“YOU GOT THIS from one of my laboratory workers,”
Jan Christiaan Hoenveld accused. “Charlotte Tresca, wasn’t it?”
He was calling from his private cubical in the corner of the
biochemistry lab; through the glass partition behind him Juan
Jimenez could see people working at benches, including, he thought,
his informant. For the moment, he disregarded the older man’s
tone and manner.
“That’s correct, Dr. Hoenveld. I met Miss Tresca at
a cocktail party last evening. She and some other Science Center
people were discussing the different phases of the Fuzzy research,
and she mentioned having found hokfusine, or something very similar
to it, in the digestive tracts of land-prawns. That had been a week
ago; she had reported her findings to you immediately, and assumed
that you had reported them to me. Now, I want to know why you
didn’t.”
“Because it wasn’t worth reporting,” Hoenveld
snapped. “In the first place, she wasn’t supposed to be
working on land-prawns, or hokfusine”—he almost spat the
word in contempt—“at all. She was supposed to be looking for
NFMp in this mess of guts and tripes you’ve been dumping into
my laboratory from all over the planet. And in the second place, it
was merely a trace-presence of titanium, with which she had
probably contaminated the test herself. The girl is an incurably
careless and untidy worker. And finally,” Hoenveld raged,
“I want to know by what right you question my laboratory
workers behind my back . . . ”
“Oh, you do? Well, they are not your laboratory workers,
Dr. Hoenveld; they are employees of the Zarathustra Company, the
same as you. Or I. And the biochemistry laboratory is not your
private empire. It is a part of Science Center, of which I am
division chief, and from where I sit the difference between you and
Charlotte Tresca is barely perceptible to the naked eye. Is that
clear, Dr. Hoenveld?”
Hoenveld was looking at him as though a pistol had blown up in
his hand. He was, in fact, mildly surprised at himself. A month
ago, he wouldn’t have dreamed of talking so to anybody, least
of all a man as much older than himself as Hoenveld, and one with
Hoenveld’s imposing reputation.
But as division chief, he had to get things done, and there
could be only one chief in the division.
“I am quite well aware of your recent and sudden
promotion, Dr. Jimenez,” Hoenveld retorted acidly.
“Over the heads of a dozen of your seniors.”
“Including yourself; well, you’ve just demonstrated
the reason why you were passed over. Now, I want some work done,
and if you can’t or won’t do it, I can promote somebody
to replace you very easily.”
“What do you think we’ve been doing? Every ranger
and hunter on the company payroll has been shooting everything from
damnthings and wild veldbeest to ground-mice and dumping the
digestive and reproductive tracts in my—I beg your pardon, I mean
the Charterless Zarathustra
Company’s—laboratory.”
“Have you found any trace of NFMp in any of
them?”
“Negative. They don’t have the glands to secrete it;
I have that on the authority of the comparative mammalian
anatomists.”
“Then stop looking for it; I’ll order the specimen
collecting stopped at once. Now, I want analyses of land-prawns
made, and I want to know just what Miss Tresca found in them;
whether it was really hokfusine, or anything similar to it, or just
trace-presences of titanium, and I want to know how it gets into
the land-prawns’ systems and where it concentrates there. I
would suggest—correction, I direct—that Miss Tresca be put to work
on that herself, and that she report directly to me.”
“WHAT’S YOUR OPINION of Chris Hoenveld,
Ernst?” Victor Grego asked.
Mallin frowned—his standard think-seriously-and-weigh-every-word
frown.
“Dr. Hoenveld is a most distinguished scientist. He has an
encyclopedic grasp on his subject, an infallible memory, and an
infinite capacity for taking pains.”
“Is that all?”
“Isn’t that enough?”
“No. A computer has all that, to a much higher degree, and
a computer couldn’t make an original scientific discovery in
a hundred million years. A computer has no imagination, and neither
has Hoenveld.”
“Well, he has very little, I’ll admit. Why do you
ask about him?”
“Juan Jimenez is having trouble with him.”
“I can believe it,” Mallin said. “Hoenveld has
one characteristic a computer lacks. Egotism. Has Jimenez
complained to you?”
“Nifflheim, no; he’s running Science Center without
yelling to Big Brother for help. I got this off the powder-room and
coffee-stand telegraph, to which I have excellent taps. Juan cut
him down to size; he’s doing all right.”
“Well, how about the NFMp problem?”
“Nowhere, on hyperdrive. The Fuzzies just manufacture it
inside themselves, and nobody knows why. It seems mainly to be
associated with the digestive system, and gets from there into the
blood-stream, and into the gonads, in both sexes, from there.
Thirty-six births, so far; three viable.”
From the terrace outside came the happy babble of Fuzzy voices.
They were using their Fuzzyphones to talk to one another; wanted to
talk like the Hagga. Poor little tail-enders of a doomed race.
THE WHOLE DAMNED thing was getting too big for comfort, Jack
Holloway thought. A month ago, there’d only been Gerd and
Ruth and Lynne Andrews and Pancho Ybarra, and George Lunt, and the
men George had brought when he’d transferred from the
Constabulary. They all had cocktails together before dinner, and
ate at one table, and had bull-sessions in the evenings, and
everybody had known what everybody else was doing. And there had
only been forty or fifty Fuzzies, beside his and George’s and
Gerd’s and Ruth’s.
