Company Wars 01 – Downbelow Station

Russell’s at the height of the panic. They had wanted information at that

threatened station; had used Adjustment techniques in interrogation. Damon

rested his mouth against his hand, watched the fragmentary record roll past,

sick at his stomach. He felt ashamed at the discovery, naive. He had not

questioned Russell’s reports, had not investigated them himself; had had other

things on his hands, and staff to take care of that matter; had not—he admitted

it—wanted to deal with the case any more than he absolutely had to. Talley had

never called him. Had conned him. Had held himself together, already unstrung

from previous treatment, to con Pell into doing the only thing that might put an

end to his mental hell. Talley had looked him straight in the eye and arranged

his own suicide.

The record rambled on… from interrogation under drugs to chaotic evacuation,

with stationer mobs on one side and the military threatening him on the other.

And what it had been, what had happened during that long voyage, a prisoner on

one of Mazian’s ships…

Norway … and Mallory.

He killed the screen, sat staring at the stack of papers, the unfinished

condemnations. After a time he set himself to work again, his fingers numb as he

signed the authorizations.

Men and women had boarded at Russell’s Star, folk who, like Talley, might have

been sane before it all started. What had gotten off those ships, what existed

over in Q… had been made, of folk no different than themselves.

He simply pushed the destruct on lives like Talley’s, which were already gone.

On men like himself, he thought, who had gone over civilized limits, in a place

where civilization had stopped meaning anything.

Mazian’s Fleet—even they, even the likes of Mallory—had surely started

differently.

“I’m not going to challenge,” Tom told him, over a lunch they both drank more

than ate.

And after lunch he went to the small Adjustment facility over in red, and back

into the treatment area. He saw Josh Talley. Talley did not see him, although

perhaps it would not have mattered. Talley was resting at that hour, having

eaten. The tray was still on the table, and he had eaten well. He sat on the bed

with a curiously washed expression on his face, all the lines of strain erased.

ii

Angelo looked up at the aide, took the report of the ship outbound and scanned

the manifest, looked up. “Why Hansford?”

The aide shifted his weight, distressed. “Sir?”

“Two dozen ships idle and Hansford has a commission to launch? Unfitted? And

with what crew?”

“I think crew was hired off the inactive list, sir.”

Angelo leafed through the report. “Lukas Company. Viking-bound with a stripped

ship and a dock-bound crew and Dayin Jacoby for a passenger? Get Jon Lukas on

the com.”

“Sir,” the aide said, “the ship has already left dock.”

“I can see the time. Get me Jon Lukas.”

“Yes, sir.”

The aide went out. In moments the screen on the desk went bright and Jon Lukas

came on. Angelo took a deep breath, calmed himself, angled the report toward the

pickup. “See that?”

“You have a question?”

“What’s going on here?”

“We have holdings at Viking. Business to carry on. Shall we let our interest

there sink into panic and disorder? They’re due some reassurance.”

“With Hansford?”

“We had an opportunity to engage a ship at below standard. Economics, Angelo.”

“Is that all?”

“I’m not sure I take your meaning.”

“She carried nothing like full cargo. What kind of commodity do you plan to pick

up at Viking?”

“We carry as much as we can with Hansford in her present condition. She’ll refit

there, where facilities are less crowded. Refitting is the hire for which we got

her use, if you must know. What she carries will pay the bill; she’ll lade full

on return, critical supplies. I’d think you’d be pleased. Dayin is aboard to

supervise and to administer some business at our Viking office.”

“You’re not minded, are you, that this full lading include Lukas Company

personnel… or others? You’re not going to sell passage off Viking. You’re not

going to pull that office out.”

“Ah. That’s your concern.”

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