Piers Anthony
=============

HARD SELL
=========

Portions of this book originally appeared in slightly different form in
the following magazines:

Chapter 1 (originally titled "Hard Sell") in If magazine, August 1972

Chapter 2 (originally titled "Black Baby") in If magazine, September
1972

Chapter 3 (originally titled "Hurdle") in If magazine, December 1972

Chapter 5 (originally titled "Life") in Twilight Zone magazine, December
1987

------------------------------------------------------------------------

CHAPTER 1
---------

"Interplanetary call for Mr. Fisk Centers," the cute operator said.

Fisk almost dropped his sandwich. "There must be some mistake! I don't
know anybody offplanet!"

The girl looked at him with polite annoyance, as though nobody should be
startled by such an event. "Are you Mr. Fisk Centers?"

"Yes, of course," he said. "But--"

Her face sifted out, smiling professionally. The screen bleeped, went
blank, and finally produced a man. He had handsome gray hair and wore
the traditional Mars-resident uniform: a cross between a spacesuit and a
tuxedo. He was seated behind a large plastifoam desk, and a tremendous
color map of classical Mars covered the wall beyond.

"Welcome to Mars, Mr. Centers!" the man said, putting on a contagious
grin. "I am Bondman, of Mars Ltd." Somehow he managed to pronounce
"Ltd." the way it looked.

Fisk was fifty and had been around, but he had never been treated to an
interplanetary call before. It wasn't just the expense, though he knew
that was extraordinary. He just happened to be one of the several
billion who had never had occasion to deal offplanet. Probably Mars Ltd.
was economizing by using OVTS--Open Volume Telephone Service--but it was
still impressive. "Are you sure--?"

"Now, Mr. Centers, let's not let modesty interfere with business,"
Bondman said, frowning briefly. "You're far too sensible a man for that.
That's why you're one of the privileged few to be selected as eligible
for this project."

"Project? I don't--"

The Marsman's brow wrinkled elegantly. "Naturally it isn't available to
the common run. Mars is too fine a planet to ruin by indiscriminate
development, don't you agree?"

Fisk found himself nodding to the persuasive tone before the meaning
registered. "Development? I thought Mars was uninhabitable! Not enough
water, air--"

"Most astute, Mr. Centers," Bondman said, bathing him with a glance of
honest admiration. "Indeed there is not enough water or air. Not for
every person who might want to settle. Selectivity is the key--the vital
key--for what can be a very good life indeed. Mars, you see, has
space--but what is space without air?"

"Right. There's no good life in a spacesuit. I--"

"Of course not, Mr. Centers. The ignorant person believes that man must
live on Mars in a cumbersome suit, and so he has a low regard for Mars
realty. How fortunate that you and I know better!" And before Fisk could
protest, he continued: "You and I know that the new static domes
conserve air, water and heat, utilizing the greenhouse effect to make an
otherwise barren land burst into splendor! Within that invisible
protective hemisphere it is completely Earthlike! Not Earth as it is
today, but as it was a century ago. Think of it, Mr. Centers--pure clean
air, gentle sunshine, fresh running water! Horses and
carriages--automobiles, guns, hallucinogenic drugs, and similar evils
prohibited! A haven for retirement in absolute security and comfort!"

Something was bothering Fisk, but the smooth sales patter distracted him
and compelled his half-reluctant attention. "But they don't have such
domes on Mars! That technique was developed only a few months ago, and
is still in the testing stage."

"Brilliant, Mr. Centers!" Bondman exclaimed sincerely. "You certainly
keep abreast of the times! Of course there are no domes on Mars now, as
you so astutely point out. Why, it will be years before they are set
up--perhaps even as long as a decade! This is what makes it such a
superlative investment now, before the news gets out. Provided we
restrict it to intelligent men such as yourself. Now I'm sure--"

"Investment? Now hold on!" Fisk protested. "I'm not in the market for
investment. I'm comfortably set up right now, and--"

"I quite understand. Naturally you're not interested in a mediocre
investment, Mr. Centers," Bondman said, frowning skillfully. "Do you
think I would insult your intelligence by wasting your time? No, you
have the discernment to identify the superior value when you encounter
it, unlike the common--"

"What investment?" Fisk demanded, annoyed by the too-heavy flattery. The
intrigue of the interplanetary call was wearing thin, and the objection
he couldn't quite formulate still nagged--and he wanted to finish his
sandwich before it got stale.

The man leaned forward to whisper confidentially. "Marsland!" he
breathed, as though it were the secret of the ages. His voice was so
charged with excitement and rapture that Fisk had to struggle to
maintain his emotional equilibrium. Could there be something in it?

After a pregnant pause, Bondman resumed. "I see you understand. I was
sure you would! You comprehend the phenomenal potential in Marsland
realty, the incredible opportunity--"

"I don't comprehend it!" Fisk snapped, gesturing with his neglected
sandwich. "I have no use for land on Mars, and I'd consider it an
extremely risky investment. That dome technique is still in the
prototype stage; it may not even work on Mars! So if that's what
you're--"

"Yes, of course you want to see the brochure," the salesman agreed
irrelevantly. "And you shall have it, Mr. Centers! I will put it in the
slot for you immediately, first class. I'm sure you will examine it
most--"

Suddenly, facilitated by some devious mental process, Fisk's nagging
question came into focus. "You aren't on Mars!" he cried angrily. "Mars
orbit is fifty million miles outside Earth's even when Mars is closest,
it should take a good ten minutes to get an answer by phone."

"Congratulations," Bondman cried jubilantly. "You have just qualified
for our exclusive genius-intellect bonus certificate! Of course I'm not
calling from that Mars you see in the sky! I'm here at the Mars Ltd.
promotion office. Mr. Centers, I'm so glad you were sharp enough to
solve our little riddle within the time limit! You're the very kind of
investor we prefer! I'll insert the certificate right now! And I'll be
seeing you again soon. Bye-bye!"

And while Fisk was marveling at the peculiarly childish "bye-bye," the
image faded.

He lifted his sandwich, a fine torula-steak on soyrye with enriched
onion sauce, but found he was no longer hungry. He was sure this was a
sales gimmick for something worthless, but Bondman's contagious
excitement had gotten to him. Maybe there was a good investment on Mars!

Well, no harm in looking at the literature. He certainly didn't have to
buy!

He didn't have long to wait, either. His mail receiver was already
chiming with an arrival.

He picked up the bulky printing and spread it out. It was a first-class
presentation, all right, with color photographs and glossy surfacing
that must have cost dearly to transmit. If he hadn't been present when
it arrived, he would have suspected a physical delivery rather than the
normal mailfax. Mars Ltd. must have oiled the right palms in the post
office.

Well, he had to admit it: he was intrigued. He probably would not buy,
but he would enjoy looking.

First there was the bonus certificate, entitling him to a twenty percent
reduction. Fair enough--but hardly sufficient to induce him to buy
without knowing the actual price. Then a spread on Mars: its discovery
in prehistoric times, its variable distance from Earth (35-235 million
miles), its long year (687 days) (Earth days or Mars days, he
wondered... or were they the same?), low surface gravity (one third of
Earth's), pretty moons (ten mile diameter Phobos, six mile Deimos),
scenic craters, legendary canals--all familiar material, but calculated
to whet the appetite for investment and retirement.

Then down to pay dirt: the proposed colony, "Elysium Acres," located on
a map dramatically colored and named. An electrostatic dome a hundred
miles in diameter, almost fifty miles high, enclosing a greenhouse
atmosphere at Earth-normal pressure and temperature. Suitable for
homesites, with carefully laid out horse trails and a delightful crater
lake. Guaranteed weather, pollutant-free.

Fisk was middle aged and cynical, but this gripped him. Earth was such a
sweatbox now. He hated having to take weekly shots to protect his system
against environmental contamination, and the constantly increasing
restrictions invoked in the name of the growing pressure on worldly
resources made him rage at times like an imprisoned tiger. (What other
kind of tiger was there, today?) Perhaps if he had married, found
someone to share his--but that was another entire dimension of
frustration, hardly relevant now.

This Marsdome pitch catered to these very frustrations, he realized.
There must be millions like himself: well enough to do, intelligent, and
sick of uselessness. What a beacon it was: an escape to an unspoiled
planet... in comfort!

But of course he was old enough to control his foolish fancies. He knew
intellectually that no such development existed on Mars--and probably
never would exist. The sheer expense would be prohibitive! All that
technology, all that shipment from Earth... why, passenger fare for one
person one way would amount to two hundred thousand dollars or more,
assuming emigration could even be arranged. And for him it was
completely out of the question.

Yet he couldn't help studying it. Elysium Acres--such suggestion of
bliss! Could it possibly be true--by the time he turned sixty? Why not,
if they were able to finance it?

There was the real rub. Money. How much to establish the dome, stock it
with good atmosphere, import vegetation, calculate and maintain a
closed-system ecological balance, construct access highways, lakes,
houses, service facilities? There would have to be hospitals, libraries,
administrative buildings, emergency staffs--all the accoutrements of
civilization, in short. Billions of dollars to maintain; perhaps
trillions to construct. Naturally the brochure did not provide the price
list.

But if it were affordable, and if it were possible for him to go--what a
temptation!

He punched his personal info number for his net worth, just checking.
The totals flashed on the screen after he had provided his
identification code: liquid assets just over five hundred thousand
dollars sterling; investments at current quotations just under two
million; miscellaneous properties and options six to eight hundred
thousand, pending urgency of sale. Grand total: a generous three
million.

Enough, with proper management, to tide him through the twenty-five
years until his retirement annuities matured. He was hardly fool enough
to jeopardize any of it by investing in pie-on-Mars! But it had been fun
dreaming.

The dream lingered next morning, a welcome guest staying beyond
courteous hours. Fisk showered in the sonic booth, depilitated, and
dressed. As he arranged and set his graying locks he wondered
irrelevantly whether the salesman Bondman used the same brand of hair
tint he did. He studied his face in the mirror, picturing himself as a
hard-sell agent, lifting his brow artfully to augment a pregnant pause.
Yes, he did look the part; perhaps he would be good at it.

But then, subjectively, he saw the signs of what he knew was there: the
circulatory malady that bound him to Earth for life. His quarterly
medication kept it under control--but a trip to Mars, with the necessary
accelerations and drugstates, was out of the question. That was why Mars
would never be more than a dream for Fisk Centers, no matter how
conducive the sales pitch. He would always be a portly, subdued
Earthman.

So it was time to end it. He filed the Mars Ltd. literature in the
recycle bin and watched it disintegrate. Then he punched breakfast. He
felt lonely.

The phone lighted. "Yes?" he said automatically.

"Interplanetary call for Mr. Fisk Centers," the cute operator said. She
had changed her hairdo, but it was the same one who had placed the call
yesterday.

"Come off it, girl!" he snapped, aware that there was nothing more
useless than taking out a personal peeve on an impersonal employee. "It
is not interplanetary!"

Bondman of Mars phased into view. "Of course it is, Mr. Centers," he
said genially. "The Mars Ltd. office is legally Mars soil, you know. An
enclave. We have to undergo quarantine before reporting for work, ha-ha!
Now I trust you have studied our brochure--"

"Yes. I'm not buying."

Bondman looked hurt. "But you haven't even heard our price, Mr. Centers.
I know a man as fair-minded as you--"

"I'll never go to Mars."

"Remember, you get a special bonus price, because of your intelligence
and judgment. I'm sure you'll recognize--"

"I have a circulatory disorder. Inoperable. Sorry."

Bondman laughed with a finely crafted lack of affectation. "You don't
have to go to Mars, Mr. Centers! We're talking about investment!"

"I told you I wasn't looking for--"

"You've studied the plans for Elysium Acres? The phenomenal hundred mile
dome, the luxurious facilities, the nineteenth century
atmosphere--literally!--the scenic lots? Of course you have! Mr.
Centers, you know the value of things. What do you figure it will cost?
I mean the entire setup on Mars, gross?"

"Ten trillion dollars," Fisk said, believing it. "Plus upkeep of
billions per year."

"Would you believe thirty trillion? But you're remarkably close, Mr.
Centers! You certainly comprehend investment! You merely underestimated
the importance of this development to us--and to the world. We're
putting everything into it, Mr. Centers! Another developer might do it
for ten trillion, but we put quality first! Thirty trillion! But we know
we'll make a profit in the end--and of course we have to consider
profit, Mr. Centers! We're businessmen, like you!--because believe me,
sir, there is a demand! Earth is crowded, and in ten years Earth will be
a veritable nightmare! Elysium Acres will be an incredible bargain at
any price!" Bondman held up a hand to forestall Fisk's possible
objection. "Now I'm not forgetting that you can't go, Mr. Centers. I'm
merely pointing out what an attractive investment this is going to be.
Some will have the incalculable privilege of retiring in Elysium Acres;
others will merely make a fortune from it." And here he dropped to his
supercharged confidential tone. "I hope to do both!" He paused just long
enough for that affirmation of faith to penetrate, but not long enough
for Fisk to generate an interjection. "Now we're subdividing E.A. into
lots of one hundred feet square, give or take a foot, ha-ha! Enough for
a comfortable cottage and garden. Twenty million of them--yes, that's
correct, Mr. Centers! That dome is a hundred miles across, and there'll
be eight thousand square miles inside, and two and a half thousand lots
per mile--but I don't need to do elementary mathematics for you, Mr.
Centers. Twenty million lots for thirty trillion dollars. That comes to
one million five hundred thousand dollars per lot. A bit high for Earth,
considering they're undeveloped--but this is Mars! Those lots are
priceless, Mr. Centers, priceless--yet they will be put on the market at
a price any successful man can afford." He held up his hand again,
though Fisk had made no motion to interrupt. "But Mars Ltd. needs
operating capital, Mr. Centers, and we need it now. So we are offering,
for a limited time only, a very, very special investment opportunity.
You can buy these lots as investment real estate today for a tiny
fraction of their actual value. So although you may never have the
privilege of going to Mars yourself--and please accept my heartfelt
condolences, Mr. Centers, for I know how much you would have liked to
retire in Elysium Acres--you can still benefit while advancing a noble
cause through your investment."

Fisk was more impressed by the emotive delivery than by the content.
Salesmanship really was an art! "How much?"

"Mr. Centers, we are offering these lots at--now listen carefully,
because this is hard to believe--at one quarter price! Three hundred and
sev-en-ty thou-sand dollars for a property worth one mil-lion five
hun-dred thou-sand dollars." Bondman spaced out the syllables to make
the figures absolutely clear and emphatic.

"That's my bonus for nabbing your 'interplanetary call' gimmick?"

Bondman rolled his eyes expressively but did not take exception to the
description. "Of course not, Mr. Centers! That's the one-time
special-offer bargain price. For you alone we provide the bonus price."
Here he paused to make that dramatic conspiratorial lowering of voice.
"Don't tell anyone else, because if word got out that anyone beat the
bargain price there would be resentment. Even...." and a great rippling
shrug bespeaking consequences so vast that it would be foolhardy to
invoke them by name.

But he did not speak that mind-shattering figure. Instead he fed it into
his mailfax. The full contract emerged from Fisk's slot. He rifled
through it while Bondman waited expectantly, anticipating the client's
amazed pleasure.

Three hundred thousand dollars. In other words, the straight twenty
percent reduction the certificate had promised.

It did seem like a good buy. Still, Fisk had some experience in such
matters. He skimmed through until he found the "small print"--actually
regular type buried in an otherwise innocuous paragraph.

Ownership remained with Mars Ltd. until the stipulated amount had been
paid in full. In the event of default, the property reverted to Mars
Ltd. without refund. The risk of capital was all with the purchaser,
unless he bought outright for cash. Very interesting.

"Now you see the bargain we are offering you, Mr. Centers," Bondman said
gravely. "Frankly you are one of the very last to receive the
three-hundred seventy-thousand figure, let alone the bonus deal. Demand
has been even greater than we anticipated, with many people buying
multiple lots. Blocks of four, or even more. There will have to be a
price increase. After all, Mars Ltd. needs capital; it is ridiculous for
us to sell so low when our own clients are turning around and selling
their lots for more! Why only last week a man sold five for two million
flat--and he'd only bought them last month! He made a one hundred and
twenty thousand profit on a three-week investment--and that's only the
one we know about. Others--" here his shoulders rose in another eloquent
shrug. "Where, Mr. Centers, is the limit?"

"Why didn't the second buyer come to you first?" Fisk inquired. Actually
the described profit was only about six percent, and normal fluctuation
of the market could readily account for it. But it did seem to augur
well for Mars Ltd.'s growth prospects.

"Apparently he didn't realize our price was as low as it was," Bondman
said sadly. "He thought he had information. The biggest sucker is the
one who thinks he knows it all, right, Mr. Centers? If he had only
checked with us... but of course our price won't be lower, after this
week. So he has a good investment anyway--though not as good as it could
have been. You understand?"

Yes. Fisk was certainly interested now. Buy for three hundred, sell for
four... but he knew better than to appear eager. "I might take a lot or
two," he said. "But it's a lot of money. I'd have to liquidate my other
investments, and that would take time."

"I understand perfectly," Bondman agreed instantly. "I had to do the
same when I invested in my own first Mars lot. It was well worth it, of
course. Fortunately we have a time payment plan exactly suited to your
situation. Ten-year term, so that it will be paid up when Elysium Acres
opens and the real gold rush begins. Irrevocable six percent interest.
Just three thousand two hundred and fifty dollars a month covers all,
Mr. Centers--we absorb the cover charge! How does that suit you?"

Fisk checked the figures quickly in his head. They were fair: six
percent on a decreasing principal. No funny business there, no usury.
And he would be able to liquidate his investments profitably within a
year and pay off the rest, saving the interest. Some contracts had
penalty clauses for early payment, but this one didn't, fortunately.
"Sounds good," he admitted.

"Good? Good?" Bondman demanded rhetorically. "Mr. Centers, how would you
like to buy a cyclotron at the sheet metal price? That's how good it is!
But that isn't all! What we are talking about is three-two-fifty a
month, one hundred dollars a day to control a genuine Marsland property
now selling for--" here he broke off, nodding significantly toward the
contract with the secret figure. "And with values quadrupling--or
more!--in the period of agreement! Mr. Centers, you are actually
investing a paltry three-two-fifty a month--for a return of at least one
million five hundred thousand in a bare decade!"

Fisk knew. Three hundred thousand dollars, plus ninety thousand dollars
accumulated interest for the ten year span. For one-million-five. A net
profit of one million eleven hundred thousand, or over one hundred and
ten thousand per year--per lot. With just three lots he could triple his
fortune! "Still, it's a sizable amount. Are you sure it's safe? I mean,
suppose something happens and the dome doesn't get built. The lots would
become almost worthless."

"Mr. Centers, it certainly is a pleasure to do business with you!"
Bondman exclaimed. "You don't miss a trick! Of course there is a nominal
element of risk! Life itself is the biggest risk of all! But by buying
on time you can eliminate even that one-in-a-thousand chance. Just
consider: if something should happen to abort Elysium Acres
tomorrow--and I assure you nothing short of World War Four could squelch
our plans--and then where would you be anyway, ha-ha!--if it ended
tomorrow, and you had bought today and paid your deposit premium--what
would you have lost? Three thousand two hundred and fifty dollars! Why
Mr. Centers--you must blow more than that on one good suit!"

Extremely sharp observation. Fisk had paid more than that for his dress
suit.

Bondman followed up his advantage, knowing he had scored. "Considering
the one million five hundred thousand value--just what do you risk? ONE
SUIT!"

"But suppose something happens in two years? Or nine? I can't afford to
lose a suit every month!"

"Mr. Centers," Bondman said sternly. "I'm a busy man and this call is
expensive. Don't waste my time and yours with inconsequentials! If you
don't trust the stability of a fine new developer like Mars Ltd., don't
invest. Or if you believe it will fail in two years, sell in one year.
Your property will have increased in value at least ten percent--in
fact, considering the coming price rise, twenty percent may be a more
accurate estimate. But just to keep it simple, let's call it ten
percent. That's between thirty and forty thousand dollars, right? And
how much are you paying per year?"

"Between thirty and forty thousand dollars," Fisk said with a smile.

"So if you sell then, your return on your actual investment will be just
about one hundred percent. This is leverage, Mr. Centers: taking a small
amount of money to control a large amount of money. And the profit is
yours even if, as you say, Mars Ltd. fails in two years. Or nine.
Ha-ha." He leaned forward again, speaking intensely. "The dome may fail,
Mr. Centers, but you won't!"

Fisk laughed. "Very well, Mr. Bondman. You've sold me. Just give me a
little time to check around...." This was a key ploy. If the salesman
were out to take him, he would do anything to prevent a fair
investigation of the facts. And of course Fisk wouldn't buy without
checking. That was the big advantage in being an experienced fifty. He
couldn't be stampeded.

"Certainly, Mr. Centers. In fact I insist on it! If we were looking for
foolish investors we never would have called you. I'll be happy to
provide the government property report--"

"Thanks, no. I just want a few days to make some calls." He was hardly
going to use Mars Ltd. data to check out Mars Ltd.!

"By all means! I wouldn't have it otherwise." Then Bondman paused as
though remembering something. "Of course, I can't guarantee your price,
Mr. Centers. That increase is going to come through any day now--perhaps
tomorrow. They never let us salesmen know in advance, of course, because
some might, uh, profiteer at the expense of the customer. But I know
it's soon. Your bonus will still apply, naturally, but fifty or sixty
thousand per lot is a pretty hefty penalty for a day's time. Uh--do you
think you could make it by this afternoon? Say, four o'clock? I don't
want to rush you, and of course it might be as late as next week before
the rise--but I'd feel terrible if--"

He'd feel terrible if he lost his commission because an irate customer
balked at the higher price, Fisk thought. "I think I can make it by
four." That would give him six hours: time enough.

"Excellent! I'll see you then! Bye-bye!" and the screen faded.

Fisk hadn't been bluffing. The Marslot investment seemed attractive,
indeed, but he never made snap decisions about money. It wasn't just a
matter of checking; it was appraising his own motives and inclinations.
The best buy in the world--on Mars!--was pointless if it failed to
relate to his basic preferences and needs.

He punched an early lunch and ate it slowly. Then he began his calls.

First the library informational service for a summary of Mars Ltd.
operations. While that was being processed for faxing to him, he read
the sample contract carefully and completely. It was tight: he would not
actually own the lot until it was completely paid for, and he couldn't
sell it until he owned it. Leverage? Ha!

But apart from that trap, it was straight. He could defang it by
purchasing it outright. Not to mention the interest he would save.

The rundown on Mars Ltd. arrived. He settled down to his real homework.

Interesting--there was a cautionary note about "Ltd." That stood for
Limited, and meant that the developer's liability was limited to its
investments on Earthsoil--of which it had none. Its only Earthly enclave
was, as Bondman had claimed, legally Marssoil. A nice device for
impressive "interplanetary" calls to clients--but perhaps even nicer as
a defense against lawsuit. An irate party might obtain a judgment for a
million dollars--but unless he sued on Mars, there was nothing for him
to collect. What a beautiful foil against crackpots and opportunists!

The company was legitimate. In fact it was the largest of its kind,
having sold billions of dollars worth of Marsland to speculators in the
past few years. The Elysium Acres project was listed too. A note said
SEE GOVERNMENT PROPERTY REPORT. Fisk sighed and punched for it, as it
hadn't been attached to the main commentary. He had a lot of dull
reading to do!

The phone lighted. It was four already! He had meant to make some other
checks--well, they hardly mattered. He had verified that Mars Ltd. was
no fly-by-night outfit.

"Did you come to a decision, Mr. Centers?" Bondman inquired, sounding
like an old friend.

Fisk had--but a certain innate and cussed caution still restrained him.
The deal seemed too good to be true, and that was a suspicious sign. But
aside from the "leverage" hoax he could find no fault in it. He decided
not to query the salesman about the time payment trap; that would only
bring a glib explanation and more superfluous compliments on his
intelligence. Better to let Bondman think he was fooling the client.

"I might be interested in more than one lot," Fisk said.

"Absolutely no problem, Mr. Centers!" Fisk was sure the salesman's
warmth was genuine this time. "Simply enter the number of lots you are
buying on the line on page three where it says 'quantity,' write your
name on the line below, and make out a check to Mars Ltd. for your first
payment. That's all there is to it, since I have already countersigned.
Fax a copy back to us and--"

Fisk's mail-chime sounded. "Oh--the property report," he said. "Do you
mind if I just glance at it first? A formality, of course."

"Oh, I thought you'd already read that! Didn't I send you one? By all
means--"

Then a buzzer on Bondman's desk interrupted him. "I'm in conference," he
snapped into his other phone. "Can't it wait?" Then his expression
changed. "Oh, very well!" He turned to Fisk. "I beg your pardon--a
priority call has just signaled on my other line and--well, it's from my
superior. Can't say no to him, ha-ha, even if it is bad form to
interrupt a sales conference. If you don't mind waiting a moment--"

"Not at all. I'll read the property report."

"Excellent! I'll wrap this up in a moment, I'm sure." Bondman faded, to
be replaced by a dramatic artist's conception of Elysium Acres,
buttressed by sweet music. The connection remained; this was merely Mars
Ltd.'s privacy shunt.

Then there was a snap! as of a shifting connection, and Bondman's voice
was superimposed on the music. "...tell you I'm closing a sale for
several lots. I can't just pull the rug out--he's signing the contract
right now!" A pause, as he listened to the response that Fisk couldn't
hear. Then: "To five hundred thousand! As of this morning? Why didn't
you call me before?"

Fisk realized that Bondman's privacy switch hadn't locked properly. It
wouldn't be ethical to listen, and he did want to skim that property
report. But the voice wrested his attention away from the printed
material.

"Look, boss--I just can't do it! I quoted him the three hundred grand
bonus... no, I can't withdraw it! He's sharp, and he's got the contract!
He'd make a good Mars Ltd. exec... no, terms, I think... yes, if we
could get him to default on the payments, so the reversion clause...
hate to bilk him like that--I like him... no, I'm sure he wouldn't go
for the new price. Not with the cancellation of the bonus and all.
That's a two hundred grand jump just when he's about to sign... okay,
okay, I'll try it--but listen, boss, you torp me in midsale again like
this and I'm signing with Venus Ltd. before you finish the call... I
know they're a gyp outfit! But I promised this client the bonus price
and now you're making a liar out of me and cheating him out of the
finest investment of the century on a time payment technicality! If I
have to operate that way, I might as well go whole Venus hog...."

There was a long pause. Fisk smiled, thinking of the tongue lashing
Bondman must be getting for putting integrity ahead of business.

Fisk knew it was unfair for him to take advantage of a slipped switch
and private information--but he had been promised the bonus price, and
now someone was trying to wipe it out. If Mars Ltd. were trying to con
him out of his investment, he had a similar right to con himself back
ire!

"...all right," Bondman's voice came again. "That's best. I'll try to
talk him out of it so nobody loses. But get those new quotations in the
slot right away. Couple other clients I have to call--they're going to
be furious about that increase, but at least they were warned about
delaying... yes... yes... okay. Sorry I blew up. Bye-bye."

The music faded, the picture vanished, and Bondman reappeared, looking
unsettled. "Sorry to keep you waiting so long, Mr. Centers," he said.
"Bad news. The offer I was describing to you--well, I'm afraid we'll
have to call it off."

"But I just signed the contract!" Fisk protested innocently. "Are you
telling me to tear it up already?"

Bondman's eyelids hardly flickered. "What I meant to say is that the
conditions have changed. New government restrictions have forced up
construction costs, and the whole Elysium Acres project is in jeopardy.
In fact, Mr. Centers, we now have no guarantee that there will even be a
dome on Mars. Under the circumstances I don't see how I can recommend--"

So that was the pitch! "We all have to take chances, as you pointed
out," Fisk said briskly. "I should think that if your expenses go up,
your prices would follow to compensate. So I should buy now."

"Er... yes," Bondman admitted. "Still, it looks bad. I wouldn't want you
to be left holding title to a worthless lot, Mr. Centers. Until this
thing settles down--"

"My lot?" Fisk interjected with mock dismay. "Lots. I signed up for
ten."

For a moment even the super salesman was at a loss for words. "T-ten?"

"Why not, for such a good investment. Leverage, you know."

"Leverage! Let me tell you something--" But then Bondman caught himself.
He sighed. He put on a smile of rueful admiration. "You certainly know
your business, Mr. Centers. I only hope you aren't taking a terrible
chance with a great deal of money. Are you sure--?" But, observing
Fisk's expression, he capitulated. "Well, then, just make out your first
monthly payment for thirty-two thousand five hundred dollars, and
we'll--"

"Thanks, no. I'm paying cash."

Bondman looked so woebegone that Fisk felt sorry for him, though he knew
the salesman would still receive a handsome commission along with his
reprimand for letting so many underpriced lots go. "Cash? The entire
amount?"

"Yes. Here is my check for three million dollars, certified against the
escrow liquidation of my total holdings. That saves you the annoyance of
time payments and gives you a good chunk of the working capital you
need. Your boss should be well pleased, considering your rising
expenses."

"Uh, yes," Bondman agreed faintly as Fisk faxed check and contract back
to him. The originals remained with him for his records, but the faxes
were legal too. The deal was closed. He owned the lots outright, and
could not lose them by payment default. If he needed working capital
himself, he could sell one at the five-hundred thousand dollar price
tomorrow.

Bondman stared bleakly at the documents, then pulled himself together.
"It has been a real pleasure doing business with you, Mr. Centers," he
said with a brave smile. "I'm sure you'll never regret your purchase.
Uh, bye-bye."

"Bye-bye!" Fisk returned cheerily as the connection broke.

But something about the salesman's expression just as the picture faded
bothered him. It reminded him of what Bondman had said during the
morning call: "The biggest sucker is the one who thinks he knows it
all...."

The library information on Mars Ltd. was general and of course bland.
Any negative remarks would have made it vulnerable for a libel suit,
regardless of the truth. It had provided him with essentially the Mars
Ltd. publicity release, but added the cautionary note SEE GOVERNMENT
PROPERTY REPORT.

Fisk had been about to look at that report when Bondman's boss had
interrupted... and the privacy switch had coincidentally malfunctioned.
Very interesting timing.

After the price-increase call Bondman had been nervous and stuttery,
hardly a super salesman. His facade had disintegrated--yet he had known
the word was coming. Any salesman of that caliber should be able to
cover better than that. Unless the whole thing was an act... to puff the
confidence of a sucker who thought he knew it all....

Fisk's hand shook as he lifted the property report, for now he knew what
he would find.

Plainly printed in red ink: "This property is not adaptable for
terraforming purposes. The lots are unimproved, unsurveyed, and without
roads, landing facilities or other improvements. Access is extremely
poor. Site is subject to frequent ground tremors prohibiting
construction of permanent buildings or erection of static-dome
generators. Approximate value per lot is $300.00."

CHAPTER 2
---------

Fisk Centers sank wearily into his foamer. He reached out of the froth
to dial a cold drink while his suit dissolved from his sweaty torso.

No drink came. Then he remembered: his credit balance was down, and half
his apartment appliances were out of service until he made repair--of
his financial situation.

"I'm too old to be destitute!" he lamented, still hardly believing it.
But he hadn't been too old to be bilked out of his fortune by a
hard-sell outfit.

Frustrated, he stepped out, letting the spume drain away. He punched for
a new suit, knowing that a brave new exterior would refresh his spirit.

The suiter did not produce.

Fisk stood naked, slowly coming to grips with his condition. He had
never before suffered from malnutrition of credit, and he had hardly
gotten the feel of it yet. There was no clothing in his apartment. Why
should there be, when the day's attire was always conveniently recycled
after use? He had nothing to wear.

He was no lean bronzed muscular youth who could trot outside in Adamic
splendor and stare down anyone who blinked. When properly suited, Fisk
was portly; bare, he was unconscionably avoirdupois. More bluntly: fat.
Of course he wouldn't be that way long if he didn't find some way to
renew his dietary credit.

He had been politely inquiring about situations for a gentleman with his
qualifications--and receiving tacit demurrals. Hunger would very shortly
put an end to that. It was past time to hustle out and get a job. If he
could only figure out how.

He punched for the newsfax want ads, and was relieved to see the paper
slide into the hopper. So long as he could communicate, he could
function.

Quickly he eliminated the ads obviously intended for women, for youths,
and for specialists. The economy was in one of its periodic recessions
that always seemed to come when the opposite party was in control, so
there were few promising entry-level positions for the untrained. The
main field available to him was--sales.

Fisk winced. He had been taken by a salesman. But that was certainly a
kind of experience. Why couldn't he sell a legitimate product himself?

But as he read more closely he discovered that here, too, the demand was
for special types. He could not afford even the nominal six week hiatus
for insurance training; he needed a credit balance now. He could hardly
peddle household machinery, when the first requirement was to purchase
the demonstrator models. He couldn't even go for a preliminary
interview--not in this dishabille. And he absolutely refused to go into
illicit land sales.

The remaining offerings were scant, and not particularly enticing.
Artificial Manure, no exp. req. That stank! Artistic Photography,
Special Interest, 50% comm. No, he wasn't ready to peddle pornography!
Intangible, must travel. No doubt that salesman had to travel, when his
intangible turned out to have intangible value, too.

In this morass one item snagged his wandering eye and hauled it back.
Call Collect. No product, no requirement, just the number.

Well, whoever ran that one understood Fisk's desperation. He could apply
there even if his phone credit stalled. So he punched the number,
collect.

To his slight surprise, the call was accepted. A nervous-looking
middle-aged woman appeared on the screen. She looked at him sharply.
"Yes?"

"My name is Fisk Centers. I'm interested in employment. Your ad--"

"I know what the ad says!" she snapped. "If this is your idea of a joke
at our expense--"

Fisk belatedly remembered that he was unclothed. He had been so
preoccupied by his predicament that... well, too late now. Honesty was
always the best and only policy. "I'm--broke. My suiter's been
interdicted. I need a credit balance in a hurry--as you can see. I shall
be happy to provide my identity code, if you wish to verify--"

She smiled fleetingly. "I see. The position is open. Expenses and
commission. If you qualify."

"I have to tell you I'm fifty and untrained in sales. I suffered a
business loss--"

"Oh? What kind? If you were rolled--"

"I bought into Mars Inc. Ltd., I mean. Mars Ltd. Ten lots in Elysium
Acres. Cash."

She whistled. "They say one's born every minute, but your kind comes
only once a week! You lost--"

"The shirt off my back," Fisk finished, trying to smile.

"At least" she said, eyeing him again. "When can you report?"

"I beg your pardon?"

"You want a job, don't you?"

"Oh!" Fisk had been so well braced against another turndown that he was
hardly prepared. "As soon as I get dressed. Uh--"

"We'll call it a business expense," she said. "Have a suit on us, Mr.
Centers." And the OPERATIVE light flashed on the suiter.

"But I don't even know your business!" he protested feebly as he
hastened to the unit.

"Mr. Johns will explain all that at the office." She paused. "You can
work with nonwhites?"

"I pride myself on my inflexible nonbigotry."

"But you understand that a certain discretion may be necessary...."

"I can keep my mouth shut." He was familiar enough with middle class
values to realize that this constituted a pretty compelling agreement.
He could take the job or reject it, but he could not talk about it
elsewhere.

She smiled again, this time with genuine warmth. "Mr. Centers, I think
you'll do very well with our organization!"

Fisk was met at the office by a hard-looking young man. "I'm Chic Johns,
procurement. You'll be on sales, of course. Know anything about the
adoption racket?" the youth demanded.

"Nothing. I--"

"Good. We'll tell you all you need to know. We sell babies."

"I don't think I understand--"

Johns appraised him cynically. "Right. You look like a businessman and
you talk like one. We like that. Just remember: we don't gab about
business matters to third parties. You take the client's order and
deliver the body and collect the cash. We do the rest. All in strict
privacy. Right?"

