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“Yeah. Trouble is, Archimedes is stronger than greed but he ain’t none too smart. If it came to a rescue mission, it’d be a toss-up whether you’d trust him or the autopilot to take the right action. You need a rescue crew that’s smart and a good enough pilot to land the ship on top of Julian Graves’s bald head and be out of there before he has time to feel the pain. And there’s one other thing. You need a rescue crew that won’t turn and run, no matter how dangerous it gets. You need a rescue crew that would die rather than leave you behind on the surface of Marglot.”

“Kallik and J’merlia?”

“You got it. Put all that together, and it’s easy. Atvar H’sial and I go down in the pinnace, and so does Claudius. Archimedes, Kallik and J’merlia stay behind. Kallik is really smart, and J’merlia flies this ship better than I ever could. Both of them are so devoted to At and me they’d come after us if we were marooned in hell. In fact, they’re too damned devoted—if we don’t stop ’em, they’ll be down there every ten minutes to check on us. I’ll tell ’em to come if they get my signal, or the pinnace beacon goes dead, an’ not before. That leaves only one person still to decide.”

“Me? You can’t possibly mean me.” Sinara stood in her most aggressive hands-on-hips stance. “Let me remind you of something, Louis. I am a survival team member. I am trained for trouble.”

“You certainly know how to start it. All right, you’re the fourth. It will be a squeeze in the pinnace, but we’ll manage.”

“We’ll do more than manage. We’ll have fun.”

“I’m glad to hear you say that. Because I’ll be the pilot, and the way space inside the pinnace is arranged, either Atvar H’sial or Claudius will have to sit next to you. I’ll give you the choice.” Louis looked up at her scowling face. “If you want to hear the rest of it, you might as well sit down again.”

“The rest of it? You had this all worked out before I came in. You didn’t want me to help, you just wanted me to listen.”

“Not true. A second head can help. I think I know what I’m doin’, but suppose I’m wrong? Here’s the other part. We’re going down to Marglot, but where do we land?”

“Are you asking me, or are you just going to tell me?” But Sinara sat down again.

“I’m going to explain the situation as I see it. Then I’m goin’ to ask your opinion. What we know isn’t much and it isn’t complicated. We have six people in suits in one place on the surface, near the Hot Pole. Kallik has been monitoring suit signals, and one of the people is banged up pretty good.”

“Who?”

“Ben Blesh.”

“I bet he got hurt trying to be a hero. That was always his ambition.”

“No information on that, an’ you’re bein’ bitchy. The others are all right. But we got one, E.C. Tally, way off in the temperate zone between the hot and cold hemispheres. How he got there, what he’s doin’ there, your guess is as good as mine.

“Now we come to what we really don’t know. Who else, or what else, is down there? The Marglotta were advanced enough to commission a Polypheme ship an’ fly all the way to the Orion Arm to ask for help. They must have had some spaceflight of their own. You’d expect to see satellites buzzing all over the place around Marglot. We don’t. Maybe in the combined gravity field of the sun, M-2, and Marglot, orbital paths are so weird that orbital decay times stop you puttin’ up anything unmanned. But that’s pure guesswork.

“Then there’s the surface. Before you can have spaceflight, you need a pretty advanced civilization. It doesn’t have to be out on the surface—Lo’tfian females run everything from their burrows, and only the males wander around above ground. But normally you expect spaceports an’ stuff like that. Archimedes plotted out lots of structures that could be cities or industrial plants on the warm hemisphere, but he can’t see anythin’ moving near any of them. Also, we don’t pick up a peep of radio signals from them. The strangest thing is that on the cold side, where Archimedes finds no trace of industrial structures, we pick up scads of radio noise all over the place. An’ when I say noise, I mean it. The signals are junk, as though hundreds of people in suits were all jabbering at each other at once with nobody listening. One of those babble centers seems right about the place where we pick up the beacon of E.C. Tally’s suit.”

Louis leaned back in his chair. He would never admit it to anybody, but it was nice to have an audience—especially an audience as attentive, fair-skinned and bright-eyed as Sinara Bellstock. A man could get into lots of trouble with an attractive young woman like that hanging on his words—if he wasn’t in twenty-seven kinds of trouble already.

Sinara raised her eyebrows at him. “Do you really want my opinion?”

“I’m waitin’ for it.”

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