LAST OF THE BREED
Major
Joe Makatozi stepped in the sunlight of a late afternoon. The
first thing he must remember was the length of the days at this
latitude. His eyes moved left and right.
About three hundred yards long, a hundred yards wide, three
guard towers to a side, two men in each. A mounted machine gun
in each tower. Each man armed with a submachine gun..
He walked behind Lieutenant Suvarov, and two armed guards
followed him.
Five barracklike frame buildings, another under construction,
prisoners in four of the five buildings but not all the cells
occupied.
He had no illusions. He was a prisoner, and when they had
extracted the information they knew he possessed, he would be
killed. There was a cool freshness in the air like that from the
sea, but he was far from any ocean. His first impression was,
he believed, the right one. He was somewhere in the vicinity of
Lake Baikal, in Siberia.
A white line six feet inside the barbed wire, the limit of
approach for prisoners. The fence itself was ten feet high, twenty
strands of tightly drawn, electrified wire. From the barbed wire
to the edge of the forest, perhaps fifty yards.
No one knew he was alive but his captors. There would be no
inquires, no diplomatic feelers. Whatever happened now must be
of his own doing. He had one asset. They had no idea what manner
of man they had taken prisoner.
The office into which he was shown was much like a military
orderly room. The man behind the table was tall and wide in the
shoulder. He studied Joe Makatozi with appraising eyes.
For the first time Colonel Arkady Zamatev was seeing a man
who had been the center of his thinking for more than a year.
Up to this point his personally conceived plan had worked with
a fine precision of which he could be proud.
When he first proposed the capture of Major Makatozi his superiors
thought he had lost his mind. Yet information was desperately
needed on some of the experimental aircraft the Americans were
designing, and Makatozi had test-flown most of them. Moreover,
he had advised on the construction of some, had suggested innovations.
Only Zamatev knew there were three Soviet agents in the American
division of military personnel assignment, no one of them aware
of the others. All were Americans at whom no suspicion had been
directed. The three had been carefully maneuvered into position
for just such an emergency, and it was upon these three that he
depended for the assignment of Major Makatozi to the Alaska command
for a refresher course in Arctic flying before tests were made
with a new aircraft.
It had not been difficult to arrange. A casual remark had
been made about operating the new plane in sub-Arctic temperatures;
a few days later the question of a refresher course had been raised,
if Major Makatozi were to pilot the new plane. And the rest had
been up to Zamatev.
The provision for the secret prison camp had been made four
years before. The necessity for understanding the extent and ramifications
of advances in American and British military and naval technology
had given birth to the plan. The intelligence services of the
combined armed forces had completed the arrangements.
The idea was simple enough. Locate and seize certain key personnel,
bring them to this camp, a place known to only the most powerful
figures in the Politburo, secure what information their prisoners
had, and then get rid of them. The disappearances would be few,
isolated, and seemingly unrelated. The possibility of suspicion
being aroused was almost nonexistent.
Operations had begun two years before with the seizure of
a warrant officer, a very minor figure who, in the normal progress
of his duties, had come in to possession of some key information.
That had been a modest success. Then the chemist Pennington .
. .
When Colonel Zametev looked into the eyes of his newest prisoner
he was angered. The blue-gray eyes were oddly disconcerting in
the dark, strongly boned face, yet it was the prisoner's cool
arrogance that aroused his ire. He was unaccustomed to find such
arrogance in prisoners brought to him for interrogation. It was
not arrogance alone, but a kind of bored contempt that irritated
Zamatev.
Colonel Zamatev had a dossier before him that he believed
told him all he needed to know about the man before him.
A university graduate, an athlete who had competed in various
international tournaments, a decathlon star of almost Olympic
caliber. He had scored Expert with a dozen weapons while in the
Air Force and was reputed to be skilled in the martial arts. This
was straightforward enough, and there were many other officers
in the Army, Navy, and Air Force whose dossiers were little different,
give or take a few skills.
As much as Zamatev knew about the American flyer, there was
an essential fact he did not know. Beneath the veneer of education,
culture, and training lay an unreconstructed savage.
"You are Major Joseph Makatozi?" Is that an American name?"
"If it is not there are no American names. I am an Indian,
part Sioux, part Cheyenne."
"Ah? Then you are one of those from whom your country was
taken?"
"As we had taken it from others."
"But they defeated you. You were beaten."
"We won the last battle." Joe Makatozi put into his tone a
studied insolence. "As we always shall."
Zamatev's irritation mounted. He had based much of his planning
for the preliminary interrogation on the fact that Makatozi was
of a badly treated minority.
In an effort to turn the interrogation into preferred channels,
Zamatev indicated a thick-set, powerful man sitting quietly on
the bench watching Makatozi through heavy-lidded eyes.
"As an American Indian you should be interested in meeting
Alekhin. He is a Yakut, a Siberian counterpart of the American
Indian. The Yakuts have a reputation in the Soviet. We call them
the iron men of the north. They are among our greatest hunters
and trackers."
Zamatev returned his gaze to the American. "It is the pride
of Alekhin that no prisoner has ever escaped him."
Joe Mack, as he had been called since his days of athletic
competition, glanced at the Siberian, and the Yakut stared back
at him from flat, dull eyes of black. A small blaze of white where
the hair had lost color over an old scar was his most distinguishing
characteristic. He exuded the power of a gorilla and had the wrinkled,
seamed face of a tired monkey until one looked a second time and
recognized the lines for what they were, lines of cruelty and
ruthlessness.
With deliberate contempt Joe Makatozi replied, "I don't believe
he could track a muddy dog across a dry floor!"
Alekhin came off the bench, a single swift, fluid movement,
feet apart, hands ready. Joe Mack turned easily, almost contemptuously,
to meet him.
Zamatev's voice was a whip. "Alekhin! Sit down!"
His eyes went to Joe Mack. "Understand your position, Major.
If you live it will be because I wish it, and your future, if
any, depends on your replies to my questions. I will accept only
complete cooperation, including a complete account of your operations
as pilot of several varieties of experimental aircraft.
"You are an intelligent man, and I shall allow you twenty-four
hours in which to consider your position. If you are reasonable
you may find a place of honor among us. You can serve us, or you
can die."
"When was a traitor honored anywhere, even among those who
profit from his betrayal? You waste your time Colonel Zamatev."
The Russian was startled. "You know me, then?"
"We also have our dossiers, Colonel."
Zamatev was shaken by cold fury, but he forced himself to
remain calm. "You are married, Major?"
"No."
"Your parents are living?"
"No."
"How old are you?"
"Thirty-one."
Colonel Zamatev shuffled papers on his desk. "To your country,
Major, you are already dead. To us you may yet to be useful. A
man of your talents can do well here, and you do not appear to
be a man who would willingly choose death. At home you have no
ties."
"You forget the most important one, Colonel. There is my country."
Zamatev spoke to Suvarov. "Return this man to his quarters,
Lieutenant. I shall speak to him again after he has had time to
consider his position."
When they had gone Zamatev leaned back in his chair. He prided
himself on his detachment, yet there was something about this
particular American that irritated him. Perhaps it was the man's
total lack of fear, even of uncertainty. Yet was that normal?
Was it not natural to fear in such a situation? To be wary? Uncertain?
Worried? Major Makatozi showed no signs of apprehension, and at
the brief meeting in this office he had seemed completely at ease.
What was it about this man?
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