That left two of them. The inspector continued to gaze at the remains on the plate in a dreamy way. The other man straightened his big shoulders, looked at me, and said, jerking his thumb toward the shed, "Mr. Carter's an ecologist. He just came along for the trip. He's on his way to the Government Experimental Farm over at Murdock. I'm a government sociologist. I was sent here to have a talk with you. My name is Ranson."
"Sure. Sit down. I guess I'm licked, but there's no use making a rumpus about it."
I turned to the inspector whose eyes were still caught in the egg plate. I said, "Ever taste them?"
"Once," he said, in a far away voice. I went to the cupboard and came back with a paper bag full of eggs and put it in his hands. He held them as if someone had just given him the wheat sheaf badge of merit.
"I won't be needing these after our little talk, I expect. Take them home to the kiddies."
He smiled, looked at the sociologists, who grinned back and nodded. The inspector walked very carefully out of the back door and down to the wharf to stow his eggs in the helicopter.
Ranson shifted in his chair. He said, "That was very nice of you, Mr. Henry."
"George," I said.
"Against the law, of course." There was a smile around his eyes. "Are you against the law, George?"
"Yes. No use bluffing. You know the story. All the waters and everything in them are WFI. All the land and everything on it. I don't like packaged food. I like real food. I don't like my oysters, crabs, clams, fish minced up and blended with chick weed, cereals, yeast, algae, plankton, and flavored to taste a little like steak. And plenty of others feel the same. I have a market."