The building was high and huge and greenhouse-hot. The humidity
and stench were punishing. The polarized glassteel roof had been
set to allow the maximum passage of sunlight. The air conditioning
was off. The buckets of night earth had not been removed from the
breeding stalls.
Norbon w’Deeth leaned on a slick brass rail, scanning the
enclosed acres below the observation platform.
Movable partitions divided the floor into hundreds of tiny
cubicles rowed back to back and facing narrow passageways. Each
cubicle contained an attractive female. There were so many of them
that their breathing and little movements kept the air alive with a
restless susurrus.
Deeth was frightened but curious. He had not expected the
breeding pens to be so huge.
His father’s hand touched his shoulder lightly, withdrew
to flutter in his interrogation of his breeding master. The elder
Norbon carried half a conversation with his hands.
“How can they refuse? Rhafu, they’re just
animals.”
Deeth’s thoughts echoed his father’s. The Norbon
Head could not be wrong. Rhafu had to be mistaken. Breeding and
feeding were the only things that interested animals.
“You don’t understand, sir.” Old Rhafu’s
tone betrayed stress. Even Deeth sensed his frustration at his
inability to impress the Norbon with the gravity of the situation.
“It’s not entirely that they’re refusing, either.
They’re just not interested. It’s the boars, sir. If it
were just the sows the boars would take them whether or not they
were willing.”
Deeth looked up at Rhafu. He was fond of the old man. Rhafu was
the kind of man he wished his father were. He was the old
adventurer every boy hoped to become.
The responsibilities of a Family Head left little time for close
relationships. Deeth’s father was a remote, often harried
man. He seldom gave his son the attention he craved.
Rhafu was a rogue full of stories about an exciting past. He
proudly wore scars won on the human worlds. And he had time to
share his stories with a boy.
Deeth was determined to emulate Rhafu. He would have his own
adventures before his father passed the family into his hands. His
raidships would plunder Terra, Toke, and Ulant. He would return
with his own treasury of stories, wealth, and honorable scars.
It was just a daydream. At seven he already knew that
heirs-apparent never risked themselves in the field. Adventures
were for younger sons seeking an independent fortune, for daughters
unable to make beneficial alliances, and for possessionless men
like Rhafu. His own inescapable fate was to become a merchant
prince like his father, far removed from the more brutal means of
accumulating wealth. The only dangers he would face would be those
of inter-Family intrigues over markets, resources, and power.
“Did you try drugs?” his father asked. Deeth yanked
himself back to the here and now. He was supposed to be learning.
His father would smack him a good one if his daydreaming became
obvious.
“Of course. Brood sows are always drugged. It makes them
receptive and keeps their intellection to a minimum.”
Rhafu was exasperated. His employer had not visited Prefactlas
Station for years. Moreover, the man confessed that he knew nothing
about the practical aspects of slave breeding. Fate had brought him
here in the midst of a crisis, and he persisted in asking questions
which cast doubt on the competence of the professionals on the
scene.
“We experimented with aphrodisiacs. We didn’t have
much luck. We got more response when we butchered a few boars for
not performing, but when we watched them closer we saw they were
withdrawing before ejaculation. Sir, you’re looking in the
wrong place for answers. Go poke around outside the station
boundary. The animals wouldn’t refuse if they weren’t
under some external influence.”
“Wild ones?” The Norbon shrugged, dismissing the
idea. “What about artificial insemination? We don’t
dare get behind. We’ve got contracts to meet.”
This was why the Norbon was in an unreasonable mood. The crisis
threatened the growth of the Norbon profit curve.
Deeth turned back to the pens. Funny. The animals looked so much
like Sangaree. But they were filthy. They stank.
Rhafu said some of the wild ones were different, that they cared
for themselves as well as did people. And the ones the Family kept
at home, at the manor, were clean and efficient and
indistinguishable from real people.
He spotted a sow that looked like his cousin Marjo. What would
happen if a Sangaree woman got mixed in with the animals? Could
anyone pick her out? Aliens like the Toke and Ulantonid were easy,
but these humans could pass as people.
“Yes. Of course. But we’re not set up to handle it
on the necessary scale. We’ve never had to do it. I’ve
had instruments and equipment on order since the trouble
started.”
“You haven’t got anything you can make do
with?” Deeth’s father sounded peevish. He became
irritable when the business ran rocky. “There’s a
fortune in the Osirian orders, and barely time to push them through
the fast-growth labs. Rhafu, I can’t default on a
full-spectrum order. I won’t. I refuse.”
Deeth smiled at a dull-eyed sow who was watching him
half-curiously. He made a small, barely understood obscene gesture
he had picked up at school.
