"THAT’s FAR ENOUGH,
Eysie!”
Although Traders by law and tradition carried no more potent
personal weapons—except in times of great crisis—than hand sleep rods, the resultant shot from the latter was
just as unpleasant for temporary periods as a more forceful
beam—and the threat of it was enough to halt the three men
who had come to the foot of the Queen’s ramp and who could
see the rod held rather negligently by Ali. Ali’s eyes were
anything but negligent, however, and Free Traders had reputations
to be respected by their rivals of the Companies. The very nature
of their roving lives taught them savage lessons—which they
either learned or died.
Dane, glancing down over the Engineer-apprentice’s
shoulder, saw that Van Rycke’s assumption of confidence had
indeed paid off. They had left the trade enclosure of the Salariki
barely three-quarters of an hour ago. But below now stood the
bebadged Captain of the I-S ship and his Cargo-master.
“I want to speak to your Captain—” snarled the
Eysie officer.
Ali registered faint amusement, an expression which tended to
rouse the worst in the spectator, as Dane knew of old when that
same mocking appraisal had been turned on him as the rawest of the
Queen’s crew.
“But does he wish to speak to you?”
countered Kamil. “Just stay where you are, Eysie, until we
are sure about that fact.”
That was his cue to act as messenger. Dane retreated into the
ship and swung up the ladder to the command section. As he passed
Captain Jellico’s private cabin he heard the muffled squall
of the commander’s unpleasant pet—Queex, the
Hoobat—a nightmare combination of crab, parrot and toad,
wearing a blue feather coating and inclined to scream and spit at
all comers. Since Queex would not be howling in that fashion if its
master was present, Dane kept on to the control cabin where he
blundered in upon an executive level conference of Captain,
Cargo-master and Astrogator.
“Well?” Jellico’s blaster scarred left cheek
twitched as he snapped that impatient inquiry at the messenger.
“Eysie Captain below, sir. With his Cargo-master. They
want to see you—”
Jellico’s mouth was a straight line, his eyes very hard.
By instinct Dane’s hand went to the grip of the sleep rod
slung at his belt. When the Old Man put on his fighting face—look
out! Here we go again, he told himself, speculating as to just what
type of action lay before them now.
“Oh, they do, do they!” Jellico began and then
throttled down the temper he could put under iron control when and
if it were necessary. “Very well, tell them to stay where
they are. Van, we’ll go down—”
For a moment the Cargo-master hesitated, his heavy-lidded eyes
looked sleepy, he seemed almost disinterested in the suggestion.
And when he nodded it was with the air of someone about to perform
some boring duty.
“Right, sir.” He wriggled his heavy body from behind
the small table, resealed his tunic, and settled his cap with as
much precision as if he were about to represent the Queen before
the assembled nobility of Sargol.
Dane hurried down the ladders, coming to a halt beside Ali. It
was the turn of the man at the foot of the ramp to bark an
impatient demand:
“Well?” (Was that the theme word of every
Captain’s vocabulary?)
“You wait,” Dane replied with no inclination to give
the Eysie officer any courtesy address. Close to a Terran year
aboard the SolarQueen had inoculated him with pride in his own
section of Service. A Free Trader was answerable to his own
officers and to no one else on Earth—or among the stars—no matter how much discipline and official etiquette the
Companies used to enhance their power.
He half expected the I-S officers to leave after an answer such
as that. For a Company Captain to be forced to wait upon the
convenience of a Free Trader must be galling in the extreme. And
the fact that this one was doing just that was an indication that
the Queen’s crew did, perhaps, have the edge of advantage in
any coming bargain. In the meantime the Eysie contingent fumed below while Ali lounged
whistling against the exit port, playing with his sleep rod and
Dane studied the grass forest. His boot nudged a packet just inside
the port casing and he glanced inquiringly from it to Ali.
“Cat ransom,” the other answered his unspoken
question.
So that was it—the fee for Sinbad’s return.
“What is it today?”
“Sugar—about a tablespoon full,” the
Engineer-assistant returned, “and two colored steelos. So far
they haven’t run up the price on us. I think they’re
sharing out the spoil evenly, a new cub brings him back every
night.”
