thruways; careful, courteous and
+fast. The NorCon patrol cars could settle down to watch out for the
+occasional nuts and drunks that might bring disaster.</p>
+
+<p>Once again, Martin had the patrol car on auto drive in the center of
+the police lane and he steeled back in his seat. Beside him, Kelly
+stared moodily into the night.</p>
+
+<p>"How come you've never married, Ben?" she asked. The senior trooper
+gave her a startled look. "Why, I guess for the same reason you're
+still a maiden," he answered. "This just doesn't seem to be the right
+kind of a job for a married man."</p>
+
+<p>Kelly shook her head. "No, it's not the same thing with me," she said.
+"At least, not entirely the same thing. If I got married, I'd have to
+quit the Patrol and you wouldn't. And secondly, if you must know the
+truth, I've never been asked."</p>
+
+<p>Ben looked thoughtfully at the copper-haired Irish-Indian girl. All of
+a sudden she seemed to have changed in his eyes. He shook his head and
+turned back to the road monitors.</p>
+
+<p>"I just don't think that a patrol trooper has any business getting
+married and trying to keep a marriage happy and make a home for a
+family thirty days out of every three hundred sixty, with an
+occasional weekend home if you're lucky enough to draw your hometown
+for a terminal point. This might help the population rate but it
+sure doesn't do anything for the institution of matrimony."</p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/image_42.jpg" width="500" height="627" alt="Illustration" /></div>
+
+
+<p>"I know some troopers that are married," Kelly said.</p>
+
+<p>"But there aren't very many," Ben countered. "Comes the time they pull
+me off the cars and stick me behind a desk somewhere, then I'll think
+about it."</p>
+
+<p>"You might be too old by then," Kelly murmured.</p>
+
+<p>Ben grinned. "You sound as though you're worried about it," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"No," Kelly replied softly, "no, I'm not worried about it. Just
+thinking." She averted her eyes and looked out into the night again.
+"I wonder what NorCon would do with a husband-wife team?" she
+murmured, almost to herself.</p>
+
+<p>Ben looked sharply at her and frowned. "Why, they'd probably split
+them up," he said.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"Split what up?" Clay inquired, standing in the door of the cab.</p>
+
+<p>"Split up all troopers named Clay Ferguson," Kelly said disgustedly,
+"and use them for firewood&mdash;especially the heads. They say that
+hardwood burns long and leaves a fine ash. And that's what you've been
+for years."</p>
+
+<p>She sat erect in the jump seat and looked sourly at the young trooper.</p>
+
+<p>Clay shuddered at the pun and squeezed by the girl to get to his seat.
+"I'll take it now, pop," he said. "Go get your geriatrics treatment."</p>
+
+<p>Ben got out of his seat with a snort. "I'll 'pop' you, skinhead," he
+snapped. "You may be eight years younger than I am but you only have
+one third the virility and one tenth the brains. And eight years from
+now you'll still be in deficit spending on both counts."</p>
+
+<p>"Careful, venerable lord of my destiny," Clay admonished with a grin,
+"remember how I spent my vacation and remember how you spent yours
+before you go making unsubstantiated statements about my virility."</p>
+
+<p>Kelly stood up. "If you two will excuse me, I'll go back to the
+dispensary and take a good jolt of male hormones and then we can come
+back and finish this man-to-man talk in good locker room company."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you dare," Ben cried, "I wouldn't let you tamper with one
+single, tiny one of your feminine traits, princess. I like you just
+the way you are."</p>
+
+<p>Kelly looked at him with a wide-eyed, cherubic smile. "You really mean
+that, Ben?"</p>
+
+<p>The older trooper flushed briefly and then turned quickly into the
+galley. "I'm going to try for some shut-eye. Wake me at two, Clay, if
+nothing else breaks." He turned to Kelly who still was smiling at him.
+"And watch out for that lascivious young goat."</p>
+
+<p>"It's all just talk, talk, talk," she said scornful. "You go to bed
+Ben. I'm going to try something new in psychiatric annals. I'm going
+to try and psychoanalyze a dummy." She sat back down on the jump seat.</p>
+
+<p>At 2400 hours it was Vincennes Check with the density reports, all
+down in the past hour. The patrol was settling into what looked like a
+quiet night routine. Kelly chatted with Ferguson for another half hour
+and then rose again. "I think I'll try to get some sleep," she said.
+"I'll put on a fresh pot of coffee for you two before I turn in."</p>
+
+<p>She rattled around in the galley for some time. "Whatcha cooking?"
+Clay called out. "Making coffee," Kelly replied.</p>
+
+<p>"It take all that time to make coffee?" Clay queried.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said. "I'm also getting a few things ready so we can have a
+fast breakfast in case we have to eat on the run. I'm just about
+through now."</p>
+
+<p>A couple of minutes later she stuck her head into the cab. "Coffee's
+done. Want some?"</p>
+
+<p>Clay nodded. "Please, princess."</p>
+
+<p>She poured him a cup and set it in the rack beside his seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," Clay said. "Good night, Hiawatha."</p>
+
+<p>"Good night, Babe," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean 'Paul Bunyon,' don't you?" Clay asked. "'Babe' was his blue
+ox."</p>
+
+<p>"I know what I said," Kelly retorted and strolled back to the
+dispensary. As she passed through the crew cubby, she glanced at Ben
+sleeping on the bunk recently vacated by Ferguson. She paused and
+carefully and gently pulled a blanket up over his sleeping form. She
+smiled down at the trooper and then went softly to her compartment.</p>
+
+<p>In the cab, Clay sipped at his coffee and kept watchful eyes on the
+video monitors. Beulah was back on auto drive and Clay had dropped her
+speed to a slow fifty as the traffic thinned.</p>
+
+<p>At 0200 hours he left the cab long enough to go back and shake Ben
+awake and was himself re-awakened at 0400 to take back control. He let
+Ben sleep an extra hour before routing him out of the bunk again at
+0700. The thin, gray light of the winter morning was just taking hold
+when Ben came back into the cab. Clay had pulled Beulah off to the
+service strip and was stopped while he finished transcribing his
+scribbled notes from the 0700 Washington Criminal Control broadcast.</p>
+
+<p>Ben ran his hand sleepily over his close-cropped head. "Anything
+exciting?" he asked with a yawn. Clay shook his head. "Same old thing.
+'All cars exercise special vigilance over illegal crossovers. Keep all
+lanes within legal speed limits.' Same old noise."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything new on our hit-runner?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nope."</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, knights of the open road," Kelly said from the galley
+door. "Obviously you both went to sleep after I left and allowed our
+helpless citizens to slaughter each other."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you figure that one?" Ben laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it's very simple," she replied. "I managed to get in a full seven
+hours of sleep. When you sleep, I sleep. I slept. Ergo, you did
+likewise."</p>
+
+<p>"Nope," Clay said, "for once we had a really quiet night. Let's hope
+the day is of like disposition."</p>
+
+<p>Kelly began laying out the breakfast things. "You guys want eggs this
+morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"You gonna cook again today?" Clay inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Only breakfast," Kelly said. "You have the honors for the rest of the
+day. The diner is now open and we're taking orders."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have mine over easy," Ben said. "Make mine sunny-up," Clay
+called.</p>
+
+<p>Kelly began breaking eggs into the pan, muttering to herself. "Over
+easy, sunny-up, I like 'em scrambled. Next tour I take I'm going to
+get on a team where everyone likes scrambled eggs."</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later, Beulah's crew sat down to breakfast. Ben had just
+dipped into his egg yolk when the radio blared. "Attention all cars.
+Special attention Cars 207, 56 and 82."</p>
+
+<p>"Just once," Ben said, "just once, I want to sit down to a meal and
+get it all down my gullet before that radio gives me indigestion." He
+laid down his fork and reached for the message pad.</p>
+
+<p>The radio broadcast continued. "A late model, white over green
+Travelaire, containing two men and believed to be the subjects wanted
+in earlier broadcast on murder, robbery and hit-run murder, was
+involved in a service station robbery and murder at Vandalia,
+Illinois, at approximately 0710 this date. NorCon Criminal Division
+believes this subject car escaped filter check and left NAT 26-West
+sometime during the night.</p>
+
+<p>"Owner of this stolen vehicle states it had only half tanks of fuel at
+the time it was taken. This would indicate wanted subjects stopped for
+fuel. It is further believed they were recognized by the station
+attendant from video bulletins sent out by this department last date
+and that he was shot and killed to prevent giving alarm.</p>
+
+<p>"The shots alerted residents of the area and the subject car was last
+seen headed south. This vehicle may attempt to regain access to
+NAT-26-West or it may take another thruway. All units are warned once
+again to approach this vehicle with extreme caution and only with the
+assistance of another unit where possible. Acknowledge. Washington
+Criminal Control out."</p>
+
+<p>Ben looked at the chrono. "They hit Vandalia at 0710, eh. Even in the
+yellow they couldn't get this far for another half hour. Let's finish
+breakfast. It may be a long time until lunch."</p>
+
+<p>The crew returned to their meal. While Kelly was cleaning up after
+breakfast, Clay ran the quick morning engine room check. In the cab,
+Ben opened the arms rack and brought out two machine pistols and
+belts. He checked them for loads and laid one on Clay's control seat.
+He strapped the other around his waist. Then he flipped up a cover in
+the front panel of the cab. It exposed the breech mechanisms of a
+pair of twin-mounted 25 mm auto-cannon. The ammunition loads were
+full. Satisfied, Ben shut the inspection port and climbed into his
+seat. Clay came forward, saw the machine pistol on his seat and
+strapped it on without a word. He settled himself in his seat. "Engine
+room check is all green. Let's go rabbit hunting."</p>
+
+<p>Car 56 moved slowly out into the police lane. Both troopers had their
+individual sets of video monitors on in front of their seats and were
+watching them intently. In the growing light of day, a white-topped
+car was going to be easy to spot.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It had all the earmarks of being another wintery, overcast day. The
+outside temperature at 0800 was right on the twenty-nine-degree mark
+and the threat of more snow remained in the air. The 0800 density
+reports from St. Louis Control were below the 14,000 mark in all lanes
+in the one-hundred-mile block west of the city. That was to be
+expected. They listened to the eastbound densities peaking at
+twenty-six thousand vehicles in the same block, all heading into the
+metropolis and their jobs. The 0800, 1200 and 1600 hours density
+reports also carried the weather forecasts for a five-hundred-mile
+radius from the broadcasting control point. Decreasing temperatures
+with light to moderate snow was in the works for Car 56 for the first
+couple of hundred miles west of St. Louis, turning to almost blizzard
+conditions in central Kansas. Extra units had already been put into
+service on all thruways through the midwest and snow-burners were
+waging a losing battle from Wichita west to the Rockies around
+Alamosa, Colorado.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the temperature was below freezing; inside the patrol car it
+was a comfortable sixty-eight degrees. Kelly had cleared the galley
+and taken her place on the jump seat between the two troopers. With
+all three of them in the cab, Ben cut from the intercom to commercial
+broadcast to catch the early morning newscasts and some pleasant
+music. The patrol vehicle glided along at a leisurely sixty miles an
+hour. An hour out of St. Louis, a big liquid cargo carrier was stopped
+on the inner edge of the green lane against the divider to the police
+lane. The trucker had dropped both warning barriers and lights a half
+mile back. Ben brought Beulah to a halt across the divider from the
+stopped carrier. "Dropped a track pin," the driver called out to the
+officers.</p>
+
+<p>Ben backed Beulah across the divider behind the stalled carrier to
+give them protection while they tried to assist the stalled vehicle.</p>
+
+<p>Donning work helmets to maintain contact with the patrol car, and its
+remote radio system, the two troopers dismounted and went to see what
+needed fixing. Kelly drifted back to the dispensary and stretched out
+on one of the hospital bunks and picked up a new novel.</p>
+
+<p>Beulah's well-equipped machine shop stock room produced a matching
+pin and it was merely a matter of lifting the stalled carrier and
+driving it into place in the track assembly. Ben brought the patrol
+car alongside the carrier and unshipped the crane. Twenty minutes
+later, Clay and the carrier driver had the new part installed and the
+tanker was on his way once again.</p>
+
+<p>Clay climbed into the cab and surveyed his grease-stained uniform
+coveralls and filthy hands. "Your nose is smudged, too, dearie,"
+Martin observed.</p>
+
+<p>Clay grinned, "I'm going to shower and change clothes. Try and see if
+you can drive this thing until I get back without increasing the
+pedestrian fatality rate." He ducked back into the crew cubby and
+stripped his coveralls.</p>
+
+<p>Bored with her book, Kelly wandered back to the cab and took Clay's
+vacant control seat. The snow had started falling again and in the
+mid-morning light it tended to soften the harsh, utilitarian landscape
+of the broad thruway stretching ahead to infinity and spreading out in
+a mile of speeding traffic on either hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Attention all cars on NAT 26-West and east," Washington Criminal
+Control radio blared. "Special attention Cars 56 and 82. Suspect
+vehicle, white over green Travelaire reported re-entered NAT 26-West
+on St. Louis interchange 179. St. Louis Control reports communications
+difficulty in delayed report. Vehicle now believed...."</p>
+
+<p>"Car 56, Car 56," St. Louis Control broke in. "Our pigeon is in your
+zone. Commercial carrier reports near miss sideswipe three minutes ago
+in blue lane approximately three miles west of mile Marker 957.</p>
+
+<p>"Repeating. Car 56, suspect car...."</p>
+
+<p>Ben glanced at the radiodometer. It read 969, then clicked to 970.</p>
+
+<p>"This is Five Six, St. Louis," he broke in, "acknowledged. Our
+position is mile marker 970...."</p>
+
+<p>Kelly had been glued to the video monitors since the first of the
+bulletin. Suddenly she screamed and banged Ben on the shoulder. "There
+they are. There they are," she cried, pointing at the blue lane
+monitor.</p>
+
+<p>Martin took one look at the white-topped car cutting through traffic
+in the blue lane and slammed Beulah into high. The safety cocoons
+slammed shut almost on the first notes of the bull horn. Trapped in
+the shower, Clay was locked into the stall dripping wet as the water
+automatically shut off with the movement of the cocoon.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"I have them in sight," Ben reported, as the patrol car lifted on its
+air pad and leaped forward. "They're in the blue five miles ahead of
+me and cutting over to the yellow. I estimate their speed at two
+twenty-five. I am in pursuit."</p>
+
+<p>Traffic gave way as Car 56 hurtled the divider into the blue.</p>
+
+<p>The radio continued to snap orders.</p>
+
+<p>"Cars 112, 206, 76 and 93 establish roadblocks at mile marker
+crossover 1032. Car 82 divert all blue and yellow to green and
+white."</p>
+
+<p>Eight Two was one hundred fifty miles ahead but at
+three-hundred-mile-an-hour speeds, 82's team was very much a part of
+the operation. This would clear the two high-speed lanes if the
+suspect car hadn't been caught sooner.</p>
+
+<p>"Cars 414, 227 and 290 in NAT-26-East, move into the yellow to cover
+in case our pigeon decides to fly the median." The controller
+continued to move cars into covering positions in the area on all
+crossovers and turnoffs. The sweating dispatcher looked at his lighted
+map board and mentally cursed the lack of enough units to cover every
+exit. State and local authorities already had been notified in the
+event the fugitives left the thruways and tried to escape on a state
+freeway.</p>
+
+<p>In Car 56, Ben kept the patrol car roaring down the blue lane through
+the speeding westbound traffic. The standard emergency signal was
+doing a partial job of clearing the path, but at those speeds, driver
+reaction times weren't always fast enough. Ahead, the fleeing suspect
+car brushed against a light sedan, sending it careening and rocking
+across the lane. The driver fought for control as it swerved and
+screeched on its tilting frame. He brought it to a halt amid a haze of
+blue smoke from burning brakes and bent metal. The white over green
+Travelaire never slowed, fighting its way out of the blue into the
+ultra-high yellow and lighter traffic. Ben kept Beulah in bulldog
+pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>The sideswipe ahead had sent other cars veering in panic and a cluster
+inadvertently bunched up in the path of the roaring patrol car. Like a
+flock of hawk-frightened chickens, they tried to scatter as they saw
+and heard the massive police vehicle bearing down on them. But like
+chickens, they couldn't decide which way to run. It was a matter of
+five or six seconds before they parted enough to let the patrol car
+through. Ben had no choice but to cut the throttle and punch once on
+the retrojets to brake the hurtling patrol car. The momentary drops in
+speed unlocked the safety cocoons and in an instant, Clay had leaped
+from the shower stall and sped to the cab. Hearing, rather than seeing
+his partner, Martin snapped over his shoulder, "Unrack the rifles.
