"I'm afraid I'll have to ask you gentlemen to be our guests for a time," Mostert continued. "We'll pay at normal rates with Molt laborers for the supplies we take, I assure you . . . but so that there aren't any misunderstandings, I'll be putting my own men in your fort and admin buildings. I'm sure you understand, Mr. Dupuy."
If the Federation official made any reply to Mostert, his words were lost in the roar of the
Hawkwood,
landing with her plasma cannon run out for use.
"Easy, easy . . ." echoed Leon's voice through the fort's superstructure. Heavy masses of metal chinged, then clanged loudly together—the trunnions of a 15-cm plasma cannon dropping into the cheek pieces. "Lock 'em down!"
"Look at this," Ricimer murmured to Gregg in the control room below—and to Guillermo; at any rate, the Molt was present. Ricimer slowly turned a dial, increasing the magnification of the image in the holographic screen. "Just look at the resolution."
"Boardman, use the twenty-
four
-millimeter end, not the twenty-two!" Leon shouted. "D'ye have shit for brains?"
The bosun's twenty-man crew was completing the mounting of the fort's armament. The heavy plasma cannon had been delivered by a previous Earth Convoy. In three days, the Venerians had accomplished a job that Federation personnel on Biruta hadn't gotten around to in at least a year.
On the other hand, the Feds in their heart of hearts didn't expect to need the fort. The Venerians did.
"This is what we'll have on Venus soon," Ricimer said. "This is what all humanity will have, now that we have the stars again."
The five Venerian ships—the
Grandcamp
had vanished after the first series of transits, and only an optimist believed that she or her crew would ever be seen again—clustered together near the buildings at the north end of the island. Men were busy refitting the battered vessels for the long voyage back to Venus. They used Federation equipment as well as that carried by the argosy.
"All right," Leon ordered. "You four, torque her down tight. Loong, you and your lot are dismissed. Take the shearlegs and tackle back to the
Tolliver
with you. Anders, you're in charge here until you're relieved."
Ricimer had focused on the
Rose,
eight hundred meters across the island. At the present magnification, Gregg could identify some of the crewmen fitting new thruster nozzles beneath the vessel. The holds gaped open above them, letting the sea breeze flow through the vessel.
"We could see right into the ship if the light was a little better," Gregg agreed.
Guillermo said, "The third control from the right." His three jointed fingers together indicated the rotary switch he meant. "Up will increase light levels above ambient."
Ricimer touched the control, then rolled it upward. The edges of the display whited out with overload. Shadowed areas congealed into clarity beneath the ship, within the holds, and even through the open gunports.
"You've seen this sort of equipment before?" Ricimer asked.
The Molt flicked his fingers behind his palms in the equivalent of a shrug. "It's a standard design," he said. "My memory—"
"Memory" was a more or less satisfactory description of what amounted to genetic encoding.
"—includes identical designs."
"They'd have to be," Gregg realized aloud. "It's not as though the Feds built this. Their Molts did."
The huge advantage the North American Federation had over other states was its possession of planets whose automated factories had continued to produce microchips for years or even centuries after the Collapse. When the factories finally broke down, they left behind dispersed stockpiles of circuitry whose quality and miniaturization were beyond the capacity of the present age.
Fed electronics were not so much better than those of the Venerians as greatly more common. But Fed electronics were better also . . .
"Once Venus has its trade in hand," Ricimer said, "we'll do it properly. The Federation goes by rote—"
He nodded to Guillermo. Leon, muttering about the lazy frogspawn crewing some vessels he could name, clomped down the ladder serving the gun stations on the roof.
"—only doing what was done a thousand years ago. We'll build from where mankind was before the Rebellion—new ways through the Mirror, new planets with new products. Not just the same old ways."
"Old ways is right," Leon said as he entered the control room. "Those guns we mounted, they're alike as so many peas. Men didn't make them, Molts and machines did. The Feds just sit on their butts and let the work do itself—like people did before the Collapse."
