CHAPTER ELEVEN

Ysolto Mbushia looked at the paper and thoughtfully pursed his lips, one hand lifting, the fingers tracing the pattern of ritual scars which stood livid on his cheeks.

'Well, now,' he said. 'I'm not sure.'

'Why the doubt? The signature's good, isn't it?'

'How would I know?' The Hausi looked at Dumarest and lifted his shoulders in a shrug. 'The Matriarch Su Posta could have written this or someone could have done it for her. Signed it too. You see the difficulty?'

'The signature's been countersigned.' Dumarest pointed. 'And thumbprinted. And witnessed by a monk. Brother Vezey. He was with the matriarch's retinue.'

'So?'

'You don't know the monk's handwriting either. Nor the thumbprint. I understand. But I'm not asking you to give me cash over the counter. Just hold it, verify it and collect. Pay me only when it's been cleared.' Then, as the Hausi continued to hesitate, Dumarest added, 'Naturally there'll be a commission. Ten percent?'

'The usual is twenty.'

'Fifteen and you can handle our supplies and repairs. A deal?'

The Hausi nodded and smiled. 'A deal, my friend. To be sealed in wine! Here, on Jourdan, we have our traditions. A moment if you please while I fetch the bottle.'

'And a copy of the promissory note,' reminded Dumarest.

'Together with your receipt and statement as to the agreed commission.'

'You don't trust me?'

'Yes,' said Dumarest. A Hausi did not lie. 'I trust you but I have partners and they don't trust me. What about that wine?'

It was sweet, cool, tasting of mint and honey and he savored it as he leaned with his back against the counter. Through the open door of the agency he could see the field, the bulk of the Moira together with other vessels. A busy field and an economically viable world if the ranked warehouses were anything to go by. Even as he watched, a line of carts appeared, low trailers drawn by sweating men each loaded with bulging sacks.

'Choum,' said the Hausi. 'A high-protein food destined for the mines on Calvardopolis. A short run and little profit but better than nothing if your ship's lying idle. If you're interested I could arrange the load.'

Dumarest shook his head; the Moira was grounded until it could be repaired. He watched as the men dragged their loads closer to the warehouse. The whips of overseers made spiteful, cracking sounds.

'Vagrants,' said Mbushia. 'Debtors and petty criminals working off their sentences on work gangs.' He sipped at his wine. 'Forgers lose their hands.'

'Thinking of that note?' Dumarest finished his wine and set down the glass. 'Forget it if it bothers you. I'll try somewhere else. Maybe the palace itself. The journey's worth ten percent.'

'We agreed on fifteen.'

'So we did.' Dumarest met the agent's eyes. 'And it's genuine. Maybe I should see a doctor.' He joined the other's laughter, then, 'How long?'

'A little while. The matriarch isn't a quick payer and it might be best to discount the note. How low will you go?'

'Face value or nothing-I'm not that stupid. Not yet.'

Outside Dumarest looked up at the sky and felt the warmth of the sun. It felt good, as did the touch of wind on his face, the grit of dirt beneath his boots. Space was too cold, too hostile. There was nowhere to hide and nothing soft to see. Nothing green like the leaf he pulled from a shrub to crush and lift to his nostrils and smell. No water like that which came gushing from a fountain to fill the air with musical tinklings. Ships were traps from which there could be no escape and space was an all-enveloping enemy.

Fantasies but he was glad the journey was over. It had taken too long and would have been impossible without the fuel salvaged from the Galya. Only that and Batrun's skill had enabled them to use the currents and nurse the generator until finally settling on solid ground. The generator was ruined and would have to be replaced-the matriarch's reward would cover it.

She had gone together with her retinue; the small child, the governess, the bodyguard, the attendants, the monk. The man who had looked like a trader had been an advocate and he had gone too. So had Craig, hunting a new generator. Olga had gone with him and Shandhar had left to see about supplies. Only Ysanne and Batrun remained.

'Earl!' She waved to him as he entered the salon. Batrun was with her, papers spread between them, and Dumarest caught a glimpse of navigational symbols; lines, zones, waves, the tools of her trade. 'Come and sit with us. Andre's been telling me some of the things he learned as a boy working the Chelham Ridge. You know it? It's an area where if you spit you'd splash a dozen worlds. Full of opposed gravities, magnetic fluxes, the works. You can head for one place and wind up at another. Turn almost a full circle. Right, Andre?'

He nodded, looking at Dumarest.

'Like a maze,' she said. 'Like threading a needle through a head of cabbage. It goes in but you don't know where the hell it's coming out. Fun, eh? Good fun, Earl. Damned good fun. Right?'

She talked too fast and her eyes were too bright and he guessed she'd been drinking but wasn't yet wholly drunk. Just enough for tensions to have eased and emotion to be vented in a flurry of words. A compensation too, perhaps, for Batrun's having shown her how relatively inexperienced she really was.

'I'll get some coffee, Earl,' he said, rising. 'I think Ysanne may have celebrated our landing with a little too much enthusiasm.'

'I can't drink,' she said. 'Is that what you're saying? Nobody from Manito can drink. We've more sense than to rot our guts with poison. When we want kicks we chew weed or change lovers or have a fight. You know, Earl, that's an idea. Maybe we should have a fight. Winner take all, right? Winner takes all.'

'What have we got? A broken down ship, some supplies, some cargo still to be turned into cash.'

'And a promise, Earl. That old bag should be grateful.'

'Maybe.' Dumarest looked up as Batrun returned. He carried a steaming pot and a vial of tablets. 'Sobup pills,' he explained. 'She must have got the wine from Shandhar. Here.' He offered her two with a cup of coffee. 'Take these and you'll soon feel better.'

A promise fulfilled as she set down her empty cup and sat blinking at the scattered papers.

'A little wine,' she said, 'and your brains take wings. Now I know why we don't drink back home. How the hell do you manage it, Earl?'

'Practice.' He looked at the papers. 'Apart from the lesson what's been happening?'

'We talked,' she said. 'I suggested changing the name of the ship. I don't like the Moira. It was Pendance's choice and I want to forget that bastard.' Glancing at Batrun she said, 'Why not the Galya?'

'No!' He softened the rejection. 'No, I'd rather not. For me there could only ever be one Galya. But, in view of our search, why not the Erce?'

'Erce?' Ysanne thought about it. 'An odd name but why not? Earl?'

He said, 'Where did you hear it, Andre?'

'Does it matter?' Ysanne was impatient. 'It's a name. Erce.' She shook her head. 'One you wouldn't forget in a hurry. What does it mean?'

'Earth,' said Batrun. 'It's another name for Earth. You couldn't call a ship that, could you? Not Earth. And not Terra either. Strange how old names lose their meaning. Earth is ground or dirt and we still use it in that connection. As we do terra-terrain. But Erce?'

Dumarest said, again, 'Andre-where did you hear it?'

'From a book, I think. Yes, it had to be that.' He saw Dumarest's expression and continued. 'Most of a captain's job is to wait. To stand watch and do nothing but wait and fight boredom. Some do it with drugs, others with symbiotes; I used books-old ones, mostly, dealing with legends and myths. Did you know that Bonanza actually exists? That Eden was a real world and you can visit Heaven any time you want? They call it Haveen now but it has to be the same planet. But to be more specific. Erce was a term used in a wider sense than a name. Think of it not

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