Little Fuzzy H. Beam Piper (best ereader for comics txt) đ
- Author: H. Beam Piper
Book online «Little Fuzzy H. Beam Piper (best ereader for comics txt) đ». Author H. Beam Piper
âYou mean theyâre actually taking this seriously?â
âIt is serious. If youâre convicted, the Companyâs charter will be almost automatically voided. And, although this is important only to you personally, you might, very probably, be sentenced to be shot.â He shrugged that off, and continued: âNow, Iâll want to talk to you about your defense, for which I am responsible. Say ten-thirty tomorrow, at my office. I should, by that time, know what sort of evidence is going to be used against you. I will be expecting you, Dr. Kellogg.â
He must have said more than that, but that was all that registered. Leonard wasnât really conscious of going back to the other room, until he realized that he was sitting in his relaxer chair, filling the glass with brandy. There was only a little ice in it, but he didnât care.
They were going to try him for murder for killing that little animal, and Ham OâBrien had said they wouldnât, heâd promised heâd keep the case from trial and he hadnât, they were going to try him anyhow and if they convicted him they would take him out and shoot him for just killing a silly little animal he had killed it heâd kicked it and jumped on it he could still hear it screaming and feel the horrible soft crunching under his feetâ ââ âŠ
He gulped what was left in the glass and poured and gulped more. Then he staggered to his feet and stumbled over to the couch and threw himself onto it, face down, among the cushions.
Leslie Coombes found Nick Emmert with Victor Grego in the latterâs office when he entered. They both rose to greet him, and Grego said, âYouâve heard?â
âYes. OâBrien called me immediately. I called my clientâ âmy client of record, that isâ âand told him. Iâm afraid it was rather a shock to him.â
âIt wasnât any shock to me,â Grego said as they sat down. âWhen Ham OâBrienâs as positive about anything as he was about that, I always expect the worst.â
âPendarvis is going to try the case himself,â Emmert said. âI always thought he was a reasonable man, but whatâs he trying to do now? Cut the Companyâs throat?â
âHe isnât anti-Company. He isnât pro-Company either. Heâs just pro-law. The law says that a planet with native sapient inhabitants is a Class-IV planet, and has to have a Class-IV colonial government. If Zarathustra is a Class-IV planet, he wants it established, and the proper laws applied. If itâs a Class-IV planet, the Zarathustra Company is illegally chartered. Itâs his job to put a stop to illegality. Frederic Pendarvisâ religion is the law, and he is its priest. You never get anywhere by arguing religion with a priest.â
They were both silent for a while after he had finished. Grego was looking at the globe, and he realized, now, that while he was proud of it, his pride was the pride in a paste jewel that stands for a real one in a bank vault. Now he was afraid that the real jewel was going to be stolen from him. Nick Emmert was just afraid.
âYou were right yesterday, Victor. I wish Hollowayâd killed that son of a Khooghra. Maybe itâs not too lateâ ââ âŠâ
âYes, it is, Nick. Itâs too late to do anything like that. Itâs too late to do anything but win the case in court.â He turned to Grego. âWhat are your people doing?â
Grego took his eyes from the globe. âErnest Mallinâs studying all the filmed evidence we have and all the descriptions of Fuzzy behavior, and trying to prove that none of it is the result of sapient mentation. Ruth Ortheris is doing the same, only sheâs working on the line of instinct and conditioned reflexes and nonsapient, single-stage reasoning. She has a lot of rats, and some dogs and monkeys, and a lot of apparatus, and some technician from Henry Stensonâs instrument shop helping her. Juan Jimenez is studying mentation of Terran dogs, cats and primates, and Freyan kholphs and Mimir black slinkers.â
âHe hasnât turned up any simian or canine parallels to that funeral, has he?â
Grego said nothing, merely shook his head. Emmert muttered something inaudible and probably indecent.
âI didnât think he had. I only hope those Fuzzies donât get up in court, build a bonfire and start making speeches in Lingua Terra.â
Nick Emmert cried out in panic. âYou believe theyâre sapient yourself!â
âOf course. Donât you?â
Grego laughed sourly. âNick thinks you have to believe a thing to prove it. It helps but it isnât necessary. Say weâre a debating team; weâve been handed the negative of the question. Resolved: that Fuzzies are Sapient Beings. Personally, I think we have the short end of it, but that only means weâll have to work harder on it.â
âYou know, I was on a debating team at college,â Emmert said brightly. When that was disregarded, he added: âIf I remember, the first thing was definition of terms.â
Grego looked up quickly. âLeslie, I think Nick has something. What is the legal definition of a sapient being?â
âAs far as I know, there isnât any. Sapience is something thatâs just taken for granted.â
âHow about talk-and-build-a-fire?â
He shook his head. âPeople of the Colony of Vishnu versus Emily Morrosh, 612 AE.â He told them about the infanticide case. âI was looking up rulings on sapience; I passed the word on to Ham OâBrien. You know, what your people will have to do will be to produce a definition of sapience, acceptable to the court, that will include all known sapient races and at the same time exclude the Fuzzies. I donât envy them.â
âWe need some Fuzzies of our own to study,â Grego said.
âToo bad we canât get hold of Hollowayâs,â Emmert said. âMaybe we could, if he leaves them alone at his camp.â
âNo. We canât risk that.â He thought for a moment. âWait a moment. I think
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