"Says you," Garlock replied, skeptically, and all four went to work as though nothing had happened.
They went through the shops and the almost-finished ship. They studied blueprints. They met all the Operators and discussed generators and fields of force and mathematics and paraphysics and Guntherics. They argued so hotly about mental control that Garlock had James bring the _Pleiades_ over to new-christened Galaxian Field so that he could prove his point then and there.
Entlore and Holson came along this time, as well as the ComOff; and all three were nonplussed and surprised to see each member of the "crackpot"
group hurl the huge starship from one solar system to any other one desired, apparently merely by thinking about it. And the "crackpots"
were extremely surprised to find themselves hopelessly lost in uncharted galactic wildernesses every time they did not think, definitely and positively, of one specific destination. Then Garlock took a chance. He had to take it sometime; he might just as well do it now.
"See if you can hit Andromeda, Deggi," he suggested.
While Belle, James, and Lola held their breaths, Delcamp tried. The starship went toward the huge nebula, but stopped at the last suitable planet on the galaxy"s rim.
"Can _you_ hit Andromeda?" Delcamp asked, more than half jealously, and Belle tensed her muscles.
"Never tried it," Garlock said, easily. "I suppose, though, since you couldn"t kick the old girl out of our good old home galaxy, she"ll just sit right here for me, too."
He went through the motions and the _Pleiades_ did sit right there--which was exactly what he had told her to do. And everybody--even the "crackpots"--breathed more easily.
And Belle was "nice" to Fao; she didn"t use her claws, even once, all day. And, just before quitting time--
"Does he ... I mean, did he ever ... well, sort of knock you around?"
Fao asked.
"I"ll say he hasn"t!" Belle"s nostrils flared slightly at the mere thought. "I"d stick a knife into him, the big jerk."
"Oh, I didn"t mean physically...."
"Through my blocks? A _Prime"s_ blocks? Don"t be ridiculous, Fao!"
"What do you mean, "ridiculous"?" Fao snapped. "You tried _my_ blocks.
What did they feel like to you--mosquito netting? What I thought was....
Oh, all he really said was that all Primes had to have h.e.l.l knocked out of them before they could be any good. That he had had it one way, Deggi another, and me a third. I see--you haven"t had yours yet."
"I certainly haven"t. And if he ever tries it, I"ll...."
"Oh, he won"t. He couldn"t, very well, because after you"re married, it would...."
"Did the big lug tell you I was going to marry him?"
"Of course not. No fringes, even. But who else are you going to marry?
If the whole universe was clear full of the finest men imaginable--pure dreamboats, no less--can you even conceive of you marrying any one of them except him?"
"I"m not going to marry anybody. Ever."
"No? You, with your Prime"s mind and your Prime"s body, not have any children? And you tell _me_ not to be ridiculous?"
That stopped Belle cold, but she wouldn"t admit it. Instead--"I don"t get it. What did he _do_ to you, anyway?"
Fao"s block set itself so tight that it took her a full minute to soften it down enough for even the thinnest thought to get through. "That"s something n.o.body will ever know. But anyway, unless ... unless you find another Prime as strong as Clee is--and I don"t really think there are any, do you?"
"Of course there aren"t. There"s only one of his cla.s.s, anywhere. He"s it," Belle said, with profound conviction.
"That makes it tough for you. You"ll have the toughest job imaginable.
The _very_ toughest. I know."
"Huh? What job?"
"Since Clee won"t do it for you, and since n.o.body else can, you"ll have to just simply knock h.e.l.l out of yourself."
And in Garlock"s room that night, getting ready for bed, Belle asked suddenly, "Clee, what in h.e.l.l did you do to Fao Talaho?"
"Nothing much. She"s a mighty good egg, really."
"Could you do it, whatever it was, to me?"
"I don"t know; I never tried it."
"_Would_ you, then, if I asked you to?"
"No."
"Why not?"
"Answer that yourself."
"And it was "nothing much," it says here in fine print. But I think I know just about what it was. Don"t I?"
"I wouldn"t be surprised."
"You knocked h.e.l.l out of yourself, didn"t you?"
"I lied to her about that. I"m still trying to."
"So I"ve got to do it to myself. And I haven"t started yet?"
"Check. But you"re several years younger than I am, you know."
Belle thought it over for a minute, then stubbed out her cigarette and shrugged her shoulders. "No sale. Put it back on the shelf. I like me better the way I am. That is, I _think_ I do.... In a way, though, I"m sorry, Clee darling."
"Darling? Something new has been added. I wish you really meant that, ace."
"I"m still "ace" after what I just said? I"m glad, Clee. "Ace" is ever so much nicer than "chum.""
"Ace. The top of the deck. You are, and always will be."