“Ouch!”
Having disciplined his son, the Norbon turned to Rhafu as though
nothing had happened. Deeth rubbed the sting away. His father
abhorred the thought of coupling with livestock. To him that was
the ultimate perversion, though the practice was common. The Sexon
Family maintained a harem of specially bred exotics.
“Thirty units for the first shipment,” Rhafu said
thoughtfully. “I think I can manage that. I might damage a
few head forcing it, though.”
“Do what you have to.”
“I hate to injure prime stock, sir. But there’ll be
no production otherwise. We’ve had to be alert to prevent
self-induced abortion.”
“That bad? It’s really that bad?” Pained
surprise flashed across the usually expressionless features of the
Norbon. “That does it. You have my complete sanction. Do
what’s necessary. These contracts are worth the risk.
They’re going to generate follow-ups. The Osirian market is
wide open. Fresh. Untouched. The native princes are total despots.
Completely sybaritic and self-indulgent. It’s one of the
human First Expansion worlds gone feral. They’ve devolved
socially and technologically to a feudal level.”
Rhafu nodded. Like most Sangaree with field experience, he had a
solid background in human social and cultural history.
The elder Norbon stared into the pens that were the cornerstone
of the Family wealth. “Rhafu, Osiris is the Norbon
Wholar. Help me exploit it the way a Great House should.” Wholar. That’s the legendary one, Deeth thought. The
bonanza. The bottomless pot of gold. The world so big and wild and
rich that it took five Families to exploit it, the world that had
made the consortium Families first among the Sangaree.
Deeth was not sure he wanted an El Dorado for the Norbon. Too
much work for him when he became Head. And he would have to
socialize with those snobbish Krimnins and Sexons and Masons.
Unless he could devour the dream and make the Norbon the richest
Family of all. Then he would be First Family Head, could do as he
pleased, and would not have to worry about getting along.
“It’s outside trouble, I swear it,” Rhafu
said. “Sir, there’s something coming on. Even the
trainees in Isolation are infected. They’ve been complaining
all week. Station master tells me it’s the same everywhere.
Agriculture caught some boar pickers trying to fire the sithlac
fields.”
“Omens and signs, Rhafu? You’re superstitious? They
are the ones who need the supernatural. It’s got to be their
water. Or feed.”
“No. I’ve checked. Complete chemical analysis.
Everything is exactly what it should be. I tell you,
something’s happening and they know it. I’ve seen it
before, remember. On Copper Island.”
Deeth became interested again. Rhafu had come to the Norbon from
the Dathegon, whose station had been on Copper Island. No one had
told him why. “What happened, Rhafu?”
The breeding master glanced at his employer. The Norbon frowned,
but nodded.
“Slaves rising, Deeth. Because of sloppy security. The
field animals came in contact with wild ones. Pretty soon they
rebelled. Some of us saw it coming. We tried to warn the station
master. He wouldn’t listen. Those of us who survived work for
your father now. The Dathegon never recovered.”
“Oh.”
“And you think that could happen here?”
Deeth’s father demanded.
“Not necessarily. Our security is better. Our station
master served in human space. He knows what the animals can do when
they work together. I’m just telling you what it looks like,
hoping you’ll take steps. We’ll want to hold down our
losses.”
Rhafu was full of the curious ambivalence of Sangaree who had
served in human space. Individuals and small groups he called
animals. Larger bodies he elevated to slave status. When he
mentioned humanity outside Sangaree dominion he simply called them
humans, degrading them very little. His own discriminations
reflected those of his species as to the race they exploited.
“If we let it go much longer we’ll have to slaughter
our best stock to stop it.”
“Rhafu,” Deeth asked, “what happened to the
animals on Copper Island?”
“The Prefactlas Heads voted plagues.”
“Oh.” Deeth tried not to care about dead animals.
Feeling came anyway. He was not old enough to have hardened. If
only they did not look so much like real
people . . .
“I’ll think about what you’ve told me,
Rhafu.” The Norbon’s hand settled onto Deeth’s
shoulder again. “Department Heads meeting in the morning.
We’ll determine a policy then. Come, Deeth.”
They inspected the sithlac in its vast, hermetically sealed
greenhouse. The crop was sprouting. In time the virally infected
germ plasm of the grain would be refined to produce stardust, the
most addictive and deadly narcotic ever to plague humankind.
Stardust addicts did not survive long, but while they did they
provided their Sangaree suppliers with a guaranteed income.
Sithlac was the base of wealth for many of the smaller Families.
It underpinned the economy of the race. And it was one of the roots
of their belief in the essential animal-ness of humanity. No true
sentient would willingly subject itself to such a degrading, slow,
painful form of suicide.
