Banners ushered them quickly through the bustling CoDominium Marine barracks, past bored guards who half-saluted the Presidential Guard uniform. The Marine fortress was a blur of activity, every open space crammed with packs and weapons; the signs of a military force about to move on to another station.
As they were leaving the building, Falkenberg saw an elderly Naval officer. “Excuse me a moment, Banners.” He turned to the CoDominium Navy captain. “They sent someone for me. Thanks, Ed.”
“No problem. I’ll report your arrival to the Admiral. He wants to keep track of you. Unofficially, of course. Good luck, John. God knows you need some right now. It was a rotten deal.”
“It’s the way it goes.”
“Yeah, but the Fleet used to take better care of its own than that. I’m beginning to wonder if anyone is safe. Damn Senator-“
“Forget it,” Falkenberg interrupted. He glanced back to be sure Lieutenant Banners was out of earshot. “Pay my respects to the rest of your officers. You run a good ship.”
The captain smiled thinly. “Thanks. From you that’s quite a compliment.” He held out his hand and gripped John’s firmly. “Look, we pull out in a couple of days, no more than that. If you need a ride on somewhere I can arrange it. The goddam Senate won’t have to know. We can fix you a hitch to anywhere in CD territory.”
“Thanks, but I guess I’ll stay.”
“Could be rough here,” the captain said.
“And it won’t be everywhere else in the CoDominium?” Falkenberg asked. “Thanks again, Ed.” He gave a half-salute and checked himself.
Banners and Calvin were waiting for him, and Falkenberg turned away. Calvin lifted three personal effects bags as if they were empty and pushed the door open in a smooth motion. The CD captain watched until they had left the building, but Falkenberg did not look back.
“Damn them,” the captain muttered. “Damn the lot of them.”
“The car’s here.” Banners opened the rear door of a battered ground effects vehicle of no discoverable make. It had been cannibalized from a dozen other machines, and some parts were obviously cut-and-try jobs done by an uncertain machinist. Banners climbed into the driver’s seat and started the engine. It coughed twice, then ran smoothly, and they drove away in a cloud of black smoke.
They drove past another dock where a landing craft with wings as large as the entire Marine landing boat was unloading an endless stream of civilian passengers. Children screamed, and long lines of men and women stared about uncertainly until they were ungently hustled along by guards in uniforms matching Banners’. The sour smell of unwashed humanity mingled with the crisp clean salt air from the ocean beyond. Banners rolled up the windows with an expression of distaste.
“Always like that,” Calvin commented to no one in particular. “Water discipline in them CoDominium prison ships bein’ what it is, takes weeks dirtside to get clean again.”
“Have you ever been in one of those ships?” Banners asked.
“No, sir,” Calvin replied. “Been in Marine assault boats just about as bad, I reckon. But I can’t say I fancy being stuffed into no cubicle with ten, fifteen thousand civilians for six months.”
“We may all see the inside of one of those,” Falkenberg said. “And be glad of the chance. Tell me about the situation here, Banners.”
“I don’t even know where to start, sir,” the lieutenant answered. “I-do you know about Hadley?”.
“Assume I don’t,” Falkenberg said. May as well see what kind of estimate of the situation the President’s officers can make, he thought. He could feel the Fleet Intelligence report bulging in an inner pocket of his tunic, but those reports always left out important details; and the attitudes of the Presidential Guard could be important to his plans.
“Yes, sir. Well, to begin with, we’re a long way from the nearest shipping lanes-but I guess you knew that. The only real reason we had any merchant trade was the mines. Thorium, richest veins known anywhere for a while, until they started to run out.
“For the first few years that’s all we had. The mines are up in the hills, about eighty miles over that way.” He pointed to a thin blue line just visible at the horizon.
“Must be pretty high mountains,” Falkenberg said. “What’s the diameter of Hadley? About eighty percent of Earth? Something like that. The horizon ought to be pretty close.”