Now Gerd had three assistants, and Ruth had dropped work on
Fuzzy psychology and was helping him with whatever he was doing,
and what that was he wasn’t quite sure. He wasn’t quite
sure what anybody was doing, anymore. And Pancho was practically
commuting to and from Mallorysport, and Ernst Mallin was out at
least once a week. Funny, too; he used to think Mallin was a solid,
three-dimensional bastard, and now he found he rather liked him.
Even Victor Grego was out, one weekend, and everybody liked
him.
Lynne had a couple of helpers, too, and a hospital and clinic,
and there was a Fuzzy school, where they were taught Lingua Terra
and how to use Fuzzyphones and about the strange customs of the
Hagga. Some old hen Ruth had kidnapped from the Mallorysport
schools was in charge of it, or thought she was; actually Little
Fuzzy and Ko-Ko and Cinderella and Lizzie Borden and Dillinger were
running it.
And he and George Lunt couldn’t yell back and forth to
each other any more, because their offices, at opposite ends of the
long hut, were partitioned off and separated by a hundred and
twenty feet of middle office, full of desks and business machines
and roboclerks, and humans working with them. And he had a
secretary, now, and she had a secretary, or at least a
stenographer, of her own.
Gerd van Riebeek came in from the outside, tossing his hat on
top of a microbook-case and unbuckling his pistol.
“Hi, Jack. Anything new?” he asked.
Gerd and Ruth had been away for a little over a week, in the
country to the south. It must have been fun, just the two of them
and Complex and Superego and Dr. Crippen and Calamity Jane, camping
in Gerd’s airboat and visiting the posts Lunt had strung out
along the edge of the big woods.
“I was going to ask you that. Where’s
Ruth?”
“She’s staying another week, at the Kirtland
plantation, with Superego and Complex; there must be fifty to
seventy-five Fuzzies there; she’s helping the Kirtland people
with them, teaching them not to destroy young sugarplant shoots.
Kirtland’s been taking a lot of damage to his shoots from
zatku. What’s the latest from Mallorysport?”
“Well, nowhere on the NFMp, but they seem to have found
something interesting about the land-prawns.”
“More on that?” Gerd had heard about the alleged
hokfusine. “Have they found out what it is?”
“It isn’t hokfusine, it’s just a rather
complicated titanium salt. The land-prawns eat titanium, mostly in
moss and fungus and stuff like that. It probably grades about ten
atoms to the ton on what they eat. But they fix it, apparently in
that middle intestine that they have. I have a big long write-up on
what it does there. The Fuzzies seem to convert it to something
else in their own digestive system. Whatever it does, hokfusine
seems to do it a lot better. They’re still working on
it.”
“They ate land-prawns all along, but it was only since
this new generation hatched, this Spring, that they really got all
they wanted of them. I wonder what they ate before, up
north.”
“Well, we know what all they eat beside zatku and the
stuff we give them. Animals small enough to kill with those little
sticks, fruit, bird eggs, those little yellow lizards,
grubs.”
“What are Paine’s Marines doing up north now, beside
looking for nonexistent Fuzzy catchers?”
“That’s about all. Flying patrol, taking photos,
mapping. They say there are lots of Fuzzies north of the Divide
that haven’t started south yet, probably haven’t heard
about the big zatku bonanza yet.”
“I’m going up there, Jack. I want to look at them,
see what they live on.”
“Don’t go right away; wait a week, and I’ll go
along with you. I still have a lot of this damn stuff to clear up,
and I have to go in to Mallorysport tomorrow. Casagra’s
talking about recalling Paine and his men and vehicles. You know
where that would put us.”
Gerd nodded. “We’d have to double the ZNPF.
It’s all George can do to maintain those posts along the edge
of the big woods and fly inspections in the farm country, without
having to patrol in the north too.”
“I don’t know how we could pay or equip them, even
if we could recruit them. We’re operating on next
year’s budget now. That’s another thing I’ll have
to talk to Ben about. He’ll have to allocate us more
money.”
“GOD DAMN IT, there’s no money to give
him!”
Ben Rainsford spoke aloud and bitterly, and then caught himself
and puffed furiously on his pipe, the smoke reddening in the sunset
afterglow. Have to watch that; people hear him talking to himself,
it would be all over Government House, and all over Mallorysport in
the next day, that Governor Rainsford was going crazy. Not that it
would be any wonder if he were.
The three Fuzzies, Flora and Fauna and their friend Diamond, who
had gotten hold of a lot of wooden strips of the sort the gardeners
used for trelliswork and were building a little arbor of their own,
looked up quickly and then realized that he wasn’t speaking
to them and went on with what they were doing. The sun had gone to
bed already, and the sky-light was fading, and they wanted to get
whatever it was they were making finished before it got dark.
Fuzzies, like Colonial Governors, found time running out on them
occasionally.
