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A certain X-factor that sometimes does the trick.”
“Well, I guess you know what you’re doing,” Stan said. “Although I’ve been wanting to see some of this thieving of yours in action.”
“Being a good thief costs money, Stan.”
“That’s a funny thing to say. I thought you were supposed to make money that way.” “That’s the result, of course. But when you work in the upper echelon of crime, you don’t go in and hold up a candy store. And you don’t knock off a bank, either.
Those are not what I was trained for. You never asked what kind of thief I was, Stan. Well, I’m telling you now. I’m a high-society jewelry thief. I knock off only the best people. I work at political conventions, movie openings, awards ceremonies, great sports events, things that bring together crowds of people with lots of money. But that requires a setup. Otherwise I’d have to spend too long just trying to dope out how to do it. I buy a ready-made plan from an expert in the field. It comes high. But it’s guaranteed to bring me to large amounts of money and jewelry.”
“How much does a plan like that cost?”
“If you buy one from an expert like Gibberman, it can cost plenty. I’m going to use your money to win more money so I can pay Gibberman to give me one of his great plans. It may sound like a roundabout way to you, but name me any other profession where you can go from a thousand dollars to around a million in less than three days.”
“Sounds interesting,” said Stan. “Can I come along?”
“Well, of course you can, at least for some of it, but you have to be real cool. You mustn’t even act like you’re with me. You see, gambling is hard work. I’m going to have to give it all my attention. Then, assuming I win, there’s the next part of the operation, which calls for even more attention.”
“Yeah? What’s that?”
That’s walking out of the gambling place with your money, Stan.”
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“Well, I guess you know what you’re doing,” Stan said. “Although I’ve been wanting to see some of this thieving of yours in action.”
“Being a good thief costs money, Stan.”
“That’s a funny thing to say. I thought you were supposed to make money that way.” “That’s the result, of course. But when you work in the upper echelon of crime, you don’t go in and hold up a candy store. And you don’t knock off a bank, either.
Those are not what I was trained for. You never asked what kind of thief I was, Stan. Well, I’m telling you now. I’m a high-society jewelry thief. I knock off only the best people. I work at political conventions, movie openings, awards ceremonies, great sports events, things that bring together crowds of people with lots of money. But that requires a setup. Otherwise I’d have to spend too long just trying to dope out how to do it. I buy a ready-made plan from an expert in the field. It comes high. But it’s guaranteed to bring me to large amounts of money and jewelry.”
“How much does a plan like that cost?”
“If you buy one from an expert like Gibberman, it can cost plenty. I’m going to use your money to win more money so I can pay Gibberman to give me one of his great plans. It may sound like a roundabout way to you, but name me any other profession where you can go from a thousand dollars to around a million in less than three days.”
“Sounds interesting,” said Stan. “Can I come along?”
“Well, of course you can, at least for some of it, but you have to be real cool. You mustn’t even act like you’re with me. You see, gambling is hard work. I’m going to have to give it all my attention. Then, assuming I win, there’s the next part of the operation, which calls for even more attention.”
“Yeah? What’s that?”
That’s walking out of the gambling place with your money, Stan.”
5
At first Stan didn’t want to show his robot alien to Julie. On the one hand, he thought it was the best piece of work he had ever done. But would she realize that? What would her reaction be?
It didn’t matter what she thought, of course, Stan told himself logically. Yet all the time he knew it did matter, very much. He realized he wanted Julie to think well of him. He had been alone too long, and he had hidden from everyone, including himself, just how lonely and desperate he had been. It would have been too much to have realized that earlier. But now that Julie had come into his life, he could no longer bear being without her. He wanted to make sure that never happened.
He didn’t know what was going to happen. He was scared. But he was also strangely happy. Over the last few days the individual moments of his life felt better than they had for a long time. Maybe he’d never felt so good.
He was thinking about this while he showered and put on clothes fresh from the dry cleaners. He shaved with special care, and he laughed at himself for doing all this, but that didn’t stop him. He saw Julie over breakfast. She was looking radiant, her hair sparkling in the sunshine.
After breakfast, Stan showed her his lab.
After that, it was time to show off his robot alien.
He kept it in a special temperature-controlled room behind a locked door. The door was to keep people out, not to keep the robot in, he told Julie. It stood perfectly immobile, since it was not presently activated.
Its black, heavily muscled body seemed ready to lunge. Yet Julie did not hesitate when Stan took her hand and peeled back the robot’s lips to show its gleaming rows of needle-sharp fangs.
“Your pet looks like evil incarnate,” Julie said.
“As a matter of fact, he’s suprisingly gentle. I hope I haven’t made a mistake in the circuitry. He may need to be trained to fight.”
“I can be of some help there,” Julie said.
It didn’t matter what she thought, of course, Stan told himself logically. Yet all the time he knew it did matter, very much. He realized he wanted Julie to think well of him. He had been alone too long, and he had hidden from everyone, including himself, just how lonely and desperate he had been. It would have been too much to have realized that earlier. But now that Julie had come into his life, he could no longer bear being without her. He wanted to make sure that never happened.
He didn’t know what was going to happen. He was scared. But he was also strangely happy. Over the last few days the individual moments of his life felt better than they had for a long time. Maybe he’d never felt so good.
He was thinking about this while he showered and put on clothes fresh from the dry cleaners. He shaved with special care, and he laughed at himself for doing all this, but that didn’t stop him. He saw Julie over breakfast. She was looking radiant, her hair sparkling in the sunshine.
After breakfast, Stan showed her his lab.
After that, it was time to show off his robot alien.
He kept it in a special temperature-controlled room behind a locked door. The door was to keep people out, not to keep the robot in, he told Julie. It stood perfectly immobile, since it was not presently activated.
Its black, heavily muscled body seemed ready to lunge. Yet Julie did not hesitate when Stan took her hand and peeled back the robot’s lips to show its gleaming rows of needle-sharp fangs.
“Your pet looks like evil incarnate,” Julie said.
“As a matter of fact, he’s suprisingly gentle. I hope I haven’t made a mistake in the circuitry. He may need to be trained to fight.”
“I can be of some help there,” Julie said.
6
In Jersey City, lying on a rank bed with a filthy mattress, Thomas Hoban stirred uneasily in his sleep. The dreams didn’t come so of-ten, but they still came. And always the same …
Captain Thomas Hoban was seated in the big command chair, viewscreens above him, clear-steel glass canopy in front. Not that you get to see much in space, not even in the Asteroid Belt. But even the biggest spaceship is small in terms of space for humans, and you get to appreciate even a view of nothingness. It’s better than being sealed up in a duralloy cocoon without any vision except for what the TV monitors can offer.
The Dolomite—a good ship with an old but reliable atomic drive, but also recently fitted with tachyonic gear for multiparsec jumps—was currently on a local run within the solar system, tooling around doing a job here, a job there, trying to pick up some money for the owners. Then they got the signal that took them to Lea II in the asteroids.
Lea was a fueling base, owned by Universal Obsidian but open to all ships. It was a refueling spot. It even had a kind of cafe, only a dozen seats and a menu like you’d expect at a place that hired their cooks by how little they would steal and cut costs by never bringing in fresh provisions. Not that fresh produce comes easy in the asteroids. It costs too much to make special runs with your iceberg lettuce.
After leaving Lea, Hoban had taken the Dolomite to Position A23 in the asteroids. That was the location for the Ayngell Works, a refinery on its own slab of rock, where a robot work crew purified metals and rare earths mined elsewhere in the asteroids. A23 was located in one of the densest parts of the cluster. You had to navigate at slow speeds and with care, but who didn’t know that? And Hoban was a careful man. He didn’t let his second-in-command do the job for him. Even though Gill was an android and a top pilot and navigator, Hoban did it himself, and he did it well. In any event, no one had any complaints about him before he came to A23.
His job on A23 was to take a big metals hopper into tow and bring it to the Luna Reclamations Facility.
Taking it up was no small job. It was a big mother, too big to fit into the Dolomite’s hold. But of course the asteroid it was perched on had negligible gravity, so there was no difficulty in pulling the hopper away from the surface once the magnetic clamps that held it to its massive base plate were released. Hoban’s crew, by all accounts, were trained men; it should have been a piece of cake.
The trouble was, they weren’t really a trained crew. There were three Malays aboard who spoke no English and only understood the simplest commands. That usually worked out all right, but not this time. It had never been proven, but one of those Malays must have gotten confused working in the lowest bay. Somehow he or someone had missed the towline entirely and had locked a fuel-line feeder into the cou-pling winch. The next thing Hoban knew, the feeding mechanism had been jerked out of the atomic pile, which had shut down automatically, leaving him floating in space without main power.
