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"How would the Authority stop it, smart ass?" asked Gabriella. "It has no army, no weapons."
"Depends what you call a weapon," said Eric quietly.
"What?", said Gabriella. For a moment they'd forgotten the fourth member of the party.
"Information's a weapon. There wouldn't be any threats. You never hear of a threat coming out of
Switzerland. The Authority would simply stop giving replies to Federation questions. That'd drag it
down quick enough. They wouldn't be able to compete with neighbors who continued to receive
answers. Not in fishing, not in mining, not in manufacturing; nothing."
"Eric's right." Charlie was quick to jump on the bandwagon of tightness. "How's the Federation going to
market its coffee, for example, if it can't get allotment predictions, supply-demand forecasts, or even
weather news from the Authority?"
Gabriella backed down, but not all the way. "I still think it's a possibility. It all depends on how bad they
want that territory."
Charlie was looking smug. "No way, lady, that a hunk of land, or principle, is worth a big drop in GNP.
You wait. The Federation'll huff and puff and try to get all it can from the Kaffoers, but they won't step
past Authority bounds."
"We'll see," said the combative Gabriella.
Crowd noise intensified behind them. The game was coming on. Tonight the Scorchers were playing
Philadelphia, and Frank Alway, the network cosell, was having trouble with his mike. The rumble was
due to overfeed from the Casa Grande stadium's air-conditioning system. Even though the moon was up,
it was still over a hundred degrees outside on the sun-baked basin of the Sonoran Desert.
Eric and Charlie turned in their chairs, and the girls began murmuring among themselves. They were all
fans. Their table sat on a raised dais from which they not only had a fine view outside, but also a clear
line of sight to one of the four big optos that hung from the center of the ceiling.
Their waitress drifted past, and Eric absently ordered another hamburger and fries as he considered
Gabriella from behind. She was undeniably attractive and, according to Charlie, seriously interested in
him.' A bit aggressive, though.
She followed the waitress's progress, glanced back over her shoulder. "Honestly, Eric, I don't know
where you put it. I've never known anyone who eats like you do to stay so trim."
If it's any consolation, he mused silently, it's a mystery to me also. It did seem that he ate much more
than any of his friends, yet never put on weight. Didn't exercise much either. The benefits of a benign
metabolism, he thought. That's what the company doctor had told him when he'd inquired about it during
one of the annual physical exams everybody at Selvern had to take. His body just burned up calories
faster than the norm. He felt guilty about it now and then, especially when he indulged in rich foods or
fancy desserts, much to the consternation of his diet-conscious acquaintances.
Once, to win a bet for Charlie, he'd downed eight slices of chocolate mousse cake at Oscar Taylor's. This
on top of a large steak dinner. Not only was the fellow who lost the bet astonished, so was the restaurant
staff. In addition he was blessed with excellent general health, to the point of never catching a cold or
the spring flu. He never did understand how anyone who took moderately good care of himself could
catch cold in the heat-sink that was Phoenix.
"I watch myself, Charlie," he'd told his closest friend one day. "It's not hard to stay healthy."
"Yeah, but there are other factors. You have to stay clear of sniffly kids on their way home from school,
housewives coming back from marketing, old folks out for a stroll: anyone can carry germs. What's your
secret? Massive doses of vitamin C?"
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