"AND SO we landed here, sir,”
Rip concluded his report in the matter-of-fact tone he might have
used in describing a perfectly ordinary voyage, say between
Terraport and Luna City, a run of no incident and dull cargo
carrying.
The crew of the SolarQueen, save for Tau, were assembled in a
room somewhere in the vastness of Patrol Headquarters. Since the
room seemed a comfortable conference chamber, Dane thought that
their status must now be on a higher level than that of Patrol
Posted outlaws. But he was also sure that if they attempted to walk
out of the building that effort would not be successful.
Van Rycke sat stolidly in his chosen seat, fingers of both hands
laced across his substantial middle. He had sat as impassively as
the Captain while Rip had outlined their adventures since they had
all been stricken. Though the other listeners had betrayed interest
in the story, the senior officers made no comments. Now Jellico
turned to his Cargo-master.
“How about it, Van?”
“What’s done is done—”
Dane’s elation vanished as if ripped away by a Sargolian
storm wind. The Cargo-master didn’t approve. So there must
have been another way to achieve their ends—one the younger
members of the crew had been too inexperienced or too dense to
see—
“If we blasted off today we might just make cargo
contract.”
Dane started. That was it! The point they had lost sight of
during their struggles to get aid. There was no possible chance of
upping the ship today—probably not for days to come—or
ever, if the case went against them. So they had broken
contract—and the Board would be down on them for that. Dane
shivered inside. He could try to fight back against the
Patrol—there had always been a slight feeling of rivalry between the Free Traders and the space police. But you
couldn’t buck the Board—and keep your license and so
have a means of staying in space. A broken contract could cut one
off from the stars forever. Captain Jellico looked very bleak at
that reminder.
“The Eysies will be all ready to step in. I’d like
to know why they were so sure we had the plague on
board—”
Van Rycke snorted. “I can supply you five answers to that—for one they may have known the affinity of those creatures
for the wood, and it would be easy to predict as a result of our
taking a load on board—or again they may have deliberately
planted the things on us through the Salariki—But we
can’t ever prove it. It remains that they are going to get
for themselves the Sargolian contract unless—” He
stopped short, staring straight ahead of him at the wall between
Rip and Dane. And his assistant knew that Van was exploring a fresh
idea. Van’s ideas were never to be despised and Jellico did
not now disturb the Cargo-master with questions.
It was Rip who spoke next and directly to the Captain. “Do
you know what they plan to do about us, sir?”
Captain Jellico grunted and there was a sardonic twist to his
mouth as he replied, “It’s my opinion that
they’re now busy adding up the list of crimes you four have
committed—maybe they had to turn the big HG computer loose
on the problem. The tally isn’t in yet. We gave them our
automatic flight record and that ought to give them more food for
thought.”
Dane speculated as to what the experts would make of
the mechanical record of the Queen’s past few weeks—the
section dealing with their landing in the Big Burn ought to be a
little surprising. Van Rycke got to his feet and marched to the
door of the conference room. It was opened from without so quickly
Dane was sure that they had been under constant surveillance.
“Trade business,” snapped the Cargo-master,
“contract deal. Take me to a sealed com
booth!”
Contracts might not be as sacred to the protective Service as they were to Trade, but Trade had its powers and since Van
Rycke, an innocent bystander of the Queen’s troubles, could
not legally be charged with any crime, he was escorted out of the
room. But the door panel was sealed behind him, shutting in the
rest with the unspoken warning that they were not free agents.
Jellico leaned back in his chair and stretched. Long years of close
friendship had taught him that his Cargo-master was to be trusted
with not only the actual trading and cargo tending, but could also
think them out of some of the tangles which could not be solved by
his own direct action methods. Direct action had been applied to
their present problem—now the rest was up to Van, and he was
willing to delegate all responsibility.
But they were not left long to themselves. The door opened once
more to admit star rank Patrolmen. None of the Free Traders arose.
As members of another Service they considered themselves equals.
