<h2>9</h2>
<p>It was really infernally bad luck! Mihul was
going to be the least easy of wardens to get away
from ... particularly in time to catch a liner
tomorrow night. Mihul knew her much too well.</p>
<p>"Like to come along and meet your facsimile
now?" Mihul inquired. She grinned. "Most
people find the first time quite an experience."</p>
<p>Trigger stood up resignedly. "All right," she
said. They were being polite about it, but it was
clear that it was still a cop and prisoner situation.
And old friend Mihul! She <ins class="typo" title="Transcriber's Note: 'rekembered' in the original text.">remembered</ins> something
then. "I believe Major Quillan has my gun."</p>
<p>He looked at her thoughtfully, not smiling.
"No," he said. "Gave it to Mihul."</p>
<p>"That's right," said Mihul. "Let's go, kid."</p>
<p>They went out through the door that had appeared
in the wall. It closed again behind them.</p>
<p>The facsimile stood up from behind a table at
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="090">p. 90</SPAN></span>
which she had been sitting as Trigger and Mihul
came into the room. She gave Trigger a brief,
impersonal glance, then looked at Mihul.</p>
<p>Mihul performed no introductions.</p>
<p>"Dress, robe and scarf," she said to the facsimile.
"The shoes are close enough." She turned
to Trigger. "She'll be wearing your street clothes
when she leaves<ins class="typo" title="Transcriber's Note: comma missing in the original text.">,</ins>" she said. "Could we have the
dress now?"</p>
<p>Trigger pulled the dress over her head, tossed it
to Mihul and stood in her underwear, looking at
her double slip out of her street clothes. They did
seem to be a very close match in size and proportions.
Watching the shifting play of slim muscles
in the long legs and smooth back, Trigger decided
the similarity was largely a natural one. The
silver-blonde hair was the same, of course. The
gray eyes seemed almost identical—and the rest
of the face was a little <i>too</i> identical! They must
have used a life-mask there.</p>
<p>It was a bit uncanny. Like seeing one's mirror
image start moving about independently. If the
girl had talked, it might have reduced the effect.
But she remained silent.</p>
<p>She put on the dress Trigger had been wearing
and smoothed it down. Mihul surveyed the result.
She nodded. "Perfect." She took Trigger's robe
and scarf from the back of a chair where someone
had draped them and handed them over.</p>
<p>"You won't wear the scarf," she said. "Just
shove it into a pocket of the coat."</p>
<p>The girl slung the cloak over her shoulder and
stood holding the scarf. Mihul looked her over
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="091">p. 91</SPAN></span>
once more. "You'll do," she said. She smiled
briefly. "All right."</p>
<p>The facsimile glanced at Trigger again, turned
and moved attractively out of the room. Trigger
frowned.</p>
<p>"Something wrong?" Mihul asked. She had
gone over to a wall basin and was washing out a
tumbler.</p>
<p>"Why does she walk like that?"</p>
<p>"The little swing in the rear? She's studied it."
Mihul half filled the tumbler with water, fished a
transparent splinter of something out of a pocket
and cracked the splinter over the edge of the glass.
"Among your friends it's referred to as the Argee
Lilt. She's got you down pat, kid."</p>
<p>Trigger didn't comment. "Am I supposed to put
on her clothes?"</p>
<p>"No. We've got another costume for you."
Mihul came over, holding out the glass. "This is
for you."</p>
<p>Trigger looked at the glass suspiciously.
"What's in it?"</p>
<p>The blue eyes regarded her mildly. "You could
call it a sedative."</p>
<p>"Don't need any. Thanks."</p>
<p>"Better take it anyway." Mihul patted her hip
with her other hand. "Little hypo gun here. That's
the alternative."</p>
<p>"What!"</p>
<p>"That's right. Same type of charge as in your
fancy Denton. Stuff in the glass is easier to take
and won't leave you groggy."</p>
<p>"What's the idea?"</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="092">p. 92</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I've known you quite a while," said Mihul.
