Trigger came out of the ceridim trance
hours before Lyad awoke from the stunner blast she’d
absorbed. The Commissioner was sitting in a chair
beside her bunk, napping.
She looked around a moment, feeling
very comfortable and secure. This was her personal
cabin on Commissioner Tate’s ship, the one he
referred to as the Big Job, modeled after the long-range
patrol ships of the Space Scouts. It wasn’t
actually very big, but six or seven people could go
traveling around in it very comfortably. At the
moment it appeared to be howling through subspace
at its hellish rate again, going somewhere.
Well, that could keep.
Trigger reached out and poked the
Commissioner’s knee. “Hey, Holati!”
she whispered. “Wake up.”
His eyes opened. He looked at
her and smiled. “Back again, eh?”
he said.
Trigger motioned at the door.
“Close it,” she whispered. “Got
something to tell you.”
“Talk away,” he said.
“Quillan’s piloting, the First Lady’s
out cold, and Mantelish got dive-sick and I doped
him. Nobody else on board.”
Trigger lay back and looked at him.
“This is going to sound pretty odd!” she
warned him. Then she told him what Repulsive had
done and what he was trying to do.
The Commissioner looked badly shaken.
“You sure of that, Trigger?”
“Sure, I’m sure.”
“Trying to talk to you?”
“That’s it.”
He blinked at her. “I looked in the bag,
and the thing was gone.”
“Lyad knows it was gone,”
Trigger said. “So in case she gets a chance
to blab to someone, we’ll say you had it.”
He nodded and stood up. “You
stay here,” he said. “Prescription
for the kind of treatment you’ve had is a day
of bed rest.”
“Where are you going?”
“I’m going to go talk
to that Psychology ship,” he said. “And
just let ’em try to stall me this time!”
He went off up the passage toward
the transmitter cabinet in the forward part of the
ship. Some minutes passed. Then Trigger suddenly
heard Commissioner Tate’s voice raised in great
wrath. She listened. It appeared the Psychology
Service had got off on the wrong foot by advising
him once more to stay calm.
He came back presently and sat down
beside the bunk, still a little red in the face.
“They’re going to follow us,” he
said. “If they hadn’t, I would have
turned back and gunned our way on board that lopsided
disgrace of theirs.”
“Follow us? Where?”
He grunted. “A place called
Luscious. We’ll be there in under a week.
It’ll take them about three. But they’re
starting immediately.”
Trigger blinked. “Looks
like the plasmoids have made it to the head of the
problem list!”
“I wouldn’t be surprised,”
said the Commissioner. “I was put through
to that Pilch after a while. She said to remind
you to listen to your thinking whenever you can get
around to it. Know what she meant?”
“I’m not sure I do,”
Trigger said hesitantly. “But she’s
mentioned it. I’ll give it a whirl.
Why are we going to Luscious?”
“Selan’s Fleet found plasmoids
on it. It’s in the Vishni area.”
“What kind of plasmoids?”
He shrugged. “They don’t
amount to much, from what I heard. Small stuff.
But definitely plasmoid. It looks like somebody
might have done some experimenting there for a while.
And not long ago.”
“Did they find the big one?”
“Not yet. No trace of any
people on Luscious either.” He chewed his
lip thoughtfully for a moment. “About an
hour after we picked you and Lyad up,” he said,
“we had a Council Order transmitted to the ship.
Told us to swing off course a bit and rendezvous with
a fast courier boat of theirs.”
“What for?”
“The order said the courier
was to take Lyad on board and head for the Hub with
her. Some diplomatic business.” He
scratched his chin. “It also instructed
us to treat the First Lady of Tranest with the courtesy
due to her station meanwhile.”
“Brother!” Trigger said, outraged.
“Just too bad I couldn’t
read that message,” said Holati Tate. “Some
gravitic disturbance! Rendezvous point’s
hours behind us. They’ll never catch up.”
“Ho-ho!” said Trigger.
