DANE THORSON, CARGO-MASTER-APPRENTICE of the
SolarQueen, Galactic Free Trader spacer, Terra registry, stood in
the middle of the ship’s cramped bather while Rip Shannon,
assistant Astrogator and his senior in the Service of Trade by some
four years, applied gobs of highly scented paste to the skin
between Dane’s rather prominent shoulder blades. The small
cabin was thickly redolent with spicy odors and Rip sniffed
appreciatively.
“You’re sure going to be about the best smelling
Terran who ever set boot on Sargol’s soil,” his soft
slur of speech ended in a rich chuckle.
Dane snorted and tried to estimate progress over one
shoulder.
“The things we have to do for Trade!” his comment
carried a hint of present embarrassment. “Get it well
in—this stuff’s supposed to hold for hours. It’d
better. According to Van those Salariki can talk your ears right
off your head and say nothing worth hearing. And we have to sit and
listen until we get a straight answer out of them. Phew!” He
shook his head. In such close quarters the scent, pleasing as it
was, was also overpowering. “We would have to pick a world
such as this—”
Rip’s dark fingers halted their circular motion.
“Dane,” he warned, “don’t you go talking
against this venture. We got it soft and we’re going to be
credit-happy—if it works out—”
But, perversely, Dane held to a gloomier view of the immediate
future. “If,” he repeated. “There’s a
galaxy of ‘ifs’ in this Sargol proposition. All very
well for you to rest easy on your fins—you don’t have
to run about smelling like a spice works before you can get the
time of day from one of the natives!”
Rip put down the jar of cream. “Different worlds,
different customs,” he iterated the old tag of the Service.
“Be glad this one is so easy to conform to. There are some I
can think of—There,” he ended his message with a
stinging slap, “You’re all evenly greased. Good thing
you don’t have Van’s bulk to cover. It takes him a good
hour to get his cream on—even with Frank helping to spread. Your
clothes ought to be steamed up and ready, too, by
now—”
He opened a tight wall cabinet, originally intended to sterilize
clothing which might be contaminated by contact with organisms
inimical to Terrans. A cloud of steam fragrant with the same spicy
scent poured out.
Dane gingerly tugged loose his Trade uniform, its brown silky
fabric damp on his skin as he dressed. Luckily Sargol was warm.
When he stepped out on its ruby tinted soil this morning no
lingering taint off his off-world origin must remain to disgust the
sensitive nostrils of the Salariki. He supposed he would get used
to this process. After all this was the first time he had undergone
the ritual. But he couldn’t lose the secret conviction that
it was all very silly. Only what Rip had pointed out was the
truth—one adjusted to the customs of aliens or one
didn’t trade and there were other things he might have had to
do on other worlds which would have been far more upsetting to that
core of private fastidiousness which few would have suspected
existed in his tall, lanky frame.
“Whew—out in the open with you—!” Ali
Kamil, apprentice Engineer, screwed his too regular features into
an expression of extreme distaste and waved Dane by him in the
corridor.
For the sake of his shipmates’ olfactory nerves, Dane
hurried on to the port which gave on the ramp now tying the Queen
to Sargol’s crust. But there he lingered, waiting for Van
Rycke, the Cargo-master of the spacer and his immediate superior.
It was early morning and now that he was out of the confinement of
the ship the fresh morning winds cut about him, rippling through
the blue-green grass forest beyond, to take much of his momentary irritation with them.
There were no mountains in this section of Sargol—the highest
elevations being rounded hills tightly clothed with the same
ten-foot grass which covered the plains. From the Queen’s
observation ports, one could watch the constant ripple of the grass
so that the planet appeared to be largely clothed in a shimmering,
flowing carpet. To the west were the seas—stretches of
shallow water so cut up by strings of islands that they more
resembled a series of salty lakes. And it was what was to be found
in those seas which had lured the SolarQueen to Sargol.
Though, by rights, the discovery was that of another
Trader—Traxt Cam—who had bid for trading rights to
Sargol, hoping to make a comfortable fortune—or at least
expenses with a slight profit—in the perfume trade, exporting
from the scented planet some of its most fragrant products. But
once on Sargol he had discovered the Koros stones—gems of a new
type—a handful of which offered across the board in one of
the inner planet trading marts had nearly caused a riot among
bidding gem merchants. And Cam had been well on the way to becoming
one of the princes of Trade when he had been drawn into the vicious
net of the Limbian pirates and finished off.
Because they, too, had stumbled into the trap which was Limbo,
and had had a very definite part in breaking up that devilish
installation, the crew of the SolarQueen had claimed as their
reward the trading rights of Traxt Cam in default of legal heirs.
And so here they were on Sargol with the notes left by Cam as their
guide, and as much lore concerning the Salariki as was known
crammed into their minds.
Dane sat down on the end of the ramp, his feet on Sargolian
soil, thin, red soil with glittering bits of gold flake in it. He
did not doubt that he was under observation from hidden eyes, but
he tried to show no sign that he guessed it. The adult Salariki
maintained at all times an attitude of aloof and complete
indifference toward the Traders, but the juvenile population were
as curious as their elders were contemptuous. Perhaps there was a method of approach in that. Dane
considered the idea.
Van Rycke and Captain Jellico had handled the first
negotiations—and the process had taken most of a
day—the result totaling exactly nothing. In their contacts
with the off world men the feline ancestered Salariki were
ceremonious, wary, and completely detached. But Cam had gotten to
them somehow—or he would not have returned from his first
trip with that pouch of Koros stones. Only, among his records,
salvaged on Limbo, he had left absolutely no clue as to how he had
beaten down native sales resistance. It was baffling. But patience
had to be the middle name of every Trader and Dane had complete
faith in Van. Sooner or later the Cargo-master would find a key to
unlock the Salariki.
As if the thought of Dane’s chief had summoned him, Van
Rycke, his scented tunic sealed to his bull’s neck in
unaccustomed trimness, his cap on his blond head, strode down the
ramp, broadcasting waves of fragrance as he moved. He sniffed
vigorously as he approached his assistant and then nodded in
approval.
“So you’re all greased and ready—”
“Is the Captain coming too, sir?”
Van Rycke shook his head. “This is our headache. Patience,
my boy, patience—” He led the way through a thin screen
of the grass on the other side of the scorched landing field to a
well-packed earth road.
Again Dane felt eyes, knew that they were being watched. But no
Salarik stepped out of concealment. At least they had nothing to
fear in the way of attack. Traders were immune, taboo, and the
trading stations were set up under the white diamond shield of
peace, a peace guaranteed on blood oath by every clan chieftain in
the district. Even in the midst of interclan feuding deadly enemies
met in amity under that shield and would not turn claw knife
against each other within a two mile radius of its protection.
The grass forests rustled betrayingly, but the Terrans displayed
no interest in those who spied upon them. An insect with wings of brilliant green gauze detached itself from the
stalk of a grass tree and fluttered ahead of the Traders as if it
were an official herald. From the red soil crushed by their boots
arose a pungent odor which fought with the scent they carried with
them. Dane swallowed three or four times and hoped that his
superior officer had not noted that sign of discomfort. Though Van
Rycke, in spite of his general air of sleepy benevolence and
careless goodwill, noticed everything, no matter how trivial, which
might have a bearing on the delicate negotiations of Galactic
Trade. He had not climbed to his present status of expert
Cargo-master by overlooking anything at all. Now he gave an
order:
“Take an equalizer—”
Dane reached for his belt pouch, flushing, fiercely determined
inside himself, that no matter how smells warred about him that
day, he was not going to let it bother him. He swallowed the tiny
pellet Medic Tau had prepared for just such trials and tried to
occupy his mind with the work to come. If there would be any
work—or would another long day be wasted in futile speeches
of mutual esteem which gave formal lip service to Trade and its
manifest benefits?
“Houuuu—” The cry which was half wail, half
arrogant warning, sounded along the road behind them.
Van Rycke’s stride did not vary. He did not turn his head,
show any sign he had heard that heralding fanfare for a clan
chieftain. And he continued to keep to the exact center of the
road, Dane the regulation one pace to the rear and left as befitted
his lower rank.
“Houuu—” that blast from the throat of a
Salarik especially chosen for his lung power was accompanied now by
the hollow drum of many feet. The Terrans neither looked around nor
withdrew from the center, nor did their pace quicken.
That, too, was in order, Dane knew. To the rank conscious
Salariki clansmen you did not yield precedence unless you wanted at
once to acknowledge your inferiority—and if you did that by
some slip of admission or omission, there was no use in trying to treat face to face with their chieftains
again.
“Houuu—!” The blast behind was a scream as the
retinue it announced swept around the bend in the road to catch
sight of the two Traders oblivious of it. Dane longed to be able to
turn his head, just enough to see which one of the local lordlings
they blocked.
“Houu—” there was a questioning note in the
cry now and the heavy thud-thud of feet was slacking. The clan
party had seen them, were hesitant about the wisdom of trying to
shove them aside.
Van Rycke marched steadily onward and Dane matched his pace.
