thought they were headed beyond to inspect the war, with no merchanter who would
agree to take Company scrip to take them aboard. He did not need problems from
lower levels.
The boy’s face haunted him. He turned back to that page, leafed again through
the interrogation report, scanned it, remembered the security chief still
standing there. “So what are you doing with him?”
“Holding him in detention. None of the other offices agrees what to do with
him.”
Pell had never had a prisoner of war. The war had never come here. Angelo
thought it over and fretted the more for the situation. “Legal Affairs have a
suggestion?”
“Suggested I get a decision here.”
“We’re not equipped for that kind of detention.”
“No, sir,” the security chief agreed. It was a hospital facility down there. The
setup was for retraining, Adjustment… what rare times it had ever been needed.
“We can’t treat him.”
“Those cells aren’t set up for long stays, sir. Maybe we could rig up something
more comfortable.”
“We’ve got people without lodgings as it is. How are we going to explain that?”
“We could set up something in detention itself. Take a panel out; at least get a
bigger room.”
“Postpone that” Angelo ran a hand through his sparse hair. “I’ll consider policy
on the case as soon as I get the emergency matters settled. Deal with him as
best you can with what you have at hand. Ask the lower offices to apply some
imagination to the case and send me the recommendations.”
“Yes, sir.” The security chief left. Angelo put the folder away for later use. A
prisoner of that kind was not what they needed at the moment. What they did need
was a means to secure housing and feed extra mouths and to cope with what was
coming. They had trade goods which were suddenly going nowhere; those could be
consumed on Pell and on Down-below at the base, and out in the mines. But they
needed others. They had economics to worry about, markets which had collapsed,
the value of any currency in doubt as far as merchanters were concerned. From a
star-spanning economy, Pell had to be turned to feed itself, to
self-sufficiency; and perhaps—to face other changes.
It was not the single Union prisoner they had in hand, identified, who had him
worried. It was the likely number of Unionists and sympathizers who would grow
in quarantine, folk for whom any change was going to look better than what they
had. There were only some of the refugees with papers, and many of those had
been discovered not to match the prints and photos attached to them.
“We need some sort of liaison with the quarantine zone residents,” he advised
council at that afternoon’s meeting. “We’ll have to set up a government on the
other side of the line, someone of their choosing, some manner of elections; and
we’ll have to deal with what results.”
They accepted that, as they had accepted all else. It was the concerns of their
own constituencies which had them distraught, the councillors from dislodged
orange and yellow, from green and white which had gotten most of the influx of
station residents. Red sector, untouched, abutting yellow from the other side,
was anxious; the others were jealous. There was a deluge of complaints and
protests and rumors of rumor. He made note of them. There was debate. It finally
came to the necessary conclusion that they had to relieve pressure on the
station itself.
“We do not authorize further construction here,” the man Ayres interposed,
rising from his seat. Angelo simply stared at him, given heart to do so by Signy
Mallory, who had called a bluff on the Company and made it good.
“I do,” Angelo said. “I have the resources to do it, and I will.”
There was a vote. It went the only sane way, with the Company observers sitting
in silent anger, vetoing what was passed, which veto was simply ignored while
plans proceeded.
The Company men left the meeting early. Security reported them later agitating
on the docks, and trying to engage a freighter at inflated rates, with gold.
There was not a freighter moving, for anything except in-system hauling,
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