Part 22 (1/2)

Beside them appeared the crouching figure of Tloto. Drops from the wet leaves burned on his neck and back, over the drying blood. He turned his blank face left and right in the golden light, and with all his knowing could communicate no awe.

CHAPTER IX

Clea Koshar had been installed in her government office for three days.

The notebook in which she had been doing her own work in inverse sub-trigonometric functions had been put away in her desk for exactly fifty-four seconds when she made the first discovery that gave her a permanent place in the history of Toromon's wars as its first military hero. Suddenly she pounded her fist on the computer keys, flung her pencil across the room, muttered, ”What the h.e.l.l is this!” and dialed the military ministry.

It took ten minutes to get Tomar. His red-haired face came in on the visiphone, recognized her, and smiled. ”Hi,” he said.

”Hi, yourself,” she said. ”I just got out those figures you people sent us about the data from the radiation barrier, and those old readings from the time Telphar was destroyed. Tomar, I didn't even have to feed them to the computer. I just looked at them. That radiation was artificially created. Its increment is completely steady. At least on the second derivative. Its build-up pattern is such that there couldn't be more than two simple generators, or one complexed on ...”

”Slow down,” Tomar said. ”What do you mean, generators?”

”The radiation barrier, or at least most of it, is artificially maintained. And there are not more than two generators, and possibly one, maintaining it.”

”How do you generate radiation?” Tomar asked.

”I don't know,” Clea said. ”But somebody has been doing it.”

”I don't want to knock your genius, but how come n.o.body else figured it out?”

”I just guess n.o.body thought it was a possibility, or thought of gratuitously taking the second derivative, or bothered to look at them before they fed them into the computers. In twenty minutes I can figure out the location for you.”

”You do that,” he said, ”and I'll get the information to whomever it's supposed to get to. You know, this is the first piece of information of import that we've gotten from this whole battery of slide-rule slippers up there. I should have figured it would have probably come from you.

Thanks, if we can use it.”

She blew him a kiss as his face winked out. Then she got out her notebook again. Then minutes later the visiphone crackled at her. She turned to it and tried to get the operator. The operator was not to be gotten. She reached into her desk and got out a small pocket tool kit and was about to attack the housing of the frequency-filterer when the crackling increased and she heard a voice. She put the screw driver down and put the instrument back on the desk. A face flickered onto the screen and then flickered off. The face had dark hair, seemed perhaps familiar. But it was gone before she was sure she had made it out.

Crossed signals from another line, she figured. Maybe a short in the dialing mechanism. She glanced down at her notebook and took up her pencil when the picture flashed onto the screen again. This time it was clear and there was no static. The familiarity, she did not realize, was the familiarity of her own face on a man.

”h.e.l.lo,” he said. ”h.e.l.lo, h.e.l.lo, Clea?”

”Who is this?” she asked.

”Clea, this is Jon.”

She sat very still, trying to pull two halves of something back together (as in a forest, a prince had felt the same things disengage). Clea succeeded. ”You're supposed to be ... dead. I mean I thought you were.

Where are you, Jon?”

”Clea,” he said. ”Clea--I have to talk to you.”

There was a five-second silence.

”Jon, Jon, how are you?”

”Fine,” he said. ”I really am. I'm not in prison any more. I've been out a long time, and I've done a lot of things. But Clea, I need your help.”

”Of course,” she said. ”Tell me how? What do you want me to do?”