Ben Wrail was taking things easy.
Stretched out in his chair, with his cigar lit and
burning satisfactorily, he listened to a radio program
broadcast from Earth.
Through the window beside him, he
could look out of his skyscraper apartment over the
domed city of Ranthoor. Looming in the sky, slightly
distorted by the heavy quartz of the distant dome,
was massive Jupiter, a scarlet ball tinged with orange
and yellow. Overwhelmingly luminous, monstrously
large, it filled a large portion of the visible sky,
a sight that brought millions of tourists to the Jovian
moons each year, a sight that even the old-timers
still must stare at, drawn by some unfathomable fascination.
Ben Wrail stared at it now, puffing
at his cigar, listening to the radio. An awe-inspiring
thing, a looming planet that seemed almost ready to
topple and crash upon this airless, frigid world.
Wrail was an old-timer. For thirty
years Earth years he had made
his home in Ranthoor. He had seen the city grow
from a dinky little mining camp enclosed by a small
dome to one that boasted half a million population.
The dome that now covered the city was the fourth one.
Four times, like the nautilus, the city had outgrown
its shell, until today it was the greatest domed city
in the Solar System. Where life had once been
cheap and where the scum of the system had held rendezvous,
he had seen Ranthoor grow into a city of dignity,
capital of the Jovian confederacy.
He had helped build that confederacy,
had been elected a member of the constitution commission,
had helped create the government and for over a decade
had helped to make its laws.
But now ... Ben Wrail spat angrily
and stuffed the cigar back in his mouth again, taking
a fresh and fearsome grip. Now everything had
changed. The Jovian worlds today were held in
bond by Spencer Chambers. The government was
in the hands of his henchmen. Duly elected, of
course, but in an election held under the unspoken
threat that Interplanetary Power would withdraw, leaving
the moons circling the great planet without heat,
air, energy. For the worlds of the Jovian confederacy,
every single one of them, depended for their life upon
the accumulators freighted outward from the Sun.
Talk of revolt was in the air, but,
lacking a leader, it would get nowhere. John
Moore Mallory was imprisoned on one of the prison
spaceships that plied through the Solar System.
Mallory, months ago, had been secretly transferred
from the Callisto prison to the spaceship, but in
a week’s time the secret had been spread in angry
whispers. If there had been riots and bloodshed,
they would have been to no purpose. For revolution,
even if successful, would gain nothing. It would
merely goad Interplanetary Power into withdrawing,
refusing to service the domed cities on the moons.
Ben Wrail stirred restlessly in his
chair. The cigar had gone out. The radio
program blared unheard. His eyes still looked
out the window without seeing Jupiter.
“Damn,” said Ben Wrail.
Why did he have to go and spoil an evening thinking
about this damned political situation? Despite
his part in the building of the confederacy, he was
a businessman, not a politician. Still, it hurt
to see something torn down that he had helped to build,
though he knew that every pioneering strike in history
had been taken over by shrewd, ruthless, powerful
operators. Knowing that should have helped, but
it didn’t. He and the other Jovian pioneers
had hoped it wouldn’t happen and, of course,
it had.
“Ben Wrail,” said a voice in the room.
Wrail swung around, away from the window.
“Manning!” he yelled,
and the man in the center of the room grinned bleakly
at him. “How did you come in without me
hearing you? When did you get here?”
“I’m not here,” said Greg.
“I’m back on Earth.”
“You’re what?” asked
Wrail blankly. “That’s a pretty silly
statement, isn’t it, Manning? Or did you
decide to loosen up and pull a gag now and then?”
“I mean it,” said Manning.
“This is just an image of me. My body is
back on Earth.”
“You mean you’re dead? You’re
a ghost?”
The grin widened, but the face was bleak as ever.
“No, Ben, I’m just alive
as you are. Let me explain. This is a television
image of me. Three-dimensional television.
I can travel anywhere like this.”
Wrail sat down in the chair again.
“I don’t suppose there’d be any use
trying to shake hands with you.”
“No use,” agreed Manning’s image.
“There isn’t any hand.”
“Nor asking you to have a chair?”
Manning shook his head.
“Anyhow,” said Wrail,
“I’m damn glad to see you or
think I see you. I don’t know which.
Figure you can stay and talk with me a while?”
“Certainly,” said Manning.
“That is what I came for. I want to ask
your help.”
“Listen,” declared Wrail,
“you can’t be on Earth, Manning. I
say something to you and you answer right back.
That isn’t possible. You can’t hear
anything I say until 45 minutes after I say it, and
then I’d have to wait another 45 minutes to
hear your answer.”
“That’s right,”
agreed the image, “if you insist upon talking
about the velocity of light. We have something
better than that.”
“We?”
“Russell Page and myself.
We have a two-way television apparatus that works
almost instantaneously. To all purposes, so far
as the distance between Earth and Callisto is concerned,
it is instantaneous.”
Wrail’s jaw fell. “Well,
I be damned. What have you two fellows been up
to now?”
“A lot,” said Manning
laconically. “For one thing we are out to
bust Interplanetary Power. Bust them wide open.
Hear that, Wrail?”
Wrail stared in stupefaction.
“Sure, I hear. But I can’t believe
it.”
“All right then,” said
Manning grimly, “we’ll give you proof.
What could you do, Ben, if we told you what was happening
on the stock market in New York ... without you
having to wait the 45 minutes it takes the quotations
to get here?”
Wrail sprang to his feet. “What
could I do? Why, I could run the pants off every
trader in the exchange! I could make a billion
a minute!” He stopped and looked at the image.
