Retief! By Keith Laumer

“By the way, you are instrugted to iknore any small ah . . . indrusions. If you zee anything . . . unusual, zummon a guard at once.”

“Intrusions?” Straphanger repeated querulously. “What kind of intrusions?”

“The balace,” Oh-Doomy-Gloom said, “is haunted.”

* * *

Four twisting turns of a stone staircase above the reception hall, Second Secretary Magnan tip-toed at Retief’s side along an echoing corridor past black, iron-bound doors and mouldy tapestries dimly visible in the light of a flambeau set in a bracket at the far end of the passage.

“Quaint beliefs these bucolics entertain,” Magnan said in a tone of forced heartiness. “Haunted indeed! How silly! Ha!”

“Why are you whispering?” Retief inquired.

“Just out of respect for the Pope, of course.” Magnan came to an abrupt halt, clutched Retief’s sleeve. “Wha-what’s that?” he pointed. Along the corridor, something small and dark slipped from the shadow of a pilaster to the shelter of a doorway.

“Probably just our imagination,” Retief suggested.

“But it had big red eyes,” Magnan protested.

“They’re as easy to imagine as any other kind.”

“I just remembered: I left my shower cap in my hold baggage. Let’s go back.”

Retief moved off. “It’s just a few doors farther. Six, seven . . . here we are.” He inserted the key Oh-Doomy-Gloom’s aide had provided; the heavy door swung open with a creak that descended the scale to a low groan. Magnan hurried forward, paused to stare at the nearest wall hanging, showing a group of Hoogans suspended head-down from spikes above leaping flames, while goblins of various shapes prodded them with long barb-tipped spears.

“Curious how similar religious art is from one world to another,” he commented. Inside the room, he stared around in dismay at the damp stone walls, the two spartan cots, the carved devils in the corner.

“What perfectly ghastly quarters!” He dropped his suitcase, went over to prod the nearest bunk. “Why, my spine will never endure this mattress! I’ll be a physical wreck after the first night! And the draft—I’m sure to catch a chill. And . . . and . . .” He broke off, raised a shaky finger to point at the darkest corner of the narrow chamber, where a tall, bug-eyed demon carved from pale blue stone winked garnet eyes.

“Retief! Something moved over there—it was just like the devils in the pictures! All fuzzy red bristles and eyes that glow in the dark . . . !”

Retief opened his suitcase. “If you see another one, throw a shoe at it. Right now, we’d better be getting into costume; compared with an aroused Ambassador, a few devils are just friendly pets.”

Half an hour later, having sponged off at the stone sink, Magnan’s eyes were still rolling nervously as he adjusted the folds of his Hoogan ceremonial sarong before the tarnished, rippled mirror.

“I suppose it is just nerves,” he said. “It’s all the fault of that Oh-Doomy-Gloom fellow and his quaint native superstitions! I confess his remarks quite unnerved me for a moment.”

Across the room, Third Secretary Retief was loading match-head sized charges into the magazine of an inconspicuous hand-gun.

“Probably just his way of warning us about the mice,” he said.

Magnan turned, caught a glimpse of the gun. “Here, Retief! What’s that?”

“Just a quaint native cure for spooks—if they get too noisy.” He tucked the gun out of sight under the Hoogan sarong. “Just think of it as a sort of good luck charm, Mr. Magnan.”

“A knife up the sleeve is an old diplomatic tradition,” Magnan said doubtfully. “But a power pistol under the sarong . . .”

“I’ll have it along in case something jumps out of the stonework and yells boo!” Retief said reassuringly.

Magnan sniffed, admiring himself in the dark glass.

“I was rather relieved when the Ambassador insisted on native dress for the staff instead of ceremonial nudity for tonight’s affair.” He turned to study the hang of the uneven hem-line that exposed his bare shins. “One of his finer moments, I fancied. He does cut an impressive figure, once his jowls get that purplish tinge. Not even Oh-Doomy-Gloom dared stand up to him. Though I do wish he’d gone just the one step further and demanded the right to wear trousers—” he broke off, his eyes on the black drapes covering the high, narrow window. The heavy cloth twitched.

“Retief!” he gasped. “There it is again!”

