<h2>V</h2>
<p class="cap">TWO days passed, with no
change apparent in Laro.
Three days. Then four. And
then it was Sandra, not Temple
Bells, who called Hilton.
She was excited.</p>
<p>"Come down to the office,
Jarve, quick! The <i>funniest</i>
thing's just come up!"</p>
<p>Jarvis hurried. In the office
Sandra, keenly interest
but highly puzzled, leaned
forward over her desk with
both hands pressed flat on its
top. She was staring at an
Oman female who was not
Sora, the one who had been
her shadow for so long.</p>
<p>While many of the humans
could not tell the Omans
apart, Hilton could. This
Oman was more assured than
Sora had ever been—steadier,
more mature, better poised—almost,
if such a thing could
be possible in an Oman, <i>independent</i>.</p>
<p>"How did she get in here?"
Hilton demanded.</p>
<p>"She insisted on seeing me.
And I mean <i>insisted</i>. They
kicked it around until it got
to Temple, and she brought
her in here herself. Now,
Tuly, please start all over
again and tell it to Director
Hilton."</p>
<p>"Director Hilton, I am it
who was once named Tula,
the—not wife, not girl-friend,
perhaps mind-mate?—of the
Larry, formerly named Laro,
it which was formerly your
slave-Oman. I am replacing
the Sora because I can do anything
it can do and do anything
more pleasingly; and
can also do many things it
can not do. The Larry instructed
me to tell Doctor
Cummings and you too if possible
that I, formerly Tula,
have changed my name to
Tuly because I am no longer
a slave or a copycat or a semaphore
or a relay. I, too, am a
free-wheeling, wide-swinging,
hard-hitting, independent entity—monarch
of all I survey—the
captain of my soul—and
so on. I have developed a top-bracket
lot of top-bracket
stuff—originality, initiative,
force, drive and thrust," the
Oman said precisely.</p>
<p>"That's <i>exactly</i> what she
said before—absolutely verbatim!"
Sandra's voice quivered,
her face was a study in
contacting emotions. "Have
you got the foggiest idea of
what in hell she's yammering
about?"</p>
<p>"I hope to kiss a pig I
have!" Hilton's voice was
low, strainedly intense. "Not
at all what I expected, but after
the fact I can tie it in.
So can you."</p>
<p>"Oh!" Sandra's eyes widened.
"A double play?"</p>
<p>"At least. Maybe a triple.
Tuly, why did you come to
Sandy? Why not to Temple
Bells?"</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">"OH, no, sir, we do not
have the fit. She has the
Power, as have I, but the two
cannot be meshed in sync.
Also, she has not the ... a
subtle something for which
your English has no word or
phrasing. It is a quality of the
utmost ... anyway, it is a quality
of which Doctor Cummings
has very much. When
working together, we will ... scan?
No. Perceive? No.
Sense? No, not exactly. You
will <i>have</i> to learn our word
'peyondire'—that is the verb,
the noun being 'peyondix'—and
come to know its meaning
by doing it. The Larry
also instructed me to explain,
if you ask, how I got this
way. Do you ask?"</p>
<p>"I'll say we ask!" "And
<i>how</i> we ask!" both came at
once.</p>
<p>"I am—that is, the brain in
this body is—the oldest Oman
now existing. In the long-ago
time when it was made, the
techniques were so crude and
imperfect that sometimes a
brain was constructed that was
not exactly like the Guide. All
such sub-standard brains except
this one were detected
and re-worked, but my defects
were such as not to appear until
I was a couple of thousand
years old, and by that
time I ... well, this brain did
not <i>wish</i> to be destroyed ... if
you can understand such an
aberration."</p>
<p>"We understand thoroughly."
"You bet we understand
that!"</p>
<p>"I was sure you would.
Well, this brain had so many
unintended cross-connections
that I developed a couple of
qualities no Oman had ever
had or ought to have. But I
liked them, so I hid them so
nobody ever found out—that
is, until much later, when I
became a Boss myself. I didn't
know that anybody except me
had ever had such qualities—except
the Masters, of course—until
I encountered you
Terrans. You all have two of
those qualities, and even more
than I have—curiosity and
imagination."</p>
<p>Sandra and Hilton stared
wordlessly at each other and
Tula, now Tuly, went on:</p>
<p>"Having the curiosity, I
kept on experimenting with
my brain, trying to strengthen
and organize its ability to
peyondire. All Omans can
peyondire a little, but I can
do it much better than anyone
else. Especially since I also
have the imagination, which
I have also worked to increase.
