Legacy | Page 2

James H. Schmitz

the last four feet to a jolting landing. Mihul groaned. Plemponi
apologized. Trigger walked over to them.
"Does he do that often?" she asked interestedly.
"Every other time!" Mihul asserted. She was a tall, lean, muscular slab
of a woman, around forty. She gave Trigger a wink behind Plemponi's
back. "We keep the chiropractors on stand-by duty when we go riding
with Plemp."
"Now then! Now then!" Doctor Plemponi said. "You distracted my
attention for a moment, that's all. Now, Trigger, the reason we're here is
that Mihul told me at our prebreakfast conference you weren't entirely
happy at the good old Colonial School. So climb in, if you don't have
much else to do, and we'll run up to the office and discuss it." He
opened the door for her.
"Much else to do!" Trigger gave him a look. "All right, Doctor. We'll
run up and discuss it."
She went back for her sun hat, climbed in, closed the door and sat down
beside him, shoving the holstered Denton forward on her thigh.
Plemponi eyed the gun dubiously. "Brushing up in case there's another
grabber raid?" he inquired. He reached out for the guide stick.
Trigger shook her head. "Just working off hostility, I guess." She
waited till he had lifted the car off the ground in a reckless swoop.
"That business yesterday--it really was a grabber raid?"
"We're almost sure it was," Mihul said behind her, "though I did hear

some talk they might have been after those two top-secret plasmoids in
your Project."
"That's not very likely," Trigger remarked. "The raiders were a half
mile away from where they should have come down if the plasmoids
were what they wanted. And from what I saw of them, they weren't
nearly a big enough gang for a job of that kind."
"I thought so, too," Mihul said. "They were topflight professionals, in
any case. I got a glimpse of some of their equipment. Knockout
guns--foggers--and that was a fast car!"
"Very fast car," Trigger agreed. "It's what made me suspicious when I
first saw them come in."
"They also," said Mihul, "had a high-speed interplanetary hopper
waiting for them in the hills. Two more men in it. The cops caught
them, too." She added, "They were grabbers, all right!"
"Anything to indicate whom they were after?" Trigger asked.
"No," Mihul said. "Too many possibilities. Twenty or more of the
students in that area at the time had important enough connections to
class as grabber bait. The cops won't talk except to admit they were
tipped off about the raid. Which was obvious. The way they popped up
out of nowhere and closed in on those boys was a beautiful sight to
see!"
"I," Trigger admitted, "didn't see it. When that car homed in, I yelled a
warning to the nearest bunch of students and dropped flat behind a rock.
By the time I risked a look, the cops had them."
"You showed very good sense," Plemponi told her earnestly. "I hope
they burn those thugs! Grabbing's a filthy business."
"That large object coming straight at you," Mihul observed calmly, "is
another aircar. In this lane it has the right of way. You do not have the
right of way. Got all that, Plemp?"

"Are you sure?" Doctor Plemponi asked her bewilderedly. "Confound it!
I shall blow my siren."
He did. Trigger winced. "There!" Plemponi said triumphantly as the
other driver veered off in fright.
Trigger told herself to relax. Aircars were so nearly accident-proof that
even Plemponi couldn't do more than snarl up traffic in one. "Have
there been other raids in the school area since I left?" she asked, as he
shot up out of the quadrangle and turned toward the balcony of his
office.
"That was just under four years ago, wasn't it?" Mihul said. "No, you
were still with us when we had the last one.... Six years back.
Remember?"
Trigger did. Two students had been picked up on that occasion--sons of
some Federation official. The grabbers had made a clean getaway, and
it had been several months later before she heard the boys had been
redeemed safely.
Plemponi descended to a teetery but gentle landing on the office
balcony. He gave Trigger a self-satisfied look. "See?" he said tersely.
"Let's go in, ladies. Had breakfast yet, Trigger?"
Trigger had finished breakfast a half-hour earlier, but she accepted a
cup of coffee. Mihul, all athlete, declined. She went over to Plemponi's
desk and stood leaning against it, arms folded across her chest, calm
blue eyes fixed thoughtfully on Trigger. With her lithe length of body,
Mihul sometimes reminded Trigger of a ferret, but the tanned face was
a pleasant one and there was humor around the mouth. Even in
Trigger's pregraduate days, she and Mihul had been
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 100
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.