Finder’s Fee by David Alexander & Hayford Peirce

Illustration by Darryl Elliott


All across Human Occupied Space planets continued to randomly lose congruency with nullspace, thereby isolating billions of human beings forever, but why should I care?

I was in the company of a beautiful woman, and the two of us were soaring on warm thermals high above the New Sonoran desert on the back of the biggest, gaudiest butterfly in the known Universe. The problems of interplanetary navigation should have been the farthest thing from my mind.

But I did care about the lost worlds, intensely.

After all, my life depended on it.

Only a few days before, the incomprehensible workings—or misworkings—of the currents of nullspace had unexpectedly washed me ashore here on New Sonora, the only habitable planet in the Icarus System, ninety-seven light-years from my intended destination.

And that was only the starter.

The logistics of interstellar commerce are stark. Either you voyage from star to star via nullspace or you don’t go at all. Yes, you can try building yourself a craft capable of attaining a few percent of the speed of light, then spend eighty or ninety years guiding it to the next star system, hoping that something doesn’t break down before you die of old age.

To my knowledge it had never been done, and I doubted that it ever would—and certainly not by me, a former senior facilitator and currently a neophyte star-freighter captain with little more to his name than a highly mortgaged spaceship and a cargo of almost certainly worthless crystalline blocks.

And if New Sonora fell out of congruency, as my intended destination of Charon IV apparently had, I wouldn’t be able to make my next payment to the banker-surgeons of New Zurich, and they would, in consequence, refuse to transmit the reactivation code for the artificial pancreas installed in me as security for the mortgage on the Venture.

And I, Isaiah Howe, the one-time youngest senior facilitator in the history of Human Occupied Space, would be dead at the ripe old age of thirty-four.

Of course, even if New Sonora didn’t Ml out of congruency, I still needed the money for the payment. Or I would die. All of which made it easy to understand why I was a bit distracted.

“Do you like it?” shouted Rebona Myking over her shoulder from the lead saddle, her face lit by a radiant smile.

“It’s terrific!” I called back. “The view is fantastic!”

It was, too. Not only the panorama of the improbable cactus-town and of the luridly colored mountains on all sides of its desert basin, but also the view of my companion’s slim back and long auburn hair streaming almost into my face.

Forcing a smile, I tried and failed to banish all thoughts of just how far I was from being able to meet my upcoming mortgage payment.

“You’re still brooding about the aliens and those damned crystals.”

“Yes,” I admitted, though the demands of the outlandish aliens the New Sonorans called Bagpipes were only making a bad situation worse. It was the crystals themselves that were at the root of my problems. I remembered the first time I had seen them in the cavernous warehouse back on the rain-drenched planet of Bountiful…


My third trip as the master of my own ship had begun with reasonable promise. My cargo of prepaid blank data crystals, pharmaceuticals, Sytherian and Terran spices, and the master copy of an entertainment library licensed for duplication and distribution was destined for Bountiful, a planet whose star lay near the Edelweiss Drift. No system bordering the Drift had slipped away in the more than 600 years we had been using nullspace, so I was reasonably confident I would get to Bountiful and back.

Of equal importance, my consignee, the House of Rallingsback, had paid half the shipping costs in advance. It was only after I had released the cargo to the Rallingsback warehouse and was awaiting the balance of my money that I was informed that Ryseel Rallingsback, Lord of the House, had died eight days before.

“I’m very sorry to hear that,” I murmured politely to the old man’s sons.

The heirs to the House of Rallingsback, two pasty-faced sharpies with flaming red hair atop skull-like heads, pursed their lips lugubriously. Father’s estate and all his assets, which now included my cargo, would, they explained, unfortunately be tied up in Probate Court for the next two years.

I was, of course, Reefal and Rastal Rallingsback advised, welcome to file a creditor’s claim and wait for justice to take its course. Or, they smiled into the long, appalled silence, I could accept an extremely valuable consignment of high-grade crystals now lodged in this very warehouse.

Scowling, I let the Brothers Rallingsback lead me deeper into the gloom.

“Look,” exclaimed Reefal, the marginally less skeletal of the two, gesturing at a carelessly piled heap of halfmeter by half-meter crystalline blocks glimmering in subdued yellows, bright blues, and subtie greens, “one-and-a-half tons of a unique form of gemstone. It was Father’s intention to cut them into sizes suitable for jewelry, electronic circuitry, surgical tools, and other devices. Unfortunately my brother and I have neither the time nor the experience to manage such a complicated venture.”

Human space, of course, is overrun with gems, crystals, and gemstones from hundreds of planets. As far as jewelry is concerned, artificial diamonds and rubies indistinguishable from the real article are produced on a dozen worlds. And current manufacturing techniques have long since made obsolete most industrial uses for even the finest gemstones, synthetic substrates being far more efficient, uniform, and reliable.

I eyed the Rallingsbacks bleakly as I tried to keep from screaming aloud—more at my own stupidity than at their childish larceny. Their father had obviously been crazy to buy the crystals in the first place, and I would be equally crazy in accepting them as payment for the balance of the shipping charges. But what choice did I have? A bird in the hand…

It took only a few minutes for the necessary documents to be signed, title transferred, and orders given to move the blocks to my cargo hold. I stormed out into the rain and had a quick dinner at a cheap portside restaurant. An hour later, wet and still seething with anger, I stomped across the rain-swept field and back to the Venture. There I found three sour-looking customs officials regarding the ship speculatively.

“Your purchase has been loaded?”

“Presumably. Why?”

One of them produced a paper. “Here is the calculation of the transfer taxes on the transaction. It comes to just under 19,000 credits.”

“Very well,” I said, knowing only too well that I had no more than six thousand to my name. “If you’ll wait here, I’ll get the money. Ship, lower the ramp.”

Before they could object, I hurried inside, slid into my command chair, and snapped a toggle. The hatch whined shut behind me.

“Computer, what’s the nearest human-occupied planet?” I demanded.

“Charon IV, fourteen light-years distant, sometimes called Dogwood.”

“Then start getting us there in the next two seconds.”

“There are three human beings standing by the passenger port.”

“They’re not human beings, they’re tax collectors! Take us up—now!

The lift-off klaxon sounded three thunderous tones. Thirty seconds later, shredding a thousand port regulations to ribbons, we lurched away from the field. As we tore through the upper atmosphere my hands clamped the arms of my chair in impotent fury. This whole miserable episode was yet another lesson in the difference between intellectual brilliance and practical knowledge. Any experienced ship’s captain of even limited intelligence would have demanded payment in full before releasing his cargo to the consignee’s warehouse.

But I, a man whose academic degrees and professional honors had once filled an entire wall of my luxurious office on Westerworld, had stood complacently by while the cargo was unloaded before payment was made. What was the old wheeze? A lesson learned is a lesson cherished…

Five days out of Bountiful, somewhere in nullspace with barely enough money to refuel the Venture at her next planetfall, the computer roused me from a fitful sleep.

“I have a report.”

I knew this could not be good news. “Go ahead,” I muttered.

“Instead of exiting nullspace at Charon IV, fourteen light-years from Bountiful, we are about to enter the Icarus System, ninety-seven light-years farther along the Edelweiss Drift.”

Dogwood has slipped away?” I demanded, my voice tight. Only nine months earlier the 3,000 imperial grandees from Gaveltry who had incautiously accompanied their Autarch to Lowry’s Landfall for his impending nuptials with the daughter of the Most Equal Elder, had vanished forever when the Landfall system had slipped from congruency. If Dogwood was also gone, this would be the first time that two systems had lost congruency in less than a single Terran year.

You didn’t have to be a senior facilitator with degrees in linguistics, economics, diplomacy, and advanced integration to discern a frightening pattern. Lowry’s Landfall had been the fourteenth system to fall out of nullspace contact in the last fifty years, but it was the ninth to do so in the last twenty. In the previous two centuries we had lost only four.

If Dogwood had slipped away, then we were seeing a pattern that, if continued, would eventually spell the ruin of Human Occupied Space, as well as disaster for the empires of the six alien species with whom we uneasily coexisted.

“Ninety-seven light-years off course,” I groaned. If Icarus too were to fall out of access by nullspace, then I would be marooned forever in this cosmic backwater. “Is Icarus within HOS? Can we refuel here?”

“Yes. It has one inhabited world: New Sonora.”

Worse and worse: Sonora was the name of a blisteringly hot North American desert. If the planet’s climate was similar to that of its namesake, New Sonora would not be an enticing planet. With growing concern, I threw myself into the command chair and tried to learn what I could of the approaching world.


New Sonora turned out to be both better and worse than I had feared.

Its gravity was a light .63 of the standard Terran norm, which meant that with my first steps down the boarding ramp I instantly felt as frisky as a teenager. And with a population of less than a quarter of a million human beings, landing formalities were comparatively few, which meant a welcome reduction in the landing fees, inspection charges, and all the other bureaucratic paperwork associated with more densely populated worlds.

Within a few minutes of establishing a communications link, the Venture had been directed to a barren patch of mountain-rimmed desert forty miles or so to the northwest of Saguaro, the planet’s only metropolitan area. Half an hour after the ship touched down I was in an aircar moving away from the jagged chain of mountains north of the spacefield. A harsh white sun blazed out of an intensely blue sky. The profiles of the distant mountains that defined the great basin in which Saguaro lay were as sharp in the clear desert air as if they were within arm’s reach.

As the view of the city grew larger in the aircar’s bubble canopy, I glumly calculated that the probability would be high that a society with a small population apparently dedicated to living in harmony with nature and adapting local materials to human needs, would generate little or no business for a trader such as myself.

My only realistic hope of finding some commercial opportunity would be to discover a biological agent or “cactus” by-product that might have a unique value elsewhere in Human Occupied Space. I was not optimistic. On Earth, the only commercial byproducts I had ever heard of that derived from the thousand or so varieties of cacti were prickly-pear jelly, tequila, and a variety of skin softeners, hardly the foundation for making my fortune, or meeting my next mortgage payment.

As the pale green cluster of succulents that made up the city of Saguaro grew closer, my eye was caught by a flicker of color against the deep blue sky. Moments later two small specks began to take on birdlike shapes, then suddenly became discernible as the giant butterflies that the ship’s computer had informed me were one of the more beguiling aspects of life on New Sonora.

On the back of each scarlet-bodied butterfly sat a human rider as nonchalantly as Lady Godiva steering her horse through the streets of Coventry, though these riders were swathed in white to protect themselves from New Sonora’s brilliant sun. As the aircar flashed past, they waved enormous sunhats.

