Jadiver sicklily knew he had been wrong about the tangle gun; it could kill if the person who used it had sufficient experience and brutality.
Emily would never have to lose that beautiful face and figure. She could keep it until she died, which wouldn"t be long. n.o.body could stop the peristaltic motion of the digestive system, voluntarily or otherwise, or of the lungs in trying to breathe.
Burlingame wouldn"t know. Policemen were cooperative, and it would be listed as an accident.
Jadiver closed his eyes. Emily was dying and no one could help her. Or himself, either, when they came to pick him up. They had to know exactly where he was. He waited, expecting a tap on the shoulder or the snap of the tangle gun.
The lights dimmed and the same harsh voice spoke. "The danger is over, thanks to the efficient work of the Venicity police force. You are now safe."
Nothing like advertising yourself, thought Jadiver.
No one came near him. Apparently the police didn"t want him yet--they expected him to do more for them.
He went down the stairs and mingled with the excited guests. It had been a good show, unexpected entertainment, especially since it hadn"t involved any real danger for them. He circulated through the chattering men and women until he came near the planted area. At an opportune moment, he slipped in.
It was a miniature jungle; he was safe from ordinary detection as long as he stayed there. He went quietly through the vines and shrubs toward the other side. The broad back of a policemen loomed up in front of him.
Jadiver was an industrial engineer, a specialist in the design of robot bodies and faces, robots that had to look like humans. He knew anatomy, not in the way a doctor did, but it was nonetheless the knowledge of an expert. He reached out and the policeman toppled.
He dragged the unconscious man deeper into the little jungle and listened. No one had noticed. Physically a large man, the policeman might be the one who had shot Emily--and then again he might not be. He did have a tangle gun, which was the important thing. Jadiver took it and rifled the man"s pockets for ammunition.
He knelt for a final check on the body. The chest rose and fell with slow regularity. For insurance, Jadiver again pressed the nerve. This man wouldn"t trouble anyone for a few hours.
Jadiver looked out. When he was sure he wasn"t observed, he walked out and joined the guests. He moved politely from one group to another and in several minutes stood beside the door. He left the way he came.
It was that simple. He had to a.s.sume that until events proved he was mistaken.
Outside, he walked briskly. It was not late and the city overflowed with men and women walking, flying, skimming. Roughly dressed men down from the north polar farms, explorers from the temperate jungles, government girls--the jumbled swarm that comes to a planet in the intermediate stages of exploitation. It was a background through which he could pa.s.s unnoticed.
The circuit, though--always the circuit. He couldn"t escape that by walking away from it. But at least he"d proved that telepathy wasn"t possible by means of it, or he wouldn"t still be free.
Other than that, he didn"t know how it operated. If it was purely electronic in nature, then it had a range. He might be able to get beyond that range, if he knew how far it extended.
A lot depended on the power source. He hadn"t been able to check closely, hadn"t really known what he was looking at when he"d seen it in the autobath. He remembered that the circuit seemed to be laid over his own nervous system. Considering the power available, the range was apt to be quite limited.
That was pure supposition and might be wrong. There was nothing to preclude an external power source, say a closed field blanketing the city or even the entire planet. If so, it represented a technical achievement beyond anything he was familiar with. That didn"t disprove it, of course. The circuit itself indicated a startling advance and he knew _it_ existed.
There was still another possibility. The circuit might not be entirely electronic. It might operate with the same forces that existed inside a single nerve cell. If so, all bets were off; there was no way he could determine the range. It might be anything at all, micro-inches or light-years.
With unlimited equipment and all the time in the worlds, he could answer some of those questions floating around in his mind. He had neither, but there were solutions he could make use of. Limited solutions, but it was better than waiting to be caught.
Jadiver headed toward one such solution.
The robot clerk looked up, smiling and patient, as he entered. It could afford to be patient. There was no place it wanted to be other than where it was at the moment. "Can I help you?"
"Pa.s.sage to Earth," said Jadiver.
The clerk consulted the schedule. That was pretense. The schedule and not much else had been built into its brain. "There"s an orbit flight in two weeks."
In two weeks, Jadiver could be taken, tried, and converted ten times over. "Isn"t there anything sooner?"
"There"s an all-powered flight leaving tomorrow, but that"s for Earth citizens only."
"Suits me. Book me for it."
"Be glad to," said the robot. "Pa.s.sport, please."
It was going to cost more than just the fare, Jadiver knew. He would arrive on Earth with very little money and could expect to start all over. He was no longer fresh out of training, willing to start at the bottom. He was a mature man, experienced beyond the ordinary, and most organizations he could work for would be suspicious of that.
But it was worth it, aside from the escape. No future for him there, jammed in on a crowded world, but it was his planet, always would be, and he wouldn"t mind going back.
"Sorry," said the clerk, flipping over the pa.s.sport and studying it. "I can"t book you. The flight"s only for Earth citizens."
"I was born there," Jadiver impatiently said. "Can"t you see?"
"You were?" asked the robot eagerly. "I was built there." It handed him back the pa.s.sport. "However, it doesn"t matter where you were born.
You"ve been here three years without going back. Automatically, you became a citizen of Venus two and a half years ago."
Jadiver hadn"t known that. He doubted that many did. It was logical enough. Earth was overflowing and the hidden citizenship clause was a good way of getting rid of the more restless part of the population and making sure they didn"t come back.
"There"s still the orbit flight," said the clerk, smiling and serene.
"For that you need a visitor"s visa, which takes time. Shall I make the arrangements?"
Aside from the time element, which was vital, he couldn"t tip the police off that he intended to leave.
"Thanks," he said, taking the pa.s.sport. "I"ll call back when I make up my mind."
Down the street was another interplanetary flight office and he wandered into it. It might have been the same office he had just left, robot and all.
"Information on Mars," he said, his manner casual.
The clerk didn"t bother to consult the schedule. There was a difference, after all. "There"ll be an orbit flight in four months," it said pleasantly. "Rate, four-fifths of the standard fare to Earth."
Nothing was working out as expected. "What about the moons of Jupiter?"
This was the last chance.
"Due to the position of the planets, for the next few months there are no direct flights anywhere beyond Mars. You have to go there and transfer."
That escape was closed. "I can"t make plans so far in advance."
The robot beamed at him. "I can see that you"re a gentleman who likes to travel." It grew confidential and leaned over the counter. "I have a bargain here, truly the most sensational we"ve ever offered."
Jadiver drew away from that eagerness. "What is this bargain?"
"Did you notice the fare to Mars? Four-fifths of that to Earth, and yet it"s farther away. Did you stop to think why?"