"STORY ARCHIVE - HERITAGE (Peter Freewheel)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Freewheel Peter)Heritage
HERITAGE
Peter Freewheel
Richard Walker was shocked at the message coming through on his mailer.
It was from his father. He hadn't seen or heard from him in two years.
"I've done it, boy," the message began. "They laughed at me, said it
was impossible. I've found a way to deactivate the Neridium in the Space
Drive Propulsion Unit in complete safety. I haven't much time to explain.
Very simply, Neridium is the element that powers the Warp Drive in all
Space Drive Propulsion Units. However, it's a very unstable element and it
only remains stable after being activated inside the force field of the
Drive Unit. Neridium lasts forever, but the Space Drive Propulsion Units
don't; because of the stress they're subjected to, they wear out in about
a year - but the Neridium inside them is still good for thousands of
years. However, if you try to remove the Neridium strip from the Drive
Unit after its been activated, it'll blow a whole planet sky high.
Neridium strips cost 100,000 Solar Credits each to produce, and they have
to be thrown away after 0.1 per cent of their useful life span. With my
invention you can deactivate the Neridium and offer it for resale. I know
where the Drive Units are dumped - out on an asteroid, there's over a
thousand there - that's a potential one hundred million Solar Credits just
waiting to be collected."
"After your mother died, I became lonely, I needed women, their
friendship, their bodies. I found one while you were away at college. I
went away with her, but she left me, like your mother left me; but your
mother was dead, it wasn't her fault. This woman couldn't leave me unless
she was dead as well. But she wasn't dead, but she had to be dead. They
put me away in a place, they put this thing in my head. They let me
continue my work, but they told me that if I went outside of the house
this capsule would be activated. If I stayed away for more than two hours
it would be set irreversibly, after four hours it would go off. I've been
gone nearly four hours already. I couldn't let them have my find, they
don't allow visitors or mail - I had to get out, get this message to you,
to pay you back for the way I've failed you."
"I killed. Again; many times, before they caught me. I must kill, kill
women for they only die in the end anyway; die when you don't want them
to. Why should they have it all their own way? They thought they'd cured
me, but they haven't. I still want to kill. They don't like that sort of
thing."
"They say I'm mad. However, my technical brain is still sane; the
formula is attached to this mail. But you must follow my plan very
carefully, or you'll smash the bottom out of the market. I want you to
remember me for this, not for anything else."
"I'm probably dead now, and if I'm not, I might as well be; but you're
to put all that behind you. Don't bother trying to find me, they'll take
care of all that. I must stress that my plan will only succeed if you are
prepared to give a 100% commitment to it and be prepared to sacrifice
anything and-or everything. The successful outcome will make you one of
the richest men in the Universe, so it will be worth it. On the subject of
money, this brings me on to the first objective; capital. It will be
necessary for you to secure a sizeable loan in order to purchase either
the asteroid on which the Neridium is dumped, or the Neridium itself. What
money I had was used in perfecting my formula, and I can't imagine you've
get much. However, Keith Gascoigne has, and he'll lend it to you. But
don't tell him what it's for under any circumstances. He'll ask a high
price in return, but YOU MUST PAY IT. "
"I have set up more time delayed mailers. You will hear from me again.
Goodbye son. Trust me.
Your loving father."
Dick carefully filed the formula attached to the mailer then re-read
the letter, wondering what Gascoigne would ask for; and why his father had
put that particular part in capital letters. Well, he wouldn't find out
tonight. He decided that he would go and see Gascoigne first thing in the
morning - he had no job, so he hadn't got anything better to do.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The next morning, he left his girlfriend, June asleep and made his way
to Gascoigne's office. He met up with some stiff opposition from various
officials and secretaries, but finally got in to see him.
"Hello, Walker old chap," Gascoigne greeted him. "I haven't seen you
for a couple of years; not since University. What are you doing nowadays?"
"I'm between jobs," Walker confessed.
"Oh, bad luck. Well, I can't offer you a job here, old fellow. We're
cutting back on staff, not that I take much interest in running the place;
I leave that to my minions, just rake in the profits." He laughed.
"It's about money that I've come to see you," Walker confessed.
"Oh?" Gascoigne queried. "This isn't the Welfare Office you know."
"I don't want you to give me any. I want a loan."
"I see." Gascoigne replied. "A couple of hundred credits to tide you
over?"
"More," Walker explained, "much more. It's a business venture. I want
to buy an asteroid."