And it was their private boast that the interests of Galactic
civilization, as represented by the black and silver, often
followed, not preceded the brown tunics into new quarters of the
universe.
However, Rip, Ali, Dane, and Weeks answered as fully as they
could the flood of questions which engulfed them. They explained in
detail their visit to the E-Stat, the landing in the Big Burn, the
kidnaping of Hovan. Dane’s stubborn feeling of being in the
right grew in opposition to the questioning. Under the same set of
circumstances how would that Commander—that Wing
Officer—that Senior Scout—now all seated
there—have acted? And every time they inferred that his part
in the affair had been illegal he stiffened.
Sure, there had to be law and order out on the Rim—and
doubly sure it had to cover and protect life on the softer planets
of the inner systems. He wasn’t denying that on Limbo, he,
for one, had been very glad to see the Patrol blast their way into
the headquarters of the pirates holed up on that half-dead world.
And he was never contemptuous of the men in the field. But like all
Free Traders he was influenced by a belief that too often the laws
as enforced by the Patrol favored the wealth and might of the Companies, that law could be
twisted and the Patrol sent to push through actions which, though
legal, were inherently unfair to those who had not the funds to
fight it out in the far off Council courts. Just as now he was
certain that the Eysies were bringing all the influence they had to
bear here against the Queen’s men. And Inter-Solar had a lot
of influence.
At the end of their ordeal their statements were read back to
them from the recording tape and they thumb signed them. Were these
statements or confessions, Dane mused. Perhaps in their honest
reports they had just signed their way into the moon mines. Only
there was no move to lead them out and book them. And when Weeks
pressed his thumb at the bottom of the tape, Captain Jellico took a
hand. He looked at his watch.
“It is now ten hours,” he observed. “My men
need rest, and we all want food. Are you through with
us?”
The Commander was spokesman for the other group. “You are
to remain in quarantine, Captain. Your ship has not yet been passed
as port-free. But you will be assigned quarters—”
Once again they were marched through blank halls to the other
section of the sprawling Patrol Headquarters. No windows looked
upon the outer world, but there were bunks and a small mess alcove.
Ali, Dane, and Rip turned in, more interested in sleep than food.
And the last thing the Cargo-apprentice remembered was seeing
Jellico talking earnestly with Steen Wilcox as they both sipped
steaming mugs of real Terran coffee.
But with twelve hours of sleep behind them the three were less
contented in confinement. No one had come near them and Van Rycke
had not returned. Which fact the crew clung to as a ray of hope.
Somewhere the Cargo-master must be fighting their battle. And all
Van’s vast store of Trade knowledge, all his knack of cutting
corners and driving a shrewd bargain, enlisted on their behalf,
must win them some concessions.
Medic Tau came in, bringing Hovan with him. Both looked tired but triumphant. And their report was a shot in the arm for
the now uneasy Traders.
“We’ve rammed it down their throats,” Tau
announced. “They’re willing to admit that it was those
poison bugs and not a plague. Incidentally,” he grinned at
Jellico and then looked around expectantly, “where’s
Van? This comes in his department. We’re going to cash in on
those the kids dumped in the deep freeze. Terra-Lab is bidding on
them. I said to see Van—he can arrange the best deal for us.
Where is he?”
“Gone to see about our contract,” Jellico reported.
“What’s the news about our status now?”
“Well, they’ve got to wipe out the plague ship
listing. Also—we’re big news. There’re about
twenty video men rocketing around out in the offices trying to get
in and have us do some spot broadcasts. Seems that the children
here,” he jerked his thumb at the three apprentices,
“started something. An inter solar invasion couldn’t be
bigger news! Human interest by the tankful. I’ve been on
Video twice and they’re trying to sign up Hovan almost
steady—”
The Medic from the frontier nodded. “Wanted me to appear
on a three week schedule,” he chuckled. “I was asked to
come in on ‘Our Heroes of the Starlines’ and two Quiz
programs. As for you, you young criminal,” he swung to Dane,
“you’re going to be fair game for about three networks.
