 CHAPTER XIII She had felt somewhat self-conscious for the first two or three minutes. But it helped when she caught a glimpse of their own table drifting by among the others and realized that the smiling red-head viewer image over there looked completely at her ease. It helped too that Major Quillen turned suddenly into the light but ardent conversation type of companion. In the short preceding briefing he had pointed out that a bit of flirting, etc., was a necessary, or at least nearly necessary, part of the act. Trigger was going along with the flirting. He could be right about that. She intended to stay on the alert for the etc. They got nibbles very promptly, but not quite the right kind. The concealed table comm-web murmured, a caller request to be connected with Major Quillen. Is it permitted? Oh, ho! Quillen said poisonously. I suspected we should have stayed off-circuit. Who's the caller? The name given is Keath Debal. Quillen laughed. Give the little wolf Major Quillen's regards and tell him it was a good try. I'll look him up to-morrow. He gave Trigger a gentle wink. Let him pant, he said, at a distance. She smiled uncertainly. If he had a mustache she thought he'd be twirling it. There were two more calls in the next few minutes of similar nature. Quillen rebuffed them cheerfully. It was rather flattering in a way. She wondered how so many people in the cocktail lounge happened to know Quillen by name. When the comm-web reported the fourth caller it sounded odd. The name given is the lady Lyad Irmitine, it said. Quillen beamed. Lyad, bless her heart, a pleasure, put her through. A screen shaped itself on the wall mirror to the right. Lyad Irmitine's face appeared in it. "'Hes let Quillen,' she smiled. "'So you aren't permanently lost to your friends after all.' It was a light liquid voice. It suited her appearance perfectly. "'Only to the frivolous ones,' Quillen said. His thick black brows went up. His face took on a dedicated look. "'I'm headed for Manin on duty.' She nodded. Still with the subspace engineers?' And with the rank of major by now, Quillen said. "'Congratulations. But I'd already observed that your fabulous good fortune hasn't deserted you in the least.' Lyad's glance switched to trigger. She smiled again. It was a pleasant, easy smile that showed white teeth. "'Would you shield your comm-web, Quillen?' "'Shield it?' Lyad looked surprised. Why, certainly. He reached under the edge of the table. The drifting viewer images vanished. Go ahead.' Lyad's eyes turned back to trigger. They were off-color eyes, like amber or a light wine, fringed with long black lashes. Very steady, very knowing eyes.' Trigger felt herself tensing. "'Forgive me the discurtycy of inquiring directly,' the light voice said. "'But you are Trigger Argey, aren't you?' Quillen's hand slapped the table. He looked at Trigger and laughed. "'Better give it up, Trigger. I told you you were much more widely known than you believed.' "'Well, Brule,' Trigger muttered mootily to the solitopic prompt upright against the pillow before her. You'd bug those pretty blue eyes out if you knew who's invited me to dinner.' Brule smiled back, winningly. She lay on her cabin's bed, chin on her crossed arms, eyes a dozen inches from the pretty blue ones. She studied Brule's features soberly. "'Major Heslett Quillen,' she announced, suddenly in cold, even tones, is a completely impossible character. It was no more than the truth. She didn't mind so much that Quillen wouldn't tell her what he thought of Lyad Emyrtein standing on the suspect list now. There hadn't really been much opportunity for open conversation so far. But he and that unpleasant Belchick Pluley had engaged in some jovial back-slapping and rib-punching when he and Trigger went over to join Lyad's party at her request. And Quillen cried out merrily that he and Belchick had long had won great interest in common, ha-ha-ha. Then those two great buddies vanished together for a full hour to take in some very special, not publicly programmed, sensations unlimited in the dawn city's inferno. Lyad had smiled after them as they left. "'Aren't men disgusting?' she said, tolerantly. "'That reflected on her, didn't it? She was supposed to be very good friends with somebody like that. Of course Quillen must have some bit of intelligence business in mind with Pluley, but there should be other ways of going about it. And later, when she'd been just a little stiff with him, Quillen had had the nerve to tell her not to be a prude doll!' Trigger shoved the solidific under the pillow. Then she rolled on her side and blinked at the wall. Naturally, Major Quillen's personal habits were none of her business. It was just that, in less than an hour, he was to pick her up and take her to the ermitine suite for that dinner. He was wondering how she should behave towards him. Reasonably pleasant, but cool, she decided. But again, not too cool, since she'd obligated herself to help him find out what the trinest tycooness was after. Any obvious lack of friendliness between them might make the job more difficult. Trigger sighed. Things were getting complicated again. While Quillen was indulging his baser nature among the questionable attractions of the Inferno, she'd shot three hundred of her pre-call credits on a formal black gown. On what yesterday she would have considered a rather unbelievable gown. Even at an ermitine dinner she couldn't actually look dowdy in it. And then, accompanied by Gaia, who had turned out to be a very pleasant, but not very communicative companion, she'd headed for a gambling-room to make back the price of the gown. It hadn't worked out. The game she particularly studied up on turned out to have a five hundred minimum play, which finished that scheme. The system she planned to use looked very sound, but she needed more than one chance to try it in. She and Gaia sat down at another table, with a different game, where you could get in for fifty credits. In eight minutes Trigger lost a hundred and twenty and quit. Gaia won seventy-five. It had been an interesting day, but with some unsatisfactory aspects to it. She hauled the solidific out from under the pillow again. And you, she told Brewell warningly, seemed to be playing around with some very bad company, my friend. Just luck I'm coming back to see you don't get into serious trouble. He'd showered and was studying the black gown's effect before the mirror when the comm-web chimed. Permission for audio intrusion granted, Trigger said casually, without looking around. She was getting used to this sort of thing. Thank you, Miss Drell-Ganneth, said the comm-web. A package from the Belden shop has been deposited in your mail transmitter. It signed off. Belden shop? Trigger frowned, laid the gown across a chair, and went over to the transmitter receptacle. She opened it. A flat small green package marked the styles of Belden slid out. A delicate scent came trailing along with it. A small white envelope clung to the package's top. Inside the envelope was a card. It read, A peace offering. Would you wear it to dinner in token of forgiveness? Very humbly, queue. Trigger found herself smiling and wiped off the smile. Then she let it come back. No point in staying grim with the character. She pulled the package tab and opened it up. There were three smaller packages inside. She opened the first of these and for a moment gazed doubtfully at four objects like green leaf buds, each the size of her thumb. She laid them down and opened the second package. This one contained a pair of very fancy high heels, green and pale gold. Out of the third flowed something which was at all events extraordinarily beautiful material of some kind. Velvety green, shimmeringly alive. Its touch was a caress. Its perfume was like soft whispers. Lifting one end with great care between thumb and finger, Trigger let it unfold itself to the floor. Tilting her head to one side, she studied the shimmering featherweight cat's cradle of jewel-green ribbons that hung there. What was it? She reflected, found her dressing-gown in one of the suitcases, slipped it on, sat down before the comm-web with the mysterious ribbon arrangement and dialed Gaia's number. The intelligence girl was in her cabin and obviously had been napping, but she was wide awake now. Sheilded here, she said quickly as soon as her image cleared. Go ahead. It's nothing important, Trigger said hastily. Gaia relaxed. It's just—she held up the ribbons. Major Quillen sent me this. Gaia uttered a small squeal. Oh! Beautiful! A belden! That's what it says. Gaia smiled. He must like you. Oh! said Trigger. She hesitated. Gaia's face grew questioning. She asked, Is something the matter? Probably not, said Trigger. She considered. If you laugh, she warned, I'll hate you. She indicated the ribbons again. What is that belden really? Gaia blinked. You haven't been around our decanate circles long enough, she said soberly. Then she did laugh. Don't hate me, Trigger. Anyway, it's very high fashion. But also—her glance went quickly over Trigger, in excellent taste in this case—it's a belden gown. A gown! Some of the beautiful ribbons were wider than others. None of them looked as wide as they should have been, not for a gown. Dubiously, Trigger wriggled and fitted herself into the high fashion item. Even before she went over to the mirror in it, she knew it wouldn't do. Not possibly. Rivals on many hub worlds were rather bold, of course, but she was sure this effect wasn't what the belden's designers had intended. She stepped in front of the mirror. Her eyes widened. Brother! She breathed. That belden did go with a woman like Stripes went with a tiger. After one look you couldn't quite understand why nature hadn't arranged for it first, but just as obviously there wasn't nearly enough belden around at the moment. Trigger checked the time and began to feel herried. Probably she'd wind up wearing the black gown anyway, but at least she wanted to get this matter worked out before she decided. She dialed for a drink, took two swallows, and reflected that she might have put the thing on backwards, or upside down. Five minutes later she sat at the dresser, tapping her fingers on its glassy surface, gazing at the small pile of green ribbons before her and whistling softly. There was a thoroughly bared look on her face. Suddenly she stood up and went back to the comm-web. Ribbons, said the lady who was the belden shop's manager. That would be Seven-Forty-One, a delightful little creation. Delightful, said Trigger. May I see it on the model? Immediately, madam. A few moments later a long-limbed model strolled into the view-screen, displaying an exquisite arrangement of burnt Sienna ribbons plus four largest leaf-like designs. Trigger glanced quickly back to the table where she had put down the strange green buds. They had quietly opened out meanwhile. She thanked the manager, switched off the comm-web, got into the belden again, and attached her leaf-designs where the model had carried them. They adhered softly, molding themselves to her, neatly completing the costume. She stepped into the high heels and looked in the mirror