Part 1 (1/2)
Legacy.
by James H Schmitz.
1
It was the time of sunrise in Ceyce, the White City, placidly beautiful capital of Maccadon, the University World of the Hub.
In the Colonial School's sprawling five-mile complex of buildings and tropical parks, the second student s.h.i.+ft was headed for breakfast, while a larger part of the fourth s.h.i.+ft moved at a more leisurely rate toward their bunks. The school's organized activities were not much affected by the hour, but the big exercise quadrangle was almost deserted for once.
Behind the railing of the firing range a young woman stood by herself, gun in hand, waiting for the automatic range monitor to select a new string of targets for release.
She was around twenty-four, slim and trim in the school's comfortable hiking outfit. Tan s.h.i.+rt and knee-length shorts, knee stockings, soft-soled shoes. Her sun hat hung on the railing, and the dawn wind whipped strands of shoulder-length, modishly white-silver hair along her cheeks. She held a small, beautifully worked handgun loosely beside her--the twin-barrelled sporting Denton which gunwise citizens of the Hub rated as a weapon for the precisionist and expert only. In inst.i.tutions like the Colonial School it wasn't often seen.
At the exact instant the monitor released its new flight of targets, she became aware of the aircar gliding down toward her from the administration buildings on the right. Startled, she glanced sideways long enough to identify the car's two occupants, s.h.i.+fted her attention back to the cl.u.s.ter of targets speeding toward her, studied the flight pattern for another unhurried half-second, finally raised the Denton.
The little gun spat its noiseless, invisible needle of destruction eight times. Six small puffs of crimson smoke hung in the air. The two remaining targets swerved up in a mocking curve and shot back to their discharge huts.
The girl bit her lip in moderate annoyance, safetied and holstered the gun and waved her hand left-right at the range attendant to indicate she was finished. Then she turned to face the aircar as it settled slowly to the ground twenty feet away. Her gray eyes studied its occupants critically.
”Fine example you set the students!” she remarked. ”Flying right into a hot gun range!”
Doctor Plemponi, princ.i.p.al of the Colonial School, smiled soothingly.
”Eight years ago, your father bawled me out for the very same thing, Trigger! Much more abusively, I must say. You know that was my first meeting with old Runser Argee, and I--”
”Plemp!” Mihul, Chief of Physical Conditioning, Women's Division, cautioned sharply from the seat behind him. ”Watch what you're doing, you a.s.s!”
Confused, Doctor Plemponi turned to look at her. The aircar dropped the last four feet to a jolting landing. Mihul groaned. Plemponi apologized.
Trigger walked over to them.
”Does he do that often?” she asked interestedly.
”Every other time!” Mihul a.s.serted. She was a tall, lean, muscular slab of a woman, around forty. She gave Trigger a wink behind Plemponi's back. ”We keep the chiropractors on stand-by duty when we go riding with Plemp.”
”Now then! Now then!” Doctor Plemponi said. ”You distracted my attention for a moment, that's all. Now, Trigger, the reason we're here is that Mihul told me at our prebreakfast conference you weren't entirely happy at the good old Colonial School. So climb in, if you don't have much else to do, and we'll run up to the office and discuss it.” He opened the door for her.
”Much else to do!” Trigger gave him a look. ”All right, Doctor. We'll run up and discuss it.”
She went back for her sun hat, climbed in, closed the door and sat down beside him, shoving the holstered Denton forward on her thigh.
Plemponi eyed the gun dubiously. ”Brus.h.i.+ng up in case there's another grabber raid?” he inquired. He reached out for the guide stick.
Trigger shook her head. ”Just working off hostility, I guess.” She waited till he had lifted the car off the ground in a reckless swoop.
”That business yesterday--it really was a grabber raid?”
”We're almost sure it was,” Mihul said behind her, ”though I did hear some talk they might have been after those two top-secret plasmoids in your Project.”
”_That's_ not very likely,” Trigger remarked. ”The raiders were a half mile away from where they should have come down if the plasmoids were what they wanted. And from what I saw of them, they weren't nearly a big enough gang for a job of that kind.”
”I thought so, too,” Mihul said. ”They were topflight professionals, in any case. I got a glimpse of some of their equipment. Knockout guns--foggers--and that was a fast car!”
”Very fast car,” Trigger agreed. ”It's what made me suspicious when I first saw them come in.”