
"Twenty dollars," Jones said.
Clumsily, Cussick fumbled in his pocket. "For what? What am I getting?"
After a moment Jones explained. "See that?" He indicated a wheel on the table. Pulling back a lever he released it; the hand on the wheel slowly turned, accompanied by a laborious metallic clicking. The face of the wheel was divided into four quarters. "You have one hundred and twenty seconds. Anything you want to ask. Then your time is up." He took the change and dropped it in his coat pocket.
"Ask?" Cussick said huskily. "About what?"
"The future." There was contempt in the youth's voice, undisguised, unconcealed. It was obvious; of course, the future. What else? Irritably, his thin, hard fingers drummed. And the wheel ticked.
"But not personal?" Cussick pursued. "Not about myself?"
Lips twitching spasmodically, Jones shot back: "Of course not. You're a nonentity. You don't figure."
Cussick blinked. Embarrassed, feeling his ears begin to burn, he answered as evenly as possible: "Maybe you're wrong. Maybe I'm somebody." Hotly, he was thinking of his position; what would this rustic punk say if he knew he was facing a Fedgov secret-service man? It was on the tip of his tongue angrily to blurt it out, to give his role away in self-defense. That, of course, would finish him off with Security. But he was harried, and uncertain.
"You're down to ninety seconds," Jones notified him dispassionately. Then his gaunt, stony voice took on feeling. "For God's sake, ask something! Don't you want to know anything? Aren't you curious?"
Licking his lips, Cussick said: "Well, what's the future hold? What's going to happen?"