As did all Terran ships, the SolarQueen carried a cat as an
important member of her regular crew. And the portly Sinbad, before
their landing on Sargol, had never presented any problem. He had
done his duty of ridding the ship of unusual and usual pests and
cargo despoilers with dispatch, neatness and energy. And when in
port on alien worlds had never shown any inclination to go
a-roving.
But the scents of Sargol had apparently intoxicated him,
shearing away his solid dignity and middle-aged dependability. Now
Sinbad flashed out of the Queen at the opening of her port in the
early morning and was brought back, protesting with both voice and
claws, at the end of the day by that member of the juvenile
population whose turn it was to collect the standing reward for his
forceful delivery. Within three days it had become an accepted
business transaction which satisfied everyone but Sinbad.
The scrape of metal boot soles on ladder rungs warned of the
arrival of their officers. Ali and Dane withdrew down the corridor,
leaving the entrance open for Jellico and Van Rycke. Then they
drifted back to witness the meeting with the Eysies.
There were no prolonged greetings between the two parties, no
offer of hospitality as might have been expected between Terrans on
an alien planet a quarter of the Galaxy away from the earth which had given them a common heritage.
Jellico, with Van Rycke at his shoulder, halted before he
stepped from the ramp so that the three Inter-Solar men, Captain,
Cargo-master and escort, whether they wished or no, were put in the
disadvantageous position of having to look up to a Captain whom
they, as members of one of the powerful Companies, affected to
despise. The lean, well muscled, trim figure of the Queen’s
commander gave the impression of hard bitten force held in check by
will control, just as his face under its thick layer of space burn
was that of an adventurer accustomed to make split second
decisions—an estimate underlined by that seam of blaster
burn across one flat cheek.
Van Rycke, with a slight change of dress, could have been a
Company man in the higher ranks—or so the casual observer
would have placed him, until such an observer marked the eyes
behind those sleepy drooping lids, or caught a certain note in the
calm, unhurried drawl of his voice. To look at the two senior
officers of the Free Trading spacer were the antithesis of each
other—in action they were each half of a powerful,
steamroller whole—as a good many men in the
Service—scattered over a half dozen or so planets—had
discovered to their cost in the past.
Now Jellico brought the heels of his space boots together with
an extravagant click and his hand flourished at the fore of his
helmet in a gesture which was better suited to the Patrol hero of a
slightly out-of-date Video serial.
“Jellico, SolarQueen, Free Trader,” he identified
himself brusquely, and added, “This is Van Rycke, our
Cargo-master.”
Not all the flush had faded from the face of the I-S
Captain.
“Grange of the Dart,” he did not even sketch a
salute. “Inter-Solar. Kallee, Cargo-master—” And
he did not name the hovering third member of his party.
Jellico stood waiting and after a long moment of silence Grange
was forced to state his business.
“We have until noon—”
Jellico, his fingers hooked in his belt, simply waited. And
under his level gaze the Eysie Captain began to find the going
hard.
“They have given us until noon,” he started once
more, “to get together—”
Jellico’s voice came, coldly remote. “There is no
reason for any ‘getting together,’ Grange. By rights I
can have you up before the Trade Board for poaching. The SolarQueen has sole trading rights here. If you up-ship within a
reasonable amount of time, I’ll be inclined to let it pass.
After all I’ve no desire to run all the way to the nearest
Patrol post to report you—”
“You can’t expect to buck Inter-Solar. We’ll
make you an offer—” That was Kallee’s
contribution, made probably because his commanding officer
couldn’t find words explosive enough.
Jellico, whose forte was more direct action, took an excursion
into heavy-handed sarcasm. “You Eysies have certainly been
given excellent briefing. I would advise a little closer study of
the Code—and not the sections in small symbols at the end of
the tape, either! We’re not bucking anyone.
You’ll find our registration for Sargol down on tapes at the
Center. And I suggest that the sooner you withdraw the
better—before we cite you for illegal planeting.”
Grange had gained control of his emotions. “We’re
pretty far from Center here,” he remarked. It was a statement
of fact, but it carried over-tones which they were able to assess
correctly. The SolarQueen was a Free Trader, alone on an alien
world. But the I-S ship might be cruising in company, ready to
summon aid, men and supplies. Dane drew a deep breath, the Eysies
must be sure of themselves, not only that, but they must
want what Sargol had to offer to the point of being willing to step
outside the law to get it.
The I-S Captain took a step forward. “I think we
understand each other now,” he said, his confidence
restored.
