Page 16 of The Invaders Plan


  But I had my own urgencies. I had to get Heller trained and gone. And fast. I shifted this way and that, looking for the Countess Krak.

  And there she was! Over by a far wall. In a half-moon before her stood a group of fortress officers. I stepped toward them, fearful that something was up that would delay Heller’s training. It was the deputy commander of Spiteos, the one that handles internal administration, and several of his troop officers, all in their filthy, ragged uniforms. There was some sort of argument in progress.

  The Countess Krak was standing there talking to them. She was leaning on a broom. She was garbed in her shapeless work coveralls. The coveralls were wet! They had been washed! Through the gap in front was another surprise. She was clean. She had bathed! There was an exercise cloth wrapped around her head. Her hair had been shampooed! What in all the prayers to Gods was going on?

  “I am very sorry,” she was saying to the deputy commander. “But you will just have to accept it. In the future, I will train no more people that you have maimed!”

  The deputy commander was a harassed-looking fat fellow. “But, Countess,” he pleaded, “if we don’t cut out their tongues before we send them to you, they will betray Spiteos when we ship them out.”

  “I have told you before,” said the Countess, “but I will repeat it. The people picked up and sent here to be trained don’t know where they are when they arrive. They don’t find out while they are here. And in any event I can give each one a posthypnotic suggestion that he will become unable to answer the question, if he were ever to be asked where he had been. It is simply senseless and brutal to cut out their tongues. It makes them much harder to train.”

  The deputy commander sort of moaned.

  “So that is how it is now,” continued the Countess Krak. “I have tried to get this into effect before but it is final now. If you send me any damaged people, I will not train them. And that will be the end of your trained acts program.”

  The troops shifted restlessly. They were very nervous, having their eyes on that broom handle she was leaning on. With a savage one-two, she was capable of skewering any one of them with it before they could even flinch.

  The deputy commander knew he would be the first to be spitted. He had been very ill at ease talking to her and now, with a sort of relief, capitulated. He lifted his hand in a self-protective gesture. “All right. As you say, so it shall be.”

  She gave a bright little laugh. My eyes bugged. The Countess Krak laughing?

  The deputy commander got himself and his troops out of there. They went, whispering to one another, glancing back over their shoulders at her, just plain scared!

  The Countess Krak swept up a pile of debris and dumped it in a box. She pushed the box along toward the escalator. She was humming! No words. Just the tune of some little ballad.

  Her crew and workmen seemed to be finishing up for they were working at double, triple speed. Their eyes kept flicking toward her as they sped about polishing the place up. They were terrified at this change in her.

  I myself was too frightened to go near her. I supposed her wits had flipped. There was no telling what she would do next! As they say in the high country beyond Kabar, “Lepertiges do not change their fangs.”

  Frankly, I was too scared to approach her, urgent as my business was. Lombar was clear up in the high tower; the Countess Krak was right here!

  Her crew was practically finished. I drew off to one side after a while. The movement must have attracted her attention.

  She came waltzing over to me. “Oh, Soltan,” she said, “I am so glad to see you!” And she gave me a bright smile.

  The Countess Krak smiling unnerved me. There was a big padded chair, a fairly new one, close by the wall. It had a new glowplate over it. A low table was in front of it and a matching chair was on the other side. A newly created cozy nook. I stumbled back against the big chair and sat down in it abruptly.

  She had turned and was facing the whole room. She clapped her hands together to attract attention. The more than forty men hastily turned to face her.

  “I think,” said the Countess Krak, “that this is enough for today. You have done very well. You are all sweaty now, so you should go wash your clothes and take baths. And then, because you have been up since the middle of the night,” she paused and smiled brightly, “you can have the rest of the day off!”

  You could have created the same effect by leveling a blastcannon at them. It had never happened before in the modern history of Spiteos. They looked at each other. They looked to the door to see if execution squads were waiting. They looked at her. They had worked for years for the Countess Krak. They didn’t understand this. She lightly laughed. “Well, run along!” In terror they plunged en masse to the exit ramp and vanished.

  She turned around and came walking toward me. Halfway across her smile vanished and her eyes blazed!

  I knew it. I knew this change was not there to stay. She was still the Countess Krak! I braced myself for a blow.

  She seized my arm and yanked me out of that chair like a cargo hook had grabbed me. She hurled me to one side.

  Then she did a very idiotic thing. She took off her headcloth and carefully wiped the seat of the chair where I had been sitting. Just as if I had gotten it dirty!

  She looked at me severely. “That is not your chair! This,” and she swept her hand toward the small ensemble of two chairs and the table, “has been set up for Jettero!”

  Then she softened, made some minute arrangements in the position of the table and adjusted some books and a language machine. And then she patted the chair.

  She was all mellow again when she walked over to the area where I was picking myself up. But there was a bit of calculation in her eyes, too.

