business.

'We can't let Earth have it,' said Smoky. 'They could open it. We don't have their time stopper.' Without looking at Luke, he added, 'Some inventions do have to be suppressed.'

'You could get it with a little research,' said Garner.

'Dump it on Jupiter,' Masney advised. 'Strap It to the Heinlein's hull and let Woody and me fly it. If we both come back alive you know it got dumped on schedule. Right?'

'Right,' said Lew. Garner nodded. Others in the lounge tasted the idea and found it good, despite the loss of knowledge which must be buried with the suit. Larry Greenberg, who had other objections, kept them to himself.

'All agreed?' Lew swept his eyes around the main lounge.

'Okay. Now, which one is the amplifier?'

There was a full two seconds of dismayed silence. Greenberg pointed. 'The wrinkled one with both hands empty.'

Once it had been pointed out, the difference was obvious. The second suit had wrinkles and bumps and bulges; the limbs were twisted; it had no more personality than a sack. But the suit that was Kzanol- it lay in one corner of the lounge, knees bent, disintegrator half raised. Even in the curious shape of arms and legs, and in the expressionless mirror of its face, one could read the surprise and consternation which must have been the thrint's last emotions. There must have been fury too, frustrated fury that had been mounting since Kzanol first saw the fused, discolored spot which was the rescue switch on his second suit.

Garner tossed off his champagne, part of the stock from the honeymooner's food stores. 'So it's settled. The Sea Statue goes back to the UN Comparative Cultures Exhibit. The treasure suit goes to Jupiter. I submit the Sun might be safer, but what the hell. Greenberg, where do you go?'

'Home. And then Jinx, I think.' Larry Greenberg wore what Lucas Garner decided was a bittersweet smile, though even he never guessed what it meant. 'They'll never keep Judy and me away now. I'm the only man in the universe who can read bandersnatchi handwriting.'

Masney shook his head and started to laugh. He had a rumbling, helpless kind of laugh, as infectious as mumps. 'Better not read their minds, Greenberg. You'll end up as a whole space menagerie if you aren't careful.'

Others took up the laughter, and Larry smiled with them, though only he knew how true were Masney's words.

Or had Garner guessed? The old man was looking at him very strangely. If Garner guessed that, two billion years ago, Kzanol had taken a racarliw slave as a pet and souvenir-

Nonsense.

So only Larry would ever know. If the suit were opened it could start a war. With controlled hydrogen fusion as common today as electrical generators had been a century and a half back, any war might be the very last. So the suit had to go to Jupiter; and the doomed racarliw slave had to go with it, buried in dead, silent stasis for eternity.

Could Larry Greenberg have sacrificed an innocent sentient, even for such a purpose? To Larry plus dolphin plus thrint, it wasn't even difficult.

Just a slave, whispered Kzanol. Small, stupid, ugly: worth half a commercial at best.

Can't defend himself, thought Charley. He has no rights.

Larry made a mental note never to tell Judy, even by accident, and then went on to more pleasant thoughts.

What was he thinking? Garner wondered. He's dropped it now; I might as well stop watching him.

But I'd give my soul if I could read minds for an hour, if I could pick the hour.

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