<h2>2</h2>
<p>There was a tube portal at the end of the hall outside
Doctor Plemponi's office. Mihul stepped into
the portal, punched the number of her personal
quarters, waited till the overhead light flashed
green a few seconds later, and stepped out into
another hall seventeen floors below Plemponi's
office and a little over a mile and a half away from
it.</p>
<p>Mihul crossed the hall, went into her apartment,
locked the door behind her and punched a
shield button. In her bedroom, she opened a wall
safe and swung out a high-powered transmitter.
She switched the transmitter to active.</p>
<p>"Yes?" said a voice.</p>
<p>"Mihul here," said Mihul. "Quillan or the
Commissioner...."</p>
<p>"Quillan here," the transmitter said a few seconds
later in a different voice, a deep male one.
"Go ahead, doll."</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="015">p. 15</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mihul grunted. "I'm calling," she said, "because
I feel strongly that you boys had better take
some immediate action in the Argee matter."</p>
<p>"Oh?" said the voice. "What kind of action?"</p>
<p>"How the devil would I know? I'm just telling
you I can't be responsible for her here much
longer."</p>
<p>"Has something happened?" Quillan asked
quickly.</p>
<p>"If you mean has somebody taken another
swing at her, no. But she's all wound up to start
swinging herself. She isn't going to do much waiting
either."</p>
<p>Quillan said thoughtfully, "Hasn't she been
that way for quite a while?"</p>
<p>"Not like she's been the last few days." Mihul
hesitated. "Would it be against security if you told
me whether something has happened to her?"</p>
<p>"Happened to her?" Quillan repeated cautiously.</p>
<p>"To her mind."</p>
<p>"What makes you think so?"</p>
<p>Mihul frowned at the transmitter.</p>
<p>"Trigger always had a temper," she said. "She
was always obstinate. She was always an individualist
and ready to fight for her own rights and
anyone else's. But she used to show good sense.
She's got one of the highest I.Q.s we ever processed
through this place. The way she's acting
now doesn't look too rational."</p>
<p>"How would she have acted earlier?" Quillan
asked.</p>
<p>Mihul considered. "She would have been very
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="016">p. 16</SPAN></span>
annoyed with Commissioner Tate," she said. "I
don't blame her for that—I'd be, too, in the circumstances.
When he got back, she'd have
wanted a reasonable explanation for what has
been going on. If she didn't get one that satisfied
her, she'd have quit. But she <i>would</i> have waited
till he got back. Why not, after all?"</p>
<p>"You don't think she's going to wait now?"</p>
<p>"I do not," Mihul said. "She's forwarded him a
kind of ultimatum through Plemponi. Communicate-or-else,
in effect. Frankly, I wouldn't
care to guarantee she'll stay around to hear the
answer."</p>
<p>"Hm.... What do you expect she'll do?"</p>
<p>"Take off," Mihul said. "One way or the other."</p>
<p>"Ungh," Quillan said disgustedly. "You make
it sound like the chick's got built-in space drives.
You can stop her, can't you?"</p>
<p>"Certainly I can stop her," Mihul said. "If I can
lock her in her room and sit on her to make sure
she doesn't leave by the window. But 'unobtrusively?'
You're the one who stressed she isn't to
know she's being watched."</p>
<p>"True," Quillan said promptly. "I spoke like a
loon, Mihul."</p>
<p>"True, Major Quillan, sir," said Mihul. "Now
try again."</p>
<p>The transmitter was silent a few seconds.
"Could you guarantee her for three days?" he
asked.</p>
<p>"I could not," said Mihul. "I couldn't guarantee
her another three hours."</p>
<p>"As bad as that?"</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="017">p. 17</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes," said Mihul. "As bad as that. She was
controlling herself with Plemponi. But I've been
observing her in the physical workouts. I've fed it
to her as heavy as I could, but there's a limit to
what you can do that way. She's kept herself in
very good shape."</p>
<p>"One of the best, I've been told," said Quillan.</p>
<p>"Condition, I meant," said Mihul. "Anyway,
she's trained down fine right now. Any more of it
would just <ins class="typo" title="Transcriber's Note: 'maker' in the original text.">make</ins> her edgier. You know how it
goes."</p>
<p>"Uh-huh," he said. "Fighter nerves."</p>
<p>"Same deal," Mihul agreed.</p>
<p>There was a short pause. "How about slapping a
guard on all Colonial school exits?" he suggested.</p>
<p>"Can you send me an army?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Then forget it. She was a student here, remember?
Last year a bunch of our students smuggled
the stuffed restructured mastodon out and
left it in the back garden of the mayor of Ceyce,
just for laughs. Too many exits. And Trigger was a
trickier monkey than most that way, when she felt
like it. She'll fade out of here whenever she wants
to."</p>
<p>"It's those damn tube portal systems!" said
Quillan, with feeling. "Most gruesome invention
that ever hit the tailing profession." He sighed.
