Part 37 (1/2)
Holati looked startled. ”He can't do that, and he knows it!” He reached for the desk transmitter.
”Don't bother, Commissioner. I told Mantelish I'd been put in charge of Repulsive, and that he'd lose an arm if he tried to walk out of the lab with him.”
Holati cleared his throat. ”I see! How did Mantelish react?”
”Oh, he huffed a bit. Like he does. Then he calmed down and agreed he could get by without Repulsive out there. So we stood by while he measured and weighed the thing, and so on. After that he got friendly and said you'd asked him to fill me in on current plasmoid theory.”
”So I did,” said Holati. ”Did he?”
”He tried, I think. But it's like you say. I got lost in about three sentences and never caught up.” She looked curiously at the Commissioner. ”I didn't have a chance to talk to Major Quillan alone, so I'm wondering why Mantelish was told the I-Fleets in the Vishni area are hunting for planets with plasmoids on them. I thought you felt he was too woolly-minded to be trusted.”
”We couldn't keep that from him very well,” Holati said. ”He was the boy who thought of it.”
”You didn't have to tell him they'd found some possibles did you?”
”He did, unfortunately. He's had those plasmoid detectors of his for about a month, but he didn't happen to think of mentioning them. The reason he was to come back to Manon originally was to sort over the stuff the Fleets have been sending back here. It's as weird a collection of low-grade life-forms as I've ever seen, but not plasmoid. Mantelish went into a temper and wanted to know why the idiots weren't using detectors.”
”Oh, Lord!” Trigger said.
”That's what it's like when you're working with him,” said the Commissioner. ”We started making up detectors wholesale and rus.h.i.+ng them out there, but the new results haven't come in yet.”
”Well, that explains it.” Trigger looked down at the desk a moment, then glanced up and met the Commissioner's eye. She colored slightly.
”Incidentally,” she said, ”I did take the opportunity to apologize to Major Quillan for clipping him a couple this morning. I shouldn't have done that.”
”He didn't seem offended,” said Holati.
”No, not really,” she agreed.
”And I explained to him that you had a very good reason to feel disturbed.”
”Thanks,” said Trigger. ”By the way, was he really a smuggler at one time? And a hijacker?”
”Yes--very successful at it. It's excellent cover for some phases of Intelligence work. As I heard it, though, Quillan happened to scramble up one of the Hub's nastier dope rings in the process, and was broken two grades in rank.”
”Broken?” Trigger said. ”Why?”
”Unwarranted interference with a political situation. The Scouts are rough about that. You're supposed to see those things. Sometimes you don't. Sometimes you do and go ahead anyway. They may pat you on the back privately, but they also give you the axe.”
”I see,” she said. She smiled.
”Just how far did we get in bringing you up to date yesterday?” the Commissioner asked.
”The remains that weren't Doctor Azol,” Trigger said.
If it hadn't been for the funny business with Trigger, Holati said, he mightn't have been immediately skeptical about Doctor Azol's supposed demise by plasmoid during a thrombosis-induced spell of unconsciousness.
There had been no previous indications that the U-League's screening of its scientists, in connection with the plasmoid find, might have been strategically loused up from the start.
But as things stood, he did look on the event with very considerable skepticism. Doctor Azol's death, in that particular form, seemed too much of a coincidence. For, beside himself, only Azol knew that another person already had suddenly and mysteriously lost consciousness on Harvest Moon. Only Azol therefore might expect that the Commissioner would quietly inform the official investigators of the preceding incident, thus cinching the accidental death theory in Azol's case much more neatly than the a.s.sumed heart attack had done.