People on all sides were leaping up and hurrying over. Eleanor had already disappeared.
"Go on," Rita cried, her hands over her face, elbows resting against the table. "You know where she's going. You know what he'll do to her."
Benteley ran into the corridor and towards the descent lift. A moment later he emerged on the ground level. At the far end of the corridor he saw a flash of green and red. He raced forward, turned a corner — and stopped dead.
Eleanor Stevens stood facing Reese Verrick. "Listen to me," she was entreating. "It's the only way." Her voice rose in shrill panic. "Reese, for mercy's sake believe me. Take me back! I'm sorry. I left you but I won't do it again. I'm bringing you this, aren't I?"
Verrick saw Benteley. He smiled slightly as he reached out to seize Eleanor's wrist with his iron-hard fingers. "We're back together. All three of us."
"You've got it wrong," Benteley said to him. "She didn't mean to betray you. She's loyal."
"I don't think so," Verrick said. "She's no good."
"Then let her go."
Verrick considered. "No," he said finally.
"Reese!" the girl wailed. "I told you what they said! I told you how you can do it—now! I made it possible, so take me back, please take me back!"
"I can do it. But I had already worked it out."
Benteley stepped in fast, but not fast enough.
"Ted!" Eleanor screamed. "Help me!"
Verrick swept her up and lugged her in three giant strides to a precipitous drop beyond which was dead bleakness. Verrick lifted the screaming, struggling girl high and with one quick movement threw her sprawling into eternity.
She stumbled and fell into rubble and rock, arms flailing, face distorted, eyes bulging. For one pleading instant she looked towards Benteley.
Numbed, Benteley plucked out his gun. Shaeffer knocked it from his hand. "No good—she's dead!"
Benteley nodded. "Yes, I know and Verrick is going to get away with it."
He moved away to stumble on to the ascent ramp.
Footsteps and heavy breathing sounded behind him and the ramp shuddered under a great weight. Verrick had followed.
"Wait a minute, Benteley," he said. "I'll come along with you. I have a business transaction I think Cartwright will be interested in."
Verrick waited until Judge Waring, muttering and fumbling with his chair, had seated himself. Opposite him Cartwright sat straight and white-faced.
"How's your niece?" Verrick asked.
"She'll be all right," Cartwright said, "thanks to Benteley."
"Yes," Verrick agreed. "I always thought Benteley could act when necessary. It was her face Eleanor struck for?"
"Surgeons can fix her up. It didn't get to her eyes; mostly her skin and hair."
Benteley couldn't stop looking at Reese Verrick, calm and collected. His breathing had returned to normal; his face had a mottled look but his hands had stopped trembling.
"What do you want?" Cartwright asked him. He turned to Judge Waring. "I don't know what this is about."
"Neither do I," Judge Waring agreed crossly. "What is this, Reese? What have you got on your mind?"
Verrick explained. "I have a proposal to offer Cartwright. I want you to hear it out and see that it's legal." He placed his gun on the table in front of him. "We've come to a dead end. You can't kill me, Leon; that would be murder. The death of Eleanor will be ignored—she was in an important social category."
Cartwright did not take his eyes from Verrick.
"I came here to kill Benteley, but I can't. Stalemate. Stalemate on all sides; you can't kill me, I can't kill Benteley, and I can't kill you."
Shaeffer entered the room. He glanced at Judge Waring and took a seat. "Leon," he said to Cartwright, "this is a bluff on his part. The girl took him the idea before he killed her. He wants to scare you———"
"I know," Cartwright said. "He's going to suggest an arrangement. What's your proposition, Reese?"
Verrick dug into his pocket and got out his power-card. "A swap," he said. "Your card for mine."
"That would make you Quizmaster," Cartwright observed.
"You'll come out of this with your life, I'll come out with the Quizmastership."
"Then you'll have Benteley," Cartwright said.
"That's right," Verrick answered.
Cartwright turned to Shaeffer. "Will he kill me if I refuse?"
Shaeffer was silent for a long time. "Yes," he said at last, "he won't leave here without killing you or getting Benteley back. If you don't fit in he'll kill you and surrender his card. If you do, he'll have Benteley again. Either way he gets one of you. He knows he can't get both. He'd prefer to have Benteley; he has got to have him under control again."
Cartwright searched his pockets until he found his package of power-cards. He sorted through them slowly. "Is this legal?" he asked Judge Waring.
"You can exchange," Waring said gruffly.
Benteley rose. "Cartwright, are you really——"
"Sit down!" Waring snapped. "You have no say in this."
Cartwright found the correct card, checked it with his other papers, then laid it on the table. "There's mine."
"You're willing to exchange?" Verrick asked. "You understand what it means? You're legally giving up your position. With your card goes everything."
"I understand."
Verrick turned round and faced Benteley. The two of them gazed at each other a moment, neither speaking. Then Verrick grunted: "It's a deal."
Benteley said thickly: "Cartwright, you know what he'll do to me, don't you?"
Cartwright ignored him; he was returning the little package of power-cards to his coat pocket. "Go ahead," he said mildly to Verrick. "Let's finish so that I can go to Rita."
Verrick reached forward and picked up Cartwright's power-card. "Now I'm Quizmaster."
Cartwright's hand came out of his pocket. With his small, antiquated gun he shot Reese Verrick directly in the heart. Still clutching the power-card, Verrick slid forward and lay with his face against the table, eyes and mouth open.
"Is it legal?" Cartwright asked the Judge.
"Absolutely." Waring nodded solemnly. "Of course you lose that packet of cards you hold."
Cartwright tossed them to the Judge. "I'm an old man and I'm tired."
Benteley sagged. "He's dead. It's over."
Cartwright got to his feet. "Now we can go downstairs and see how Rita is."
Chapter XV
Rita o'neill was on her feet when the two of them entered the infirmary. "I'm all right," she said huskily. "What happened?"
"Verrick's dead," Benteley said.
"Yes, we're all finished," Cartwright added. He went up to his niece and kissed the bandage that covered her face. "You've lost some of your hair."
"It'll grow again," Rita said as she sat down shakily. "You killed him and came out with your own life?"
"I came out with everything but my power-card," Cartwright said. He explained what had happened. "Now there's no Quizmaster. There will have to be a fresh selection."
"It's hard to believe," Rita said. "It seems as if there's always been a Reese Verrick."
Cartwright searched his pockets and brought out a notebook. He made a tick and then closed the book. "Everything but Herb Moore. We still have that to worry about. The ship hasn't yet landed, and the Pellig body is somewhere within a few hundred thousand miles of Flame Disc." He hesitated, then continued: "As a matter of fact, the ipvic monitor says Moore reached Preston's ship and entered it."