Space Viking H. Beam Piper (life books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: H. Beam Piper
Book online «Space Viking H. Beam Piper (life books to read .TXT) đ». Author H. Beam Piper
As soon as the Space Scourge was unloaded, she was put on off-planet watch; Harkaman immediately spaced out in the Nemesis, while Trask remained behind. They began unloading the Rozinante, after setting her down at Rivington Spaceport. After that was done, her officers and crew took a holiday which lasted a month, until the Nemesis returned. Harkaman must have made quick raids on half a dozen planets. None of the cargo he brought back was spectacularly valuable, and he dismissed the whole thing as chicken-stealing, but he had lost some men and the ship showed a few fresh scars. A good deal of what was transshipped to the Rozinante was manufactured goods which would compete with merchandise produced on Gram.
âThat load will be a comedown, after what the Space Scourge took back, but we didnât want to send the Rozinante back empty,â he said. âOne thing, I had time to do a little reading, between stops.â
âThe books from the Eglonsby library?â
âYes. I learned a curious thing about Amaterasu. Do you know why that planet was so extensively colonized by the Federation, when there donât seem to be any fissionable ores? The planet produced gadolinium.â
Gadolinium was essential to hyperdrive engines; the engines of a ship the size of the Nemesis required fifty pounds of it. On the Sword-Worlds, it was worth several times its weight in gold. If they still mined it, Amaterasu would repay a second visit.
When he mentioned it, Harkaman shrugged. âWhy should they mine it? Thereâs only one thing itâs good for, and you canât run a spaceship on diesel oil. I suppose the mines could be reopened, and new refineries built, but.â ââ âŠâ
âWe could trade plutonium for gadolinium. They have none of their own. We could charge our own prices for it, and we wouldnât need to tell them what gadolinium sells for on the Sword-Worlds.â
âWe could, if we could do business with anybody there, after what we did to Eglonsby and Stolgoland. Where would we get plutonium?â
âWhy do you think the Beowulfers donât have hyperships, when they have everything else?â
Harkaman snapped his fingers. âBy Satan, thatâs it!â Then he looked at Trask in alarm. âHey, youâre not thinking of selling Amaterasu plutonium and Beowulf gadolinium, are you?â
âWhy not? We could make a big profit on both ends of the deal.â
âYou know what would happen next, donât you? Thereâd be ships from both planets all over the place in a few years. We want that like we want a hole in the head.â
He couldnât see the objection. Tanith and Amaterasu and Beowulf could work up a very good triangular trade; all three would profit. It wouldnât cost men and ship-damage and ammunition, either. Maybe a mutual defense alliance, too. Think about it later; there was too much to do here on Tanith at present.
There had been mines on the Moon of Tanith before the collapse of the Federation; they had been stripped of their equipment afterward, while Tanith was still fighting a rearguard battle against barbarism, but the underground chambers and man-made caverns could still be used, and in time the mines were reopened and the steel mill put in, and eventually ingots of finished steel were coming down by shuttle-craft. In the meantime, the shipyard had been laid out and was taking shape.
The Gram ship Queen Flaviaâ âshe had been the one found unfinished at Glaspythâ âcame in three months after the Rozinante started back; she must have been finished while Valkanhayn was still in hyperspace. She carried considerable cargo, some of it superfluous but all of it useful; everybody was investing in the Tanith Adventure now, and the money had to be spent for something. Better, she brought close to a thousand men and women; the leakage of brains and ability from the Sword-Worlds was turning into a flood. Among them was Basil Gorram. Trask remembered him as an insufferable young twerp, but he seemed to be a good shipyard man. He very frankly predicted that in a few years his fatherâs yards at Wardshaven would be idle and all the Tanith ships would be Tanith-built. A junior partner of Lothar Ffayleâs also came out, to establish a branch of the Bank of Wardshaven at Rivington.
As soon as the Queen Flavia had discharged her cargo and passengers, she took on five hundred ground-fighters from the Lamia, Nemesis and Space Scourge companies and spaced out on a raiding voyage. While she was gone, the second ship, the one Duke Angus had started at Wardshaven and King Angus had finished, the Black Star, came in.
Trask was slightly incredulous at realizing that she had spaced out from Gram almost exactly two years after the Nemesis had departed. He still hadnât any idea where Andray Dunnan was, or what he was doing, or how to find him.
The news of the Gram base on Tanith spread slowly, first by the scheduled liners and tramp freighters that linked the Sword-Worlds, and then by trading ships and outbound Space Vikings to the Old Federation. Two years and six months after the Nemesis had come out of hyperspace to find Boake Valkanhayn and Garvan Spasso on Tanith, the first independent Space Viking came in, to sell a cargo and get repairs. They bought his lootâ âhe had been raiding some planet rather above the level of Khepera and below that of Amaterasuâ âand healed the wounds his ship had taken getting it. He had been dealing with the Everrard family on Hoth, and professed himself much more satisfied with the bargains he had gotten on Tanith and swore to return.
He had never even heard of Andray Dunnan or the Enterprise.
It was a Gilgamesher that brought the first news.
He had first heard of Gilgameshersâ âthe word was used indiscriminately for a native of or a ship from Gilgameshâ âon Gram, from Harkaman
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