+That's the car." Clay reached for the gun rack at the rear of the cab.</p>
+
+<p>Kelly took one look at the young trooper and jumped for the doorway to
+the galley. A second later she was back. Without a word, she handed
+the nude Ferguson a dangling pair of uniform coveralls. Clay gasped,
+dropped the rifles and grabbed the coveralls from her hand and
+clutched them to his figure. His face was beet-red. Still without
+speaking, Kelly turned and ran back to her dispensary to be ready for
+the next acceleration.</p>
+
+<p>Clay was into the coveralls and in his seat almost at the instant
+Martin whipped the patrol car through the hole in the blue traffic and
+shoved her into high once more.</p>
+
+<p>There was no question about the fact that the occupants of the
+fugitive car knew they were being pursued. They shot through the
+crossover into the yellow lane and now were hurtling down the thruway
+close to the four-hundred-mile-an-hour mark.</p>
+
+<p>Martin had Beulah riding just under three hundred to make the
+crossover, still ten miles behind the suspect car and following on
+video monitor. The air still crackled with commands as St. Louis and
+Washington Control maneuvered other cars into position as the pursuit
+went westward past other units blocking exit routes.</p>
+
+<p>Clay read aloud the radiodometer numerals as they clicked off a mile
+every nine seconds. Car 56 roared into the yellow and the instant Ben
+had it straightened out, he slammed all finger throttles to full
+power. Beulah snapped forward and even at three hundred miles an hour,
+the sudden acceleration pasted the car's crew against the back of
+their cushioned seats. The patrol car shot forward at more than five
+hundred miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>The image of the Travelaire grew on the video monitor and then the two
+troopers had it in actual sight, a white, racing dot on the broad
+avenue of the thruway six miles ahead.</p>
+
+<p>Clay triggered the controls for the forward bow cannon and a panel box
+flashed to "ready fire" signal.</p>
+
+<p>"Negative," Martin ordered. "We're coming up on the roadblock. You
+might miss and hit one of our cars."</p>
+
+<p>"Car 56 to Control," the senior trooper called. "Watch out at the
+roadblock. He's doing at least five hundred in the yellow and he'll
+never be able to stop."</p>
+
+<p>Two hundred miles east, the St. Louis controller made a snap decision.
+"Abandon roadblock. Roadblock cars start west. Maintain two hundred
+until subject comes into monitor view. Car 56, continue speed
+estimates of subject car. Maybe we can box him in."</p>
+
+<p>At the roadblock forty-five miles ahead of the speeding fugitives and
+their relentless pursuer, the four patrol cars pivoted and spread out
+across the roadway some five hundred feet apart. They lunged forward
+and lifted up to air-cushion jet drive at just over two hundred miles
+an hour. Eight pairs of eyes were fixed on video monitors set for the
+ten-mile block to the rear of the four vehicles.</p>
+
+<p>Beulah's indicated ground speed now edged towards the five hundred
+fifty mark, close to the maximum speeds the vehicles could attain.</p>
+
+<p>The gap continued to close, but more slowly. "He's firing hotter," Ben
+called out. "Estimating five thirty on subject vehicle."</p>
+
+<p>Now Car 56 was about three miles astern and still the gap closed. The
+fugitive car flashed past the site of the abandoned roadblock and
+fifteen seconds later all four patrol cars racing ahead of the
+Travelaire broke into almost simultaneous reports of "Here he comes."</p>
+
+<p>A second later, Clay Ferguson yelled out, "There he goes. He's
+boondocking, he's boondocking."</p>
+
+<p>"He has you spotted," Martin broke in. "He's heading for the median.
+Cut, cut, cut. Get out in there ahead of him."</p>
+
+<p>The driver of the fugitive car had seen the bulk of the four big
+patrol cruisers outlined against the slight rise in the thruway almost
+at the instant he flashed onto their screens ten miles behind them. He
+broke speed, rocked wildly from side to side, fighting for control and
+then cut diagonally to the left, heading for the outer edge of the
+thruway and the unpaved, half-mile-wide strip of landscaped earth that
+separated the east and westbound segments of NAT-26.</p>
+
+<p>The white and green car was still riding on its airpad when it hit the
+low, rounded curbing at the edge of the thruway. It hurtled into the
+air and sailed for a hundred feet across the gently-sloping
+snow-covered grass, came smashing down in a thick hedgerow of
+bushes&mdash;and kept going.</p>
+
+<p>Car 56 slowed and headed for the curbing. "Watch it, kids," Ben
+snapped over the intercom, "we may be buying a plot in a second."</p>
+
+<p>Still traveling more than five hundred miles an hour, the huge patrol
+car hit the curbing and bounced into the air like a rocket boosted
+elephant. It tilted and smashed its nose in a slanting blow into the
+snow-covered ground. The sound of smashing and breaking equipment
+mingled with the roar of the thundering jets, tracks and air drives as
+the car fought its way back to level travel. It surged forward and
+smashed through the hedgerow and plunged down the sloping snowbank
+after the fleeing car.</p>
+
+<p>"Clay," Ben called in a strained voice, "take 'er."</p>
+
+<p>Ferguson's fingers were already in position. "You all right, Ben?" he
+asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Think I dislocated a neck vertebra," Ben replied. "I can't move my
+head. Go get 'em, kid."</p>
+
+<p>"Try not to move your head at all, Ben," Kelly called from her cocoon
+in the dispensary. "I'll be there the minute we slow down."</p>
+
+<p>A half mile ahead, the fugitive car plowed along the bottom of the
+gentle draw in a cloud of snow, trying to fight its way up the
+opposite slope and onto the eastbound thruway.</p>
+
+<p>But the Travelaire was never designed for driving on anything but a
+modern superhighway. Car 56 slammed through the snow and down to the
+bottom of the draw. A quarter of a mile ahead of the fugitives, the
+first of the four roadblock units came plowing over the rise.</p>
+
+<p>The car speed dropped quickly to under a hundred and the cocoons were
+again retracted. Ben slumped forward in his seat and caught himself.
+He eased back with a gasp of pain, his head held rigidly straight.
+Almost the instant he started to straighten up, Kelly flung herself
+through the cab door. She clasped his forehead and held his head
+against the back of the control seat.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, the fugitive car spun sideways, bogged in the wet snow and
+muddy ground beneath and stopped. Clay bore down on it and was about
+two hundred yards away when the canopy of the other vehicle popped
+open and a sheet of automatic weapons fire raked the patrol car. Only
+the low angle of the sedan and the nearness of the bulky patrol car
+saved the troopers. Explosive bullets smashed into the patrol car
+canopy and sent shards of plastiglass showering down on the trio.</p>
+
+<p>An instant later, the bow cannon on the first of the cut-off patrol
+units opened fire. An ugly, yellow-red blossom of smoke and fire
+erupted from the front of the Travelaire and it burst into flames. A
+second later, the figure of a man staggered out of the burning car,
+clothes and hair aflame. He took four plunging steps and then fell
+face down in the snow. The car burning and crackled and a thick
+funereal pyre of oily, black smoke billowed into the gray sky. It was
+snowing heavily now, and before the troopers could dismount and plow
+to the fallen man, a thin layer of snow covered his burned body.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>An hour later, Car 56 was again on NAT 26-West, this time heading for
+Wichita barracks and needed repairs. In the dispensary, Ben Martin was
+stretched out on a hospital bunk with a traction brace around his neck
+and a copper-haired medical-surgical patrolwoman fussing over him.</p>
+
+<p>In the cab, Clay peered through the now almost-blinding blizzard that
+whirled and skirled thick snow across the thruway. Traffic densities
+were virtually zero despite the efforts of the dragonlike snow-burners
+trying to keep the roadways clear. The young trooper shivered despite
+the heavy jacket over his coveralls. Wind whistled through the shell
+holes in Beulah's canopy and snow sifted and drifted against the back
+bulkhead.</p>
+
+<p>The cab communications system had been smashed by the gunfire and Clay
+wore his work helmet both for communications and warmth.</p>
+
+<p>The door to the galley cracked open and Kelly stuck her head in. "How
+much farther, Clay?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"We should be in the barracks in about twenty minutes," the shivering
+trooper replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll fix you a cup of hot coffee," Kelly said. "You look like you
+need it."</p>
+
+<p>Over the helmet intercom Clay heard her shoving things around in the
+galley. "My heavens, but this place is a mess," she exclaimed. "I
+can't even find the coffee bin. That steeplechase driving has got to
+stop." She paused.</p>
+
+<p>"Clay," she called out, "Have you been drinking in here? It smells
+like a brewery."</p>
+
+<p>Clay raised mournful eyes to the shattered canopy above him. "My
+cooking wine" he sighed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/image_51.jpg" alt="Illustration" width="600" height="81" /></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Code Three, by Rick Raphael
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CODE THREE ***
+
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+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Code Three, by Rick Raphael
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Code Three
+
+Author: Rick Raphael
+
+Illustrator: Schoenherr
+
+Release Date: August 24, 2006 [EBook #19111]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CODE THREE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Sankar Viswanathan, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was produced from Analog Science Fact--Science Fiction,
+ February 1963. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
+ the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
+
+
+
+ Code Three
+
+
+
+
+ The cars on high-speed highways
+ must follow each other like sheep.
+ And they need shepherds.
+ The highway police cruiser of tomorrow
+ however must be massively different--
+ as different as the highways themselves!
+
+
+
+ by Rick Raphael
+
+
+ Illustrated by Schoenherr
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+The late afternoon sun hid behind gray banks of snow clouds and a cold
+wind whipped loose leaves across the drill field in front of the
+Philadelphia Barracks of the North American Continental Thruway
+Patrol. There was the feel of snow in the air but the thermometer
+hovered just at the freezing mark and the clouds could turn either
+into icy rain or snow.
+
+Patrol Sergeant Ben Martin stepped out of the door of the barracks and
+shivered as a blast of wind hit him. He pulled up the zipper on his
+loose blue uniform coveralls and paused to gauge the storm clouds
+building up to the west.
+
+The broad planes of his sunburned face turned into the driving cold
+wind for a moment and then he looked back down at the weather report
+secured to the top of a stack of papers on his clipboard.
+
+Behind him, the door of the barracks was shouldered open by his junior
+partner, Patrol Trooper Clay Ferguson. The young, tall Canadian
+officer's arms were loaded with paper sacks and his patrol work helmet
+dangled by its strap from the crook of his arm.
+
+Clay turned and moved from the doorway into the wind. A sudden gust
+swept around the corner of the building and a small sack perched atop
+one of the larger bags in his arms blew to the ground and began
+tumbling towards the drill field.
+
+"Ben," he yelled, "grab the bag."
+
+The sergeant lunged as the sack bounced by and made the retrieve. He
+walked back to Ferguson and eyed the load of bags in the blond-haired
+officer's arms.
+
+"Just what is all this?" he inquired.
+
+"Groceries," the youngster grinned. "Or to be more exact, little
+gourmet items for our moments of gracious living."
+
+Ferguson turned into the walk leading to the motor pool and Martin
+swung into step beside him. "Want me to carry some of that junk?"
+
+"Junk," Clay cried indignantly. "You keep your grimy paws off these
+delicacies, peasant. You'll get yours in due time and perhaps it will
+help Kelly and me to make a more polished product of you instead of
+the clodlike cop you are today."
+
+Martin chuckled. This patrol would mark the start of the second year
+that he, Clay Ferguson and Medical-Surgical Officer Kelly Lightfoot
+had been teamed together. After twenty-two patrols, cooped up in a
+semiarmored vehicle with a man for ten days at a time, you got to know
+him pretty well. And you either liked him or you hated his guts.
+
+As senior officer, Martin had the right to reject or keep his partner
+after their first eleven-month duty tour. Martin had elected to retain
+the lanky Canadian. As soon as they had pulled into New York Barracks
+at the end of their last patrol, he had made his decisions. After
+eleven months and twenty-two patrols on the Continental Thruways, each
+team had a thirty-day furlough coming.
+
+Martin and Ferguson had headed for the city the minute they put their
+signatures on the last of the stack of reports needed at the end of a
+tour. Then, for five days and nights, they tied one on. MSO Kelly
+Lightfoot had made a beeline for a Columbia Medical School seminar on
+tissue regeneration. On the sixth day, Clay staggered out of bed,
+swigged down a handful of antireaction pills, showered, shaved and
+dressed and then waved good-by. Twenty minutes later he was aboard a
+jet, heading for his parents' home in Edmonton, Alberta. Martin soloed
+around the city for another week, then rented a car and raced up to
+his sister's home in Burlington, Vermont, to play Uncle Bountiful to
+Carol's three kids and to lap up as much as possible of his sister's
+real cooking.
+
+While the troopers and their med officer relaxed, a service crew moved
+their car down to the Philadelphia motor pool for a full overhaul and
+refitting for the next torturous eleven-month-tour of duty.
+
+The two patrol troopers had reported into the Philadelphia Barracks
+five days ago--Martin several pounds heavier courtesy of his sister's
+cooking; Ferguson several pounds lighter courtesy of three assorted,
+starry-eyed, uniform-struck Alberta maidens.
+
+They turned into the gate of the motor pool and nodded to the sentry
+at the gate. To their left, the vast shop buildings echoed to the
+sound of body-banging equipment and roaring jet engines. The darkening
+sky made the brilliant lights of the shop seem even brighter and the
+hulls of a dozen patrol cars cast deep shadows around the work crews.
+
+The troopers turned into the dispatcher's office and Clay carefully
+placed the bags on a table beside the counter. Martin peered into one
+of the bags. "Seriously, kid, what do you have in that grab bag?"
+
+"Oh, just a few essentials," Clay replied "_Pate de foie gras_, sharp
+cheese, a smidgen of cooking wine, a handful of spices. You know,
+stuff like that. Like I said--essentials."
+
+"Essentials," Martin snorted, "you give your brains to one of those
+Alberta chicks of yours for a souvenir?"
+
+"Look, Ben," Ferguson said earnestly, "I suffered for eleven months in
+that tin mausoleum on tracks because of what you fondly like to think
+is edible food. You've got as much culinary imagination as Beulah. I
+take that back. Even Beulah turns out some better smells when she's
+riding on high jet than you'll ever get out of her galley in the next
+one hundred years. This tour, I intend to eat like a human being once
+again. And I'll teach you how to boil water without burning it."
+
+"Why you ungrateful young--" Martin yelped.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The patrol dispatcher, who had been listening with amused tolerance,
+leaned across the counter.
+
+"If Oscar Waldorf is through with his culinary lecture, gentlemen," he
+said, "perhaps you two could be persuaded to take a little pleasure
+ride. It's a lovely night for a drive and it's just twenty-six hundred
+miles to the next service station. If you two aren't cooking anything
+at the moment, I know that NorCon would simply adore having the
+services of two such distinguished Continental Commandos."
+
+Ferguson flushed and Martin scowled at the dispatcher. "Very funny,
+clown. I'll recommend you for trooper status one of these days."
+
+"Not me," the dispatcher protested. "I'm a married man. You'll never
+get me out on the road in one of those blood-and-gut factories."
+
+"So quit sounding off to us heroes," Martin said, "and give us the
+clearances."
+
+The dispatcher opened a loose-leaf reference book on the counter and
+then punched the first of a series of buttons on a panel. Behind him,
+the wall lighted with a map of the eastern United States to the
+Mississippi River. Ferguson and Martin had pencils out and poised over
+their clipboards.
+
+The dispatcher glanced at the order board across the room where patrol
+car numbers and team names were displayed on an illuminated board.
+"Car 56--Martin-Ferguson-Lightfoot," glowed with an amber light. In
+the column to the right was the number "26-W." The dispatcher punched
+another button. A broad belt of multi-colored lines representing the
+eastern segment of North American Thruway 26 flashed onto the map in a
+band extending from Philadelphia to St. Louis. The thruway went on to
+Los Angeles in its western segment, not shown on the map. Ten bands of
+color--each five separated by a narrow clear strip, detailed the
+thruway. Martin and Ferguson were concerned with the northern five
+bands; NAT 26-westbound. Other unlighted lines radiated out in
+tangential spokes to the north and south along the length of the
+multi-colored belt of NAT 26.
+
+This was just one small segment of the Continental Thruway system that
+spanned North America from coast to coast and crisscrossed north and
+south under the Three Nation Road Compact from the southern tip of
+Mexico into Canada and Alaska.
+
+Each arterial cut a five-mile-wide path across the continent and from
+one end to the other, the only structures along the roadways were the
+turretlike NorCon Patrol check and relay stations--looming up at
+one-hundred-mile intervals like the fire control islands of
+earlier-day aircraft carriers.
+
+Car 56 with Trooper Sergeant Ben Martin, Trooper Clay Ferguson and
+Medical-Surgical Officer Kelly Lightfoot, would take their first
+ten-day patrol on NAT 26-west. Barring major disaster, they would eat,
+sleep and work the entire time from their car; out of sight of any but
+distant cities until they had reached Los Angeles at the end of the
+patrol. Then a five-day resupply and briefing period and back onto
+another thruway.
+
+During the coming patrol they would cross ten state lines as if they
+didn't exist. And as far as thruway traffic control and authority was
+concerned, state and national boundaries actually didn't exist. With
+the growth of the old interstate highway system and the Alcan Highway
+it became increasingly evident that variation in motor vehicle laws
+from state to state and country to country were creating impossible
+situations for any uniform safety control.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With the establishment of the Continental Thruway System two decades
+later, came the birth of the supra-cop--The North American Thruway
+Patrol, known as NorCon. Within the five-mile bands of the
+thruways--all federally-owned land by each of the three nations--the
+blue-coveralled "Continental Commandos" of NorCon were the sole law
+enforcement agency and authority. Violators of thruway law were cited
+into NorCon district traffic courts located in the nearest city to
+each access port along every thruway.
