'Please bring him to my cabin,' he said, turning his back. 'And resume patrol.' Halfway out the door leading from the bridge, he turned. 'And you may say, in your report home, that we have emerged victorious in a duel with a Class-A Cassiopeian Vanguard destroyer.'

He would at least have the rest of his patrol time to live. There was no reason to go rushing back to face sure conviction.

Chapter Six

'I did it, sir,' Lex said, standing at attention in the Captain's cramped quarters, 'because someday I'm going to be free to go home, back to Texas.'

'Is Texas so heavenly that a man will violate his honor for her?' Wal sat, slumped tiredly over his small writing desk.

'Sir, with all respect, it was not my honor which I violated, it was yours. Or the Empire's. Or something. I mean, sir, that I wasn't the one who made the rules.'

'The rules, fleeter, are the result of centuries of tradition. Till now, they've worked fairly well to keep us all alive.'

'They wouldn't have kept us alive, sir,' Lex said. 'In fact, they seemed sure to get us dead.'

'Rules are designed for the good of all,' Wal said. Why, he asked himself, was he so calmly debating with this outworlder? 'Is it every man for himself on Texas?'

'No,' Lex said. 'On Texas it's all for one and one for all, sir. And they, meaning that nebulous 'they' which we use when we talk about people we don't really know, people who have life-and-death power over us, don't make rules which would devalue the life of a single Texican as our lives were devalued by the situation wherein we faced a superior force and were forced to fight on terms not of our choosing.'

'An interesting thought,' Wal said, 'in keeping, I think, with the rather incredible story which has been told about the Battle of Wolfs Star. I have heard that a Texican fleet moved to save one individual.'

'It's true, sir.'

'But they sent you out into the Empire to take your punishment,' Wal said.

'I was given a choice, sir.'

The Captain looked at Lex with knitted brows. He was trying to imagine a like situation in the Empire. He knew that the individual involved would not even be consulted, not given a voice, much less a choice. 'Sit down, Gunner. Tell me about this Texas of yours.'

Lex made himself as comfortable as possible in the undersized chair in front of the Captain's desk. Big, lanky, he spilled over the edges, leaned one elbow on the back. His ease in the presence of a superior impressed Wal and, as the Captain listened, he began to make unconscious comparisons.

Arden Wal was a loyal man. He was a Vegan. He'd spent his formative years at the heart of the Empire, had been educated in the best schools and at the Academy on Polaris Two. He was a man of some intelligence. His mind was never satisfied with the knowledge it held, always seeking more data. At fifty, he was in the prime of his middle manhood. He had never formed a permanent relationship with a woman. His love had always been the fleet and, for a long time, until the last Texican incident, he'd entertained hopes of rising in rank to, someday, command an entire sector. His cabin was neatly arranged, everything in its place, but packed to capacity with electrobooks, star charts and an impressive collection of antique printed books which included, as his prime source of pride, ancient star catalogues from the old Earth, theBanner Durchmusterung , first edition, listing 324,000 stars north of -2 degrees declination from the Earth; Schonfeld's extended catalogue and theCordoba Durchmusterung , the Cape Photographic Durchmusterung , theCarte du Ciel . In addition to the priceless ancient catalogues, of value for their age, their quaintness, there were hundreds of carefully cross-filed electro-charts, a collection of star knowledge which covered the charted galaxy. Wal had traveled many of the blink lines charted in theComplete Empire Spaceways and, as First Officer of an exploration scout, he'd personally helped to add to the continually growing charts. He was a cosmopolitan man in the true sense, having seen the Empire from old Earth to the far reaches of the periphery, its cities, its mining planets, its museums and prisons and fisheries, its agriculture and its people. But he'd never seen Texas and he'd never heard of a society wherein the individual mattered more than the whole.

As Lex rambled on, taking the opportunity to talk of home, Wal was fascinated.

TheGrus blinked accurately, contacted a new opposite, sent out to replace the lost Cassie Vandy, and an hour passed. Wal offered Eridani brandy, warmed his glass in his hand as Lex talked about the big planet somewhere far out past the extent of Empire and Wal asked questions about its people, its industry, its war potential. Lex told him about the Darlene, about the maneuverability of an airors, about Texas' need for metals. But it was government which caught Wal's attention for long minutes.

'A board of citizens appoints a President?' he asked, unbelievingly.

'No one really wants the job,' Lex said. 'But if he's chosen he serves.'

'No one wants it?'

'Heck, no. Who'd want to spend his time pushing papers and talking with everyone who has an idea or a complaint when he could be on his own land, growing his own meacrs, or out hunting in the desert?'

'No Texican, then, seeks power for the sake of power?' Wal asked sarcastically.

'I can't speak for all of them,' Lex said, 'but when my father was appointed President he tried like hell to get out of it, and we almost had to hog-tie old Andy Gar to get him to serve.'

Three brandies later Lex was talking wistfully about how he and ole Billy Bob went riding over the desert and how they shot low vectors at the hills and caught sanrabs with their bare hands and Wal found himself laughing. By this time he was convinced that Lex had no idea where Texas was located, except that it was well beyond Empire control areas and lonely in its big skies. And he was convinced, also, that Texicans were very atypical people. He had to admit that their ideas about keeping a planet livable were sensible. Overcrowding was a problem throughout the Empire and the drain of energies and goods and wealth to people unable to fend for themselves was a growing cancer. Instead of being angry with the young man, he was coming to like him. Lex's casual dismissal of his actions toward the ailing computer impressed him. The lad had not only thrown out every regulation in the book regarding destruction of fleet equipment, but he'd been right. And according to him every Texican who had attended a school would have recognized the necessity to disconnect the sick lobe. Wal envisioned a planet filled with men like Lex, intuitive tinkerers at home with machinery and electronics, able to mend and make do without the basic theory behind their actions.

As a military man, he was impressed by the Texicans' ability to destroy major Cassiopeian battle ships not only without fear of retaliation, but without detection. And he was inordinately interested in the double-blink technique which allowed a Texican ship to blink in and out of danger while others, like this new and impressive Vandy, had to sit and wait for recharging, taking the accumulated fire of a fleet while doing it, or use the last charging reserve and kill a ship to escape.

It was new data for his greedy mind. He fed the young Gunner brandy until he was satisfied that he'd picked all the available information and then he listened as Lex talked of his family with a loneliness which was touching. Sobered, Wal was reminded that both he and the Texican were dead men.

'I'm very sorry that you will never see them again,' he said.

'But I will,' Lex said. 'Somehow I will.' 'When we get back to base we'll both be brought up on charges the second the Automatic Record is

monitored,' Wal said. 'Sir, I've been thinking about that. Why do we have to go back to base?' 'Shall we sneak up and destroy the entire Empire as you destroyed the Cassie?' 'We don't have to, sir. We can go to Texas.' When it was said, Wal realized that he'd been waiting for the boy to say it. He mused silently for a

moment.

'With all respect, sir, you don't look like a man who would just lie down and let someone kill him for using common sense.' 'You used common sense,' Wal said, realizing that the brandy was getting to him. 'If I had known that it would get you in trouble too I might not have.' 'And you're not using it now,' Wal said. 'Even if we entertained the idea of defecting to your Texas—' 'I know,' Lex said. 'I don't know where it is. But we're still trading with the Empire, aren't we? I had a

steak from Texas in a restaurant on Luyten not long ago. And if we're still trading, we can find the

rendezvous point and contact a Texican ship.' 'And if your escape from your punishment angers the Emperor to the point of stopping the trading, then-what? You'd be right back where you started.'

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