"You win, Mihul! The Commissioner isn't in at
the moment. But whether he gets in or not, I'll
have someone over today to pick her up. Matter of
fact, I'll come along myself."</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="018">p. 18</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Good for you, boy!" Mihul said relievedly.
"Did you get anything out of yesterday's grabbers?"</p>
<p>"A little. 'Get her, don't harm her' were their
instructions. Otherwise it was like with those
other slobs. A hole in the head where the real info
should be. But at least we know for sure now that
someone is specifically after Argee. The price was
kind of interesting."</p>
<p>"What was it?"</p>
<p>"Flat half million credits."</p>
<p>Mihul whistled. "Poor Trigger!"</p>
<p>"Well, nobody's very likely to earn the money."</p>
<p>"I hope not. She's a good kid. All right, Major.
Signing off now."</p>
<p>"Hold on a minute," said Quillan. "You asked a
while ago if the girl had gone ta-ta."</p>
<p>"So I did," Mihul said, surprised. "You didn't
say. I figured it was against security."</p>
<p>"It probably is," Quillan admitted. "Everything
seems to be, right now. I've given up trying to
keep up with that. Anyway—I don't know that she
has. Neither does the Commissioner. But he's
worried. And Argee has a date she doesn't know
about with the Psychology Service, four days
from now."</p>
<p>"The eggheads?" Mihul was startled. "What do
they want with her?"</p>
<p>"You know," Quillan remarked reflectively,
"that's odd! They didn't think to tell me."</p>
<p>"Why are you letting me know?" Mihul asked.</p>
<p>"You'll find out, doll," he said.</p>
<hr />
<p>The U-League guard leaning against the wall
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="019">p. 19</SPAN></span>
opposite the portal snapped to attention as it
opened. Trigger stepped out. He gave her a fine
flourish of a salute.</p>
<p>"Good morning, Miss Farn."</p>
<p>"Morning," Trigger said. She flashed him a
smile. "Did the mail get in?"</p>
<p>"Just twenty minutes ago."</p>
<p>She nodded, smiled again and walked past him
to her office. She always got along fine with cops
of almost any description, and these League boys
were extraordinarily pleasant and polite. They
were also, she'd noticed, a remarkably muscled
group.</p>
<p>She locked the office door behind her—part of
the Plasmoid Project's elaborate security precautions—went
over to her mail file and found
it empty. Which meant that whatever had come in
was purely routine and already being handled by
her skeleton office staff. Later in the day she might
get a chance to scrawl Ruya Farn's signature on a
few dozen letters and checks. Big job! Trigger sat
down at her desk.</p>
<p>She brooded there a minute or two, tapping her
teeth with her thumbnail. The Honorable Precolonial
Commissioner Tate, whatever else might
be said of him, undoubtedly was one of the
brainiest little characters she'd ever come across.
He probably saw some quite valid reason for keeping
her here, isolated and uninformed. The question
was what the reason could be.</p>
<p>Security.... Trigger wrinkled her nose. Security
didn't mean a thing. Everybody and everything
associated with the Old Galactic plasmoids
had been wrapped up in Federation security measures
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="020">p. 20</SPAN></span>
since the day the plasmoid discovery was
announced. And she'd been in the middle of the
operations concerning them right along. Why
should Holati Tate have turned secretive on her
now? When even blabby old Plemponi could contact
him.</p>
<p>It was more than a little annoying....</p>
<p>Trigger shrugged, reached into a desk drawer
and took out a small solidopic. She set it on the
desk and regarded it moodily.</p>
<p>The face of an almost improbably handsome
young man looked back at her. Startling dark-blue
eyes; a strong chin, curly brown hair. There was a
gleam of white teeth behind the quick, warm
smile which always awoke a responsive glow in
her.</p>
<p>She and Brule Inger had been the nearest thing
to engaged for the last two and a half years, ever
since Precol sent them out together to its project
on Manon Planet. They'd been dating before that,
while they were both still attending the Colonial
School. But now she was here, perhaps stuck here
indefinitely—unless she did something about
it—and Brule was on Manon Planet. By the very
fastest subspace ships the Manon System was a
good nine days away. For the standard Grand
Commerce express freighter or the ordinary liner
it was a solid two-months' run. Manon was a <i>long</i>
way away!</p>
<p>It was almost a month since she'd even heard
from Brule. She could make up another personal
tape to him today if she felt like it. He would get it
in fourteen days or so via a Federation packet. But
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="021">p. 21</SPAN></span>
she'd already sent him three without reply. Brule
wasn't at all good at long distance love-making,
and she didn't blame him much. She was a little
awkward herself when it came to feeding her personal
feelings into a tape. And—because of security
again—there was very little else she could
feed into it. She couldn't even let Brule know just
where she was.</p>
<p>She put the solido back in its drawer, reached
for one of the bank of buttons on the right side of
the desk and pushed it down. A desk panel slid up
vertically in front of her, disclosing a news viewer
switched to the index of current headlines.</p>
<p>Trigger glanced over the headlines, while a few
