Despite the aircirc system and two floating fans, the small white cabin was muggy and hot. Saint’s bright green skin was dotted with perspiration; his orange hair had lost its springy curl. He was sitting in a lame wicker chair, facing the small table against his cabin’s starboard wall.
Perched atop the table was a tri-op portrait, framed in trugold, of the fattest, ugliest, most dimwitted old catwoman on this entire sweaty planet. It was inscribed, in a clumsy scrawl, “To dear, dearest Johan, from his furball, Princess Zorina.” Scattered around at the base of the frame of the portrait of the repulsive princess were several realpape business cards that identified Saint as one Johan St. Moritz, General Supervisor of the Trinidad Skymine Development Corp.
Saint ran his tongue over his dry green lips, then rubbed his palms together and strived to rid his mind of thoughts about how far down the ladder of success he’d fallen in the past few months.
“Been having a deuced bad run of luck of late,” he muttered. “A frightful waste of potential.”
Brow furrowing, bushy orange eyebrows tilting toward each other, Saint began concentrating.
The framed portrait of the catwoman princess quivered and then, with a very faint popping sound, vanished.
Seconds later there was a small thumping sound over on his unmade bunk.
Glancing over his shoulder, the short green man confirmed that the picture had materialized across the cabin.
“Slick as ever,” murmured Saint, smiling thinly to himself. “Now then, old man, let us concentrate on the jewel box of the princess.”
Just then the door of his stateroom unexpectedly burst open.
“Blackguard!”
“Rogue!”
Narrowing his left eye, Saint scanned the furry couple who’d come barging in on his privacy. “I don’t believe we’ve been introduced,” he informed them. “So if you’ll kindly withdraw, I-”
“We came aboard at Seton’s Landing,” said the burly catman in the two-piece checkered travelsuit. He held a kilgun in each piebald paw.
“And poor dear put-upon Aunt Zorina has told us all about you, you fortune hunter,” added the husky cat-woman on the threshold. She had only one kilgun showing.
“Ah, yes, to be sure.” Saint, carefully, rose to his feet. “Then you must be kinsmen of the dear princess.”
“I’m Bud Barnstraw and this is my lovely wife Bess,” said the checksuited catman as he came stalking in out of the thick, steamy afternoon. “As if you didn’t know.”
“I assure you, dear fellow, I had not even an inkling of your existence until your surprise entry,” said Saint amiably. “Of course, I’m quite flattered at your eagerness to make my acquaintance. Since, however, we’ll be docking in but scant minutes, and I’d like very much to change into a fresh suit of-”
“We happen to be her only heirs,” Bess Barnstraw informed him, fur bristling.
“She’s seventy-nine years old,” added Bud.
Bess eased her bulk into the cabin and shut the louvered door. “And you’re a nasty fortune hunter.”
“We don’t intend to let any picklecolored gigolo woo our auntie and have her cut us off without diddly-”
“Sir, I shan’t listen to any slurs about my tint.” Saint drew himself up to his full five foot three. “I believe one ought to judge a man not by his color, nor by his fur, but by how he-”
“Judging by any standard,” interrupted the angry Bud, “you’re out to persuade Aunt Zorina to marry you.”
“I assure you, old man, that ours is merely a shipboard friendship.” Saint glanced casually at his suitcase next to the bunk, the one where his stungun was packed away.
“What we’re going to do,” explained Bess while digging a paw into her neostraw shoulder bag, “is fix you so you won’t romance any more dotty old ladies.” From the bag she produced a large folded plyosack.
Saint cleared his throat. “I think, dear people, I’d best make my true intentions clear to you. Crystal clear,” he said. “I am not the sort of fellow who weds repulsive old bimbos for their fortunes.”
Bud gestured impatiently with one of his guns. “Like heck you aren’t.”
“I am, trust me, simply a telekinetic cracksman.”
“Hm?” Bess blinked, pausing in the unfurling of the big sack.
“I mean, dear lady, that I am but a humble telek.” He bowed to her, then to her husband.
Bud’s twin kilguns suddenly vanished from his hairy grasp. Seconds later they materialized up near the white ceiling.
Grinning, Saint winked faintly at the perplexed Mrs. Barnstraw.
Her gun disappeared with a faint popping sound. It didn’t materialize again.
“Damn it all,” said Bud, disappointed. “How the heck are we going to sew you up in this sack, Mr. St. Moritz, and toss you in the river?”
“I rather doubt you are, old boy.” Saint opened his green fingers wide and his own stungun materialized in his right hand. Gripping it, he pointed the weapon at the unhappy Barnstraws. “Your interest in the welfare of your dear aunt is most heartwarming. I’ll cherish our little meeting.”
Zzzzzummmmmmm!
The stunbeam hit Bud first. He gasped, flapped his arms twice and fell to the cabin floor.
Bess said, “Why, you little emerald pipsqueak, where do you get off-”
Zzzzzummmmmmm!
She joined her unconscious husband.
Slipping the gun into his breast pocket, Saint smoothed his jacket. “Ah, how pathetic to see such a great talent as mine thrown away on the likes of these ninnies,” he said forlornly. “Bud and Bess…gad.”
Shrugging, Saint pressed one palm against his green forehead. He concentrated on the jewel case up in the princess’ cabin one deck above.
Seconds later it was in his hand.
“Damn, just goes to show what a rotten judge of character I am.”
Turning, Saint saw that the door of his cabin was once more open. Framed in the doorway was the captain of the ship, a portly lizardman in a two-piece gold-and-blue unisuit. “Was there something, Captain?” he inquired. “I fear I didn’t hear your knock.”
“I actually believed you were a man of honor and integrity,” said the captain, a sad look touching his scaly brownish face. “In fact, I came barging in here to discuss the buying of a block of Trinidad Skymine Development Corporation stock.” He struck his chest with his fist, causing his gold braid to jingle. “Now I find that you are not only a thief, Mr. St. Moritz, but a murderer as well.”
“Captain, I had you down as a chap who kept his head,” said Saint. “These two are far from being defunct, and I was about to report to you the fact that they’d wandered into my digs and fainted when you-”
“You’ll have a chance to refute all the charges I’m going to bring soon as we dock,” the captain informed him coldly. “Right now, however, I intend to summon several of my surliest crewmen to haul you to the brig, sir.”
“Old man, I’ve always found incarceration of any sort deuced uncomfortable.” Saint lunged at the captain.
He succeeded in tipping the larger man over and, as the captain dropped back onto the yellow deck planks, Saint left his cabin to go running along the deck.
“Help! Escaping killer!” roared the sprawled captain.
Saint hesitated only long enough to thrust the jewel case into the waist of his trousers before sprinting to the rail and, gracefully, vaulting over it.
He hit the tepid river with a whomping splash and went sinking down in the brown silty water.
Seconds later and several yards from the ship, he resurfaced, about a quarter-mile from the jungly shore.
“For a chap in my tip top condition this swim’ll be a piece of cake.”
The captain apparently had decided not to halt his craft and give chase, because, when the green man pulled himself up on the mossy stretch of overgrown shore, using the gnarled root of the nearest bluish tree to help him, the ship was already fading away in the hot afternoon haze.