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He went back into the living room, selected a film from the library and slipped it into a lap projector. He sat down and tried to concentrate on the film, a historical adventure about the days of the first moon rockets. He couldn't follow it.
The viewer rang.
He bounded from the chair as though he had triggered a high speed ejection seat in a burning jet. He went to the viewer and flicked it on.
The plate shimmered, and then Ciel's image came into focus.
"_Baby!_" He was certain his shout overmodulated every amp tube in the entire World City viewer system. But he felt better, wonderfully better, already.
She was smiling. "h.e.l.lo, d.i.c.k."
"h.e.l.lo."
And then they looked at each other in affectionate embarra.s.sment for a moment.
"One of us," said Pell, "ought to have his script writer along."
"d.i.c.k, I don't know exactly how to say what I want to say...."
"Don't. Don't say anything. Just pretend nothing ever happened. Just come on home fast as you can."
"No, d.i.c.k. Not yet. I still want to talk about--well, everything. d.i.c.k, we've got to reach some sort of compromise. There _must_ be a way."
"Come on home. We'll find a way."
"Not home. Too many memories there. Besides," she smiled a little, "I don't trust us alone together. You know what would happen. We wouldn't get _any_ talking done. Not any sensible talking anyway. You'd better meet me someplace."
He sighed. "Okay. Where can I meet you?"
"How about the Stardust Cafe?"
"Again? That place didn't help us much the last time."
"I know, but it's the handiest. I'm sure we can find a quiet place. Out on the terrace or something."
"Is there a terrace?"
"Yes, I think so. I'm sure there must be."
He looked at his chrono. "All right, baby. Half an hour?"
"Half an hour."
When she clicked off he felt his heart pounding. He felt dizzy. He felt as though he had just taken a quart of meth at one jolt--intravenously.
He sang, more loudly and more off-key than ever. He went into the bedroom and started to get dressed again.
It wasn't until he was finishing the knot in his tie that the hunch hit him.
It was funny about that hunch. He would have said it came out of nowhere, and yet it must have broken from the bottom of his mind through some kind of restraining layer into the conscious levels. He didn't remember thinking anything that might have brought it on--his mind was strictly on Ciel. Maybe that was how it came through, with the attention of his conscious mind directed elsewhere.
With the hunch he heard Ciel's voice again, heard it very clearly, saying: "_I'm sure we can find a quiet place. Out on the terrace or something._" And with that other things started to fall into place.
As he thought, and as the possibilities of his hunch fanned out to embrace other possibilities he became suddenly cold and sick inside. He fought the feeling. "Got to go through with it," he muttered to himself.
"Got to."
As soon as he was dressed he took the tunnel cars to Station D-90, changing twice. People were aboard at this hour, returning from the evening. Lots of men and women in uniform: the green of the landfighters, the white of the seamen, the blue of the flyers, the silver and black of the s.p.a.ce force. Young people. Kids mostly: kids who had never seen war, smelled death, heard the wounded scream. He hoped they never would. But if his hunch was correct they might be dangerously near to it right now.
If only he had time to call Kronski. He'd feel a lot safer....
He shook himself. Have to stop thinking about it. Proceed cautiously now, and take each thing as it came. That was the only thing to do.
He went topside and stepped from the elevator kiosk into the night air.
Ahead he saw the bright globular sign of the Stardust Cafe. But he didn't go toward it right away. He turned in the other direction, walked swiftly, and kept a sharp eye on the shadows. He turned off on a side street, circled a small park, and then crossed a sloping lawn toward the back of the night club. He headed for the light of the service entrance.
A half-credit bill got him inside through the back entrance. He found the door with the temporary sign saying: Marco the Mentalist. He knocked.
Marco the Mentalist opened the door. He didn't look quite as tall face-to-face as he did out on the floor, nor quite as impressive. His face was still dark and faintly saturnine, but the jowls seemed a little puffier now, there was a faint network of capillaries around his nostrils and his eyes looked just the least bit weary and tired. In a pleasant enough voice he said, "Yes?"
Pell showed his C.I.B. identification.
Marco raised his eyebrows a little and said, "Come inside, please."
Inside he found a chair for Pell. He sat across from him at his dressing table, half-turned toward the room. "I must get ready for my show in a little while. You understand that, of course."
Pell nodded. "What's on my mind won't take long. First of all, I want to ask a few questions about hypnotism. They may seem silly to you, or maybe a little elementary, but I'd like you to answer 'em just the same."
Marco's eyebrows went a little bit higher and he said, "Proceed."
"Okay. Question number one: can anybody be hypnotized against his will?"
"Some can, some can't." Marco smiled. "The average person, under average circ.u.mstances--no. I appear in my act to hypnotize people against their wills. Actually, subconsciously, they _wish_ to be hypnotized, which is why they volunteer to let me try in the first place."
"Okay, number two. Is there any drug that can hypnotize a person?"
Marco frowned. "Pentothal and several things _appear_ to do that. You could argue it either way, whether the subject is actually hypnotized or not. I believe post-hypnotic commands have been given to subjects under sodium pentothol and carried out, even back in the dark ages of psychiatry several hundred years ago."
"I've got one more really important question," Pell said then. "I'd understood that somebody under hypnosis won't do anything against his moral or ethical sense. An honest man, for instance, can't be forced to steal. Is that true?"
Marco laughed and gestured with his graceful fingers. "I don't think it is true. It was once believed to be, because hypnotic technique was not strong enough. That is, the subject's hypnosis was not strong enough to overcome a strong moral sense, which is actually a surface veneer on a deeper, more brutal nature. But I think with deep enough hypnosis, and the right kind of command, you can get a person to do most anything in post-hypnotic behavior--and of course not know why he _must_ do it, even knowing it's wrong. Do you follow me?"
"I hope I do." Then Pell leaned forward. "And now I have a very great favor to ask of you."
"Yes?"
"I want you to put on a little special private performance for me, right here and now."
"I'm afraid I don't understand."
"You will, in about sixty seconds. Just listen carefully...."