Fuzzy - Fuzzy Bones - Fuzzy - Fuzzy Bones Part 10
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Fuzzy - Fuzzy Bones Part 10

Lynne had finished up some things in the kitchen and then joined the group.

"The xeno-paleontologists haven't found any bones yet to hang that theory on,"

she said.

"Well, we've only been here a quarter century," Gerd protested. "We know nothing about the history of Fuzzies, and almost nothing about the history of the planet. The xeno-paleontologists haven't found any really ancient Fuzzy bones, either, but the existence of Fuzzies is self-evident."

Sandra stuck to her point. "I'm not attacking your theory, Gerd, but if it's correct wouldn't that mean there used to be more titanium on Zarathustra? In order for Fuzzies to develop this critical need for it in their diet? Are you saying there used to be more titanium on Zarathustra than there is now? Isn't there a rule or something about that?"

Gerd thought for a moment, smiling as he felt around for the governing principle Sandra was referring to. "Oh, no," he said. "Titanium is too heavy to be carried off as the planet developed. That wouldn't apply to Zarathustra-the gravity is almost the same as Terra." Suddenly, he realized what he was saying. "Great galloping holy Dai-Butsu!" he exclaimed. "I've been digging up the wrong rabbit hole all along! All the titanium ever formed on Zarathustra is still here, in its crust, and that's damned little. That point was established very early in comparative extraterrestrial planetography by-what's his name?-MacKenzie 's Law." "You mean it's constant on all planets?" Sandra asked. "Sure it is," Jack said.

"Do you remember it, Jack?" Gerd asked. "You're the closest thing here to ageologist."

"I can't state it mathematically," Jack said, "but I know it. That tells us beforehand something of what a planet's geology is likely to be all about.

Let's see now-'The rate of escape of a substance from a planetary mass will vary inversely with the gravity of that mass, varies directly with its temperature, and-" He scratched his head. "-and varies indirectly with the boiling or sublimation point of the substance in question.' That's the gist of it."

"All right, then," Sandra said. "If there's so little titanium on Zarathustra, how did Fuzzies come to have such a specific need for it in their metabolism?"

"Now, you're getting back toward my specialty," Gerd said. "That point is only theoretically defined in xeno-biology. Remember Garrett's Theorem? It states that 'A need for an element does not arise in evolution unless the element is available in reasonable amounts and in assimilable form.' In other words-in soluble form." Gerd thought about that for a moment, too, then shook his head.

"That doesn't get me out of the woods, either, does it? There's still the possibility that Fuzzies might not have evolved here at all."

"Pish-tush," Lynne said. "That's along the line of crackpot theories from the First Century that man was not native to Terra-none of which were ever taken seriously by the scientific community."

"That makes sense to me," George said. "How would a low Paleolithic people get to Zarathustra from another planet? Somebody take them for a joy-ride?"

"Which ones?" Ahmed asked. "The low Paleolithic Fuzzies living in the woods, or the agricultural, house-building Fuzzies that are still in the Uplands of North Beta?"

"Or," Jack chimed in, "the reading-and-writing, communication-screen-watching, machinery-operating Fuzzies that are living at Holloway Station and Mallorysport?"

Chapter 17.

"Charming," The Rev muttered as he opened the shop door. A tiny bell, suspended on a piece of spring steel so that the door would brush it into action when opened, jingled brightly. I've never seen one of those things outside a period-piece screenplay, he thought, but one might expect it here.

The white haired proprietor appeared, coming from a well-equipped back room that was many times the size of the tiny front portion of the shop. He smiled in sudden recognition. "Why, Tom," he said, "It is you. From the descriptions I've heard about the Junktown Rescue Mission, I rather thought you might be on Zarathustra."

They shook hands warmly. "It is myself, Henry. It has been a while, indeed, since I saw you. Fenris, I think- wasn't it? After a while all colony worlds begin to look alike."

