"Doesn't look too bad," she conceded. "That's
real porgee in the top section?"
"The real article. Close to nine hundred and
fifty credits worth."
"Suppose somebody wants to borrow a sniff?
Wouldn't be good to have them fumbling around
the pouch very much!"
"They can't," said the Commissioner. "That's
why we made it porgee. When you buy a supply, it
has to be adjusted to your individual chemistry,
exactly. That's mainly what makes it expensive.
Try using someone else's, and it'll flip you across
the room."
"Better get this adjusted to my chemistry then. I
might have to take a demonstration sniff now and
then to make it look right."
"We've already done that," he said.
"Good," said Trigger. "Now let's see!" She
straightened up, left hand closed lightly around
the bottom of the purse, right hand loose at her
side. Her eyes searched the office briefly. "Some
object around here you don't particularly value?"
she asked. "Something largish?"
"Several," the Commissioner said. He glanced
around. "That overgrown flower pot in the corner
is one. Why?"
"Just practicing," said Trigger. She turned to
face the flower pot. "That will do. Now—here I
come along, thinking of nothing." She started
walking toward the flower pot. "Then, suddenly,
in front of me, there stands a plasmoid
snatcher."
She stopped in mid-stride. Handbag and strap
vanished, as her right hand slapped the porgee
pouch. The Denton popped into her palm. The
flower pot screeched and flew apart.
"Golly!" she said, startled. "Come, Fido!"
Handbag and strap reappeared and she reached
out and caught the strap. She looked around at
Commissioner Tate.
"Sorry about your pot, Holati. I was just going
to shake it up a little. I forgot you people had been
handling my gun. I keep it switched to stunner
myself when I'm carrying it," she added pointedly.
"Perfectly all right about the pot," the Commissioner
said. "I should have warned you.
Otherwise, I'd say all you'd need is a moment to
see them coming."
Trigger spun the Denton to its stunner setting
and laid it back inside the slit which had appeared
along the side of the porgee pouch. She ran thumb
and finger tip along the length of the slit, and the
pouch was sealed again.
"That's the part that's worrying me," she admitted.

When Trigger presented herself at Commissioner
Tate's personal quarters early that evening,
she found him alone.
"Sit down," he said. "I've been trying to get
hold of Mantelish for the past hour. He's over on
the other side of the planet again."
Trigger sat down and lifted an eyebrow.
"Should he be?"
"I don't think so," said Holati. "But I've been
overruled on that. He's still the best man the Federation
has working on the various plasmoid
problems, so I'm not to interfere with his investigations
any more than I can show is absolutely
necessary. It's probably all right. Those U-League
guards of his aren't a bad group."
"If they compare with the boys the League had
watching the Plasmoid Project, they should be
just about tops," Trigger said.
"The Space Scouts thank you for those kind
words," the Commissioner told her. "Those
weren't League guards. When it came to deciding
who was to keep an eye on you, I overruled everybody."
She smiled. "I might have guessed it. What's
there for the professor to be investigating on the
other side of Manon?"
"He's hunting for some theoretical creatures he
calls wild plasmoids."
"Wild plasmoids?"
"Uh-huh. His idea is that some of the plasmoids
the Old Galactics were using on Manon might
have got away from them, or just been left lying
around, so to speak, and could have survived till
now. He thinks they might even be reproducing
themselves. He's looking for them with a special
detector he built."
Trigger held up a finger on which was a slim
gold ring with a small green stone in it. "Like this
one?" she asked.
"He's got a large version of that type of detector
with him too. But he thinks that if any wild plasmoids
are around, they're likely to be along the
lines of 113-A. So he's also constructed a detector
which reacts to 113-A."
"I see." Trigger was silent a moment. "Does
Mantelish have any idea why Repulsive is the
only plasmoid known to which our ring detectors
don't react?"
"Apparently he does," Holati said. "But when
he starts in on those subjects, I find him difficult
to follow." He looked soberly at Trigger. "There
are times," he confessed, "when I suspect Professor
Mantelish is somewhat daft. But probably he's
just so brilliant that he keeps fading beyond my
mental range."
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