"But I understood it was against the law to assign a monetary value
to--"

"It's like this, Centers. The state agencies charge for costs, always
inflated, which is really the same thing as selling for a profit.
Thousand dollars minimum for a live body. They make their bundle, never
you fear. But they're choosy as hell. No black on white or yellow on
black, know what I mean? If the client balks, they find him
'unqualified' and he's on the blacklist and he can die childless for all
they care, he's out. Lots of good potential parents hung up that way. So
it's up to us private concerns to fill the vacuum. We don't ask
questions, we don't have restrictions. Client tells us what he wants, we
get it for a price, just like any other business."

Fisk found this hard to assimilate. "But these are human beings! Surely
you wouldn't place an innocent baby with unfit parents!"

Johns shrugged. "I wouldn't--but my end is procurement, not placement.
You're the one who decides. But remember, we don't have the staff to do
a damn security check on every family that wants a child. And who's to
say who's 'fit' or 'unfit'? Some pretty rough people are mighty good to
their kids--and some pillars of society, the kind the state agencies
like, are raising speed demons, not to mention the real addicts. Our
record is at least as good as the state's, when you consider the family,
not the class--and we deliver much faster. So we just charge enough to
discourage anybody who's in it for laughs. Would you pay thirty, forty
grand for a piddling black baby if you didn't mean to take care of it?"

"No, of course not. But--"

"Sokay. Here's the procedure book. Take it home, study it today.
Tomorrow's your first ass."

"Ass?"

"Assignment. Tomorrow maybe you'll place a poor black baby in a rich
white home, Centers. Twenty percent commission on the gross. Maybe eight
thousand dollars for a day's work. Like the notion?"

"I'll, er, try my best," Fisk said uncertainly. It was a job....

The book was far more sophisticated in language than Chic Johns had
been, providing elegant explanations and justifications for the private
enterprise adoption procedures. But the man's callous summary seemed
essentially correct. State regulations were so complex and picayune, and
state agency staffs so overworked, that many worthy prospective parents
were unfairly denied adoptive children. At the same time, many innocent
babies were forced to grow up in impersonal institutions where they soon
became so backward as to be unadoptable. Even a bad family appeared, on
balance, to be a better environment for a child than a good state
orphanage. A child needed parents.

But Fisk, double-wary after the bilking Mars Ltd. had accomplished with
its plausible sales pitch, checked carefully for the pitfalls. This
manual could be biased, deliberately distorting the state agency picture
in order to justify the need for private enterprise.

He phoned the library information service and verified that state
institutions were run according to strict and basically fair precepts,
so that orphans were not actually deprived--but adoption into families
was still preferable. He learned that no adoption was legal unless
court-approved, so that if this seeming detail were omitted a child
could be taken away at any time, even from the most loving and competent
parents. This was the main complaint lodged against black market
outfits: their frequent failure to nail down adoptions in court.

The procedure book Chic Johns had given him was supposed to contain all
he needed to know about placing a child for adoption. Yet it made no
reference to the court requirement.

Fisk reviewed the library material carefully. Theoretically it was
impossible for a baby to be adopted without court sanctions--i.e., via
black market. But now that he had a notion which lines to read between,
he saw that there were avenues. The problem was not placement, for many
more people wanted children than the supply could accommodate. The
problem was the acquisition. Some few babies might be born
unrecorded--but the overwhelming majority arrived in hospitals or with
sanctioned medical supervision, and all of these were duly recorded.
Once recorded, they were in the computerized system; the state knew the
whereabouts of every recorded human entity. But some few officials were
susceptible to corruption, and supervisory agencies were chronically
overworked, so there was a practical loophole for continuing siphoning
of babies theoretically destined for legitimate placement. If no one
complained, and no one checked to make certain a given baby had arrived,
the computer's entry was in fact fictitious... sometimes.

But it would be premature to assume that he had landed in such a black
market enterprise, Fisk told himself. He had gotten in trouble before by
jumping to conclusions--and he needed the job. The court would make its
own investigation at the time of the adoption, and if anything was
wrong, the transaction would be voided. It was the ethical
responsibility of the placement agent--himself--to make arrangements for
such legal blessing. So long as he saw to that, he was only providing a
necessary introductory and advisory service, and being paid for that
service, not for human flesh.

A little something nagged at him subliminally, but the thought of an
eight-thousand dollar commission for one day's work refuted such doubts.
His best course was to try the job, honestly, before judging it. He
could always quit once he had verified the facts, if that was the way it
went.

The woman was back on duty in the morning. "All set, Mr. Centers?" she
inquired over her mounded paperwork.

"Ready to try," he said. "There's a lot more I'll need to know, but I
should be able to work it out as I go along."

"Good. Here's your first lead. Find out what they want and report back
here. Don't talk business over the phone; we never do that. Remember,
make no promises; just say you'll try."

That simple! Fisk took the card she proffered and read it: Michael
Ormand, with an address in one of the newer apartment complexes.

But why no business over the phone? An order was a fairly
straightforward thing.

Ormand was a genial muscular man of about thirty, with a scalped-looking
crewcut and the inset metal contacts of a spaceman. Fisk tried not to
stare. He knew about the brain-to-machine synapses used by
interplanetary crewmen, but had never seen the implants this close
before.

"Mars shuttle?" Fisk inquired, feeling a twinge for another reason. It
was foolish to resent everything connected to Mars, but that wound still
pained.

"Venus," Ormand answered. "But I'm through with all that. No more
shuttling. Going to retire now that I've made my pile. Want a family."

"That's what I'm here to discuss!" Fisk said with what he hoped was the
proper note of professional encouragement. This was easy enough, so far.
"May I ask what you plan to do now?"

"It's none of your business, but I'll tell you. I'll grow mugwumps."

"I beg your pardon?"

"Mugwumps. Venusian pseudo-plants. Very pretty, use no water or
sunlight, smell like a lemon. Big demand here on Earth, but I'm not
doing it for the money. Made my pile already, I said. Challenge, you
know. Never been cultivated before."

Fisk made a mental note to look up mugwumps, as he had not heard of the
name in this connection before. "I see. What kind of child were you
thinking of adopting? You understand we are a private, fee-charging
agency. We do our best, but we can't make promises--except that we don't
collect until we deliver."

"Sure. No red tape, that's what I like. I figure a little girl, nine or
ten. Healthy, you know?"

"Nine or ten months," Fisk repeated, writing it down.

"Months? Years! What would I want with a squalling baby?"

"Oh," Fisk said, nonplussed. "Sorry. I thought--uh, how long have you
been married?"

"Married? Spacemen don't marry! What would I want with a gold-digging
wife?"

Fisk choked. "Mr. Ormand! If you want to adopt--"

"That's why I want to adopt. A nice, sweet little girl. Catch her before
she gets bitchy, train her right, you know? Older women are
unmanageable."

"But--!"

"You're single, aren't you? You know what women are like!"

"But you can't adopt when you're single!" Ormand glanced at him in
surprise.

"I can't?"

"Of course not! Only married couples can--"

The man smiled. "Oh, that's the agency pitch. Sure. That's why I called
you. To cut out that bilge. Look, you don't need to beat up the price on
me. I told you I'm loaded. Don't worry about it. Find me what I want and
I'll pay. Within reason. I know what the range is for this sort of
thing. And I'll give you a little bonus on the side for prompt service.
Fair enough?"

Fisk was afraid of what would come out if he opened his mouth, so he
kept it closed. Somehow he made his exit in good order.

"Ten-year-old girl? Sure, we can get," Johns said at the office. "That
kind's a glut on the market. And he won't quibble on color or price!
Good show, Centers! I can see you've got the knack."

This was not the response Fisk had anticipated. He had supposed the sale
doomed. "But he's single!"

"So?"

"What about the law?"

Johns made a face as though he had heard a bad word. "What about it?
Didn't you read the book? Singles can adopt, if they have the means to
make a good home. And this guy does. He'll bite for fifty grand, wait
and see. Grand for you, grand for me, and grand for business!"

Fisk felt vaguely nauseous, but didn't want to imperil his income by
raising uninformed objections. Ten thousand dollars could go a long way
in reconstituting his life-style. "Do you have a ten-year-old girl? Uh,
in stock?"

"You think I keep that kind packed in desk drawers? I'll find one,"
Johns said confidently. "Just a matter of making the connection, and a
little quiet negotiation. Two days, maybe. Don't you worry about that.
My end of the business, procurement. Just you go out on your next ass
and see if you can land another order to match the first."

Fisk retained strong personal reservations about this business, but he
went. As it happened, the leads fizzled. Some people merely wanted
information and others backed off when it came to the point of actually
ordering a baby. One lady seemed to be more interested in finding a
husband, and Fisk barely escaped intact. Ormand was right: some older
women did get predatory. Meanwhile, however much he might look the part,
he was not a high pressure salesman.

On the third day Johns barged into the office hauling along a screaming
tantrum of a spitfire. "Got her!" he exclaimed breathlessly, shoving the
creature into the center of the room and leaning against the door. Blood
dripped from a scratch on his cheek and his suit was torn in a couple of
places, but he was smiling. "What a job!"

Abruptly the commotion ceased. A young girl stood there, of
indeterminate color and culture. "Hi," she said to Fisk, nodding her
short black tangle of hair pertly. "You the sucker?"

Fisk turned to Johns, dismayed. "Surely this isn't--?"

"Sure this is! Take her to your client and get the money. Real bargain
for him! See those classic facial lines? That animal vigor? That instant
self-control? You know the price."

Fisk found the moral ramifications too vast to contemplate on the spot,
so he shelved them in favor of details. "He--he wants a--a nice, sweet
little girl."

"I'm nice and sweet," the girl snarled. "When I want to be."

"Would you want to be sweet for a man who'll shell out fifty grand for
you?" Johns asked her with a half-smile.

"Fifty grand!" she exclaimed, delighted. "Am I worth all that?"

"If you behave. At least until the deal's complete. After that, who
cares? You're in."

"Yeah, who cares!" she echoed, with momentary mischief. Despite their
manner of entry, Johns and the girl appeared to have a certain mutual
appreciation of each other's motives.

Fisk had been concerned for the welfare of the child, but now he
suspected that the client was the sucker she had implied. Should he
proceed with this transaction?

What would he eat if he didn't? He had made no other sales (placed no
other children, he corrected himself), and so his commission was zero.
The office petty cash fund wouldn't carry him much longer. Sheer need
was bruising his scruples.

"Sokay, Centers--take her away," Johns said briskly. "Clean her up and
feed her first, so she doesn't snatch. Here's a couple tokens. Play it
cool. But don't turn her over until you get his payment."

Fisk took her away, with a stop at a refresher booth to get her cleaned
and dressed for presentation. He wished he could do the same for
himself; his home foamer had quit the day before, and this was his
fourth day on a one-day suit. Only extreme care kept him from looking
seedy.

Of course he could always sell one of his Mars lots. But those were
worth only one percent of what he had paid, and he couldn't bring
himself to convert that 99% paper loss to cash. Marsland might
eventually improve....

"What's your name?" he asked belatedly as she foamed.

"Yola. Hey, I've never been in a public booth before. Neat!" Her voice
emerged from a speaker beside the entrance. There was no vision screen,
of course.

"How did Johns get you?" Fisk couldn't bring himself to use the term
"procure" in this connection.

"The usual. I was doing time in solitary 'cause I--aw, never mind. The
cage was glad to unload me, and not for any fifty grand, either!"

"The orphanage sold you?"

They don't call it that. Order came through the Juvenile Parole Agency,
which is a legit division of Youth Services. But somewhere along the way
I got shunted, and here I am!"

"You mean you were abducted from your lawful guardian?"

"You don't know much, do you! It was just in the paperwork. Same thing,
I guess. The usual, I said."

The usual...

"But how could you be transferred from a state institution to a--to
here?"

"If I knew, I'd know enough not to talk about it," she said
uncomfortably. Then she changed the subject. "Is it a nice family?"

"It's a single man. Spacer."

She didn't respond right away, and Fisk hardly needed to inquire why.
Children learned early about life in institutions, and spacers were
notorious for their planetfall orgies. This was a far cry from the
philanthropic service he had half-anticipated.

"Well, let's go," she said, emerging. Fisk had feared she would punch
some outrageous replacement outfit, but she was tastefully dressed for
her age: eleven. She was small, as though undernourished, and not,
despite Johns's remarks, black skinned. But she obviously derived from
mixed ancestry. She looked well-tanned on the body, and had a certain
Negroid cast about her features, but this was not obvious at a casual
glance. No doubt neither pure black nor pure white had wanted her as a
baby, as neither considered brown beautiful. So she was here....

"So watcha gaping at?" she demanded.

He guided her to the fooder and inserted the second token. "Punch what
you want, and make sure you have enough to fill up," he advised, hoping
she would order too much, so that he would get to abate his sudden
hunger on the surplus. He had been scrimping on meals too, necessarily.

She looked at him sidelong, and punched a supersoda and a miniature dog
biscuit. "For you," she said, proffering the latter.

Fisk was too hungry to be properly furious. He chewed on the biscuit
while she slurped the fragrant giant confection noisily. An unlimited
one-sitting fooder order gone to waste!

But his conscience hung on. "Are you sure you want to go through with
this, Yola? A single man--"

"A single loaded man. Think I'm dumb? Better'n solitary, for sure. I'll
get to see shows, sleep late, and eat anything I want--"

"Then why were you fighting so hard when Johns brought you in?"

"I don't like being told what to do."

"Do you always throw a tantrum when--"

"Always. Matter of principle."

"That could get you into trouble."

She contemplated him obliquely as the soda drained to the vociferous
dregs. "My middle name, grandad."

"Don't call me grandad!" he said sharply.

"Don't tell me what to call you!" she screamed, not stinting on the
volume. It was amazing how far a soprano voice carried! People stopped
in the street to look, and Fisk fought to keep the flush off his face.
Then, sweetly: "...Grandad."

Fisk decided to ignore it. "We have an appointment, Yola."

"Right, Centers," she agreed with continued insolence. But he was
determined not to let her have the satisfaction of his reaction.

Mike Ormand was pleased. "Very nice," he said, studying Yola with more
critical intensity than Fisk thought appropriate for such an interview.
He half hoped the child would pull an instant tantrum and void the
placement, but for the moment she was every inch the demure pre-teen.
"Here's your check, sir. Fifty grand, certified."

"Just a minute!" Fisk protested. "You can't just--"

"Why not, Mr. Centers?" Yola asked innocently. She turned to Ormand.
"May I call you Dad?"

"Sure, kid. Go punch yourself a soda," he said amiably. "No hard stuff,
now!" Then, to Fisk: "Don't worry. I didn't forget yours. I know how it
goes. I made it out separately. So your office wouldn't know. Five
thousand." He handed over the second check, winking.

"Not that!" Fisk cried, his moral anguish tempered by the greed of
desperation. Five thousand would fuel his finances for a couple of
weeks! "You--you two--don't even know each other!"

"What's to know, Mr. Centers?" Yola inquired prettily over her soda.
This one didn't slurp, for she sipped with delicacy. "Dad's got a nice
layout here, a real home. He's a nice guy."

"Yeah," Ormand agreed. "I've got what she wants, she's what I want,
you've got your money. So it's done, we're all happy, and thank you. Now
toddle off, Centers. You're interfering in family business."

"Yeah," Yola echoed almost inaudibly.

They were both reasonably satisfied, neither being quite the bargain the
other supposed, and he did have the money. Why should he object? He had
performed his function. He had a ten thousand dollar commission coming
for this transaction! Yet he balked, feeling like a pimp. "We have to
complete the contract and make arrangements for the formal adoption.
There'll have to be a court hearing, and--"

"A what!" Ormand demanded incredulously. Then he caught himself. "Oh,
sure. I'll take care of that. You don't need to bother."

"I do need to bother," Fisk said, his stubborn streak coming into play.
"Somebody could take her away from you at any time, no matter how
long--"

"Oh, that's it!" Ormand said, seeming relieved. "That's okay. Nothing's
going to happen inside of ten days, is it?"

"Not that I know of. But there is no expiration on a counterclaim of
this nature. Suppose a natural parent showed up in five years--"

Ormand laughed. "Fat chance. They'd never follow where we're going!"

"Where are we going, Dad?" Yola inquired.

"To Venus, of course. Got my one way passes for the next liftoff, just
ten days off."

Yola spat out a mouthful of soda. "Venus!"

"Sure, kid. To farm mugwump. It only grows on Venus, you know."

"But there aren't any shows on Venus!" Yola shrieked as though mortally
wounded. "No foamers, no fooders, no autobeds. It's just a perpetual
sandstorm!"

"Right. Real challenge. Ideal for mugwumps, and no neighbors to butt in,
'cept for the shuttle every four months. Great life!"

"In a spacesuit!" she wailed, her anguish intensifying. "All day! And
the trip there takes six months, cooped up in an old tin can with
nothing but nasty ol' vacuum trying to get in!"

"The vacuum doesn't come in," Ormand said, "The air goes out. If there's
a leak. And the trip takes longer, right now. And it's getting worse,
because of the phase. That's why I have to make a tight schedule. The
free-fall gets to you if you stay in space too long, specially if you're
not used to it."

"Free-fall!" she repeated faintly. "I get sick just in the downshaft!"

"I don't understand," Fisk said. "If you're settling on Venus, why are
you adopting a girl?"

"Why do you think he wants a girl, grandad!" Yola exclaimed tearfully.

"Well, it's a long trip out, and a rough, lonely life," Ormand said
reasonably. "What grown woman would sign up for it?"

"A desperate one," Fisk said. "No other."

"Just count me out, Ormand!" Yola cried. "I'm no Lolita!"

Fisk couldn't resist needling her, though he was privately relieved
about her change of heart. "You didn't object before, Yola."

"He wasn't going to Venus before!"

"Sure I was," Ormand said. "That's why I--"

"You stay out of this, child-buyer!" she screamed at him.

"Watch who you're sassing, kid," he snapped back. His temper was about
as quick as hers.

She threw the soda cup at him. "I'll sass anybody I please, you--oh!"

For Ormand had grabbed her in mid-sentence and was hauling her over his
knee. He nipped her short skirt up over her back. "No daughter of mine
is going to sass her elders!" he said as his hand came down resoundingly
on her little posterior.

Yola screeched incoherently. Fisk had some sympathy with each party, so
didn't interfere. Yola certainly had no reason to like Venus, but Ormand
was taking the kind of firm disciplinary action Fisk envied. They were
working it out.

Then Yola jackknifed and bit the man on the ankle. It was Ormand's turn
to exclaim with pain and rage. By the time he recovered his bearings,
Yola had scooted across the room.

Fisk had been pleasantly bemused by the suddenness and violence of these
proceedings, but now he stepped between them. "I'm afraid this isn't
going to work. Here are your checks back, Mr. Ormand. I'll return this
girl to the--"

"Uh-uh!" Yola said.

"Oh no you don't, Centers!" Ormand rapped, simultaneously slapping the
checks to the floor. "I don't have time to get another girl. This one'll
be fine once I get her broken in."

"Go break in your fat head!" Yola cried, casting about for something
else to throw.

Fisk caught her by the wrist and hustled her out of the apartment, and
this time she didn't object to being directed. Ormand charged after
them, but Yola ducked back and tripped him with professional dispatch so
that he sprawled ignominiously. Fisk wondered just what sort of
education children obtained in state orphanages, for spacers were
normally sure on their feet. They ran to the exit chute and jumped in.

She did look a little queasy in that brief free-fall, though there were
other factors to account for that.

The house alarm was already sounding as they boarded the transport for
the office. Ormand must have called the police! But they were on their
way, and by the time the police net tightened... "Let him rant," Fisk
said angrily as the capsule popped into its vacuum tunnel and
accelerated. "The adoption was never consummated. He has no call on
you."

"Good," she said. "Where're we headed now?"

"To the office. Then Johns will return you to the orphanage, or wherever
you came from."

"Not me!" she said. "I hate that place."

"But you agreed to go back! I heard you, in the apartment."

"I said uh-uh, not uh-huh, grandad!"

"You don't want to go to Venus, do you?"

"No. But I'm not going back in local solitary, either," she said
dangerously.

"I don't see what choice you have, unless another client happens to be
looking for a girl your age. And frankly, your spot tantrums don't make
you very easy--"

"What do you want to do with these?" she asked, interrupting him.
"They're made out to you, you know."

"I'll just explain the situation at the office--" He stopped, seeing
what she held. "What are you doing with--"

"Ormand's checks?" she said innocently. "I figured we might need the
money, so I scooped them up while--"

"His checks! Yola, that represents either stealing or
acceptance-of-payment. It gives him a theoretical basis to--"

"To sue?" she inquired with mock astonishment. "Gee, you could get in
bad trouble, Centers!"

"ALL VEHICLES HALT IN PLACE!" the capsule loudspeaker said. "STAND BY
FOR INSPECTION."

"No wonder he's mad!" Fisk said as he punched the HALT button. "I didn't
realize we'd taken his money."

"Mistake, huh?" she said, looking at the checks.

Sometimes she was unbearable, but this time she seemed genuinely
contrite. "Bad mistake."

"OPEN VENT." The police had connected a pressurized tube; the capsule
could not be opened in the tunnel vacuum.

Reluctantly, Fisk pressed the OPEN stud.

"You dope!" Yola cried, slapping the CANCEL button before the machinery
functioned. "They'll hang you!" She hit the EMERGENCY ACCELERATION next.

"What are you doing!" he exclaimed as the vehicle shot forward with the
force possible only in vacuum, ripping away the police tube.

"Making your getaway, grandad," she said. "No sense having you in the
hole for theft."

"But I was going to return the checks and explain--"

"And let me hang!" she accused him angrily.

"You have an unduly suspicious mind. Once the mistake is clarified,
nobody will--"

"Uh-uh. Get that uh this time, Centers! You aren't going to return that
money and void the sale. I told you I'm not going back to the pen. Not
for anything."

"Do you mean you are willing to let me be charged with
resisting-the-police--just to stay out of a legitimate orphanage! I
can't believe that!"

"You can't, huh?" She considered for a moment. "Well, would you believe
kidnapping?"

"Yola! Of all the ridiculous--"

"Or maybe child-molestation? My word against yours, Centers. Want to see
my act?"

"SUSPECT RUNNING. CUT POWER IN TUNNEL."

Fisk knew how guilty that sudden flight made him seem. Why would he take
Ormand's money (or seem to!), then break out of a routine police net?
With a screaming eleven-year-old girl! Yola really could hang him! And
she was brat enough to do it.

He had once supposed this job would benefit his fellow man and make
people happy....

"You're pretty much of a sucker, aren't you," Yola said as the capsule
drifted to a lifeless stop. "What're you doing in a racket like this?"

"Because I am a sucker," Fisk admitted, demoralized. "A Marsland
salesman took me, and I'm broke."

She looked at him as though sorry for a broken-winged bird. "Well, we're
caught anyway. It's nothing personal, Centers. Maybe I'd better go back
to Ormand. He's the kind of bastard I don't mind scr--"

"Yola!"

"Oh come off it, grandad! You have a dirty mind. I mean I can always run
away before he goes to Venus. So he's got what he deserves: nothing."

Her spark of charity was as awkward as her ruthlessness! "But that's
dishonest! If you don't intend to--"

"All right, sucker. It was only a silly notion to get you off the hook,
'cause you're a decent sort under all that quaint naivete." She began
tearing up her recently machined hairdo. "By the time they get this
kidnap/molestation rap untangled, Ormand'll be on Venus, you'll be in
the clink for trial, and I'll be a ward of the court, where maybe I can
finagle a better deal for number one. Will that make you feel better?"

Fisk saw that it was futile to attempt to reason with this gutter child.
The police were already applying another pressure-exit to the capsule.
He'd just have to present his case and hope the police considered all
the aspects of the situation before doing anything irrevocable.
Certainly he wasn't going to capitulate to this attempted extortion!

"You're so cubical, you're a tesseract!" she exclaimed. "Look, grandad,
you're a nonsurvival type. If you'll just shut up and let me handle it,
I can--"

The capsule opened. "Crawl out in a hurry--you're blocking traffic!" a
police voice yelled down the tube.

Fisk's mind was still on Yola's offer to complicate things yet further.
"Never!" he cried to her.

Naturally the police misunderstood. A sleepdart buzzed along the tube
like a vengeful fly and pinked Fisk on the sweaty forehead... and he
found himself standing insecurely before a tall desk in the police
station. Yola was beside him, and Ormand had a chair nearby. The Law
could be devastatingly efficient when it snared the innocent.

"Serious charge. Kidnapping a minor from a private apartment," the
Lieutenant behind the desk said as the dart nullifier took effect. "You
understand you have the right to consult counsel before making your
statement, et cetera, et cetera?"

"I'm sure I can explain everything without the necessity of counsel,"
Fisk said hastily, knowing that the police preferred dispatch. "This
girl--"

"What he means is," Yola interjected, "we were just going to the court
to arrange for the adoption."

"You were?" Ormand said, surprised and, oddly, not particularly pleased.
"I thought--"

"We were not!" Fisk said. "I was taking her back to--"

Yola kicked him. "To fetch the adoption papers," she said.

The Lieutenant turned to Ormand. "What's this about adoption? You told
us your daughter had been kidnapped."

Ormand hesitated. "I, er, maybe there was a misunderstanding. I'll just
take her home now." He came up and grabbed Yola's arm.

"Get your filthy paw off me!" she screamed automatically. "You can't
tell me what to do, you child beater!"

The lieutenant made a note. "Child beating."

Fisk had a certain grudging sympathy for the other man. Ormand still
thought a simple spanking or two would bring Yola into line, but he
would learn--

The desk phone lighted. "For you," the Lieutenant said to Fisk, turning
the screen to face him.

It was Johns. "What's this about you being arrested?" Johns demanded.
"We run a respectable outfit here. You're fired, Centers!"

"But I've still got the child! The adoption can't--"

Johns screwed up his face in perplexity. "Child? Adoption? I don't know
what you're talking about! Have you been messing around with something
on the side?"

Fisk began to see what sort of a bag he was to be left holding.
Naturally Johns wouldn't admit to dealing in black market babies, here
in the hearing of the police! "But--"

"Just get our 80% to us pronto and we'll forget the embezzlement charge,
however," Johns finished, clicking off.

The policeman made another note. "Embezzlement." He looked up. "Are you
sure you don't need an attorney?"

"This is all a misunderstanding!" Fisk cried despairingly. But it looked
hopeless. If he returned the checks, Johns would charge him with
embezzlement of company funds; if he kept them, Ormand had him on
kidnapping. Both were ruthless enough to hang the intermediary. And Yola
hadn't even started on her child-molestation act yet.

"There's funny business somewhere," the Lieutenant said thoughtfully.
"Damn funny!" He pronounced the improper word without the vowel,
legitimizing it. He turned to Ormand. "This is a nonwhite child, and
you're a white spacer. She can't be your natural issue."

"Sure I could," Yola said, keeping her option open. "My mother's black,
and I won't say what business she's in, but it's near the spaceport.
She--"

"Yeah," Ormand agreed, manifestly not pleased but riding with the
inevitable. "You know how it is."

"How old are you, Ormand?" the Lieutenant snapped.

"Twenty-nine. That's why I'm retiring. You have to, after thirty."

"And you?" he said to Yola.

"Eleven."

The Lieutenant turned back to Ormand. "And how old is the minimum for a
space license?"

"Twenty-one." Then Ormand saw the trap. "Well, maybe before I--"

"Looks like a black market operation to me," the Lieutenant said. "Five
to two you're an ineligible parent. Single, with no permanent home, and
you can't take an underage child offplanet--"

"No, no!" Ormand cried, turning pale even for a spacer.

"So you paid a fat check to a shyster outfit to sneak through a black
baby--I know damn well you weren't going to any court for adoption,
whatever you told the child!"

Ormand fell back, whipped.

Without seeming to take a breath, the Lieutenant pounced on Fisk, who
had just started to relax. "And you, Centers. You represent that black
market racket, squeezing human blood out of both ends. You're selling an
innocent ward of the state to an ineligible child-beater, and embezzling
on the side, and maybe kidnapping too--"

"Yeah," Yola said, enjoying this. "Don't forget child moles--"

"And to top it off the brat's a little bitch nobody can handle without a
whip in one hand and a prayer-book in the other!"

"Yeah," Fisk and Ormand agreed together. Yola glared.

The Lieutenant smiled knowledgeably. "In short, three fine fat fish on
the line, suckers all, tugging the hooks into each other. As if I didn't
have important cases to handle in my off-days! Now are you three going
to work out your own squabble, or shall I do it for you?"

Yola and Ormand both quailed, but Fisk had an inspiration. "Lieutenant,
if you will please permit us a moment to confer privately--"

"Sure, I'll wait," the officer said generously. "Thirty seconds."

"Here--now!" Fisk snapped at the other two, pulling them into a huddle.
He had never before attempted to manage people so boldly, but
desperation gave him genius. "Ormand, if I get you off the hook and find
you an age-of-consent girl who's willing--"

"Yeah, yeah!" Ormand agreed eagerly. "Keep the money. Just--"

"Yola, if I arrange a legitimate adoption, court-approved, so you'll
never have to go back to--"

"Yeah, yeah!" she echoed fervently.

"Time!" the Lieutenant called.

Fisk stepped up to the desk. "As I was saying," he said so smoothly he
surprised himself, "it was all a misunderstanding. Mr. Ormand was
looking for a wife to take to Venus--he's going to be cultivating exotic
Venus plants for export to Earth, you know--and the agency thought he
meant the phrase 'little girl' literally, not knowing the way spacers
talk. When the two were introduced, the error was quickly apparent. He
was naturally upset, and so was the girl, as you can readily understand.
In their confusion they exchanged some unkind words--"

"Yeah, yeah!" the two whispered.

"So Mr. Ormand may have said 'kidnapped' when he meant 'defrauded.' A
natural error in the circumstances. Actually I was taking the child back
to--" Here Yola opened her mouth, but he elbowed her warningly. "To
assist me in locating the correct subject. One of the sixteen-year-old
girls just graduating from the orphanage, eager for the security of
marriage. Young enough to be, uh, malleable. Who likes to travel--even
as far as Venus, where there would be no female competition for
attention."

"Yeah..." Ormand said, his face lighting. "Sixteen, love-starved..."

The lieutenant nodded. "You're pretty smooth, when put on your mettle,"
he admitted approvingly. "But what about Miss Tantrums, here? You have
to shut her up before she says something I might have to jail you for."

Fisk could have done without such candor. "Once we have clarified Mr.
Ormand's situation satisfactorily, I will--" Here he paused to gird
himself for the sacrifice. "I will take Yola to the court to--to adopt
her myself. I am, I believe, an eligible parent."

Yola's mouth fell open. "Gee--really?" she breathed ecstatically.

"Yes, really," Fisk said, hoping he wouldn't regret this decision of
expediency for the rest of his life. "I'm young enough to be your
father, you know, and I've, er, always wanted a black baby."

CHAPTER 3
---------

"Up, Fisk!" Yola said. "Earn your daily Bonus and Commission or else."

Fisk Centers rolled over groggily. "Else what?"

"Else this!" An avalanche of icy foam descended on his head.

He struggled upward, gasping for breath, suddenly wide awake. "What was
that for?"

"Well, I did warn you," she said contritely. "You look like a walrus
surfacing."

"Nonsense. I don't have tusks."

"A toothless walrus, then. Fat, wet, stupid--"

"You're about to look like a spanked brat!"

"No time," she said. "Bolt your food, Fisky. Today you go to work for
your living."

"What makes you so certain I'll have any better luck today than I have
all week, pesky?"

"Because you handled the week; I set up today. While you snored."

"I should have stayed single," Fisk muttered as he stumbled to the
suiter and let it dry and dress him. "Or at least gotten married. The
last thing any sane man would do is become an adoptive father to a
pre-teen hellion."

"Right," she agreed. "Especially when he has to live off her money."

"That's my money! Twenty percent commission for--"

"For selling an innocent child on the black mar--"

"Shut up!" He stepped out of the suiter, resplendent in blue jeans,
checkered shirt and goggles. "What did you do to the setting?" he
roared.

"Well, for your job," she said. "Hurry up."

He tore off the goggles. "My job--doing what?"

"Selling cars, of course."

"Cars! I'm no mechanic!"

"That's all you know, Dad. Salesman don't have to know anything about
the workings. Just believe in your product and sell, sell, sell!"

Fisk punched a soyomelet. "Believe in my product, she says. I haven't
even driven a car for five years! Now I have to sell--" He took a bite,
but paused before masticating it. "What car?"

"Fusion. They've got a real nice commission deal--"

The mouthful of omelet sprayed over the table. "The atomic racer? The
radioactive juggernaut that makes the obituary headlines every other
week? The--"

"The same. They're making a play for the middle class market, and they
need middle class salesmen. Hot chance for you."

"Hot is an ironic understatement! Listen, Yola--do you realize that my
annuities don't mature for another twenty-five years, and are voided in
the event of deliberate suicide? If I die tomorrow in a Fusion, you
inherit nothing!"

"Term life insurance," she answered. "That's their bonus. Life and Comm.
You live off the comm., of course; but if you die--"

"Enough, child! The longer I listen to you the worse I feel. I'm not
going near any--"

"Suit yourself," she said. "We'll run out of money tomorrow."

"Tomorrow! There's enough for at least another week!"

"You forget you have a family to support. Two don't live as cheaply as
one, you know." She paused, serious and for the moment rather pretty in
her brown-faced way. "Fisk, it's a good chance for you. I thought you'd
really go for a decent income--"

Fisk sighed. "I'll talk to the man. But it'd better be strictly
salesroom. If I have to go near a living Fusion, I'll resign on the
spot."

"Sure," she said in a way that hinted more mischief. "Come on--you're
due to report in twenty minutes."

"Fisk Centers? Right!" the executive at Fusion Motors said briskly as
Fisk introduced himself. "Your daughter here set it up. Glad to have a
man of your experience with us!"

"Experience? I haven't--"

Yola tromped his toe, and Fisk realized that she had invented suitable
qualifications for him. "Time to set that straight right now!" He took a
breath.

"You're in the weekly Hurdle, starting at ten today," the man said.

Fisk's breath whooshed out. "I beg your--"

The man guided him out of the service exit. They stepped into a massive
garage fraught with menacing machinery. "Bill, he's here!"

Fisk tried again. "Look, I don't know what she told you, but I'm not--"

"Here's your co-pilot, Bill. Bill, this is Fisk. Used to be with Ferrari
before the antipolluters closed down their commercial branch. Drove in
the Antarctic cross-country a couple times, maybe twenty years ago.
Going to sell for us. I want him to get a real feel for the Fusion, but
you'll have to carry the burden this time."

"Great!" Bill said, shaking Fisk's hand with a grip of steel and rubber.
"Come on, Fisk. We've got just thirty-five minutes till blastoff, and
you'll need briefing."

"But I--"

"Don't get me wrong," Bill said, hustling him along while Yola trotted
excitedly behind. "I'm not denigrating your experience. But there's been
a lot of development in the past two decades, and most of it has been
led by Fusion, and the Hurdle is a real workout. If anything happens to
me, you'll have to take over, because the finish line's the only safe
exit. Ever drive over 500 before?"

"Well, I--" Then it occurred to Fisk that Bill wasn't talking about
distance, and certainly not about regular highway travel. Stunned, he
fumbled for a suitable way to set things straight immediately.

Yola caught up. She smiled sweetly at Bill. "Can I come too? I love
racing!"

Bill looked at her with leathery compassion. "Sorry, kid. No juniors
allowed. This is a rough course, and it changes every week. You'll have
to watch it on the customer screen. Mine's the purple Eight."

"Oh." She looked dangerously sullen, but she fell back.

"Bill, there's been a misunderstanding," Fisk said, already out of
breath because of the pace Bill was setting through the monstrous
garage. "I can't--I never--"

"Here she is," Bill said proudly, pulling up at a tremendous sculptured
vehicle with eight massive wheels. "Hop in. We'll get strapped while the
tug takes her there, and I'll brief you while we're moving." And he gave
Fisk a powerful boost into the open cockpit.

The tug started moving the moment they landed in the firm molded seats,
hauling the car bargelike out of its niche and down a ramp. Bill saw to
Fisk's complex protective harness before attending to his own.