This wasn’t the first time a spacecraft had lost a main engine. Gill estimated six hours to repair it. Meantime the backup accumulators and the steering jets would provide enough propulsion to get back to A23 so they could pick up the five crewmen who had gone down to manhandle the cargo ties into position.
At least that’s what should have happened, or so it was claimed in the court inquiry later.
Instead, Hoban had turned the ship toward Luna and got away as fast as he could. He claimed afterward that there was a lot more wrong than just losing an engine. Down on A23, an inexperienced crew member had accidentally pulled the interlocks on the atomic pile that kept A23 running. The damned thing was going critical and there was no time to do anything but run for it…
Leaving the five crewmen on A23 to their fate.
Hoban had had to make a quick decision. He calculated that the pile was going to blow up in three minutes. If he stayed around or moved in closer, the blast would take him with it. Even a class-four duralloy hull wasn’t built for that kind of treatment. And anyhow, nonmilitary spacecraft were usually built of lightergauge metal than the fighting ships.
It was pandemonium aboard the Dolomite. There was a crew of twenty aboard, and five of them were down at A23 with the blast coming up on them in minutes. Half of the remaining crew had wanted the captain to ignore the lapsed-time indicator, ignore the risk, and go back to pick up the men; the other half wanted him to blow off what remained of battery power and get out of there as fast as his jets would take him.
The crew had burst into the control room, hysterical and entirely out of order, and they had begun to come to blows right there while Hoban was trying to con the ship and Gill into attending to the navigation. Letting those men in there had been the captain’s first mistake.
Crewmen were not allowed in officer country except by specific invitation. When a crewman trespasses, shipboard code says he should be punished immediately. If Hoban had ordered Gill to seize the first man to come in and put him into the crowded little locker belowdecks that served as jail space, the others might have had second thoughts. Crews obey strong leadership, and Hoban’s leadership at this point was decidedly weak.
It was in the middle of that shouting writhing mass of people that Hoban had come to his decision.
“Open the accumulators! Get us out of here, Mr. Gill!”
That had shut everybody up, since the acceleration alarm had gone off and they had to get back to their own part of the ship and strap down while the faux gravity was still in operation. It was Hoban’s hesitation that had almost set off the men, but once he’d made up his mind, things were better.
The question was, had he made the right choice? The jury decided there was reason enough to believe that Hoban had panicked, had not thought through his position, had not properly calculated the risk. The jury’s report said that he had had more than enough time and could have gone in for the men without undue risk to the ship. It would have been cutting it a little fine, but in the atmosphere of the trial, men didn’t think about that. They didn’t really ask themselves what they would have done in Hoban’s shoes. They just knew that five crewmen were dead, and the company was liable.
But the question was, under which clause of the insurance contract was the company liable? If what had happened was beyond anyone’s power to change, that was one thing. But if it was due to pilot error or poor judgment, then the company had less direct liability. Guess which the jury went for?
Spaceship pilots were important men, like star athletes, and most of them had, in addition to solid abilities, good-to-excellent connections. Hoban didn’t have any of that. Just top marks in his class through-out the university and Space School after that He was the corps’ token poor boy; proof that anyone could make it in the corps if he was smart and diligent. But when it came right down to it, after the accident, the company didn’t want to pay out on the higher figure of the insurance and Hoban didn’t have any friend in high places to keep a watch over his interests. Juries had been known to be bribed, and Bio-Pharm had been known to bribe them.
The case had faded quickly from the news. There were lots of other things to get excited about. No one was even interested in doing a vid special on the Hoban case. But if they’d looked into it, they might have been surprised.
Captain Thomas Hoban was seated in the big command chair, viewscreens above him, clear-steel glass canopy in front. Not that you get to see much in space, not even in the Asteroid Belt. But even the biggest spaceship is small in terms of space for humans, and you get to appreciate even a view of nothingness. It’s better than being sealed up in a duralloy cocoon without any vision except for what the TV monitors can offer.
The Dolomite—a good ship with an old but reliable atomic drive, but also recently fitted with tachyonic gear for multiparsec jumps—was currently on a local run within the solar system, tooling around doing a job here, a job there, trying to pick up some money for the owners. Then they got the signal that took them to Lea II in the asteroids.
Lea was a fueling base, owned by Universal Obsidian but open to all ships. It was a refueling spot. It even had a kind of cafe, only a dozen seats and a menu like you’d expect at a place that hired their cooks by how little they would steal and cut costs by never bringing in fresh provisions. Not that fresh produce comes easy in the asteroids. It costs too much to make special runs with your iceberg lettuce.
After leaving Lea, Hoban had taken the Dolomite to Position A23 in the asteroids. That was the location for the Ayngell Works, a refinery on its own slab of rock, where a robot work crew purified metals and rare earths mined elsewhere in the asteroids. A23 was located in one of the densest parts of the cluster. You had to navigate at slow speeds and with care, but who didn’t know that? And Hoban was a careful man. He didn’t let his second-in-command do the job for him. Even though Gill was an android and a top pilot and navigator, Hoban did it himself, and he did it well. In any event, no one had any complaints about him before he came to A23.
His job on A23 was to take a big metals hopper into tow and bring it to the Luna Reclamations Facility.
Taking it up was no small job. It was a big mother, too big to fit into the Dolomite’s hold. But of course the asteroid it was perched on had negligible gravity, so there was no difficulty in pulling the hopper away from the surface once the magnetic clamps that held it to its massive base plate were released. Hoban’s crew, by all accounts, were trained men; it should have been a piece of cake.
The trouble was, they weren’t really a trained crew. There were three Malays aboard who spoke no English and only understood the simplest commands. That usually worked out all right, but not this time. It had never been proven, but one of those Malays must have gotten confused working in the lowest bay. Somehow he or someone had missed the towline entirely and had locked a fuel-line feeder into the cou-pling winch. The next thing Hoban knew, the feeding mechanism had been jerked out of the atomic pile, which had shut down automatically, leaving him floating in space without main power.
This wasn’t the first time a spacecraft had lost a main engine. Gill estimated six hours to repair it. Meantime the backup accumulators and the steering jets would provide enough propulsion to get back to A23 so they could pick up the five crewmen who had gone down to manhandle the cargo ties into position.
At least that’s what should have happened, or so it was claimed in the court inquiry later.
Instead, Hoban had turned the ship toward Luna and got away as fast as he could. He claimed afterward that there was a lot more wrong than just losing an engine. Down on A23, an inexperienced crew member had accidentally pulled the interlocks on the atomic pile that kept A23 running. The damned thing was going critical and there was no time to do anything but run for it…
Leaving the five crewmen on A23 to their fate.
Hoban had had to make a quick decision. He calculated that the pile was going to blow up in three minutes. If he stayed around or moved in closer, the blast would take him with it. Even a class-four duralloy hull wasn’t built for that kind of treatment. And anyhow, nonmilitary spacecraft were usually built of lightergauge metal than the fighting ships.
It was pandemonium aboard the Dolomite. There was a crew of twenty aboard, and five of them were down at A23 with the blast coming up on them in minutes. Half of the remaining crew had wanted the captain to ignore the lapsed-time indicator, ignore the risk, and go back to pick up the men; the other half wanted him to blow off what remained of battery power and get out of there as fast as his jets would take him.
The crew had burst into the control room, hysterical and entirely out of order, and they had begun to come to blows right there while Hoban was trying to con the ship and Gill into attending to the navigation. Letting those men in there had been the captain’s first mistake.
Crewmen were not allowed in officer country except by specific invitation. When a crewman trespasses, shipboard code says he should be punished immediately. If Hoban had ordered Gill to seize the first man to come in and put him into the crowded little locker belowdecks that served as jail space, the others might have had second thoughts. Crews obey strong leadership, and Hoban’s leadership at this point was decidedly weak.
It was in the middle of that shouting writhing mass of people that Hoban had come to his decision.
“Open the accumulators! Get us out of here, Mr. Gill!”
That had shut everybody up, since the acceleration alarm had gone off and they had to get back to their own part of the ship and strap down while the faux gravity was still in operation. It was Hoban’s hesitation that had almost set off the men, but once he’d made up his mind, things were better.
The question was, had he made the right choice? The jury decided there was reason enough to believe that Hoban had panicked, had not thought through his position, had not properly calculated the risk. The jury’s report said that he had had more than enough time and could have gone in for the men without undue risk to the ship. It would have been cutting it a little fine, but in the atmosphere of the trial, men didn’t think about that. They didn’t really ask themselves what they would have done in Hoban’s shoes. They just knew that five crewmen were dead, and the company was liable.
But the question was, under which clause of the insurance contract was the company liable? If what had happened was beyond anyone’s power to change, that was one thing. But if it was due to pilot error or poor judgment, then the company had less direct liability. Guess which the jury went for?
