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"Not yet. We were knifing each other all over the place, back at HQ, but we're both on top now. He'll be good for what ails me. Wait 'till you see him, sister -and hang on to your hat."
"I'll have no trouble doing that, I'm positive," Bernice said, a little stiffly; just as Jones came up, again to dance her away.
Percival Train appeared in less than a week. He was, as has been said, a big bruiser. He was just about Leyton's size, and even handsomer. As soon as he got over the shock of discovering what a h.e.l.lish planet Rhenia Four was, he became enthusiastic about its possibilities. He also, Bernice was sure, became enthusiastic about Project Engineer Byrd.
"But there's nothing flagrant about it that I can see, pet," Jones argued one night, just before going to sleep. "What makes you think so except Curly's jaw flapping?"
"I just know they are," Bernice said, darkly. "She really meant it, and she's the type to. She ought to be ashamed of herself, but she isn't. Not the least little tiny bit."
"Well, neither of 'em's married, so what's the dif? Even if they are stepping out, which is a moot point, you know."
"Well... maybe. One good thing about it, she isn't making any pa.s.ses at you, and she'd better not. I'll scratch both her green eyes out if she tries it, the hussy-so help me!"
"Oh, she was just chomping her choppers, sweetheart. Besides, I'm as prejudiced as I am insulated. I've never seen anyone within seven thousands pa.r.s.ecs of being you."
"You're a darling, Here, and I love you all to pieces. She snuggled up close and closed her eyes; but she did not drop easily, as was her wont, to sleep.
If that red-headed, green-eyed vixen-that s.e.x-flaunting powerhouse-had unlimbered her heavy artillery... but she hadn't... and it was just as well for all concerned, Bernice thought, just before she did go to sleep, that that particular triangular issue had not been joined.
Chapter 11 PSIONTISTS.
Secretary of Labor Deissner was very unhappy. The United Copper Miners, as a union, had been wiped out of existence. Mighty Drivers' all-out effort at New York s.p.a.ceport had been smashed with an ease that was, to Deissner's mind, appalling. Worse, it was inexplicable; and, since no one else really knew anything, either, he was being buffeted, pushed, and pulled in a dozen different directions at once.
The Dutchman, however, was n.o.body's push-over. He merely set his stubborn jaw a little more stubbornly. "I want facts!" he bellowed, smas.h.i.+ng his open hand down onto the top of his desk. "I've got to have facts! Until I get facts we can't move-I won't move!"
For weeks, then, and months, "Dutch" Deissner studied ultra confidential reports and interviewed ultra-secret agents-many of whom were so ultra-ultra-secret as to be entirely unknown to any other member of WestHem's government... and the more he worked the less secure he felt and the more unhappy he became. He was particularly unhappy when, late one night and very secretly, he conferred with a plenipotentiary from EastHem.
"The Nameless One is weary of meaningless replies to his questions," the Slay said, bruskly. "I therefore demand with his mouth a plan of action and its date of execution."
"Demand and be d.a.m.ned," Deissner said, flatly. "I will not act until I know what that verdammte Maynard has got up his sleeve. Tell Nameless that."
"In that case you will come with me now."
"You talk like a fool. One false move and you and your escort die where you sit. Tell Nameless he does not own me yet and it may very well be he never will. If he wants to talk to me I will arrange a meeting in South Africa."
"You are rash. Are you fool enough to believe that he will condescend to meet you at any place of your choosing?"
"I don't care whether he does or not. If he knows as much as I do, he will."
The messenger went away; and, a long time. later, the Nameless One did meet Deissner-with due precautions on each side, of course-in South Africa.
"Don't you know, fool," the dictator opened up, "that you will die for this?"
"No. Neither do you. Glance over this list of the real names of some men who have died lately in accidents of various kinds."
If the Slav's iron control was shaken as he read the long list, it was scarcely perceptible. Deissner went on: "As long as it was to my advantage I let you think that I was just another one of your puppets, but I'm not. If you insist on committing suicide by jumping in the dark, count me out."
"In the dark? My information is that..."
"Have you any information as to where those so-huge tanks came from? Where they could possibly have been built?"
"No, but.
"Then whatever information you have is completely useless," the Dutchman drove relentlessly on. " Maynard has been ready. What more is he ready for? That thought made me think. How did he get that way? I investigated. Do you know that computers and automation to the amount of hundreds of millions of dollars have been paid for by and delivered to non-existent firms?"
"No, but what...?"