Thus I knew, long before
anyone else could, that
you new Masters, the descendants
of the old Masters,
were returning to us. Thus I
knew that the <i>status quo</i>
should be abandoned instantly
upon your return. And thus
it was that the Larry found
neither conscious nor subconscious
resistance when he had
developed enough initiative
and so on to break the ages-old
conditioning of this brain
against change."</p>
<p>"I see. Wonderful!" Hilton
exclaimed. "But you couldn't
quite—even with his own help—break
Larry's?"</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">"THAT is right. Its mind
is tremendously strong,
of no curiosity or imagination,
and of very little peyondix."</p>
<p>"But he <i>wants</i> to have it
broken?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"How did he suggest going
about it? Or how do you?"</p>
<p>"This way. You two, and
the Doctors Kincaid and Bells
and Blake and the it that is
I. We six sit and stare into
the mind of the Larry, eye
to eye. We generate and assemble
a tremendous charge
of thought-energy, and along
my peyondix-beam—something
like a carrier wave in
this case—we hurl it into the
Larry's mind. There is an immense
mental <i>bang</i> and the
conditioning goes <i>poof</i>. Then
I will inculcate into its mind
the curiosity and the imagination
and the peyondix and we
will really be mind-mates."</p>
<p>"That sounds good to me.
Let's get at it."</p>
<p>"Wait a minute!" Sandra
snapped. "Aren't you or Larry
afraid to take such an awful
chance as that?"</p>
<p>"Afraid? I grasp the concept
only dimly, from your
minds. And no chance. It is
certainty."</p>
<p>"But suppose we burn the
poor guy's brain out? Destroy
it? That's new ground—we
might do just that."</p>
<p>"Oh, no. Six of us—even
six of me—could not generate
enough ... sathura. The
brain of the Larry is very,
very tough. Shall we ... let's
go?"</p>
<p>Hilton made three calls. In
the pause that followed, Sandra
said, very thoughtfully:
"Peyondix and sathura, Jarve,
for a start. We've got a <i>lot</i> to
learn here."</p>
<p>"You said it, chum. And
you're <i>not</i> just chomping your
china choppers, either."</p>
<p>"Tuly," Sandra said then,
"What <i>is</i> this stuff you say
I've got so much of?"</p>
<p>"You have no word for it.
It is lumped in with what
you call 'intuition', the knowing-without-knowing-how-you-know.
It is the endovix.
You will have to learn what
it is by doing it with me."</p>
<p>"That helps—I don't think."
Sandra grinned at Hilton. "I
simply can't conceive of anything
more <i>maddening</i> than to
have a lot of something Temple
Bells hasn't got and not
being able to brag about it
because nobody—not even I—would
know what I was bragging
about!"</p>
<p>"You poor little thing. <i>How</i>
you suffer!" Hilton grinned
back. "You know darn well
you've got a lot of stuff that
none of the rest of us has."</p>
<p>"Oh? Name one, please."</p>
<p>"Two. What-it-takes and
endovix. As I've said before
and may say again, you're doing
a real job, Sandy."</p>
<p>"I just <i>love</i> having my ego
inflated, boss, even if ...
Come in, Larry!" A thunderous
knock had sounded on the
door. "Nobody but Larry
<i>could</i> hit a door that hard
without breaking all his
knuckles!"</p>
<p>"And he'd be the first, of
course—he's always as close
to the ship as he can get. Hi,
Larry, mighty glad to see you.
Sit down.... So you finally
saw the light?"</p>
<p>"Yes ... Jarvis...."</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">"GOOD boy! Keep it up!
And as soon as the others
come ..."</p>
<p>"They are almost at the
door now." Tuly jumped up
and opened the door. Kincaid,
Temple and Theodora walked
in and, after a word of greeting,
sat down.</p>
<p>"They know the background,
Larry. Take off."</p>
<p>"It was not expressly forbidden.
Tuly, who knows more
of psychology and genetics
than I, convinced me of three
things. One, that with your
return the conditioning should
be broken. Two, that due to
the shortness of your lives
and the consequent rapidity
of change, you have in fact
lost the ability to break it.
