For a moment the words swirled before
Bart’s still-watering eyes. He wiped them,
trying to steady himself. Had he so soon reached
the end of his dangerous quest? Somehow he had
expected it to lie in deep, dark concealment.
Raynor One. The existence of
Raynor One presupposed a Raynor Two and
probably a Raynor Three for all he
knew, Raynors Four, Five, Six, and Sixty-six!
The building looked solid and real. It had evidently
been there a long time.
With his hand on the door, he hesitated.
Was it, after all, the right Eight Colors?
But it was a family saying; hardly the sort of thing
you’d be apt to hear outside. He pushed
the door and went in.
The room was filled with brighter
light than the Procyon sun outdoors, the edges of
the furniture rimmed with neon in the Mentorian fashion.
A prim-looking girl sat behind a desk or
what should have been a desk, except that it looked
more like a mirror, with little sparkles of lights,
different colors, in regular rows along one edge.
The mirror-top itself was blue-violet and gave her
skin and her violet eyes a bluish tinge. She
was smooth and lacquered and glittering and she raised
her eyebrows at Bart as if he were some strange form
of life she hadn’t seen very often.
“I’d er like to
see Raynor One,” he said.
Her dainty pointed fingernail, varnished
blue, stabbed at points of light. “On what
business?” she asked, not caring.
“It’s a personal matter.”
“Then I suggest you see him at his home.”
“It can’t wait that long.”
The girl studied the glassy surface
and punched at some more of the little lights.
“Name, please?”
“David Briscoe.”
He had thought her perfect-painted
face could not show any emotion except disdain, but
it did. She looked at him in open, blank consternation.
She said into the vision-screen, “He calls himself
David Briscoe. Yes, I know. Yes, sir, yes.”
She raised her face, and it was controlled again,
but not bored. “Raynor One will see you.
Through that door, and down to the end of the hall.”
At the end of the hallway was another
door. He stepped through into a small cubicle,
and the door slid shut like a closing trap. He
whirled in panic, then subsided in foolish relief
as the cubicle began to rise it was just
an automatic elevator.
It rose higher and higher, stopping
with an abrupt jerk, and slid open into a lighted
room and office. A man sat behind a desk, watching
Bart step from the elevator. The man was very
tall and very thin, and the gray eyes, and the intensity
of the lights, told Bart that he was a Mentorian.
Raynor One?
Under the steady, stern gray stare,
Bart felt the slow, clutching suck of fear again.
Was this man a slave of the Lhari, who would turn him
over to them? Or someone he could trust?
His own mother had been a Mentorian.
“Who are you?” Raynor
One’s voice was harsh, and gave the impression
of being loud, though it was not.
“David Briscoe.”
It was the wrong thing. The Mentorian’s
mouth was taut, forbidding. “Try again.
I happen to know that David Briscoe is dead.”
“I have a message for Raynor Three.”
The cold gray stare never altered. “On
what business?”
On a sudden inspiration, Bart said,
“I’ll tell you that if you can tell me
what the Eighth Color is.”
There was a glint in the grim eyes
now, though the even, stern voice did not soften.
“I never knew myself. I didn’t name
it Eight Colors. Maybe it’s the original
owner you want.”
On a sudden hope, Bart asked, “Was
he, by any chance, named Rupert Steele?”
Raynor One made a suspicious movement.
“I can’t imagine why you think so,”
he said guardedly. “Especially if you’ve
just come in from Earth. It was never very widely
known. He only changed the name to Eight Colors
a few weeks ago. And it’s for sure that
your ship didn’t get any messages while the
Lhari were in warp-drive. You mention entirely
too many names, but I notice you aren’t giving
out any further information.”
“I’m looking for a man called Rupert Steele.”
“I thought you were looking
for Raynor Three,” said Raynor One, staring
at the Mentorian cloak. “I can think of
a lot of people who might want to know how I react
to certain names, and find out if I know the wrong
people, if they are the wrong people. What makes
you think I’d admit it if I did?”
