
could even be traced to its original place of purchase, though the records of its owner were lost. When
he was done, he would wipe all surfaces clean of prints, even though his own prints were not on file
any-where in the world and never would be. If the surfaces were smeared, the police would assume a
known criminal had been responsible, a man hiding his traces carefully. Another false trail, of course, just
like the gun. He flicked off the safety and turned. He was only halfway around when the slam of the other
man's pistol boomed through the room and the hot sting of the bullet bit into his thigh.
The slug did not hit bone, though it tore a chunk of flesh out of his leg big enough to fill the palm of his
hand. He was spun back against the easy chair, fell over the arm and struck the floor hard with the side
of his head. He felt the pain of the wound pounding up through his entire body. It shook his frame as if he
had been grasped in two gigantic hands which were intent upon rending him into little bits and pieces.
With one hand, he reached down and felt the wound. His hand came away slick with heavy, rich blood.
For a moment, he felt as if he would pass out. There were dancing, whirling lights in his head. As each
one burst, a pitch spot replaced it. In a moment, there would be total dark-ness—and then, surely, death.
He heard feet on the floor, moving quickly toward the chair. He already had the picture. At the
moment, the chair hid him from the stranger, but it would be a useless barrier in seconds. The man would
come around it, level his gun at the Puppet's head, and calmly fill his skull with lead. That might actually
be nice, part of the Puppet's mind decided. Nice sharp bullets in the brain would snuff out all the agony of
the leg wound. Two slugs lodged in the frontal lobe, fragments radiating in all di-rections, would put an
end to the pounding ache, bring him soft relaxing darkness.
With an effort, he roused himself, expelled the longing for rest. He had not been sent here to fail. Too
much de-pended upon his fulfilling the obligations set upon him. He was lying flat on his back, the wind
knocked out of him, a fist-sized chunk torn from his leg. His situation was not pretty. The only thing he
had going for him was his gloved right hand which still clutched the loaded pis-tol. He tried bringing it
around, realizing for the first time how heavy it was. Perhaps, with a heavy-duty winch, he could lift it. Or
if he had seven or eight strong arms to lend a hand. But he only had two hands, his own. He brought his
left hand over, clamped the pistol in both palms. Yes, that made it easier. Now it was only about as bad
as ripping an oak tree loose of its root system and turning it around for replanting.
He had the gun almost in position when the stranger appeared over the arm of the chair. It wasn't
exactly where he wanted it, but he pulled the trigger anyway. It took a little over two thousand years to
accomplish that, and he watched the stars dying inside his head while he waited. Then there was a flash
of light, a booming, and a long scream that ended in a gurgle.
Abruptly, the gun's weight doubled, tripled, and he could no longer hold it. It fell out of his hands and
landed on the carpet next to his head. He gritted his teeth and waited for the stranger to take his turn in
the shooting match. While he was waiting, he passed out.
He was in a dark forest, running toward a patch of gray light. Behind, a pack of wild dogs,
slavering and keening, were gaining on him. One of the dogs had already attached itself to his leg
and was slowly devour-ing him. Then, a dozen yards from the gray light, he tripped and fell. The
moaning pack drew closer, howling with sudden excitement.
The Puppet woke and batted at the dog, but only slapped his hand on a bloody, pulsing wound in his
own leg. For a time, he could not think where he was. Then the programming took over, and he did not
even care where he was, did not care about anything but the next step of the plan. He had not been
killed. The room was quiet He could remember an ugly scream just as he passed out, one which was not
his own. He did not scream. Was the stranger dead, as intended?
The thing to do was get up and find out. The only trouble was that his left leg had grown roots into
the floorboards. He grabbed an arm of the easy chair, braced his other hand on the floor, simultaneously
pulled and pushed himself toward a standing position. But the leg held tight to the carpet. For a brief
instant, he considered the expediency of taking the disintegrator coin out of his pock and slicing the limb
off. It would save a lot of trou-ble. As if in response, the leg gave a little and started to rise. He got his
good foot under himself and, shakily, pushed erect, holding onto the chair until the knuckles of that hand
were a bloodless white.
It took only a moment to discover he had completed the next stage of the plan, perhaps a bit more