Four-Day Planet H. Beam Piper (best books to read for success .txt) š
- Author: H. Beam Piper
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Once in a while, Dad would write a blistering editorial about one or the other or both of them. Whenever he did, I would put my gun on, and so would Julio Kubanoff, the one-legged compositor who is the third member of the Times staff, and we would take turns making sure nobody got behind Dadās back. Nothing ever happened, though, and that always rather hurt me. Those two racketeers were in so tight they didnāt need to care what the Times printed or ācast about them.
Hallstock glanced over in my direction and said something to Ravick. Ravick gave a sneering laugh, and then he crushed out the cigarette he was smoking on the palm of his left hand. That was a regular trick of his. Showing how tough he was. Dad says that when you see somebody showing off, ask yourself whether heās trying to impress other people, or himself. I wondered which was the case with Steve Ravick.
Then I looked up again. The PeenemĆ¼nde was coming down as fast as she could without overheating from atmosphere friction. She was almost buckshot size to the naked eye, and a couple of tugs were getting ready to go up and meet her. I got the telephoto camera out of the hamper, checked it, and aimed it. It has a shoulder stock and handgrips and a trigger like a submachine gun. I caught the ship in the finder and squeezed the trigger for a couple of seconds. It would be about five minutes till the tugs got to her and anything else happened, so I put down the camera and looked around.
Coming through the crowd, walking as though the concrete under him was pitching and rolling like a shipās deck on contragravity in a storm, was Bish Ware. He caught sight of us, waved, overbalanced himself and recovered, and then changed course to starboard and bore down on us. He was carrying about his usual cargo, and as usual the manifest would read, Baldur honey-rum, from Harry Wongās bar.
Bish wasnāt his real name. Neither, I suspected, was Ware. When heād first landed on Fenris, some five years ago, somebody had nicknamed him the Bishop, and before long that had gotten cut to one syllable. He looked like a bishop, or at least like what anybody whoās never seen a bishop outside a screenplay would think a bishop looked like. He was a big man, not fat, but tall and portly; he had a ruddy face that always wore an expression of benevolent wisdom, and the more cargo he took on the wiser and more benevolent he looked.
He had iron-gray hair, but he wasnāt old. You could tell that by the backs of his hands; they werenāt wrinkled or crepy and the veins didnāt protrude. And drunk or soberā āthough I never remembered seeing him in the latter conditionā āhe had the fastest reflexes of anybody I knew. I saw him, once, standing at the bar in Harry Wongās, knock over an open bottle with his left elbow. He spun half around, grabbed it by the neck and set it up, all in one motion, without spilling a drop, and he went on talking as though nothing had happened. He was quoting Homer, I remembered, and you could tell that he was thinking in the original ancient Greek and translating to Lingua Terra as he went.
He was always dressed as he was now, in a conservative black suit, the jacket a trifle longer than usual, and a black neckcloth with an Uller organic-opal pin. He didnāt work at anything, but quarterlyā āonce every planetary dayā āa draft on the Banking Cartel would come in for him, and heād deposit it with the Port Sandor Fidelity & Trust. If anybody was unmannerly enough to ask him about it, he always said he had a rich uncle on Terra.
When I was a kidā āwell, more of a kid than I am nowā āI used to believe he really was a bishopā āunfrocked, of course, or ungaitered, or whatever they call it when they give a bishop the heave-ho. A lot of people who werenāt kids still believed that, and they blamed him on every denomination from Anglicans to Zen Buddhists, not even missing the Satanists, and there were all sorts of theories about what heād done to get excommunicated, the mildest of which was that somewhere there was a cathedral standing unfinished because heād hypered out with the building fund. It was generally agreed that his ecclesiastical organization was paying him to stay out there in the boondocks where he wouldnāt cause them further embarrassment.
I was pretty sure, myself, that he was being paid by somebody, probably his family, to stay out of sight. The colonial planets are full of that sort of remittance men.
Bish and I were pretty good friends. There were certain old ladies, of both sexes and all ages, of whom Professor Hartzenbosch was an example, who took Dad to task occasionally for letting me associate with him. Dad simply ignored them. As long as I was going to be a reporter, Iād have to have news sources, and Bish was a dandy. He knew all the disreputable characters in town, which saved me having to associate with all of them, and it is sad but true that you get very few news stories in Sunday school. Far from fearing that Bish would be a bad influence on me, he rather hoped Iād be a good one on Bish.
I had that in mind, too, if I could think of any way of managing it. Bish had been a good man, once. He still was, except for one thing. You could tell that before heād started drinking, heād really been somebody, somewhere. Then something pretty bad must have happened to him, and now he was here on Fenris, trying to hide from it behind a bottle. Something ought to be done to give
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