Spaceship pilots were important men, like star athletes, and most of them had, in addition to solid abilities, good-to-excellent connections. Hoban didn’t have any of that. Just top marks in his class through-out the university and Space School after that He was the corps’ token poor boy; proof that anyone could make it in the corps if he was smart and diligent. But when it came right down to it, after the accident, the company didn’t want to pay out on the higher figure of the insurance and Hoban didn’t have any friend in high places to keep a watch over his interests. Juries had been known to be bribed, and Bio-Pharm had been known to bribe them.
The case had faded quickly from the news. There were lots of other things to get excited about. No one was even interested in doing a vid special on the Hoban case. But if they’d looked into it, they might have been surprised.
7
Callahan’s Sporting Club near Delancey Street was an illegal club. The authorities were always closing it down, but Callahan’s always managed to open again in a day or two. Many city mayors and police commissioners had sworn to close the place once and for all, but somehow they never got around to it. Too much money changed hands. It was nice to know that some things, like the power of bribery, never changed.
A panel slid open in a reinforced door, and a face looked out. “Whaddyaa want?”
“I want to gamble,” Julie said.
“Who do you know?”
“Luigi.”
“Then come on in.”
After they were inside, Stan whispered to her, “Who’s Luigi?”
“I have no idea,” Julie said. “In a place like this, looking like you know someone is worth almost as much as really knowing.”
Callahan’s was filled with well-dressed, prosperous-looking people, most of them crowded three deep around the horseshoe-shaped bar. The general depression and malaise that seemed to grip so much of America didn’t operate here. Here, things were booming.
Stan could see people sitting in the adjoining dining room, eating as though there were no food shortages. It looked like they were eating real steaks, too. From beyond the dining room he could hear the excited sounds of people betting. The gaming rooms would be right down there, and that was where Julie led him.
“What game are you going to play?” he asked.
“I’ll try Whorgle,” she said.
She pushed her way into the circle, and they made way for her. There were a dozen men and three women betting on the action. They waited while she set out her cash. Then the game went on.
Stan found he couldn’t figure out how Whorgle was played. There were cards, of course, and a small ivory marker, and something made it spin and jump between the numbers painted on the table. How long it resided in a square seemed to decide who won, but the cards had something to do with it, too. There were also disk-shaped markers with odd symbols on one side. The money, thrown down on the painted stake lines, passed back and forth too quickly for Stan to figure out what was happening. He knew he could work it all out if he just applied his mind, but right now he was feeling light-headed. It had been quite a while since his last shot of Xeno-Zip. The artificial fire that had enlivened his nerves and dulled his senses was fading out of his system. He was beginning to feel very bad. The pain was simply too hard to handle without something to help it like essence of royal jelly.
At last the pain became too much for him. He had to go into a nearby room and lie down on a couch.
After a while he fell into a troubled sleep and dreamed of grinning skulls dancing and bobbing in front of him.
After a while Julie came and woke him. She was smiling.
“How did you do?” Stan asked her.
“Nobody beats me at Whorgle,” she said, riffling through a stack of greenbacks. “Let’s go home and get some sleep. Then I need to see Gibberman.”
A panel slid open in a reinforced door, and a face looked out. “Whaddyaa want?”
“I want to gamble,” Julie said.
“Who do you know?”
“Luigi.”
“Then come on in.”
After they were inside, Stan whispered to her, “Who’s Luigi?”
“I have no idea,” Julie said. “In a place like this, looking like you know someone is worth almost as much as really knowing.”
Callahan’s was filled with well-dressed, prosperous-looking people, most of them crowded three deep around the horseshoe-shaped bar. The general depression and malaise that seemed to grip so much of America didn’t operate here. Here, things were booming.
Stan could see people sitting in the adjoining dining room, eating as though there were no food shortages. It looked like they were eating real steaks, too. From beyond the dining room he could hear the excited sounds of people betting. The gaming rooms would be right down there, and that was where Julie led him.
“What game are you going to play?” he asked.
“I’ll try Whorgle,” she said.
She pushed her way into the circle, and they made way for her. There were a dozen men and three women betting on the action. They waited while she set out her cash. Then the game went on.
Stan found he couldn’t figure out how Whorgle was played. There were cards, of course, and a small ivory marker, and something made it spin and jump between the numbers painted on the table. How long it resided in a square seemed to decide who won, but the cards had something to do with it, too. There were also disk-shaped markers with odd symbols on one side. The money, thrown down on the painted stake lines, passed back and forth too quickly for Stan to figure out what was happening. He knew he could work it all out if he just applied his mind, but right now he was feeling light-headed. It had been quite a while since his last shot of Xeno-Zip. The artificial fire that had enlivened his nerves and dulled his senses was fading out of his system. He was beginning to feel very bad. The pain was simply too hard to handle without something to help it like essence of royal jelly.
At last the pain became too much for him. He had to go into a nearby room and lie down on a couch.
After a while he fell into a troubled sleep and dreamed of grinning skulls dancing and bobbing in front of him.
After a while Julie came and woke him. She was smiling.
“How did you do?” Stan asked her.
“Nobody beats me at Whorgle,” she said, riffling through a stack of greenbacks. “Let’s go home and get some sleep. Then I need to see Gibberman.”
8
Gibberman was a small man who wore a tweed cap pulled low on his forehead and crouched behind his Plexiglas-protected desk in his Canal Street pawnbroker’s office, looking for all the world like an inflated toad. He wore a jeweler’s loupe on a black ribbon around his neck and spoke with some indefinable Eastern European accent.
“Julie! Good to see you, darling.”
“I told you I’d come,” Julie said. “I’d like you to meet a friend of mine.”
“Delighted,” said Gibberman. “But no names, please.” He shook Stan’s hand, then offered Julie a drink from a half-empty bottle of bourbon beside him.
“No, nothing,” she said. “Look, I’m going to get right to the point. I need plans for a job, and I need them quickly.”
“Everybody’s always in a hurry,” Gibberman said.
“I’ve got places to go and things to do,” Julie said.
“Rushing around is the curse of this modem age.”
“Sure,” Julie said. “You got anything for me or not?”
Gibberman smiled. “A good job is going to cost, you know.”
“Of course,” Julie said. “Here, check this out.”
She took an envelope from her purse and put it down on the desk in front of Gibberman. He opened it, looked inside, riffled the bills, then closed the envelope again.
“You got it there, Julie. All you’ve got, that’s the price.”
“Fine,” Julie said. “Now what do you have?”
“A piece of luck for you,” Gibberman said. “Not only have I got a first-class job, probably worth a million or more, but you could do it tonight if you want to move that fast.”
“Fast is just what I want,” Julie said. “You’re sure this is a good one?”
“Of course I’m sure,” Gibberman said. “There’s an element of risk in all these matters, as you well know. But with your well-known talents, you should have no particular difficulty.”
Gibberman twirled around in his chair and pushed a wall painting out of the way. Behind it was a small safe set into the wall. He twirled the combination, blocking Julie and Stan’s view with his body. Reaching in, he pulled out half a dozen envelopes, looked through them rapidly, selected one, put the rest back, then closed the safe.
“Here’s the job, my dear. Set for New York, and on a street not too far from where we are just now.”
“This had better be good,” Julie said. “That’s every cent we’ve got in the world.”
“You know how reliable I am,” Gibberman said. “Together with my accuracy goes my well-known discretion.”
“Julie! Good to see you, darling.”
“I told you I’d come,” Julie said. “I’d like you to meet a friend of mine.”
“Delighted,” said Gibberman. “But no names, please.” He shook Stan’s hand, then offered Julie a drink from a half-empty bottle of bourbon beside him.
“No, nothing,” she said. “Look, I’m going to get right to the point. I need plans for a job, and I need them quickly.”
“Everybody’s always in a hurry,” Gibberman said.
“I’ve got places to go and things to do,” Julie said.
“Rushing around is the curse of this modem age.”
“Sure,” Julie said. “You got anything for me or not?”
Gibberman smiled. “A good job is going to cost, you know.”
“Of course,” Julie said. “Here, check this out.”
She took an envelope from her purse and put it down on the desk in front of Gibberman. He opened it, looked inside, riffled the bills, then closed the envelope again.
“You got it there, Julie. All you’ve got, that’s the price.”
“Fine,” Julie said. “Now what do you have?”
“A piece of luck for you,” Gibberman said. “Not only have I got a first-class job, probably worth a million or more, but you could do it tonight if you want to move that fast.”
“Fast is just what I want,” Julie said. “You’re sure this is a good one?”
“Of course I’m sure,” Gibberman said. “There’s an element of risk in all these matters, as you well know. But with your well-known talents, you should have no particular difficulty.”
Gibberman twirled around in his chair and pushed a wall painting out of the way. Behind it was a small safe set into the wall. He twirled the combination, blocking Julie and Stan’s view with his body. Reaching in, he pulled out half a dozen envelopes, looked through them rapidly, selected one, put the rest back, then closed the safe.
