by David Drake
I daubed the three massive hinges of the alley door with penetrating oil, but then I reentered the palace and hid the remainder of the can of penetrating oil in the framework from which Giorgios’ bed curtains hung. I could retrieve it easily there, but even if it were found it didn’t point to me.
When Giorgios next came past my alcove, I stopped him. “Sir?” I said. “Was the Admiral pleased with the way I’ve kept the console in operating condition?”
“Yes, everything went well,” the chamberlain said. He looked a little worried, which is what I intended when I brought up the console and the fact it depended on me.
“Good,” I said. “Good. I want to attend the sale of slaves this afternoon, sir.”
“You do?” Giorgios said. His mild worry had risen to alarm. “Ah. I suppose you’re planning to buy a slave of your own. Slaves, perhaps?”
“I’m just considering possibilities, sir,” I said. It was normal for slaves of some rank to own slaves themselves. Generally it was a mark of status, though I’d run into cases where a slave official’s slaves did all the official’s work.
To make sure Giorgios was getting the point, I said, “I think I’ll have to continue doing all the computer work, though. This console is remarkably finicky, and I regularly have to reset it when it locks up. I could never train somebody who could keep it going.”
“Well, there’s no reason you shouldn’t buy a slave,” Giorgios said. “Ah, and you can come to me if you need someone to guarantee your credit with the auctioneer.”
He strode quickly into his bedroom. I bowed respectfully to his back, then said to Abram, “Let’s go watch an auction.”
“Suits me,” Abram said. “Though I don’t know what you want a slave for.”
I didn’t. What I wanted was a look at—and just possibly a meeting with—the Karst consul.
* * *
Slaves were sold at the top of the swale near the underground prison. There were stone seats and a permanent roof of structural plastic for spectators.
There was nothing for the prisoners, unless you counted the tower which mounted an automatic impeller. It was sited on the back side of the bleachers, which struck me as odd until I realized that from this location the muzzle couldn’t be lowered enough to bear on the customers. Given the quality of the guards I’d seen in Salaam, that was a wise precaution.
They’d started to bring out the prisoners by the time we arrived. They were in groups of five roped together at the right ankle. Guards were linking them as they climbed a ladder from the pit. None of them looked in great shape even without bonds, but I suppose the Admiral saw no reason to take chances.
We climbed four levels of seats, above the audience already in place. Those seated on the bottom row had come with cushions. Two of the four principals had brought attendants.
“The high mucky-mucks down there’re the consuls,” Abram whispered. “That’s Platt from Karst on the right and the woman on the left’s Kimber or Kimley, something like that, from the Alliance. The two in the middle are the Solitan League and the Sworn Brotherhood. They’re each three worlds, but they don’t count for much.”
The Alliance consul was the only woman visible. Platt was taller than me but he looked worn. His curly hair was obviously dyed and had receded high up his forehead. My first glance wasn’t encouraging, but it seemed that he might be what I had to work with.
I looked at the woman from the Alliance. There was no legal connection there, but maybe her gender would help? The thing was, I’d met plenty of women doing jobs that mostly were handled by men. From what I’d seen—and I was an outsider, I know—most of them were harder on other women than a man would have been. I guess they were just proving they weren’t soft.
The first gang of slaves shuffled in front of the stands. They were looking down and sometimes shielding their eyes with their hands: The roof didn’t cover them.
“Five spacers from the ship Hentzau,” the auctioneer called. He was in the chancellor’s division, a man named Albert. I knew him slightly because he chose to buy meals from Martial instead of eating with his own division. “All sound in limb.”
Two men in the second row bid against one another without enthusiasm. The lot was sold at 120 piasters per person. Guards shuffled the slaves off to the other end, where groups of attendants waited. An aide to the successful bidder jotted notes, as did Albert’s assistant.
“They’re both off-planet labor contractors,” Abram explained. “They’re putting together gangs to ship out of Eski Marakech.”