They might not possess a leather-lunged herald to clear their road,
but they gave every indication of having the right to occupy as
much of it as they wished. And that unruffled poise had its affect
upon those behind. The pound of feet slowed to a walk, a walk which
would keep a careful distance behind the two Terrans. It had
worked—the Salariki—or these Salariki—were
accepting them at their own valuation—a good omen for the
day’s business. Dane’s spirits rose, but he schooled
his features into a mask as wooden as his superior’s. After
all this was a very minor victory and they had ten or twelve hours
of polite, and hidden, maneuvering before them.
The SolarQueen had set down as closely as possible to the
trading center marked on Traxt Cam’s private map and the
Terrans now had another five minutes march, in the middle of the
road, ahead of the chieftain who must be inwardly boiling at their
presence, before they came out in the clearing containing the
roofless, circular erection which served the Salariki of the
district as a market place and a common meeting ground for truce
talks and the mending of private clan alliances. Erect on a pole in
the middle, towering well above the nodding fronds of the grass
trees, was the pole bearing the trade shield which promised not
only peace to those under it, but a three day sanctuary to any
feuder or duelist who managed to win to it and lay hands upon its
weathered standard.
They were not the first to arrive, which was also a good thing.
Gathered in small groups about the walls of the council place were
the personal attendants, liege warriors, and younger relatives of
at least four or five clan chieftains. But, Dane noted at once,
there was not a single curtained litter or riding orgel to be seen.
None of the feminine part of the Salariki species had arrived. Nor
would they until the final trade treaty was concluded and
established by their fathers, husbands, or sons.
With the assurance of one who was master in his own clan, Van
Rycke, displaying no interest at all in the shifting mass of lower
rank Salariki, marched straight on to the door of the enclosure.
Two or three of the younger warriors got to their feet, their
brilliant cloaks flicking out like spreading wings. But when Van
Rycke did not even lift an eyelid in their direction, they made no
move to block his path.
As fighting men, Dane thought, trying to study the specimens
before him with a totally impersonal stare, the Salariki were an
impressive lot. Their average height was close to six feet, their
distant feline ancestry apparent only in small vestiges. A
Salarik’s nails on both hands and feet were retractile, his
skin was gray, his thick hair, close to the texture of plushy fur,
extended down his backbone and along the outside of his well
muscled arms and legs, and was tawny-yellow, blue-gray or white. To
Terran eyes the broad faces, now all turned in their direction,
lacked readable expression. The eyes were large and set slightly
aslant in the skull, being startlingly orange-red or a brilliant
turquoise green-blue. They wore loin cloths of brightly dyed
fabrics with wide sashes forming corselets about their slender
middles, from which gleamed the gem-set hilts of their claw knives,
the possession of which proved their adulthood. Cloaks as
flamboyant as their other garments hung in bat wing folds from
their shoulders and each and every one moved in an invisible cloud
of perfume.
Brilliant as the assemblage of liege men without had been, the
gathering of clan leaders and their upper officers within the
council place was a riot of color—and odor. The chieftains
were installed on the wooden stools, each with a small table before
him on which rested a goblet bearing his own clan sign, a folded
strip of patterned cloth—his “trade shield”—and a gemmed box containing the scented paste he would use
for refreshment during the ordeal of conference.
A breeze fluttered sash ends and tugged at cloaks, otherwise the
assembly was motionless and awesomely quiet. Still making no
overtures Van Rycke crossed to a stool and table which stood a
little apart and seated himself. Dane went into the action required
of him. Before his superior he set out a plastic pocket flask, its
color as alive in the sunlight as the crudely cut gems which the
Salariki sported, a fine silk handkerchief, and, last of all, a
bottle of Terran smelling salts provided by Medic Tau as a
necessary restorative after some hours’ combination of Salariki
oratory and Salariki perfumes. Having thus done the duty of liege
man, Dane was at liberty to seat himself, cross-legged on the
ground behind his chief, as the other sons, heirs, and advisors had
gathered behind their lords.
The chieftain whose arrival they had in a manner delayed came in
after them and Dane saw that it was Fashdor—another piece of
luck—since that clan was a small one and the chieftain had
little influence. Had they so slowed Halfer or Paft it might be a
different matter altogether.
Fashdor was established at his seat, his belongings spread out,
and Dane, counting unobtrusively, was certain that the council was
now complete. Seven clans Traxt Cam had recorded divided the sea
coast territory and there were seven chieftains
here—indicative of the importance of this meeting since some
of these clans, beyond the radius of the shield peace, must be
fighting a vicious blood feud at that very moment. Yes, seven were
here. Yet there still remained a single stool, directly across the
circle from Van Rycke. An empty stool—who was the late
comer?
That question was answered almost as it flashed into
Dane’s mind. But no Salariki lordling came through the door.
