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The blow on the head was conceded to have provided a provocation for charge (c)--but not enough n.o.body seemed to be charging the slave Maleen with anything. The judge only looked at her curiously, and shook his head.
"As the Court considers this regrettable incident," he remarked, "it looks like two years for you, Bruth; and about three for you, captain.
Too bad!"
The captain had an awful sinking feeling. He had seen something and heard a lot of Imperial court methods in the fringe systems. He could probably get out of this three-year rap; but it would be expensive.
He realized that the judge was studying him reflectively.
"The Court wishes to acknowledge," the judge continued, "that the captain's chargeable actions were due largely to a natural feeling of human sympathy for the predicament of the slave Maleen. The Court therefore, would suggest a settlement as follows--subsequent to which all charges could be dropped: "That Bruth the Baker resell Maleen of Karres--with whose services he appears to be dissatisfied--for a reasonable sum to Captain Pausert of the Republic of Nikkeldepain."
Bruth the Baker heaved a gusty sigh of relief. But the captain hesitated.
The buying of human slaves by private citizens was a very serious offense in Nikkeldepain! Still, he didn't have to make a record of it.
If they weren't going to soak him too muchAt just the right moment, Maleen of Karres introduced a barely audible, forlorn, sniffling sound.
"How much are you asking for the kid?" the captain inquired, looking without friendliness at his recent antagonist. A day was coming when he would think less severely of Bruth; but it hadn't come yet.
Bruth scowled back but replied with a certain eagerness: "A hundred and fifty m--" A policeman standing behind him poked him sharply in the side.
Bruth shut up.
"Seven hundred maels," the judge said smoothly. "There'll be Court charges, and a fee for recording the transaction--" He appeared to make a swift calculation. "Fifteen hundred and forty-two maels--" He turned to a clerk: "You've looked him up?"
The clerk nodded. "He's right!"
"And we'll take your check," the judge concluded. He gave the captain a friendly smile. "Next case."
The captain felt a little bewildered.
There was something peculiar about this! He was getting out of it much too cheaply. Since the Empire had quit its wars of expansion, young slaves in good health were a high-priced article. Furthermore, he was practically positive that Bruth the Baker had been willing to sell for a tenth of what the captain actually had to pay!
Well, he wouldn't complain. Rapidly, he signed, sealed and thumbprinted various papers shoved at him by a helpful clerk; and made out a check.
"I guess," he told Maleen of Karres, "we'd better get along to the s.h.i.+p."
And now what was he going to do with the kid, he pondered, padding along the unlighted streets with his slave trotting quietly behind him.
If he showed up with a pretty girl-slave in Nikkeldepain, even a small one, various good friends there would toss him into ten years or so of penal servitude--immediately after Illyla had personally collected his scalp.
They were a moral lot.
Karres--?
"How far off is Karres, Maleen?" he asked into the dark. "It takes about two weeks," Maleen said tearfully.
Two weeks! The captain's heart sank again.
"What are you blubbering about?" he inquired uncomfortably. Maleen choked, sniffed, and began sobbing openly.
"I have two little sisters!" she cried.
"Well, well," the captain said encouragingly. "That's nice--you'll be seeing them again soon. I'm taking you home, you know!"
Great Patham--now he'd said it! But after all But this piece of good news seemed to be having the wrong effect on his slave! Her sobbing grew much more violent.
"No, I won't," she wailed. "They're here!"
"Huh?" said the captain. He stopped short. "Where?"
"And the people they're with are mean to them, too!" wept Maleen.
The captain's heart dropped clean through his boots. Standing there in the dark, he helplessly watched it coming: "You could buy them awfully cheap!" she said.
II.
In times of stress, the young life of Karres appeared to take to the heights. It might be a mountainous place.
The Leewit sat on the top shelf of the back wall of the crockery and antiques store, strategically flanked by two expensive-looking vases.
She was a doll-sized edition of Maleen; but her eyes were cold and gray instead of blue and tearful. About five or six, the captain vaguely estimated. He wasn't very good at estimating them around that age.
"Good evening," he said, as he came in through the door. The Crockery and Antiques Shop had been easy to find. Like Bruth the Baker's, it was the one spot in the neighborhood that was all lit up.
"Good evening, sir!" said what was presumably the store owner, without looking around. He sat with his back to the door, in a chair approximately at the center of the store and facing the Leewit at a distance of about twenty feet.
"... and there you can stay without food or drink till the Holy Man comes in the morning!" he continued immediately, in the taut voice of a man who has gone through hysteria and is sane again. The captain realized he was addressing the Leewit.
"Your other Holy Man didn't stay very long!" the diminutive creature piped, also ignoring the captain. Apparently, she had not yet discovered Maleen behind him.
"This is a stronger denomination--much stronger!" the store owner replied, in a shaking voice but with a sort of relish. "He'll exorcise you, all right, little demon--you'll whistle no b.u.t.tons off him! Your time is up! Go on and whistle all you want! Bust every vase in the place--" The Leewit blinked her gray eyes thoughtfully at him.
"Might!" she said.
"But if you try to climb down from there," the store owner went on, on a rising note, "I'll chop you into bits--into little, little bits!"
He raised his arm as he spoke and weakly brandished what the captain recognized with a start of horror as a highly ornamented but probably still useful antique battle-ax.
