Part 24 (1/2)

Hoddan said ruefully:

”I forgot. The fighting's over. But bring your stun-pistols. n.o.body'd stay behind, but somebody might have gotten left.”

He rose, to take over the captured s.h.i.+p.

[Ill.u.s.tration]

IX

Normally, at overdrive cruising speed, it would be a week's journey from Walden to the planet Krim. Hoddan made it in five days. There was reason. He wanted to beat the news of his piracy to Krim. He could endure suspicion, and he wouldn't mind doubt, but he did not want certainty of his nefarious behavior to interfere with the purposes of his call.

The s.p.a.ce yacht, sealed tightly, floated in an orbit far out in emptiness. The big s.h.i.+p went down alone by landing grid. It glittered brightly as it descended. When it touched ground and the grid's force fields cut off, it looked very modern and very crisp and strictly businesslike. Actually, the capture of this particular liner was a bit of luck, for Hoddan. It was not one of the giant inter-cl.u.s.ter s.h.i.+ps which make runs of thousands of light-years and deign to stop only at very major planets. It was a medium s.h.i.+p of five thousand tons burden, designed for service in the Horsehead Nebula region. It was brand-new and on the way from its builders to its owners when Hoddan interfered.

Naturally, though, it carried cargo on its maiden voyage.

Hoddan spoke curtly to the control room of the grid.

”I'm non-sked,” he explained. ”New s.h.i.+p. I got a freak charter party over on Walden and I have to get rid of my cargo. How about s.h.i.+fting me to a delay s.p.a.ce until I can talk to some brokers?”

The force fields came on again and the liner moved very delicately to a position at the side of the grid's central s.p.a.ce. There it would be out of the way.

Hoddan dressed himself carefully in garments found in the liner's skipper's cabin. He found Thal wearing an ap.r.o.n and an embittered expression. He ceased to wield a mop as Hoddan halted before him.

”I'm going ash.o.r.e,” said Hoddan crisply. ”You're in charge until I get back.”

”In charge of what?” demanded Thal bitterly. ”Of a bunch of male housemaids! I run a mop! And me a Darthian gentleman! I thought I was being a pirate! What do I do? I scrub floors! I wash paint! I stencil cases in cargo holds! I paint over names and put others in their places!

Me, a Darthian gentleman!”

”No,” said Hoddan. ”A pirate. If I don't get back, you and the others can't work this s.h.i.+p, and presently the police of Krim will ask why.

They'll recheck my careful forgeries, and you'll all be hung for piracy.

So don't let anybody in. Don't talk to anybody. If you do--_pfft!_”

He drew his finger across his throat, and nodded, and went cheerfully out the crew's landing-door in the very base of the s.h.i.+p. He went across the tarmac and out between two of the gigantic steel arches of the grid.

He hired a ground vehicle.

”Where?” asked the driver.

”Hm-m-m,” said Hoddan. ”There's a firm of lawyers.... I can't remember the name--”

”There's millions of 'em,” said the driver.

”This is a special one,” explained Hoddan. ”It's so dignified they won't talk to you unless you're a great-grandson of a client. They're so ethical they won't touch a case of under a million credits. They've got about nineteen names in the firm t.i.tle and--”

”Oh!” said the ground-car driver. ”That'll be-- h.e.l.l! I can't remember the name either. But I'll take you there.”

He drove out into traffic. Hoddan relaxed. Then he tensed again. He had not been in a city since he stopped briefly in this on the way to Darth.