Time was running out fast for him. The ninety days the CZC had
allowed him to take over all the public services they were no
longer obliged to maintain were more than half gone now, and
nothing had been done. The election for delegates to a
constitutional convention was still a month in the future, and he
had no idea how long it would take the elected delegates, whoever
they’d be, to argue out a constitution, and how long
thereafter it would take to get a Colonial Legislature set up, and
how long after tax laws were enacted it would be before the
Government would begin collecting money.
He wished he’d been able to borrow that half billion sols
from the Banking Cartel that Hugo Ingermann had been yakking about.
Ingermann had later been forced to back down to something closer to
the actual figure of fifty million, just as he had been forced to
retreat from some of his exaggerated statements about the Adoption
Bureau, but it seemed that the public still believed his original
statements and were disregarding the hedging and weasel-worded
retractions. Fifty million sounded like a lot of money, too—till
you had to run a planetary government on it, and everything was
going to cost so much more than he had expected.
The Native Affairs Commission, for instance. He and Jack had
both believed that a hundred and fifty men would be ample for the
Native Protection Force; now they were finding that three times
that number wouldn’t be enough. They had thought that Gerd
and Ruth van Riebeek and Lynne Andrews, and Pancho Ybarra, on loan
from the Navy, would be able to do all the study and research work;
now that was spread out to Mallorysport Hospital and Science
Center, for which the CZC was paying and would expect compensation.
And the Adoption Bureau was costing as much, now, as the whole
original Native Affairs Commission estimate.
At least, he’d been able to do one thing for Jack. Alex
Napier had agreed that protection and/or policing of natives on
Class-IV planets was a proper function of the Armed Forces, and
instead of recalling his fifty men, Casagra had been ordered to
reinforce them with twenty more.
The Fuzzies suddenly stopped what they were doing and turned.
Diamond drew his Fuzzyphone. “Pappy Vic!” he called, in
delighted surprise. “Come; look what we make!” Flora
and Fauna were whooping greetings, too.
He rose, and saw behind him the short, compactly-built man,
familiar from news-screen views, whom he had so far avoided meeting
personally. Victor Grego greeted the Fuzzies, and then said,
“Good evening, Governor. Sorry to intrude, but Miss Glenn has
a dinner-and-dancing date, and I told her I’d get Diamond
myself.”
“Good evening, Mr. Grego.” Somehow, he didn’t
feel the hostility to the man that he had expected. “Could
you wait a little while? They have an important project, here, and
they want to finish it while there’s still
daylight.”
“Well, so I see.” Grego spoke to the Fuzzies in
their own language, and listened while they explained what they
were doing. “Of course; we can’t interfere with
that.”
The Fuzzies went back to their trellis-building. He and Grego
sat down in lawn-chairs; Grego lit a cigarette. He watched the CZC
manager-in-chief as the latter sat watching the Fuzzies. This
couldn’t be Victor Grego; “Victor Grego” was a
label for a personification of black-hearted villainy and ruthless
selfishness; this was a pleasant-spoken, courteous gentleman who
loved Fuzzies, and was considerate of his employees.
“Miss Glenn’s date was with Captain Ahmed
Khadra,” Grego was saying, to make conversation. “The
fifth in the last two weeks. I’m afraid I’m just before
losing a good Fuzzy sitter by marriage.”
“I’m afraid so; they seem quite serious about each
other. If so, she’ll be getting a good husband. I’ve
known Ahmed for some time; he was at the Constabulary post near my
camp, on Beta. It’s too bad,” he added, “that he
seems to be getting nowhere on this Herckerd-Novaes investigation.
It’s certainly not from lack of trying.”
“My police chief, Harry Steefer, is getting nowhere just
as rapidly,” Grego said. “He’s ready to give the
whole thing up, and when Harry Steefer gives up, it’s
hopeless.”
“Do you think there is anything to this theory that
somebody is training those Fuzzies to help catch other
Fuzzies?”
Grego shook his head. “You know Fuzzies at least as well
as I do, Governor. Almost two months; anything you can train a
Fuzzy to do, you can train him to do it in less than that,”
he said. “And I don’t see why anybody would try to
catch wild Fuzzies, not with the bloodthirsty laws you’ve
enacted. Criminals only take chances in proportion to profits, and
almost anybody who wants a Fuzzy can get one free.”
That was true. And there was no indication of any black market
in Fuzzies here, and Jack’s patrols over northern Beta
Continent hadn’t found any evidence that anybody was live
trapping Fuzzies there.
“Ahmed had an idea, for a while, that they were going into
the export business; catching Fuzzies to smuggle out for sale
off-planet.”
“He mentioned that to Harry Steefer. Jack Holloway was
talking to me about that, too; wanted to know what could be done to
prevent it. I told him it would be impossible to get Fuzzies onto a
ship from Darius, or onto Darius from Mallorysport Space Terminal.
As long as we keep our ‘flagrant and heinous space-traffic
monopoly,’ you can be sure no Fuzzies are going to be shipped
off-planet.”
“You think Ingermann really has anything to do with
it?” he asked hopefully, recognizing the source of the
quotation.
“If there is a black market in Fuzzies, Ingermann’s
back of it,” Grego said, as though stating a natural law.
