“Two cups,” Sam said, and Dar felt in his purse for nails. The girl turned to the arcane contraption, picked up a cup, and pressed a valve; then she turned back to them with two steaming mugs. “New here.”
“Am,” Sam confirmed. “Just in from Wolmar.”
Panic jammed Dar’s stomach up toward his throat. Why not just send up a rocket that’d explode into the words, “Here’re the suspects!”
But the girl’s face came alive. “The prison planet? Where they’re oppressing the natives? Hey, tell me about it!”
“Yeah, me too!” A tall, lanky man lounged up to lean on the bar beside Sam.
“Wolmar? I want to hear this!”
“Hey! The real word?”
In thirty seconds, they were surrounded by a small crowd. Dar kept trying to edge closer and closer to the counter, and to glance over both shoulders at once; but Sam launched happily into an account of her tour of Wolmar. Dar was amazed at her accuracy; under equivalent conditions, he couldn’t have resisted the temptation to color the tale a little, probably putting in a bevy of scantily clad maidens and a hair-raising escape from a bloodthirsty tribe or two; but Sam stuck to reporting what she’d seen and heard, introducing Dar as her guide, which won him a look of respect, then glares of scorn when she mentioned his being a trader, then looks of awe when she explained his teaching function.
“You mean it’s not really a prison colony?”
Sam shrugged. “Depends on how you look at it. They’ve all been sentenced to go there.”
“They’re not really oppressing the natives?” The asker sounded almost disappointed.
“No—but look what they are doing!” Sam fairly glowed with missionary fervor as she went into an explanation of Cholly’s educational program. Dar listened, enthralled. He hadn’t known he was that much of a hero.
“Hey—it sounds like heaven,” said one Hume, with a shaky laugh.
“Yeah. What crime do I have to commit to get sent there?” another joked; but the laughter that followed had a rather serious echo.
“Well, don’t jump too soon.” Sam leaned on the counter and pushed her cup over for a refill. “The Bureau of Otherworldly Affairs sent out a new governor.”
Dar was delighted at the groan.
“Bastards always gotta foul up something good when they find it,” muttered one Angry Young Man.
“Establishments can’t stand progress,” growled another.
“Yeah, but BOA didn’t figure on Shacklar.” Sam sipped her refill with relish.
“Why? What could he do?” The AYM frowned.
“Well, the new governor’s credentials kinda got, uh, ‘lost,’ before he could show them to Shacklar. And by the time Shacklar got done with him, he’d decided to resign and join the colony.”
The room rocked with a hoot of laughter. The AYM smote the counter gleefully. “Go, General! The Organic Will Grow, in spite of the defoliators!”
Sam nodded. “Dar and I got the job of carrying his resignation back to Terra. But the new ex-governor’s lefthand man didn’t like the whole idea, so he set out to sabotage us.”
“How?” The AYM scowled. “What could he do?”
“Well, first off, he seems to have wrangled himself in as the pilot of the courier ship that brought us here—and he sicced a bunch of pirates on us as soon as we broke out of H-space.”
A low mutter of anger ran around the crowd.
“Oh, it was okay—we got out of it, all right, and got picked up by a patrol cruiser. But when we got here, we found out he’d told the Haskerville government that one of us was a telepath and was a threat to social order.”
“You?” a voice hooted. “You’re the witches they’re hunting?”
“What’ve they got against telepaths, anyway?” the AYM grumbled. “They’re not hurting anybody.”
“Especially when they aren’t really telepaths,” Sam agreed. “But the House of Houses got wind of it, too, and tried to ‘script us. So we’re on the run two ways, and running out of hideouts.”
A chorus of protest filled the room, and a dozen Humes thrust forward with offers of sympathy.
“Sons o’ sobakas,” the AYM growled. “Just let one person try do do something decent, and they throw every roller they can in your way! Come on! We’ll hide you!”
And the whole crowd swirled them out with a chorus of agreement. Dar started to dig in his heels in alarm, then noticed Sam whirling by with a delighted grin. He relaxed, and let himself be borne by the current.
It deposited them in the street outside, with only the AYM and a few other Humes.
“Come on!” the AYM declared, and he set off down the street. Dar had to hurry to catch up.
“Lucky bumping into you,” Sam was saying as he came up with them.
“Not all that much luck. This’s the ideal place for us—they leave us alone.”
Dar could see why. The townsfolk would want to stay as far away as they could from the drab Humes and their shoestring existence. Of course, the shortage of radio communication and police might have had something to do with it, too—if the system was rigged to stay out of the way of the taxpayers’ pleasures, it wouldn’t be able to bother anyone else much, either.
The AYM led them into an old building that looked as though it had been an office collection in its youth, but had been converted to dwelling purposes. The liftshaft still operated, and took them up to the third level.
“Got to exploring one day.” The AYM ran his fingers over the bas-reliefs that decorated the wall at the end of the corridor. “I was doing a rubbing here, and I must have pressed just hard enough on the right thing, because …”
Something clicked; a hum sprang up; then, slowly, a portion of the wall retracted, to leave a doorway about two meters high.
Dar stared. Then, slowly, he nodded. “A very interesting suite.”
“Yeah, isn’t it?” The AYM grinned. “I don’t know what kind of business the office had in the old days, but they must’ve had some kind of a security problem. Import-export trade, at a guess.”
Dar stooped through the doorway. “Don’t suppose it comes equipped with little luxuries like light.”
“Try the wall-plate.”
It hadn’t occurred to Dar that there might be one. He slid his hand over the wall until he felt the smoother rectangle. It responded to his skin temperature by glowing a small, dim plate in the ceiling into life.
Sam stepped through, too. “You knew we were coming?”
“No, but I had a notion I might need it someday.” The AYM pointed to a few boxes of sealed packets and demijohns against the lefthand wall. “Made a deposit every time I could scrounge a little extra. There’s a week’s supply in here, at least. Pretty plain—biscuit and fruit, and some meat, and nothing to drink but water—but it’ll keep you alive.” He pointed to a neat stack of blankets just beyond the two straight chairs. “That’s all I could scrounge for sleeping and sitting. But all I promised was a hideout.”
“The way we are right now, this is a palace.” Sam clasped his hand. “No way I can thank you, really, grozh.”
“No need. Who knows? You may be doing the same for me someday.” He squeezed her arm. “Enjoy what you can. I’ll check in every now and then.” He stepped back through the doorway, and the wall-segment rolled back into place.
“Of course,” Dar observed, “you realize we can’t get out now.”
“Lesser of two evils.” Sam settled herself on one of the hard chairs. “We can get him to tell us when the next ship lands, and duck out to the port.”
“A month in this crackerbox?”
“This one, or one like it, maintained by the authorities.” Sam shrugged. “Your choice. Personally, I’ll take this one.”
“No contest,” Dar sighed, flopping down onto the other chair. “I didn’t know your tribe was so widespread.”
“There’re a lot of us—an awful lot. Oh, there always have been some, at least as far back as the late nineteenth century—but they’re always a minority, unless something’s going wrong in the government. When a political system has engine trouble, alternative cultures spread.”
“Until the engine starts running again?”
Sam nodded. “But the numbers have been on the increase, steadily, for more than a hundred years now.”