
They ascended the stairs to the second floor. Thus far they had seen nobody at all, which was
understandable. They had counted on the total population being down at the park for the political
rally. Aside from Tri-Di, there was precious little in the way of local entertainment.
On the second floor, the largest of the three men looked up and down the hall, dipped a hand into
his side pocket, and brought forth a pair of thin black gloves. His right hand went back into the
pocket of his shorts and came forth with a key. He unlocked the door and all three filed through
quickly. He locked the door behind him.
The other two put their attaché cases and the cane on the room's center table and also donned
gloves. They seemed in no hurry. They took out handkerchiefs and carefully wiped the cane and
case with professional care.
Their leader, a black, went through the small apartment, which consisted of bedroom, bath, and
kitchen, besides the living room into which they had entered, and checked it out carefully. He, too,
had left his attaché case on the table after wiping it clean.
His companions looked about at the nondescript furniture, which included a broken couch and an
old-fashioned rocking chair.
The two were of dark complexion, but there the resemblance ended. One was tall, wiry, and
cougarlike of movement, black of hair and eye. The other was below average height, stocky,
muscular. He tended to smile, while his companion was stoic of expression in keeping with his
Amerind tradition. The smaller man was Latino.
The stocky one said, "Look, civilization." He pointed at the sole representative of modern
furnishing, a small Tri-Di set.
The black, who had checked out the other rooms, returned and said, "Wizard, let's get the show
roadbound."
Jose Zavalla took up the walking stick and began to unscrew the handle. His limp was gone. The
handle came away and he upended the cane to let its contents slide gently into his right hand. It was a
metallic tube about three feet long, threaded on one end externally, internally on the other. He laid it
back on the table.
"Jesus, it's light," he said.
Tom Horse, the Indian, who was opening the two attaché cases, said, "Titanium alloy."
The sole contents of the hand luggage consisted of seven items, all carefully wrapped in foam
rubber. Tom took them out gingerly, one by one, and laid them in a row on the table.
He said, "How's it look up the road, Hamp?"
Hamp was the black, a well-built, dark-chocolate man with features more Caucasian than Bantu. He
went over to the middle of the three curtained windows that lined the street side of the room. He
pulled one curtain aside a bit and peered out, looking toward the north. From a jacket pocket he
brought forth a small monoscope, twisted it open, and took off both lens shields. He put the
eyepiece to his right eye, adjusted the focus.
He said, "Quite a turnout. Must be triple the population of the town."
"You don't hear the governor sound off every day in New Salem and environs," Tom told him,
unwrapping his packages with love care.
"Nice big banner above the speaker's stand," Hamp said. "Says, America for the Americans. Very
sentimental. American flags at both ends. They look a little out of date. How many stars in the flag
these days?"
"Who keeps track? About a hundred," Tom said. He had taken up the tube Joe had extracted from
the hollow cane and was carefully screwing one of the other objects—a stubby rectangular
affair—into the threads of its interior.