“In the six or so years he’s infected this planet,
I’ve learned a lot about the soi-disant Honorable Hugo
Ingermann, and none of it’s been good.”
“Ahmed Khadra thinks his attacks on the CZC space-monopoly
may stem from a desire to get some way around your controls at the
ground terminal here and on Darius. Of course, he’s talking
about a Government spaceport, and that would be just as tightly
controlled . . . ”
Grego hesitated for a moment, then dropped his cigarette to the
ground and heeled it out. He leaned toward Rainsford in his
chair.
“Governor, you know, yourself, that as things stand you
can’t build a second spaceport here,” he said.
“Ingermann knows that, too. He’s making that issue to
embarrass you and to attack the CZC at the same time. He has no
expectation that your Government would build any spaceport
facilities here. He certainly hopes not; he wants to do that
himself.”
“Where the devil would he get the money?”
“He could get it. Unless I miss my guess, he’s
getting it now, or as soon as a ship can get in, on Marduk. There
are a number of shipping companies who would like to get in here in
competition with Terra-Baldur-Marduk Spacelines, and there are
quite a few import-export houses there who would like to trade on
Zarathustra in competition with CZC. Inside six months somebody
will be trying to put in a spaceport here. If they can get land to
set it on. And due to a great error in my judgment eight years ago,
the land’s available.”
“Where?”
“Right here on Alpha Continent, less than a hundred miles
from where we’re sitting. A wonderful place for a spaceport.
You weren’t here, then, were you, Governor?”
“No. I came here, I blush to say, on the same ship that
brought Ingermann, six and a half years ago.”
“Well, you got here, and so did he, after it was over, but
just before that we had a big immigration boom. At that time, the
company wasn’t interested in local business, just offplanet
trade in veldbeest meat. A lot of independent concerns started,
manufacturing, food production, that sort of thing that we
didn’t want to bother with. We sold land north of the city,
in mile and two-mile square blocks, about two thousand square miles
of it. Then the immigrants stopped coming, and a lot of them moved
away. There simply wasn’t employment for them. Most of the
companies that had been organized went broke. Some of the factories
that were finished operated for a while; most of them were left
unfinished. The banks took over some of the land; most of it got
into the hands of the shylocks; and since the Fuzzy Trial Ingermann
has been acquiring title to a lot of it. Since the Fuzzy Trial,
nobody else has been spending money for real-estate; everybody
expects to get all the free land they want.”
“Well, he’ll probably make some money out of that,
but the people who come in here with the capital will be the ones
to control it, won’t they?”
“Of course they will, but that’s honest business;
Ingermann isn’t interested. He’s expecting an increase
of about two to three hundred percent in the planetary population
in the next five years. With eighty percent of the land-surface in
public domain, that’s probably an underestimate. Most of them
will be voters; Ingermann’s going to try to control that
vote.”
And if he did . . . His own position was secure; Colonial
Governors were appointed, and it took something like the military
intervention which had put him into office to unseat one. But a
Colonial Governor had to govern through and with the consent of a
Legislature. He wasn’t looking forward happily to a
Legislature controlled by Hugo Ingermann. Neither, he knew, was
Grego.
He’d have to be careful, though. Grego wanted to put the
company back in its old pre-Fuzzy position of planetary dominance.
He was still violently opposed to that.
It was almost dark, now. The Fuzzies had put the final touches
to the lacy trellis they had built, and came crowding over, wanting
Pappy Ben and Pappy Vic to come look. They went and examined it,
and spoke commendation. Grego picked up Diamond; Flora and Fauna
were wanting him to go and sit down and furnish them a lap to sit
on.
“I’ve been worrying about just that,” he said,
when he was back in his chair, with the Fuzzies climbing up onto
him. “A lot of the older planets are beginning to
overpopulate, and there’s never room enough for everybody on
Terra. There’ll be a rush here in about a year. If I can only
get things stabilized before then . . . ”
Grego was silent for a moment. “If you’re worried
about all those public-health and welfare and service functions,
forget about them for a while,” he said. “I know, I
said the company would discontinue them in ninety days, but that
was right after the Pendarvis Decisions, and nobody knew what the
situation was going to be. We can keep them going for a year, at
least.”
“The Government won’t have any more money a year
from now,” he said. “And you’ll expect
compensation.”
“Of course we will, but we won’t demand gold or
Federation notes. Tax-script, bonds, land script . . . ”
Land-script, of course; the law required a Colonial Government
to make land available to Federation citizens, but it did not
require such land to be given free. That might be one way to
finance the Government.
It could also be a way for the Zarathustra Company, having
gotten the Government deeply into debt, to regain what had been
lost in the aftermath of the Fuzzy Trial.
“Suppose you have Gus Brannhard talk it over with Leslie
Coombes,” Grego was suggesting. “You can trust Gus not to stick the
Government’s foot into any bear trap, can’t
you?”
“Why, of course, Mr. Grego. I want to thank you, very
much, for this. That public services takeover was worrying me more
than anything else.”
Yet he couldn’t feel relieved, and he couldn’t feel
grateful at all. He felt discomfited, and angry at himself more
than at Grego.
