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Exile-and Glory

Page 23

by Jerry Pournelle


  Al Shamlan shrugged. "You win. We can wait for the next launch window." He got up from the table. "Coming, Johnny?"

  "In a minute." Peregrine had a worried look. "Ms. Hendrix, how do you expect to make a profit? I assure you that we won't pay what you seem to think we will."

  "Leave that to me," she said. She still had that look: triumphant. The price didn't seem to bother her at all.

  "Hum." Al Shamlan made a gesture of bafflement. "One thing, Captain. Before you sign with Rhoda, you might ask to see the money. I would be much surprised if Jefferson Corporation has two hundred thousand." He pushed himself away and sailed across the bar to the corridor door. "You know where to find me if things don't work out, Captain Kephart."

  He went out, and his company cops came right after him. After a moment Peregrine and the other corporation people followed.

  I wondered what the hell I'd got myself into this time.

  Rhoda Hendrix was trying to be friendly. It didn't really suit her style.

  I knew she'd come to Jefferson back when it was called Grubstake and Blackjack Dan was trying to set up an independent colony. Sometime in her first year she'd moved in with him, and pretty soon she was handling all his financial deals. There wasn't any nonsense about freedom and democracy back then. Grubstake was a big opportunity to get rich or get killed, and not much more.

  When they found Blackjack Dan outside without a helmet, it turned out that Rhoda was his heir. She was the only one who knew what kind of deals he'd made anyway, so she took over his place. A year later she invented the Jefferson Corporation. Everybody living on the rock had to buy stock, and she talked a lot about sovereign rights and government by the people. It takes a lot of something to govern a few thousand rockrats, and whatever it is, she had plenty. The idea caught on.

  Now things didn't seem to be going too well, and her face showed it when she tried to smile. "Glad that's all settled," she said. "How's Janet?"

  "The family is fine, the ship's fine, and I'm fine," I said.

  She let the phony grin fade out. "OK, if that's the way you want it. Shall we move over to a booth?"

  "Why bother? I've got nothing to hide," I told her.

  "Watch it," Hornbinder growled.

  "And I've had about enough of him," I told Rhoda. "If you've got cargo to boost, let's get it boosted."

  "In time." She pulled some papers out of her pouch. "First, here's the charter contract."

  It was all drawn up in advance. I didn't like it at all. The money was good, but none of this sounded right. "Maybe I should take al Shamlan's advice and—"

  "You're not taking the Arab's advice or their money either," Hornbinder said.

  "—and ask to see your money first," I finished.

  "Our credit's good," Rhoda said.

  "So is mine as long as I keep my payments up. I can't pay off Barclay's with promises." I lifted my beer and flipped the top just enough to suck down a big gulp. Beer's lousy if you have to sip it.

  "What can you lose?" Rhoda asked. "OK, so we don't have much cash. We've got a contract for the ice. Ten percent as soon as the Lloyd's man certifies the stuff's in transfer orbit. We'll pay you out of that. We've got the dee, we've got reaction mass, what the hell else do you want?"

  "Your radiogram said cash," I reminded her. "I don't even have the retainer you promised. Just paper."

  "Things are hard out here." Rhoda nodded to herself. She was thinking just how hard things were. "It's not like the old days. Everything's organized. Big companies. As soon as we get a little ahead, the big outfits move in and cut prices on everything we sell. Outbid us on everything we have to buy. Like your beef."

  "Sure," I said. "I'm facing tough competition from the big shipping fleets, too."

  "So this time we've got a chance to hold up the big boys," Rhoda said. "Get a little profit. You aren't hurt. You get more than you expected." She looked around to the other miners. There were a lot of people listening to us. "Kephart, all we have to do is get a little ahead, and we can turn this rock into a decent place to live. A place for people, not corporation clients!" Her voice rose and her eyes flashed. She meant every word, and the others nodded approval.

  "You lied to me," I said.

  "So what? How are you hurt?" She pushed the contract papers toward me.

  "Excuse me." Dalquist hadn't spoken very loudly, but everyone looked at him. "Why is there such a hurry about this?" he asked.

  "What the hell's it to you?" Hornbinder demanded.

  "You want cash?" Rhoda asked. "All right, I'll give you cash." She took a document out of her pouch and slammed it onto the table. She hit hard enough to raise herself a couple of feet out of her chair. It would have been funny if she wasn't dead serious. Nobody laughed. "There's a deposit certificate for every goddam cent we have!" she shouted. "You want it? Take it all. Take the savings of every family in Jefferson. Pump us dry. Grind the faces of the poor! But sign that charter!"

  " 'Cause if you don't," Hornbinder said, "your ship won't ever leave this rock. And don't think we can't stop you."

  "Easy." I tried to look relaxed, but the sea of faces around me wasn't friendly at all. I didn't want to look at them so I looked at the deposit paper. It was genuine enough: you can't fake the molecular documents Zurich banks use. With the Jefferson Corporation Seal and the right signatures and thumbprints that thing was worth exactly 78,500 francs.