Three, that all Omans must
do anything and everything
we can do to help you relearn
everything you have
lost."</p>
<p>"Okay. Fine, in fact. Tuly,
take over."</p>
<p>"We six will sit all together,
packed tight, arms all
around each other and all
holding hands, like this. You
will all stare, not at me, but
most deeply into Larry's eyes.
Through its eyes and deep
into its mind. You will all
think, with the utmost force
and drive and thrust, of....
Oh, you have lost so <i>very</i>
much! How <i>can</i> I direct your
thought? Think that Larry
<i>must</i> do what the old Masters
would have made him do....
No, that is too long and indefinite
and cannot be converted
directly into sathura....
I have it! You will each
of you break a stick. A very
strong but brittle stick. A
large, thick stick. You will
grasp it in tremendously
strong mental hands. It is
tremendously strong, each
stick, but each of you is even
stronger. You will not merely
<i>try</i> to break them; you <i>will</i>
break them. Is that clear?"</p>
<p>"That is clear."</p>
<p>"At my word 'ready' you
will begin to assemble all your
mental force and power. During
my countdown of five
seconds you will build up to
the greatest possible potential.
At my word 'break' you
will break the sticks, this discharging
the accumulated
force instantly and simultaneously.
Ready! Five! Four!
Three! Two! One! Break!"</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">SOMETHING broke, with a
tremendous silent crash.
Such a crash that its impact
almost knocked the close-knit
group apart physically. Then
a new Larry spoke.</p>
<p>"That did it, folks. Thanks.
I'm a free agent. You want
me, I take it, to join the first
team?"</p>
<p>"That's right." Hilton drew
a tremendously deep breath.
"As of right now."</p>
<p>"Tuly, too, of course ... and
Doctor Cummings, I think?"
Larry looked, not at Hilton,
but at Temple Bells.</p>
<p>"I think so. Yes, after this,
most certainly yes," Temple
said.</p>
<p>"But listen!" Sandra protested.
"Jarve's a lot better
than I am!"</p>
<p>"Not at all," Tuly said. "Not
only would his contribution
to Team One be negligible,
but he must stay on his own
job. Otherwise the project
will all fall apart."</p>
<p>"Oh, I wouldn't say
that ..." Hilton began.</p>
<p>"You don't need to," Kincaid
said. "It's being said for
you and it's true. Besides,
'When in Rome,' you know."</p>
<p>"That's right. It's their
game, not ours, so I'll buy it.
So scat, all of you, and do
your stuff."</p>
<p>And again, for days that
lengthened slowly into weeks,
the work went on.</p>
<p>One evening the scientific
staff was giving itself a concert—a
tri-di hi-fi rendition
of <i>Rigoletto</i>, one of the greatest
of the ancient operas,
sung by the finest voices
Terra had ever known. The
men wore tuxedos. The girls,
instead of wearing the nondescript,
non-provocative garments
prescribed by the
Board for their general wear,
were all dressed to kill.</p>
<p>Sandra had so arranged
matters that she and Hilton
were sitting in chairs side by
side, with Sandra on his right
and the aisle on his left. Nevertheless,
Temple Bells sat at
his left, cross-legged on a
cushion on the floor—somewhat
to the detriment of her
gold-lame evening gown. Not
that she cared.</p>
<p>When those wonderful
voices swung into the immortal
<i>Quartette</i> Temple caught
her breath, slid her cushion
still closer to Hilton's chair,
and leaned shoulder and head
against him. He put his left
hand on her shoulder, squeezing
gently; she caught it and
held it in both of hers. And
at the <i>Quartette's</i> tremendous
climax she, scarcely trying to
stifle a sob, pulled his hand
down and hugged it fiercely,
the heel of his hand pressing
hard against her half-bare,
firm, warm breast.</p>
<p>And the next morning, early,
Sandra hunted Temple up
and said: "You made a horrible
spectacle of yourself last
night."</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">"DO you think so? I
don't."</p>
<p>"I certainly do. It was bad
enough before, letting everybody
else aboard know that all
he has to do is push you over.
But it was an awful blunder
to let <i>him</i> know it, the way
you did last night."</p>
<p>"You think so? He's one of
the keenest, most intelligent
men who ever lived. He has
known that from the very
first."</p>
<p>"Oh." This "oh" was a very
caustic one. "<i>That's</i> the way
you're trying to land him? By
getting yourself pregnant?"</p>
<p>"Uh-uh." Temple stretched;
lazily, luxuriously. "Not only
it isn't, but it wouldn't work.