“Yes, sir. They are high mountains. Hadley is small, but we’ve got bigger and better everything here.” There was pride in the young officer’s voice.
“Them bags seem pretty heavy for a planet this small,” Calvin said.
“Hadley’s very dense,” Banners answered. “Gravity nearly ninety percent standard. Anyway, the mines are over there, and they have their own spaceport at a lake nearby. Refuge-that’s this city-was founded by the American Express Company. They brought in the first colonists, quite a lot of them.”
“Volunteers?” Falkenberg asked.
“Yes. All volunteers. The usual misfits. I suppose my father was typical enough, an engineer who couldn’t keep up with the rat race and was tired of Bureau of Technology restrictions on what he could learn. They were the first wave, and they took the best land. They founded the city and got an economy going. American Express was paid back all advances within twenty years.” Banners’ pride was evident, and Falkenberg knew it had been a difficult job.
“That was, what, fifty years ago?” Falkenberg asked.
“Yes.”
They were driving through crowded streets lined with wooden houses and a few stone buildings. There were rooming houses, bars, sailors’ brothels, all the usual establishments of a dock street, but there were no other cars on the road. Instead the traffic was all horses and oxen pulling carts, bicycles, and pedestrians.
The sky above Refuge was clear. There was no trace of smog or industrial wastes. Out in the harbor tugboats moved with the silent efficiency of electric power, and there were also wind-driven sailing ships, lobster boats powered by oars, even a topsail schooner lovely against clean blue water. She threw up white spume as she raced out to sea. A three-masted, full-rigged ship was drawn up to a wharf where men loaded her by hand with huge bales of what might have been cotton.
They passed a wagonload of melons. A gaily dressed young couple waved cheerfully at them, then the man snapped a long whip at the team of horses that pulled their wagon. Falkenberg studied the primitive scene and said, “It doesn’t look like you’ve been here fifty years.”
“No.” Banners gave them a bitter look. Then he swerved to avoid a group of shapeless teenagers lounging in the dockside street. He had to swerve again to avoid the barricade of paving stones that they had masked. The car jounced wildly. Banners gunned it to lift it higher and headed for a low place in the barricade. It scraped as it went over the top, then he accelerated away.
Falkenberg took his hand from inside his shirt jacket. Behind him Calvin was inspecting a submachine gun that had appeared from the oversized barracks bag he’d brought into the car with him. When Banners said nothing about the incident, Falkenberg frowned and leaned back in his seat, listening. The Intelligence reports mentioned lawlessness, but this was as bad as a Welfare Island on Earth.
“No, we’re not much industrialized,” Banners continued. “At first there wasn’t any need to develop basic industries. The mines made everyone rich, so we imported everything we needed. The farmers sold fresh produce to the miners, for enormous prices. Refuge was a service industry town. People who worked here could soon afford farm animals, and they scattered out across the plains and into the forests.”
Falkenberg nodded. “Many of them wouldn’t care for cities.”
“Precisely. They didn’t want industry, they’d come here to escape it.” Banners drove in silence for a moment. “Then some blasted CoDominium bureaucrat read the ecology reports about Hadley. The Population Control Bureau in Washington decided this was a perfect place for involuntary colonization. The ships were comin
g here for the thorium anyway, so instead of luxuries and machinery they were ordered to carry convicts. Hundreds of thousands of them, Colonel Falkenberg. For the last ten years there have been better than fifty thousand people a year dumped in on us.”
“And you couldn’t support them all,” Falkenberg said gently.
“No, sir.” Banners’ face tightened. He seemed to be fighting tears. “God knows we try. Every erg the fusion generators can make goes into converting petroleum into basic protocarb just to feed them. But they’re not like the original colonists! They don’t know anything, they won’t do anything! Oh, not really, of course. Some of them work. Some of our best citizens are transportees. But there are so many of the other kind.”
“Why’n’t you tell ‘em to work or starve?” Calvin asked bluntly. Falkenberg gave him a cold look, and the sergeant nodded slightly and sank back into his seat. “Because the CD wouldn’t let us!” Banners shouted. “Damn it, we didn’t have self-government. The CD Bureau of Relocation people told us what to do. They ran everything ...”
