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d’Alembert 7 – Planet of Treachery – E E. Doc Smith

by the guards, then gagged the men and tied them to a tree. The d’Alemberts took their

blasters and felt a little more relieved now that they were again armed with modern

weapons. Jules also took one of the guards’ pocket phones and, leaving the visual

transmitter turned off, called back to the station. “The damned thing’s empty,” he

reported, cupping his hands over his mouth to disguise his voice slightly. “We’ll bring it in

for a more thorough inspection.”

He and Vonnie got back in the sleigh and drove openly toward the boulder that concealed

the guard station. The one guard left in the station would see only the two warm figures

sitting in the front of the sleigh, and would assume they were his compatriots.

He paid for that assumption-with a solid blow to his head a few minutes later. The

d’Alemberts were in sole possession of the guard station-and not a shot had been fired

to warn the occupants of the house that they were under attack.

“From now on it gets risky,” Jules said. “We can’t just walk in the front door, and I have

no way of knowing whether the windows are wired for alarms or not.”

“We’ll just have to chance it, then. We’ve played slash and-grab before, if it comes to

that. It might help if we could grab Lady A as a hostage; they wouldn’t shoot at us if we

had her for a shield. Where do you think she’d be?”

“Third floor, more than likely,” Jules surmised. “On a world without copters, the top story

is naturally the safest.”

Under cover of darkness, the two agents crept up the steep hill until they stood beside

the large house. Silently they walked around it, observing its construction with a

professional’s eye for detail. When they reached the back-a part Jules had not seen

before-they found both the copter pad and the small launching site for Lady A’s

spaceship. Both copter and ship were waiting there, for which the d’Alemberts were

grateful; they would have their choice of transportation out of here.

Finally spotting an ascent route that looked a little more promising than the others, Jules

started his slow climb up the outer wall of the house. The mixed construction materials of

brick, stone and timber gave him narrow finger- and toeholds; even so, he needed every

scrap of his circus training to cling to the building and make his way up three stories to a

perch beside a darkened window.

Yvonne stood by on the ground below, blaster in hand. If Jules’s attempt to open the

window should set off an alarm, she was prepared to race into the house from the

ground floor while Jules was entering from the top, creating havoc from two directions at

once and hopefully confusing the occupants . enough to let the DesPlainians triumph. But

she was hoping such heroics would not be necessary.

Jules inspected the window carefully. A gentle touch proved it was locked, but the lock

was merely a mechanical latch, not an electronic mechanism. He saw no wires or

electrical connections of any kind around the window -a hopeful sign. With a sigh, he

braced himself for the worst and, using the full strength of his DesPlainian muscles, he

gave a sudden intense push against the latch.

The latch snapped with a light spring and the window gave the meagerest of creaks as it

opened, but other than that there was no sound. The alarm may have been a silent one,

keyed to go off only at one specific location, but after waiting at his position for another

minute Jules could hear no indication of hurried activity within the house. Maybe they had

been lucky after all; maybe Lady A had felt that no one could get past the infrared

detectors without special equipment unavailable on Gastonia, and had not bothered with

alarms on the house itself. Jules slipped inside the room and looked around.

He found himself in an auxiliary bedroom, currently unoccupied. Crossing to the hall door,

he opened it and looked out. The corridor beyond was well-lit but deserted. Jules closed

the door again and locked it temporarily, assuring himself some momentary privacy in

here.

Stripping the sheets and blankets off the bed, he fastened them together into a long rope

that he lowered out the window to his waiting wife below. She tucked her blaster into her

parka and scrambled up the makeshift cord; within seconds she was standing beside her

husband, who then pulled the rope up after her to avoid leaving telltale signs of their

entrance.

Unlocking the bedroom door once more, the d’Alemberts checked to make sure the

hallway was still deserted, then slipped out of their bedroom and along the corridor. They

went in separate directions, trying doors along the corridor as they went. Most of the

doors were locked, and they chose for the moment not to force their way in; if someone

was inside, the SOTE agents might not be able to silence him before he gave the alarm

to the rest of the house. They would try the unlocked doors first.

Vonnie found an unlocked door and signaled her success to Jules, who came over to join

her. There was no light coming from under the sill, so they quietly opened the door and

slipped into the room beyond.

As their eyes grew accustomed to the dark they could see that they’d found an office of

some sort, with a desk and computer files standing about the room. With the door closed

behind them, shutting off the light from the hallway, the only illumination in the room came

from the double windows, where dim starlight filtered in. There’d been no pocket flashes

available in the village, of course, and working in this darkness was impossible. “We’ll

have to risk turning on a light,” Jules whispered.

Both agents squinted against the glare as Jules palmed the wall switch and the room

was suddenly alive with light. The DesPlainians stood motionless for over a minute,

listening for any sign that the light had betrayed them, but when there was none they

breathed a little easier. By unspoken agreement, Jules began a quick search of one side

of the room while Yvonne concentrated on the other.

Jules’s area had a telecom unit and a computer file. Turning on the computer memory, he

started playing with it, cuing it almost at random in the hopes of finding some important

clue. He had no way of knowing in advance under what headings Lady A and Tanya

Boros filed their information, but he could check a few references. He asked the

computer for information about Gastonia’s Governor, and was rewarded with a long

personal file detailing not only the Governor’s life and background, but also his

involvement with the conspiracy. To Jules’s chagrin it dated back more than a decade,

almost from the day he was assigned here. Checking some of the listed

cross-references, Jules learned which of the Governor’s aides were also involved. It

turned out to be nearly a third of the garrison’s total staff-a dismaying thought indeed.

Yvonne, meanwhile, was searching through the drawers of the desk, and found an item

of interest-a small vial of nitrobarb, the most potent truth serum in the Galaxy. Lady A

probably kept it on hand in case one of her trusted servants turned out to be a spy from

SOTE and she needed to question him. In any case, Vonnie pocketed the vial against

possible future need and moved around the desk to a spot behind the door.

Just as she did so, the door flew suddenly open and Lady A stood in the threshold. She

had a stun-gun drawn and pointed at Jules before he could reach for his own weapon-but

Vonnie was behind the door and out of the woman’s sight.

“So,” Lady A said coldly, “we have a visitor after all. When Tanya told me about her

uninvited guest of a few weeks ago, I thought it might be someone from SOTE, so I set

a little trap. I knew you’d be here eventually. I’ve got a vial of nitrobarb ready for you.”

Lady A stepped forward, past the edge of the door. As she did so, Vonnie reached out

quickly and knocked the gun from her hand. The instant his wife made her move, Jules

made his. Racing forward, he grabbed his adversary, spun her around and gripped her

neck in a hammerlock. At the same time Vonnie closed the door once more and locked it.

Lady A apparently had been alone, and they wanted to make sure no one else joined the

party.

“I’ve got a few questions I’d like to ask you, too,” Jules said. He held his blaster with its

nozzle up against Lady A’s throat.

Lady A held her nerve. With a voice carved from glacial ice she said, “You know you

don’t dare use that on me. I know too much that you want to find out.”

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