Dane’s self-control kept him in his place, even after he
caught the meaning of the insignia emblazoned across the
newcomer’s tunic. Trader—and not only a Trader but a
Company man! But why—and how? The Companies only went after
big game—this was a planet thrown open to Free Traders, the
independents of the star lanes. By law and right no Company man had
any place here. Unless—behind a face Dane strove to keep as
impassive as Van’s his thoughts raced. Traxt Cam as a Free
Trader had bid for the right to exploit Sargol when its sole
exportable product was deemed to be perfume—a small,
unimportant trade as far as the Companies were concerned. And then
the Koros stones had been found and the importance of Sargol must
have boomed as far as the big boys could see. They probably knew of
Traxt Cam’s death as soon as the Patrol report on Limbo had
been sent to Headquarters. The Companies all maintained their
private information and espionage services. And, with Traxt Cam
dead without an heir, they had seen their chance and moved in.
Only, Dane’s teeth set firmly, they didn’t have the
ghost of a chance now. Legally there was only one Trader on Sargol
and that was the SolarQueen, Captain Jellico had his records
signed by the Patrol to prove that. And all this Inter-Solar man
could do now was to bow out and try poaching elsewhere.
But the I-S man appeared to be in no haste to follow that only
possible course. He was seating himself with arrogant dignity on
that unoccupied stool, and a younger man in I-S uniform was putting
before him the same type of equipment Dane had produced for Van
Rycke. The Cargo-master of the SolarQueen showed no surprise, if
the Eysies’ appearance had been such to him.
One of the younger warriors in Paft’s train got to his
feet and brought his hands together with a clap which echoed across
the silent gathering with the force of an archaic solid projectile
shot. A Salarik, wearing the rich dress of the upper ranks, but also the collar forced upon a captive taken in
combat, came into the enclosure carrying a jug in both hands.
Preceded by Paft’s son he made the rounds of the assembly
pouring a purple liquid from his jug into the goblet before each
chieftain, a goblet which Paft’s heirs tasted ceremoniously
before it was presented to the visiting clan leader. When they
paused before Van Rycke the Salarik nobleman touched the side of
the plasta flask in token. It was recognized that off world men
must be cautious over the sampling of local products and that when
they joined in the Taking of the First Cup of Peace, they did so
symbolically.
Paft raised his cup, his gesture copied by everyone around the
circle. In the harsh tongue of his race he repeated a formula so
archaic that few of the Salariki could now translate the sing-song
words. They drank and the meeting was formally opened.
But it was an elderly Salarik seated to the right of Halfer, a
man who wore no claw knife and whose dusky yellow cloak and sash
made a subdued note amid the splendor of his fellows, who spoke
first, using the click-clack of the Trade Lingo his nation had
learned from Cam.
“Under the white,” he pointed to the shield aloft,
“we assemble to hear many things. But now come two tongues to
speak where once there was but one father of a clan. Tell us,
outlanders, which of you must we now hark to in truth?” He
looked from Van Rycke to the I-S representative.
The Cargo-master from the Queen did not reply. He stared across
the circle at the Company man. Dane waited eagerly. What
was the I-S going to say to that?
But the fellow did have an answer, ready and waiting. “It
is true, fathers of clans, that here are two voices, where by right
and custom there should only be one. But this is a matter which can
be decided between us. Give us leave to withdraw from your sight
and speak privately together. Then he who returns to you will be
the true voice and there shall be no more
division—”
It was Paft who broke in before Halfer’s spokesman could
reply.
“It would have been better to have spoken together before
you came to us. Go then until the shadow of the shield is not, then
return hither and speak truly. We do not wait upon the pleasure of
outlanders—”
A murmur approved that tart comment. “Until the shadow of
the shield is not.” They had until noon. Van Rycke arose and
Dane gathered up his chief’s possessions. With the same
superiority to his surroundings he had shown upon entering, the
Cargo-master left the enclosure, the Eysies following. But they
were away from the clearing, out upon the road back to the Queen
before the two from the Company caught up with them.
“Captain Grange will see you right away—” the
Eysie Cargo-master was beginning when Van Rycke met him with a
quelling stare.
“If you poachers have anything to say—you say it at
the Queen and to Captain Jellico,” he stated flatly and
started on.
Above his tight tunic collar the other’s face flushed, his
teeth flashed as he caught his lower lip between them as if to
forcibly restrain an answer he longed to make. For a second he
hesitated and then he vanished down a side path with his assistant.
Van Rycke had gone a quarter of the distance back to the ship
before he spoke.
“I thought it was too easy,” he muttered. “Now
we’re in for it—maybe right up the rockets! By the
Spiked Tail of Exol, this is certainly not our lucky
day!” He quickened pace until they were close to
trotting.
