Trigger and Friends by James H. Schmitz

The Missionary Captain was a tall, gray-haired, gray-eyed, square-jawed man in uniform. After confirming to his satisfaction that Trigger was indeed in charge, he informed her in chilled tones that the Devagas Union would hold her personally responsible for the unprovoked outrage unless an apology was promptly forthcoming.

Trigger apologized promptly. He acknowledged with a curt nod.

“The ship will now require new spacepaint,” he pointed out, unmollified.

Trigger nodded. “We’ll send a work squad out immediately.”

“We,” the Missionary Captain said, “shall supervise the work. Only the best grade of paint will be acceptable!”

“The very best only,” Trigger agreed.

He gave her another curt nod, and switched off.

“Ass,” she said. She cut in the don’t-disturb barrier and dialed Holati’s ship.

It took a while to get through; he was probably busy somewhere in the crate. Like Belchik Pluly, the Commissioner, while still a very wealthy man, would have been a very much wealthier one if it weren’t for his hobby. In his case, the hobby was ships, of which he now owned two. What made them expensive was that they had been tailor-made to the Commissioner’s specifications, and his specifications had provided him with two rather exact duplicates of the two types of Scout fighting ships in which Squadron Commander Tate had made space hideous for evildoers in the good old days. Nobody as yet had got up the nerve to point out to him that private battlecraft definitely were not allowable in the Manon System.

He came on finally. Trigger told him about the Devagas. “Did you know those characters were in the area?” she asked.

The Commissioner knew. They’d stopped in at the system check station three days before. The ship was clean. “Their missionaries all go armed, of course; but that’s their privilege by treaty. They’ve been browsing around and going hither and yon in skiffs. The ship’s been on orbit till this morning.”

“Think they’re here in connection with whatever Balmordan is up to?” Trigger inquired.

“We’ll take that for granted. Balmordan, by the way, attended a big shindig on the Pluly yacht yesterday. Unless his tail goofed, he’s still up there, apparently staying on as a guest.”

“Are you having these other Devagas watched?”

“Not individually. Too many of them, and they’re scattered all over the place. Mantelish got back. He checked in an hour ago.”

“You mean he’s upstairs in his quarters now?” she asked.

“Right. He had a few more crates hauled into the lab, and he’s locked himself in with them and spy-blocked the place. May have got something important, and may just be going through one of his secrecy periods again. We’ll find out by and by. Oh, and here’s a social note. The First Lady of Tranest is shopping in the Grand Commerce Center this morning.”

“Well, that should boost business,” said Trigger. “Are you going to be back in the dome by lunchtime?”

“I think so. Might have some interesting news, too, incidentally.”

“Fine,” she said. “See you then.”

Twenty minutes later the desk transmitter gave her the “to be shielded” signal. Up went the barrier again.

Major Quillan’s face looked out at her from the screen. He was, Trigger saw, in Mantelish’s lab. Mantelish stood at a workbench behind him.

“Hi!” he said.

“Hi, yourself. When did you get in?”

“Just now. Could you pick up the whoosis-and-whichis and bring it up here?”

“Right now?”

“If you can,” Quillan said. “The professor’s got something new, he thinks.”

“I’m on my way,” said Trigger. “Take about five minutes.”

She hurried down to her quarters, summoned Repulsive’s container into the room and slung the strap over her shoulder.

Then she stood still a moment, frowning slightly. Something—something like a wisp of memory, something she should be remembering—was stirring in the back of her mind. Then it was gone.

Trigger shook her head. It would keep. She opened the door and stepped out into the hall.

She fell down.

As she fell, she tried to give the bag the send-off squeeze, but she couldn’t move her fingers. She couldn’t move anything.

There were people around her. They were doing things swiftly. She was turned over on her back and, for a few moments then, she saw her own face smiling down at her from just a few feet away.

21

She was, suddenly, in a large room, well lit, with elaborate furnishings—sitting leaned back in a soft chair before a highly polished little table. On the opposite side of the table two people sat looking at her with expressions of mild surprise. One of them was Lyad Ermetyne. The other was a man she didn’t know.

