by John F. Carr
No, he wouldn’t make such a trip again. If he needed an excuse, it was that the Black Bitch wasn’t built for such loads, at such distance. Let Kennicott provide more boats, if they wanted to haul more slave labor down river.
And now a Kennicott ship in orbit, and maybe a Kennicott agent as somebody I’ve come to respect and even to trust a bit. It’s hard to say to yourself “I don’t know,” but the truth is, that I DON’T know. I’ve been thinking of Jane and Haven, not of the conditions off-planet. We could be pawns in someone else’s game—but why not a Knight, a Rook, or even…a Queen?
“No!” I won’t let us be played like this!
“No to what, Leo?”
He knew that voice.
“I, too, have made a decision, Leo,” Van Damm continued out of the darkness. There was a short silence.
“Uhuh.” Makhno kept it noncommittal, wondering how much Owen had guessed.
“Will you talk with me, Leo?” Van Damm was drunk enough that his accent was showing. “Are we not comrades? Have we not fought together?”
“Why not?”
Van Damm led the way towards the barrel floats that served as Docktown’s Port-of-Entry and reason for being.
“What we have built here is too important to sell out to some company or some government,” Van Damm said firmly. “Is certainly too important to be left to the whims of ideological theorists.”
“Jane’s a practical sort,” said Makhno.
“I know that you know…that I have received a message from above,” Van Damm plowed on. “I will tell you, Leo. I watched you receive the news and I will tell you what it is about, and confirm some of your suspicions. Yes, I have been summoned to the ship. No, I am not an agent of Kennicott Metals. I vork for Fleet.”
Makhno could hear the capital letters. He also noticed that Van Damm’s Afrikaner accent could have become more pronounced with emotion than drink.
“You may not understand all of what I have to say, Leo; but please listen and remember…and tell Jane everything.”
That sounds good. “I’m listening.”
“Jomo was a cat’s paw. My boss wanted Jomo to win, even provided him with the stunners and sent me to get close to him and make sure that he won. Also make dammed sure that he took slaves and committed every atrocity he was capable of… But they made two mistakes…”
“You were the wrong color,” injected Leo.
“That was one, but also they had not counted on Jane and what she represents.” He stopped and faced Makhno. “She is a wild card in the deck.”
“You mean, nobody took account of a canny farmer!”
“Brodski might have done alone what the two of us did. Not with the same presence perhaps, but, accomplished the same tings and maybe even with fewer casualties. He has fought many kinds of war, that man,” Van Damm said with respect.
“Jane had the sense to recruit him.” Makhno kept his hand near his belt-knife, but relaxed a little. “She told me what to look for, and I found men who fit her specs.”
“Including me.”
“True. But why did you fight for Jane, then, instead of Jomo?”
“Leo, I have seen my home and culture destroyed by politicians in Washington and Moscow, and on Luna. Deciding the fates of lands they have never valked over, by drawing lines on maps.…”
“I think we’ve all seen that.”
“I vas off-world, Leo, vhen my people vere killed in vhat the media called ‘An exzess of independence’ but the result vas the same as if they had called it a ‘riot’ or an ‘insurrection.’ The result vas the same, the same…I no longer had a family or a home to return to, except the Fleet—until now.”
“Why did Fleet want Jomo to win?” Makhno asked.
“My job here vas to make the ‘uprising’ that happened as bloody as possible, and get the attention of the off-vorld news agencies. They are easy to manipulate and use. The justification for a CoDo takeover vas supposed to be the issue of overt slavery on Haven, and Jomo vas supposed to be the kingpin. But how much outrage can you generate vith a lead-line like Farmers defeat Slavers, Vid at 11?”
“Because you joined us, instead.”
“Ya.”
There was silence between the two men as they watched Hecate pass behind the hub of Cat’s Eye.
“Are you going back up, Van?”
“You killed any other option for me, Leo. The message vas delivered to me. I have been called; now I must go. By the vay, my controller is Maxwell Cole. If he ever tries to make a deal vith you.…”
“Yeah; don’t trust him.”
The two men turned and reentered the bar not noticing the child who had listened and learned, literally from sitting (in a barrel) at their feet.
Sr. Agent (GS14) Max Cole was seething. The reports from Haven pointed to a fiasco. Jomo’s head was on a stick outside of his own headquarters. The Kennicott agent who had been Jomo’s lieutenant was back in his old establishment, The Golden Parrot, with only one-third the strength he started with. What really rankled Cole was that a bunch of dirt farmers with fowling pieces and other junk had defeated a force of over fifty fighters (thugs and bullies true, but fighters none the less) armed with modern weapons, CoDo stunners. Led by a bloodthirsty egotist, the Simbas should have rolled up the settlers as fast as they found them.
Instead, Jomo and all the troops he’d taken with him were slaughtered. The thugs he’d left behind were being killed or were running out to a hostile wasteland where the odds of survival were ninety-nine to one against, at best.
What had Van Damm been doing? The media would be applauding, not screaming for the CoDominium to take action for ’Pacification.’ If they ever got the news, he thought. Chances were slight, since most of the returning ships were bound for Tabletop or Tanith, but still….
Maybe the farmers can be made to attack the Harmonies and take their land…. Well, I’ll find out when he gets up here. If Van Damm doesn’t have a plan, he’ll stay on that ice-ball until he bloody well comes up with one.
It was quiet in The Golden Parrot, and Tomas Messenger y DeCastro was disturbed. His bar was the only safe spot for the more overt “criminal” class of the planet, and it felt as if a siege was mounting outside its walls. He had forestalled some of the action by refusing entrance to some Simbas being chased by a mob—and had killed the one that had broken in through a back window. All the windows were now securely shuttered and barred from the inside. The dead Simba’s body was on a hook outside the front door.
That takes care of the present, perhaps even the next week or so, but what happens after that?
DeCastro had seen mobs taken by what they had felt was righteous indignation before, and it had always ended in killings and hangings and looting. He felt no need to dance his final dance at the end of a rope.
Well if one cannot live in one place, one moves to another.
But, how to move and keep things somewhat intact? Well, Capitan Makhno was a capitalist above all else; perhaps he would transport Tomas and his goods down river to the Kennicott camp. DeCastro could bring a few women with him, along with some of his most trustworthy compadres and a certain amount of his mostly depleted stock.
Perhaps Capitan Makhno would accept The Golden Parrot and all that remained in it in trade for transportation, including the hydroponic poppy garden in the basement. A pity that: they were just getting ready for bleeding. Opium remained a saleable product anywhere one took it.
He still had to ensure some kind of insurrection to allow Kennicott the rights they wished to steal from the Harmonies who now owned this moon of the Cat’s Eye.
The miners downstream might just do to serve his purpose.
He wrote a note and summoned his most trusted girl, Inez, and instructed her most carefully.
Maxwell Cole pointed his finger at Van Damm as if it was a pistol. “Bottom line, you had a job to do, and you didn’t do it.”
Van Damm shrugged instead of breaking off the jabbing digit at the root. “I ha
d faulty tools. The gang the previous operatives put together was a laugh. Jomo vas a bloodthirsty tyrant, more interested in pumping his own ego than doing the job. He and his gang of thugs thought they could bully people in submission. Vhen some of the locals put up some resistance, they folded like a house of cards.”
“Janesfort, ha! It sounds like the women had some backup, yes?”
“Yes, an ex-fleet gunny named Brodski, gave the ladies some support.”
“Why didn’t you dissuade him?” Cole asked patronizingly.
“I was busy in Castell, trying to keep control of things while Jomo was beating the bush,” Van Damm lied smoothly.
Cole shook his head. “The agency’s never going to buy this: a bunch of hicks and women beating off a small army. My ninety days here are just about up; I’m going to have to leave and sell this crock to my boss. Something tells me he’s not going to be amused. I know I’m not, and you’re the Johnny-on-the-spot.”
“I’ll take the heat.”
“Sure you will. You’re going to stay here until my replacement comes.”
Van Damm lowered his head as if he couldn’t bear the weight. The Velcro patch on his butt kept him firmly anchored to his seat, otherwise he would have floated away. “Not that,” he muttered, sounding as if he meant it.
“Yes, that,” Cole said. “And you’ll stay here until the next agent from BuIntel arrives. We’ve setup a small post on Wayforth Station to keep an eye on the Tanith Sector. The Harbinger will be stopping there first before going on to Newton, so it won’t take more than a few T-months to get someone out here. But that doesn’t mean you’re going to go shimmer stone hunting; I want you to try and light a fire under these hicks.”
Cole handed off a satchel which weighed enough to drag his arm down to the table. “This contains 2.5 kilos of assorted gold coins, and some cash. I want you to set up a network to undermine Harmony rule, plain and simple. That shouldn’t be difficult for a man of your experience.”
Van Damm nodded. “Jomo’s payoff for the stunners.”
“Yeah, and more. The Agency wants results; they’re getting a lot of pressure from higher up.”
Van Damm wondered why the Grand Senate was so interested in Haven. Maybe Senator Bronson wanted to reconsolidate his gains on the shimmer stone trade, now that the Company’s monopoly had been busted.
“Now, what can you do for us?” Cole demanded.
“It’s a difficult situation now that Jomo’s been killed.” Van Damm shrugged. “The townies and Jomo’s competitors used his defeat to clean up Castell City. There aren’t a lot of thugs left in Castell, and most of those that are still alive work for DeCastro.”
“DeCastro’s unreliable. He takes money from both Kennicott and Reynolds. The man’s been bought so many times he doesn’t know his left from his right. Maybe you can stir up some trouble with the miners.”
Van Damm knew that was beating a dead horse. Most of the miners had shimmer stone fever, and couldn’t care less about Castell City or who ran it. The rest were indentured serfs working for one of the Companies. Hell’s-A-Comin’ was like Dawson City during the Alaskan Gold Rush: no place for the timid or the faint of heart. As long as the Harmonies left them alone, they weren’t interested in anything but stones, women, getting drunk and gambling. He also knew that he had to give Cole something he could take back to his masters on Luna.
He slapped the leather satchel. “With this, I can buy some serious trouble,” he promised. But for whom?
“Good, I want you to use that cash to buy the Harmonies lots of trouble: Enough that when my replacement arrives, you can hand him Haven on a gold plate.”
“And, if I can’t?”
Cole gave him the fish eye. “Then you can stay on this ice-ball for the rest of your life, however long that may be.”
The shuttle carrying Van Damm was going to return in the dim phase, and Brodski was getting ready for it. Leo Makhno had delivered six 40-gallon drums of beer, twenty gallons of alcohol and almost a ton of foodstuffs for the bar, along with a selection of weapons and ammo (Simba salvaged war surplus) for him to sell. Flora, who had grill duty, was cleaning up the kitchen and the ex-Fleet sergeant was bringing a pile of sweepings up to the front door with careful broom strokes, when he heard a sound Brodski had heard all too often in his long career—a child being hurt.
The situation outside was about what he expected. Three men were struggling to hold onto a young boy. The boy was clearly overmatched, but refused to give up fighting for his freedom.
Brodski moved in. A quick thrust with the broom handle to the lower spine of the one with his back to Brodski took the odds down to two. Reversing the broom in a half-spin faced the second with the surprise of assured blindness. He let go.
The child twisted loose of his last tormentor and ran for the door of the bar.
“Pick up your friend and leave,” snarled Brodski, “And don’t come back for any reason.”