“Here’s the job, my dear. Set for New York, and on a street not too far from where we are just now.”
“This had better be good,” Julie said. “That’s every cent we’ve got in the world.”
“You know how reliable I am,” Gibberman said. “Together with my accuracy goes my well-known discretion.”
9
“What is this?” Stan asked. They had gone back home and had opened the manila envelope that Gibberman had given her. Inside was a map, a floor plan of an apartment, several keys, and a half-dozen pages of notes neatly printed in a tiny handwriting.
“This, my dear, is what any successful thief needs—a plan.”
“That’s what you got from Gibberman?”
“I’ve used his plans for several years,” Julie said. “He’s very thorough.”
“So who are you going to rob?” Stan asked.
“A wealthy Saudi oilman named Khalil. He arrived in New York two days ago. He’s going to the Metropolitan Opera tomorrow night to watch a special performance of The Desert Song. While he’s away I’ll relieve him of certain items he usually keeps in his apartment.”
“Where is this to take place?”
“He’s staying at the Plaza.”
“Wow,” Stan said. “I never thought I’d be doing this.”
“You’re not,” Julie said. “I am. You’ll have to wait for me at home. I always work alone.”
“But we’re partners now. We do everything together.”
He looked so crestfallen that Julie felt a pang of sorrow for him.
“Stan,” she said, “you know that robot you’ve built? Would you trust me to do micro-soldering on his interior circuits?”
“Of course not,” Stan said. “You haven’t had the training… Oh, I see what you mean. But it’s not really the same thing.”
“It’s the exact same thing,” Julie said.
“I just hate to see you going into this alone.”
“Don’t worry about me. Nothing ever goes wrong with my plans. And if it does, I can take care of it.”
“This, my dear, is what any successful thief needs—a plan.”
“That’s what you got from Gibberman?”
“I’ve used his plans for several years,” Julie said. “He’s very thorough.”
“So who are you going to rob?” Stan asked.
“A wealthy Saudi oilman named Khalil. He arrived in New York two days ago. He’s going to the Metropolitan Opera tomorrow night to watch a special performance of The Desert Song. While he’s away I’ll relieve him of certain items he usually keeps in his apartment.”
“Where is this to take place?”
“He’s staying at the Plaza.”
“Wow,” Stan said. “I never thought I’d be doing this.”
“You’re not,” Julie said. “I am. You’ll have to wait for me at home. I always work alone.”
“But we’re partners now. We do everything together.”
He looked so crestfallen that Julie felt a pang of sorrow for him.
“Stan,” she said, “you know that robot you’ve built? Would you trust me to do micro-soldering on his interior circuits?”
“Of course not,” Stan said. “You haven’t had the training… Oh, I see what you mean. But it’s not really the same thing.”
“It’s the exact same thing,” Julie said.
“I just hate to see you going into this alone.”
“Don’t worry about me. Nothing ever goes wrong with my plans. And if it does, I can take care of it.”
10
The Plaza Hotel had suffered some damage during the recent time of the aliens, but had since regained at least a semblance of its former elegance. Julie went there that evening wearing a stunning red cocktail dress. She looked, if not exactly like a celebrity, then definitely like a celebrity’s girlfriend. The doorman opened the door for her, bowing deeply. She entered the big, brilliantly lit lobby. The reception desk was straight ahead. She didn’t want to get too close to it yet. She glanced at her watch as if she was expecting to meet somebody. All the time she was taking in the details.
People were very well dressed. This was a place where money was in very good supply.
To one side a small orchestra was playing a quaint song from olden times called “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes.” People were coming in and out of the bar with its glowing mahogany paneling and its soft indirect lighting. She would have liked a drink now, but she had an unbreakable rule: no alcohol or any other kind of drug while she was on a job.
She looked around the bar and then the lobby. Her practiced eye picked out the security men, two of them near the potted palms. She could always tell who they were. They just didn’t look like the guests, no matter how well they dressed. She counted five of them. They gave her admiring glances but there was nothing suspicious in their looks. So far so good.
The big hotel was in full swing. There were lights everywhere, and elegant people, and the accoutrements of success. You could smell it in the five-dollar cigars and the expensive perfume on the white shoulders of the women; in the aroma of roast beef, the real thing, wafting out from under silver servers as black-coated waiters brought the well-laden plates around; in the very carpet, permeated with expensive preservatives and subtle-smelling oils.
Julie went to the elevators. One was reserved for the penthouse suites. There was a man standing near it, rocking back and forth on his heels as he surveyed the passing crowds. Julie made him for a plainclothes cop, maybe somebody’s bodyguard. She walked on past and went through a set of corridors back into the main lobby. She was pretty sure the guy at the penthouse elevator hadn’t noticed her. She was also sure a frontal assault on the apartment wasn’t the best idea.
Gibberman had taken this possibility into account. Next door to the Plaza was the Hotel Van Dyke. Khalil’s apartment was a penthouse in the Plaza. If, for any reason, Julie didn’t want to use the elevator, Gibberman had indicated an ingenious alternate way of gaining entry. It involved swinging from an unoccupied top-floor apartment in the Van Dyke, and going in through Khalil’s window. A cat-burglar act, but that was one of Julie’s specialties. She wished Stan could be here to watch her. But it wouldn’t be safe, and it might distract her.
She had no trouble slipping into the Van Dyke with a group of people going to the top-floor restaurant. When they got off at the top floor, Julie got out with them, but instead of entering the restaurant, she ducked into the short flight of service stairs that led to the roof. From there she had a fine view of upper Manhattan, with the dark mass of Central Park directly in front of her and traffic crawling by a long way below on the street. A cutting wind blew her hair around, and she slipped on a knit cap to hold it in place. “Here we go!” she said aloud.
She fixed her ropes and swung over to the roof of the Plaza. From there she tied her rope to a cornice and, taking a deep breath, swung out again into space, bracing herself with one foot so as not to spin. The stars and the street seemed equally distant as she lowered herself to the level of the apartment windows.
They were open, saving her from having to cut through them with a vibrator tool.
She swung in through the billowing white curtains, landed soundlessly inside the darkened apartment, and rolled to her feet. She could see pretty well with the infrared-enhanced goggles she now snapped on. Her feet were set in a defensive pose, but there was no one there. She gave the rope a snap and it came free from the cornice. She wound it around her waist. Now there was no evidence of her means of entry.
She looked around the apartment. It was large, with a drawing room and a separate bedroom. She checked out the kitchen. The refrigerator was filled with a very good brand of champagne, and there were tins of caviar in the pantry. This Khalil seemed to live on the rarest of fare. The question now was where did he keep the jewelry?
She knew that Gibberman had chosen this mark carefully. Ahmed Khalil was renowned as an international playboy. He loved to give expensive gifts to his ladies of the evening. But where did he keep the trinkets?
She had already learned from inside sources that he didn’t entrust them to hotel safes. He wanted them close at hand for the moment when he chose to reward his current lady.
She moved quickly around the apartment Although the place was big, it was still only a hotel suite. The stuff has to be here somewhere…
And then, suddenly, the lights came on.
“Good evening, my dear,” a deep, resonant voice said.
Julie saw a tall, very thin, dark-faced man leaning negligently against the wall. He was wearing a checked headdress. He had a short beard and luxuriant mustache. His face was narrow, and he had a hawk’s nose with a large mole in the left corner. Standing beside him was another man, also an Arab, but large—in fact, huge—with a full head of fuzzy black hair and so much facial hair that his features were all but obscured. Julie, however, had no trouble seeing the knife he held in his right hand.
“What are you doing here?” Julie asked. “You’re supposed to be seeing an opera.”
Khalil, the tall thin man, smiled. “Your information is reliable, but so was my counterintelligence service. We always keep an eye on Gibberman when we come to New York. He’s stung us before. We knew when you visited him to set up the job. Didn’t we, Sfat?”
The giant smiled and touched the point of his dagger with the ball of his thumb.
Khalil said, “Gibberman was happy to tell us what he had set up for this evening.”
Julie nodded. Talk about luck.
“You mustn’t hold it against Gibberman for talking,” Khalil said. “When Sfat takes the knife to somebody, secrets are shouted from the rooftops. His skill is better than a surgeon’s. With that knife he can lay bare a single nerve, in the arm, for example, and play on it as if it were the string on a violin. It is an unforgettable experience, my dear, and one I’m sure you wouldn’t want to miss.”
Julie thought of how she had told Stan that nothing ever went wrong. What a laugh! Of course, it was all bad luck. How could she nave guessed that Khalil would find out about Gibberman? She had discounted the efficiency of the counterintelligence corps these rich Arabs employed.