“YOU GOT THIS from one of my laboratory workers,”
Jan Christiaan Hoenveld accused. “Charlotte Tresca, wasn’t it?”
He was calling from his private cubical in the corner of the
biochemistry lab; through the glass partition behind him Juan
Jimenez could see people working at benches, including, he thought,
his informant. For the moment, he disregarded the older man’s
tone and manner.
“That’s correct, Dr. Hoenveld. I met Miss Tresca at
a cocktail party last evening. She and some other Science Center
people were discussing the different phases of the Fuzzy research,
and she mentioned having found hokfusine, or something very similar
to it, in the digestive tracts of land-prawns. That had been a week
ago; she had reported her findings to you immediately, and assumed
that you had reported them to me. Now, I want to know why you
didn’t.”
“Because it wasn’t worth reporting,” Hoenveld
snapped. “In the first place, she wasn’t supposed to be
working on land-prawns, or hokfusine”—he almost spat the
word in contempt—“at all. She was supposed to be looking for
NFMp in this mess of guts and tripes you’ve been dumping into
my laboratory from all over the planet. And in the second place, it
was merely a trace-presence of titanium, with which she had
probably contaminated the test herself. The girl is an incurably
careless and untidy worker. And finally,” Hoenveld raged,
“I want to know by what right you question my laboratory
workers behind my back . . . ”
“Oh, you do? Well, they are not your laboratory workers,
Dr. Hoenveld; they are employees of the Zarathustra Company, the
same as you. Or I. And the biochemistry laboratory is not your
private empire. It is a part of Science Center, of which I am
division chief, and from where I sit the difference between you and
Charlotte Tresca is barely perceptible to the naked eye. Is that
clear, Dr. Hoenveld?”
Hoenveld was looking at him as though a pistol had blown up in
his hand. He was, in fact, mildly surprised at himself. A month
ago, he wouldn’t have dreamed of talking so to anybody, least
of all a man as much older than himself as Hoenveld, and one with
Hoenveld’s imposing reputation.
But as division chief, he had to get things done, and there
could be only one chief in the division.
“I am quite well aware of your recent and sudden
promotion, Dr. Jimenez,” Hoenveld retorted acidly.
“Over the heads of a dozen of your seniors.”
“Including yourself; well, you’ve just demonstrated
the reason why you were passed over. Now, I want some work done,
and if you can’t or won’t do it, I can promote somebody
to replace you very easily.”
“What do you think we’ve been doing? Every ranger
and hunter on the company payroll has been shooting everything from
damnthings and wild veldbeest to ground-mice and dumping the
digestive and reproductive tracts in my—I beg your pardon, I mean
the Charterless Zarathustra
Company’s—laboratory.”
“Have you found any trace of NFMp in any of
them?”
“Negative. They don’t have the glands to secrete it;
I have that on the authority of the comparative mammalian
anatomists.”
“Then stop looking for it; I’ll order the specimen
collecting stopped at once. Now, I want analyses of land-prawns
made, and I want to know just what Miss Tresca found in them;
whether it was really hokfusine, or anything similar to it, or just
trace-presences of titanium, and I want to know how it gets into
the land-prawns’ systems and where it concentrates there. I
would suggest—correction, I direct—that Miss Tresca be put to work
on that herself, and that she report directly to me.”
“WHAT’S YOUR OPINION of Chris Hoenveld,
Ernst?” Victor Grego asked.
Mallin frowned—his standard think-seriously-and-weigh-every-word
frown.
“Dr. Hoenveld is a most distinguished scientist. He has an
encyclopedic grasp on his subject, an infallible memory, and an
infinite capacity for taking pains.”
“Is that all?”
“Isn’t that enough?”
“No. A computer has all that, to a much higher degree, and
a computer couldn’t make an original scientific discovery in
a hundred million years. A computer has no imagination, and neither
has Hoenveld.”
“Well, he has very little, I’ll admit. Why do you
ask about him?”
“Juan Jimenez is having trouble with him.”
“I can believe it,” Mallin said. “Hoenveld has
one characteristic a computer lacks. Egotism. Has Jimenez
complained to you?”
“Nifflheim, no; he’s running Science Center without
yelling to Big Brother for help. I got this off the powder-room and
coffee-stand telegraph, to which I have excellent taps. Juan cut
him down to size; he’s doing all right.”
“Well, how about the NFMp problem?”
“Nowhere, on hyperdrive. The Fuzzies just manufacture it
inside themselves, and nobody knows why. It seems mainly to be
associated with the digestive system, and gets from there into the
blood-stream, and into the gonads, in both sexes, from there.
Thirty-six births, so far; three viable.”
From the terrace outside came the happy babble of Fuzzy voices.
They were using their Fuzzyphones to talk to one another; wanted to
talk like the Hagga. Poor little tail-enders of a doomed race.
THE WHOLE DAMNED thing was getting too big for comfort, Jack
Holloway thought. A month ago, there’d only been Gerd and
Ruth and Lynne Andrews and Pancho Ybarra, and George Lunt, and the
men George had brought when he’d transferred from the
Constabulary. They all had cocktails together before dinner, and
ate at one table, and had bull-sessions in the evenings, and
everybody had known what everybody else was doing. And there had
only been forty or fifty Fuzzies, beside his and George’s and
Gerd’s and Ruth’s.