"But I'm only supposed to be a salesman!" Fisk cried. "I can't get
involved in a race! I have absolutely no--"

"No problem. Boss always breaks in the new men like this. Idea is you
don't need to know every detail about the car, you just have to believe
in it absolutely, and the details will take care of themselves. So we
don't load you down with statistics and all that junk; we just show you.
Once you've raced the Fusion special, you're a believer."

"But I'm trying to tell you! I don't know the first thing about--"

"Sure, the boss explained. You've never touched the Fusion before. And
twenty years is a long, long time, in racing. We'd have let you sit it
out this week, but my regular co-pilot isn't out of the hospital yet.
But I know you've got the stuff. I used to watch that Antarctic
cross-country race when I was a kid. Those glaciers, those ice
crevasses--" He shook his head. "No, the Hurdle isn't rougher than that.
But it is different, and you've got to ride it several times before you
get the feel. So, I'll drive, and you just handle the map, okay? Nobody
tackles a new race in a new car, cold!"

Appalled, Fisk could only nod. At this point it almost seemed better to
take the horrible ride and keep his mouth shut. At least his driver was
competent, and it would be a one time only experience.

"Actually, that map is important," Bill said consolingly. "I can't take
my eyes off the track when I'm at speed. They do it that way to make
sure it's fair. New track each run, nobody knows the specific layout
until the race starts, and then he has to figure out his strategy from
the map. So it's a necessary job, and don't you doubt it for a moment.
One misreading and you're dead."

Fisk came to an abrupt decision: he would blurt out the truth and get
released from this race right now. "Bill, I--"

"I wouldn't drive without a mapman. My co-pilot tried that a couple
weeks ago, when I was out at the last minute with the one-day intestinal
grippe. You know--bathroom every ten minutes, ready or not. Didn't dare
drive. So he took it alone, 'cause you can't get a 'co' in the last
moment and we didn't want our entry scratched. That's why he cracked up,
trying to read the map before he got out of the Tunnel...." Bill shook
his head. "Fifteen hours in surgery, and he'll have to drive next time
with a prosthetic hand and a plate in his skull. Ran way over the
insurance, and he's got a family to support. That's why I have to run a
good race this time. Got to help him out."

Fisk realized that if he spoke out now, Bill would have no co-pilot.
Then he would have either to take it alone, risking the same fate that
had wiped out his partner, or drop out of the race entirely. Then his
friend's medical bills would ruin his family.

Fisk well understood the problems of financial ruin. He had been a
moderately wealthy man not so long ago. It was not a fate he would wish
on anyone.

"...true dual-purpose car," Bill was saying. He evidently liked to talk,
but his topics became him. "Motor's always at full power, of course, so
the clutch guides it. Not the kind of clutch you knew, eh? No gearing,
just engage for the percentage of power you want. Depress gently, and
you've got a gentle touring car; goose it, and you've got a real racer!
I use a model just like this for city traffic...."

What could he do but stick with it? Racing terrified him, and not just
because of his health--but there were more things riding on this than
his preferences.

"...duplicate controls, but yours will be inactive. Except for the
indicators; you need to watch them in case of emergency. Regular
steering wheel, you see; nothing complicated. Fusion's designed for the
simpleminded--that's why I like it! And over here..."

Now the tug was maneuvering the car into the starting stall. A giant
chronometer above was ticking off the last seconds before the start.
Fisk squirmed within his harness, feeling cold sweat on palms, face and
underarms. He hoped that the term insurance was for a large amount.

"The map will fall into the fax hopper there as the gun goes off," Bill
said. "Grab it and--"

There was a faint pop! through the armored hull. Paper dropped. And the
car ground forward with such authority that it was all Fisk could do to
breathe. There was very little noise; pollution-control had really
clamped down on loud sports, and both the hydrogen/helium fusion engine
and the mercury vapor working fluid were almost silent. Also, it seemed,
the cockpit was soundproof.

He had to admit it: this was a nice piece of machinery.

On either side the competing cars were shot out of their stalls. Blue,
white, green, red, yellow; internal combustion, steam, electric, jet,
atomic and assorted hybrids. The industry had claimed that stiff
antipollution standards would ruin it, but in fact it had led to a
marvelous flowering of superior new types. The money that had once been
wasted on planned obsolescence of style now went into improvement of
mechanics. Drivers still had to buy a new car every three years to keep
up with fashion--but now they obtained a superior product each time. And
this was where that superiority was demonstrated: in professional
competition, using the same cars sold in the showrooms. It was a drag
race start: thirty bright vehicles straining forward on a ten mile
straightaway. But no noise, no fumes.

Fisk sneaked a look at the speedometer. His duplicate was functioning,
but it took him a moment to find the MPH scale amid the massed dials and
digits. The main scales were feet per second and kilometers per hour,
but he was pedestrian enough to orient on old-fashioned miles per hour.
They were already doing 150, and accelerating rapidly! And the other
cars were keeping pace or pulling ahead, so that their group velocity
was deceptive.

"Look at the map!" Bill shouted. "What's the first hurdle?"

Fisk opened the map hastily and scanned it. Here he was daydreaming when
his very life was at stake in an obstacle race at hundreds of miles per
hour. Fortunately the map was simple and clear. "The Narrows," he said.

"The Narrows! That's a stiff location, but good for us. Hang on--we'll
have to push it."

And, astonishingly, the acceleration increased. They began gaining on
other cars.

"I thought you were flat-out before!" Fisk gasped.

"Hardly. This is the finest car ever made, overall. The Fusion's got
more actual poop than any car on the market, and unlimited range. It's a
little piece of the sun inside, you know--that's the heat of the
conversion, four hydrogen atoms transforming into one helium atom in
controlled fusion. Fuel's no problem--it's loaded when we make it, and
it runs until the car is junked, on just that little bit of hydrogen. We
have no top speed, really; car would shake apart before we ever reached
max. Only limiting factor--oh, don't worry we won't shake apart! That'd
take a bigger track than this!--only limiting factor in a race like this
is the frictive surface: the tires. That's why we've got eight, and
they're broad ones, too. But too much acceleration makes them skid a
bit, and that's bad for control and worse for wear. Got to save the
rubber or we'll have trouble finishing, even though the tires are solid.
Guess you were still on pneumatics in Antarctica, eh?"

"I guess." Fisk realized that he had just received Lesson #1 in Fusion
salesmanship. The car was so powerful that even solid composition (not
rubber, of course; there were laws protecting the few wild rubber trees
remaining) could wear out of round in the course of an hour.

But they were taking that risk now! They were overhauling car after car.
The speedometer read--he looked again, astonished--390 MPH... 395...
400... and still rising! Air whistled by the little winglike vanes on
the sides that were necessary for control at such velocity; even the
soundproofing could not eliminate every vestige of that hurricane
keening. 410 MPH...!

The boss was right. Telling him could not have been nearly as efficient
as showing him, regardless of his presumed experience. When he got into
the showroom and a customer asked him about power and speed, he would
not need any artifice to describe the Fusion. He had seen it in action,
seen the other racers falling behind at 430... 435...

"You haven't raced before," Bill observed mildly.

And it was out at last--too late. "I tried to tell you, but--"

Bill smiled. "But you're a sucker for a sob story."

Oh-oh. "You mean to say your co-pilot didn't--?"

"No, he did, all right. I do need that money, and that's why. But nine
men out of ten would not risk their own necks in a grind like this to
help out someone they'd never seen. You're too soft-hearted, and I'll
bet you've been stepped on more than once, or you wouldn't be looking
for a job at your age."

"Close enough."

"Don't worry about it, Fisk. Lot of people sneer because they haven't
got the guts to be decent when the heat is on. I knew you weren't a
racer the moment I saw you. You don't have racer's ways, and you're
soft. But I wasn't going to embarrass the boss like that right before a
race, and I did need a mapman."

"And you're a bit soft yourself," Fisk said. "Helping your friend,
sparing your boss, giving me a chance to get a job--"

Bill laughed easily. "Takes one to know one, doesn't it! Little girl set
it up, right? Wanted her daddy to be a big man! Well, you are one, and
not because of any fancy race. Got a child like that myself, wouldn't
trade her! No, I'll cover for you Fisk. They can't hear us here; only
contact is the radio, and that's one way: in. On the public band. So no
driver can sneak in tactical info during the race. You're an honest man,
and I like that, so I stopped you from making an ass of yourself, or
seeming to. Man quits race at the start, the word spreads that he's
chicken, no matter what the facts. After this you'll be a racer,
officially, and nobody has to know the difference."

Fisk was beginning to find the man's solicitude a bit too confining.
"But it isn't honest to--"

"It isn't right to make a scene right before a race, embarrassing the
company and hurting the little girl's feelings. Got to choose your
course in a hurry, even when the best one is ragged. That's racing. I
figured more people would be better off this way, so that's the way I
played it. Okay?"

What was there to say? "Okay," Fisk agreed reluctantly.

Then he saw the end of the track: slanting walls of concrete foam,
narrowing the thirty car highway into twenty, ten, five lanes. Bill
maneuvered the vehicle around the few remaining leaders with minute but
expert turns of his steering wheel that nevertheless brought anguished
squeals from the massive tires. At 500 MPH he passed the last and
slammed into the Narrows.

"New leader and winner of the first heat, Fusion!" a voice announced.
Fisk jumped, then realized that it was the car radio, that Bill had
turned on. The race was being broadcast to the sports fans of the world.

"Sales: Fusion 24, Steamco 19, Duperjet 17...."

"Hear that?" Bill cried happily. "The sales follow the performance,
roughly. Usually the winner of a Hurdle is good for a hundred and fifty
contracts or more right during the race. Much more, if something
spectacular happens. We're ahead where it counts!"

Fisk was amazed. "You mean people are buying cars while they watch?"

"They sure do! When a car makes a good move, the sales-lines light up.
Impulse buyers. Want to own a car with class. We're selling Fusions
right now, Fisk--one percent commission on the gross goes to the driver.
Five thousand dollars per unit; if they take the Special; less for the
tamer models, though no Fusion is very tame! I figure each one for an
average of $2500. If I run well this time and sell a hundred cars,
that's two hundred fifty grand. Pretty good for a week's pay. Of course
I don't always finish; then I get nothing. And most races I make less
than one hundred grand when I do place. And I'd have to finish at least
second or third just to cover my friend's medical expenses, if I wanted
to do it in one race. But it's a living. I figure to retire after I make
one really big killing--if it isn't myself I'm killing!"

"I see," Fisk said, chilled by the concept and by the rapidly narrowing
walls of the Narrows. Five hundred miles per hour was an outrageous
speed for a car, and now that there was something to measure it against
outside...

"Oh, sorry--I didn't mean to rub it in, pal. You aren't a regular
driver, so that commission doesn't apply to you. But I'll tell them you
helped a lot, and if we do well the boss'll give you a nice starting
bonus. Your commission will come from your showroom sales, mostly."

Fisk's concern had been about the danger, not the money, but he didn't
push the matter.

Bill braked, using small parachutes that blossomed and dragged behind,
rather than the pedal. They provided a steady reduction without slewing.
Fisk was glad to have it. The Narrows, according to the map, was a
one-lane chute with twelve-foot high barricades on either side. No one
could pass there, so it would remain single file. It was a slow heat, as
there were curves that would be disastrous at peak velocity.

But looking at the map was foolish: they were in the Narrows already!
The crisscrossed timbers were invisible at this range, only a graying of
view. Timbers of steel. Speed was less essential than control here. Any
accident, and the Narrows would be blocked--and all cars behind would
suffer. Bill had insured his own passage and placement by entering
first.

There was a faint rattle. Bill cocked an ear alertly. "Check your
gauges," he snapped to Fisk. "Probably that was an irregularity in the
track; felt like it. But just in case--"

Fisk scanned the dials and lights. "All green and in 'normal' range."

"Right. Some of these buggies are more maneuverable at speed," Bill
explained as he sweated the Fusion down and through. "They could leave
us behind on a track like this--if they could only pass us. We're heavy,
and prone to chassis stresses. Not the fault of the car--it's inherent
in the mass, and much of that mass is shielding that we simply have to
have. If any of those other cars carried our weight-penalty, they
wouldn't have a chance in this race! But here in the Narrows we lose no
ground. If anything's wrong, we can slow down and check it out. Next
straightaway we'll show 'em dust! What's next on the map?"

"Hairpin."

"Say, we're really in luck! That's our worst time loser, except that now
we've got first crack at it. The big ugly god of Hurdle racers must be
smiling on us. We might even win this one, baby!"

Bill continued to slow, but even at 150 the huge racer skewed and tilted
on the gentle curves, alarming Fisk uncomfortably. He was not, despite
appearances, in perfect health, and this was not the healthiest type of
stress for him.

Then they shot out of the Narrows--and there was Hairpin, brightly
blazoned and barely a hundred yards distant.

They were at a comparative crawl of 120 MPH now--but in just two seconds
Bill was slewing into the approach, deliberately skidding the rear
wheels and braking. The next car was close behind: a jet. Fisk watched
it in the rearview screen, so as not to have to watch the nightmare
ahead. He knew the jet's wheels were merely for support. The only thing
that stopped it from being a flyaway winner on the straightaway was the
pollution damping: the jet with its flaming exhaust had to meet almost
prohibitive standards of emission control. And of course it was
chemically fueled, which meant it couldn't go far compared to a car like
the Fusion. But such thoughts were merely irrelevant flashes in passing.
They were down to 90 now, whipping around another killer bend of Hairpin
while metal groaned and dirt flew wide. Fisk thought he heard another
rattling, but realized that it was merely the splay of pebbles thrown up
against the bottom of the vehicle. Outside each curve there was a six
foot drop-off onto an escape lane; the turn had to be made tightly or
there was no second chance. "Fusion still leads," the radio announced.
"Excellent tactics in a slow second heat. Sales: Fusion 26, Duperjet
21...."

"Not much pickup on the Narrows," Bill explained in fragmentary fashion
between the body-smashing maneuvers. He was heel-and-toeing it now,
working accelerator, clutch and wheelbrake almost simultaneously with
his right foot while his left controlled the movable wind vanes for
additional control. The parachute brakes had been jettisoned, for they
could not be turned on and off like this. Fisk was amazed Bill still had
concentration for chatter while performing such heroic feats of
motestry. "Because I held up the line. Crowd likes action. But we're in
good field position. Watch us go once we pass Hairpin!"

They braked again, down to 60, for the sharpest bend yet. It looked like
the point of a knife. Fisk thought the turn impossible.

And someone ran out into the track.

Fisk became faint with impotent horror, but Bill's reaction time was
like an old-time mousetrap. He swerved to miss the figure, throwing the
car into a four-wheel or perhaps even a two wheel tilt, and careered off
the bank to drop into the escape lane. The two men bounced like yo-yos
in their harnesses as the great car landed, but they and it took the
fall without physical damage. Good construction, good safeguards, good
luck!

The jet following did likewise, landing more gently because it had only
half Fusion's mass. Thus it was moving faster, and pulled up even.

There wasn't room for two. They jostled together and spun about. The
side vane of the other car--Duperjet, Fisk realized--cut through the
Fusion's bubble top, opening a neat incision in the shatterproof
material. Then the lighter jet was ahead, reorienting in a fine display
of equilibrium, and blasting back down the intercept lane to rejoin the
race. Missing a turn did not, it seemed, disqualify a car; it merely
delayed it. Delay of even a second could be extremely costly, of course,
depending on the competition.

Already three other cars had navigated this fold of Hairpin, and more
were coming. The dust was fluffing higher as the road eroded. The
remaining entries would be taking the curve virtually blind--another
disadvantage of trailing the leaders.

Bill guided the car to a safe slowdown, then slapped a hand to his head.
"Get her moving!" he cried thickly. "The--" Fisk saw the blood.

"My controls don't--" Fisk began; but he paused as he saw Bill slump.
How badly had the man been injured? The harness prevented him from
looking more closely.

"New leader!" the radio cried. "Fusion and Duperjet spun out on Hairpin.
Steamco first! Sales: Steamco 32, Fusion--one moment, the cancellations
are still coming in--Fusion 21, Duperjet 15...."

The car had finally stopped--but it was blocking the sole escape lane
for this turn. Any car that missed this hairpin would shoot right this
way at sixty or better, probably out of control. The ballooning dust
guaranteed that the onrushing vehicle would not see the Fusion in time
to stop, even if it were in condition to do so. This was a very bad
location!

Something knocked on the bubble, and for a heartbeat he thought the
collision had come already. But it was the figure who had started this
disaster by materializing in the forbidden territory of the Hurdle
Hairpin. He was going to have something to say to--

"Yola!" Fisk cried in dismay. He should have known!

She yelled something, but in the confusion he couldn't make it out. Then
she pointed at Bill.

"Duperjet clipped him, thanks to you!" Fisk shouted back, trying to make
himself heard through the bubble.

"Fisk, let me in!" Her voice came through the unnatural vent.

He found the canopy switch on Bill's side and jerked it. The bubbletop
yanked itself up, its ripped portion catching, then springing loose.
Yola jumped inside.

"Close up and get rolling!" she ordered, settling into Bill's inert lap.
"First car that misses that pretzel--pow!"

An apt summation! "But I can't--my controls don't--"

"Don't give me that! You'll kill us all!" She looked back. "Here comes
one now!"

Fisk's hand found the changeover switch as his foot came down on the
accelerator clutch. The car lunged aimlessly, all eight wheels spinning
in the dirt. He grabbed at the steering wheel, easing up enough on the
clutch to let the wheels catch. "But there's nowhere to go!" he
protested belatedly.

"Back on the main track, stupid! We've got to get this guy to a doctor.
He's bleeding!"

And Fisk was somehow guiding the seeming behemoth down the track at
rapidly increasing speed. His lightest pressure on the pedal elicited a
surge of brute animation that was frightening in its vast strength. No
car was behind; that had been a false alarm. But he knew they could not
have remained in the escape lane. And she was right about Bill: the man
was hurt, perhaps seriously, and every minute they delayed getting him
to medical attention might reduce his chance of survival. There was no
way out but on.

Then a car did appear in the escape lane, nosing out of the dust cloud
as though from a brown tunnel, and Fisk involuntarily goosed the Fusion
back onto the main track, his tires screaming as he turned. Fortunately
for him, there were no further hairpin loops.

"What are we in for next?" he asked her, his hands sweating. He was
moving the monster--but how long could he control it? Every time he
pushed down on the pedal, the wheels destroyed themselves a little in
their tigerish effort to accelerate the vehicle instantaneously. But it
was either ride this tiger or be smashed flat by the one following.

Yola scrambled for the map, which had strewn itself across Fisk's feet.
"The Elevated," she said. "Better get up speed."

"No thank you! I'm doing eighty now, and I know my limits. We're just
going to limp out the safest way we can find, and--what were you doing
on the track, anyway?"

"Have it your way," she said with affected nonchalance. "But I'm a race
fan from way back, and I think you'd better get it up. Ever see the El
on the newscreen?"

"Brilliant recovery by Duperjet!" the radio exclaimed. "Fusion is not
out of the race, but trails the pack and is moving erratically. Sales:
Duperjet 55, Steamco 49, Gasturb...."

"Never watched sports." He looked around nervously. "Look, Yola--Bill's
a nice guy, and it's your fault he's hurt. See if you can bandage him
up, or something."

"What do I know about first aid?" she demanded rebelliously, as she
always did when told to do something. But she began looking in the car
pockets for the medicinal supplies that had to be there.

"...and Fusion 12--no, 10."

Then Fisk saw what lay ahead. "That?"

"What do you think? Watch those cars behind you."

Fisk was watching. They came up on him at an alarming clip as they
navigated the last of Hairpin and accelerated. The track was widening
here, but one slow vehicle could be disaster. Perforce, he speeded up.

Yola found a rolled bandage and began stretching it out. Fisk knew her
hands were dirty--they always were--but kept his peace. Infection was
the least of their present concerns! "We're taking a beating at the box
office," she said. "But we're still in the race, and we're not last,
either. Yet."

Still the cars came, showing no inclination to yield the right-of-way
merely to avoid a possible crash. Fisk's adrenaline squirted. He stamped
down hard--but not too hard--and the car surged forward as though its
speed of a hundred miles per hour had been mere idling. It was a fine
piece of machinery, and it could hardly perform like this had it
suffered mechanical damage in the accident. There was, indeed, a certain
exhilaration in managing a brute like this.

They were booming up the steep approach ramp of the Elevated. The
combination of acceleration and angle shoved the riders back into their
seats, hard. Yola balanced precariously and Fisk felt the first twinge
of nausea. He had a circulatory disorder that could be aggravated by
sustained physical stress. Ordinarily it didn't bother him, since token
medication kept the symptoms suppressed--but ordinarily he didn't tackle
obstacle races in 500 MPH juggernauts.

He could have relaxed and let it pass until he had the opportunity to
punch his formula from a roadside med dispenser--if he didn't happen to
be isolated on a private track, responsible for the lives of three
people. Not to mention a five hundred thousand dollar racer.

"It's on his neck," Yola complained. "All icky with hair and gore. I
can't make the bandage stay!"

"Then hold it there with your hand!" Fisk rasped, resenting the need to
split his concentration and his breath in a situation like this. "We've
got to keep him from bleeding too much. If Bill hadn't swerved to avoid
you--"

She uttered a monosyllable Fisk didn't recognize, fortunately, as he was
pretty sure it would have earned her another week in solitary back at
the orphanage from whence she sprang. But somehow she fixed the bandage
in place.

Then they were up, with the other cars close behind. Ahead stretched
mind-numbing miles of twisted ribbon, five hundred feet above the
ground, tapering into a thread in the distance though it was four lanes
wide. What engineering it must have taken to assemble this race course
in just one week!

The two following cars charged past, and the whine of their tires was
momentarily loud. The odor of oil and hot rubberoid swirled in through
the rent in the bubble, and fine dust stung his face.

Yola sneezed. "There can't be many more behind us," she muttered, torn
between hope and regret. She clung to the straps of Bill's harness as
the incoming gusts swept her black hair across her brown face. "But
don't stop now! You have to take the El at speed, or you fall off."

She was speaking literally. The paving contorted like a living tapeworm,
given animation by his speed of--ouch!--170 MPH. In addition, the hole
in the bubble interfered with the streamline contour and created a
dangerous drag that Fisk seemed to feel all the way down to the sliding
tires. But their forward momentum was not enough. The road tilted into a
forty-five degree embankment girded by token guardrails. He would indeed
fall off--unless he maintained speed sufficient to match the needs of
the curve, countering the angle. Routine for racers, who required banked
turns for stability; terrifying for pedestrian Fisk Centers.

"Yeah," Yola said, licking her lips. At eleven, with her deprived
background, she was more enthusiastic than afraid. He hadn't really
needed to ask why she had sneaked into the race grounds. Because it was
forbidden. She had wanted a ride--and now she had it. Quite possibly her
last....

More wind blasted in as he accelerated. "Close up that hole!" Fisk
snapped as another warning wave of dizziness came over him. Now the
blood circulation to his brain was being inhibited! But to stop was to
die. Already they were sliding toward the nether perimeter, and the drag
was making it worse, and he had to keep turning the wheel and bearing
down on the pedal to counter the drift. But if he accelerated too
strongly and broke the wheels free of the surface...

"Don't tell me what to do!" Yola flared.

Fisk twitched the wheel the other way. The Fusion jerked toward the
rail. The bright water of a scenic lake spread below: a natural safety
net. But if it was deep, they could drown, for the massive car would
plummet to the bottom; if it was shallow, the fall would flatten them.

"Okay! Okay!" she exclaimed with grace. "You're the driver!" She dug out
some harness strap and additional bandage and wedged the mass into the
gap. It helped.

Now Fisk was able to gain the speed he needed. 200... 250... 280--and
finally the drift abated, and they were cruising in a kind of stasis. It
was, actually, rather pleasant in its way; the velocity anesthetized his
sense of proportion, and the balancing forces lulled his circulatory
incapacity. What remained was a growing sense of well-being and power.
He was no longer Fisk, the hard-sell sucker; he was Fisk the Supreme!
"The Secret Life of Fisk Centers..."

Then the curvature and banking reversed.

Fisk was driving for his life, and there was suddenly no joy in it. He
slewed across the strip at 300 MPH without any exact knowledge where he
was going or how long he could last. His brain tried to black out, but
he wouldn't let consciousness depart and leave him in the lurch. He
tilted his head back as far as he could, trying to let the blood in his
system flow level to the gray region that needed it.

"Slow up! Speed down!" Yola screamed. "Watch the sky below--" Which was
just about the way Fisk saw it.

"Duperjet still the leader," the radio announced. "Sales: Duperjet 78,
Steamco 60, Electro 44...."

Then the tilt decreased, and they were rolling down the steep exit slope
at 350. Fisk knew there had been many miles of elevated ribbon, and that
he had covered every twist at daredevil speed, but his memory had a
short-term blank on the subject. That was fortunate for his equanimity,
unfortunate for his security, since memory-lapse was another signal of
his functional impairment. At six miles per minute, nothing but blind
reflex had carried him through; but before long his reflexes would cut
out too. After this--if there were an after!--he would carry spare
medication on his person at all times.

Yola was silent and staring. Yes, it must have been good, to faze her
like that.

"...Fusion 13...."

At the foot of the ramp was an impenetrable bank of fog. The road led
directly into it.

Fisk sighed. No way to avoid it. This was obviously part of the course.
Another hurdle. He turned on the lights, and they were searing beams of
brilliance that might well have been windowed from the solar conversion
of the engine--but the best they could do here was about two hundred
feet. No doubt some company specialized in producing such nonpollutive
pseudo-smog for just such hurdle races! The car was moving at over 500
feet per second, according to the relevant scale of the speedometer. 360
MPH. How many seconds would it take him to come to a stop?

He applied the brakes: both parachute and wheel. The car slowed with
neck-wrenching suddenness. Bill groaned.

Good: it proved he was still alive. The smell of burning rubberoid
infiltrated from somewhere. It could hardly be his tires--

"Keep moving!" Yola screamed. "Fogbank always has stuff in it--"

A gap opened in the road. By the time Fisk reacted, it was too late to
react. The car hurtled the twenty foot void with no more than a noisy
jolt.

"Try that at half the speed!" Yola muttered faintly.

Fisk had to agree with her. Undervelocity was just as dangerous here as
overvelocity. His conservative course was to maintain middle-range
speed: say 200 MPH.

Then a wall appeared: stone and steel, by the look.

Fisk swerved left, barely in time. In the fraction of a second it took
to get there, he found the wall was oblique, cutting across the lane
only gradually, right to left. His instinct had been accurate, and he
had dodged the hurdle. Had he swerved right...

"Try that at half speed!" he mimicked.

"Luck," Yola said despairingly, as though her own life were not part of
the stakes.

Not all of the fog was outside. Fisk's arms were becoming leaden on the
wheel and even his eyelids felt ponderous. His system had taken just
about all it was going to. He was out of adrenaline. Wisps of cloud
passed between his face and the instrument panel--or perhaps it was
between his eyeball and his brain.

"Wake up!" Yola screamed. "THIS IS NO TIME FOR SLEEP!"

Fisk snapped alert, laughing--and, momentarily, that did it. He felt
refreshed, ready to continue another couple of minutes. She thought he
was so confident or foolhardy that he was deliberately relaxing! She
didn't know about his disorder, since she had only been his daughter for
two weeks. And why should he tell her now?

"Duperjet is out of the race!" the radio cried. "Crack-up in the
Slalom--"

Fisk bounced over a devastating washboard trap and emerged from the fog.
It hadn't actually been so bad. It would have been another matter in the
press of the pack, however. Maneuvering invisibly to gain position,
forced by other cars into that wall--had that been Duperjet's fate?

Or had Duperjet, too, suffered some injury in that Hairpin scrape,
leading to eventual disaster? All because he hadn't anticipated his
child's mischief? Was Duperjet's driver dead because of him?

But they were out of the fog and into a forest. Green concrete
pseudotrees or pilings rose from the highway in a seemingly solid mass.
They were cold: ice had formed on them and snow coated the ground. Fisk
was reminded of the Antarctic cross-country race he had supposedly
driven in his youth, and he shivered.

"The Slalom!" Yola cried despairingly. "Doom!" But, as with the wall in
the fog, the pilings were less impenetrable than they seemed from a
distance. In the seconds it took to reach the first, Fisk saw that they
were spaced well apart. There was room to skid around them, if forward
progress was not excessive. The tracks of many vehicles showed the
routes other cars had taken.

But across the main trail were wheels themselves, and jagged pieces of
metal: the debris of a recent accident strewn across the course.
Duperjet, surely. This was dangerous territory--but it was nagging guilt
he felt, not fear. Suppose one of Duperjet's wheels had been loosened at
Hairpin....

"...Fusion 19... Duperjet 09...." The buyers certainly had little
sympathy for a loser. Yet Duperjet was a fine car! It had led the pack
after that spinout--no fault of its own!--but now that it had crashed,
nobody wanted it. Fusion was recovering sales--but what a grisly way to
succeed. It was as though he had killed a friend to obtain his
commission. Far better to quit the race.

But he was already on the treacherous snow surface, and there was no way
out but on, as the saying went. He was falling under the sway of stress
fatigue again. Fisk willed his remaining strength into his hands and
aimed the vehicle at the widest aperture between groups of pilings,
following the common trail. Here and there the refrigerative grid
showed, scraped temporarily bare by the passage of the pack, giving him
slightly improved footing. He was still doing over 300 MPH, and he knew
better than to attempt to change speed here.

Yola covered her eyes. "You drive like a zombie," her mouth said from
under her hand.

The trail split. A piling lay dead ahead. Dead was the word! Fisk forced
a message down along the resistive nerve tissue of his right arm, and
the arm convulsed a bit, pulling the wheel around just that fraction
necessary. The car slewed right, scraping paint against the piling on
the left and almost dislodging Yola's hole-stuffing. At this point he
hardly cared; it was as though car and racetrack were far away. Even his
own extremities were almost beyond reach; his heart was laboring to the
point of incipient collapse, but the life-sustaining blood was not
getting through. He was numb and terribly tired all over....

Yet somehow he would not let go entirely. He wasn't certain whether it
was stubbornness or guilt, or what the object of either condition might
be; but he hung on. A thin rivulet of animation trickled along the
buried conduits of his pallid flesh, extending from corona to index
finger. As the pilings loomed, his muscles twitched, and the car shaved
by, never quite hitting, never quite sacrificing the traction so
necessary to keep it from following Duperjet into destruction. Here
Fusion's huge mass gave it traction when a lighter car might have
skated. The impact of their passage howled about the myriad death traps
of the Slalom, and if he were the lyrical type he might have
immortalized the experience in poetry... and then they were out of it.

"We're alive!" Yola cried, amazed. "At least, I am. For a while I almost
wished I was back at the orphanage!" She looked at Fisk. "You can stop
here, zombie. We're out of the woods and nobody's behind anymore."

Fisk ignored her. Now there was straightaway, long and level and dry.
Far ahead he could see several other cars. The Fusion had actually
gained on them during this last hurdle. The race wasn't over yet--and as
long as he was in it, why not win it?

It was madness, he knew--the futile delusion of grandeur of an
oxygen-starved brain, its frontal lobes anesthetized. He didn't care.
Bill needed a large sales-tally for his friend's medical bills--and
perhaps for his own, coming up. Fisk was responsible for the Fusion's
fall from first to last place in the Hurdle, and for Bill's injury, and
perhaps for Duperjet's demise as well. What further harm could he do?
There was power under his foot, if not in his body or brain. Why not
invoke it, double or nothing?

"Daddy, what are you doing!" Yola whispered as the car accelerated.

"You willful little brat, you got me into this!" he snapped. "Now you're
going to see it through." He was mad: insane, not angry. His brain had
gone berserk and was running faster than the car! He had never suffered
this effect of his malady before. It was as though another personality
had fought to the surface--a completely un-Fisk monster.

No, not true. It was him. His true personality, shackled by decades of
civilized restraint, had at last emerged. And he had experienced this
effect before: when under the multiple emotional stresses that had led
to his acquisition of Yola. Then he had talked his way out of trouble;
now he would drive out.

The girl was a tough refugee from a state institution. She didn't like
having the patsy-Daddy submerge. "So it's like that, Centers," she
muttered. "Well, want to know what's next? The Mountain!"

Fisk-normal quailed, but the demon aspect who had usurped control of his
body said in fine detergent-opera fashion: "Yeah? You think I'm chicken?
Watch this!" And his right foot crunched down harder.

The speedometer read 400 MPH. It climbed rapidly, as the tireless
eight-tired machine obeyed the imperious command of a lunatic.

"Steamco 86, Electro 59, Gasturb 49..." the radio said, and continued on
through the entire list of twenty-six cars remaining in the race. Fusion
was back up to 24, reflecting its slow recovery of position.

Slow? They were doing 500 now, and Fisk's foot was a marvel of
unremitting ponderosity. This was a fair sized straightaway--the kind
where power counted. Fusion's favorite track. The gap between him and
the pack was closing. How much would this buggy do, flat-out? 570...
580... it was as though he heard the numbers as sales announcements
instead of seeing them as miles per hour.

"This is suicide!" a little voice cried. At first he thought it was his
civilized-self-conscience, but it turned out to be Yola.

Fisk's eyeballs seemed to be locked in their sockets, able to move only
marginally to cover the contours of the road. He could not see her face
or judge how Bill was doing. In fact, he was a machine himself, with his
arms levering more or less together, sharing his drastically limited
muscular power as though connected by an old fashioned limited-slip
differential.

600!

Suddenly the straightaway was ending, and he was overhauling the pack at
a phenomenal clip. Great! The demon exalted.

"You fool--it's the Mountain!" the Yola conscience screamed, afraid. But
there was no meaning for Fisk except that beautiful passing of
competitors on the fast track. So they had written Fusion off, eh?
Fusion was going to win!

Then his foot came up involuntarily. Yola was down beside the pedal,
prying it loose. And the pack moved ahead again and crammed like so much
floating refuse into the drain-like access to the next hurdle.

"Fusion has merged with the pack," the radio said, surprised. "Looked
for a moment there as if--but the driver was too smart to risk a pass on
Mountain. We thought Fusion had mechanical trouble, but obviously not!
Sales: Steamco 101, Electro 75, Gasturb 55, Vaporlock 44, Fusion 38...."

"Wow!" Yola cried, forgetting her apprehensions of the moment before.
"You may be crazy, but we're back in the sales money! What's your cut of
the gross, Fisk?"

He didn't answer, knowing how little the money was compared to the lives
and medical expenses depending on it. She had climbed back into Bill's
lap, and Fisk's foot was free; but now the ascent was too steep to
permit high velocity. He trailed the pack at a poor 380 MPH.

It was the Mountain Hurdle. The course wedged into a two lane thread
along which cars were spaced like traveling ants. A cliff developed on
the right, the dropoff becoming tall and sheer. Ahead, a car tried to
pass another precipitously, about the way Fisk-demon had intended to
pass the entire pack. But the banking of the road reversed, throwing it
too far out, and the vehicle sailed into space at 350 to torpedo into
the water-trap below. Water gouted as it struck.

"Coaldust slipped!" the radio cried, almost blood-thirstily.
"Twenty-four remaining in the Hurdle at the two-thirds point."

The velocity-demon that now governed Fisk's ailing body took note. A lot
of cars would not finish because they were too eager. He had to bide his
time with a conservative strategy until he hit another straightaway or
other suitable medium for all-out poop.

Meanwhile, Mountain was a terror. Visibility declined as the blind
curves became sharper, and a small thunderstorm was anchored at the
crest, pelting the entries with rain and hailstones. He had to slow to a
crawl of 280, pacing himself by the car ahead. In a nonrace situation
the turns would have been so gradual as to induce highway hypnosis; but
here they were enough to smash him from side to side in his harness as
he navigated each one. Yola hung on somehow; she seemed to have her arms
under Bill's straps so that she could cling by the elbows.

Through the blasting rain, the drops vaporizing with the enormous
impact, for his velocity converted them into bullet-hard pellets. Around
a stalled car, barely glimpsed in the spume. Then came the descent, and
Fisk accelerated down the glassy slope.

