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"That's Marco, the new mentalist," said Pell.
Ciel shrugged to show that she wasn't particularly impressed. Neither was Pell, to tell the truth. Mentalists were all the rage, partly because everybody could practice a little amateur telepathy and hypnotism in his own home. Mentalists, of course, made a career of it and were much better at it than anybody else.
Their drinks came and they watched Marco go through his act in a rather gloomy silence. Marco was skillful, but not especially unusual. He did the usual stuff: calling out things that people wrote on slips of paper, calling out dates on coins, and even engaging in mental duels wherein the challenger wrote a phrase, concealed it from Marco, and then deliberately tried to keep him from reading it telepathically. He had the usual hypnotism session with volunteers who were certain they could resist. He made them hop around the stage like monkeys, burn their fingers on pieces of ice, and so on. The audience roared with laughter.
Pell and Ciel just kept staring.
When Marco had finished his act and the thundering applause had faded the Venusian dancing girls came back on the stage again.
Ciel yawned.
Pell said, "Me, too. Let's get out of here."
It wasn't until they were home in their underground apartment and getting ready for bed that Ciel turned to him and said, "You see?"
He was b.u.t.toning his pajamas. "See what?"
"It's _us_, d.i.c.k. It's not the floor show, or the meth, or anything--it's _us_. We can't enjoy _anything_ together any more."
He said, "Now wait a minute...."
But she had already stepped into the bedroom and slammed the door. He heard the lock click.
"Hey," he said, "what am I supposed to do, sleep out here?"
He took the ensuing silence to mean that he was.
And he did.
The next morning, as he came into the office, Pell scowled deeply and went to his desk without saying good morning to anybody. Ciel had kept herself locked in the bedroom and he had made his own breakfast. How it was all going to end he didn't know. He had the feeling that she was working herself up to the decision to leave him. And the real h.e.l.l of it was that he couldn't exactly blame her.
"Morning, partner," said a voice above him. He looked up. Way up. Steve Kronski was built along the general lines of a water buffalo. The usual battered grin was smeared across his face. "I see we got a new a.s.signment."
"Oh--did Larkin brief you on it already?"
"Yeah. Before I could get my hat off. Funny set-up, all right. I punched for basic data before you got in. Hardly any."
"Maybe that means something in itself. Maybe somebody saw to it that the information never got into the central banks."
The C.I.B. computers could be hooked into the central banks which stored information on nearly everything and everybody. If you incorporated, filed for a patent, paid taxes, voted, or just were born, the central banks had an electronic record of it.
Kronski jerked his thumb toward the computer room. "I punched for names of Supremist members coupla minutes ago. Thought maybe we could start in that way."
Pell followed, his mind not really on the job yet. He wasn't at his best working with the computers, and yet operating them was ninety per cent of investigation. He supposed he'd get used to it sometime.
Three walls of the big computer room were lined with control racks, consisting mostly of keyboard setups. Code symbols and index cards were placed in handy positions. The C.I.B. circuits, of course, were adapted to the specialized work of investigation. In the memory banks of tubes and relays there was a master file of all names--aliases and nicknames included--with which the organization had ever been concerned.
Criminals, witnesses, complaints, everyone. Code numbers linked to the names showed where data on their owner could be found. A name picked at random might show that person to have data in the suspect file, the arrest file, the psychological file, the modus operandi file, and so forth. Any of the data in these files could be checked, conversely, against the names.
Kronski walked over to where letter sized cards were flipping from a slot into a small bin. He said, "Didn't even have to dial in Central Data for these. Seems we got a lot of Supremist members right in our own little collection."
Pell picked up one of the cards and examined it idly. Vertical columns were inscribed along the card, each with a heading, and with further sub-headed columns. Under the column marked _Modus Operandi_, for instance, there were subcolumns t.i.tled _Person Attacked_, _Property Attacked_, _How Attacked_, _Means of Attack_, _Object of Attack_, and _Trademark_. Columns of digits, one to nine, were under each item. If the digits 3 and 2 were punched under _Trademark_ the number 32 could be fed into the Operational Data machine and this machine would then give back the information on a printed slip that number 32 stood for the trademark of leaving cigar b.u.t.ts at the scene of the crime.
"Got five hundred now," said Kronski. "I'll let a few more run in case we need alternates."
"Okay," said Pell. "I'll start this batch through the a.n.a.lyzer."
He took the cards across the room to a machine about twenty feet long and dropped them into the feeder at one end. Channels and rollers ran along the top of this machine and under them were a series of vertical slots into which the selected cards could drop. He cleared the previous setting and ran the pointer to _Constants_. He set the qualitative dial to 85%. This meant that on the first run the punch hole combinations in the cards would be scanned and any item common to 85% of the total would be registered in a relay. Upon the second run the machine would select the cards with this constant and drop them into a slot corresponding with that heading. Further scanning, within the slot itself, would pick out the constant number.
Pell started the rollers whirring.
Kronski came over. He rubbed his battered nose. "Hope we get outside on this case. I'm gettin' sick o' the office. Haven't been out in weeks."
Pell nodded. Oh, for the life of a C.I.B. man. In teleplays they cornered desperate criminals in the dark ruins of the ancient cities topside, and fought it out with freezers. The fact was, although regulations called for them to carry freezers in their shoulder holsters, one in a thousand ever got a chance to use them.
Pell said, "Maybe you need a vacation."
"Maybe. Only I keep putting my vacation off. Got a whole month saved up now."
"Me, too." Pell sighed. Ciel would probably be pacing the floor back home now, trying to make up her mind. To break it up, or not to break it up? There would be no difficulty, really: she had been a pretty good commercial artist before they were married and she wouldn't have any trouble finding a job again somewhere in World City.
The rollers kept whirring and the cards flipping along with a whispering sound.
"Wonder what we're looking into these Supremists for?" asked Kronski. "I always thought they were some kind of harmless crackpots."
"The Chief doesn't think so. Neither does Theodor Rysland." He told Kronski more about the interview last night.
Presently the machine stopped, clicked several times and began rolling the other way.
"Well, it found something," said Kronski.
They kept watching. Oh, for the life of a C.I.B. man. Cards began to drop into one of the slots. The main heading was _Physical_ and the sub-heading _Medical History_. Pell frowned and said, "Certainly didn't expect to find a constant in this department." He picked up a few of the first cards and looked at them, hoping to catch the constant by eye. He caught it. "What's 445 under this heading?"
Kronski said, "I'll find out," and stepped over to the Operational Data board. He worked it, took the printed slip that came out and called back: "Record of inoculation."
"That's a funny one."
"Yup. Sure is." Kronski stared at the slip and scratched his neck. "It must be just any old kind inoculation. If it was special--like typhoid or teta.n.u.s or something--it'd have another digit."
"There must be some other boil-downs, if we could think of them." Pell was frowning heavily. Some of the other men, used to the machines, could grab a boil-down out of thin air, run the cards again and get another significant constant. The machine, however, inhibited Pell. It made him feel uneasy and stupid whenever he was around it.
"How about location?" suggested Kronski.
Pell shook his head. "I checked a few by eye. All different numbers under location. Some of 'em come from World City, some from Mars Landing, some from way out in the sticks. Nothing significant there."
"Maybe what we need is a cup of coffee."