Now Gerd had three assistants, and Ruth had dropped work on
Fuzzy psychology and was helping him with whatever he was doing,
and what that was he wasn’t quite sure. He wasn’t quite
sure what anybody was doing, anymore. And Pancho was practically
commuting to and from Mallorysport, and Ernst Mallin was out at
least once a week. Funny, too; he used to think Mallin was a solid,
three-dimensional bastard, and now he found he rather liked him.
Even Victor Grego was out, one weekend, and everybody liked
him.
Lynne had a couple of helpers, too, and a hospital and clinic,
and there was a Fuzzy school, where they were taught Lingua Terra
and how to use Fuzzyphones and about the strange customs of the
Hagga. Some old hen Ruth had kidnapped from the Mallorysport
schools was in charge of it, or thought she was; actually Little
Fuzzy and Ko-Ko and Cinderella and Lizzie Borden and Dillinger were
running it.
And he and George Lunt couldn’t yell back and forth to
each other any more, because their offices, at opposite ends of the
long hut, were partitioned off and separated by a hundred and
twenty feet of middle office, full of desks and business machines
and roboclerks, and humans working with them. And he had a
secretary, now, and she had a secretary, or at least a
stenographer, of her own.
Gerd van Riebeek came in from the outside, tossing his hat on
top of a microbook-case and unbuckling his pistol.
“Hi, Jack. Anything new?” he asked.
Gerd and Ruth had been away for a little over a week, in the
country to the south. It must have been fun, just the two of them
and Complex and Superego and Dr. Crippen and Calamity Jane, camping
in Gerd’s airboat and visiting the posts Lunt had strung out
along the edge of the big woods.
“I was going to ask you that. Where’s
Ruth?”
“She’s staying another week, at the Kirtland
plantation, with Superego and Complex; there must be fifty to
seventy-five Fuzzies there; she’s helping the Kirtland people
with them, teaching them not to destroy young sugarplant shoots.
Kirtland’s been taking a lot of damage to his shoots from
zatku. What’s the latest from Mallorysport?”
“Well, nowhere on the NFMp, but they seem to have found
something interesting about the land-prawns.”
“More on that?” Gerd had heard about the alleged
hokfusine. “Have they found out what it is?”
“It isn’t hokfusine, it’s just a rather
complicated titanium salt. The land-prawns eat titanium, mostly in
moss and fungus and stuff like that. It probably grades about ten
atoms to the ton on what they eat. But they fix it, apparently in
that middle intestine that they have. I have a big long write-up on
what it does there. The Fuzzies seem to convert it to something
else in their own digestive system. Whatever it does, hokfusine
seems to do it a lot better. They’re still working on
it.”
“They ate land-prawns all along, but it was only since
this new generation hatched, this Spring, that they really got all
they wanted of them. I wonder what they ate before, up
north.”
“Well, we know what all they eat beside zatku and the
stuff we give them. Animals small enough to kill with those little
sticks, fruit, bird eggs, those little yellow lizards,
grubs.”
“What are Paine’s Marines doing up north now, beside
looking for nonexistent Fuzzy catchers?”
“That’s about all. Flying patrol, taking photos,
mapping. They say there are lots of Fuzzies north of the Divide
that haven’t started south yet, probably haven’t heard
about the big zatku bonanza yet.”
“I’m going up there, Jack. I want to look at them,
see what they live on.”
“Don’t go right away; wait a week, and I’ll go
along with you. I still have a lot of this damn stuff to clear up,
and I have to go in to Mallorysport tomorrow. Casagra’s
talking about recalling Paine and his men and vehicles. You know
where that would put us.”
Gerd nodded. “We’d have to double the ZNPF.
It’s all George can do to maintain those posts along the edge
of the big woods and fly inspections in the farm country, without
having to patrol in the north too.”
“I don’t know how we could pay or equip them, even
if we could recruit them. We’re operating on next
year’s budget now. That’s another thing I’ll have
to talk to Ben about. He’ll have to allocate us more
money.”
“GOD DAMN IT, there’s no money to give
him!”
Ben Rainsford spoke aloud and bitterly, and then caught himself
and puffed furiously on his pipe, the smoke reddening in the sunset
afterglow. Have to watch that; people hear him talking to himself,
it would be all over Government House, and all over Mallorysport in
the next day, that Governor Rainsford was going crazy. Not that it
would be any wonder if he were.
The three Fuzzies, Flora and Fauna and their friend Diamond, who
had gotten hold of a lot of wooden strips of the sort the gardeners
used for trelliswork and were building a little arbor of their own,
looked up quickly and then realized that he wasn’t speaking
to them and went on with what they were doing. The sun had gone to
bed already, and the sky-light was fading, and they wanted to get
whatever it was they were making finished before it got dark.
Fuzzies, like Colonial Governors, found time running out on them
occasionally.
