Temporarily, I hope."
There was a short silence, faintly horrified, and then Lee said,
"Was that the message?
Are things breaking already?"
"Don't know.
I can't tell till I hear what Verisof has to say.
They may be, though.
After all, they have to before election.
But what are you looking so dead about?"
"Because I don't know how it's going to turn out.
You're too deep, Hardin, and you're playing the game too close to your chest."
"Even you?" murmured Hardin.
And aloud,
"Does that mean you're going to join Sermak's new party?"
Lee smiled against his will.
"All right. You win.
How about lunch now?" 2.
There are many epigrams attributed to Hardin - a confirmed epigrammatist - a good many of which are probably apocryphal.
Nevertheless, it is reported that on a certain occasion, he said:
"It pays to be obvious, especially if you have a reputation for subtlety."
Poly Verisof had had occasion to act on that advice more than once for he was now in the fourteenth year of his double status on Anacreon - a double status the upkeep of which reminded him often and unpleasantly of a dance performed barefoot on hot metal.
To the people of Anacreon he was high priest, representative of that Foundation which, to those "barbarians," was the acme of mystery and the physical center of this religion they had created - with Hardin's help - in the last three decades.
As such, he received a homage that had become horribly wearying, for from his soul he despised the ritual of which he was the center.
But to the King of Anacreon - the old one that had been, and the young grandson that was now on the throne - he was simply the ambassador of a power at once feared and coveted.
On the whole, it was an uncomfortable job, and his first trip to the Foundation in three years, despite the disturbing incident that had made it necessary, was something in the nature of a holiday.
And since it was not the first time he had had to travel in absolute secrecy, he again made use of Hardin's epigram on the uses of the obvious.
He changed into his civilian clothes - a holiday in itself - and boarded a passenger liner to the Foundation, second class.
Once at Terminus, he threaded his way through the crowd at the spaceport and called up City Hall at a public visiphone.
He said, "My name is Jan Smite.
I have an appointment with the mayor this afternoon."
The dead-voiced but efficient young lady at the other end made a second connection and exchanged a few rapid words, then said to Verisof in dry, mechanical tone,
"Mayor Hardin will see you in half an hour, sir," and the screen went blank.
Whereupon the ambassador to Anacreon bought the latest edition of the Terminus City Journal, sauntered casually to City Hall Park and, sitting. down on the first empty bench he came to, read the editorial page, sport section and comic sheet while waiting.
At the end of half an hour, he tucked the paper under his arm, entered City Hall and presented himself in the anteroom.
In doing all this he remained safely and thoroughly unrecognized, for since he was so entirely obvious, no one gave him a second look.
Hardin looked up at him and grinned.
"Have a cigar!
How was the trip?"
Verisof helped himself.
"Interesting.
There was a priest in the next cabin on his way here to take a special course in the preparation of radioactive synthetics - for the treatment of cancer, you know -"
"Surely, he didn't call it radioactive synthetics, now?"
"I guess not!
It was the Holy Food to him."
The mayor smiled.
"Go on."
"He inveigled me into a theological discussion and did his level best to elevate me out of sordid materialism."
"And never recognized his own high priest?"
"Without my crimson robe?
Besides, he was a Smyrnian.