Van Rycke answered him, his deep voice cutting across the
sighing of the wind in the grass forest.
“Your proposition?”
Perhaps this return to their implied threat bolstered their
belief in the infallibility of the Company, their conviction that
no independent dared stand up against the might and power of
Inter-Solar. Kallee replied:
“We’ll take up your contract, at a profit to you,
and you up-ship before the Salariki are confused over whom they are
to deal with—”
“And the amount of profit?” Van Rycke bored in.
“Oh,” Kallee shrugged, “say ten percent of
Cam’s last shipment—”
Jellico laughed. “Generous, aren’t you, Eysie? Ten
percent of a cargo which can’t be assessed—the gang on
Limbo kept no records of what they plundered.”
“We don’t know what he was carrying when he crashed
on Limbo,” countered Kallee swiftly. “We’ll base
our offer on what he carried to Axal.”
Now Van Rycke chuckled. “I wonder who figured that one
out?” he inquired of the scented winds. “He must save
the Company a fair amount of credits one way or another.
Interesting offer—”
By the bland satisfaction to be read on the three faces below
the I-S men were assured of their victory. The SolarQueen would be
paid off with a pittance, under the vague threat of Company
retaliation she would up-ship from Sargol, and they would be left
in possession of the rich Koros trade—to be commended and
rewarded by their superiors. Had they, Dane speculated, ever had
any dealings with Free Traders before—at least with the brand
of independent adventurers such as manned the SolarQueen?
Van Rycke burrowed in his belt pouch and then held out his hand.
On the broad palm lay a flat disc of metal. “Very
interesting—” he repeated. “I shall treasure this
recording—”
The sight of that disc wiped all satisfaction from the Eysie
faces. Grange’s purplish flush spread up from his tight tunic
collar, Kallee blinked, and the unknown third’s hand dropped
to his sleep rod. An action which was not overlooked by either Dane
or Ali.
“A smooth set down to you,” Jellico gave the
conventional leave taking of the Service.
“You’d better—” the Eysie Captain began
hotly, and then seeing the disc Van Rycke held—that sensitive
bit of metal and plastic which was recording this interview for
future reference, he shut his mouth tight.
“Yes?” the Queen’s Cargo-master prompted
politely. But Kallee had taken his Captain’s arm and was
urging Grange away from the spacer.
“You have until noon to lift,” was Jellico’s
parting shot as the three in Company livery started toward the
road.
“I don’t think that they will,” he added to
Van Rycke.
The Cargo-master nodded. “You wouldn’t in their
place,” he pointed out reasonably. “On the other hand
they’ve had a bit of a blast they weren’t expecting.
It’s been a long time since Grange heard anyone say
‘no.’”
“A shock which is going to wear off,”
Jellico’s habitual distrust of the future gathered force.
“This,” Van Rycke tucked the disc back into his
pouch, “sent them off vector a parsec or two. Grange is not
one of the strong arm blaster boys. Suppose Tang Ya does a little
listening in—and maybe we can rig another surprise if Grange
does try to ask advice of someone off world. In the meantime I
don’t think they are going to meddle with the Salariki. They
don’t want to have to answer awkward questions if we
turn up a Patrol ship to ask them. So—” he stretched
and beckoned to Dane, “we shall go to work once
more.”
Again two paces behind Van Rycke Dane tramped to the trade
circle of the Salariki clansmen. They might have walked out only
five or six minutes of ship time before, and the natives betrayed
no particular interest in their return. But, Dane noted, there was
only one empty stool, one ceremonial table in evidence. The Salariki had expected only one
Terran Trader to join them.
What followed was a dreary round of ceremony, an exchange of
platitudes and empty good wishes and greetings. No one mentioned
Koros stones—or even perfume bark—that he was willing
to offer the off-world traders. None lifted so much as a corner of
his trade cloth, under which, if he were ready to deal seriously,
his hidden hand would meet that of the buyer, so that by finger
pressure alone they could agree or disagree on price. But such
boring sessions were part of Trade and Dane, keeping a fraction of
attention on the speeches and “drinkings-together,”
watched those around him with an eye which tried to assess and
classify what he saw.
The keynote of the Salariki character was a wary independence.