items dissolved slowly here and there and were
replaced by more recent developments. Under the
"Science" heading a great deal seemed to be
going on, as usual, in connection with plasmoid
experiments around the Hub.</p>
<p>She dialed in the heading, skimmed through
the first item that appeared. Essentially it was a
summary of reports on Hubwide rumors that nobody
could claim any worthwhile progress in determining
what made the Old Galactic plasmoids
tick. Which, so far as Trigger knew, was quite
true. Other rumors, rather unpleasant ones, were
that the five hundred or so scientific groups to
whom individual plasmoids had been issued by
the Federation's University League actually had
gained important information, but were keeping
it to themselves.</p>
<p>The summary plowed through a few of the
learned opinions and counteropinions most recently
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="022">p. 22</SPAN></span>
obtained, then boiled them down to the
statement that a plasmoid might be compared to
an engine which appeared to lack nothing but an
energy source. Or perhaps more correctly—assuming
it might have an as yet unidentified
energy source—a starter button. One group
claimed to have virtually duplicated the plasmoid
loaned to it by the Federation, producing a
biochemical structure distinguishable from the
Old Galactic model only by the fact that it had—quite
predictably—fallen apart within hours. But
plasmoids didn't fall apart. The specimens undergoing
study had shown no signs of deterioration.
A few still absorbed nourishment from time
to time; some had been observed to move slightly.
But none could be induced to operate. It was all
very puzzling!</p>
<p>It <i>was</i> very puzzling, Trigger conceded. Back in
the Manon System, when they had been discovered,
the plasmoids were operating with high
efficiency on the protein-collecting station which
the mysterious Old Galactics appeared to have
abandoned, or forgotten about, some hundreds of
centuries ago. It was only when humans entered
the base and switched off its mechanical operations
that the plasmoids stopped working—and
then, when the switches which appeared to have
kept them going were expectantly closed again,
they had stayed stopped.</p>
<p>Personally, Trigger couldn't have cared less if
they never did move. It was nice that old Holati
Tate had made an almost indecently vast fortune
out of his first-discovery rights to the things, because
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="023">p. 23</SPAN></span>
she was really very fond of the Commissioner
when he wasn't being irritating. But in
some obscure way she found the plasmoids themselves
and the idea of unlimited plastic life which
they embodied rather appalling. However, she
was in a minority there. Practically everybody
else seemed to feel that plasmoids were the biggest
improvement since the creation of Eve.</p>
<p>She switched the viewer presently to its local-news
setting and dialed in the Manon System's
reference number. Keeping tab on what was going
on out there had become a private little ritual of
late. Occasionally she even picked up references
to Brule Inger, who functioned nowadays as Precol's
official greeter and contact man in the system.
He was very popular with the numerous important
Hub citizens who made the long run out to
the Manon—some bent on getting a firsthand
view of the marvels of Old Galactic science, and a
great many more bent on getting an early stake in
the development of Manon Planet, which was
rapidly approaching the point where its status
would shift from Precol Project to Federation Territory,
opening it to all qualified comers.</p>
<p>Today there was no news about Brule. Grand
Commerce had opened its first business and recreation
center on Manon, not ten miles from the
Precol Headquarters dome where Trigger recently
had been working. The subspace net which was
being installed about the Old Galactic base was
very nearly completed. The permanent Hub
population on Manon Planet had just passed the
forty-three thousand mark. There had been, Trigger
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="024">p. 24</SPAN></span>
recalled, a trifle nostalgically, barely eight
hundred Precol employees, and not another
human being, on that world in the days before
Holati Tate announced his discovery.</p>
<p>She was just letting the viewer panel slide back
into the desk when the office ComWeb gave forth
with a musical ping. She switched it on.</p>
<p>"Hi, Rak!" she said cheerily. "Anything new?"</p>
<p>The bony-faced young man looking out at her
wore the lusterless black uniform of a U-League
Junior Scientist. His expression was worried.</p>
<p>He said, "I believe there is, Miss Farn." Rak was
the group leader of the thirty-four Junior Scientists
the League had installed in the Project. Like
all the Juniors, he took his duties very seriously.
"Unfortunately it's nothing I can discuss over a
communicator. Would it be possible for you to
come over and meet with us during the day?"</p>
<p>"That," Trigger stated, "was a ridiculous question,
Rak! Want me over right now?"</p>
<p>He grinned. "Thanks, Miss Farn! In twenty
minutes then? I'll get my advisory committee together
and we can meet in the little conference
room off the Exhibition Hall."</p>
<p>Trigger nodded. "I'll be wandering around the
Hall. Just send a guard out to get me when you're
ready."</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="025">p. 25</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />