The death-watch outside had grown
to about fifteen or twenty. They were all waiting
in happy anticipation as I came out of the Secretary’s
office.
“What did he do to you, Silk?”
Courtlant Staynes asked, amusedly.
“Demoted me. Kicked me
off the Hooligan Diplomats,” I said glumly.
“Demoted you from the Consular
Service?” Staynes asked scornfully. “Impossible!”
“Yes. He demoted me to
the Cookie Pushers. Clear down to Ambassador.”
They got a terrific laugh. I
went out, wondering what sort of noises they’d
make, the next morning, when the appointments sheet
was posted.
I gathered a few things together,
mostly small personal items, and all the microfilms
that I could find on New Texas, then got aboard the
Space Navy cutter that was waiting to take me to the
ship. It was a four-hour trip and I put in the
time going over my hastily-assembled microfilm library
and using a stenophone to dictate a reading list for
the spacetrip.
As I rolled up the stenophone-tape,
I wondered what sort of secretary they had given me;
and, in passing, why Natalenko’s department had
furnished him.
Hoddy Ringo....
Queer name, but in a galactic civilization,
you find all sorts of names and all sorts of people
bearing them, so I was prepared for anything.
And I found it.
I found him standing with the ship’s
captain, inside the airlock, when I boarded the big,
spherical space-liner. A tubby little man, with
shoulders and arms he had never developed doing secretarial
work, and a good-natured, not particularly intelligent
face.
See the happy moron, he doesn’t give a damn,
I thought.
Then I took a second look at him.
He might be happy, but he wasn’t a moron.
He just looked like one. Natalenko’s people
often did, as one of their professional assets.
I also noticed that he had a bulge
under his left armpit the size of an eleven-mm army
automatic.
He was, I’d been told, a native
of New Texas. I gathered, after talking with
him for a while, that he had been away from his home
planet for over five years, was glad to be going back,
and especially glad that he was going back under the
protection of Solar League diplomatic immunity.
In fact, I rather got the impression
that, without such protection, he wouldn’t have
been going back at all.
I made another discovery. My
personal secretary, it seemed, couldn’t read
stenotype. I found that out when I gave him the
tape I’d dictated aboard the cutter, to transcribe
for me.
“Gosh, boss. I can’t
make anything out of this stuff,” he confessed,
looking at the combination shorthand-Braille that my
voice had put onto the tape.
“Well, then, put it in a player
and transcribe it by ear,” I told him.
He didn’t seem to realize that that could be
done.
“How did you come to be sent
as my secretary, if you can’t do secretarial
work?” I wanted to know.
He got out a bag of tobacco and a
book of papers and began rolling a cigarette, with
one hand.
“Why, shucks, boss, nobody seemed
to think I’d have to do this kinda work,”
he said. “I was just sent along to show
you the way around New Texas, and see you don’t
get inta no trouble.”
He got his handmade cigarette drawing,
and hitched the strap that went across his back and
looped under his right arm. “A guy that
don’t know the way around can get inta a lotta
trouble on New Texas. If you call gettin’
killed trouble.”
So he was a bodyguard ... and I wondered
what else he was. One thing, it would take him
forty-two years to send a radio message back to Luna,
and I could keep track of any other messages he sent,
in letters or on tape, by ships. In the end,
I transcribed my own tape, and settled down to laying
out my three weeks’ study-course on my new post.
I found, however, that the whole thing
could be learned in a few hours. The rest of
what I had was duplication, some of it contradictory,
and it all boiled down to this:
Capella IV had been settled during
the first wave of extrasolar colonization, after the
Fourth World or First Interplanetary War.
Some time around 2100. The settlers had come from
a place in North America called Texas, one of the
old United States. They had a lengthy history independent
republic, admission to the United States, secession
from the United States, reconquest by the United States,
and general intransigence under the United States,
the United Nations and the Solar League. When
the laws of non-Einsteinian physics were discovered
and the hyperspace-drive was developed, practically
the entire population of Texas had taken to space
to find a new home and independence from everybody.
They had found Capella IV, a Terra-type
planet, with a slightly higher mean temperature, a
lower mass and lower gravitational field, about one-quarter
water and three-quarters land-surface, at a stage of
evolutionary development approximately that of Terra
during the late Pliocene. They also found supercow,
a big mammal looking like the unsuccessful attempt
of a hippopotamus to impersonate a dachshund and about
the size of a nuclear-steam locomotive. On New
Texas’ plains, there were billions of them;
their meat was fit for the gods of Olympus. So
New Texas had become the meat-supplier to the galaxy.
