Short Fiction by Mack Reynolds (ready to read books .TXT) π

Description
Dallas McCord βMackβ Reynolds was an American science fiction writer who authored almost two hundred short stories and novellas, was a staple in all the major science fiction and fantasy magazines and published dozens of science fiction novels. He began his writing career in the late 1940s. His fiction focused on exploring and challenging both the socioeconomic themes of the day and the implications of the Cold War that raged throughout his career. A thoughtful writer of speculative fiction, many of Mack Reynoldsβ predictions have come to pass, including the credit-card economy, remote warfare and a worldwide computer network. His thoughts about the outcomes of both the Soviet and western political and economic systems are still highly relevant.
This collection gathers stories that were published in Analog, Astounding Science Fiction, Amazing Stories and others. Ordered by date of first publication, they range from spy adventures to the ultimate expression of corporate warfare and from a very short 1000-word story to full-blown novellas.
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- Author: Mack Reynolds
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I shifted my shoulders. βWell, itβs one possibility.β
βI got a better one. Howβs this. Thereβs this alien life form thatβs way ahead of us. Their civilization is so old that they donβt have any records of when it began and how it was in the early days. Theyβve gone beyond things like wars and depressions and revolutions, and greed for power or any of these things giving us a bad time here on Earth. Theyβre all like scholars, get it? And some of them are pretty jolly well taken by Earth, especially the way we are right now, with all the problems, get it? Things developing so fast we donβt know where weβre going or how weβre going to get there.β
I finished my beer and clapped my hands for Mouley. βHow do you mean, where weβre going?β
βWell, take half the countries in the world today. Theyβre trying to industrialize, modernize, catch up with the advanced countries. Look at Egypt, and Israel, and India and China, and Yugoslavia and Brazil, and all the rest. Trying to drag themselves up to the level of the advanced countries, and all using different methods of doing it. But look at the so-called advanced countries. Up to their bottoms in problems. Juvenile delinquents, climbing crime and suicide rates, the loony-bins full of the balmy, unemployed, threat of war, spending all their money on armaments instead of things like schools. All the bloody mess of it. Why, a man from Mars would be fascinated, like.β
Mouley came shuffling up in his babouche slippers and we both ordered another schooner of beer.
Paul said seriously, βYou know, thereβs only one big snag in this sort of talk. Iβve sorted the whole thing out before, and you always come up against this brick wall. Where are they, these observers, or scholars, or spies or whatever they are? Sooner or later weβd nab one of them. You know, Scotland Yard, or the F.B.I., or Russiaβs secret police, or the French SΓ»retΓ©, or Interpol. This world is so deep in police, counterespionage outfits and security agents that an alien would slip up in time, no matter how much heβd been trained. Sooner or later, heβd slip up, and theyβd nab him.β
I shook my head. βNot necessarily. The first time I ever considered this possibility, it seemed to me that such an alien would base himself in London or New York. Somewhere where he could use the libraries for research, get the daily newspapers and the magazines. Be right in the center of things. But now I donβt think so. I think heβd be right here in Tangier.β
βWhy Tangier?β
βItβs the one town in the world where anything goes. Nobody gives a damn about you or your affairs. For instance, Iβve known you a year or more now, and I havenβt the slightest idea of how you make your living.β
βThatβs right,β Paul admitted. βIn this town you seldom even ask a man whereβs heβs from. He can be British, a White Russian, a Basque or a Sikh and nobody could care less. Where are you from, Rupert?β
βCalifornia,β I told him.
βNo, youβre not,β he grinned.
I was taken aback. βWhat do you mean?β
βI felt your mind probe back a few minutes ago when I was talking about Scotland Yard or the F.B.I. possibly flushing an alien. Telepathy is a sense not trained by the humanoids. If they had it, your jobβ βand mineβ βwould be considerably more difficult. Letβs face it, in spite of these human bodies weβre disguised in, neither of us is humanoid. Where are you really from, Rupert?β
βAldebaran,β I said. βHow about you?β
βDeneb,β he told me, shaking.
We had a laugh and ordered another beer.
βWhatβre you doing here on Earth?β I asked him.
βResearching for one of our meat trusts. Weβre protein eaters. Humanoid flesh is considered quite a delicacy. How about you?β
βScouting the place for thrill tourists. My job is to go around to these backward cultures and help stir up inter-tribal, or international, conflictsβ βall according to how advanced they are. Then our tourists come inβ βwell shielded, of courseβ βand get their kicks watching it.β
Paul frowned. βThat sort of practice could spoil an awful lot of good meat.β
Gun for HireJoe Prantera called softly, βAl.β The pleasurable, comfortable, warm feeling began spreading over him, the way it always did.
The older man stopped and squinted, but not suspiciously, even now.
The evening was dark, it was unlikely that the other even saw the circle of steel that was the mouth of the shotgun barrel, now resting on the carβs window ledge.
βWhoβs it?β he growled.
Joe Prantera said softly, βBig Louis sent me, Al.β
And he pressed the trigger.
And at that moment, the universe caved inward upon Joseph Marie Prantera.
There was nausea and nausea upon nausea.
There was a falling through all space and through all time. There was doubling and twisting and twitching of every muscle and nerve.
There was pain, horror and tumultuous fear.
And he came out of it as quickly and completely as heβd gone in.
He was in, he thought, a hospital and his first reaction was to think, This here California. Everything different. Then his second thought was Something went wrong. Big Louis, he ainβt going to like this.
He brought his thinking to the present. So far as he could remember, he hadnβt completely pulled the trigger. That at least meant that whatever the rap was it wouldnβt be too tough. With luck, the syndicate would get him off with a couple of years at Quentin.
A door slid open in the wall in a way that Joe had never seen a door operate before. This here California.
The clothes on the newcomer were wrong, too. For the first time, Joe Prantera began to sense an aliennessβ βa something that was awfully wrong.
The other spoke precisely and slowly, the way a highly educated man speaks a language which he reads and writes fluently but has little occasion to practice vocally. βYou have recovered?β
Joe Prantera looked at the
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