again. She breathed, Brother, again. McCann wouldn't have approved. She wasn't sure she approved, either. But one thing was certain, there wasn't the remotest suggestion of doubtiness about a belden. Objectively, impersonally considered, the effect was terrific. Feeling tawny and feline, Trigger slowly lifted one shoulder and lowered it again. She turned and strolled toward the full-length mirror across the cabin, admiring the shifts of the belden effect in the flow of motion. Terrific. With another drink, she could do it. She dialed another drink and settled down with it beneath the mechanical stylist for a readjustment in the hairdo department. This time the stylist purred as it surveyed and hummed while it worked. And when the hairdo was done and Trigger moved to get up, its flexible little tool-pads pulled her back gently into the seat and tilted up her chin. For a moment she was startled. Then she saw that the stylist had produced a shiny makeup kit and was opening it. This time she was getting the works. Twenty minutes later Quillen's voice informed her via the comm-web that he could be outside her cabin any time she was ready. Trigger told him cheerily to come right over, picked up her purse and swaggered toward the door, smiling a cool feline smile. Pru day she muttered. She opened the door. YARG! cried Quillen, shaken. End of Chapter 13. CHAPTER XIV. They were out on a terrace near the top of an illusion mountainside in a beautiful evening. Dinner had been old-style and delicious, served by its creators, two slim, brown-skinned, red-lipped girls who looked much too young to have acquired such skills. They were natives of Trenest, Lyad said proudly, and two of the finest food technicians in the hub. They were at all events the two finest food technicians Trigger had run into as yet. The brandy which followed the dinner seemed to represent no let-down to the connoisseurs around Trigger. She went at it cautiously, though she had swallowed a couple of wake-up capsules just before they walked into the ermitine suite. The capsules took effect in the middle of the first course, and what she woke up to was a disconcerting awareness of being the center of much careful attention. The boys were all giving her plus Belden the eye intensively. Then Lyad's giant-sized butler, or major domo, or whatever she called him, named Varad, ogled coldly out of the background. Trigger gave them the eye back one after the other in turn, and that stopped it. Lyad, beautifully wearing something which would have passed muster at the U-League's annual presidential dinner in Sacy, looked amused. It wasn't till the end of the second course that Trigger began to feel at ease again. After that she forgot, more or less, about the Belden. The talk remained light during dinner. When they switched off the illusion background for a look at the goings-on during the garth stopover, she took the occasion to study her companions in more detail. There were three men at the table, Lyad and herself. Quillen sat opposite her. Belchick Ploely's unseemly person, in a black silk robe which left his plump arms bare from the elbows down, was on Quillen's right. The third man fascinated her. It was as if some strange cold creature had walked up out of a polar sea to come on board their ship. It wasn't so much his appearance, though the green tip of a vethy sponge lying coiled lightly about his neck probably had something to do with the impression. Trigger knew about vethy sponges and their attics, though she hadn't seen either before. It wasn't so serious an addiction, except, perhaps, in the fact that it was rarely given up again. The sponges soothed jangled nerves, stabilized, unstable emotions. Belmorton didn't look like a man who needed one. He was big, not as tall as Quillen, but probably heavier, with strong features, a boldly jutting nose, bleak, pale eyes. He was about fifty, and wore a richly ornamented blue shirt and trousers. The shirt hung loose, perhaps to conceal the flattened contours of his odd companion's body. Lyad had introduced him as a De Vega scientist, and in a manner which indicated he was a man of considerable importance. That meant he was almost certainly a member of the De Vega's hierarchy, which in itself would have made him very interesting. Trigger had run into some of the odd-ball missionaries the De Vega's kept sending about the hub, and she'd sometimes speculated curiously regarding the leaders of that chronically angry, unpredictable nation, which, on its twenty-eight restricted worlds, formed more than six percent of the population of the hub. The De Vega seemed to like nobody, and certainly nobody liked them. Belmorton didn't fit her picture of a De Vega's leader too badly. His manner and talk were easy-going and agreeable. But his particular brand of ogle, when she first became aware of it, had been disquieting. Rather like a biologist planning the details of an interesting vivisection. Of course, he was a biologist. But Trigger kept wondering why Lyad had invited him to dinner. Lyad was positive, for one thing, that Belchick Plule wasn't at all happy about Belmorton's presence. Dinner was over before the garth take-off, and they switched themselves back to the mountainside and took other chairs. A red-haired, green-eyed, tanned, sinuous young woman named Flam appeared from time to time to renew brandy-glasses and pass iced fruits around. She gave Trigger coolly speculative looks now and then. Then Varad showed up again with a flat tray of what turned out to be a very special brand of tobacco. Trigger declined. The men made connoisseur-type sounds of high appreciation, and everybody, including Lyad, lit up small pipes of a very special brand of coral and puffed away happily. Quillen looked up at Varad. Hi, big boy! He said pleasantly. How's everything been with you? Varad, in a wide-sleeve scarlet jacket and creased black trousers, bowed his shaved bullet head very slightly. Everything's been fine, Major Quillen, he said. Thank you. He turned and went out of the place. Trigger glanced after him. Varad awed her a little. He was really huge. Moving about among them, he had seemed like a softly padding elephant. And there was an elephant-steady deafness in the way he held out the tiny tobacco trays. The ermatine winked at Quillen. Quillen wrestled Varad to a pin down once, she said to Trigger. A fifty-seven minute round, wasn't it? Thereabouts, Quillen said. He added, Trigger doesn't know yet that I was a sports-bum in my youth. Really, Trigger said. He nodded. I came from a long line of sports-bums, as a matter of fact, but I broke tradition, went into business for myself, finally. Nowadays I'm old and soft. Eh, Belchy? The two great pals, sitting side by side, dug elbows at each other and ha ha ha, Trigger winced. Still in the same line of business on the side, Lyant inquired. Quillen looked steadily at her and grinned. More or less, he said. We might, Lyant had said thoughtfully, come back to that later. As for that match with Varad, she went on to Trigger. It was really a terrific event. Varad was a Trenesta arena professional before I took him into my personal employ, and he's very, very rarely been beaten in any such contest. She laughed. And before such a large group of people, too. I'm afraid he's never quite forgiven you for that, Quillen. I'll keep out of his way," Quillen said easily. Did you people know, Lyant said, that the trouble on the way between McCatton and Avaly was caused by a catacin killing? There was a touch of mischief in the question, Trigger thought. There were assorted startled responses. The ermatine went briefly over some of the details Quillen had told. Essentially, it was the same story. And do you know, Belchik, what the creature was trying to do? It was trying to get into the rest-cubicle vaults. Just think, it might have been set after you! It was rather cruel. Ploely's head jerked, and he blinked rapidly at Lyad, saying nothing. He was a badly scared little man at that moment. I felt a little sorry for him, but not too sorry. Belchik's ogle had been of the straightforward, loose-lipped, drooling variety. You're safe when you're in one of those things, Belchik, Quillen said reassuringly. Wouldn't you feel a little safer there yourself, Lyad? If you say they're not even sure they've killed the creature? I probably shall have a cubicle set up here," Lyad said, but not as protection against a catacin. It would never get past Ploely for one thing. She looked at Trigger. Oh! I forgot! You haven't met Ploely. Varad, she called. Varad appeared at the far end of the terrace. Yes, First Lady. Bring in Ploely, she told him. Varad bowed. Ploely is in the room, First Lady. He glanced about, went over to a massive easy-chair a few feet away and swung it aside. Something like a huge ball of golden fur behind it moved and sat up. It was an animal of some sort. Its head seemed turned toward the group, but whatever features it had remained hidden under the fur. Then an arm like the arm of a bear reached out and Trigger saw a great furred hand that in shape seemed completely human clutch the chair's edge. He was resting, Lyad said. Not sleeping. Ploely doesn't sleep. He's a perfect guardian. Come here, Ploely. Meet Trigger Archie. Ploely swung up on his feet. It was an impressively effortless motion. There was a thick, wide torso on short, thick legs under the golden fur. The structure was gorilla-like. Ploely might weigh around four hundred pounds. He started silently forward and Trigger felt a tingle of alarm. Yet he stopped six feet away. She looked at him. Do I say something to Ploely? Lyad looked pleased. No, he's a bio-structure, a very intelligent one, but speech isn't included in his pattern. Trigger kept looking at the golden furred nightmare. How can he see to guard you through all that hair? He doesn't see, Lyad said. At least not as we do. He's part of one of our trinest experiments. The original stock came from the McHaddon Lifebanks, a small, golden-haired earth monkey. The present level of the experiment is on the fancy side. It has four hearts, for example, and what amounts to a second brain at the lower half of its spine. But it doesn't come equipped with visual organs. Ploely is one of twenty-three of the type. They have compensatory perception of a kind that is still quite mysterious. We hope to read them past the speech barrier so they can tell us what they do instead of seeing. All right, Ploely, run along. She said to Belmorton, I believe he doesn't like that vethy thing of yours very much. Belmorton nodded. I had the same impression. Perhaps Trigger thought that was why Ploely had been lurking so close to them. She watched the biostructure move off down the terrace, grotesque and huge. She had got it sent as it went past her, a fresh, rather pleasant whiff, like the smell of ripe apples. An almost amiable sort of nightmare figure Ploely was. The apple smell went with that, seemed to fit in. But nightmare was there, too. She found herself feeling rather sorry for Ploely. In a way, Lyad said, Ploely brings to us that matter of business I mentioned this afternoon. The group's eyes