Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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âI donât understand,â Ellen said shakily.
Chung went back to his intercom. Blades fumbled out his pipe and rolled it empty between his hands. âThat missile was shot off on purpose,â he said.
âWhat? No, you must be sick, thatâs impossible!â
âI realize you didnât know about it. Only three or four officers have been told. The job had to be done very, very secretly, or thereâd be a scandal, maybe an impeachment. But itâs still sabotage.â
She shrank from him. âYouâre not making sense.â
âTheir own story doesnât make sense. Itâs ridiculous. A new missile system wouldnât be sent on a field trial clear to the Belt before itâd had enough tests closer to home to get the worst bugs out. A warhead missile wouldnât be stashed anywhere near something so unreliable, let alone be put under its control. The testing ship wouldnât hang around a civilian Station while her gunnery chief tinkered. And Hulse, Warburton, Liebknecht, they were asking in such detail about how radiation-proof we are.â
âI canât believe it. Nobody will.â
âNot back home. Communication with Earth is so sparse and garbled. The public will only know there was an accident; whoâll give a hoot about the details? We couldnât even prove anything in an asteroid court. The Navy would say, âClassified information!â and thatâd stop the proceedings cold. Sure, thereâll be a board of inquiryâ âcomposed of naval officers. Probably honorable men, too. But what are they going to believe, the sworn word of their Goddard House colleague, or the rantings of an asterite bum?â
âMike, I know this is terrible for you, but youâve let it go to your head.â Ellen laid a hand over his. âSuppose the worst happens. Youâll be compensated for your loss.â
âYeah. To the extent of our personal investment. The Bank of Ceres still has nearly all the money that was put in. We didnât figure to have them paid off for another ten years. They, or their insurance carrier, will get the indemnity. And after our fiasco, they wonât make us a new loan. They were just barely talked into it, the first time around. I daresay Systemic Developments will make them a nice juicy offer to take this job over.â
Ellen colored. She stamped her foot. âYouâre talking like a paranoiac. Do you really believe the government of North America would send a battleship clear out here to do you dirt?â
âNot the whole government. A few men in the right positions is all thatâs necessary. I donât know if Hulse was bribed or talked into this. But probably he agreed as a duty. Heâs the prim type.â
âA dutyâ âto destroy a North American business?â
Chung finished at the intercom in time to answer: âNot permanent physical destruction, Miss Ziska. As Mike suggested, some corporation will doubtless inherit the Sword and repair the damage. But a private, purely asterite businessâ ââ ⊠yes, Iâm afraid Mikeâs right. We are the target.â
âIn mercyâs name, why?â
âFrom the highest motives, of course,â Chung sneered bitterly. âYou know what the Social Justice Party thinks of private capitalism. Whatâs more important, though, is that the Sword is the first Belt undertaking not tied to Mother Earthâs apron strings. We have no commitments to anybody back there. We can sell our output wherever we like. Itâs notorious that the asterites are itching to build up their own self-sufficient industries. Quite apart from sentiment, we can make bigger profits in the Belt than back home, especially when you figure the cost of sending stuff in and out of Earthâs gravitational well. So certainly weâd be doing most of our business out here.
âOur charter canât simply be revoked. First a good many laws would have to be revised, and thatâs politically impossible. There is still a lot of individualist sentiment in North America, as witness the fact that businesses do get launched and that the Essjays did have a hard campaign to get elected. What the new government wants is something like the Eighteenth Century English policy toward America. Keep the colonies as a source of raw materials and as a market for manufactured goods, but donât let them develop a domestic industry. You canât come right out and say that, but you can let the situation develop naturally.
âOnlyâ ââ ⊠here the Sword is, obviously bound to grow rich and expand in every direction. If weâre allowed to develop, to reinvest our profits, weâll become the nucleus of independent asterite enterprise. If, on the other hand, weâre wiped out by an unfortunate accident, thereâs no nucleus; and a small change in the banking laws is all thatâs needed to prevent others from getting started. Q.E.D.â
âI daresay Hulse does think heâs doing his patriotic duty,â said Blades. âHe wants to guarantee North America our natural resourcesâ âin the long run, maybe, our allegiance. If he has to commit sabotage, too bad, but it wonât cost him any sleep.â
âNo!â Ellen almost screamed.
Chung sagged in his chair. âWeâre very neatly trapped,â he said like an old man. âI donât see any way out. Think you can get to work now, Mike? You can assign group leaders for the evacuationâ ââ
Blades jumped erect. âI can fight!â he growled.
âWith what? Can openers?â
âYou mean youâre going to lie down and let them break us?â
Avis came back. She thrust the bottle into Bladesâ hands as he paced the room. âHere you are,â she said in a distant voice.
He held it out toward Ellen. âHave some,â he invited.
âNot with youâ ââ ⊠you subversive!â
Avis brightened noticeably, took the bottle and raised it. âThen hereâs to victory,â she said, drank, and passed it to Blades.
He started to gulp; but the wine was too noble, and he found himself savoring its course down his throat. Why, he thought vaguely, do people always speak with scorn about Dutch courage? The Dutch have real guts. They fought themselves free of Spain and free of the ocean itself; when the French or Germans came, they made the enemy sea their allyâ â
The bottle fell from his grasp. In the weak acceleration, it hadnât hit
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