The Cartels Jungle
by
The cartels jungle
by … Irving E. Cox, Jr.
It was a world of greedy Dynasts–each contending for the right to pillage and enslave. But one man’s valor became a shining shield.
* * * * *
… and he who overcomes an enemy by fraud is as much to be praised as he who does so by force.
Machiavelli, DISCORSI, III, 1531
The captain walked down the ramp carrying a lightweight bag. To a discerning eye, that bag meant only one thing: Max Hunter had quit the service. A spaceman on leave never took personal belongings from his ship, because without a bag he could by-pass the tedious wait for a customs clearance.
From the foot of the ramp a gray-haired port hand called up to Hunter, “So you’re really through, Max?”
“I always said, by the time I was twenty-six–“
“Lots of guys think they’ll make it. I did once myself. Look at me now. I’m no good in the ships any more, so they bust me back to port hand. It’s too damn easy to throw your credits away in the crumb-joints.”
“I’m getting married,” Hunter replied. “Ann and I worked this out when I joined the service. Now we have the capital to open her clinic–and ninety-six thousand credits, salted away in the Solar First National Fund.”
“Every youngster starts out like you did, but something always happens. The girl doesn’t wait, maybe. Or he gets to thinking he can pile up credits faster in the company casinos.” The old man saluted. “So long, boy. It does my soul good to meet one guy who’s getting out of this crazy space racket.”
Max Hunter strode along the fenced causeway toward the low, pink-walled municipal building, shimmering in the desert sun. Behind him the repair docks and the launching tubes made a ragged silhouette against the sky.
Hunter felt no romantic inclination to look back. He had always been amused by the insipid, Tri-D space operas. To Hunter it had been a business–a job different from other occupations only because the risks were greater and the bonus scale higher.
Ann would be waiting in the lobby, as she always was when he came in from a flight. But today when they left the field, it would be for keeps. Anticipation made his memory of Ann Saymer suddenly vivid–the caress of her lips, the delicate scent of her hair, her quick smile and the pert upturn of her nose.
Captain Hunter thought of Ann as small and delicate, yet neither term was strictly applicable except subjectively in relation to himself. Hunter towered a good four inches above six feet. His shoulders were broad and powerful, his hips narrow, and his belly flat and hard. He moved with the co-ordination that had become second nature to him after a decade of frontier war. He was the typical spaceman, holding a First in his profession.
As was his privilege, he still wore his captain’s uniform–dress boots of black plastic, tight-fitting trousers, and a scarlet jacket bearing the gold insignia of Consolidated Solar Industries.
Hunter entered the municipal building and joined the line of people moving slowly toward the customs booth. Anxiously he scanned the mass of faces in the lobby. Ann Saymer wasn’t there.
He felt the keen, knife-edge disappointment, and something else–something he didn’t want to put into words. He had sent Ann a micropic telling her when his ship would be in. Of course, there was that commission-job she had taken–
Abruptly he was face to face again with the vague fear that had nagged at his mind for nearly a month. This wasn’t like Ann. Always before she had sent him every two or three days a chatty micropic, using the private code they had invented to cut the unit cost of words. But four weeks had now passed since he had last heard from her.