Tangle Hold

Chapter 12

"What happened to them?"

"They died."

He didn"t like where this was taking him. His hand slid toward the tangle gun in his pocket. "Maybe I should die, too."

She nodded. "That would be one solution." She added harshly: "They shouldn"t have taken you. Legally speaking, you"re not a criminal. But I couldn"t investigate you personally before I put the circuit in."

Why not? Was she an automaton that reacted in response to a b.u.t.ton? In a way she was, but the b.u.t.ton was psychological.

"That doesn"t help me," he said tiredly. "The police wanted to catch Burlingame through me. That"s right, isn"t it?"

She indicated that it was.

"I did, without knowing what I was doing," he went on. "Now I want out.

Even if I cooperated with the cops, which I"m not going to do, I"m of no further value to them. Every criminal on Venus knows about me by now."

"That"s part of it," she said. "But there"s more. You"ve tied up the machine and neither I nor the police can use it."

Explanations were coming faster. It was no wonder the police wanted him badly. They had a perfect device to use against criminals, which was all they were concerned with, and they couldn"t use it as long as the circuit was in him. It made sense, but that kind of logic was deadly--for him.

"I"ll face it," he said. "I"ll take whatever charge they hang on me. It shouldn"t be more than a few years. You can use the time to take this d.a.m.n thing out of me. Only I want a guarantee first."

She got up and stood with the light behind her. It was deliberately intended to distract him. Under other circ.u.mstances, it would have.

"If it were a small circuit, over just a fraction of your body, I could cut it out," she said. "But the way it is, I can"t. It would kill you."

At least she was honest about it. And he still didn"t know what she meant when she had written, with his hands in the apartment, that she would help him. He would have to find out.

"I can smash the machine," he said. "That"s the other solution."

She leaned against the wall. "You can"t. And neither can I, though it"s technically my machine. It"s in the police department with an armed guard around it at all times. Besides, the machine can defend itself."

He looked at her without understanding. It didn"t sound right. He was sweating under the makeup and part of it was coming loose.

"Then what did you mean when you said you"d help?" he asked. "You promised, but what can you do?"

"I never promised to help." It was her turn not to understand. Her hand slipped down and so did the robe.

She was lying to him, had been lying all along. She never intended to help, though she said she would. The purpose? To lead him into a trap.

She"d been successful enough. He looked up in anger, in time to see an object hurtling from her hand.

It struck him on the side of the head, hard. Some of the makeup chipped and fell off, but that was less important than yanking out the tangle gun. He fired twice, once at her feet and once at her shoulders. He had aimed at her head, but the shot went low.

[Ill.u.s.tration]

Her face was still pretty, though no longer indifferent or so strong.

"What do you want?" she screamed. "Why don"t you leave me alone? I can"t help you. n.o.body can."

She was standing there rigid, not daring to move. The robe rippled in a breeze from the vent and the tangle stuff gripped it and the fabric tore. She"d stand there a few more hours and then topple over. They"d find her in the morning and remove the tangle with the special tongs.

As for himself, it was too late. He might have got off Venus at one time if he had concentrated on it. He hadn"t tried harder because of Doumya Filone. He had _wanted_ to believe her because--well, because.

"I told you I"d help, Jadiver. I will." The voice was distinct.

It wasn"t Doumya Filone who"d said it. A tangle strand had worked up her throat and gripped her face. She couldn"t speak if she tried. Her gray eyes weren"t gray; they were the color of tears.

He looked around. It wasn"t Doumya Filone--and there wasn"t any other person in the room.

"I"ve kept the police away," said the familiar voice. "I can protect you for a while longer. There"s still time to save yourself. But you have to guess right. You can"t make any more mistakes."

Strictly speaking, it wasn"t a voice. Doumya Filone didn"t hear it; that was obvious. It was the circuit then. Someone was making use of the machine to actuate the auditory nerve directly. That was what he seemed to hear.

Jadiver was tired and his body grimy, muscles twitching under the tension. But if his unknown friend--real, after all--could out-wit a room full of police and tinker with the mechanism which was supposed to spot him, he couldn"t do less.

He grinned. "I"ll make it this time. I know what to do."

"The police haven"t given up," said the voice. "I"m going to be busy with them. Don"t expect further communication from me."

He didn"t know who the person was, in spite of the haunting familiarity of the voice. And he wasn"t going to find out soon. Probably never. It was enough, however, to know that he had a friend.

He left Doumya Filone standing there, which was a mistake, he realized as he reached the front office. He should have fired once more at her hands. The screen was crackling; her hands had been free and she"d managed to turn the screen on before the tangle strands interfered with her movement.

He"d made a grave error, but not necessarily fatal. It would be some time before anyone got there. By then he hoped to be safe.

He slipped through the corridors, went out the rear of the building and looked around for an air cab. The place was deserted at this hour and no cabs were in the nearby sky.

He had to walk and he didn"t have that much time. He headed toward the nearest main thoroughfare. It was in the opposite direction to his destination, but he should be able to find an air cab there. He was walking too fast, for a light flashed down on him. He wasn"t presentable and his haste was suspicious.

"Stop," said the amplified voice. It was probably just a routine check, but he couldn"t risk even that.

He dodged into a s.p.a.ce between two buildings and began to run. In the center of town, this would be a blind alley, but in this section it wasn"t. There was a chance he could lose them. The buildings were just high enough so that they couldn"t use the air car and they"d have to follow on foot.

The patrol car alighted almost instantly and one of the policemen started after him. The man following him knew his business and was in good physical condition, better than Jadiver was after days of tension and little sleep.

Jadiver turned and snapped a half dozen shots at his pursuer. He was lucky, a couple were close enough. The policeman crashed to the ground and began to swear. His voice was choked off in seconds.

The other one got out of the patrol car and let it stand. It was the principle of the thing: n.o.body did that to a policeman. Jadiver had a substantial lead and it was dark, but he didn"t know the route. Jadiver was enormously tired and this was the policeman"s regular beat. The gap between them closed rapidly.

Out of breath and time and s.p.a.ce to move around in, Jadiver took the wrong turn because the man was so close--and found himself boxed in.

Crouching, Jadiver fired at the oncoming man, a dark shape he sensed rather than saw. The tangle gun clicked futilely, out of ammunition. He fumbled hastily for a clip; before he could reload, the policeman squeezed the trigger and held it down.

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