"Steamco 129, Electro 114, Vaporlock 68, Fusion 59...." They were moving
up on sales faster than on the pack, perhaps because the spectators knew
what would happen on the next level heat, but it wasn't enough. The
demon would settle for nothing less than total victory.

"Oh-oh!" Yola said. "Loop's next. Cool it, leadfoot."

Bill groaned again. He was showing signs of recovery, but Fisk didn't
care. His eyes were on the desertlike sandflat beyond. Gently rolling
dunes were artfully placed to alleviate the monotony and impede
progress; a straight-line route would necessarily take in several of
them. The alternative was to waste time going around. He had no idea
what it was like to drive on sand. But if the other cars could handle
it, so could this fine Fusion--and this might be his last chance to pass
the pack before the finish.

"Steamco still leads going into the Loop," the radio said. "Pack's
pretty close and tight, though. There's likely to be some action...."

Indeed there was. Now Fisk observed the Loop, nestled in the angle
between the Mountain terminus and the Dunes plain. It seemed to be about
three lanes wide--but the pack contained about fifteen cars, and few of
them were giving way to let the procession become orderly. The Fusion
was gaining, but would strike the Loop just after the pack did.

It didn't look as though there were any inherent limit on speed, here;
the faster he went, the less likely he would be to fall off at the
upside-down apex--provided he had the car under control. So long as
nothing got in his way. But could his defective body take the sheer
pseudogravitational strain? The Fusion was willing; the flesh was weak.

The first car hit the Loop. Up and over it went at some five hundred
miles per hour, like a toy. Only car lengths behind it came the second,
closing. Steamco and Electro, no doubt. Then, squeezing in two and three
abreast, the pack, vying for position even as they encountered the
vertical ascent. And the Fusion was bearing down at 550 MPH, still
accelerating, still gaining.

Steamco shot from the corkscrew exit and landed on the fringe of the
sandflat. Dust billowed up momentarily. Electro smacked into this and
swerved, stirring up a greater cloud. Then the pack was tearing through
like so many piranhas.

But Fisk was entering the Loop at 600 MPH. "Hang on!" he yelled, though
Yola needed no warning. They smashed into the vertical curve and Fisk's
breath left him. This was in effect a ten or fifteen G spaceship
takeoff, he was sure, and his body was already weak from the prior
strain and his existing disorder.

Yet he clutched a painful gray awareness, on and off.

"...spectacular crash!" the radio was crying avidly, and he realized he
had failed, and could expect nothing but agony before he died....
"Pileup just beyond the Loop--"

Not him! But he was headed for it at 650 and up. That was the reality
that kept him fighting: the climbing needle, signifying his conquest
of--

"Stop!" Yola screamed thinly.

But it was too late to stop. They were upside-down, plummeting
headfirst, level, taking off, upside-down, proceeding along the awful
corkscrew of the Loop. Instead, Fisk shoved the pedal all the way to the
floor, connecting engine to wheels without any bleeding of power, and
rode the descent lane into ever increasing velocity.

670... 685... magic pictures on his retina....

700... 715....

"Crazy... mad... deranged... berserk..." Yola gasped as the incredible
markers passed. It was all she could summon breath for.

730... and they were sailing off the skirt of the Loop.

740... the wheels seemed hardly to touch the sand, and only the little
vanes kept the car level. 742... 744... coming slower now. The great
machine shuddered as though its stress limit had finally been met, and
all that was left for Yola was a shaken moan. What power!

745. This was the ultimate glory!

"...fire prevents recovery of the bodies... total loss... worst disaster
of the year... look at Fusion!"

Glory!

Dead ahead, half concealed by a low dune and a sinking dust cloud, was
the roadblock. Licks of flame shot up, and smoke was piling into the
sky. No chance to turn. A thousand feet away--and in less than one
second they were upon it, traveling at 750 miles per hour, and his foot
still savagely mashing the pedal. The Fusion was tearing itself apart,
and eradication was a microsecond away, but Fisk would not even attempt
to ease up. Already he was touching the vane-angle switch.

The low dune shoved the rubberoid and metal aloft in a single mighty
convulsion. The great wheels barely touched the flaming corpse of the
nearest car.

And they were airborne as the shaking became almost intolerable. Fumes
siphoned in through the stuffed hole as the car was bathed in fire. The
speedometer stood at 760.

"Great God," Yola screamed in a whisper. "We've cracked the speed of
sound!"

"Fusion is past?" the radio gasped. "Fusion hurdled the pileup!"

They landed, and the sand swirled up behind in little tornadoes spawned
by the vacuum of their sonic passage, but the mighty machine crunched
on. The flames were far behind. Fisk's hands and arms were senseless and
stiff in a kind of living rigor mortis, but straight ahead was all the
car needed in the way of a directive. Now at last his foot began to
creep up from the pedal.

"What? What?" a voice mumbled.

"Hey, he's coming to!" Yola cried as Bill stirred.

"Keep him quiet!" Fisk's voice rasped. "We're still doing 690 on sand!"

"Sales," the radio said. "Steamco 152, Fusion--one moment, it's still
changing--that feat of piloting really stirred up the--never seen
anything like it--Fusion takes the lead in sales! Fusion 173, Steamco
152--one moment--"

Bill lifted his head. "God, man, that's near my best! What--"

"I had to take over," Fisk said tersely. He was still fighting the
rising tide of gray behind his eyes.

"Yeah. My head. But--"

"Revised sales," the radio said. "Fusion 208--folks, it's still
changing! We can't get a fixed reading. The race isn't even finished...
Fusion 249... 261...." There was an unexplained pause, then: "Folks, to
recap: There has been a fifteen car collision on the Dunes just beyond
the Loop, but the remaining cars are still running. Here's the
replay...." Another pause, as the screen viewers saw the film. "Steamco
retains the lead on the track, but that's all, and Fusion is coming up
fast. The others--seven cars, I believe--are picking their way around
the wreckage, avoiding the flames. None of them will finish in the
money. It's a two car race! Fusion, not known for its maneuverability,
pulled such an extraordinary feat of--Fusion 319!--those orders are
pouring in! Here's the replay on that hurdle of death: see, that's
Fusion firing out of the Loop--look at that! IT CRACKED MACH ONE! We
thought the car was out of the running, then this! The buyers are really
impressed! Hell, I'm impressed, and I've been in this business for--most
racers would have been smashed to pieces, busting sound like that, let
alone doing it through flame! Fusion 370... 401--folks we can't keep up!
Unprecedented sales for an unfinished race! Looks like a record in the
making, even if Fusion doesn't win the Hurdle! 452--I gotta buy one
myself...." The announcer panted into silence.

"That tells it! Bill exclaimed. "Sweetest music I ever! And I thought
you couldn't drive!"

"I can't," Fisk said. "I'm sicker than you are."

Bill looked at him. "You're white as bare bones! You have a heart
condition? I've lost some blood, but I've taken lumps before--better let
me take over! Kid, get down on the floor or somewhere."

Yola scrambled down, finding a place to squat between the bucket seats.
Bill clicked the switch, and Fisk's controls went dead. Now he could
relax. These regular racing drivers were almost as tough as their cars!

"What's next?" Bill demanded, angling the car gently around another
dune.

"Tunnel," Yola said, wrestling with the map.

"Fusion 607...."

"Get that!" Bill cried. "We match our sales! 607 MPH!"

Fisk just lay back and let himself slide back into whatever oblivion
awaited. The drive-demon was gone, but the regular Fisk still needed his
medicine. The race's end could not be far off, and it did look as though
he were planning to survive.

"Fusion 726...."

Bill shook his head. "Fisk, I don't know exactly how you did it while I
was out, but you've just made us rich. Those sales are going to hit a
thousand! It's a bandwagon now--everybody in the world wants a Fusion!
We'll get two million five in commissions!"

"They'll come to their senses and begin cancelling after the excitement
passes," Fisk pointed out. Now that he could afford to faint, he seemed
to be recovering strength, perversely.

"Sure--but those'll be made up by the other buyers reading about it in
the fax. That always happens, and they generally do balance out, close
as makes no difference. Don't worry; we've got record winnings! And the
credit's yours! So you took her through mach, did you! I never had the
nerve."

"Terrific!" Yola cried, liking the idea of fame.

"Uh, better not," Fisk said, eyeing the tiny mouth of the approaching
tunnel. Bill sounded normal, but Fisk didn't trust the man's condition.
He had been unconscious for a fair period, and must have lost a
significant quantity of blood--and an error in judgment of so much as
six inches could be fatal, in that tight passage ahead.

"No, no, Fisk--you did it, and you'll get the commission. When I tell
the boss how you pulled it out--"

"We'll be rich!" Yola exclaimed with innocent childish avarice.

Fisk hadn't been talking about money. His first concern was seeing them
through the tunnel alive. Steamco had just entered it, and at the rate
the Fusion was going there would be contact between them inside that
darkness. Was Bill intending to vie for position, even now?

But it seemed money was a factor, because of the tremendous sales
spurred by his mad exploit of moments ago. Yola's greed and Bill's
misunderstanding sent a negative ripple through the weary convolutions
of his brain. "When you tell your boss that, he'll fire you for allowing
an unqualified driver to take over and play roulette with machinery and
people's lives in the Hurdle. Because you knew, and he didn't. It was
blind luck that got us through, as the tapes of the race will show."

Bill slid the car into the Tunnel as though he had done it all his
life--as perhaps he had. "Maybe so," he said soberly. "Luck doesn't
operate that way--not on the El or Mountain, and especially not by
getting up speed to hurdle wreckage. There was driving genius in your
hands and feet, like it or not. But you're right, it's bad business, and
my boss would rather not know. Okay--we'll split the take, half-half.
It's right to share, because I got hurt and you--"

As the Tunnel closed about them the rag and strap plug popped out of the
hole in the bubble, urged by the suddenly compressing air within the
confined space. An almost solid blast of atmosphere rammed in, striking
Bill in the face and making a stormlike turbulence within the bubble.
The car swerved, partly because Bill could barely see in the gale, but
mostly, Fisk knew, because of the drag of the aperture itself. There was
no room to compensate, here; the stony walls were inches close.

But Yola knew what to do, and since no one had told her to do it, she
did it. She crawled across Bill's lap, probably kneeing him painfully in
the process, fetched in the tattered wad and jammed it back into the
hole. The storm subsided.

Fisk was able to speak again. "You got hurt because my daughter ran out
in front while you were going through Hairpin! That almost killed us
all, and maybe Duperjet too."

"Take the money! Take the money!" Yola cried.

"You sure are one for making objections," Bill said ruefully. "What do
you want?"

This just stiffened Fisk's dubiously motivated resistance. "I think we'd
better just walk out of your life when the race is over. A good--"

He had to pause, for they had caught up to Steamco. The Tunnel was
lighted, but irregularly; the width varied from one to three lanes with
curves thrown in. Passing could be tricky--and Steamco had no intention
of being passed.

"A good sales-day is the least we can do to repay--"

But Fisk had to stop again as Bill swerved to pass on a subterranean
straightaway and was quickly blocked off. Steamco had to know that there
was no car to beat but Fusion, and the drivers would have been hearing
the same reports about the sales. The only way the other car could
recoup was by finishing ahead--or by putting Fusion out of the race
entirely. That would shatter the dawning myth of invulnerability, and
make Steamco the lone survivor and object for sales.

The passage narrowed, halting the maneuvering for a moment.

"...the trouble we have caused you," Fisk continued. "I'll find another
job."

"Fisk, shut up!" Yola said. "You're throwing away two and a half million
dollars."

"Fusion 981...."

"Look, Fisk," Bill said earnestly as the dark walls rushed by and
trickles of wind whined in through the stuffed hole. "I told you I'd
cover for you about your lack of experience, laughable as that seems
now. You've had experience, somewhere, somehow, even if you don't
remember it. You're covering for me, really. And I'd never make trouble
for your little girl. You don't have to sign over the money for that. I
want you to have your share because you earned it. I wouldn't feel right
letting you go away with nothing, after the way you--"

"I wouldn't feel right taking it," Fisk said firmly. "You were right:
any idiot can drive this car, and one just did. It was the car that
pulled it out. It is the finest ever!"

"Fisk," Yola cried. "If you don't take that money--"

The dark track opened into a dual lane, then into a broad cavern spiked
with stalagmites, casting their multiple and deceptive shadows. Many
trails seemed to be open. Bill goosed the Fusion into a preemptive speed
and angled for the far right opening. The Steamco moved over to block
him, staying just ahead so that passing was impossible. It was more
maneuverable, so could get away with this.

"I'll take the commission myself and make out a check for you," Bill
said, as though nothing special were going on. "I'll take all the credit
for the race, if that's the way you want it--but you've got to have your
share of the commission. I can't take all the money for a race I didn't
drive!"

"No."

Bill dodged the car again--which was impressive, at 400 MPH in the
partially lighted cavern. But Steamco was ready, and stayed ahead. "You
can't cover me forever, you bastard," he muttered. He was addressing the
other car, Fisk decided after due reflection.

"Fusion 1038...."

"I'll give it to your daughter, then. An irrevocable trust for her
education, so she doesn't have to run onto any more racetracks."

"Yeah, yeah!" Yola agreed, but with less enthusiasm.

Fisk shook his head. "That money should go to your injured partner."

Another dangerous dodge that nearly put both cars into a post.
"Twenty-five percent to your little girl, then." Bill looked grim. "A
million will cover my friend's bill. You're making me settle for twice
that. I don't like profiteering on something like this. I'm hurting in
my conscience worse than on my head, and I can't dicker with you
anymore. That's my final offer."

"Flip for it!" Yola said. "You go left next split, last moment. If
Steamco goes right, you pass and Fisk takes the share."

"Okay!" Bill agreed.

Fisk was about to demur again, when the radio interrupted: "Folks,
you'll be glad to know the drivers both survived Duperjet's crash. They
blame themselves for misjudgment: too much speed in the Slalom, slipped
on the ice...."

Fisk felt a tremendous relief.

Bill accelerated again, almost nudging Steamco's persistent tail. As the
post zoomed in on them, the first of a line of them, he nudged right,
then cut sharply left. Steamco was caught on the right side, too late to
compensate without cracking into the pylon.

"What's the matter with you?" Yola demanded as they stepped out of the
tube at his apartment building. "We need money and you know it. Why
wouldn't you take your share?"

Fisk hardly understood it himself. "What I did wasn't real. Some demon
in me wanted the glory of winning the Hurdle, no matter what the cost. I
was too sick to control it--"

"That's right!" she agreed. "You looked like a corpse! I thought sure
you meant to kill us all!"

"But once the pressure was off, I regained control. By then it was too
late to undo the damage--"

"But you brought it off!"

"The demon brought it off. But at least I didn't have to give that demon
the satisfaction of making a profit from the episode. With no credit and
no money--"

"Except that trust Bill's setting up for me that nobody can touch," she
said. "Fisk, that money would have bought a lot of fun for both of us,
and now all it's good for is education. Ugh!"

"Precisely. Education abolishes demons."

"I just don't get it!" she said crossly, putting her hand to the
doorplate of their apartment.

"Neither do I," Fisk admitted. "I just knew that neither the racing
credit nor the money was rightfully mine. I'll earn my fortune in my own
way or not at all. That's my particular hurdle. Maybe it's a question of
whether Dr. Jekyll or Mr. Hyde will govern."

"Who?"

He sighed. "Never mind. It's a devious point of characterization, and
perhaps illusory. Every time I compromise my principles, disaster
strikes. I tried to make an illicit profit in Marsland speculation and
lost everything; I got involved in black market adoption and almost
landed in jail. This time I very nearly killed us all. The demon offers
material riches, but his real goal is misery."

She uttered the expletive he still didn't understand. "The first time
you got a new exciting life. The second time you got me. This time you
could've had--"

"At any rate, I'll never go near another racing car as long as I--"

"Hey, what's this?" she cried, lifting something out of the package
slot.

Fisk looked at what she had found. It was a small square item with a
gift tag.

Yola read it aloud. "You're a great sport. Sink Bill."

"That's 'Sinc.,' not 'sink,' " Fisk said. "For 'Sincerely.' " But she
was already tearing open the wrapping with juvenile impatience.

Inside was a personalized ID ownership key for a new Fusion special.

CHAPTER 4
---------

"Mr. Pontimer? I'm Fisk Centers of Perpetual Laser Memorial Gardens.
I've come to give you the certificate to the free plot you have been
awarded."

Pontimer's pale whiskered face was dubious. "Plot? What plot?"

His wife rushed up and pressed the door-release, admitting Fisk to the
Pontimer's rather plain apartment. She was a thin, nervous woman whose
manner suggested that she was used to putting up with abuse. "They
called the other day, dear. It sounded so nice. A free space in
the--the--" She stopped, grasping for an acceptable term.

"Memorial gardens," Fisk put in. Many people had deep neuroses about
death, which was why the word was banned from his present vocabulary. He
was not selling grave sites, he was doing memorial counseling. "We--"

"I'm no farmer!" Pontimer said indignantly. He was old and crotchety:
the kind of man who required a meek wife.

"It's not a garden, dear," she said hastily. "It's--it's--"

Fisk saw that he would have to get more basic. "It's a cemetery."

"A graveyard!" Pontimer shrieked, shocked.

Sensitive subject, there! "Let's call it a place of interment," Fisk
said, striving to eradicate the vulgar terminology and with it the
vulgar notion that death was objectionable. This was the sort of
education the profession did, necessarily. Once over this hump...
"Actually, it's a very far shout from the conventional open cemetery you
may have known in your youth. Population pressure has struck the
memorial industry too, Mr. Pontimer! Today we have to make maximum
possible utilization of land area. Our mausoleum--"

"Tea?" Mrs. Pontimer inquired, presenting an actual cup and pot.

Fisk was glad he was old enough to remember such niceties of the past.
"Thank you," he said, accepting about four ounces of hot yellow liquid.
"Our mausoleum is sixty stories high. But your plot is absolutely
private! The dead have complete sanctity at--"

"Dead? I'm not dead yet! Who told you that?" Pontimer said with
asperity. "I'm not going to die. My heart's as healthy as it ever was.
More! I don't need any--"

"Oops!" Fisk, distracted by the awful tea, had made the cardinal error
of the novice. He had spoken the Forbidden Word. And now he was
confronted with a living object lesson why that proscription was so
stringently enforced. The client had spun into a morbid tizzy.

"Pre-need, Mr. Pontimer." Fisk forced a hearty laugh. "That means you
pay now, die later." If he were lucky, that would defuse the word's
connotations, making it possible to proceed with the presentation.
Henceforth, though, he would keep a tighter rein on his vocabulary!

"Why should I pay now?" Pontimer realized with the cunning of the
sick-minded that he had in some way put Fisk on the defensive. And the
old man brightened visibly with aggressive importance. "Dying is bad
enough, without you vultures coming around in advance to--"

"Dear!" Mrs. Pontimer exclaimed with rare courage.

But that was the question Fisk had been primed for. "I can answer that,
Mr. Pontimer. It's a very good question and I'm glad you asked." He took
a satisfying breath, having expended the standard ploy. Compliment the
dog that bites you. "First, we live in inflationary times. Prices go up.
You can't expire as cheaply as grandfather did, you know. Years from now
it will cost still more. But you--"

"So pretty soon we can't afford to die at all!" Pontimer put in,
cracking a smile.

And soon you'll have that dog licking your hand. "Right, Mr. Pontimer!
But you can halt that trend by acting now. Invest today, and the price
can never be raised for you."

"I thought the plot was free," Pontimer said sharply.

"Of course. I was speaking figuratively, merely explaining why it is to
your advantage to make arrangements now. Quite apart from the fact that
you can receive your plot absolutely without charge, no strings
attached. This offer will not be repeated. But even if you were paying,
it would pay you to act now."

"Oh. Maybe so," Pontimer said grudgingly.

"But more important, Mr. Pontimer," Fisk said, warming up nicely, "it is
smart to make arrangements now, while you can specify exactly what you
want. Do you know what usually happens when a person passes on without
such preparation?"

"When you die, you die," Pontimer said. "What difference does anything
make, once you're six feet under?"

A man with deep religious convictions would not have put it that way,
Fisk thought, and made a mental note to avoid religious references. "It
makes a difference to your widow," he said sternly. "Right at the moment
of her grief, she has to make complex arrangements, not knowing your
preferences. She may pay hundreds of dollars more than necessary,
depleting your estate--all because you didn't care enough to plan
ahead."

That got to him. "All right. I'll take your free plot."

"Excellent." Yes indeed--the bait had been taken. "Now you will want an
adjacent plot for your wife, which we are offering at the special
pre-need price of only fifty thousand dollars."

"Fifty thousand dollars!" Pontimer shouted before pausing for a coughing
fit. "I bought this entire property for that! The lease to the land, I
mean."

"How long ago?" Fisk inquired without hesitation, giving him the
straight look the sales training course specified. The client's every
reaction had been anticipated, and the winning responses were right
there in the manual.

"Forty years." He pondered that, surprised. "Must be worth one million,
today. Too bad it reverts to the state the moment we leave it."

Fisk pounced. "So your lease would cost twenty times as much today,
still only for life tenure. But our plots, at fifty thousand, are no
more expensive than equivalent accommodations twenty, thirty, and even
forty years ago--and your tenure is forever! That's what modern
technology and our pre-need reduction do for you. But such a bargain can
hardly last long, obviously."

Fisk was afraid the client would spot the incongruity of using both
inflation and the forty-year consistency of price as selling points. But
Pontimer considered, then said: "Oh, all right. Fifty thousand for a
plot--before it gets even more expensive."

Well. On with the manual. "Then you will need matching vaults, for only
fifty thousand each, in order to use your plots."

"Coffins?"

Fisk almost winced at the crudity. "Vaults. To protect the caskets from
the ravages of time and prevent settling of the ground, traditionally."
That qualification was important.

"Oh--when the body decays," Mr. Pontimer said. "I've heard of that. But
I thought they used metal now for the coffins, so the things can't break
down."

"Caskets," Fisk corrected him. "Better yet, couches. No, the casket is
not as stable over the years as you might suppose, Mr. Pontimer. Even
the solid metal, hermetically sealed variety. And of course we don't
handle that end; the funeral home provides the casket, so we can't be
responsible. Every casket succumbs eventually, and then where are you?
The vault will protect your remains from that unpleasantness."

But Pontimer had not lost sight of the money. "That's one hundred fifty
thousand dollars! For a free plot!"

But the manual was way ahead of him. "Without our introductory gift of a
plot and our pre-need discounts, the same thing would cost you double
that amount at Perpetual Laser--and even more at competitive memorial
gardens. But there is absolutely no obligation. You may accept your free
plot and dispense with the remainder. I am merely trying to help you
plan realistically."

Pontimer looked at him suspiciously. "Well, I'll just do that. Give me
your free plot. I'll buy the damned vault somewhere else. A secondhand
one, or something. We'll see whether you mean it or not."

Fool, Fisk thought. You can't outsmart the manual! And who ever heard of
a secondhand burial vault? "I see you are an astute businessman. Very
well. You understand that this plot is non-transferable. You have to use
it yourself, or it reverts to us. No re-selling. And you must use a
standard vault, wherever you obtain it."

"Oh." Evidently that no-sell stricture had just punctured a dawning
notion. Sell the free plot to someone else for fifty thousand or less
and make a clean profit!

"Now we'll have to make an appointment for you and your wife to tour the
premises and select the precise site," Fisk said, going into the next
stage of the sale. "We want to be absolutely certain you're satisfied."

And while he negotiated the schedule, Fisk mentally counted his
winnings. Twenty percent commission on what was shaping up to be at
least a one hundred fifty thousand dollar sale. Not bad for an hour's
work!

Of course, he did feel a bit of guilt about the gimmick. The regular
pre-need price of a plot at Laser Mem. was forty thousand dollars, and
it was not the kind of lodging the average man preferred once he saw it.
By establishing an inflated "need" price of sixty thousand dollars and
offering one "free" plot per family and requiring expensive vaults, they
were able to offer a "bargain" package that cost just about the usual.
$160,000 for $150,000. Many sales were made that way that would not
otherwise have materialized--and that was only the beginning.

Still, it was no worse than the norm for the industry. And it did
represent a net saving over both the "need" and the "pre-need" prices.
And everyone had to die sooner or later, so it was hardly a case of
creating a market for a superfluous commodity. There were aspects of the
sales spiel Fisk did not like--but he had discovered that there were
aspects to every job. He had to compromise a little--or go into debt.

It was a necessary service, he reminded himself. People who did not plan
for the inevitable were setting themselves up for much greater later
grief than they deserved. Mr. Pontimer could not last long; his wife
deserved the amelioration of the shock that this pre-planning would
provide.

"And we provide an advisory service in funeral matters," Fisk finished
aloud. "There is no obligation and no charge. You have only to ask--any
time."

"How nice," Mrs. Pontimer said. She seemed genuinely relieved to have
the matter settled. Not that it was settled, yet.

Yola knew, the moment he stepped into the apartment. "Fisky, you caught
a sucker!" She flung her thin brown arms about his neck and kissed him.

"I made a sale," Fisk admitted, forceably disengaging. There were
aspects of adoptive parenthood that disturbed him more than anything in
the cemetery business. Such as an eleven-year-old daughter who insisted
on vacillating between four-year-old tantrums and eighteen-year-old
seductions. He was largely incompetent to deal with either stage, as
well she knew. "I mean, I counseled a client about his memorial needs."

"How much loot?" she demanded eagerly.

He sighed as he stepped into the foamer. "It isn't settled, Yola. All
they have agreed to so far is the free plot. If the normal course is
followed, my commission would come to about thirty thousand dollars.
More, if they respond well to tomorrow's tour."

"Yeah, I hear that tour's murder. Hey, when do I get to see the leaning
tower? Must be weird in those stacks! All those dry bones--"

"It's a mausoleum. No visible bones--they're all sealed up in caskets
and vaults. And it doesn't lean!"

She shrugged indifferently. "Multiple-layer berry patch. Betcha it
stinks on hot days."

"It's air-conditioned--it doesn't smell. Yola, Perpetual Laser's plots
are paying our bills--and we have plenty, the way you splurge on
nonessentials. It's a profession, and you'd better give it due respect.
The tower is entirely sanitary."

"A skyscraper full of corpses!"

"Remains!" But it was useless correcting her; it only brought him down
to her level. "Punch us supper, will you?"

"Punch it yourself, cryptface!"

"Very well." Fisk reached for the fooder control. "Boiled seaweed and
impurgated cod liver oil."

Yola ran around him and got her hands there first. "I'll do it!
Chocolate cookies and ice cream Alamo."

"a la mode." She could be managed, he saw. If only he had the ability to
do it when he needed to!

The Pontimers arrived on the vacuum express. "Welcome to Perpetual Laser
Memorial Gardens," Fisk said benignly. "As you can see, the mausoleum is
completely enclosed by laser beams--our trademark. No intruder will ever
penetrate these premises!"

"We just did," Pontimer observed, thinking he had scored another point.

"We are hardly intruders. The computer knows the difference, I assure
you." Fisk showed them into the spacious ground floor and began the tour
spiel. "The word 'mausoleum' derives from the tomb of Mausolus at
Halicarnasssus, built in 352 B.C., one of the seven wonders of the
ancient world. The Great Pyramid was another--the only wonder to survive
until this day. Gradually the word 'mausoleum' came to apply to any
large building containing the remains of an entire family--typically a
royal family. The famous Taj Mahal is a mausoleum." Calculated to put
things in their proper perspective, assuming the clients were educated
enough to appreciate the references.

"They had lasers back in 352 B.C.?" Pontimer inquired.

Fisk ignored that. "Now the ground floor is devoted entirely to chapels.
Every major religion is represented, and there is even a blank chamber
for atheists, ha-ha. We are nondenominational, of course, but we honor
every faith and scoff at none. Your own priest, pastor or rabbi knows he
is welcome here. Many services are performed daily for your
convenience." Fisk really liked this section; it was one of the better
facets of the business. The clients evidently liked it too; they looked
about and murmured appreciatively. No matter how small a part religion
might play in their daily lives, most people liked to have a religious
sanction for the important turning points: birth, marriage, death.

Of course this was really part of the sales pitch. Clients came for the
tour thinking it was all settled--but the real push was just beginning.

Well, he thought uncomfortably, he didn't make policy. It was a living.

"Now your plots are on the fifth level," Fisk said guiding them to the
elevator.

"How about making it the top floor?" Pontimer said. "Nearer to God, you
know." He was more cheerful today; perhaps these elegant surroundings
were abating his fear of the inevitable. It was Fisk's private theory
that much of the abhorrence people had for death was its presumed
loneliness, and the fancied discomforts of an exposed grave. Obviously
there was plenty of company and comfort in this remarkable building.

"Sorry," Fisk said regretfully. "The upper floors are not yet in
service. Occupation is from the bottom up. Each level is a complete
self-contained memorial park. It will be half a century before every
unit in the mausoleum is spoken for--and longer before complete
occupation, naturally."

The elevator glided to a halt. Archaic devices of this nature were
deliberately used here, to enhance the suggestion of ancient splendor.
Also, they served as a better control on visitation. Timing was
essential.

The door slid open noiselessly. Fisk waited for them to step out,
knowing what would happen.

"Oh, it's beautiful!" Mrs. Pontimer exclaimed. Even grouchy Mr. P.
assented.

That first impression was worth several thousand dollars to Perpetual
Laser, for it predisposed the clients to buy at any price.

For the elevators debouched into the park section of the floor. White
pebbled pathways curved around flowering bushes and led on to a central
fountain that sparkled in subtly shifting pastel hues. The lighting was
soft, as though dusk were verging: the twilight of a pleasant life, or
the pre-dawn of a pleasant afterlife. The air was cool and delicately
scented with pine and rose. Religious-seeming statuary was discreetly
placed and illumined, but devoid of any specific connotations. The
artistic nudes could be considered virgins or mermaids or random art,
depending on the eye of the beholder; the avian representations might be
doves of peace or hawks of war or even vague angels. The occasional
granite snakes could be classed as refugees from Eden or as Ouroburos:
resurrection. Living palms, violets, wheat, passion flowers, clover and
ivy: each might be a symbol, but none had to be symbolic. Some of the
abstracts resembled a crucifix from one angle, a Buddha from another,
and something suggestive of Mohammedanism from a third--none being
certain. Myriad live butterflies fluttered in the gentle breeze, of
diverse and exotic species.

Fisk allowed them to take it in for the prescribed period, then showed
them to an offshoot. An inconspicuous door in the park wall, rather like
the opening to a moss-covered tomb, led into a somber hallway. The
temperature was set at sixty degrees Fahrenheit. The Pontimers rubbed
their arms unconsciously to fend off the sudden chill.

"Here you are," Fisk said. The acoustics here made his voice harsh.

"Here?" Pontimer was uncomprehending. "This is like a crypt!"

"It is a crypt," Fisk said. He grasped a bleak handle and hauled out a
low drawer. "Refrigerated, of course. There is absolutely no
decomposition. Guaranteed. A plot such as the kings of ancient times
never possessed. How do you like it?"

There was a strained silence.

"I--I thought the park--" Mrs. Pontimer said hesitantly. "I saw some--"

"Some memorial markers," Fisk said. "Certainly. We do have a limited
number of interments there. But location in the park proper is
necessarily somewhat more of an investment. Naturally we have an
excellent time-payment plan incorporating amount of balance insurance,
that brings the park within anybody's reach--but I would not attempt to
deceive you. It is more costly."

"Why?" Pontimer demanded, though he obviously knew that the trap was
closing.

"Well, it is a rather special environment," Fisk said, feeling some
sympathy for the fish as it wriggled on the hook. "Much less efficient,
because of the vegetation and statuary, so it has to cost more." He was
forgetting to stick to "investment" in lieu of "cost," but doubted that
nicety mattered now. "But mainly it's because of special government
regulations, sanitary and esthetic. The remains must either be cremated
or sealed hermetically. A suitable memorial marker must be placed, so
that the site can always be found despite changes in vegetation and
layout. There is also an interment fee, as the ground there must
literally be broken, refilled, and replanted. And the care of the
site--clipping the grass, feeding the birds--yes, there are living birds
here, too, but they tend to stay out of sight--watering, artificial
sunlight--"

"You said we had to buy vaults," Pontimer exclaimed. "To go around the
coffin, to stop the ground from settling. But here in this crypt there
is no ground! So what's the vault for?"

Chomp! on the bait. Fisk had a momentary mental image of a fish in a
mousetrap. A prospect was most vulnerable when he thought he had caught
the salesman in an error. "State law, Mr. Pontimer. Everybody interred
in a cemetery of any nature must be casketed and vaulted, regardless of
the actual mode. Ridiculous, isn't it? But what can anyone do? The
memorial industry has lobbied for simplification for years, without
making any dent on the bureaucracy. It costs us more to accommodate full
vaults in our freezers, but we must do it or forfeit our license to
operate. Vaults are necessary when there is an actual ground burial, as
in the parksite; but--"

"So, we have to pay for what we don't need," Pontimer said, shivering.
Fisk was warmly dressed, but the clients were subject to the full ravage
of the cold, by no accident. By this time the very notion of
refrigeration after death was repulsive. Imagine shivering for eternity
in a dark drawer.

"How--how much is it? In the park?" Mrs. Pontimer asked timidly.

"One hundred twenty thousand dollars a plot," Fisk said without
hesitation. "Plus the vault, of course. And memorial plaque. Even with
our fully insured easy-installment plan--well..."

Now at last he let them come out of the dismal hall. At the precise
instant they emerged into the warm, wonderful scenic splendor of the
park, he said: "We still allow for the free plot, however. Fifty
thousand dollars credited toward the more elegant residence. And this
week only we are waiving the interment fee on all park plots placed.
But--" He gestured to encompass the marvelous beauty of it. "Such
accommodation never does come cheaply. And with inflation--"

Mrs. Pontimer cracked first. She put her hand on her husband's arm.
"Please, George--"

"It's a damn gimmick," Pontimer muttered, accurately enough. But he too
had been shaken by the appalling contrast between park and crypt. He
capitulated. "We can't take what little we have with us, and I don't
care to leave it to our cheapskate third cousins. Might as well waste it
on something nice."

Victory stared Fisk Centers in the face. And he escorted them to a
pleasant alcove amid the lovely bushes where the fragrance of nature was
especially serene, and there he counseled them into matching memorial
sites for that exact location and two attractive vaults and a bronze Mr.
& Mrs. plaque set flush with the ground so as not to obstruct the airy
passage of the butterflies. All parties were well satisfied. And after
that he rested.

Total investment: $350,000.

Commission: $70,000.

"Pontimer! Pontimer! Who sold Pontimer?" the supervisor called. The
robosec was malfunctioning again, so that the records were not readily
accessible.

"I did," Fisk said, looking up from his copy of CASKET AND SUNNYSIDE.
This was a slow day, and several of the salesmen were doing phone duty,
trying to develop new leads. This was mind deadening labor, so they did
it in shifts. Fisk's turn was due in half an hour.

"Wife on phone. GS, for sure. Pick it up in the office and make it
short. Ditch that magazine, will you? If a client saw that on the
screen..."

"Right." Fisk didn't have to check his cardfile on that one; that sale
had put him on the board as an effective salesman, and the initiative
had brought him fairly regular success in the intervening month. "GS"
meant grief stricken, so he knew what to expect.

Mrs. Pontimer's strained face was waiting on the screen. "Oh, Mr.
Centers!" she exclaimed with relief. "Please, can you handle it?"

Evidently pre-need had abruptly become need. But he had to be sure.
"Handle what, Mrs. Pontimer?"

"The--the--my husband--" She brought her handkerchief to her face.

"Mrs. Pontimer, I assure you that everything is in order here. The
insurance will cover the remaining payments on your husband's plot and
vault. We'll be glad to contact your funeral director and--"

"No, no!" she cried hysterically. "I couldn't bear to have a stranger
doing it! Please, Mr. Centers--you said Per--Perpetual Laser would--you
know about such things. I'm so--he never had heart trouble before--I
don't know what to--"

The supervisor was back. "Go ahead," he muttered. "We're short on leads
and it's good publicity. 'Laser Mem. assists GS widow.' Good experience
for you, too."

