WÄ…tki
 
[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

Adoption Center; she d have to pick up Diamond at Government House. And Leslie
wouldn t be in for cocktails this evening; he was over on Epsilon Continent,
talking to people about things he didn t want to discuss by screen. Ben
Rainsford had finally gotten around to calling for an election for delegates
to a constitutional convention, and they wanted to line up candidates of their
own. It looked as though Mr. Victor Grego would have cocktails with the
manager-in-chief of the Charterless Zarathustra Company, this evening. Might
as well have them here.
Titanium, he thought disgustedly. It would be something like that. What was
it they called the stuff? Oh, yes; the nymphomaniac metal; when it gets hot it
combines with anything. An idea suddenly danced just out of reach. He stopped,
halfway from the desk to the cabinet, his eyes closed. Then he caught it, and
dashed for the communication screen, punching Malcolm Dunbar s call
combination.
It was a few minutes before Dunbar answered; he had his hat and coat on.
 I was just going out, Mr. Grego.
 So I see. That man Vespi, the one who worked for Odin Dietetics; is he still
around?
 Why, no. He left twenty minutes ago, and I don t know how to reach him right
away.
 No matter; get him in the morning. Listen, the pressure cookers, the ones
you use to cook the farina for bulk-matter. What are they made of?
 Why, light nonox-steel; our manufacture. Why?
 Ask Vespi what they used for that purpose on Odin. Don t suggest the answer,
but see if it wasn t titanium.
Dunbar s eyes widened. He d heard about the chemical nymphomania of titanium,
too.
 Sure; that s what they d use, there. And at Argentine Syntho-Foods, too.
Listen, suppose I give the police an emergency-call request; they could find
Joe in half an hour.
 Don t bother; tomorrow morning s good enough. I want to try something
first.
He blanked the screen, and called Myra Fallada. She never left the office
before he did.
 Myra; call out and get me five pounds of pure wheat farina, and be sure it s
made from Zarathustran wheat. Have it sent up to my apartment, fifteen minutes
ago.
 Fifteen minutes from now do? she asked.  What s it for; the Little Monster?
All right, Mr. Grego.
He forgot about the drink he was going to have with Mr. Victor Grego. You had
a drink when the work was done, and there was still work to do.
Page 77
ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.html
THERE WAS CLATTERING in the kitchenette when Sandra Glenn brought Diamond
into the Fuzzy-room. She opened the door between and looked through, and
Diamond crowded past her knees for a look, too. Mr. Grego was cooking
something, in a battered old stew pan she had never seen around the place
before. He looked over his shoulder and said,  Hi, Sandra. Heyo, Diamond; use
Fuzzyphone, Pappy Vic no get ear-thing.
 What make do, Pappy Vic? Diamond asked.
 That s what I want to know, too.
 Sandra, keep your fingers crossed; when this stuff s done and has cooled
off, we re going to see how Diamond likes it. I think we have found out what s
the matter with that Extee-Three.
 Estee-fee? You make Estee-fee? Real? Not like other? Diamond wanted to
know.
 You eat, Pappy Vic said.  Tell if good. Pappy Vic not know.
 Well, what is it? she asked.
 Hoenveld found what was different about it. The explanation was rather
complicated; she had been exposed to, rather than studied, chemistry. She got
the general idea; the Extee-Three the Fuzzies liked had been cooked in
titanium.
 That s what this stew pan is; part of a camp cooking kit I brought here from
Terra. He gave the white mess in the pan a final stir and lifted it from the
stove, burning his finger and swearing; just like a man in a kitchen.  Now, as
soon as this slop s cool... 
Diamond smelled it, and wanted to try it right away. He had to wait, though,
until it was cool. Then they carried the pan, it had a treacherous-looking
folding handle, out to the Fuzzy-room, and Mr. Grego spooned some onto
Diamond s plate, and Diamond took his little spoon and tasted, cautiously.
Then he began shoveling it into his mouth ravenously.
 The Master Mind crashes through again, she said.  He really likes it.
Diamond had finished what was on his plate.  You like? she asked, in Fuzzy.
 Want more?
 Give him the rest of it, Sandra. I m going to call Dr. Jan Christiaan
Hoenveld, and suggest an experiment for him to try. And after that, Miss
Glenn, will you honor me by having a cocktail with me?
JACK HOLLOWAY LAUGHED.  So that s it. When did you find out?
 Mallin just screened me; he just got it from Grego, Gerd van Riebeek, in
the screen, said.  They re going to start tearing out all the stainless-steel
cookers right away, and replace them with titanium. Jack, have you any
titanium cooking utensils?
 No. Everything we have here is steel. We have sheet titanium; the house and
the sheds and the old hangar are all sheet-titanium. We might be able to make
something...  He stopped short.  Gerd, we don t have to cook the food in
titanium. We can cook titanium in the food. Cut up some chunks and put them in
Page 78
ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.html
the kettles. It would work the same way.
 Well, I ll be damned, Gerd said.  I never thought of that. I ll bet nobody
else did, either.
DR. JAN CHRISTIAAN Hoenveld was disgusted and chagrined and embarrassed, and
mostly disgusted.
It had been gratifying to discover a hitherto unknown biochemical, especially
one existing unsuspected in a well known, long manufactured, and widely
distributed commercial product. He could understand how it had happened; a
by-effect in one of the manufacturing processes, and since the stuff had been
proven safe and nutritious for humans and other life-forms having similar
biochemistry and metabolism, nobody had bothered until some little animals no,
people, that had been scientifically established had detected its absence by
taste. Things like that happened all the time. He had been proud of the
accomplishment; he d been going to call the newly discovered substance
hoenveldine. He could have worked out a way of synthesizing it, too, but by
proper scientific methods it would have taken over a year, and he knew it, and
he d said so to everybody.
And now, within a day, it had been synthesized, if that were the word for it,
by a rank amateur, a layman, a complete non-scientist. And not in a laboratory
but in a kitchen, with no equipment but a battered old stew pan!
And the worst of it was that this layman, this empiric, was his employer. The
claims of the manager-in-chief of the Zarathustra Company simply couldn t be
brushed off. Not by a Company scientist. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
  • zanotowane.pl
  • doc.pisz.pl
  • pdf.pisz.pl
  • bialaorchidea.pev.pl
  •  
    Copyright © 2006 MySite. Designed by Web Page Templates