Time was running out fast for him. The ninety days the CZC had
allowed him to take over all the public services they were no
longer obliged to maintain were more than half gone now, and
nothing had been done. The election for delegates to a
constitutional convention was still a month in the future, and he
had no idea how long it would take the elected delegates, whoever
they’d be, to argue out a constitution, and how long
thereafter it would take to get a Colonial Legislature set up, and
how long after tax laws were enacted it would be before the
Government would begin collecting money.
He wished he’d been able to borrow that half billion sols
from the Banking Cartel that Hugo Ingermann had been yakking about.
Ingermann had later been forced to back down to something closer to
the actual figure of fifty million, just as he had been forced to
retreat from some of his exaggerated statements about the Adoption
Bureau, but it seemed that the public still believed his original
statements and were disregarding the hedging and weasel-worded
retractions. Fifty million sounded like a lot of money, too—till
you had to run a planetary government on it, and everything was
going to cost so much more than he had expected.
The Native Affairs Commission, for instance. He and Jack had
both believed that a hundred and fifty men would be ample for the
Native Protection Force; now they were finding that three times
that number wouldn’t be enough. They had thought that Gerd
and Ruth van Riebeek and Lynne Andrews, and Pancho Ybarra, on loan
from the Navy, would be able to do all the study and research work;
now that was spread out to Mallorysport Hospital and Science
Center, for which the CZC was paying and would expect compensation.
And the Adoption Bureau was costing as much, now, as the whole
original Native Affairs Commission estimate.
At least, he’d been able to do one thing for Jack. Alex
Napier had agreed that protection and/or policing of natives on
Class-IV planets was a proper function of the Armed Forces, and
instead of recalling his fifty men, Casagra had been ordered to
reinforce them with twenty more.
The Fuzzies suddenly stopped what they were doing and turned.
Diamond drew his Fuzzyphone. “Pappy Vic!” he called, in
delighted surprise. “Come; look what we make!” Flora
and Fauna were whooping greetings, too.
He rose, and saw behind him the short, compactly-built man,
familiar from news-screen views, whom he had so far avoided meeting
personally. Victor Grego greeted the Fuzzies, and then said,
“Good evening, Governor. Sorry to intrude, but Miss Glenn has
a dinner-and-dancing date, and I told her I’d get Diamond
myself.”
“Good evening, Mr. Grego.” Somehow, he didn’t
feel the hostility to the man that he had expected. “Could
you wait a little while? They have an important project, here, and
they want to finish it while there’s still
daylight.”
“Well, so I see.” Grego spoke to the Fuzzies in
their own language, and listened while they explained what they
were doing. “Of course; we can’t interfere with
that.”
The Fuzzies went back to their trellis-building. He and Grego
sat down in lawn-chairs; Grego lit a cigarette. He watched the CZC
manager-in-chief as the latter sat watching the Fuzzies. This
couldn’t be Victor Grego; “Victor Grego” was a
label for a personification of black-hearted villainy and ruthless
selfishness; this was a pleasant-spoken, courteous gentleman who
loved Fuzzies, and was considerate of his employees.
“Miss Glenn’s date was with Captain Ahmed
Khadra,” Grego was saying, to make conversation. “The
fifth in the last two weeks. I’m afraid I’m just before
losing a good Fuzzy sitter by marriage.”
“I’m afraid so; they seem quite serious about each
other. If so, she’ll be getting a good husband. I’ve
known Ahmed for some time; he was at the Constabulary post near my
camp, on Beta. It’s too bad,” he added, “that he
seems to be getting nowhere on this Herckerd-Novaes investigation.
It’s certainly not from lack of trying.”
“My police chief, Harry Steefer, is getting nowhere just
as rapidly,” Grego said. “He’s ready to give the
whole thing up, and when Harry Steefer gives up, it’s
hopeless.”
“Do you think there is anything to this theory that
somebody is training those Fuzzies to help catch other
Fuzzies?”
Grego shook his head. “You know Fuzzies at least as well
as I do, Governor. Almost two months; anything you can train a
Fuzzy to do, you can train him to do it in less than that,”
he said. “And I don’t see why anybody would try to
catch wild Fuzzies, not with the bloodthirsty laws you’ve
enacted. Criminals only take chances in proportion to profits, and
almost anybody who wants a Fuzzy can get one free.”
That was true. And there was no indication of any black market
in Fuzzies here, and Jack’s patrols over northern Beta
Continent hadn’t found any evidence that anybody was live
trapping Fuzzies there.
“Ahmed had an idea, for a while, that they were going into
the export business; catching Fuzzies to smuggle out for sale
off-planet.”
“He mentioned that to Harry Steefer. Jack Holloway was
talking to me about that, too; wanted to know what could be done to
prevent it. I told him it would be impossible to get Fuzzies onto a
ship from Darius, or onto Darius from Mallorysport Space Terminal.
As long as we keep our ‘flagrant and heinous space-traffic
monopoly,’ you can be sure no Fuzzies are going to be shipped
off-planet.”
“You think Ingermann really has anything to do with
it?” he asked hopefully, recognizing the source of the
quotation.
“If there is a black market in Fuzzies, Ingermann’s
back of it,” Grego said, as though stating a natural law.