Grinning, I waved back, my facilitator’s mind automatically estimating the surface area of the butterflies’ wings and running calculations to determine how such improbable creatures could possibly fly. When I factored in New Sonora’s barely more than half standard gravity coupled with an atmospheric pressure nearly double that of Earth’s, as well as the lift generated by the desert’s thermals and the fact that this was a planet settled by genetic engineers who could as easily rewire an indigenous life form’s DNA as a groundcar mechanic can change a flux coil, I understood how these fairytale creatures could soar so effortlessly through the New Sonoran sky.

I waved once more, then, as the butterflies fell behind, my thoughts again turned somber.

The butterflies were undeniably beautiful, but it seemed unlikely that I would be able to transport any of them alive to some distant zoo. Still, it was only early afternoon, time enough to check with whatever passed in Saguaro for a shipping agent to see if there was any hope of disposing of my cargo of crystal blocks on this uninviting and underpopulated world.


“Isaiah—what a curious name,” Cotita Lazzeri said with mild surprise when I introduced myself.

“It’s an old biblical name. I’m told it means salvation of the Lord.” Cotita Lazzeri pursed her lips and ran gnarled hands through her helmet of matted gray hair.

“The lord? Which one?”

“Take your pick. It doesn’t matter. It’s just a name.” I gestured at the small piece of brightly colored crystal that Cotita Lazzeri held in her hands. “What do you think?”

The New Sonoran factor put my sample down beside the holograms I had shown her of the shipment in the Venture’s cargo hold, then chuckled softly and shook her head.

“I’m afraid you’re not going to be able to sell your cargo here, Citizen Howe. New Sonora is where it came from in the first place. Didn’t you know that?” She broke off a thick, pulpy-looking piece of orange and white petal from a luxuriant flower growing in a pot on her desk and popped it into her fleshy mouth. As she chewed, the seams in her leathery face gradually relaxed into a euphoric smile. “Would you care for a piece? This is genuine Hillaton’s Favorite.”

I stared at Cotita Lazzeri in dismay. We were sitting in her small office high in the interior of one of the town’s ubiquitous giant succulents. The room was dark, moist, and cool, with two small round portholes of triple-paned glass looking out on the Yakabee Mountains to the south. The floor beneath my feet was a very pale green, firm but faintly yielding. It was, like the irregularly shaped walls and ceiling, an integral part of the living “saguaro” itself. The cool air caressing my face carried with it a feint, almost imperceptible odor of exotic spices. I waved my hand, refusing the fleshy petal in Cotita Lazzeri’s outstretched fingers. Now, if I were willing to transport unregistered euphorics… But no, I was already in enough trouble without getting involved in drug running.

“Are you certain my crystals are from New Sonora?”

“Oh yes. If you like, we can run them through a spectroscope, but that will only confirm what I’ve told you. The colors and structure are definitely those of Carson’s crystal. They’re unique to this world, and absolutely worthless.”

“Doesn’t their very uniqueness confer some value?”

“Not when there are hundreds of tons of them available from Xerxes’s mine and not when there’s nothing they’re good for except their pretty colors and any decent fabricator can make you glass baubles that look twice as nice. You might as well try to peddle our sand and rocks.”

I nodded morosely. “There’s no practical use for them at all?”

“Other than junk jewelry? Not to my knowledge.” The factor stuffed another petal into her mouth and chewed voluptuously.

“But I’ve got a ton-and-a-half of the stuff sitting in my hold. Certainly there was a reason why it was mined and shipped.”

Cotita Lazzeri smiled blissfully and for a moment I caught a tantalizing glimpse of the once-beautiful woman trapped within this leathery-skinned creature of almost indeterminate age and sex.

“Oh, Xavier Xerxes had a reason. I’m certain your consignee on Beautiful, or wherever, must have gotten it from him. Xerxes the Zany we call him here in Saguaro. He’s a local character, an offworlder from Kingfire who’s convinced that there must be something on New Sonora that will make his fortune. He’s the kind of man who believes that someday he’ll find a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, so long as he just looks hard enough. He’s been looking now for sixteen or seventeen years with no results, except for this stuff.” The factor shrugged and handed the crystal back to me. “For the last year or so he’s been trying to get people interested in these things. He’s got a mine out in the Hormagaunts. Obviously, he sold your load to some sucker offworld. God knows what Xerxes told him they were good for. He’ll be using the money, I suppose, for research.”

“Research on the crystals?”

Cotita Lazzeri laughed. “What else? I’ve heard that he’s managed to talk some Museum of Man scientists into coming here to examine them.” She gestured indulgently. “What a joke! He’s convinced himself that they must have some secret capabilities just waiting to be discovered.” She plucked and ate another petal and her eyes grew even vaguer.

“What you’re telling me is that no one here sees any value in my crystals except Xavier Xerxes and he has no reason to buy them.”

“Exactly. He’s already got a mountain full of them.” The factor’s head wobbled uncertainly.

“Do you think there’s any use in talking to him?”

“He’s nothing but a hard-luck prospector looking for a pot of gold he’ll never find. I wouldn’t waste my time if I were you.”

With no more information to be gained, I bounced to my feet in the light gravity with the appearance of far more exuberance than I actually felt and left Cotita Lazzeri to her flower petals.


“Does it take long to learn to ride these ’flies?” I asked, speaking into Rebona Myking’s right ear at our cruising height of about a thousand feet. I felt detached, isolated from the world below. Except for the soft hiss of scented wind whispering past my ears the sky was as silent as the noiseless vacuum of space.

“Only a few hours. This little bar in front of my saddle controls our course. The biogeneticists who settled the planet modified the ’flies’ skeleton to make a bone-like joystick growing out of their spine. When you move it, directional nerve impulses are sent to its brain, not that the ’flies’ brains are very big, but they’re large enough to let them take us where we tell them to go.” She tossed her head and laughed gaily. “Usually, that is. Sometimes they have a mind of their own.”

A few minutes later I saw what she meant. The butterfly went into a long slow spiral that seemed to be centered on a thick cluster of giant cacti in an otherwise barren stretch of rocky desert. The ’fly’s enormous scarlet wings, filigreed with an intricate pattern of green and blue, fluttered once, then became rigid as we drifted lower. Although I was securely strapped into the leather saddle that sat athwart the bony blue crest running down the middle of the ’fly’s back, I involuntarily clenched my knees around the saddle.

“Don’t worry,” Rebona assured me, “the saddle is bonded to the carapace by a natural resin made from dead ’flies’ connective tissue. It can’t fall off, and neither can you.”

“Is she going to land on that cactus?

“The narco-flowers are a treat for the ’flies as well as for humans—it’s no use trying to steer her away. We’re just going to have to be patient until she’s drunk her fill.”

I sat back and tried to enjoy the view as we glided down to the spine-studded plant. The genetic tinkering with the local cacti by the planet’s first settlers had borne spectacular fruit.

There were two kinds of giant “cacti” on New Sonora. One was what our butterfly was now homing in on, the Demon Lover, a huge cone-shaped plant on which grew the prized narco-flowers. The other was what the natives perversely called “saguaros,” although the local variety bore as much resemblance to the Terran cactus as a goldfish does to a great white shark.

I had gotten a good look at the so-called saguaros on my aircar ride in from the landing field. Except for a few industrial buildings for such things as generating power and processing toxic materials, the city of Saguaro was almost entirely composed of the plants. All of the region’s inhabitants lived in the barrel-shaped succulents, although calling them “pumpkins” would have made far more sense than “saguaros.”

If you took a giant green pumpkin, hollowed it out, put the top back on, and then carved away at its sides until you had eight widely spaced staves curving up to fuse together into a single massive green capstone, you’d have a New Sonoran saguaro, except that in this case the capstone was broad enough, and thick enough, to host a game of tennis.

While awesome, their gigantic size was easily understandable. Even in the far heavier gravity of Earth there were giant sequoias and eucalypti well over 300 feet in height. And the ship’s database told me that each of the saguaro’s eight staves was anchored to the desert floor by massive networks of giant roots. In New Sonora’s lighter gravity, creating these cacti would have been child’s play for the two or three generations of eccentric genetic engineers who had amused themselves by growing 20-foot butterflies. And as a final refinement, they had induced titanium-precipitating microbes to live in a symbiotic relationship within the cactus staves. Not only did this help support the gigantic plants, it also enabled the locals to smelt the plant for profit when it died. True ingenuity!

Now practically the entire population lived inside plants that even in the blast-furnace atmosphere of New Sonora were cool and moist and that, except for the cost of installing utility runs, elevators, and ventilation systems, were essentially free.

The Demon Lover cacti were just as tall as the great saguaros but were shaped like knobby green cones. Growing from bases a hundred feet in diameter, their bodies tapered to a blunt, rounded summit almost hidden beneath a dense crown of yellow and orange blossoms.

The nearer we drew to the monstrous Demon Lover plant, the more impressive it became. In addition to having ordinary needles like Terrestrial cacti, this succulent’s tough, fibrous surface also sported a veritable forest of fronds, limbs, and branches, as well as a host of parasitic vines and plants.

I grew increasingly uneasy as the flowers drifted closer. Was the ’fly going to land directly on one of the enormous blossoms or merely hover above it? Either seemed equally dangerous. An unexpected thermal could easily smash us against a foot-long needle. And if the ’fly tumbled into the plant, the spines would rip us to shreds.

Rebona Myking didn’t seem to be worried by the prospect. She merely gestured at the huge yellow flower upon which the butterfly was now slowly settling.

“The Demon Lover’s narco-flower contains a powerful aphrodisiac and euphoric, at least for human beings. At wedding ceremonies the bride and groom wrap themselves in sheets of petals and are carried by their guests to the nuptial banquet. Later, after ceremonial toasts with petal nectar, they’re led to the honeymoon suite where the bedsheets are composed of mats made from the petals. It’s a very powerful experience,” she added in a surprisingly harsh tone. “Even the Bagpipes seem to be affected by the damned flowers. Frankly, I’m surprised they live in a Demon Lover the way they do.”

“You seem to know a lot about these things,” I ventured cautiously. “Have you tried them?”

Rebona Myking was silent so long that I was certain I had offended her. Finally she spoke without looking at me.

“My husband’s an ethnologist. One of the reasons we came here was so he could study the courtship and wedding rituals of the New Sonorans. So, yes, I did try it. Purely as scientists, he said. Unfortunately Ross is one of those people who overreact to it and he’s become an addict. I haven’t seen him in over nine months now.”

“You mean he’s given up a beautiful woman like you for… for a flower?

She nodded curtly. “So it seems.”

“There’s no treatment for this addiction?”

“If you want to be treated. But like most addicts, he doesn’t. I’ve been waiting for him to admit that he needs help.” She shrugged almost imperceptibly. “I’m going to give him another three months. After that…What about you? Do you have a wife somewhere?”

“No, not anymore.”

“Was it terrible, your—divorce?”

