"H. Beam Piper - Time Crime" - читать интересную книгу автора (Piper H Beam)


"And ten tens are a hundred," one of the clerks in blue jackets said, adding another stack to the pile of gold
coins.

"Nineteen hundreds," one of the pair in dirty striped robes agreed, taking a stone from the box in front of him
and throwing it away. Only one stone remained. "One more hundred to pay."

One of the blueтИТjacketed plantation clerks made a tally mark; his companion counted out coins, ten and ten
and ten.

Dosu Golan, the plantation manager, tapped impatiently on his polished boot leg with a thin riding whip.


Time Crime 1
Time Crime

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"I don't like this," he said, in another and entirely different language. "I know, chattel slavery's an established
custom on this sector, and we have to conform to local usages, but it sickens me to have to haggle with these
swine over the price of human beings. On the Zarkantha Sector, we used nothing but free wageтИТlabor."

"Migratory workers," the guard captain said. "Humanitarian considerations aside, I can think of a lot better
ways of meeting the labor problem on a fruit plantation than by buying slaves you need for three months a
year and have to feed and quarter and clothe and doctor the whole twelve."

"Twenty hundreds of obus," the clerk who had been counting the money said. "That is the payment, is it not,
CoruтИТhinтИТIrigod?"

"That is the payment," the slave dealer replied.

The clerk swept up the remaining coins, and his companion took them over and put them in an ironтИТbound
chest, snapping the padlock. The two guards who had been loitering at one side slung their rifles and picked
up the chest, carrying it into the plantation house. The slave dealer and his companion arose, putting their
money into a leather bag; CoruтИТhinтИТIrigod turned and bowed to the two men in white cloaks.

"The slaves are yours, noble lords," he said.

Across the plantation yard, six more men in striped robes, with carbines slung across their backs, approached;
with them came another man in a hooded white cloak, and two guards in blue jackets and red caps, with
bayoneted rifles. The man in white and his armed attendants came toward the house; the six Calera slavers
continued across the yard to where their horses were picketed.

"If I do not offend the noble lords, then," CoruтИТhinтИТIrigod said, "I beg their sufferance to depart. I and my
men have far to ride if we would reach Careba by nightfall. The Lord, the Great Lord, the Lord God Safar
watch between us until we meet again."

Urado Alatana, the labor foreman, came up onto the porch as the two slavers went down.

"Have a good look at them, Radd?" the guard captain asked.