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It wouldn’t have needed a Sherlock Holmes to read the story of the night before from the scene that confronted him in the living room. The half-filled coffee cup, empty cigarette pack, and the remains of a pepperoni pizza surrounded by scientific papers and notes strewn untidily in front of the desk terminal told of an evening that had begun with the best and purest of intentions to explore another approach to the Pluto problem. Lyn’s shoulder bag on the table by the door, her coat draped across one end of the couch, the empty Chablis bottle, and the white cardboard box containing traces of a beef-curry di
He walked over to the desk and interrogated the terminal for any mail that might have come in overnight. There was a draft of a paper being put together by Mike Barrow’s team at Lawrence Livermore Labs, suggesting that an aspect of Ganymean physics that they had been studying implied the possibility of achieving fusion at low temperatures. Hunt sca
William and the family had enjoyed having Vic over on vacation recently and had especially liked hearing his personal account of his experiences at Jupiter and later back on Earth with the Ganymeans. . . . Cousin Je
Just as the recording was finishing, Lyn came out of the bedroom wearing her chocolate blouse and ivory crкpe skirt from the night before, then disappeared again into the kitchen. "Who’s that?" she called, to the accompaniment of cupboard doors being opened and closed and plates being set down on a working surface.
"Uncle Billy."
"The one in Africa that you visited a few weeks ago?"
"Uh huh."
"So how are they doing?"
"He looks fine. Je
"Uh-oh. What flow?"
"Doing his pub lawyer act by the sound of it. Somebody didn’t agree that the government ought to guarantee paychecks to anybody on strike."
"What is he-some kind of nut?"
"Runs in the family."
"You said it, not me."
Hunt gri
"I’ll remember that. . . . Food’s ready."
Hunt flipped off the terminal and walked into the kitchen. Lyn, perched on a stool at the breakfast bar that divided the room in two, had already started eating. Hunt sat down opposite her, drank some coffee, then picked up his fork. "Why the rush?" he asked. "It’s still early. We’re not pushed for time."
"I’m not coming straight in. I ought to go home first and change."
"You look okay to me-in fact, not a bad piece of womanry at all."
"Flattery will get you anywhere you like. No . . . Gregg’s got some special visitors coming down from Washington today. I don’t want to look ‘groped’ and spoil the Navcomms image." She smiled and mimicked an English accent. "One must maintain standards, you know."
Hunt snorted derisively. "It needs more practice. Who are the visitors?"
"All I know is they’re from the State Department. Some hush-hush stuff that Gregg’s been mixed up with lately. . . lots of calls coming in on secure cha
"He hasn’t let you in on it?" Hunt sounded surprised.
She shook her head and shrugged. "Maybe it’s because I associate with crazy, unreliable foreigners."
"But you’re his personal assistant," Hunt said. "I thought you knew about everything that happens around Navcomms."
Lyn shrugged again. "Not this time. . . . at least, not so far. I’ve got a feeling I might find out today, though. Gregg’s been dropping hints."
"Mmm. . . . odd. . ." Hunt returned his attention to his plate and thought about the situation. Gregg Caldwell, Executive Director of the Navigation and Communications Division of the UN Space Arm, was Hunt’s immediate chief. Through a combination of circumstances, under Caldwell’s direction Navcomms had played a leading role in piecing together the story of Minerva and the Ganymeans, and Hunt had been intimately involved in the saga both before and during the Ganymeans’ stay on Earth. Since their departure, Hunt’s main task at Navcomms had been to head up a group that was coordinating the researches being conducted in various places into the volume of scientific information bequeathed by the aliens to Earth. Although not all the findings and speculations had been made public, the working atmosphere inside Navcomms was generally pretty frank and open, so security precautions taken to the extreme that Lyn had described were virtually unheard of. Something odd was going on, all right.
He leaned against the backrest of the bar chair to light a cigarette, and watched Lyn as she poured two more coffees. There was something about the way her gray-green eyes never quite lost their mischievous twinkle and about the hint of a pout that was always dancing elusively around her mouth that he found both amusing and exciting-"cute," he supposed an American would have said. He thought back over the three months that had elapsed since the Shapieron left, and tried to pinpoint what had happened to turn somebody who had been just a smart-headed, good-looking girl at the office into somebody he had breakfast with fairly regularly at one apartment or the other. But there didn’t seem to be any particular where or when; it was just something that had happened somehow, somewhere along the line. He wasn’t complaining.
She glanced up as she set the pot down and saw him looking at her. "See, I’m quite nice to have around, really. Wouldn’t the morning be dull with only the viscreen to stare at." She was at it again. . . . playfully, but only if he didn’t want to take it seriously. One rent made more sense than two, one set of utility bills was cheaper, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
"I’ll pay the bills," Hunt said. He opened his hands appealingly. "You said it yourself earlier-Englishmen are creatures of habit. Anyhow, I’m maintaining standards."
"You sound like an endangered species," she told him.
"I am-chauvinists. Somebody’s got to make a last stand somewhere."
"You don’t need me?"
"Of course not. Good Lord, what a thought!" He scowled across the bar while Lyn returned an impish smile. Maybe the world could wait another forty-eight hours to find out about Pluto. "What are you up to tonight-anything special?" he asked.
"I got invited to a di