DANE THORSON, CARGO-MASTER-APPRENTICE of the
SolarQueen, Galactic Free Trader spacer, Terra registry, stood in
the middle of the ship’s cramped bather while Rip Shannon,
assistant Astrogator and his senior in the Service of Trade by some
four years, applied gobs of highly scented paste to the skin
between Dane’s rather prominent shoulder blades. The small
cabin was thickly redolent with spicy odors and Rip sniffed
appreciatively.
“You’re sure going to be about the best smelling
Terran who ever set boot on Sargol’s soil,” his soft
slur of speech ended in a rich chuckle.
Dane snorted and tried to estimate progress over one
shoulder.
“The things we have to do for Trade!” his comment
carried a hint of present embarrassment. “Get it well
in—this stuff’s supposed to hold for hours. It’d
better. According to Van those Salariki can talk your ears right
off your head and say nothing worth hearing. And we have to sit and
listen until we get a straight answer out of them. Phew!” He
shook his head. In such close quarters the scent, pleasing as it
was, was also overpowering. “We would have to pick a world
such as this—”
Rip’s dark fingers halted their circular motion.
“Dane,” he warned, “don’t you go talking
against this venture. We got it soft and we’re going to be
credit-happy—if it works out—”
But, perversely, Dane held to a gloomier view of the immediate
future. “If,” he repeated. “There’s a
galaxy of ‘ifs’ in this Sargol proposition. All very
well for you to rest easy on your fins—you don’t have
to run about smelling like a spice works before you can get the
time of day from one of the natives!”
Rip put down the jar of cream. “Different worlds,
different customs,” he iterated the old tag of the Service.
“Be glad this one is so easy to conform to. There are some I
can think of—There,” he ended his message with a
stinging slap, “You’re all evenly greased. Good thing
you don’t have Van’s bulk to cover. It takes him a good
hour to get his cream on—even with Frank helping to spread. Your
clothes ought to be steamed up and ready, too, by
now—”
He opened a tight wall cabinet, originally intended to sterilize
clothing which might be contaminated by contact with organisms
inimical to Terrans. A cloud of steam fragrant with the same spicy
scent poured out.
Dane gingerly tugged loose his Trade uniform, its brown silky
fabric damp on his skin as he dressed. Luckily Sargol was warm.
When he stepped out on its ruby tinted soil this morning no
lingering taint off his off-world origin must remain to disgust the
sensitive nostrils of the Salariki. He supposed he would get used
to this process. After all this was the first time he had undergone
the ritual. But he couldn’t lose the secret conviction that
it was all very silly. Only what Rip had pointed out was the
truth—one adjusted to the customs of aliens or one
didn’t trade and there were other things he might have had to
do on other worlds which would have been far more upsetting to that
core of private fastidiousness which few would have suspected
existed in his tall, lanky frame.
“Whew—out in the open with you—!” Ali
Kamil, apprentice Engineer, screwed his too regular features into
an expression of extreme distaste and waved Dane by him in the
corridor.
For the sake of his shipmates’ olfactory nerves, Dane
hurried on to the port which gave on the ramp now tying the Queen
to Sargol’s crust. But there he lingered, waiting for Van
Rycke, the Cargo-master of the spacer and his immediate superior.
It was early morning and now that he was out of the confinement of
the ship the fresh morning winds cut about him, rippling through
the blue-green grass forest beyond, to take much of his momentary irritation with them.
There were no mountains in this section of Sargol—the highest
elevations being rounded hills tightly clothed with the same
ten-foot grass which covered the plains. From the Queen’s
observation ports, one could watch the constant ripple of the grass
so that the planet appeared to be largely clothed in a shimmering,
flowing carpet. To the west were the seas—stretches of
shallow water so cut up by strings of islands that they more
resembled a series of salty lakes. And it was what was to be found
in those seas which had lured the SolarQueen to Sargol.
Though, by rights, the discovery was that of another
Trader—Traxt Cam—who had bid for trading rights to
Sargol, hoping to make a comfortable fortune—or at least
expenses with a slight profit—in the perfume trade, exporting
from the scented planet some of its most fragrant products. But
once on Sargol he had discovered the Koros stones—gems of a new
type—a handful of which offered across the board in one of
the inner planet trading marts had nearly caused a riot among
bidding gem merchants. And Cam had been well on the way to becoming
one of the princes of Trade when he had been drawn into the vicious
net of the Limbian pirates and finished off.
Because they, too, had stumbled into the trap which was Limbo,
and had had a very definite part in breaking up that devilish
installation, the crew of the SolarQueen had claimed as their
reward the trading rights of Traxt Cam in default of legal heirs.
