Retief! By Keith Laumer

“Pomfroy-Tic all same have organ cluster up ventral orifice—”

“Gilitit, I’ve warned you to watch your language!” Magnan roared. “It’s no habit for a communications man to get into!” He clicked off. “Confounded locals! It’s hopeless, of course; our equipment was never designed for pin-pointing moving patrol boats at four A-U’s.”

“How do the Yalcans feel about the situation?”

Magnan blinked. “Why, as to that, I, ah . . . was just going to call Oo-Rilikuk.” Magnan punched keys, tuned in a bland yellow and blue face with eyes like gold pinheads and vertically-hinged jaws busy with an oily drumstick.

“Ah, there, Magnan,” a voice like an unoiled wheel said. “Just finishing up my lunch. Roast haunch of giant locust. Delicious.” A tongue like a length of green silken rope flicked a tidbit from a corner of the lipless mouth.

“Oo-Rilikuk, do you know anything of a large convoy due here today?”

Rilikuk dabbed at his chin with a gossamer napkin. “I seem to recall issuing a number of visas to Groaci nationals in recent weeks.”

“Groaci? Fifty shiploads of them?”

“Something like that,” the Yalcan said carelessly. “By the way, if you haven’t already made arrangements, perhaps you’d care to join my Bachelor’s Group for the upcoming festivities—”

“You’re not concerned? Perhaps you’re not aware of the insidious reputation the Groaci enjoy—”

“I don’t mind saying I’ve exercised a trifle of influence to procure a choice mud pocket; the rich, oleaginous kind, you know. And there’ll be no shortage of nubile females along—though you’re not organized to appreciate the latter, it’s true—”

“May I ask the state of the planetary defenses, Rilikuk? I’m warning you, these Groaci are not to be trusted—”

“Planetary defenses?” Rilikuk issued a chirp of amusement. “As confirmed pacifists, we’ve never felt the need for such an extravagance. Now, I’ll be leaving the office in a few minutes; suppose I drop by for you—we’ll go on to my place for dinner, then off to the bog—”

“You’re leaving the Foreign Office at a moment like this?” Magnan yelped. “They’ll be landing in a matter of minutes!”

“I fear I’ll have no time to devote to tourism this week, Magnan,” Rilikuk said. “They’ll just have to manage alone. After all, Voom Festival time comes but once in ninety-four standard years—”

Magnan rang off with a snort. “We’ll receive scant help from that quarter.” He swiveled to gaze out the unglazed window across the gay tiles of the plaza, lined with squat, one-story shops of embossed and colored ceramic brick to the glittering minarets of the mile-distant temple complex.

“If these idlers invested less energy in shard-sorting and more in foreign affairs, I wouldn’t be faced with this contretemps,” he grumbled.

“If the CDT would talk Groac into selling them a few thousand tons of sand, they wouldn’t have to sort shards.”

“There are better uses for CDT bottoms than hauling sand, Retief, though I notice the local scrap pile is about depleted. Possibly now they’ll turn to more profitable pursuits than lavishing the artistry of generations on tenantless shrines.” He indicated the cluster of glass towers sparkling in the sun. “They might even consent to export a reasonable volume of glassware in place of the present token amounts.”

“Rarity keeps the price up; and they say they can’t afford to let much glass off-world. It all goes back in the scrap piles when it’s broken, for reuse.”

Magnan stared across the plain, where the white plumes of small geysers puffed into brief life, while the pale smoke rising from the fumaroles rose straight up in the still air. Far above, a point of blue light twinkled.

“Odd,” Magnan said, frowning. “I’ve never seen one of the moons in broad daylight before . . .”

Retief came to the window.

“You still haven’t. Apparently our Groaci friends are ahead of schedule. That’s an ion drive, and it’s not over twenty miles out.”

Magnan bounded to his feet. “Get your hat, Retief! We’ll confront these interlopers the moment they set foot on Yalcan soil! The Corps isn’t letting this sort of thing pass without comment!”

“The Corps is always a fast group with a comment,” Retief said. “I’ll give it that.”

Outside, the plaza was a-bustle with shopkeepers glittering in holiday glass jewelry, busily closing up their stalls, erecting intricate decorations like inverted chandeliers before their shuttered shops, and exchanging shouted greetings. A long-bodied pink-and-red-faced Yalcan in a white apron leaning in the open door of a shop waved a jointed forearm.