  It would be a lot of money if I owned it for myself. It wasn't so much compared to the mortgage on Slinger. It was nothing at all for the total assets of a whole community.

  "This is our chance to get out from under," Rhoda was saying. She wasn't talking to me. "We can squeeze the goddam corporation people for a change. All we need is that charter and we've got Westinghouse and the Arabs where we want them!"

  Everybody in the bar was shouting now. It looked ugly, and I didn't see any way out.

  "OK," I told Rhoda. "Sign over that deposit certificate, and make me out a lien on future assets for the rest. I'll boost your cargo—"

  "Boost hell, sign that charter contract," Rhoda said.

  "Yeah, I'll do that too. Make out the documents."

  "Captain Kephart, is this wise?" Dalquist asked.

  "Keep out of this, you little son of a bitch." Horny moved toward Dalquist. "You got no stake in this. Now shut up before I take off the top—"

  Dalquist hardly looked up. "Five hundred francs to the first man who coldcocks him," he said carefully. He took his hand out of his pouch, and there was a bill in it. There was a moment's silence, then four big miners started for Horny.

  When it was over, Dalquist was out a thousand, because nobody could decide who got to Hornbinder first.

  Even Rhoda was laughing after that was over. The mood changed a little; Hornbinder had never been very popular, and Dalquist was buying for the house. It didn't make any difference about the rest of it, of course. They weren't going to let me off Jefferson without signing that charter contract.

  Rhoda sent over to city hall to have the documents made out. When they came, I signed, and half the people in the place signed as witnesses. Dalquist didn't like it, but he ended up as a witness too. For better or worse, Slingshot was chartered to the Jefferson Corporation for seven hundred hours. The surprise came after I'd signed. I asked Rhoda when she'd be ready to boost.

  "Don't worry about it. You'll get the capsule when you need it."

  "Bloody hell! You can't wait to get me to sign—"

  "Aww, just relax, Kephart."

  "I don't think you understand. You have half a million tons to boost up to what, five, six kilometers a second?" I took out my pocket calculator. "Sixteen tons of deuterium and eleven thousand reaction mass. That's a bloody big load. The fuel feed system's got to be built. It's not something I can just strap on and push off—"

  "You'll get what you need," Rhoda said. "We'll let you know when it's time to start work."

  Jed put us in a private dining room. Janet came in later and I told her ab
out the afternoon. I didn't think she'd like it, but she wasn't as upset as I was.

  "We have the money," she said. "And we got a good price on the cargo, and if they ever pay off we'll get more than we expected on the boost charges. If they don't pay up—well, so what?"

  "Except that we've got a couple of major companies unhappy, and they'll be here long after Jefferson folds up. Sorry, Jed, but—"

  He bristled his mustache. "Could be. I figure on gettin' along with the corporations too. Just in case."

  "But what did all that lot mean?" Dalquist asked.

  "Beats me." Jed shook his head. "Rhoda's been making noises about how rich we're going to be. New furnace, another power plant, maybe even a ship of our own. Nobody knows how she's planning on doing it."

  "Could there have been a big strike?" Dalquist asked. "Iridium, one of the really valuable metals?"

  "Don't see how," Jed told him. "Look, mister, if Rhoda's goin' to bail this place out of the hole the big boys have dug for us, that's great with me. I don't ask questions."

  Jed's boy came in. "There's a lady to see you." Barbara Morrison Colella was a small blonde girl, pug nose, blue eyes. She looks like somebody you'd see on Earthside TV playing a dumb blonde.

  Her degrees said "family economics," which I guess on Earth doesn't amount to much. Out here it's a specialty. To keep a family going out here you better know a lot of environment and life-support engineering, something about prices that depend on orbits and launch windows, a lot about how to get something to eat out of rocks, and maybe something about power systems, too. She was glad enough to see us, especially Janet, but we got another surprise. She looked at Dalquist and said, "Hello, Buck."

  "Hello. Surprised, Bobby?"

  "No. I knew you'd be along as soon as you heard."

  "You know each other, then," I said.

  "Yes." Dalquist hadn't moved, but he didn't look like a little man any longer. "How did it happen, Bobby?"

  Her face didn't change. She'd lost most of her smile when she saw Dalquist. She looked at the rest of us, and pointed at Jed. "Ask him. He knows more than I do."

  "Mr. Anderson?" Dalquist prompted. His tone made it sound as if he'd done this before, and he expected to be answered.

  If Jed resented that, he didn't show it. "Simple enough. Joe always seemed happy enough when he came in here after his shift—"

  Dalquist looked from Jed to Barbara. She nodded.

  "—until the last time. That night he got stinking drunk. Kept mutterin' something about 'Not that way. There's got to be another way.' "

  "Do you know what that meant?"

  "No," Jed said. "But he kept saying it. Then he got really stinking and I sent him home with a couple of the guys he worked with."

  "What happened when he got home?" Dalquist asked.