  “I’ve just remembered, Soltan, that you’ll be going back to Blito-P3, too. You’re Jettero’s handler, aren’t you?”

  Well, she could figure that out from the language courses I’d laid out and that I was making Heller’s appointments. I mumbled something about this being the case.

  “And you’re in full charge of preparing him and running some mission he is on?”

  I nodded.

  She smiled. She has very beautiful white teeth. I was very conscious of those teeth. She gently took my arm—ignoring my flinch—and guided me over to a bench and sat me down on it.

  “You need a language brushup,” she said.

  I tried to get up nerve to tell her my English and Italian and Turkish and half a dozen other languages were in perfect shape. But my mouth didn’t seem to want to talk. Too dry.

  She walked sedately over to the racks and got down a hypnohelmet and came over to me with it. I offered no slightest resistance. After all, I’d spent weeks in these things. She patted my head comfortingly and then slid the helmet over it. From her coverall pocket she took a recorded strip.

  “It’s just a little accent check,” she said, smiling gently.

  She slid the strip into the slot and turned the helmet on.

  There was the familiar buzz. I was out like a turned-off glowplate.

  I came to. I was a trifle surprised to see that a half-hour had gone by. She was piling some books onto the table and neating up the chair some more. She saw I was out of it. She picked up a book and came over.

  When the helmet was unstrapped and off, she patted me on the head again. “Now,” she said, “read this and we’ll see how your accent is. First, Virginian.”

  I thought this was pretty silly. There was nothing wrong with my accent in commercial English. She sensed resistance. “Now, Jettero will be talking Virginian. It’s a city or something, isn’t it? On some planet named ‘Earth.’ And you must be able to understand him. Read.” And she pointed her finger at the page.

  I read aloud, “Obedience is the mother of success, the wife of safety.”

  Then, “The fear of some divine and supreme powers keeps men in obedience.”

  She clapped her hands like a child. “Oh, that is very good, So
ltan. You read it in perfect Virginian.” I wondered how in Hells she knew it was perfect “Virginian.” Had she been studying English?

  She pointed her finger down the page, “Now, Soltan, read this in New England.”

  I read, speaking a bit nasally, “He who takes his orders gladly, escapes the bitterest part of slavery—doing what one does not want to do.”

  “Ah, splendid, splendid, Soltan!” She yanked the book away. “Truly perfect New England.”

  Now, I myself had not been able to notice any real difference. I had imitated what they call “Americans” before and you just speak through your nose. I felt sort of funny.

  A slam-bang opening of the main door halted any further conversation. The Countess Krak went flying off in that direction. I got up and went over to see what this was all about.

  What? It was one of Snelz’s guards with a big package for her. I was in time to catch a flash of the label, something about:

  TO A DAZZLING STAR

  She took the package. She seemed confused. Upset. Embarrassed. “For me?” she asked.

  “That’s what he said, Countess.”

  In a sort of a daze she put it on her desk and tore it open. Then she just stood there, staring down. At length she said, “Ooooo!” and put her hand to her breast. She was cooing!

  I got into a position so I could see what it was. A bomb? So she could break out?

  She lifted something up. She ran over to a mirror and held it against her. She said, “Oooo!” and ran back to the package and got something else and then ran to the mirror. . . .

  The card slipped off. It was signed “Jet.”

  Oh, my Gods! He was giving her clothes! Now giving an unmarried woman clothes means just one thing: a pass! Trouble, I thought, you have my address!

  The package, when it all got sorted out, contained three skintight, elastic cover suits, the very latest fashion. One was shimmering black, one was bright scarlet and one was gleaming silver. Each had a matching pair of elastic ankle boots with small flowers on them and each had a matching headband with flowers to match the boots. Extremely feminine stuff. For the Countess Krak?

  I got it. All he had heard of my dissertation on her, possibly, was that she had no clothes!

  (Bleep) him. And (bleep) Snelz! The platoon commander must have sent a guardsman all the way to the city at dawn. Heller, sleeping so peacefully when I left, must have been right behind me out that door!

  She was waltzing around in the center of the room, holding the silver one against her.

  Then she rushed back to the desk and found his card and pressed it to her chest.

  I looked at my watch. Ouch, were we overdue for instruction this morning! I started to hurry out.

  “No, no!” cried the Countess Krak. “Give me twenty minutes before you bring him down. I have to bathe again and get dressed!”

  Right that moment I got a horrible premonition that all this was going to wind up in catastrophe. I do wish now I had learned to obey my hunches. They were right!

  PART FOUR

  Chapter 2

  In my room I found Jettero Heller lounging in an easy chair, eyes half closed, idle beyond belief. The furthest thing from his mind appeared to be Mission Earth. Some supplementary reading I had given him lay in a neglected pile. Soft but plaintive music was coming over the Homeview and some female singer was on the screen. Love songs!