There was very little in any of the
microfilm-books about the politics of New Texas and
such as it was, it was very scornful. There were
such expressions as ‘anarchy tempered by assassination,’
and ’grotesque parody of democracy.’
There would, I assumed, be more exact
information in the material which had been shoved
into my hand just before boarding the cutter from Luna,
in a package labeled TOP SECRET: TO BE OPENED
ONLY IN SPACE, AFTER THE FIRST HYPERJUMP. There
was also a big trunk that had been placed in my suite,
sealed and bearing the same instructions.
I got Hoddy out of the suite as soon
as the ship had passed out of the normal space-time
continuum, locked the door of my cabin and opened the
parcel.
It contained only two loose-leaf notebooks,
both labeled with the Solar League and Department
seals, both adorned with the customary bloodthirsty
threats against the unauthorized and the indiscreet.
They were numbered ONE and TWO.
ONE contained four pages. On the first,
I read:
FINAL MESSAGE
OF THE FIRST SOLAR LEAGUE AMBASSADOR
TO
NEW TEXAS
ANDREW JACKSON HICKOCK
I agree with none of the so-called
information about this planet on file with the State
Department on Luna. The people of New Texas are
certainly not uncouth barbarians. Their manners
and customs, while lively and unconventional, are
most charming. Their dress is graceful and practical,
not grotesque; their soft speech is pleasing to the
ear. Their flag is the original flag of the Republic
of Texas; it is definitely not a barbaric travesty
of our own emblem. And the underlying premises
of their political system should, as far as possible,
be incorporated into the organization of the Solar
League. Here politics is an exciting and exacting
game, in which only the true representative of all
the people can survive.
DEPARTMENT ADDENDUM
After five years on New Texas,
Andrew Jackson Hickock resigned, married a daughter
of a local rancher and became a naturalized citizen
of that planet. He is still active in politics
there, often in opposition to Solar League policies.
That didn’t sound like too bad
an advertisement for the planet. I was even feeling
cheerful when I turned to the next page, and:
FINAL MESSAGE
OF THE SECOND SOLAR LEAGUE
AMBASSADOR TO
NEW TEXAS
CYRIL GODWINSON
Yes and no; perhaps and perhaps
not; pardon me; I agree with everything you say.
Yes and no; perhaps and perhaps not; pardon me; I agree...
DEPARTMENT ADDENDUM
After seven years on New Texas,
Ambassador Godwinson was recalled; adjudged hopelessly
insane.
And then:
FINAL MESSAGE
OF THE THIRD SOLAR LEAGUE
AMBASSADOR TO NEW TEXAS
R. F. GULLIS
I find it very pleasant to inform
you that when you are reading this, I will be dead.
DEPARTMENT ADDENDUM
Committed suicide after six months on New Texas.
I turned to the last page cautiously, found:
FINAL MESSAGE
OF THE FOURTH SOLAR LEAGUE
AMBASSADOR TO NEW TEXAS
SILAS CUMSHAW
I came to this planet ten years
ago as a man of pronounced and outspoken convictions.
I have managed to keep myself alive here by becoming
an inoffensive nonentity. If I continue in this
course, it will be only at the cost of my self-respect.
Beginning tonight, I am going to state and maintain
positive opinions on the relation between this planet
and the Solar League.
DEPARTMENT ADDENDUM
Murdered at the home of Andrew J. Hickcock.
And that was the end of the first
notebook. Nice, cheerful reading; complete, solid
briefing.
I was, frankly, almost afraid to open
the second notebook. I hefted it cautiously at
first, saw that it contained only about as many pages
as the first and that those pages were sealed with
a band around them.
I took a quick peek, read the words on the band:
Before reading, open the sealed
trunk which has been included with your luggage.
So I laid aside the book and dragged
out the sealed trunk, hesitated, then opened it.
Nothing shocked me more than to find
the trunk ... full of clothes.
There were four pairs of trousers,
light blue, dark blue, gray and black, with wide cuffs
at the bottoms. There were six or eight shirts,
their colors running the entire spectrum in the most
violent shades. There were a couple of vests.