This was not the kindest way to put it, but at least it bestowed the
cemetery management's technical blessing. The woman obviously needed
help. Perpetual Laser did advertise free advisory service, and now its
bluff had been called. "Mrs. Pontimer, I'll be right over," Fisk said
reassuringly.

"Oh, thank you, thank you!" she said. He cut the connection before she
had the opportunity to break down completely.

Fisk took a priority highway and gunned his massive Fusion to two
hundred, covering thirty miles in ten minutes. For him this was fast;
for the car it was commuter's creep, as the machine had the capability
to crack the sonic barrier on land, given running room. But it was
handy, he had to admit, having a car that was really a car.

Mrs. Pontimer was in a worse state than he realized. She hadn't done a
thing other than phone him. Her husband lay on the floor where he had
fallen, half behind a heavy old table, a spilled glass beside him. Fisk
was able to reconstruct what had happened fairly readily: the man had
been moving furniture at his wife's behest--it was amazing what control
even the meekest woman had over the grouchiest man--working up a real
sweat, and had paused for a drink of cold water. And his heart had
stopped. Fisk had heard of it happening that way: not during exertion,
but just after.

Of course there was no excuse for it, since modern medicine could abate
virtually every heart ailment. But Pontimer was the kind who didn't
trust doctors. Obviously he had heart trouble, because his wife had
immediately named that as the cause of death.

It was obvious that Mrs. Pontimer had no resources at all. She had been
almost completely dependent on her husband, and simply couldn't cope
with the disaster. Probably there were no close relatives--he vaguely
remembered a mention of distant cousins--so she had called the one
person she thought could handle it: the cemetery representative.
Sensible enough, really.

The trouble was, Fisk knew very little about the actual mechanism of the
funereal end of it. He had picked up the basics, of course, and a number
of tidbits from the mortuary magazines--but that hardly prepared him for
a fresh corpse and a distraught widow who wouldn't deal with strangers.

"Mrs. Pontimer," he said, keeping his voice calm. "Who is your family
doctor?"

Her expression was answer enough. No help there.

"Perhaps you should lie down for a while," Fisk told her. "I'll take
care of it."

"Yes...." She meandered to an old couch.

Fisk called his own doctor. "I know this isn't your specialty, Al," he
said apologetically. "But I'm in a spot and need a bit of advice myself,
so I can give advice."

"Fisk, I'm really pretty busy this morning--hey! Is that in the
background what--"

"Afraid so."

"You don't need advice, you need an attorney! Or didn't you do it?"

"You old fraud--I need a doctor. He had a heart attack. I think. Can you
come?"

"Very well." Dr. Bickel was an old acquaintance. Fisk's circulatory
condition had required a great deal of competent attention in the early
days, and young Bickel of thirty years ago had handled it. Now Fisk's
medication made the matter routine, but the friendship endured.

"Dead, certainly," Bickel said shortly later, checking the body. "You're
lucky, Fisk. No question of foul play. Heart. He should never have
tackled that table--not in the condition he was in."

"Lucky?" Fisk asked. "I'm just helping a client."

Bickel spoke in a voice too low for Mrs. Pontimer to overhear: "If it
had been poison or a clout on the head, Fisk, you would have been
implicated. Wife could have sworn you did it... these things happen, you
know."

Ouch! "I'm--I'm in charge of arrangements," Fisk explained lamely. "I
never thought--"

"That's why I cancelled my morning appointments and got the hell over
here. I didn't save your circulation just to have it jinxed permanently
by your soft brain. I'll make out a death certificate while you call an
undertaker. He'll take it from there."

"Can't do, Al. She won't have a stranger doing it. And my company wants
the publicity for making the arrangements."

The doctor looked at him. "Is Laser paying for it?"

"No. Except for the burial end. But she does need help. I don't think
she has much money, and--"

Bickel shook his head as he let his breath out. "Fisk, how do you get
into these scrapes? You have too soft a heart to deal with a
professional mortician. It is essential to have an objective third party
to handle such negotiations; that far you're on solid ground. But you do
have to use an undertaker, Fisk--no way around that, in this state. Are
you sure you have the gumption to do the necessary?"

"Morticians aren't that bad, Al! I've had some experience, after all--"

"No worse than cemeterians," Bickel muttered. "All right--leave her here
with her husband while you go dicker with the mortician. When you phone
here you can introduce her to the funeral director, so he's not a
stranger. I'll stay here until they arrive for the body."

"Thanks, Al," Fisk said gratefully. Dr. Bickel had an excellent bedside
manner; he would have Mrs. Pontimer docile and reasonable within the
hour.

"But first find out what she can afford--and no matter what, stay within
it. Understand?"

Fisk shook the doctor's hand. "I'll protect her interests. Don't worry
about that!"

But he had an education coming.

The presiding mortician of Deep Space Memorial Chapel was most
solicitous. He was dressed conservatively and nothing about him could be
construed as offensive to any conceivable system of belief--yet he
carried about him the distinct aura of afterlife. Fisk was reminded of
the park statuary of the mausoleum.

Mr. Black asked only essential questions, and even these seemed to be
largely formality. Obviously the man had done spot research on Mr.
Pontimer via the population directory and knew what he needed already.
Almost too efficient.

Mr. Black conducted Fisk to the tastefully carpeted selection room with
such finesse that Fisk made a note to emulate the technique for his own
tours through the mausoleum. The undertaker was obviously master of a
trade Fisk was only learning.

The room was filled with elaborate display coffins, each mounted at
comfortable elevation for inspection, each girt with dark cloth and with
its lid lifted. Some had bedsheets and pillows inside, and looked
exceedingly comfortable.

"This is our Deep Space Trademark Platinum Memorial Couch," Mr. Black
said softly. "Solid copper foundation with genuine platinum impregnation
inside and out. You cannot obtain a more secure resting place at any
price, Mr. Centers. Seamless exterior, unit construction, noiseless
hinges, foam rubber interior. Available in Reclining Pink, Conservative
Gray, and Forever Black."

Indeed, it resembled a padded treasure chest more than a coffin. Fisk
had not realized that the dead rated such considerate repose. But he
couldn't help asking: "Are you sure it's tight? The cemeteries require
vaults--"

"The cemeteries are unnecessarily solicitous. This casket is so tight it
can be sent to deep space without leakage. If we can interest you in our
special Planetary Orbit Memorial--"

"Orbit?" Fisk hadn't heard of this.

"In the asteroid belt. Technically, the casket becomes a planet in its
own right, circling the sun forever until the Judgment Day. The bereaved
can observe it by telescope, drawing reassurance. A very fitting--"

"Uh, no thanks. Memorial arrangements have already been made."

"Very good." It was just as though the man had made no pitch to exclude
the cemetery, but Fisk now had an insight into the competition. Burial
in space! Perpetual Laser would have to keep on its corporate toes.

"About the cost--" Fisk hinted.

"By all means. This handsome couch is just eleven eighty-seven--a very
reasonable investment considering its quality."

"Eleven hundred dollars?"

"Eleven thousand," Black said solicitously.

"Eleven thousand dollars?" Fisk's jaw dropped. "For one box?"

Black frowned as though embarrassed by the client's ignorant outburst.
"For one superior casket, Mr. Centers, including the complete service,
naturally."

"Oh." He should have remembered. The price of the entire funeral was
predicated on the casket. Fisk began to wonder: Was he out of touch? Was
the price in order? "Just what do we get with this cof--this casket?"

"Conveyance of the loved one, preparation, display in the slumber room,
memorial service--all accomplished with tact and simple elegance by our
experienced personnel. We take care of all legal details and records, of
course."

"You mean there will be no additional charges at all?" Actually, it was
no more than the cost of plot and vault at Perpetual Laser....

"None by us, Mr. Centers. Unless you wish us to supervise the floral
tribute, musician's honorarium, burial site and similar details."

It occurred to Fisk that Mr. Black had not done his homework quite
thoroughly enough, and did not suspect that Fisk was a representative of
the burial industry. This was the second time Black had smoothly
attempted to usurp cemeterial prerogatives. "I suppose a few flowers
would be nice--no I think we'll omit them. Better to donate the money to
charity. Put 'Please Omit' in the notice of service."

"I beg your pardon?"

"No flowers. They'll only wilt, and there'll be plenty of growing plants
at Las--at the cemetery."

"But it is usual to have a floral tribute for the service itself," Black
protested, evincing refined disapproval. "To facilitate a suitable
Memory Picture."

Memory Picture: the mortician's term for a good looking corpse. Jokes
were rife at the cemetery about such funeral foibles, and Fisk could not
resist some gentle ribbing. "What are you talking about? This is a
funeral, not a parade!"

"Mr. Centers, I see you do not properly appreciate our position. This is
not just a funeral; it is grief therapy for the bereaved. The Loved One
must be provided with the most favorable accouterments."

"Grief therapy? Who appointed you therapist? I'm just looking for a
decent and inexpensive funeral for my client."

"Your client, Mr. Centers?"

Oh-oh. If Black found out now about the cemetery... "Mrs. Pontimer. I'm
representing her interests, as a friend of the family. Figure of
speech."

Black gazed at him for a moment, but made no issue of the matter. Fisk
had to admire the man's aplomb as he showed the way to another casket.

"This is our Economy Plan, at a saving of four thousand dollars," Black
said with a certain reserve.

Fisk felt a bit cheap, though he knew this was a merchandising strategy
similar to what he employed in selling burial plots. Show an expensive
one, then an obviously inferior one, then swing back to clinch the sale.
The yo-yo technique: extremely effective against unsuspecting marks.

Cheap? This coffin was still almost eight thousand dollars! It was of
simulated wood, with simulated knotholes. Real pine would cost several
times as much, were it not illegal for such purposes. This was the kind
of gaudy make-believe that was calculated to appeal to people of
illiterate taste.

The mortician saw Fisk's expression. Without a word he showed the way to
a third display. "Stellar Classic Memorial couch. Eighteen gauge
lead-coated steel, counterbalanced top, innerspring mattress,
contemporary styling, velvet lining--not elaborate from the outside, but
quite well appointed inside. Available at a saving of two thousand
dollars."

So now the "couch" nomenclature had dropped in price. Subtle, clever.
"Cheaper than the last one?" Fisk asked hopefully.

"Than the first one. Nine eighty-seven, complete with service."

Fisk didn't like being managed. "Let's see your cheapest coffin. No
trimmings, no grief therapy, no flowers."

"Really, Mr. Centers. You wouldn't want--"

"I might want to take my business elsewhere."

Black stiffened almost visibly at this unwarranted harassment. "Very
well." He led the way brusquely through a door Fisk hadn't noticed
before. The room beyond was gaunt. A lone deathbox squatted on the dusty
floor, fashioned of unappealing fiberboard. It had no soft inner lining,
no fancy coating, and even seemed slightly warped. Light showed through
the cracks: it would be a leaky domicile. "Four eighty-seven."

"Still almost five thousand dollars--for this makeshift thing?"

"Including our minimum service, Mr. Centers," Black said with simple
dignity. "We are unable to do it for less and remain fully compensated."

Fully compensated: the funeral trade's euphemism for charging what the
market would bear. "Oh come off it, Black!" Fisk exclaimed, exasperated.
"A human body can be transported and cremated for less than a thousand!"

"Mr. Centers: a human body can be thrown into the sewer for nothing."

Touch. Fisk had to bite his tongue to keep from laughing. What a sneer
at crematoriums! Ashes were cheaper to handle and cheaper to bury, so
neither morticians nor crematarians were particularly partial to
remains.

Meanwhile, this pro could not be shaken loose. Fisk imagined what Mrs.
Pontimer's reaction would be to seeing her husband lying in sad state in
this cruel box. He sighed. She had barely fifteen thousand dollars in
available funds, apart from a small widow's pension. That money would be
better spent on groceries and rentals: phone, foamer, suiter and so on.
But her grief would never permit obvious cheapness in the disposition of
her husband.

Fisk raged inwardly, but he wound up with the nine thousand eight
hundred and seventy dollar casket--which was, of course, the one the
funeral director had pegged him for at the outset. He phoned Mrs.
Pontimer and introduced Black, who quickly made her feel at ease. Now
Dr. Bickel could go back to his practice, and the body could be removed
from the house.

Now for the lesser details. Disgruntled at his own inefficiency as a
bargainer, Fisk decided to cut costs implacably on the remaining
portions of the ritual. Perpetual Laser had perfectly serviceable chapel
facilities that Mrs. Pontimer would certainly approve, so the formal
service could be held there. And he would absolutely rule out
nonessentials like flowers. He might yet save a significant portion of
the widow's savings for the urgent needs of the living.

Since the management of the funeral home balked about preparing a notice
of service excluding flowers, Fisk decided to call Black's bluff by
using the mortician's phone to contact a leading florist himself.
Naturally the florist would insist that there was nothing obligatory
about flowers, and with that leverage...

"Please omit--what?" the lady demanded, shocked.

"Omit flowers," Fisk said patiently. "My friend's estate is not large,
so I knew you would understand the necessity to economize. You would not
want your product to be the one that dissipated the resources she needs
for food and medicine--"

She appraised him carefully, with the briefest glance at Black, who was
standing behind. Her voice softened persuasively. "We certainly do
appreciate your position, sir. We of the floral industry are uniquely
aware how very difficult it is to cope with this period of bereavement.
Naturally you are concerned with the welfare of the survivors as well as
that of your loved one. We certainly wish to do everything humanly
possible to ease your suffering."

"Good," said Fisk, relieved. "Now if you'll just explain to the
under--the funeral director, here--"

"However," she continued firmly, "have you considered the longer view?
Sometimes an immediate saving may be had at the cost of a great deal of
unnecessary suffering. You have the opportunity now--and never again,
unfortunately!--to render meaningful tribute to your Loved One.
Psychologists agree that funeral flowers comfort the bereaved as almost
nothing else can. They provide an outlet for the expressions of sympathy
for friends. They pay tribute to the life accomplishments of the
deceased. Your experience and common sense must tell you that in this
emotional moment the extra warmth and comfort of living flowers is
essential to create a Memory Picture that will endure through the
years."

Oh, no! Not the Memory Picture again! "Well yes, but--"

Her voice became stern. "But consider this, too: if you begin omitting
flowers, what will be next? Minister? Music? All but the plainest
casket? Memorial markers? Interment itself? When does a funeral service
stop comforting the bereaved--and become merely a mechanical fulfillment
of an obligation? Once you start subtracting warmth and human feeling,
where do you end--and what do you have left?"

Fisk recognized a variant of the hard-sell pitch. But if he omitted the
flowers now, he would seem to be vilifying human warmth itself! The
florist had beaten him at his game. He couldn't risk cutting the flowers
and having someone in the trade get through to Mrs. Pontimer to inflame
her guilt through such aspersions.

"All right," he said. "We'll take a few flowers, and omit the 'please
omit.' "

She was gracious in victory. "I was sure you would understand," she said
with no trace of the smugness he knew she felt. "Now we have excellent
Venusian mugwumps, the very latest and most elegant of floral
tributes--"

"Hey, Fisky--whatcha doing at the body shop," a penetrating voice
called.

Fisk whipped around. "Yola! What--?"

Then he saw her brown face on another phone. She must have called him at
the cemetery office and been redirected here. She had the annoying habit
of checking up on him possessively. He had to get off the line before
she tore things up in her inimitable fashion.

"What happened, Fisk?" she demanded loudly. "You quit working at Boot
Hill? Tenement tombstones get you down?"

Black eyed her critically, drawing the obvious inferences--and the
florist was doing likewise from the other phone. "Memorials, not
tombstones," Fisk said. "Yola, this is business. I've told you not to
bother me at--"

"Hell, Daddy, the corpses don't care. You only croak once, you know!"

Wrong, he thought. He died every time Yola let fly in public.

"So you work for a cemetery," Black said coldly.

"What are you trying to do--cut us out?" the florist demanded, a sharp
tone replacing her former persuasiveness. "Two can play that game!
Burial isn't even required by law, you know, despite that expensive
lobbying you folks are doing. A man has to die, but he doesn't have to
wind up in a plot. Just remember--"

"You're jumping to conclusions!" Fisk cried desperately. "I was just--"

"What's bugging them?" Yola said, enjoying the consternation. "A carcass
by any other name would rot as quick."

Black's composure broke at last, and the florist turned lily-white. All
their labored euphemisms were being massacred!

But the mortician had a fighting heart. There was only a hint of a
quaver in his voice. "If you want to spy on the profession, just examine
your own skeletons first, Centers. What's your outfit?"

Yola burst into song. "Did you ever think as the hearse flew by, that
you might be the next to die?"

"Coach, not hearse!" Black snapped involuntarily.

"PL," Fisk muttered, casting about for an inconspicuous exit.

"Perpetual Laser!" the florist said, pouncing like a hungry superhybrid
pitcher plant. "Free plot gimmick. Freezing crypts. We deliver there all
the time."

"...they wrap you up in a Plutofoam sheet--" Yola sang.

"Shroud!" Black cried. "Robe, I mean." He was certainly flustered now.

"Yola, this is no way to behave!" But Fisk knew remonstrance was
useless. He could see her thumb jammed down hard on the OVERRIDE button,
a precaution against termination of the connection from this end.

"Laser, eh?" Black said, swinging back to the attack. There could be no
question of his courage under fire! "Hydroponic gardens, we call them.
Artificial plantings on sixty stories. So-called nonprofit corp."

"Non-profit corpse!" Yola screamed, delighted. "That's rich, ghoul!"

"Owned by a holding company who sells them space at inflated prices to
make sure they can't make a profit. No taxes that way. But the real
owners are reaping rich harvests from that dirt, let me tell you!"

"That land sold for five hundred thousand dollars per acre," the florist
said. "So they charge five thousand for each six-by-three plot. Know
what that comes to? Well over ten million dollars--per level!"

"The worms crawl in, the worms crawl out, the worms play Satellite on
your snout!"

"And it's sixty levels high--not counting the cremain-urn mezzanines,"
Black said. "Talk of profiteering!"

Fisk spied a back door and made his escape while the trialogue sustained
itself with increasing vehemence.

It was like coming in out of a hurricane. He found himself in a dark,
rather cold passage reminiscent of the crypt tunnels of the mausoleum.
He trotted along it, afraid Black would notice his absence before he
cleared the building. Once he got home he would poke Yola's mouthy
little head into the foamer and lock the machine on SCOUR!

The hall emptied into a chilly room containing several wheeled tables,
each with powerstraps and shroudcloths. For the transport of corpses,
obviously. The right side opened to a delivery platform for the
hearsejets.

Fisk headed for the garage section, knowing that there would be a
connection to the visitor's parking lot where his Fusion was docked.

He was mistaken. Every door was locked, and keyed to authorized
personnel only. He couldn't get out.

He returned to the table-staging area, looking for another exit. Light
suddenly showed at the far end of the entrance passage. Someone was
coming after him!

Fisk jumped onto a table and pulled the shroud over himself. His action
was irrational, since all he had to do was go back to face the moderate
embarrassment lurking in the front office, apologize, and beat a humble
retreat. He was not too proud for that. But his flight reflex refused to
pay attention. It just wanted to get him away.

Clamps snapped about his ankles and wrists. Snakelike, a strap crawled
over his abdomen and constricted snugly. Something like a helmet eased
onto his head, holding it securely.

It was an automated operating table. Fisk opened his mouth to shout--and
a jointed pincer jammed in a wad of absorbent gauze and taped it in
place. To prevent noxious exhalations from the subject, probably, since
dead bodies did not normally need to be gagged. Fisk struggled mightily,
but only succeeded in shaking the shroud away from one eye, so that he
could see the plain ceiling. The pincer had folded down into the table.

The table moved. Helpless, Fisk watched it bash through the swinging
doors astride its track and cruise into a tiled and sterile-looking
surgery room. Oh no! This was the undertaker's morgue!

Something else moved. It was an old fashioned multipurpose robot, the
kind that knew any menial job when the appropriate occupation-spool was
inserted. Semi-humanoid because the early manufacturers thought that was
what the buying public wanted. The portion of the extremities Fisk could
see by straining his eyeball almost crosswise in its socket had been
fitted with a scalpel, forceps, clamp and needles. Fisk had a rough idea
what these instruments were for. He would have screamed if he could.

The dermasurgeon robot touched a switch. The cart rolled forward a few
feet, then abruptly tilted. As his head swung up, Fisk saw that he was
not the first in line. Another corpse preceded him, and his unit had
just moved into the slanted on-deck position. Assembly-line efficiency.

The other table was now tilted the other way: head down. Fisk stared at
it with burgeoning alarm as the robot peeled back the shroud.

"Now, Mr. Pontimer," the robot said with morbid mechanical cheer. "We
shall set about making you comfortable."

His eyes had not deceived him. It was Mr. Pontimer, already here. The
hearse must have jetted out the instant the decision was made, and
brought the body back while Fisk was bargaining about "Please omit."
Appalling efficiency.

"Just one neat little painless incision in the carotid artery of the
neck," the surgeon said. Fisk had forgotten that the spool-robots
talked. But of course it was just part of the prerecorded tape, keyed in
to the other job requirements. That way the owner could verify the
machine's programming verbally. There was certainly no need to talk to
the dead--but also no need to turn off the sound.

"There, that didn't hurt a bit, did it? Oh blood won't flow? Tut, tut;
we'll just have to help it along a little. One tiny prick of the
needle--very good, Mr. Pontimer, you didn't flinch at all!--and now
we'll start the nice sanitary Jupiter Mist Quality embalming fluid
gently coursing in. SAE 10-30 for all weather. Ha-ha, little joke there!
It really is nothing more than the Balm-ex company's patented blend of
formaldehyde, alcohol, glycerin, phenol, borax, water and Formula Q,
that mystic ingredient derived from moon-lava and guaranteed to bring
instant new softness and luster to you skin. Or your money back, Mr.
Pontimer. Ha-ha. Now isn't that better? So cool, so smooth, so
fragrant..."

Fisk became sick--but choked back his gorge, knowing that it would only
complicate his situation. It was already hard enough to breathe with his
mouth stuffed. He struggled with his bonds, but they had been made with
rigor mortis in mind and were absolutely firm. Not uncomfortable, for
bruised or battered corpses looked bad on display; but impossible to
escape.

"And now, while the marvelous elixir of mortis, that sweet embalmer is
replacing all the dark smelly old tired blood, let's just perform a
smidgeon of decorative surgery on your face, Mr. Pontimer. Oh it is a
nice face, for a human; please don't take umbrage! But there are just a
few wee little tiny wrinkles here and there that make you look less
healthy than you really are. Shall we apply a spot of Saturn Snow
foundation creme? You'll look so nice they'll think you have a halo, or
at least a ring, a Saturn Snow ring, ha-ha! Oh, your eyes, Mr. Pontimer;
must close them! Clients are never supposed to witness the secrets of
our excellent preparation room. Suppose we insert these dainty little
Comet Everstick adhesive caps under the lids, so, and depress the skin
ever so gently, so. Now you will sleep forever. Isn't that wonderful!"

Another cart sailed into the morgue--or, as the loquacious robot put it
with the prescribed euphemism, the preparation room. This was a busy
outfit. It was quite possible that one extra cadaver would not be
noticed until after processing....

"Ah, you are looking better already, Mr. Pontimer! I could have taken
another twenty years off your life, had you come here for treatment
twenty years ago! Embalming is most effective when commenced before
death occurs. If only Mr. Black didn't require me to operate at such a
disadvantage, waiting until hours after life is extinct! I really must
go on strike for the right to embalm living people, don't you agree?"

That was some speech-tape the robot had, Fisk thought with a shudder.
Had a sadist programmed it? Or a practical joker?

"But twenty years ago I would have had to use a needle and thread to sew
your mouth together, with the stitches passing between your upper lip
and your left nostril. Inside, where nothing shows, of course.
Effective, but crude, you must admit. Today we are so much more
civilized. We merely apply the Fang--beg pardon, the Nova Oral
Pessary--to bring your teeth together and your lips almost together,
just so. No, no, don't bite, Mr. Pontimer! It screws into your jaw
automatically. It will hold itself in place until death do you part,
ha-ha! Oh, does the screw hurt? I'm so sorry, I should have administered
an anesthetic. We used to have you in stitches, and now we screw you.
Oh, not funny? I apologize profusely! So thoughtless of me. But you see,
robots don't think very much. Our bodies may be superior to yours, but
our brains--well, can't cry over spilt oil! Now we'll just trim and tint
your hair--oh, and we must do something about that ugly beard stubble,
too. You really should have shaved before you died, Mr. Pontimer!"

There were sounds of trimming and tinting and shaving, as well as an
indeterminate slosh and grind that had to be the Fang installing itself.
Fisk's own jaw hurt.

"Now we'll simply seal the incision with invisible Future Age
pseudoplastic tape, so, and it's done. Let's see your abdomen, Mr.
Pontimer. Hm, none too healthy, I'm obliged to say. Suppose we just
insert our little trocar in your navel and poke about your worn-out
entrails--you really will not be needing them anymore, will you?--and
suck them out through the tube. We'll find something so much better to
fill your body cavity, Mr. Pontimer!"

The sound and smell destroyed what control remained to Fisk. His own gut
heaved as though to evacuate itself without benefit of the robot's
trocar. There was no stopping it.

And the pressure of the vomit blasted out the gag.

It took Fisk some time to recover, and longer to realize that he was now
free to scream for help. But what good would screaming do, with no one
to hear but this grotesquely preprogrammed machine?

In the interval the robot had completed the abdominal surgery, stuffed
the hollow, and replaced the shroud over Mr. Pontimer. Apparently it was
not going to do the remainder of the restoration immediately. No doubt
the body had to "set" for a few hours for the embalmer to suffuse the
outer tissues.

The tables moved again. Fisk found himself upended. The robot lifted
away the shroud and leaned over Fisk's nether extremity: his head. It
didn't seem to notice the vomit.

"Now Mr. Klondyke--so sorry to have kept you waiting, but we'll make up
for that by treating you extra well. Shall we begin with the jugular
vein? The scalpel moved toward his neck.

Desperation gave Fisk genius. This was not, could not be a taped
machine! The dialogue was non-repetitive, and it was using proper names!
This was a thinking robot, one who might respond to verbal commands.

"STOP!"

The knife paused. "Fine intellectual problem," the robot mused. "Mr.
Black has put Mr. Klondyke on the schedule for this morning--but Mr.
Klondyke wishes to countermand. Which directive takes precedence?"

"Mine, of course!" Fisk said, vastly relieved.

"No, I don't work for you," the machine said after pondering. "I work on
you." The scalpel resumed travel.

"I'M NOT DEAD!" Fisk bawled.

Then he realized his mistake. "Splendid!" the surgeon said. "I can
finally embalm a live subject! Oh, Mr. Klondyke, you have made my whole
day!"

He would have to get an ambitious mechanical! Naturally the robot had no
human sense of right and wrong. It cared only for the quality of its
work--and as it had explained to Mr. Pontimer, the fresher the client,
the better.

But Fisk's life-gluttonous brain came through again. "I'm--I'm already
done! I'm bursting with Jupiter Mist Quality SAE 10-30 with Formula Q!
Marvelous lifelike job--your most brilliant exhibition of preparation
skill! Just route me on to the display room without further retouching!"

The robot still hesitated. The scalpel wavered before Fisk's nervous
jugular. Obviously the machine felt that something was not quite right.

"You're getting behind schedule!" Fisk said. "See, there's another
cadaver on deck. Go on to the next. Every minute that passes makes
embalming more difficult."

The robot looked. "Strange," it said. "There was no other client listed
for this session. Just Mr. Smith and Mr. Pontimer and Mr. Klondyke...."

"An emergency case came up! Mr.--Mr. Makeshift died of Neptunian Algae
and has to be prepared immediately before he stagnates! Mr. Black says
these remains take precedence!"

He had spoken the magic words. "Oh, well, if Mr. Black says..."

Fisk's table trollied onward, righting itself. The next specimen--the
real Mr. Klondyke--tilted into place. "Now Mr. Makeshift, where would
you like to be tapped? Mr. Black says you're to have priority
treatment...."

He had saved his blood and guts--but that was all. Fisk jolted to a stop
beside Mr. Pontimer, and there he stayed, hopelessly bound. He was
afraid to say anything more to the robot, lest the lure of a live body
prove too great to resist after all.

Time trod on. Fisk grew hungry and thirsty, but had no relief. Worse,
the strain of tension and confinement was aggravating his circulatory
condition, making him feel faint. In due course he lost consciousness.

Motion woke him. Another robot was handling him, removing his clothing,
washing his body. Fisk was too disorganized to realize that he was now
free of the manacles. "I'm done! Pass me along!"

But he was weaker than he realized. He fainted again.

"And now you may view Mr. Klondyke," Black's unctuous voice said. "We
regret that he will reside in the slumber room for only two hours, as
the window for the launch is limited... you understand."

There was a subdued murmur of agreement.

A curtain parted dramatically. Light shone in, blinding Fisk so that his
eyes closed automatically. He kept still, trying to fathom his
situation.

"As you know, the final resting place for which Mr. Klondyke is destined
is one of the most elegant conceivable to the mind of man," Black
continued. By the sound of it he was standing nearby but facing away,
addressing a small party of mourners.

Mourners...

He was in a casket, on display!

By fouling up the assembly line robots he had slipped into the slot
intended for Mr. Klondyke. And the funeral director, so contemptuously
confident of his apparatus, had never bothered to make a preliminary
visual inspection.

"...whereupon the Ship of Shadows will follow that solemn trajectory
unerringly to the very source of life itself, committing Mr. Klondyke to
the ultimately purifying flame," Black continued. Fisk had to admit that
the undertaker was good at this; his voice rang with impassioned
sincerity. "Ladies and gentlemen of the Beloved Bereaved, I give you
Solar Cremation!"

They were going to rocket him into the sun!

Now the Beloved Bereaved drew closer to the casket, eager for a solid
glimpse of the recipient-to-be of this exotic terminus. Fisk kept his
eyes tightly shut, afraid to do otherwise. Of course there was no
equitable way out of this--but what was he to do?

Appreciative murmurs of the standard variety. "My, how lifelike!" "He's
only sleeping!" "How well he looks!"

What were they--paid mourners? They should have spotted the imposition
by this time! Fisk held his breath, waiting for the inevitable. In a
moment they would realize that he was not their cadaver....

Black had the finesse not to acknowledge the audible compliments on his
restorative art. "Naturally he is only sleeping. His spirit survives
forever! Now I shall leave you to your final farewell--"

"A-tisket, a-tasket, a green and yellow casket!" a girlish voice sang in
the hall, coming nearer. The mourners hushed. "I wrote a letter, poison
pen--" Then: "There you are, ghoul! What have you done with my father?"

It was Yola, bless her infuriating little heart. She had come to the
rescue--in her fashion. Fisk slit one eye open.

No wonder the Beloved Bereaved had not yet recognized him. He was
propped within a massive coffin that shadowed the better part of his
face. A colored light shone down, not nearly as bright as it had seemed
at first, no doubt tinting the highlights to bring out those lifelike
tones while concealing the ravages of death. There were flowers
everywhere, filling the room and the coffin itself and even encroaching
on the body: him. And he wore some kind of tuxedo with a high collar to
conceal the supposed scars on his neck. And there was a weight of makeup
on his cheeks.

But fortunately he had been spared the eye and mouth fixers, not to
mention embalming and evisceration. He had a right to look alive.

The mortician must have said something to soothe Yola, but any such
attempt was foredoomed. Yola hated to be soothed, and now she had a
legitimate grievance: the disappearance of her father. "Don't try to
shush me, buzzard-beak! He was here this morning! I saw him on the
phone, remember? Then you found out he was from the graveyard--and he
disappeared. I'll bet he's in one of these meat-cans right here. You
rubbed him out so he couldn't talk!"

Thank God for her vociferous loyalty! If anyone ever did 'rub him out'
Yola would guarantee a miserable existence for the murderer. The entire
crowd was staring at her and Black now, much to the undertaker's
discomfort. Die a little, funeral man! Fisk thought sadistically.

Fisk sat up quietly. Flowers sprayed to the floor as he teetered
dizzily, but no one noticed. Good--he was even equipped with fancy black
shoes that fit. Nothing cheap about the Deep Space Memorial Chapel!

Yola continued to harangue the mortified mortician. "Fake outfit... damn
taxidermist... slaughterhouse... stinking corpses... gyp deal..."

Fisk climbed out of the casket and clung to it, steadying himself. He
needed a shot of his circulatory medication, but knew he had to hang on
for a few minutes more. Once he got to the Fusion he could call Dr.
Bickel. Right now he had to make the supreme effort.

He took a breath and cast loose. He wobbled, stumbled, and almost fell,
brushing against a Bereaved. The man glanced at him, obviously taking
him for another mourner, and made way. Fisk found a handkerchief tucked
neatly in his breast pocket--a genuine nylon handkerchief!--and used it
to mop his face as he barged through the group. He probably looked as
much like a simultaneously bereaved and outraged relative as it was
possible to be.

And he was out. He toyed for an irrational moment with the notion of
finding a substitute for the coffin, either a dummy or another corpse,
but fortunately realized that this was a delusion of his malfunctioning
brain. He was lucky just getting away.

All the way out to the car he could hear Yola's shrill exclamations:
mortuary pornography.

"Oh, Mr. Centers, it's so lovely!" Mrs. Pontimer said through her tears.
"He looked just as if he were sleeping, and all those pretty flowers,
and Mr. Black was so nice, and Dr. Bickel too--I know I could never have
found such wonderful people without your help. And then the burial in
your beautiful memorial gardens with the butterflies. I know ten
thousand dollars is a lot to pay for a funeral, but it was worth it
to--to--"

Fisk was glad she was in no condition to perceive his reaction. Nice Mr.
Black! Ten thousand dollars? The insurance had covered the massive debt
remaining on the burial facilities, of course, so that much was indeed a
bargain. But the flowers had cost $5630 alone--what incredible lucre for
"human warmth"! The musicians--Fisk couldn't remember at the moment
where they had come in--had run another three thousand, union minimum.
Plus other incidentals somehow not included in the all-inclusive main
package. All told, the funeral come to just about twenty thousand
dollars, despite Fisk's valiant efforts to hold costs down.

He had paid the difference himself, rather than see his client wiped
out.

"So lovely!" Mrs. Pontimer repeated. Fisk new that it was the claim of
the funeral trade that it was only delivering what the people wanted. It
seemed that this was true, at least with respect to Mrs. Pontimer.

"Yes, lovely," Fisk agreed dutifully, thinking of what Mr. Pontimer had
gone through in the undertaker's morgue to achieve that grandeur for the
display. Embalming, trocar, fang... but it had made him look better in
death than he had in life. There did seem to be comfort in appearances,
and the widow had indeed formed a therapeutic Memory Picture. Thus Black
had delivered every part of the promised service.

Fisk shook his head. He wasn't sure he could distinguish right from
wrong.

Yola had a message for him at home. "The ghoul wants you to call him
back."

Fisk gestured her away. "Black has his money. I'm quitting the business.
I'll sell candy corn on the street if I have to; I won't deal with the
funeral trade anymore, any part of it. Just be thankful he didn't press
charges against us, after you--"

"So call him up and tell him off," she said, punching the number. "Do I
have to do everything for you?" Before Fisk could stop it, Black's face
was on the screen.

The mortician gave him no chance to martial his sentiments. "I'll speak
to the point, Mr. Centers," he said suavely. "I had thought you to be a
typical cemetery salesman, but further information has enlightened me. I
respect your motives and commend your success; you did economize
substantially. But I must advise you that you are hopelessly naive about
the profession. Had you been frank with me at the outset you would have
discovered that our purposes are not antagonistic."

"Now look here, Black--" Fisk began angrily.

"Tell Mrs. Pontimer to join a memorial society. Her own disposition can
be prepaid for less than five thousand dollars total, including a
conservative floral tribute."

Fisk sat down suddenly. "You mean I could have saved--"

"And you yourself seem better suited to employment with the Death
Insurance Agency, Mr. Centers. I have taken the liberty of recommending
your name to their personnel office as a claims investigator. You do
seem to have a talent for getting into the back rooms." He smiled
briefly. "Good day." Black's face faded out.