"An asteroid'" Gascoigne exclaimed. "What the hell do you want an
asteroid for?"
"I can't reveal that."
"You want me to lend you a big chunk of credits. I think I deserve to
know. What securities have you got?"
"I haven't got any. That's why I came to you instead of a bank."
"This is ridiculous," Gascoigne exclaimed. "You can't expect me to
write you a blank cheque without knowing what it's for, and without any
security. I know we were friends at University, but I think you rather
strained that friendship when you stole my girl friend." He paused. "Are
you still living with June?"
"Yes."
"Mmm, I thought you would be. True love wasn't it?" He paused again and
looked thoughtful. His eyes narrowed. "I once offered you a cheque for a
million Credits if you would give June up. I'll now revise that offer.
I'll loan you what you need, at normal rates of interest, if you leave
her."
"What!" Walker exploded. "I can't! If I told her to go, she wouldn't."
"Just leave her," Gascoigne explained. "Tell her it's all over. We've
kept in touch. It's only her love for you that keeps her from me. With you
out of the way, she'll come back to me."
Walker sat there looking stunned. Was this what his father had had in
mind in his letter? He couldn't give up June, but this was the only place
he was likely to get hold of any cash. Perhaps he'd be able to bluff it
out for a while, and if he got the cash; he could get the girl back.
"Okay," he agreed slowly, "I'll do it."
"When the girl comes to me, you can have your loan," Gascoigne decided
looking pleased. "It's been a pleasure doing business with you, old chap."
Walker didn't reply. He was wondering how he was going to tell June.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
By the time he got back to the flat, June had gone out. He packed his
things and left her a note. 'I'm leaving you. It's all over.'
He rented a small flat near the spaceport and phoned Gascoigne each
day. On the fifth day, Gascoigne announced that the girl had come to live
with him, and that he could proceed with the purchase.
Walker had a number of second thoughts during that week, and although
he couldn't summon the courage to return to the girl, he had secretly
hoped that she wouldn't go to Gascoigne and that the whole thing would
fall through. As if on cue, the next mailer from his late father arrived.
"Dear Dick,
I trust you've obtained the loan. It was the girl wasn't it? I knew it
would be - don't worry; they all go in the end anyway.
Right; well, the next thing to do is purchase the asteroid. Its
reference number is 765/34/2. It belongs to a firm called Intergalactic
Mining. They'll ask a high price, but they'll be glad to get rid of it.
Good luck."
Walker closed the mailer and looked up Intergalactic Mining in the
directory. He made an appointment with their property department.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The property officer, a young girl, looked surprised. "765/34/2 you
say? I don't recognise the number on our current sales list."
"But you do own it, don't you?" Walker asked.
The girl nodded.
"765/34/2," Walker replied. "Is it for sale?"
"Well, most of our property is for sale," she confirmed. "You see, we
buy up areas of planets and asteroids that are unexplored, carry out an
analysis of the minerals there and sell off the mining rights. You can't
want this one, it's a Jonah." She consulted the data. "We bought it up in
a job lot from an old man's estate. There's nothing worth mining there.
It's just a lump of common rock, and that's not all. Before we could
unload it, the Solar Government placed a compulsory order on it - turned
it into a dump for clapped out Star Ship Engines. It's gonna take hundreds
of years before the rental they pay us gives us a profit. No-one would
want to buy this - well do you? Do you know something we don't? Rental
going up or something?"
Walker smiled. "I'm not supposed to reveal my backers," he said, doing
some quick thinking, "but I feel in this case, it will be better to
explain the situation. I represent a Nature Trust, dedicated to preserving
rare species of plants and animal life. On this particular asteroid, on
the other side to the dumping ground, is a very rare species of grass. It
doesn't grow anywhere else apparently. Well, like you, I can't see why
anyone could care about a bit of grass, but my backers do. They want to
ensure that the scrap is dumped well away from the grassy area and the
only way they can do this, is either by renting that particular area from
you, or by buying the whole thing. They feel if they buy the whole
asteroid they may be able to encourage the grass to grow over a larger
area."
"Mmm," the girl replied, locking thoughtful, "well you know, you
realise that the owners of the asteroid have to carry out a number of very
stringent requirements regarding the dumping area. Apparently, it's quite
dangerous."
"I'm sure my backers appreciate that," Walker conceded. "How much?"