“In the six or so years he’s infected this planet,
I’ve learned a lot about the soi-disant Honorable Hugo
Ingermann, and none of it’s been good.”
“Ahmed Khadra thinks his attacks on the CZC space-monopoly
may stem from a desire to get some way around your controls at the
ground terminal here and on Darius. Of course, he’s talking
about a Government spaceport, and that would be just as tightly
controlled . . . ”
Grego hesitated for a moment, then dropped his cigarette to the
ground and heeled it out. He leaned toward Rainsford in his
chair.
“Governor, you know, yourself, that as things stand you
can’t build a second spaceport here,” he said.
“Ingermann knows that, too. He’s making that issue to
embarrass you and to attack the CZC at the same time. He has no
expectation that your Government would build any spaceport
facilities here. He certainly hopes not; he wants to do that
himself.”
“Where the devil would he get the money?”
“He could get it. Unless I miss my guess, he’s
getting it now, or as soon as a ship can get in, on Marduk. There
are a number of shipping companies who would like to get in here in
competition with Terra-Baldur-Marduk Spacelines, and there are
quite a few import-export houses there who would like to trade on
Zarathustra in competition with CZC. Inside six months somebody
will be trying to put in a spaceport here. If they can get land to
set it on. And due to a great error in my judgment eight years ago,
the land’s available.”
“Where?”
“Right here on Alpha Continent, less than a hundred miles
from where we’re sitting. A wonderful place for a spaceport.
You weren’t here, then, were you, Governor?”
“No. I came here, I blush to say, on the same ship that
brought Ingermann, six and a half years ago.”
“Well, you got here, and so did he, after it was over, but
just before that we had a big immigration boom. At that time, the
company wasn’t interested in local business, just offplanet
trade in veldbeest meat. A lot of independent concerns started,
manufacturing, food production, that sort of thing that we
didn’t want to bother with. We sold land north of the city,
in mile and two-mile square blocks, about two thousand square miles
of it. Then the immigrants stopped coming, and a lot of them moved
away. There simply wasn’t employment for them. Most of the
companies that had been organized went broke. Some of the factories
that were finished operated for a while; most of them were left
unfinished. The banks took over some of the land; most of it got
into the hands of the shylocks; and since the Fuzzy Trial Ingermann
has been acquiring title to a lot of it. Since the Fuzzy Trial,
nobody else has been spending money for real-estate; everybody
expects to get all the free land they want.”
“Well, he’ll probably make some money out of that,
but the people who come in here with the capital will be the ones
to control it, won’t they?”
“Of course they will, but that’s honest business;
Ingermann isn’t interested. He’s expecting an increase
of about two to three hundred percent in the planetary population
in the next five years. With eighty percent of the land-surface in
public domain, that’s probably an underestimate. Most of them
will be voters; Ingermann’s going to try to control that
vote.”
And if he did . . . His own position was secure; Colonial
Governors were appointed, and it took something like the military
intervention which had put him into office to unseat one. But a
Colonial Governor had to govern through and with the consent of a
Legislature. He wasn’t looking forward happily to a
Legislature controlled by Hugo Ingermann. Neither, he knew, was
Grego.
He’d have to be careful, though. Grego wanted to put the
company back in its old pre-Fuzzy position of planetary dominance.
He was still violently opposed to that.
It was almost dark, now. The Fuzzies had put the final touches
to the lacy trellis they had built, and came crowding over, wanting
Pappy Ben and Pappy Vic to come look. They went and examined it,
and spoke commendation. Grego picked up Diamond; Flora and Fauna
were wanting him to go and sit down and furnish them a lap to sit
on.
“I’ve been worrying about just that,” he said,
when he was back in his chair, with the Fuzzies climbing up onto
him. “A lot of the older planets are beginning to
overpopulate, and there’s never room enough for everybody on
Terra. There’ll be a rush here in about a year. If I can only
get things stabilized before then . . . ”
Grego was silent for a moment. “If you’re worried
about all those public-health and welfare and service functions,
forget about them for a while,” he said. “I know, I
said the company would discontinue them in ninety days, but that
was right after the Pendarvis Decisions, and nobody knew what the
situation was going to be. We can keep them going for a year, at
least.”
“The Government won’t have any more money a year
from now,” he said. “And you’ll expect
compensation.”
“Of course we will, but we won’t demand gold or
Federation notes. Tax-script, bonds, land script . . . ”
Land-script, of course; the law required a Colonial Government
to make land available to Federation citizens, but it did not
require such land to be given free. That might be one way to
finance the Government.
It could also be a way for the Zarathustra Company, having
gotten the Government deeply into debt, to regain what had been
lost in the aftermath of the Fuzzy Trial.
“Suppose you have Gus Brannhard talk it over with Leslie
Coombes,” Grego was suggesting. “You can trust Gus not to stick the
Government’s foot into any bear trap, can’t
you?”
“Why, of course, Mr. Grego. I want to thank you, very
much, for this. That public services takeover was worrying me more
than anything else.”
Yet he couldn’t feel relieved, and he couldn’t feel
grateful at all. He felt discomfited, and angry at himself more
than at Grego.