It seems you transmit well,” he uttered the last as if it
were an accusation and Dane squirmed. “Anyway you did
something with your crazy stunt. And, Captain, three men want to
buy your Hoobat. I gather they are planning a showing of how it
captures those pests. So be prepared—”
Dane tried to visualize a scene in which he shared top billing
with Queex and shuddered. All he wanted now was to get free of
Terra for a nice, quiet, uncomplicated world where problems could
be settled with a sleep rod or a blaster and the Video screen was
unknown.
Having heard of what awaited them without the men of the
Queen were more content to be incarcerated in the quarantine
section. But as time wore on and the Cargo-master did not return, their anxieties awoke. They were fairly sure by now
that any penalty the Patrol or the Terrapolice would impose would
not be too drastic. But a broken contract was another and more
serious affair—a matter which might ground them more
effectively than any rule of the law enforcement bodies. And
Jellico took to pacing the room, while Tang and Wilcox, who had
started a game of four dimensional chess, made countless errors of
move, and Stotz glared moodily at the wall, apparently too sunk in
his own gloomy thoughts to rise from the mess table in the
alcove.
Though time had ceased to have much meaning for them except as
an irritating reminder of the now sure failure of their Sargolian
venture, they marked the hours into a second full day of detention
before Van Rycke finally put in appearance. The Cargo-master was
plainly tired, but he showed no signs of discomposure. In fact as
he came in he was humming what he fondly imagined was a popular
tune.
Jellico asked no questions, he merely regarded his trusted
officer with a quizzically raised eyebrow. But the others drew
around. It was so apparent that Van Rycke was pleased with himself.
Which could only mean that in some fantastic way he had managed to
bring their venture down in a full fin landing, that somehow he had
argued the Queen out of danger into a position where he could
control the situation.
He halted just within the doorway and eyed Dane, Ali, and Rip
with mock severity. “You’re baaaad boys,” he told
them with a shake of the head and a drawl of the adjective.
“You’ve been demoted ten files each on the
list.”
Which must put him on the bottom rung once more, Dane calculated
swiftly. Or even below—though he didn’t see how he
could fall beneath the rank he had held at assignment. However, he
found the news heartening instead of discouraging. Compared to a
bleak sentence at the moon mines such demotion was absolutely
nothing and he knew that Van Rycke was breaking the worst news
first.
“You also forfeit all pay for this voyage,” the
Cargo-master was continuing. But Jellico broke in.
”Board fine?”
At the Cargo-master’s nod, Jellico added. “Ship pays
that.”
“So I told them,” Van Rycke agreed. “The
Queen’s warned off Terra for ten solar
years—”
They could take that, too. Other Free Traders got back to their
home ports perhaps once in a quarter century. It was so much less
than they had expected that the sentence was greeted with a
concentrated sigh of relief.
“No earth-side leave—”
All right—no leave. They were not, after their late
experiences, so entranced with Terraport that they wanted to linger
in its environs any longer than they had to.
“We lose the Sargol contract—”
That did hurt. But they had resigned themselves to it since the
hour when they had realized that they could not make it back to the
perfumed planet.
“To Inter-Solar?” Wilcox asked the important
question.
Van Rycke was smiling broadly, as if the loss he had just
announced was in some way a gain. “No—to
Combine!”
“Combine?” the Captain echoed and his puzzlement was
duplicated around the circle. How did Inter-Solar’s principal
rival come into it?”
“We’ve made a deal with Combine,” Van Rycke
informed them. “I wasn’t going to let I-S cash in on
our loss. So I went to Vickers at Combine and told him the
situation. He understands that we were in solid with the Salariki
and that the Eysies are not. And a chance to point a blaster at
I-S’s tail is just what he has been waiting for. The shipment
will go out to the storm priests tomorrow on a light
cruiser—it’ll make it on time.”