+
+There was no challenge to the authority of NorCon. Public demand for
+faster and more powerful vehicles had forced the automotive industry
+to put more and more power under the touch of the ever-growing
+millions of drivers crowding the continent's roads. Piston drive gave
+way to turbojet; turbojet was boosted by a modification of ram jet and
+air-cushion drive was added. In the last two years, the first of the
+nuclear reaction mass engines had hit the roads. Even as the hot
+Ferraris and Jags of the mid-'60s would have been suicide vehicles on
+the T-model roads of the '20s so would today's vehicles be on the
+interstates of the '60s. But building roads capable of handling three
+hundred to four hundred miles an hour speeds was beyond the financial
+and engineering capabilities of individual states and nations. Thus
+grew the continental thruways with their four speed lanes in each
+direction, each a half-mile wide separated east and west and north and
+south by a half-mile-wide landscaped divider. Under the Three Nation
+Compact, the thruways now wove a net across the entire North American
+continent.
+
+On the big wall map, NAT 26-west showed as four colored lines; blue
+and yellow as the two high and ultra-high speed lanes; green and white
+for the intermediate and slow lanes. Between the blue and yellow and
+the white and green was a red band. This was the police emergency
+lane, never used by other than official vehicles and crossed by the
+traveling public shifting from one speed lane to another only at
+sweeping crossovers.
+
+The dispatcher picked up an electric pointer and aimed the light beam
+at the map. Referring to his notes, he began to recite.
+
+"Resurfacing crews working on 26-W blue at milestone Marker 185 to
+Marker 187, estimated clearance 0300 hours Tuesday--Let's see, that's
+tomorrow morning."
+
+The two officers were writing the information down on their
+trip-analysis sheets.
+
+"Ohio State is playing Cal under the lights at Columbus tonight so you
+can expect a traffic surge sometime shortly after 2300 hours but most
+of it will stay in the green and white. Watch out for the drunks
+though. They might filter out onto the blue or yellow.
+
+"The crossover for NAT 163 has painting crews working. Might watch out
+for any crud on the roadway. And they've got the entrance blocked
+there so that all 163 exchange traffic is being rerouted to 164 west
+of Chillicothe."
+
+The dispatcher thumbed through his reference sheets. "That seems to be
+about all. No, wait a minute. This is on your trick. The Army's got a
+priority missile convoy moving out of the Aberdeen Proving Grounds
+bound for the west coast tonight at 1800 hours. It will be moving at
+green lane speeds so you might watch out for it. They'll have
+thirty-four units in the convoy. And that is all. Oh, yes. Kelly's
+already aboard. I guess you know about the weather."
+
+Martin nodded. "Yup. We should be hitting light snows by 2300 hours
+tonight in this area and it could be anything from snow to ice-rain
+after that." He grinned at his younger partner. "The vacation is over,
+sonny. Tonight we make a man out of you."
+
+Ferguson grinned back. "Nuts to you, pop. I've got character witnesses
+back in Edmonton who'll give you glowing testimonials about my
+manhood."
+
+"Testimonials aren't legal unless they're given by adults," Martin
+retorted. "Come on, lover boy. Duty calls."
+
+Clay carefully embraced his armload of bundles and the two officers
+turned to leave. The dispatcher leaned across the counter.
+
+"Oh, Ferguson, one thing I forgot. There's some light corrugations in
+red lane just east of St. Louis. You might be careful with your
+souffles in that area. Wouldn't want them to fall, you know."
+
+Clay paused and started to turn back. The grinning dispatcher ducked
+into the back office and slammed the door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The wind had died down by the time the troopers entered the
+brilliantly lighted parking area. The temperature seemed warmer with
+the lessening winds but in actuality, the mercury was dropping. The
+snow clouds to the west were much nearer and the overcast was getting
+darker.
+
+But under the great overhead light tubes, the parking area was
+brighter than day. A dozen huge patrol vehicles were parked on the
+front "hot" line. Scores more were lined out in ranks to the back of
+the parking zone. Martin and Ferguson walked down the line of military
+blue cars. Number 56 was fifth on the line. Service mechs were just
+re-housing fueling lines into a ground panel as the troopers walked
+up. The technician corporal was the first to speak. "All set, Sarge,"
+he said. "We had to change an induction jet at the last minute and I
+had the port engine running up to reline the flow. Thought I'd better
+top 'er off for you, though, before you pull out. She sounds like a
+purring kitten."
+
+He tossed the pair a waving salute and then moved out to his service
+dolly where three other mechs were waiting.
+
+The officers paused and looked up at the bulk of the huge patrol car.
+
+"Beulah looks like she's been to the beauty shop and had the works,"
+Martin said. He reached out and slapped the maglurium plates. "Welcome
+home, sweetheart. I see you've kept a candle in the window for your
+wandering son." Ferguson looked up at the lighted cab, sixteen feet
+above the pavement.
+
+Car 56--Beulah to her team--was a standard NorCon Patrol vehicle. She
+was sixty feet long, twelve feet wide and twelve feet high; topped by
+a four-foot-high bubble canopy over her cab. All the way across her
+nose was a three-foot-wide luminescent strip. This was the variable
+beam headlight that could cut a day-bright swath of light through
+night, fog, rain or snow and could be varied in intensity, width and
+elevation. Immediately above the headlight strip were two red-black
+plastic panels which when lighted, sent out a flashing red emergency
+signal that could be seen for miles. Similar emergency lights and
+back-up white light strips adorned Beulah's stern. Her bow rounded
+down like an old-time tank and blended into the track assembly of her
+dual propulsion system. With the exception of the cabin bubble and a
+two-foot stepdown on the last fifteen feet of her hull, Beulah was
+free of external protrusions. Racked into a flush-decked recess on one
+side of the hull was a crane arm with a two-hundred-ton lift capacity.
+Several round hatches covered other extensible gear and periscopes
+used in the scores of multiple operations the NorCon cars were called
+upon to accomplish on routine road patrols.
+
+Beulah resembled a gigantic offspring of a military tank, sans heavy
+armament. But even a small stinger was part of the patrol car
+equipment. As for armament, Beulah had weapons to meet every
+conceivable skirmish in the deadly battle to keep Continental Thruways
+fast-moving and safe. Her own two-hundred-fifty-ton bulk could reach
+speeds of close to six hundred miles an hour utilizing one or both of
+her two independent propulsion systems.
+
+At ultra-high speeds, Beulah never touched the ground--floating on an
+impeller air cushion and driven forward by a pair of one hundred fifty
+thousand pound thrust jets and ram jets. At intermediate high speeds,
+both her air cushion and the four-foot-wide tracks on each side of the
+car pushed her along at two hundred-mile-an-hour-plus speeds. Synchro
+mechanisms reduced the air cushion as the speeds dropped to afford
+more surface traction for the tracks. For slow speeds and heavy duty,
+the tracks carried the burden.
+
+Martin thumbed open the portside ground-level cabin door.
+
+"I'll start the outside check," he told Clay. "You stow that garbage
+of yours in the galley and start on the dispensary. I'll help you
+after I finish out here."
+
+As the younger officer entered the car and headed up the short flight
+of steps to the working deck, the sergeant unclipped a check list
+from the inside of the door and turned towards the stern of the big
+vehicle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Clay mounted to the work deck and turned back to the little galley
+just aft of the cab. As compact as a spaceship kitchen--as a matter of
+fact, designed almost identically from models on the Moon run--the
+galley had but three feet of open counter space. Everything else,
+sink, range, oven and freezer, were built-ins with pull-downs for use
+as needed. He set his bags on the small counter to put away after the
+pre-start check. Aft of the galley and on the same side of the
+passageway were the double-decked bunks for the patrol troopers.
+Across the passageway was a tiny latrine and shower. Clay tossed his
+helmet on the lower bunk as he went down the passageway. At the
+bulkhead to the rear, he pressed a wall panel and a thick, insulated
+door slid back to admit him to the engine compartment. The service
+crews had shut down the big power plants and turned off the air
+exchangers and already the heat from the massive engines made the
+compartment uncomfortably warm.
+
+He hurried through into a small machine shop. In an emergency, the
+troopers could turn out small parts for disabled vehicles or for other
+uses. It also stocked a good supply of the most common failure parts.
+Racked against the ceiling were banks of cutting torches, a grim
+reminder that death or injury still rode the thruways with increasing
+frequency.
+
+In the tank storage space between the ceiling and top of the hull were
+the chemical fire-fighting liquids and foam that could be applied by
+nozzles, hoses and towers now telescoped into recesses in the hull.
+Along both sides and beneath the galley, bunks, engine and
+machine-shop compartments between the walls, deck and hull, were
+Beulah's fuel storage tanks.
+
+The last after compartment was a complete dispensary, one that would
+have made the emergency room or even the light surgery rooms of
+earlier-day hospitals proud.
+
+Clay tapped on the door and went through. Medical-Surgical Officer
+Kelly Lightfoot was sitting on the deck, stowing sterile bandage packs
+into a lower locker. She looked up at Clay and smiled. "Well, well,
+you DID manage to tear yourself away from your adoring bevies," she
+said. She flicked back a wisp of golden-red hair from her forehead and
+stood up. The patrol-blue uniform coverall with its belted waist
+didn't do much to hide a lovely, properly curved figure. She walked
+over to the tall Canadian trooper and reached up and grabbed his ear.
+She pulled his head down, examined one side critically and then
+quickly snatched at his other ear and repeated the scrutiny. She let
+go of his ear and stepped back. "Damned if you didn't get all the
+lipstick marks off, too."
+
+Clay flushed. "Cut it out, Kelly," he said. "Sometimes you act just
+like my mother."
+
+The olive-complexioned redhead grinned at him and turned back to her
+stack of boxes on the deck. She bent over and lifted one of the boxes
+to the operating table. Clay eyed her trim figure. "You might act like
+ma sometimes," he said, "but you sure don't look like her."
+
+It was the Irish-Cherokee Indian girl's turn to flush. She became very
+busy with the contents of the box. "Where's Ben?" she asked over her
+shoulder.
+
+"Making outside check. You about finished in here?"
+
+Kelly turned and slowly scanned the confines of the dispensary. With
+the exception of the boxes on the table and floor, everything was
+behind secured locker doors. In one corner, the compact
+diagnostician--capable of analyzing many known human bodily ailments
+and every possible violent injury to the body--was locked in its
+riding clamps. Surgical trays and instrument racks were all hidden
+behind locker doors along with medical and surgical supplies. On
+either side of the emergency ramp door at the stern of the vehicle,
+three collapsible autolitters hung from clamps. Six hospital bunks in
+two tiers of three each, lined another wall. On patrol, Kelly utilized
+one of the hospital bunks for her own use except when they might all
+be occupied with accident or other kind of patients. And this would
+never be for more than a short period, just long enough to transfer
+them to a regular ambulance or hospital vehicle. Her meager supply of
+personal items needed for the ten-day patrol were stowed in a small
+locker and she shared the latrine with the male members of the team.
+
+Kelly completed her scan, glanced down at the checklist in her hand.
+"I'll have these boxes stowed in five minutes. Everything else is
+secure." She raised her hand to her forehead in mock salute.
+"Medical-Surgical Officer Lightfoot reports dispensary ready for
+patrol, sir."
+
+Clay smiled and made a checkmark on his clipboard. "How was the
+seminar, Kelly?" he asked.
+
+Kelly hiked herself onto the edge of the operating table. "Wonderful,
+Clay, just wonderful. I never saw so many good-looking, young, rich
+and eligible doctors together in one place in all my life."
+
+She sighed and smiled vacantly into space.
+
+Clay snorted. "I thought you were supposed to be learning something
+new about tissue regeneration," he said.
+
+"Generation, regeneration, who cares," Kelly grinned.
+
+Clay started to say something, got flustered and wheeled around to
+leave--and bounded right off Ben Martin's chest. Ferguson mumbled
+something and pushed past the older officer.
+
+Ben looked after him and then turned back to Car 56's combination
+doctor, surgeon and nurse. "Glad to see the hostess aboard for this
+cruise. I hope you make the passengers more comfortable than you've
+just made the first mate. What did you do to Clay, Kelly?"
+
+"Hi, Ben," Kelly said. "Oh, don't worry about junior. He just gets all
+fluttery when a girl takes away his masculine prerogative to make
+cleverly lewd witticisms. He'll be all right. Have a happy holiday,
+Ben? You look positively fat."
+
+Ben patted his stomach. "Carol's good cooking. Had a nice restful
+time. And how about you. That couldn't have been all work. You've got
+a marvelous tan."
+
+"Don't worry," Kelly laughed, "I had no intention of letting it be all
+study. I spent just about as much time under the sun dome at the pool
+as I did in class. I learned a lot though."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Ben grinned and headed back to the front of the car. "Tell me more
+after we're on the road," he said from the doorway. "We'll be rolling
+in ten minutes."
+
+When he reached the cab, Clay was already in the right-hand control
+seat and was running down the instrument panel check. The sergeant
+lifted the hatch door between the two control seats and punched on a
+light to illuminate the stark compartment at the lower front end of
+the car. A steel grill with a dogged handle on the upper side covered
+the opening under the hatch cover. Two swing-down bunks were racked up
+against the walls on either side and the front hull door was without
+an inside handle. This was the patrol car brig, used for bringing in
+unwilling violators or other violent or criminal subjects who might
+crop up in the course of a patrol tour. Satisfied with the appearance
+of the brig, Ben closed the hatch cover and slid into his own control
+seat on the left of the cab. Both control seats were molded and
+plastiformed padded to the contours of the troopers and the armrests
+on both were studded with buttons and a series of small,
+finger-operated, knobs. All drive, communication and fire fighting
+controls for the massive vehicle were centered in the knobs and
+buttons on the seat arms, while acceleration and braking controls were
+duplicated in two footrest pedals beneath their feet.
+
+Ben settled into his seat and glanced down to make sure his
+work-helmet was racked beside him. He reached over and flipped a bank
+of switches on the instrument panel. "All communications to 'on,'" he
+said. Clay made a checkmark on his list. "All pre-engine start check
+complete," Clay replied.
+
+"In that case," the senior trooper said, "let's give Beulah some
+exercise. Start engines."
+
+Clay's fingers danced across the array of buttons on his seat arms and
+flicked lightly at the throttle knobs. From deep within the engine
+compartment came the muted, shrill whine of the starter engines,
+followed a split-second later by the full-throated roar of the jets as
+they caught fire. Clay eased the throttles back and the engine noise
+softened to a muffled roar.
+
+Martin fingered a press-panel on the right arm of his seat.
+
+"Car 56 to Philly Control," Ben called.
+
+The speakers mounted around the cab came to life. "Go ahead Five Six."
+
+"Five Six fired up and ready to roll," Martin said.
+
+"Affirmative Five Six," came the reply, "You're clear to roll. Philly
+Check estimates white density 300; green, 840; blue 400; yellow, 75."
+
+Both troopers made mental note of the traffic densities in their first
+one-hundred-mile patrol segment; an estimated three hundred vehicles
+for each ten miles of thruway in the white or fifty to one hundred
+miles an hour low lane; eight hundred forty vehicles in the one
+hundred to one hundred fifty miles an hour green, and so on. More than
+sixteen thousand westbound vehicles on the thruway in the first one
+hundred miles; nearly five thousand of them traveling at speeds
+between one hundred fifty and three hundred miles an hour.
+
+Over the always-hot intercom throughout the big car Ben called out.
+"All set, Kelly?"
+
+"I'm making coffee," Kelly answered from the galley. "Let 'er roll."
+
+Martin started to kick off the brakes, then stopped. "Ooops," he
+exclaimed, "almost forgot." His finger touched another button and a
+blaring horn reverberated through the vehicle.
+
+In the galley, Kelly hurled herself into a corner. Her body activated
+a pressure plant and a pair of mummy-like plastifoam plates slid
+curvingly out the wall and locked her in a soft cocoon. A dozen
+similar safety clamps were located throughout the car at every working
+and relaxation station.
+
+In the same instance, both Ben and Clay touched another plate on their
+control seats. From kiosk-type columns behind each seat, pairs of
+body-molded crash pads snapped into place to encase both troopers in
+their seats, their bodies cushioned and locked into place. Only their
+fingers were loose beneath the spongy substance to work arm controls.
+The half-molds included headforms with a padded band that locked
+across their foreheads to hold their heads rigidly against the backs
+of their reinforced seats. The instant all three crew members were
+locked into their safety gear, the bull horn ceased.
+
+"All tight," Ben called out as he wiggled and tried to free himself
+from the cocoon. Kelly and Clay tested their harnesses.
+
+Satisfied that the safety cocoons were operating properly, Ben
+released them and the molds slid back into their recesses. The cocoons
+were triggered automatically in any emergency run or chase at speeds
+in excess of two hundred miles an hour.
+
+Again he kicked off the brakes, pressed down on the foot feed and Car
+56--Beulah--rolled out of the Philadelphia motor pool on the start of
+its ten-day patrol.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The motor pool exit opened into a quarter-mile wide tunnel sloping
+gently down into the bowels of the great city. Car 56 glided down the
+slight incline at a steady fifty miles an hour. A mile from the mouth
+of the tunnel the roadway leveled off and Ben kicked Beulah up another
+twenty-five miles an hour. Ahead, the main tunnel ended in a series of
+smaller portal ways, each emblazoned with a huge illuminated number
+designating a continental thruway.
+
+Ben throttled back and began edging to the left lanes. Other patrol
+cars were heading down the main passageway, bound for their assigned
+thruways. As Ben eased down to a slow thirty, another patrol vehicle
+slid alongside. The two troopers in the cab waved. Clay flicked on the
+"car-to-car" transmit.
+
+The senior trooper in Car 104 looked over at Martin and Ferguson. "If
+it isn't the gruesome twosome," he called. "Where have you two been?