"From that fact I drew the tentative conclusion that MetEnge has industrialized a virgin planet somewhere; one that we know nothing whatever about."
"Ridiculous! MetEnge builds its own automation but to save time they might... but such a planet would have to be staffed, and that could not be done tracelessly."
"It was done tracelessly enough so that we did not suspect it. I find that about sixty thousand male graduate engineers and scientists, and about the same number of young and nubile females of the same types, have disappeared from the ninety six planets."
"So?" This information had little visible effect.
"So those disappearances prove beyond any reasonable doubt that my tentative conclusion is a fact. Maynard is not bluffing; he is ready. Now, if MetEnge has worked that long and hard in complete secrecy it should be clear even to you that you and your missiles are precisely as dangerous to them as a one-week-old kitten would be. Before we can act we must find that planet and bomb it out of existence."
"It is impossible to hide so many people, especially young..."
"Do you think my agents didn't check? They did, thoroughly, and could find..."
"Bah! Your agents are stupid!"
"They were smart enough to put the arm on your men on that list, and if you think Maynard is stupid you had better think again. The worst fact is that twenty eight of my agents have disappeared, too, all of whom had worked up into good jobs with MetEnge and any one of whom could have and would have built a subs.p.a.ce communicator had it been humanly possible. The situation is bad. Very bad. That is why I have not acted. I will not act until I have enough facts to act on."
"My agents would have found that planet if it exists. I will send my own men and they will find it if it exists." "You think you've got a monopoly on brains?" Deissner sneered. "Send your men and be d.a.m.ned. You'll learn. Here are copies of everything I have found out," and he handed The Nameless One a bulging brief-case.
Nameless took it without thanks. "In three months I will know all about everything and I will act accordingly." "You hope. In the meantime you must agree that a general strike is out of the question."
"Until I investigate, yes. Hara.s.sing tactics merely." "Exactly what I am doing. Plan M."
"As good as any. Your status in my organization will depend upon my findings," and the Nameless One of EastHem strode out.
The tremendous new stars.h.i.+p, the Explorer, built of leybyrdite and equipped for any foreseeable eventuality, was ready to fly. The Destons and the Joneses were holding their last pre-flight conference. No one had said anything for a couple of minutes; yet no one had suggested that the meeting was over.
"Well, that covers it... I guess..." Deston said, finally. "Except maybe for one thing that's been niggling at me... but it makes so little sense that I'm afraid to say it out loud. So if any of you can think of anything else we might need, no matter how wild it sounds... I'm playing a hunch. Write it down on a slip of paper and put it face-down on the table... here's mine... it'll be three out of four, I think... read 'em and weep, Bun."
Bernice turned the four slips over. "Four out of four. Perce Train and Cecily Byrd. But what in h.e.l.l do we want 'em for?"
"Search me; just a hunch," Deston said, and: "Me neither; just intuition." Barbara nodded her head. "But why didn't we say anything... oh, I see. You and I didn't, Babe, because we thought Bun wouldn't want her along. Bun didn't because she thought we'd think it was so she could kick her teeth out. Here didn't because Bun might think he wanted her along for monkey business. Right?"
That was right, and Deston called Maynard. "You can have 'em both and welcome," was the tyc.o.o.n's surprising reaction to Deston's request. "They're the two hardest cases I ever tried to handle in my life, and I've got troubles enough without combing them out of my hair every hour on the hour. They did such good jobs on their projects that they haven't got enough to do. I'd like to fire them both-their a.s.sistants are a lot better for their present jobs than they are-but of course I can't. But listen, son. Why lead with your chin? If I can't handle those two d.a.m.ned kittyhawks, how do you expect to?"
"I don't know, chief; I'm just playing a hunch. Thanks a lot, and so-long."
Percival Train and Cecily Byrd boarded the Explorer together. "What can you four want of us?" the red-head asked, as soon as the six were seated around a table. "Particularly, what can you possibly want of me?"
"We haven't the foggiest idea," was Deston's surprising answer. "But four solid hunches can't be wrong. So suppose you break down and tell us."
"In that case I think I can. That must mean that you and Bobby are a lot more than just a wizard and a witch; and that both Here and Bun are heavy-duty psionicists, too-I've more than suspected just that of Here. Right?"
That's right," Barbara agreed. "So you and Perce both are too." Train's jaw dropped and he looked at Barbara in pop-eyed astonishment. "Which I didn't suspect consciously for a second. How long have you had it, Curly-known that you had it, I mean?"