The only form of government they would tolerate was a family-clan
organization. Feuds and deadly duels between individuals and clans
were the accepted way of life and every male who reached adulthood
went armed and ready for combat until he became a “Speaker
for the past”—too old to bear arms in the field. Due
to the nature of their battling lives, relatively few of the
Salariki ever reached that retirement. Short-lived alliances
between families sometimes occurred, usually when they were to face
a common enemy greater than either. But a quarrel between
chieftains, a fancied insult would rip that open in an instant.
Only under the Trade Shield could seven clans sit this way without
their warriors being at one another’s furred throats.
An hour before sunset Paft turned his goblet upside down on his
table, a move followed speedily by every chieftain in the circle.
The conference was at an end for that day. And as far as Dane could
see it had accomplished exactly nothing—except to bring the
Eysies into the open. What had Traxt Cam discovered which
had given him the trading contact with these suspicious aliens?
Unless the men from the Queen learned it, they could go on talking
until the contract ran out and get no farther than they had
today.
From his training Dane knew that ofttimes contact with an alien race did require long and patient handling. But between
study and experiencing the situation himself there was a gulf, and
he thought somewhat ruefully that he had much to learn before he
could meet such a situation with Van Rycke’s unfailing
patience and aplomb. The Cargo-master seemed in nowise tired by his
wasted day and Dane knew that Van would probably sit up half the
night, going over for the hundredth time Traxt Cam’s sketchy
recordings in another painstaking attempt to discover why and how
the other Free Trader had succeeded where the Queen’s men
were up against a stone wall.
The harvesting of Koros stones was, as Dane and all those who
had been briefed from Cam’s records knew, a perilous job.
Though the rule of the Salariki was undisputed on the land masses
of Sargol, it was another matter in the watery world of the shallow
seas. There the Gorp were in command of the territory and one had
to be constantly alert for attack from that sly, reptilian
intelligence, so alien to the thinking processes of both Salariki
and Terran that there was, or seemed to be, no point of possible
contact. One went gathering Koros gems after balancing life against
gain. And perhaps the Salariki did not see any profit in that
operation. Yet Traxt Cam had brought back his bag of
gems—somehow he had managed to secure them in trade.
Van Rycke climbed the ramp, hurrying on into the Queen as if he
could not get back to his records soon enough. But Dane paused and
looked back at the grass jungle a little wistfully. To his mind
these early evening hours were the best time on Sargol. The light
was golden, the night winds had not yet arisen. He disliked
exchanging the freedom of the open for the confinement of the
spacer.
And, as he hesitated there, two of the juvenile population of
Sargol came out of the forest. Between them they carried one of
their hunting nets, a net which now enclosed a quiet but baneful
eyed captive—Sinbad being delivered for nightly ransom. Dane
was reaching for the pay to give the captors when, to his real astonishment, one of them advanced and pointed
with an extended forefinger claw to the open port.
“Go in,” he formed the Trade Lingo words with care.
And Dane’s surprise must have been plain to read for the cub
followed his speech with a vigorous nod and set one foot on the
ramp to underline his desire.
For one of the Salariki, who had continually manifested their
belief that Terrans and their ship were an offence to the nostrils
of all right living “men,” to wish to enter the spacer
was an astonishing about-face. But any advantage, no matter how
small, which might bring about a closer understanding, must be
seized at once.
Dane accepted the growling Sinbad and beckoned, knowing better
than to touch the boy. “Come—”
Only one of the junior clansmen obeyed that invitation. The
other watched, big-eyed, and then scuttled back to the forest when
his fellow called out some suggestion. He was not going to
be trapped.
Dane led the way up the ramp, paying no visible attention to the
young Salarik, nor did he urge the other on when he lingered for a
long moment or two at the port. In his mind the Cargo-master
apprentice was feverishly running over the list of general trade
goods. What did they carry which would make a suitable and
intriguing gift for a small alien with such a promising bump of
curiosity? If he had only time to get Van Rycke!
The Salarik was inside the corridor now, his nostrils spread,
assaying each and every odor in this strange place. Suddenly his
head jerked as if tugged by one of his own net ropes. His interest
had been riveted by some scent his sensitive senses had detected.
His eyes met Dane’s in appeal. Swiftly the Terran nodded and
then followed with a lengthened stride as the Salarik sped down
into the lower reaches of the Queen, obviously in quest of
something of great importance.
