They faced each other across the little fire, eyes locked. Rod breathed hard and tried to think. The evidence was against Jack. But had this little runt tracked him, slugged him, stolen everything he had? It looked like it.
Yet it did not feel like it. He told himself that he could handle the kid if his story did not ring true. He let go Jack's wrist. "All right," he said angrily, "tell me how you got my knife."
Jack went on slicing liver. "It's not much of a story and I don't know that it is your knife. But it was not mine to start with- you've seen mine. I use this one as a kitchen knife. Its balance is wrong.
"Colonel Bowie! Balanced wrong? That's the best throwing knife you ever saw!"
"Do you want to hear this? I ran across this hombre in the bush, just as the jackals were getting to him. I don't know what got him-stobor, maybe; he was pretty well clawed and half eaten. He wasn't one of my class, for his face wasn't marked and I could tell. He was carrying a Thunderbolt and-"
"Wait a minute. A Thunderbolt gun?"
"I said so, didn't I? I guess he tried to use it and had no luck. Anyhow, I took what I could use- this knife and a couple of other things; I'll show you. I left the Thunderbolt; the power pack was exhausted and it was junk."
"Jack, look at me. You're not lying?"
Jack shrugged. "I can take you to the spot. There might not be anything left of him, but the Thunderbolt ought to be there."
Rod stuck out his hand. "I'm sorry. I jumped to conclusions."
Jack looked at his hand, did not shake it. "I don't think you are much of a team mate. We had better call it quits." The knife flipped over, landed at Rod's toes. "Take your toadsticker and be on your way."
Rod did not pick up the knife. "Don't get sore, Jack. I made an honest mistake."
"It was a mistake, all right. You didn't trust me and I'm not likely to trust you again. You can't build a team on that." Jack hesitated. "Finish your breakfast and shove off. It's better that way."
"Jack, I truly am sorry. I apologize. But it was a mistake anybody could make- you haven't heard my side of the story."
"You didn't wait to hear my story!"
"So I was wrong, I said I was wrong." Rod hurriedly told how he had been stripped of his survival gear. "-so naturally, when I saw Colonel Bowie, I assumed that you must have jumped me. That's logical, isn't it?" Jack did not answer; Rod persisted: "Well? Isn't it?"
Jack said slowly, "You used 'logic' again. What you call 'logic.' Rod, you use the stuff the way some people use dope. Why don't you use your head, instead?"
Rod flushed and kept still. Jack went on, "If I had swiped your knife, would I have let you see it? For that matter, would I have teamed with you?"
"No, I guess not. Jack, I jumped at a conclusion and lost my temper."
"Commander Benboe says," Jack answered bleakly, "that losing your temper and jumping at conclusions is a one-way ticket to the cemetery."
Rod looked sheepish. ''Deacon Matson talks the same way."
"Maybe they're right. So let's not do it again, huh? Every dog gets one bite, but only one."
Rod looked up, saw Jack's dirty paw stuck out at him. "You mean we're partners again?"
"Shake. I think we had better be; we don't have much choice." They solemnly shook hands. Then Rod picked up Colonel Bowie, looked at it longingly, and handed it hilt first to Jack.
"I guess it's yours, after all."
"Huh? Oh, no. I'm glad you've got it back."
"No," Rod insisted. "You came by it fair and square.
"Don't be silly, Rod. I've got 'Bluebeard'; that's the knife for me."
"It's yours. I've got Lady Macbeth."
Jack frowned. "We're partners, right?"
"Huh? Sure."
"So We share everything. Bluebeard belongs just as much to you as to me. And Colonel Bowie belongs to both of us. But you are used to it, so it's best for the team for you to wear it. Does that appeal to your lopsided sense of logic?"
"Well..."
"So shut up and eat your breakfast. Shall I toast you another slice? That one is cold."
Rod picked up the scorched chunk of liver, brushed dirt and ashes from it. "This is all right."
"Throw it in the stream and have a hot piece. Liver won't keep anyhow."
Comfortably stuffed, and warmed by companionship, Rod stretched out on the shelf after breakfast and stared at the sky. Jack put out the fire and tossed the remnants of their meal downstream. Something broke water and snapped at the liver even as it struck. Jack turned to Rod. "Well, what do we do today?"
"Mmm... what we've got on hand ought to be fit to eat tomorrow morning. We don't need to make a kill today."
"I hunt every second day, usually, since I found this place. Second-day meat is better than first, but by the third... phewy!"
"Sure. Well, what do you want to do?"
"Well, let's see. First I'd like to buy a tall, thick chocolate malted milk- or maybe a fruit salad. Both. I'd eat those-"
"Stop it, you're breaking my heart!"
"Then I'd have a hot bath and get all dressed up and flip out to Hollywood and see a couple of good shows. That superspectacle that Dirk Manleigh is starring in and then a good adventure show. After that I'd have another malted milk... strawberry, this time, and then-"
"Shut up!'
"You asked me what I wanted to do."
"Yes, but I expected you to stick to possibilities."
"Then why didn't you say so? Is that 'logical'? I thought you always used logic?"
"Say, lay off, will you? I apologized."
"Yeah, you apologized," Jack admitted darkly. "But I've got some mad I haven't used up yet."
"Well! Are you the sort of pal who keeps raking up the past?"
"Only when you least expect it. Seriously, Rod, I think we ought to hunt today."
"But you agreed we didn't need to. It's wrong, and dangerous besides, to make a kill you don't need."
"I think we ought to hunt people."
Rod pulled his ear. "Say that again."
"We ought to spend the day hunting people."
"Huh? Well, anything for fun I always say. What do we do when we find them? Scalp them, or just shout 'Beaver!'?"
"Scalping is more definite. Rod, how long will we be here?"
"Huh? All we know is that something has gone seriously cockeyed with the recall schedule. You say we've been here three weeks. I would say it was longer but you have kept a notch calendar and I haven't. Therefore..." He stopped.
"Therefore what?"
"Therefore nothing. They might have had some technical trouble, which they may clear up and recall us this morning. Deacon Matson and his fun-loving colleagues might have thought it was cute to double the period and not mention it. The Dalai Lama might have bombed the whiskers off the rest of the World and the Gates may be radioactive ruins. Or maybe the three-headed serpent men of the Lesser Magellanic Cloud have landed and have the situation well in hand- for them. When you haven't data, guessing is illogical. We might be here forever."
Jack nodded. "That's my point."
"Which point? We know we may be marooned; that's obvious."
"Rod, a two-man team is just right for a few weeks. But suppose this runs into months? Suppose one of us breaks a leg? Or even if we don't, how long is that thorn-bush alarm going to work? We ought to wall off that path and make this spot accessible only by rope ladder, With somebody here all the time to let the ladder down. We ought to locate a salt lick and think about curing hides and things like that- that water skin I made is getting high already. For a long pull we ought to have at least four people."