Yes, a light cruiser, one of the fast ships maintained by the
big Companies, could make the transition to Sargol with a slight
margin to spare. Stotz nodded his approval at this practical
solution.
“I’m going with it—”
That did jerk them
all up short. For Van Rycke to leave the Queen—that
was as unthinkable as if Captain Jellico had suddenly announced
that he was about to retire and become a kelp farmer. “Just for the one
trip,” the Cargo-master hastened to assure them. “I
smooth their vector with the storm priests and hand over so the
Eysies will be frozen out—”
Captain Jellico interrupted at that point. “D’you
mean that Combine is buying us out—not just taking
over? What kind of a deal—”
But Van Rycke, his smile a brilliant stretch across his plump
face, was nodding in agreement. “They’re taking over
our contract and our place with the Salariki.”
“In return for what?” Steen Wilcox asked for them
all.
“For twenty-five thousand credits and a mail run between
Xecho and Trewsworld—frontier planets. They’re far
enough from Terra to get around the exile ruling. The Patrol will
escort us out and see that we get down to work like good little
space men. We’ll have two years of a nice, quiet run on
regular pay. Then, when all the powers that shine have forgotten
about us, we can cut in on the trade routes again.”
“And the pay?” “First or second class
mail?” “When do we start?”
“Standard pay on the completion of each run—Board
rates,” he made replies in order. “First, second and
third class mail—anything that bears the government seal and
out in those quarters it is apt to be anything! And you
start as soon as you can get to Xecho and relieve the Combine scout
which has been holding down the run.”
“While you go to Sargol—” commented
Jellico.
“While I make one voyage to Sargol. You can spare
me,” he dropped one of his big hands on Dane’s shoulder
and gave the flesh beneath it a quick squeeze. “Seeing as how
our juniors helped pull us out of this last mix-up we can trust
them about an inch farther than we did before. Anyway—Cargo-master on a mail run is more or less a thumb-twiddling job at
the best. And you can trust Thorson on stowage—that’s
one thing he does know.” Which dubious ending left
Dane wondering as to whether he had been complimented or warned.
“I’ll be on board again before you know it—the
Combine will ship me out to Trewsworld on your second trip across
and I’ll join ship there. For once we won’t have to
worry for awhile. Nothing can happen on a mail run.”
He shook
his head at the three youngest members of the crew.
“You’re in for a very dull time—and it will serve
you right. Give you a chance to learn your jobs so that when you
come up for reassignment you can pick up some of those files you
were just demoted. Now,” he started briskly for the door.
“I’ll tranship to the Combine cruiser. I take it that
you don’t want to meet the Video people?”
At their hasty agreement to that, he laughed. “Well, the
Patrol doesn’t want the Video spouting about
‘high-handed official news suppression’ so about an
hour or so from now you’ll be let out the back way. They put
the Queen in a cradle and a field scooter will take you to her.
You’ll find her serviced for a take-off to Luna City. You can
refit there for deep space. Frankly the sooner you get off-world
the happier all ranks are going to be—both here and on the
Board. It will be better for us to walk softly for a while and let
them forget that the SolarQueen and her crazy crew exists.
Separately and together you’ve managed to break—or at
least bend—half the laws in the books and they’d like
to have us out of their minds.”
Captain Jellico stood up. “They aren’t any more
anxious to see us go than we are to get out of here. You’ve
pulled it off for us again, Van, and we’re lucky to get out
of it this easy—”
Van Rycke rolled his eyes ceilingward. “You’ll never
know how lucky! Be glad Combine hates the space I-S blasts through.
We were able to use that to our advantage. Get the big fellows at
each others’ throats and they’ll stop annoying
us—simple proposition but it works. Anyway we’re set in
blessed and peaceful obscurity now. Thank the Spirit of Free Space
there’s practically no trouble one can get into on a safe and
sane mail route!”
But Cargo-master Van Rycke, in spite of knowing the SolarQueen
and the temper of her crew, was exceedingly over-optimistic when he
made that emphatic statement.