"And I was watching you the last twenty minutes
in that room through a screen. You'll take off
again if you get the least chance. I don't blame you
a bit. You're being pushed around. But now it's
my job to see you don't take off; and until we get to
where you're going, I want to be sure you'll stay
quiet."</p>
<p>She still held out the glass, in a long, tanned,
capable hand. She stood three inches taller than
Trigger, weighted thirty-five pounds more. Not
an ounce of that additional thirty-five pounds was
fat. If she'd needed assistance, the hunting lodge
was full of potential helpers. She didn't.</p>
<p>"I never claimed I liked this arrangement,"
Trigger said carefully. "I did say I'd go along with
it. I will. Isn't that enough?"</p>
<p>"Sure," Mihul said promptly. "Give word of
parole?"</p>
<p>There was a long pause.</p>
<p>"No!" Trigger said.</p>
<p>"I thought not. Drink or gun?"</p>
<p>"Drink," Trigger said coldly. She took the glass.
"How long will it put me out?"</p>
<p>"Eight to nine hours." Mihul stood by watchfully
while Trigger emptied the tumbler. After a
moment the tumbler fell to the floor. She reached
out and caught Trigger as she started down.</p>
<p>"All right," she said across her shoulder to the
open doorway behind her. "Let's move!"</p>
<hr />
<p>Trigger awoke and instantly went taut with tension.
She lay quiet a few seconds, not even opening
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="093">p. 93</SPAN></span>
her eyes. There was cool sunlight on her
eyelids, but she was indoors. There was a subdued
murmur of sound somewhere; after a moment
she knew it came from a news viewer turned
low, in some adjoining room. But there didn't
seem to be anybody immediately around her.
Warily she opened her eyes.</p>
<p>She was on a couch in an airy, spacious room
furnished in the palest of greens and ivory. One
entire side of the room was either a window or a
solido screen. In it was a distant mountain range
with many snowy peaks, an almost cloudless blue
sky. Sun at midmorning or midafternoon.</p>
<p>Sun and all had the look of Maccadon—they
probably still were on the planet. That was where
the interview was to take place. But she also could
have been sent on a three-day space cruise, which
would be a rather good way to make sure a prisoner
stayed exactly where you wanted her. This
could be a spaceliner suite with a packaged view
of any one of some hundreds of worlds, and with
packaged sunlight thrown in.</p>
<p>There was one door to the room. It stood open,
and the news viewer talk came from there.</p>
<p>Trigger sat up quietly and looked down at the
clothes she wore. All white. A short-sleeved
half-blouse of some soft, rather heavy, very comfortable
unfamiliar stuff. Bare midriff. White kid
trousers which flared at the thighs and were
drawn in to a close fit just above the knees and
down the calves, vanishing into kid boots with
thick, flexible soles.</p>
<p>Sporting outfit.... That meant Maccadon!</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="094">p. 94</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She pulled a handful of hair <ins class="typo" title="Transcriber's Note: 'foward' in the original text.">forward</ins> and looked
at it. They'd recolored it—this time to a warm
mahogany brown. She swung her legs off the
couch and stood up quietly. A dozen soft steps
across the springy thick-napped turf of ivory carpet
took her to the window.</p>
<p>The news viewer clicked and went silent.</p>
<p>"Not bad," Trigger said. She saw a long range of
woodlands and open heath, rising gradually into
the flanks of the mountains. On the far right was
the still, silver glitter of two lakes. "Where are
we?"</p>
<p>"Byla Uplands Game Preserve. That's the game
bird area before you." Mihul appeared in the
doorframe, in an outfit almost a duplicate of Trigger's,
in pearl-gray tones. "Feel all right?"</p>
<p>"Feeling fine," Trigger said. Byla Uplands—the
southern tip of the continent. She could make
it back to Ceyce in two hours or less! She turned
and grinned at Mihul. "I also feel hungry. How
long was I out?"</p>
<p>Mihul glanced at her wrist watch. "Eight hours,
ten minutes. You woke up on schedule. I had
breakfast sent up thirty minutes ago. I've already
