without resources, and we made a healthy profit on this run.' 'Will we make another, though?' Gabriel said, sitting back. 'Any offers on the return-leg screen this morning?'
She tilted her head sideways again, this time more slowly. 'Nothing yet, but there is no need for buyers at this end to be sudden, especially not with Mr. Alwhirn in his present mood. If anyone wants to ship data with us, well enough; but they would have shipped with Alwhirn or I.I. before now. No one in so small a place is going to rush off to give their business to someone they have never seen before. Time will be taken to study us. Therefore we should be out and about today. We should see about resupplying.' 'With what? We're full up after Diamond Point—'
'You know that, and I know that, but the storekeepers here will not. Besides,' Enda said with an amused look, 'I want to find out where Oraan, our chef of last evening, is getting his vegetables. Canned they may be, but they are of high quality. If he is growing them, then we will be back here, infotrading or not.' Gabriel got up and stretched, thinking about his shower. Enda gave the screen one last look, then went down the hall. After a moment, she stuck her head out of her cabin door and looked at him. 'I wonder about these dreams you have been having. They seem to be making you circumstantial.' 'Maybe they have,' Gabriel said, uncertain what she meant.
She came down the hall with the plant pot. 'Good. Meanwhile, a little natural sunlight can do this no harm.'
'You know what I think?' Gabriel said. 'I think that thing's made of some kind of plastic. It's a joke on a poor human who doesn't know any better.'
Enda smiled. 'When I play a joke on you, it will be a better one than that. When you are ready, let us go into town and see about those vegetables and anything else we can discover.'
They went out an hour or so later. By the time they finished their stops at the various shops and businesses in Sunbreak, lunch was starting when they finally got to the community center. Enda sat down with a glass of the bubbling water and started making notes on the morning's discussions. Gabriel had chai while he gazed out the windows at the extraordinary view, row after row of serried peaks in the now-fading afternoon light.
Rather to his pleasure, they didn't stay alone for long. A couple of people came along to sit and chat with them. 'Just curious,' said the lady, an Alaundrin, who sat down with a tall mug of some pungent kind of hotdraft that Gabriel couldn't identify.
'Nosey,' said the man who sat down across from her, a short broad man with a big nose and merry little eyes.
The lady was Marielle Esephanne. Her husband was still in the office taking care of some paperwork in his job as a secretary to the Regency Expansion Bureau, the department that oversaw infrastructure matters in Sunbreak. The man introduced himself as Rov Melek, cousin to a homesteader growing beef lichen and broadleaf maleaster on a small terraced farm just across the valley from Sunbreak on Black Mountain.
'But they're all black around here,' said Gabriel.
Rov winked at him as he turned around his own glass of chai, waiting for it to cool. 'Makes it easier to name them.'
Enda looked up from her notes.
Rov grinned. 'We're becoming a gourmet's paradise,' he said to Gabriel. 'People come, oh, tens of light- years for our food, but it would be nice if more of them came back more than once. We get so many of these one- time charlies.'
Gabriel chatted with the two Sunbreakers while Enda finished her notes. As he had suspected, it turned out that most people in the settlement worked for either Alaundril or the Regency of Bluefall. There was not a lot else to do here. However, the settlers seemed to consider one administration about as good (or bad) as the other, and Gabriel heard Marielle or Rov refer to 'the government' and mean both sides of the colonial divide.
Maybe, Gabriel thought, it's because this place is so small and isolated. Making a big deal over one side or the other wouldn't get you far. They're all stuck here together, a long way from anywhere else. They were eager enough to hear what news Gabriel had to pass on from Grith. Everyone in town knew about Rae Alwhirn's outburst of the previous evening, but no one knew what it was about or had connected recent events at Corrivale with them. Marielle and Rov listened without much comment to Gabriel's much-edited story of his visit to Rhynchus in company with Enda and Helm. 'That guy,' Rov said in reference to Helm, 'looks like he might own a gun or so.' Gabriel agreed. When he finished telling about their arrival at Grith and the standoff between a VoidCorp dreadnought,
Gabriel blinked. 'But they were trying to shut
'Rae's got more conspiracy theories than a riglia's got cilia,' Rov said. 'He's always been on a hair trigger, seeing something hiding behind every rock. He's had a lot of trouble in his business. Bad luck, mostly. A power failure a while back cost him a lot in insurance; there were lawsuits. . Now Rae thinks everything that happens around here is aimed at him.' Rov scratched his head. 'Have to admit, I haven't seen him pop like that before. He must think you're out to get him in particular because you're infotraders.'
'Did he treat the I.I. people the same way?' Gabriel asked.
'Frikes, no, they were here six years before he started. They've been trading in and out of this system, to Aegis and Tendril all that while, but you see the problem.' Rov gestured around him. 'We're so small here, and so quiet. Our Grid's so small you could spit across it. A lot of people don't like the idea of them,' he jerked a desultory thumb over his shoulder, 'the riglia.' Enda pushed her notepad aside. 'Do you not like the idea of them either?'
'Don't see that they care about my opinion one way or the other,' Rov said, 'but they were here first. We didn't know when we came that they were more than dumb animals. A lot of us came a long way to settle here, got ourselves set up, and then what do we find?' He pulled his head down between his shoulders as if seeking protection from something. 'Government shoulda checked things out more carefully before they let anyone settle here, before those fraal scientists came in and told everybody 'Guess what, you've got company.' ' He sighed. 'Sorry, lady. I know it wasn't your fault. Anyway, there are people leaving all the time. The feeling that you're being watched… it gets to you after a while.' 'I've felt that,' Gabriel said. 'An uneasy kind of feeling.'
'That's right,' Marielle said. 'Well, it's the riglia, I suppose. They're mindwalkers, so they can do that. There are a lot more of them than there are of us.' She sighed. 'Some day maybe there'll be nobody but them here again, but meantime a lot of us have spent everything we had to come here. We can't just go. There's nothing to go
'This isn't a busy part of space, anyway,' said Rov. 'No other well-settled systems are nearby. There are some useless ones— stars but no planets, or planets that're just rocks, no point even in mining 'em. You hear stories, rumors about one world or another that got missed when they did the surveys, but you can't take things like that too seriously.'
'They missed Rivendale that same way,' said Enda, 'when they first came through the system. No one thought so small a dwarf star would have a planet.'
'Well, true enough, lady,' Rov said. 'It's rare, isn't it? Hasn't happened since, though you keep hearing stories and rumors. People go out looking for those places and don't come back.' He dropped his voice lower. 'And there are ships out there, too, that nobody knows where they come from — out in the empty spaces, the 'back of the Verge,' the Barrens. Nobody sensible goes out that way. Crazy explorers,
'That's just my point,' Rov said, 'but they were going that way anyhow. Something called Elder? Caldera? Something. . No, Eldala, it was.' Enda shook her head. 'I have never heard of it.'
'You're not alone. But off they went, she and her friend, and we haven't seen hide or hair of them since. Hair enough her friend had, too.' Rov chuckled.
'Maybe,' Gabriel said, wondering what Rov's last comment might have meant but deciding not to press it. 'Were they just more of the one-time visitors you mentioned?'
'I wouldn't have thought so,' said Rov, drinking the last of his drink and eyeing the glass absently. 'The one lady, the human, she was real taken with this place. She said it reminded her of home. Wouldn't want to think what