shifted over to her. She smiled. We have good scientists on Trinest, she said, as Ploely, I think, demonstrates. She nodded at Belmorton. There are good scientists in the De Vegas Union, and everyone here is aware that the treaties of restriction imposed on both our governments have made it impossible for our citizens to engage seriously in plasmoid research. Trigger nodded briefly as the light amber eyes paused on her for a moment. Quillen had cautioned her not to show surprise at anything the ermitine might say or do. If Trigger didn't know what to say herself, she was merely to look inscrutable. I'll screw it," he explained. The others won't. I'll take over, then, and you just follow my lead. Get it?" Belmorton, Lyad said. I understand you are going to menon to attend the seminars and demonstrations on the plasmoid station. That is true, First Lady, said Belmorton. Now I, Lyad told the company, shall be more honest. The information released in those seminars is of no value whatever. He, she nodded at the De Vegas scientist, and I are going to menon with the same gold in mind, that is, to obtain plasmoids for our government laboratories. Belmorton smiled amiably. Trigger asked, How do you intend to obtain them? By offering very large sums of money, or equivalent inducements, to people who are in a position to get them for me, said Lyad. Quillen tutt-tutted disapprovingly. The First Lady's mind, he told Trigger, turns readily to illegal methods. When necessary, Lyad said, undisturbed, as it is here. How about you, sir? Quillen asked Belmorton. Are we to understand that you also would be interested in the purchase of a middling plasmoid or two? I would be naturally, Belmorton said, but not at the risk of causing trouble for my government. Of course not, Quillen said. He thought a moment. You, Belchie? He asked. Plully looked alarmed. No, no, no, he said hastily. He blinked wildly. I'll stick to the shipping business. It's safer. Quillen patted him fondly on the shoulder. It's one law-abiding citizen in this group. He winked at Trigger. Trigger's wondering, he told Lyad, why she and I are being told these things. Well, obviously, Lyad said, Trigger and you are in an excellent position, or will be very soon, to act as middlemen in the matter. Well, Trigger began astounded. Then as all eyes swiveled over to her, she checked herself. Do you really think, she asked Lyad, that we'd agree to such a thing? Certainly not, said Lyad. I don't expect anyone to agree to anything tonight. Though it's a safe assumption, I'm not the only one here who has made sure this conversation is not being recorded and will not be available for reconstruction. Well, Quillen, she smiled. How right you are, First Lady, Quillen said. She tapped a breast-pocket, scrambler and distorter, present and in action. And you, Belmorton? I must admit, Belmorton said pleasantly, that I thought it wise to take certain precautions. Very wise, said Lyad. Her glance shifted, with some amusement in it, to Plooly. Belchick. You're a nerve-wracking woman, Lyad, Belchick said unhappily. Yes, I'm scrambling, of course. He shuddered. I can't afford to take chances, not when you're around. Of course not. And even so, said Lyad, there are still reasons why an unconsidered word might be embarrassing in this company. So no trigger. I'm not expecting anybody to agree to anything tonight. I'm merely mentioning that I'm interested in the purchase of plasmoids. Incidentally, I'd be very much more interested even in seeing you and Quillen enter my employ directly. Yes, Belchick? Plooly had begun giggling wildly. I was, ha-ha, having the same idea, he gasped, about one of, ha-ha, of them anyway, I... He jerked and came to an abrupt stop, transfixed by trigger's stare. Then he reached for his glass, blinking at top speed. Excuse me, he muttered. Hardly, Belchick, said Lyad. She gave trigger a small wink. But I can assure you, trigger R.G., that you'd find my pay in working conditions very attractive indeed. It seemed a good moment to look inscrutable. Trigger did. Guess about that, Lyad, asked Quillen. The ermatine said, Certainly I'm serious. Both of you could be of great value to me at present. She looked at him a moment. Did you ever happen to tell Trigger about the manner in which you re-established the family fortune? Not in any great detail, Quillen said. A very good hijacker and smuggler went to waste when you signed up with the engineers, Lyad said. But perhaps not entirely to waste. Perhaps not, acknowledged Quillen. He grinned. But I'm a modest man. One fortune's enough for me. There was a time, you know, Lyad said, when I was rather afraid it would be necessary to have you killed. Quillen laughed. There was a time, he admitted, when I suspected you might be thinking along those lines, First Lady, didn't lose too much, did you? I lost enough, Lyad said. She wrinkled her nose at him, but that's all over and done with. And now, no more business to-night, I promise. She turned her head a little. Flam, she called, Yes, First Lady, said the voice of the red-headed girl, Bring us Miss R.G.'s property, please. Quillen brought in a small package of flat discs taped together. Lyad took them. Sometimes, she told Quillen, the ASCAP becomes a little independent. He's been spoken to. Here, you keep them for Trigger. She tossed the package lightly over to them. Quillen put out a hand and caught it. Thanks, he said. He put the package in a pocket. I'll call off my beagles. Soot yourself as to that, said the ermatine. It won't hurt the ASCAP to stay frightened a little longer. She checked herself. The room's comm-web was signalling. Varad went over to it. A voice came through. The garth men and subspace run begins in one hour. Rest cubicles have been prepared. That means me, Belchick Pluley said. He climbed hastily to his feet. That's stand-dives, get hallucinations, nasty ones. He staggered a little, then, and Trigger realized for the first time that Belchick had got pretty thoroughly drunk. Better give our guest a hand, Varad. Lyad called over her shoulder. Happy dreams, Belchick! Are you going by rest, Trigger? No? You're not, of course, Quillen. Balmorton? The DeVegas scientist also shook his head. Then by all means, Lyad said, let's stay together a little while longer. End of Chapter 14, Chapter 15 of Legacy by James H. Schmitz. This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. Legacy Chapter 15 She, said Trigger, is a remarkable woman. Yeah, said Quillen, remarkable. May I ask you, finally, a few pertinent questions? Trigger inquired humbly. Not here, sweet stuff, said Quillen. You're a bossy sort of slob, Hezlett Quillen, she said equably. Quillen didn't answer. They had come down the stairway to the storerooms level and were walking along the big, lit hallway toward their cabins. Trigger felt pleasantly relaxed. And she did have a great many pertinent questions to ask Quillen now, and she wanted to get started on them. Oh, she said suddenly. Just as suddenly, Quillen's hand was on her shoulder, moving her along. Hush now, he said, and keep walking. But you saw it, didn't you? Trigger asked, trying to look back to the small, open door into the storerooms they just passed. Quillen sighed. Certainly, he said, guy in space armor. But what's he doing here? Checking something, I suppose. His hand left her shoulder, and for just a moment his finger rested lightly across her lips. Trigger glanced up at him. He was walking on beside her, not looking at her. All right, she thought. She could take a hint. But she felt tense and uncomfortable now. Nothing was going on again, apparently. They turned into the side passage and came up to her cabin. Trigger started to turn to face him, and Quillen picked her up and went on without a noticeable break in his stride. Close to her ear, his voice whispered, Explain in a moment, dangerous here. As the door to the end cabin closed behind him, he put her back on her feet. He looked at his watch. We can talk here, he said, but there may not be much time for conversation. He gestured toward a table against the wall. Take a look at the setup. Trigger looked. The table was littered with instruments, like an electronic workbench. A visual screen showed a view of both her own cabin and a section of the passage outside it, up to the point where it entered the big hall. What is it? She asked, uncertainly. Essentially, said Quillen, we've set up a catacin trap. Catacin? Trigger squeaked. That's right, don't get too nervous though, I've caught them before. Used to be a sort of specialty of mine. And there's one thing about them. They'll blab their pointed little heads off if you can get one alive and promise it its catnip. He'd shucked off his jacket and taken out of it a very large handgun with a bell-shaped mouth. He laid the gun down next to the view-screen. In case, he said, unreassuringly. Now, just a moment. He sat down in front of the view-screen and did something to it. All right, he said them, we're here and set. Probability period starts in three minutes, continues for sixty. Signal on any blip, otherwise no gabbing, and remember, they're fast. Don't get sappy. There was no answer. Quillen did something else to the screen and stood up again. He looked broodingly at Trigger. It's those damn computers again, he said. I don't see any sense in it. In what? She asked, shakily. Everything that's happening around here is being fed back to them at the moment, he said. When they heard about our invite to Laiad's dinner-party and who was to be present, they came up with a honey. In the time period I mentioned, a catacin is supposed to show up at your cabin. They give it a pretty high probability. Trigger didn't say anything. If she had, she probably would have squeaked again. Now, don't worry, he said, squeezing her shoulder reassuringly between a large thumb and four slightly less large fingers. Nice muscle, he said absently. The cabin's trapped and I've taken other precautions. Massage the muscle gently. Probably the only thing that will happen is that we'll sit around here for an hour or so and then we'll have a hearty laugh together at those foolish computers. He smiled. I thought, Trigger said without squeaking, that everybody was pretty sure it was dead. Quillen frowned. Well, that's something else again. There are at least two ways I know of to sneak it past that search. Jump it out and in with a sub-tub as one. They could have done that from their own cabin as soon as they had its pattern. So I don't really think it's dead. It's just... Quillen, a tiny voice said from the viewer. He turned, took two steps, and sat down fast before the viewer. Go ahead. Fast motion in B-section, going your way. Fast motion. A thought flicked up. Quillen, Trigger began. He raised a shushing hand. Get a silhouette, he asked. His hands went to a set of control switches and stayed there. No, pickup shows a haze like in the Reconstruct. An instant pause. Leaving B-section. Motion in C-section, said another voice. Quillen said, All right, it's coming. No more verbal reports unless it changes direction. If you want to stay alive, don't move unless you're in