Deeth fidgeted, bored, scarcely hearing his father’s
remarks. He was indifferent to the security that a sound,
conservative agricultural program represented. He was too young to
comprehend adult needs. He preferred the risk and romance of a
Rhafu-like life to the security of drug production.
Rhafu had not been much older than he was now when he had served
as a gunner’s helper during a raid into the Ulant sphere.
Raiding was the only way possessionless Sangaree had to
accumulate the wealth needed to establish a Family. Financially
troubled Families sometimes raided when they needed a quick cash
flow. Most Sangaree heroes and historical figures came out of the
raiding.
A conservative, the Norbon possessed no raidships. His
transports were lightly armed so his ships’ masters would not
be tempted to indulge in free-lance piracy.
The Norbon were a “made” Family. They were solid in
pleasure slaves and stardust. That their original fortune had been
made raiding was irrelevant. Money, as it aged, always became more
conservative and respectable.
Deeth reaffirmed his intention of building raiders when he
became Head. Everybody was saying that the human and Ulantonid
spheres were going to collide soon. That might mean war. Alien
races went to their guns when living space and resources were at
stake. The period of adjustment and accommodation would be a
raidmaster’s godsend.
Norbon w’Deeth, Scourge of the Spaceways, was slammed back
to reality by the impact of his father’s hand. “Deeth!
Wake up, boy! Time to go back to the greathouse. Your mother wants
us to get ready.”
Deeth took his father’s hand and allowed himself to be led
from the dome. He was not pleased about going. Even prosaic sithlac
fields were preferable to parties.
His mother had one planned for that evening. Everyone who was
anyone among the Prefactlas Families would be there—including
a few fellow heirs-apparent who could be counted on to start a
squabble when their elders were not around. He might have to take a
beating in defense of Family honor.
He understood that his mother felt obligated to have these
affairs. They helped reduce friction between the Families. But why
couldn’t he stay in his suite and view his books about the
great raiders and sales agents? Or even just study?
He was not going to marry a woman who threw parties. They were
boring. The adults got staggering around drunk and bellicose, or
syrupy, pulling him onto their laps and telling him what a
wonderful little boy he was, repelling him with their alcohol-laden
breath.
He would never drink, either. A raidmaster had to keep a clear
head.
The building was high and huge and greenhouse-hot. The humidity
and stench were punishing. The polarized glassteel roof had been
set to allow the maximum passage of sunlight. The air conditioning
was off. The buckets of night earth had not been removed from the
breeding stalls.
Norbon w’Deeth leaned on a slick brass rail, scanning the
enclosed acres below the observation platform.
Movable partitions divided the floor into hundreds of tiny
cubicles rowed back to back and facing narrow passageways. Each
cubicle contained an attractive female. There were so many of them
that their breathing and little movements kept the air alive with a
restless susurrus.
Deeth was frightened but curious. He had not expected the
breeding pens to be so huge.
His father’s hand touched his shoulder lightly, withdrew
to flutter in his interrogation of his breeding master. The elder
Norbon carried half a conversation with his hands.
“How can they refuse? Rhafu, they’re just
animals.”
Deeth’s thoughts echoed his father’s. The Norbon
Head could not be wrong. Rhafu had to be mistaken. Breeding and
feeding were the only things that interested animals.
“You don’t understand, sir.” Old Rhafu’s
tone betrayed stress. Even Deeth sensed his frustration at his
inability to impress the Norbon with the gravity of the situation.
“It’s not entirely that they’re refusing, either.
They’re just not interested. It’s the boars, sir. If it
were just the sows the boars would take them whether or not they
were willing.”
Deeth looked up at Rhafu. He was fond of the old man. Rhafu was
the kind of man he wished his father were. He was the old
adventurer every boy hoped to become.
The responsibilities of a Family Head left little time for close
relationships. Deeth’s father was a remote, often harried
man. He seldom gave his son the attention he craved.
Rhafu was a rogue full of stories about an exciting past. He
proudly wore scars won on the human worlds. And he had time to
share his stories with a boy.
Deeth was determined to emulate Rhafu. He would have his own
adventures before his father passed the family into his hands. His
raidships would plunder Terra, Toke, and Ulant. He would return
with his own treasury of stories, wealth, and honorable scars.
It was just a daydream. At seven he already knew that
heirs-apparent never risked themselves in the field. Adventures
were for younger sons seeking an independent fortune, for daughters
unable to make beneficial alliances, and for possessionless men
like Rhafu. His own inescapable fate was to become a merchant
prince like his father, far removed from the more brutal means of
accumulating wealth. The only dangers he would face would be those
of inter-Family intrigues over markets, resources, and power.