eaten mine—took one sniff and plunged in. It's
good!" Mihul's hair, Trigger saw, had been
cropped short and a streak of gray added over the
right side; and they'd changed the color of her
eyes to hazel. She wondered what had been done
to her along that line. "Want to come in?" Mihul
said. "We can talk while you eat."</p>
<p>Trigger nodded. "After I've freshened up."</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="095">p. 95</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The bathroom mirror showed they'd left her
eyes alone. But there was a very puzzling impression
that she was staring at an image considerably
plumper, shorter, younger than it should be—a
teen-ager around seventeen or eighteen. Her eyes
narrowed. If they'd done flesh-sculpting on her, it
could cause complications.</p>
<p>She stripped hurriedly and checked. They
hadn't tampered with her body. So it had to be the
clothes; though it was difficult to see how even
the most cunning cut could provide such a very
convincing illusion of being more rounded out,
heavier around the thighs, larger breasts—just
missing being dumpy, in fact. She dressed
again, looked again, and came out of the bathroom,
still puzzled.</p>
<p>"Choice of three game birds for breakfast."
Mihul announced. "Never heard of any of them.
All good. Plus regular stuff." She patted her flat
midriff. "Ate too much!" she admitted. "Now dig
in and I'll brief you."</p>
<p>Trigger dug in. "I had a look at myself in the
mirror," she remarked. "What's this now-you-see-it-now-you-don't
business of fifteen or so
pounds of baby fat?"</p>
<p>Mihul laughed. "You don't really have it."</p>
<p>"I know that too. How do they do it?"</p>
<p>"Subcolor job in the clothes. They're not really
white. Anyone looking at you gets his vision distorted
a little without realizing it. Takes a wider
view of certain areas, for example. You can play it
around in a lot of ways."</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="096">p. 96</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I never heard of that one," Trigger said.
"You'd think it would be sensational in fashions."</p>
<p>"It would be. Right now it's top secret for as
long as Intelligence can keep it that way."</p>
<p>Trigger chewed a savory morsel of something.
"Then why did you tell me?"</p>
<p>"You're one of the gang, however reluctant.
And you're good at keeping the mouth shut. Your
name, by the way, is now Comteen Lod, just
turned eighteen. I am your dear mama. You call
me Drura. We're from Slyth-Talgon on Evalee,
here for a few days shooting."</p>
<p>Trigger nodded. "Do we do any shooting?"</p>
<p>Mihul pointed a finger at a side table. The Denton
lay there, looking like a toy beside a standard
slender-barrelled sporting pistol. "Bet your life,
Comteen!" she said. "I've always been too stingy
to try out a first-class preserve on my own money.
And this one is <i>first</i> class." She paused. "Comteen
and Drura Lod really exist. We're a very fair copy
of what they look like, and they'll be kept out of
sight till we're done here. Now—"</p>
<p>She leaned back comfortably, tilting the chair
and clasping her hands around one knee. "Aside
from the sport, we're here because you're a convalescent.
You're recovering from a rather severe
attack of Dykart Fever. Heard of it?"</p>
<p>Trigger reflected. "Something you pick up in
some sections of the Evalee tropics, isn't it?"</p>
<p>Mihul nodded. "That's what you did, child!
Skipped your shots on the last trip we took—and
six months later you're still paying for it. You
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="097">p. 97</SPAN></span>
were in one of those typical Dykart fever comas
when we brought you in last night."</p>
<p>"Very clever!" Trigger commented acidly.</p>
<p>"Very." Mihul pursed her lips. "The Dykart bug
causes temporary derangements, you know—spells
during which convalescents talk wildly,
imagine things."</p>
<p>Trigger popped another fragment of meat between
her teeth and chewed thoughtfully, looking
over at Mihul. "Very good duck or whatever!"
she said. "Like imagining they've been more or
less kidnapped, you mean?"</p>
<p>"Things like that," Mihul agreed.</p>
<p>Trigger shook her head. "I wouldn't anyway.