+We thought the front office had finally caught up with you and found
+out that neither one of you could read or write and that they had
+canned you."
+
+"We can't read," Ben quipped back. "That's why we're still on the job.
+The front office would never hire anyone who would embarrass you two
+by being smarter than either of you. Where're you headed, Eddie?"
+
+"Got 154-north," the other officer said.
+
+"Hey," Clay called out, "I've got a real hot doll in Toronto and I'll
+gladly sell her phone number for a proper price."
+
+"Wouldn't want to hurt you, Clay," the other officer replied. "If I
+called her up and took her out, she'd throw rocks at you the next time
+you drew the run. It's all for your own good."
+
+"Oh, go get lost in a cloverleaf," Clay retorted.
+
+The other car broke the connection and with a wave, veered off to the
+right. The thruway entrances were just ahead. Martin aimed Beulah at
+the lighted orifice topped by the number 26-W. The patrol car slid
+into the narrower tunnel, glided along for another mile and then
+turned its bow upwards. Three minutes later, they emerged from the
+tunnel into the red patrol lane of Continental Thruway 26-West. The
+late afternoon sky was a covering of gray wool and a drop or two of
+moisture struck the front face of the cab canopy. For a mile on either
+side of the police lane, streams of cars sped westward. Ben eyed the
+sky, the traffic and then peered at the outer hull thermometer. It
+read thirty-two degrees. He made a mental bet with himself that the
+weather bureau was off on its snow estimates by six hours. His Vermont
+upbringing told him it would be flurrying within the hour.
+
+He increased speed to a steady one hundred and the car sped silently
+and easily along the police lane. Across the cab, Clay peered
+pensively at the steady stream of cars and cargo carriers racing by in
+the green and blue lanes--all of them moving faster than the patrol
+car.
+
+The young officer turned in his seat and looked at his partner.
+
+"You know, Ben," he said gravely, "I sometimes wonder if those
+old-time cowboys got as tired looking at the south end of northbound
+cows as I get looking at the vanishing tail pipes of cars."
+
+The radio came to life.
+
+"Philly Control to Car 56."
+
+Clay touched his transmit plate. "This is Five Six. Go ahead."
+
+"You've got a bad one at Marker 82," Control said. "A sideswipe in the
+white."
+
+"Couldn't be too bad in the white," Ben broke in, thinking of the
+one-hundred mile-an-hour limit in the slow lane.
+
+"That's not the problem," Control came back. "One of the sideswiped
+vehicles was flipped around and bounded into the green, and that's
+where the real mess is. Make it code three."
+
+"Five Six acknowledge," Ben said. "On the way."
+
+He slammed forward on the throttles. The bull horn blared and a second
+later, with MSO Kelly Lightfoot snugged in her dispensary cocoon and
+both troopers in body cushions, Car 56 lifted a foot from the roadway,
+and leaped forward on a turbulent pad of air. It accelerated from one
+hundred to two hundred fifty miles an hour.
+
+The great red emergency lights on the bow and stern began to blink and
+from the special transmitter in the hull a radio siren wail raced
+ahead of the car to be picked up by the emergency receptor antennas
+required on all vehicles.
+
+The working part of the patrol had begun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Conversation died in the speeding car, partly because of the
+concentration required by the troopers, secondly because all
+transmissions whether intercom or radio, on a code two or three run,
+were taped and monitored by Control. In the center of the instrument
+panel, an oversized radiodometer was clicking off the mileage marks as
+the car passed each milestone. The milestone posts beamed a coded
+signal across all five lanes and as each vehicle passed the marker,
+the radiodometer clicked up another number.
+
+Car 56 had been at MM 23 when the call came. Now, at better than four
+miles a minute, Beulah whipped past MM 45 with ten minutes yet to go
+to reach the scene of the accident. Light flurries of wet snow bounced
+off the canopy, leaving thin, fast-drying trails of moisture. Although
+it was still a few minutes short of 1700 hours, the last of the winter
+afternoon light was being lost behind the heavy snow clouds overhead.
+Ben turned on the patrol car's dazzling headlight and to the left and
+right, Clay could see streaks of white lights from the traffic on the
+green and blue lanes on either side of the quarter-mile wide emergency
+lane.
+
+The radio filled them in on the movement of other patrol emergency
+vehicles being routed to the accident site. Car 82, also assigned to
+NAT 26-West, was more than one hundred fifty miles ahead of Beulah.
+Pittsburgh Control ordered Eight Two to hold fast to cover anything
+else that might come up while Five Six was handling the current
+crisis. Eastbound Car 119 was ordered to cut across to the scene to
+assist Beulah's crew, and another eastbound patrol vehicle was held in
+place to cover for One One Nine.
+
+At mile marker 80, yellow caution lights were flashing on all
+westbound lanes, triggered by Philadelphia Control the instant the
+word of the crash had been received. Traffic was slowing down and
+piling up despite the half-mile wide lanes.
+
+"Philly Control this is Car 56."
+
+"Go ahead Five Six."
+
+"It's piling up in the green and white," Ben said. "Let's divert to
+blue on slowdown and seal the yellow."
+
+"Philly Control acknowledged," came the reply.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The flashing amber caution lights on all lanes switched to red. As Ben
+began de-acceleration, diagonal red flashing barriers rose out of the
+roadway on the green and white lanes at the 85 mile marker and lane
+crossing. This channelled all traffic from both lanes to the left and
+into the blue lane where the flashing reds now prohibited speeds in
+excess of fifty miles an hour around the emergency situation. At the
+same time, all crossovers on the ultra high yellow lane were sealed by
+barriers to prevent changing of lanes into the over-congested area.
+
+As Car 56's speed dropped back below the two hundred mile an hour mark
+the cocoon automatically slid open. Freed from her safety restraints,
+Kelly jumped for the rear entrance of the dispensary and cleared the
+racking clamps from the six autolitters. That done, she opened another
+locker and reached for the mobile first-aid kit. She slid it to the
+door entrance on its retractable casters. She slipped on her work
+helmet with the built-in transmitter and then sat down on the seat by
+the rear door to wait until the car stopped.
+
+Car 56 was now less than two miles from the scene of the crash and
+traffic in the green lane to the left was at a standstill. A half mile
+farther westward, lights were still moving slowly along the white
+lane. Ahead, the troopers could see a faint wisp of smoke rising from
+the heaviest congregation of headlights. Both officers had their work
+helmets on and Clay had left his seat and descended to the side door,
+ready to jump out the minute the car stopped.
+
+Martin saw a clear area in the green lane and swung the car over the
+dividing curbing. The big tracks floated the patrol car over the
+two-foot high, rounded abutment that divided each speed lane. Snow was
+falling faster as the headlight picked out a tangled mass of wreckage
+smoldering a hundred feet inside the median separating the green and
+white lanes. A crumpled body lay on the pavement twenty feet from the
+biggest clump of smashed metal, and other fragments of vehicles were
+strung out down the roadway for fifty feet. There was no movement.
+
+NorCon thruway laws were strict and none were more rigidly enforced
+than the regulation that no one other than a member of the patrol set
+foot outside of their vehicle while on any thruway traffic lane. This
+meant not giving any assistance whatsoever to accident victims. The
+ruling had been called inhuman, monstrous, unthinkable, and lawmakers
+in the three nations of the compact had forced NorCon to revoke the
+rule in the early days of the thruways. After speeding cars and cargo
+carriers had cut down twice as many do-gooders on foot at accident
+scenes than the accidents themselves caused, the law was reinstated.
+The lives of the many were more vital than the lives of a few.
+
+Martin halted the patrol vehicle a few feet from the wreckage and
+Beulah was still rocking gently on her tracks by the time both Patrol
+Trooper Clay Ferguson and MSO Kelly Lightfoot hit the pavement on the
+run.
+
+In the cab, Martin called in on the radio. "Car 56 is on scene.
+Release blue at Marker 95 and resume speeds all lanes at Marker 95
+in--" he paused and looked back at the halted traffic piled up before
+the lane had been closed "--seven minutes." He jumped for the steps
+and sprinted out of the patrol car in the wake of Ferguson and Kelly.
+
+The team's surgeon was kneeling beside the inert body on the road.
+After an ear to the chest, Kelly opened her field kit bag and slapped
+an electrode to the victim's temple. The needle on the encephalic
+meter in the lid of the kit never flickered. Kelly shut the bag and
+hurried with it over to the mass of wreckage. A thin column of black,
+oily smoke rose from somewhere near the bottom of the heap. It was
+almost impossible to identify at a glance whether the mangled metal
+was the remains of one or more cars. Only the absence of track
+equipment made it certain that they even had been passenger vehicles.
+
+Clay was carefully climbing up the side of the piled up wrecks to a
+window that gaped near the top.
+
+"Work fast, kid," Martin called up. "Something's burning down there
+and this whole thing may go up. I'll get this traffic moving."
+
+He turned to face the halted mass of cars and cargo carriers east of
+the wreck. He flipped a switch that cut his helmet transmitter into
+the remote standard vehicular radio circuit aboard the patrol car.
+
+"Attention, please, all cars in green lane. All cars in the left line
+move out now, the next line fall in behind. You are directed to clear
+the area immediately. Maintain fifty miles an hour for the next mile.
+You may resume desired speeds and change lanes at mile Marker 95. I
+repeat, all cars in green lane...." he went over the instructions once
+more, relayed through Beulah's transmitter to the standard receivers
+on all cars. He was still talking as the traffic began to move.
+
+By the time he turned back to help his teammates, cars were moving in
+a steady stream past the huge, red-flashing bulk of the patrol car.
+
+Both Clay and Kelly were lying flat across the smashed, upturned side
+of the uppermost car in the pile. Kelly had her field bag open on the
+ground and she was reaching down through the smashed window.
+
+"What is it Clay?" Martin called.
+
+The younger officer looked down over his shoulder. "We've got a woman
+alive down here but she's wedged in tight. She's hurt pretty badly and
+Kelly's trying to slip a hypo into her now. Get the arm out, Ben."
+
+Martin ran back to the patrol car and flipped up a panel on the hull.
+He pulled back on one of the several levers recessed into the hull and
+the big wrecking crane swung smoothly out of its cradle and over the
+wreckage. The end of the crane arm was directly over Ferguson. "Lemme
+have the spreaders," Clay called. The arm dipped and from either side
+of the tip, a pair of flanges shot out like tusks on an elephant. "Put
+'er in neutral," Clay directed. Martin pressed another lever and the
+crane now could be moved in any direction by fingertip pulls at its
+extremity. Ferguson carefully guided the crane with its projecting
+tusks into the smashed orifice of the car window. "O.K., Ben, spread
+it."
+
+The crane locked into position and the entire arm split open in a "V"
+from its base. Martin pressed steadily on the two levers controlling
+each side of the divided arm and the tusks dug into the sides of the
+smashed window. There was a steady screeching of tearing and ripping
+metal as the crane tore window and frame apart. "Hold it," Ferguson
+yelled and then eased himself into the widened hole.
+
+"Ben," Kelly called from her perch atop the wreckage, "litter."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Martin raced to the rear of the patrol car where the sloping ramp
+stood open to the lighted dispensary. He snatched at one of the
+autolitters and triggered its tiny drive motor. A homing beacon in his
+helmet guided the litter as it rolled down the ramp, turned by itself
+and rolled across the pavement a foot behind him. It stopped when he
+stopped and Ben touched another switch, cutting the homing beacon.
+
+Clay's head appeared out of the hole. "Get it up here, Ben. I can get
+her out. And I think there's another one alive still further down."
+
+Martin raised the crane and its ripper bars retracted. The split arms
+spewed a pair of cables terminating in magnalocks. The cables dangled
+over the ends of the autolitter, caught the lift plates on the litter
+and a second later, the cart was swinging beside the smashed window as
+Clay and Kelly eased the torn body of a woman out of the wreckage and
+onto the litter. As Ben brought the litter back to the pavement, the
+column of smoke had thickened. He disconnected the cables and homed
+the stretcher back to the patrol car. The hospital cart with its
+unconscious victim, rolled smoothly back to the car, up the ramp and
+into the dispensary to the surgical table.
+
+Martin climbed up the wreckage beside Kelly. Inside the twisted
+interior of the car, the thick smoke all but obscured the bent back of
+the younger trooper and his powerful handlight barely penetrated the
+gloom. Blood was smeared over almost every surface and the stink of
+leaking jet fuel was virtually overpowering. From the depths of the
+nightmarish scene came a tortured scream. Kelly reached into a
+coverall pocket and produced another sedation hypo. She squirmed
+around and started to slip down into the wreckage with Ferguson.
+Martin grabbed her arm. "No, Kelly, this thing's ready to blow. Come
+on, Clay, get out of there. Now!"
+
+Ferguson continued to pry at the twisted plates below him.
+
+"I said 'get out of there' Ferguson," the senior officer roared. "And
+that's an order."
+
+Clay straightened up and put his hands on the edge of the window to
+boost himself out. "Ben, there's a guy alive down there. We just can't
+leave him."
+
+"Get down from there, Kelly," Martin ordered. "I know that man's down
+there just as well as you do, Clay. But we won't be helping him one
+damn bit if we get blown to hell and gone right along with him. Now
+get outta there and maybe we can pull this thing apart and get to him
+before it does blow."
+
+The lanky Canadian eased out of the window and the two troopers moved
+back to the patrol car. Kelly was already in her dispensary, working
+on the injured woman.
+
+Martin slid into his control seat. "Shut your ramp, Kelly," he called
+over the intercom, "I'm going to move around to the other side."
+
+The radio broke in. "Car 119 to Car 56, we're just turning into the
+divider. Be there in a minute."
+
+"Snap it up," Ben replied. "We need you in a hurry."
+
+As he maneuvered Beulah around the wreckage he snapped orders to
+Ferguson.
+
+"Get the foam nozzles up, just in case, and then stand by on the
+crane."
+
+A mile away, they saw the flashing emergency lights of Car 119 as it
+raced diagonally across the yellow and blue lanes, whipping with
+ponderous ease through the moving traffic.
+
+"Take the south side, 119," Martin called out. "We'll try and pull
+this mess apart."
+
+"Affirmative," came the reply. Even before the other patrol vehicle
+came to a halt, its crane was swinging out from the side, and the
+ganged magnalocks were dangling from their cables.
+
+"O.K., kid," Ben ordered, "hook it."
+
+At the interior crane controls, Clay swung Beulah's crane and cable
+mags towards the wreckage. The magnalocks slammed into the metallic
+mess with a bang almost at the same instant the locks hit the other
+side from Car 119.
+
+Clay eased up the cable slack. "Good," Ben called to both Clay and the
+operating trooper in the other car, "now let's pull it ... LOOK OUT!
+FOAM ... FOAM ... FOAM," he yelled.
+
+The ugly, deep red fireball from the exploding wreckage was still
+growing as Clay slammed down on the fire-control panel. A curtain of
+thick chemical foam burst from the poised nozzles atop Beulah's hull
+and a split-second later, another stream of foam erupted from the
+other patrol car. The dense, oxygen-absorbing retardant blanket
+snuffed the fire out in three seconds. The cranes were still secured
+to the foam-covered heap of metal. "Never mind the caution," Ben
+called out, "get it apart. Fast."
+
+Both crane operators slammed their controls into reverse and with an
+ear-splitting screech, the twisted frames of the two vehicles ripped
+apart into tumbled heaps of broken metal and plastics. Martin and
+Ferguson jumped down the hatch steps and into ankle-deep foam and oil.
+They waded and slipped around the front of the car to join the
+troopers from the other car.
+
+Ferguson was pawing at the scum-covered foam near the mangled section
+of one of the cars. "He should be right about," Clay paused and bent
+over, "here." He straightened up as the others gathered around the
+scorched and ripped body of a man, half-submerged in the thick foam.
+"Kelly," he called over the helmet transmitter, "open your door. We'll
+need a couple of sacks."
+
+He trudged to the rear of the patrol car and met the girl standing in
+the door with a pair of folded plastic morgue bags in her hands.
+Behind her, Clay could see the body of the woman on the surgical
+table, an array of tubes and probes leading to plasma drip bottles and
+other equipment racked out over the table.
+
+"How is she?"
+
+"Not good," Kelly replied. "Skull fracture, ruptured spleen, broken
+ribs and double leg fractures. I've already called for an ambulance."
+
+Ferguson nodded, took the bags from her and waded back through the
+foam.
+
+The four troopers worked in the silence of the deserted traffic lane.
+A hundred yards away, traffic was moving steadily in the slow white
+lane. Three-quarters of a mile to the south, fast and ultra high
+traffic sped at its normal pace in the blue and yellow lanes.
+Westbound green was still being rerouted into the slower white lane,
+around the scene of the accident. It was now twenty-six minutes since
+Car 56 had received the accident call. The light snow flurries had
+turned to a steady fall of thick wet flakes, melting as they hit on
+the warm pavement but beginning to coat the pitiful flotsam of the
+accident.
+
+The troopers finished the gruesome task of getting the bodies into the
+morgue sacks and laid beside the dispensary ramp for the ambulance to
+pick up with the surviving victim. Car 119's MSO had joined Kelly in
+Beulah's dispensary to give what help she might. The four patrol
+troopers began the grim task of probing the scattered wreckage for
+other possible victims, personal possessions and identification. They
+were stacking a small pile of hand luggage when the long, low bulk of
+the ambulance swung out of the police lane and rolled to a stop.
