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“Good enough,” he murmured. He dressed and left the loft, headed for the address he had purchased for an extra M from the tapelegger.

11

It was an unprepossessing front of ancient, natural stone, a hideous dull purple in color, with steep steps and a corroded iron railing. He rapped, waited. The door was opened by a small, bandy-legged, jug-eared man with a shiny scalp and the face of an intelligent Rhesus.

“Yes?” the man demanded, wiping at his face with a towel draped around his stringy neck.

Bailey showed a cred-card, almost fully charged.

“I want to see Goldblatt.”

“Looking at him.” The small man glanced up and down Bailey’s slight frame.

“Rehab case?” he asked doubtfully.

“No. I want a Maxpo course.”

The man jumped as if he had been jabbed in the kidneys. “You a kidder, Mister? What you think this is, Doose Center? I run a quiet house of physical fitness here, strictly on the flat—”

“I’ve got ten M’s that say differently,” Bailey cut in softly.

Goldblatt stared. “Out,” he said firmly. He put a surprisingly sinewy hand against Bailey’s chest. “You got the wrong Goldblatt.”

Bailey took his other hand from his pocket, showed the glossy blue of the One Category tag. “Don’t worry, it’s faked,” he said, as the gym operator jerked his hand back. “I’m showing it to you to convince you I’m in no position to call in the Bugs. I can pay for what I want.”

Goldblatt took a fold of Bailey’s tunic in his fingers and pulled him inside, closed the door quickly, hustled him through a frowsty room where a pair of sweating men pulled listlessly at spring-loaded apparatus. In a small office he said, “What’s this all about, mister?”

Bailey eased half a dozen full-charge cash cards from his pocket, fanned them out. “These tell it all,” he said. Goldblatt’s frown lingered on the green- and blue-edged plastics.

“You said… Maxpo? What makes you think I can help you?” He shot a sharp look over Bailey’s spare frame. “Or that you could handle the gaff if I could, which I’m not saying I can?”

“How I handle it is up to me.” Bailey placed the blue tag on top of the cred-cards, offered the stack. “You hold them until the job’s done.”

Goldblatt put up a hand, made a pushing motion. “Nix. Don’t show me a fixed tag, mister.” His hand reversed, became an open palm. “But maybe I could take a retainer while we talk about it.”

Bailey handed over the cards. “I want to start today,” he said. “How long will it take?”

12

“How long it takes,” Goldblatt said half an hour later, “depends on a couple of things. First, how good the equipment is.” He slapped the curving metal case, like a streamlined coffin, that rested on a stand in the surprisingly clean and well-lit basement room. “And I’ve got the best. Private custom job, less than five years old, best circuitry a man could ask for—except no blanking circuit. You take it cold. That’s how I got it cheap.”

“How long?” Bailey repeated the question.

“Second, what we got to work with,” Goldblatt continued, unruffled. He rubbed his hands together. “Frankly, my friend, you offer a man a challenge.” He frowned happily at Bailey’s bare ribs, reached out to squeeze his thin arm above the elbow. “You look like about what we call a three: minimum normal range, about point 4 musculature, probably no better’n a five vascular rating, same for osteo—”

“I understand it’s a fast process,” Bailey said. “Can you do it in a week?”

The trainer’s mouth snapped open. He wagged his head in wonderment. “The ideas some people got,” he said. “Forget it, mister. A week? In a week maybe you can see the first results. What you think a Maxpo is, some kind of magic trick? It’s pain! Pain that will burn your heart out. Not every man can take it; not even most men. And frankly, you don’t look to me like one of the tough ones. Maybe better we talk a standard toning course, two weeks and you feel like a new man—”

“Maxpo or nothing,” Bailey said. “And in minimum time.”

“You know how it works, mister?” Goldblatt turned to the tank, poked a button. The top slid back, exposing a padded interior of complex shape, fitted with numerous wide web straps with polished buckles.

“The principle,” Bailey responded instantly, “is that of selective electronically triggered isometric and isotonic contraction, coupled with appropriately neuro-synaptic stimulation and coordinated internal physiochemical environmental control. The basal somatic rhythms are encoded, brought into a phased relationship, and—”

“You know plenty fancy words, bub, I’ll give you that,” Goldblatt said wonderingly. “But what it works out to is I put a micro-filament tap into your spinal cord, right where it leaves the skull. We use the trial-and-error method for coding the motor nerves. It hurts. When I finish, all I have to do is push a button and the muscle it’s wired to contracts—max contraction, more than you could trigger with the voluntary nervous system. Once I’ve got you wired, I slap you in the frame and strap you up rigid. The frame is articulated, so you get isotonic work along with the ’metrics. Then I work you over like one of them guys in a torture chamber, know what I mean? You’ll come out of it screaming for mercy, every muscle in your body yelling for help. You’ll turn black and blue all over. This goes on for a week. Then it gets worse.” He shook his head. “Like I said, not many fellows can take it.”

“How long?”

“Give yourself a break, mister. A few times a year I sell a tank job, not a max but just whatever somebody needs, like a demo player is slowing down, he needs toning up fast; or some of these specialty show people, after a long layoff. And even at that—”

“How many hours a day do I spend inside?”

“A day?” Goldblatt barked. “You work day and night—that’s if you’re talking minimum time. But that’s for lab cases, theory stuff—”

“We’ll test the theory.”

“You must be in some kind of hurry, mister.”

“That’s right. And we’re wasting time.”

Goldblatt nodded heavily. “It’s your bones that’ll get bent, my friend, not mine. All right, strip down and I’ll run you across the ’tab monitor and see what we got to work with.”

13

The insertion of the hair-fine electrodes took three hours—three uncomfortable hours of probing in sensitive flesh with sharp-pointed metal, alternated with tingling shocks that made obscure muscles jump and quiver. At the end of it, Bailey touched the coin-sized plastic disk nestled against the base of his skull and winced.

“That’s the easy part,” Goldblatt said cheerfully. “Now we start the hard work. You know, it’s funny,” he rambled on as he strapped his victim in position. “They invented this device to take the will power out of physical training. What they forgot was it still takes will power to climb in under the straps, knowing what’s coming.”