"She," said Trigger, "is a remarkable woman."
"Yeah," said Quillan. "Remarkable."
"May I ask you, finally, a few pertinent questions?"
Trigger inquired humbly.
"Not here, sweet stuff," said Quillan.
"You're a bossy sort of slob, Heslet Quillan,"
she said equably.
Quillan didn't answer. They had come down
the stairway to the storerooms level and were
walking along the big lit hallway toward their
cabins. Trigger felt pleasantly relaxed. But she
did have a great many pertinent questions to ask
Quillan now, and she wanted to get started on
them.
"Oh!" she said suddenly. Just as suddenly,
Quillan's hand was on her shoulder, moving her
along.
"Hush now," he said. "And keep walking."
"But you saw it, didn't you?" Trigger asked,
trying to look back to the small open door into the
storerooms they'd just passed.
Quillan sighed. "Certainly," he said. "Guy in
space armor."
"But what's he doing there?"
"Checking something, I suppose." His hand left
her shoulder; and, for just a moment, his finger
rested lightly across her lips. Trigger glanced up
at him. He was walking on beside her, not looking
at her.
All right, she thought—she could take a hint.
But she felt tense and uncomfortable now. Something
was going on again, apparently.
They turned into the side passage and came up
to her cabin. Trigger started to turn to face him,
and Quillan picked her up and went on without a
noticeable break in his stride. Close to her ear, his
voice whispered, "Explain in a moment! Dangerous
here."
As the door to the end cabin closed behind
them, he put her back on her feet. He looked at his
watch.
"We can talk here," he said. "But there may not
be much time for conversation." He gestured toward
a table against the wall. "Take a look at the
setup."
Trigger looked. The table was littered with instruments,
like an electronic workbench. A visual
screen showed a view of both her own cabin and a
section of the passage outside it, up to the point
where it entered the big hall.
"What is it?" she asked uncertainly.
"Essentially," said Quillan, "we've set up a
catassin trap."
"Catassin!" Trigger squeaked.
"That's right. Don't get too nervous though. I've
caught them before. Used to be a sort of specialty
of mine. And there's one thing about them—they'll
blab their pointed little heads off if you can
get one alive and promise it its catnip...." He'd
shucked off his jacket and taken out of it a very
large handgun with a bell-shaped mouth. He laid
the gun down next to the view screen. "In case,"
he said, unreassuringly. "Now just a moment."
He sat down in front of the view screen and did
something to it.
"All right," he said then. "We're here and set.
Probability period starts in three minutes, continues
for sixty. Signal on any blip. Otherwise no
gabbing. And remember they're fast. Don't get
sappy."
There was no answer. Quillan did something
else to the screen and stood up again. He looked
broodingly at Trigger. "It's those damn computers
again!" he said. "I don't see any sense in it."
"In what?" she asked shakily.
"Everything that's happening around here is
being fed back to them at the moment," he said.
"When they heard about our invite to Lyad's dinner
party, and who was to be present, they came
up with a honey. In the time period I mentioned a
catassin is supposed to show up at your cabin.
They give it a pretty high probability."
Trigger didn't say anything. If she had, she
probably would have squeaked again.
"Now don't worry," he said, squeezing her
shoulder reassuringly between a large thumb and
four slightly less large fingers. "Nice muscle!" he
said absently. "The cabin's trapped and I've taken
other precautions." He massaged the muscle
gently. "Probably the only thing that will happen
is that we'll sit around here for an hour or so, and
then we'll have a hearty laugh together at those
foolish computers!" He smiled.
"I thought," Trigger said without squeaking,
"that everybody was pretty sure it was dead."
Quillan frowned. "Well, that's something else
again! There are at least two ways I know of to
sneak it past that search. Jump it out and in with a
subtub is one—they could have done that from
their own cabin as soon as they had its pattern. So
I don't really think it's dead. It's just—"
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