“We know,” Falkenberg said gently. “We’ve seen the results of Humanity League influence over BuRelock. My sergeant major wasn’t asking you a question, he was expressing an opinion. Nevertheless, I am surprised. I would have thought your farms could support the urban population.”
“They should be able to, sir.” Banners drove in grim silence for a long minute. “But there’s no transportation. The people are here, and most of the agricultural land is five hundred miles inland. There’s arable land closer, but it isn’t cleared. Our settlers wanted to get away from Refuge and BuRelock. We have a railroad, but bandit gangs keep blowing it up. We can’t rely on Hadley’s produce to keep Refuge alive. There are a million people on Hadley, and half of them are crammed into this one ungovernable city.’
They were approaching an enormous bowl-shaped structure attached to a massive square stone fortress. Falkenberg studied the buildings carefully, then asked what they were.
“Our stadium,” Banners replied. There was no pride in his voice now. “The CD built it for us. We’d rather have had a new fusion plant, but we got a stadium that can hold a hundred thousand people.”
“Built by the GLC Construction and Development Company, I presume,” Falkenberg said.
“Yes ... how did you know?”
“I think I saw it somewhere.” He hadn’t, but it was an easy guess: GLC was owned by a holding company that was in turn owned by the Bronson family. It was easy enough to understand why aid sent by the CD Grand Senate would end up used for something GLC might participate in.
“We have very fine sports teams and racehorses,” Banners said bitterly. “The building next to it is the Presidential Palace. Its architecture is quite functional.” The Palace loomed up before them, squat and massive; it looked more fortress than capital building. The city was more thickly populated as they approached the Palace. The buildings here were mostly stone and poured concrete instead of wood. Few were more than three stories high, so that Refuge sprawled far along the shore. The population density increased rapidly beyond the stadium-palace complex. Banners was watchful as he drove along the wide streets, but he seemed less nervous than he had been at dockside.
Refuge was a city of contrasts. The streets were straight and wide, and there was evidently a good waste-disposal system, but the lower floors of the buildings were open shops, and the sidewalks were clogged with market stalls. Clouds of pedestrians moved through the kiosks and shops.
There was still no motor traffic and no moving ped-ways. Horse troughs and hitching posts had been constructed at frequent intervals along with starkly functional street lights and water distribution towers. The few signs of technology contrasted strongly with the general primitive air of the city.
A contingent of uniformed men thrust their way through the crowd at a street crossing. Falkenberg looked at them closely, then at Banners. “Your troops?”
“No, sir. That’s the livery of Glenn Foster’s household. Officially they’re unorganized reserves of the President’s Guard, but they’re household troops all the same.” Banners laughed bitterly. “Sounds like something out of a history book, doesn’t it? We’re nearly back to feudalism, Colonel Falkenberg. Anyone rich enough keeps hired bodyguards. They have to. The criminal gangs are so strong the police don’t try to catch anyone under organized protection, and the judges wouldn’t punish them if they were caught.”
“And the private bodyguards become gangs in their own right, I suppose,”
Banners looked at him sharply. “Yes, sir. Have you seen it before?”
“Yes. I’ve seen it before.” Banners was unable to make out the expression on Falkenberg’s lips.
VI
They drove into the Presidential Palace and received the salutes of the blue uniformed troopers. Falkenberg noted the polished weapons and precise drill of the Presidential Guard. There were well-trained men on duty here, but the unit was small. Falkenberg wondered if they could fight as well as stand guard. They were local citizens, loyal to Hadley, and would be unlike the CoDominium Marines he was accustomed to.
He was conducted through a series of rooms in the stone fortress. Each had heavy metal doors, and several were guardrooms. Falkenberg saw no signs of government activity until they had passed through the outer layers of the enormous palace into an open courtyard, and through that to an inner building.
