Company Wars 01 – Downbelow Station

ordinary runs to the mines. It did not surprise Angelo when he heard that. There

was a cold wind blowing, and Pell felt it; everyone with instincts bred of the

Beyond felt it.

Eventually perhaps the Company men did, at least two of them, for those two

engaged a ship home, to Sol, the same which had brought them, a smallish and

decrepit jump-freighter, the only merchanter with an ec designation which had

docked at Pell in the better part of a decade, laden with Downbelow curios and

delicacies for its return, as it had brought in goods from Earth, which sold

high, for their curiosity. The four other Company representatives upped their

offers, and boarded a freighter for an unguaranteed run on the freighter’s own

schedule, to call at Viking and wherever else the uncertain times left safe.

They accepted Mallory’s conditions from a merchanter captain, and paid for the

privilege.

Chapter Six

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i

Downbelow main base: 5/20/52

It was storm on Downbelow when the shuttle came down, and that was not uncommon,

on a world of abundant cloud, when all the winter on the northern continent was

wrapped in sea-spawned overcast, seldom cold enough to freeze, not warm enough

for human comfort—never a clear sight of sun or stars for month on dreary month.

The unloading of the passengers at the landing site was proceeding in a cold,

pelting rain, a line of tired and angry people trudging over the hill from the

shuttle, to be settled into various warehouse digs amid stacks of mats and musty

sacks of prosh and fikli. “Move it over and stack it up,” the supervisors

shouted when the crowding became evident; and the noise was considerable,

cursing voices, the beating of rain in the inflated domes, the inevitable thump

of compressors. The tired stationers sulked and finally began to do as they were

told… young, most of them, construction workers and a few techs, virtually

without baggage and no few of them frightened at their first experience of

weather. They were station-born, wheezing at a kilo or so extra weight from

Downbelow’s gravity, wincing at thunder and at lightning which chained across

the roiling skies. No sleep for them until they could set up some manner of

dormitory space; no rest for anyone, native or human, who labored to carry

foodstuffs over the hill to lade the shuttle, or the crews trying to cope with

the inevitable flooding in the domes.

Jon Lukas oversaw some of it, scowling, walked back to the main dome where the

operations center was. He paced, listened to the rain, waited the better part of

an hour, finally suited up again and masked to walk to the shuttle. “Goodbye,

sir,” the com operator offered rising from his desk. Others stopped work, the

few who were there. He shook hands, still frowning, and finally walked out the

flimsy lock and up the wooden steps to the path, spattered again by the cold

rain. His fiftyish overweight was unflattered by the bright yellow plastic. He

had always been conscious of the indignity and hated it, hated walking in mud up

to the ankles and feeling a chin which penetrated even the suit and the liner.

Raingear and the necessary breathers turned all the humans at the base into

yellow monsters, blurred in the downpour. Downers scurried about naked and

enjoying it, the brown fur of their spindly limbs and lithe bodies dark with

moisture and plastered to them, their faces, round-eyed and with mouths set in

permanent o’s of surprise, watched and chattered together in their own language,

a babble in the rain and the constant bass of thunder. He walked the direct

trail to the landing site, not that which led on the other leg of the triangle,

past the storage domes and barracks domes. This one had no traffic. No meetings.

No good-byes. He looked across to fields which were aswim; the gray-green brush

and the ribbon trees on the hills about the base showed through curtains of

rain, and the river was a broad, overflowed sheet on the far-side bank, where a

marsh tended to form, for all their attempts to drain it… disease among the

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