“Shhh,” Retief watched as the curtain moved again. A tiny red-glowing head appeared at its edge, a foot above the floor; a wire-thin leg emerged, another; a body like a ball of reddish fluff came into view, its red-bead eyes on two inch stalks tilting alertly to scan the chamber. Its gaze fixed on Retief; it moved clear of the curtain, paused, then started toward him on skittery legs—

With a yell, Magnan dived for the door, flung it wide.

“Guards! Help! Goblins! Spooks!” His voice receded along the hall, mingling with the clank of accouterments, the slap of wide Hoogan feet.

The intruder hesitated at the outcry, dithered for a moment, then emitted a cry like a goosed fairy, fumbling with two of its limbs at something attached to its back. Beyond the door, Magnan’s voice supplied a shrill counterpoint to the rumble of Hoogan questions.

“Then get someone who speaks Terran!” he yelped. “At this moment my associate is being savaged by the monster!”

Retief crossed quickly to the window, pulled the drapes aside and unlatched a panel, letting in a draft of damp night air.

“This way out, fellow,” he said. “You’d better be going before the cops arrive.”

The fluff-ball darted across the room, came to a shaky stop before Retief, made quick motions. A folded square of paper fell to the floor at Retief’s feet. Then the creature sprang for the opening and was gone as Hoogan feet clumped at the door.

“Where Spism?” a heavy voice demanded in thick Terran. A conical Hoogan head in a flaring helmet swiveled to scan the room. Behind the guard, Magnan craned for a view.

“Where is the beast?” he shrilled. “It was at least four feet high, and its tusks were four inches long at the very least!”

The Hoogan advanced into the room, pointed to the open window with his broad-headed seven-foot pike.

“It was a mouse after all,” Retief said. “It got away.”

“You let Spism ko?”

“Shouldn’t I have?” Retief inquired mildly, pocketing the folded paper.

“Spism pad imp from nether rechions; might bite Terry, get blood boisonink.”

“I think you’re being impertinent,” Magnan said sharply, “biting Terrans is perfectly safe—”

The Hoogan turned to him, pike lowered ominously.

“You will gome with me,” it ordered. “The benaldy for consortink with minions of Unterworlt is poilink in oil.”

“Here,” Magnan said, backing. “Stand back, my man—”

The Hoogan reached for Magnan with a long, snaky hand; Retief stepped up behind him, selected a spot, and struck a sharp blow with bunched fingertips. The guard stumbled, fell past Magnan and hit chin first with a resounding slam. His pike shattered against the wall.

“Retief!” Magnan gobbled. “What are you thinking of? You’ve laid hands on a member of the Papal Guard!”

“I had the distinct impression this fellow hooked a toe on the rug and fell down. Didn’t you notice?”

“Why, you know very well—”

“Just before he reached you, Mr. Magnan.”

“Ah . . . why, yes, now that you mention it, he did trip,” Magnan’s tone was suddenly brisk. “Nasty fall. I rushed up to support him, but alas, too late. Poor fellow. Served him right, the brute. Shall we go through his pockets?”

“Why?”

“You’re right; there isn’t time. That crash was doubtless heard throughout the palace—”

A second Hoogan appeared at the open door, his helmet bearing the fanged angel indicative of officer rank. He eyed the fallen pikeman.

“You addacked this one?” he demanded.

Magnan glanced at the victim as though noticing him for the first time. “He seems to have fallen down,” he observed brightly.

“Against rules to gill Hoogan,” the captain said ominously.

“He . . . ah . . . broke his spear,” Magnan pointed out helpfully.

“Very bad crime, defile ceremonial spear,” the captain said sternly. “Require burification ceremony. Very expensive.”

Magnan fumbled in a money pouch at one hip. “I’d love to contribute a little something—”

“Ten Hoogan gredits, forget whole thing. For eggstra five dispose of body—”

The felled Hoogan stirred, mumbled, sat up.

“Ha!” the captain said. “Look like no teal. Put for another eggstra five . . .” He lifted a short, ugly club from his belt. “Finish off unfortunate victim of Terry violence.”

“Stop!” Magnan yelled. “Are you out of your mind?”

“Inzult to Overseer caste briest cosd you two more gredits. For you I mage special brice, three for five—”

“Bribery?” Magnan gasped. “Corruption?”

“Three it is,” the Hoogan nodded. “How apout you?” he turned to Retief. “You sport like other Terry?”

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