armor. There was silence. Quillen sat unmoving, eyes fixed on the screen. Trigger stood just behind him. Her legs had begun to tremble. She'd better tell him. Quillen. For an instant in the screen there was something like heat shimmer at the far end of the passage. Then she saw her cabin door pop open. The interior of the cabin showed in a brief flare of blue light. In it was a shape. It vanished instantly again. She heard Quillen make a shocked, incredulous sound. His left hand slashed at a switch on the panel. Twenty feet from them, just behind the closed door to the passage, was a splatting noise like a tremendous slap. Then another noise, strangely like a brief cloudburst. Quillen silence again. She realized Quillen was on his feet beside her, the oversized gun in his hand. He was pointed at the door. His eyes switched suddenly from the door to the screen and back again. She felt him relaxing slowly. Then she discovered she was clutching a handful of his shirt along with a considerable chunk of tough skin. She went on clutching it. Flyswatter got it. He said, Phew! He looked down and patted the clutching hand. No catacin'. The trap in the cabin just wasn't fast enough. Had a gravity-mine outside our door just in case. That was barely fast enough. For once Quillen looked almost odd. Le, le, like? Trigger began. She tried again. Like a little yellow man? You saw it in the cabin? Yes, never saw anything just like it before. Trigger pressed her lips together to make them stay steady. I have, she said, that's what I was trying to tell you. Quillen stared at her for an instant. You'll tell me about it in a couple of minutes. I've got some quick work to do first. He checked himself. A wide grin spread suddenly over his face. Know something, doll? What? The damn computers! Major Quillen said happily, they goofed. The gravity-mine would have reduced almost any life-form which moved into its field to a rather thin smear, but there wasn't even that left of the yellow demon-shape. Something, presumably something it was carrying, had turned it into a small blaze of incandescent energy as the mine flattened it out, which explained the sound like a cloud burst. That had been the passage's automatic fire extinguishers going into brief but correspondingly violent action. Quillen's group stayed out of sight for the time being. He barely got the mine put away, along with a handful of warped metal slugs which was what the mine had left of their attackers' mechanical equipment, and Trigger's cabin door locked again, when three visitors came zooming down the storeroom's hall in a small car. A ship's engineer and two assistants had arrived to check on what had started the extinguishers. They may, Quillen said hopefully, just go away again. He and Trigger were watching the engineers through the viewer which had been extended to cover their end of the passage. They didn't just go away. They checked the extinguishers, looked at the floor, still wet but rapidly absorbing the last drops of the brief deluge. They exchanged puzzled comment. They checked everything once more. Finally, the leader made use of the door-announcer and asked if he might intrude. Quillen switched off the viewer. Come in, he said, resignedly. The door opened. The three glanced at Quillen, and then at Trigger plus Belden. Their eyes widened only slightly. Duty on the dawn city produced hardened men. Neither Quillen nor Trigger could offer the slightest explanation as to what had started the extinguishers. The engineers apologized and withdrew. The door closed again. Quillen switched on the viewer. Their voices came back into the cabin as they climbed into their car. So that's how it happened. One of the assistants was saying reflectively. Right, said the ship's engineer, like to burst into flames myself. Ha, ha, ha! They drove off. Trigger flushed. She looked at Quillen. Perhaps I ought to get into something else, she said, now that the party's over. Perhaps Quillen admitted. I'll have Gaia bring something down. We want to stay out of your cabin for an hour or so till everything's been checked. There'll be a few conferences to go through now. Gaia arrived next with clothes. Trigger retired to the cabin's bathroom with them and came out a few minutes later dressed again. Meanwhile, the dawn city's first security officer also had arrived, and was setting up a portable restructure stage in the center of the cabin. He looked rather grim, but he also looked like a very much relieved man. I suggest we run your sequence off first, Major," he said. Then we can put them on together and compare them. Trigger sat down on a couch beside Gaia to watch. Sheepin told that the momentary view of the little demon shape in the cabin had been deleted from security's copy of their own sequence and wasn't to be mentioned. Otherwise there really was not too much to see. What the attacking creature had used to blur the restructure wasn't clear, except that it wasn't a standard scrambler. Amplified to the limits of clarity and stepped down in time to the limit of immobility, all that emerged was a shifting haze of energy, which very faintly hinted at a dwarfish human shape in outline. A rather unusually small and heavy catassin, the security chief pointed out, would present such an outline. That something quite material was finally undergoing devastating structural disorganization on the gravity mine was unpleasantly obvious, but it produced no further information. The sequence ended with the short blaze of heat which had set off the extinguishers. Then they ran the restructure of the preceding double-killing. Trigger watched, gulping a little, till it came to the point where the haze shape actually was about to touch its victims. Then she studied the carpet carefully until Gaia nudged her to indicate the business was over. Catassins almost invariably used their natural equipment in the kill. It was a swift process, of course, but shockingly brutal, and Trigger didn't care to remember what the results looked like in a human being. Both men had been killed in that manner, and the purpose, obviously, was to conceal the fact that the killer was not a catassin, but something even more efficient along those lines. It didn't occur to the security chief to question Trigger. A temporal restructure of a recent event was a far more reliable witness than any set of human senses and memory mechanisms. He left presently, reassured that the catassin incident was concluded. It startled Trigger to realize that security did not seem to be considering seriously the possibility of discovering the human agent behind the murders. Quillen shrugged. Whoever did it has covered three ways in every direction. The chief knows it. He can't psych four thousand people on general suspicions, and he'd hit mind blocks in every twentieth passenger presently on board if he did. Anyway, he knows we're on it, and that we have a great deal better chance of nailing the responsible characters eventually. More information for the computers, eh? Trigger said. Aha! You got this little chunk the hard way, I feel, she observed. True, Quillen admitted, but we have to get it any way we can till we get enough to move on. Then we move. He looked at her with an air of regarding a new idea. You know, he said, you don't do badly for an amateur. She doesn't do badly, Guy's voice said behind Trigger, for anybody. How do you people feel about a drink? I thought I could use one myself after looking at the chief's restructure. Trigger felt herself coloring, praise from the cloak-and-dagger experts. For some reason it pleased her immensely. She turned her head to smile at Gaia, standing there with three glasses on a tray. Thanks, she said. She took one of the glasses. Gaia held the tray out to Quillen and took the third glass herself. It was some five minutes later when Trigger remarked, You know, I'm getting sleepy. Quillen looked around the viewer equipments, he and Gaia were dismantling. Why not hit the couch over there and take a nap? He suggested. It'll be about an hour before the boys can get down here for the real conference. Good idea. Trigger yawned, finished her drink, put the glass on a table, and wandered over to the couch. She stretched out on it. A drowsy somnolence enveloped her almost instantly. She closed her eyes. Ten minutes later Gaia, standing over her, announced, Well, she's out. Fine, said Quillen, packaging the rest of the equipment. Tell them to hold in the rest cubicle. I'll be done here in a minute. When you and the Lady Warden can take over. Gaia looked down at Trigger. There was a trace of regret in her face. I think, she said, she's going to be fairly displeased with you when she wakes up and finds she's on Manon. Wouldn't doubt it, said Quillen, but from what I've seen of that chick, she's going to get fairly displeased with me from time to time on this operation anyway. Gaia looked at his back. Major Quillen, she said. Would you like a tip from a keen-eyed operator? Go ahead, old keen-eyed up, Quillen said in kindly tones. Not that you don't have it coming, boy, said Gaia, but watch yourself, this one is dangerous. This one could sink you for keeps. You're going out of your mind, doll, said Quillen. End of Chapter 15. CHAPTER XVI. The pre-called headquarters dome on Manon Planet was still in the spot where Trigger had left it, looking unchanged. But everything else in the area seemed to have been moved, improved, expanded, or taken away entirely, and unfamiliar features had appeared. In the screens of Commissioner Tate's pre-call offices, Trigger could see both the new metropolitan-sized spaceport on which the dawn city had set down that morning, and the towering glassy structures of the giant shopping and recreation centre, which had been opened there recently by Grand Commerce in its bid for a cut of prospective outworld salaries. The salaries weren't entirely prospective, either. Ten miles away on the other side of headquarters dome, new squares of living domes were sprouting up daily. At this morning's count they housed 52,000 people. The hub's major industries and assorted branches of Federation government had established a solid foothold on Manon. Trigger turned her head as Holotti Tate came into the office. He closed the door carefully behind him. "'How's the little critter doing?' he asked. "'Still absorbing the goop?' Trigger said. She held Mantellish's small mystery plasmoid cupped lightly between thumbs and fingers, its bottom side down in a shallow bowl half full of something which Mantellish considered to be nutritive for plasmoids, or at least for this one. Its sides pulsed lightly and regularly against her palms. "'The level of the stuff keeps going down,' she added. "'Good,' said Holotti. He pulled a chair up to the table and sat down opposite her. He looked broodingly at plasmoid 113A. "'You really think this thing likes me, personally?' Trigger inquired. Her boss said. "'It's eating, isn't it? And moving. There were a couple of days before you got here when it looked pretty dead to me.' "'Hard to believe,' Trigger observed, that a sort of leech-looking thing could distinguish between people. This one