Here there was plenty of activity. Clerks bustled through the halls, and girls in the draped togas fashionable years before on Earth sat at desks in offices. Most seemed to be packing desk contents into boxes, and other people scurried through the corridors. Some offices were empty, their desks covered with fine dust, and there were plasti-board moving boxes stacked outside them.
There were two anterooms to the President’s office. President Budreau was a tall, thin man with a red pencil mustache and quick gestures. As they were ushered into the overly ornate room the President looked up from a sheaf of papers, but his eyes did not focus immediately on his visitors. His face was a mask of worry and concentration.
“Colonel John Christian Falkenberg, sir,” Lieutenant Banners said. “And Sergeant Major Calvin.”
Budreau got to his feet. “Pleased to see you, Falkenberg.” His expression told them differently; he looked at his visitors with faint distaste and motioned Banners out of the room. When the door closed he asked, “How many men did you bring with you?”
“Ten, Mr. President. All we could bring aboard the carrier without arousing suspicion. We were lucky to get that many. The Grand Senate had an inspector at theloading docks to check for violation of the anti-mercenary codes. If we hadn’t bribed a port official to distract him we wouldn’t be here at all. Calvin and I would be on Tanith as involuntary colonists.”
“I see.” From his expression he wasn’t surprised. John thought Budreau would have been more pleased if the inspector had caught them. The President tapped the desk nervously. “Perhaps that will be enough. I understand the ship you came with also brought the Marines who have volunteered to settle on Hadley. They should provide the nucleus of an excellent constabulary. Good troops?”
“It was a demobilized battalion,” Falkenberg replied. “Those are the troops the CD didn’t want anymore. Could be the scrapings of every guardhouse on twenty planets. We’ll be lucky if there’s a real trooper in the lot.”
Budreau’s face relaxed into its former mask of depression. Hope visibly drained from him.
“Surely you have troops of your own,” Falkenberg said.
Budreau picked up a sheaf of papers. “It’s all here. I was just looking it over when you came in.” He handed the report to Falkenberg. “There’s little encouragement in it, Colonel. I have never thought there was any military solution to Hadley’s problems, and this confirms that fear. If you have only ten men plus a battalion of forced-labor Marines, the military answer isn’t even worth considering.”
Budreau returned to his seat.
His hands moved restlessly over the sea of papers on his desk. “If I were you, Falkenberg, I’d get back on that Navy boat and forget Hadley.”
“Why don’t you?”
“Because Hadley’s my home! No rabble is going to drive me off the plantation my grandfather built with his own hands. They will not make me run out.” Budreau clasped his hands together until the knuckles were white with the strain, but when he spoke again his voice was calm. “You have no stake here. I do.”
Falkenberg took the report from the desk and leafed through the pages before handing it to Calvin. “We’ve come a long way, Mr. President. You may as well tell me what the problem is before I leave.”
Budreau nodded sourly. The red mustache twitched and he ran the back of his hand across it. “It’s simple enough. The ostensible reason you’re here, the reason we gave the Colonial Office for letting us recruit a planetary constabulary, is the bandit gangs out in the hills. No one knows how many of them there are, but they are strong enough to raid farms. They also cut communications between Refuge and the countryside whenever they want to.”
“Yes.” Falkenberg stood in front of the desk because he hadn’t been invited to sit. If that bothered him it did not show. “Guerrilla gangsters have no real chance if they’ve no political base.”
Budreau nodded. “But, as I am sure Vice President Bradford told you, they are not the real problem.” The President’s voice was strong, but there was a querulous note in it, as if he was accustomed to having his conclusions argued against and was waiting for Falkenberg to begin. “Actually, we could live with the bandits, but they get political support from the Freedom Party. My Progressive Party is larger than the Freedom Party, but the Progressives are scattered all over the planet. The FP is concentrated right here in Refuge, and they have God knows how many voters and about forty thousand loyalists they can concentrate whenever they want to stage a riot.”
The Mercenary Page 6