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were our forefathers who had nothing sheeplike about them." Twisting round in his chair, he beckoned to Matt. "Bring us two shemaks." Then to Elissa. "My guess is that it won't pay that ship to hang around too long."
* * * The battleship's caller-system bawled imperatively, "Fanshaw, Folsom, Fuller, Garson, Gleed, Gregory, Haines, Harrison, Hope-" and down through the alphabet.
A trickle of men flowed along the pa.s.sages, catwalks and alleyways toward the fore chartroom. They gathered outside it in small cl.u.s.ters, chattering in undertones and sending odd sc.r.a.ps of conversation echoing down the corridor.
"Wouldn't say anything to us but, 'Myob!' Got sick and tired of it after a while."
"You ought to have split up, like we did. That show place on the outskirts didn't know what a Terran looks like. I just walked in and took a seat."
"Hear about Meakin? He mended a leaky roof, chose a bottle of double dith in payment and mopped the
lot. He was dead flat when we found him. Had to be carried back."
"Some guys have all the luck. We got the brush-off wherever we showed our faces. It gets you down."
"You should have separated, like I said."
"Half the mess must be still lying in the gutter. They haven't turned up yet."
"Grayder will be hopping mad. He'd have stopped this morning's second quota if he'd known in time."
Every now and again First Mate Morgan stuck his head out of the chartroom door and uttered a name
already voiced on the caller. Frequently there was no response.
"Harrison!" he yelled.
With a puzzled expression, Harrison went inside. Captain Grayder was there, seated behind a desk and
gazing moodily at a list lying before him. Colonel Shelton was stiff and erect to one side, with Major Hame slightly behind him. Both wore the pained expressions of those tolerating a bad smell while the plumber goes looking for the leak.
His Excellency was tramping steadily to and fro in front of the desk, muttering deep down in his chins.
"Barely five days and already the rot has set in." He turned as Harrison entered, fired off sharply, "So it's you, mister. When did you return from leave?"
"The evening before last, sir."
"Ahead of time, eh? That's curious. Did you get a puncture or something?"
"No, sir. I didn't take my bicycle with me."
"Just as well," approved the amba.s.sador. "If you had done so, you'd have been a thousand miles away by
now and still pushing hard.""Why, sir?""Why? He asks me why! That's precisely what I'd like to know-why?" He fumed a bit, then inquired, "Did you visit this town by yourself, or in company?"
"I went with Sergeant Gleed, sir."
"Call him," ordered the amba.s.sador, looking at Morgan.
Opening the door, Morgan obediently shouted, "Gleed! Gleed!"
No answer.
He tried again, without result. They put it over the caller-system again. Sergeant Gleed refused to be among those present.
"Has he booked in?"
Grayder consulted his list. "In early. Twenty-four hours ahead of time. He may have sneaked out again with the second liberty quota this morning and omitted to book it. That's a double crime."
"If he's not on the ship, he's off the ship, crime or no crime."
"Yes, your Excellency." Captain Grayder registered slight weariness.
"GLEED!" howled Morgan, outside the door. A moment later he poked his head inside, said, "Your
Excellency, one of the men says Sergeant Gleed is not on board because he saw him in town quite
recently."
"Send him in." The amba.s.sador made an impatient gesture at Harrison. "Stay where you are and keep those confounded ears from flapping. I've not finished with you yet."
* * * A long, gangling grease-monkey came in, blinked around, a little awed by high bra.s.s.
"What do you know about Sergeant Gleed?" demanded the amba.s.sador.
The other licked his lips, seemed sorry that he had mentioned the missing man. "It's like this, your honor, I-"
"Call me 'sir.'"
"Yes, sir." More disconcerted blinking. "I went out with the second party early this morning, came back
a couple of hours ago because my stomach was acting up. On the way, I saw Sergeant Gleed and spoke to him."
"Where? When?"
"In town, sir. He was sitting in one of those big long-distance coaches. I thought it a bit queer."
"Get down to the roots, man! What did he tell you, if anything?"
"Not much, sir. He seemed pretty chipper about something. Mentioned a young widow struggling to
look after two hundred acres. Someone had told him about her and he thought he'd take a peek." He
hesitated, backed away a couple of paces, added, "He also said I'd see him in irons or never.""One of your men," said the amba.s.sador to Colonel Shelton. "A trooper, allegedly well-disciplined. One with long service, three stripes, and a pension to lose." His attention returned to the informant. "Did he say exactly where he was going?"
"No, sir. I asked him, but he just grinned and said, 'Myob!' So I came back to the ship."
"All right. You may go." His Excellency watched the other depart, then continued with Harrison. "You were with that first quota."
"Yes, sir."
"Let me tell you something, mister. Four hundred twenty men went out. Only two hundred have
returned. Forty of those were in various stages of alcoholic turpitude. Ten of them are in the clink
yelling, 'I Won't!' in steady chorus. Doubtless they'll go on yelling until they've sobered up."
He stared at Harrison as if that worthy were personally responsible, then went on, "There's something paradoxical about this. I can understand the drunks. There are always a few individuals who blow their tops first day on land. But of the two hundred who have condescended to come back, about half returned before time, the same as you did. Their reasons were identical-the town was unfriendly, everyone
treated them like ghosts until they'd had enough."
Harrison made no comment.
"So we have two diametrically opposed reactions," the amba.s.sador complained. "One gang of men say
the place stinks so much that they'd rather be back on the ship. Another gang finds it so hospitable that either they get filled to the gills on some stuff called double dith, or they stay sober and desert the service. I want an explanation. There's got to be one somewhere. You've been twice in this town. What can you tell us?"
Carefully, Harrison said, "It all depends on whether or not you're spotted as a Terran. Also on whether you meet Gands who'd rather convert you than give you the brush-off." He pondered a moment, finished, "Uniforms are a give-away."
"You mean they're allergic to uniforms?"
"More or less, sir."
"Any idea why?"
"Couldn't say for certain, sir. I don't know enough about them yet. As a guess, I think they may have
been taught to a.s.sociate uniforms with the Terran regime from which their ancestors escaped."
"Escaped nothing!" scoffed the amba.s.sador. "They grabbed the benefit of Terran inventions, Terran
techniques and Terran manufacturing ability to go some place where they'd have more elbow room." He gave Harrison the sour eye. "Don't any of them wear uniforms?"
"Not that I could recognize as such. They seem to take pleasure in expressing their individual
personalities by wearing anything they fancy, from pigtails to pink boots. Oddity in attire is the norm among the Gands. Uniformity is the real oddity-they think it's submissive and degrading."
"You refer to them as Gands. Where did they dig up that name?"
Harrison told him, thinking back to Elissa as she explained it. In his mind's eye he could see her now.