<h2>11</h2>
<p>The bedside ComWeb warned her politely that it was
now ten minutes to dive point. Waking passengers
who experienced subspace distress in any
form could obtain immediate assistance by a call
on any ComWeb. If they preferred, they could
have their cabins kept under the continuous visual
supervision of their personal steward or
stewardess.</p>
<p>The Dawn City's passenger areas still looked
rather well populated when Trigger arrived. But
some of the passengers were showing signs of
regretting their decision to stay awake. Presently
she became aware of a faint queasiness herself.</p>
<p>It wasn't bad—mainly a sensation as if the ship
were trying continuously to turn over on its axis
around her and not quite making it—and she
knew from previous experience that after the first
hour or so she would be completely free of that.
She walked into a low, dimly lit, very swank-looking
gambling room, still well patronized by
the hardier section of her fellow travelers, searching
for a place where she could sit down unobtrusively
for a while and let the subspace reaction
work itself out.</p>
<p>A couch beside a closed door near the unlit end
of the room seemed about right for the purpose.</p>
<p>Trigger sat down and glanced around. There
were a variety of games in progress, all unfamiliar
to her. The players were mostly men, but a remarkable
number of beautiful women, beautifully
gowned, stood around the tables as observers.
Traveler's Companions, Trigger realized suddenly—the
Dawn City's employees naturally
would be inured to subspace effects. From the
scraps of talk she could pick up, the stakes seemed
uniformly high.</p>
<p>A swirl of vertigo suddenly built up in her
again. This one was stronger than most; for a
moment she couldn't be sure whether she was
going to be sick or not. She stood up, stepped over
to the door a few feet away, pulled it open and
went through, drawing it shut behind her.</p>
<p>There had been a shielding black-light screen
in the doorway. On the other side was bottled
sunshine.</p>
<p>She found herself on a long balcony which
overlooked a formal garden enclosure thirty feet
below. There was no one else in sight. She leaned
back against the wall beside the door, closed her
eyes and breathed slowly and deeply for some
seconds. The sickish sensation began to fade.</p>
<p>When she opened her eyes again, she saw the
little yellow man.</p>
<p>He stood motionless at the far end of the garden,
next to some flowering shrubbery out of which he
might have just stepped. He seemed to be peering
along the sand path which curved in toward the
balcony and vanished beneath it, below the point
where Trigger stood.</p>
<p>It was sheer fright which immobilized her at
first. Because there was not anything really
human about that small, squat, manshaped figure.
A dwarfish yellow demon he seemed, evil and
menacing. The garden, she realized suddenly,
might be an illusion scene. Or else—</p>
<p>The thing moved in that instant. It became a
blur of motion along the curving path and disappeared
under the balcony. After a second or so she
heard the sound of a door closing some distance
away. The garden lay still again.</p>
<p>Trigger stayed where she was, her knees shaking
a little. The fright appeared to have driven
every trace of nausea out of her, and gradually her
heartbeat began to return to normal. She took
three cautious steps forward to the balcony railing,
where the tip of a swaying green tree branch
was in reach.</p>
<p>She put her hand out hesitantly, felt the smooth
vegetable texture of a leaf, grasped it, pulled it
away. She moved back to the door and examined
the leaf. It was a quite real leaf. Thin sap formed a
bead of amber moisture at the break in the stalk as
she looked at it.</p>
<p>No illusion structure could be elaborated to that
extent.</p>
<p>So she'd just had her first dive hallucination—and
it had been a dilly!</p>
<p>Trigger dropped the leaf, pushed shakily at the
balcony door, and stepped back through the
black-light screen into the reassuring murmur of
human voices in the gambling room.</p>
<p>An hour later, the ship's loudspeaker system
went on. It announced that the Dawn City would
surface in fifteen minutes because of gravitic disturbances,
and proceed the rest of the way to
Evalee in normal space, arriving approximately
five hours behind schedule. Rest cubicle passengers
would not be disturbed, unless this was specifically
requested by a qualified associate.</p>
<p>Trigger turned her attention back to her viewer,
feeling rather relieved. She hadn't experienced
any further hallucinations, or other indications of
subspace distress; but the one she'd had would do
her for a while. The little viewer library she was in
was otherwise deserted, and she'd been going
about her studies there just the least bit nervously.</p>
<p>Subject of the studies were the Hub's principal
games of chance. She'd identified a few of those
she'd been watching—and one of them did look as
if someone who went at it with an intelligent
understanding of the odds—</p>
<p>A part of Trigger kept tut-tutting and shaking
its head at such reckless notions. But another part
pointed out that they couldn't be much worse off
financially than they were right now. So what if
they arrived in Manon dead-broke instead of practically?