“But this isn’t like you. This isn’t
the way you’d do things.”
“I don’t want you to hurt
anyone but Chambers,” said Manning. “If
somebody else gets in the way, of course they have
to take the rap along with him. But I do want
to give Chambers a licking. That’s what
I came here to see you about.”
“By Heaven, Greg, I’ll
do it,” said Wrail. He stepped quickly forward,
held out his hand to close the deal, and encountered
only air.
Manning’s image threw back its head and laughed.
“That’s your proof, Ben. Good enough?”
“I’ll say it is,”
said Wrail shakily, looking down at the solid-seeming
hand that his own had gone right through.
November 6, 2153, was a day long remembered
in financial circles throughout the Solar System.
The Ranthoor market opened easy with little activity.
Then a few stocks made fractional gains. Mining
dropped fractionally. Martian Irrigation still
was unexplainably low, as was Pluto Chemical and Asteroid
Mining.
Trading through two brokers, Ben Wrail
bought 10,000 shares of Venus Farms, Inc. when the
market opened at 83-1/2. A few minutes later they
bought 10,000 shares of Spacesuits Ltd. at 106-1/4.
The farm stocks dropped off a point. Spacesuits
gained a point. Then suddenly both rose.
In the second hour of trading the Venus stocks had
boomed a full five points and Wrail sold. Ten
minutes later they sagged. At the end of the
day they were off two points from the opening.
In late afternoon Wrail threw his 10,000 shares of
Spacesuits on the market, sold them at an even 110.
Before the close they had dropped back with a gain
of only half a point over the opening.
Those were only two transactions.
There were others. Spaceship Fabrication climbed
three points before it fell and Wrail cashed in on
that. Mercury Metals rose two points and crashed
back to close with a full point loss. Wrail sold
just before the break. He had realized a cool
half million in the day’s trade.
The next day it was a million and
then the man who had always been a safe trader, who
had always played the conservative side of the market,
apparently sure of his ground now, plunged deeper and
deeper. It was uncanny. Wrail knew when
to buy and when to sell. Other traders watched
closely, followed his lead. He threw them off
by using different brokers to disguise his transactions.
Hectic day followed hectic day.
Ben Wrail did not appear on the floor. Calls
to his office netted exactly nothing. Mr. Wrail
was not in. So sorry.
His brokers, well paid, were close-mouthed.
They bought and sold. That was all.
Seated in his office, Ben Wrail was
busy watching two television screens before him.
One showed the board in the New York exchange.
In the other was the image of Gregory Manning, hunched
in a chair in Page’s mountain laboratory back
on Earth. And before Greg likewise were two screens,
one showing the New York exchange board, the other
trained on Ben Wrail’s office.
“That Tourist stuff looks good,”
said Greg. “Why not buy a block of it?
I happen to know that Chambers owns a few shares.
He’ll be dabbling in it.”
Ben Wrail grinned. “It’s
made a couple of points, hasn’t it? It’s
selling here for 60 right now. In 45 minutes it’ll
be quoted at 62.”
He picked up a telephone. “Buy
all you can of Tourist,” he said. “Right
away. I’ll tell you when to sell. Get
rid of whatever you have in Titan Copper at 10:30.”
“Better let go of your holdings
of Ranthoor Dome,” suggested Greg. “It’s
beginning to slip.”
“I’ll watch it,” promised Ben.
“It may revive.”
They lapsed into silence, watching the board in New
York.
“You know, Greg,” said
Ben finally, “I really didn’t believe all
this was true until I saw those credit certificates
materialize on my desk.”
“Simple,” grunted Greg.
“This thing we’ve got can take anything
any place. I could reach out there, grab you
up and have you down here in a split second.”
Ben sucked his breath in between his
teeth. “I’m not doubting anything
any more. You sent me half a billion two days
ago. It’s more than doubled now.”
He picked up the phone again and spoke
to his broker on the other end.
“Unload Ranthoor Dome when she reaches 79.”
The real furor came on the Ranthoor
floor when Wrail cornered Titan Copper. Striking
swiftly, he purchased the stock in huge blocks.
The shares rocketed as the exchanges throughout the
System were thrown into an uproar. Under the
cover of the excitement he proceeded to corner Spacesuits
Ltd. Spacesuits zoomed.
For two days the main exchanges on
four worlds were in a frenzy as traders watched the
shares climb swiftly. Operators representing
Interplanetary Power made offerings. No takers
were reported. The shares climbed.
Within one hour, however, the entire
Wrail holdings in both stocks were dumped on the market.
The Interplanetary Power traders, frantic over the
prospect of losing control of the two important issues,
bought heavily. The price plummeted.
Spencer Chambers lost three billion
or more on the deal. Overnight Ben Wrail had
become a billionaire many times over. Greg Manning
added to his own fortune.
“We have enough,” said
Greg. “We’ve given Chambers what he
had coming to him. Let’s call it off.”
“Glad to,” agreed Ben. “It
was just too damned easy.”
“Be seeing you, Ben.”
“I’ll get down to Earth
some day. Come see me when you have a minute.
Drop in for an evening.”
“That’s an invitation,”
said Greg. “It’s easy with this three-dimension
stuff.”
He reached out a hand, snapped a control.
The screens in Wrail’s office went dead.
Wrail reached for a cigar, lit it
carefully. He leaned back in his chair, put his
feet on the desk.
“By Heaven,” he said satisfiedly,
“I’ve never enjoyed anything so much in
all my life.”