Guillermo looked at the bosun. "Is work by itself good?" the Molt asked. "How can it matter whether you pull a rope or I pull a rope or a winch pulls the rope—so long as the rope is pulled?"
"Centralized production is sure enough
bad,
" Leon said. "That's what caused the Collapse, after all. That and people having too much time to spend on politics, since they didn't do anything real."
"It's more than that," Piet Ricimer added. "Machines can't create. They'll make the same thing each time—whether it's a nozzle or a flashgun barrel or a birdbath. When my father or even one of his apprentices makes an item, it has . . ."
He smiled wryly to wipe the hint of blasphemy away from what he was about to say. "A
man's
work has what would be a soul, if the work were a man rather than a thing."
Guillermo's head moved from Leon to Ricimer, as if the neck were clicking between detents. "And my race has no soul," the Molt said. The words were too flat to be a question.
"If you do have souls," Ricimer replied after a moment's hesitation, "then in selling your fellows as merchandise, we're committing an unspeakable sin, Guillermo."
Man and Molt looked at one another in silence. The alien's face was impassive by virtue of its exoskeletal construction. Piet Ricimer's expression gave up equally little information.
Guillermo cocked his head in a gesture of amusement. "Things are things, Captain," he said. "But I'll admit that the number of things may be less important than how you use the things you have. And your Venus clan uses things very well."
The
Tolliver
's siren began to wind.
"Damn the timing!" Gregg snarled. "Leon, did the men from the
Tolliver
leave in the truck?"
The bosun pursed his lips and nodded.
"All right," Gregg decided aloud. "Piet, I'll run across to the flagship and find out what's going on. You can—"
Ricimer smiled. "I think we can learn what's happening more easily than that, Stephen," he said.
As he spoke, he tapped pairs of numbers into a keypad on the console. Each touch switched the holographic display, either to a lustrous void or an image:
An office in the island's administrative complex, where half a dozen Venerians had put down their playing cards when the siren blew;
A panorama from a camera placed a hundred meters above the empty sea;
Another office, this one empty save for a chair over which was draped the uniform jacket of a Federation officer.
"Seventeen," Guillermo suggested, pointing.
Ricimer keyed in one-seven. The screen split, with Alexi Mostert on the left half, saying to the Federation officer on the right side, "Yes, your Administrator Carstensen, if he's in charge! And don't even
think
of trying to land without my permission!"
"I thought," Gregg said softly, "that we might manage to get away before the Earth Convoy arrived."
"It's no problem, sir," Leon said in mild surprise. "If they try to land, we'll rip 'em up the jacksies while they're braking. It's suicide for ships to attack plasma batteries on the surface."
"That's not the whole question, Leon," Piet Ricimer said. The right half of the screen had gone blank. On the left, Mostert was in profile as he spoke with subordinates. The Federation communications equipment completely muted all sound not directed toward it, so Mostert's lips moved silently.
The right side of the screen solidified into an image again. This time it was a heavy-jowled man in his fifties, wearing Federation court dress. He looked angry enough to chew nails. For the moment, he too was talking to someone outside the range of the pickup.
"Federation ships with Fed crews, they'll be in much worse shape than ours were," Ricimer continued in a bare whisper. "If we don't let them land, at least half of them will be lost . . . and that will mean war between Venus and the Federation."
"I'll fight a war if that's what they want, Mr. Ricimer," Leon said. He didn't raise his voice, but there was challenge in the set of his chin.
Gregg smiled tightly and squeezed the bosun's biceps in a friendly grip. "We'll all do what we have to, Leon," he said. "But war's bad for trade."
The Federation leader faced front. "I'm Henry Carstensen, Administrator of the Outer Ways by order of President Pleyal and the Federation Parliament," he said. "You wanted me and I'm here. Speak."
The crispness of both the visual and audio portions of the transmission were striking to men used to Venerian commo. There was no sign that Federation AIs made a better job of the complex equations governing transit, though . . .
"First, Your Excellency," Alexi Mostert said unctuously, "I want to apologize for this little awkward—"
"Stop your nonsense," Carstensen snapped. "You're holding a Federation port against Federation vessels. Is it war, then, between Venus and Earth—or are you a pirate, operating against the will of Governor Halys?"
