Brantling paid out more cable, allowing the other operator to draw the load over the bed of the lowboy.
Wueppertal patted the two-way radio hooked to his belt. 'They've located the rest of the chips, Captain,' he said. 'It was an inventory error, somebody entering two crates when it should have been eleven. We'll have them out to you yet this evening, after we've off-loaded the rest of your cargo.'
The microchips Sal was contracted to carry back to Paris Ouest on Earth were newly manufactured on a Near Space colony of the Independent Coastal Republic. Heldensburg produced very little itself, but in the past ten years it had become a major transit point for Near Space trade.
Heldensburg's powerful defenses were an important attraction, but it wasn't only captains concerned about Pleyal's claimed monopoly on trade beyond Pluto who called here. The ship nearest to the
'Do you have many Feds here?' Sal asked, trying to keep the disapproval out of her voice.
Wueppertal waved a hand. 'About a third of our traffic,' he said. 'Look, their credit drafts spend just the same as yours. If we didn't have those guns'-a nod toward the nearby fort-'then I'd worry, sure But we do.'
'Yes,' Sal said She might have let the subject drop, but she hadn't been sleeping well for too long. 'Heldensburg's too tough a nut for Pleyal to crack, now. But if it weren't for the trouble Venus has been causing him these past ten years, he'd have crushed you all like bugs before you got properly settled.'
The turbine settled onto the lowboy. The trailer's suspension compressed a good 10 centimeters before the winch cables slackened.
A spherical 600-tonne merchantman was discharging grain into a series of hopper cars. From details of its design, Sal guessed the vessel was from the Federation. The Feds were drawn here by the variety of available cargoes, just as the other traders were. The fact that those cargoes depended on plasma cannon to keep President Pleyal's warships away was an irony of human existence.
'Oh, there's something to be said for a guy like Pleyal,' Wueppertal said with the same tone of almost- challenge that Sal had heard in her own voice. 'He knows what order is and he's not afraid to enforce it. Commandant La Fouche said just last week in staff meeting that there's other places that could use a little discipline of the sort.'
'We'll give Pleyal discipline, all right,' Tom Harrigan said, wandering over to the forward hatch now that the loading operation was complete. 'He'll try to clamp down on Venus, and we'll go through his fleet like shit through a goose.'
'You think that?' Wueppertal said. He was a smallish man, dark-haired but with brilliant blue eyes.
'I know that,' the mate said. 'Why, the man who owns this ship, Mister Gregg-that's
'Co-owns the
'Sure, co-owns,' Harrigan agreed. 'I've seen him clear a Fed warship single-handed-and that in a Fed port! And brought us back rich, too. Why, there's Dock Street ladies who bought country seats from what they made off sailors come back from Winnipeg and Callisto!'
Sal thought of the slaughter, of the columns of smoke rising from Winnipeg Spaceport as the
Wueppertal's eyes narrowed. 'You know Colonel Gregg?' he said.
Tom Harrigan nodded. 'Let me tell you,' he said. 'When we hopped the
Harrigan bent his head and ran an index finger over the ridged pink-and-white keloid on his scalp. He straightened and continued forcefully, 'Listen! When it comes to real war, we'll whip the Feds right back to Montreal, and we'll do it because God's on our side. Factor Ricimer preaches God like nobody you've heard in chapel of a Sunday, and Mister Gregg-he's the Wrath of God, he is!'
Sal thought of the Stephen Gregg she knew. Her eyes were on the distant horizon, and her expression was as hard as cast iron.
The stevedores had completed tying the turbine firmly onto the trailer bed. One of the men called, 'Hey, Hymie!' and waved to Wueppertal. 'You want us to go on back now?'
Wueppertal said, 'Hang on, I'll ride with you!' To Harrigan and Sal he added, 'I'll make sure they've got the chips ready to go. The sort of screwups they got running Warehouse Four, they're as likely to be piling more crates on top of yours as they are to be loading them onto trucks.'
Harrigan sat on the topmost of the three steps from the hatch to the ground, watching the tractor and lowboy head toward the complex of low warehouses west of the field. 'Paris and then home, Sal?' he asked.
Sal shrugged. The gesture was pointless since the mate wasn't looking at her. 'Maybe home,' she said. 'There may be a load of desalinization equipment ready for carriage to Drottingholm. Europe and the Coasties have set up a joint colony there.'
A starship was landing almost precisely in line with the morning sun. Harrigan took a filter from his breast pocket and used it to view the ship through the double glare. 'A big one,' he remarked idly. 'Shouldn't wonder if it was another Fed.'
He turned his head to look up at Sal. 'We've been lucky with cargoes, you know,' he said. 'Short layovers and almost never lifting empty. Sure a change from the old days.'
'It's a change, but it's not luck,' Sal replied sharply. 'Mister Gregg's making the arrangements. Balancing cargoes, setting up credit lines-judging who'll need something and who can pay for it.'
She flicked an index finger in the direction of the lowboy, now halfway to the warehouses. 'These power plants. Stephen-Mister Gregg-he set up the whole deal. All the principals had to do was sign the agreement he offered them! We're getting the haulage fees, but buyer and seller both are gaining a lot more from the deal than we are.'
'Who'd have thought it?' Harrigan said. 'A man like Mister Gregg, and he's a merchant besides!'
The thrusters of the ship in its landing approach braked at maximum output, bellowing across the starport at a level that forbade speech.
It wouldn't have surprised those who knew Stephen Gregg before he first voyaged to the Reaches and defeated everything he found there except his own human soul.
And very nearly his soul as well.
BETAPORT, VENUS
July 12, Year 27
1658 hours, Venus time
Originally Dock Street had been the route by which starships were hauled between the transfer docks, whose domes slid open for takeoffs and landings, and the storage docks where vessels were refitted between voyages. New routes and docks had been built to suit the ever-larger ships operating from Betaport, but Dock Street remained a broad, high-roofed corridor and the center of nautical affairs in a city built on star travel.
Guild marshals were trying to keep the crowd back from the red carpet laid for the occasion. They had their work cut out for them, especially here near the train station where the dignitaries were gathered. The station itself was ringed by men who were something more than an 'honor' guard: the
Dole saw Stephen blocked by a press of citizens who'd overwhelmed the guild marshals. 'Make a path for Mister Gregg, you whoresons!' the bosun shouted.
Stephen forced a smile. He was as tense as a trigger with only the last gram of take-up remaining. He'd been raised in Eryx, his family's small keep on the Atalanta Plains. Space was at a premium, but there weren't enough people in the entire community to constitute a crowd by Betaport standards.
Stephen's instincts were all wrong for a mob of people like this. Unless of course the folk around him had