"Ha!" said the Leewit.
"Beg your pardon, sir!" the captain said, clearing his throat.
"Good evening, sir!" the store owner repeated, without looking around.
"What can I do for you?"
"I came to inquire," the captain said hesitantly, "about that child."
The store owner s.h.i.+fted about in his chair and squinted at the captain with red-rimmed eyes.
"You're not a Holy Man!" he said.
"h.e.l.lo, Maleen!" the Leewit said suddenly. "That him?"
"We've come to buy you," Maleen said. "Shut up!"
"Good!" said the Leewit.
"Buy it? Are you mocking me, sir?" the store owner inquired.
"Shut up, Moonell!" A thin, dark, determined-looking woman had appeared in the doorway that led through the back wall of the store.
She moved out a step under the shelves; and the Leewit leaned down from the top shelf and hissed. The woman moved hurriedly back into the doorway.
"Maybe he means it," she said in a more subdued voice.
"I can't sell to a citizen of the Empire," the store owner said defeatedly.
"I'm not a citizen," the captain said shortly. This time, he wasn't going to name it.
"No, he's from Nikkel--" Maleen began.
"Shut up, Maleen!" the captain said helplessly in turn.
"I never heard of Nikkel," the store owner muttered doubtfully.
"Maleen!" the woman called shrilly. "That's the name of one of the others--Bruth the Baker got her. He means it, all right! He's buying them--"
"A hundred and fifty maels!" the captain said craftily, remembering Bruth the Baker. "In cas.h.!.+"
The store owner looked dazed.
"Not enough, Moonell!" the woman called. "Look at all it's broken!
Five hundred maels!"
There was a sound then, so thin the captain could hardly hear it. It pierced at his eardrums like two jabs of a delicate needle. To right and left of him, two highly glazed little jugs went "Clink-clink!", showed a sudden veining of cracks, and collapsed.
A brief silence settled on the store. And now that he looked around more closely, the captain could spot here and there other little piles of shattered crockery--and places where similar ruins apparently had been swept up, leaving only traces of colored dust.
The store owner laid the ax down carefully beside his chair, stood up, swaying a little, and came towards the captain.
"You offered me a hundred and fifty maels!" he said rapidly as he approached. "I accept it here, now, see--before witnesses!" He grabbed the captain's right hand in both of his and pumped it up and down vigorously.
"Sold!" he yelled.
Then he wheeled around in a leap and pointed a shaking hand at the Leewit.
"And NOW," he howled, "break something! Break anything! You're his!
I'll sue him for every mael he ever made and ever will!"
"Oh, do come help me down, Maleen!" the Leewit pleaded prettily.
For a change, the store of Wansing, the jeweler, was dimly lit and very quiet. It was a sleek, fas.h.i.+onable place in a fas.h.i.+onable shopping block near the s.p.a.ceport. The front door was unlocked, and Wansing was in.
The three of them entered quietly, and the door sighed quietly shut behind them. Beyond a great crystal display-counter, Wansing was moving about among a number of opened shelves, talking softly to himself. Under the crystal of the counter, and in close-packed rows on the satin-covered shelves, reposed a many-colored gleaming and glittering and s.h.i.+ning.
Wansing was no piker.
"Good evening, sir!" the captain said across the counter.
"It's morning!" the Leewit remarked from the other side of Maleen.
"Maleen!" said the captain.
'We're keeping out of this," Maleen said to the Leewit.
"All right," said the Leewit.
Wansing had come around jerkily at the captain's greeting, but had made no other move. Like all the slave owners the captain had met on Porlumma so far, Wansing seemed unhappy. Otherwise, he was a large, dark, sleek-looking man with jewels in his ears and a smell of expensive oils and perfumes about him.
"This place is under constant visual guard, of course!" he told the captain gently. "Nothing could possibly happen to me here. Why am I so frightened?"
"Not of me, I'm sure!" the captain said with an uncomfortable attempt at geniality. "I'm glad your store's still open," he went on briskly.
"I'm here on business--"
"Oh, yes, it's still open, of course," Wansing said. He gave the captain a slow smile and turned back to his shelves.
"I'm making inventory, that's why! I've been making inventory since early yesterday morning. I've counted them all seven times--"
"You're very thorough," the captain said.
"Very, very thorough!" Wansing nodded to the shelves. "The last time I found I had made a million maels. But twice before that, I had lost approximately the same amount. I shall have to count them again, I suppose!" He closed a shelf softly. "I'm sure I counted those before.
But they move about constantly. Constantly! It's horrible."
"You've got a slave here called Goth," the captain said, driving to the point.
"Yes, I have!" Wansing said, nodding. "And I'm sure she understands by now I meant no harm! I do, at any rate. It was perhaps a little--but I'm sure she understands now, or will soon!"
"Where is she?" the captain inquired, a trifle uneasily.
"In her room perhaps," Wansing suggested. "It's not so bad when she's there in her room with the door closed. But often she sits in the dark and looks at you as you go past--" He opened another drawer, and closed it quietly again. "Yes, they do move!" he whispered, as if confirming an earlier suspicion. "Constantly--"
"Look, Wansing," the captain said in a loud, firm voice. "I'm not a citizen of the Empire. I want to buy this Goth! I'll pay you a hundred and fifty maels, cash."