Now, Bart thought, they had reached
a deadlock. Somebody had to trust somebody.
This could go on all night parry and riposte,
question and evasive answer, each of them throwing
back the other’s questions in a verbal fencing-match.
Raynor One wasn’t giving away any information.
And, considering what was probably at stake, Bart didn’t
blame him much.
He flung the Mentorian cloak down on the table.
“This got me out of trouble the
hard way,” he said. “I never wore
one before and I never intend to again. I want
to find Rupert Steele because he’s my father!”
“Your father. And just
how are you going to prove that exceptionally interesting
statement?”
Without warning, Bart lost his temper.
“I don’t care whether
I prove it or not! You try proving something
for a change, why don’t you? If you know
Rupert Steele, I don’t have to prove who I am just
take a good look at me! Or so Briscoe told me a
man who called himself Briscoe, anyway. He gave
me papers to travel under that name! I didn’t
ask for them, he shoved them into my hand. That
Briscoe is dead.” Bart struck his fist hard
on the desk, bending over Raynor One angrily.
“He sent me to find a man named
Raynor Three. But the only one I really care
about finding is my father. Now you know as much
as I do, how about giving me some information
for a change?”
He ran out of breath and stood glaring
down at Raynor One, fists clenched. Raynor One
got up and said, quick, savage and quiet, “Did
anyone see you come here?”
“Only the girl downstairs.”
“How did you get through the
Lhari? In that?” He moved his head at the
Mentorian cloak.
Bart explained briefly, and Raynor One shook his head.
“You were lucky,” he said,
“you could have been blinded. You must have
inherited flash-accommodation from the Mentorian side Rupert
Steele didn’t have it. I’ll tell
you this much,” he added, sitting down again.
“In a manner of speaking, you’re my boss.
Eight Colors it used to be Alpha Transshipping is
what they call a middleman outfit. The interplanet
cargo lines transport from planet to planet within
a system that’s free competition and
the Lhari ships transport from star to star that’s
a monopoly all over the galaxy. The middleman
outfits arrange for orderly and businesslike liaison
between the two. Rupert Steele bought into this
company, a long time ago, but he left it for me to
manage, until recently.”
Raynor punched a button, said to the
image of the glossy girl at the desk, “Violet,
get Three for me. You may have to send a message
to the Multiphase.”
He swung round to Bart again.
“You want a lot of explanations? Well,
you’ll have to get ’em from somebody else.
I don’t know what this is all about. I
don’t want to know: I have to do
business with the Lhari. The less I know, the
less I’m apt to say to the wrong people.
But I promised Three that if you turned up, or if
anyone came and asked for the Eighth Color, I’d
send you to him. That’s all.”
He motioned Bart ungraciously to a
seat, and shut his mouth firmly, as if he had already
said too much. Bart sat. After a while he
heard the elevator again; the panel slid open and
Raynor Three came into the room.
It had to be Raynor Three; there was
no one else he could have been. He was as like
Raynor One as Tweedledum to Tweedledee: tall,
stern, ascetic and grim. He wore the full uniform
of a Mentorian on Lhari ships: the white smock
of a medic, the metallic blue cloak, the low silvery
sandals.
He said, “What’s doing,
One? Violet ” and then he caught
sight of Bart. His eyes narrowed and he drew
a quick breath, his face twisting up into apprehension
and shock.
“It must be Steele’s boy,”
he said, and immediately Bart saw the difference between
the were they brothers? For Raynor
One’s face, controlled and stern, had not altered
all during their interview, but Raynor Three’s
smile was wry and kindly at once, and his voice was
low and gentle. “He’s the image of
Rupert. Did he come in on his own name?
How’d he manage it?”
“No. He had David Briscoe’s papers.”
“So the old man got through,”
said Raynor Three, with a low whistle. “But
that’s not safe. Quick, give them to me,
Bart.”
“The Lhari have them.”
Raynor One walked to the window and
said in his deadpan voice, “It’s useless.