“Did you try drugs?” his father asked. Deeth yanked
himself back to the here and now. He was supposed to be learning.
His father would smack him a good one if his daydreaming became
obvious.
“Of course. Brood sows are always drugged. It makes them
receptive and keeps their intellection to a minimum.”
Rhafu was exasperated. His employer had not visited Prefactlas
Station for years. Moreover, the man confessed that he knew nothing
about the practical aspects of slave breeding. Fate had brought him
here in the midst of a crisis, and he persisted in asking questions
which cast doubt on the competence of the professionals on the
scene.
“We experimented with aphrodisiacs. We didn’t have
much luck. We got more response when we butchered a few boars for
not performing, but when we watched them closer we saw they were
withdrawing before ejaculation. Sir, you’re looking in the
wrong place for answers. Go poke around outside the station
boundary. The animals wouldn’t refuse if they weren’t
under some external influence.”
“Wild ones?” The Norbon shrugged, dismissing the
idea. “What about artificial insemination? We don’t
dare get behind. We’ve got contracts to meet.”
This was why the Norbon was in an unreasonable mood. The crisis
threatened the growth of the Norbon profit curve.
Deeth turned back to the pens. Funny. The animals looked so much
like Sangaree. But they were filthy. They stank.
Rhafu said some of the wild ones were different, that they cared
for themselves as well as did people. And the ones the Family kept
at home, at the manor, were clean and efficient and
indistinguishable from real people.
He spotted a sow that looked like his cousin Marjo. What would
happen if a Sangaree woman got mixed in with the animals? Could
anyone pick her out? Aliens like the Toke and Ulantonid were easy,
but these humans could pass as people.
“Yes. Of course. But we’re not set up to handle it
on the necessary scale. We’ve never had to do it. I’ve
had instruments and equipment on order since the trouble
started.”
“You haven’t got anything you can make do
with?” Deeth’s father sounded peevish. He became
irritable when the business ran rocky. “There’s a
fortune in the Osirian orders, and barely time to push them through
the fast-growth labs. Rhafu, I can’t default on a
full-spectrum order. I won’t. I refuse.”
Deeth smiled at a dull-eyed sow who was watching him
half-curiously. He made a small, barely understood obscene gesture
he had picked up at school.
“Ouch!”
Having disciplined his son, the Norbon turned to Rhafu as though
nothing had happened. Deeth rubbed the sting away. His father
abhorred the thought of coupling with livestock. To him that was
the ultimate perversion, though the practice was common. The Sexon
Family maintained a harem of specially bred exotics.
“Thirty units for the first shipment,” Rhafu said
thoughtfully. “I think I can manage that. I might damage a
few head forcing it, though.”
“Do what you have to.”
“I hate to injure prime stock, sir. But there’ll be
no production otherwise. We’ve had to be alert to prevent
self-induced abortion.”
“That bad? It’s really that bad?” Pained
surprise flashed across the usually expressionless features of the
Norbon. “That does it. You have my complete sanction. Do
what’s necessary. These contracts are worth the risk.
They’re going to generate follow-ups. The Osirian market is
wide open. Fresh. Untouched. The native princes are total despots.
Completely sybaritic and self-indulgent. It’s one of the
human First Expansion worlds gone feral. They’ve devolved
socially and technologically to a feudal level.”
Rhafu nodded. Like most Sangaree with field experience, he had a
solid background in human social and cultural history.
The elder Norbon stared into the pens that were the cornerstone
of the Family wealth. “Rhafu, Osiris is the Norbon
Wholar. Help me exploit it the way a Great House should.” Wholar. That’s the legendary one, Deeth thought. The
bonanza. The bottomless pot of gold. The world so big and wild and
rich that it took five Families to exploit it, the world that had
made the consortium Families first among the Sangaree.
Deeth was not sure he wanted an El Dorado for the Norbon. Too
much work for him when he became Head. And he would have to
socialize with those snobbish Krimnins and Sexons and Masons.
Unless he could devour the dream and make the Norbon the richest
Family of all. Then he would be First Family Head, could do as he
pleased, and would not have to worry about getting along.
“It’s outside trouble, I swear it,” Rhafu
said. “Sir, there’s something coming on. Even the
trainees in Isolation are infected. They’ve been complaining
all week. Station master tells me it’s the same everywhere.
Agriculture caught some boar pickers trying to fire the sithlac
fields.”
“Omens and signs, Rhafu? You’re superstitious? They
are the ones who need the supernatural. It’s got to be their
water. Or feed.”
