Starman's Quest

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Starman's Quest Page 8

by Robert Silverberg


  _Chapter Seven_

  The sign over the office door said REGISTRY OF FREE-STATUS LABOR FORCE,and under that ROOM 1104. Hawkes nudged the door open and they went in.

  It was not an imposing room. A fat pasty-faced man sat behind a scarredneoplast desk, scribbling his signature on forms that he was taking froman immense stack. The room was lined with records of one sort oranother, untidy, poorly assembled. There was dust everywhere.

  The man at the desk looked up as they entered and nodded to Hawkes."Hello, Max. Making an honest man of yourself at last?"

  "Not on your life," Hawkes said. "I came up here to do some checking.Alan, this is Hines MacIntosh, Keeper of the Records. Hines, want you tomeet a starman friend of mine. Alan Donnell."

  "Starman, eh?" MacIntosh's pudgy face went suddenly grave. "Well, boy, Ihope you know how to get along on an empty stomach. Free Status lifeisn't easy."

  "No," Alan said. "You don't under----"

  Hawkes cut him off. "He's just in the city on leave, Hines. His shipblasts off in a couple of days and he figures to be on it. But he'strying to track down his brother, who jumped ship nine years back."

  MacIntosh nodded. "I suppose you drew a blank in the big roomdownstairs?"

  "Yes."

  "Not surprising. We get these ship-jumping starmen all the time up here;they never do get work cards, it seems. What's that thing on yourshoulder, boy?"

  "He's from Bellatrix VII."

  "Intelligent?"

  "I should say so!" Rat burst in indignantly. "Just because I have acertain superficial physiological resemblance to a particular species ofunpleasant Terran rodent----"

  MacIntosh chuckled and said, "Ease up! I didn't mean to insult you,friend! But you'll have to apply for a visa if you're going to stay heremore than three days."

  Alan frowned. "Visa?"

  Hawkes cut in: "The boy's going back on his ship, I told you. He won'tneed a visa, or the alien either."

  "Be that as it may," MacIntosh said. "So you're looking for yourbrother, boy? Give me the specifications, now. Name, date of birth, andall the rest."

  "His name is Steve Donnell, sir. Born 3576. He jumped ship in----"

  "Born _when_, did you say?"

  "They're spacers," Hawkes pointed out quietly.

  MacIntosh shrugged. "Go ahead."

  "Jumped ship in 3867--I think. It's so hard to tell what year it is onEarth."

  "And physical description?"

  "He was my twin," Alan said. "Identical twin."

  MacIntosh jotted down the data Alan gave him and transferred it to apunched card. "I don't remember any spacers of that name," he said, "butnine years is a long time. And we get so many starmen coming up here totake out Free Status."

  "You do?"

  "Oh, fifteen or twenty a year, at least--and that's in this officealone. They're forever getting stranded on leave and losing their ships.Why, there was one boy who was robbed and beaten in the Frisco Enclaveand didn't wake up for a week. Naturally he missed his ship, and noother starship would sign him on. He's on Free Status now, of course.Well, let's see about Donnell Steve Male, shall we? You realize the lawdoesn't require Free Status people to register with us, and so we maynot necessarily have any data on him in our computer files?"

  "I realize that," Alan said tightly. He wished the chubby records-keeperwould stop talking and start looking for Steve's records. It was gettingalong toward late afternoon now; he had come across from the Enclavearound noontime, and certainly it was at least 1600 by now. He wasgetting hungry--and he knew he would have to start making plans forspending the night somewhere, if he didn't go back to the Enclave.

  MacIntosh pulled himself laboriously out of his big webwork cradle andwheezed his way across the room to a computer shoot. He dropped the cardin.

  "It'll take a few minutes for them to make the search," he said,turning. He looked in both directions and went on, "Care for a drink?Just to pass the time?"

  Hawkes grinned. "Good old Hinesy! What's in the inkwell today?"

  "Scotch! Bottled in bond, best syntho stuff to come out of Caledonia inthe last century!" MacIntosh shuffled back behind his desk and foundthree dingy glasses in one of the drawers; he set them out and uncorkeda dark blue bottle plainly labelled INK.

  He poured a shot for Hawkes and then a second shot; as he started topush it toward Alan, the starman shook his head. "Sorry, but I don'tdrink. Crewmen aren't allowed to have liquor aboard starships.Regulation."

  "Oh, but you're off-duty now!"

  Alan shook his head a second time; shrugging, MacIntosh took the drinkhimself and put the unused third glass back in the drawer.

  "Here's to Steve Donnell!" he said, lifting his glass high. "May he havehad the good sense to register his name up here!"

  They drank. Alan watched. Suddenly, the bell clanged and a tube rolledout of the computer shoot.

  Alan waited tensely while MacIntosh crossed the room again, drew out thecontents of the tube, and scanned them. The fat man's face was broken bya smile.

  "You're in luck, starman. Your brother did register with us. Here's the'stat of his papers."

  Alan looked at them. The photostat was titled, APPLICATION FOR ADMISSIONTO FREE-STATUS LABOR FORCE, and the form had been filled out in ahandwriting Alan recognized immediately as Steve's: bold, untidy, theletters slanting slightly backward.

  He had given his name as Steve Donnell, his date of birth as 3576, hischronological age as seventeen. He had listed his former occupation as_Starman_. The application was dated 4 June 3867, and a stampednotation on the margin declared that Free Status had been granted on 11June 3867.

