"I never claimed I liked this arrangement,"
Trigger said carefully. "I did say I'd go along with
it. I will. Isn't that enough?"
"Sure," Mihul said promptly. "Give word of
parole?"
There was a long pause.
"No!" Trigger said.
"I thought not. Drink or gun?"
"Drink," Trigger said coldly. She took the glass.
"How long will it put me out?"
"Eight to nine hours." Mihul stood by watchfully
while Trigger emptied the tumbler. After a
moment the tumbler fell to the floor. She reached
out and caught Trigger as she started down.
"All right," she said across her shoulder to the
open doorway behind her. "Let's move!"

Trigger awoke and instantly went taut with tension.
She lay quiet a few seconds, not even opening
her eyes. There was cool sunlight on her
eyelids, but she was indoors. There was a subdued
murmur of sound somewhere; after a moment
she knew it came from a news viewer turned
low, in some adjoining room. But there didn't
seem to be anybody immediately around her.
Warily she opened her eyes.
She was on a couch in an airy, spacious room
furnished in the palest of greens and ivory. One
entire side of the room was either a window or a
solido screen. In it was a distant mountain range
with many snowy peaks, an almost cloudless blue
sky. Sun at midmorning or midafternoon.
Sun and all had the look of Maccadon—they
probably still were on the planet. That was where
the interview was to take place. But she also could
have been sent on a three-day space cruise, which
would be a rather good way to make sure a prisoner
stayed exactly where you wanted her. This
could be a spaceliner suite with a packaged view
of any one of some hundreds of worlds, and with
packaged sunlight thrown in.
There was one door to the room. It stood open,
and the news viewer talk came from there.
Trigger sat up quietly and looked down at the
clothes she wore. All white. A short-sleeved
half-blouse of some soft, rather heavy, very comfortable
unfamiliar stuff. Bare midriff. White kid
trousers which flared at the thighs and were
drawn in to a close fit just above the knees and
down the calves, vanishing into kid boots with
thick, flexible soles.
Sporting outfit.... That meant Maccadon!
She pulled a handful of hair forward and looked
at it. They'd recolored it—this time to a warm
mahogany brown. She swung her legs off the
couch and stood up quietly. A dozen soft steps
across the springy thick-napped turf of ivory carpet
took her to the window.
The news viewer clicked and went silent.
"Not bad," Trigger said. She saw a long range of
woodlands and open heath, rising gradually into
the flanks of the mountains. On the far right was
the still, silver glitter of two lakes. "Where are
we?"
"Byla Uplands Game Preserve. That's the game
bird area before you." Mihul appeared in the
doorframe, in an outfit almost a duplicate of Trigger's,
in pearl-gray tones. "Feel all right?"
"Feeling fine," Trigger said. Byla Uplands—the
southern tip of the continent. She could make
it back to Ceyce in two hours or less! She turned
and grinned at Mihul. "I also feel hungry. How
long was I out?"
Mihul glanced at her wrist watch. "Eight hours,
ten minutes. You woke up on schedule. I had
breakfast sent up thirty minutes ago. I've already
eaten mine—took one sniff and plunged in. It's
good!" Mihul's hair, Trigger saw, had been
cropped short and a streak of gray added over the
right side; and they'd changed the color of her
eyes to hazel. She wondered what had been done
to her along that line. "Want to come in?" Mihul
said. "We can talk while you eat."
Trigger nodded. "After I've freshened up."
The bathroom mirror showed they'd left her
eyes alone. But there was a very puzzling impression
that she was staring at an image considerably
plumper, shorter, younger than it should be—a
teen-ager around seventeen or eighteen. Her eyes
narrowed. If they'd done flesh-sculpting on her, it
could cause complications.
She stripped hurriedly and checked. They
hadn't tampered with her body. So it had to be the
clothes; though it was difficult to see how even
the most cunning cut could provide such a very
convincing illusion of being more rounded out,
heavier around the thighs, larger breasts—just
missing being dumpy, in fact. She dressed
again, looked again, and came out of the bathroom,
still puzzled.
"Choice of three game birds for breakfast."
Mihul announced. "Never heard of any of them.
All good. Plus regular stuff." She patted her flat
midriff. "Ate too much!" she admitted. "Now dig
in and I'll brief you."
Trigger dug in. "I had a look at myself in the
mirror," she remarked. "What's this now-you-see-it-now-you-don't
business of fifteen or so
pounds of baby fat?"
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