Part 38 (1/2)

Legacy James H. Schmitz 30390K 2022-07-22

”I guess I can stand it,” she said. ”As far as you're concerned, anyway.” She hesitated. ”What's the egghead like?”

”Old Cranadon?” said Pilch. ”You won't mind her a bit, I think. Very motherly old type. Let's get through the preparations first, and then I'll introduce you to her. If you think it would make you more comfortable, I'll just stay around while she's working. I've sat in on her interviews before. How's that?”

”Sounds better,” Trigger said. She did feel a good deal relieved.

They slid presently into a tunnel-like lock of the s.p.a.ce vehicle Holati Tate had described as a flying mountain. From what Trigger could see of it in the guide lights on the approach, it did rather closely resemble a very large mountain of the craggier sort. They went through a series of lifts, portals and pa.s.sages, and wound up in a small and softly lit room with a small desk, a very large couch, a huge wall-screen, and a.s.sorted gadgetry. Pilch sat down at the desk and invited Trigger to make herself comfortable on the couch.

Trigger lay down on the couch. She had a very brief sensation of falling gently through dimness.

Half an hour later she sat up on the couch. Pilch switched on a desk light and looked at her thoughtfully. Trigger blinked. Then her eyes widened, first with surprise, then in comprehension.

”Liar!” she said.

”Hm-m-m,” said Pilch. ”Yes.”

”That _was_ the interview!”

”True.”

”Then you're the egghead!”

”Tcha!” said Pilch. ”Well, I believe I can modestly describe myself as being like that. Yes. You're another, by the way. We're just smart about different things. Not so very different.”

”You were smart about this,” Trigger said. She swung her legs off the couch and regarded Pilch dubiously. Pilch grinned.

”Took most of the disagreeableness out of it, didn't it?”

”Yes,” Trigger admitted, ”it did. Now what do we do?”

”Now,” said Pilch, ”I'll explain.”

The thing that had caught their attention was a quite simple process. It just happened to be a process the Psychology Service hadn't observed under those particular circ.u.mstances before.

”Here's what our investigators had the last time,” Pilch said. ”Lines and lines of stuff, of course. But here's a simple continuity which makes it clear. Your mother dies when you're six months old. Then there are a few nurses whom you don't like very much. Good nurses but frankly much too stupid for you, though you don't know that, and they don't either, naturally. Next, you're seven years old--a bit over--and there's a mud pond on the farm near Ceyce where you spend all your vacations. You just love that old mud pond.”

Trigger laughed. ”A smelly old hole, actually! Full of froggy sorts of things. I went out to that farm six years ago, just to look around it again. But you're right. I did love that mud pond, once.”

”Right up to that seventh summer,” Pilch said. ”Which was the summer your father's cousin spent her vacation on the farm with you.”

Trigger nodded. ”Perhaps. I don't remember the time too well.”

”Well,” Pilch said, ”she was a brilliant woman. In some ways. She was about the age your mother had been when she died. She was very good-looking. And she was _nice_! She played games with a little girl, sang to her. Told her stories. Cuddled her.”

Trigger blinked. ”Did she? I don't--”

”However,” said Pilch, ”she did not play games with, tell stories to, cuddle, etcetera, little girls who”--her voice went suddenly thin and edged--”_come in all filthy and smelling from that dirty, slimy old mud pond!_”

Trigger looked startled. ”You know,” she said, ”I do believe I remember her saying that--just that way!”