Another group was offered. This time an old man seated just below us with a grandson asked for a closer examination. He looked at the spacers—also from the Hentzau—individually, demanding they open their mouths. He finally offered 200 piasters on the second man in line. No one bid against him, though the other labor contractor bought the remainder of the coffle at 110 apiece.
These were men just like me. It bothered me a little that I was thinking of them as items of trade—as I would think of shovels or bags of barley being bought for the palace. I don’t suppose it mattered. I wasn’t buying them, even buying them for the palace.
Giorgios had an assistant to purchase labor. That fellow, Ali son of Ali, wasn’t present today.
I said to Abram, “How about me? I wasn’t paraded like those fellows.”
“Oh, I heard about that,” he said. “That was really hush-hush, you know? Giorgios did a deal with the cutter’s captain who took you, cash under the table. The chancellor didn’t get his cut, but maybe Giorgios squared him.”
Abram looked at me and grinned. “I guess he had to pay pretty well to get an expert on the console like you, huh?” he said.
“I don’t know what he paid,” I said. “It was off-book like you figure, so I haven’t found it in the records. I think he paid in Alliance thalers.”
I didn’t argue about being called an expert on the console. In Salaam, that’s what I was.
The third group came up to bid. Albert hadn’t more than stated, “Five spacers from the S611 out of Rupert’s Planet,” when the tall man at the head of the line put his arms akimbo.
“I am a citizen of Bryce!” he called, looking from one consul to the other. “I’m being improperly held!”
Albert turned to the woman. “Mistress Kimber?” he said. “This spacer was a member of the crew of S611, which is registered on Rupert’s Planet. Salaam has no treaty with Rupert’s Planet.”
“That’s a lie!” said the spacer. “I’m Gus Andre and I was a passenger on S611, not crew!”
“Master Albert?” said the woman. Two of her aides were whispering together as one consulted his personal data unit. “What evidence do you have that this man was crew and not a passenger?”
“The S611 didn’t have facilities for passengers,” said Albert, pulling a hardcopy document from his scrip. “Just bunks for the crew.”
“I slept in a bunk,” Andre said, “but I wasn’t crew!”
“Do you have the ship’s log showing that Andre was enrolled in the crew?” Kimber demanded.
“I don’t have record of that, no,” Albert said. Before the consul could speak again, Albert gestured to one of the escorting guards. “Release this man to the care of the Alliance consul.”
An attendant separated the freed man from the rest of the coffle by using shears to snip the light rope which attached his ankle to a heavy hawser. He tried to run over to the consul with his arms outstretched, but one of her aides intercepted him and led him off to the side where attendants waited. Bidding began on the remainder of the coffle.
“Are there any women?” I asked Abram.
“They’re sold separately,” he said. “They’re kept in that building with the yellow window frames.”
He gestured back toward the town proper. The barred windows didn’t set it off from other houses.
“And the really pretty ones don’t come to public auction anyway,” Abram continued. “The chancellor holds a private sale for h
igh rollers. But say, look—if you want a woman, I can find you plenty of stuff that’s just as good as what comes off captured ships. Except maybe hair color—real blond is hard, but I could keep an eye out.”
“Thank you, Abram,” I said, “but it was just curiosity. I like to know things, but I’m not looking for a woman.”
“If you’ve got problems with buying one, there’s a lot of fathers I could introduce you to,” Abram said. “You’re a big man, Roy, even though you don’t put on side. There’s a lot of girls who’d really like to be your woman.”
Arguing with him didn’t do any good, so I concentrated on the new line of prisoners shuffling in. The man in the middle was arguing with the guards. When he reached the display area he called to the consuls, “I’m from Andover and I was a passenger on the Regenswelt! A passenger!”
“This man is Thom Burris, crewman on the Regenswelt out of Grantholm,” Albert said, reading from his hardcopy. “He has spacers’ tattoos.”