“It’s never fun, I guess, is it? I had some business problems and she couldn’t handle my—my change in circumstances. It’s a long story.”

“I shouldn’t have asked,” Rebona said apologetically. “Let’s forget both of them and just enjoy our ride.”

A moment later the ’fly withdrew her proboscis from the flower, revved up the flapping of her wings, and fluttered us back up into the sky.

As I watched the narco-flower dwindle beneath us, I wondered gloomily if what had happened to me on my purported way to Charon IV meant that all my future flying would now be confined to the backs of butterflies…


Rebona Myking had approached me in the best restaurant the metropolis of Saguaro had to offer. It was called the Belle Vue and it lived up to its name. It was at the very top of what looked like the tallest living thing in the entire Universe. Seven of the massive staves rising from its geometrically precise circular base held apartments. In the eighth, in addition to offices and stores, an elevator serviced the thick capstone where the Belle Vue had been hollowed out of the living plant.

Far above the desert floor, the restaurant-tavern afforded a 360-de-gree panorama of hundreds of square miles of orange, scarlet, and red desert, expanses of huge cacti, and four ranges of jagged olive- and rust-colored mountains. In spite of the hellish sun beating down from the cobalt sky, the restaurant itself was dark, cool, and moist, an oasis in the middle of a Dantesque landscape.

As I sat sipping pale blue beer and sampling a tableful of tiny dishes of New Sonoran haute cuisine, I reflected glumly that with every passing hour it was becoming more likely that I would have to tap my emergency cache of Universal Credits just to get enough fuel to escape this world. It was certain that the useless crystals wouldn’t power the Venture’s engines.

“Excuse me, are you the gentleman with the crystals for sale?”

A pretty girl stood looking down at me, or at least what I thought might be a pretty girl, for her face was halfhidden by the floppy brim of her enormous sunhat.

I rose. “Yes, I’m Isaiah Howe.” I pointed to the empty chair across from mine. “Please join me.”

She paused, smiled faintly, and removed her hat. I decided that she was almost certainly not a native of New Sonora. Her skin was far too fair, almost a milky white, while that of the locals was uniformly tanned a leathery brown. And her light gray eyes sparkled with a liveliness and intelligence that was noticeably absent from the faces of the petal-chewing New Sonorans.

“I’m sorry,” she said in an accent that was pure Standard, “but I can’t at the moment. You see—” she nodded toward the broad expanse of window behind me “—it’s actually someone else, outside, who’d like to speak to you about the crystals. He… didn’t feel comfortable coming in. Could you come outside and meet him? He’s just out on the landing deck.”

“My pleasure,” I said warmly; if someone wanted to buy my cargo I’d walk across the New Sonoran desert at high noon to meet him. “Lead the way. Perhaps later you’ll join me for a nightcap.”


The alien honked at me, then he burped like a sated tyrannosaurus, and finally he produced a sound that was a passable imitation of a highspeed collision of four or five ground-cars.

“Can you make any sense of that?”

Rebona Myking sighed. “It’s difficult enough to translate even with computer analysis and enhancement, but I’ll try.”

“I thought I knew every alien species in Human Occupied Space but I’ve never seen anything like that. What is it?”

“Here on New Sonora we call them Bagpipes.”

“Because they look like bagpipes or because they sound like them?”

“A little of both.”

I turned back to the alien. It looked like a jury-rigged bundle of hoses, tubes, tentacles, and rubber pipes that were anywhere from a quarter of an inch to two inches or more in diameter, with lengths as varied as their thickness. The Bagpipe’s colors ranged from pewter through a dark silvery charcoal. Its body was neither vertically nor horizontally symmetrical. Instead, various hoses appeared at random locations, some undoubtedly serving as fingers, hands, feet, ears, noses, and mouths. Half a dozen tiny aprons of various gaudy colors were strapped to tentacles in no apparent order and were its only articles of clothing.

When I was finally able to tear my fascinated gaze from the Bagpipe I saw that Rebona was studying the display panel of a small hand-held computer connected to a wire leading to her ear. She pursed her lips.

“He says he’d like to discuss the crystals with you and requests that the three of us take a short ride to his quarters.”

“Fine,” I agreed immediately, heedless of the outlandishness of the alien beside me. “Let’s go.” I needed that sale!

We headed for an aircar at the edge of the landing area, the alien moving with surprising grace. The ten or fifteen hoses that served as its feet shuttled in a complicated rhythm as if the Bagpipe were a strange breed of circular centipede that could move in any direction without having to rotate its body.

The alien fitted his flexible body into one of the seats without apparent discomfort. “It’s actually my aircar,”

Rebona Myking explained, “but he insists on flying it.” She grinned ruefully. “Who’s going to argue with anyone who looks like that?

In a swift blur of motion two of the Bagpipe’s smaller tubes pecked at the craft’s instrument panel and moments later we were cruising 900 feet above New Sonora’s desert. I studied the alien carefully as we flew along but it was impossible to guess which of its appendages might serve as visual receptors.

A few minutes of flight took us southeast across a dozen miles of desert. None of us spoke as the aircar descended toward a large solitary Demon Lover cactus. Its crown was studded with enormous orange and yellow blossoms, some of which were four or five yards across. The aircar moved towards a dark opening some fifty feet below the plant’s apex and settled to a silky halt on a ledge just outside the mouth of a tunnel.

The light inside the chamber was dim, but the Bagpipe seemed to have no problem finding his way and we trotted along behind him across the room’s spongy, resilient floor. One dark tunnel led to another, and eventually we came to a small tubular shaft in the center of the plant. The Bagpipe pressed a button with one of its trunks and a chain of single-person transport disks slowly moved down inside the tube. One by one we boarded the disks and an eternity later were deposited deep within the huge succulent.

From out of the gloom two more aliens appeared and immediately began honking at their comrade. I turned to Rebona’s shadowy silhouette.

“What’re they saying?”

“I can barely figure what they’re saying when only one of them’s talking—with two or more it’s hopeless. The meaning of their communication units is contained as much in which tube emits the sound and in the accompanying gestures as it is by the sound itself. My computer pack has a neural-net visual system that I focus on the Bagpipe who’s talking. The AI uses a preloaded vocabulary to determine which of the tubes is generating the noise and making the gestures, and then it gives me a rough translation with a choice of vocabulary options.”

“Options?”

“Almost nothing but options. Most of my job consists of studying the possible alternative meanings based on the context of the conversation, then I assemble a coherent, meaningful exchange as a gestalt. There’s almost no word-for-word equivalency between the Bagpipes’ language and human speech. For now we’ll just have to wait until they decide which one’s going to speak to us before I can tell you anything about what they’re saying.”

We waited more or less patiently until one of the aliens, apparently their spokesman, moved forward. Rebona activated her computer and again inserted the plug into her ear. The alien, whom I dubbed Tall And Thin because he was both taller and thinner than either of his companions, began another of his hooting, honking monologues. When he come to a gurgling conclusion, Rebona turned to me and hesitantly began her translation.

“They seem to be… agitated by your cargo of crystals. They’ve learned about it, apparently over the net, and they say that it’s urgent, or important, or vital, something like that, that you give them up.”

“Give them up? To whom? To them? Do you mean they want to buy them?”

“I’m not really sure. It may be they want actual physical possession of them, or it may be they want the crystals put back where they originally came from.” She grimaced. “I’m afraid it’s not very clear.”

“Can’t you ask them for clarification?”

“Communicating with the Bagpipes is almost entirely a one-way process. I simply don’t have the right equipment to speak their language beyond getting across a few pidgin phrases. It’s the equivalent of trying to learn something technical from a human nullspace engineer if you limit yourself to only a vocabulary of a hundred words like ‘yes,’ ‘no,’ ‘stop,’ ‘go,’ good,’ and bad.’ ” She turned back to Tall And Thin. “I have a basic phrase for ‘I don’t understand.’ I’ll try that.”

Rebona pressed keys on her computer and its speaker issued a brief series of hoots and honks. The Bagpipes remained motionless for several seconds, then engaged in another three-way dialog. Finally Tall And Thin spoke again.

“Well?”

“I’m still not sure,” she said, shaking her head. “What I think I’m getting is something about it being forbidden or taboo or an insult or wrong or dangerous for you to have the crystals, or for the crystals to be taken off-planet, or for the crystals to be used or modified or sold; and that the crystals must be released by you, probably into their custody, to be properly disposed of, or transferred or worshipped or venerated or protected.”

I glared at the Bagpipes. “Why are they so concerned by my crystals? Are they religious artifacts, or necessary for a mating ritual, or used for medical purposes, or what?

“I don’t know. I simply don’t have enough vocabulary to ask that kind of question. I’ll tell them again that you don’t understand, but I think they’ll just repeat what they said before.”

“Can you tell them I’ll consider their request?”

“Yes, there’s a phrase that’s roughly equivalent to ‘I need time to think.’ ”

Rebona tapped more keys, her computer emitted a desultory hoot, and then we turned and headed back to the transport tube. Neither Tall And Thin nor the others made a move to follow us. Once we were in Rebona’s aircar and on our way back to the restaurant I tried to elicit any additional information that might help make sense of all this.

“You seem to be the local expert on the Bagpipes. Where did they come from? What are they doing here?”

“I’m really not that much of an expert, I’m afraid. I’m actually an eco-biologist from the university on Granger IV. My department had heard about this planet’s genetically modified cacti and wanted to see if we could create similar biological housing units for other ecological systems. My husband wanted to do his own research, so it seemed the perfect trip to take together. I’ve been here about a year and a half now. About six months ago the Bagpipes showed up and I seemed to be the only person on the planet who took any interest in them.”

A new alien species? And no one’s interested?

“Well, for a while they were a minor curiosity, but when communication with them proved so difficult everyone else lost interest. You’ve got to remember that this is still pretty much a frontier world and any field of study without a practical application is discouraged or ignored. And, of course,” she added with a bitter edge to her voice, “it’s a planet almost entirely populated by petalheads. Most of the time everyone here’s too bent to see beyond the end of their nose.”

“They do seem a trifle… relaxed,” I agreed. “But you…?”

“Because of my husband, I also have something of an ethnological background. I managed to modify some of the equipment we’d brought for research and eventually I was able to communicate with the Bagpipes after a fashion. By now a professional xenologist with the right equipment would be projecting a holographic simulacrum of a Bagpipe waving precisely the right tubes in the right order as part of the translation process. But without the equipment or training, I just have to fumble along.”

“Don’t be so apologetic! I’m astonished you’ve accomplished as much as you have—communication with any other species is always extremely difficult. How many of them are there?”

“You mean here? Oh, half a dozen or so that I know of. They came in a single small ship.”

“Where do they come from? And why did they come here?”