You types are bound to have all the legal angles
covered."</p>
<p>"Sure," said Mihul. "Just thought I'd mention
it. Have you used the Denton much on game?"</p>
<p>"Not too often." Trigger had been wondering
whether they'd left the stunner compartment
loaded. "But it's a very fair gun for it."</p>
<p>"I know. The other one's a Yool. Good game
gun, too. You'll use that."</p>
<p>Trigger swallowed. She met the calm eyes
watching her. "I've never handled a Yool. Why
the switch?"</p>
<p>"They're easy to handle. The reason for the
switch is that you can't just stun someone with a
Yool. It's better if we both stay armed, though it
isn't really necessary—so much money comes to
play around here they can afford to keep the Uplands
very thoroughly policed, and they do. But
an ace in the hole never hurts." She considered.
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="098">p. 98</SPAN></span>
"Changed your mind about that parole business
yet?"</p>
<p>"I hadn't really thought about it," Trigger said.</p>
<p>"I'd let you carry your own gun then."</p>
<p>Trigger looked reflective, then shook her head.
"I'd rather not."</p>
<p>"Suit yourself," Mihul said agreeably. "In that
case though, there should be something else understood."</p>
<p>"What's that?"</p>
<p>"We'll have up to three-four days to spend here
together before Whatzzit shows up."</p>
<p>"Whatzzit?"</p>
<p>"For future reference," Mihul said, "Whatzzit
will be that which—or he or she who—wishes to
have that interview with you and has arranged for
it. That's in case you want to talk about it. I might
as well tell you that I'll do very little <ins class="typo" title="Transcriber's Note: 'taking' in the original text.">talking</ins> about
Whatzzit."</p>
<p>"I thought," Trigger suggested, "I was one of
the gang."</p>
<p>"I've got special instructions on the matter,"
Mihul said. "Anyway, Whatzzit shows up. You
have your interview. After that we do whatever
Whatzzit says we're to do. As you know."</p>
<p>Trigger nodded.</p>
<p>"Meanwhile," said Mihul, "we're here. Very
pleasant place to spend three-four days in my
opinion, and I think, in yours."</p>
<p>"Very pleasant," Trigger agreed. "I've been
suspecting it was you who suggested it would be a
good place to wait in."</p>
<p>"No," Mihul said. "Though I might have, if
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="099">p. 99</SPAN></span>
anyone had asked me. But Whatzzit's handling all
the arrangements, it seems. Now we could have
fun here—which, I suspect, would be the purpose
as far as you're concerned."</p>
<p>"Fun?" Trigger said.</p>
<p>"To put you into a good frame of mind for that
interview, might be the idea," Mihul said. "I don't
know. Three days here should relax almost anyone.
Get in a little shooting. Loaf around the
pools. Go for rides. Things like that. The only
trouble is I'm afraid you're nourishing dark notions
which are likely to take all the enjoyment
out of it. Not to mention the possibility of really
relaxing."</p>
<p>"Like what?" Trigger asked.</p>
<p>"Oh," Mihul said, "there're all sorts of possibilities,
of course." She nodded her head at the
guns. "Like yanking the Denton out of my holster
and feeding me a dose of the stunner. Or picking
up that coffee pot there and tapping me on the
skull with it. It's about the right weight."</p>
<p>Trigger said thoughtfully, "I don't think either
of those would work."</p>
<p>"They might," Mihul said. "They just might!
You're fast. You've been taught to improvise. And
there's something eating you. You're edgy as a
cat."</p>
<p>"So?" Trigger said.</p>
<p>"So," Mihul said, "there are a number of alternatives.