“Well, Khalil,” Julie said, “looks like I’m foiled and caught in the act. Have your man step away from the door and I’ll leave quietly.”
Khalil smiled. “I’m afraid it’s not going to be so easy, my dear.”
“You’re going to turn me over to the police?”
“Eventually. If there’s enough left of you. First, however, it will be necessary to teach you a lesson. Sfat!”
The big man took a slow step toward her.
Julie said, “I thought it would be like that. Thanks, Khalil.”
“For what?”
“For freeing me of any scruples. If I ever had any, you’ve put them completely out of my mind.”
She turned to face Sfat, and took two steps toward him while Khalil folded his arms and waited for the fun to begin, a small smile on his lips.
Sfat lifted his arms, hands formed into blades. He bent his knees, feet pointed outward, and Julie recognized the typical fighting stance of a Saudi karate fighter. It was a technique that had its limitations. Sfat advanced, mincingly for so large a man, and his bearded face was set in a mask of cruelty. As he came within range his left hand darted out, the finger’s shaped like a hawk’s head.
She was ready for it, had been anticipating it. She ducked under the swooping blow and, with a short, economical kick, connected with Sfat’s left kneecap. He had been turning as she kicked, and some of the force of the blow was lost. Nevertheless, it was enough to take his feet out from under him. He fell heavily, and Julie pounced.
But this time he caught her unawares. Sfat’s clumsy fall had been feigned, and as she came leaping at him his arms and legs were drawn up cat fashion, and he lashed out, expecting to catch her in the solar plexus. She had seen her danger a moment before his counterstroke, however, and turning in midair, managed to avoid his flailing limbs. Her stiffened elbow caught him in the pit of the stomach, knocking the air out of him, and in the second it took him to recover, she ‘ rolled away and regained her feet.
Khalil had been watching all this dumbfounded. Now, belatedly, he stirred into action. He stepped forward, crouching in a classic knife fighter’s pose. The weapon he carried in his right hand and low against his body was a yata, a traditional Yemeni dagger, about eight inches long, slightly curved, and sharpened to a razor edge. It was made from a Swedish saw blade, and fitted with an elaborate rhino-horn handle. Arabic letters were engraved on the blade. Julie’s eyes widened when she saw the weapon.
“You do well to fear the yata” Khalil said, advancing, light twinkling off the point like the gaze of a one-eyed basilisk.
“Oh, I wasn’t exactly afraid of it,” Julie said. “Just surprised to see it. Rhino horn is not legally traded. Is it genuine?”
“Of course,” Khalil said, feinting and then making a lightning stab at her. “I always kill with the genuine article.”
“I’m sure glad to hear that,” Julie said. That makes that knife extremely valuable!”
The blade darted toward her midsection. Julie spun, and the thing passed harmlessly along her left side. As it passed, her arm snapped down, trapping the weapon. Khalil began a long and elaborate Arabic curse in the guttural dialect of Omdurman, but got out no more than a couple of syllables before Julie’s left elbow crashed with piledriver force into the middle of his face.
Blood streaming from his nose and mouth, Khalil stumbled backward, losing his grip on the knife that was still clamped under Julie’s left arm.
“I’ll just keep this for you,” Julie said, slipping the knife into her belt. “It might reduce its value if we got blood all over it.”
A feint to the midsection drew down Khalil’s guard. Fingers folded in protectively, Julie snapped a blow. The heel of her hand caught Khalil where the upper lip meets the nose. Four of his front teeth cracked off clean at the gum line.
“You ought to thank me,” Julie said. “I’ve corrected your overbite and haven’t even charged you for it.”
Khalil fell down screaming. He rolled on the floor clutching his head and whimpering. Bloody foam splattered from his mouth. Julie watched him critically for a moment, then muttered, “That ought to keep you occupied for a while.”
She turned to Sfat. He had regained his feet, and although his balance was just the slightest bit off-kilter, he was still formidable. If rage could kill, then Julie would be dead ten times over. He came toward her on the attack. He was about twice the weight of the slender girl and he was containing his fury now as he backed her into an angle of the wall, just to one side of an indifferent copy of Gainsborough’s Blue Boy. There seemed no way she could get out of this one. Shouting an oath in street Arabic, Sfat launched his attack.
Julie had had long preparation for moments like this. Shen Hui’s instructions in self-defense had covered all the basics of unarmed combat. He had hot been satisfied with that, however, since he accounted himself no expert in the finer points of self-defense. So he had apprenticed her to Olla Khan, a fat-faced master fighter from Isfahan in central Asia. Khan, beguiled by her beauty, had said, “My arrangement with your master is that you will stay with me and serve me in all particulars until you can beat me at unarmed combat. That might take more than a lifetime, my pet.” In fact it took just five months, and Olla Khan ended up in a hospital for his presumption.
And so, now, with Sfat launching his impetuous and ill-considered attack, Julie’s problem was not how to cope with it, but which of several different methods to choose. She also had to decide to what extent she wished to incapacitate him, and this in turn depended on her estimation of his value to her alive. In the split of a second she decided that this gross hairy-faced man with the bad breath was of no value to her, and indeed could serve her better dead as a message to his master, Khalil, to stop resisting and start cooperating.
She didn’t think all that through consciously. Instead, she opposed his charge with a sword hand, fingers stiffened. Sfat crashed into her hand and was stopped abruptly as the fingers took him high between the eyes, shutting down his pineal gland and. then going on to break his neck. His eyes rolled up, showing the white, and he crashed to the floor like two hundred pounds of dead mutton.
She turned from him to Khalil. “Ready to go another round?” she asked.
Khalil, his teeth scattered over the floor, had had enough. He mumbled through a bloodstained hand. “Don’t hurt me anymore. I’m a dilettante, not a fighter. I’ll give you whatever you want.”
“That’s what I like to hear,” Julie said. She took a pillow from a nearby bed and stripped off the pillowcase.
“Fill it with good stuff for me,” she said. “Don’t put in any worthless crap or I’ll have something to say about it.”
Khalil, totally unnerved, couldn’t even dream of resistance.
His collapse was absolute. He opened a compartment concealed in the wall behind the bed and picked several precious bracelets, two handfuls of magnificent unmounted gems in a white chamois bag, and a string of glorious baroque pearls, each the size of a pigeon’s egg and no two alike. Soon the pillowcase was bulging. Khalil had other objects he wanted to give her, but she stopped him.
“One bagful is enough. I’m not greedy. Besides, I’d need an extra pair of hands to carry it all.”
Khalil recovered sufficiently to say, “If you’re finished, then get out!”
“Okay,” Julie said. “This is good-bye, then.” She moved close to him.
He stared at her. The whites of his eyes went a dirty yellow as she advanced on him. He stumbled away, found himself with his back to a bureau. “What are you going to do?” he asked in a shaking voice.
“Just give you a couple hours’ sleep. So I can walk out of here like a lady.” She touched a nerve in his neck. He slumped to the floor unconscious.
“Be sure to have a dentist look at those stumps,” she said. He couldn’t hear her, of course, but she was sure he’d remember anyway.
Julie went to the dressing-room mirror and checked her clothing and makeup. She repaired her lipstick, which had been smeared in the combat, and found an ugly red stain on the shoulder of her red dress.
Luckily, Khalil had a really smart ermine jacket in his closet. It covered the stain nicely. She left by the penthouse elevator. No one stopped her as she walked out, passed through the lobby, and exited the revolving front door onto Central Park South, where she called a taxi.
People were very well dressed. This was a place where money was in very good supply.
To one side a small orchestra was playing a quaint song from olden times called “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes.” People were coming in and out of the bar with its glowing mahogany paneling and its soft indirect lighting. She would have liked a drink now, but she had an unbreakable rule: no alcohol or any other kind of drug while she was on a job.
She looked around the bar and then the lobby. Her practiced eye picked out the security men, two of them near the potted palms. She could always tell who they were. They just didn’t look like the guests, no matter how well they dressed. She counted five of them. They gave her admiring glances but there was nothing suspicious in their looks. So far so good.
The big hotel was in full swing. There were lights everywhere, and elegant people, and the accoutrements of success. You could smell it in the five-dollar cigars and the expensive perfume on the white shoulders of the women; in the aroma of roast beef, the real thing, wafting out from under silver servers as black-coated waiters brought the well-laden plates around; in the very carpet, permeated with expensive preservatives and subtle-smelling oils.
Julie went to the elevators. One was reserved for the penthouse suites. There was a man standing near it, rocking back and forth on his heels as he surveyed the passing crowds. Julie made him for a plainclothes cop, maybe somebody’s bodyguard. She walked on past and went through a set of corridors back into the main lobby. She was pretty sure the guy at the penthouse elevator hadn’t noticed her. She was also sure a frontal assault on the apartment wasn’t the best idea.