“More mysteries. All I can gather is that they’re from somewhere way beyond HOS and that they may or may not be part of an empire. And I think they have their own way of getting around nullspace, one that’s a lot more certain than ours.”

“Really?” More and more interesting. Nullspace is peculiar. Sometimes you can go from A to C, but not from A to B, even though it lies directly between the two. To get there, you first have to go to D, then backtrack. If the Bagpipes had a new and better way of navigating nullspace…

“What do they want here on New Sonora?”

“It definitely has something to do with those crystals, but I’m not sure exactly what. They told Xavier Xerxes pretty much what they just told, you, that he should leave the crystals alone, that the sale of the crystals was forbidden.”

“Sale? Did they really use that word?”

“Well, no. Distribution, sale, dispersion, dissemination—it might be any one of them.”

“Do you think Xerxes understood what the Bagpipes meant any more than I do?”

“I don’t think he cared what they meant. But I’m only guessing. You could always ask him yourself.”

“I think I will. Will you be my guide? How about tomorrow morning?”

“I’ll pick you up at nine,” she said, nodding vigorously, as if she were glad to have something to do, just as we dropped down to the deck of the cactus/restaurant where I had just met my first Bagpipe.


Xavier Xerxes was clearly a man with an obsession. It was equally clear why the locals called him Xerxes the Zany. He was tall and gaunt, with a long, lustrous, milky beard. Enormous glittering green eyes smoldered beneath almost non-existent eyebrows. In the middle of his flowing white beard was a large red circle, as carefully crafted as if it had been laser-printed there earlier that day. What purpose it served was not immediately obvious. All in all, he looked like a particularly mad biblical prophet.

“So you’re interested in my crystals, are you?” Xerxes muttered suspiciously, his glittering eyes fixed intently on one of my old business cards. “What exactly do you want with them?”

Xerxes, Rebona Myking, and I were in a hideous dank chamber hollowed out of the Hormagaunt Hills just north of the spaceport. It hadn’t been cleaned since the day it was dug and we were perched on makeshift pieces of furniture that hadn’t been dusted since the turn of the century. The walls exuded a stench powerful enough to be used as insect repellent against the man-eating triple-teeth on Think Again.

“I’ve got a shipload of crystal, so I thought it might be a good idea to find out what it’s good for.”

“You admit it, then? You want to find out what I’ve discovered about my crystals so you can make your own fortune from them.”

“I’ve only got the one shipload. Certainly not enough to threaten your position with a whole mountain at your disposal. After all, you control the source of supply. Still, I’d definitely like to find some way to sell them. What have you learned, if I’m not asking you to reveal trade secrets.”

Xerxes’s incandescent gaze moved from me to Rebona Myking, who squirmed uncomfortably beneath it, then back to me.

“All right. It’s no secret, I suppose. At least most of it isn’t. Here, follow me.”

We trailed Xerxes through the back of the cave into a narrow passageway hewn from the mountain’s interior. “The main diggings are up this way.” A hundred yards into the mountain the tunnel widened into a good-sized chamber with a ceiling at least twenty feet above our heads. “Here,” said Xerxes, gesturing at a glittering rock face of yellow, green, and azure crystal identical to that in my cargo hold.

I tried to stifle my disappointment. “This is where you’ve been doing your research?”

“Yes. Anyone on the planet will tell you the crystals have got some damned unusual properties. I’ve bombarded them with magnetic fields and high-voltage electron beams with amazing results. In fact—” Xerxes’s mouth snapped shut and he glared at me defiantly, as if I had almost tricked him into revealing too much.

“What sort of results?” I prompted.

“Well… hallucinations, I guess you’d say, astral displacements, far visions, OBE’s, Dunesian epiphanies, stuff like that.”

“No teleportation or spontaneous human combustion?” Rebona asked sarcastically.

“I don’t understand how nullspace generators work either, lady, but they do, don’t they?” Xerxes jabbed a long, bony finger painfully into my chest. “They’re real, all right, I just don’t have the quantitative data yet. And the results vary from time to time. You’d have to see them for yourself to understand why they’re so remarkable.”

I pursed my lips as I considered his words. “If you pass a laser beam through a crystal impressed with a holographic etching you’ll see a three-dimensional image in front of you. It’s totally illusory—but you still see it.”

Xerxes shrugged. “Explain it however you like. All I know is that it works.”

“But you can’t make the effects reliably repeatable?”

“Not yet. It’s all hit or miss—so far.” Once again his mad eyes glared at me. “But I’ll get it, sooner or later I’m going to get it. And when I do, I’ll be the richest man in the sector!”

“Who else knows the crystals have these properties?”

Xavier Xerxes uttered a harsh bark of bitter disdain.

“You think the petalheads care? They’re all so stupefied from chewing on those damned flowers they wouldn’t notice if my crystals picked them up and threw them over the tops of their Demon Lovers!”

“Some of them notice,” Rebona interrupted. “Everyone in Saguaro says you’re bringing in experts from the Museum of Man to help you.”

“The petalheads are saying that?” The mad green eyes grew crafty and Xerxes lowered his voice to a pensive whisper. “Well, maybe for once they’re right about something.”

“You think they can help you turn the crystals into some sort of entertainment device?” I asked.

“I didn’t say that!” Xerxes glared suspiciously.

I shrugged. “It seems obvious. What else could you use them for?”

“I guess you’ll just have to wait and see, won’t you?”

I nodded. “But remember,” I reminded him, “I have a load of the crystals, too. I want to see you succeed as much as you do.” I turned towards the tunnel, then paused. “I understand you were approached by the Bagpipes,” I added as if it were an unimportant afterthought. “What did they want?”

“The Bagpipes? More damned nonsense!”

“What do you mean?”

Xerxes laughed. “They want me to give up my project—if I’m understanding them right.” He gave me a hard stare. “If you’ve got hold of my shipload of crystals why don’t you go talk to the Bagpipes? Maybe you can get them to tell you why they’re so interested in them.”

“As a matter of fact, they’ve already contacted me, but they didn’t seem to make much sense—something about disturbing the crystals being forbidden. Do you think we should take them seriously?”

Xerxes twitched his lips contemptuously. “This is a human planet, Mr. Senior Facilitator Howe, run by our laws, not theirs. The crystals are legally ours. I don’t care what they want.”

“Reasonable enough, but we don’t have any idea of what the Bagpipes can do.”

“Here on New Sonora there are a dozen of them and a quarter million of us.” He hefted his beard’s luxuriant length and waved its bright red circle at me. “I’m from Kingfire, a Dominie Second Class from the Seventeenth Cube Removed. I would have thought a big-brain ex-facilitator like you would have known that. Which means I’m not afraid of a collection of half-sentient garden hoses. Nobody’s taking my crystals away from me!”


Half-blinded by the late-morning sun, Rebona and I stood blinking beside the adit that led to Xerxes’s mine. The prospector’s battered blue aircar lay in the windswept dust not far from Rebona’s.

“Would you like to go butterfly riding?” she asked hesitantly.

In the full glory of New Sonora’s blazing sun, Rebona was more than just pretty—she was beautiful. And until I came up with some other idea I certainly had nothing better to do.

“Absolutely,” I said.

The butterfly stable was tucked away in the circular space inside the base of a medium-sized saguaro on the city’s outskirts. Beneath a huge gauzy awning seven or eight of the enormous butterfly-like creatures lay torpidly in the inky shadows, their blue and green wings wrapped around scarlet and blue bodies so that only the tips of their torpedo-like heads were visible. From each of the motionless beasts a dull red tube protruded into a stainless steel cask. Their huge yellow and black eyes seemed as inanimate as dinner plates.

“Sugar syrup,” explained Rebona. “As long as it’s supplied, the ’flies won’t move an inch.”

A leathery-skinned New Sonoran, who seemed nearly as torpid as his colorful charges, reluctantly emerged from a leg of the cactus and lackadaisically manhandled the nearest butterfly away from its feeding station. As its long proboscis slowly withdrew into its head, the ’fly’s wings began to unfold. Tapping it on the side of the head with a heavy orange prod, the butterfly handler maneuvered the creature away from its companions and through an opening in its huge mesh cage. Rebona Myking took me by the hand and led me up onto the butterfly’s surprisingly sturdy back.


When we returned to the stables several hours later I watched appreciatively as Rebona climbed gracefully down from our mount, her long slim legs filling her trousers to perfection. The air was almost too dry to feel myself sweating, but I knew that in this terrible heat we must have been rapidly evaporating our liquid reserves.

I waggled a finger in the general direction of the spaceport. “Rather than offering you a glass of the terrible local beer, if you’ll fly me back to my ship I think my galley can dispense something more civilized.”

A few minutes later we entered the Venture’s tiny salon and Rebona sank into my comfortable old red leather chair. The galley produced tall glasses of lemonade for each of us.

“I like your ship,” she said warmly. “It’s very… homey. But don’t you get lonely out in space all by yourself? What if something broke down?”

“That’s something spacers don’t think about, let alone say aloud. And in theory the ship’s smart enough to repair almost anything that goes wrong, as long as the problem is with the equipment.”

“What else could it be?”

“The problem could be nullspace itself.”

“You mean planets slipping away?”

I nodded. “If entire systems can fall out of congruence, why not spaceships? I personally think there’s now enough statistical evidence about missing ships to indicate that sometimes that actually happens.”

Rebona frowned into her lemonade. “That’s why I don’t like traveling very much. Suppose you got stuck on some really terrible planet like Piggoty’s Place or Sandalstone III? That would be awful!”

“Yes,” I agreed, perching myself carefully on the arm of her chair. “It’s a sobering thought. But what about your own profession? I’d bet that in every system that’s ever slipped away there’s been at least one or two visiting scholars who’ve been trapped there forever.”

Rebona uttered a little sigh. “There’s actually a marble plaque at the Peabody Museum at Harvard with a whole list of them. They update it regularly.”

“I know—I’ve seen it. And, unfortunately, that’s the least part of the problem.”

“How do you mean?”

“Unless you live within a planetary system that you never, ever intend to leave, there isn’t an investment or bank account anywhere in HOS that’s completely safe.”

“There are the UC’s. They’re guaranteed safe.”

It was true. Universal Credits were guaranteed to hold their value no matter how many systems fell out of nullspace. Centuries before, when the first systems began to slip away, the central banks of Earth, Telos, and New Zurich had agreed to jointly issue a currency called Universal Credits. All three planets would have to fall out of congruency simultaneously for the credits to be rendered worthless. Like everyone with any sense, I kept my own modest supply of emergency funds in UC’s.

“Small change,” I pointed out. “That guarantee is limited to a maximum of a million credits per customer. Fine for individuals, but worthless for real business. The effect on commerce of planets slipping away is already massive, and it’s getting worse.”