And so here they were on Sargol with the notes left by Cam as their
guide, and as much lore concerning the Salariki as was known
crammed into their minds.
Dane sat down on the end of the ramp, his feet on Sargolian
soil, thin, red soil with glittering bits of gold flake in it. He
did not doubt that he was under observation from hidden eyes, but
he tried to show no sign that he guessed it. The adult Salariki
maintained at all times an attitude of aloof and complete
indifference toward the Traders, but the juvenile population were
as curious as their elders were contemptuous. Perhaps there was a method of approach in that. Dane
considered the idea.
Van Rycke and Captain Jellico had handled the first
negotiations—and the process had taken most of a
day—the result totaling exactly nothing. In their contacts
with the off world men the feline ancestered Salariki were
ceremonious, wary, and completely detached. But Cam had gotten to
them somehow—or he would not have returned from his first
trip with that pouch of Koros stones. Only, among his records,
salvaged on Limbo, he had left absolutely no clue as to how he had
beaten down native sales resistance. It was baffling. But patience
had to be the middle name of every Trader and Dane had complete
faith in Van. Sooner or later the Cargo-master would find a key to
unlock the Salariki.
As if the thought of Dane’s chief had summoned him, Van
Rycke, his scented tunic sealed to his bull’s neck in
unaccustomed trimness, his cap on his blond head, strode down the
ramp, broadcasting waves of fragrance as he moved. He sniffed
vigorously as he approached his assistant and then nodded in
approval.
“So you’re all greased and ready—”
“Is the Captain coming too, sir?”
Van Rycke shook his head. “This is our headache. Patience,
my boy, patience—” He led the way through a thin screen
of the grass on the other side of the scorched landing field to a
well-packed earth road.
Again Dane felt eyes, knew that they were being watched. But no
Salarik stepped out of concealment. At least they had nothing to
fear in the way of attack. Traders were immune, taboo, and the
trading stations were set up under the white diamond shield of
peace, a peace guaranteed on blood oath by every clan chieftain in
the district. Even in the midst of interclan feuding deadly enemies
met in amity under that shield and would not turn claw knife
against each other within a two mile radius of its protection.
The grass forests rustled betrayingly, but the Terrans displayed
no interest in those who spied upon them. An insect with wings of brilliant green gauze detached itself from the
stalk of a grass tree and fluttered ahead of the Traders as if it
were an official herald. From the red soil crushed by their boots
arose a pungent odor which fought with the scent they carried with
them. Dane swallowed three or four times and hoped that his
superior officer had not noted that sign of discomfort. Though Van
Rycke, in spite of his general air of sleepy benevolence and
careless goodwill, noticed everything, no matter how trivial, which
might have a bearing on the delicate negotiations of Galactic
Trade. He had not climbed to his present status of expert
Cargo-master by overlooking anything at all. Now he gave an
order:
“Take an equalizer—”
Dane reached for his belt pouch, flushing, fiercely determined
inside himself, that no matter how smells warred about him that
day, he was not going to let it bother him. He swallowed the tiny
pellet Medic Tau had prepared for just such trials and tried to
occupy his mind with the work to come. If there would be any
work—or would another long day be wasted in futile speeches
of mutual esteem which gave formal lip service to Trade and its
manifest benefits?
“Houuuu—” The cry which was half wail, half
arrogant warning, sounded along the road behind them.
Van Rycke’s stride did not vary. He did not turn his head,
show any sign he had heard that heralding fanfare for a clan
chieftain. And he continued to keep to the exact center of the
road, Dane the regulation one pace to the rear and left as befitted
his lower rank.
“Houuu—” that blast from the throat of a
Salarik especially chosen for his lung power was accompanied now by
the hollow drum of many feet. The Terrans neither looked around nor
withdrew from the center, nor did their pace quicken.
That, too, was in order, Dane knew. To the rank conscious
Salariki clansmen you did not yield precedence unless you wanted at
once to acknowledge your inferiority—and if you did that by
some slip of admission or omission, there was no use in trying to treat face to face with their chieftains
again.
“Houuu—!” The blast behind was a scream as the
retinue it announced swept around the bend in the road to catch
sight of the two Traders oblivious of it. Dane longed to be able to
turn his head, just enough to see which one of the local lordlings
they blocked.
“Houu—” there was a questioning note in the
cry now and the heavy thud-thud of feet was slacking. The clan
party had seen them, were hesitant about the wisdom of trying to
shove them aside.
Van Rycke marched steadily onward and Dane matched his pace.
