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A method of training latent telepathic ability that really worked.

A type of psychotherapy that seemed to be a brutal, all-out attack on the patient’s ego, yet which cured in weeks supposedly impossible-to-cure men­tal illnesses such as drug addiction and far-advanced schizophrenia.

An electromagnetic theory of mind function that opened the way for partial or complete control of the mind by electromagnetic fields.

A way of measuring the presence of Synchronicity generated by schizophrenics—an acausal force which, by altering consistently the patterns of prob­ability, made the objective world appear to collabo-

rate with the psychotic in the creation of the half-real world in which his worst fears would, against impos­sible odds, come true.

Was it these results that impressed Mekkis, or was it the example of Balkani the man? The latter. Mek­kis had begun to see himself in the Terran psychia­trist, feeling at one with this man who had set himself up in opposition to his entire race.

It would be interesting, Mekkis mused, if I turned into a Ganymedian Doctor Balkani.

Glancing up for a moment he discovered that one of his wik secretaries had been trying, for almost a minute now, to attract his attention. “Gus Swenes­gard is here, Mr. Administrator,” the secretary de­clared.

“I haven’t time to see him. What does he want? Did he say?”

“He wishes more fighting units in his Neeg hunt in the mountains. He claims he can clean out the whole lot of them if he just has a little Gany first line hardware.”

He did not want to think about the Neegs; he was struggling to understand a particularly fine point in the illogical logic of Dr. Balkani’s “Centerpoint, Ac­tion at a Distance and ESP.” Aloud he said, “Give him what he wants. Keep an eye on him though. And don’t bother me about it.”

“But—”

“That’s is all.” Mekkis flicked the switch with his tongue, the switch that turned the microfilm viewer to the next frame.

With a shrug the wik departed. Mekkis instantly forgot the exchange as he buried himself once again

in the twilight world of “Centerpoint Paraphysics.”

When Gus Swenesgard heard the Administrator’s decision, as relayed to him by the wik secretary, he said rapidly, “Mekkis says I get anything I want?” “That’s correct,” the secretary said.

“First off,” Gus said with an expansive smile, “I’d like all the Gany fighting units in the bale trans­ferred to my command. Then—” He pondered a moment, dreamily. “—I’d like to do a little reorgani­zation in the governmental structure.”

“Who do you think you are?” the wik secretary said dryly.

Gus chuckled, slapping the somewhat annoyed secretary on the back. “I’m the Kingfish around here now, sir. That’s who I am.” He then left the Gany HQ building. Whistling contentedly; he knew exactly what he had—for reasons unknown to him— achieved.

Tljere, up ahead, Paul Rivers made out a highway, and on the highway a huge trailer-truck zoomed through the night. He hauled back gently on the controls of the ionocraft and thought, Why not? The craft responded sluggishly but he found himself swinging down behind the truck, approaching it, as he intended, from the rear.

Now, he said to himself, and cut the grids. On the last dying power he sailed in through the open upper half of the trailer and settled on its cargo with a crash. The driver spun around, startled, and gazed back through his cab window as Paul took aim with a very mean-looking laser rifle. “Keep driving,” Paul said, over the roar of the truck engine.

“You’re the boss, man, the driver said with a sheepish grin; he turned his eyes back on the road. He must think, Paul realized, that we’re hijackers; the first chance he gets he’ll try to signal the law. And the law, of course, would be here in a second.

The driver, however, appeared to be a Negro. “Percy,” Paul Rivers said urgently. “Pull yourself together and tell the driver who we are. Quick!” Beside him Percy blinked, then read Paul’s mind and the driver’s with two swift probes, then yelled at the driver, “Hey, dad, you know who I am?”

The driver, studying his rearview mirror, said, “Yeah, I know who you are; I do believe you’re Percy X. I would have joined you in the hills except I got a wife and kids to think about; I gotta stick around and keep them from killing each other.” He laughed. Mockingly.

“You going anywhere near Gus Swenesgard’s plantation?” Paul asked. We’re headed, he thought hopefully, in the right direction.

“Goin’ through the northern end, the driver answered.

“Fine,” Percy X said, with palpable relief. “From there I’ll be able to get back to my men on my own.” To Paul he said, “Are you coming with me?”

Paul glanced at Joan Hiashi and said, “No. Ed and I will be parting company with you there.”

“You want to take Joan with you?”

“She’ll be safer with me.”

“Nobody is safe nowhere these days, Percy X said bitingly.

“Do you want her to stay the way Balkani has made her?”

After a pause Percy X said, “You’ll keep me

posted on how she’s doing? With that amplifier of yours?”

Just then an ionocraft whooshed overhead, then another and another. “Where’d they go?” de­manded a voice on the police radio. “They’ve van­ished!”

Another radio voice crackled out with resignation. “The Neegs have those new weapons. I heard about it on TV; they can make themselves invisible.”

Paul Rivers could not resist smiling faintly when he heard one of the police mutter under his breath, “Never can find a Neeg when you really want one.”

X

It had been a long climb up to the mountain cave where the most enigmatic of the weapons captured by the Neeg-parts from Gus Swenesgard’s excava­tion had been hidden. Everyone felt acutely tired.

Percy X, seated in the shade, examined a manual which had come with a rather ordinary-looking de­vice, something which resembled a high-frequency oscillator. “Look at this,” he said to a group of his men who lounged near him, staring absently into space.

The ’parts passed the manual back and forth, ex­amining it; then one of them said, “Doctor Balkani.” Lincoln strolled up and dropped languidly to sprawl beside Percy X; he took the manual and leafed through it. “I didn’t want to use this baby,” he said. “There seems to be a good reason why it wasn’t used during the war.”

“Those white worm-kissers might have thought it was a good reason,” Percy said broodingly; he wiped sweat from his forehead with the back of his arm.

“Maybe, maybe,” Lincoln said, taking off his bat­tered horn-rimmed glasses and gesturing nervously with them. “I might agree with you about the other

gadgets we got in this haul. They’ve turned out to be useful—but a little scary.”

“Scary?” Percy said with annoyance.

“Well, you know these constructs are supposed to produce illusions.” Lincoln frowned. “But there’s something wrong. Did you ever see an illusion that left footprints? That could kill a man?”

“No,” Percy said. “And I never will.”

“That’s what you think. I tell you, man, there’s something about these weapons that just isn’t right; you use one, just once, and you are never quite the same again. You begin to wonder what’s real and what isn’t, or if anything is real.”

“But you’ve been using them anyway, right?” Percy said.

“All but this baby; this is something else. The manual says it never got tested, that it couldn’t be tested. Nobody, not even the guy who built it, knows exactly what it’ll do, but from the looks of what the other constructs do—”

“If I have to use it,” Percy said grimly, “I’ll use it. There’s no such thing as a weapon that’s too power­ful.” Even, he thought, if it’s one of Balkani’s inven­tions.