A Circus of Hells by Poul Anderson. Part one

adventures of a Highland tinker.

It made a good cover for the fact that he was not out for pleasure.

Beyond the compound walls, the homes of the wealthy loomed amidst

grandly downsweeping private parks. In a way, Flandry thought, they

epitomized man’s trajectory. Once the settlement had been sufficiently

large and prosperous, and sufficiently within the Imperial sphere, to

attract not only merchants but aristocrats. Old Town had bustled with

culture as well as commerce–provincial, no doubt, this far from Terra;

nevertheless, live and genuine, worthy of the respectful emulation of

the autochthons.

Tonight Irumclaw lay like a piece of wreckage at the edge of the

receding tide of empire. What mansions were not standing hollow had

become the property of oafs, and showed it. (The oafs were not to be

scoffed at. Several of them directed large organizations devoted to

preying on the spacemen who visited and the Navy men who guarded what

transshipment facilities remained in use.) Outside the treaty port

boundaries, barbarism rolled forward as the natives abandoned

civilization with a perhaps justifiable contempt.

Past the residential section, workshops and warehouses hulked black in

the night, and Flandry moved alert with a hand near the needle gun under

his tunic. Robberies and murders had happened here. Lacking the police

to clean out this area, assuming he wanted to, the commandant had

settled for advising men on liberty not to go through alone.

Flandry had been shocked to learn that when he first arrived. “We could

do it ourselves–establish regular patrols–if he’d order it. Doesn’t he

care? What kind of chief is he?”

His protest had been delivered in private to another scout, Lieutenant

Commander Eisenschmitt. The latter, having been around for a while,

shrugged. “The kind that any place like this gets,” he answered. “We

don’t rate attention at GHQ, so naturally we’re sent the hacks, boobs,

and petty crooks. Good senior officers are too badly needed elsewhere.

When Irumclaw does get one it’s an accident, and he doesn’t stay long.”

“Damn it, man, we’re on the border!” Flandry pointed out the window of

the room where they sat. It had been dark then, too. Betelgeuse glowed

bloody-brilliant among the hosts of stars where no writ ran. “Beyond

there–Merseia!”

“Yeh. And the gatortails expanding in all directions except when we bar

the way. I know. But this is the far edge of nowhere … in the eyes of

an Imperial government that can’t see past its perfume-sniffing nose.

You’re fresh from Terra, Dom. You ought to understand better than me. I

expect we’ll pull out of Irumclaw entirely inside another generation.”

“No! Can’t be! Why, that’d leave this whole flank exposed for six

parsecs inward. We’d have no way of protecting its commerce … of, of

staying around in any force–”

“Uh-huh.” Eisenschmitt nodded. “On the other hand, the local commerce

isn’t too profitable any more, less each year. And think of the saving

to the Imperial treasury if we end operations. The Emperor should be

able to build a dozen new palaces complete with harems.”

Flandry had not been able to agree at the time. He was too lately out of

a fighting unit and a subsequent school where competence was demanded.

Over the months, though, he saw things for himself and drew his own sad

conclusions.

There were times when he would have welcomed a set-to with a bandit. But

it had not befallen, nor did it on this errand into Old Town.

The district grew around him, crumbling buildings left over from pioneer

days, many of them simply the original beehive-shaped adobes of the

natives slightly remodeled for other life forms. Streets and alleys

twisted about under shimmering glowsigns. Traffic was mainly pedestrian,

but noise beat on the eardrums, clatter, shuffle, clop, clangor, raucous

attempts at music, a hundred different languages, once in a while a

muffled scream or a bellow of rage. The smells were equally strong, body

odors, garbage, smoke, incense, dope. Humans predominated, but many

autochthons were present and space travelers of numerous different

breeds circulated among them.

Outside a particular joyhouse, otherwise undistinguished from the rest,

an Irumclavian used a vocalizer to chant in Anglic: “Come one, come all,

come in, no cover, no minimum. Every type of amusement, pleasure, and

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