“Well, you’re a facilitator. I suppose you ought to know.”

Ex-facilitator—there’s a considerable difference between the two.”

“Why are you an ex, if I’m not being nosy?”

“I don’t mind, but it’s a long story.”

Nineteen months earlier I had been on Mathison’s World on the opposite side of Human Occupied Space, about to conclude the most important transaction of my career. Senior Facilitators arc basically polymaths trained to recognize and correlate obscure relationships between vastly disparate types of information. We can discern, extrapolate from, and, of equal importance, articulate, apparently non-existent relationships.

In consideration of a suitable fee, we can reconcile seemingly irreconcilable pieces of data to often arrive at solutions for everything from quarreling spouses to warring planets. For certain types of adjudicating and expediting within specifically defined parameters, only licensed facilitators can legally charge a fee. And, of course, only licensed facilitators are given any credence in the first place by the major businesses and governments with which Human Occupied Space’s several hundred Senior Facilitators normally deal.

Purely by chance, I had been gifted at birth with certain talents that years of training had eventually brought to fruition as a Senior Facilitator. And as befit my biblical name of Isaiah, the motto on my letterhead and business cards read: Come Now, and Let Us Reason Together

But reasoning together on Mathison’s World had led to a tangled nightmare of a disaster for which an arbitrator on Westerworld had designated me the official scapegoat. When all was said and done, my license had been suspended for five years, just at the time that all my savings and investments vanished when the financial haven of New Gibraltar fell out of congruency.

I had a choice: I could take every last penny I could scrape up and appeal the Arbitrator’s decision knowing that the chances of overturning the judgment were slim at best, or I could take my few remaining assets and put my skills to use in the interstellar shipping business.

Eventually, by leaving my pancreas as collateral with the flint-hearted bankers of New Zurich and having it replaced with an artificial one programmed to require servicing within two months of every annual payment date, I was able to purchase a mortgaged spaceship in reasonable working order.

Meeting my mortgage payments subsequently took on an urgency that the average borrower seldom experiences…

Rebona Myking smiled encouragingly. “That doesn’t seem—” but she was cut off by two loud clangs from the Venture’s hull.

“Ship, what’s that?”

“Someone has just pounded on the hull with a metal implement.”

“Thanks for being so informative,” I grumped, and strode to the main hatch. Looking up at the monitor I saw three Bagpipes standing before the lock.

One was Tall And Thin. The other two were strangers. The lighter colored one I dubbed Almost Gray. The third had a peculiar tube in the middle of his body that was thicker and more muscular than those of the others. He became Trunk Like An Elephant.

“Look who’s here,” I called to Rebona, opening the hatch for the aliens.

The Bagpipes brushed past me like visions from a nightmare and headed for the control room. After a moment’s hesitation they shuffled to the main computer’s I/O ports, pulled lumpy crystalline devices from their aprons, and, using seven or eight of their manipulators with blinding speed, began to plug hair-thin filaments from their contrivances into the computer’s access ports.

“What are they doing?” I asked Rebona, but she was as confused as I was and only shook her head. “Ship, defend your integrity by whatever means necessary if it looks like you’re being endangered.”

“Noted.”

Rebona tapped at her computer’s keyboard, then stood scowling at Tall And Thin s reply.

“He says they’re preparing to talk to us. They evidently think they can set up a better translator by connecting their equipment to your ship’s computer.”

“If they don’t destroy the Matrix in the process,” I muttered uneasily, inching forward to get a better look at what the Bagpipes were up to. A few minutes later Almost Gray held out two circular bands of a milky crystalline substance that were wired into the Venture’s I/O ports through a web of dozens of tiny tendrils. Tall And Thin hooted at Rebona and appeared to be motioning for us to approach.

“He says they’re ready or done or that we should proceed, something like that.”

“I’ll go first,” I said with no great enthusiasm. “If my head blows up…” I shrugged, unable to think of appropriate instructions.

I pulled the band over my head. The material softened and adjusted itself to my cranial contours and shortly my eyes and ears were completely covered. An instant later I found myself floating in the vastness of space, adrift in the middle of a grayish cosmos dimly lighted by a billion distant suns.

Slowly, more details began to take shape. Far below I saw a river winding its way across plains and through canyons until it disappeared into the misty distance. Just above the far horizon were two larger stars; stretching between them I could discern a tiny silver thread.

I had just formed the thought of wanting to examine the river more closely when my point of view zoomed downwards until I was floating barely a few feet above its swirling, quicksilver surface. Then, with only the slightest mental flicker, I was able to move along the river at dizzying speed.

Rapids, waterfalls, whirlpools, dams, lakes, reefs, rocks, cliffs, and canyons flashed past until the river finally emptied into a broad, placid sea. I paused for a moment, then began to rise. The ocean dwindled beneath me, the horizon grew curved, and within seconds I was far above what was now a planet hanging in space.

Turning my attention to the millions of distant suns, I realized that if I concentrated on any particular pair of them I could see a tiny silver thread running between them. Was this some sort of psychological visualization of routes through nullspace? I peered in all directions until I found a thread that seemed wider and thicker than the rest, then soared over to examine it.

Once again I found myself hovering above a river.

If the first had been a wild, barely tamed torrent, this one was a placid, heavily traveled, commercial artery. On the river were… things. They were, in a sense, ships, a weird cross between houseboats, ocean liners, and Tom Sawyer’s raft. That’s not, of course, very descriptive, but what I was seeing was not the factual image of a real object but only my poor human brain’s attempt to make sense of the alien signals being pumped through my optic and auditory nerves.

In addition to the boat-like objects there were other things—presences? animals? something—in the water around the ships—silvery-gray, rounded, oval blobs. While unable to determine exactly what they were, my intuition told me that these were living creatures in some sort of symbiosis with the ships, guiding or pulling them down the river, perhaps in a larger sense actually moving the ships through nullspace between the stars.

Was all this a representation of how the Bagpipes navigated their interstellar craft, how they avoided the nullspace dangers that had plagued humanity? I felt myself growing excited. If I could learn how to utilize the Bagpipes’ technique, I could make myself the richest man in HOS.

The distant stars and the threads between them began to fade, to be replaced by a vague, shimmering image of a single Bagpipe. Deep within my head it began to speak, though not in words or phrases. There was no real syntax. It was a gestalt, a succession of pictures overlaid with something like intuition that let me detect, feel, but not necessarily fully comprehend, the whole of the idea the Bagpipe was trying to convey.

I now realized that the blob-like creatures in the rivers were my brain’s visual depiction of crystalline intelligences whose physical presence was forever locked within the veins of Crystal deposits like that which Xerxes was excavating—but whose minds were free to roam the uncharted domains of nullspace.

The Bagpipe flashed me glimpses of world after world, all of them far outside Human Occupied Space and each of them containing deposits of Carson’s crystals. Each deposit comprised a living entity, or perhaps a tribe, or a group, or even a nation of these entities.

In our own three-dimensional world the crystals seemed dead and inert, mere hunks of rock, for we humans perceived only organic life. But the lattices that formed their structure had, over millions of years, evolved to form an intelligence that, though lacking physical senses in our Newtonian Universe, manifested themselves in the domain of nullspace.

For a fleeting instant, I wondered how many other supposedly inanimate objects might have attained some kind of life in the realms of nullspace. Had some of our supercomputers, which themselves were based on crystalline technology, also become sentient dwellers there?

By mining the deposits on New Sonora, the Bagpipe told me, Xavier Xerxes would not only destroy an entire collective of these creatures, he was also potentially injuring the entire Bagpipe species, for the Bagpipes depended upon the nullspace-expressed consciousness rooted in these crystals to guide/propel their ships from world to world. Without them, their ability to cross space would disappear.

I conjured up an image of the crystals in the Venture’s hold. “What about these?”

The response was instantaneous. It was imperative that my crystals be returned from where they had been mined. There, over an unspecified period of time, the crystalline structure would repair itself and grow again into a unified whole. But time was rapidly slipping away—the damage had to be repaired soon.

“Very well,” I temporized. “But I’ll have to figure out a way to actually do this. You don’t understand human laws and customs. You’ll have to give me time to figure out how to accomplish what you want.”

“Why? Why? Why?” the Bagpipe seemed to wail. Then I got something like: “Short time. Soon.” Was that a few days? Then, “No longer. We will take action.” He projected an image of me trying to leave the planet and of their ship tracking me down, taking the crystals by force and destroying the Venture.

My vision blurred to a uniform gray and I found myself back in the Venture with my fingers fumbling to pull the Bagpipes’ device from my head. Beside me Rebona Myking was tugging at her own band. She looked at me wide-eyed, her face filled with awe. “Did you see what I saw?”

“I suppose so.” I glanced at the three aliens and heaved an irritated sigh. “At least now we know what they want and why.”


“It’s a nice ethical problem,” I mused after the Bagpipes had left.

“I can see a number of them,” snapped Rebona tartly. “Which particular one are you talking about?”

“My personal one. If I return the crystals I’ll be left with an empty ship, no prospects, just enough emergency money to fuel up one more time and get off-planet, and absolutely nowhere to go.”

“If you don’t give them up the Bagpipes will chase you down and take them. What’s the ethical problem?”

“Now we know what my crystals can be used for. It’s obvious that I am sitting on Xavier Xerxes’s fortune.”

“So?”

“The Bagpipes need these nullspace creatures alive for their ships to work. But we don’t. Tall And Thin’s modifications to the Venture will let me see the currents in nullspace. It might take ten or twenty years and a few hundred million credits, but one way or another we’ll figure out how to tie pieces of these crystals into our VR/navigation nets. The crystals’ value is almost unimaginable. Every ship in HOS will need a chunk of the stuff. I can think of five corporations that would pay me millions in cash for what’s in my cargo hold.”

“OK, I can see how that would upset the Bagpipes, but why do you think it’s an ethical dilemma?”

“Because as soon as the crystal’s value is discovered they’ll all be mined out and chopped up into little instrument panel-sized pieces. It will be like gold fever was centuries ago. In a generation or two humans will destroy the crystals and the Bagpipes’ civilization with them.”

“Then don’t let anyone know about them.”

“If I can’t earn enough money in the very near future to keep up the payments on this ship, my artificial pancreas will shut down and I won’t be alive to worry about anything. Being an ethicist doesn’t mean I have to commit suicide.”

“Can’t you sell this one load but make sure that everyone knows that the crystals are part of a living creature? The New Sonorans aren’t ethical morons. In fact, they’re actually very dedicated environmentalists. They’d make the crystals a protected life form.”

I heaved a deep sigh. “That’s where the ethical nicety arises. In order to prove what we’re saying, we’d have to show how the crystals can be used for nullspace navigation. Then, instead of just Xerxes and a few hundred thousand New Sonorans, we’d have 20 trillion other people all over Human Occupied Space trying to dig up Carson’s crystals and install them in their ships. It would make things infinitely worse. It would certainly lead to war between humans and Bagpipes.”

“War?” Rebona looked horrified. “You can’t mean that!”

“I’m still a facilitator. Whether I’m licensed or not I can’t escape seeing the consequences of a course of action. Everything I’ve ever learned tells me that war would be inevitable. If human use of the crystals became sufficiently widespread, it would not only doom the crystal creatures, it would eventually relegate the Bagpipes to a single planet. They’re not stupid. Long before they let it come to that, they’d go to war to stop us.”

“Isn’t this the sort of problem facilitators are trained to solve? Can’t you figure out a solution?”

If there’s a way out of this, I don’t know what it is.”

“What do you mean, if?

“I mean that one of the first things a facilitator learns is that not all problems have a solution acceptable to all parties. It’s entirely possible that this is one of them.”

“I see.” Rebona considered me for a long moment, then turned towards the hatch. “You’ll probably get more accomplished without me around—I’ll leave you to your facilitator-type thoughts.” With what might have been a wistful glance over her shoulder, she made her way out of the ship.

The first of my facilitator-type thoughts was no more profound than: So now what?

No matter how I looked at it, Xavier Xerxes was obviously the key to the puzzle. One more attempt to reason with him could hardly make things worse.

Or so I thought.


An hour after Rebona left, the aircar the Venture ordered for me—through the local net settled next to the main ramp—and I climbed aboard. It was mid-afternoon when I reached the entrance to Xerxes’s mine in the Hormagaunt Hills. His battered blue aircar had been joined on the rocky soil by an even more decrepit flyer that might once have been red. I strode through the adit to the shambles of the miner’s living quarters. They were lighted but empty.

Sighing, I moved deeper into the labyrinth of dimly lighted tunnels that Xerxes had gouged out of the mountain. As I neared the rock face where his excavations had exposed the crystal lattice, I heard whoops and yells of drunken excitement. Had Xerxes brought in a gaggle of party girls, along with a basket or two of cactus petals, and gotten himself thoroughly bent?

Rounding the final bend, I saw a bright actinic light flickering against the wall in front of me. I turned the corner to the hemispherical chamber and was treated to a macabre display. The darkness was almost total, illuminated only by a single glow wand lying on the floor. It was enough, however, to reveal Xerxes and another man capering in front of the fifteen-foot-high wall of exposed crystal.

Xerxes’s companion, well over six feet tall, with a beefy flushed face, an orange ruff of bristly hair, and the bloated body of a weightlifter gone to seed, was laughing maniacally as he twirled an eighty-pound beam welder around his head like a toy. Xavier Xerxes, giggling like a wirehead, was staggering back and forth as he tried ineffectually to wrest the welder from the other’s grasp.

“My turn, MacKay,” Xerxes whined, making yet another grab for the welder, “my turn!”

“Not yet!” MacKay howled gleefully. “Once more! I get to do it once more!” He lurched to his left, raised the welder, and pointed it at the center of the crystal face. I managed to shut my eyes an instant before he loosed a ten-foot beam of high-voltage electrons at the wall.

Built to draw huge currents from planetary mains, beam welders excite electrons to an extremely high voltage, then force them through a series of tightly focused magnetic fields to project a beam no more than three inches in diameter as much as fifteen feet from its muzzle.

When MacKay bombarded the crystal wall with high-voltage electrons the current had to find its way to ground. In doing so, it excited various portions of the lattice depending upon the electrical properties of the crystalline structure. MacKay was giving the crystal the equivalent of electric shock therapy.

Why he was doing it became immediately apparent. The moment the beam impacted the lattice, my mind was overwhelmed with fantastic images, colors, tastes, smells, and every other conceivable kind of perceptual sensation. It was as if someone had short-circuited every sensory nerve in my body, had fed me the electronic equivalent of a high-voltage psychotropic drug. These two lunatics were obviously enraptured by the experience, but even in the grip of sensory overload I knew that what they found so pleasurable was, in fact, the screams of terror and pain emanating from the crystal entity.

“Stop that!” I somehow managed to shout. “You’re killing it!”

Stumbling forward, I attempted to wrestle the beam welder from MacKay’s meaty grasp but I might as well have been trying to pull a musket from the hands of a bronze statue. At least now, though, the welder was shut off. As my mind gradually cleared, I continued to grapple ineffectually with Xerxes’s enormous friend until he tired of the unequal contest and ponderously removed one massive hand from the welder.

“Look out!” yelled Rebona Myking from somewhere behind me. Startled, I simultaneously let go of the welder and stumbled on the uneven floor. MacKay’s huge fist whistled past my ear as I fell. As I rolled desperately away from his flailing boots Rebona and two Bagpipes entered the room.

“What are they doing here?” I panted, gesturing at Tall And Thin and Trunk like An Elephant, nonetheless very glad that they had arrived. For Xerxes and his crony MacKay had suddenly lost all interest in me.

“I’m sorry, but after I left your ship the Bagpipes found me again and demanded that I tell them what you were going to do. I tried to explain as well as I could but I think all I managed to do was confuse and upset them. They apparently decided to take some decisive action and they insisted that I come along to translate.”

His tussle with me now forgotten, MacKay uttered an inhuman cackle and once again pointed the welder at the wall. The Bagpipes immediately began to hoot like a broken calliope. Ignoring them, MacKay fumbled for the trigger.

Trunk Like An Elephant scurried forward and wrapped two of his tentacles around the muzzle. Instead of contesting the Bagpipe for possession of the welder, however, MacKay let it swing free until its muzzle was pointed at the center of the alien’s body. Then he pulled the trigger.

A blazing line of electricity splashed across and then through the Bagpipe. Trunk Like An Elephant uttered a single horrible discordant honk and fell to the floor, his central torso a smoking ruin. MacKay stared at the fallen Bagpipe’s body, laughed, then raised the welder and swung it towards Tall And Thin. But the second Bagpipe was ready for him.

So quickly that the motion was barely visible, Tall And Thin produced a small egg-shaped device from one of his apron pockets. He waved it at MacKay in a pattern of three vertical strokes and six horizontal ones. At each stroke a thin, cleaving beam projected from the glittering egg and passed effortlessly through MacKay’s body. In the space of a heartbeat MacKay fell apart like an onion diced by a chef’s invisible knife. Three seconds after MacKay had turned the welder toward Tall And Thin he was nothing but bleeding chunks of meat, steaming and dripping on the cavern floor.

Now the Bagpipe turned the egg towards Xavier Xerxes. Still under the psychotropic affect of the crystal’s wails, the terrified prospector burst into wracking sobs. Deep, ominous hoots rumbled from Tall And Thin’s upper tubes as he raised the egg.

“Wait!” Rebona screamed. Whitefaced and sweating, she thumped her computer and initiated a furious volley of noise. Tall And Thin paused, then hooted back at her. “He says you’ve got to come with us,” she eventually told the blubbering Xerxes. “He… he says that if you make any trouble at all he’ll… he’ll kill you just… just the way he did your friend.” She turned away from the ghastly carnage.

Without waiting for a reply, Tall And Thin slid forward with his usual peculiar grace, grabbed Xerxes’s wrists with two of his tubes, and yanked the miner towards the tunnel. As he slithered past Rebona, a third appendage snaked out to grab her right arm. Startled, she uttered a muffled gasp. Tall And Thin’s only response was to wrap another tube around her waist and drag her even closer.

Without conscious thought I started towards the Bagpipe. In a blur of motion one of his lower appendages seized a rock from the floor of the cavern and launched it with terrible accuracy at the top of my head. The struggling form of Rebona Myking was the last thing I saw as I lost consciousness.


Like everything else in Saguaro, police headquarters was inside a giant cactus. The officers seemed marginally less listless than most of the other natives I had so far encountered. Perhaps they weren’t allowed to chew on duty.

“So you’re the facilitator,” the chief of police said without any sign of friendliness. A sign on his desk identified him as Colonel Gerald Mouers. Tall, leathery, and completely bald, with a long, beaklike nose, he made me think of an ancient Galapagos sea turtle.

“Ex-facilitator, but how did you know that?”

“Xerxes managed to get out a brief call on his wristphone before it went dead. According to him he’s been kidnapped by the Bagpipes. He said you were involved.”

“In the sense that I tried to save him and got knocked unconscious for my trouble,” I growled as I rubbed the egg-sized lump on the top of my head. Flakes of dried blood drifted down to the Chief’s immaculate desk.

“Tell me about it,” the Colonel ordered, waving me to a seat and, after a moment’s hesitation, passing across a bottle of painkillers from a desk drawer.

I told him, leaving out any mention of what I had learned about the crystals from the Bagpipes.

“So Dolf MacKay’s got himself chopped up into little bits, has he?” mused Mouers when I had finished. He didn’t seem particularly upset by the news. “He’s another offworlder, from Propertyville, I think.”

“I suppose,” I said impatiently. “But even if you can’t blame the Bagpipe for killing MacKay in self-defense, I don’t know what they might be doing to Xerxes right now, and, more importantly, to Rebona Myking. What are you going to do?”

“A posse of sworn deputies is being assembled up on the roof right now. You figure they’ve taken them back to their cactus?”

“They don’t respond like humans. I don’t think it would occur to them to try to hide.”

“Then we’ll go over there and get the two of them back.”

“You’d better be careful. We don’t have any idea what kind of technology they’ve got.”

Colonel Mouers considered my words. “You’re a facilitator, a disbarred one at that, not a law enforcement officer. So leave the law enforcing to us—we know our job.” He tugged at his bony nose. “On second thought, I think I’ll ask you to come along. You said you’d been inside their cactus—you might be useful.”

I nodded with no great enthusiasm. The colonel was obviously of the “Puli out your gun and kick in the door,” school of policemen. It was highly probable that he was going to charge in without further thought and get himself and his so-called posse summarily slaughtered. That didn’t bother me—but it was probably going to be up to me to think of something to keep Rebona Myking from being chopped to bits along with the others.


It was late afternoon when our convoy of twelve civilian aircars and two official ones containing perhaps thirty-five people approached the Bagpipes’s Demon Lover cactus. Slightly below the lead vehicle in which I rode I could see the cactus’s bright yellow and orange flowers in full bloom. Not entirely the fool I thought him to be, the cautious Colonel Mouers followed at a discreet distance.

I turned to the grim-faced female police officer sitting at the controls. “What do you—” That was when, in the middle of a clear and entirely unobstructed sky, we ran into something.

As the lead aircar, we had already slowed to little more than twenty miles an hour but the impact still felt like we had run into a huge, slightly flexible plastic wall. An instant later I was in total darkness as the craft’s airbags deployed around us. And moments after that I felt my head and stomach changing places in nauseating fashion.

We were falling, tumbling as we went.

From 500 feet…

An eternity later, still enveloped by the airbags, we smashed into the desert.

When we were pulled from the wreckage my heart was pounding furiously—but my only injury was a slight tenderness in my ribs where an airbag had thrust my arm painfully against my side.

“What happened?” I muttered to Colonel Mouers, who stood scowling down at me.

“It looks like you ran into a force-field.”

“Forcefields are impossible.”

“I guess no one told that to the Bagpipes.”

I shook my head groggily. “How many of the others ran into it?”

“Just one. You were a little bit ahead, so we had some warning.”

“Now I see why you brought me along.” I looked at him grimly. “What about Rebona?”

Mouers jerked a thumb in the direction of the giant cactus. “She’s still in there, I suppose.”

“You don’t know?”

“How can I? My men have been walking around, and flying around, this damned thing for fifteen minutes but we haven’t found a way in. It goes all the way around and up over the top.”

The chief was only partially right, I discovered a few minutes later. My own left hand went easily through the forcefield with only a slight tingling until the edge of the field encountered my wristphone. Then my hand stopped abruptly. I removed the phone and tried again. This time my arm penetrated to the edge of my shirt sleeve. As the Colonel looked on skeptically, I removed my shirt. This time my arm went in as far as my shoulder. I didn’t feel like sticking my head in.

“Organic matter seems to pass through,” I pointed out, “while anything artificial seems to be stopped. If anyone in HOS still wore pure cotton or pure wool instead of these synthetics I’ll bet they’d go through too. As it is, it looks like all we have to do is take off all of our clothes.”

“And go in after them stark naked? With no weapons and them fully armed? What would we do once we found Xerxes and Myking, throw rocks?

“Are you just going to sit out here and do nothing?”

Colonel Mouers gave me as hard a look as I was giving him. “I always knew Xerxes was going to get into trouble fooling around with those crystals. He’s gotten himself into this mess and I don’t intend to make things worse by taking my people in without a plan that has a chance of succeeding. Those aliens are armed, you said.”

“What about Rebona Myking?” I repeated between clenched teeth.

“What we’ve got here is a classic hostage situation. The book says that when you have a barricaded suspect you sit back, let him get tired, and then you negotiate a solution. You don’t go running in without a plan. That will only get people killed. The Bagpipes aren’t going anywhere and neither are we. We can wait longer than they can. I suggest that you go back to your ship and leave the law enforcement to the professionals. If we need you we’ll call you.” Mouers clenched his jaw and pointed me toward one of the civilian aircars. “Cal, take this guy back to town, will you.” It wasn’t a question.

As we flew away, I watched the police settle in to their positions around the cactus. They seemed to be getting comfortable for a long stay.


Half an hour later, as I was sitting in the same chair in the ship’s salon that Rebona Myking had graced so recently, my wristphone rang. To my astonishment it was Rebona.

“Are you all right?” I half-shouted.

“More or less. Having been married to an ethnologist, this isn’t the first time I’ve been in… peculiar circumstances.” She uttered a faint sound that might have been an attempt to laugh. “In spite of everything, the Bagpipes still need me to translate for them. I’m sure that’s their only interest in me. I’ll be fine.”

“What are they doing?”

“I think they want to trade Xerxes and me to you for the crystals in your ship, but first they say that Xerxes must resonate with the crystals so that he can empathize with them.”

I ran that through my mind two or three times.

“What does that mean?”

“I don’t know, but I don’t think it means anything good for Xerxes. The last time I saw him, he was being strapped into a tangle of their equipment and they were attaching pieces of crystal to his head.”

I uttered an exasperated sigh. “I’ll worry about him later. Where are you right now?”

“Just outside the room in the center of the cactus where you first talked with them. Once I finished translating for Xerxes they lost interest in me. They don’t think like we do at all.”

I thrust myself to my feet. “Don’t move,” I ordered. “I’ll come and get you.”


Standing in the ship’s hatch on the edge of the boarding ramp, I stared up at the unfamiliar constellations that filled the night sky. Easy to say that I’d come and get her. But how?

I was, I knew only too well, a facilitator, not a warrior. But unfortunately, I now had little choice. I didn’t much care what happened to Xavier Xerxes, any more than I did about Dolf MacKay. And while I most certainly did care about Rebona Myking, even that was peripheral to my main concern.

A facilitator’s gift is a curse as well as a blessing. Sometimes it forced me to read the future as clearly as if it were scrolling down my monitor, circumscribing my freedom of action as surely as if the doctrine of Predestination really was driving the Universe.

And I now saw the future very clearly.

The Bagpipes didn’t, apparently, understand the concept of the transfer of property, or perhaps even of “property” at all, at least not in the human sense. Unless this mess got cleaned up right now, it was inevitable that someone was eventually going to ask one too many questions about the Bagpipe’s interest in the crystals or, after he was killed, would buy Xerxes’s mine from his estate and sooner or later discover what the crystals could do.

Then we would end up at war with the Bagpipes as surely as I was standing here. Given what I had seen of their technology, it was a war that the mysterious and disquietingly confident aliens might well win. Gritting my teeth, I marched back into the ship. It was time to find out as much as I could about the Demon Lover’s narco-flowers…


The most salient thing I had learned from my crash course in New Sonoran flora and fauna was that the giant butterflies of New Sonora wouldn’t fly at night. So I had had to wait impatiently for first light. Now, as I cruised through the dawn sky with Icarus just above the Dragontooth Mountains, the air rushing across my bare skin was still somewhere between chilly and cold. And in light of the Bagpipes’ forcefield I was, of course, not only unarmed, but also totally naked.

My only accessories were a small set of leather saddlebags draped across my thighs. The saddle on which I sat was composed entirely of leather. Any non-organic straps and metal fittings had been removed, including my safety harness. If I was wrong in my reasoning, the Bagpipes’ field would knock me off the ’fly and I would find myself tumbling several hundred feet to the desert floor, this time without airbags. I gripped the saddle even tighter with my knees.

Just ahead and to my left I spotted the Bagpipes’s cactus, its blunt tip bursting with its crop of enormous flowers. Gently I jiggled the butterfly’s control-bone. My mount made a lazy turn and angled obediently towards my destination.

As we neared the cactus the fly began to zero in on the flowers. I held on tight and waited for us to hit the field. When the moment came it was totally anticlimactic. If the butterfly even noticed the Bagpipes’ barrier it gave no indication. I myself felt nothing but a momentary tingling across my skin.

My mount settled into the gentle concavity of one of the flowers, extruded its feeding tube, and began to probe for nectar. With one hand around the saddle’s leather handle I leaned out as far as I dared and began tearing fragments from the yellow petals. In a few frantic seconds I had my saddlebags filled with pieces of the pulpy blossoms. Finally, by dint of several kicks and a few sharp jabs on the butterfly’s control-bone, I managed to tear my mount away from the flower and into a descending spiral around the cactus.

A quarter of the way down the far side we drifted toward the shadowy mouth of the chamber we had entered the day before. The butterfly’s wingspan was far too great to fit through the opening but through creative gardening and the use of growth hormones the plant’s skin had been persuaded to bulge out into a small landing terrace. My ’fly fluttered to a gentle halt on the edge of the pad. I slipped from the saddle and, after wrapping the creature’s leather halter around a cluster of spines, threw the saddlebags over my shoulder and hurried into the tunnel.

It was even darker than I remembered but I managed to reach the shaft in which we had earlier taken the transport disks. I considered it dubiously for a long moment, then slipped past and padded into the darkness. For several minutes I moved cautiously through the inky tunnels, navigating nearly as much by the slight echoes produced by the slapping of the soles of my feet against the succulent’s resilient floor as by the occasional patches of dim light that appeared at erratic intervals.

Just as I was beginning to wonder if I was hopelessly lost, I heard the soft hooting echoes of Bagpipe conversation intermixed with an eerie, undulating wail. Dragging my left hand along the corridor’s wall to keep from smashing into unseen obstructions, I stepped up my pace.

The tunnel came to an abrupt end at a dimly lighted chamber near the heart of the cactus. The silhouette of Rebona Myking appeared just before me. Beyond her were two Bagpipes and, slumped within a tangle of alien equipment, the corpselike form of Xavier Xerxes.

I paused in the tunnel’s darkness only inches behind Rebona. I could see Tall And Thin and Almost Gray standing over Xerxes, a dozen of their appendages beating a staccato tattoo on the weakly glowing surface of an instrument panel. Suddenly Xerxes’s body tautened, his eyes popped open, and he emitted a high, bloodcurdling shriek to which the Bagpipes remained utterly indifferent. Heart pounding, I slid forward and clapped my hand over Rebona’s mouth.

“Not a sound,” I hissed into her ear as she struggled frantically. “We’ve got to get you and Xerxes out of here.” Her body relaxed and she let me pull her back into the blackness of the tunnel.

“What are they doing to him?” I whispered when I thought we had retreated far enough to avoid being overheard.

She shook her head back and forth wildly. If she noticed I was naked she gave no sign. “I don’t know. I don’t think they’re trying to hurt him, but they have no way of understanding us.” Taking a deep breath, she made an obvious effort to compose herself. “I think they’re just trying to change his mind, to convince him to leave the crystals alone, but God knows what it’s like from Xerxes’s side of the conversation. Did you see how his body stiffened up? I’m afraid they’re going to kill him.”

I nodded grimly and pulled her another couple of steps away from the Bagpipes’ re-education chamber.

“Do you think you could talk them into letting Xerxes go?”

“No—I’ve already spent hours trying. I think they’ve decided that we humans are either crazy or just plain evil.”

I looked at her bleakly. “Then we’ve got no choice. I’m going to have to get you and Xerxes out of here before I deal with them. Here,” I said, reaching into my saddlebags and shoving some torn-up narco-flower blossoms into her hand.

“What’s this for?”

“We know these things have a powerful effect on humans. I’ve taken a look at their chemical structure. They should affect almost any creature with > a nervous system even remotely similar to those I’m familiar with. Besides, I remember you telling me that the Bagpipes were affected by them too. We’re going to mash this stuff down every tube we can reach. I’m hoping it will make them sick or dazed or dizzy or at least distract them enough so that we can get Xerxes out of here.”

“I only said I thought they might be affected by it! No one really knows if the blossoms have any affect on them or not.”

“When your choices are slim and none, slim is better.”

Shaking her head and plainly scared, Rebona accepted the handful of petal fragments, then followed me back towards the aliens’ chamber.