They might not possess a leather-lunged herald to clear their road,
but they gave every indication of having the right to occupy as
much of it as they wished. And that unruffled poise had its affect
upon those behind. The pound of feet slowed to a walk, a walk which
would keep a careful distance behind the two Terrans. It had
worked—the Salariki—or these Salariki—were
accepting them at their own valuation—a good omen for the
day’s business. Dane’s spirits rose, but he schooled
his features into a mask as wooden as his superior’s. After
all this was a very minor victory and they had ten or twelve hours
of polite, and hidden, maneuvering before them.
The SolarQueen had set down as closely as possible to the
trading center marked on Traxt Cam’s private map and the
Terrans now had another five minutes march, in the middle of the
road, ahead of the chieftain who must be inwardly boiling at their
presence, before they came out in the clearing containing the
roofless, circular erection which served the Salariki of the
district as a market place and a common meeting ground for truce
talks and the mending of private clan alliances. Erect on a pole in
the middle, towering well above the nodding fronds of the grass
trees, was the pole bearing the trade shield which promised not
only peace to those under it, but a three day sanctuary to any
feuder or duelist who managed to win to it and lay hands upon its
weathered standard.
They were not the first to arrive, which was also a good thing.
Gathered in small groups about the walls of the council place were
the personal attendants, liege warriors, and younger relatives of
at least four or five clan chieftains. But, Dane noted at once,
there was not a single curtained litter or riding orgel to be seen.
None of the feminine part of the Salariki species had arrived. Nor
would they until the final trade treaty was concluded and
established by their fathers, husbands, or sons.
With the assurance of one who was master in his own clan, Van
Rycke, displaying no interest at all in the shifting mass of lower
rank Salariki, marched straight on to the door of the enclosure.
Two or three of the younger warriors got to their feet, their
brilliant cloaks flicking out like spreading wings. But when Van
Rycke did not even lift an eyelid in their direction, they made no
move to block his path.
As fighting men, Dane thought, trying to study the specimens
before him with a totally impersonal stare, the Salariki were an
impressive lot. Their average height was close to six feet, their
distant feline ancestry apparent only in small vestiges. A
Salarik’s nails on both hands and feet were retractile, his
skin was gray, his thick hair, close to the texture of plushy fur,
extended down his backbone and along the outside of his well
muscled arms and legs, and was tawny-yellow, blue-gray or white. To
Terran eyes the broad faces, now all turned in their direction,
lacked readable expression. The eyes were large and set slightly
aslant in the skull, being startlingly orange-red or a brilliant
turquoise green-blue. They wore loin cloths of brightly dyed
fabrics with wide sashes forming corselets about their slender
middles, from which gleamed the gem-set hilts of their claw knives,
the possession of which proved their adulthood. Cloaks as
flamboyant as their other garments hung in bat wing folds from
their shoulders and each and every one moved in an invisible cloud
of perfume.
Brilliant as the assemblage of liege men without had been, the
gathering of clan leaders and their upper officers within the
council place was a riot of color—and odor. The chieftains
were installed on the wooden stools, each with a small table before
him on which rested a goblet bearing his own clan sign, a folded
strip of patterned cloth—his “trade shield”—and a gemmed box containing the scented paste he would use
for refreshment during the ordeal of conference.
A breeze fluttered sash ends and tugged at cloaks, otherwise the
assembly was motionless and awesomely quiet. Still making no
overtures Van Rycke crossed to a stool and table which stood a
little apart and seated himself. Dane went into the action required
of him. Before his superior he set out a plastic pocket flask, its
color as alive in the sunlight as the crudely cut gems which the
Salariki sported, a fine silk handkerchief, and, last of all, a
bottle of Terran smelling salts provided by Medic Tau as a
necessary restorative after some hours’ combination of Salariki
oratory and Salariki perfumes. Having thus done the duty of liege
man, Dane was at liberty to seat himself, cross-legged on the
ground behind his chief, as the other sons, heirs, and advisors had
gathered behind their lords.
The chieftain whose arrival they had in a manner delayed came in
after them and Dane saw that it was Fashdor—another piece of
luck—since that clan was a small one and the chieftain had
little influence. Had they so slowed Halfer or Paft it might be a
different matter altogether.
Fashdor was established at his seat, his belongings spread out,
and Dane, counting unobtrusively, was certain that the council was
now complete. Seven clans Traxt Cam had recorded divided the sea
coast territory and there were seven chieftains
here—indicative of the importance of this meeting since some
of these clans, beyond the radius of the shield peace, must be
fighting a vicious blood feud at that very moment. Yes, seven were
here. Yet there still remained a single stool, directly across the
circle from Van Rycke. An empty stool—who was the late
comer?
That question was answered almost as it flashed into
Dane’s mind. But no Salariki lordling came through the door.