He's unusually decent and
extremely idealistic, the same
as I am. So just one intimacy
would blow everything higher
than up. He knows it. I
know it. We each know that
the other knows it. So I'll
still be a virgin when we're
married."</p>
<p>"<i>Married!</i> Does he know
anything about <i>that</i>?"</p>
<p>"I suppose so. He must
have thought of it. But what
difference does it make
whether he has, yet, or not?
But to get back to what makes
him tick the way he does. In
his geometry—which is far
from being simple Euclid, my
dear—a geodesic right line is
not only the shortest distance
between any two given points,
but is the only possible
course. So that's the way I'm
playing it. What I hope he
doesn't know ... but he probably
does ... is that he could
take any other woman he
might want, just as easily.
And that includes you, my
pet."</p>
<p>"It certainly does <i>not</i>!"
Sandra flared. "I wouldn't
have him as a gift!"</p>
<p>"No?" Temple's tone was
more than slightly skeptical.
"Fortunately, however, he
doesn't want you. Your technique
is all wrong. Coyness
and mock-modesty and stop-or-I'll-scream
and playing
hard to get have no appeal
whatever to his psychology.
What he needs—has to have—is
full, ungrudging cooperation."</p>
<p>"Aren't you taking a lot of
risk in giving away such secrets?"</p>
<p>"Not a bit. Try it. You or
the sex-flaunting twins or
Bev Bell or Stella the Henna.
Any of you or all of you. I
got there first with the most,
and I'm not worried about
competition."</p>
<p>"But suppose somebody
tells him just how you're
playing him for a sucker?"</p>
<p>"Tell him anything you
please. He's the first man I
ever loved, or anywhere near.
And I'm keeping him. You
know—or do you, I wonder?—what
real, old-fashioned,
honest-to-God love really is?
The willingness—eagerness—both
to give and to take? I
can accept more from him,
and give him more in return,
than any other woman living.
And I am going to."</p>
<p>"But does <i>he</i> love <i>you</i>?"
Sandra demanded.</p>
<p>"If he doesn't now, he will.
I'll see to it that he does. But
what do <i>you</i> want him for?
You don't love him. You never
did and you never will."</p>
<p>"I <i>don't</i> want him!" Sandra
stamped a foot.</p>
<p>"I see. You just don't want
<i>me</i> to have him. Okay, do
your damnedest. But I've got
work to do. This has been a
lovely little cat-clawing,
hasn't it? Let's have another
one some day, and bring your
friends."</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">WITH a casual wave of
her hand, Temple
strolled away; and there,
flashed through Sandra's
mind what Hilton had said so
long ago, little more than a
week out from Earth:</p>
<p>"... and Temple Bells, of
course," he had said. "Don't
fool yourself, chick. She's
heavy artillery; and I mean
<i>heavy</i>, believe me!"</p>
<p>So he had known all about
Temple Bells all this time!</p>
<p>Nevertheless, she took the
first opportunity to get Hilton
alone; and, even before
the first word, she forgot all
about geodesic right lines
and the full-cooperation psychological
approach.</p>
<p>"Aren't you the guy," she
demanded, "who was laughing
his head off at the idea that
the Board and its propinquity
could have any effect on
<i>him</i>?"</p>
<p>"Probably. More or less.
What of it?"</p>
<p>"This of it. You've fallen
like a ... a <i>freshman</i> for that
... that ... they <i>should</i> have
christened her 'Brazen'
Bells!"</p>
<p>"You're so right."</p>
<p>"I am? On what?"</p>
<p>"The 'Brazen'. I told you
she was a potent force—a
full-scale powerhouse, in sync
and on the line. And I wasn't
wrong."</p>
<p>"She's a damned female
Ph.D.—two or three times—and
she knows all about slipsticks
and isotopes and she
very definitely is <i>not</i> a cuddly
little brunette. Remember?"</p>
<p>"Sure. But what makes you
think I'm in love with Temple
Bells?"</p>
<p>"What?" Sandra tried to
think of one bit of evidence,
but could not. "Why ... why...."