"Well now, the asteroid itself is quite worthless for anything other
than its actual mass; but the owners of the asteroid do own all material
dumped there. In this case, a thousand Drive Units; each one containing
Neridium strips - and the likelihood of several thousand more over the
next few years. You know how much Neridium costs, don't you?"
"I don't understand," Walker confessed. "My understanding of the
situation is that this Neridium stuff is no use unless it hasn't been
activated, and all this lot has been."
The girl laughed. "The Modern Alchemists dream - to find a way of
reprocessing Neridium. Do you realise there's a potential of something
like a hundred million Solar Credits worth of Neridium just laying there
waiting to be defused."
Walker broke out in a sweat. He forced a smile. "But as you say, it's a
pipe dream. Not even the largest Corporation with their virtually
unlimited resources have been able to find a way of dealing with this
Neridium stuff."
The officer's eyes narrowed. "Maybe, but there's another side to it as
well. There's enough active Neridium there to cause one hell of an
explosion. Eventually, there'll be enough to blast the whole Solar System
away. Is that what you're after?"
"Certainly not," Walker blustered. "What do you think I am?"
"A fraud? A crank? A loser? I don't know. I don't really care. We have
a detailed survey on this asteroid; it's just a barren hunk of rock,
there's no grass on it at all. You don't think we'd be prepared to sell
the most dangerous and possibly most profitable lump of rock on our
books?" She smiled coldly. "I don't know what your game is. Others have
tried to buy it before. It wouldn't do you any good if you did buy it. The
Government has very tight security on their dump. If you tried to get
within a mile of it, they'd blast you off into space in little bits. You
know, I spend most of my time dealing with enquiries about this asteroid,
it's my main function. I have to decide if the enquirer is a loser, a
nutter or a subversive who needs reporting to the security forces." She
paused. "I won't be bothering to report you. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm
very busy. If you leave now without any fuss, that'll be the end to it.
Goodbye."
Walker felt sick. He mumbled something by way of parting and returned
to his flat. The next mailer arrived soon afterwards.
"Dear Dick,
I don't expect they'll sell. Don't worry, son; now's not the time to
get despondent. Send the formula to my old friend Doctor Freinberg; he can
be trusted. Explain the situation to him. He'll be able to sort things
out. He's out on Globol IV now, so there'll be a couple of months delay,
but it's imperative you hang on in there.
Dad."
Walker forced a brief smile his father might have been criminally
insane, but he certainly did seem to have things sown up. He needed some
working capital, so he 'phoned Gascoigne. The man's face appeared on the
screen. "Ah, Richard, you've only just caught me. Me and June are going on
a long holiday in deep space."
He tried to keep his face expressionless, but his stomach turned over;
she might be away for years. Still, when they returned, his riches would
make Gascoigne look like a pauper. She'd come back to him then.
"Don't worry, old boy. I've left word with my deputy to let you have
whatever cash you need to buy this asteroid thing. Have you set up a deal
yet?"
"No," Walker stated, "but I need some cash to keep the cogs oiled; can
you forward me a thousand?"
"Sure, I'll forward it." Gascoigne's attention was drawn from the
screen by someone who'd come into the room. He said something and then
turned back to the screen. He was smiling. "June's here. I expect you want
to say goodbye, I'll put her on."
Walker panicked and was about to break the connection, when the girl's
face appeared on the screen. She looked angrily at him. "You creep," she
cursed. "To think I left Keith for you. Gave up all his wealth for you, a
down and out. I trusted you. I stayed with you come what may, and there
was precious little that did come our way. As soon as you sniff some money
through some crazy deal, you don't need me to buy you your meal ticket,
you just walk out on me. Well, Dick, old buddy, I hope you go like your
father!!"
She walked out of view of the screen.
"Wait," Walker pleaded helplessly. "I've done it for you..." The
connection was cut at the other end.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The next day a note for a thousand credits arrived. This gave Walker
the money to pay the fee for Freinberg to investigate the formula. The
remainder of the cash he began to squander on booze. As the days passed,
his consumption of alcohol increased. When the money was gone, he
contacted Gascoigne's deputy and was give another thousand credits without
question.
His life slipped into a twilight world of alcohol and drugs while he
waited for word from Freinberg. He lost track of time. The cash was gone.
He asked for five thousand Credits from Gascoigne's company, and he got
it.
His downward slide continued until at last Freinberg's reply came. He
had a job reading the message, his vision now seemed constantly blurred..