can. Do you get any sensations while holding it?' "'Sensations?' She considered. Nothing particular. "'It's just like I said the other time. Little repulsive is rather nice to feel.' "'For you,' he said. "'I didn't tell you everything.' "'You rarely do,' Trigger remarked. "'I'll tell you now,' said Holotti. The day after we left, when it started acting very agitated and then very droopy, Mantellers said it might be missing the female touch it had got from you. He was being facetious, I think. But I couldn't see any reason not to try it. So I called in your facsimile and had her sit down at the table where the thing was lying. Yes?' "'Well, first it came flying up to her, crying mama. Not actually, of course. Then it touched her hand and recoiled in horror.' Trigger raised an eyebrow. "'It looked like it,' he insisted. We all commented on it. So then she reached out and touched it. Then she recoiled in horror. "'Why?' She said it had given her a very nasty electric jolt, apparently like the one it gave Mantellers.' Trigger glanced down dubiously at repulsive. "'Gee, thanks for letting me hold it, Holadi. It seems to have stopped eating now, by the way, or whatever it does. Doesn't look much fatter, if any, does it?' The commissioner looked. "'No,' he said. And if you weighed it, you'd probably find it still weighs an exact three and a half pounds. Mantellers feels the thing turns any food intake directly into energy. Then it should be able to produce a very nice jolt at the moment,' she commented. "'Now, what do I do with repulsive?' Holadi took a towel from beneath the table and spread it out. Absorbent material,' he said. "'Lay it on that and just let it dry. That's what we used to do.' Trigger shook her head. "'Next thing, I'll be changing its diapers.' "'It isn't that bad,' the commissioner said. "'Anyway, you will adopt the baby, won't you?' "'I suppose I have to.' He placed the plasmoid on the towel, wiped her hands, and stepped back from it. "'What happens if it falls on the floor?' "'Nothing,' Holadi said. It just moves on in the direction it was going. Pretty hard to hurt those things.' "'In that case,' Trigger said, "'let's check out its container now.' The commissioner took repulsive's container out of a desk safe and handed it to her. Its outer appearance was that of a neat modern woman's handbag with a shoulder strap. It had an anti-grab setting which would reduce its overall weight, with the plasmoid inside, down to nine ounces if Trigger wanted it that way. It also had a combination lock, unmarked, virtually invisible, the settings of which Trigger already had memorized. Without knowing the settings, a determined man using a high-powered needle-blaster might have opened the handbag in around nine hours. A very special job.' Trigger ran through the settings, opened the container, and peered inside. "'Rather cramped,' she observed. Not for one of them. We need a room for the gadgetry.' "'Yes,' she said. Subspace rotation.' She shook her head. "'Is that another space scout invention?' "'No,' said Holadi. They stole it from subspace engineers. Engineers don't know we have it yet. As far as I know, nobody else has got it from them. Go ahead, give it a try.' I was going to. Trigger snapped the container shut, slipped the strap over her shoulder, and stood straight, left hand closed over the lower rim of the purse-like object. She shifted the ball of her thumb and the tip of her middle finger to the correct spots and began to apply pressure. Then she started. Handbag and strap had vanished. "'Feels odd,' she said. She smiled. "'And to bring it back, I just have to be here, the same place, and say those words.' He nodded. "'Want to try that now?' Trigger waved her left hand gently through the air beside her. "'What happens?' she asked, if the thing surfaces exactly where my hand happens to be. "'It won't surface if there's anything bulkier than a few dust modes in the way. That's one improvement the sub-engineers haven't heard about yet.' "'Well?' She glanced around, picked up a plastic ruler from the desk behind her, and moved back a cautious step. She waved the ruler's tip gingerly about in the area where the handbag had been. "'Come fight, oh,' she said. Nothing happened.' She drew the ruler back. "'Come fight, oh!' Handbag and strap materialized in mid-air and thumped to the floor. "'Convinced?' Oh, lot he asked. He picked up the handbag and gave it back to her. It seems to work. How long will that little plasmoid last if it's left in sub-space like that?' He shrugged. "'Indefinitely, probably. They're tough. We know that twenty-four hours at a stretch won't bother it in the least, so we've set that as a limit its to stay rotated except in emergencies. "'And you, and one other person I'm not to know about, but who isn't anywhere near here, can also bring it back?' "'Yes. If we know the place from which it's been rotated, so the agreement is that, again, except in absolute emergencies, it will be rotated only from one of the six points specified and known to all three of us.' Trigger nodded. She opened the container and went over to the table where the plasmoid still lay on its towel. It was dry by now. She picked it up. "'You're a lot of trouble, repulsive,' she told it. "'But these people think you must be worth it.' She slipped it into the container and it seemed to snuggle down comfortably inside. Trigger closed the handbag, lightened it to half its normal weight, slipped the strap back over her left shoulder. "'And now,' she inquired, "'what am I to do with the stuff I usually keep in a purse?' "'You'll be in a pre-call uniform while you're here. We've had a special uniform made for you. Extra pockets.' Trigger sighed. "'Oh, they're quite inconspicuous and convenient,' he assured her. We checked with the girls on that.' "'I'll bet,' she said. "'Did they okay the porgy pouch, too?' "'Sure. Porgy doping is a big thing all over the hub at the moment. Being the ladies, anyway, shows you're the delicate sort or something like that. I forget what they said. Want to start carrying it?' "'Hand it over,' Trigger said, resignedly. "'I did see quite a few pouches on the ship. Might as well get people used to thinking I've turned into a porgy sniffer.' Olotti went back to the desk safe and took out a flat pouch, the length of his hand, but narrower. He gave it to her. It appeared to be worked of gold thread. One side was studded with tiny pearls, the opposite surface was plain. Trigger laid the plain side against the cloth of her skirt just below the right hip and let go. It adhered there. She stretched her right leg out to the side and considered the porgy pouch. "'Doesn't look too bad,' she conceded. "'That's real porgy in the top section?' "'The real article. Close to nine hundred and fifty credits worth.' "'Suppose somebody wants to borrow a sniff. Wouldn't be good to have them fumbling around the pouch very much.' "'They can't,' said the commissioner. "'That's why we made it porgy.' "'When you buy a supply, it has to be adjusted to your individual chemistry exactly. That's mainly what makes it expensive. Try using someone else's, and it'll flip you across the room.' "'Better get this adjusted to my chemistry, then. I might have to make a demonstration sniff now and then to make it look right.' "'We've already done that,' he said. "'Good,' said Trigger. "'Now let's see.' She straightened up, left hand closed lightly around the bottom of the purse, right hand loose at her side. Her eyes searched the office briefly. "'Some object around here you don't particularly value,' she asked. "'Nothing largeish?' "'Several,' the commissioner said. He glanced around. "'That overgrown flower pot in the corner is one. Why?' "'Just practicing,' said Trigger. She turned to face the flower pot. That will do. Now, here I come along, thinking of nothing.' She started walking toward the flower pot. "'Then suddenly, in front of me, there stands a plasmoid snatcher.' She stopped and mid-stride. Handbag and strap vanished. As a right hand slapped the porgy-pouch. The denton popped into her palm. The flower pot screeched and flew apart. "'Golly,' she said, startled. "'Come, Fido.' Handbag and strap reappeared and she reached out and caught the strap. She looked around at Commissioner Tate. "'Sorry about your pot, Holotti. I was just going to shake it up a little. I forgot you people have been handling my gun. I keep it switched to stunner myself when I'm carrying it.' She said, pointedly. "'Perfectly all right about the pot,' the Commissioner said. I should have warned you. Otherwise I'd say all you'd need is a moment to see them coming.' Trigger spun the denton to its stunner setting and laid it back inside the slit which had appeared along the side of the porgy-pouch. She ran thumb and finger-tip along the length of the slit and the pouch was sealed again. "'That's the part that's worrying me,' she admitted. When Trigger presented herself at Commissioner Tate's personal quarters early that evening she found him alone. "'Sit down,' he said. "'I've been trying to get hold of Mantellish for the past hour. He's over on the other side of the planet again.' Trigger sat down and lifted an eyebrow. Should he be?' "'I don't think so,' said Holotti. "'But I've been overruled on that. He's still the best man the Federation has working on the various plasmoid problems, so I'm not to interfere with his investigations any more than I can show is absolutely necessary. It's probably all right. Those you-league guards of his aren't a bad group.' If they compare with the boys the league had watched in the plasmoid project they should be just about tops,' Trigger said. The space scouts thank you for those kind words, the Commissioner told her. Those weren't league guards. When it came to deciding who was to keep an eye on you, I overruled everybody. She smiled. I might have guessed it. What's there for the Professor to be investigating on the other side of Manon? He's hunting for some theoretical creatures he calls wild plasmoids. Wild plasmoids? Uh-huh. His idea is that some of the plasmoids the old galactics were using on Manon might have got away from them, or just been left lying around, so to speak, and could have survived till now. He thinks they might even be reproducing themselves. He's looking for them with a special detector he built. Trigger held up a finger on which was a slim gold ring with a small green stone in it. Like this one, she asked. He's got a large version of that type of detector with him, too. But he thinks that if any wild plasmoids are around, they're likely to be along the lines of 113A. So he's also constructed a detector which reacts to 113A. I see. Trigger was silent a moment. Does Mantelish have any idea why repulsive is the only plasmoid known to which our ring detectors don't react? Apparently, he does, Holotti said. But when he starts in on those subjects I find him difficult to follow. He looked soberly at Trigger. There are times, he confessed, when I suspect Professor Mantelish is somewhat daft, but probably he's just so brilliant that he keeps fading beyond my mental range. Trigger laughed. My father used