Three hours later, the ship was well away from
Luscious, traveling subspace, traveling fast. Trigger
walked up into the control section.
"Mantelish is still asleep," she said. They'd fed
the professor a doped drink to get him aboard
without detailed explanation and argument about
how much of the lab should be loaded on the ship
first. "Shall I get Lyad out of her cabin for the rest
of the story or wait till he wakes up?"
"Better wait," said the Commissioner. "He'll
come out of it in about an hour, and he might as
well hear it with us. Looks like navigating's going
to be a little rough for a spell anyway."
Trigger nodded and sat down in the control
next to his. After a while he glanced over at her.
"How did you get her to talk?" he asked.
"We went back into the woods a bit. I tied her
over a stump and broke two sticks across the first
seat of Tranest. Got the idea from Mihul sort of,"
Trigger added vaguely. "When I picked up a third
stick, Lyad got awfully anxious to keep things at
just a fast conversational level. We kept it there."
"Hm," said the Commissioner. "You don't feel
she did any lying this time?"
"I doubt it. I tapped her one now and then, just
to make sure she didn't slow down enough to do
much thinking. Besides I'd got the whole business
down on a pocket recorder, and Lyad knew
it. If she makes one more goof till this deal is over,
the recording gets released to the Hub's news
viewer outfits, yowls and all. She'd sooner lose
Tranest than risk having that happen. She'll be
good."
"Yeah, probably," he said thoughtfully. "About
that substation—would you feel more comfortable
if we went after the bunch round the Devagas
dome first and got us an escort for the trip?"
"Sure," Trigger said. "But that would just about
kill any chances of doing anything personally,
wouldn't it?"
"I'm afraid so. Scout Intelligence will go along
pretty far with me. But they couldn't go that far.
We might be able to contact Quillan individually
though. He's a topnotch man in a fighter."
"It doesn't seem to me," Trigger said, "that we
ought to run any risk of being spotted till we know
exactly what this thing is like."
"Well," said the Commissioner, "I'm with you
there. We shouldn't."
"What about Mantelish and Lyad? You can't let
them know either."
The Commissioner motioned with his head.
"The rest cubicle back of the cabins. If we see a
chance to do anything, we'll pop them both into
Rest. I can dream up something to make that look
plausible afterwards, I think."
Trigger was silent a moment. Lyad had told
them she'd dispatched the Aurora to stand guard
over a subspace station where the missing king
plasmoid presently was housed, until both she
and the combat squadron from Tranest could arrive
there. The exact location of that station had
been the most valuable of the bits of information
she had extracted so painstakingly from Balmordan.
The coordinates were centered on the Commissioner's
course screen at the moment.
"How about that Tranest squadron?" Trigger
asked. "Think Lyad might have risked a lie, and
they could get out here in time to interfere?"
"No," said the Commissioner. "She had to have
some idea of where to send them before starting
them out of the Hub. They'll be doing fine if they
make it to the substation in another two weeks.
Now the Aurora—if they started for Luscious
right after Lyad called them last night, at best they
can't get there any sooner than we can get to the
substation. I figure that at four days. If they turn
right around then, and start back—"
Trigger laughed. "You can bet on that!" she
said. The Commissioner had used his ship's guns
to brand the substation's coordinates in twenty-mile
figures into a mountain plateau above Plasmoid
Creek. They'd left much more detailed information
in camp, but there was a chance it
would be overlooked in too hurried a search.
"Then they'll show up at the substation again
four or five days behind us," the Commissioner
said. "So they're no problem. But our own outfit's
fastest ships can cut across from the Devagas
dome in less than three days after their search
party messages from Luscious to tell them why
we've stopped transmitting and where we've
gone. Or the Psychology ship might get to Luscious
before the search party does and start
transmitting about the coordinates."
"In any case," said Trigger, "it's our own boys
who are likely to be the problem."
"Yes. I'd say we should have two days, give or
take a few hours, after we get to the station to see if
we can do anything useful and get it done. Of
course, somebody might come wandering into
Luscious right now and start wondering about
those coordinate figures, or drop in at our camp
and discover we're gone. But that's not very likely,
after all."
"Couldn't be helped anyway," Trigger said.
"No. If we knock ourselves out on this job,
somebody besides Lyad's Tranest squadron and
the Devagas has to know just where the station
is." He shook his head. "That Lyad! I figured
she'd know how to run the transmitters, so I gave
her the chance. But I never imagined she'd be a
good enough engineer to get inside them and
mess them up without killing herself."
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