  "So he did register," Alan said. "But now what? How do we find him?"

  Hawkes reached for the photostat. "Here. Let me look at that." Hesquinted to make out the small print, then nodded and wrote downsomething. "His televector number's a local one. So far, so good." Heturned the form over and glanced at the reproduced photo of Steve on theback. He looked up, comparing it with Alan.

  "Dead ringers, these two. But I'll bet this one doesn't look much likethis any more--not after nine years of Free Status!"

  "It only pays off for the lucky few, eh, Max?" MacIntosh asked slyly.

  Hawkes grinned. "Some of us make out all right. You have to have theknack, though. You can get awful hungry otherwise. Come on, kid--let'sgo up a little higher, now. Up to the televector files. Thanks for thehelp, Hinesy. You're a pal."

  "Just doin' my job," MacIntosh said. "See you tonight as usual?"

  "I doubt it," Hawkes replied. "I'm going to take the night off. I haveit coming to me."

  "That leaves the coast clear for us amateurs, doesn't it? Maybe I'llcome out ahead tonight."

  Hawkes smiled coldly. "Maybe you will. Let's go, kid."

  They took the lift tube outside and rode it as high as it went. Itopened out into the biggest room Alan had ever seen, bigger even thanthe main registry downstairs--a vast affair perhaps a hundred feet highand four hundred feet on the side.

  And every inch of those feet was lined with computer elements.

  "This is the nerve-center of the world," Hawkes said as they went in."By asking the right questions you can find out where anybody in theworld happens to be at this very moment."

  "How can they do that?"

  Hawkes nudged a tiny sliver of metal embedded in a ring on his finger."Here's my televector transmitter. Everyone who has a work card or FreeStatus carries one, either on a ring or in a locket round his neck orsomewhere else. Some people have them surgically embedded in theirbodies. They give off resonance waves, each one absolutely unique;there's about one chance in a quadrillion of a duplicate pattern. Theinstruments here can pick up a given pattern and tell you exactly wherethe person you're looking for is."

  "So we can find Steve without much trouble!"

  "Probably." Hawkes' face darkened. "I've known it to happen that thetelevector pattern picks up a man who's been at the bottom of the seafor five years. But don't let me scare you; Steve's
probably in goodshape."

  He took out the slip of paper on which he had jotted down Steve'stelevector code number and transferred the information to an applicationblank.

  "This system," Alan said. "It means no one can possibly hide anywhere onEarth unless he removes his televector transmitter."

  "You can't do that, though. Strictly illegal. An alarm goes out wheneversomeone gets more than six inches from his transmitter, and he's pickedup on suspicion. It's an automatic cancellation of your work card ifyou try to fool with your transmitter--or if you're Free Status a fineof ten thousand credits."

  "And if you can't pay the fine?"

  "Then you work it off in Government indenture, at a thousand credits ayear--chopping up rocks in the Antarctica Penitentiary. The system'sflawless. It _has_ to be. With Earth as overpopulated as it is, you needsome system of tracking down people--otherwise crime would be ten timesas prevalent as it is now."

  "There still is crime?"

  "Oh, sure. There's always somebody who needs food bad enough to rob forit, even though it means a sure arrest. Murder's a little less common."Hawkes fed the requisition slip into the slot. "You'd be surprised whata deterrent the televector registry system is. It's not so easy to runoff to South America and hide when anybody at all can come in here andfind out exactly where you are."

  A moment went by. Then the slot clicked and a glossy pink slip camerolling out.

  Alan looked at it. It said:

  TELEVECTOR REGISTRY 21 May 3876 Location of Donnell Steve, YC83-10j6490k37618 Time: 1643:21

  There followed a street map covering some fifteen square blocks, and abright red dot was imprinted in the center of the map.

  Hawkes glanced at the map and smiled. "I thought that was where he wouldbe!"

  "Where's that?"

  "68th Avenue and 423rd Street."

  "Is that where he lives?" Alan asked.

  "Oh, no. The televector tells you where he is right now. I'd venture tosay that was his--ah--place of business."

  Alan frowned. "What are you talking about?"

  "That happens to be the address of the Atlas Games Parlor. Your brotherSteve probably spends most of his working day there, when he has enoughcash to get in. I know the place. It's a cheap joint where the payoffsare low but easy. It's the kind of place a low-budget man wouldfrequent."

  "You mean Steve's a gambler?"

  Hawkes smiled. "Most Free Status men are. It's one of the few ways wecan earn a living without getting a work card. There isn't any gamblers'guild. There are a few other ways, too, but they're a lot less savory,and the televector surveillance makes it hard for a man to stay inbusiness for long."

  Alan moistened his lips. "What do _you_ do?"

  "Gamble. I'm in the upper brackets, though. As I say: some of us havethe knack. I doubt if your brother does, though. After nine years hewouldn't still be working the Atlas if he had any dough."

  Alan shrugged that off. "How do we get there? I'd like to go right away.I----"

  "Patience, lad," Hawkes murmured. "There's plenty of time for that. Whendoes your ship leave?"

  "Couple of days."

  "Then we don't need to rush right over to the Atlas now. Let's get somefood in ourselves first. Then a good night's rest. We can go over theretomorrow."

  "But my brother----"

  "Your brother," Hawkes said, "has been in York City for nine years, andI'll bet he's spent every night for the last eight of them sitting inthe Atlas. He'll keep till tomorrow. Let's get something to eat."

 

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