to come home from a session with Mantelish muttering the same sort of thing. She glanced at the ring again. By the way, have any plasmoids actually been stolen around here for us to detect? He nodded. Quite a few have been snitched from Harvest Moon and various storage points by now. I wouldn't be surprised if some of them turn up here in the dome eventually. Not that it's a serious loss. What the thieves have been getting away with is small stuff, plasmoid nuts and bolts, so to speak. Still, each of those would still fetch around a hundred thousand credits if you offer them to the right people. Incidentally, if asking you to this conference has interfered with any personal plans, just say so. We can put it off till tomorrow. Especially since it's beginning to look as if Mantelish won't make it here either. Either, Trigger said. Quillen's already had to cancel. He got involved with something during the afternoon. Oh, she said coolly. She had looked at her watch. I do have a dinner date with Brul Inger in an hour and a half. But you said this meeting wasn't to take more than an hour anyway, didn't you? He nodded. Then I'm free. My quarters are arranged, and I'm ready to go back on my old job in the morning. Fine, said the Commissioner. There are things I wanted to discuss with you privately anyway. If we can't get through to Mantelish in another ten minutes, we'll go ahead with that. I would have liked to have Quillen here to fill us in with data about some of the top-level crooks in the hub. They're a specialty of his. I don't know too much about them myself. He paused. That Lyad Emertine now, he said, looks as if she either already is part of the main problem, or is working very hard to get there. She had a Trenest warship station here for the past two weeks. A thing called the Aurora. Trigger was startled. But warships aren't allowed in Manin's system. It isn't in the system. It's stationed a half-light year away, where it has a legal right to be. Nothing to worry about as such. It's just a heavy-armed frigate which as the limit Trenest is allowed to build. Since it's Lyad's private boat, I imagine it's been souped up with everything they could throw in. Anyway, the fact that she sent it here ahead of her indicates she isn't just dropping in for a casual visit. She made that pretty clear herself, Trigger said. Why do you think she's being so open about it? He shrugged. Might have a number of reasons. One could be that she'd get the BDI anyway as soon as she showed up here. When Lyad goes anywhere, it's usually on business. After Quillen reported on your dinner party, I got all the information I could on her. The first lady stacks up as a tough cookie. Also smart. Most of those emertines wind up being dead-brained by some loving relative, and apparently they have to know how to whip up a sharp brew of poison before they're led into kindergarten. Lyad's been top dog among them since she was 18. His head turned. A bell had begun pinging in the next room. He stood up. Probably Mantellish's outfit on the transmitter, he said. I told them to call as soon as they located him. He stopped at the door. Care for a drink, Trigger girl? You know where the stuff is. Not just now, thanks. The commissioner came back in a couple of minutes. Darn fool got lost in a swamp. They found him finally, but he's too tired to come over now. He sat down and scratched his chin thoughtfully. Do you remember the time you passed out on the harvest moon? He asked. Trigger looked at him puzzled. The time I what? Passed out, fainted, went out cold. I? You're out of your mind, Holadi. I never fainted in my life. Reason I asked, he said, is that I've been told a spell in arrest cubicle. Same thing as arrest cubicle, anyway. Only it's used for therapy. Sometimes resolves amnesias. Amnesias? What are you talking about? The commissioner said, I'm talking about you. This is bound to be a jolt, Trigger girl. Might have been easier after a drink. But I'll just give it to you straight. About a week after Mantelish and his you-league crew first arrived here, you did pass out on one occasion while we were on the harvest moon with them. And afterwards you didn't remember doing it. I didn't, Trigger said weakly. No. I thought it might have cleared up, and you just had some reason for not wanting to mention it. He got to his feet. Like that drink now, before I go on with the details? She nodded. End of Chapter 16. Chapter 17 of Legacy by James H. Schmitz. This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. LEGACY. CHAPTER 17 Holadi Tate brought her the drink and went on with the details. Trigger and he, and a dozen or so of the first group of you-league investigators, had been in what was now designated as Section 52 of Harvest Moon. The commissioner was by himself, checking over some equipment which had been installed in one of the compartments. After a while Dr. Azal joined him and told him Mantelish and the others had gone on to another section. Holadi and Azal finished the check-up together, and were about to leave the area to catch up with the group, when Holadi saw Trigger lying on the floor in an adjoining compartment. You seemed to be in some kind of coma, he said. We picked you up and put you into a chair by one of the survey screens, and were trying to get out a call on Azal's suit communicator to the ambulance boat, when you suddenly opened your eyes. You looked at me and said, Oh, there you are! I was just going to go looking for you. It was obvious that you didn't realize anything unusual had happened. Azal started to say something, but I stepped on his foot and he caught on. In fact, he caught on so fast that I became a little suspicious of him. Poor Azal, Trigger said. Poor nothing, the Commissioner said cryptically. I'll tell you about that some other time. I cautioned Dr. Azal to say nothing to anybody until the incident had been clarified, in view of the stringent security precautions being practiced, supposedly being practiced. He amended. Then he'd return to man and planet with Trigger immediately, where she was checked over by Pre-Call's medical staff. Physically there wasn't a thing wrong with her. And that, said Trigger, feeling a little frightened, is something else I don't remember. Well, you wouldn't, the Commissioner said. You were fed a hypno-spray first. You went out for three hours. When you woke up you thought you'd been having a good nap. Since the medics were sure you hadn't picked up some odd plasmoid infection, I wanted to know just what else had happened on Harvest Moon. One of those scientific big-shots might also have used a hypno-spray on you, with the idea of turning you into a conditional assistant for future shenanigans. Trigger grinned faintly. You do have a suspicious mind. The grin faded. Was that what they were going to find out in that mind-search interview on McCaddon I skipped out on? That's one of the things they might have looked for, he agreed. Trigger gazed at him very thoughtfully for a moment. Well, I'd loused that deal up, she remarked. But why is everybody...? She shook her head. Excuse me, go on. The Commissioner went on. Old Doc Lee Harvest was handling the hypnosis herself. She hit what she thought might be a mind-block when she tried to get you to remember what happened. We know now it wasn't a mind-block, but she wouldn't monkey with you any farther and told me to get in an expert, so I called the Psychology Services headquarters in Orado. Trigger looked startled, then laughed. The egg heads? You went right to the top there, didn't you? Try to, said Holody Tate. It's a good idea when you want real service. They told me to stay calm and to say nothing to you. An expert would be shipped out promptly. Was he? Yes. Trigger's eyes narrowed a little. Same old hypno-spray treatment? Right, said Commissioner Tate. He came, sprayed, investigated. Then he told me to stay calm and went off looking puzzled. Puzzled, she said. If I hadn't known before that experts come in all grades, the Commissioner said, I'd know it now. That first one they sent was just sharp enough to realize there might be something involved in the case he wasn't getting, but that was all. Trigger was silent a moment. So there've been more of those investigations I don't know about? She observed, her voice taking on an edge. Uh-huh, the Commissioner said cautiously. How many? Seven. Trigger flushed, straightened up, eyes blazing, and pronounced a very un-ladylike word. Excuse me, she added a moment later, I got carried away. Perfectly all right, said the Commissioner. I've been getting just a bit fed up, anyway. Trigger went on, voice and color still high, with people knocking me for a loop one way or another whenever they happen to feel like it. Don't blame you a bit, he said, and please don't think I don't appreciate your calling in all those experts. I do. It's just their sneaky, underhanded, secretive methods I don't go for. Exactly how I feel about it, said the Commissioner. Trigger stared at him suspiciously. You're a pretty sneaky type yourself, she said. Well, excuse the blow-up, whole-oddy. They probably had some reason for it. Have they found out anything at all with all the spraying and investigating? Oh yes. They seem to have made considerable progress. The last report I had from them, about a month ago, shows that the original amnesia had been completely resolved. Trigger looked surprised. If it's been resolved, she said reasonably, why don't I remember what happened? You aren't supposed to become conscious of it before the final interview. I don't know the reason for that. But the memory is available now. Untapped, so to speak. They'll give you a cue, and then you'll remember it. Just like that, eh? She paused. So the psychology service is what's it? What's it? said the Commissioner. She explained about what's it. He grinned. Yes, he said. They're the ones who've been giving the instructions, as far as you're concerned. Trigger was silent a moment. I've heard, she said, the eggheads have terrific pull when they want to use it. You don't hear much about them otherwise. Let me think just a little. Go ahead, said Holotti. A minute ticked away. What it boils down to so far, Trigger said then, is still pretty much what you told me on McHaddon. The psychology service thinks I know something that might help clean up the plasmoid problem, or at least help explain it. He nodded. And the people who've been trying to grab me, very probably, are doing it for exactly the same reason. He nodded again. That's almost certain. Do you think the eggheads might already have figured out what the connection is? The Commissioner shook his head. If they had, we'd be doing something about it. The Federation Council is very nervous. Well, Trigger said, she pursed her lips. That's Lyad, she said. What about her? She tried to hire me, said Trigger. Major Quillen reported it, I suppose. Sure. And it wouldn't be just to steal some stupid plasmoid. Especially since you say a number of small ones are already available. Then they're the ones that Raiders picked up in the hub. She probably has a collection by now. He nodded. Probably. She seems to know