As far as she could tell they hadn't modified
anything. The whole kitchen level looked so unchanged
that she had a moment of nostalgia.
Groups of students went chattering along the
hallways between the storerooms and the cooking
and processing plants. The big mess hall, Trigger
noticed in passing, smelled as good as it always
had. Bells sounded the end of a period and a
loudspeaker system began directing Class so and
so to Room such and such. Standing around were
a few uniformed guards—mainly for the purpose
of helping out newcomers who had lost their direction.
She came out on the equally familiar big and
brightly lit platform of the loading ramp. Some
sixty or seventy great cylindrical vans floated
alongside the platform, most of them disgorging
their contents, some still sealed.
Trigger walked unhurriedly down the ramp,
staying in the background, observing the movements
of two ramp guards and marking four vans
which were empty and looked ready to go.
The driver of the farthest of the four empties
stood in the back of his vehicle, a few feet above
the platform. When Trigger came level with him,
he was studying her. He was a big young man
with tousled black hair and a rough-and-ready
look. He was grinning very faintly. He knew the
ways of Colonial School students.
Trigger raised her left hand a few inches, three
fingers up. His grin widened. He shook his head
and raised both hands in a corresponding gesture.
Eight fingers.
Trigger frowned at him, stopped and looked
back along the row of vans. Then left hand up
again—four fingers and thumb.
The driver made a circle with finger and thumb.
A deal, for five Maccadon crowns. Which was
about standard fare for unauthorized passage out
of the school.
Trigger wandered on to the end of the platform,
turned and came back, still unhurriedly but now
close to the edge of the ramp. Down the line,
another van slammed open in back and a stream of
crates swooped out, riding a gravity beam from
the roof toward a waiting storeroom carrier. The
guard closest to Trigger turned to watch the process.
Trigger took six quick steps and reached her
driver.
He put down a hand to help her step up. She
slipped the five-crown piece into his palm.
"Up front," he whispered hoarsely. "Next to the
driver's seat and keep down. How far?"
"Nearest tube line."
He grinned again and nodded. "Can do."
Twenty minutes later Trigger was in a downtown
ComWeb booth. There had been a minor
modification in her plans and she'd stopped
off in a store a few doors away and picked up a
carefully nondescript street dress and a scarf. She
changed into the dress now and bundled the
school costume into a deposit box, which she
dispatched to Central Deposit with a one-crown
piece, getting a numbered slip in return. It had
occurred to her that there was a chance otherwise
of getting caught in a Colonial School roundup, if
it was brought to Doctor Plemponi's attention that
there appeared to be considerably more students
out on the town at the moment than could be
properly overlooked.
Or even, Trigger thought, if somebody simply
happened to have missed Trigger Argee.
She slipped the rain robe over her shoulders,
dropped a coin into the ComWeb, and covered the
silver-blonde hair with the scarf. The screen lit
up. She asked for Grand Commerce Transportation.
Waiting, she realized suddenly that so far she
was rather enjoying herself. There had been a
little argument with the van driver who, it turned
out, had ideas of his own about modifying Trigger's
plans—a complication she'd run into frequently
in her school days too. As usual, it didn't
develop into a very serious argument. Truckers
who dealt with the Colonial School knew, or
learned in one or two briefly horrid lessons, that
Mihul's commando-trained charges were prone
to ungirlish methods of discouragement when argued
with too urgently.
The view screen switched on. The transportation
clerk's glance flicked over Trigger's street
dress when she told him her destination. His expression
remained bland. Yes, the Dawn City was
leaving Ceyce Port for the Manon System tomorrow
evening. Yes, it was subspace express—one
of the newest and fastest, in fact. His eyes slipped
over the dress again. Also one of the most luxurious,
he might add. There would be only two
three-hour stops in the Hub beyond Maccadon—one
each off Evalee and Garth. Then a straight
dive to Manon unless, of course, gravitic storm
shifts forced the ship to surface temporarily. Average
time for the Dawn City on the run was
eleven days; the slowest trip so far had required
sixteen.
"But unfortunately, madam, there are only a
very few cabins left—and not very desirable ones,
I'm afraid." He looked apologetic. "There hasn't
been a vacancy on the Manon run for the past
three months."
"I can stand it, I imagine," Trigger said. "How
much for the cheapest?"
The clerk cleared his throat gently and told her.
She couldn't help blinking, though she was
braced for it. But it was more than she had
counted on. A great deal more. It would leave her,
in fact, with exactly one hundred and twenty-six
crowns out of her entire savings, plus the coins
she had in her purse.
"Any extras?" she asked, a little hoarsely.
He shrugged. "There's Traveler's Rest," he said
negligently. "Nine hundred for the three dive
periods. But Rest is optional, of course. Some
passengers prefer the experience of staying awake
during a subspace dive." He smiled—rather
sadistically, Trigger felt—and added, "Till
they've lived through one of them, that is."
Contents
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