“But that’s being pretty insubordinate,
Holati!”
“It was till just now,”
he said. “I mentioned that we had Lyad on
board to that Pilch person. She said she’d
speak to the Council. We’re to hang on
to Lyad and when Pilch gets to Luscious she’ll
interview her.”
Trigger grinned. “Now that,”
she remarked, “gives me a feeling of great satisfaction,
somehow. When Pilch gets her little mitts on someone,
there isn’t much left out.”
“I had that impression.
Meanwhile, we’ll put the Ermetyne through a
routine questioning ourselves when she gets over being
groggy. Courtesy will be on the moderate side.
She’ll probably spill part of what she knows,
especially if you sit there and hand her the beady
stare from time to time.”
“That,” Trigger assured
him, “will be hardly an effort at all!”
“I can imagine. You’re
pretty sure that thing will show up again?”
Trigger nodded. “Just leave the handbag
with me.”
“All right.” He stood
up. “I’ve got a hot lunch prepared
for you. I’ll bring the bag along.
Then you can tell me what happened after they grabbed
you.”
“How did you find out I was gone?” Trigger
asked.
“Your fac,” he said.
“The girl was darn good actually. I talked
to you her on office transmitter
once and didn’t spot a sour note. Mostly
she just kept out of everybody’s way. Very
slick at it! We would have got her fairly fast
because we were preparing for take-off to Luscious
by then. But she spilled it herself.”
“How?”
“I located her finally again,
on transmitter screen. There was no one on her
side to impress. She took a sniff of porgee.”
Trigger laughed delightedly.
“Good old porgee pouch! It beat them twice.
But how did you know where I was?”
“No problem there. We knew
Lyad had strings on Pluly. Quillan knew about
that sealed level on Pluly’s yacht and got Pluly
to invite him over to admire the harem right after
the Dawn City arrived. While he was admiring,
he was also recording floor patterns for a subtub jump.
That gimmick’s pretty much of a spilled secret
now, but on a swap for you and Lyad it was worth it.
We came aboard five minutes after we’d nabbed
your fac.”
“The Ermetyne figured you’d
go chasing after the Aurora,” Trigger said.
“Well,” the Commissioner
said tolerantly, “the Ermetyne’s pretty
young. The Aurora was a bit obvious.”
“How come Quillan didn’t
start wondering when I didn’t show up in Mantelish’s
lab with Repulsive?”
“So that’s what he was
for!” Holati said. He rubbed the side of
his jaw. “I was curious about that angle!
That wasn’t Quillan. That was Quillan’s
fac.”
“In Mantelish’s lab?” Trigger said,
startled.
“Sure. That’s how
they all got in. In those specimen crates Mantelish
has been lugging into the dome the past couple of days.
It looks like the prof’s been hypnotized up
to his ears for months.”
The last five hours of her day of
recuperative rest Trigger spent asleep, her cabin
door locked and the plasmoid purse open on the bunk
beside her. Holati had come by just before to
report that the Ermetyne was now awake but very groggy,
apparently more than a little shocked, and not yet
quite able to believe she was still alive. He’d
dose her with this and that, and interrogations would
be postponed until everybody was on their feet.
When Trigger woke up from her five
hour nap, the purse was shut. She opened it and
looked inside. Repulsive was down there, quietly
curled up.
“Smart little bugger, aren’t
you?” she said, not entirely with approval.
Then she reached in and gave him a pat. She locked
the purse, got dressed and went up to the front of
the ship, carrying Repulsive along.
All four of the others were up in
the lounge area which included the partitioned control
section. The partition had been slid into the
wall and the Commissioner, who was at the controls
at the moment, had swung his seat half around toward
the lounge.
He glanced at the plasmoid purse as
Trigger came in, grinned and gave her a small wink.
“Come in and sit down,”
he said. “We’ve been waiting for you.”
Trigger sat down and looked at them.