+Longer than the patrol cars but without the non-medical emergency
+facilities, the ambulance was in reality a mobile hospital. A full,
+scrubbed-up surgical team was waiting in the main operating room even
+as the ramps opened and the techs headed for Car 56. The team had been
+briefed by radio on the condition of the patient; had read the full
+recordings of the diagnostician; and were watching transmitted pulse
+and respiration graphs on their own screens while the transfer was
+being made.
+
+The two women MSOs had unlocked the surgical table in Beulah's
+dispensary and a plastic tent covered not only the table and the
+patient, but also the plasma and Regen racks overhead. The entire
+table and rig slid down the ramp onto a motor-driven dolly from the
+ambulance. Without delay, it wheeled across the open few feet of
+pavement into the ambulance and to the surgery room. The techs locked
+the table into place in the other vehicle and left the surgery. From a
+storage compartment, they wheeled out a fresh patrol dispensary table
+and rack and placed it in Kelly's miniature surgery. The dead went
+into the morgue aboard the ambulance, the ramp closed and the
+ambulance swung around and headed across the traffic lanes to
+eastbound NAT-26 and Philadelphia.
+
+Outside, the four troopers had completed the task of collecting what
+little information they could from the smashed vehicles.
+
+They returned to their cars and One One Nine's medical-surgical
+officer headed back to her own cubby-hole.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The other patrol car swung into position almost touching Beulah's left
+flank. With Ben at the control seat, on command, both cars extended
+broad bulldozer blades from their bows. "Let's go," Ben ordered. The
+two patrol vehicles moved slowly down the roadway, pushing all of the
+scattered scraps and parts onto a single great heap. They backed off,
+shifted direction towards the center police lane and began shoving the
+debris, foam and snow out of the green lane. At the edge of the police
+lane, both cars unshipped cranes and magnalifted the junk over the
+divider barrier onto the one-hundred-foot-wide service strip bordering
+the police lane. A slow cargo wrecker was already on the way from
+Pittsburgh barracks to pick up the wreckage and haul it away. When the
+last of the metallic debris had been deposited off the traffic lane,
+Martin called Control.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"Car 56 is clear. NAT 26-west green is clear."
+
+Philly Control acknowledged. Seven miles to the east, the amber
+warning lights went dark and the detour barrier at Crossover 85 sank
+back into the roadway. Three minutes later, traffic was again flashing
+by on green lane past the two halted patrol cars.
+
+"Pitt Control, this is Car 119 clear of accident," the other car
+reported.
+
+"Car 119 resume eastbound patrol," came the reply.
+
+The other patrol car pulled away. The two troopers waved at Martin and
+Ferguson in Beulah. "See you later and thanks," Ben called out. He
+switched to intercom. "Kelly. Any ID on that woman?"
+
+"Not a thing, Ben," she replied. "About forty years old, and she had a
+wedding band. She never was conscious, so I can't help you."
+
+Ben nodded and looked over at his partner. "Go get into some dry
+clothes, kid," he said, "while I finish the report. Then you can take
+it for a while."
+
+Clay nodded and headed back to the crew quarters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ben racked his helmet beside his seat and fished out a cigarette. He
+reached for an accident report form from the work rack behind his seat
+and began writing, glancing up from time to time to gaze thoughtfully
+at the scene of the accident. When he had finished, he thumbed the
+radio transmitter and called Philly Control. Somewhere in the bloody,
+oil and foam covered pile of wreckage were the registration plates for
+the two vehicles involved. When the wrecker collected the debris, it
+would be machine sifted in Pittsburgh and the plates fed to records
+and then relayed to Philadelphia where the identifications could be
+added to Ben's report. When he had finished reading his report he
+asked, "How's the woman?"
+
+"Still alive, but just barely," Philly Control answered. "Ben, did you
+say there were just two vehicles involved?"
+
+"That's all we found," Martin replied.
+
+"And were they both in the green?"
+
+"Yes, why?"
+
+"That's funny," Philly controller replied, "we got the calls as a
+sideswipe in white that put one of the cars over into the green. There
+should have been a third vehicle."
+
+"That's right," Ben exclaimed. "We were so busy trying to get that gal
+out and then making the try for the other man I never even thought to
+look for another car. You suppose that guy took off?"
+
+"It's possible," the controller said. "I'm calling a gate filter until
+we know for sure. I've got the car number on the driver that reported
+the accident. I'll get hold of him and see if he can give us a lead on
+the third car. You go ahead with your patrol and I'll let you know
+what I find out."
+
+"Affirmative," Ben replied. He eased the patrol car onto the police
+lane and turned west once again. Clay reappeared in the cab, dressed
+in fresh coveralls. "I'll take it, Ben. You go and clean up now.
+Kelly's got a pot of fresh coffee in the galley." Ferguson slid into
+his control seat.
+
+A light skiff of snow covered the service strip and the dividers as
+Car 56 swung back westward in the red lane. Snow was falling steadily
+but melting as it touched the warm ferrophalt pavement in all lanes.
+The wet roadways glistened with the lights of hundreds of vehicles.
+The chronometer read 1840 hours. Clay pushed the car up to a steady
+75, just about apace with the slowest traffic in the white lane. To
+the south, densities were much lighter in the blue and yellow lanes
+and even the green had thinned out. It would stay moderately light now
+for another hour until the dinner stops were over and the night
+travelers again rolled onto the thruways.
+
+Kelly was putting frozen steaks into the infra-oven as Ben walked
+through to crew quarters. Her coverall sleeves were rolled to the
+elbows as she worked and a vagrant strand of copper hair curled over
+her forehead. As Martin passed by, he caught a faint whisper of
+perfume and he smiled appreciatively.
+
+In the tiny crew quarters, he shut the door to the galley and stripped
+out of his wet coveralls and boots. He eyed the shower stall across
+the passageway.
+
+"Hey, mother," he yelled to Kelly, "have I got time for a shower
+before dinner?"
+
+"Yes, but make it a quickie," she called back.
+
+Five minutes later he stepped into the galley, his dark, crew-cut hair
+still damp. Kelly was setting plastic, disposable dishes on the little
+swing-down table that doubled as a food bar and work desk. Ben peered
+into a simmering pot and sniffed. "Smells good. What's for dinner,
+Hiawatha?"
+
+"Nothing fancy. Steak, potatoes, green beans, apple pie and coffee."
+
+Ben's mouth watered. "You know, sometimes I wonder whether one of your
+ancestors didn't come out of New England. Your menus always seem to
+coincide with my ideas of a perfect meal." He noted the two places set
+at the table. Ben glanced out the galley port into the headlight-striped
+darkness. Traffic was still light. In the distance, the night sky glowed
+with the lights of Chambersburg, north of the thruway.
+
+"We might as well pull up for dinner," he said. "It's pretty slow out
+there."
+
+Kelly shoved dishes over and began laying out a third setting. About
+half the time on patrol, the crew ate in shifts on the go, with one of
+the patrol troopers in the cab at all times. When traffic permitted,
+they pulled off to the service strip and ate together. With the
+communications system always in service, control stations could reach
+them anywhere in the big vehicle.
+
+The sergeant stepped into the cab and tapped Ferguson on the shoulder.
+"Dinnertime, Clay. Pull her over and we'll try some of your gracious
+living."
+
+"Light the candles and pour the wine," Clay quipped, "I'll be with you
+in a second."
+
+Car 56 swung out to the edge of the police lane and slowed down. Clay
+eased the car onto the strip and stopped. He checked the radiodometer
+and called in. "Pitt Control, this is Car 56 at Marker 158. Dinner is
+being served in the dining car to the rear. Please do not disturb."
+
+"Affirmative, Car 56," Pittsburgh Control responded. "Eat heartily, it
+may be going out of style." Clay grinned and flipped the radio to
+remote and headed for the galley.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seated around the little table, the trio cut into their steaks. Parked
+at the north edge of the police lane, the patrol car was just a few
+feet from the green lane divider strip and cars and cargo carriers
+flashed by as they ate.
+
+Clay chewed on a sliver of steak and looked at Kelly. "I'd marry you,
+Pocahontas, if you'd ever learn to cook steaks like beef instead of
+curing them like your ancestral buffalo robes. When are you going to
+learn that good beef has to be bloody to be edible?"
+
+The girl glared at him. "If that's what it takes to make it edible,
+you're going to be an epicurean delight in just about one second if I
+hear another word about my cooking. And that's also the second crack
+about my noble ancestors in the past five minutes. I've always
+wondered about the surgical techniques my great-great-great grandpop
+used when he lifted a paleface's hair. One more word, Clay Ferguson,
+and I'll have your scalp flying from Beulah's antenna like a coontail
+on a kid's scooter."
+
+Ben bellowed and nearly choked. "Hey, kid," he spluttered at Clay,
+"ever notice how the wrong one of her ancestors keeps coming to the
+surface? That was the Irish."
+
+Clay polished off the last of his steak and reached for the individual
+frozen pies Kelly had put in the oven with the steaks. "Now that's
+another point," he said, waving his fork at Kelly. "The Irish lived so
+long on potatoes and prayers that when they get a piece of meat on
+their menu, they don't know how to do anything but boil it."
+
+"That tears it," the girl exploded. She pushed back from the table and
+stood up. "I've cooked the last meal this big, dumb Canuck will ever
+get from me. I hope you get chronic indigestion and then come crawling
+to me for help. I've got something back there I've been wanting to
+dose you with for a long time."
+
+She stormed out of the galley and slammed the door behind her. Ben
+grinned at the stunned look on Clay's face. "Now what got her on the
+warpath?" Clay asked. Before Ben could answer the radio speaker in the
+ceiling came to life.
+
+"Car 56 this is Pitt Control."
+
+Martin reached for the transmit switch beside the galley table. "This
+is Five Six, go ahead."
+
+"Relay from Philly Control," the speaker blared. "Reference the
+accident at Marker 92 at 1648 hours this date; Philly Control reports
+a third vehicle definitely involved."
+
+Ben pulled out a pencil and Clay shoved a message pad across the
+table.
+
+"James J. Newhall, address 3409 Glen Cove Drive, New York City,
+license number BHT 4591 dash 747 dash 1609, was witness to the initial
+impact. He reports that a white over green, late model Travelaire,
+with two men in it, sideswiped one of the two vehicles involved in the
+fatal accident. The Travelaire did not stop but accelerated after the
+impact. Newhall was unable to get the full license number but the
+first six units were QABR dash 46 ... rest of numerals unknown."
+
+Ben cut in. "Have we got identification on our fatalities yet?"
+
+"Affirmative, Five Six," the radio replied. "The driver of the car
+struck by the hit-and-run vehicle was a Herman Lawrence Hanover, age
+forty-two, of 13460 One Hundred Eighty-First Street South, Camden, New
+Jersey, license number LFM 4151 dash 603 dash 2738. With him was his
+wife, Clara, age forty-one, same address. Driver of the green lane car
+was George R. Hamilton, age thirty-five, address Box 493, Route 12,
+Tucumcari, New Mexico."
+
+Ben broke in once more. "You indicate all three are fatalities. Is
+this correct, Pitt Control? The woman was alive when she was
+transferred to the ambulance."
+
+"Stand by, Five Six, and I'll check."
+
+A moment later Pitt Control was back. "That is affirmative, Five Six.
+The woman died at 1745 hours. Here is additional information. A
+vehicle answering to the general description of the hit-and-run
+vehicle is believed to have been involved in an armed robbery and
+multiple murder earlier this date at Wilmington, Delaware. Philly
+Control is now checking for additional details. Gate filters have been
+established on NAT 26-West from Marker-Exit 100 to Marker-Exit 700.
+Also, filters on all interchanges. Pitt Control out."
+
+Kelly Lightfoot, her not-too-serious peeve forgotten, had come back
+into the galley to listen to the radio exchange. The men got up from
+the table and Clay gathered the disposable dishware and tossed them
+into the waste receiver.
+
+"We'd better get rolling," Ben said, "those clowns could still be on
+the thruway, although they could have got off before the filters went
+up."
+
+They moved to the cab and took their places. The big engines roared
+into action as Ben rolled Car 56 back onto the police-way. Kelly
+finished straightening up in the galley and then came forward to sit
+on the jump seat between the two troopers. The snow had stopped again
+but the roadways were still slick and glistening under the headlights.
+Beulah rolled steadily along on her broad tracks, now cruising at one
+hundred miles an hour. The steady whine of the cold night wind
+penetrated faintly into the sound-proofed and insulated cabin canopy.
+Clay cut out the cabin lights, leaving only the instrument panel
+glowing faintly along with the phosphorescent buttons and knobs on the
+arms of the control seats.
+
+A heavy express cargo carrier flashed by a quarter of a mile away in
+the blue lane, its big bulk lit up like a Christmas tree with running
+and warning lights. To their right, Clay caught the first glimpse of a
+set of flashing amber warning lights coming up from behind in the
+green lane. A minute later, a huge cargo carrier came abreast of the
+patrol car and then pulled ahead. On its side was a glowing star of
+the United States Army. A minute later, another Army carrier rolled
+by.
+
+"That's the missile convoy out of Aberdeen," Clay told Kelly. "I wish
+our hit-runner had tackled one of those babies. We'd have scraped him
+up instead of those other people."
+
+The convoy rolled on past at a steady one hundred twenty-five miles
+an hour. Car 56 flashed under a crossover and into a long, gentle
+curve. The chronometer clicked up to 2100 hours and the radio sang
+out. "Cars 207, 56 and 82, this is Pitt Control. 2100 hours density
+report follows...."
+
+Pittsburgh Control read off the figures for the three cars. Car 82 was
+one hundred fifty miles ahead of Beulah, Car 207 about the same
+distance to the rear. The density report ended and a new voice came on
+the air.
+
+"Attention all cars and all stations, this is Washington Criminal
+Control." The new voice paused, and across the continent, troopers on
+every thruway, control station, checkpoint and relay block, reached
+for clipboard and pen.
+
+"Washington Criminal Control continuing, all cars and all stations,
+special attention to all units east of the Mississippi. At 1510 hours
+this date, two men held up the First National Bank of Wilmington,
+Delaware, and escaped with an estimated one hundred seventy-five
+thousand dollars. A bank guard and two tellers, together with five
+bank customers were killed by these subjects using automatic weapon
+fire to make good their escape. They were observed leaving the scene
+in a late model, white-over-green Travelaire sedan, license unknown. A
+car of the same make, model and color was stolen from Annapolis,
+Maryland, a short time prior to the holdup. The stolen vehicle, now
+believed to be the getaway car, bears USN license number QABR dash 468
+dash 1113...."
+
+"That's our baby," Ben murmured as he and Clay scribbled, on their
+message forms.
+
+"... Motor number ZB 1069432," Washington Criminal Control continued.
+"This car is also now believed to have been involved in a hit-and-run
+fatal accident on NAT 26-West at Marker 92 at approximately 1648 hours
+this date.
+
+"Subject Number One is described as WMA, twenty to twenty-five years,
+five feet, eleven inches tall, medium complexion, dark hair and eyes,
+wearing a dark-gray sports jacket and dark pants, and wearing a gray
+sports cap. He was wearing a ring with a large red stone on his left
+hand.
+
+"Subject Number Two is described as WMA, twenty to twenty-five years,
+six feet, light, ruddy complexion and reddish brown hair, light
+colored eyes. Has scar on back left side of neck. Wearing light-brown
+suit, green shirt and dark tie, no hat.
+
+"These subjects are believed to be armed and psychotically dangerous.
+If observed, approach with extreme caution and inform nearest control
+of contact. Both subjects now under multiple federal warrants charging
+bank robbery, murder, and hit-and-run murder. All cars and stations
+acknowledge. Washington Criminal Control out."
+
+The air chattered as the cars checked into their nearest controls with
+"acknowledged."
+
+"This looks like it could be a long night," Kelly said, rising to her
+feet. "I'm going to sack out. Call me if you need me."
+
+"Good night, princess," Ben called.
+
+"Hey, Hiawatha," Clay called out as Kelly paused in the galley door.
+"I didn't mean what I said about your steaks. Your great-great-great
+grandpop would have gone around with his bare scalp hanging out if he
+had had to use a buffalo hide cured like that steak was cooked."
+
+He reached back at the same instant and slammed the cabin door just as
+Kelly came charging back. She slammed into the door, screamed and then
+went storming back to the dispensary while Clay doubled over in
+laughter.
+
+Ben smiled at his junior partner. "Boy, you're gonna regret that.
+Don't say I didn't warn you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Martin turned control over to the younger trooper and relaxed in his
+seat to go over the APB from Washington. Car 56 bored steadily through
+the night. The thruway climbed easily up the slight grade cut through
+the hills north of Wheeling, West Virginia, and once more snow began
+falling.
+
+Clay reached over and flipped on the video scanners. Four small
+screens, one for each of the westbound lanes, glowed with a soft red
+light. The monitors were synchronized with the radiometer and changed
+view at every ten-mile marker. Viewing cameras mounted on towers
+between each lane, lined the thruway, aimed eastward at the on-coming
+traffic back to the next bank of cameras ten miles away. Infra-red
+circuits took over from standard scan at dark. A selector system in
+the cars gave the troopers the option of viewing either the block they
+were currently patrolling; the one ahead of the next ten-mile block;
+or, the one they had just passed. As a rule, the selection was based
+on the speed of the car. Beamed signals from each block automatically
+switched the view as the patrol car went past the towers. Clay put the
+slower lane screens on the block they were in, turned the blue and
+yellow lanes to the block ahead.