"AND SO we landed here, sir,”
Rip concluded his report in the matter-of-fact tone he might have
used in describing a perfectly ordinary voyage, say between
Terraport and Luna City, a run of no incident and dull cargo
carrying.
The crew of the SolarQueen, save for Tau, were assembled in a
room somewhere in the vastness of Patrol Headquarters. Since the
room seemed a comfortable conference chamber, Dane thought that
their status must now be on a higher level than that of Patrol
Posted outlaws. But he was also sure that if they attempted to walk
out of the building that effort would not be successful.
Van Rycke sat stolidly in his chosen seat, fingers of both hands
laced across his substantial middle. He had sat as impassively as
the Captain while Rip had outlined their adventures since they had
all been stricken. Though the other listeners had betrayed interest
in the story, the senior officers made no comments. Now Jellico
turned to his Cargo-master.
“How about it, Van?”
“What’s done is done—”
Dane’s elation vanished as if ripped away by a Sargolian
storm wind. The Cargo-master didn’t approve. So there must
have been another way to achieve their ends—one the younger
members of the crew had been too inexperienced or too dense to
see—
“If we blasted off today we might just make cargo
contract.”
Dane started. That was it! The point they had lost sight of
during their struggles to get aid. There was no possible chance of
upping the ship today—probably not for days to come—or
ever, if the case went against them. So they had broken
contract—and the Board would be down on them for that. Dane
shivered inside. He could try to fight back against the
Patrol—there had always been a slight feeling of rivalry between the Free Traders and the space police. But you
couldn’t buck the Board—and keep your license and so
have a means of staying in space. A broken contract could cut one
off from the stars forever. Captain Jellico looked very bleak at
that reminder.
“The Eysies will be all ready to step in. I’d like
to know why they were so sure we had the plague on
board—”
Van Rycke snorted. “I can supply you five answers to that—for one they may have known the affinity of those creatures
for the wood, and it would be easy to predict as a result of our
taking a load on board—or again they may have deliberately
planted the things on us through the Salariki—But we
can’t ever prove it. It remains that they are going to get
for themselves the Sargolian contract unless—” He
stopped short, staring straight ahead of him at the wall between
Rip and Dane. And his assistant knew that Van was exploring a fresh
idea. Van’s ideas were never to be despised and Jellico did
not now disturb the Cargo-master with questions.
It was Rip who spoke next and directly to the Captain. “Do
you know what they plan to do about us, sir?”
Captain Jellico grunted and there was a sardonic twist to his
mouth as he replied, “It’s my opinion that
they’re now busy adding up the list of crimes you four have
committed—maybe they had to turn the big HG computer loose
on the problem. The tally isn’t in yet. We gave them our
automatic flight record and that ought to give them more food for
thought.”
Dane speculated as to what the experts would make of
the mechanical record of the Queen’s past few weeks—the
section dealing with their landing in the Big Burn ought to be a
little surprising. Van Rycke got to his feet and marched to the
door of the conference room. It was opened from without so quickly
Dane was sure that they had been under constant surveillance.
“Trade business,” snapped the Cargo-master,
“contract deal. Take me to a sealed com
booth!”
Contracts might not be as sacred to the protective Service as they were to Trade, but Trade had its powers and since Van
Rycke, an innocent bystander of the Queen’s troubles, could
not legally be charged with any crime, he was escorted out of the
room. But the door panel was sealed behind him, shutting in the
rest with the unspoken warning that they were not free agents.
Jellico leaned back in his chair and stretched. Long years of close
friendship had taught him that his Cargo-master was to be trusted
with not only the actual trading and cargo tending, but could also
think them out of some of the tangles which could not be solved by
his own direct action methods. Direct action had been applied to
their present problem—now the rest was up to Van, and he was
willing to delegate all responsibility.
But they were not left long to themselves. The door opened once
more to admit star rank Patrolmen. None of the Free Traders arose.
As members of another Service they considered themselves equals.