“Aww, it’s only a Harmony kid. We was just havin’ some fun.”
Brodski had moved a bit closer while the man was talking. The bristles of the broom ripped open the man’s cheek, and the handle end whipped around to break his nose as his head turned. A snap kick to the belly stopped the third man in his tracks.
It pays to advertise, especially when it comes to the kind of custom you want, thought Brodski. “It isn’t fun unless everybody involved enjoys what’s happening,” he said. “You having fun now? No? Then move out and don’t come back.” He’d remember those faces.
As Brodski entered the bar he sent the sweepings flying out the door with a quick flick of the broom, leaving some blood streaks on the floor, then looked at the child standing well back and holding a heavy clay ashtray ready to throw. Flora backed him with the coach gun from behind the bar.
“It’s all finished now, so put up the hardware.” Brodski turned to the child. “What’s your name, lad?”
“Do you know Captain Makhno?”
“I do.”
“I have a message for him, from Charles Castell.”
“Why you, lad, and not a beadle?”
“Because Castell doesn’t know he sent it.” That was stated simply as a fact, with all of the assurance of an eleven-year-old knowing he was doing the right thing.
“What’s your message, lad? I’ll make sure it gets to him.”
“It’s only for him, not some sinning bar owner.” Disdain was dripping from his mouth when he said it.
“Look kid, you’re making me think that I should have left you to your fun-loving friends out there.”
There was a look of thoughtfulness on the kid’s face. “How did you do that? I mean, with the broom. I never thought of a broom….”
“It’s just using what you have at hand to do the job.” Brodski thought a moment, “’Being at one with the moment is all; this is the path to Harmony with the universe,’” he quoted a Zen master he had studied under once.
“But…I have been taught that violence is dis-harmonious.”
Brodski pulled up the argument he’d used with Harmonies before. “Lad, when you come to think of it, striking a drum with a stick to make a beat is violent. Plucking a string on a guitar is violent. Nobody asks the skin or the string if they want to be treated that way, but what is produced can be music or discord depending on how it’s done. Just in case you’re wondering, that’s called Zen, and is part of a way of defending yourself.”
“…I’d like to learn more.”
“Well lad, I’m willing to teach if you’re willing to learn. You can write your message for Leo and leave it here. It won’t get read unless by him, but he won’t be back for a couple of days. You can write can’t you?”
The look on the child’s face told it all.
“Well, I can teach that, too. Flora, bring me a writing pad, some milk and a beer.” Looking over the kid, he added, “And a meat sandwich for my student. What’s your name, youngster?”
“Wilgar.”
“Wel
l, I guess first we teach you to write your name.”
Van Damm was still smarting from the dressing-down Max Cole had handed out in his private cabin aboard the Kennicott Harbinger, but at least Van was staying on Haven and getting a chance to recover some of his professional pride. With 2.5 kilos of assorted gold coins (the Golden Rand and English Guinea were still the small change of the espionage business), out-system trade units (plastic with embedded holograms), and paper CoDo money in various denominations, it would be possible to set up the kind of network Cole had ordered him to. Using DeCastro’s connections wouldn’t hurt, and would speed the process.
The question was, did he want to do it?
Seeing the virtues of one’s victims: this is how agents get turned, or go native.
As he headed for his temporary cabin in officers’ country he noticed a career corporal he’d played chess with on the way out, and the man didn’t look all that happy.
“What’s new, Heinrick?” he asked.
“Moving out, Mr. Van Damm. Planet-side. Down to that hellhole til God knows when. The Powers That Be have decided to lighten the ship by jettisoning half the ship’s guard in forty-eight hours. We go right after the Kennicott stuff drops for Kenny-Camp. You taking passage back to Earth?”
“No,” said Van Damm, an idea dawning. “I have part interest in a business in Docktown: one that you might like. A bar run by a friend of mine…an ex-Fleet Gunny named Brodski. Ever hear of him?”