+
+They rolled past the interchange with NAT 114-South out of Cleveland and
+the traffic densities picked up in all lanes as many of the southbound
+vehicles turned west on to NAT 26. The screens flicked and Clay came alert.
+Some fifteen miles ahead in the one-hundred-fifty-to-two-hundred-mile an
+hour blue lane, a glowing dot remained motionless in the middle of the lane
+and the other racing lights of the blue lane traffic were sheering around
+it like a racing river current parting around a boulder.
+
+"Trouble," he said to Martin, as he shoved forward on the throttle.
+
+A stalled car in the middle of the high-speed lane was an invitation
+to disaster. The bull horn blared as Beulah leaped past the two
+hundred mile an hour mark and safety cocoons slid into place. Aft in
+the dispensary, Kelly was sealed into her bunk by a cocoon rolling out
+of the wall and encasing the hospital bed.
+
+Car 5 slanted across the police lane with red lights flashing and edged
+into the traffic flow in the blue lane. The great, red winking lights
+and the emergency radio siren signal began clearing a path for the
+troopers. Vehicles began edging to both sides of the lane to shift to
+crossovers to the yellow or green lanes. Clay aimed Beulah at the
+motionless dot on the screen and eased back from the four-mile-a-minute
+speed. The patrol car slowed and the headlight picked up the stalled
+vehicle a mile ahead. The cocoons opened and Ben slipped on his work
+helmet and dropped down the steps to the side hatch. Clay brought Beulah
+to a halt a dozen yards directly to the rear of the stalled car, the
+great bulk of the patrol vehicle with its warning lights serving as a
+shield against any possible fuzzy-headed speeders that might not be
+observing the road.
+
+As Martin reached for the door, the Wanted bulletin flashed through
+his head. "What make of car is that, Clay?"
+
+"Old jalopy Tritan with some souped-up rigs. Probably kids," the
+junior officer replied. "It looks O.K."
+
+Ben nodded and swung down out of the patrol car. He walked quickly to
+the other car, flashing his handlight on the side of the vehicle as he
+went up to the driver. The interior lights were on and inside, two
+obviously frightened young couples smiled with relief at the sight of
+the uniform coveralls. A freckled-faced teenager in a dinner jacket
+was in the driver's seat and had the blister window open. He grinned
+up at Martin. "Boy, am I glad to see you, officer," he said.
+
+"What's the problem?" Ben asked.
+
+"I guess she blew an impeller," the youth answered. "We were heading
+for a school dance at Cincinnati and she was boiling along like she
+was in orbit when blooey she just quit."
+
+Ben surveyed the old jet sedan. "What year is this clunker?" he asked.
+The kid told him. "You kids have been told not to use this lane for
+any vehicle that old." He waved his hand in protest as the youngster
+started to tell him how many modifications he had made on the car. "It
+doesn't make one bit of difference whether you've put a first-stage
+Moon booster on this wreck. It's not supposed to be in the blue or
+yellow. And this thing probably shouldn't have been allowed out of the
+white--or even on the thruway."
+
+The youngster flushed and bit his lip in embarrassment at the giggles
+from the two evening-frocked girls in the car.
+
+"Well, let's get you out of here." Ben touched his throat mike. "Drop
+a light, Clay and then let's haul this junk pile away."
+
+In the patrol car, Ferguson reached down beside his seat and tugged at
+a lever. From a recess in Beulah's stern, a big portable red warning
+light dropped to the pavement. As it touched the surface, it
+automatically flashed to life, sending out a bright, flashing red
+warning signal into the face of any approaching traffic. Clay eased
+the patrol car around the stalled vehicle and then backed slow into
+position, guided by Martin's radioed instructions. A tow-bar extruded
+from the back of the police vehicle and a magnaclamp locked onto the
+front end of the teenager's car. The older officer walked back to the
+portable warning light and rolled it on its four wheels to the rear
+plate of the jalopy where another magnalock secured it to the car.
+Beulah's two big rear warning lights still shone above the low
+silhouette of the passenger car, along with the mobile lamp on the
+jalopy. Martin walked back to the patrol car and climbed in.
+
+He slid into his seat and nodded at Clay. The patrol car, with the
+disabled vehicle in tow moved forward and slanted left towards the
+police lane. Martin noted the mileage marker on the radiodometer and
+fingered the transmitter. "Chillicothe Control this is Car 56."
+
+"This Chillicothe. Go ahead Five Six."
+
+"We picked up some kids in a stalled heap on the blue at Marker 382
+and we've got them in tow now," Ben said. "Have a wrecker meet us and
+take them off our hands."
+
+"Affirmative, Five Six. Wrecker will pick you up at Marker 412."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Clay headed the patrol car and its trailed load into an emergency
+entrance to the middle police lane and slowly rolled westward. The
+senior trooper reached into his records rack and pulled out a citation
+book.
+
+"You going to nail these kids?" Clay asked.
+
+"You're damn right I am," Martin replied, beginning to fill in the
+violation report. "I'd rather have this kid hurting in the pocketbook
+than dead. If we turn him loose, he'll think he got away with it this
+time and try it again. The next time he might not be so lucky."
+
+"I suppose you're right," Clay said, "but it does seem a little
+rough."
+
+Ben swung around in his seat and surveyed his junior officer.
+"Sometimes I think you spent four years in the patrol academy with
+your head up your jet pipes," he said. He fished out another cigarette
+and took a deep drag.
+
+"You've had four solid years of law; three years of electronics and
+jet and air-drive engine mechanics and engineering; pre-med,
+psychology, math, English, Spanish and a smattering of Portuguese, to
+say nothing of dozens of other subjects. You graduated in the upper
+tenth of your class with a B.S. in both Transportation and Criminology
+which is why you're riding patrol and not punching a computer or
+tinkering with an engine. You'd think with all that education that
+somewhere along the line you'd have learned to think with your head
+instead of your emotions."
+
+Clay kept a studied watch on the roadway. The minute Ben had turned
+and swung his legs over the side of the seat and pulled out a
+cigarette, Clay knew that it was school time in Car 56. Instructor
+Sergeant Ben Martin was in a lecturing mood. It was time for all good
+pupils to keep their big, fat mouths shut.
+
+"Remember San Francisco de Borja?" Ben queried. Clay nodded. "And you
+still think I'm too rough on them?" Ben pressed.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Ferguson's memory went back to last year's fifth patrol. He and Ben
+with Kelly riding hospital, had been assigned to NAT 200-North,
+running out of Villahermosa on the Guatemalan border of Mexico to
+Edmonton Barracks in Canada. It was the second night of the patrol.
+Some seven hundred fifty miles north of Mexico City, near the town of
+San Francisco de Borja, a gang of teenage Mexican youngsters had gone
+roaring up the yellow at speeds touching on four hundred miles an
+hour. Their car, a beat-up, fifteen-year-old veteran of less speedy
+and much rockier local mountain roads, had been gimmicked by the kids
+so that it bore no resemblance to its original manufacture.
+
+From a junkyard they had obtained a battered air lift, smashed almost
+beyond use in the crackup of a ten-thousand dollar sports cruiser. The
+kids pried, pounded and bent the twisted impeller lift blades back
+into some semblance of alignment. From another wreck of a cargo
+carrier came a pair of 4000-pound thrust engines. They had jury-rigged
+the entire mess so that it stuck together on the old heap. Then they
+hit the thruway--nine of them packed into the jalopy--the oldest one
+just seventeen years old. They were doing three hundred fifty when
+they flashed past the patrol car and Ben had roared off in pursuit.
+The senior officer whipped the big patrol car across the crowded high
+speed blue lane, jockeyed into the ultra-high yellow and then turned
+on the power.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+By this time the kids realized they had been spotted and they cranked
+their makeshift power plant up to the last notch. The most they could
+get out of it was four hundred and it was doing just that as Car 56,
+clocking better than five hundred, pulled in behind them. The patrol
+car was still three hundred yards astern when one of the bent and
+re-bent impeller blades let go. The out-of-balance fan, turning at
+close to 35,000 rpm, flew to pieces and the air cushion vanished. At
+four hundred miles an hour, the body of the old jalopy fell the twelve
+inches to the pavement and both front wheels caved under. There was a
+momentary shower of sparks, then the entire vehicle snapped
+cartwheeling more than eighty feet into the air and exploded. Pieces
+of car and bodies were scattered for a mile down the thruway and the
+only whole, identifiable human bodies were those of the three
+youngsters thrown out and sent hurtling to their deaths more than two
+hundred feet away.
+
+Clay's mind snapped back to the present.
+
+"Write 'em up," he said quietly to Martin. The senior officer gave a
+Satisfied nod and turned back to his citation pad.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At marker 412, which was also the Columbus turnoff, a big patrol
+wrecker was parked on the side strip, engines idling, service and
+warning lights blinking. Clay pulled the patrol car alongside and
+stopped. He disconnected the tow bar and the two officers climbed out
+into the cold night air. They walked back to the teenager's car. Clay
+went to the rear of the disabled car and unhooked the warning light
+while Martin went to the driver's window. He had his citation book in
+hand. The youngster in the driver's seat went white at the sight of
+the violation pad. "May I see your license, please," Ben asked. The
+boy fumbled in a back pocket and then produced a thin, metallic tab
+with his name, age, address and license number etched into the
+indestructible and unalterable metal.
+
+"Also your car registration," Ben added. The youth unclipped similar
+metal strip from the dashboard.
+
+The trooper took the two tabs and walked to the rear of the patrol
+car. He slid back a panel to reveal two thin slots in the hull. Martin
+slid the driver's license into one of the slots, the registration tab
+into the other. He pressed a button below each slot. Inside the car, a
+magnetic reader and auto-transmitter "scanned" the magnetic symbols
+implanted in the tags. The information was fed instantly to
+Continental Headquarters Records division at Colorado Springs. In
+fractions of a second, the great computers at Records were comparing
+the information on the tags with all previous traffic citations issued
+anywhere in the North American continent in the past forty-five years
+since the birth of the Patrol. The information from the driver's
+license and registration tab had been relayed from Beulah via the
+nearest patrol relay point. The answer came back the same way.
+
+Above the license recording slot were two small lights. The first
+flashed green, "license is in order and valid." The second flashed
+green as well, "no previous citations." Ben withdrew the tag from the
+slot. Had the first light come on red, he would have placed the driver
+under arrest immediately. Had the second light turned amber, it would
+have indicated a previous minor violation. This, Ben would have noted
+on the new citation. If the second light had been red, this would have
+meant either a major previous violation or more than one minor
+citation. Again, the driver would have been under immediate arrest.
+The law was mandatory. One big strike and you're out--two foul tips
+and the same story. And "out" meant just that. Fines, possibly jail or
+prison sentence and lifetime revocation of driving privileges.
+
+Ben flipped the car registration slot to "stand-by" and went back to
+the teenager's car. Even though they were parked on the service strip
+of the police emergency lane, out of all traffic, the youngsters
+stayed in the car. This one point of the law they knew and knew well.
+Survival chances were dim anytime something went wrong on the
+high-speed thruways. That little margin of luck vanished once outside
+the not-too-much-better security of the vehicle body.
+
+Martin finished writing and then slipped the driver's license into a
+pocket worked into the back of the metallic paper foil of the citation
+blank. He handed the pad into the window to the driver together with a
+carbon stylus.
+
+The boy's lip trembled and he signed the citation with a shaky hand.
+
+Ben ripped off the citation blank and license, fed them into the slot
+on the patrol car and pressed both the car registration and license
+"record" buttons. Ten seconds later the permanent record of the
+citation was on file in Colorado Springs and a duplicate recording of
+the action was in the Continental traffic court docket recorder
+nearest to the driver's hometown. Now, no power in three nations could
+"fix" that ticket. Ben withdrew the citation and registration tag and
+walked back to the car. He handed the boy the license and registration
+tab, together with a copy of the citation. Ben bent down to peer into
+the car.
+
+"I made it as light on you as I could," he told the young driver.
+"You're charged with improper use of the thruway. That's a minor
+violation. By rights, I should have cited you for illegal usage." He
+looked around slowly at each of the young people. "You look like nice
+kids," he said. "I think you'll grow up to be nice people. I want you
+around long enough to be able to vote in a few years. Who knows, maybe
+I'll be running for president then and I'll need your votes. It's a
+cinch that falling apart in the middle of two-hundred-mile an hour
+traffic is no way to treat future voters.
+
+"Good night, Kids." He smiled and walked away from the car. The three
+young passengers smiled back at Ben. The young driver just stared
+unhappily at the citation.
+
+Clay stood talking with the wrecker crewmen. Ben nodded to him and
+mounted into the patrol car. The young Canadian crushed out his
+cigarette and swung up behind the sergeant. Clay went to the control
+seat when he saw Martin pause in the door to the galley.
+
+"I'm going to get a cup of coffee," the older officer said, "and then
+take the first shift. You keep Beulah 'til I get back."
+
+Clay nodded and pushed the throttles forward. Car 56 rolled back into
+the police lane while behind it, the wrecker hooked onto the disabled
+car and swung north into the crossover. Clay checked both the
+chronometer and radiodometer and then reported in. "Cinncy Control
+this is Car 56 back in service." Cincinnati Control acknowledged.
+
+Ten minutes later, Ben reappeared in the cab, slid into the left-hand
+seat. "Hit the sack, kid," he told Ferguson. The chronometer read
+2204. "I'll wake you at midnight--or sooner, if anything breaks."
+
+Ferguson stood up and stretched, then went into the galley. He poured
+himself a cup of coffee and carrying it with him, went back to the
+crew quarters. He closed the door to the galley and sat down on the
+lower bunk to sip his coffee. When he had finished, he tossed the cup
+into the basket, reached and dimmed the cubby lights and kicked off
+his boots. Still in his coveralls, Clay stretched out on the bunk and
+sighed luxuriously. He reached up and pressed a switch on the bulkhead
+above his pillow and the muted sounds of music from a standard
+broadcast commercial station drifted into the bunk area. Clay closed
+his eyes and let the sounds of the music and the muted rumble of the
+engines lull him to sleep. It took almost fifteen seconds for him to
+be in deep slumber.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ben pushed Beulah up to her steady seventy-five-mile-an-hour cruising
+speed, moved to the center of the quarter-mile-wide police lane and
+locked her tracks into autodrive. He relaxed back in his seat and
+divided his gaze between the video monitors and the actual scene on
+either side of him in the night. Once again the sky was lighted, this
+time much brighter on the horizon as the road ways swept to the south
+of Cincinnati.
+
+Traffic was once again heavy and fast with the blue and green carrying
+almost equal loads while white was really crowded and even the yellow
+"zoom" lane was beginning to fill. The 2200 hour density reports from
+Cinncy had been given before the Ohio State-Cal football game traffic
+had hit the thruways and densities now were peaking near twenty
+thousand vehicles for the one-hundred-mile block of westbound NAT 26
+out of Cincinnati.
+
+Back to the east, near the eastern Ohio state line, Martin could hear
+Car 207 calling for a wrecker and meat wagon. Beulah rumbled on
+through the night. The video monitors flicked to the next ten-mile
+stretch as the patrol car rolled past another interchange. More
+vehicles streamed onto the westbound thruway, crossing over and
+dropping down into the same lanes they held coming out of the
+north-south road. Seven years on patrols had created automatic
+reflexes in the trooper sergeant. Out of the mass of cars and cargoes
+streaming along the rushing tide of traffic, his eye picked out the
+track of one vehicle slanting across the white lane just a shade
+faster than the flow of traffic. The vehicle was still four or five
+miles ahead. It wasn't enough out of the ordinary to cause more than a
+second, almost unconscious glance, on the part of the veteran officer.
+He kept his view shifting from screen to screen and out to the sides
+of the car.
+
+But the reflexes took hold again as his eye caught the track of the
+same vehicle as it hit the crossover from white to green, squeezed
+into the faster lane and continued its sloping run towards the next
+faster crossover. Now Martin followed the movement of the car almost
+constantly. The moving blip had made the cut-over across the half-mile
+wide green lane in the span of one crossover and was now whipping into
+the merger lane that would take it over the top of the police lane
+and drop down into the one hundred fifty to two hundred mile an hour
+blue. If the object of his scrutiny straightened out in the blue, he'd
+let it go. The driver had been bordered on violation in his fast
+crossover in the face of heavy traffic. If he kept it up in the
+now-crowded high-speed lane, he was asking for sudden death. The
+monitors flicked to the next block and Ben waited just long enough to
+see the speeding car make a move to the left, cutting in front of a
+speeding cargo carrier. Ben slammed Beulah into high. Once again the
+bull horn blared as the cocoons slammed shut, this time locking both
+Clay and Kelly into their bunks, sealing Ben into the control seat.
+
+Beulah lifted on her air cushion and the twin jets roared as she
+accelerated down the police lane at three hundred miles an hour. Ben
+closed the gap on the speeder in less than a minute and then edged
+over to the south side of the police lane to make the jump into the
+blue lane. The red emergency lights and the radio siren had already
+cleared a hole for him in the traffic pattern and he eased back on the
+finger throttles as the patrol car sailed over the divider and into
+the blue traffic lane. Now he had eyeball contact with the speeding
+car, still edging over towards the ultra-high lane. On either side of
+the patrol car traffic gave way, falling back or moving to the left
+and right. Car 56 was now directly behind the speeding passenger
+vehicle. Ben fingered the cut-in switch that put his voice signal onto
+the standard vehicular emergency frequency--the band that carried the
+automatic siren-warning to all vehicles.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The patrol car was still hitting above the two-hundred-mile-an-hour
+mark and was five hundred feet behind the speeder. The headlamp bathed
+the other car in a white glare, punctuated with angry red flashes from
+the emergency lights.
