Part 19 (2/2)

When the two men were full of food, they strolled over to a davenport facing the fire. As they sat down, Innocent entered the room, carrying a tall, dewy mint julep on a tray. She was followed by another female figure bearing a bottle of avignognac and the appurtenances which are its due--and at the first full sight of that figure Hilton stopped breathing for fifteen seconds.

Her hair was very thick, intensely black and long, cut squarely off just below the lowest points of her shoulder blades. Heavy brows and long lashes--eyes too--were all intensely, vividly black. Her skin was tanned to a deep and glowing almost-but-not-quite-brown.

”Murchison's Dark Lady!” Hilton gasped. ”Larry! You've--we've--_I've_ got that painting here?”

”Oh, yes, sir.” The newcomer spoke before Larry could. ”At the other end--your part--of the room. You will look now, sir, please?” Her voice was low, rich and as smooth as cream.

Putting her tray down carefully on the end-table, she led him toward the other fireplace. Past the piano, past the tri-di pit; past a towering grillwork holding art treasures by the score. Over to the left, against the wall, there was a big, business-like desk. On the wall, over the desk, hung _the_ painting; a copy of which had been in Hilton's room for over eight years.

He stared at it for at least a minute. He glanced around: at the other priceless duplicates so prodigally present, at his own guns arrayed above the mantel and on each side of the fireplace. Then, without a word, he started back to join Karns. She walked springily beside him.

”What's your name, Miss?” he asked, finally.

”I haven't earned any as yet, sir. My number is ...”

”Never mind that. Your name is 'Dark Lady'.”

”Oh, thank you, sir; that is truly wonderful!” And Dark Lady sat cross-legged on the rug at Hilton's feet and busied herself with the esoteric rites of Old Avignon.

Hilton took a deep inhalation and a small sip, then stared at Karns.

Karns, over the rim of his gla.s.s, stared back.

”I can see where this would be habit-forming,” Hilton said, ”and very deadly. _Extremely_ deadly.”

”Every wish granted. Surrounded by all this.” Karns swept his arm through three-quarters of a circle. ”Waited on hand and foot by powerful men and by the materializations of the dreams of the greatest, finest artists who ever lived. Fatal? I don't know....”

”My solid hope is that we never have to find out. And when you add in Innocent and Dark Lady.... They _look_ to be about seventeen, but the thought that they're older than the hills of Rome and powered by everlasting atomic engines--” He broke off suddenly and blushed. ”Excuse me, please, girls. I _know_ better than to talk about people that way, right in front of them; I really do.”

”Do you really think we're _people_?” Innocent and Dark Lady squealed, as one.

That set Hilton back onto his heels. ”I don't know.... I've wondered.

Are you?”

Both girls, silent, looked at Larry.

”We don't know, either,” Larry said. ”At first, of course, there were crude, non-thinking machines. But when the Guide attained its present status, the Masters themselves could not agree. They divided about half and half on the point. They never did settle it any closer than that.”

”I certainly won't try to, then. But for my money, you are people,”

Hilton said, and Karns agreed.

That, of course, touched off a near-riot of joy; after which the two men made an inch-by-inch study of their tremendous living-room. Then, long after bedtime, Larry and Dark Lady escorted Hilton to his bedroom.

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