Besides, there was the problem of remaining
inconspicuous till they got there. On the
Dawn City no one whose wardrobe was limited to
one Automatic Sales dress was going to remain
inconspicuous very long.</p>
<p>Trigger-in-toto went on calculating the odds for
various possible play combinations. She developed
her first betting system, presently discovered
several holes in it, and began to develop
another.</p>
<p>The loudspeaker system went on again. She
was too absorbed to pay much attention to it at
first. Then she suddenly straightened up and listened,
frowning.</p>
<p>The man speaking now was the liner's First
Security Officer. He was being very polite and
regretful. Under Section such and such, Number
so and so, of the Federation's Legal Code, a cabin
by cabin search of the passenger area of the Dawn
City had become necessary. The persons of passengers
would not be searched. Passengers might,
if they wished, be present while their cabins were
inspected; but this was not required. Baggage
need not be opened, providing its spyproofing
was not activated. Any information revealed by
the search which did not pertain to a violation of
the Code Section and Number in question would
not be recorded and could not be introduced as
future legal evidence under any circumstances.
Complaints regarding the search could be addressed
to any Planetary Moderator's office.</p>
<p>This wasn't good at all! Trigger stood up. The
absence of luggage in her cabin mightn't arouse
more than passing interest in the searchers. Her
gun was a different matter. Discreet inquiries regarding
a female passenger who carried a double-barreled
sporting Denton might be one of
the check methods used by the Scout Intelligence
boys if they started thinking of liners which recently
had left Maccadon in connection with
Trigger's disappearance. There weren't likely to
be more than two or three guns of that type on
board, and it was almost certain that she would be
the only woman who owned one.</p>
<p>She'd better go get the Denton immediately
... and then vanish again into the public sections
of the ship! Some Security officer with a
good memory and a habit of noticing faces might
identify her otherwise from the news viewer pictures
taken on Manon.</p>
<p>And he just might start wondering then why
she was traveling as Birna Drellgannoth—and
start to check.</p>
<p>She paused long enough to get the Legal Code
article referred to into the viewer.</p>
<p>Somebody on board appeared to have got himself
murdered.</p>
<p>She reached the cabin too late. A couple of
young Security men already were going over it.
Trigger said hello pleasantly. It was too bad, but it
wasn't their fault. They just had a job to do.</p>
<p>They smiled back at her, apologized for the
intrusion and went on with their business. She sat
down and watched them. The Denton was there in
plain sight. Dropping it into her purse now would
be more likely to fix it in their memory than leaving
it where it was.</p>
<p>The gadgets they were using were in concealing
casings, and she couldn't guess what they
were looking for by the way they used them. It
didn't seem that either of them was trying to haul
up an identifying memory about her. They did
look a little surprised when the second cabin
closet was opened and found to be as empty as the
first; but no comments were made about that. Two
minutes after Trigger had come in, they were
finished and bowed themselves out of the cabin
again. They turned then toward the cabin occupied
by the ancient retainers of the Askab of
Elfkund.</p>
<p>Trigger left her door open. This she wanted to
hear, if she could.</p>
<p>She heard. The Elfkund door also stayed open,
while the racket beyond it grew shriller by the
moment. Finally a ComWeb chimed. A feminine
voice spoke sternly. The Quavering outcries subsided.