quite a bit about what's going on. Very likely she does. Let's grab her, said Trigger. We can do it quietly, and she's too big to be mind-blocked. We get part of the answer, perhaps all of it. Something flared briefly in the Commissioner's small gray eyes. He reached over and patted her knee. You're a girl after my own heart, Trigger-girl, he said. I'm for it. Just half the Council would have faded dead away if they heard you make that suggestion. There as touchy as that? She asked, disappointed. Yes, and you can't quite blame them. Fumbles could be pretty bad. When it comes to someone around Liad's level, our own group is restricted to defensive counter-action. If we get evidence against her, it'll be up to the diplomats to decide what's to be done about it, tactfully. We wouldn't be further involved. Trigger nodded, watching him. Go on. Well, defensive counter-action can cover a lot of things, of course. If we actually run into the First Lady while we're engaged in it, we'll hold her, as long as we can. And from all accounts, now that she showed up to take personal charge of things around here, we can expect some very fast, very direct action from Liad. How fast? My own guess, said the Commissioner, would be around a week. If she hasn't moved by then, we might help things along a little. Make a few of those openings for her, eh? Well, that doesn't sound too bad. Trigger reflected. Then there's point number two, she said. What's that? She grimaced. I'm not real keen on it, she confessed, but I think we better do something about that interview with Watsit I ducked out of. If they still want to talk to me. They do, very much so. What's that business about their saying it was OK now for me to go on to Manon? Commissioner Tate tugged gently at his left earlobe. Frankly, he said, that's something that shook me a little. Shook you? Why? It's that matter of experts coming in grades. The upper ranks in the psychology service are extremely busy people, I understand. After your first interview, we were shifted upward promptly. A couple of middling, high-bracket investigators took over for a while. But after the fourth interview, I was told I'd have to bring you to the hub to let somebody really competent handle the next stage of whatever they've been doing. They said they couldn't spare anybody of that caliber for a trip to Manon. Was that the real reason we went to MacCaddon? Commissioner asked, startled. Sure. But we still hadn't got anywhere near the service's top level then. As I get it, their top-notchers don't spend much time on individual cases. They keep busy with things on the scale of our more bothersome planetary cultures. And there are supposed to be only a hundred or so of them in that category. So I was more than a little surprised when the service informed me finally one of those people was coming to MacCaddon to conduct your ninth interview. One of the re-leg heads, Trigger, smiled nervously. And then I just took off. They can't have too good an opinion of me at the moment, you know. Apparently that didn't upset them in the least, the Commissioner said. They told me to stay calm and make sure you got to Manon all right. Then they said they had a ship operating in this area, and they routed over to Manon after you arrived here. A ship, Trigger asked. I've seen a few of their ships. They looked like oversized flying mountains, camouflaged jobs. What they actually are is space-going superlaboratories, from what I've heard. This one has a couple of those top-notchers on board, and one of them will take you on. It's due here in a day or so. Trigger had paled somewhat. You know, she said, I feel a little shaken myself now. I'm not surprised, said the Commissioner. She shook her head. Well, if they're top-notchers, they must know what they're doing. She gave him a smile. Looks like I'm something extremely unusual. Like a bothersome planetary culture. Weak joke, she added. The Commissioner ignored the weak joke. There's another thing, he said thoughtfully. What's that? When I mentioned your reluctance about being interviewed, they told me not to worry about it, that you wouldn't try to duck out again. That's why I was surprised when you brought up the matter of the interview yourself just now. Now that is odd, Trigger admitted after a pause. How would they know? Right, he said. He sighed. Guess we're both a little out of our depth here. I have come close to getting impatient with them a few times. Had the feeling they were stalling me off and holding back information. But presumably they do know what they're doing. He glanced at his watch. That hour's about up now, by the way. Well, if there's something else that should be discussed, I can break my dinner date, Trigger said, somewhat reluctantly. I had a chance to talk with Brule at the spaceport for a while when we came in this morning. I wasn't suggesting that, said Houladi. There still are things to be discussed, but a few hours one where the other won't make any difference. We'll get together again around lunch tomorrow. Then you'll be filled in pretty well on all the main points of this business. Trigger nodded. Fine. What I had in mind right now was that the service people suggested having you look over their last report on you after your arrival. You'd have just enough time for that before going to keep your date. Care to do it? I certainly would, Trigger said. The transmitter signaled for attention while she was studying the report. Houladi Tate went off to answer it. The report was rather lengthy and Trigger was still going over it when he got back. He sat down again and waited. When she looked up finally, he asked, can you make much sense of it? Not very much, Trigger admitted. It just states what seems to have happened, not how or why. Apparently they did get me to develop a total recall of that knocked out period in the last interview. I even reported hearing you and Dr. Azal moving around and talking in the next compartment. He nodded. I remember enough of my conversation with Azal to be able to verify that part of it. Then, some time before I actually fell down, said Trigger, I was apparently already in that mysterious coma. Getting deeper into it. It started when I walked away from Antelosh's group without having any particular reason for doing it. I just walked. Then I was in another compartment by myself and still walking and the stuff kept getting deeper until I lost physical control of myself and fell down. Then I lay there a while until you came down that aisle and saw me, and after you'd pick me up and put me in that chair, just like that, everything clears up. Except that I don't remember what happened and think I've just left Antelosh to go looking for you. I don't even wonder how I happened to be sitting there in a chair. The commissioner smiled briefly. That's right, you didn't. Her slim fingers tapped the pages of the report, the green stone in the ring he'd given her to wear reflecting little flashes of light. They seemed quite positive that nobody else came near me during that period, and that nobody had used a hypnospray on me or shot a hypodermic pellet into me, anything like that, before the seizure or whatever it was came on. How do you suppose they could be so sure of that? I wouldn't know, Holotti said, but I think we might as well assume they're right. I suppose so. What it seems to boil down to is, they're saying I was undergoing something like a very much slowed down, very profound emotional shock, source still undetermined, but profound enough to knock me completely out for a while. Only they also say that, for a whole list of reasons, it couldn't possibly have been an emotional shock after all, and when the effect left, it went instantaneously. That would be just the reverse to the pattern of an emotional shock, wouldn't it? Yes, he said. That occurred to me too, but it didn't explain anything to me. Possibly it's explained something to the psychology service. Well, Trigger said, it's certainly all very odd, very disagreeable too. She laid the report down on the arm of her chair and looked at the commissioner. Guess I'd better run now, she said, but there was something you said before that made me wonder. There was really very little of Dr. Azal left after that plasmoid got through with him. He nodded. True? It wasn't Azal, was it? No. Man, oh man! Trigger jumped up, bent over his chair, and gave him a quick peck on an ear tip. If I ask one more question, we'll be sitting here the next two hours. I'll run instead. See you around lunchtime, commissioner. Right, Trigger, he said, getting up. He closed the door behind her and went back to the transmitter. He looked rather unhappy. Yes, said a voice in the transmitter. She just left, commissioner Tate said. Get on the beam and stay there. End of Chapter 17, Chapter 18 of Legacy by James H. Schmitz. This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. Legacy, Chapter 18. Well, Trigger said, regarding Bruelt critically. I just meant to say that you're getting the least little bit plump here and there under all that tan. I'll admit it doesn't show yet when you're dressed. Bruelt smiled tolerantly. In silver swimming trunks and sandals, he was obviously a very handsome honk of young man and he knew it. So did Trigger. So did a quartet of predatory young females eyeing them speculatively from a table only 20 feet away. I've come swimming here quite a bit since they opened the center, he said. He flexed his right arm and regarded his biceps complacently. That's just streamlined muscle you're looking at, sweetheart. Trigger reached over and poked the biceps with a fingertip. Muscle, she said, smiling at him. It dents, see? He clasped his other hand over hers and squeezed it lightly. Oh, golly, Bruelt, she said happily. I'm so glad I'm back. He gave her the smile. You're not the only glad one. She looked around, humming softly. They were having dinner in one of the grand commerce center's restaurants. This one happened to be beneath the surface of the artificial swimming lake installed in the center, a giant grotto surrounded by green gold chasms of water on every side. Underwater swimmers and bottom walkers moved past beyond the wide windows. A streak of silvery swiftness against a dark red canyon wall before her was trying to keep away from a trio of pursuing spear fishermen. Even the lake fish were hub imports advertised as such by the center. Her eyes widened suddenly. Hey, she said. What? That group of people up there. Bruelt looked. What about them? No suits, you idiot? He grinned. Oh, a lot of them do that. OK by Federation law, you know. And seeing men so close to becoming open Federation territory, we haven't tried to enforce minor pre-call regulations much lately. Well, trigger began. He was still smiling. Have you been doing it? She inquired suspiciously. Swimming in the raw? Certainly. Depends on the company. If you weren't such a little prude, I'd have suggested it to-night. Want to try it later? Trigger colored. Prude again, she thought. Nope, she said. There are limits. He patted her cheek. On you it would look cute. She shook her head, aware of a small fluster of