“Those aren’t spacers’ tattoos!” Burris shouted. “Ariel is my girlfriend, not a ship! Well, she was. I’ve never been in space except as a passenger, and I was on my way back home when you bastards caught the Regenswelt in orbit!”
The consul for the Sworn Brotherhood got to his feet and said, “Master Albert, tattoos are common on Andover. There’s nothing about Master Burris’ tattoo to suggest he’s anything but a healthy young man with a girlfriend.”
Albert glanced at his hardcopy again, then looked up and said, “Appeal denied. Five spacers, one missing three fingers of his left hand. What am I offered?”
“I protest!” the consul shouted.
“You can’t do this!” said Burris.
Albert said nothing to the consul. To the nearest guard he said, “Silence the prisoner so that I can get on with the auction.”
The guard had a thick-bladed cutlass instead of an impeller. He chopped at Burris’ head with the flat. The prisoner got his hands up, but the edge scraped his forearm. He staggered back and fell.
The guard moved forward, but Albert said, “That’s enough.” To the consul he added, “You can make a protest to your government if you like. When the auction closes, I’ll give you a note as to where the man has been sold for you to pursue it if you like.”
The sale proceeded. I said to Abram, “I don’t see how Albert could be so certain. A tattoo doesn’t seem much evidence the fellow was a crewman.”
Abram shrugged and said, “The Sworn Brotherhood has maybe three gunboats and a very old destroyer if they get everything together. The consul would have to send the message off through Eski Marakech, which would take a good month. Whereas the Alliance could have a standby squadron here in six weeks and stay long enough to screw everybody on ben Yusuf’s life up. They wouldn’t land troops themself, but they might make it hot enough for the other admirals to make a change in who was running Salaam.”
“I see,” I said.
As the next coffle was arriving, I tapped Abram on the arm. “I guess I’ve seen enough,” I said.
We got up and headed back for the palace. The delivery from Roussel should be made this afternoon. I wanted to see Monica unwrap the sauces she’d ordered.
CHAPTER 22
Abram and I stopped at Martial’s for a meal and a chat with laborers at the bottom echelon of the palace. I had a pasty and wine watered at my request; Abram drank his wine straight and had a second glass besides. I’d have needed help getting up the stairs if I’d done that.
The wine Martial served us was quite strong. I don’t know what the rest of his customers ate, but there was meat in my pasty. I’m pretty sure the other diners got a filling of lentils and rice; which, with the sauce it was cooked with, would have been very good.
Two of those eating turned out to be gardeners who’d helped plant the new lemon tree. I treated them to an extra glass each and said, “Do you fellows have to tend the tree now that it’s in the ground?”
“Naw,” said Omar, the senior man. “The girls’re going to do that, Setne says.”
The other man, Carlo, said, “Setne’s our foreman. Which means he sits on his butt in the shade and watches us work.”
Omar said, “Well, I guess they can pour a bucket of water on it every day. And when it sets fruit, they can pick it.”
We chatted a little longer, then went upstairs. Abram hadn’t said anything during the meal, but his very silence showed that he was worried. Normally after a couple glasses of wine, he’d be chattering like a magpie.
* * *
When I got to the console, the first thing I did was enter the day’s invoices. They included the order from Roussel, who specialized in exotic items. These generally had to be ordered and bought from off planet and imported through Eski Marakech, which added several levels of delay and expense to the process.
I’d noticed a repeated order for Saguntine pepper sauce for the Wives’ Wing. The only person from Saguntum in that wing was Monica Smith. Supposedly Saguntum was covered by treaty with ben Yusuf, so there shouldn’t have been any Saguntines in the palace except by their own will.
Monica was certainly not here by her own will.
I checked the camera in her room. She wasn’t present, but in the corner of her bed was the box which had contained the sauces. It sat upended to display the bottom. On the fiberboard was printed the word YES in large black letters. As best as I could tell on the screen, she’d written with kohl eyeliner and a brush.
