A Circus of Hells by Poul Anderson. Part one

nothing in it for them but extra work? I’d lay long odds they’d classify

your ‘discovery’ an Imperial secret and forbid you under criminal

penalties ever to mention it anywhere. You might guess differently,

though. No insult to you, Dominic. I believe in insurance, that’s all.

Right?

“So my agent will ride along, and give you the navigational data after

you’re safely away in space, and never leave your side till you’ve

returned and told me personally what you found. Afterward, as a witness

to your behavior on active duty, a witness who’ll testify under

hypnoprobe if need be, why, he’ll keep on being my insurance against any

change of heart you might suffer.”

Flandry blew a smoke ring. “As you wish,” he conceded. “It’ll be pretty

cozy, two in a Comet, but I can rig an extra bunk and–Let’s discuss

this further, shall we? I think I will take the job, if certain

conditions can be met.”

Ammon would have bristled were he able. The Gorzunian sensed his

irritation and growled. “Conditions? From you?”

Flandry waved his cigar. “Nothing unreasonable, sir,” he said airily.

“For the most part, precautions that I’m sure you will agree are

sensible and may already have thought of for yourself. And that agent

you mentioned. Not ‘he’, please. It could get fatally irritating, living

cheek by unwashed jowl with some goon for weeks. I know you can find a

capable and at the same time amiable human female. Right? Right.”

He had everything he could do to maintain that surface calm. Beneath it,

his pulse racketed–and not simply because of the money, the risk, the

enjoyment. He had come here on a hunch, doubtless generated by equal

parts of curiosity and boredom. He had stayed with the idea that, if the

project seemed too hazardous, he could indeed betray Ammon and apply for

duty that would keep him beyond range of assassins. Now abruptly a

vision was coming to him, hazy, uncertain, and gigantic.

III

Djana was hard to shock. But when the apartment door had closed behind

her and she saw what waited, her “No!” broke free as a near scream.

“Do not be alarmed,” said the squatting shape. A vocalizer converted the

buzzes and whistles from its lower beak into recognizable Anglic

syllables. “You have nothing to fear and much to gain.”

“You–a man called me–”

“A dummy. It is not desirable that Ammon know you have met me in

private, and surely he has put a monitor onto you.”

Djana felt surreptitiously behind her. As expected, the door did not

respond; it had been set to lock itself. She clutched her large

ornamental purse. A stun pistol lay inside. Her past had seen

contingencies.

Bracing herself and wetting her lips, she said, “I don’t. Not with

xenos–” and in haste, fearing offense might be taken, “I mean nonhuman

sophonts. It isn’t right.”

“I suspect a large enough sum would change your mind,” the other said.

“You have a reputation for avarice. However, I plan a different kind of

proposition.” It moved slowly closer, a lumpy gray body on four thin

legs which brought the head at its middle about level with her waist.

One tentacle sent the single loose garment swirling about in a sinuous

gesture. Another clutched the vocalizer in boneless fingers. The

instrument was being used with considerable skill; it actually achieved

an ingratiating note. “You must know about me in your turn. I am only

Rax, harmless old Rax, the solitary representative of my species on this

world. I assure you my reproductive pattern is sufficiently unlike yours

that I find your assumption comical.”

Djana eased a bit. She had in fact noticed the creature during the three

years she herself had been on Irumclaw. A casual inquiry and answer

crossed her recollection, yes, Rax was a dealer in drugs, legal or

illegal, from … where was it? Nobody knew or cared. The planet had

some or other unpronounceable name and orbited in distant parts.

Probably Rax had had to make a hurried departure for reasons of health,

and had drifted about until it stranded at last on this tolerant shore.

Such cases were tiresomely common.

And who could remember all the races in the Terran Empire? Nobody: not

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *