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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It was auto-copter 4, which Johnny hadnβt expected for another half hour. He extracted the reports and then peered into the cockpit to check. There were two red lights flickering on the panel. Work for Reuben. This damned sand was a perpetual hazard to equipment. Number 4 had just had an overhaul a few weeks before and here it was throwing red lights already.
He took the reports back into the office and dumped them into the card-punch. While they were being set up, Johnny went over to the office refrigerator and got out a can of Tuborg beer. Theoretically, it was as taboo to drink iced beer in this climate, and particularly at this time of day, as it was to go out into the sun without a hat. But this was one place where the Commissionβs medics could go blow.
By the time heβd finished the Danish brew, the card-punch had stopped clattering so he took the cards from the hopper and crossed to the sorter. He gave them a quick jogglingβ βcards held up well in this dry climate, though they were a terror further southβ βand sorted them through four code numbers, enough for this small an amount. He carried them over to the collator and merged them into the proper file.
He was still running off a report on the Alphabetyper when Derek Mason came in.
Johnny drawled in a horrible caricature of a New England accent, βI say, Si, did the cyclone hurt your barn any?β
Derekβs voice took on the same twang. βDonβt know, Hiram, we ainβt found it yet.β
Johnny said, βYou get all your chores done, Si?β
Derek dropped the pseudo-twang and his voice expressed disgust. βI got a chore for you Johnny, that youβre going to love. Rounding up some livestock.β
Johnny looked up from the report he was running off and shot an impatient glance at him. βLivestock? What the hell are you talking about?β
βGoats.β
Johnny McCord flicked the stop button on the Alphabetyper. βWhereβve you been? There isnβt a goat within five hundred miles of here.β
Derek went over to the refrigerator for beer. He said over his shoulder, βI was just making a routine patrol over toward AmΓ©rene El Kasbach. Iβd estimate there were a hundred Tuareg in camp there. Camels, a few sheep, a few horses and donkeys. Mostly goats. Thousands of them. By the looks of the transplants, theyβve been there possibly a week or so.β
Johnny said in agony, βOh, Lord. What clan were they?β
Derek punched a hole in his beer can with the opener that hung from the refrigerator by a string. βI didnβt go low enough to check. You can never tell with a Tuareg. They canβt resist as beautiful a target as a helicopter, and one of these days one of them is going to make a hole in me, instead of in the fuselage or rotors.β
Johnny McCord, furious, plunked himself down before the telephone and dialed Tessalit, 275 kilometers to the south. The girl on the desk there grinned at him and said, βHello, Johnny.β
Johnny McCord was in no mood for pleasantries. He snapped, βWhoβs supposed to be on Bedouin patrol down there?β
She blinked at him. βWhy, Mohammed is in command of patrolling this area, Mr. McCord.β
βMohammed? Mohammed who? Eighty percent of these Malians are named Mohammed.β
βCaptain Mohammed Mohmoud ould Cheikh.β She added, unnecessarily, βThe Qadiβs son.β
Johnny grunted. Heβd always suspected that the captain had got his ideas of what a qadiβs son should be like from seeing Hollywood movies. βLook, Kate,β he said. βLet me talk to Mellor, will you?β
Her face faded to be replaced by that of a highly tanned, middle-aged executive type. He scowled at Johnny McCord with a this-better-be-important expression, not helping Johnnyβs disposition.
He snapped, βSomebodyβs let several thousand goats into my eucalyptus transplants in my western four hundred.β
Mellor was taken aback.
Johnny said, βI can have Derek back-trail them, if you want to be sure, but itβs almost positive they came from the south, this time of year.β
Mellor sputtered, βThey might have come from the direction of Timmissao. Who are they, anyway?β
βI donβt know. Tuareg. I thought weβd supposedly settled with all the Tuareg. Good Lord, man, do you know how many transplants a thousand goats can go through in a weekβs time?β
βA weekβs time!β Mellor rasped. βYou mean youβve taken a whole week to detect them?β
Johnny McCord glared at him. βA whole week! Weβre lucky they didnβt spend the whole season before we found them. How big a staff do you think we have here, Mellor? Thereβs just three of us. Only one can be spared for patrol.β
βYou have natives,β the older man growled.
βThey canβt fly helicopters. Most of them canβt even drive a Land Rover or a jeep. Besides that, theyβre scared to death of Tuaregs. They wouldnβt dare report them. What I want to know is, why didnβt you stop them coming through?β
Mellor was on the defensive. He ranked Johnny McCord, but that was beside the point right now. He said finally, βIβll check this all the way through, McCord. Meanwhile, Iβll send young Mohammed Mohmoud up with a group of his men.β
βTo do what?β Johnny demanded.
βTo shoot the goats, what else?β
Johnny growled, βOne of these days a bunch of these Tuareg are going to decide that a lynching bee is in order, and thatβs going to be the end of this little base at Bidon Cinq.β
Mellor said, βIf theyβre Tuareg nomads then they have no legal right to be within several hundred miles of Bidon Cinq. And if theyβve got goats, they shouldnβt have. The Commission has bought up every goat in this part of the world.β
Johnny growled, βSure, bought them up and then left it to the honor of the Tuareg to destroy them. The honor of the Tuareg! Ha!β
The other said pompously, βAre you criticizing the upper echelons, McCord?β
Johnny McCord snapped, βYouβre damned right I
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