Gibberman had taken this possibility into account. Next door to the Plaza was the Hotel Van Dyke. Khalil’s apartment was a penthouse in the Plaza. If, for any reason, Julie didn’t want to use the elevator, Gibberman had indicated an ingenious alternate way of gaining entry. It involved swinging from an unoccupied top-floor apartment in the Van Dyke, and going in through Khalil’s window. A cat-burglar act, but that was one of Julie’s specialties. She wished Stan could be here to watch her. But it wouldn’t be safe, and it might distract her.
She had no trouble slipping into the Van Dyke with a group of people going to the top-floor restaurant. When they got off at the top floor, Julie got out with them, but instead of entering the restaurant, she ducked into the short flight of service stairs that led to the roof. From there she had a fine view of upper Manhattan, with the dark mass of Central Park directly in front of her and traffic crawling by a long way below on the street. A cutting wind blew her hair around, and she slipped on a knit cap to hold it in place. “Here we go!” she said aloud.
She fixed her ropes and swung over to the roof of the Plaza. From there she tied her rope to a cornice and, taking a deep breath, swung out again into space, bracing herself with one foot so as not to spin. The stars and the street seemed equally distant as she lowered herself to the level of the apartment windows.
They were open, saving her from having to cut through them with a vibrator tool.
She swung in through the billowing white curtains, landed soundlessly inside the darkened apartment, and rolled to her feet. She could see pretty well with the infrared-enhanced goggles she now snapped on. Her feet were set in a defensive pose, but there was no one there. She gave the rope a snap and it came free from the cornice. She wound it around her waist. Now there was no evidence of her means of entry.
She looked around the apartment. It was large, with a drawing room and a separate bedroom. She checked out the kitchen. The refrigerator was filled with a very good brand of champagne, and there were tins of caviar in the pantry. This Khalil seemed to live on the rarest of fare. The question now was where did he keep the jewelry?
She knew that Gibberman had chosen this mark carefully. Ahmed Khalil was renowned as an international playboy. He loved to give expensive gifts to his ladies of the evening. But where did he keep the trinkets?
She had already learned from inside sources that he didn’t entrust them to hotel safes. He wanted them close at hand for the moment when he chose to reward his current lady.
She moved quickly around the apartment Although the place was big, it was still only a hotel suite. The stuff has to be here somewhere…
And then, suddenly, the lights came on.
“Good evening, my dear,” a deep, resonant voice said.
Julie saw a tall, very thin, dark-faced man leaning negligently against the wall. He was wearing a checked headdress. He had a short beard and luxuriant mustache. His face was narrow, and he had a hawk’s nose with a large mole in the left corner. Standing beside him was another man, also an Arab, but large—in fact, huge—with a full head of fuzzy black hair and so much facial hair that his features were all but obscured. Julie, however, had no trouble seeing the knife he held in his right hand.
“What are you doing here?” Julie asked. “You’re supposed to be seeing an opera.”
Khalil, the tall thin man, smiled. “Your information is reliable, but so was my counterintelligence service. We always keep an eye on Gibberman when we come to New York. He’s stung us before. We knew when you visited him to set up the job. Didn’t we, Sfat?”
The giant smiled and touched the point of his dagger with the ball of his thumb.
Khalil said, “Gibberman was happy to tell us what he had set up for this evening.”
Julie nodded. Talk about luck.
“You mustn’t hold it against Gibberman for talking,” Khalil said. “When Sfat takes the knife to somebody, secrets are shouted from the rooftops. His skill is better than a surgeon’s. With that knife he can lay bare a single nerve, in the arm, for example, and play on it as if it were the string on a violin. It is an unforgettable experience, my dear, and one I’m sure you wouldn’t want to miss.”
Julie thought of how she had told Stan that nothing ever went wrong. What a laugh! Of course, it was all bad luck. How could she nave guessed that Khalil would find out about Gibberman? She had discounted the efficiency of the counterintelligence corps these rich Arabs employed.
“Well, Khalil,” Julie said, “looks like I’m foiled and caught in the act. Have your man step away from the door and I’ll leave quietly.”
Khalil smiled. “I’m afraid it’s not going to be so easy, my dear.”
“You’re going to turn me over to the police?”
“Eventually. If there’s enough left of you. First, however, it will be necessary to teach you a lesson. Sfat!”
The big man took a slow step toward her.
Julie said, “I thought it would be like that. Thanks, Khalil.”
“For what?”
“For freeing me of any scruples. If I ever had any, you’ve put them completely out of my mind.”
She turned to face Sfat, and took two steps toward him while Khalil folded his arms and waited for the fun to begin, a small smile on his lips.
Sfat lifted his arms, hands formed into blades. He bent his knees, feet pointed outward, and Julie recognized the typical fighting stance of a Saudi karate fighter. It was a technique that had its limitations. Sfat advanced, mincingly for so large a man, and his bearded face was set in a mask of cruelty. As he came within range his left hand darted out, the finger’s shaped like a hawk’s head.
She was ready for it, had been anticipating it. She ducked under the swooping blow and, with a short, economical kick, connected with Sfat’s left kneecap. He had been turning as she kicked, and some of the force of the blow was lost. Nevertheless, it was enough to take his feet out from under him. He fell heavily, and Julie pounced.
But this time he caught her unawares. Sfat’s clumsy fall had been feigned, and as she came leaping at him his arms and legs were drawn up cat fashion, and he lashed out, expecting to catch her in the solar plexus. She had seen her danger a moment before his counterstroke, however, and turning in midair, managed to avoid his flailing limbs. Her stiffened elbow caught him in the pit of the stomach, knocking the air out of him, and in the second it took him to recover, she ‘ rolled away and regained her feet.
Khalil had been watching all this dumbfounded. Now, belatedly, he stirred into action. He stepped forward, crouching in a classic knife fighter’s pose. The weapon he carried in his right hand and low against his body was a yata, a traditional Yemeni dagger, about eight inches long, slightly curved, and sharpened to a razor edge. It was made from a Swedish saw blade, and fitted with an elaborate rhino-horn handle. Arabic letters were engraved on the blade. Julie’s eyes widened when she saw the weapon.
“You do well to fear the yata” Khalil said, advancing, light twinkling off the point like the gaze of a one-eyed basilisk.
“Oh, I wasn’t exactly afraid of it,” Julie said. “Just surprised to see it. Rhino horn is not legally traded. Is it genuine?”
“Of course,” Khalil said, feinting and then making a lightning stab at her. “I always kill with the genuine article.”
“I’m sure glad to hear that,” Julie said. That makes that knife extremely valuable!”
The blade darted toward her midsection. Julie spun, and the thing passed harmlessly along her left side. As it passed, her arm snapped down, trapping the weapon. Khalil began a long and elaborate Arabic curse in the guttural dialect of Omdurman, but got out no more than a couple of syllables before Julie’s left elbow crashed with piledriver force into the middle of his face.
Blood streaming from his nose and mouth, Khalil stumbled backward, losing his grip on the knife that was still clamped under Julie’s left arm.
“I’ll just keep this for you,” Julie said, slipping the knife into her belt. “It might reduce its value if we got blood all over it.”
A feint to the midsection drew down Khalil’s guard. Fingers folded in protectively, Julie snapped a blow. The heel of her hand caught Khalil where the upper lip meets the nose. Four of his front teeth cracked off clean at the gum line.
“You ought to thank me,” Julie said. “I’ve corrected your overbite and haven’t even charged you for it.”
Khalil fell down screaming. He rolled on the floor clutching his head and whimpering. Bloody foam splattered from his mouth. Julie watched him critically for a moment, then muttered, “That ought to keep you occupied for a while.”
She turned to Sfat. He had regained his feet, and although his balance was just the slightest bit off-kilter, he was still formidable. If rage could kill, then Julie would be dead ten times over. He came toward her on the attack. He was about twice the weight of the slender girl and he was containing his fury now as he backed her into an angle of the wall, just to one side of an indifferent copy of Gainsborough’s Blue Boy. There seemed no way she could get out of this one. Shouting an oath in street Arabic, Sfat launched his attack.
Julie had had long preparation for moments like this. Shen Hui’s instructions in self-defense had covered all the basics of unarmed combat. He had hot been satisfied with that, however, since he accounted himself no expert in the finer points of self-defense. So he had apprenticed her to Olla Khan, a fat-faced master fighter from Isfahan in central Asia. Khan, beguiled by her beauty, had said, “My arrangement with your master is that you will stay with me and serve me in all particulars until you can beat me at unarmed combat. That might take more than a lifetime, my pet.” In fact it took just five months, and Olla Khan ended up in a hospital for his presumption.