Something apparently had been going on. Quillan’s
tanned face was thoughtful, perhaps a trifle amused.
Mantelish looked very red and angry. His shock
of white hair was wildly rumpled. The Ermetyne
appeared a bit wilted.
“What’s been going on?” Trigger
asked.
It was the wrong question. Mantelish
took a deep breath and began bellowing like a wounded
thunder-ork. Trigger listened, with some admiration.
It was one of the best jobs of well-verbalized huffing
she’d heard, even from the professor. He
ran down in less than five minutes, though apparently
he’d already let off considerable steam.
Lyad had dehypnotized him, at the
Commissioner’s suggestion. It had been
a lengthy job, requiring a couple of hours, but it
was a complete one. Which was understandable,
since it was the First Lady herself, Trigger gathered
gradually from the noise, who had put Mantelish under
the influence, back in his own garden on Maccadon,
and within two weeks after his first return from Harvest
Moon.
It was again Lyad who had given Mantelish
his call to bemused duty via a transmitted verbal
cue on her arrival in Manon, and instructed him to
get lost from his League guards for a few hours in
Manon’s swamps. There she had met and conferred
with him and pumped him of all he could tell her.
As the final outrage, she had instructed him to lug
her crated cohorts, preserved like Pluly’s harem
ladies, into the Precol dome to care for
them tenderly there and at the proper cued moment to
release them for action all under the illusion
that they were priceless biological specimens!
Mantelish wasn’t in the least
appeased by the fact that again at the
Commissioner’s suggestion Lyad had
installed one minor new hypno-command which, she said,
would clear up permanently his tendency toward attacks
of dive sickness. But he just ran down finally
and sat there, glowering at the Ermetyne now and then.
“Well,” the Commissioner
remarked, “this might be as good a time as any
to ask a few questions. Got your little quizzer
with you, Quillan?”
Quillan nodded. Lyad looked at
both of them in turn and then, briefly and for the
first time, glanced in Trigger’s direction.
It wasn’t exactly an appealing
glance. It might have been a questioning one.
And Trigger discovered suddenly that she felt just
a little sympathy for Lyad. Lyad had lost out
on a very big gamble. And, each in his own way,
there were three very formidable males among whom she
was sitting. None of them was friendly; two were
oversized, and the undersized one had a fairly bloodchilling
record for anyone on the wrong side of law and order.
Trigger decided to forget about beady stares for the
moment.
“Cheer up, Lyad!” she
said. “Nobody’s going to hurt you.
Just give ’em the answers!”
She got another glance. Not a
grateful one, exactly. Not an ungrateful one
either. Temporary support had been acknowledged.
“Commissioner Tate has informed
me,” the Ermetyne said, “that this group
does not recognize the principle of diplomatic immunity
in my case. Under the circumstances I must accept
that. And so I shall answer any questions I can.”
She looked at the pocket quizzer Quillan was checking
over unhurriedly. “But such verification
instruments are of no use in questioning me.”
“Why not?” Quillan asked idly.
“I’ve been conditioned
against them, of course,” Lyad said. “I’m
an Ermetyne of Tranest. By the time I was twelve
years old, that toy of yours couldn’t have registered
a reaction from me that I didn’t want it to
show.”
Quillan slipped the toy back in his pocket.
“True enough, First Lady,”
he said. “And that’s one small strike
in your favor. We thought you might try to gimmick
the gadget. Now we’ll just pitch you some
questions. A recorder’s on. Don’t
stall on the answers.”
And he and the Commissioner started
flipping out questions. The Ermetyne flipped
back the answers. So far as Trigger could tell,
there wasn’t any stalling. Or any time
for it.
Azol: Doctor Azol had been her
boy from the start. He was now on Tranest.
The main item in his report to her had been the significance
of the 112-113 plasmoid unit. He’d also
reported that Trigger Argee had become unconscious
on Harvest Moon. They’d considered the possibility
that somebody was controlling Trigger Argee, or attempting
to control her, because of her connections with the
plasmoid operations.
