waste my breath.
We passed one of the hotels/boardinghouses for human transients. Men watched from chairs on the lower- level stoop. Stephen eyed them, shifting slightly the way he carried the flashgun. The captain of the
Piet had addressed the population of New Troy the night we arrived, promising that we would deal fairly with them as individuals, paying for whatever merchandise or services we required. Our quarrel was with President Pleyal and his attempt to dictate to all mankind.
When Piet was done, Stephen added a few words: if there was trouble, the colony would pay for it. If one of our men was killed, there would be no colony when we left. The next visitors would find the bones of the present inhabitants in the ashes of their buildings.
There was a line of men-our men-reaching out the door of the next building, a brothel. There were three girls, though Dole said the fiftyish madame had turned tricks as well during the crush the night before.
The waiting spacers grew silent and looked away. Piet turned his head in the direction of the river and said to Alicia, 'Do the landowners have guards on their estates, Mistress Leeman?'
Alicia sniffed. 'They arm trusties to track Molts who run away,' she said. 'None of the landowners are going to risk their life or property to help the secretary, though.'
We were past the brothel. Piet didn't approve of whoring or drunkenness, but he didn't order his crew to remain chaste and sober while on leave. A cynic would say Piet was too smart to give orders he knew would be ignored. . but I'm not sure most of this crew would ignore an order of his, even an order that went so clearly against their view of nature.
Sunset painted clouds in the eastern sky, while veils of heat lightning shimmered behind them. We might have a storm before morning. I doubted the shed in the Molt pen was waterproof.
The combination saloon and general merchandise store next to the brothel was owned by Federation Associates-President Pleyal himself, in his private capacity. The facade sagged, and I could see through the grime of the display windows that the roof leaked badly. The store had twenty meters of frontage, but the shelves within were dingy and almost empty. A Molt clerk stared back at us, as motionless as a display mannequin.
Boards filled the lower three-quarters of the saloon's window frames, leaving only a single row of glass panes for illumination. A drunk lay in the street. Two men arguing in front of the door stepped inside when they saw who we were.
'This is why we have to bring Venus to the stars,' Piet said. 'New Troy, a thousand New Troys-this can't be allowed to continue as man's face to the universe.'
'Commander,' I said, 'it's a frontier. You can't expect polish on a frontier.'
Piet stood arms akimbo in the middle of the street. Tracked-on clay covered the plasticized surface. The adobe would be slick as grease in a rainstorm.
Three grain elevators marked the boundary of the human community of New Troy. Beyond were pentagonal towers the Molt labor force had built for itself. Their upper floors were served by outside staircases. Though constructed from scrap material by slaves, the towers had a neat unity that the human buildings lacked.
'Let's go back,' Piet said. He turned up the broad passage beside the saloon and the nearest elevator. After a moment, he went on, 'It's not a frontier, Jeremy. It's a dumping ground, a midden. Pleyal is mining the universe for his personal benefit, not mankind's.'
His voice was rising. The louvered shutters of most of the windows on this side of the saloon were swung back from unglazed casements. A barge crewman at a table followed us with his eyes as we passed.
'The only kind of men who'll come to the stars to serve a tyrant are the trash, or men as grasping and shortsighted as their master is,' Piet said. 'The few of a better sort sink into the mire because they're almost alone. This isn't a frontier where hardship makes men hard, it's a cesspool where filth makes men filthy! And it will
The fronts of commercial buildings on the starport side duplicated those on Water Street. The saloon's facade had one fully-glazed sash window. The bartender was a Molt. A dozen men sat inside, drinking from 100-ml metal tumblers.
None of the clientele was from the
'One ship won't bring down the North American Federation,' Alicia said. This evening she wore a frock of translucent layers. The undermost was patterned with Terran roses which seemed to climb through a dense fog of overlying fabric.
'Our success will bring other ships, Mistress Leeman,' Piet said. 'Raids on the Federation Reaches have already increased twentyfold in the two years since, since
He gripped Stephen's right hand, though he continued to look toward Alicia on his other side.
'— came back with more microchips than had been seen on Venus since the Collapse.'
'It's not just the wealth for Venus,' Stephen said. 'It's the wealth that doesn't go to Earth to help President Pleyal strangle everyone but Pleyal.'
There was no line on the starport side of the brothel. A lone Federation spacer glanced at us from the doorway. A pink-shaded lamp inside was lighted. I stepped into a pothole that the sky's afterglow hadn't shown me.
Alicia lifted her chin in a taut nod. 'So you'll replace bums with pirates? That's your plan?' She paused. 'Bums and whores!'
'We'll break the present system, mistress,' Piet said, 'because it can't be reformed. With the help of God we'll do that. Then there'll be room for men-from Earth, from Venus, from the Moon colony and Mars, perhaps-to expand in however many ways they find. Rather than as a tyrant demands, in a fashion that will come crashing down when the tyranny does-as it must! — in a second Collapse that would be forever.'
The last words were a trumpet call, not a shout. Another man would have blazed them out with anger, but Piet's transfiguring vision was a joyous thing. Though even I'd seen how harsh the execution would be.
'I went to the Reaches to trade,' Stephen said in the thin, lilting voice I'd heard him use before. 'I wonder what would have happened if we'd been left to trade in peace, hey?'
He laughed. Alicia shut her eyes and missed a step. She squeezed against me instinctively.
'Maybe I'd sleep at night, do you think?' Stephen went on in the same terrible voice. Piet took his friend's hand again.
The slave pen was unlighted. Figures moved around a lantern at the Water Street end. It was about time for the prisoners to get their rations.
Floodlights gleamed on the
'There'll be time for that after we've taken the
Piet gave a nonchalant shrug. 'We'll take her,' he said. 'And return home, with the help of God.'
He looked at Alicia, smiled, and bowed slightly. 'I think I'll go aboard and see how the repairs are coming,' he said. 'Mistress Leeman, I've appreciated your company.'
'I'll go along with you, Piet,' Stephen said. 'Maybe I'll bunk in the ship tonight.'
He gave me a wan smile. The two of them walked in step toward the
I opened the wicket into the Commandatura garden for Alicia.
'Captain Ricimer really believes in what you're doing,' she said softly. Roses perfumed the air. There were lights in the far wing of the building, but the garden seemed to be empty. 'But Mister Gregg doesn't.'
'I think Stephen believes the same things as Piet does,' I said. 'I just don't think he cares very much.'
'He frightens me,' she said.