The Lani People by Jesse F. Bone (best fiction books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Jesse F. Bone
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âI couldnât help the delay,â Kennon said. âThe ship was old.â
âI know. Youâve told me more than you think. Iâm a telepath, you know.â
âIâve never forgotten it,â Kennon said. âThat was one of the principal reasons I came here. I wanted to see how youâd react when you learned the whole truth.â
âAnd I suppose you gloatânoâyouâre not doing that. But you are right. I could have checked it further. But I didnât. Outworld Enterprises is far bigger than Floraâand I was busy. Galactic trade is a snake-pit. And, after all, there was Douglasâs deathâand the Family with their never-ending clamor for money and their threats when it didnât come promptly. I like being an entrepreneur, but until I made Outworld independent of Family control, I couldnât do anything except run the business to their wishes. Actually the island was only a small part of the corporation. I tried to run it as humanely as possible under the circumstances.â He shuddered. âI donât think I was ever needlessly cruel.â
âNo,â Kennon said, âyou were indifferent.â
âWhich is just as bad,â Alexander said.
âWellâwhat are you going to do about it?â Copper interjected. âYou can beat yourself until youâre blue, but that wonât accomplish anything.â
âWhat are you going to do?â Alexander countered. âYou have the upper hand.â
âMe?â Copper asked. âI have nothing. This is between you men.â She lapsed into silence.
Alexander turned back to Kennon. âYou have undoubtedly made some arrangements. You wouldnât come hereâoh! I see. Congratulations. Handling the evidence that way was a wise course. You have my admiration. But then I should have known that I was not dealing with a fool.â He smiled wryly. âSubconsciously I think I did knowâbutââ
âThatâs one consolation,â Kennon grinned. âTo be thought a rascal is bad enough, but to be considered a fool is intolerable.â
âBut your decision not to use the evidence unless you were forced toâthatâs poor business.â
âBut good morals,â Kennon said. âNeither the Brotherhood nor I could settle this affair. It is a matter only you can handle. There is no sense in killing Outworld or throwing Kardon into centuries of litigation. The Lani never were numerous enough to lay claim to an entire world. Iâll admit the club is there, but Iâll never use it unless itâs necessary.â
âWhy not?âitâs sound business practice.â
âIâm a professionalânot a businessman. And besides, I havenât the moral right to return evil for good. You have not been a bad boss.â
âThanks,â Alexander said glumly. âIâve always considered myself civilized.â
âI wouldnât go so far as to say that,â Kennon said. âHonorable, yesâcivilized, no. But none of us are really civilized.â
âSo?â
âWe havenât changed much, despite our development. Perhaps weâve varied a little physicallyâand weâve learned to use new tools, but our minds are still the minds of barbariansâblood brothers against the enemy, and everything not of us is enemy. Savagesâhiding under a thin veneer of superficial culture. Savages with spaceships and the atom.â Kennon looked down at Copper. Apparently her thoughts were miles away in an introspective world that was all her own. She had said her piece and having done that was content to let the two men develop it. Kennon looked at her with odd respect. Alexander eyed her with a mildly startled expression on his lean face. And both men smiled, but the smiles were not amused.
âJudging from Copper,â Alexander said, âI donât think weâll have to worry about how the Lani will turn out.â He looked at Kennon with mild sympathy. âYou are going to have quite a time with her,â he said.
âI suppose so. Iâll probably never know whether Iâm guided or whether Iâm doing the guiding. Iâve changed a lot of my opinions about Copper since the day I met her.â
Copper looked up and smiled at them. It was an odd smile, hinting at secrets neither of them would ever know. Alexander chuckled. âIt serves you right.â He crossed his legs and looked up at Kennon standing before him. By some uncanny legerdemain he had gotten control of himself and the situation at the same time. Being telepathic was an unfair advantage, Kennon thought.
âYou were equally unfair with your accusation,â Alexander said. âSureâhumanity makes mistakes, and like this one theyâre sometimes brutal mistakes. But we are capable of atonement. Morally we have come a long way from the brutality of the Interregnum. I shouldnât have to use examples, but look at thatââhe waved at the view wall at the panorama of gleaming fairy towers and greenery that made Beta City one of the most beautiful in the Brotherhood. âDonât tell me that five thousand years of peace and development havenât produced civilization. Thatâs a concrete example out there.â
âIt isnât,â Kennon said flatly. âSure, itâs prettyâcleanâand beautifully designed for art and utilityâbut it isnât civilization. Youâre confusing technology with culture. You look at this and say, âWhat a great civilization man has built,â when you really mean, âWhat a great technology mankind has developed.â Thereâs all the difference in the world. Technology is of the mind and hands. Civilization is of the spiritâand spiritually we are still in the Dark Ages.
âWe conquer, kill, loot, and enslave. We establish standards to keep humanity a closed corporation, a special club in which men can live but aliens canât. Weâve made the standards for admission so rigid that we even enslave our own kind and call them animals. Thatâs not civilizationâthatâs savagery!
âFor nearly five hundred years your family has run a slave pen. Your fortune is based upon it. And you have perpetuated this traffic in flesh on the specious reasoning that a court judgment of half a millennium ago is as good today as when it was handed down. Never once did anyone have the moral courage to re-examine that old decision. Never once did any human question the rightness of that decision. None of us are immune. We all based our conduct upon an antiquated law and searched no further. Everyone was happy with the status quoâor at least not so unhappy that they wanted to change it. Even I would have been content had it not been for Copper.â
âYet I do not feel that it was bad that I hired you,â Alexander said. âEven though you have shown me that I am a slaver, and made me see faults I never knew I had.â His face was drawnâharsh lines reached from nose to lips, from eyes to chin. Suddenly he looked old. âI can accept censure if censure is just. And this is just. NoâIâm not sorry I hired you even though the thought of what I have helped do to the Lani makes me sick to my stomach.â
âWellââ Kennon said. âWhat are you going to do about it?â
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