"I'm not starting anything. I'm just seeking a conference with Scyth."
"How did you know?" asked the Marandanian uncertainly.
"By being just smart enough to find a tomcat by knowing where the tomcat is likely to prowl."
"Meaning?" demanded Barbara icily.
Dusty ignored her. To Scyth he said, "I don't know beans about barytrine fields or generators, but I guessed that you'd set it up on earth somewhere, start it cooking, and wetnurse it until it came to a boil. That would leave you on Earth with time to kill. Since time hangs heavy, you'd probably look up one of the only two people you know. The more attractive one, Scyth. So I've been haunting the front door like a private eye."
Barbara coughed. "You took that right out of The Space Patrol Fights The Overlords of Delgon."
"So I've got good writers," grinned Dusty.
"What do you intend to do?" asked Scyth nervously.
Dusty faced Scyth. Dusty topped the Marandanian by perhaps an inch or two and covered him by a good twenty pounds. He guessed that if it came to roughhouse he would probably win. He poised himself on the balls of his feet, just in case. He had no way of guessing the speed or power of the wiry-looking Scyth Radnor and so he was taking no chances.
"I became a professional bum because of you and your phanobands and your menslators and your barytrine fields," he said bluntly. "I was laughed out of everything I had. So now you're going to go with me and tell 'em all that I was right. We'll have the big domes out to take a look at your spacecraft, have 'em inspect your barytrine doodad, take a gander at whatever it is you call phanobands, and so on."