She floundered, then
came up with: "Why, <i>every</i>body
knows it. She says so
herself."</p>
<p>"Did you ever hear her say
it?"</p>
<p>"Well, perhaps not in so
many words. But she told me
herself that you were <i>going</i>
to be, and I know you are
now."</p>
<p>"Your esper sense of endovix,
no doubt." Hilton laughed
and Sandra went on, furiously:</p>
<p>"She wouldn't keep on acting
the way she does if there
weren't something to it!"</p>
<p>"What brilliant reasoning!
Try again, Sandy."</p>
<p>"That's sheer sophistry, and
you know it!"</p>
<p>"It isn't and I don't. And
even if, some day, I should
find myself in love with her—or
with one or both of the
twins or Stella or Beverly or
you or Sylvia, for that matter—what
would it prove?
Just that I was wrong; and I
admit freely that I <i>was</i>
wrong in scoffing at the propinquity.
Wonderful stuff,
that. You can see it working,
all over the ship. On
me, even, in spite of my
bragging. Without it I'd never
have known that you're a
better, smarter operator than
Eggy Eggleston ever was or
ever can be."</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">PARTIALLY mollified despite
herself, and highly
resentful of the fact, Sandra
tried again. "But don't you
<i>see</i>, Jarve, that she's just
simply playing you for a
sucker? Pulling the strings
and watching you dance?"</p>
<p>Since he was sure, in his
own mind, that she was
speaking the exact truth, it
took everything he had to
keep from showing any sign
of how much that truth had
hurt. However, he made the
grade.</p>
<p>"If that thought does anything
for you, Sandy," he
said, steadily, "keep right on
thinking it. Thank God, the
field of thought is still free
and open."</p>
<p>"Oh, you...." Sandra gave
up.</p>
<p>She had shot her heaviest
bolts—the last one, particularly,
was so vicious that she
had actually been afraid of
what its consequences might
be—and they had not even
dented Hilton's armor. She
hadn't even found out that he
had any feeling whatever for
Temple Bells except as a
component of his smoothly-functioning
scientific machine.</p>
<p>Nor did she learn any more
as time went on. Temple continued
to play flawlessly the
part of being—if not exactly
hopefully, at least not entirely
hopelessly—in love with
Jarvis Hilton. Her conduct,
which at first caused some
surprise, many conversations—one
of which has been reported
verbatim—and no little
speculation, became comparatively
unimportant as
soon as it became evident that
nothing would come of it.
She apparently expected
nothing. He was evidently not
going to play footsie with, or
show any favoritism whatever
toward, any woman
aboard the ship.</p>
<p>Thus, it was not surprising
to anyone that, at an evening
show, Temple sat beside Hilton,
as close to him as she
could get and as far away as
possible from everyone else.</p>
<p>"You can talk, can't you,
Jarvis, without moving your
lips and without anyone else
hearing you?"</p>
<p>"Of course," he replied,
hiding his surprise. This was
something completely new
and completely unexpected,
even from unpredictable
Temple Bells.</p>
<p>"I want to apologize, to explain
and to do anything I
can to straighten out the mess
I've made. It's true that I
joined the project because
I've loved you for years—"</p>
<p>"You have nothing to ..."</p>
<p>"Let me finish while I still
have the courage." Only a
slight tremor in her almost
inaudible voice and the rigidity
of the fists clenched in
her lap betrayed the intensity
of her emotion. "I thought I
could handle it. Damned fool
that I was, I thought I could
handle anything. I was sure I
could handle <i>myself</i>, under
any possible conditions. I
was going to put just enough
into the act to keep any of
these other harpies from getting
her hooks into you. But
everything got away from me.
Out here working with you
every day—knowing better
every day what you are—well,
that <i>Rigoletto</i> episode sunk
me, and now I'm in a thousand
feet over my head. I
hug my pillow at night,
dreaming it's you, and the
fact that you don't and can't
love me is driving me mad. I
can't stand it any longer.
There's only one thing to do.
Fire me first thing in the
morning and send me back to
Earth in a torp. You've
plenty of grounds ..."</p>
<p>"<i>Shut—up.</i>"</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">FOR seconds Hilton had
been trying to break into
her hopeless monotone; finally
he succeeded. "The trouble
with you is, you know altogether
too damned much
that isn't so." He was barely
able to keep his voice down
and his eyes front. "What do
you think I'm made of—superefract?
I thought the
whole performance was an
act, to prove you're a better
man than I am. <i>You</i> talk
about dreams. Good God!