"Just since the dance. You gave me bell, Here, remember? And before that, the chief and Babe had worked me over, too..."
"I remember." Jones began to grin. "All I'm surprised at... Hush, you." Cecily grinned back at him. "I don't get these moments of truth very often, so you just listen. Anyway, after the dance I felt lower than a snake's feet. I didn't feel even like going over to my hand-bag after a cigarette, so I just sat there and looked at it and pretty soon I could see everything perfectly plainly and one jumped out of my case inside my bag and into my mouth and lit itself. Then I knew, of course, and started working on it and 'I got pretty good at it. Watch. I'm over here in the comer and now back in my chair. Now count the cigarettes in your case, Babe."
"He doesn't need to," Train put in. "Twelve King Camfields. Stainless steel case-not the one you carried on Rhenia, by the way-right-hand s.h.i.+rt pocket." A king-size Camfield appeared between Cecily's lips and came alight. "One gone, eleven left."
"Oh?" "Ah!" "So." came three voices at once; and Deston, after counting his cigarettes, said, "Eleven is right. That's a neat trick, Curly-just a minute."
Grasping his case he stared fixedly at it and a Camfield appeared in his mouth, too; but it did not light up. "How do you concentrate the energy without burning the end of your..." He broke off as Barbara shot him a thought, then went on, "... yeah, that can come later. Go ahead, Perce."
"You four are using telepathy Train declared. "Uh-huh. It's easy, we'll show you how it goes. Go ahead."
"There's not much to tell. I've had it all my life, but I've never let on about it until now and I've never used it except on the job; I've been afraid to. I read up on psionics, but it's never been demonstrated scientifically and I didn't want the psychs to start with me. So I kept still. I knew you two were witches, of course-even though that is impossible, too-but I wasn't in your cla.s.s, so I still kept still. Oh, I could see the stuff plainly enough when I knew exactly where to look, but that was all."
"How do you know that was all? You've been fighting the whole concept, haven't you, the same way I was?" "Could be, I guess... maybe I have got something... latent, I mean... at that."
"I don't suppose we really need to ask you two, then, if you want to come along with us."
"I'll say you don't-and thanks a million for asking us," Cecily breathed; and Train agreed fervently. He went on, "You have room enough, I suppose? And when's your zero?"
"Plenty. Nineteen hours today was announced, but we can hold it up without hurting anything a bit."
"No need to. That gives us over seven hours and we won't need half that. Except for our bags at the hotel all our stuff's in the shed. We'll be seeing you-let's jet, Curly."
Train called an aircab and they were whisked across the city. Nothing was said until they were in the girl's room. He put both arms around her and looked straight into her eyes; his hard but handsome face strangely tender. "This hasn't been enough, Sess. I asked you once before to marry, me..."
"I'm glad you brought that up, Perce. I was just going to ask you if you still harbored the idea."
There is no need to go into exactly what happened then. After a time, however, he said, "I knew why you wouldn't, before."
"Of course," she replied, soberly. "We would have been at each other's throats half the time-we would have hurt each other unbearably."
"And this changes things completely," he said, just as soberly. "Exploring the universe with those four... as well as the unknown universe of psionics..."
"Oh, wonderful!" she breathed. "Just the thought of it-especially that you're so strongly psionic, too-rocks me. It changes my whole world. And besides," her expression changed completely; she gave him a bright, quick grin, "children, especially such super-children as yours and mine, ought to have two parents. Married. To each other. You know?"
"Children!" Train gasped. "Why, I didn't know... you didn't tell me you were..."
"Of course not, silly. I'm not. I'm talking about the ones we're going to have. Super-children. Half a dozen of 'em."
"Oh." Train gulped. "Okay. But why the 'super'?" "Have you ever scanned Teddy Deston and Babbsy Jones?"
No. Why should I have? Or any other little toddlers?" "They aren't ordinary little toddlers, Perce. Not by seven thousand rows of apple trees. I got a flash once. Just a flash and just once, but I know d.a.m.n well it was a mind-block. They scare me witless. Babe and Here think they're ordinary babies, too, but Bobby and Bun know very well they aren't. They won't admit it, of course, even to themselves, to say nothing of to each other-Bobby and Bun, I mean, not the kids-so don't ever breathe a word of this to anybody-besides, they'd s.n.a.t.c.h you bald-headed if you did. So-verb.u.m sap."