"Death insurance?" Yola demanded. "What's he talking about?"

Fisk shook his head wearily. "I don't know either. But I have the
sinking feeling that ghouls give good advice, when they give it at all.
I do need a new job. I suppose this insurance outfit will contact me."

The phone lighted.

CHAPTER 5
---------

Yola opened the phone line before Fisk could stop her, as she always
did. Sometimes he was caught eating, and sometimes cleaning up in the
foamer. This time, fortunately, he was fed and clothed, so for once
avoided the embarrassment of a stranger's cynosure.

A fat man stared into the room. "Yola Centers?" he inquired.

"You mean it's for me?" she cried, girlishly flattered.

"For you and your father," the man said, smiling. "I'm Brown of the
Death Insurance Agency. Mr. Black of Deep Space Memorial Chapel
recommended you and your father as suitable prospects for our claim
department."

"Us?" Yola exclaimed. "Not just him?"

Fisk, about to take over the dialogue, paused. He had been anticipating
the call from DIA without knowing what to expect, but he hadn't thought
of expecting this. Maybe Yola would be able to get more pertinent
information than he could. She was certainly more forward.

"What does it pay?" she asked.

"Twenty-five hundred dollars a week to start," Brown said. "No upper
limit for really qualified personnel. But our standards of competence
are stringent, and you may find it difficult to--"

"Well, okay," she said. "And how much for him?"

Fisk choked, but Brown wasn't fazed. "This is exactly the type of nerve
we require. But in this case the figure is for the team. I know it isn't
much--but we can't use you alone, unfortunately."

"I knew there was a catch," she muttered. "But there'd better be a raise
pretty fast."

"Excellent," Brown said. "Here is the prospectus on your first
assignment." And the mailfax issued a sheet.

Fisk made ready to formulate an objection, but his fifty-year-old brain
couldn't marshal his thoughts rapidly enough.

"I hope you are successful," Brown said. "I shall transfer your first
month's salary to your account. Sincerely--" and he faded.

"But I don't know anything about whatever it is!" Fisk cried belatedly.

"So hit their lit, silly," Yola said, heading for the fooder.

Fisk sighed and read it. Slowly he began to understand.

"Life" insurance was a death benefit payable to the survivors of the
insuree, so that they might exist despite the loss of income brought
about by the person's demise. The insuree had to die to collect.

"Death" insurance was the opposite. In this age it was possible--and,
indeed, commercially feasible--to reanimate the dead. The insuree was by
this policy guaranteed the right to stay dead, in whole or in part, once
his mortal term was over. The certainty of death had become one of
humanity's most important rights. DIA would spare no expense, up to the
face value of the policy, to see that no insuree lived again against his
will.

"Morbid," Yola said appreciatively. "I'll work for 'em, but you'll never
catch me taking out a policy on my death!"

"I don't know," Fisk said. "Consider the ghosts of the past. Human
spirits who were not allowed to rest, and had to exist in misery after
their decease. Their dearest wish was to be allowed to die completely.
If I were in such a situation--"

"Ghosts!" she said witheringly. "Have you taken your anti-senility pill
this month, Fisky?"

"The medication I take is for my circulatory condition--" he began, but
gave it up. She was forever teasing him about his infirmities, chief of
which was his age. Four and a half times hers. Next to that, she rebuked
his slight obesity, that she claimed made him weigh four and a half
times as much as she. She liked to imply that he was also stupid, and
should have retired from active life two decades ago. She was, in short,
a typical daughter, despite her recent adoption, and in his most secret
heart he rather appreciated her little concerns.

"Have lunch," she said, shoving a hi-calorie, lo-vitamin strawberry
splurge at him. "Fat old idiots don't need a balanced diet."

Fisk tooled the Fusion into the parking cavern of Exotic Disposals, Inc.
"You know what to do?" he asked nervously.

"Fisky, after ten years at state institutions as a homeless waif, I'm a
pro at sneakery," Yola said confidently. "Just do your part and it's
quack soup."

"They'll make quack soup of us if they catch on," he warned her. "The
business they're in--"

"Aw, they're clean," she said with less confidence. "You'll see."

"I sincerely hope so," he said with a shiver.

They got out and walked up the ramp to the entrance. "Now stand close
behind me," Fisk murmured.

"You don't have to tell me! Think I'm as dumb as you are? Pull in your
fat pos--"

"Sh!"

The screen came on as they stepped on the access plate. "Identity and
mission," a voice demanded.

"Fisk Centers, salesman." He knew his image was being checked against
city directory files.

"Product."

"Preparation Creme, miniaturization. Srinkfit brand."

There was a pause for verification. Fisk wasn't worried about that
aspect; he was at this moment a legitimate agent of Srinkfit and was so
registered, even though this was merely his cover identity.

The gate opened. Fisk stepped inside--with Yola in lockstep behind him,
so that the electronic counter would pick up only one body. After the
gate closed, Yola split away and hurried down a side passage while Fisk
proceeded slowly toward the purchasing office. Stage one had been
navigated successfully.

"All right, Srinkfit--strut your stuff," the purchaser said. He was a
man of about Fisk's age and size, with a bald-wig concealing what was
probably an unfashionably thick head of hair. There were hard lines
around his eyes and mouth. The name on his identity plaque was
Exunt--probably a business moniker.

"We offer a superior grade preparation creme that will match or exceed
the tolerances on your present brand and provide better resolution,"
Fisk said, spieling off his memorized opening sentence. He had learned
that, in the course of assorted efforts to sell sundry products: get
that opening down pat, to break the ice and abate stage fright. The rest
was better done extemporaneously, but not the start. "It costs more, of
course--but the enhancement of quality in your end product more than
justifies this."

"Document your claim," Exunt said cynically.

"That would take several hours, as you know," Fisk said. "I am prepared
to leave a sample on speculation--"

"Uh-uh. We do top-grade work here, and use no products on spec. Unless
Srinkfit posts a performance bond--"

Fisk put on the no-no expression, another sales standby. "Not unless we
oversee the operation."

The purchaser stood up, smiling. "Perhaps we can do business. Bring your
sample to the lab."

"But I'm a salesman, not a chemist," Fisk protested, though this was
exactly what he wanted.

Exunt punched a number on his phone. The SRINKFIT coat-of-arms appeared
on the screen, replaced after a moment by the pretty answering-service
girl.

"Will you accept Fisk Centers as overseer for a sample run of your
preparation creme in Exotic Disposals accredited laboratory, five
hundred thousand dollar performance bond?" Exunt inquired nonchalantly.

She did bat an eyelash, but only one. "One moment, please." She punched
a coding on her own board. A green light came on. "Yes, your query was
expected. We will."

Fisk stared. "You will?" He hoped he wasn't overdoing the surprise.

"You're new at this game, aren't you," Exunt said. "Most legitimate
companies will go along with us. We run a clean shop here. The
performance bond is merely to protect our clients." He showed the way to
the lab.

Exotic Disposals did seem to be legitimate, Fisk thought, as he rode the
hall belt. Exunt's every reaction was forthright. But Yola's report
would be the one that counted. How was she doing now?

Yola ducked into the first available niche after she separated from
Fisk. She touched the top button on her dress. A faint pinging indicated
that she was not under electronic surveillance at the moment.

She poked her head out and looked down the passage. All clear. She
stepped onto the near belt just as though she belonged, proceeding
toward the cleaning depot. She had memorized the layout of the
building--a real chore, as it was large and intricate--so knew where she
was going. DIA intelligence had ascertained the location of all the
electronic checkpoints as of the past month, and her route was
calculated to avoid these.

Except for one. There was screen-beam across the entrance to the depot,
and she could not pass it without setting off an alarm. So she waited.

In a few minutes she heard a machine coming down the hall behind her.
All it needed to do was ride the belt, but it was too stupid to turn off
its wheels, so it was riding and wheeling, thereby making double time.
She flattened herself against the side and let it pass. It was a
sweeper, its brush-rollers drawn up, its dust-bags loaded like the
pollen-sacs of a honeybee.

Yola shook her head. No chance there. The screen-beam would register the
sweeper's precise outline, and sound the alarm if anything were added.

It looked as if this would not be a quick mission. She hoped dear, dull
Fisk was holding up his (fat) end.

"Frank, this is Fisk Centers of Srinkfit," the purchaser said. "Try this
preparation creme on your next client and let me know how it turns out.
He'll remain for the duration, overseeing."

"Sure," Frank said. He was a freckle-faced youngster apparently in his
teens. "Got two in the can now; want a control?"

"Excellent!" Exunt said. He departed.

Frank hauled on a long drawer. Within it was a naked frozen corpse of an
old man, staring up. "Cancer," Frank said nonchalantly. "Allergic to
anticarcinogens, by the look of him. Sad." He slid the body into a
defrost chamber.

The second drawer had a younger man. "Traffic fatality. See, his rib
cage is bashed in. Probably reached the hospital too late for complete
revivification, and his relatives decided to write him off. Or maybe he
had a death insurance policy; you'd be surprised how many kooks do."
This one went into an adjacent melter while Fisk maintained a straight
face. Did these people suspect his real identity? "Pick your subject and
trot out our product; we'll have to work fast to keep them both
percolating simultaneously."

Fisk swallowed and produced his jar of Srinkfit Creme. He doubted that
he would ever become acclimatized to this particular business.

The melters were efficient. In a few minutes both corpses had been
thawed and were ready for processing. Frank took Fisk's jar and opened
it. "Which one?"

"The--older," Fisk said, hoping this was not going to be as gruesome as
he feared. He had been well briefed, but...

Frank put one hand into a pocket suiter. The machine hummed. Now he wore
a skintight rubberoid glove. He transferred the jar and gloved his other
hand similarly. Then he scooped out a gob of creme, rubbed it between
his palms, and smeared it over the body of the old man. He worked
efficiently, with marvelously quick yet gentle hands, so that within a
minute the entire corpse gleamed damply. Fisk could see already that
this unprepossessing young man was master of his specialty.

Frank changed gloves and did the same with the other subject, using his
regular brand of lubricant. "Okay, gentlemen--into the hopper with you
both!" He slid each corpse into an orifice of a large machine, and
closed the two doors.

Fisk let out his breath. He had been afraid he would have to watch the
evisceration, and he knew his stomach would not hold still for that. "So
you do it mechanically," he said.

"Sure. In the old days they had to do it all by hand, because no machine
was delicate enough, and it was pretty grim. Had to wear a wet-suit to
keep the gore off. But we've had the one deboner for a couple of years,
and liked it so well we bought a second, just a couple of weeks ago.
Cyborg, you know--animate brain instead of a computer. Can run rings
around any true robot. You know what they say: a machine doesn't care. A
cyborg does."

"And these machines remove the--the contents--without damage?"

"Sure. System is based on the old tsanstsay--the Indian shrunken heads.
You know how they cut off the--"

"Yes," Fisk said quickly. He had read about that process just yesterday,
preparing for his mission, while Yola pored over her own homework for
the same purpose. Today it was considered chic in some circles to have
the entire body shrunk similarly and preserved for posterity. Thus the
success of companies such as this one, catering to the current fashion.
Fisk had absorbed a lot more than he cared to know about exotic modes of
death and disposition, and understood that competition between
specialist outfits was fierce. "What happens to the bones... and stuff?"

"Oh, let's see," Frank said, checking a list. "Old man gets cremated.
Young one--fed into a converter to fission into electric power."

"What--blood and all?" Fisk asked with simulated surprise. What he
really wanted was information on the specific disposition of the brain
and nervous system. But such a question might alert Frank to Fisk's real
mission. That was the very last thing he wanted. He had no desire to be
shoved into the deboning machine.

"Everything. Strict regulations about that, and we honor them
scrupulously. Those remains get packaged here and shipped to cremation
and fission plants and we get a receipt. So there's no question."

It certainly seemed straightforward. More so than the anonymous tip that
had made DIA suspicious of Exotic Disposals. Was this a false trail?

The two sinister machines with their animate brains completed their work
and disgorged the products.

Fisk braced himself--but the change was so great that he could make no
emotional connection between what he saw and what he knew it was. The
bodies had been replaced by flat mannequins cut from soggy cardboard, in
appearance. Human skins, emptied of bones, muscles and organs.

There was a noise as a disposal vat trundled up to accept those
"contents" from the first deboner. Fisk averted his eyes as the stuff
slurped from a side vent in the machine, down a chute, and splashed into
the wheeled container. The smell was faint but unpleasantly suggestive.
Frank put an identification tag on the collector, so there would be no
mistake about the disposition of this particular mess, and let it go.

"Now for boiling," Frank said. "This is where the salve really counts."
He slid the skins into a tank of fluid, sealed it, and turned up the
heat. It was a pressure cooker. The gauge mounted to fifty pounds per
square inch and stayed there.

"No need to separate 'em for this stage," Frank explained in response to
Fisk's questioning glance. "The creme is absorbed into the skin by now,
and no transfer occurs. But this'll take a while. Can't rush it. Let's
eat."

Eat! Fisk wondered if he could.

Yola came to life at the sight of the third machine. It was a refuse
collector. A large vat mounted on little wheels. She jumped toward it,
lifted the lid, and climbed in, letting the cover down on top of her.
Now she could pass the screen beam without distorting the outline of the
machine.

It was dark inside, and cramped and uncomfortable, and the smell was
ghastly. Her feet skidded on moist sticks, and something warm sloshed
over her toes. She repressed her lively imagination, not caring to
speculate what sort of garbage she perched on.

The machine trundled to a stop. Yola pushed up the lid and clambered
out.

Just in time! The vat tilted, pouring its lumpy contents into a cavity
in the floor. Bones, blood and tattered meat. Water sprayed from side
vents, sloshing out the vat and washing the gory residue into the hole.
Then a plastic cover passed over the floor-aperture, and the refuse
machine backed out into the passage, intent on its next grisly
collection.

The plastic rose out of the floor, manifesting as a complete sealed
container. A tiny tug-robot pushed it to a stamping machine that burned
a programmed address into the top, working from a tag left by the vat.
Then the box went into a mailing chute.

Who would want a package like that, she wondered, her stomach churning.
The fooder-machine supply company? She glanced at her feet and saw a
thick red stain on both shoes' toes.

She kicked them off, peeled off her socks, and set the mess against the
wall, a sodden pile. She would finish this mission barefoot.

Now to business. This room was the center of Exotic Disposals' cleanup
network. The large cleaners and carryvats had to use the main halls, but
there were many small service tunnels extending to every section of the
building. Those were what she needed.

She opened her dress. Strapped to her skinny torso were twenty tiny
machines, each the size of a mouse. She snapped loose the first, touched
the activation button, and watched its miniature wheels buzz about. Just
like a cleaning sweeper, only smaller. It was in working order.

She carried it to the nearest cleaner-tube and popped it inside. "Go,
go, eegmouse!" she whispered. "Go make me a sensational recording!"

The mouse spun its wheels until they found purchase, then scooted upward
along the curving tunnel. It knew what to do.

Yola snapped loose her other mice and fed them into all the tubes and
passages she could find. Now the job was getting done.

Fisk was hardly hungry, but was happy to get away from the gruesome lab
for a while. He hoped Yola had managed to stay out of trouble. By this
time her eegmice should have made their recordings and returned to her.
The information was in; all they had to do was get it out. She would
have to watch for him, so as to rejoin him in lockstep as he stepped out
through the exit screen. Then the several patterns would be compared to
those on file at DIA headquarters, and the accuracy of the charge would
be proven or disproven.

All simple enough in theory--provided Yola remained undetected.
Unfortunately, she was a magnet for trouble.

He managed to consume a pseudolettuce sandwich and gulp down some milk.
To his surprise, the food helped settle his stomach. They returned to
the lab.

The cooking was done. The limp skin mockups had shrunk to barely a
quarter of their prior size. They were rubbery and pale as Frank checked
them and bundled them into the curing ovens.

This stage, too, was mercifully secluded. Fisk watched the dials that
indicated temperature, humidity and abrasive application, and saw the
items tumbling about within the ovens like so much old fashioned
laundry, and wondered again how Yola was doing. Probably waiting
impatiently for him.

At last the almost-finished hides emerged. Frank stretched them out on
the mounting boards, inserted small stretcher frameworks, and closed off
the openings. Two tiny hairless mannequins rather like unfinished dolls
lay there.

"Now comes the acid test," Frank said, meaning it literally. Each figure
was fogged with preparatory acid to bring out its surface qualities.

And the doll-sized old man looked more realistic than the doll-sized
young man. "Have to confess," Frank said. "You do have a superior
preparation creme. That's the best-looking shrink I've done this month!"

"Fine," Fisk said. "Notify Mr. Exunt, and you'll be able to use it from
now on."

"Of course there's still some processing--got to insert eyebeads and
teeth to scale, and put on some hair. But it sure looks good."

Fisk was glad this facet had worked out, for it vindicated his pose as
salesman. He would get a real commission from Srinkfit on ED's order,
too.

The shrunken figure would be touched up and dressed up, the real skins
wrapped around artificial man-frames and returned to the grieving
relatives as tangible mementos. It was no more gruesome than embalming
or cremating, actually. Some people kept a jar of human
ashes--cremains--on the mantel; others preferred a more evocative
reminder. Such as a shrink. Perhaps the grandchildren got to play with
it, Fisk thought, saving the price of a doll....

One by one the eegmice whizzed back. Yola deactivated each and snapped
it back into her body harness. Ten were done; eleven, twelve.

There was a noise beyond the main screen-beam. Another cleaner was
coming in, no doubt. She picked up two more mice, unconcerned. Quack
soup!

"I'll take those," a harsh human voice said.

Yola jumped and ran--but there was nowhere to go. She had gotten
careless--and now she was trapped. She tried to hide the two eegmice,
but the Exotic Disposals' security officer obviously recognized them.

Fisk entered the purchaser's office to complete his sale. Two men were
there--and Yola, strangely quiet, in bare feet.

Fisk kept his face straight, knowing that something had gone awry. She
was supposed to have avoided detection, once he siphoned her past the
perimeter.

"No, we haven't touched her," Exunt said. "We let her run her tests,
then picked her up. It was a nice try, but we upgraded our security
since DIA last surveyed. Random spybeams that your telltales don't pick
up. Not your fault at all. Nothing personal; we just don't like
snoopers."

Which explained why the man wasn't angry. ED's new security system had
been tested and found adequate. Meanwhile, the purchaser was calmly
punching a number.

The DIA living-brain emblem flashed on the screen. "We have apprehended
your infiltrators," Exunt said. "Take a look."

Fisk's real boss, Brown came on. "Sorry to embarrass you, ED. We had a
complaint, so we had to investigate."

"We're clean," the security officer said gruffly. "To prove it, we'll
run off your recordings right now. Set up your suspects."

"Done," the DIA man agreed, as though this were routine. The talk was
all friendly and polite, but Fisk was sure this was mere dressing. Death
Insurance and Exotic Disposals were natural enemies.

Yola brought out a mouse and flipped its broadcast switch. Nothing was
audible, but its signal was bleeping out in special DIA code to be
checked against DIA computer files.

"You see?" Exunt said confidently when the mouse clicked off. "If you'd
come to us directly, we would have authenticated--"

"Naturally," Brown said. "And we'd have been accused of collusion. Shall
we check the rest?"

"It's academic," Exunt said, but he gestured to Yola, who produced
another mouse.

They ran through several more, and with each blank Exunt became more
affable, and even the security officer began to smirk. "No point, no
point at all," Exunt said.

"We've got a match," Brown said quietly.

"As I said, we're clean. We always--what?"

"One of our insurees is in one of your machines--alive."

Both ED officials changed color. "Impossible!" Exunt exclaimed. "We have
pedigrees on every cyborg. Nothing like that could happen without my
personal knowledge."

Brown merely looked at him.

Exunt changed color again, more vividly. "I tell you, it's a mistake!"
he cried angrily. "We don't operate that way! We value our reputation!"

The DIA man raised a printout and read it aloud. "Nellie Lockridge.
Deceased suddenly at age 57, processed for compost at your facilities
four months ago." He paused. "We can locate the specific unit now, if
you care to cooperate. Otherwise I regret--"

"Of course we'll cooperate! But it's a mistake!" Now all color had
drained from both ED faces. Fisk appreciated why: possession of an
illicit living brain was technically kidnapping, and if DIA even filed
charges, Exotic's reputation would suffer grievously. And DIA was in
business to file just such charges--when it had a case.

"We're always ready to work with a cooperative company," Brown said with
the smoothness of glasslined steel. "Suppose you open your records to
our representatives, and we'll ascertain the facts of the case."

The facts of the case were that if DIA nailed ED on this one, ED would
very shortly be out of business. It was bargaining over a gun barrel.
"Yes," Exunt said after a pained pause, glancing at his security officer
for affirmation.

"All we want is the truth," Brown said, and now he was the affable one.
"And our client's death." He faded out.

Exunt seemed to have aged five years in as many minutes. "Which unit?"

Yola checked the mouse against the EEG identified. "We'll have to run it
through again," she said. "I didn't see where all the mice went."

They ran it through again, this time tracing the route of that one
eegmouse and noting the EEG's it picked up as it sneaked through the
cleaning conduits within range of a cyborg. It had a pattern-sensing
program that urged it toward any mechanically mounted living brain,
until the recording was made. It also avoided light and normal living
brains--in short, people--as a secretive measure. This made it extremely
difficult to follow.

But half an hour later they had vectored in on the suspect: the new
deboner Fisk had seen in operation earlier. They checked the EEG
independently. It matched that of Nellie Lockridge, the DIA insuree.

Hands shaking, the purchaser punched for his records, scanning them
rapidly. "We're guilty of possession, not collusion," he said, as if
fighting a rearguard action. "I want it on record that we assisted in
clarifying this matter. We'll pay reparations, of course--but we don't
want any publicity."

Straws. "DIA is interested in eliminating the guilty party, whoever that
may be," Fisk said carefully. "If the evidence indicates that Exotic
Disposals is an unwitting user, there would be no need to bring its name
into the legal proceedings."

Exunt nodded gratefully. "We bought this unit complete from General
Cyborg just under a month ago, and took delivery ten days later. It has
given good service since. The papers are all in order, as you can see."
He passed the license, tax forms and pedigree over to Fisk.

"But the EEG prints do not match," Fisk pointed out. "The papers are in
order--but the wrong brain is in that unit. The brain of our client,
Miss Lockridge. Don't you verify the EEG's of your cyborgs?"

Exunt's face was red. "Normally, yes. But our verification man was on
vacation the week that unit arrived. We had urgent need to put it in
service--business has picked up recently, owing to our successful
advertising program--and General Cyborg's credentials are impeccable.
There was no hint--"

"Sloppy security," Yola muttered. She had not forgiven the security man
for catching her.

"Let's trace the brain itself," Fisk said. "Where did GC get it?"

"From Organic Computers. OC obtains brains from a variety of sources,
mostly volunteer or paid. Cash in advance to needy families. We've done
business with them--" He paused, realizing how it sounded. "Not in this
case! We composted Miss Lockridge's body entire, as specified on the
manifest. Brain and all!"

Fisk shook his head. "Mr. Exunt, Miss Lockridge was active in the Floral
industry. Her will specified that her remains should be composted and
used to fertilize flowers. Exotic Disposals handled that account--and
now her brain has surfaced in an Exotic Disposals cyborg unit. You had
opportunity and motive, because a cyborg reconstituted by a fresh brain
is far cheaper than a new one. Your facilities are certainly capable of
accomplishing this. I'm afraid DIA will have to bring suit against you
for--"

"No!" Exunt cried, sweating. "We are innocent! How can we convince you?"

"Why not ask the brain, Dummy?" Yola inquired.

Both men stared at her. "Is that possible?" Fisk asked.

"Yes, certainly," Exunt said. "But the brain may not choose to
communicate. I--"

"You're afraid it'll tell the truth," Yola said.

Exunt looked almost ready to kill. "I'm not afraid of the truth! Only--"

"Only what, kidnapper?" Yola demanded, enjoying his discomfiture.

"Well, the duty to which that particular unit has been assigned--it
might be upset about--"

"Deboning," Fisk said, understanding. "That is a noxious job for a lady
who loved flowers!"

"Exactly," Exunt said. "She might wish to hurt us--"

"Especially after you stole her brain!" Yola said.

"Face it," Fisk said briskly. "Nothing she can say can hurt you worse
than a DIA suit. And she just might clear you--if you are innocent."

"Ha!" Yola exclaimed.

Exunt was now immune to her jibes. "We have no choice."

They traipsed down to Frank's lab. "Frank, this man is a DIA
investigator," Exunt said. "It seems our new cyborg deboner is--ah well,
we shall have to question it. Can you plug in a typer?"

"Sure," Frank said, staring at Fisk. Evidently the young man didn't like
being investigated.

They plugged in the typer. "This is attuned to the impulses of a touch
typist," Exunt explained. "A diminishing breed, today, since most
records are voicetaped, but conservative industries like the Floral
still do use them. Even if she's had no experience, she can still pick
out the letters two-finger, as it were. It may be tedious, but--"

"How do we make our query?" Fisk asked, alert for some fakery. A lot was
riding on this interrogation, and he had never before talked with the
half-dead.

"We plug in this voicetaper," Exunt said, doing so. He handed the mike
to Fisk. "Perhaps you had better--"

Fisk steeled himself. "Miss Lockridge--do you understand me? Please type
your reply, if--"

The typer clattered silently--a vaguely unnerving process, but suitable
to this interview. "OF COURSE."

"Hey, it really works!" Yola cried. "We're talking with a pickled--"

Fisk trod on her bare toe. "Miss Lockridge, I am Fisk Centers, of the
Death Insurance Agency. You have a policy with us--"

"I CERT INLY DO! WH T TOOK YOU SO LONG?"

"Alive and sane," Exunt breathed prayerfully.

"But not much of a typist," Yola said.

"It's a defective typer," Frank said. "Stuck in upper case, and the
letter A's missing."

"DEFECTIVE?" the brain inquired. " T CONSOLOD TED BLOSSOMS OUR M CHINES
WERE NEVER DEFECTIVE! WE H D L%& TYPERS, ND**"

"No problem," Frank said easily. "We can read it, so long as you stay
clear of the numbers, and you can substitute another vowel for A."

"VERY WELL. THERE MUST BE MORE TH N ONE OF YOU SPE KING**I'LL TRY U.
SPEUKING**IS THUS SUTISFUCTORY?"

"Yes, certainly," Fisk agreed. "There are four of us here--me, Centers,
the purchaser, Mr. Exunt, my daughter Yola--"

"THUT IS FIVE ULREUDY, YOUNG MUN! YOU UND THE PURCHUSER UND YOUR
DUUGHTER YOLU UND CENTERS UND**"

"Let's get on with it!" Exunt cried, exasperated.

"I am Centers. I'll try to identify the others when they speak! That was
Exunt just now, who is the purchaser."

"CERTUINLY. BUT YOU HUVEN'T EXPLUINED YOUR DELUY."

"We received un unonymous--I mean, an anonymous tup--tip!--that Exotic
Disposals was bootlegging some of our clients to life, but lack of
detailed information impeded our investigation. However, now that we--"

"You believed an anonymous tip?" Exunt demanded.

Fisk gestured him to silence. "That was an interjection by Mr. Exunt.
Now that we have located you, Miss Lockridge, you may be assured that we
shall honor our commitment fully. The guilty parties shall be punished,
and you shall die, as is your legal right, and--

"WUIT! WUIT! I DON'T WUNT TO DIE UGUIN! I WUS MURDERED THE FIRST TIME,
UND I DIDN'T WUNT THUT, EITHER!"

"Well, of course you don't have to--" Fisk said as Exunt brightened. "I
mean, your wishes of whatever nature will of course be honored, and a
full investigation will be made into your death as well as your
reanimation. DIA will protect you from exploitation. That's what you
paid your premiums for. But first it is necessary for us to ask you some
questions. To establish the guilt in this matter. For the crimes
committed against you. Because you were supposed to be--"

The typer was already going at a merry clip. Miss Lockridge was a touch
typist, all right. "I ENTERED THE HOSPITUL FOR U ROUTINE REJUVINUTION,
MR. CENTERS. BUT U MUN ENTERED MY ROOM THE NIGHT BEFORE THE OPERUTION. I
THOUGHT HE WUS U DOCTOR, SO I DIDN'T OBJECT. HE GUVE ME U SHOT**UND WHEN
I WOKE I WUS IN SOME LUBOORUTORY, NOT UT THE HOSPITUL. THEN I KNEW I HUD
BEEN KIDNUPPED."

"But you died at the hospital!" Fisk protested. "Our records show that
your body was composted by Exotic Disposals--the very same company
that--"

"NO. MY BODY MUY HUVE BEEN RETURNED TO THE HOSPITUL, BUT NOT MY BRUIN. I
BELIEVE U PSEUDO-BRUIN WUS IMPLUNTED IN THE SKULL OF THE CORPSE. I WUS
TURNSFERRED TO THIS MUCHINE UND SHIPPED HERE."

"The brain in that client was genuine!" Exunt exclaimed. "I assure you
we are in a position to tell the difference between--"

But Fisk was on another tack. "They must have held you in that lab for
some time. Did you see--?"

"NO, THEY PERFORMED THE TRUNSFER IMMEDIUTELY, UND UFTER U FEW DUYS I
URRIVED HERE."

"But that's impossible!" Fisk said. "You were in the hospital four
months ago, and this unit arrived here three weeks ago. Over three
months are missing--"

"Men are so dumb!" Yola said. "They must have put her in stasis,
idiots!"

"Yes!" Exunt agreed. "She would not have been aware of that! Miss
Lockridge, how much time do you judge has passed since you entered the
hospital?"

"CERTUINLY NOT FOUR MONTHS, YOUNG MUN. FOUR WEEKS, POSSIBLY, OR U LITTLE
LESS."

"That doesn't get you off the hook," Fisk told Exunt. "Exotic Disposals
could have saved her brain until--"

"But we didn't!" Exunt protested. "We never got her brain, by her own
statement! Just her body, with a brainsponge in it--or rather, with the
original cyborg deboner brain transplanted. That was dead, of course, so
we couldn't take its EEG. So in good faith we composted it--"

"Maybe," Fisk said, swayed. "Miss Lockridge, do you have any clue who
kidnapped you? Someone must have--"

"ONLY THE LUBORUTORY TECHNICIUN. YOUNG MUN NUMED FRUNK**"

Exunt wheeled on Frank, crestfallen. "What?"

"FRUNK MERRYWHETHER. I HEURD HIS NUME WHEN THEY THOUGHT I WUS
UNCONSCIOUS UND THEN I WUS UNCONSCIOUS. DOES THUT HELP?"

"This is Frank, er Frank Emberdinck," Exunt said, looking faint.

Frank was no less relieved. "You know I don't know brain-planting, boss.
I'm strictly a shrinker. But there is another Frank in the mortuary
business. I knew him in pre-mort, until he split for nerve surgery. Real
sharp technician, but they caught him stealing from the school lab and
washed him out. I don't remember his last name, but I think he got a job
at Acme Elims."

"Acme Eliminations!" Exunt shouted. "Our chief competitor! Just the kind
that would hire a dishonest tech! Those utter bleeps tried to frame us!
Intercepting our delivery and substituting a bootleg brain in our unit,
then tipping DIA anonymously!"

"We shall check this out, of course," Fisk said. Certainly one company
trying to do the other in, whichever way it went. But by the time DIA
finished, the truth would be known.

He returned to the cyborg. "Miss Lockridge, your preliminary testimony
has been invaluable. But now we must see to your own comfort. We can of
course keep your brain alive, but you will have to remain in a cyborg
unit of some type. Perhaps you could transfer to a flower mill--"

"FLOWER NURSERY," she corrected him. "BUT I UM QUITE SUTISFIED HERE."

"You are?" Exunt asked, amazed. "I presumed a woman of your
sensitivities--"

"I USED TO LIKE THE IDEU OF TURNING UGLY PEOPLE INTO BEUUTIFUL FLOWERS,"
she typed. "BUT IN U FEW DUYS THE FLOWERS SPOIL UND TURN UGLY TOO, SO IT
BECOMES FUTILE. ON THE OTHER HUND, WHEN UN UGLY PERSON IS CHUNGED INTO U
LOVELY LITTLE DOLL**"

"Yes, yes, of course!" Exunt agreed, mopping his face. "ED's philosophy
exactly! Miss Lockridge, if there is anything we can do for you--"

"IF YOU WOULD PLUG IN SOME GOOD MURDER MYSTERIES FOR MY OFF HOURS," she
typed. "IT DOES GET DULL WITH NO LIVING BODY...."

"Right away!" Exunt cried. "I'm a gothics fan myself! I'll bring you
mysteries, historicals, science fiction--"

"NO SCIENCE FICTION! I'M U SENSIBLE REUDER," she typed primly.

"It was a frame," Brown agreed, back at the DIA office. "We are suing
Acme Eliminations, and the State is joining with us because of the
murder charge, and I rather think Acme will be the next eliminated. Good
job!"

"That was fun," Yola said. "What's our next case?"

Brown put on the sorry-bad-news face. "I regret there will be no more
cases for you. Your cover has been blown, and now every suspect will be
alert. Had you completed your mission without exposure--"

Yola looked at Fisk speculatively. "You know, if you were a cyborg,
maybe you could hold a job without muffing it. How about--"

"Excuse me, please," Fisk said politely to Brown. "I have to make an
exotic disposal." Then he took off after her, lifting his spanking hand.

CHAPTER 6
---------

"We can't afford it," Fisk Centers said, sounding even to himself like a
broken record.

"Oh, Fisky!" Yola cried, putting on her woebegone-waif look. "It's only
a little one!"

"Even a little robot carries a big price tag! And we don't need it. Now
come on."

He half expected a crowd-drawing tantrum of the type his pre-teen
hellion specialized in when balked, but evidently she wasn't in the
mood. She came along with only token drag.

The truth was Fisk would dearly have liked to own one of the displayed
household robots. They were convenient, and Yola was consistently expert
at making a mess of their apartment. But the habits of a lifetime of
comfortable living had left him ill-equipped to deal with his present
poverty. Particularly now that he was trying to support a daughter whose
lifetime of poverty had left her well-equipped with comfortable-living
appetites. So the regretful "no" loomed large in his vocabulary.

A street phone lighted. "Excuse me, Father-Daughter," a man's pleasant
voice said. "Can I interest you in a respectable cash contract?"

Fisk snorted. "These shyster loaners are like prostitutes soliciting on
the--"

"Daddy!" Yola stage-whispered warningly. It wasn't that she possessed
even token ignorance of gutter vocabulary, but she liked to pretend, for
the sake of appearances, that Fisk did.

"One moment!" the man on the phone called. "I'm not a loaner or a
hawker! I'm an employer!"

Fisk and Yola halted in place. The one thing that would solve most of
their problems was a well-paying job. "What type of work?" Fisk asked,
turning to face the screen.

"Advertising," the man said resonantly. He was a nattily dressed
rejuvenated executive with a direct stare.

"How much money?" Yola demanded, always first with the basics.

"That's hard to say, precisely, but it should be more than adequate. Why
don't you step into my office and we'll discuss it?"

"Not so fast," Fisk said, intrigued but wary. He had been disappointed
in sales-type positions many times before, and advertising was certainly
a form of sales. "What product?"

"I can't discuss it on the street" the man said, and right away the very
notion sounded ridiculous. Nobody talked business on the street! "Come
to the General Transport and ask for Matrans. It may be well worth your
while." He faded.

"Wish I had an offer like that!" a stranger said. Fisk glared at him,
and the man shuffled on.

Then Fisk looked at Yola. "Your antenna are sharper than mine, for this
sort of thing. Is this sucker bait?"

"I thought so until the last," she said. "But General Transport--that's
one of the biggest outfits in the world!"

"Maybe it's a shyster using their name."

"Uh-uh. He didn't give an address, just GT. If it's a fake, we'd know
soon's we walk in and ask."

"Maybe we'd better do that, then."

She nodded thoughtfully. "Transport's got money, that's for sure. Even
their robots get union scale!"