There were two pairs of short boots with high heels
and fancy leather-working, and a couple of hats with
four-inch brims.
And there was a wide leather belt,
practically a leather corset.
I stared at the belt, wondering if
I was really seeing what was in front of me.
Attached to the belt were a pair of
pistols in right- and left-hand holsters. The
pistols were seven-mm Krupp-Tatta Ultraspeed automatics,
and the holsters were the spring-ejection, quick-draw
holsters which were the secret of the State Department
Special Services.
This must be a mistake, I thought.
I’m an Ambassador now and Ambassadors never
carry weapons.
The sanctity of an Ambassador’s
person not only made the carrying of weapons unnecessary,
so that an armed Ambassador was a contradiction of
diplomatic terms, but it would be an outrageous insult
to the nation to which he had been accredited.
Like taking a poison-taster to a friendly dinner.
Maybe I was supposed to give the belt and the holsters
to Hoddy
Ringo....
So I tore the sealed band off the second notebook
and read through it.
I was to wear the local costume on
New Texas. That was something unusual; even in
the Hooligan Diplomats, we leaned over backward in
wearing Terran costume to distinguish ourselves from
the people among whom we worked.
I was further advised to start wearing
the high boots immediately, on shipboard, to accustom
myself to the heels. These, I was informed, were
traditional. They had served a useful purpose,
in the early days on Terran Texas, when all travel
had been on horseback. On horseless and mechanized
New Texas, they were a useless but venerated part of
the cultural heritage.
There were bits of advice about the
hat, and the trousers, which for some obscure reason
were known as Levis. And I was informed, as an
order, that I was to wear the belt and the pistols
at all times outside the Embassy itself.
That was all of the second notebook.
The two notebooks, plus my conversation with Ghopal,
Klueng and
Natalenko, completed my briefing for my new post.
I slid off my shoes and pulled on
a pair of boots. They fitted perfectly.
Evidently I had been tapped for this job as soon as
word of Silas Cumshaw’s death had reached Luna
and there must have been some fantastic hurrying to
get my outfit ready.
I didn’t like that any too well,
and I liked the order to carry the pistols even less.
Not that I had any objection to carrying weapons,
per se: I had been born and raised on Theta
Virgo IV, where the children aren’t allowed
outside the house unattended until they’ve learned
to shoot.
But I did have strenuous objections
to being sent, virtually ignorant of local customs,
on a mission where I was ordered to commit deliberate
provocation of the local government, immediately on
the heels of my predecessor’s violent death.
The author of Probable Future Courses
of Solar League Diplomacy had recommended the
use of provocation to justify conquest. If the
New Texans murdered two Solar League Ambassadors in
a row, nobody would blame the League for moving in
with a space-fleet and an army....
I was beginning to understand how
Doctor Guillotin must have felt while his neck was
being shoved into his own invention.
I looked again at the notebooks, each
marked in red: Familiarize yourself with contents
and burn or disintegrate.
I’d have to do that, of course.
There were a few non-humans and a lot of non-League
people aboard this ship. I couldn’t let
any of them find out what we considered a full briefing
for a new Ambassador.
So I wrapped them in the original
package and went down to the lower passenger zone,
where I found the ship’s third officer.
I told him that I had some secret diplomatic matter
to be destroyed and he took me to the engine room.
I shoved the package into one of the mass-energy convertors
and watched it resolve itself into its constituent
protons, neutrons and electrons.
On the way back, I stopped in at the ship’s
bar.
Hoddy Ringo was there, wrapped up
in and I use the words literally a
young lady from the Alderbaran system. She was
on her way home from one of the quickie divorce courts
on Terra and was celebrating her marital emancipation.
They were so entangled with each other that they didn’t
notice me. When they left the bar, I slipped after
them until I saw them enter the lady’s stateroom.
That, of course, would have Hoddy immobilized better
word, located for a while. So I went
back to our suite, picked the lock of Hoddy’s
room, and allowed myself half an hour to search his
luggage.
All of his clothes were new, but there
were not a great many of them. Evidently he was
planning to re-outfit himself on New Texas. There
were a few odds and ends, the kind any man with a
real home planet will hold on to, in the luggage.