Gess Fayle: Lyad had been looking
for Doctor Fayle as earnestly as everyone else after
his disappearance. She had not been able to buy
him. So far as she knew, nobody had been able
to buy him. Doctor Fayle had appeared to intend
to work for himself. He was at present well outside
the Hub’s area of space. He still had 112-113
with him. Yes, she could become more specific
about the location with the help of star
maps.
“Let’s get them out,” said Commissioner
Tate.
They got them out. The Ermetyne
presently circled a largish section of the Vishni
Fleet’s area. The questions began again.
113-A: Professor Mantelish had
told her of his experiments with this plasmoid
There was an interruption here while
Mantelish huffed reflexively. But it was very
brief. The professor wanted to learn more about
the First Lady’s depravities himself.
and its various possible
associations with the main unit. But by the time
this information became available to her, 113-A had
been placed under heavy guard. Professor Mantelish
had made one attempt to smuggle it out to her.
Huff-huff!
but had been unable to
walk past the guards with it. Tranest agents
had made several unsuccessful attempts to pick up the
plasmoid. She knew that another group had made
similarly unsuccessful attempts. The Devagas.
She did not yet know the specific nature of 113-A’s
importance. But it was important.
Trigger: Trigger Argee might
be able to tell them why Trigger was important.
Doctor Fayle certainly could. So could the top
ranks of the Devagas hierarchy. Lyad, at the
moment, could not. She did know that Trigger
Argee’s importance was associated directly with
that of plasmoid 113-A. This information had
been obtained from a Devagas operator, now dead.
Not Balmordan. The operator had been in charge
of the attempted pickup on Evalee. The much more
elaborate affair at the Colonial School had been a
Tranest job. A Devagas group had made attempts
to interfere with it, but had been disposed of.
Pluly: Lyad had strings on Belchik.
He was afraid of the Devagas but somewhat more terrified
of her. His fear of the Devagas was due to the
fact that he and an associate had provided the hierarchy
with a very large quantity of contraband materials.
The nature of the materials indicated the Devagas
were constructing a major fortified outpost on a world
either airless or with poisonous atmosphere. Pluly’s
associate had since been murdered. Pluly believed
he was next in line to be silenced.
Balmordan: Balmordan had been
a rather high-ranking Devagas Intelligence agent.
Lyad had heard of him only recently. He had been
in charge of the attempts to obtain 113-A. Lyad
had convinced him that she would make a very dangerous
competitor in the Manon area. She also had made
information regarding her activities there available
to him. So Balmordan and a select group of his
gunmen had attended Pluly’s party on Pluly’s
yacht. They had been allowed to force their way
into the sealed level and were there caught in a black-light
trap. The gunmen had been killed. Balmordan
had been questioned.
The questioning revealed that the
Devagas had found Doctor Fayle and the 112-113 unit,
almost immediately after Fayle’s disappearance.
They had succeeded in creating some working plasmoids.
To go into satisfactory operation, they still needed
113-A. Balmordan had not known why. But
they no longer needed Trigger Argee. Trigger Argee
was now to be destroyed at the earliest opportunity.
Again Balmordan had not known why. Fayle and
his unit were in the fortress dome the Devagas had
been building. It was in the area Lyad had indicated.
It was supposed to be very thoroughly concealed.
Balmordan might or might not have known its exact
coordinates. His investigators made the inevitable
slip finally and triggered a violent mind-block reaction.
Balmordan had died. Dead-braining him had produced
no further relevant information.
The little drumfire of questions ended
abruptly. Trigger glanced at her watch.
It had been going on for only fifteen minutes, but
she felt somewhat dizzy by now. The Ermetyne
just looked a little more wilted.
After a minute, Commissioner Tate
inquired politely whether there was any further information
the First Lady could think of to give them at this
time.
She shook her head. No.
Only Professor Mantelish believed her.
But the interrogation was over, apparently.