"I wasn"t looking closely," said Ole Doc.
"Well, that"s just one. We got hundreds all over the planet. And we keep them going so long as the citizens pay the tax. And when they refuse to pay it, well, we get "em to put up a bond. And-"
"What kind of a bond?"
"Personal liberty bond, of course. If we don"t collect when it"s due, then the man"s liberty is over and he"s repossessed by us."
"Why do you want him?"
"Slaves, of course. Nine-tenths of the people on this planet would rather be slaves than have the machines stop. So there we go."
"You mean nine-tenths are slaves by this action. See here, Tolliver, what do the machines do?"
"Why, they keep the outer s.p.a.cial gases from settling down and killing people. The gases ruin the oxygen con-
tent of the air. So we run the machines and keep the gases going up, not down. That"s simple isn"t it? And the air bombs we sell let men breathe when they"ve been hit by the gases too much."
"What kind of gases?"
Tolliver looked shrewdly at Ole Doc. The crook, thought Tolliver, was pretty intelligent. Well, all the bet- ter. "That"s where I need an expert," said Tolliver. "Now if you"ll just join up and take orders-"
"Let me look this thing over first," said Ole Doc.
"Money is money but it just may be that I can"t do a thing about it."
Suspicion was a fine quality to find in a man. Tolliver reared up and was about to call when Tinoi, sweating hard from his walk, scuttled in. He saw Ole Doc and left his prepared report unsaid.
"New recruit," said Tolliver. "They all get here, Tinoi?"
"About twelve died on the way in," said Tinoi. "Them Persephons don"t have good sense when it comes to driv- ing-"
"How much did you get?" said Tolliver.
Tinoi looked aggrieved and his boss laughed.
"Well, put them in a stockade and . . . no, wait. Here.
Take this man around and let him look the place over."
Tinoi twisted his head sideways at Ole Doc in suspicion, and then he caught a secret gesture from Tolliver which said, "Watch him, don"t let him see too much, kill if he tries to get away."
"I need this man," added Tolliver.
Ole Doc rose. "If you"ll let me know where I can find Bestin-"
"Later, later. Take him along, Tinoi."
Outside Ole Doc tried to regain his weapons and was refused. He would have made a stronger bid if he had not just then seen the slaves waiting before the door.
They were groveling in the dust, lying p.r.o.ne with ex- haustion or looking in dumb misery at the huge gold office building which was then: doom. These were the same slaves Ole Doc had seen earlier for there was the same grizzled ancient, coughing and whining in their midst, "Air! Air!"
Ole Doc took half a dozen strides and was outside. He saw what he was looking for and went sick inside. There she was, lying on a litter, moaning in semi-consciousness,
twisting with fever. The beauty of her was spoiled and her spirit was shredded with pain.
With another pace, Ole Doc tried to approach her. He knew how she had been burned, why he had been lying outside in the gra.s.s. Connoly was standing hugely in his way, lordly drunk but very positive.
"n.o.body gets near them slaves," said Connoly. "Or- ders."
"Come back here, you," said Tinoi. He scuttled down the steps and grabbed Ole Doc from behind.
Ole Doc offered no fight.
"Who"s this bloke?" asked Connoly, when they had him , back at a decent distance.
"Recruit, the boss said. Just what we don"t need is a recruit," grumbled Tinoi. "Too many splits now. Too big a payroll. Connoly, you run these pigs into the stockade. I got to play nursemaid to this kid here. Never get to rest.
Never get a drink. Never-" he trailed off. "Come on, you. What are you supposed to do?"
"I"m supposed to repair the machines," said Ole Doc.
"Well, come on, then." He scuttled away and Ole Doc followed.
The machine was above eye level which was why Ole Doc had missed it. It was a huge, gold drum and it stood squarely on top of the office building. They went up to it in an elevator and found it humming to itself.
Ole Doc had pulled his dome on from some instinct But he was surprised to find Tinoi getting quickly into a mask before he stepped out of the elevator.
"What"s wrong with it?" said Tinoi.
Ole Doc spoke at urgent random. "The rheostats."
"The . . . well, you know your business, I guess. There"s the port and there"s the vats. You work and I"ll stay here and rest. Walk a man"s legs off and then don"t even let him drink. Keep your hands out of the vats, now."
"I"ll need some of the things I left in the office," said Ole Doc.
Tinoi went to the phone and called and presently a clerk came up with them in a paper bag. No pellets, no hypo gun, no blaster-Ole Doc spread out his small kit.
"Don"t look like tools to me."
"I"m a chemist," said Ole Doc.
"Oh, I get you. I told him the mixture was too strong. I even get it."
Ole Doc smiled and nodded. "We"ll see."
He gingerly approached a vat in the dark interior. On looking around he found a simple arrangement. There was a centrifuge in the vat and a molecularizer above it and then there were ports which carried ionized beams out into the surrounding air. He stepped up and saw that a constant stream of fluid in very tiny amounts was being broadcast through the jets to be carried by the wind all around the countryside. He went back to the vats.
With a drop of mixture on a filter, he rapidly ruled out virus and bacteria with a pocket a.n.a.lyser. Intrigued now, he made a rapid inspection for inorganic matter and was instantly in the field of naturally produced plant secre- tions.
He took a bit of "synthetic skin" from his case and got a very violent reaction. On the grid, the thing was an allergy product of a plant. And when he had run through twenty alkaloids, working slowly because of his impoverish- ment in equipment, he knew what it was.
Ragweed pollen!