"THAT’s FAR ENOUGH,
Eysie!”
Although Traders by law and tradition carried no more potent
personal weapons—except in times of great crisis—than hand sleep rods, the resultant shot from the latter was
just as unpleasant for temporary periods as a more forceful
beam—and the threat of it was enough to halt the three men
who had come to the foot of the Queen’s ramp and who could
see the rod held rather negligently by Ali. Ali’s eyes were
anything but negligent, however, and Free Traders had reputations
to be respected by their rivals of the Companies. The very nature
of their roving lives taught them savage lessons—which they
either learned or died.
Dane, glancing down over the Engineer-apprentice’s
shoulder, saw that Van Rycke’s assumption of confidence had
indeed paid off. They had left the trade enclosure of the Salariki
barely three-quarters of an hour ago. But below now stood the
bebadged Captain of the I-S ship and his Cargo-master.
“I want to speak to your Captain—” snarled the
Eysie officer.
Ali registered faint amusement, an expression which tended to
rouse the worst in the spectator, as Dane knew of old when that
same mocking appraisal had been turned on him as the rawest of the
Queen’s crew.
“But does he wish to speak to you?”
countered Kamil. “Just stay where you are, Eysie, until we
are sure about that fact.”
That was his cue to act as messenger. Dane retreated into the
ship and swung up the ladder to the command section. As he passed
Captain Jellico’s private cabin he heard the muffled squall
of the commander’s unpleasant pet—Queex, the
Hoobat—a nightmare combination of crab, parrot and toad,
wearing a blue feather coating and inclined to scream and spit at
all comers. Since Queex would not be howling in that fashion if its
master was present, Dane kept on to the control cabin where he
blundered in upon an executive level conference of Captain,
Cargo-master and Astrogator.
“Well?” Jellico’s blaster scarred left cheek
twitched as he snapped that impatient inquiry at the messenger.
“Eysie Captain below, sir. With his Cargo-master. They
want to see you—”
Jellico’s mouth was a straight line, his eyes very hard.
By instinct Dane’s hand went to the grip of the sleep rod
slung at his belt. When the Old Man put on his fighting face—look
out! Here we go again, he told himself, speculating as to just what
type of action lay before them now.
“Oh, they do, do they!” Jellico began and then
throttled down the temper he could put under iron control when and
if it were necessary. “Very well, tell them to stay where
they are. Van, we’ll go down—”
For a moment the Cargo-master hesitated, his heavy-lidded eyes
looked sleepy, he seemed almost disinterested in the suggestion.
And when he nodded it was with the air of someone about to perform
some boring duty.
“Right, sir.” He wriggled his heavy body from behind
the small table, resealed his tunic, and settled his cap with as
much precision as if he were about to represent the Queen before
the assembled nobility of Sargol.
Dane hurried down the ladders, coming to a halt beside Ali. It
was the turn of the man at the foot of the ramp to bark an
impatient demand:
“Well?” (Was that the theme word of every
Captain’s vocabulary?)
“You wait,” Dane replied with no inclination to give
the Eysie officer any courtesy address. Close to a Terran year
aboard the SolarQueen had inoculated him with pride in his own
section of Service. A Free Trader was answerable to his own
officers and to no one else on Earth—or among the stars—no matter how much discipline and official etiquette the
Companies used to enhance their power.
He half expected the I-S officers to leave after an answer such
as that. For a Company Captain to be forced to wait upon the
convenience of a Free Trader must be galling in the extreme. And
the fact that this one was doing just that was an indication that
the Queen’s crew did, perhaps, have the edge of advantage in
any coming bargain. In the meantime the Eysie contingent fumed below while Ali lounged
whistling against the exit port, playing with his sleep rod and
Dane studied the grass forest. His boot nudged a packet just inside
the port casing and he glanced inquiringly from it to Ali.
“Cat ransom,” the other answered his unspoken
question.
So that was it—the fee for Sinbad’s return.
“What is it today?”
“Sugar—about a tablespoon full,” the
Engineer-assistant returned, “and two colored steelos. So far
they haven’t run up the price on us. I think they’re
sharing out the spoil evenly, a new cub brings him back every
night.”