He had another eleven-mm pistol, made
by Consolidated-Martian Metalworks, mate to the one
he was carrying in a shoulder-holster, and a wide
two-holster belt like the one furnished me, but quite
old.
I greeted the sight and the meaning
of the old holsters with joy: they weren’t
the State Department Special Services type. That
meant that Hoddy was just one of Natalenko’s
run-of-the-gallows cutthroats, not important enough
to be issued the secret equipment.
But I was a little worried over what
I found hidden in the lining of one of his bags, a
letter addressed to Space-Commander Lucius C. Stonehenge,
Aggression Department Attache, New Austin Embassy.
I didn’t have either the time or the equipment
to open it. But, knowing our various Departments,
I tried to reassure myself with the thought that it
was only a letter-of-credence, with the real message
to be delivered orally.
About the real message I had no doubts:
arrange the murder of Ambassador Stephen Silk in
such a way that it looks like another New Texan job....
Starting that evening or
what passed for evening aboard a ship in hyperspace Hoddy
and I began a positively epochal binge together.
I had it figured this way: as
long as we were on board ship, I was perfectly safe.
On the ship, in fact, Hoddy would definitely have given
his life to save mine. I’d have to be killed
on New Texas to give Klueng’s boys their excuse
for moving in.
And there was always the chance, with
no chance too slender for me to ignore, that I might
be able to get Hoddy drunk enough to talk, yet still
be sober enough myself to remember what he said.
Exact times, details, faces, names,
came to me through a sort of hazy blur as Hoddy and
I drank something he called superbourbon a
New Texan drink that Bourbon County, Kentucky, would
never have recognized. They had no corn on New
Texas. This stuff was made out of something called
superyams.
There were at least two things I got
out of the binge. First, I learned to slug down
the national drink without batting an eye. Second,
I learned to control my expression as I uncovered
the fact that everything on New Texas was supersomething.
I was also cautious enough, before
we really got started, to leave my belt and guns with
the purser. I didn’t want Hoddy poking around
those secret holsters. And I remember telling
the captain to radio New Austin as soon as we came
out of our last hyperspace-jump, then to send the
ship’s doctor around to give me my hangover treatments.
But the one thing I wanted to remember,
as the hangover shots brought me back to normal life,
I found was the one thing I couldn’t remember.
What was the name of that girl a big, beautiful
blond who joined the party along with Hoddy’s
grass widow from Alderbaran and stayed with it to the
end?
Damn, I wished I could remember her name!
When we were fifteen thousand miles
off-planet and the lighters from New Austin spaceport
were reported on the way, I got into the skin-tight
Levis, the cataclysmic-colored shirt, and the loose
vest, tucked my big hat under my arm, and went to
the purser’s office for my guns, buckling them
on. When I got back to the suite, Hoddy had put
on his pistols and was practicing quick draws in front
of the mirror. He took one look at my armament
and groaned.
“You’re gonna get yourself
killed for sure, with that rig, an’ them popguns,”
he told me.
“These popguns’ll shoot
harder and make bigger holes than that pair of museum-pieces
you’re carrying,” I replied.
“An’ them holsters!”
Hoddy continued. “Why, it’d take all
day to get your guns outa them! You better let
me find you a real rig, when we get to New Austin....”
There was a chance, of course, that
he knew what I was using and wanted to hide his knowledge.
I doubted that.
“Sure, you State Department
guys always know everything,” he went on.
“Like them microfilm-books you was readin’.
I try to tell you what things is really like on New
Texas, an’ you let it go in one ear an’
out the other.”
Then he wandered off to say good-bye
to the grass widow from Alderbaran, leaving me to
make the last-minute check on the luggage. I was
hoping I’d be able to see that blond ... what
was her name; Gail something-or-other.
Let’s see, she’d been at some Terran university,
and she was on her way home to ... to New Texas!
Of course!
I saw her, half an hour later, in
the crowd around the airlock when the lighters came
alongside, and I tried to push my way toward her.
As I did, the airlock opened, the crowd surged toward
it, and she was carried along. Then the airlock
closed, after she had passed through and before I
could get to it. That meant I’d have to
wait for the second lighter.
So I made the best of it, and spent
the next half-hour watching the disc of the planet
grow into a huge ball that filled the lower half of
the viewscreen and then lose its curvature, and instead
of moving in toward the planet, we were going down
toward it.