Terens reached out a quick hand and neutralized the screen. "Better try another book, Rik."
"But…" Rik hesitated, then followed orders. Another search through the catalog and then he chose Enning's Composition of Space.
The screen filled itself once more with a request to consult the librarian. Terens said, "Damn!" and deadened the screen again.
Rik said, "What's the matter?"
Terens said, "Nothing. Nothing. Now don't get panicky, Rik. I just don't quite see-"
There was a little speaker behind the grillwork on the side of the reading mechanism. The librarian's thin, dry voice emerged therefrom and froze them both.
"Room 242! Is there anyone in Room 242?"
Terens answered harshly, "What do you want?"
The voice said, "What book is it you want?"
"None at all. Thank you. We are only testing the reader."
There was a pause as though some invisible consultation was proceeding. Then the voice said with an even sharper edge to it, "The record indicates a reading request for Wrijt's Treatise of Spatio-analytical Instrumentation, and Enning's Composition of Space. Is that correct?"
"We were punching catalog numbers at random," said Terens. "May I ask your reason for desiring those books?" The voice was inexorable.
"I tell you we don't want them… Now stop it." The last was an angry aside to Elk, who had begun whimpering.
A pause again. Then the voice said, "If you will come down to the desk you may have access to the books. They are on a reserved listing and you will have to fill out a form."
Terens held out a hand to Rik. "Let's go."
"Maybe we've broken a rule," quavered Rik.
"Nonsense, Elk. We're leaving."
"We won't fill out the form?"
"No, we'll get the books some other time."
Terens was hurrying, forcing Elk along with him. He strode down the main lobby. The librarian looked up.
"Here now," she cried, rising and circling the desk. "One moment. One moment!"
They weren't stopping for her.
That is, until a patroller stepped in front of them. "You're in an awful hurry, laddies."
The librarian, somewhat breathless, caught up to them. "You're 242, aren't you?"
"Look here," said Terens firmly, "why are we being stopped?"
"Didn't you inquire after certain books? We'd like to get them for you."
"It's too late. Another time. Don't you understand that I don't want the books? I'll be back tomorrow."
"The library," said the woman primly, "at all times endeavors to give satisfaction. The books will be made available to you in one moment." Two spots of red burned high upon her cheekbones. She turned away, hurrying through a small door that opened at her approach.
Terens said, "Officer, if you don't mind-"
But the patroller held out his moderately long, weighted neuronic whip. It could serve as an excellent club, or as a longer-range weapon of paralyzing potentialities. He said, "Now, laddy, why don't you sit down quietly and wait for the lady to come back? It would be the polite thing to do."
The patroller was no longer young, no longer slim. He looked close to retirement age and he was probably serving out his time in quiet vegetation as library guard, but he was armed and the joviality on his swarthy face had an insincere look about it.
Terens' forehead was wet and he could feel the perspiration collecting at the base of his spine. Somehow he had underestimated the situation. He had been sure of his own analysis of the matter, of everything. Yet here he was. He shouldn't have been so reckless. It was his damned desire to invade Upper City, to stalk through the library corridors as though he were a Sarkite…
For a desperate moment he wanted to assault the patroller and then, unexpectedly, he didn't have to.
It was just a flash of movement at first. The patroller started to turn a little too late. The slower reactions of age betrayed him. The neuronic whip was wrenched from his grasp and before he could do more than emit the beginning of a hoarse cry it was laid along his temple. He collapsed.
Rik shrieked with delight, and Terens cried, "Valona! By all the devils of Sark, Valonat'
4. The Rebel
TERENS RECOVERED almost at once. He said, "Out. Quickly!" and began walking.
For a moment he had the impulse to drag the patroller's unconscious body into the shadows behind the pillars that lined the main hall, but there was obviously no time.
They emerged onto the ramp, with the afternoon sun making the world bright and warm about them. The colors of Upper City had shifted to an orange motif.
Valona said anxiously, "Come on!" but Terens caught her elbow.
He was smiling, but his voice was hard and low. He said, "Don't run. Walk naturally and follow me. Hold on to 111k. Don't let him run."
A few steps. They seemed to be moving through glue. Were there sounds behind them from the library? Imagination? Terens did not dare look.
"In here," he said. The sign above the driveway he indicated flickered a bit in the light of afternoon. It didn't compete very well with Florina's sun. It said: Ambulance Entrance.
Up the drive, through a side entrance, and between incredibly white walls. They were blobs of foreign material against the aseptic glassiness of the corridor.
A woman in uniform was looking at them from a distance. She hesitated, frowned, began to approach. Terens did not wait for her. He turned sharply, followed a branch of the corridor, then another one. They passed others in uniform and Terens could imagine the uncertainty they aroused. It was quite unprece dented to have natives wandering about unguarded in the upper levels of a hospital. What did one do?
Eventually, of course, they would be stopped.
So Terens felt his heartbeat step up when he saw the unobtrusive door that said: To Native Levels. The elevator was at their level. He herded Rik and \Talona within and the soft lurch as the elevator dropped was the most delighiful sensation of the day.
There were three kinds of buildings in the City. Most were Lower Buildings, built entirely on the lower level. Workers' houses, ranging up to three stories in height. Factories, bakeries, disposal plants. Others were Upper Buildings: Sarkite homes, theaters, the library, sports arenas. But some few were Doubles, with levels and entrances both below and above; the patroller stations, for instance, and the hospitals.
One could therefore use a hospital to go from Upper City to Lower City and avoid in that manner the use of the large freight elevators with their slow movements and overattentive operators. For a native to do so was thoroughly illegal, of course, but the added crime was a pinprick to those already guilty of assaulting patrollers.
They stepped out upon the lower level. The stark aseptic walls were there still, but they had a faintly haggard appearance as though they were less often scrubbed. The upholstered benches that lined the corridors on the upper level were gone. Most of all there was the uneasy babble of a waiting room filled with wary men and frightened women. A single attendant was attempting to make sense out of the mess, and succeeding poorly.
She was snapping at a stubbled oldster who pleated and unpleated the wrinkled knee of his raveling trousers and who answered all questions in an apologetic monotone.
"Exactly what is your complaint?… How long have you had these pains?… Ever been to the hospital before?.. Now look, you people can't expect to bother us over every little thing. You sit down and the doctor will look at you and give you more medicine."
She cried shrilly, "Next!" then muttered something to herself as she looked at the large timepiece on the wall.
Terens, Valona and Elk were edging cautiously through the crowd. Valona, as though the presence of fellow Florinians had freed her tongue of paralysis, was whispering intensely.
"I had to come, Townman. I was so worried about Rik. I thought you wouldn't bring him back and-"
"How did you get to Upper City, anyway?" demanded Terens over his shoulder, as he shoved unresisting natives to either side.