Galaxy Science Fiction Super Pack #2. Edgar Pangborn

Galaxy Science Fiction Super Pack #2 - Edgar  Pangborn


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leave. But don’t threaten me with it.”

      She watched him silently for a moment. Then she handed him the newspaper she had been reading. It was folded around an advertisement.

      *

      BIOLOGISTS WANTED

      by

      ANTHROPOS INCORPORATED

      for

      Evolvotron Operators

      Incubator Tenders

      Nursery Supervisors

      Laboratory Personnel

      in NEW ATLANTA PLANT Call or write: Personnel Mgr. ANTHROPOS INC. Atlanta, Ga. Note: Secure Work Departmentrelease from present jobbefore applying.

      *

      He looked at Anne curiously. “So?”

      She shrugged. “So there’s a job, if you want to quit this one.”

      “What’s this got to do with Peony, if anything?”

      “We could take her with us.”

      “Not a chance,” he said. “Do you suppose a talking neutroid would be any safer there?”

      She demanded angrily, “Why should they want to destroy her?”

      Norris sat on the edge of the bed and thought about it. “No particular individual wants to, honey. It’s the law.”

      “But why?”

      “Generally, because deviants are unknown quantities. They can be dangerous.”

      “That child—dangerous?”

      “Dangerous to a concept, a vague belief that Man is something special, a closed tribe. And in a practical sense, she’s dangerous because she’s not a neuter. The Federation insists that all mutants be neuter and infertile, so it can control the mutant population. If mutants started reproducing, that could be a real threat in a world whose economy is so delicately balanced.”

      “Well, you’re not going to let them have her, do you hear me?”

      “I hear you,” he grumbled.

      *

      On the following day, he went down to police headquarters to sign a statement concerning the motive in Doctor Georges’ murder. As a result, Mrs. Glubbes was put away in the psycho-ward.

      “It’s funny, Norris,” said Chief Miler, “what people’ll do over a neutroid. Like Mrs. Glubbes thinking that newt was her own. I sure don’t envy you your job. It’s a wonder you don’t get your head blown off. You must have an iron stomach.”

      Norris signed the paper and looked up briefly. “Sure, Chief. Just a matter of adaptation.”

      “Guess so.” Miler patted his paunch and yawned. “How you coming on this Delmont business? Picked up any deviants yet?”

      Norris laid down the pen abruptly. “No! Of course not! What made you think I had?”

      Miler stopped in the middle of his yawn and stared at Norris curiously. “Touchy, aren’t you?” he asked thoughtfully. “When I get that kind of answer from a prisoner, I right away start thinking—”

      “Save it for your interrogation room,” Norris growled. He stalked quickly out of the office while Chief Miler tapped his pencil absently and stared after him.

      He was angry with himself for his indecision. He had to make a choice and make it soon. He was climbing in his car when a voice called after him from the building. He looked back to see Chief Miler trotting down the steps, his pudgy face glistening in the morning sun.

      “Hey, Norris! Your missus is on the phone. Says it’s urgent.”

      Norris went back grudgingly. A premonition of trouble gripped him.

      “Phone’s right there,” the chief said, pointing with a stubby thumb.

      The receiver lay on the desk, and he could hear it saying, “Hello—hello—” before he picked it up.

      “Anne? What’s the matter?”

      Her voice was low and strained, trying to be cheerful. “Nothing’s the matter, darling. We have a visitor. Come right home, will you? Chief Franklin’s here.”

      It knocked the breath out of him. He felt himself going white. He glanced at Chief Miler, calmly sitting nearby.

      “Can you tell me about it now?” he asked her.

      “Not very well. Please hurry home. He wants to talk to you about the K-99s.”

      “Have the two of them met?”

      “Yes, they have.” She paused, as if listening to him speak, then said, “Oh, that! The game, honey—remember the game?”

      “Good,” he grunted. “I’ll be right there.” He hung up and started out.

      “Troubles?” the chief called after him.

      “Just a sick newt,” he said, “if it’s any of your business.”

      *

      Chief Franklin’s helicopter was parked in the empty lot next door when Norris drove up in front of the house. The official heard the truck and came out on the porch to watch his agent walk up the path. His lanky, emaciated body was loosely draped in gray tweeds, and his thin hawk face was a dark and solemn mask. He was a middle-aged man, his skin seamed with wrinkles, but his hair was still abnormally black. He greeted Norris with a slow, almost sarcastic nod.

      “I see you don’t read your mail. If you’d looked at it, you’d have known I was coming. I wrote you yesterday.”

      “Sorry, Chief, I didn’t have a chance to stop by the message office this morning.”

      Franklin grunted. “Then you don’t know why I’m here?”

      “No, sir.”

      “Let’s sit out on the porch,” Franklin said, and perched his bony frame on the railing. “We’ve got to get busy on these Bermuda-K-99s, Norris. How many have you got?”

      “Thirty-four, I think.”

      “I counted thirty-five.”

      “Maybe you’re right. I—I’m not sure.”

      “Found any deviants yet?”

      “Uh—I haven’t run any tests yet, sir.”

      Franklin’s voice went sharp. “Do you need a test to know when a neutroid is talking a blue streak?”

      “What do you mean?”

      “Just this. We’ve found at least a dozen of Delmont’s units that have mental ages that correspond to their physical age. What’s more, they’re functioning females, and they have normal pituitaries. Know what that means?”

      “They won’t take an age-set then,” Norris said. “They’ll grow to adulthood.”

      “And have children.”

      Norris frowned. “How can they have children? There aren’t any males.”

      “No? Guess what we found in one of Delmont’s incubators.”

      “Not a—”

      “Yeah. And it’s probably not the first. This business about padding his quota is baloney! Hell, man, he was going to start his own black market! He finally admitted it, after twenty-hours’ questioning without a letup. He was going to raise them, Norris. He was stealing them right out of the incubators before an inspector ever saw them. The K-99s—the numbered ones—are just the ones he couldn’t get back. Lord knows how many males he’s got hidden away someplace!”

      “What’re you going to do?”


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