As did all Terran ships, the SolarQueen carried a cat as an
important member of her regular crew. And the portly Sinbad, before
their landing on Sargol, had never presented any problem. He had
done his duty of ridding the ship of unusual and usual pests and
cargo despoilers with dispatch, neatness and energy. And when in
port on alien worlds had never shown any inclination to go
a-roving.
But the scents of Sargol had apparently intoxicated him,
shearing away his solid dignity and middle-aged dependability. Now
Sinbad flashed out of the Queen at the opening of her port in the
early morning and was brought back, protesting with both voice and
claws, at the end of the day by that member of the juvenile
population whose turn it was to collect the standing reward for his
forceful delivery. Within three days it had become an accepted
business transaction which satisfied everyone but Sinbad.
The scrape of metal boot soles on ladder rungs warned of the
arrival of their officers. Ali and Dane withdrew down the corridor,
leaving the entrance open for Jellico and Van Rycke. Then they
drifted back to witness the meeting with the Eysies.
There were no prolonged greetings between the two parties, no
offer of hospitality as might have been expected between Terrans on
an alien planet a quarter of the Galaxy away from the earth which had given them a common heritage.
Jellico, with Van Rycke at his shoulder, halted before he
stepped from the ramp so that the three Inter-Solar men, Captain,
Cargo-master and escort, whether they wished or no, were put in the
disadvantageous position of having to look up to a Captain whom
they, as members of one of the powerful Companies, affected to
despise. The lean, well muscled, trim figure of the Queen’s
commander gave the impression of hard bitten force held in check by
will control, just as his face under its thick layer of space burn
was that of an adventurer accustomed to make split second
decisions—an estimate underlined by that seam of blaster
burn across one flat cheek.
Van Rycke, with a slight change of dress, could have been a
Company man in the higher ranks—or so the casual observer
would have placed him, until such an observer marked the eyes
behind those sleepy drooping lids, or caught a certain note in the
calm, unhurried drawl of his voice. To look at the two senior
officers of the Free Trading spacer were the antithesis of each
other—in action they were each half of a powerful,
steamroller whole—as a good many men in the
Service—scattered over a half dozen or so planets—had
discovered to their cost in the past.
Now Jellico brought the heels of his space boots together with
an extravagant click and his hand flourished at the fore of his
helmet in a gesture which was better suited to the Patrol hero of a
slightly out-of-date Video serial.
“Jellico, SolarQueen, Free Trader,” he identified
himself brusquely, and added, “This is Van Rycke, our
Cargo-master.”
Not all the flush had faded from the face of the I-S
Captain.
“Grange of the Dart,” he did not even sketch a
salute. “Inter-Solar. Kallee, Cargo-master—” And
he did not name the hovering third member of his party.
Jellico stood waiting and after a long moment of silence Grange
was forced to state his business.
“We have until noon—”
Jellico, his fingers hooked in his belt, simply waited. And
under his level gaze the Eysie Captain began to find the going
hard.
“They have given us until noon,” he started once
more, “to get together—”
Jellico’s voice came, coldly remote. “There is no
reason for any ‘getting together,’ Grange. By rights I
can have you up before the Trade Board for poaching. The SolarQueen has sole trading rights here. If you up-ship within a
reasonable amount of time, I’ll be inclined to let it pass.
After all I’ve no desire to run all the way to the nearest
Patrol post to report you—”
“You can’t expect to buck Inter-Solar. We’ll
make you an offer—” That was Kallee’s
contribution, made probably because his commanding officer
couldn’t find words explosive enough.
Jellico, whose forte was more direct action, took an excursion
into heavy-handed sarcasm. “You Eysies have certainly been
given excellent briefing. I would advise a little closer study of
the Code—and not the sections in small symbols at the end of
the tape, either! We’re not bucking anyone.
You’ll find our registration for Sargol down on tapes at the
Center. And I suggest that the sooner you withdraw the
better—before we cite you for illegal planeting.”
Grange had gained control of his emotions. “We’re
pretty far from Center here,” he remarked. It was a statement
of fact, but it carried over-tones which they were able to assess
correctly. The SolarQueen was a Free Trader, alone on an alien
world. But the I-S ship might be cruising in company, ready to
summon aid, men and supplies. Dane drew a deep breath, the Eysies
must be sure of themselves, not only that, but they must
want what Sargol had to offer to the point of being willing to step
outside the law to get it.
The I-S Captain took a step forward. “I think we
understand each other now,” he said, his confidence
restored.
