Telzey Amberdon by James H. Schmitz

Registration, the legal department added, was a serious matter, of course, and Miss Lodis should give it sufficient thought before deciding to sign the application they had prepared. On the other hand, it might be best not to delay more than a day or two. The Parlins’ attitude showed she would be safe only so long as they did not know where she was.

* * *

“Has she discussed it with you?” Dasinger asked.

Telzey looked at him irritably. Her nerves had been on edge since the conference ended. Things had taken a very unsatisfactory turn. If Malrue Parlin would only drop dead!

She shook her head. “She’s been in her room. We haven’t talked about it yet.”

Dasinger studied her face. “Your father and I,” he remarked, “aren’t entirely happy about having her register for a private war.”

“Why not? I thought you . . .”

He nodded. “I know. But in view of what you said, I’ve been watching her, and I’m inclined to agree now that she might be too civilized for such methods. It’s a pleasant trait, though it’s been known to be a suicidal one.”

He hesitated, went on. “Aside from that, a private war is simply the only practical answer now. And it would be best to act at once while the Parlin family is together and on Orado. If we wait till they scatter, it will be the devil’s own job roping them in again. I think I can guarantee that none of the three will be physically injured. As for Miss Lodis’s feelings about it, we—your father and I—assume that your ability to handle emotional disturbances isn’t limited to animals.”

Telzey shifted uneasily in her chair. Her skull felt tight; she might be getting a headache. She wondered why she didn’t tell the detective to stop worrying. Gonwil had found her own solution before the conference was over. She wouldn’t authorize a private war for any purpose. No matter how expertly it was handled, somebody was going to get killed when two bands of armed men came into conflict, and she didn’t want the responsibility for it.

Neither did she want to run and hide for years to keep Malrue from having her killed. The money wasn’t worth it.

So the logical answer was to accept Malrue’s offer and let her have the stock and control of Lodis Associates. Gonwil could get along very well without it. And she wouldn’t have consented to someone’s death to keep it.

Gonwil didn’t know why she hadn’t told them that at the conference, though Telzey did. Gonwil had intended to speak, then suddenly forgotten her intention. Another few hours, Telzey had thought, to make sure there wasn’t some answer as logical as surrender but more satisfactory. A private war didn’t happen to be it.

She realized she’d said something because Dasinger was continuing. Malrue Parlin appeared to have played into their hands through overconfidence. . . .

That, Telzey thought, was where they were wrong. The past few days had showed her things about Gonwil which had remained partly unrevealed in two years of friendship. But a shrewd and purposeful observer like Malrue Parlin, knowing Gonwil since her year of birth, would be aware of them.

Gonwil didn’t simply have a prejudice against violence; she was incapable of it. Malrue knew it. It would have suited her best if Gonwil died in a manner which didn’t look like murder, or at least didn’t turn suspicion on the Parlins. But she needn’t feel any concern because she had failed in that. The shock of knowing that murder had been tried, of realizing that more of that kind of thing would be necessary if Malrue was to be stopped, would be enough. It wasn’t so much fear as revulsion—a need to draw away from the ugly business. Gonwil would give in.

Cousin Malrue hadn’t been overconfident. She’d simply known exactly what would happen.

Anger was an uncomfortable thing. Telzey’s skin crawled with it. Dasinger asked a question, and she said something which must have made sense because he smiled briefly and nodded, and went on talking. But she didn’t remember then what the question had been or what she had replied. For a moment, her vision blurred and the room seemed to rock. It was almost as if she’d heard Malrue Parlin laughing nearby, already savoring her victory, sure she’d placed herself beyond reprisal.

Malrue winning out over Gonwil like that was a thing that couldn’t be accepted; and she’d prevented Gonwil from admitting it. But she was unable to do what Gilas and Dasinger expected now—change Gonwil’s opinions around until she agreed cheerfully to whatever arrangements they made. And if people got killed during her private war, well, that would be too bad but it had been made inevitable by the Parlins’ criminal greed and the Federation’s sloppy laws, hadn’t it.

It was quite possible to do, but not by changing a few of Gonwil’s civilized though unrealistic attitudes. It could be done only by twisting and distorting whatever was Gonwil. And that wouldn’t ever be undone again.

Malrue laughed once more, mocking and triumphant, and it was like pulling a trigger. Dasinger still seemed to be talking somewhere, but the room had shifted and disappeared. She was in a darkness where laughter echoed and black electric gusts swirled heavily around her, looking out at a tall, handsome woman in a group of people. Behind Telzey, something rose swiftly, black and towering like a wave about to break, curving over towards the woman.

Then there was a violent, wrenching effort of some sort.

* * *

She was back in her chair, shaking, her face wet with sweat, with a sense of having stopped at the last possible instant. The room swam past her eyes and it seemed, as something she half-recalled, that Dasinger had just left, closing the door behind him, still unaware that anything out of the ordinary was going on with Telzey. But she wasn’t completely alone. A miniature figure of the Psionic Cop hovered before her face, gesticulating and mouthing inaudible protests. He looked ridiculous, Telzey thought. She made a giggling noise at him, shaking her head, and he vanished.

She got out a handkerchief and dabbed at her face. She felt giddy and weak. Dasinger had noticed nothing, so she hadn’t really gone anywhere physically, even for a second or two. Nevertheless, on Orado half a million miles away, Malrue Parlin, laughing and confident in a group of friends or guests, had been only moments from invisible, untraceable death. If that wave of silent energy had reached her, she would have groaned and staggered and fallen, while her companions stared, sensing nothing.

What created the wave? She hadn’t done it consciously—but it would be a good thing to remember not to let hot, foggy anger become mixed with a psi impulse again! She wasn’t Gonwil, but to put somebody to death in that manner would be rather horrid. And the weakness in her suggested that it mightn’t be healthy for the psi who did it, unless he had something like the equipment of that alien in the university’s habitat museum.

At any rate, her anger had spent itself now. The necessity of doing something to prevent Gonwil’s surrender remained.

And then it occurred to Telzey how it might be done.

She considered a minute or two, and put out a search-thought for Chomir, touched his mind and slipped into it. Groping about briefly, she picked up the artificial memory section she’d installed to cover the disturbing events in the Kyth Agency’s hideout.

She had worked the section in rather carefully. Even if Chomir had been a fairly introspective and alert human being, he might very well have accepted it as what had happened. But it wasn’t likely that an intruding telepath who studied the section at all closely would be fooled. She certainly wouldn’t be. It seemed a practical impossibility to invest artificial memories with the multitudinous, interconnected, coherent detail which characterized actual events. Neither was the buried original memory really buried when one began to search for it. It could be brought out and developed again.

And if such constructions couldn’t fool her, could they fool a high-powered psionic mind-reading device, built for the specific purpose of finding out what somebody really thought, believed and remembered . . . such as Transcluster Finance’s verifying machines?

They couldn’t of course.

Telzey sat still again a while, biting her lip, frowning, mentally checking over a number of things. Then she went to look for Gilas.

* * *

“It’s a completely outrageous notion!” her father said a short while later, his tone still somewhat incredulous. He glanced over at Dasinger, who had been listening intently, cleared his throat. “However, let’s look at it again. You say you can manufacture ‘memories’ in the dog’s mind which can’t be distinguished from things he actually remembers?”

Telzey nodded.

“I can’t tell any difference,” she said. “And I don’t see how a Verifier could.”

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