+
+"You are directed to halt or be fired upon," Ben's voice roared out
+over the emergency frequency. Almost without warning, the speeding car
+began braking down with such deceleration that the gargantuan patrol
+car with its greater mass came close to smashing over it and crushing
+the small passenger vehicle like an insect. Ben cut all forward power,
+punched up full retrojet and at the instant he felt Beulah's tracks
+touch the pavement as the air cushion blew, he slammed on the brakes.
+Only the safety cocoon kept Martin from being hurled against the
+instrument panel and in their bunks, Kelly Lightfoot and Clay Ferguson
+felt their insides dragging down into their legs.
+
+The safety cocoons snapped open and Clay jumped into his boots and
+leaped for the cab. "Speeder," Ben snapped as he jumped down the steps
+to the side hatch. Ferguson snatched up his helmet from the rack
+beside his seat and leaped down to join his partner. Ben ran up to the
+stopped car through a thick haze of smoke from the retrojets of the
+patrol car and the friction-burning braking of both vehicles.
+Ferguson circled to the other side of the car. As they flashed their
+handlights into the car, they saw the driver of the car kneeling on
+the floor beside the reclined passenger seat. A woman lay stretched
+out on the seat, twisting in pain. The man raised an agonized face to
+the officers. "My wife's going to have her baby right here!"
+
+"Kelly," Ben yelled into his helmet transmitter. "Maternity!"
+
+The dispensary ramp was halfway down before Ben had finished calling.
+Kelly jumped to the ground and sprinted around the corner of the
+patrol car, medical bag in hand.
+
+She shoved Clay out of the way and opened the door on the passenger
+side. On the seat, the woman moaned and then muffled a scream. The
+patrol doctor laid her palm on the distended belly. "How fast are your
+pains coming?" she asked. Clay and Ben had moved away from the car a
+few feet.
+
+"Litter," Kelly snapped over her shoulder. Clay raced for the patrol
+car while Ben unshipped a portable warning light and rolled it down
+the lane behind the patrol car. He flipped it to amber "caution" and
+"pass." Blinking amber arrows pointed to the left and right of the
+halted passenger vehicle and traffic in the blue lane began picking up
+speed and parting around the obstructions.
+
+By the time he returned to the patrol car, Kelly had the expectant
+mother in the dispensary. She slammed the door in the faces of the
+three men and then she went to work.
+
+The woman's husband slumped against the side of the patrol vehicle.
+
+Ben dug out his pack of cigarettes and handed one to the shaking
+driver.
+
+He waited until the man had taken a few drags before speaking.
+
+"Mister, I don't know if you realize it or not but you came close to
+killing your wife, your baby and yourself," Ben said softly, "to say
+nothing of the possibility of killing several other families. Just
+what did you think you were doing?"
+
+The driver's shoulders sagged and his hand shook as he took the
+cigarette from his mouth. "Honestly, officer, I don't know. I just got
+frightened to death," he said. He peered up at Martin. "This is our
+first baby, you see, and Ellen wasn't due for another week. We thought
+it would be all right to visit my folks in Cleveland and Ellen was
+feeling just fine. Well, anyway, we started home tonight--we live in
+Jefferson City--and just about the time I got on the thruway, Ellen
+started having pains. I was never so scared in my life. She screamed
+once and then tried to muffle them but I knew what was happening and
+all I could think of was to get her to a hospital. I guess I went out
+of my head, what with her moaning and the traffic and everything. The
+only place I could think of that had a hospital was Evansville, and I
+was going to get her there come hell or high water." The young man
+tossed away the half-smoked cigarette and looked up at the closed
+dispensary door. "Do you think she's all right?"
+
+Ben sighed resignedly and put his hand on the man's shoulder. "Don't
+you worry a bit. She's got one of the best doctors in the continent in
+there with her. Come on." He took the husband by the arm and led him
+around to the patrol car cab hatch. "You climb up there and sit down.
+I'll be with you in a second."
+
+The senior officer signaled to Ferguson. "Let's get his car out of the
+traffic, Clay," he directed. "You drive it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ben went back and retrieved the caution blinker and re-racked it in
+the side of the patrol car, then climbed up into the cab. He took his
+seat at the controls and indicated the jump seat next to him. "Sit
+down, son. We're going to get us and your car out of this mess before
+we all get clobbered."
+
+He flicked the headlamp at Ferguson in the control seat of the
+passenger car and the two vehicles moved out. Ben kept the emergency
+lights on while they eased carefully cross-stream to the north and the
+safety of the police lane. Clay picked up speed at the outer edge of
+the blue lane and rolled along until he reached the first "patrol
+only" entrance through the divider to the service strip. Ben followed
+him in and then turned off the red blinkers and brought the patrol car
+to a halt behind the other vehicle.
+
+The worried husband stood up and looked to the rear of the car.
+"What's making it so long?" he asked anxiously. "They've been in there
+a long time."
+
+Ben smiled. "Sit down, son. These things take time. Don't you worry.
+If there were anything wrong, Kelly would let us know. She can talk to
+us on the intercom anytime she wants anything."
+
+The man sat back down. "What's your name?" Ben inquired.
+
+"Haverstraw," the husband replied distractedly, "George Haverstraw.
+I'm an accountant. That's my wife back there," he cried, pointing to
+the closed galley door. "That's Ellen."
+
+"I know," Ben said gently. "You told us that."
+
+Clay had come back to the patrol car and dropped into his seat across
+from the young husband. "Got a name picked out for the baby?" he
+asked.
+
+Haverstraw's face lighted. "Oh, yes," he exclaimed. "If it's a boy,
+we're going to call him Harmon Pierce Haverstraw. That was my
+grandfather's name. And if she's a girl, it's going to be Caroline May
+after Ellen's mother and grandmother."
+
+The intercom came to life. "Anyone up there?" Kelly's voice asked.
+Before they could answer, the wail of a baby sounded over the system.
+Haverstraw yelled.
+
+"Congratulations, Mr. Haverstraw," Kelly said, "you've got a
+fine-looking son."
+
+"Hey," the happy young father yelped, "hey, how about that? I've got a
+son." He pounded the two grinning troopers on the back. Suddenly he
+froze. "What about Ellen? How's Ellen?" he called out.
+
+"She's just fine," Kelly replied. "We'll let you in here in a couple
+of minutes but we've got to get us gals and your new son looking
+pretty for papa. Just relax."
+
+Haverstraw sank down onto the jump seat with a happy dazed look on his
+face.
+
+Ben smiled and reached for the radio. "I guess our newest citizen
+deserves a ride in style," he said. "We're going to have to transfer
+Mrs. Haverstraw and er, oh yes, Master Harmon Pierce to an ambulance
+and then to a hospital now, George. You have any preference on where
+they go?"
+
+"Gosh, no," the man replied. "I guess the closest one to wherever we
+are." He paused thoughtfully. "Just where are we? I've lost all sense
+of distance or time or anything else."
+
+Ben looked at the radiodometer. "We're just about due south of
+Indianapolis. How would that be?"
+
+"Oh, that's fine," Haverstraw replied.
+
+"You can come back now, Mr. Haverstraw," Kelly called out. Haverstraw
+jumped up. Clay got up with him. "Come on, papa," he grinned, "I'll
+show you the way."
+
+Ben smiled and then called into Indianapolis Control for an ambulance.
+
+"Ambulance on the way," Control replied. "Don't you need a wrecker,
+too, Five Six?"
+
+Ben grinned. "Not this time. We didn't lose one. We gained one."
+
+He got up and went back to have a look at Harmon Pierce Haverstraw,
+age five minutes, temporary address, North American Continental
+Thruway 26-West, Mile Marker 632.
+
+Fifteen minutes later, mother and baby were in the ambulance heading
+north to the hospital. Haverstraw, calmed down with a sedative
+administered by Kelly, had nearly wrung their hands off in gratitude
+as he said good-by.
+
+"I'll mail you all cigars when I get home," he shouted as he waved and
+climbed into his car.
+
+Beulah's trio watched the new father ease carefully into the traffic
+as the ambulance headed down the police-way. Haverstraw would have to
+cut over to the next exchange and then go north to Indianapolis. He'd
+arrive later than his family. This time, he was the very picture of
+careful driving and caution as he threaded his way across the green.
+
+"I wonder if he knows what brand of cigars I smoke?" Kelly mused.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The chrono clicked up to 2335 as Car 56 resumed patrol. Kelly plumped
+down onto the jump seat beside Ben. Clay was fiddling in the galley.
+"Why don't you go back to the sack?" Ben called.
+
+"What, for a lousy twenty-five minutes," Clay replied. "I had a good
+nap before you turned the burners up to high. Besides, I'm hungry.
+Anyone else want a snack?"
+
+Ben shook his head. "No, thanks," Kelly said. Ferguson finished
+slapping together a sandwich. Munching on it, he headed into the
+engine room to make the midnight check. Car 56 had now been on patrol
+eight hours. Only two hundred thirty-two hours and two thousand miles
+to go.
+
+Kelly looked around at the departing back of the younger trooper.
+"I'll bet this is the only car in NorCon that has to stock twenty days
+of groceries for a ten-day patrol," she said.
+
+Ben chuckled. "He's still a growing boy."
+
+"Well, if he is, it's all between the ears," the girl replied. "You'd
+think that after a year I would have realized that nothing could
+penetrate that thick Canuck's skull. He gets me so mad sometimes that
+I want to forget I'm a lady." She paused thoughtfully. "Come to think
+of it. No one ever accused me of being a lady in the first place."
+
+"Sounds like love," Ben smiled.
+
+Hunched over on the jump seat with her elbows on her knees and her
+chin cupped in both hands, Kelly gave the senior officer a quizzical
+sideways look.
+
+Ben was watching his monitors and missed the glance. Kelly sighed and
+stared out into the light streaked night of the thruway. The heavy
+surge of football traffic had distributed itself into the general flow
+on the road and while all lanes were busy, there were no indications
+of any overcrowding or jam-ups. Much of the pattern was shifting from
+passenger to cargo vehicle as it neared midnight. The football crowds
+were filtering off at each exchange and exit and the California fans
+had worked into the blue and yellow--mostly the yellow--for the long
+trip home. The fewer passenger cars on the thruway and the increase in
+cargo carriers gave the troopers a breathing spell. The men in the
+control buckets of the three hundred and four hundred-ton cargo
+vehicles were the real pro's of the thruways; careful, courteous and
+fast. The NorCon patrol cars could settle down to watch out for the
+occasional nuts and drunks that might bring disaster.
+
+Once again, Martin had the patrol car on auto drive in the center of
+the police lane and he steeled back in his seat. Beside him, Kelly
+stared moodily into the night.
+
+"How come you've never married, Ben?" she asked. The senior trooper
+gave her a startled look. "Why, I guess for the same reason you're
+still a maiden," he answered. "This just doesn't seem to be the right
+kind of a job for a married man."
+
+Kelly shook her head. "No, it's not the same thing with me," she said.
+"At least, not entirely the same thing. If I got married, I'd have to
+quit the Patrol and you wouldn't. And secondly, if you must know the
+truth, I've never been asked."
+
+Ben looked thoughtfully at the copper-haired Irish-Indian girl. All of
+a sudden she seemed to have changed in his eyes. He shook his head and
+turned back to the road monitors.
+
+"I just don't think that a patrol trooper has any business getting
+married and trying to keep a marriage happy and make a home for a
+family thirty days out of every three hundred sixty, with an
+occasional weekend home if you're lucky enough to draw your hometown
+for a terminal point. This might help the population rate but it
+sure doesn't do anything for the institution of matrimony."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"I know some troopers that are married," Kelly said.
+
+"But there aren't very many," Ben countered. "Comes the time they pull
+me off the cars and stick me behind a desk somewhere, then I'll think
+about it."
+
+"You might be too old by then," Kelly murmured.
+
+Ben grinned. "You sound as though you're worried about it," he said.
+
+"No," Kelly replied softly, "no, I'm not worried about it. Just
+thinking." She averted her eyes and looked out into the night again.
+"I wonder what NorCon would do with a husband-wife team?" she
+murmured, almost to herself.
+
+Ben looked sharply at her and frowned. "Why, they'd probably split
+them up," he said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Split what up?" Clay inquired, standing in the door of the cab.
+
+"Split up all troopers named Clay Ferguson," Kelly said disgustedly,
+"and use them for firewood--especially the heads. They say that
+hardwood burns long and leaves a fine ash. And that's what you've been
+for years."
+
+She sat erect in the jump seat and looked sourly at the young trooper.
+
+Clay shuddered at the pun and squeezed by the girl to get to his seat.
+"I'll take it now, pop," he said. "Go get your geriatrics treatment."
+
+Ben got out of his seat with a snort. "I'll 'pop' you, skinhead," he
+snapped. "You may be eight years younger than I am but you only have
+one third the virility and one tenth the brains. And eight years from
+now you'll still be in deficit spending on both counts."
+
+"Careful, venerable lord of my destiny," Clay admonished with a grin,
+"remember how I spent my vacation and remember how you spent yours
+before you go making unsubstantiated statements about my virility."
+
+Kelly stood up. "If you two will excuse me, I'll go back to the
+dispensary and take a good jolt of male hormones and then we can come
+back and finish this man-to-man talk in good locker room company."
+
+"Don't you dare," Ben cried, "I wouldn't let you tamper with one
+single, tiny one of your feminine traits, princess. I like you just
+the way you are."
+
+Kelly looked at him with a wide-eyed, cherubic smile. "You really mean
+that, Ben?"
+
+The older trooper flushed briefly and then turned quickly into the
+galley. "I'm going to try for some shut-eye. Wake me at two, Clay, if
+nothing else breaks." He turned to Kelly who still was smiling at him.
+"And watch out for that lascivious young goat."
+
+"It's all just talk, talk, talk," she said scornful. "You go to bed
+Ben. I'm going to try something new in psychiatric annals. I'm going
+to try and psychoanalyze a dummy." She sat back down on the jump seat.
+
+At 2400 hours it was Vincennes Check with the density reports, all
+down in the past hour. The patrol was settling into what looked like a
+quiet night routine. Kelly chatted with Ferguson for another half hour
+and then rose again. "I think I'll try to get some sleep," she said.
+"I'll put on a fresh pot of coffee for you two before I turn in."
+
+She rattled around in the galley for some time. "Whatcha cooking?"
+Clay called out. "Making coffee," Kelly replied.
+
+"It take all that time to make coffee?" Clay queried.
+
+"No," she said. "I'm also getting a few things ready so we can have a
+fast breakfast in case we have to eat on the run. I'm just about
+through now."
+
+A couple of minutes later she stuck her head into the cab. "Coffee's
+done. Want some?"
+
+Clay nodded. "Please, princess."
+
+She poured him a cup and set it in the rack beside his seat.
+
+"Thanks," Clay said. "Good night, Hiawatha."
+
+"Good night, Babe," she replied.
+
+"You mean 'Paul Bunyon,' don't you?" Clay asked. "'Babe' was his blue
+ox."
+
+"I know what I said," Kelly retorted and strolled back to the
+dispensary. As she passed through the crew cubby, she glanced at Ben
+sleeping on the bunk recently vacated by Ferguson. She paused and
+carefully and gently pulled a blanket up over his sleeping form. She
+smiled down at the trooper and then went softly to her compartment.
+
+In the cab, Clay sipped at his coffee and kept watchful eyes on the
+video monitors. Beulah was back on auto drive and Clay had dropped her
+speed to a slow fifty as the traffic thinned.
+
+At 0200 hours he left the cab long enough to go back and shake Ben
+awake and was himself re-awakened at 0400 to take back control. He let
+Ben sleep an extra hour before routing him out of the bunk again at
+0700. The thin, gray light of the winter morning was just taking hold
+when Ben came back into the cab. Clay had pulled Beulah off to the
+service strip and was stopped while he finished transcribing his
+scribbled notes from the 0700 Washington Criminal Control broadcast.
+
+Ben ran his hand sleepily over his close-cropped head. "Anything
+exciting?" he asked with a yawn. Clay shook his head. "Same old thing.
+'All cars exercise special vigilance over illegal crossovers. Keep all
+lanes within legal speed limits.' Same old noise."
+
+"Anything new on our hit-runner?"
+
+"Nope."
+
+"Good morning, knights of the open road," Kelly said from the galley
+door. "Obviously you both went to sleep after I left and allowed our
+helpless citizens to slaughter each other."
+
+"How do you figure that one?" Ben laughed.
+
+"Oh, it's very simple," she replied. "I managed to get in a full seven
+hours of sleep. When you sleep, I sleep. I slept. Ergo, you did
+likewise."
+
+"Nope," Clay said, "for once we had a really quiet night. Let's hope
+the day is of like disposition."
+
+Kelly began laying out the breakfast things. "You guys want eggs this
+morning?"
+
+"You gonna cook again today?" Clay inquired.
+
+"Only breakfast," Kelly said. "You have the honors for the rest of the
+day. The diner is now open and we're taking orders."
+
+"I'll have mine over easy," Ben said. "Make mine sunny-up," Clay
+called.
