Still, Clete’s drawling voice was heard loud and clear throughout the videotape. The tape began with him chatting with a floating Hask, who was plainly visible; Dale had forgotten just how blue Hask’s old hide had been.
"But you guys," Clete was saying in that rich Tennessee accent, "being able to shut down for centuries, having that ability built right into y’all. You can fake gravity in space, ’course, through centrifugal force or constant acceleration. But there ain’t nothing you can do about the time it takes for interstellar travel. With a natural suspended-animation ability, y’all sure got us beat. We might have been destined to go into planetary orbit, but your race seems to have been destined to sail between the stars."
"Many of our philosophers would agree with that statement," remarked Hask. Then, after a second: "But not all, of course." They were both quiet for a time. "I am hungry," said Hask. "It will take several hours for the others to revive. Do you require food?"
"I brought some with me," said Clete. "Navy rations. Hardly gourmet vittles, but they’ll do."
"Come with me," said Hask. The alien folded his three-part legs against a bulkhead and kicked off. Clete started off with a hand push — his long arm darted into the shot for a moment — but then apparently kicked off the wall as well. They floated down another corridor, large yellow lights overhead alternating with small orange ones.
Soon they came to a door, which slid aside for Hask. They floated into the room. As they did so more lights came on overhead.
There was a sound of Clete sucking in his breath. No way to know what he’d been thinking, but Dale Rice always felt like vomiting when he saw this part of the tape. In the dimmed light of the courtroom, he could see several jurors wincing.
There was a great bloody mass in the middle of the picture. It took several seconds for the shape of the thing to register as Clete panned the camera.
It seemed to be an enormously long tube of raw meat, its surface glistening with pinkish-red blood. The tube wound around itself like a pile of spilled intestines. Its diameter was about five inches, and its length — well, if it were all stretched out, instead of coiled up, it might have run to fifty feet, a great, gory anaconda stripped of its hide. One end was plugged into one of the room’s walls; the other end, which terminated in a flat circular cross section, was propped up by a Y-shaped ceramic support.
"God a’mighty!" said Clete voice. "What is it?"
"It is food," said Hask.
"It’s meat?"
"Yes. Would you like some?"
"Ah — no. No, thanks."
Hask floated over to the tube’s free end. He reached into one of the pouches on his dun-colored vest and removed a small blue cylinder about ten inches long and two inches in diameter. He took one end of it in the fingers of his front arm and the other in his back arm, then bent it. It split down the middle into two five-inch cylinders. He then moved his hands as if he were drawing an invisible loop of string stretched between the two cylinders around the great tube of meat, about four inches from its end. He pulled the two blue handles away from each other, and to the jury’s amazement, the last four inches of the great meat sausage separated from the rest. It just floated there, but the picture clearly showed a receptacle attached to the Y-shaped support that obviously would have caught it had the ship been undergoing acceleration.
"How did you do that?" said Clete, off camera.
Hask looked at him, puzzled. Then he seemed to realize. "You mean my carving tool? There is a single, long, flexible molecular chain connecting the two handles. The chain cannot be broken, but because of its thinness, it cuts easily through almost anything."
Clete’s voice could be heard to say, "It slices! It dices!"
"Pardon?" said Hask.
"A line from an old TV commercial — for the Ronco Veg-O-Matic. ‘It slices! It dices!’ " Clete sounded impressed. "Purty neat device. But if you can’t see the thread, isn’t it dangerous?"
Hask grabbed the two parts of the handle and pulled them as far apart as he could. Every fifteen inches or so, a large blue bead appeared along the otherwise invisible filament. "The beads enable you to see the filament," said Hask, "as well as letting you handle it safely. They are lined on the inside with a monomolecular weave that the filament cannot cut through, so you can slide the beads along the filament if they get in the way."
Hask’s tuft moved in a shrug. "It is a general-purpose tool, not just for carving meat; nothing sticks to the monofilament, so you do not have to worry about keeping it clean."
Dale had his eyes glued to the jurors. First one got it, and then another, and soon they all had reacted with either widened eyes or noddings of their heads: they had just seen what could very likely have been the murder weapon.