I switched to one of the pair of cameras on the wives’ garden. Three of the wives sat on the shaded side. A pair of female servants served them cool drinks, and a eunuch waved a feather fan without enthusiasm in front of Derega—a local wife, but very delicate in her tastes.
Monica sat against the opposite wall, reading. She was backed deep into the plantings there, though they included hollies with prickly leaves. The foliage protected all but her lower legs from the sun; she was wearing loose trousers and slippers with long stockings.
Her head was within six inches of the door to the tunnel by which the tree had been brought in.
I took a deep breath. This might work or it might not, but it was as good a time as any. I unlocked the electronic bolts, then got up and said to Abram, “You might want to stay here. Or go someplace else with lots of witnesses.”
“I’ll come along,” he said with a sour expression. “For a smart man, Roy, you act like a bloody fool sometimes.”
I didn’t argue with him.
I took the pry bar, which I didn’t expect to need, and a screwdriver which I did. I don’t know what Abram had besides the knife, but he laid that open in his lap as he squatted beside the alley door.
“I’ll tap when I’m ready to come out,” I said with my hand on the strap handle. “If somebody’s in the alley, you ring something metal on the panel and I wait.”
“What if it’s the Admiral’s soldiers and they want in?” Abram said. I don’t think he was really worried about that, but he was in a sour mood and determined to put a dark wash on everything.
“Let them try,” I said, shrugging. “There’s a sliding bolt on my side.”
Of course, in that case I’d have to leave through the Wives’ Wing. I just might be able to make it alive, but I had no way of getting out of Salaam, let alone off planet.
There was no one in the alley. I pulled the door open with my left hand. It was a strain, but the penetrating oil had worked. The bar was in my right hand, but that was partly in case somebody was waiting in the passage—which of course there wasn’t. I closed the massive panel behind me; and because Abram had made a point about it, I shot the sliding bolt.
The passage was unlighted. I hadn’t brought a light with me because the passage was straight and the walls were smooth. I shuffled ahead with my left fingertips on the wall and the bar outstretched in front of me like a steel cane. It touched the interior door with a faint chink.
I set the bar down and felt for the view panel, suddenly wishing I’d brought a light aft
er all. There was a slot-head screw in each corner of the cover plate. I’d lubed each of them on my first visit to the passage, but I hadn’t come back to open them.
I fitted the screwdriver, gripped the handle with both hands, and leaned against the butt to keep it in contact. To my great relief, the first three cracked free when I turned them out.
When I started to turn the last one, the plate itself swung down as the screwhead loosened. The screech of rusted metal probably wasn’t loud anywhere but in the sealed passage, but despite my startlement I was also relieved that I’d been able to open the thing. I hadn’t really been sure until it happened.
“Are you there?” a girl asked from the other side of the heavy screen. “Can you get me out of here? I can pay well!”
“I’m here,” I said, looking out at the back of a blond head. “But getting you out is going to take a while. I plan to do it.”
“Can you watch for anyone coming up behind me?” the woman said. She got up and turned her wicker chair around, then sat down again facing where I stood. Her lips were farther away, but I could see them—which really would help me understand her words.
“Who are you?” Monica said. “And how were you able to send me a message in the package of hot sauce?”
“Look, I’m a friend,” I said. “And I want to get you out of here, but it takes planning.”
I was afraid to tell her my name. I didn’t know whether she was the sort to blurt things to friends or scream threats to an enemy; and anyway, it wouldn’t help her to know.
From what I’d seen from the cameras, Monica was about as solid as I could wish for. I was still afraid.
The note was simple enough. I had gone to Roussel with the latest specialty order and told him to place it under the four bottles of Saguntine pepper sauce. If he did so without opening it, there would be a hundred piasters cash as soon as I was sure.
The note said:
If you want to get out, write YES on a card and place it where the camera in your room can see it. Then sit in the garden near the door through which the lemon tree came in. It may take some days for me to respond.