Fisk was more cautious. "It could be a rental office. The building
guarantees nothing."

"Yes it does!" she said excitedly as they walked to the elevator tubes.
"GT guarantees everything on its premises. It wouldn't let a shyster
operate here. These big outfits are very sensitive about image."

True enough. Fisk felt a growing excitement himself. A solicitation on
the street was an unpromising beginning, but not insuperable.

They stepped into the vertical shaft and whisked upward in the antigrav.
The floor markers flashed by: 10, 20, 30, 50, 80, 120. They came to rest
at 148 and stepped out.

The exec was there. "So glad to meet you!" he said with convincing
warmth. "I'm Kirk Dunkling. Call me Kirk."

"Sure, Kirk," Yola agreed loudly.

"Fisk Centers," Fisk said, hoping she wouldn't antagonize the man before
they heard the deal. "My daughter Yola."

"How much money, Kirk?" Yola asked with her normal reticence.

Dunkling showed them into his cubicle. "That depends on the contract. I
think we could offer seventy-five thousand."

"A year?" she said derisively. "That's dinky!"

"For the job. Perhaps two weeks work. And there will probably be
residuals amounting to more than the advance."

"Seventy-five to one hundred fifty thousand for two weeks work?" Fisk
asked incredulously. "What do I have to do?"

"Nothing. The offer is for her."

"Me!" Yola cried, delighted. "You're great, Kirk!"

Now Fisk was really suspicious. "Before we go any farther--"

"It's very simple," Dunkling said quickly, sounding extremely sincere.
"General Transport has developed a new product, and we need an image.
Someone associated with the product, for the ad campaign. The pro actors
won't do, but I think Yola here--"

"Miss Centers," she said primly.

"...is just right. She has these dramatic little ways about her,
especially when she wants something."

"How do you know that?" Fisk asked, for the assessment was right on
target, if euphemistic. Had the man been snooping?

"Fisk, it's my business to notice things about people. Like you being a
one-time man of means, and your daughter being a new acquisition,
probably adopted."

"Now just a--" Fisk started, annoyed.

"I spend several hours a day on the phone, just watching the streets. I
can judge by a person's accent, by his nuances of expression, the way he
carries himself. You have a genteel upbringing, but she has the
state-institution manner. When I spot the person we're looking for--"

"Why not use the employment agency?" Fisk asked. "Or run an ad--since
you're in the ad business."

"Not so simple!" Dunkling said, laughing with assumed naturalness. "The
kind of person we want doesn't normally go to the agency, or answer ads.
For one thing, he may be employed--or underage. But mainly, we require
just the right person--and we are the only judge of the qualities we
need. In this case, a pretty little mischief with expensive tastes."

"Yeah," Yola agreed.

"The product," Fisk said, not convinced. There had to be a catch.

"Right here." Dunkling gestured to a pair of screens standing upright on
the floor. Each was about six feet tall by three wide, supported by a
firm stand.

Dunkling picked up one screen by handles mounted on its side and carried
it across the room, setting it down about a yard from the wall. "Not at
all heavy, you see," he said. He returned to set the other screen near
the opposite wall.

"Sure--I could carry it myself," Yola said. "So what, Kirky?"

"This." Dunkling stepped through one screen.

Fisk blinked and Yola gave a yelp of surprise. For the man had
disappeared.

"Over here," Dunkling said. He was standing beside the other screen.
"Catch on?"

"Matrans!" Fisk exclaimed. "Does that stand for Matter Transmission?"

"It does," Dunkling said, pleased. "The ultimate in transport."

"But it's no good for live things!" Yola objected. "Only dead things."

"It was" Dunkling said, stepping into the second screen. This time
Fisk's head snapped about to cover the emergence across the room. There
was no doubt about it: the man had jumped instantly from one to the
other, alive. "It took our research lab a long time to perfect this
refinement, but here it is at last. Care to try it?"

"No!" father and daughter exclaimed together. There had been so many
horror stories about matter transmission that the subject had become
part of the world folklore. Murders were still committed by shoving the
living victim into a transmitter tuned to some distant location, where
he invariably arrived whole but dead. Circus performers did their acts
above horizontal transmitter planes: the world's deadliest safety nets.
Transmitter technicians were insured, at phenomenal expense, against
loss of life or limb through accidental transmission. If some fool poked
his finger through an active screen and drew it back immediately, that
finger was dead and had to be amputated. It wasn't just loss of
circulation; every cell in it was devoid of life.

"That is the problem we face," Dunkling said seriously. "The average
person has become thoroughly conditioned against live transmission--with
good reason, until now. But we have solved the technical problems--and
now we need to reeducate the market. This requires a sophisticated
series of commercials."

"Not on your life!" Yola cried. "I'm not going through that thing!"

"You can't mistake it for a regular transmitter," Dunkling said. "The
style is completely distinct. This has no personnel guard--because it
needs none. Orientation of screens doesn't matter--see, I can go through
from either side." He poked his arm into the screen from the center
side, and it emerged from the center side of the opposite screen. "No
line-of-sight alignment necessary; jog the screens any which way, it's
still safe. Two people can use it simultaneously, crossing paths. One
using the front route, the other the back. No danger of collision, no
need to wait a turn, no worry about one arriving with two livers, the
other with none."

"It's a fake," Yola said.

But now Fisk was intrigued. "A fake? To what purpose? We're no
prospective market! Such a transmitter set would cost tens of
thousands."

"You try it, then!" she cried with instant temper, pushing him.

Fisk stumbled against the near screen, throwing out his right hand to
catch himself. The hand went through before he stopped.

Appalled, he stood there, looking at his severed forearm in the screen.
There was no pain.

Then a hand grasped his. "Congratulations!" Dunkling said across the
room. He was holding something. It was Fisk's hand and part of his arm.

"Gee, I'm sorry, Daddy," Yola said contritely. I didn't mean to kill
your hand! It's your spanking hand, too."

Which meant that her grief was limited. "It's not dead," Fisk said,
amazed despite what Dunkling had shown them. "It's--over there." He
wiggled his fingers, and the distant hand wiggled.

"You mean it actually works?" Yola asked.

Cautiously, Fisk poked more of his arm through. Sensation remained. Then
he nerved himself, closed his eyes, and put his head through too.

When he reopened his eyes, he was staring into Dunkling's beaming face.
He looked down, and saw nothing but the floor. His legs remained on the
other side of the room, a good fifteen feet distant--yet they continued
to support him.

Fisk jerked back--and was in one piece at his original screen. "Yes, it
works," he said.

"Your brain isn't dead?" Yola asked, chewing one fingernail nervously.
"Not that it'd make any difference--"

But he couldn't spank her here in the GT office.

"Seventy-five thousand dollars!" Yola cried, dancing around their
apartment with the credit voucher in her hand. "Now we can get that
household robot!"

"Now we can live extremely conservatively until the job is done," Fisk
corrected her. "No splurging. We might have to refund."

"You forget I'm the credit winner!" she said.

"You forget I'm your manager. You, like it or not, are a minor. Without
my signature that contract is invalid."

"Pooh!" she pouted.

"Now you get your little bleep on that script and memorize it. If you
want to be an actress, you've got to act."

But privately, Fisk was proud of her. Yola had really come through in
the clutch, demonstrating that she was the girl GT wanted. All she had
to do for the contract was repeat a few cute lines as she danced through
the Matrans screens, showing by manner and demonstration that there
really was no harm in it. If a sweet little imp like her had no fear of
transmission, what sensible adult could retain his ridiculous prejudices
against it?

Actually, it would be months before the ads were broadcast, and it might
be years before significant public response developed. But in time the
change in attitude would occur, and Matrans sales would accelerate.
Getting it started was the big job. General Transport could afford to
take the long view, and thought Yola was the best introduction.

Fisk expected trouble during the takes, but the easygoing ad director
wanted naturalness above all else, and quickly discovered how to get
along with Yola. He praised her constantly. The result was that in two
weeks, the film sequence was complete. The job was done, General
Transport was satisfied, and Fisk and Yola had seventy-five thousand
dollars. Everything was fine.

Fisk resumed his fruitless search for a regular job, knowing that their
windfall would not last indefinitely. Yola, bitten by the drama bug,
joined the relevant actor's union: Commercial Representatives
Organization, Advertising, "K" district, better known acronymically as
CROAK. CROAK was dedicated to the improvement of the lot of actors who
made commercials, euphemistically called "Commercial Representatives."
It was active in public relations and contract review and published a
weekly fax containing news and gossip of the field. CROAK was not an
employment agency, and engaged in no legal transactions, but it did
advise its members on an unofficial basis of their rights and best
interests. The dues were nominal, and Fisk saw no harm in Yola's
membership; it might keep her out of mischief. And if any problem should
arise in connection with the Matrans contract, this was a ready source
of advice.

Not that they anticipated any problems. The job was done, the money paid
over. What could possibly go wrong?

The phone lighted. It was Dunkling. "Oh, hi, Quirk," Yola said as Fisk
hastily stepped into the suiter. He wished she wouldn't tease the man so
directly, but Dunkling seemed to take no notice.

"Good news," the exec said. "International Vacationer is taking a
subsidiary option on the Matrans sequence. You'll have to do a few minor
retakes, of course, to dub in their place names, but that's all."

"How much money?"

"Depends on the contract, which depends on how well the modifications
turn out."

Yola frowned. "That's blackmail, Dunkbunk!"

Still Dunkling took no offense. "Naturally you don't have to do it, and
we can write off their generous fringe..."

"Oh, fudge! When do I report?"

"This afternoon, studio four, 131st floor, Vacationer Building. You'll
be working with International's ad director. But remember: this is an
option. They will proffer a contract later--if they like the takes. As
I'm sure they will."

The screen faded. Yola turned to Fisk. "Joker knows I've got the bug.
More acting, more money--hey, how much do you figure?"

"As I understand options, the complete terms of the contract have
already been fixed and spelled out," Fisk said. "IV will have to
exercise it within a specified time, or the deal lapses. Funny that
Dunkling didn't name the figure--but I suppose he has a conditioned
reflex against talking dollars over the phone, or maybe it's company
policy."

"Or maybe he isn't all that sure they'll take it up," Yola said. "But I
still want to know, even if I have to go to his bleeping office and--"

"Why don't you dial Info and check the standard advance for this sort of
thing," Fisk suggested quickly. "According to our contract, we get fifty
percent and General Transport gets fifty percent of the net proceeds
from any subcontract."

"They get half?" Yola was outraged. "What for? I'm doing the work!"

"Standard practice, it seems," Fisk said. "Prime contractor always takes
half the income from the subsidiaries. We've got no complaint; we signed
it."

"You signed it. It's still a gyp. You were supposed to be looking out
for my interests!" she mumbled, punching the number. When Info answered,
she asked: "What's the standard advance to the artist on a subsidiary
contract on a filmed commercial?"

There was some back and forth, establishing the nature of the ad and the
company involved. Finally the answer came: one hundred fifty thousand
dollars.

"One hundred fifty thousand!" Yola exclaimed, turning to Fisk. Twice
what we got the first time!"

That made him wonder, as he had supposed a prime contract would normally
be for a larger amount than a subcontract. Had General Transport taken
advantage of their naivete to make an inadequate payment? But there was
no point in upsetting Yola with that notion, especially when there was
really no indication that the company had deceived them. Dunkling had
made an offer to a pair of people off the street, and they had accepted;
scale rates for hardened professionals were hardly applicable.
"Remember," he cautioned, "only half of it's ours."

"Yah. That means GT gets a free ride. They get back just as much as they
paid out--and they've still got the series to run! What a hoist!"

"Maybe so," Fisk said tolerantly. "But they are also investing the much
larger expenses of film production, reproduction, distribution and
broadcasting--all on a speculative basis, while our own risk is minimal.
And we're still ahead another seventy-five thousand dollars. And we know
exactly where we stand."

She agreed somewhat grudgingly. Fisk knew that next time she would balk
at accepting a primary contract with this clause included--and he would
support her position. The prime contractor was supposed to make its
profit from sales of the advertised product, not from sales of the
advertising itself.

Yola did the retakes, which consisted principally of her saying
"Honolulu," "Moscow," "Buenos Aires," "Tokyo" and others as she stepped
through the Matrans screen. International Vacationer would dub in the
appropriate backgrounds from their files, and thus adapt the entire
series to their purpose. It was a cooperative effort, since obviously a
live-matter transmitter was useless to a person with nowhere to go, and
travel was tedious unless instantaneous.

In two days, as promised, she was done. International presented her with
two honorary vacations in Australia--it was the slack season for Down
Under--as a goodwill bonus that was completely successful in earning her
goodwill.

Fisk and Yola stepped to Sydney by Matrans, though the GT facilities
were not officially in operation yet. They spent two pleasant weeks
looking at the rare remaining kangaroos, exploring the ruins of the
Great Barrier Reef, and touring Android sheep farms. Accommodations were
first class, and they even had a moderate souvenir allowance. There was
no question about it: it was fun.

Home was a letdown. Fisk still seemed to be unemployable, and Yola had
no responses to her several queries to advertisers listed in the first
CROAK fax. She had gotten the impression from the market report that
spot-commercial character actors were in urgent demand, but the reality
failed to measure up so far.

"And where the bleep's the money from the IV advance?" Yola demanded
angrily when it finally dawned on her that the world was not eager to
utilize her newfound talents.

"Ask Kirk Dunkling," Fisk said.

She phoned Dunkling at his office, but his robot secretary explained
that he was on a business trip. Yola left her query, and the secretary
promised to have Dunkling call back the moment he returned.

A month later she phoned again. After threatening a tantrum, she got
through to the exec. "Why didn't you call back, Smirk? Where's my
money?"

"Oh, didn't I tell you?" he asked innocently. "International Vacationer
hasn't paid yet. They don't voucher their contracts until thirteen weeks
after the commercials are aired. But we'll relay your share the moment
we receive their payment." He faded.

Yola turned indignantly to Fisk, as though he were to blame. "Thirteen
weeks after they use it! And they call that an advance?"

"Maybe CROAK can explain it," Fisk said, surprised himself. Contract
terminology was not to be taken literally, it seemed.

She headed for the fooder, as she always did when under stress. "No--I
don't want to bother them with a stupid question. Vacationer treated us
okay."

"That's what CROAK's there for, Yola." But he knew what she meant.
International Vacationer had given them an excellent two weeks, and Yola
would seem both naive and ungrateful if she inquired too quickly about
their policies as though they were suspect. Her new pride as an actress
wouldn't allow that.

Actually, that pride was not a bad thing, Fisk thought. Yola was less
like a brat than she had been before, and easier to tolerate around the
apartment.

Time passed. Fisk found a job selling fruit-flavored foamer soap, but it
didn't last. His jobs never did, though he always tried his best. Their
family funds diminished. Yola finally got a bit part in a spot mailfax
house ad, but it paid only twenty-five hundred dollars, with no
subsidiary shares available, and was never actually run. "Microdinks!"
she said: the superlative of "dinky."

"When the bleep is that Vacationer loot coming?"

"Don't swear," Fisk muttered, but he wondered too. It was now four
months since International Vacationer had accepted the retakes for the
subcontract--and still those ads had not been aired.

Yola dialed two triple decker licorice-mushroom foamwiches from the
fooder, handed one to Fisk, and turned on the evening play. This was one
of the expensive receivers their assets had been frittered on. Fisk had
fought against it and lost, as it was relevant to Yola's
income-producing propensities. Meanwhile, he had to gird himself to
digest the foamwich without gagging.

A vision coalesced in the center of the room, expanding outward like an
uncorked genie, until its limits coincided with the walls behind the two
watchers. Fisk and Yola were in the scene, but not of it. The four
dimensional image converted their doorway into a large fireplace
inhabited by a smudge-faced but pretty girl.

"Oh, not Cinderella again!" Yola expostulated. She reached to change the
station, but paused as the commercial came on.

Yola stepped through the tall screen prominently labeled MATRANS.
"Paris," she said pertly--and emerged before the Eiffel Tower.

"The IV ad!" Fisk and Yola cried together.

The image-Yola smiled impishly. "I said I'd drop dead before I'd go
through a matter transmitter." She poked a finger through gingerly, and
it wiggled back in the New York setting. "I lied." She faded out, and
the Cinderella set resumed.

Yola skipped to the fireplace and mimicked the ash-strewn girl there.
"Fisk, they're running it! Wasn't I cute? Count off thirteen bleeping
weeks for the money! Maybe now I'll be famous and'll get oodleumpteen
offers! Do you think it'll sell Matrans screens? They cut my bestest
line, where I say if I didn't drop dead before, I'd sure be dead after!
Can we replay tapes so I can watch the series anytime? I sure am a cute
brown tyke, aren't I! Why aren't you saying anything?"

Fisk didn't need to comment. It was Yola's moment.

Yola's business did pick up. Several enterprising companies liked her
style and made inquiries. But she balked at accepting the 50%
subcontract split clause, and they balked at its exclusion. It was
standard in the field. Fisk sided with her; to him it seemed like an
industry-wide conspiracy against actors. But there did not seem to be
much any one or two persons could do about it. He wondered whether CROAK
would be interested in undertaking a class-action suit against the
practice, since it smacked of monopolistic collusion--but surely CROAK
had long since looked into the matter, and would have acted had there
been a substantial case.

If Yola wanted to act in commercials, she had to accept the terms
proffered. She wrestled with the problem for a month, and finally
decided she had no choice. Half a subcontract was better than none.

Then Dunkling called. "We're gearing down for a new project," he said
warmly. "You did so well on Matrans--"

"How much, Jirk?"

"One hundred thousand."

Yola didn't ask about the subcontract split. Dunkling went on to
describe the product: a mass-capacity elevated conveyer belt for
industrial commuters. Because it was fast for a belt--135 MPH cruising
speed--and high--1,000 feet--a certain initial popular resistance was
anticipated. Dunkling would put Yola's name and record into the Hibelt
publicity office, which was a different department. He thought it almost
certain they would accept his recommendation, however, as it was all in
the company. "All GT," he put it, in the firm's slang for "perfect."

"We're in business again," Yola said as the man faded. "I clucked out on
the sub. At least Shirk named the figure, this time!"

Fisk nodded. He was glad she wasn't rationalizing about her capitulation
to standard practice. She had grown.

In the ensuing months, the Matrans/Vacationer ads appeared profusely.
Whether they were accomplishing the primary purpose it was impossible to
tell, because there was such pervasive conditioning against live
transmission. Normal reaction to the very notion should have been
derisive laughter--which was how the ads were playing it, while planting
the seeds of doubt. An intensive campaign of years would be required to
show measurably positive results.

But International Vacationer's business seemed to be suffering an
upturn, and Yola's reputation as a child actress developed nicely. She
no longer had to solicit employment; employers contacted her with
offers. Fisk signed her up for an option with Consolidated
Construction--$125,000 with a 70-30 split in her favor on
subcontracts--and for another with Ace Atomic: $100,000 with a 90-10
split. It seemed that the 50-50 split was not so standard, when the
employers really wanted the account. Things were definitely looking up.

But Fisk discovered that there were personal liabilities of success,
too. He had appreciated Yola's increasing maturity as she wrestled with
the hard contractual decisions; but now those decisions were past. Never
exactly shy, she was rapidly developing into a pint-sized prima donna.
She would fly into an object-throwing tantrum whenever balked--and she
felt balked when Fisk refused to let her watch the late evening show,
that ran until one AM and was rated triple-X-negative for under age 35.
She also affected obnoxious little mannerisms, such as answering the
phone "The Yola Centers speaking, lout!"

Then the General Transport statement of account arrived by mailfax. It
was a formal document listing the commercial, the artist (Yola), the
advance paid, and the earnings due the artist based on a royalty of four
and a half percent of the net profit realized after taxes on each set of
Matrans screens judged by the GT sales board to have been sold on the
open market owing to primary influence of her commercials.

Fisk looked over her shoulder, frowning. "Well, we knew they didn't
expect many early sales," he said. "That's why they give a big
advance--not that they did, as these things go. So it takes a decade to
earn it out--that's advertising!"

"What about Vacationer?" she demanded. "Aren't they supposed to be
listed here too?"

Fisk looked again. "Their payment must be listed on a separate sheet."

She shook the fax. There was no other sheet. And the space reserved for
the listing of subsidiary contracts was blank.

"They goofed it up!" she cried indignantly. "That subsale was made six
months ago!"

"Call GT's accounting department and get a corrected statement," Fisk
said. "There isn't any actual money involved right now, since only two
months have elapsed since the ads started airing. But we might as well
keep the record straight."

Yola called. In the course of fifteen minutes of ungracious haggling the
computer's corrected fax appeared.

It was identical to the first.

Yola swelled dangerously. "Why you blathering fat-eared stink--"

Fisk dived for the phone and cut the connection before she warmed up.
"Wait! Wait!" he cried. "Let's recheck the contract first! If GT's
wrong, we can nail it in polite language." No use trying to convince her
to restrain her own language; he would just have to make sure he did the
talking next time.

He brought out the contract and skimmed its provisions. "See?" Yola
cried, pointing. "It says Artist gets fifty percent of payments from
major subcontract by another established company!"

"So it does," Fisk agreed patiently. "But that is not the present
question. We need to know how soon GT relays such payments--and when
they have to report on the subcontracts."

"Gobbledegooky!" she muttered.

They read on. "At the next annual statement after receipt of cash," Fisk
said.

"But the cash isn't coming for another month, and we've just had the
first annual statement. You mean we won't get our money for a whole
'nother year?"

"That's what the small print seems to say."

"But we need that money to live on! Anyway, the print's the same size as
the rest of it!"

Fisk shook his head. "Do you think General Transport gives a plugged
slug how we survive? We signed the contract. And 'small print' is just
an expression meaning that there are reservations in the contract that
tend to ensnare the unwary party. It isn't literally small, anymore."

"It ought to be small!" she exclaimed. "It ought to be so ashamed,
acting like that, it'd shrink right out of sight! Then why did Bunkling
say we'd get the loot right away?"

Dunkling had said that! Fisk went on through the contract, reading every
clause carefully. "Here it is! They'll pay on receipt if the artist puts
in a request!"

"Goody!" She reached for the phone. Fisk moved to stop her, then decided
this was positive enough to trust to her discretion.

"By all means," the robot secretary said. "Your share will be vouchered
at the moment of receipt."

Yola, relieved, became silent. Perhaps she had learned the advantage of
caution and reconsideration before acting. "Thank you," Fisk said for
her. "We appreciate it."

And they celebrated by setting up the richest supper their fooder could
deliver, sparing almost no expense. Fisk barely stopped Yola in time:
she had been dialing peppermint flavored caviar.

"Sometimes I just screen about town," the image-Yola said brightly.
"It's not as much fun as using the highway...." Her image faded into a
melange of traffic-jammed vehicles, swearing drivers, sagging pedestrian
belts and lifts bursting with sick-looking commuters. Then back to Yola,
emerging unruffled in a fetching little-girl dress at a plush
restaurant. "But it is faster!" She looked out the window at the
ravening throng. "If only I had time to mix in..." she finished
wistfully, shoving her elbows out as though forcing her way through a
crowd.

The Yola Centers shook her head. "They cut that one, too, bleep it! I
got to tromp toes in the takes!" She put on the next replay.

The thirteen-week post-airing subcontract date arrived, but no voucher
from General Transport. "Hold on!" Fisk said, restraining Yola at the
phone. "Give them a chance! It takes a few days to process such things!"

She turned on him a look of withering skepticism that would have done
credit to the initial sequence of a before-after commercial. "This is
the computer age, Fisky! They can handle any paperwork in six minutes."
But she waited.

Days passed, then a week. No money. "All right," Fisk said, becoming
concerned himself, and unable to withstand her vehement pestering
longer. "I'll call."

He did. "Data insufficient," the robot secretary said.

"The artist's share of the International Vacationer advance on the Yola
Centers Matrans prime contract," Fisk said evenly. "Do you need the
contract number? I believe that payment is overdue."

The robot took the number and clicked, checking. "There is no payment
owing on that contract," it said.

"What?"

"Please turn up your sound if you are having undue difficulty hearing,"
the robot said impersonally. "There is no payment owing on that
contract. Thank you." It faded.

"I told you it was fishy," Yola cried, gratified. "But you wanted to be
bleeping reasonable! The bleeps are stealing our money!"

"Let me look into this," Fisk said, shaken. "I can't believe a company
like General Transport would renege on a contract."

"What's to look, gook? You can't argue with a robot, and robot's don't
make mistakes. GT's grabbing all the loot! And they cut the best lines
out of my takes, too!"

Fisk got out the contract again. The fax sheets were becoming worn at
the creases. "Give me a couple hours to analyze this thing all the way,"
he said. "I'm going to get to the root of this."

She looked at him appraisingly and saw his determination. "Okay, Daddy.
I'll go joyriding."

He gave her the programming key for the Fusion, and she departed. She
was too young to drive, but the programmer would keep the machine on
course and safely moving even without human occupation. Fisk never had
to worry about parking his car; if space were not available, he merely
sent it home alone, and summoned it when he needed it again.

Fisk reread the entire contract, making notes. He was surprised to
discover a number of minor clauses he had forgotten. They were not good,
bad, or particularly significant--just reasonable, neutral guarantees
against special situations.

Then he hit pay dirt: "ALL PAYMENTS MADE TO ARTIST UNDER THIS CONTRACT
SHALL BE RECOVERABLE FROM ALL MONIES ACCRUING TO ARTIST UNDER SAME."

That one had not seemed remarkable to him before. He had presumed it was
necessary in order for the prime contractor to obtain its legal share of
subcontract income, buttressing the 50-50 clause. Now he saw that this
could be interpreted as a device to reserve all monies to GT, depending
on how much of the original advance had been earned back by royalties at
the time of the statement. Read this way, it obliterated the schedule of
contract/artist division of spoils.

The Matrans advance had been seventy-five thousand dollars. Only fifteen
thousand dollars had been earned back, according to the first statement.
That left a sixty thousand dollar deficit. All they could expect to
receive at this time from the subcontract share was $15,000--a poor
fraction of their expectations. Theoretically they would eventually have
the full amount--but that would be a long wait. Fisk knew when any novel
product first hit the market there was a rush of early sales, to
collectors and the curious, but that this burst soon petered out into
the regular pattern. Even the infamous Edsel car of history had sold
well, the first few days. So it was with Matrans screens--but now that
the opening-day novelty was off, they would be lucky to earn a thousand
dollars a year in royalties. Until the attitude of the world changed.

So the trap had two prongs: a very slow royalty pattern, and GT's right
to keep all subsidiary money until that pattern was complete. He was
reminded of the classic test paper legend: ninety-nine difficult
questions, with number one hundred saying "Ignore questions 1-99." He
had fallen into a variant of that trap--and it wasn't going to be easy
to explain it to Yola.

But still, there should have been some payment! And why hadn't the IV
subcontract been listed on the statement of account? The prime contract
plainly said: PRIME CONTRACTOR SHALL RENDER ANNUAL STATEMENTS OF ACCOUNT
OF THE NET ROYALTIES EARNED TO DATE, AND SUBSIDIARY SALES, LEASES AND
OPTIONS.

Fisk went at it again and again. They had been distracted from this
matter before by Dunkling's assurance that they would be paid promptly.
But there was no way around it: that omission of the Vacationer
subcontract was a direct violation of the contract.

So it boiled down to two questions: why no subcontract listing, and why
no money, however little? Both of these had been challenged, and neither
resolved. Which suggested deliberate abuse on the part of General
Transport.

Yola reappeared. "You mad now, Fishy?"

That was one takeoff on his name he didn't appreciate, particularly at
this moment, but he refused to let her know. "Let's just say that some
questions need further exploration."

"Yep. You're mad." She liked that. Yola lost what little temper she had
ten times a day, and recovered it ten times. Fisk was exceedingly slow
to anger--but he could take weeks to cool, as she had learned the hard
way. She obviously felt much better having him mad on her side.

Fisk punched for Dunkling. "This is a personal matter," he said sharply
to the robot. "I want Dunkling himself, and I want him now."

"Mr. Dunkling is in conference," the secretary said. "The first
available appointment--"

"This concerns contract violations on your part," Fisk said precisely.
"I shall either speak to Dunkling now, or I shall call the Illicit
Practices Commission. Do you understand?"

Yola clapped her hands with glee. "You're a terror, Daddy!"

Dunkling's face appeared, and for once it wasn't smiling. "Centers, I'm
not accustomed to--"

"One," Fisk said. "You made no listing of International Vacationer
subcontract on your annual statement. Two: you failed to pay over any
part of the artist's share of the subcontract advance. I want a
corrected statement and I want the money--while I wait."

Dunkling turned red. "You've got a nerve--and a lot to learn!" he
snapped. "That Vacationer sub was not listed because it was not
completed within the fiscal year for which the statement was issued--as
you would have known had you given even cursory attention to your
contract. And you received no payment because you have none coming. The
prime advance has not been earned out. Clear now?"

"No it isn't!" Fisk snapped back. "As I read the contract--"

"And our option with you on Hibelt is herewith declined," Dunkling said.
"You have no need to contact General Transport further, as none of its
divisions will be doing business with you in future." This time he
didn't fade, he crackled off.

"Come back here, you bastard!" Fisk shouted, but of course it was too
late.

"Brother, is he asking for it!" Yola said with fierce anticipation.
"What do we do now, Daddy?"

"What we should have done in the first place: query CROAK for advice."

"What about the Illicit Practices Commission?"

"IPC? Let's hold that in abeyance. Dunkling was too sure of himself.
We'd better find out why, before we get any deeper. The first thing we
need is information; then we'll know how to prosecute our case."

Yola called the CROAK contract-review office, but learned that their
expert was traveling, and would not be available for several days.

"Very well," Fisk said. "We'll print up an itemized summary and query
and leave it for his consideration when he gets back. Meanwhile, we'd
better get a lawyer."

"A lawyer!" Yola cried, thrilled. "You're gunning for elephant!"

"There are no elephant," Fisk said. "This is merely smart procedure. If
we had had a lawyer go over our contract before we signed--"

"There's a pseudoelephant at the zoo," Yola said. "But you know lawyers
are expensive--"

"A pseudo is a fake, by definition. We'll rent a small lawbot. This is
all preliminary, anyway."

"What happened to the real elephants?" Yola asked, but Fisk didn't
answer.

Lawyers were expensive. Fisk had to settle for an elementary yes-no
model that would be tedious to use. He paid a week's rental and went to
work.

First he had to type the entire contract on its alphabet-board--an
interminable chore. Then he had to program his questions. The machine
was equipped with a standard catalogue of relevant law, but alignment
with their particular situation was a problem he had to work out by
himself.

"Ask it how much money they owe us," Yola said impatiently.

"Money is not the object, now," Fisk said, but he tried.

"DATA INSUFFICIENT" the machine typed.

"That's what happens," Fisk said. "We don't have the data on the
International Vacationer subcontract, so the lawbot can't answer."

"Sure we do!" she said. "Seventy-five thousand, our share--and it should
have been one hundred fifty!"

"That's not official," he said, looking for an appropriate opening to
tell her the real figure was more likely fifteen thousand. "We need the
actual contract or statement of account--and we have neither."

"But that's why we're fighting! That lying statement--"

"We can't get a meaningful answer from the lawbot when the data itself
is at issue," Fisk said.

"Well, how about the other?" she demanded. "The sale they didn't list.

"I'll try." Fisk typed the question. "Is the International Vacationer
subcontract required to be listed on the prime contract annual statement
of account?"

"DATA INSUFFICIENT."

"That machine's lost a bleeping cog!" Yola cried. "Why is it
insufficient?"

"For that we'll have to play 'twenty questions,'" Fisk said. Yola
obviously didn't comprehend the allusion, and he was reminded again of
the span between their ages. She was eleven, he fifty. In the
intervening thirty-nine years, the world had changed mightily. Not that
that was relevant to the current problem. "We have to phrase questions
subject to yes-no answers. That's the hard part."

"The hard part is getting old 'Data Insufficient' to answer a stupidly
simple question!"

"That too." Fisk mulled it over, made some notes, and commenced: "Is a
subcontract normally required to be listed on the annual statement of
account as defined by this contract?"

"YES."

"Hey!" Yola cried. "Junkbox answered!"

"Merely the first step in what may be a long staircase."

"What?"

Oops! Another image taken from a foreign generation. "First aperture in
a megalevel chute."

"Oh. Why didn't you say so, Frisky?"

Back to work: "Should prior referenced subcontract normally appear on
the referenced statement?"

"You already asked that one," Yola said.

"No. This is one stage nearer the present case. We'll keep going until
we discover the balk-point, then rephrase and try again."

Meanwhile the machine had printed its answer: "YES."

"Ask it what happened to the elephants," Yola said.

"Is absence of prior ref. subct. on ref. statement necessarily
indicative of prime ctr. malfeasance?"

Yola shook her head. "I sure hope you know what you're saying!"

"I do--and the lawbot understands, too. I think we're zeroing in on the
loophole."

Then he read the answer: "NO."

"Loophole?" Yola asked.

"Yola, I can't translate every dated expression I use! Just let me
work."

She bristled, but decided it was better to keep him mad at General
Transport instead of at her.

After a tedious back-and-forth, Fisk narrowed it down to the essence:
the legality of the missing listing hinged on the applicable definition
of "sale." The standard definition provided by the library was: "A
contract made for the transfer of property from one legal entity to
another for a valuable consideration."

"If the standard definition holds," Fisk said, "then we have a specific
violation of contract, regardless of the money involved. 'Valuable
consideration' includes the agreement to pay at some later date; it's
all the same, legally, and execution of the contract constitutes the
sale. But it is possible they aren't using the standard definition, and
don't consider the sale complete until the money is actually received.
That's why the lawbot balked the first time."

"Can they get away with that?" Yola asked.

"I doubt it. Normal presumption is that they are following the standard;
otherwise they'd have to announce their basis for divergence, and print
that in the prime contract, which they haven't done. But it means we'll
have to take them to court to get a specific ruling for our case--and we
just don't have the money to push our suit properly."

"We don't have the money because they bilked us out of our share!" Yola
exclaimed furiously.

"That's one way of looking at it. But we're not dealing with pure
legalities now, but with reality, and it seems might makes right."

"Clout wins the bout," she echoed in her own terminology. "Money gets
the honey. But bleep it, Fisk--"

"Let's wait to see what CROAK says," he suggested. "We're obviously
sandlot players in a major league park."

"Toddlecart in the Hurdle," she agreed. "But--"

"General Transport isn't the only company in the world, fortunately. And
maybe we've learned a lesson that will save us a lot more money in the
long run than we lost this time. Now we know we have to be constantly
alert for company idiosyncrasies--like paying thirteen weeks late--and
unscrupulous policies. Public reputation means nothing. If CROAK
suggests a feasible procedure, we'll take it; otherwise--"

"You mean give up?" she demanded, horrified.

"Sometimes it is necessary to forfeit the battle in order to win the--"

She shook her head sadly. "I guess you're right, coward."

The image-Yola winked at the audience. "My Daddy says next time I do
this--" pouring instant purple cement-foam into the disposal
hopper--"he'll ship me to--" a horrendous grinding and breaking sound as
the cement-foam hardened, ruining the machine. Yola stepped hastily
through the Matrans screen. "Siberia!" she finished, shivering in snow.

The phone lighted, and Yola switched off the replay. "The Yola Cen--"

"I am Maxima Bubonik of CROAK," a suave young woman said, obviously
uninterested in Yola's credentials. Fisk had seen her a number of times
in assorted commercials, but never heard her stage name before.
"Contract-Review relayed your complaint to me--"

"It wasn't a complaint," Fisk said over Yola's shoulder. "It was a
query."