He screamed, and then re-read it again and again, hoping it would change.
"Dear Mr. Walker,
Thank you for your letter and contents. It was an interesting theory,
but I'm afraid your father's mind had obviously wandered in the last few
years. His formula appeared to be without scientific foundation; but
despite that, I carried out tests, which have confirmed my earlier view.
I'm sorry to say it, but it is nothing more than worthless rubbish. A
shame; we could have been rich men.
I had expected you to contact me; your father said you would. He ask me
to attach a mailer from him with my reply.
Yours,
Freinberg."
Walker opened the mailer from his father. He read it with increasing
anger.
"Dick,
"If you've obeyed me and waited for Freinberg's reply, you'll know the
whole thing was a hoax. It was for your own good, son. I heard you were
linked up with that Collins bitch. I couldn't let her hurt you. I had to
make you see she was just like all the others. They never stay true, never
stay with you. I knew once she was back with Gascoigne she'd forget about
you. She'd've left you anyway. Maybe tomorrow, maybe next year, but
she'd've gone. It was better that you ditched her. Always remember this,
son. This lesson is my heritage - it's all I've got left to give you. You
know what to do now son. Go and get her. The beauty is that Gascoigne will
be financing your mission."
The rest of the letter began to ramble off into violent incoherent
attacks on women and eventually ended in a string of meaningless abuse. He
lunged at a bottle of booze and not bothering to see what it was, began to
drink. He drained the bottle, and then emptied the contents of a bottle of
tablets into his mouth, which he washed down with more drink. He looked up
at the sky and shook his fist. His legs gave way and he fell on the floor.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Walker smiled for the first time in a long while. What his father had
been trying to tell him had finally permeated through his alcoholic haze.
He looked down at the body of his ex-girlfriend. It had taken a while
to catch up with them, but his father had been right. He asked for cash
and Gascoigne's deputy sent it. The final sum going to the receptionist as
a bribe to let him in the room.
He had killed her with the first blow, the axe crushing her skull, but
he chopped and chopped again, it felt good. Oh so good. He knew how his
father felt. He looked up to the sky. "Thanks dad," he smiled. He wiped
the blood from the axe. Who next? That smart alec little bitch from the
Mining Company perhaps. So many targets he could think of. He would be so
busy.......
Heritage
HERITAGE
Peter Freewheel
Richard Walker was shocked at the message coming through on his mailer.
It was from his father. He hadn't seen or heard from him in two years.
"I've done it, boy," the message began. "They laughed at me, said it
was impossible. I've found a way to deactivate the Neridium in the Space
Drive Propulsion Unit in complete safety. I haven't much time to explain.
Very simply, Neridium is the element that powers the Warp Drive in all
Space Drive Propulsion Units. However, it's a very unstable element and it
only remains stable after being activated inside the force field of the
Drive Unit. Neridium lasts forever, but the Space Drive Propulsion Units
don't; because of the stress they're subjected to, they wear out in about
a year - but the Neridium inside them is still good for thousands of
years. However, if you try to remove the Neridium strip from the Drive
Unit after its been activated, it'll blow a whole planet sky high.
Neridium strips cost 100,000 Solar Credits each to produce, and they have
to be thrown away after 0.1 per cent of their useful life span. With my
invention you can deactivate the Neridium and offer it for resale. I know
where the Drive Units are dumped - out on an asteroid, there's over a
thousand there - that's a potential one hundred million Solar Credits just
waiting to be collected."
"After your mother died, I became lonely, I needed women, their
friendship, their bodies. I found one while you were away at college. I
went away with her, but she left me, like your mother left me; but your
mother was dead, it wasn't her fault. This woman couldn't leave me unless
she was dead as well. But she wasn't dead, but she had to be dead. They
put me away in a place, they put this thing in my head. They let me
continue my work, but they told me that if I went outside of the house
this capsule would be activated. If I stayed away for more than two hours
it would be set irreversibly, after four hours it would go off. I've been
gone nearly four hours already. I couldn't let them have my find, they
don't allow visitors or mail - I had to get out, get this message to you,
to pay you back for the way I've failed you."
"I killed. Again; many times, before they caught me. I must kill, kill
women for they only die in the end anyway; die when you don't want them
to. Why should they have it all their own way? They thought they'd cured
me, but they haven't. I still want to kill. They don't like that sort of
thing."
