Quillan switched on the viewer. Their voices
came back into the cabin as they climbed into
their car.
"So that's how it happened," one of the assistants
was saying reflectively.
"Right," said the ship's engineer. "Like to burst
into flames myself."
"Ha-ha-ha!" They drove off.
Trigger flushed. She looked at Quillan.
"Perhaps I ought to get into something else,"
she said. "Now that the party's over."
"Perhaps," Quillan admitted. "I'll have Gaya
bring something down. We want to stay out of
your cabin for an hour or so till everything's been
checked. There'll be a few conferences to go
through now."
Gaya arrived next, with clothes. Trigger retired
to the cabin's bathroom with them and came out
a few minutes later, dressed again. Meanwhile
the Dawn City's First Security Officer also had
arrived and was setting up a portable restructure
stage in the center of the cabin. He looked rather
grim, but he also looked like a very much relieved
man.
"I suggest we run your sequence off first,
Major," he said. "Then we can put them on together,
and compare them."
Trigger sat down on a couch beside Gaya to
watch. She'd been told that the momentary view
of the little demon-shape in the cabin had been
deleted from Security's copy of their own sequence
and wasn't to be mentioned.
Otherwise there really was not too much to see.
What the attacking creature had used to blur the
restructure wasn't clear, except that it wasn't a
standard scrambler. Amplified to the limits of clarity
and stepped down in time to the limit of
immobility, all that emerged was a shifting haze
of energy, which very faintly hinted at a dwarfish
human shape in outline. A rather unusually small
and heavy catassin, the Security chief pointed
out, would present such an outline. That something
quite material was finally undergoing devastating
structural disorganization on the gravity
mine was unpleasantly obvious, but it produced
no further information. The sequence
ended with the short blaze of heat which had set
off the extinguishers.
Then they ran the restructure of the preceding
double killing. Trigger watched, gulping a little,
till it came to the point where the haze shape
actually was about to touch its victims. Then she
studied the carpet carefully until Gaya nudged
her to indicate the business was over. Catassins
almost invariably used their natural equipment in
the kill; it was a swift process, of course, but
shockingly brutal, and Trigger didn't care to remember
what the results looked like in a human
being. Both men had been killed in that manner;
and the purpose obviously was to conceal the fact
that the killer was not a catassin, but something
even more efficient along those lines.
It didn't occur to the Security chief to question
Trigger. A temporal restructure of a recent event
was a far more reliable witness than any set of
human senses and memory mechanisms. He left
presently, reassured that the catassin incident
was concluded. It startled Trigger to realize that
Security did not seem to be considering seriously
the possibility of discovering the human agent
behind the murders.
Quillan shrugged. "Whoever did it is covered
three ways in every direction. The chief knows it.
He can't psych four thousand people on general
suspicions, and he'd hit mind-blocks in every
twentieth passenger presently on board if he did.
Anyway he knows we're on it, and that we have a
great deal better chance of nailing the responsible
characters eventually."
"More information for the computers, eh?"
Trigger said.
"Uh-huh."
"You got this little chunk the hard way, I feel,"
she observed.
"True," Quillan admitted, "But we have to get
it any way we can till we get enough to move on.
Then we move." He looked at her, with an air of
regarding a new idea. "You know," he said, "you
don't do badly for an amateur!"
"She doesn't do badly," Gaya's voice said behind
Trigger, "for anybody. How do you people
feel about a drink? I thought I could use one myself
after looking at the chief's restructure."
Trigger felt herself coloring. Praise from the
cloak and dagger experts! For some reason it
pleased her immensely. She turned her head to
smile at Gaya, standing there with three glasses
on a tray.
"Thanks!" she said. She took one of the glasses.
Gaya held the tray out to Quillan and took the
third glass herself.
It was some five minutes later when Trigger
remarked, "You know, I'm getting sleepy."
Quillan looked around the viewer equipment
he and Gaya were dismantling. "Why not hit the
couch over there and take a nap?" he suggested.
"It'll be about an hour before the boys can get
down here for the real conference."
"Good idea." Trigger yawned, finished her
drink, put the glass on a table, and wandered over
to the couch. She stretched out on it. A drowsy
somnolence enveloped her almost instantly. She
closed her eyes.
Ten minutes later, Gaya, standing over her, announced,
"Well, she's out."
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