And it was their private boast that the interests of Galactic
civilization, as represented by the black and silver, often
followed, not preceded the brown tunics into new quarters of the
universe.
However, Rip, Ali, Dane, and Weeks answered as fully as they
could the flood of questions which engulfed them. They explained in
detail their visit to the E-Stat, the landing in the Big Burn, the
kidnaping of Hovan. Dane’s stubborn feeling of being in the
right grew in opposition to the questioning. Under the same set of
circumstances how would that Commander—that Wing
Officer—that Senior Scout—now all seated
there—have acted? And every time they inferred that his part
in the affair had been illegal he stiffened.
Sure, there had to be law and order out on the Rim—and
doubly sure it had to cover and protect life on the softer planets
of the inner systems. He wasn’t denying that on Limbo, he,
for one, had been very glad to see the Patrol blast their way into
the headquarters of the pirates holed up on that half-dead world.
And he was never contemptuous of the men in the field. But like all
Free Traders he was influenced by a belief that too often the laws
as enforced by the Patrol favored the wealth and might of the Companies, that law could be
twisted and the Patrol sent to push through actions which, though
legal, were inherently unfair to those who had not the funds to
fight it out in the far off Council courts. Just as now he was
certain that the Eysies were bringing all the influence they had to
bear here against the Queen’s men. And Inter-Solar had a lot
of influence.
At the end of their ordeal their statements were read back to
them from the recording tape and they thumb signed them. Were these
statements or confessions, Dane mused. Perhaps in their honest
reports they had just signed their way into the moon mines. Only
there was no move to lead them out and book them. And when Weeks
pressed his thumb at the bottom of the tape, Captain Jellico took a
hand. He looked at his watch.
“It is now ten hours,” he observed. “My men
need rest, and we all want food. Are you through with
us?”
The Commander was spokesman for the other group. “You are
to remain in quarantine, Captain. Your ship has not yet been passed
as port-free. But you will be assigned quarters—”
Once again they were marched through blank halls to the other
section of the sprawling Patrol Headquarters. No windows looked
upon the outer world, but there were bunks and a small mess alcove.
Ali, Dane, and Rip turned in, more interested in sleep than food.
And the last thing the Cargo-apprentice remembered was seeing
Jellico talking earnestly with Steen Wilcox as they both sipped
steaming mugs of real Terran coffee.
But with twelve hours of sleep behind them the three were less
contented in confinement. No one had come near them and Van Rycke
had not returned. Which fact the crew clung to as a ray of hope.
Somewhere the Cargo-master must be fighting their battle. And all
Van’s vast store of Trade knowledge, all his knack of cutting
corners and driving a shrewd bargain, enlisted on their behalf,
must win them some concessions.
Medic Tau came in, bringing Hovan with him. Both looked tired but triumphant. And their report was a shot in the arm for
the now uneasy Traders.
“We’ve rammed it down their throats,” Tau
announced. “They’re willing to admit that it was those
poison bugs and not a plague. Incidentally,” he grinned at
Jellico and then looked around expectantly, “where’s
Van? This comes in his department. We’re going to cash in on
those the kids dumped in the deep freeze. Terra-Lab is bidding on
them. I said to see Van—he can arrange the best deal for us.
Where is he?”
“Gone to see about our contract,” Jellico reported.
“What’s the news about our status now?”
“Well, they’ve got to wipe out the plague ship
listing. Also—we’re big news. There’re about
twenty video men rocketing around out in the offices trying to get
in and have us do some spot broadcasts. Seems that the children
here,” he jerked his thumb at the three apprentices,
“started something. An inter solar invasion couldn’t be
bigger news! Human interest by the tankful. I’ve been on
Video twice and they’re trying to sign up Hovan almost
steady—”
The Medic from the frontier nodded. “Wanted me to appear
on a three week schedule,” he chuckled. “I was asked to
come in on ‘Our Heroes of the Starlines’ and two Quiz
programs. As for you, you young criminal,” he swung to Dane,
“you’re going to be fair game for about three networks.