Dane’s self-control kept him in his place, even after he
caught the meaning of the insignia emblazoned across the
newcomer’s tunic. Trader—and not only a Trader but a
Company man! But why—and how? The Companies only went after
big game—this was a planet thrown open to Free Traders, the
independents of the star lanes. By law and right no Company man had
any place here. Unless—behind a face Dane strove to keep as
impassive as Van’s his thoughts raced. Traxt Cam as a Free
Trader had bid for the right to exploit Sargol when its sole
exportable product was deemed to be perfume—a small,
unimportant trade as far as the Companies were concerned. And then
the Koros stones had been found and the importance of Sargol must
have boomed as far as the big boys could see. They probably knew of
Traxt Cam’s death as soon as the Patrol report on Limbo had
been sent to Headquarters. The Companies all maintained their
private information and espionage services. And, with Traxt Cam
dead without an heir, they had seen their chance and moved in.
Only, Dane’s teeth set firmly, they didn’t have the
ghost of a chance now. Legally there was only one Trader on Sargol
and that was the SolarQueen, Captain Jellico had his records
signed by the Patrol to prove that. And all this Inter-Solar man
could do now was to bow out and try poaching elsewhere.
But the I-S man appeared to be in no haste to follow that only
possible course. He was seating himself with arrogant dignity on
that unoccupied stool, and a younger man in I-S uniform was putting
before him the same type of equipment Dane had produced for Van
Rycke. The Cargo-master of the SolarQueen showed no surprise, if
the Eysies’ appearance had been such to him.
One of the younger warriors in Paft’s train got to his
feet and brought his hands together with a clap which echoed across
the silent gathering with the force of an archaic solid projectile
shot. A Salarik, wearing the rich dress of the upper ranks, but also the collar forced upon a captive taken in
combat, came into the enclosure carrying a jug in both hands.
Preceded by Paft’s son he made the rounds of the assembly
pouring a purple liquid from his jug into the goblet before each
chieftain, a goblet which Paft’s heirs tasted ceremoniously
before it was presented to the visiting clan leader. When they
paused before Van Rycke the Salarik nobleman touched the side of
the plasta flask in token. It was recognized that off world men
must be cautious over the sampling of local products and that when
they joined in the Taking of the First Cup of Peace, they did so
symbolically.
Paft raised his cup, his gesture copied by everyone around the
circle. In the harsh tongue of his race he repeated a formula so
archaic that few of the Salariki could now translate the sing-song
words. They drank and the meeting was formally opened.
But it was an elderly Salarik seated to the right of Halfer, a
man who wore no claw knife and whose dusky yellow cloak and sash
made a subdued note amid the splendor of his fellows, who spoke
first, using the click-clack of the Trade Lingo his nation had
learned from Cam.
“Under the white,” he pointed to the shield aloft,
“we assemble to hear many things. But now come two tongues to
speak where once there was but one father of a clan. Tell us,
outlanders, which of you must we now hark to in truth?” He
looked from Van Rycke to the I-S representative.
The Cargo-master from the Queen did not reply. He stared across
the circle at the Company man. Dane waited eagerly. What
was the I-S going to say to that?
But the fellow did have an answer, ready and waiting. “It
is true, fathers of clans, that here are two voices, where by right
and custom there should only be one. But this is a matter which can
be decided between us. Give us leave to withdraw from your sight
and speak privately together. Then he who returns to you will be
the true voice and there shall be no more
division—”
It was Paft who broke in before Halfer’s spokesman could
reply.
“It would have been better to have spoken together before
you came to us. Go then until the shadow of the shield is not, then
return hither and speak truly. We do not wait upon the pleasure of
outlanders—”
A murmur approved that tart comment. “Until the shadow of
the shield is not.” They had until noon. Van Rycke arose and
Dane gathered up his chief’s possessions. With the same
superiority to his surroundings he had shown upon entering, the
Cargo-master left the enclosure, the Eysies following. But they
were away from the clearing, out upon the road back to the Queen
before the two from the Company caught up with them.
“Captain Grange will see you right away—” the
Eysie Cargo-master was beginning when Van Rycke met him with a
quelling stare.
“If you poachers have anything to say—you say it at
the Queen and to Captain Jellico,” he stated flatly and
started on.
Above his tight tunic collar the other’s face flushed, his
teeth flashed as he caught his lower lip between them as if to
forcibly restrain an answer he longed to make. For a second he
hesitated and then he vanished down a side path with his assistant.
Van Rycke had gone a quarter of the distance back to the ship
before he spoke.
“I thought it was too easy,” he muttered. “Now
we’re in for it—maybe right up the rockets! By the
Spiked Tail of Exol, this is certainly not our lucky
day!” He quickened pace until they were close to
trotting.