Van Rycke answered him, his deep voice cutting across the
sighing of the wind in the grass forest.
“Your proposition?”
Perhaps this return to their implied threat bolstered their
belief in the infallibility of the Company, their conviction that
no independent dared stand up against the might and power of
Inter-Solar. Kallee replied:
“We’ll take up your contract, at a profit to you,
and you up-ship before the Salariki are confused over whom they are
to deal with—”
“And the amount of profit?” Van Rycke bored in.
“Oh,” Kallee shrugged, “say ten percent of
Cam’s last shipment—”
Jellico laughed. “Generous, aren’t you, Eysie? Ten
percent of a cargo which can’t be assessed—the gang on
Limbo kept no records of what they plundered.”
“We don’t know what he was carrying when he crashed
on Limbo,” countered Kallee swiftly. “We’ll base
our offer on what he carried to Axal.”
Now Van Rycke chuckled. “I wonder who figured that one
out?” he inquired of the scented winds. “He must save
the Company a fair amount of credits one way or another.
Interesting offer—”
By the bland satisfaction to be read on the three faces below
the I-S men were assured of their victory. The SolarQueen would be
paid off with a pittance, under the vague threat of Company
retaliation she would up-ship from Sargol, and they would be left
in possession of the rich Koros trade—to be commended and
rewarded by their superiors. Had they, Dane speculated, ever had
any dealings with Free Traders before—at least with the brand
of independent adventurers such as manned the SolarQueen?
Van Rycke burrowed in his belt pouch and then held out his hand.
On the broad palm lay a flat disc of metal. “Very
interesting—” he repeated. “I shall treasure this
recording—”
The sight of that disc wiped all satisfaction from the Eysie
faces. Grange’s purplish flush spread up from his tight tunic
collar, Kallee blinked, and the unknown third’s hand dropped
to his sleep rod. An action which was not overlooked by either Dane
or Ali.
“A smooth set down to you,” Jellico gave the
conventional leave taking of the Service.
“You’d better—” the Eysie Captain began
hotly, and then seeing the disc Van Rycke held—that sensitive
bit of metal and plastic which was recording this interview for
future reference, he shut his mouth tight.
“Yes?” the Queen’s Cargo-master prompted
politely. But Kallee had taken his Captain’s arm and was
urging Grange away from the spacer.
“You have until noon to lift,” was Jellico’s
parting shot as the three in Company livery started toward the
road.
“I don’t think that they will,” he added to
Van Rycke.
The Cargo-master nodded. “You wouldn’t in their
place,” he pointed out reasonably. “On the other hand
they’ve had a bit of a blast they weren’t expecting.
It’s been a long time since Grange heard anyone say
‘no.’”
“A shock which is going to wear off,”
Jellico’s habitual distrust of the future gathered force.
“This,” Van Rycke tucked the disc back into his
pouch, “sent them off vector a parsec or two. Grange is not
one of the strong arm blaster boys. Suppose Tang Ya does a little
listening in—and maybe we can rig another surprise if Grange
does try to ask advice of someone off world. In the meantime I
don’t think they are going to meddle with the Salariki. They
don’t want to have to answer awkward questions if we
turn up a Patrol ship to ask them. So—” he stretched
and beckoned to Dane, “we shall go to work once
more.”
Again two paces behind Van Rycke Dane tramped to the trade
circle of the Salariki clansmen. They might have walked out only
five or six minutes of ship time before, and the natives betrayed
no particular interest in their return. But, Dane noted, there was
only one empty stool, one ceremonial table in evidence. The Salariki had expected only one
Terran Trader to join them.
What followed was a dreary round of ceremony, an exchange of
platitudes and empty good wishes and greetings. No one mentioned
Koros stones—or even perfume bark—that he was willing
to offer the off-world traders. None lifted so much as a corner of
his trade cloth, under which, if he were ready to deal seriously,
his hidden hand would meet that of the buyer, so that by finger
pressure alone they could agree or disagree on price. But such
boring sessions were part of Trade and Dane, keeping a fraction of
attention on the speeches and “drinkings-together,”
watched those around him with an eye which tried to assess and
classify what he saw.
The keynote of the Salariki character was a wary independence.
