“You haven’t the faintest idea what you mean,” Malone said. “Mess is hardly the word.”
Boyd snorted. “You go on getting yourself confused,” he said, “while some of us do the real work. After all—”
“Never mind the insults,” Malone said. “How about the spies?”
“Well,” Boyd said, a trifle reluctantly, “they’ve been working as janitors and maintenance men, and of course we’ve made sure they haven’t been able to get their hands on any really valuable information.”
“So they’ve suddenly turned into criminal masterminds,” Malone said. “After being under careful surveillance for years.”
“Well, it’s possible,” Boyd said defensively.
“Almost anything is possible,” Malone said.
“Some things,” Boyd said carefully, “are more possible than others.”
“Thank you, Charles W. Aristotle,” Malone said. “I hope you realize what you’ve done, picking up those three men. We might have been able to get some good lines on them, if you’d left them where they were.”
There is an old story about a general who went on an inspection tour of the front during World War I, and, putting his head incautiously up out of a trench, was narrowly missed by a sniper’s bullet. He turned to a nearby sergeant and bellowed: “Get that sniper!”