This time Tall And Thin and Almost Gray detected us as soon as we entered the room. Their lack of familiarity with human beings apparently kept them from interpreting our abrupt intrusion as a personal threat. Possibly they considered themselves physically invulnerable to unarmed humans. And who could be more unarmed than the totally naked Isaiah Howe?

At this point subtlety was useless. I simply walked up to Tall And Thin and began stuffing handfuls of flower-petal pulp into every open orifice I could find. Beside me Rebona was doing the same to Almost Gray. The Bagpipes immediately backed away, then stood very still, perhaps trying to comprehend what was happening. Seconds later they began to shake, snort, spin, flail their tentacles, and expel atomized clouds of petal pulp.

I didn’t wait to find out what happened next. Discarding the saddlebags, I pulled Xavier Xerxes’s limp body from the tangle of instruments, brushed the crystals away from his head, and threw him over my shoulder. Then I staggered out of the chamber with the best speed possible.

Rebona trotted ahead of me and, by the feeble glow of her computer’s display screen, we worked our way up through the tunnels. “Almost there,” I panted, “that light we see must be—”

We rounded the last bend.

The silhouettes of five Bagpipes blocked the entrance to the landing platform, their tentacles waving ominously. Rebona and I skidded to an ignominious halt.

“These aren’t the best circumstances under which to begin negotiations,” I growled as I tried to keep Xavier Xerxes’s leaden form from slipping to the floor, “but I don’t think we have much choice. Tell them I’ve figured out a way to protect the crystals from any further interference.”

“I’ll try. I have the words for ‘agreement,’ ‘acceptance,’ and ‘success.’ We’ll see if that works.” Casting an anguished glance at the aliens, Rebona lowered her eyes to her keypad and moments later the tunnel was filled with the grunting, hissing hoots of the machine’s pidgin language. I let Xerxes’s slack body sag to the floor, where he lay snoring raggedly.

“Tell them my solution won’t work if they continue to torture Xerxes, that they’ll only cause the human authorities to get further involved, and that if that happens everyone in Human Occupied Space will find out about the crystals’ real value.”

“ ‘Danger’ and ‘caution’ are about the best I can do. I’ll see if my dictionary has anything else that might work.”

For a full minute after Rebona completed her translation the five aliens huddled in a group, looking like a thicket of bamboo trees thrashing about in a hurricane. Finally one of them burped a reply.

“He… says something about danger, distrust, uncertainty, concern, change, or perhaps death as solving the problem. It doesn’t look like they’re in a frame of mind to negotiate anything.”

“Tell them that if Xerxes is killed, or mind-damaged, it will be impossible to protect the crystals. That if they come to my ship we’ll use the translator they installed and I’ll be able to explain my solution to them.”

“I’ll tell them ‘negotiation,’ ‘meeting,’ ‘success.’ ” Rebona continued her manipulation of the translator. Eventually the Bagpipe spokesman made his reply.

“Now they’re saying lack of trust, fear. I think they want one Bagpipe to go with you and one of us to remain here.”

“Do we dare leave Xerxes? Do you think they’ll go back to work on him?”

“I… don’t know, but I’ve been working with them for months now. I don’t think they’ll hurt me. Take Xerxes and I’ll stay here as their hostage.”

I nodded grimly. The logic was unassailable but it was a decision she alone could make.

“I’m afraid that’s the only alternative,” I agreed, then manhandled Xavier Xerxes to his feet. “Tell them it’s a deal.”

“Isaiah,” Rebona called after me, “you really do have a plan, don’t you?”

“A terrific one. Don’t worry about a thing.”

Now all I had to do was convince the Bagpipes of that. One of the aliens manipulated a preprogrammed net panel to call for an aircar, then dropped the forcefield when the flier approached. During the brief trip to the Venture he kept a duplicate of the glassy egg-shaped weapon that had killed Dolf MacKay pointed at me. If the police noticed the flier leaving, they didn’t bother to give chase. I suspected that the officers on early morning watch were busy chewing a few petals of their own.

Once inside my ship I laid Xerxes on the bunk, checked his pulse and breathing, and found them apparently normal. At least I didn’t have a corpse on my hands. Yet.

Turning back to the Bagpipe that I had named Black-Ringed Tubes, I saw that his weapon was still firmly centered on my chest. Ignoring it as much as possible, I led him to the control console where the two crystal bands were still wired in place. In a show of bravado, I snatched the nearest one and yanked it over my head. Seconds later I was back in virtual space. This time, however, along with the millions of stars, wavering before me was a stylized representation of Black-Ringed Tubes.

“Humans have an institution called trade or barter or bargaining,” I began, “all of which are subsets of negotiation.” I conjured up mental pictures of one person pushing a basket of fruit across an open space and of another person pushing a domestic animal back. Then I moved on to the more difficult concept of money After a long pause Black-Ringed Tubes conveyed the impression that although his knowledge of human culture was sparse at best, he had managed to grasp these basic concepts of commerce.

“Xerxes doesn’t care about the crystals for themselves,” I tried to tell him, “he only sees them as a way to obtain money. If there were another way to obtain money, Xerxes would leave the crystals alone.”

“You will give him this concept you call money?”

“No, you will trade something to Xerxes that will be more valuable to him than the crystals. He will then get money from what you give him and, in exchange, he will leave the crystals alone.”

“I/we have no money. Trick?”

I wasn’t sure if the Bagpipe was asking if I was tricking him or if I was proposing that a deceit be practiced on Xerxes.

“No, but you have something that is worth money, the device that makes your shield, the forcefield you set up around the plant where you are now living. That device is unknown in human culture. The ability to manufacture and sell such a machine would be more valuable to Xerxes than the crystals. If you can show me how to manufacture it, then in exchange I can get him to give up the crystals. Can you do that?”

“A simple device. Easily constructed, well known.”

Did I detect a note of surprise that we humans didn’t understand something as simple as their forcefield generator? I also got the disquieting impression that to them it really was no more than a minor trinket. Just how advanced were these people?

No matter. For the moment, my concerns were purely short-term. I returned to the negotiations and eventually we seemed to reach an understanding.

The Bagpipes would turn over to me all of the technical information needed to build a forcefield generator. I would sell this technology as Xerxes’s agent. A portion of the proceeds would be used to obtain clear title to all deposits of Carson’s crystal on New Sonora. The deeds would be placed in an irrevocable trust with a local bank as trustee. The bank’s fee for the next one hundred years would be paid in advance. Sometime during that period the Bagpipes would return to New Sonora to advance another century of fees.

The moment the trust was established, I would give the Bagpipes my own cargo of crystals. In return, I would take from the remaining balance of the forcefield sale enough money to refuel and reprovision my ship. From what remained I would then take a fifteen percent finder’s fee. Xavier Xerxes would keep the rest. Even as I struggled to convey these mystifying concepts to the Bagpipe, another part of my mind was calculating that the miner’s income from the licensing fees would probably exceed 150,000 credits a year. And that fifteen percent of that would also be mine.

I took a deep breath and tried to focus on Black-Ringed Tubes’s wavering form. “And finally,” I said, “a few small points…”

I liked the concept of being the only human being in all of Human Occupied Space who could read the currents of nullspace. For a star-freighter captain it would be an asset of incalculable value. And, of course, someone had to be the duly appointed intermediary between the Bagpipes and Human Occupied Space.

Could anyone be more qualified to fill that role than Isaiah Howe?

An eternity later, Black-Ringed Tubes reluctantly conceded that the loss of a small piece of crystal two or three inches across wouldn’t cause irreparable harm to the creature in the Hormagaunt Hills. Once the blocks in my cargo hold had been put back the missing fragment would eventually regenerate itself. The Bagpipes would permanently install my piece of crystal inside the Venture’s control panel, where it would be connected to the two translation bands. I would then become the only human being in the Universe able to freely navigate the currents of nullspace.

In return for this, I generously agreed to meet with the Bagpipes at least once every six standard months and to act as their representative in dealing with any problems that might arise between them and the human race.

Wearily I pulled the translator band from my head. All in all it seemed a fair settlement—not, of course, that a formerly licensed Senior Facilitator such as myself would have been satisfied with anything less. The only remaining question was whether Xavier Xerxes would have enough sense to accept it as an alternative to the aliens carting him away and rearranging his brains for good.

Of course, matters would also have to be smoothed over with the colonel, but if neither Xerxes, Re-bona, nor myself were willing to testify, then there was no proof of any kidnapping. We would all swear that MacKay’s death was self-defense so there wouldn’t be much the colonel could do as long as we all stuck together, as I was sure we would. There is no better glue than money.

As I turned my eyes to Black-Ringed Tubes’s multi-appendaged body, I suddenly realized there was another question: Which of his dozens of tubes and tentacles was I going to shake to close the deal?

“Just when I was getting used to you without clothes,” said Rebona Myking lightly, “you had to go and put them back on again.”

“That can be easily remedied,” I grinned.

“Mmmm.” She shifted gracefully in the lead saddle of the butterfly we had rented early that afternoon. Beneath us, the ’fly torpidly drank from an enormous blossom. Rebona tossed her auburn hair over her shoulder and uttered an exhausted sigh. Though her face was haggard and her eyes weary, she still seemed lovely.

“Is it really over?” she murmured. “You’ve arranged everything with the Bagpipes?”

“Yes. Maybe five or six years from now we’ll discover that I completely misunderstood what they were saying and then we’ll have an intergalactic war after all, but for the moment I really think it’s over.”

“And Xavier Xerxes?”

“He’s going to be a rich man. The Dorado Conglomerate on Voreth III has been grappling with forcefield technology for decades now and getting absolutely nowhere. Even from here on New Sonora I ought to be able to conclude a deal by nullspace courier drone in a couple of weeks.”

“You know how the field works?”

“I will soon enough.”

Rebona Myking turned her profile to the orange and green sunset forming above the jagged line of the Firefly Mountains. “So your pancreas is safe for another year.”

“Once I have the money to make my payment.”

“Then you’ll be leaving soon.”

“It’ll take a while to get the trust established and to complete the transfers of title and sign the license agreement. I can’t leave until the off-planet funds are confirmed and my fee paid so that I can buy fuel and provisions. You know how slowly things work on New Sonora.”

“Yes.” She turned away even further so that now all I saw was the back of her head. Was she thinking of the petalhead husband whom she hadn’t seen in nine months?

“So you’ll be here for at least a couple of weeks then,” she said in a small voice.

“Yes. In the meantime, that’s an awfully pretty sunset getting started over there. How about getting this butterfly away from this blossom and flying on over for a closer look? Then maybe we could go back to the ship and open a bottle of real wine. I’ve got one I’ve been saving for a special occasion.” I reached out and tentatively took her hand.

Rebona squeezed my fingers firmly.

“I thought you’d never ask.”

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