The only form of government they would tolerate was a family-clan
organization. Feuds and deadly duels between individuals and clans
were the accepted way of life and every male who reached adulthood
went armed and ready for combat until he became a “Speaker
for the past”—too old to bear arms in the field. Due
to the nature of their battling lives, relatively few of the
Salariki ever reached that retirement. Short-lived alliances
between families sometimes occurred, usually when they were to face
a common enemy greater than either. But a quarrel between
chieftains, a fancied insult would rip that open in an instant.
Only under the Trade Shield could seven clans sit this way without
their warriors being at one another’s furred throats.
An hour before sunset Paft turned his goblet upside down on his
table, a move followed speedily by every chieftain in the circle.
The conference was at an end for that day. And as far as Dane could
see it had accomplished exactly nothing—except to bring the
Eysies into the open. What had Traxt Cam discovered which
had given him the trading contact with these suspicious aliens?
Unless the men from the Queen learned it, they could go on talking
until the contract ran out and get no farther than they had
today.
From his training Dane knew that ofttimes contact with an alien race did require long and patient handling. But between
study and experiencing the situation himself there was a gulf, and
he thought somewhat ruefully that he had much to learn before he
could meet such a situation with Van Rycke’s unfailing
patience and aplomb. The Cargo-master seemed in nowise tired by his
wasted day and Dane knew that Van would probably sit up half the
night, going over for the hundredth time Traxt Cam’s sketchy
recordings in another painstaking attempt to discover why and how
the other Free Trader had succeeded where the Queen’s men
were up against a stone wall.
The harvesting of Koros stones was, as Dane and all those who
had been briefed from Cam’s records knew, a perilous job.
Though the rule of the Salariki was undisputed on the land masses
of Sargol, it was another matter in the watery world of the shallow
seas. There the Gorp were in command of the territory and one had
to be constantly alert for attack from that sly, reptilian
intelligence, so alien to the thinking processes of both Salariki
and Terran that there was, or seemed to be, no point of possible
contact. One went gathering Koros gems after balancing life against
gain. And perhaps the Salariki did not see any profit in that
operation. Yet Traxt Cam had brought back his bag of
gems—somehow he had managed to secure them in trade.
Van Rycke climbed the ramp, hurrying on into the Queen as if he
could not get back to his records soon enough. But Dane paused and
looked back at the grass jungle a little wistfully. To his mind
these early evening hours were the best time on Sargol. The light
was golden, the night winds had not yet arisen. He disliked
exchanging the freedom of the open for the confinement of the
spacer.
And, as he hesitated there, two of the juvenile population of
Sargol came out of the forest. Between them they carried one of
their hunting nets, a net which now enclosed a quiet but baneful
eyed captive—Sinbad being delivered for nightly ransom. Dane
was reaching for the pay to give the captors when, to his real astonishment, one of them advanced and pointed
with an extended forefinger claw to the open port.
“Go in,” he formed the Trade Lingo words with care.
And Dane’s surprise must have been plain to read for the cub
followed his speech with a vigorous nod and set one foot on the
ramp to underline his desire.
For one of the Salariki, who had continually manifested their
belief that Terrans and their ship were an offence to the nostrils
of all right living “men,” to wish to enter the spacer
was an astonishing about-face. But any advantage, no matter how
small, which might bring about a closer understanding, must be
seized at once.
Dane accepted the growling Sinbad and beckoned, knowing better
than to touch the boy. “Come—”
Only one of the junior clansmen obeyed that invitation. The
other watched, big-eyed, and then scuttled back to the forest when
his fellow called out some suggestion. He was not going to
be trapped.
Dane led the way up the ramp, paying no visible attention to the
young Salarik, nor did he urge the other on when he lingered for a
long moment or two at the port. In his mind the Cargo-master
apprentice was feverishly running over the list of general trade
goods. What did they carry which would make a suitable and
intriguing gift for a small alien with such a promising bump of
curiosity? If he had only time to get Van Rycke!
The Salarik was inside the corridor now, his nostrils spread,
assaying each and every odor in this strange place. Suddenly his
head jerked as if tugged by one of his own net ropes. His interest
had been riveted by some scent his sensitive senses had detected.
His eyes met Dane’s in appeal. Swiftly the Terran nodded and
then followed with a lengthened stride as the Salarik sped down
into the lower reaches of the Queen, obviously in quest of
something of great importance.