It looked as if Security had been obliged to
call on someone higher up in the Elfkund entourage
to come to its aid. Trigger closed her door
grinning.</p>
<p>On the screen of her secluded library, she presently
watched a great port shuttle swing in from
Evalee to meet the hovering Dawn City. It would
bring another five hundred or so passengers on
board and take off the few who had merely been
making the short run from Maccadon to Evalee in
style. Solidopic operators were quite likely to be
on the shuttle, so she had decided to keep away
from the entry area.</p>
<p>The transfer operation was carried out very expeditiously,
probably to make up for some of the
time lost on the surface. When the shuttle shoved
off, the loudspeaker announced that normal space
flight would be maintained till after the stopover
at Garth. Trigger wandered thoughtfully back to
her cabin. She closed the door behind her.</p>
<p>Then she saw the man sitting by the ComWeb
cabinet. Her breath sucked in. She crouched a
little, ready to wheel and bolt.</p>
<p>"Take it easy, Trigger!" Major Quillan said. He
was in civilian clothes, of rather dudish cut.</p>
<p>Trigger swallowed. There was, too obviously,
no place to bolt to. "How did you find me?"</p>
<p>He shrugged. "Longish story. You're not under
arrest."</p>
<p>"I'm not?"</p>
<p>"No," said Quillan. "When we get to Manon,
the Commissioner will have a suggestion to make
to you."</p>
<p>"Suggestion?" Trigger said warily.</p>
<p>"I believe you're to take back your old Precol job
in Manon, but as cover for your participation in
our little project. If you agree to it."</p>
<p>"What if I don't?"</p>
<p>He shrugged again. "It seems you'll be writing
your own ticket from here on out."</p>
<p>Trigger stared at him, wondering. "Why?"</p>
<p>Quillan grinned. "New instructions have been
handed down," he said. "If you're still curious,
ask Whatzzit."</p>
<p>"Oh," Trigger said. "Then why are you here?"</p>
<p>"I," said Quillan, "am to make damn sure you
get to Manon. I brought a few people with me."</p>
<p>"Mihul, too?" Trigger asked, a shade diffidently.</p>
<p>"No. She's on Maccadon."</p>
<p>"Is she—how's she doing?"</p>
<p>"Doing all right," Quillan said. "She sends her
regards and says a little less heft on the next solar
plexus you torpedo should be good enough."</p>
<p>Trigger flushed. "She isn't sore, is she?"</p>
<p>"Not the way you mean," he considered. "Not
many people have jumped Mihul successfully. In
her cockeyed way, she seemed pretty proud of her
student."</p>
<p>Trigger felt the flush deepen. "I got her off her
guard," she said.</p>
<p>"Obviously," said Quillan. "In any ordinary
argument she could pull your legs off and tie you
up with them. Still, that wasn't bad. Have you
talked to anybody since you came on board?"</p>
<p>"Just the room stewardess. And a couple of old
ladies in the next cabin."</p>
<p>"Yeah," he said. "Couple of old ladies. What
did you talk about?"</p>
<p>Trigger recounted the conversation. He reflected,
nodded and stood up.</p>
<p>"I put a couple of suitcases in that closet over
there," he said. "Your personal stuff is in them,
de-tracered. Another thing—somebody checked
over your finances and came to the conclusion
you're broke."</p>
<p>"Not exactly broke," said Trigger.</p>
<p>Quillan reached into a pocket, pulled out an
envelope and laid it on the cabinet. "Here's a little
extra spending money then," he said. "The balance
of your Precol pay to date. I had it picked up
on Evalee this morning. Seven hundred twenty-eight
FC."</p>
<p>"Thanks," Trigger said. "I can use some of
that."</p>
<p>They stood looking at each other.</p>
<p>"Any questions?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Sure," Trigger said. "But you wouldn't answer
them."</p>
<p>"Try me, doll," said Quillan. "But let's shift
operations to the fanciest cocktail lounge on this
thing before you start. I feel like relaxing a little.
For just one girl, you've given us a fairly rough
time these last forty-eight hours!"</p>
<p>"I'm sorry," Trigger said.</p>
<p>"I'll bet," said Quillan.</p>
<p>Trigger glanced at the closet. If he'd brought
everything along, there was a dress in one of those
suitcases that would have been a little too daring
for Maccadon. It should, therefore, be just about
right for a cocktail lounge on the Dawn City; and
she hadn't had a chance to wear it yet. "Give me
ten minutes to change."</p>
<p>"Fine." Quillan started toward the door. "By
the way, I'm your neighbor now."</p>
<p>"The cabin at the end of the hall?" she asked
startled.</p>
<p>"That's right." He smiled at her. "I'll be back in
ten minutes."</p>
<p>Well, that was going to be cosy! Trigger found
the dress, shook it out and slipped into it, enormously
puzzled but also enormously relieved.
That <ins class="typo" title="Transcriber's Note: 'Whatzzitt' in the original text.">Whatzzit</ins>!</p>
<p>Freshening up her make-up, she wondered how
he had induced the Elfkund ladies to leave.
Perhaps he'd managed to have a better cabin offered
to them. It must be convenient to have that
kind of a pull.</p>
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