It seems you transmit well,” he uttered the last as if it
were an accusation and Dane squirmed. “Anyway you did
something with your crazy stunt. And, Captain, three men want to
buy your Hoobat. I gather they are planning a showing of how it
captures those pests. So be prepared—”
Dane tried to visualize a scene in which he shared top billing
with Queex and shuddered. All he wanted now was to get free of
Terra for a nice, quiet, uncomplicated world where problems could
be settled with a sleep rod or a blaster and the Video screen was
unknown.
Having heard of what awaited them without the men of the
Queen were more content to be incarcerated in the quarantine
section. But as time wore on and the Cargo-master did not return, their anxieties awoke. They were fairly sure by now
that any penalty the Patrol or the Terrapolice would impose would
not be too drastic. But a broken contract was another and more
serious affair—a matter which might ground them more
effectively than any rule of the law enforcement bodies. And
Jellico took to pacing the room, while Tang and Wilcox, who had
started a game of four dimensional chess, made countless errors of
move, and Stotz glared moodily at the wall, apparently too sunk in
his own gloomy thoughts to rise from the mess table in the
alcove.
Though time had ceased to have much meaning for them except as
an irritating reminder of the now sure failure of their Sargolian
venture, they marked the hours into a second full day of detention
before Van Rycke finally put in appearance. The Cargo-master was
plainly tired, but he showed no signs of discomposure. In fact as
he came in he was humming what he fondly imagined was a popular
tune.
Jellico asked no questions, he merely regarded his trusted
officer with a quizzically raised eyebrow. But the others drew
around. It was so apparent that Van Rycke was pleased with himself.
Which could only mean that in some fantastic way he had managed to
bring their venture down in a full fin landing, that somehow he had
argued the Queen out of danger into a position where he could
control the situation.
He halted just within the doorway and eyed Dane, Ali, and Rip
with mock severity. “You’re baaaad boys,” he told
them with a shake of the head and a drawl of the adjective.
“You’ve been demoted ten files each on the
list.”
Which must put him on the bottom rung once more, Dane calculated
swiftly. Or even below—though he didn’t see how he
could fall beneath the rank he had held at assignment. However, he
found the news heartening instead of discouraging. Compared to a
bleak sentence at the moon mines such demotion was absolutely
nothing and he knew that Van Rycke was breaking the worst news
first.
“You also forfeit all pay for this voyage,” the
Cargo-master was continuing. But Jellico broke in.
”Board fine?”
At the Cargo-master’s nod, Jellico added. “Ship pays
that.”
“So I told them,” Van Rycke agreed. “The
Queen’s warned off Terra for ten solar
years—”
They could take that, too. Other Free Traders got back to their
home ports perhaps once in a quarter century. It was so much less
than they had expected that the sentence was greeted with a
concentrated sigh of relief.
“No earth-side leave—”
All right—no leave. They were not, after their late
experiences, so entranced with Terraport that they wanted to linger
in its environs any longer than they had to.
“We lose the Sargol contract—”
That did hurt. But they had resigned themselves to it since the
hour when they had realized that they could not make it back to the
perfumed planet.
“To Inter-Solar?” Wilcox asked the important
question.
Van Rycke was smiling broadly, as if the loss he had just
announced was in some way a gain. “No—to
Combine!”
“Combine?” the Captain echoed and his puzzlement was
duplicated around the circle. How did Inter-Solar’s principal
rival come into it?”
“We’ve made a deal with Combine,” Van Rycke
informed them. “I wasn’t going to let I-S cash in on
our loss. So I went to Vickers at Combine and told him the
situation. He understands that we were in solid with the Salariki
and that the Eysies are not. And a chance to point a blaster at
I-S’s tail is just what he has been waiting for. The shipment
will go out to the storm priests tomorrow on a light
cruiser—it’ll make it on time.”