And so, now, with Sfat launching his impetuous and ill-considered attack, Julie’s problem was not how to cope with it, but which of several different methods to choose. She also had to decide to what extent she wished to incapacitate him, and this in turn depended on her estimation of his value to her alive. In the split of a second she decided that this gross hairy-faced man with the bad breath was of no value to her, and indeed could serve her better dead as a message to his master, Khalil, to stop resisting and start cooperating.
She didn’t think all that through consciously. Instead, she opposed his charge with a sword hand, fingers stiffened. Sfat crashed into her hand and was stopped abruptly as the fingers took him high between the eyes, shutting down his pineal gland and. then going on to break his neck. His eyes rolled up, showing the white, and he crashed to the floor like two hundred pounds of dead mutton.
She turned from him to Khalil. “Ready to go another round?” she asked.
Khalil, his teeth scattered over the floor, had had enough. He mumbled through a bloodstained hand. “Don’t hurt me anymore. I’m a dilettante, not a fighter. I’ll give you whatever you want.”
“That’s what I like to hear,” Julie said. She took a pillow from a nearby bed and stripped off the pillowcase.
“Fill it with good stuff for me,” she said. “Don’t put in any worthless crap or I’ll have something to say about it.”
Khalil, totally unnerved, couldn’t even dream of resistance.
His collapse was absolute. He opened a compartment concealed in the wall behind the bed and picked several precious bracelets, two handfuls of magnificent unmounted gems in a white chamois bag, and a string of glorious baroque pearls, each the size of a pigeon’s egg and no two alike. Soon the pillowcase was bulging. Khalil had other objects he wanted to give her, but she stopped him.
“One bagful is enough. I’m not greedy. Besides, I’d need an extra pair of hands to carry it all.”
Khalil recovered sufficiently to say, “If you’re finished, then get out!”
“Okay,” Julie said. “This is good-bye, then.” She moved close to him.
He stared at her. The whites of his eyes went a dirty yellow as she advanced on him. He stumbled away, found himself with his back to a bureau. “What are you going to do?” he asked in a shaking voice.
“Just give you a couple hours’ sleep. So I can walk out of here like a lady.” She touched a nerve in his neck. He slumped to the floor unconscious.
“Be sure to have a dentist look at those stumps,” she said. He couldn’t hear her, of course, but she was sure he’d remember anyway.
Julie went to the dressing-room mirror and checked her clothing and makeup. She repaired her lipstick, which had been smeared in the combat, and found an ugly red stain on the shoulder of her red dress.
Luckily, Khalil had a really smart ermine jacket in his closet. It covered the stain nicely. She left by the penthouse elevator. No one stopped her as she walked out, passed through the lobby, and exited the revolving front door onto Central Park South, where she called a taxi.
11
“How did it go tonight?” Stan asked when she got back to the brownstone.
“Not bad,” she said, dumping her loot into the bed. “A dream night for a thief. Unfortunately, it’s nowhere near enough to buy a spaceship with.”
“We don’t need to buy one,” Stan said. “I’ve got a plan that ought to work now that we have some money to play around with. The first thing we’re going to need is a spaceship driver.”
“I’d love to talk about it,” Julie said. “But first I need a bath. And I’m famished! Sometimes stealing can be hard work. Oh, by the way, here’s a present.” She tossed the dagger onto the bed.
Stan picked it up and admired the gleaming narrow blade and the rhino handle. “Where’d you get this?”
“Just a little trinket I picked up during the evening.”
“Not bad,” she said, dumping her loot into the bed. “A dream night for a thief. Unfortunately, it’s nowhere near enough to buy a spaceship with.”
“We don’t need to buy one,” Stan said. “I’ve got a plan that ought to work now that we have some money to play around with. The first thing we’re going to need is a spaceship driver.”
“I’d love to talk about it,” Julie said. “But first I need a bath. And I’m famished! Sometimes stealing can be hard work. Oh, by the way, here’s a present.” She tossed the dagger onto the bed.
Stan picked it up and admired the gleaming narrow blade and the rhino handle. “Where’d you get this?”
“Just a little trinket I picked up during the evening.”
12
Over the next two weeks, Julie converted the loot from Khalil’s apartment to cash, and Stan lost no time putting it to work. There was information to buy, people to bribe, and round-the-clock work by hired technicians to put Norbert into full working condition.
Two weeks to the day after Julie’s theft at the Plaza, she met Stan for lunch at the Tavern on the Green in Central Park. Since it wasn’t a workday for her, she permitted herself a cocktail.
Stan was looking pretty well. A shade paler than usual, but still not bad for a man dying of cancer and sustaining himself on heavy doses of the most addicting narcotic substance known to man. His eyes were a little dreamy, but his voice was firm enough as he said, “Julie, we’re ready to make our move.”
“Today?”
“That’s right. Are you ready?”
She gave him an exasperated look. “Of course. You really don’t have to ask me that” “Sorry, I didn’t mean anything by it.” Her voice softened. “No, I’m sorry, Stan. I don’t mean to snap at you. It’s the waiting. It’s hard on my nerves.”
“Well,” Stan said, “it’ll soon be over. If this plan works, we’ll have ourselves a pilot.” “And if it doesnt work?” “We could be dead.” “Fair enough. Where are we going?” “To look up an old friend of mine and make him an offer he can’t refuse.”
Two weeks to the day after Julie’s theft at the Plaza, she met Stan for lunch at the Tavern on the Green in Central Park. Since it wasn’t a workday for her, she permitted herself a cocktail.
Stan was looking pretty well. A shade paler than usual, but still not bad for a man dying of cancer and sustaining himself on heavy doses of the most addicting narcotic substance known to man. His eyes were a little dreamy, but his voice was firm enough as he said, “Julie, we’re ready to make our move.”
“Today?”
“That’s right. Are you ready?”
She gave him an exasperated look. “Of course. You really don’t have to ask me that” “Sorry, I didn’t mean anything by it.” Her voice softened. “No, I’m sorry, Stan. I don’t mean to snap at you. It’s the waiting. It’s hard on my nerves.”
“Well,” Stan said, “it’ll soon be over. If this plan works, we’ll have ourselves a pilot.” “And if it doesnt work?” “We could be dead.” “Fair enough. Where are we going?” “To look up an old friend of mine and make him an offer he can’t refuse.”
13
Jersey City, even in its best days, had been a city many people found objectionable.
It hadn’t improved much since the days before the Human-Alien Wars and the human reoccupation. On the day Stan and Julie went there, half of the streets downtown were awash due to a burst water main from a week before, and the city’s repair crews still hadn’t gotten around to capping it.
Ragged, mean-looking men and women hung around every street corner. They looked like down-and-outers, but there was something sly and dangerous about them, too. There were soup kitchens set up here and there, and the buildings looked old and delapidated. Even the newly built sections of the city were starting to show wear, their poor construction materials already crumbling. Packs of wild dogs slinked in and out of back alleys; nobody had gotten around to getting rid of them yet.
“It’s pretty bad,” Stan said, like he was apologizing for it.
“Hey, I’ve seen worse,” Julie said. “Not that I want to hang around this place …”
At Central Station, Stan found them a motorized pedicab. The driver was a gnarled old brute, dressed nearly in rags, with a shapeless felt hat on which, incongruously, was the glittering bright medallion that let him legally operate a for-hire vehicle.
Stan peered inside the three-wheel pedicab. Some of these drivers had been known to hide accomplices inside, the better to rob the customers, or so it was said. Stan didn’t really know what to expect. He hadn’t been outside New York City in years.
He gave the driver the address, and the man grunted. “You sure you want to go there, mister?”
“Yes, I’m sure. Why do you ask?”
“You’re going to the heart of the old Gaslight District.
Where the space derelicts and the chemheads hang out.”
“Yes, I know.”
“No place for a lady, either.”
“Shut your face and get moving,” Julie said.
“Long as you know what you’re getting into.” The pedicab operator started up the hand-cranked washing-machine motor that ran his little vehicle. Stan and Julie settled back.
Once the driver got up to speed, he gave them a dashing ride. He wove in and out of traffic on Jersey City’s wide boulevards, the pedicab dodging in and out of the debris that the striking garbage collectors would get around to picking up once they settled their contract with the city. The street was like an obstacle course, filled with boxes, packing cases, mattresses, wrecked vehicles, even the carcass of a horse. There were also plenty of vehicles, driven by kamikaze drivers who were hell-bent on getting somewhere, anywhere, rushing around and dodging in and out of each other’s way like rules of the road were no more than memories. There was a dirty gray sky overhead, the sun concealed behind dark-edged clouds. It wasn’t anyone’s fault that the day was so rotten, but you felt like blaming someone anyhow. Looking around, Stan thought, “To paraphrase Robert Browning, anything so ugly had to be evil.”
“How do you like it?” the driver asked, turning back to fix Stan with a hard look.
“The city? It looks like it’s fallen on hard times.”
