Part 12 (2/2)

Bruce Gordon nodded, and the old man sighed. Something suspiciously like a tear glistened in his eyes.

”I thought you were taking a bath,” Gordon commented.

The old man chuckled. ”Fate's against me, cobber. With all the shooting, some punk put a bullet clean through the wall and the plastic of the tub. Fifty gallons of water, all wasted!”

He turned back toward the end of the hall, sighing again. Gordon went up the stairs, noticing that Izzy's door was open. The little man was stretched out on the bunk in his clothes, filthy; one side of his face swollen.

”Hi, gov'nor,” he called out, his voice still cheerful. ”I had odds you'd beat the ticket, though the Mother and me were worried there for a while. How'd you grease the fix?”

Gordon sketched it in, without mentioning Security. ”What happened to you, Izzy?”

”Price of being honest. But the gees who paid me protection didn't get hurt, gov'nor.” He winced, then grinned. ”So they pay double tomorrow.

Honesty pays, gov'nor, if you squeeze it once in a while ... Funny, you making sergeant; I thought two other gees won the lottery.”

So the promotion _had_ come from Trench! It bothered him. When a turkey sees corn on the menu, it's time to wonder about Thanksgiving.

Collections were good all week--probably as a result of Izzy's actions.

Even after he arranged to pay his income tax, and turned over his ”donation” to the fund, Gordon was well ahead for the first time since he'd landed here.

He had become almost superst.i.tious about the way he was always left with no more than a hundred credits in his pockets. This time, he stripped himself to that sum at once, depositing the rest in the First Marsport Bank. Maybe it would break the jinx.

They were one of the few teams in the Seventh Precinct to make full quota. Trench was lavish in his praise. He was playing more than fair with Bruce Gordon now, but there was a basic suspicion in his eyes.

The next day, he drafted Izzy and Gordon for a trip outside the dome.

”It's easy enough, and you'll get plenty of credit in the fund for it. I need two men who can keep their mouths shut.”

They idled around the station through the morning. In the late afternoon, they left in a big truck capable of hauling what would have been fifty tons on Earth. Trench drove. Outside the dome, the electric motor carried them along at a steady twenty miles an hour, almost silently.

It was Gordon's first look at the real Mars. He saw small villages where crop prospectors and hydroponic farmers lived, with a few small industrial sections scattered over the desert. As they moved out, he saw the slow change from the beaten appearance of Marsport to something that seemed no worse than would be found among the share-croppers back on Earth. It was obvious that Marsport was the poison center here.

Some of the younger children were running around without helmets, confirming Praeger's claim that third-generation Martians somehow learned to adapt to the atmosphere.

Darkness fell sharply, as it always did in Mars' thin air, but they went on, heading out into the dunes of the desert. When they finally stopped, they were beside a small, battered s.p.a.ce s.h.i.+p. Boxes were piled all around it, and others were being tossed out. Trent leaped from the truck, motioning them to follow, and they began loading the crates hastily. It took about an hour of hard work to load the last of them, and Trench was working harder than they were. Finished, he went up to one of the men from the s.h.i.+p, handed over an envelope, and came back to start the truck back toward Marsport. As the dunes dwindled behind them, Gordon could see the brief flare of the little rocket taking off.

They drove back through the night as rapidly as the truck could manage.

Finally, they rolled into City Hall, down a ramp, and onto an elevator that took them three levels down. Trench climbed out and nodded in satisfaction. ”That's it. Take tomorrow off, if you want, and I'll fix credit for you. But just remember you haven't seen anything. You don't know any more than our old friend Murdoch!”

He led them to another elevator, then swung back to the truck.

”Guns,” Gordon said slowly. ”Guns and contraband ammunition for the administration from Earth. And they must have paid half the graft they've taken for that. What the h.e.l.l do they want it for?”

Izzy jerked a shoulder upwards and a twist ran across his pock-marked face. ”War, what else? Gov'nor, Earth must be boiling about the election. Maybe Security's getting set to spring.”

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