guilt. There had been considerably less actual coverage in the Belden costume than there was in the minute two-piece counterpart to Brühl's silver trunks she wore at the moment. She'd have to tell Brühl about the Belden stunt, since it was more than likely he'd hear about it from others. Nivok pluly, for one. But not now. Things were getting just a little delicate along that line at the moment. Leave has changed the subject, pig, she said cheerfully. Tell me what else you've been doing besides acquiring a gorgeous tan. A couple of hours later things began to get delicate again. Same subject. Trigger had been somewhat startled at the spaceport when Brühl told her he had shifted his living quarters to a center apartment, and that a large number of pre-cause executives were taking similar liberties. Holotti's stand-in, acting Commissioner Celle, apparently hadn't been too successful at keeping up personnel discipline. She hadn't said anything. It was true that Manon was still a pre-colonial planet only as a technicality. They didn't know quite as much about it as they had to know before it could be officially released for unrestricted settling, but by now there was considerable excuse for loosening up on many of the early precautionary measures. For one thing there were just so many hub-people around nowadays that it would have been a practical impossibility to enforce all pre-call rules. What bothered her mainly about the business of Brühl's center apartment was that it might make the end of the evening less pleasant than she wanted it to be. Brühl had become the least bit swacked. Not at all offensively, but he tended to get pretty ambitious then, and during the past few hours she'd noticed that something had changed in his attitude toward her. He'd always been confident of himself when it came to women, so it wasn't that. It was, perhaps, Trigger thought, like an unspoken ultimatum along those lines, and she'd felt herself freezing up a little in response to the thought. The apartment was very beautiful, nilock she guessed, or somebody else like that. Brühl's taste was good, but he simply wouldn't have thought of a lot of the details here. Neither Trigger conceded would she. Some of the details looked pretty expensive. He came back into the living-room in a dressing-gout, carrying a couple of drinks. It was going to get awkward all right. Like it? He asked, waving a hand around. It's beautiful, Trigger said honestly. She smiled. She sipped at the drink and placed it on the arm of her chair. Somebody like an interior decorator help you with it? Brühl laughed and sat down opposite her with his drink. The laugh had sounded the least bit annoyed. You're right, he said. How did you guess? You never went in for art, exactly, she said. This room is a work of art. He nodded. He didn't look annoyed any more. He looked smug. It is, isn't it, he said. It didn't even cost so very much. You just have to know how, that's all. Know how about what, Trigger asked. Know how to live, Brühl said. Know what it's all about, then it's easy. He was looking at her. The smile was there. The warm, rich voice was there. All the old charm was there. It was Brühl, and it wasn't. Trigger realized she was twisting her hands together. She looked down at them. The little jewel in the ring Holody Tate had given her to wear blinked back with crimson gleamings. Crimson. She drew a long, slow breath. Brühl, she said. Yes, said Brühl. At the edge of her vision she saw the smile turn eager. Trigger said, Give me the plasmoid. She raised her eyes and looked at him. He'd stopped smiling. Brühl looked back at her a long time. At least it seemed a long time to trigger. The smile suddenly returned. What's that supposed to mean, he asked almost plaintively. If it's a joke, I don't get it. I just said, Trigger repeated carefully, Give me the plasmoid, the one you stole. Brühl took a swallow of his drink and put the glass down on the floor. Could you feeling well, he asked solicitously? Give me the plasmoid. Honestly, Trigger, he shook his head. He laughed. What are you talking about? A plasmoid, the one you took, the one you've got here. Brühl stood up. He studied her face, blinking, puzzled. Then he laughed, richly. Trigger, I fed you one drink too many. I never thought you'd let me do it. Be sensible now. If I had a plasmoid here, how could you tell? I can tell. Brühl, I don't know how you took it or why you took it. I don't really care. And that was a lie, Trigger thought dismally. She cared. Just give it to me and I'll put it back. We can talk about it afterwards. Afterwards, Brühl said. The laugh came again, but it sounded a little hollow. He moved a step toward her, stopped again, hands on his hips. Trigger, he said soberly, if I've ever done anything you mightn't approve of, it was done for both of us. You realize that, don't you? I think I do, Trigger said warily. Yes. Give it to me, Brühl. Brühl leaped forward. She slid sideways out of the chair to the floor as he leaped. She was crying inside, she realized vaguely. Brühl was going to kill her now, if he could. She caught his left foot with both hands as he came down and twisted viciously. Brühl shouted something. His red, furious face swept by above. He thumped to the floor beside her, one leg flung across her thighs, gripping. In Colonial School, Brühl had received the same basic training in unarmed combat that Trigger had. He was close to 80 pounds heavier than Trigger, and it was still mostly muscle. But it was nearly four years now since he had bothered himself with drills. And he hadn't been put through Mehoul's advanced students' courses lately. He stayed conscious a little less than nine seconds. The plasmoids were in a small electronic safe built into a music cabinet. The stamp to the safe was in Brühl's billfold. There were three of them, about the size of mice, starfish-shaped lumps of translucent, hard, colorless jelly. They didn't move. Trigger laid them in a row on the polished surface of a small table and blinked at them for a moment from a streaming left eye. The right eye was swelling shut. Brühl had got in one wild wallop somewhere along the line. She picked up a small jar, emptied some spicy-smelling, crumbly contents out on the table, dropped the plasmoids inside, closed the jar, and left the apartment with it. Brühl was just beginning to stir and groan. Commissioner Tate hadn't retired yet. He led her in without a word. Trigger put the jar down on a table. Three of your nuts and bolts in there, she said. He nodded. I know. I thought you did, said Trigger. Thanks for the quick cure. But right at the moment, I don't like you very much, Holadi. We can talk about that in the morning. All right, said the commissioner. He hesitated. Anything that should be taken care of before then? It's been taken care of, Trigger said. One of our employees has been moderately injured. I dialed the medics to go pick him up. They have. Good night. You might let me do something for that eye, he said. Trigger shook her head. I've got stuff in my quarters. She locked herself into her quarters, got out a jar of quick-heel and anointed the eye and a few other minor bruises. She put the jar away, made a mechanical check of the newly-installed anti-intrusion devices, dimmed the lights and climbed into her bunk. For the next twenty minutes she wept violently. Then she fell asleep. An hour or so later, she turned over on her side and said, without opening her eyes, come, Fido. The plasmoid purse appeared just above the surface of the bunk between Trigger's pillow and the wall. It dropped with a small thump and stood balanced uncertainly. Trigger slept on. Five minutes after that, the purse opened itself. A little later again, Trigger suddenly shifted her shoulder uneasily, frowned and made a little half-angry, half-wimpering cry. Then her face smoothed out. Her breathing grew quiet and slow. Major Heslett Quillen of the subspace engineers came breezing into Manin Planet Spaceport very early in the morning. A pre-call air-car picked him up and let him out on a platform of the headquarters dome near Commissioner Tate's offices. Quillen was handed on toward the offices through a string of underlings and reached the door just as it opened and Trigger Argy stepped through. He grasped her cordially by the shoulders and cried out a cheery hello. Trigger made a soft growling sound in her throat. Her left hand chopped right, her right hand chopped left. Quillen grunted and let go. What's the matter? He inquired, stepping back. He rubbed one arm, then the other. Trigger looked at him, growled again, walked past him and disappeared through another door, her back very straight. Come in, Quillen, Commissioner Tate said from within the office. Quillen went in and closed the door behind him. What did I do? he asked bewilderedly. Nothing much, said Holotti. You just share the misfortune of being a male human being. At the moment Trigger's against him. She blew up the brool ingers set up last night. Oh, Quillen sat down. I never did like that idea much, he said. The Commissioner shrugged. You don't know the girl yet. If I'd hauled inger in, she would never have really forgiven me for it. I had to let her handle it herself. Actually, she understands that. How did it go? Her cover reported it was one hell of a good fight for some seconds. If you'd looked closer, you might have just spotted the traces of the Shiner inger gave her. It was a beaut last night. Quillen went white. But if you're thinking of having a chat with inger read that part of it, the Commissioner went on, forget it. He glanced at a report from the medical department on his desk. Dislocated shoulder, broken thumb, moderate concussion, and so on. It was the throat punch that finished the matter. He can't talk yet. We'll call it square. Quillen grunted. What are you gonna do with him now? Nothing, Holotti said. We know his contacts. Why bother? He'll resign end of the month. Quillen cleared his throat and glanced at the door. I suppose she'll want him put up for rehabilitation. Seemed pretty fond of him. Relax, son, said the Commissioner, triggers an individualist. If inger goes up for rehabilitation, it will be because he wants it, and he doesn't, of course. Being a slob suits him fine. He's just likely to be more cautious about it in future, so we'll let him go his happy way. Now, let's get down to business. How does Pooley's yacht harem stack up? A reminiscent smile spread slowly over Quillen's face. He shook his head. Awesome, brother, he said. Plain awesome. Pick up anything useful? Nothing definite. But whenever Belchy comes out of the aesthetic trances, he's a worried man. Count him in. For sure? Yes. All right, he's in. Crack the aurora yet? No, said Quillen. The girls are working on it. But the amortine keeps a mighty-taught ship and a mighty-discipline crew. We'll have a couple of those boys wrapped up in another week, no earlier. A week might be soon enough, said the Commissioner. It also might not. I know it, said Quillen. But the aurora does look a little bit obvious, doesn't she? Yes, whole odd he tate admitted. Just a little bit. End of Chapter 18.