"They say I'm mad. However, my technical brain is still sane; the
formula is attached to this mail. But you must follow my plan very
carefully, or you'll smash the bottom out of the market. I want you to
remember me for this, not for anything else."
"I'm probably dead now, and if I'm not, I might as well be; but you're
to put all that behind you. Don't bother trying to find me, they'll take
care of all that. I must stress that my plan will only succeed if you are
prepared to give a 100% commitment to it and be prepared to sacrifice
anything and-or everything. The successful outcome will make you one of
the richest men in the Universe, so it will be worth it. On the subject of
money, this brings me on to the first objective; capital. It will be
necessary for you to secure a sizeable loan in order to purchase either
the asteroid on which the Neridium is dumped, or the Neridium itself. What
money I had was used in perfecting my formula, and I can't imagine you've
get much. However, Keith Gascoigne has, and he'll lend it to you. But
don't tell him what it's for under any circumstances. He'll ask a high
price in return, but YOU MUST PAY IT. "
"I have set up more time delayed mailers. You will hear from me again.
Goodbye son. Trust me.
Your loving father."
Dick carefully filed the formula attached to the mailer then re-read
the letter, wondering what Gascoigne would ask for; and why his father had
put that particular part in capital letters. Well, he wouldn't find out
tonight. He decided that he would go and see Gascoigne first thing in the
morning - he had no job, so he hadn't got anything better to do.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The next morning, he left his girlfriend, June asleep and made his way
to Gascoigne's office. He met up with some stiff opposition from various
officials and secretaries, but finally got in to see him.
"Hello, Walker old chap," Gascoigne greeted him. "I haven't seen you
for a couple of years; not since University. What are you doing nowadays?"
"I'm between jobs," Walker confessed.
"Oh, bad luck. Well, I can't offer you a job here, old fellow. We're
cutting back on staff, not that I take much interest in running the place;
I leave that to my minions, just rake in the profits." He laughed.
"It's about money that I've come to see you," Walker confessed.
"Oh?" Gascoigne queried. "This isn't the Welfare Office you know."
"I don't want you to give me any. I want a loan."
"I see." Gascoigne replied. "A couple of hundred credits to tide you
over?"
"More," Walker explained, "much more. It's a business venture. I want
to buy an asteroid."
"An asteroid'" Gascoigne exclaimed. "What the hell do you want an
asteroid for?"
"I can't reveal that."
"You want me to lend you a big chunk of credits. I think I deserve to
know. What securities have you got?"
"I haven't got any. That's why I came to you instead of a bank."
"This is ridiculous," Gascoigne exclaimed. "You can't expect me to
write you a blank cheque without knowing what it's for, and without any
security. I know we were friends at University, but I think you rather
strained that friendship when you stole my girl friend." He paused. "Are
you still living with June?"
"Yes."
"Mmm, I thought you would be. True love wasn't it?" He paused again and
looked thoughtful. His eyes narrowed. "I once offered you a cheque for a
million Credits if you would give June up. I'll now revise that offer.
I'll loan you what you need, at normal rates of interest, if you leave
her."
"What!" Walker exploded. "I can't! If I told her to go, she wouldn't."
"Just leave her," Gascoigne explained. "Tell her it's all over. We've
kept in touch. It's only her love for you that keeps her from me. With you
out of the way, she'll come back to me."
Walker sat there looking stunned. Was this what his father had had in
mind in his letter? He couldn't give up June, but this was the only place
he was likely to get hold of any cash. Perhaps he'd be able to bluff it
out for a while, and if he got the cash; he could get the girl back.
"Okay," he agreed slowly, "I'll do it."
"When the girl comes to me, you can have your loan," Gascoigne decided
looking pleased. "It's been a pleasure doing business with you, old chap."
Walker didn't reply. He was wondering how he was going to tell June.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
By the time he got back to the flat, June had gone out. He packed his
things and left her a note. 'I'm leaving you. It's all over.'
He rented a small flat near the spaceport and phoned Gascoigne each
day. On the fifth day, Gascoigne announced that the girl had come to live
with him, and that he could proceed with the purchase.
Walker had a number of second thoughts during that week, and although
he couldn't summon the courage to return to the girl, he had secretly
hoped that she wouldn't go to Gascoigne and that the whole thing would
fall through. As if on cue, the next mailer from his late father arrived.
"Dear Dick,
I trust you've obtained the loan. It was the girl wasn't it? I knew it
would be - don't worry; they all go in the end anyway.
