Ape Bates said, "Shut up, Pan! They'll put you up against a wall and shoot you."
"Don't talk like a stump-tailed macaque, Ape," Pan said. "If they can find out from me how to go faster than light, they can make the Russians look like monkeys. Rhesus monkeys."
"Sometimes I think you got a racial prejudice against those rhesuses," Happy said.
"The giant rhesus is about as intelligent as any animal I have ever known," Dr. Bedoian said. "Though I haven't worked with baboons."
"Two of the stupider branches of the great order of primates," Pan said. He looked a little angry. "I believe, doctor, you have mistaken docility and the willingness to be the dupe of humans for intelligence."
"Have it your own way, pal," Dr. Bedoian said. "All right. I'll do my duty by my country. If you will agree to surrender your great secret — how you made that spaceship do what it did — I'm authorized to give you anything you want."
"By whom?"
"General Maguire."
"That giant with the brain of a marmoset? Try higher, doctor."
Dr. Bedoian threw up his hands. "Pan, I made a damned bad Judas goat, if you know what that is. Take my advice and keep your mouth shut."
"You was just about to have a bad time, doc, before you said that," Ape Bates said. "Yeah, you listen to the doc, Pan. Tell 'em nothing."
Happy Bronstein said, "But is he going to be able to? Whatever went wrong with him, it seems to make him talk."
Pan Satyrus put his hands over his face and began to make peculiar noises. The two sailors were on their feet with alarm; but the doctor said, "He's laughing."
When he could control himself, Pan said, "I couldn't possibly explain without a diagram. And I retrogressed back to where I have to talk; but not to where I have to draw drawings and made sketches. I'm still a little better than human."
"I never wrote on the wall of a head in my life," Ape Bates said.
"Neither have I," Happy Bronstein said. "But I've never been in a Stateside head yet that something hadn't. And it's a damned safe thing it wasn't any chimpanzee."
Dr. Bedoian said, "I have an idea."
He went to the outer door, opened it. The three security men had been joined by two more, different in size and coloration, but identical in attitude. "Gentlemen, I have been unable to persuade Pan Satyrus to talk. In fact, he is distinctly nervous. He resents having you guard the door of his chamber."
Pan Satyrus promptly swung up to the chandelier, hung by one hand, and started beating himself on the chest with the other. Happy Bronstein retreated nervously to the window.
"Sorry, doctor, we have your orders," MacMahon said. "And you do, too. Make that chimp talk."
"How?" Dr. Bedoian asked.
"Isn't there something called truth serum?"
"Do I tell yon how to give loyalty oaths? I am a physician, Mr. MacMahon and as such I don't take clinical suggestions from laymen."
One of the new arrivals got up. "You're not a vet?" he asked.
"I studied the human being, Homo sapiens, seven years before graduating to the other primates-"
At this point the chandelier came loose from the ceiling; the planners and electricians and plasterers of the Floridaville House had not anticipated gymnastic chimpanzees in their commercial suite. The five security men went for their guns. Pan Satyrus landed agilely on his feet, still holding the chandelier, from which ancient wires now sprouted like whiskers on a hog's jowl.
Ape Bates was inspired to bark, "Stow them guns! They bother Mr. Satyrus!" He had been a petty officer much longer than any of the young men had been security men; they stowed their guns.
The phone began ringing. Happy Bronstein answered it. He said, "Yeah," once in a while and "naw!" once in a while and then he hung the phone up. "Management. Want to know what's what. The juice has gone off all over the house."
"As the only authority on the pongidae present," Dr. Bedoian said, "I can assure you that it is not the government's habit to house chimpanzees in a structure as flimsy as this. I'd suggest that you do as my patient suggests and retreat, leave him to calm his nerves."
Pan Satyrus took this as a cue to advance upon MacMahon, waving the wiry end of the lighting fixture under the FBI man's chin. MacMahon stood his ground, till Pan Satyrus added what he could remember of the Bastard King of England to the act. He was not well equipped musically.
MacMahon was a brave man, though. He whipped out his notebook, glanced at his wristwatch and wrote. Then he held the ballpoint pen (gold) and the notebook out to Dr. Bedoian. Your responsibility, doctor. General Maguire said you were to take charge of the. the patient, and we were to cooperate."
Dr. Bedoian signed. The five pairs of cops' feet went down the splintery stairs in a clatter.
"I suspect I am a traitor to my country," the doctor said.
Pan Satyrus threw the chandelier into a corner of the room. Glass tinkled.
"Okay," Ape Bates said, "get on the horn, Happy."
"What for?" Happy asked.
"Dames," Ape said. "Tell the hotel to send up four dames. Whatya think the doc got rid of the G-men for? He's been itchy ever since we brought the subject up."
"Have I?" Dr. Bedoian asked. "Yes, I guess I have. Of course, that's why I sent those white-collar cops away. I just didn't realize it."
CHAPTER FIVE
Apes, like men, have no fails.
It was obvious that the bellboy who answered Happy's phone call was not the first bellboy with whom the radioman had dealt. It was also obvious that Happy was not the first sailor with whom the bellboy had had dealings. He got the word at once.
They had moved into the sample room, no longer cluttered with law officers.
The bellboy went away, and Pan Satyrus sat moodily for a moment, and then went into the bedroom. Dr. Bedoian found him there, inspecting the wires that gaped from the chandelier socket. "What's the matter, Pan?"
Pan shook his head, and went over to the window and its uninspiring view of Floridaville, "Not a thing, doctor. I feel fine."
"I didn't think you were ill. I've been your doctor a long time; I can tell when you're going to come down with something long before you know it yourself. But you're depressed. Why?"
Pan put his knuckles on the floor and pivoted around on them. "Happy ordered a girl for me, too."
Dr. Bedoian smiled. "Yes. I think our two friends have completely forgotten you aren't another sailor."
"I ought to be pleased. They are very nice, for humans."
Dr. Bedoian moved quietly around the patient until he had the window at his back and the light shining in Pan's eyes. He said, "What, then?"
Pan Satyrus looked at the floor. He shuffled his huge feet and drummed on the splintery boards with his knuckles, lightly. "I don't like girls," he said.
"How do you know? You never had one, did you?"
The primate's eyes glowered. "Of course not." Then Pan Satyrus smiled. "That isn't very flattering to your species, is it?"
"That's all right, Pan. I don't like girl chimpanzees, and before you ask, I have never known any except patients. And if you don't know about the Hippocratic oath, this is not the time to go into it."
Pan sat down on the floor and absent-mindedly began stroking the back of his neck with his toes. "But Ape and Happy are my friends. I don't want to ruin their party, nor hurt their feelings."
Dr. Bedoian kept his face grave. "You won't. The length of time those lads have been at sea, they'll gladly take your lady off your hands. And mine. I'm engaged to a girl over in Tarpon Springs."