“Retief-Tic! Do me honor of to drop in for last Voom cup before I lock up. Your friend, too!”

“Sorry, Oo-Plif; duty calls.”

“I see you’ve established your usual contacts among the undesirable element,” Magnan muttered, signaling a boat-shaped taxi edging through the press on fat pneumatic wheels. “Look at these lackwits! Completely engrossed in their frivolity, while disaster descends scarcely a mile away.”

Retief eyed the descending ship as it settled in beyond the glittering glass spires of the temple-city.

“I wonder why they’re landing there instead of at the port.”

“They’ve probably mistaken the shrine for the town,” Magnan snapped. “One must admit that it makes a far more impressive display than this collection of mud huts!”

“Not the Groaci; they do their homework carefully before they start anything.”

The cab pulled up and Magnan barked directions at the driver, who waved his forearms in the Yalcan equivalent of a shrug.

“Speak to this fellow, Retief!” Magnan snapped. “Obscure dialects are a hobby of yours, I believe.”

Retief gave the driver instructions in the local patois and leaned back against the floppy cushions. Magnan perched on the edge of the seat and nipped at a hangnail. The car cleared the square, racketed down a side street streaming with locals headed for the bog, gunned out across the hard-baked mud-flat, swerving violently around the bubbling devil’s cauldrons of hot mud that dotted the way. A small geyser erupted with a whoosh!, spattering the open vehicle with hot droplets. A whiff of rotten-egg smoke blew past. Off to the left, the sunlight glinted from the wide surface of the swamp, thickly scattered with exotic lily-like flowers. Here and there, tree-ferns grew in graceful clumps from the shallow water. Along the shore, bright-colored tents had been erected, and local celebrants clustered in groups among them, weaving to and fro and waving their multiple arms.

“It’s disgraceful,” Magnan sniffed. “They’re already staggering and their infernal festival’s hardly begun!”

“It’s a native dance,” Retief said. “Very cultural.”

“What’s the occasion for this idiotic celebration? It seems to have completely paralyzed whatever elementary sense of responsibility these flibbertigibbets possess.”

“It’s related in some way to the conjunction of the four moons,” Retief said. “But there’s more to it than that. It seems to have an important religious significance; the dances are symbolic of death and rebirth, or something of the sort.”

“Hmmph! I see the dancers are now falling flat on their faces! Religious ecstasy, no doubt!”

As they swept past the reeling locals, the driver made cabalistic signs in the air, grabbed the steering bar just in time to swerve past a steam-jet that snorted from a cleft boulder. Ahead, a cloud of dust was rolling out from the landing spot where the Groaci ship had settled in, a scant hundred yards from an outlying shrine, a sparkling fifty-foot tower of red, yellow, and green glass.

“They’re coming perilously close to violating the native holy place,” Magnan observed as the taxi pulled up beside the ship. “There may be mob violence at any moment.”

A pair of locals, emerging from one of the many fanciful glass arches adorning the entrances to the shrine complex, cast no more than a casual glance at the vessel as a port opened in its side and a spindle-legged Groaci in golfing knickers and loud socks appeared.

Magnan climbed hurriedly from the cab. “I want you to note my handling of this, Retief,” he said behind his hand, “a firm word now may avert an incident.”

“I’d better say a firm word to the driver, or we’ll be walking back.”

“Look, Mac-Tic, I got a reserved slot in a hot pocket of mud waiting for me,” the driver called as he wheeled the car around. “Five minutes, OK?”

Retief handed the cabbie a ten credit token and followed Magnan across the scorched ground to the landing ladder. The Groaci descended, all five eye-stalks canted in different directions. One fixed on Magnan.

“Minister Barnshingle,” he said in his faint Groaci voice before Magnan could speak. “I am Fiss, Tour Director for Groac Planetary Tours, Incorporated. I assume you’ve come to assist in clearing my little flock through the Customs and Immigration formalities. Now—”

“Tour Director, did you say, Mr. Fiss?” Magnan cut in. “Fifty shiploads of tourists?”

“Quite correct. I can assure you that passports and visas are all in order, and immunization records are up-to-date. Since we Groaci have no diplomatic mission to Yalc, it is most kind of the CDT to extend its good offices—”

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