But get the kid out of here before they come looking
for me. Look.”
He pointed. Below them, the streets
were alive with uniformed Lhari and Mentorians.
Bart felt sick.
“If they had the same efficiency
with red tape that we humans have, he’d never
have made it this far.”
Raynor Three actually smiled.
“But you can count on them for that much inefficiency,”
he said, and his eyes twinkled for a moment at Bart.
“That’s how it was so easy to work the
old double-shuffle trick on them. They had Steele’s
description but not his name, so Briscoe took Steele’s
papers and managed to slip through. Once they
landed on Earth, they had the Steele names,
but by the time that cleared, you were outbound with
another set of papers. It may have confused them,
because they knew David Briscoe was dead and
there was just a chance you were an innocent bystander
who could raise a real row if they pulled you in.
Did old Briscoe get away?”
“No,” Bart said, harshly, “he’s
dead.”
Raynor Three’s mobile face held
shocked sadness. “Two brave men,”
he said softly, “Edmund Briscoe the father,
David Briscoe the son. Remember the name, Bart,
because I won’t remember it.”
“Why not?”
Raynor Three gave him a gold-glinting,
enigmatic glance. “I’m a Mentorian,
remember? I’m good at not remembering things.
Just be glad I remember Rupert Steele. If you’d
been a few days later, I wouldn’t have remembered
him, though I promised to wait for you.”
Raynor One demanded, “Get him out of
here, Three!”
Raynor Three swung to Bart. “Put
that on again.” He indicated the Mentorian
cloak. “Pull the hood right up over your
head. Now, if we meet anyone, say a polite good
afternoon in Lhari you can speak
Lhari? and leave the rest of the talking
to me.”
Bart felt like cringing as they came
out into the street full of Lhari; but Raynor Three
whispered, “Attack is the best defense,”
and went up to one of the Lhari. “What’s
going on, rieko mori?”
“A passenger on the ship got
away without going through Decontam. He may spread
disease, so of course we have alerted all authorities,”
the Lhari said.
As the Lhari strode past, Raynor Three
grimaced. “Clever, that. Now the whole
planet will be hunting for any stranger, worrying themselves
into fits about some unauthorized germ. We’d
better get you to a safe place. My country house
is a good way off, but I have a copter.”
Bart demanded, as they climbed in,
“Are you taking me to my father?”
“Wait till we get to my place,”
Raynor Three said, taking the controls and putting
the machine in the air. “Just lean back
and enjoy the trip, huh?”
Bart relaxed against the cushions,
but he still felt apprehensive. Where was his
father? If he was a fugitive from the Lhari, he
might by now be at the other end of the galaxy.
But if his father couldn’t travel on Lhari ships,
and if he had been here, the chances were that he was
still somewhere in the Procyon system.
They flew for a long time; across
low hills, patchwork agricultural districts, towns,
and then for a long time over water. The copter
had automatic controls, but Raynor Three kept it on
manual, and Bart wondered if the Mentorian just didn’t
want to talk.
It began to descend, at last, toward
a small green hill, bright in the last gold rays on
sunset. A small domelike pink bubble rose out
of the hill. Raynor Three set the copter neatly
down on a platform that slid shut after them, unfastened
their seat belts and gave Bart a hand to climb out.
He ushered him into a living room
of glass and chrome, softly lighted, but deserted
and faintly dusty. Raynor pushed a switch; soft
music came on, and the carpets caressed his feet.
He motioned Bart to a chair.
“You’re safe here, for
a while,” Raynor Three said, “though how
long, nobody knows. But so far, I’ve been
above suspicion."’
Bart leaned back; the chair was very
comfortable, but the comfort could not help him to
relax.
“Where is my father?” he demanded.
Raynor Three stood looking down at
him, his mobile face drawn and strange. “I
guess I can’t put it off any longer,” he
said softly. Then he covered his face with his
hands. From behind them hoarse words came, choked
with emotion.
“Your father is dead, Bart. I I
killed him.”