The man glanced aside at Lyad. “Very fast snap-back!” he said. He looked again at Trigger. He was a small man with salt-and-pepper hair, a deeply lined face, beautiful liquid-black eyes.

“Very!” Lyad said. “We must remember that. Hello, Trigger!”

“Hello,” Trigger said. Her glance went once around the room and came back to Lyad’s amiably observant face. Repulsive’s container was nowhere around. There seemed to be nobody else in the room. An ornamental ComWeb stood against one wall. Two of the walls were covered with heavy hangings, and a great gold-brocaded canopy bellied from the ceiling. No doors or portals in sight; they might be camouflaged, or behind those hangings. Any number of people could be in call range—and a few certainly must be watching her right now, because that small man was no rough-and-tumble type.

The small man was regarding her with something like restrained amusement.

“A cool one,” he murmured. “Very cool!”

Trigger looked at him a moment, then turned her eyes back to Lyad. She didn’t feel cool. She felt tense and scared cold. This was probably very bad!

“What did you want to see me about?” she asked.

Lyad smiled. “A business matter. Do you know where you are?”

“Not on your ship, First Lady.”

The light-amber eyes barely narrowed. But Lyad had become, at that moment, very alert.

“Why do you think so?” she asked pleasantly.

“This room,” said Trigger. “You don’t gush, I think. What was the business matter?”

“In a moment,” Lyad said. She smiled again. “Where else might you be?”

Trigger thought she could guess. But she didn’t intend to. Not out loud. She shrugged. “It’s no place I want to be.” She settled back a little in her chair. Her right hand brushed the porgee pouch.

The porgee pouch.

It would have been like the Ermetyne to investigate the pouch carefully, take out the gun and put the pouch back. But they might not have.

Somebody was bound to be watching. She couldn’t find out—not until the instant after she decided to try the Denton.

“I can believe that,” Lyad said. “Forgive me the discourtesy of so urgent an invitation, Trigger. A quite recent event made it seem necessary. As to the business—as a start, this gentleman is Doctor Veetonia. He is an investigator of extraordinary talents along his line. At the moment, he is a trifle tired because of the very long hours he worked last night.”

Doctor Veetonia turned his head to look at her. “I did, First Lady? Well, that does explain this odd weariness. Did I work well?”

“Splendidly,” Lyad assured him. “You were never better, Doctor.”

He nodded, smiled vaguely and looked back at Trigger. “This must go, too, I suppose?”

“I’m afraid it must,” Lyad said.

“A great pity!” Doctor Veetonia said. “A great pity. It would have been a pleasant memory. This very cool one!” The vague smile shifted in the lined face again. “You are so beautiful, child,” he told Trigger, “in your anger and terror and despair. And above it still the gaging purpose, the strong, quick thinking. You will not give in easily. Oh, no! Not easily at all. First Lady,” Doctor Veetonia said plaintively, “I should like to remember this one! It should be possible, I think.”

Small, icy fingers were working up and down Trigger’s spine. The Ermetyne gave her a light wink.

“I’m afraid it isn’t, Doctor,” she said. “There are such very important matters to be discussed. Besides, Trigger Argee and I will come to an amicable agreement very quickly.”

“No.” Doctor Veetonia’s face had turned very sullen.

“No?” said Lyad.

“She will agree to nothing. Any fool can see that. I recommend, then, a simple chemical approach. Your creatures can handle it. Drain her. Throw her away. I will have nothing to do with the matter.”

“Oh, but, Doctor!” the Ermetyne protested. “That would be so crude. And so very uncertain. Why, we might be here for hours still!”

He shook his head.

Lyad smiled. She stroked the lined cheek with light fingertips. “Have you forgotten the palace at Hamal Lake?” she asked. “The great library? The laboratories? Haven’t I been very generous?”

Doctor Veetonia turned his face toward her. He smiled thoughtfully.

“Now that is true!” he admitted. “For the moment I did forget.” He looked back at Trigger. “The First Lady gives,” he told her, “and the First Lady takes away. She has given me wealth and much leisure. She takes from me now and then a memory. Very skillfully, since she was my pupil. But still the mind must dim by a little each time it is done.”

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