The two female members of the crew sat on adjoining couches. Zilda was studying
some charts, her dark-skinned, beautiful face set in a frown of concentration. Toos, equally
attractive, older and more sophisticated, lay back nibbling crystallised fruits from a silver
box. Cass, young and muscular, dark-skinned like Zilda, sat close to the two women,
dividing his attention between them.
Then there was Borg, his burly figure stretched out on a couch while robot V.16
massaged his shoulder with delicate metal fingers. The sly, round-faced Chub sat looking
on. As usual, he was passing the time by tormenting Borg. 'There was a robot masseur in
Kaldor City once, Borg... Specially programmed, equipped with vibrodigits, subcutaneous
stimulators, the lot. You know what happened?' Chub paused artistically. 'Its first client
wanted treatment for a stiff elbow. The robot felt carefully all round the joint, then suddenly,
it just twisted his arm off at the shoulder!' Chub chuckled. 'All over in two seconds...'
Borg scowled. 'I never heard that.'
Chub nodded. 'It happened—in Kaldor City.'
Dask looked up from the chess board. 'What was the reason?'
'Reason? It went haywire! I wouldn't let a robot work on me for all the zelanite in
this ship.'
'Shut up, Chub,' growled Borg. But all the same he waved the robot away.
'A Voc-class robot,' said Dask precisely, 'has over a million multi-level constrainers
in its control circuitry. All of them would have to malfunction before it could perform such an
action.' Toos popped another fruit into her mouth. 'That's your trouble, Dask,' she said
indistinctly. 'You take all the magic out of life.'
Chub looked resentfully at Dask. He was spoiling the joke.
'They go wrong, my friend. It's been known.'
Dask shook his head. 'Only when there's an error in programming. Each case on
record shows—'
'Well, this was a case! It pulled his arm off!'
Zilda joined in the teasing. 'I heard it was a leg!'
Pout came in, a medium-sized, quietly self-contained man with an air of constant
watchfulness. 'We're turning!' he said. 'Anybody noticed?'
No one had, and no one cared. The robots were running the Sandminer. That was
what they were for, after all.
V.9 made his final move, springing a long-prepared trap. 'Mate in eight moves,
Commander.' There was no trace of triumph in the calm, pleasant voice.
Uvanov threw himself back in his chair in disgust. 'Never!'
'I will check, Commander.' There was a moment's silence. V.9 said placidly, 'Mate
in eight moves. The computation is confirmed.'
'Damn!'
Dask smiled. 'They are unbeatable,' he said softly.
There was a beep from the communicator at Uvanov's elbow. Glad of the
distraction he snarled, 'Yes?'
'V.14 on scanner, Commander,' said a robot voice. 'We have a storm report. Scale
three, range ten point five two, timed three zero six. Vector seven one and holding.'
Uvanov leapt to his feet. 'Full crew alert, V.14.'
'Full crew alert, Commander.'
Suddenly the whole place was bustling with movement.
'Chub, break out an instrument pack,' ordered Uvanov. 'The rest of you with me!
Let's hope this one's worth chasing!'