+
+Kelly began breaking eggs into the pan, muttering to herself. "Over
+easy, sunny-up, I like 'em scrambled. Next tour I take I'm going to
+get on a team where everyone likes scrambled eggs."
+
+A few minutes later, Beulah's crew sat down to breakfast. Ben had just
+dipped into his egg yolk when the radio blared. "Attention all cars.
+Special attention Cars 207, 56 and 82."
+
+"Just once," Ben said, "just once, I want to sit down to a meal and
+get it all down my gullet before that radio gives me indigestion." He
+laid down his fork and reached for the message pad.
+
+The radio broadcast continued. "A late model, white over green
+Travelaire, containing two men and believed to be the subjects wanted
+in earlier broadcast on murder, robbery and hit-run murder, was
+involved in a service station robbery and murder at Vandalia,
+Illinois, at approximately 0710 this date. NorCon Criminal Division
+believes this subject car escaped filter check and left NAT 26-West
+sometime during the night.
+
+"Owner of this stolen vehicle states it had only half tanks of fuel at
+the time it was taken. This would indicate wanted subjects stopped for
+fuel. It is further believed they were recognized by the station
+attendant from video bulletins sent out by this department last date
+and that he was shot and killed to prevent giving alarm.
+
+"The shots alerted residents of the area and the subject car was last
+seen headed south. This vehicle may attempt to regain access to
+NAT-26-West or it may take another thruway. All units are warned once
+again to approach this vehicle with extreme caution and only with the
+assistance of another unit where possible. Acknowledge. Washington
+Criminal Control out."
+
+Ben looked at the chrono. "They hit Vandalia at 0710, eh. Even in the
+yellow they couldn't get this far for another half hour. Let's finish
+breakfast. It may be a long time until lunch."
+
+The crew returned to their meal. While Kelly was cleaning up after
+breakfast, Clay ran the quick morning engine room check. In the cab,
+Ben opened the arms rack and brought out two machine pistols and
+belts. He checked them for loads and laid one on Clay's control seat.
+He strapped the other around his waist. Then he flipped up a cover in
+the front panel of the cab. It exposed the breech mechanisms of a
+pair of twin-mounted 25 mm auto-cannon. The ammunition loads were
+full. Satisfied, Ben shut the inspection port and climbed into his
+seat. Clay came forward, saw the machine pistol on his seat and
+strapped it on without a word. He settled himself in his seat. "Engine
+room check is all green. Let's go rabbit hunting."
+
+Car 56 moved slowly out into the police lane. Both troopers had their
+individual sets of video monitors on in front of their seats and were
+watching them intently. In the growing light of day, a white-topped
+car was going to be easy to spot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It had all the earmarks of being another wintery, overcast day. The
+outside temperature at 0800 was right on the twenty-nine-degree mark
+and the threat of more snow remained in the air. The 0800 density
+reports from St. Louis Control were below the 14,000 mark in all lanes
+in the one-hundred-mile block west of the city. That was to be
+expected. They listened to the eastbound densities peaking at
+twenty-six thousand vehicles in the same block, all heading into the
+metropolis and their jobs. The 0800, 1200 and 1600 hours density
+reports also carried the weather forecasts for a five-hundred-mile
+radius from the broadcasting control point. Decreasing temperatures
+with light to moderate snow was in the works for Car 56 for the first
+couple of hundred miles west of St. Louis, turning to almost blizzard
+conditions in central Kansas. Extra units had already been put into
+service on all thruways through the midwest and snow-burners were
+waging a losing battle from Wichita west to the Rockies around
+Alamosa, Colorado.
+
+Outside the temperature was below freezing; inside the patrol car it
+was a comfortable sixty-eight degrees. Kelly had cleared the galley
+and taken her place on the jump seat between the two troopers. With
+all three of them in the cab, Ben cut from the intercom to commercial
+broadcast to catch the early morning newscasts and some pleasant
+music. The patrol vehicle glided along at a leisurely sixty miles an
+hour. An hour out of St. Louis, a big liquid cargo carrier was stopped
+on the inner edge of the green lane against the divider to the police
+lane. The trucker had dropped both warning barriers and lights a half
+mile back. Ben brought Beulah to a halt across the divider from the
+stopped carrier. "Dropped a track pin," the driver called out to the
+officers.
+
+Ben backed Beulah across the divider behind the stalled carrier to
+give them protection while they tried to assist the stalled vehicle.
+
+Donning work helmets to maintain contact with the patrol car, and its
+remote radio system, the two troopers dismounted and went to see what
+needed fixing. Kelly drifted back to the dispensary and stretched out
+on one of the hospital bunks and picked up a new novel.
+
+Beulah's well-equipped machine shop stock room produced a matching
+pin and it was merely a matter of lifting the stalled carrier and
+driving it into place in the track assembly. Ben brought the patrol
+car alongside the carrier and unshipped the crane. Twenty minutes
+later, Clay and the carrier driver had the new part installed and the
+tanker was on his way once again.
+
+Clay climbed into the cab and surveyed his grease-stained uniform
+coveralls and filthy hands. "Your nose is smudged, too, dearie,"
+Martin observed.
+
+Clay grinned, "I'm going to shower and change clothes. Try and see if
+you can drive this thing until I get back without increasing the
+pedestrian fatality rate." He ducked back into the crew cubby and
+stripped his coveralls.
+
+Bored with her book, Kelly wandered back to the cab and took Clay's
+vacant control seat. The snow had started falling again and in the
+mid-morning light it tended to soften the harsh, utilitarian landscape
+of the broad thruway stretching ahead to infinity and spreading out in
+a mile of speeding traffic on either hand.
+
+"Attention all cars on NAT 26-West and east," Washington Criminal
+Control radio blared. "Special attention Cars 56 and 82. Suspect
+vehicle, white over green Travelaire reported re-entered NAT 26-West
+on St. Louis interchange 179. St. Louis Control reports communications
+difficulty in delayed report. Vehicle now believed...."
+
+"Car 56, Car 56," St. Louis Control broke in. "Our pigeon is in your
+zone. Commercial carrier reports near miss sideswipe three minutes ago
+in blue lane approximately three miles west of mile Marker 957.
+
+"Repeating. Car 56, suspect car...."
+
+Ben glanced at the radiodometer. It read 969, then clicked to 970.
+
+"This is Five Six, St. Louis," he broke in, "acknowledged. Our
+position is mile marker 970...."
+
+Kelly had been glued to the video monitors since the first of the
+bulletin. Suddenly she screamed and banged Ben on the shoulder. "There
+they are. There they are," she cried, pointing at the blue lane
+monitor.
+
+Martin took one look at the white-topped car cutting through traffic
+in the blue lane and slammed Beulah into high. The safety cocoons
+slammed shut almost on the first notes of the bull horn. Trapped in
+the shower, Clay was locked into the stall dripping wet as the water
+automatically shut off with the movement of the cocoon.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I have them in sight," Ben reported, as the patrol car lifted on its
+air pad and leaped forward. "They're in the blue five miles ahead of
+me and cutting over to the yellow. I estimate their speed at two
+twenty-five. I am in pursuit."
+
+Traffic gave way as Car 56 hurtled the divider into the blue.
+
+The radio continued to snap orders.
+
+"Cars 112, 206, 76 and 93 establish roadblocks at mile marker
+crossover 1032. Car 82 divert all blue and yellow to green and
+white."
+
+Eight Two was one hundred fifty miles ahead but at
+three-hundred-mile-an-hour speeds, 82's team was very much a part of
+the operation. This would clear the two high-speed lanes if the
+suspect car hadn't been caught sooner.
+
+"Cars 414, 227 and 290 in NAT-26-East, move into the yellow to cover
+in case our pigeon decides to fly the median." The controller
+continued to move cars into covering positions in the area on all
+crossovers and turnoffs. The sweating dispatcher looked at his lighted
+map board and mentally cursed the lack of enough units to cover every
+exit. State and local authorities already had been notified in the
+event the fugitives left the thruways and tried to escape on a state
+freeway.
+
+In Car 56, Ben kept the patrol car roaring down the blue lane through
+the speeding westbound traffic. The standard emergency signal was
+doing a partial job of clearing the path, but at those speeds, driver
+reaction times weren't always fast enough. Ahead, the fleeing suspect
+car brushed against a light sedan, sending it careening and rocking
+across the lane. The driver fought for control as it swerved and
+screeched on its tilting frame. He brought it to a halt amid a haze of
+blue smoke from burning brakes and bent metal. The white over green
+Travelaire never slowed, fighting its way out of the blue into the
+ultra-high yellow and lighter traffic. Ben kept Beulah in bulldog
+pursuit.
+
+The sideswipe ahead had sent other cars veering in panic and a cluster
+inadvertently bunched up in the path of the roaring patrol car. Like a
+flock of hawk-frightened chickens, they tried to scatter as they saw
+and heard the massive police vehicle bearing down on them. But like
+chickens, they couldn't decide which way to run. It was a matter of
+five or six seconds before they parted enough to let the patrol car
+through. Ben had no choice but to cut the throttle and punch once on
+the retrojets to brake the hurtling patrol car. The momentary drops in
+speed unlocked the safety cocoons and in an instant, Clay had leaped
+from the shower stall and sped to the cab. Hearing, rather than seeing
+his partner, Martin snapped over his shoulder, "Unrack the rifles.
+That's the car." Clay reached for the gun rack at the rear of the cab.
+
+Kelly took one look at the young trooper and jumped for the doorway to
+the galley. A second later she was back. Without a word, she handed
+the nude Ferguson a dangling pair of uniform coveralls. Clay gasped,
+dropped the rifles and grabbed the coveralls from her hand and
+clutched them to his figure. His face was beet-red. Still without
+speaking, Kelly turned and ran back to her dispensary to be ready for
+the next acceleration.
+
+Clay was into the coveralls and in his seat almost at the instant
+Martin whipped the patrol car through the hole in the blue traffic and
+shoved her into high once more.
+
+There was no question about the fact that the occupants of the
+fugitive car knew they were being pursued. They shot through the
+crossover into the yellow lane and now were hurtling down the thruway
+close to the four-hundred-mile-an-hour mark.
+
+Martin had Beulah riding just under three hundred to make the
+crossover, still ten miles behind the suspect car and following on
+video monitor. The air still crackled with commands as St. Louis and
+Washington Control maneuvered other cars into position as the pursuit
+went westward past other units blocking exit routes.
+
+Clay read aloud the radiodometer numerals as they clicked off a mile
+every nine seconds. Car 56 roared into the yellow and the instant Ben
+had it straightened out, he slammed all finger throttles to full
+power. Beulah snapped forward and even at three hundred miles an hour,
+the sudden acceleration pasted the car's crew against the back of
+their cushioned seats. The patrol car shot forward at more than five
+hundred miles an hour.
+
+The image of the Travelaire grew on the video monitor and then the two
+troopers had it in actual sight, a white, racing dot on the broad
+avenue of the thruway six miles ahead.
+
+Clay triggered the controls for the forward bow cannon and a panel box
+flashed to "ready fire" signal.
+
+"Negative," Martin ordered. "We're coming up on the roadblock. You
+might miss and hit one of our cars."
+
+"Car 56 to Control," the senior trooper called. "Watch out at the
+roadblock. He's doing at least five hundred in the yellow and he'll
+never be able to stop."
+
+Two hundred miles east, the St. Louis controller made a snap decision.
+"Abandon roadblock. Roadblock cars start west. Maintain two hundred
+until subject comes into monitor view. Car 56, continue speed
+estimates of subject car. Maybe we can box him in."
+
+At the roadblock forty-five miles ahead of the speeding fugitives and
+their relentless pursuer, the four patrol cars pivoted and spread out
+across the roadway some five hundred feet apart. They lunged forward
+and lifted up to air-cushion jet drive at just over two hundred miles
+an hour. Eight pairs of eyes were fixed on video monitors set for the
+ten-mile block to the rear of the four vehicles.
+
+Beulah's indicated ground speed now edged towards the five hundred
+fifty mark, close to the maximum speeds the vehicles could attain.
+
+The gap continued to close, but more slowly. "He's firing hotter," Ben
+called out. "Estimating five thirty on subject vehicle."
+
+Now Car 56 was about three miles astern and still the gap closed. The
+fugitive car flashed past the site of the abandoned roadblock and
+fifteen seconds later all four patrol cars racing ahead of the
+Travelaire broke into almost simultaneous reports of "Here he comes."
+
+A second later, Clay Ferguson yelled out, "There he goes. He's
+boondocking, he's boondocking."
+
+"He has you spotted," Martin broke in. "He's heading for the median.
+Cut, cut, cut. Get out in there ahead of him."
+
+The driver of the fugitive car had seen the bulk of the four big
+patrol cruisers outlined against the slight rise in the thruway almost
+at the instant he flashed onto their screens ten miles behind them. He
+broke speed, rocked wildly from side to side, fighting for control and
+then cut diagonally to the left, heading for the outer edge of the
+thruway and the unpaved, half-mile-wide strip of landscaped earth that
+separated the east and westbound segments of NAT-26.
+
+The white and green car was still riding on its airpad when it hit the
+low, rounded curbing at the edge of the thruway. It hurtled into the
+air and sailed for a hundred feet across the gently-sloping
+snow-covered grass, came smashing down in a thick hedgerow of
+bushes--and kept going.
+
+Car 56 slowed and headed for the curbing. "Watch it, kids," Ben
+snapped over the intercom, "we may be buying a plot in a second."
+
+Still traveling more than five hundred miles an hour, the huge patrol
+car hit the curbing and bounced into the air like a rocket boosted
+elephant. It tilted and smashed its nose in a slanting blow into the
+snow-covered ground. The sound of smashing and breaking equipment
+mingled with the roar of the thundering jets, tracks and air drives as
+the car fought its way back to level travel. It surged forward and
+smashed through the hedgerow and plunged down the sloping snowbank
+after the fleeing car.
+
+"Clay," Ben called in a strained voice, "take 'er."
+
+Ferguson's fingers were already in position. "You all right, Ben?" he
+asked anxiously.
+
+"Think I dislocated a neck vertebra," Ben replied. "I can't move my
+head. Go get 'em, kid."
+
+"Try not to move your head at all, Ben," Kelly called from her cocoon
+in the dispensary. "I'll be there the minute we slow down."
+
+A half mile ahead, the fugitive car plowed along the bottom of the
+gentle draw in a cloud of snow, trying to fight its way up the
+opposite slope and onto the eastbound thruway.
+
+But the Travelaire was never designed for driving on anything but a
+modern superhighway. Car 56 slammed through the snow and down to the
+bottom of the draw. A quarter of a mile ahead of the fugitives, the
+first of the four roadblock units came plowing over the rise.
+
+The car speed dropped quickly to under a hundred and the cocoons were
+again retracted. Ben slumped forward in his seat and caught himself.
+He eased back with a gasp of pain, his head held rigidly straight.
+Almost the instant he started to straighten up, Kelly flung herself
+through the cab door. She clasped his forehead and held his head
+against the back of the control seat.
+
+Suddenly, the fugitive car spun sideways, bogged in the wet snow and
+muddy ground beneath and stopped. Clay bore down on it and was about
+two hundred yards away when the canopy of the other vehicle popped
+open and a sheet of automatic weapons fire raked the patrol car. Only
+the low angle of the sedan and the nearness of the bulky patrol car
+saved the troopers. Explosive bullets smashed into the patrol car
+canopy and sent shards of plastiglass showering down on the trio.
+
+An instant later, the bow cannon on the first of the cut-off patrol
+units opened fire. An ugly, yellow-red blossom of smoke and fire
+erupted from the front of the Travelaire and it burst into flames. A
+second later, the figure of a man staggered out of the burning car,
+clothes and hair aflame. He took four plunging steps and then fell
+face down in the snow. The car burning and crackled and a thick
+funereal pyre of oily, black smoke billowed into the gray sky. It was
+snowing heavily now, and before the troopers could dismount and plow
+to the fallen man, a thin layer of snow covered his burned body.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An hour later, Car 56 was again on NAT 26-West, this time heading for
+Wichita barracks and needed repairs. In the dispensary, Ben Martin was
+stretched out on a hospital bunk with a traction brace around his neck
+and a copper-haired medical-surgical patrolwoman fussing over him.
+
+In the cab, Clay peered through the now almost-blinding blizzard that
+whirled and skirled thick snow across the thruway. Traffic densities
+were virtually zero despite the efforts of the dragonlike snow-burners
+trying to keep the roadways clear. The young trooper shivered despite
+the heavy jacket over his coveralls. Wind whistled through the shell
+holes in Beulah's canopy and snow sifted and drifted against the back
+bulkhead.
+
+The cab communications system had been smashed by the gunfire and Clay
+wore his work helmet both for communications and warmth.
+
+The door to the galley cracked open and Kelly stuck her head in. "How
+much farther, Clay?" she asked.
+
+"We should be in the barracks in about twenty minutes," the shivering
+trooper replied.
+
+"I'll fix you a cup of hot coffee," Kelly said. "You look like you
+need it."
+
+Over the helmet intercom Clay heard her shoving things around in the
+galley. "My heavens, but this place is a mess," she exclaimed. "I
+can't even find the coffee bin. That steeplechase driving has got to
+stop." She paused.
+
+"Clay," she called out, "Have you been drinking in here? It smells
+like a brewery."
+
+Clay raised mournful eyes to the shattered canopy above him. "My
+cooking wine" he sighed.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Code Three, by Rick Raphael
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CODE THREE ***
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