Bubonik continued as if she hadn't heard, her fine eye on Yola. "Because
I have done many commercials for General Transport, and am more familiar
with their mode of operation--"

"Isn't that conflict of interest?" Fisk asked, annoyed. "We wanted an
objective review of--"

"Now I have taken your complaint directly to Mr. Dunkling of Transport
and Mr. Shooper of Vacationer, and am satisfied from what they tell me
that this entire confusion stems from nothing more than your own
inexcusable ignorance of standard practice--"

"You took our query to Dunkling?" Fisk cried. "And involved Vacationer
too? That was a confidential note--"

Bubonik's gaze remained fixed on Yola. "And may I say, as one girl to
another, in the most rational and gentle fashion imaginable, that you
have acted precipitously and foolishly in this matter, and done yourself
incalculable harm. One simple query to Mr. Dunkling or to CROAK could
have resolved your misunderstanding amicably, and--"

"We queried both!" Fisk snapped. Yola kept her mouth shut, since he was
obviously working up to another thoroughgoing mad. "Dunkling responded
by cutting off our Hibelt option, and CROAK--how the bleep do you think
you got this info, if not from our--"

"But instead," Bubonik told Yola, "you have taken your fraudulent
hysteria to a lawbot, of all things, and libelously maligned one of the
very finest advertisers in the business and given a bad name to CROAK in
the process. Naturally you will issue a formal apology--"

Fisk opened his mouth, but his internal pressure had jumped to such a
level that he could not make a sound. Yola made a squeak that sounded
like stifled laughter. That had to do for their response.

Bubonik paused meaningfully. She was an experienced commercial actress,
and her pause was timed to perfection. Her attitude suggested that she
was dealing with unruly children who had to be restrained for their own
good.

"However," she said softly, "since you are obviously in difficult
straits, and perhaps guilty more of blunder than of intentional
mischief, Mr. Dunkling has agreed to waive Transport's contractual
prerogatives and relay the full scheduled subcontract share to the
artist. To you, Yola. This is a remarkably generous attitude on his
part, considering the affront! His only--and, I might add, quite
reasonable--request is that you desist in your efforts to undermine
Transport's well-deserved reputation for complete integrity and fair
dealing, and that you let the entire matter drop as of this moment. Your
CROAK complaint has already been destroyed, so that it will not
embarrass you further."

"They're going to pay!" Yola cried, and Fisk realized that Bubonik's
concentration on her had been a skillful and effective ploy. "How much
is Dirk slicing off for us?"

"The full advance paid by International Vacationer was fifty thousand
dollars. Your share will be twenty-five thousand. And since your
commercials are doing very well for them, there should be additional
payments when that advance is earned out, in about a year. Quite
possibly you will receive another twenty-five thousand."

Fisk reached across Yola to break the connection, and Bubonik faded.

"Hey!" Yola protested. "They're paying! What are you trying to--"

"They're bribing," Fisk said. "Twenty-five thousand dollars for us to
shut up. The offer made through an unofficial intermediary, the query
responsible for it destroyed, so GT can't be called to account at law.
And a pittance, at that--only a third of what a standard contract should
have brought. They must think we really are fools!"

"But the money--!"

"Money? Garbage?"

"Fisky, we need that loot! Our credit balance--"

"Need has nothing to do with it. We are not going to become accessories
to graft! When CROAK and Big Advertising are in collusion at the expense
of the individual artist--"

"Oh, phooey! They're just paying us what they owed us all along. Why
complain, when we've got ours?"

Fisk looked at her, disgusted. He had thought she was maturing. "Your
values are in tune with the times, it seems. But they're selfish,
short-sighted, eleven-year-old values. When you outgrow them and learn
the meaning of integrity and true personal pride, then you'll be an
adult. And I mean to see that you do get there."

"You're just not living in this century!" Yola said. "Why don't you ask
the lawbot, even?"

Sensible suggestion! If she would accept the verdict of the machine,
that was a start in the right direction. Fisk typed in the offer with
its silence proviso, then asked: "Should artist accept?"

"YES," the lawbot replied.

Fisk stared. "There's a mistake!"

"No mistake, Daddy," Yola said reasonably. "You just won't admit you're
wrong."

"I'm not wrong! There's a fundamental ethic involved--"

She shrugged in the tasteful, rehearsed way fashionable in commercial
acting. She had certainly picked up the phoniness of the trade quickly.
"Fisky, I was mad too, and I still think the money's way too little. But
it's the best we can get, and we can't afford to sue anyway, so we've
just got to be practical."

Fisk rephrased the question to the lawbot, got another wrong answer,
then cleared the entire temporary data bank and fed in all the relevant
information from scratch. The answer was unchanged: make the deal.

It seemed that what was not specifically illegal, by the logic of the
machine, was acceptable. There was no ethic beyond the literal law.

"This junk's going back to the shop!" Fisk said, disgruntled.

Yola shook her locks in the manner of one acquiescing to a lunatic. "God
is dead; about time you learned."

Fisk got busy. He had not been this angry in a decade. He returned the
defective lawbot to its shop, made some notes to organize his thinking,
and set out to strike back at General Transport in a manner that would
make it take notice.

He punched the number of the Illicit Practices Commission, District K.
"I wish to make a complaint of illicit practice against General
Transport, Matrans Division, Promotion, specifically relating to Kirk
Dunkling and the artist's contract for Yola Centers," he said.

"Bleep, Fisk," Yola said. "You scare me when you get like this!" For
once she was not being facetious. "All for such a little thing, when
Maxima went to so much trouble to help--"

"Please identify yourself and itemize your particulars," the human IPC
secretary said. This was obviously routine to her.

"Fisk Centers, father and manager of Yola Centers, child commercial
actress. Item One: Subject company by both verbal and contractual
statements deliberately misled artist to believe that a larger payment
for her services would be made than was actually contemplated." He
documented this by quoting from memory Dunkling's promise that "their
share" would be relayed promptly upon receipt, and his earlier statement
that "residuals" would probably amount to as much or more than the
initial advance. "When in fact," Fisk continued, "the subcontract
advance was set at an artificially low level, far below standard
practice, so that no share would be relayed." He also read from the
prime contract itself, which specified that "royalties" were to be
chargeable against the advance, while making a separate listing for
subcontract division. "This implies that said subcontracts are therefore
not chargeable against that advance, but are instead portioned as
specified in that listing," he said.

"Hey, you're right!" Yola murmured, surprised. "I never thought of
that."

"Item One noted," the secretary said coolly.

"Item Two: Subject company issued a deliberately inaccurate annual
statement of account that omitted listing of a major subsidiary contract
already executed." He documented this also, giving the approximate dates
of Vacationer's option and contract, the standard definition of "sale,"
and establishing Transport's specific refusal to correct the statement
when challenged on the omission. "In the face of Item One," he
concluded, "Item Two can only be construed as a further attempt to
mislead and defraud the artist."

"Item Two noted," the secretary said with a bored air.

"Item Three: Subject company, by way of collusive intermediary,
proffered a payment of from twenty-five to fifty thousand dollars to the
artist, providing that she desist from the complaint on Items One and
Two."

"Oh, they did!" the secretary said, coming to life. "Very well, Mr.
Centers. IPC will process this complaint, and will notify you of
developments." She faded away.

Fisk sat back. "Now we'll wait for the bleep to hit the transmitter."

"Aw, they'll just stall it to death," Yola muttered. "All that money we
could've had--"

"Yola, if our complaint proves out, we'll have the money as well as
self-respect."

"We will?" she said, brightening. "Why didn't you say so?"

"And I daresay it will not be long before we have a response," he said,
stepping into the foamer for a cleanup. "They called it a complaint when
we queried CROAK; now they've got the real thing, thanks to Maxima
Bubonik."

"What do you think GT'll do?" she asked, worried.

"Well, this IPC complaint will show them that they can't muzzle us. They
may just apologize, claim it was all a mistake, pay up and reinstate the
Hibelt option. That would be much better for them than the ugly
publicity of a contested complaint--especially when they know they're
wrong."

Yola shook her head dubiously.

In just six minutes a form emerged from the mailfax. Yola snatched it up
and began reading: "Notice of Suit against Fisk Centers."

Fisk leaped as if the foamer had goosed him. "What?"

"I think something went wrong," Yola murmured, handing him the sheet.

It was the preliminary notice of a libel suit filed against him by
General Transport, based on his IPC complaint.

"LIBEL: a false publication tending to injure the reputation or damage
the business...." Fisk looked up from the book. "This is ridiculous! I
didn't libel them, I made a complaint about their unfair practices!"

"Any complaint is libelous to General Transport," Yola said. "When you
queried, they called it a complaint; when you complained, they called it
libel. I wonder what they'd call it if you announced they were bleep
eaters?"

"Murder," he said. "Maybe even genocide! I need a lawyer, and a good
one."

"We've been through that," she pointed out. "You wouldn't listen, and
now we pine in brine--"

"The lawbot was inadequate to the need. A human lawyer would have--"

"You know what a live lawyer costs?" she asked incredulously.

"Yes. We are left with no alternative but to make application for state
assistance."

"Why not play roulette for life-stakes while you're at it? Listen,
Daddy, I was a Ward of the State, and I know--"

"It is a gamble of desperation," he admitted. "But sometimes their help
is valuable."

"Sometimes their help gets their clients brainvacked, too!"

Fisk sighed. He punched the State Assistance number.

"Fool," Yola said.

But luck was with him. He was issued a permit for one hour's time on the
District F Legal Aid Computer (FLAC), the only qualified machine
available at this time for State Assistance on a civil suit. That was
it. He would stand or fall on that hour's legal advice.

"I have a bright idea," Yola said. "Why don't we put ashes on our heads
and crawl down to General Transport and--"

"That's what they expect. Their hand isn't any stronger than it was
before; they've just raised the ante to a level they figure we can't
match. In other words--"

"Don't bother. I know that particular obscurity. We played poker all the
time in the dorm. Once I took one hundred and fifty dollars off three
boys. Good thing I didn't lose!"

"Those were coed dorms?" Fisk asked, shocked. "What happened when you
lost?"

She made a face. "Same thing't'll happen to you when you lose this one!
Why don't you quit when you're ahead?"

"Yola, that would be playing right into their hands. There's no guessing
the number of other artists they have browbeaten into submission by just
such tactics. Artists who thought they were protected by associations
like CROAK. It is high time someone stood his ground."

"You'll be standing your ground horizontally in a Perpetual Laser
Memorial Plot, and I'll be a waifless home--"

"Homeless waif." She really was upset! "But don't be unduly concerned.
That education fund I set up from the Hurdle winnings will see you
through to adulthood."

"Fat consolation! Fisk, this libel suit can wipe us out!"

"It could--if their own grounds weren't spurious. I have told IPC
nothing but the truth, and the truth will redeem my position."

"Do you really believe that?"

Fisk didn't answer, because his belief was much less firm than his
statement.

The hour on FLAC was more important than it looked to Yola. Fisk was
permitted to take it in installments of as little as one minute at a
time, and FLAC was a major computer. It could dish out an extraordinary
amount of legal strategy in one minute. Fisk's problem was one of
management: how to make good enough use of his time to win his case. He
needed to program carefully.

He ordered more texts from the library and perused their faxes avidly,
seeking a reasonable line of defense. Then, one by one, he tested them
on FLAC.

First he tried to establish the defense of "Truth." He had made three
specific charges, and they were as far as he knew true. But he
discovered that he could not merely affirm his IPC statement, for that
would be just a repetition of the supposed libel. He had to set forth
particulars, and document the particular aspects of his statement that
established accuracy.

He reassembled his evidence for the first of his three charges: that of
Transport's deceptions about the payment owing to the artist. The phone
company, for a fee, provided a dated tape of Dunkling telling Yola
"...we'll relay your share the moment we receive their (Vacationer's)
payment." That was a clear statement of intent, hardly suggesting the
later "There is no payment owing" of the robot secretary. Dunkling's
original estimate that residuals might exceed the original advance was
not available, as that had been made verbally in his office. That
necessary omission weakened Fisk's case. But he re-quoted from the prime
contract itself, where it implied separation of payments, and from the
library's standard-practice manual.

He fed this package into FLAC, using up a good ten minutes of his
allocated computer time. Now for the payoff: "Is this a valid defense
against a charge of libel based on this portion of this complaint?" If
so, and if he disposed of the other portions as readily, the suit would
be thrown out before ever coming to trial.

There was no delay. "No," the resonant FLAC voice said.

Fisk was stunned. Fortunately he didn't have to pry for the complete
answer when dealing with a computer of this level. FLAC provided it
automatically: the term "deliberately" was not in order, as it did not
admit the possibility of clerical error, always possible where humans
were involved. Dunkling could have promised the money in good faith,
being unaware that the balance would be too small to earn out the prime
advance. In order to prove his charge, Fisk would have to establish that
Dunkling knew at the time he promised payment that none was owing.
Further, even that was dubious, because Dunkling had not promised a
specific amount, but only the artist's share--which turned out to be
nothing. Of course the implication was the full fifty percent of the
Vacationer advance had been meant, but such implication did not in
itself constitute grounds for the charge Fisk had made.

Fisk shook his head slowly, as though stones were sloshing in brine
inside it. He knew he had no chance to establish Dunkling's specific
knowledge and intent at times in the past. He might be right--but his
defense of Truth had washed out, and his certainties were slipping. Why
had he had to say "deliberately" in the complaint?

He checked into other available defenses against the libel charge. One
was "Qualified Privilege," but it turned out to be inapplicable. Another
was "Right of Reply"--but GT had not accused him of anything prior to
the suit itself, so he had no legal reply in kind. The actress Maxima
Bubonik had accused him of plenty, by implication--but she was not the
one suing. Once more the network of Big Industry and its camp followers
had given him very little avenue for redress. They were indeed
professionals.

He considered "Reliance Testimony"--for he had relied on his information
that the standard subcontract applicable to his situation was one
hundred fifty thousand dollars, and had been misled into believing that
GT had made such a contract with Vacationer. But the mistake had been in
his own assumption; no one had promised him standard terms or provided
any of the relevant figures. GT had been very canny about omitting such
details--but again, he could not prove prejudicial motive.

Fisk went on down the list, his eyes becoming bleary. "Justification?"
Not if "Truth" was defunct. Who could have imagined that it would be so
difficult to defend against the preposterous charge of libel, when he
was the injured party!

Of course the onus to prosecute was on GT--but he had to be certain of
his responses when their lawyers pressed their case.

"Fisk, this is ridiculous!" Yola said. "You're just grinding through all
those stupid defenses when you know none of them will work!"

He didn't answer. He was pondering the defense of "Fair Comment!" This
required that he prove that his facts had been truly stated, as they
had; that his comment was an honest expression of his real opinion, as
it was; and that no corrupt or dishonorable motives had been ascribed to
the party criticized. "But that's the whole point of it!" he cried
aloud. "If Transport's motives had been honorable this never would have
happened! How can I be sued for telling the truth?"

"Truth, schmooth!" Yola retorted. "Who cares about that? The truth is
that you're fat, but you'd spank me if I told you that. They have the
clout to put us away no matter what the truth, and that's what counts in
this world! You're just committing suicide, oinkheaded suicide, and
taking me down with you--when we could have had the money!"

"Not another word!" Fisk roared, cowing her momentarily. "This world is
not like that, and we aren't going to act like that!"

There was silence for a full fifteen seconds. When Yola spoke again, she
was unusually subdued. "Daddy, I've been patient with you. Very patient,
for me. But I can't stand by and watch you throw your fool life away for
nothing. "It's my fault some, 'cause I wanted you mad--but that was when
I figured you were right. Now you're not right-mad, you're wrong-mad.
And you don't know when to quit."

Fisk stared at her, impressed and discomfited. This was a facet of her
personality he had not seen before. Perhaps it had not existed before
this crisis. A serious, concerned Yola, who was trying to work out what
was right. Yet still limited by her conception of might as right,
however she phrased it. To her, there was no right in the face of one's
inability to defend it. Thus, by her definition, Fisk had become "wrong"
when his case became a loser.

"A man must act in accordance with his philosophy," he said quietly.

"Yes." She thought for a moment, and he could see that she was working
up to something extraordinary. "So maybe you'll understand why I've got
to do it."

"Do what?" He didn't like the look of this. Was she going to throw a
furniture-breaking tantrum?

"Leave you."

Completely surprised, Fisk stuttered for a moment before he could speak.
"Y-you can't leave me! You have nowhere to go!"

"Yes I do, Daddy. I'll use that stupid educational fund. I can go to
school far away, and you can't stop me. I can stay there forever!" Now
she was crying, and Fisk was deeply touched, because he had never seen
her do it honestly before. Yola had always been ready with a smile or a
tantrum, both being pure artifice; seldom did her real feelings emerge
directly. It was an almost impenetrable emotional defense she had
developed in the course of her years as an institutionalized orphan. He
had been assured she liked staying with him largely because she had
never run away.

Now she wanted to leave--but not secretly. Openly. Which meant she did
not really want to go. And that put him in a nasty position, for if he
didn't try to stop her she would take it as proof that he wanted to be
rid of her, even though this particular subcrisis was of her own
genesis. He understood enough of the processes of her mind to be certain
of that.

Yola went to the phone and punched a number she must have looked up
beforehand. A woman appeared, speaking in a foreign language.

"Hook in a translator," Yola said, mopping her eyes without affection.
"I can't speak Swiss."

Swiss! Fisk was startled again. Of course she didn't speak Swiss; nobody
did, as there was no such language. But she really meant it, about going
far away. That was a school in Switzerland.

He had to stop her, and not just to play her game. It was the last thing
Yola would admit, even to herself, but she needed him. She needed to be
part of a family, however small; to be somebody's daughter. She had
called him "Daddy" consistently during this dialogue, instead of her
usual impolite variants of his name; that was another signal. Another
institution, however elaborate, was absolutely no good for her.

"Yola Centers, age eleven," she said in answer to the translated query.
She also gave her current address.

Fisk stood, about to haul her away from the phone by brute force. She
would throw a doozy of a tantrum, but this was what she really wanted.
To be kept at home. Otherwise she would have waited until she was alone
to make the call.

But he paused. If he stopped her, he would have to pacify her with some
compromise--such as capitulating on the libel defense. That he couldn't
do. And--if he managed to keep her in line, and continued the libel
defense, and then lost the case--he would no longer be able to afford to
maintain her, and might in fact be legally stripped of the right.
General Transport would see that punitive damages wiped him out beyond
hope of recovery.

So perhaps it was better that she make the break now, of her own
volition. She would never go if he tried to send her! No one could touch
her at the Swiss school; the scholastic fund was inviolate. She would
have care and education until maturity. There was a lot to recommend
that. After she graduated, there would be opportunity for a happier
life.

"We shall dispatch a taxi," the school-voice said. "Be ready in fifteen
minutes."

Yola looked at Fisk--but he was back at his references, ignoring her. He
had made a decision she was bound to misunderstand, but he didn't see
any better way. It was the lesser of evils.

She saw that he could not be moved, and her mind went through the
channels it had to and finished in the slough awaiting. She smiled,
tentatively, as though commencing the defense of "I don't care; see, I'm
laughing!" but she couldn't make that stand up. So she went into the
alternate defense of "Righteous Fury," and banged around noisily as she
packed her scant belongings.

Fisk sat through it all, wishing she would drop the case entirely--and
knowing it could mean disaster if she did. If only she could comprehend
that his position with respect to GT was very similar. What had to be
done, had to be done--no matter what the cost.

The taxi arrived and hovered urgently at the landing, and there was
nothing Yola could do except go out to it. "Oh Daddy!" she cried at the
door, for the moment entirely naked in her hurt. But Fisk, steeled, did
not even look up from his papers.

Fisk worked and slept for three days, taking pills to accomplish each.
He had been single for fifty years, and a father for less than one--but
it was not easy to revert to his old habits. He had grown accustomed...

Finally he called the court having jurisdiction over this case. "I am
ready for the initial hearing," he said. Complex matters such as a libel
suit did not jump right into a full-scale court trial; there would be a
series of hearings and much legal maneuvering preceding the public
manifestations.

"Very well, Mr. Centers," the human clerk said. "The prosecution is also
ready. We shall connect you for the hearing at noon today."

Fisk shook his head as the screen faded. He had been under the
impression that it was afternoon, but his clock agreed with the clerk:
it was morning. At any rate, he would be present; an appointment of this
nature carried an automatic warning of "Fail Not in This Appearance,
under Penalty of Contempt," whether voiced or unvoiced.

His confusion was unsurprising, he realized. Time had become
unstructured since Yola had gone. He missed the AM argument about what
to punch for breakfast (oyster stew or marijuana-flavored cupcakes), and
the PM fracas about what program to watch (Murder Killfest or Porno
Geography), and the thousand lesser frictions between. There was nothing
like an incorrigible brat to make every moment a stress situation. He
had lived more life in the past few hectic months with her than he had
in the preceding few placid decades, it seemed.

He dialed and punched the fooder randomly and ate the result without
appetite. He soaked in the foamer and emerged unrefreshed. He stepped
into the suiter for the first time since Yola's departure, not even
checking the setting--and emerged wearing a fetching dress several sizes
too small.

He laughed, appreciating the feel of old times. Then his eyes burned,
and he reset the machine for a masculine outfit.

At noon the phone lighted. "All stand," a voice said peremptorily. Fisk
stood, watching the curtain on the screen. "Its Honor, Judge Computer
KaDist," the voice announced as the curtain parted.

The BE SEATED light flashed on the computer's imposing front panel, and
Fisk sat. He was not playing any game; he was at this moment legally
before the judge of "K" district, and the last thing he needed was a
contempt citation.

Judge KaDist wasted no time. "Present Defense," it told Fisk, fixing him
with a disconcerting stare from one intake beamer. No doubt it was
simultaneously receiving the specifications of the libel charge, on
another circuit.

"The Defense of Provocation," Fisk said.

"That is a partial defense," KaDist responded as though advising a
child. "Not sufficient."

"May it please Your Honor," Fisk said hastily, "I know it is a partial
defense. I wish to apply it to just one word in the specification. Two
words, I mean. Three. I--"

A red light glimmered momentarily on KaDist's panel. "How many words?"
it inquired heavily.

"Three, Your Honor. One in each item."

Now all lights were calmly white. "Proceed."

"The word 'deliberately' in Item One. The same word in Item Two. And the
word 'collusive' in Item Three."

"Make your plea."

"Your Honor, we--my daughter Yola and I--received an insulting and
provocative call from the actress Maxima Bubonik offering--"

"One moment, Centers," the judge said, blinking orange. "Are you
prepared to put this call on record?"

"Yes, Your Honor. Her complete call and my responses. It is obviously
relevant to the case, though--"

"Clerk will mark the transcript of that call 'Exhibit A' and enter it in
the record," Judge KaDist said.

There was a delay of perhaps two minutes while the clerk commandeered
the transcript and entered it. Fisk was sweating. FLAC had given this
line of defense a 75% probability of acceptance by the court, and it was
the most promising of the alternatives. But Fisk had to make the proper
presentation, or he would throw away even that uncertain chance.

"Proceed," KaDist said, its beam winking at Fisk in a decidedly
uncomical way.

"Your Honor, this call infuriated me. This whole affair had been
angering me increasingly, and the sheer arrogance--" He paused, as the
red light was beginning to glow. The judge had little patience with
extraneous detail. "I terminated the call abruptly, as the record shows,
and had immediate words with my daughter. Thereafter I made my complaint
to IPC. Had I not been freshly provoked by that call, I would have
phrased my complaint more moderately, and omitted those three words."

"The record shows that your call to the Illicit Practices Commission
followed the termination of the Bubonik call by three hours and
thirty-six minutes. This is normally sufficient time for the human
system to abate temporary anger."

"Yes, Your Honor. But I am not a normal man! I'm fifty years old--"

"Irrelevant."

"And very slow to cool. I stay mad for hours. So--"

"This is inconclusive," KaDist said, and Fisk's heart seemed to gain a
pound. "Are you prepared to document?"

KaDist was giving him a chance after all! "I would need character
witnesses, Your Honor. I--"

"Provide names of your recent acquaintances, excluding relatives. We
shall select from that number randomly. You will be confined to quarters
and your phone blanked until their testimony is available, to prevent
prejudicial contact."

The computer certainly was thorough! "Uh, I didn't anticipate this, so I
have not said anything to--"

The red warner flashed, so Fisk dropped his attempted explanation and
spouted names. "Mr. Brown of the Death Insurance Agency, and Mrs.
Pontimer, and Mr. Black of the Deep Space Memorial Chapel, and Dr.
Bickel, and Bill--I don't know his last name--he's a racer at Fusion
Motors. And--"

"Sufficient. Have you any Defense for the remainder of the charge,
exclusive of these three words?" KaDist asked.

"The Defense of Truth, Your Honor. Without those words attributing
motive, the three items are accurate, so far as I know."

The full panel of lights came on, green predominating. "Court recessed,"
the bailiff announced. "The hearing will resume at fourteen hundred."

The screen faded and Fisk collapsed into a more comfortable chair. He
was incommunicado now, with his set locked off and his door inoperative,
but his combined defenses were on the way to being accepted--maybe!

Promptly at two the phone relighted. The brief court ceremonies were
honored. Then: "Mrs. Pontimer to the witness stand."

Mrs. Pontimer's story was soon on record. The widow of an erstwhile
client. Fisk, as a representative of Perpetual Laser Memorial Gardens,
had sold her and her husband an attractive plot within the sixty story
mausoleum. Mr. Pontimer had died shortly thereafter, and Fisk had helped
with the funeral arrangements.

"Do you consider this man Fisk Centers to be short of temper?" KaDist
asked her then. Fisk was a little amazed at the versatility of modern
computers; the judge was filling a lawyer's shoes now.

"Mr. Centers?" the old woman asked, amazed. "No, no! He is a wonderful
person, never gets angry!"

Little did she know! Fisk thought ruefully. Naturally he tried not to
show temper before a client.

"But assume for the moment that something did make him angry. How long
would you say it might take him to regain equilibrium?"

"Your Honor, I don't believe Mr. Centers ever would be angry," she said
firmly. "He's such a nice, kind, decent, sensible man...."

Fisk bit his tongue. Her loyalty was touching, but she was unwittingly
destroying his defense.

After further inconclusive questioning, KaDist excused her and the next
witness was called.

"William Ribboner to the witness stand."

The man Fisk had known only as Bill appeared on the screen. "Look, I'm
preparing my machine for a race--" he protested as the bailiff hustled
him forward.

"Are you declining to serve as a character witness for the defendant
Fisk Centers?" Judge KaDist asked, glimmering orange.

"Fisk Centers? Hey, I remember him! What's this about 'defendant'? He
wouldn't--"

"I'm being sued for libel, Bill," Fisk said. If he spoke out of turn,
the judge would cut off his phone, but this clarification should be in
order.

Bill looked around, spying him in the screen. "Sure, I'll testify for
you, friend! I know you didn't do it!"

"The witness will face the court," KaDist said, lights dancing
warningly. "Mr. Ribboner, have you had prior discussion with the
defendant concerning this matter?"

Bill looked embarrassed. "Uh, no, Your Honor. I just know Fisk wouldn't
do anything wrong, ever. He--"

"In what connection did you know the defendant?"

"Racing, Your Honor. Fisk and I were in the Hurdle together, and he
saved my life. What a driver! Did you know he cracked the--"

"Do you feel that you know him well?"

"As well as one man can know another," Bill said grandly. "That driving
he did--"

"Approximately how long were you in contact with Mr. Centers?"

"Well, Judge, the race was only half an hour, counting the--"

The clerk and bailiff were smiling. The red light flickered warningly on
Judge KaDist's face. "You knew him for just half an hour?"

Fisk quailed, knowing what was coming. Of all the witnesses to have
selected--!

Bill turned a shade darker. "Sir, for most of that I was unconscious."

This time the entire bank of warners came on, bright and fierce.
"Unconscious!"

"Your Honor, you can learn an awful lot about a man--a lot of what
counts--in a crisis situation," Bill said earnestly. "I know every
section of that race, so I know exactly what he went through, just as if
I'd watched direct. If you only knew what the Hurdle's like--"

"One moment," KaDist said, cooling to a dim glow. "Clerk will obtain a
transcript of the relevant Hurdle car race, mark it Exhibit B, and enter
it in the record."

It was done. The film was run for the human participants at the same
time, and Fisk saw the tremendous vehicles charging along at five
hundred miles per hour, slowing for the Narrows and Hairpin, and saw his
own car spin out. His hands sweated coldly. He should have died ten
times over even before making that supersonic leap through the raging
flames of the pileup at the end! This was hardly a fit recommendation
for his contested equilibrium.

"That was a remarkable race," KaDist said after assimilating it. "Very
fine machine, that Fusion. Witness definition of the crisis situation is
accepted. Mr. Ribboner--"

"Call me Bill," Bill said, as Fisk mopped his brow with relief that this
definitional hurdle had been negotiated. "Everyone does."

"Very well, Bill," the judge said. There was evidently some small humor
within its voluminous windings. "Please confine yourself in the future
to the questions. Would you consider Mr. Centers to be of an even
disposition?"

"Sure! Never gets shaken, never gets mad. Cool all the way."

Fisk shook his head. It was happening again! His friends thought they
were helping him, but his Defense of Provocation was disintegrating.

"Could you conceive of this man becoming angry?"

Bill fidgeted. "Well, sir, I couldn't swear to every possible
circumstance, you know."

"Assume he is provoked."

"Well, if he ever did get mad--" Bill hesitated, then turned to Fisk.
"I'm awful sorry, friend, but this is on oath and I just have to say it.
You saved my life, but you're awful stubborn in the clinch or you'd
never've gotten through that race, and if you ever did get mad--"

"Address the court!" the bailiff yelled angrily.

Bill turned back. "Fisk's just not the kind to cool off fast. Like the
Hurdle--he just wouldn't let go for anything, even if it killed us all!
He'd probably stay mad for days, and I just don't know what he'd do--"

Victory! Poor Bill looked so woebegone, believing that he was harming
his friend, but that was the very testimony that would save the defense.

"What might make him angry?" the judge asked without inflection.

"Not the usual. I guess you could sock him--not that I would!--and he
wouldn't worry much. But he's got some kind of funny ethical discipline,
especially about money--"

"Hypothetical case," KaDist said. "If a party offered Fisk Centers money
to alter his set position on a financial matter--"

That computer was pretty sharp, Fisk realized. KaDist wasn't just
presiding and interrogating, it was genuinely trying to bring out the
facts.

"Fisk just doesn't take money on that basis," Bill said. "I tried to
make him take half the Hurdle winnings, and he--"

"Please answer the question."

Bill looked miserable again. Actually, the man was overestimating Fisk's
reservations about money; he preferred to follow his own standards in
any endeavor. He had tried to make a financial killing by investing in
Marsland, and gotten killed himself; now he went after only what was
due. No more--and no less. General Transport had attempted to take him
for a sucker: that was the fundamental source of his ire, he realized
now, not the specific machinations.

"Well, Your Honor," Bill said slowly, "I'm afraid he might do something
he'd be sorry for."

That was inaccurate, too. Fisk wasn't sorry; he had gotten entangled in
the technicalities of wording, but he regretted his stance not at all.
Somebody had to stand and cry "Enough!" and make it stick, so he was
standing....

"Witness is excused."

Bill left, not looking at Fisk, who was reminded painfully of Yola's
departure. Conscience was a stern master--but God bless those few who
had it!

"Mr. Centers," Judge KaDist said, and Fisk jumped to attention. All this
theorizing could come to nothing if this court lacked sympathy. "Your
partial defense of Provocation is sustained, but this is not sufficient
to dismiss the suit. The case will proceed to trial with your Defense of
Truth entered against the modified charges. Hearing adjourned."

"Thank you, Judge!" Fisk cried, but the screen was already blank. The
worst hurdle had been overcome.

"It's absolutely safe," Image-Yola said, tripping from New York to
London to Istanbul to Bombay to Tokyo to Los Angeles to Rio de Janeiro
and back to New York. "But after I've circled the world a few times, it
sure is great to get home!" Her isolated hand waved good-bye as she
vanished for the last time.

Fisk felt a clutch in his gut as of a heart seizure, and had to turn the
replays off. "I wish you were home..." he said.

He was in the foamer washing off the sweat of his legal endeavors when
the phone signaled for attention. "Take a message!" he yelled at it.

Then abruptly curious, he climbed out of the foamer in mid-cycle,
dripping bubbles, and went to read the message.

"NOTICE OF CANCELLATION OF SUIT--"

General Transport had dropped the libel suit! "But why?" he demanded
aloud as more foam slid to the rug. "They might have won--"

"They might have won a technical decision over a nonentity who has no
future in the business anyway," a voice said. "Then again, they might
have lost--which would have set a precedent for a countersuit by
you--and thirteen thousand other nonentities they've browbeaten the same
way over the years."

"Yes, that makes sense," Fisk agreed. "A trial would expose their actual
way of doing business, and win or lose their reputation would suffer."
Then he did a double take. The phone was off--and that was Yola's voice.

He turned to the door. There she was, as impish as any commercial. "I
didn't recognize you in all that educated vocabulary!" he said.

She looked at him defiantly. "I figured if you could outbluff me, you
sure could outbluff them!" Then her eyes dropped demurely. "You were
bluffing?"

About wanting to be rid of her? Yes! But she had to be told the proper
way. Fisk huffed a big breath. "You bundle of trouble! I'm going to set
a precedent on your impertinent fanny! Running out on me--"

She skipped into the hall, and he was clothed only in foam and not much
of that. He had to stop until he could get rinsed and suited.

"Stay your vile hand, hangman!" she cried happily through the open door.
In a moment he knew everyone on the floor would be paying avid
attention. "Black and blue innocent waifs don't make such cute
commercials--and then who would earn your living, Fisk Centers?"

He was rinsed and dried. He dived for the suiter, dropping the act. "Why
did you return, Yola? You couldn't have known about the suit being
dropped."

"I had a dream," she said, coming in again. "There was this long, long,
long line of white woolly sheep, all bleating naively and following one
after the other to be sheared. I never saw a real sheep in my life, but
that's what I dreamed. And in this line was just one fat ornery old
goat, with crooked horns and hardly any decent wool. But when the
shearer started, that goat--well, I just had to come back, Daddy. I sort
of like goats."

Fisk stepped out, fully clothed at last, and hugged her. "I missed you,
Mischief!"

"C'mon!" she said, wriggling away, pleased and embarrassed. "I have to
fetch us some loot."

"I don't think--"

But she was already punching a number. "Supervolt Electronics," a
secretary answered.

"Give me your advertising office," Yola said briskly. Then: "I'm Yola
Centers. You know--the Matrans series? You expressed interest in an
option, but there was some fuss about the subsidiaries. Well, I'm ready
to--"

There was a momentary consultation at the other end. "We're sorry," the
Supervolt office said. "We are not engaging in advertising appropriate
to your talents at the present time."

"Bleep!" Yola swore, and called another. "Mannequin Androids? I'm Yola
Centers, and last time we talked--"

The android looked pained. "We regret--"

Three more calls brought similar results. Yola snapped her fingers as
the screen faded on the last. "Bleep! I should have known! It's the
blacklist!"

"You can't ever really win against Big Industry," Fisk agreed. "General
Transport was stupid to offer us something to fight and refute. As soon
as the libel suit got sticky, they dropped that tactic--but that hardly
means they are really sorry or that they have any intention of changing
their ways. The other companies are no different. They all reflect the
contemporary mores, and improvement will be excruciatingly slow in
coming. None of these outfits appreciate goats in the sheepfold. So they
will never give the true reason, because there are stringent regulations
against blacklisting--as there are against libel, monopolistic
collusion, and all the rest--but your career as an actress is finished.
I'm sorry."

"We oughta sue!" she muttered, going to the fooder.

"We can't. Not on the blacklisting, because it's impossible to prove
even though everyone in commercial advertising knows the score. No
artist will dare testify, either, because he would be blacklisted too.
But my complaint remains at IPC--and by and by that will have its
effect. Some year better policing will come, and the practices of
commercial advertising will improve--and we will know we helped it
happen."

"Come off it, Frisky," she said, taking out her entree. "You're just
relieved to get me out of acting."

"Well, a daughter is better than a prima donna," he agreed. "Unless you
grew up to be like Maxima Bubonik...."

Then he ducked, but she had anticipated him. The double-decker
chocolate-nut whipped-custard sandwich hit him cornerwise on the nose.

Copyright  1990 by Piers Anthony.

Cover art by Romas.

ISBN: 0-441-31748-0