"Neither, Excellency," Mostert said. "If I can explain—"
"I'm not interested in explanations!" Carstensen said. "I have ships in immediate need of landing. If one of them is lost, if one
crewman
dies, then the only thing that will prevent the forces of Earth from
devastating
your planet is your head on a platter, Mostert. Do you understand? My ships must be allowed to land
now.
"
The Venerian commander bent his head and pressed his fingertips firmly against his forehead.
"Cousin Alexi's going at it the wrong way," Ricimer said dispassionately. "With a man like Carstensen, you negotiate from strength or you don't negotiate at all."
"I'll see how they're coming on the fourth gun," Leon said abruptly. He bolted from the control room.
Mostert lifted his head. "Then listen," he said. "These are the terms on which I—"
"You have no right to set terms!" Carstensen shouted.
"Don't talk to me about rights, mister!" said Alexi Mostert. "I've got enough firepower to scour every Federation platform off the surface of this world. I can fry your ships even if you stay in orbit. If you try to come down there won't be bits big enough to splash when they finally hit the water. These are my terms! Are you ready to listen?"
"Much better, cousin," Piet Ricimer murmured.
Administrator Carstensen lifted his chin in acceptance.
"Your eight ships will be allowed to land," Mostert said. "Their guns will be shuttered. As soon as they're on the ground, the crews will be transported to outlying platforms. There will be no Federation personnel on Island Able until my argosy has finished refitting and left."
"That's impractical," Carstensen said.
"These are my terms!"
"I understand that," Carstensen said calmly. It was as though the Federation official who started the negotiation had been replaced by a wholly different man. "But some of my vessels are in very bad shape. They need immediate repairs or there'll be major fires and probably a powerplant explosion. I need to keep maintenance personnel and a few officers aboard to avoid disaster."
The Venerian commander's lips sucked in and out as he thought. "All right," he said. "But in that case I'll need liaison officers from you. Six of them. They'll be entertained in comfort for the few remaining days that my ships need to complete their refit."
Carstensen sniffed. "Hostages, you mean. Well, as you've pointed out,
Admiral
Mostert, you're holding a gun to the heads of nearly a thousand innocent men and women as it is. I accept your conditions."
Mostert licked at the dryness of his lips. "Very well," he said. "Do you swear by God and your hope of salvation to keep these terms, sir?"
"I swear," Carstensen said in the same cool tones which had characterized his latter half of the negotiations.
Carstensen stood up. His console's pickup lengthened its viewing field automatically. The administrator was surprisingly tall, a big man rather than simply a broad one. "And I swear also, Admiral," he said, "that when President Pleyal hears of this, then your Governor Halys will hear; and you will hear of it again yourself."
The convoy's side of the screen went blank.
"I'm not worried," Mostert said to the pearl emptiness. His side of the transmission blanked out as well.
Piet Ricimer turned to Gregg with an unreadable smile. "What do you think, Stephen?" he asked.
"I think if your cousin isn't worried," Gregg replied, "then he's a very stupid man."
"Slow down," Gregg said to Tancred, who was driving the guards back from the fort at the end of their watch. He peered into the darkness behind the brilliant cone of the truck's ceramic headlamps and the softer, yellower gleam of lights from the Federation vessels. "That looks like—stop, it's Mr. Ricimer."
Tancred brought the vehicle to a squealing halt. "Christ's blood!" he said. "I don't care what oaths those Feds swore. This is no safe place for one of our people alone."
The Earth Convoy lay across the center of Island Able. The straggling line was as close a group as the vessels' condition and their pilots' skill permitted. The Feds were well separated from the five Venerian ships at the north end of the island, but the metal-built vessels controlled the route between there and the fort on the western corner.
Changing the guard at the fort required driving through the midst of the Federation fleet. That didn't feel a bit comfortable, even for twenty armed men in a vehicle; and as Tancred said, it was no place for a Venerian on foot.