Right; well, the next thing to do is purchase the asteroid. Its
reference number is 765/34/2. It belongs to a firm called Intergalactic
Mining. They'll ask a high price, but they'll be glad to get rid of it.
Good luck."
Walker closed the mailer and looked up Intergalactic Mining in the
directory. He made an appointment with their property department.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The property officer, a young girl, looked surprised. "765/34/2 you
say? I don't recognise the number on our current sales list."
"But you do own it, don't you?" Walker asked.
The girl nodded.
"765/34/2," Walker replied. "Is it for sale?"
"Well, most of our property is for sale," she confirmed. "You see, we
buy up areas of planets and asteroids that are unexplored, carry out an
analysis of the minerals there and sell off the mining rights. You can't
want this one, it's a Jonah." She consulted the data. "We bought it up in
a job lot from an old man's estate. There's nothing worth mining there.
It's just a lump of common rock, and that's not all. Before we could
unload it, the Solar Government placed a compulsory order on it - turned
it into a dump for clapped out Star Ship Engines. It's gonna take hundreds
of years before the rental they pay us gives us a profit. No-one would
want to buy this - well do you? Do you know something we don't? Rental
going up or something?"
Walker smiled. "I'm not supposed to reveal my backers," he said, doing
some quick thinking, "but I feel in this case, it will be better to
explain the situation. I represent a Nature Trust, dedicated to preserving
rare species of plants and animal life. On this particular asteroid, on
the other side to the dumping ground, is a very rare species of grass. It
doesn't grow anywhere else apparently. Well, like you, I can't see why
anyone could care about a bit of grass, but my backers do. They want to
ensure that the scrap is dumped well away from the grassy area and the
only way they can do this, is either by renting that particular area from
you, or by buying the whole thing. They feel if they buy the whole
asteroid they may be able to encourage the grass to grow over a larger
area."
"Mmm," the girl replied, locking thoughtful, "well you know, you
realise that the owners of the asteroid have to carry out a number of very
stringent requirements regarding the dumping area. Apparently, it's quite
dangerous."
"I'm sure my backers appreciate that," Walker conceded. "How much?"
"Well now, the asteroid itself is quite worthless for anything other
than its actual mass; but the owners of the asteroid do own all material
dumped there. In this case, a thousand Drive Units; each one containing
Neridium strips - and the likelihood of several thousand more over the
next few years. You know how much Neridium costs, don't you?"
"I don't understand," Walker confessed. "My understanding of the
situation is that this Neridium stuff is no use unless it hasn't been
activated, and all this lot has been."
The girl laughed. "The Modern Alchemists dream - to find a way of
reprocessing Neridium. Do you realise there's a potential of something
like a hundred million Solar Credits worth of Neridium just laying there
waiting to be defused."
Walker broke out in a sweat. He forced a smile. "But as you say, it's a
pipe dream. Not even the largest Corporation with their virtually
unlimited resources have been able to find a way of dealing with this
Neridium stuff."
The officer's eyes narrowed. "Maybe, but there's another side to it as
well. There's enough active Neridium there to cause one hell of an
explosion. Eventually, there'll be enough to blast the whole Solar System
away. Is that what you're after?"
"Certainly not," Walker blustered. "What do you think I am?"
"A fraud? A crank? A loser? I don't know. I don't really care. We have
a detailed survey on this asteroid; it's just a barren hunk of rock,
there's no grass on it at all. You don't think we'd be prepared to sell
the most dangerous and possibly most profitable lump of rock on our
books?" She smiled coldly. "I don't know what your game is. Others have
tried to buy it before. It wouldn't do you any good if you did buy it. The
Government has very tight security on their dump. If you tried to get
within a mile of it, they'd blast you off into space in little bits. You
know, I spend most of my time dealing with enquiries about this asteroid,
it's my main function. I have to decide if the enquirer is a loser, a
nutter or a subversive who needs reporting to the security forces." She
paused. "I won't be bothering to report you. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm
very busy. If you leave now without any fuss, that'll be the end to it.
Goodbye."
Walker felt sick. He mumbled something by way of parting and returned
to his flat. The next mailer arrived soon afterwards.
"Dear Dick,
I don't expect they'll sell. Don't worry, son; now's not the time to
get despondent. Send the formula to my old friend Doctor Freinberg; he can
be trusted. Explain the situation to him. He'll be able to sort things
out. He's out on Globol IV now, so there'll be a couple of months delay,
but it's imperative you hang on in there.