"I think you're more than somewhat nuts, presh, but I'll be as verb.u.m sappy as you say. Now, one for the road," which turned out to be several, "and we'll go hunt us up a preacher."
"But we can't!" she wailed. "I forgot-just thought of it. Three days-those blood tests and things!"
"That's right... hut with the physicals we've been taking every ten days-proof enough of perfect health so they'll waive 'em."
"One gets you ten they won't. Did you ever hear of a small-type bureaucrat cutting one inch o his d.a.m.ned red tape?"
"I sure have. All you got to have to push bureacrats around is weight, and we're heavyweights here... it'd be quicker, though, to do it the sneaky way-some stars.h.i.+p's chaplain."
"Oh, let's!" She squealed like a schoolgirl. "I know you meant sneaky' in its engineering sense, but I don't. She has as much cat blood in her as I have. Maybe more."
"She?" Train raised his eyebrows. "Better break that up into smaller pieces, presh. Grind it a little finer."
"Comet-gas! You know who, and why, Bun. If you don't tell her who the chaplain was or what world he was from-registry, you know-she'll never find out when we were married."
Train laughed "I see, kitten-but I always did like cats, and I don't leak. Okay, little squirt-let's jet."
Long before nineteen hours, then, the Trains and their belongings arrived at the Explorer's dock. Leaving her husband at the freight hoist, Cecily went up in the pas- senger elevator and looked Bernice up. "Where's our room, Bun?" she asked, in a perfectly matter-of-fact tone and without turning a hair.
Bernice started to say something; but, as she saw the heavy, plain, yellow-gold band-Cecily had never worn a ring on either hand-she said instead, "Why, I didn't know you were-when did this happen?"
"Oh, we've been married quite a while. We didn't want it to get out before, of course, but I thought sure you'd guessed."
"I guessed something, but not that. I'm awfully sorry, Curly, really, but..."
"You needn't be, Bun, at all; you had every right to. But I'll tell you one thing right now that I really mean there'll be no more monkey-business for me. Ever."
"Oh, I'm so glad, Curly," and this time the two women did kiss each other. This was the beginning of a friends.h.i.+p that neither had thought would ever be.
At exactly nineteen hours the Explorer cut gravs. No one aboard her knew where they were going. Or what they were looking for. Or how long they would be gone.
When Maynard told Deston that he did not have time to cope with two such trouble-makers as Train and Byrd, he was stating the exact truth; for he was busier than ever he had ever been before. It was a foregone conclusion that the opposition, which included the most corrupt and farthest-left government WestHem had ever known, would not and could not accept its two minor defeats as having decided the issue.
The crucial question was- Would they call one more local, single-business strike-in an industry that could not possibly be automated-before taking the supreme gamble of a general strike?
The Galaxians had been trying for a long time to answer that question. As has been said, GalMet's spy system (officially, it did not exist; actually, it was an invisible division of the Public Relations Department) was very good. So was WarnOil's; and InStell's, by the very nature of things, was better than either. And, long before, Maynard had engineered a deal whereby Stevens Spehn had been put in charge of the combined "Information Services" of the Galactic Federation-and it is needless to say what kind of coverage this new service provided.
Six men now sat at Maynard's conference table. Maynard, as usual, was at its head. Lansing of WarnOil sat at his left. Spehn sat at his right. Next to Spehn was a newcomer to the summit table-Vice-President Guerdon Dann, the Admiral of InStell's far-flung fleet of private police battles.h.i.+ps. In full uniform, he was the typical officer of s.p.a.ce: big, lean, hard, poised, and thoroughly fit. While older, of course, than a line officer, his stiff, crew-cut red hair was only lightly sprinkled with gray and he did not as yet wear lenses. Side by side, below Lansing, sat two other newcomers, Feodr Ilyowicz and Li Hing Wong, Russian and Chinese directors on the Board.
"Yes, it'll be milk," Spehn was saying. "Impossible to automate, easy to make one hundred percent effective, and of extremely high emotional value."
"Right," Maynard agreed. "How the sobbers will shriek and scream about our starving helpless babies to death by the thousands. Any idea yet as to time?"
"Nothing definite, but it'll be fairly soon and the general strike won't be. They're holding that up while they're looking for our base, and n.o.body is even close yet to suspecting where Base is. Deissner and Nameless are all steamed up about the vanis.h.i.+ng boys and girls and automation, but they're looking for them on a new planet out in s.p.a.ce somewhere, not on an island on Galmetia. Are the kids still happy in Siberia?"