PAGE 16
Anchorite
by
“Mostly. He has the notion that everybody has a right to be accorded the respect of his fellow man, and that that right is something that every person is automatically given at birth, not something he has to earn. What gave him his particular gripe against us, I don’t know, but he’s been out to get us ever since his trip here three years ago.”
“You know, Larry,” Alhamid said slowly, “I’m not quite sure which is harder to understand: How a whole civilization could believe that sort of thing, or how a single intelligent man could.”
“It’s a positive feedback,” the governor said. “That sort of thing has wrecked civilizations before and will do it again. Let’s not let it wreck ours. Are you ready for the conference with our friend now?”
Georges Alhamid looked at the clock on the wall. “Ready as I’ll ever be. You’d better scram, Larry. We mustn’t give Mr. Tarnhorst the impression that there’s some sort of collusion between business and government out there in the Belt.”
“Heaven forfend! I’ll get.”
When he left, the governor took the playback with him. The recording would have to be filed in the special secret files.
* * * * *
Captain St. Simon eased his spaceboat down to the surface of Pallas and threw on the magnetic anchor which held the little craft solidly to the metal surface of the landing field. The traffic around Pallas was fairly heavy this time of year, since the planetoid was on the same side of the sun as Earth, and the big cargo haulers were moving in and out, loading refined metals and raw materials, unloading manufactured goods from Earth. He’d had to wait several minutes in the traffic pattern before being given clearance for anchoring.
He was already dressed in his vacuum suit, and the cabin of the boat was exhausted of its air. He checked his control board, making sure every switch and dial was in the proper position. Only then did he open the door and step out to the gray surface of the landing field. His suitcase–a spherical, sealed container that the Belt men jokingly referred to as a “bomb”–went with him. He locked the door of his boat and walked down the yellow-painted safety lane toward the nearest air lock leading into the interior of the planetoid.
He lifted his feet and set them down with precision–nobody but a fool wears glide boots on the outside. He kept his eyes moving–up and around, on both sides, above, and behind. The yellow path was supposed to be a safety lane, but there was no need of taking the chance of having an out-of-control ship come sliding in on him. Of course, if it was coming in really fast, he’d have no chance to move; he might not even see it at all. But why get slugged by a slow one?
He waited outside the air-lock door for the green light to come on. There were several other space-suited figures around him, but he didn’t recognize any of them. He hummed softly to himself.
The green light came on, and the door of the air lock slid open. The small crowd trooped inside, and, after a minute, the door slid shut again. As the elevator dropped, St. Simon heard the familiar whoosh as the air came rushing in. By the time it had reached the lower level, the elevator was up to pressure.
* * * * *
On Earth, there might have been a sign in such an elevator, reading: DO NOT REMOVE VACUUM SUITS IN ELEVATOR. There was no need for it here; every man there knew how to handle himself in an air lock. If he hadn’t, he wouldn’t have been there.