Yes, a light cruiser, one of the fast ships maintained by the
big Companies, could make the transition to Sargol with a slight
margin to spare. Stotz nodded his approval at this practical
solution.
“I’m going with it—”
That did jerk them
all up short. For Van Rycke to leave the Queen—that
was as unthinkable as if Captain Jellico had suddenly announced
that he was about to retire and become a kelp farmer. “Just for the one
trip,” the Cargo-master hastened to assure them. “I
smooth their vector with the storm priests and hand over so the
Eysies will be frozen out—”
Captain Jellico interrupted at that point. “D’you
mean that Combine is buying us out—not just taking
over? What kind of a deal—”
But Van Rycke, his smile a brilliant stretch across his plump
face, was nodding in agreement. “They’re taking over
our contract and our place with the Salariki.”
“In return for what?” Steen Wilcox asked for them
all.
“For twenty-five thousand credits and a mail run between
Xecho and Trewsworld—frontier planets. They’re far
enough from Terra to get around the exile ruling. The Patrol will
escort us out and see that we get down to work like good little
space men. We’ll have two years of a nice, quiet run on
regular pay. Then, when all the powers that shine have forgotten
about us, we can cut in on the trade routes again.”
“And the pay?” “First or second class
mail?” “When do we start?”
“Standard pay on the completion of each run—Board
rates,” he made replies in order. “First, second and
third class mail—anything that bears the government seal and
out in those quarters it is apt to be anything! And you
start as soon as you can get to Xecho and relieve the Combine scout
which has been holding down the run.”
“While you go to Sargol—” commented
Jellico.
“While I make one voyage to Sargol. You can spare
me,” he dropped one of his big hands on Dane’s shoulder
and gave the flesh beneath it a quick squeeze. “Seeing as how
our juniors helped pull us out of this last mix-up we can trust
them about an inch farther than we did before. Anyway—Cargo-master on a mail run is more or less a thumb-twiddling job at
the best. And you can trust Thorson on stowage—that’s
one thing he does know.” Which dubious ending left
Dane wondering as to whether he had been complimented or warned.
“I’ll be on board again before you know it—the
Combine will ship me out to Trewsworld on your second trip across
and I’ll join ship there. For once we won’t have to
worry for awhile. Nothing can happen on a mail run.”
He shook
his head at the three youngest members of the crew.
“You’re in for a very dull time—and it will serve
you right. Give you a chance to learn your jobs so that when you
come up for reassignment you can pick up some of those files you
were just demoted. Now,” he started briskly for the door.
“I’ll tranship to the Combine cruiser. I take it that
you don’t want to meet the Video people?”
At their hasty agreement to that, he laughed. “Well, the
Patrol doesn’t want the Video spouting about
‘high-handed official news suppression’ so about an
hour or so from now you’ll be let out the back way. They put
the Queen in a cradle and a field scooter will take you to her.
You’ll find her serviced for a take-off to Luna City. You can
refit there for deep space. Frankly the sooner you get off-world
the happier all ranks are going to be—both here and on the
Board. It will be better for us to walk softly for a while and let
them forget that the SolarQueen and her crazy crew exists.
Separately and together you’ve managed to break—or at
least bend—half the laws in the books and they’d like
to have us out of their minds.”
Captain Jellico stood up. “They aren’t any more
anxious to see us go than we are to get out of here. You’ve
pulled it off for us again, Van, and we’re lucky to get out
of it this easy—”
Van Rycke rolled his eyes ceilingward. “You’ll never
know how lucky! Be glad Combine hates the space I-S blasts through.
We were able to use that to our advantage. Get the big fellows at
each others’ throats and they’ll stop annoying
us—simple proposition but it works. Anyway we’re set in
blessed and peaceful obscurity now. Thank the Spirit of Free Space
there’s practically no trouble one can get into on a safe and
sane mail route!”
But Cargo-master Van Rycke, in spite of knowing the SolarQueen
and the temper of her crew, was exceedingly over-optimistic when he
made that emphatic statement.