“No. I’ve checked. Complete chemical analysis.
Everything is exactly what it should be. I tell you,
something’s happening and they know it. I’ve seen it
before, remember. On Copper Island.”
Deeth became interested again. Rhafu had come to the Norbon from
the Dathegon, whose station had been on Copper Island. No one had
told him why. “What happened, Rhafu?”
The breeding master glanced at his employer. The Norbon frowned,
but nodded.
“Slaves rising, Deeth. Because of sloppy security. The
field animals came in contact with wild ones. Pretty soon they
rebelled. Some of us saw it coming. We tried to warn the station
master. He wouldn’t listen. Those of us who survived work for
your father now. The Dathegon never recovered.”
“Oh.”
“And you think that could happen here?”
Deeth’s father demanded.
“Not necessarily. Our security is better. Our station
master served in human space. He knows what the animals can do when
they work together. I’m just telling you what it looks like,
hoping you’ll take steps. We’ll want to hold down our
losses.”
Rhafu was full of the curious ambivalence of Sangaree who had
served in human space. Individuals and small groups he called
animals. Larger bodies he elevated to slave status. When he
mentioned humanity outside Sangaree dominion he simply called them
humans, degrading them very little. His own discriminations
reflected those of his species as to the race they exploited.
“If we let it go much longer we’ll have to slaughter
our best stock to stop it.”
“Rhafu,” Deeth asked, “what happened to the
animals on Copper Island?”
“The Prefactlas Heads voted plagues.”
“Oh.” Deeth tried not to care about dead animals.
Feeling came anyway. He was not old enough to have hardened. If
only they did not look so much like real
people . . .
“I’ll think about what you’ve told me,
Rhafu.” The Norbon’s hand settled onto Deeth’s
shoulder again. “Department Heads meeting in the morning.
We’ll determine a policy then. Come, Deeth.”
They inspected the sithlac in its vast, hermetically sealed
greenhouse. The crop was sprouting. In time the virally infected
germ plasm of the grain would be refined to produce stardust, the
most addictive and deadly narcotic ever to plague humankind.
Stardust addicts did not survive long, but while they did they
provided their Sangaree suppliers with a guaranteed income.
Sithlac was the base of wealth for many of the smaller Families.
It underpinned the economy of the race. And it was one of the roots
of their belief in the essential animal-ness of humanity. No true
sentient would willingly subject itself to such a degrading, slow,
painful form of suicide.
Deeth fidgeted, bored, scarcely hearing his father’s
remarks. He was indifferent to the security that a sound,
conservative agricultural program represented. He was too young to
comprehend adult needs. He preferred the risk and romance of a
Rhafu-like life to the security of drug production.
Rhafu had not been much older than he was now when he had served
as a gunner’s helper during a raid into the Ulant sphere.
Raiding was the only way possessionless Sangaree had to
accumulate the wealth needed to establish a Family. Financially
troubled Families sometimes raided when they needed a quick cash
flow. Most Sangaree heroes and historical figures came out of the
raiding.
A conservative, the Norbon possessed no raidships. His
transports were lightly armed so his ships’ masters would not
be tempted to indulge in free-lance piracy.
The Norbon were a “made” Family. They were solid in
pleasure slaves and stardust. That their original fortune had been
made raiding was irrelevant. Money, as it aged, always became more
conservative and respectable.
Deeth reaffirmed his intention of building raiders when he
became Head. Everybody was saying that the human and Ulantonid
spheres were going to collide soon. That might mean war. Alien
races went to their guns when living space and resources were at
stake. The period of adjustment and accommodation would be a
raidmaster’s godsend.
Norbon w’Deeth, Scourge of the Spaceways, was slammed back
to reality by the impact of his father’s hand. “Deeth!
Wake up, boy! Time to go back to the greathouse. Your mother wants
us to get ready.”
Deeth took his father’s hand and allowed himself to be led
from the dome. He was not pleased about going. Even prosaic sithlac
fields were preferable to parties.
His mother had one planned for that evening. Everyone who was
anyone among the Prefactlas Families would be there—including
a few fellow heirs-apparent who could be counted on to start a
squabble when their elders were not around. He might have to take a
beating in defense of Family honor.
He understood that his mother felt obligated to have these
affairs. They helped reduce friction between the Families. But why
couldn’t he stay in his suite and view his books about the
great raiders and sales agents? Or even just study?
He was not going to marry a woman who threw parties. They were
boring. The adults got staggering around drunk and bellicose, or
syrupy, pulling him onto their laps and telling him what a
wonderful little boy he was, repelling him with their alcohol-laden
breath.
He would never drink, either. A raidmaster had to keep a clear
head.