Four-Day Planet H. Beam Piper (best books to read for success .txt) đ
- Author: H. Beam Piper
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âI will tell you what will happen,â Bish Ware said. âA lot of people will get killed. That isnât important, in itself. People are getting killed all the time, in a lot worse causes. But these people will all have friends and relatives who will take it up for them. Start killing people here in a faction fight, and somebody will be shooting somebody in the back out of a dark passage a hundred years from now over it. You want this planet poisoned with blood feuds for the next century?â
Dad and I looked at one another. That was something that hadnât occurred to either of us, and it should have. There were feuds, even now. Half the little settlements on the other islands and on the mainland had started when some group or family moved out of Port Sandor because of the enmity of some larger and more powerful group or family, and half our shootings and knife fights grew out of old grudges between families or hunting crews.
âWe donât want it poisoned for the next century with the sort of thing Mort Hallstock and Steve Ravick started here, either,â Dad said.
âGranted.â Bish nodded. âIf a civil warâs the only possible way to get rid of them, thatâs what youâll have to have, I suppose. Only make sure you donât leave a single one of them alive when itâs over. But if you can get the Federation Government in here to clean the mess up, that would be better. Nobody starts a vendetta with the Terran Federation.â
âBut how?â Dad asked. âIâve sent story after story off about crime and corruption on Fenris. They all get the file-and-forget treatment.â
Mrs. Laden had taken away the soup plates and brought us our main course. Bish sat toying with his fork for a moment.
âI donât know what you can do,â he said slowly. âIf you can stall off the blowup till the Cape Canaveral gets in, and you can send somebody to Terra.â ââ âŠâ
All of a sudden, it hit me. Here was something that would give Bish a purpose; something to make him want to stay sober.
âWell, donât say, âIf you can,âââ I said. âSay, âIf we can.â You live on Fenris, too, donât you?â
Meeting Out of OrderDad called the spaceport hospital, after dinner, and talked to Doc Rojansky. Murell was asleep, and in no danger whatever. Theyâd given him a couple of injections and a sedative, and his system was throwing off the poison satisfactorily. Heâd be all right, but they thought he ought to be allowed to rest at the hospital for a while.
By then, it was time for me to leave for Huntersâ Hall. Julio and Mrs. Laden were having their dinner, and Dad and Bish went up to the editorial office. I didnât take a car. Huntersâ Hall was only a half dozen blocks south of the Times, toward the waterfront. I carried my radio-under-false-pretense slung from my shoulder, and started downtown on foot.
The business district was pretty well lighted, both from the ceiling and by the stores and restaurants. Most of the latter were in the open, with small kitchen and storage buildings. At a table at one of them I saw two petty officers from the PeenemĂŒnde with a couple of girls, so I knew the ship wasnât leaving immediately. Going past the Municipal Building, I saw some activity, and an unusually large number of police gathered around the vehicle port. Ravick must have his doubts about how the price cut was going to be received, and Mort Hallstock was mobilizing his storm troopers to give him support in case he needed it. I called in about that, and Dad told me fretfully to be sure to stay out of trouble.
Huntersâ Hall was a four-story building, fairly substantial as buildings that donât have to support the roof go, with a landing stage on top and a vehicle park underneath. As I came up, I saw a lot of cars and jeeps and shipsâ boats grounded in and around it, and a crowd of men, almost all of them in boat-clothes and wearing whiskers, including quite a few characters who had never been out in a hunter-ship in their lives but were members in the best of good standing of the Cooperative. I also saw a few of Hallstockâs uniformed thugs standing around with their thumbs in their gun belts or twirling their truncheons.
I took an escalator up to the second floor, which was one big room, with the escalators and elevators in the rear. It was the social room, decorated with photos and models and solidigraphs of hunter-ships, photos of record-sized monsters lashed alongside ships before cutting-up, group pictures of shipsâs crews, monster tusks, dried slashers and halberd fish, and a whole monster head, its tusked mouth open. There was a big crowd there, too, at the bar, at the game machines, or just standing around in groups talking.
I saw Tom Kivelson and his father and Oscar Fujisawa, and went over to join them. Joe Kivelson is just an outsize edition of his son, with a blond beard thatâs had thirty-five yearsâ more growth. Oscar is skipper of the Pequodâ âhe wouldnât have looked baffled if Bish Ware called him Captain Ahabâ âand while his family name is Old Terran Japanese, he had blue eyes and red hair and beard. He was almost as big as Joe Kivelson.
âHello, Walt,â Joe greeted me. âWhatâs this Tomâs been telling me about Bish Ware shooting a tread-snail that was going to sting Mr. Murell?â
âJust about that,â I said. âThat snail must have crawled out from between two stacks of wax as
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