I'll lay them out for you. You take your
pick. For one, I could just keep you doped. Three
days in dope won't hurt you, and you'll certainly
be no problem then. Another way—I'll let you
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="100">p. 100</SPAN></span>
stay awake, but we stay in our rooms. I can lock
you in at night, and that window is escape-proof. I
checked. It would be sort of boring, but we can
have tapes and stuff brought up. I'd have the guns
put away and I'd watch you like a hawk every
minute of the day."</p>
<p>She looked at Trigger inquiringly. "Like either
of those?"</p>
<p>"Not much," Trigger said.</p>
<p>"They're safe," Mihul said. "Quite safe. Maybe
I should.... Well, the heat's off, and it's just a
matter now of holding you for Whatzzit. There're
a couple of other choices. One of them has an
angle you won't like much either. On the other
hand, it would give you a sporting chance to take
off if you're really wild about it. And it's entirely
in line with my instructions. I warned them
you're tricky."</p>
<p>Trigger stopped eating. "Let's hear that one."</p>
<p>Mihul tilted the chair back a little farther and
studied her a moment. "Pretty much like I said
before. Everything friendly and casual. Gun a bit,
swim a bit. Go for a ride or soar. Lie around in the
sun. But because of those notions of yours, there'd
be one thing added. An un-incentive."</p>
<p>"An un-incentive?" Trigger repeated.</p>
<p>"Exactly," said Mihul. "<i>That</i> isn't at all in line
with my instructions. But you're a pretty <ins class="typo" title="Transcriber's Note: 'dignifed' in the original text.">dignified</ins>
little character, and I think it should work."</p>
<p>"Just what does this un-incentive consist of?"
Trigger inquired warily.</p>
<p>"If you make a break and get away," Mihul
said, "that's one thing. Something's eating you,
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="101">p. 101</SPAN></span>
and I'm not sure I like the way this matter's been
handled. In fact, I don't like it. So I'll try to stop
you from leaving, but if it turns out I couldn't, I
won't hold any grudges. Even if I wake up with
lumps."</p>
<p>She paused. "On the other hand," she said,
"there we are—together for three-four days. I
don't want to spend them fighting off attempts to
clobber me every thirty seconds. So any time you
try and miss, Comteen, mama is going to pin you
down fast, and hot up your seat with whatever is
handiest."</p>
<p>Trigger stared at her.</p>
<p>She cleared her throat.</p>
<p>"While I'm carrying a gun?" she said shakily.
"Don't be ridiculous, Mihul!"</p>
<p>"You're not going to gun me for keeps to get out
of a licking," Mihul said. "And that's all the Yool
can do. How else will you stop me?"</p>
<p>Trigger's fingernails drummed the table top
briefly. She wet her lips. "I don't know," she
admitted.</p>
<p>"Of course," said Mihul, "all this unpleasantness
can be avoided very easily. There's always
the fourth method."</p>
<p>"What's that?"</p>
<p>"Just give parole."</p>
<p>"No parole," Trigger said thinly.</p>
<p>"All right. Which of the other ways will it be?"</p>
<p>Trigger didn't hesitate. "The sporting chance,"
she said. "The others aren't choices."</p>
<p>"Fair enough," said Mihul. She stood up and
went over to the wall. She selected a holster belt
<span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="102">p. 102</SPAN></span>
from the pair hanging there and fastened it
around her. "I rather thought you'd pick it," she
said. She gave Trigger a brief grin. "Just make sure
it's a good opening!"</p>
<p>"I will," Trigger said.</p>
<p>Mihul moved to the side table, took up the Denton,
looked at it, and slid it into her holster. She
turned to gaze out the window. "Nice country!"
she said. "If you're done with breakfast, how
about going out right now for a first try at the
birds?"</p>
<p>Trigger hefted the coffee pot gently. It was
about the right weight at that. But the range was a
little more than she liked, considering the un-incentive.</p>
<p>Besides, it might crack the monster's skull.</p>
<p>She set the pot gently down again.</p>
<p>"Great idea!" she said. "And I'm all finished
eating."</p>
<p><span class='pagenumber'><SPAN name="103">p. 103</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />