Quillan looked steadily at her and grinned.
"More or less," he said.
"We might," Lyad said thoughtfully, "come
back to that later. As for that match with Virod,"
she went on to Trigger, "it was really a terrific
event! Virod was a Tranest arena professional before
I took him into my personal employ, and he's
very, very rarely been beaten in any such contest."
She laughed. "And before such a large group of
people too! I'm afraid he's never quite forgiven
you for that, Quillan."
"I'll keep out of his way," Quillan said easily.
"Did you people know," Lyad said, "that the
trouble on the way between Maccadon and Evalee
was caused by a catassin killing?" There was
a touch of mischief in the question, Trigger
thought.
There were assorted startled responses. The
Ermetyne went briefly over some of the details
Quillan had told; essentially it was the same story.
"And do you know, Belchik, what the creature
was trying to do? It was trying to get into the rest
cubicle vaults. Just think, it might have been sent
after you!"
It was rather cruel. Pluly's head jerked, and he
blinked rapidly at Lyad, saying nothing. He was
a badly scared little man at that moment. Trigger
felt a little sorry for him, but not too sorry. Belchy's
ogle had been of the straightforward, loose-lipped,
drooling variety.
"You're safe when you're in one of those things,
Belchik!" Quillan said reassuringly. "Wouldn't
you feel a little safer there yourself, Lyad? If you
say they're not even sure they've killed the creature...."
"I probably shall have a cubicle set up here,"
Lyad said. "But not as protection against a catassin.
It would never get past Pilli, for one thing."
She looked at Trigger. "Oh, I forgot. You haven't
met Pilli. Virod!" she called.
Virod appeared at the far end of the terrace.
"Yes, First Lady?"
"Bring in Pilli," she told him.
Virod bowed. "Pilli is in the room, First Lady."
He glanced about, went over to a massive easy
chair a few feet way, and swung it aside. Something
like a huge ball of golden fur behind it
moved and sat up.
It was an animal of some sort. Its head seemed
turned toward the group, but whatever features it
had remained hidden under the fur. Then an arm
like the arm of a bear reached out and Trigger saw
a great furred hand that in shape seemed completely
human clutch the chair's edge.
"He was resting," Lyad said. "Not sleeping.
p. 156
Pilli doesn't sleep. He's a perfect guardian. Come
here, Pilli—meet Trigger Argee."
Pilli swung up on his feet. It was an impressively
effortless motion. There was a thick wide
torso on short thick legs under the golden fur. The
structure was gorilla-like. Pilli might weigh
around four hundred pounds.
He started silently forward and Trigger felt a
tingle of alarm. But he stopped six feet away. She
looked at him. "Do I say something to Pilli?"
Lyad looked pleased. "No. He's a biostructure.
A very intelligent one, but speech isn't included
in his pattern."
Trigger kept looking at the golden-furred
nightmare. "How can he see to guard you through
all that hair?"
"He doesn't see," Lyad said. "At least not as
we do. Pilli's part of one of our Tranest
experiments—the original stock came from the
Maccadon life banks, a small golden-haired Earth
monkey. The present level of the experiment is on
the fancy side—it has four hearts, for example,
and what amounts to a second brain at the lower
half of its spine. But it doesn't come equipped
with visual organs. Pilli is one of twenty-three of
the type. They have compensatory perception of a
kind that is still quite mysterious. We hope to
breed them past the speech barrier so they can tell
us what they do instead of seeing.... All right,
Pilli. Run along!" She said to Balmordan, "I believe
he doesn't like that Vethi thing of yours very
much."
Balmordan nodded. "I had the same impression."
Perhaps, Trigger thought, that was why Pilli
had been lurking so close to them. She watched
the biostructure move off down the terrace,
grotesque and huge. She had got its scent as it
went past her, a fresh, rather pleasant whiff, like
the smell of ripe apples. An almost amiable sort of
nightmare figure, Pilli was; the apple smell went
with that, seemed to fit it. But nightmare was
there too. She found herself feeling rather sorry
for Pilli.
"In a way," Lyad said, "Pilli brings us to that
matter of business I mentioned this afternoon."
The group's eyes shifted over to her. She
smiled.
"We have good scientists on Tranest," she said,
"as Pilli, I think, demonstrates." She nodded at
Balmordan. "There are good scientists in the Devagas
Union. And everyone here is aware that the
Treaties of Restriction imposed on both our governments
have made it impossible for our citizens
to engage seriously in plasmoid research."
Trigger nodded briefly as the light-amber eyes
paused on her for a moment. Quillan had
cautioned her not to show surprise at anything the
Ermetyne might say or do. If Trigger didn't know
what to say herself, she was merely to look inscrutable.
"I'll scrut," he explained. "The others
won't. I'll take over then and you just follow my
lead. Get it?"
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