Dad."
Walker forced a brief smile his father might have been criminally
insane, but he certainly did seem to have things sown up. He needed some
working capital, so he 'phoned Gascoigne. The man's face appeared on the
screen. "Ah, Richard, you've only just caught me. Me and June are going on
a long holiday in deep space."
He tried to keep his face expressionless, but his stomach turned over;
she might be away for years. Still, when they returned, his riches would
make Gascoigne look like a pauper. She'd come back to him then.
"Don't worry, old boy. I've left word with my deputy to let you have
whatever cash you need to buy this asteroid thing. Have you set up a deal
yet?"
"No," Walker stated, "but I need some cash to keep the cogs oiled; can
you forward me a thousand?"
"Sure, I'll forward it." Gascoigne's attention was drawn from the
screen by someone who'd come into the room. He said something and then
turned back to the screen. He was smiling. "June's here. I expect you want
to say goodbye, I'll put her on."
Walker panicked and was about to break the connection, when the girl's
face appeared on the screen. She looked angrily at him. "You creep," she
cursed. "To think I left Keith for you. Gave up all his wealth for you, a
down and out. I trusted you. I stayed with you come what may, and there
was precious little that did come our way. As soon as you sniff some money
through some crazy deal, you don't need me to buy you your meal ticket,
you just walk out on me. Well, Dick, old buddy, I hope you go like your
father!!"
She walked out of view of the screen.
"Wait," Walker pleaded helplessly. "I've done it for you..." The
connection was cut at the other end.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The next day a note for a thousand credits arrived. This gave Walker
the money to pay the fee for Freinberg to investigate the formula. The
remainder of the cash he began to squander on booze. As the days passed,
his consumption of alcohol increased. When the money was gone, he
contacted Gascoigne's deputy and was give another thousand credits without
question.
His life slipped into a twilight world of alcohol and drugs while he
waited for word from Freinberg. He lost track of time. The cash was gone.
He asked for five thousand Credits from Gascoigne's company, and he got
it.
His downward slide continued until at last Freinberg's reply came. He
had a job reading the message, his vision now seemed constantly blurred..
He screamed, and then re-read it again and again, hoping it would change.
"Dear Mr. Walker,
Thank you for your letter and contents. It was an interesting theory,
but I'm afraid your father's mind had obviously wandered in the last few
years. His formula appeared to be without scientific foundation; but
despite that, I carried out tests, which have confirmed my earlier view.
I'm sorry to say it, but it is nothing more than worthless rubbish. A
shame; we could have been rich men.
I had expected you to contact me; your father said you would. He ask me
to attach a mailer from him with my reply.
Yours,
Freinberg."
Walker opened the mailer from his father. He read it with increasing
anger.
"Dick,
"If you've obeyed me and waited for Freinberg's reply, you'll know the
whole thing was a hoax. It was for your own good, son. I heard you were
linked up with that Collins bitch. I couldn't let her hurt you. I had to
make you see she was just like all the others. They never stay true, never
stay with you. I knew once she was back with Gascoigne she'd forget about
you. She'd've left you anyway. Maybe tomorrow, maybe next year, but
she'd've gone. It was better that you ditched her. Always remember this,
son. This lesson is my heritage - it's all I've got left to give you. You
know what to do now son. Go and get her. The beauty is that Gascoigne will
be financing your mission."
The rest of the letter began to ramble off into violent incoherent
attacks on women and eventually ended in a string of meaningless abuse. He
lunged at a bottle of booze and not bothering to see what it was, began to
drink. He drained the bottle, and then emptied the contents of a bottle of
tablets into his mouth, which he washed down with more drink. He looked up
at the sky and shook his fist. His legs gave way and he fell on the floor.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Walker smiled for the first time in a long while. What his father had
been trying to tell him had finally permeated through his alcoholic haze.
He looked down at the body of his ex-girlfriend. It had taken a while
to catch up with them, but his father had been right. He asked for cash
and Gascoigne's deputy sent it. The final sum going to the receptionist as
a bribe to let him in the room.
He had killed her with the first blow, the axe crushing her skull, but
he chopped and chopped again, it felt good. Oh so good. He knew how his
father felt. He looked up to the sky. "Thanks dad," he smiled. He wiped
the blood from the axe. Who next? That smart alec little bitch from the
Mining Company perhaps. So many targets he could think of. He would be so
busy.......
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