The low rainbow building of Eight Colors, near the spaceport of Procyon

Alpha, had not changed; and when Bart went in, as he had done a year

ago, it seemed that the same varnished girl was sitting before the same

glass desk, neon-edged and brittle, with the same chrome-tinged hair and

blue fingernails. She looked at Bart in his Lhari clothing, at Meta in

her Mentorian robe and cloak, at Ringg, and her unruffled dignity did

not turn a hair.

"May I help you?" she inquired, still not caring.

"I want to see Raynor One."

"On what business, please?"

"Tell him," said Bart, with immense satisfaction, "that his boss is

here--Bart Steele--and wants to see him right away."

It had a sort of disrupting effect. She seemed to go blurred at the

edges. After a minute, blinking carefully, she spoke into the

vision-screen, and reported, numbly, "Go on up, Mr. Steele."

He wasn't expecting a welcome. He said so as the elevator rose. "After

all, if I'd never come back, he'd doubtless have inherited the whole

Eight Colors line, unencumbered. I don't expect he'll be happy to see

me. But he's the only one I can turn to."

The elevator stopped, opened. They stepped out, and a man stepped

nervously toward them. For a moment, expecting Raynor One, Bart was

deceived; then as the man's face spread in a smile of welcome, he

stopped in incredulous delight.

"Raynor Three!"

In overflowing gladness, Bart hugged him. It was like a meeting with the

dead. He felt as if he had really come home. "But--but you remember me!"

he exclaimed, backing away, in amazement.

Slowly, the man nodded. His eyes were grave. "Yes. I decided it wasn't

worth it, Bart, to go on losing everything that meant anything to me.

Even if it meant I had to give up the stars, never travel again except

as a passenger, I couldn't go on being afraid to remember, never knowing

the consequences or responsibilities of what I'd done." His sad smile

was strangely beautiful. "The Multiphase sailed without me. I've been

here, hoping against hope that someday I'd know the rest."

Associations clicked into place in Bart's mind. The Multiphase. So

Raynor Three was the Mentorian who had smuggled David Briscoe off the

ship, and whose memories, wrung out by the Lhari captain of that ship,

had touched off so many deaths. But he had paid for that--paid many

times over. And now must he pay for this, too?

Raynor One strode toward them. "So it's really you. I thought it might

be a trap, but Three wouldn't listen. Word came from Antares that

Montano had been arrested and his ship confiscated for illegal landing

on Lharillis. I thought you were probably dead."




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