  "He never came home, Buck," Barbara said. "I got worried about him, but I couldn't find him. The men he'd left here with said he'd got to feeling better and left them—"

  "Damn fools," Jed muttered. "He was right out of it. Nobody should go outside with that much to drink."

  "And they found him outside?"

  "At the refinery. Helmet busted open. Been dead five, six hours. Held the inquest right in here, at that table al Shamlan was sitting at this afternoon."

  "Who held the inquest?" Dalquist asked.

  "Rhoda."

  "Doesn't make sense," I said.

  "No." Janet didn't like it much either. "Barbara, don't you have any idea of what Joe meant? Was he worried about something?"

  "Nothing he told me about. He wasn't—we weren't fighting, or anything like that. I'm sure he didn't—"

  "Humpf." Dalquist shook his head. "What damned fool suggested suicide?"

  "Well," Jed said, "you know how it is. If a man takes on a big load and wanders around outside, it might as well be suicide. Hornbinder said we were doing Barbara a favor, voting it an accident."

  Dalquist took papers out of his pouch. "He was right, of course. I wonder if Hornbinder knew that all Hansen employees receive a paid-up insurance policy as one of their retirement benefits?"

  "I didn't know it," I said.

  Janet was more practical. "How much is it worth?"

  "I am not sure of the exact amounts," Dalquist said. "There are trust accounts involved also. Sufficient to get Barbara and the children back to Mars and pay for their living expenses there. Assuming you want to go?"

  "I don't know," Barbara said. "Let me think about it. Joe and I came here to get away from the big companies. I don't have to like Rhoda and the city hall crowd to appreciate what we've got in Jefferson. Independence is worth something."

  "Indeed," Dalquist said. He wasn't agreeing with her, and suddenly we all knew he and Barbara had been through this argument before. I wondered when.

  "Janet, what would you do?" Barbara asked.

  Jan shrugged. "Not a fair question. Roland and I made that decision a long time ago. But neither of us is alone." She reached for my hand across the table.

  As she said, we had made our choice. We've had plenty of offers for Slingshot, from outfits that would be happy to hire us as crew for Slinger. It would mean no more hustle to meet the mortgage payments, and not a lot of change in the way we live—but we wouldn't be our own people anymore. We've never seriously considered taking any of the offers.

  "You don't have to be alone," Dalquist said.

  "I know, Buck." There was a wistful note in Barbara's voice. They looked at each other for a long time. Then we sat down to dinner.

  I was in my office aboard Slingshot. Thirty hours had gone by since I'd signed the charter contract, and I still didn't know what I was boosting, or when. It didn't make sense.

  Janet refused to worry about it. We'd cabled the money on to Marsport, all of Jefferson's treasury and what we'd got for our cargo, so Barclay's was happy for a while. We had enough deuterium aboard Slinger to get where we could buy more. She kept asking what there was to worry about, and I didn't have any answer. I was still brooding about it when Oswald Dalquist tapped on the door.

  I hadn't seen him much since the dinner at the Doghouse, and he didn't look any different, but he wasn't the same man. I suppose the change was in me. You can't think of a man named "Buck" the same way you think of an Oswald.

  "Sit down," I said. That was formality, of course. It's no harder to stand than sit in the tiny gravity we felt. "I've been meaning to say something about the way you handled Horny. I don't think I've ever seen anybody do that."

  His smile was thin, and I guess it hadn't changed either, but it didn't seem like an accountant's smile any more. "It's an interesting story, actually," he said. "A long time ago I was in a big colony ship. Long passage, nothing to do. Discovered the other colonists didn't know much about playing poker."

  We exchanged grins again.

  "I won so much it made me worry that someone would take it away from me, so I hired the biggest man in the bay to watch my back. Sure enough, some chap accused me of cheating, so I called on my big friend—"

  "Yeah?"

  "And he shouted 'Fifty to the first guy that decks him.' Worked splendidly, although it wasn't precisely what I'd expected when I hired him—"

  We had our laugh.

  "When are we leaving, Captain Kephart?"

  "Beats me. When they get the cargo ready to boost, I guess."

  "That might be a long time," Dalquist said.

  "What is that supposed to mean?"

  "I've been asking around. To the best of my knowledge, there are no preparations for boosting a big cargo pod."

  "That's stupid," I said. "Well, it's their business. When we go, how many passengers am I going to have?"

  His little smile faded entirely. "I wish I knew. You've guessed that Joe Colella and I were old friends. And rivals for the same girl."

  "Yeah. I'm wondering why you—hell, we talked about them on the way in. You never let on you'd ever heard of them."

  He nodded carefully. "I wanted to be certa
in. I only know that Joe was supposed to have died in an accident. He was not the kind of man accidents happen to. Not even out here."

  "What is that supposed to mean?"

  "Only that Joe Colella was one of the most careful men you will ever meet, and I didn't care to discuss my business with Barbara until I knew more about the situation in Jefferson. Now I'm beginning to wonder—"

  "Dad!" Pam was on watch, and she sounded excited. The intercom box said again, "Dad!"

 

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