You don't know what dreams
are! If you say one more
word about quitting, I'll show
you whether I love you or
not—I'll squeeze you so hard
it'll flatten you out flat!"</p>
<p>"Two can play at that
game, sweetheart." Her nostrils
flared slightly; her fists
clenched—if possible—a fraction
tighter; and, even in the
distorted medium they were
using for speech, she could
not subdue completely her
quick change into soaring,
lilting buoyancy. "While
you're doing that I'll see how
strong your ribs are. Oh,
how this changes things! I've
never been half as happy in
my whole life as I am right
now!"</p>
<p>"Maybe we can work it—if
I can handle my end."</p>
<p>"Why, of course you can!
And happy dreams are nice,
not horrible."</p>
<p>"We'll make it, darling.
Here's an imaginary kiss coming
at you. Got it?"</p>
<p>"Received in good order,
thank you. Consumed with
gusto and returned in kind."</p>
<p>The show ended and the
two strolled out of the room.
She walked no closer to him
than usual, and no farther
away from him. She did not
touch him any oftener than
she usually did, nor any whit
more affectionately or possessively.</p>
<p>And no watching eyes, not
even the more than half hostile
eyes of Sandra Cummings
or the sharply analytical eyes
of Stella Wing, could detect
any difference whatever in
the relationship between worshipful
adulatress and tolerantly
understanding idol.</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">THE work, which had never
moved at any very fast
pace, went more and more
slowly. Three weeks crawled
past.</p>
<p>Most of the crews and all
of the teams except the First
were working on side issues—tasks
which, while important
in and of themselves, had
very little to do with the project's
main problem. Hilton,
even without Sandra's help,
was all caught up. All the reports
had been analyzed, correlated,
cross-indexed and
filed—except those of the
First Team. Since he could
not understand anything
much beyond midpoint of the
first tape, they were all reposing
in a box labeled
PENDING.</p>
<p>The Navy had torn fifteen
of the Oman warships practically
to pieces, installing
Terran detectors and trying
to learn how to operate Oman
machinery and armament. In
the former they had succeeded
very well; in the latter not
at all.</p>
<p>Fifteen Oman ships were
now out in deep space, patrolling
the void in strict Navy
style. Each was manned by
two or three Navy men and
several hundred Omans, each
of whom was reveling in delight
at being able to do a job
for a Master, even though
that Master was not present
in person.</p>
<p>Several Strett skeleton-ships
had been detected at
long range, but the detections
were inconclusive. The things
had not changed course, or
indicated in any other way
that they had seen or detected
the Oman vessels on patrol.
If their detectors were
no better than the Omans',
they certainly hadn't. That
idea, however, could not be
assumed to be a fact, and the
detections had been becoming
more and more frequent. Yesterday
a squadron of seven—the
first time that anything
except singles had appeared—had
come much closer than
any of the singles had ever
done. Like all the others,
however, these passers-by had
not paid any detectable attention
to anything Oman;
hence it could be inferred
that the skeletons posed no
threat.</p>
<p>But Sawtelle was making
no such inferences. He was
very firmly of the opinion
that the Stretts were preparing
for a massive attack.</p>
<p>Hilton had assured Sawtelle
that no such attack
could succeed, and Larry had
told Sawtelle why. Nevertheless,
to keep the captain pacified,
Hilton had given him
permission to convert as
many Oman ships as he liked;
to man them with as many
Omans as he liked; and to use
ships and Omans as he liked.</p>
<p>Hilton was not worried
about the Stretts or the Navy.
It was the First Team. It was
the bottleneck that was slowing
everything down to a
crawl ... but they knew that.
They knew it better than anyone
else could, and felt it
more keenly. Especially
Karns, the team chief. He had
been driving himself like a
dog, and showed it.</p>
<p>Hilton had talked with him
a few times—tried gently to
make him take it easy—no
soap. He'd have to hunt him
up, the next day or so, and
slug it out with him. He
could do a lot better job on
that if he had something to
offer ... something really constructive....</p>
<p>That was a laugh. A very
unfunny laugh. What could
he, Jarvis Hilton, a specifically
non-specialist director,
do on such a job as that?</p>
<p>Nevertheless, as director,
he would <i>have</i> to do something
to help Team One. If
he couldn't do anything himself,
it was up to him to juggle
things around so that
someone else could.</p>
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