“Buddy, you can say that again. This has always been a bad-luck city. Gutted during the Alien Wars. That happened to a lot of cities. Gave them a chance to rebuild. Only crappier.”
“Well, things are tough all over,” Stan said, wishing the driver would turn around and pay attention to the traffic.
The driver acted like he had eyes in the back of his head. Cars came shrieking at him from every direction; and somehow they always missed and he kept right on talking.
“You’re from New York, right? I can always tell. You people didn’t get the Pulsing Plague like we got it here in Jersey. Turned whole neighborhoods into madhouses filled with raving lunatics before it did them the favor of killing them. But not all of them, worse luck. There are some plague people still alive, you know. They were infected, but it didn’t kill them. But it can kill you if they touch you.”
“I’ve been inoculated against plague,” Stan said.
“Sure. But what good will an inoculation do you against the new berserkers you get around here? They’re mostly people who recovered from the Pulser, but with something missing. It was like some center of control in their heads just vanished. Berserkers can get into a frenzy over the smallest thing, over nothing at all. And then watch out for them because they start killing and don’t stop until somebody stops them.”
“I’ll watch out for them,” Stan said, feeling very uncomfortable.
What was he getting himself and Julie into?
“You wanta good restaurant?” the driver said suddenly.
“Try Toy’s Oriental Palace over on Ogden. They got a way with soypro you’d never believe. They use real spices in their sauces, too.”
“Thanks, I’ll remember that,” Stan said. “Are we close now?”
“You can smell it, can’t you?” the driver said, grinning.
“Yep, we’re just about there.”
The driver slowed down and looked for an opening in the traffic, found one that was too small, and decided to make it larger. He propelled the little pedicab into it, suffering no more than a bruised bumper, ducked into a narrow street off the boulevard, took a couple of turns, and pulled up to the curb.
Stan and Julie got out. Stan saw they were in an evil-looking neighborhood, which was just about what he’d expected. Above him, rising above the buildings, he saw a landmark: the spire of the Commercial Services Landing Field, a local service facility where non-stellar spaceships took off and landed. There had been a lot of discussion about it in the newly formed city council. Too close to the city, some said. It could be a source of danger. If one of those things goes down … Some people still didn’t trust spacecrafts. It was a point, but the other side had the answer. “It’ll bring jobs into the city. Well be the closest full-facility field within a hundred-mile radius of New York. A lot closer than the Montauk Point facility. The business will flock to us.” And in Jersey City, where business is king and corruption is its adviser, there was no answer to that.
The spaceport’s spire was several miles away, Stan figured. He was in a neighborhood of small ramshackle buildings built against the bulwark of several skyscrapers.
He was standing in front of Gabrielli’s Meat Market, advertising fresh pork today in addition to the usual soypro steaks and turkeytofu butterballs, and the place stank of blood and chemicals. Next to it was a small newsstand, and what looked like a betting parlor beside that betting was legal in the state of New Jersey, an important source of revenue. Most of the state legislature didn’t approve of gambling, but money was hard to find these days, even with the giant Bio-Pharm plant recently opened in nearby Hoboken and with MBSW—the Mercedes-Benz Spaceship Works—sprawled out in Lodi.
It hadn’t improved much since the days before the Human-Alien Wars and the human reoccupation. On the day Stan and Julie went there, half of the streets downtown were awash due to a burst water main from a week before, and the city’s repair crews still hadn’t gotten around to capping it.
Ragged, mean-looking men and women hung around every street corner. They looked like down-and-outers, but there was something sly and dangerous about them, too. There were soup kitchens set up here and there, and the buildings looked old and delapidated. Even the newly built sections of the city were starting to show wear, their poor construction materials already crumbling. Packs of wild dogs slinked in and out of back alleys; nobody had gotten around to getting rid of them yet.
“It’s pretty bad,” Stan said, like he was apologizing for it.
“Hey, I’ve seen worse,” Julie said. “Not that I want to hang around this place …”
At Central Station, Stan found them a motorized pedicab. The driver was a gnarled old brute, dressed nearly in rags, with a shapeless felt hat on which, incongruously, was the glittering bright medallion that let him legally operate a for-hire vehicle.
Stan peered inside the three-wheel pedicab. Some of these drivers had been known to hide accomplices inside, the better to rob the customers, or so it was said. Stan didn’t really know what to expect. He hadn’t been outside New York City in years.
He gave the driver the address, and the man grunted. “You sure you want to go there, mister?”
“Yes, I’m sure. Why do you ask?”
“You’re going to the heart of the old Gaslight District.
Where the space derelicts and the chemheads hang out.”
“Yes, I know.”
“No place for a lady, either.”
“Shut your face and get moving,” Julie said.
“Long as you know what you’re getting into.” The pedicab operator started up the hand-cranked washing-machine motor that ran his little vehicle. Stan and Julie settled back.
Once the driver got up to speed, he gave them a dashing ride. He wove in and out of traffic on Jersey City’s wide boulevards, the pedicab dodging in and out of the debris that the striking garbage collectors would get around to picking up once they settled their contract with the city. The street was like an obstacle course, filled with boxes, packing cases, mattresses, wrecked vehicles, even the carcass of a horse. There were also plenty of vehicles, driven by kamikaze drivers who were hell-bent on getting somewhere, anywhere, rushing around and dodging in and out of each other’s way like rules of the road were no more than memories. There was a dirty gray sky overhead, the sun concealed behind dark-edged clouds. It wasn’t anyone’s fault that the day was so rotten, but you felt like blaming someone anyhow. Looking around, Stan thought, “To paraphrase Robert Browning, anything so ugly had to be evil.”
“How do you like it?” the driver asked, turning back to fix Stan with a hard look.
“The city? It looks like it’s fallen on hard times.”
“Buddy, you can say that again. This has always been a bad-luck city. Gutted during the Alien Wars. That happened to a lot of cities. Gave them a chance to rebuild. Only crappier.”
“Well, things are tough all over,” Stan said, wishing the driver would turn around and pay attention to the traffic.
The driver acted like he had eyes in the back of his head. Cars came shrieking at him from every direction; and somehow they always missed and he kept right on talking.
“You’re from New York, right? I can always tell. You people didn’t get the Pulsing Plague like we got it here in Jersey. Turned whole neighborhoods into madhouses filled with raving lunatics before it did them the favor of killing them. But not all of them, worse luck. There are some plague people still alive, you know. They were infected, but it didn’t kill them. But it can kill you if they touch you.”
“I’ve been inoculated against plague,” Stan said.
“Sure. But what good will an inoculation do you against the new berserkers you get around here? They’re mostly people who recovered from the Pulser, but with something missing. It was like some center of control in their heads just vanished. Berserkers can get into a frenzy over the smallest thing, over nothing at all. And then watch out for them because they start killing and don’t stop until somebody stops them.”
“I’ll watch out for them,” Stan said, feeling very uncomfortable.
What was he getting himself and Julie into?
“You wanta good restaurant?” the driver said suddenly.
“Try Toy’s Oriental Palace over on Ogden. They got a way with soypro you’d never believe. They use real spices in their sauces, too.”
“Thanks, I’ll remember that,” Stan said. “Are we close now?”
“You can smell it, can’t you?” the driver said, grinning.
“Yep, we’re just about there.”
The driver slowed down and looked for an opening in the traffic, found one that was too small, and decided to make it larger. He propelled the little pedicab into it, suffering no more than a bruised bumper, ducked into a narrow street off the boulevard, took a couple of turns, and pulled up to the curb.
Stan and Julie got out. Stan saw they were in an evil-looking neighborhood, which was just about what he’d expected. Above him, rising above the buildings, he saw a landmark: the spire of the Commercial Services Landing Field, a local service facility where non-stellar spaceships took off and landed. There had been a lot of discussion about it in the newly formed city council. Too close to the city, some said. It could be a source of danger. If one of those things goes down … Some people still didn’t trust spacecrafts. It was a point, but the other side had the answer. “It’ll bring jobs into the city. Well be the closest full-facility field within a hundred-mile radius of New York. A lot closer than the Montauk Point facility. The business will flock to us.” And in Jersey City, where business is king and corruption is its adviser, there was no answer to that.
The spaceport’s spire was several miles away, Stan figured. He was in a neighborhood of small ramshackle buildings built against the bulwark of several skyscrapers.
He was standing in front of Gabrielli’s Meat Market, advertising fresh pork today in addition to the usual soypro steaks and turkeytofu butterballs, and the place stank of blood and chemicals. Next to it was a small newsstand, and what looked like a betting parlor beside that betting was legal in the state of New Jersey, an important source of revenue. Most of the state legislature didn’t approve of gambling, but money was hard to find these days, even with the giant Bio-Pharm plant recently opened in nearby Hoboken and with MBSW—the Mercedes-Benz Spaceship Works—sprawled out in Lodi.