  Now if there is anything that hurts my sensitive ears it is a high-pitched echo orchestra and the quavering, sobbing soprano of a love balladess. Furthermore, they paint their faces black for “unrequited love” and by means of tubes beside their eyes they shed red tears—tears of blood. And the melodies are all down scale:

  And so faded my glow

  Into the sorrow

  That took me in tow

  To the deep pits of woe

  And with my last breath

  I’ll still cry for death

  And grave clothes to use

  as my trousseau.

  Sickening!

  So this was Heller’s idea of charging out and getting the job done!

  In a flash of insight, I realized what I was up against. Love! There are warnings in the standard espionage texts: they give a lot of biological tables stressing that it is irrational; they go over a lot of examples of how even Royal houses have been destroyed because the practical marriage orders were flouted by young princes and princesses who stupidly fell in love with somebody else; they don’t tell you how to use it but they warn against pairing a male and female agent. They say there’s no way to thwart it short of shooting somebody. Well, the professors might not be able to use it, but I could. I owed my rise in the Apparatus to being cunning.

  I was cunning now. In a very sweet voice, I said, “You had better get cleaned up. In . . .” and I ostentatiously looked at my watch, “. . . twenty minutes you have an appointment in the training rooms with the Countess Krak.”

  Holy Gods! He came out of that chair like he’d been catapult-launched.

  He had washed his white exercise suit the night before but in this airless cubicle it wasn’t dry and he frantically rigged a heat fan. He rushed about, showered, dried and combed his hair and dressed and all in about eight minutes. Then, of course, we had to wait three or four minutes and he sat there fidgeting. I turned off the Homeview: I couldn’t take any more echo orchestra and down-scale love ballads—they came through to me more like funeral dirges and if I didn’t get Heller off this planet, there was going to be one more—mine.

  Still a minute early, we arrived outside the training rooms. He went through the door.

  I was about to follow him when a hand stopped me. It was the Countess Krak’s training assistant, a very ugly brute. “Message just came, Officer Gris. You’re wanted at the central guard office at Camp Endurance.”

  What now? In some alarm I made sure two guardsmen were posted outside the door and went tearing off.

  It always takes time to get through the tunnel and it was almost an hour later when I arrived at the Camp Endurance guard office.

  The filthy Apparatus duty officer looked over his sheets in some mystery. “Oh, yes. There was a general call for you . . . wait. It is logged as just before dawn. Good Devils, Officer Gris! Didn’t they find you this morning? I am sorry, Officer Gris, but it’s for the fortress internally and we didn’t get more than the general recording of it. . . .”

  I cut him off. “I answered that call hours ago! Cancel it.”

  “But we’re not sending it out!” he said. “It was for the internal . . .”

  In brand-new alarm, I realized I had been fooled! The Countess Krak! She had wanted me out of the way. What were they planning? A breakout?

  Real terror gripped me at the thought of what Lombar would do to me if Heller got loose! I grabbed a tunnel zipbus that didn’t zip fast enough to satisfy me. I raced through the fortress and back to the training rooms. Gods knew what I would find!

  I burst in.

  It was the most peaceful scene you ever saw. Heller was sitting in the chair she’d gotten for him; the recorded strip player was on the table running, putting out quiet roars; the Countess Krak was sitting in the other chair. She was dressed in the silver elastic suit; her hair was tied with the silver ribbon with flowers on it; her feet, relaxed, were cased in the silver ankle boots: I will say she looked heart-stoppingly beautiful. She had her elbows on the other side of the table and her chin was cupped in her palms. She was looking at him adoringly.

  I sidled over, pretty mad, really. “That was a cute trick you pulled,” I hissed, too low for Heller to hear.

  She turned her face to me. Her eyes were a smoky blue and shining. She had a half smile on her lips. Utterly relaxed, she whispered back, “Isn’t he beautiful?”

  I was disgusted. But then, I thought, even a female lepertige probably falls in love from time to time. I went out in the passageway: I really couldn’t stand to look at them. To me, the situation was too dangerous.

  Using my com
munications disk, I got an underground line to the Section 451 office in Government City. My chief clerk there—an old criminal named Bawtch—didn’t sound very happy that I had been retained as Chief of the Section. He told me they had been shuffling papers perfectly all right and hoped I didn’t have any orders: he said they didn’t need any disorders right now. It wasn’t really insolent; that’s just the way Bawtch is. He soured on life some seconds after he was born and has made a profession of deteriorating ever since.

  I did find out that some new texts and paperbacks had come in on the just-arrived freighter from Earth as well as recent issues of The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, a couple of newssheets they print on that planet. I told him to put the lot on the Spiteos shuttle and he sighed and hoped I wouldn’t be calling again soon.