"I believe it was Fenris, Tom," Henry Stenson said, "although I couldn't begin to tell you how long ago it was. I do recall it was during that squabble when the Couperin Cartel had bought up the old, original colonial company's charter-for about six-and-a-half sols and a bag of jelly beans-and tried to start running the planet. Nasty business, that one."

The Rev smiled. "I remember. The colonists and the Hunters' Co-operative ;both a little unhappy about that. They captured the port authority docks and were going to blow up the City of Malverton on her stand if the Federation Resident-General and the new company Manager-in-Chief tried to disembark.

"I must say, Henry," The Rev continued, "You don't seem to have aged a day in the years since."

Stenson chuckled. "At my age, Tom, there's simply nothing left to wrinkle or go gray. One reaches a kind of optimum state of deterioration and stays there."

Henry Stenson was the finest instrument-maker on Zarathustra-by definition, since he was the only instrument-maker on Zarathustra. However, he would still have been the finest, even if the town was crawling with them. To call Henry Stenson an instrument-maker was about the same thing as calling Michelangelo Buonarroti an interior decorator.

Elderly and thin, with a tight mouth and a face that was a spider web of wrinkles, he was the last man one would think of as being a Federation agent.

He was, though, and had figured pivotally in the great upheaval following the discovery of Fuzzies-the Fuzzy Flap, as local historians now called it.

He was also the only person to ever successfully bug Victor Grego's private office.

"And what brings you to my humble establishment, Tom?" Stenson asked.

The Rev produced a thin sheaf of folded papers, covered with engineering sketches. "Are you familiar with the Bal-lard Diagnostic Reader?" "I am,"

Stenson said.

"Well, I need one," The Rev said, "and there isn't one to be had on the whole planet-and I can't afford to wait a year to get one out here from Terra."

"That's a pretty exotic piece of medical gear for a rescue mission, Tom."

The Rev shook his head. "I know, Henry, but I've got to have one. I just don't have the time or the trained workers to run medical checks on all these poor souls down here using multiple-station methods-even with good quality manual electronic sensing and metering equipment. Blood pressure here, coronary profile there, hematology somewhere else-it just takes too bloody long. Why, do you know there are people in Junktown who have never seen a doctor in their entire adult lives?"

"Shocking," Stenson said. "Shocking thing for the Seventh Century. I thought we had excellent public health programs, here."

"We do," the Rev said. "That's the hell of it. The health care is there, all right, but the people won't use it because experience has taught them that the less contact they have with the government the less trouble the government can make for them. That's what's shocking."

"Well, don't make too much of it, Tom," Stenson said. "The way people are pouring into Mallorysport for the so-called great land boom, you've got to expect that most of them will be the kind that doesn't trust the government."

"And why should they, Henry?" the Rev asked. "For the most part they're the disillusioned and disadvantaged. If a man is prosperous, he's more apt to stay home. That's what makes any immigration movement a built-in heartbreaker. Most of these people wind up broke and hungry when they find the streets aren't paved with sunstones-and where a lot of them wind up is at my mission. So, Idispense porridge and medical care, and try to patch up their souls enough for them to climb back in the ring for another round."

"I've been watching it, too," Stenson said, "and things are beginning to show signs of strain."

"That's what I 'm trying to do," the Rev said, "give them a little hope, a little help, and keep them from becoming desperate."

"It's a dangerous situation, Tom," Stenson said. "Yes, dangerous enough-even without Hugo Ingermann and his gang of thugs constantly haranguing the mob.

There's an old proverb, Tom: 'A hungry man is like a wolf in the forest; he'll go where you tell him when his belly is empty.' "

"We've both seen it before," the Rev said. "When hope goes out the airlock, men get desperate. They've got nothing left to lose, so they'll try most anything-things they would never think of doing if they didn't have their backs to the wall. They 're easy marks for manipulation by people like this bastard Ingermann. I can see it coming in Junktown. Unless something happens to take the pressure off, the whole place is going to blow up one of these days." The little bell rang as someone entered the shop.

Henry Stenson tidied up the sheaf of papers. "Yes, I can build one of these for you, Father. The contact plate will have to be a breadboard rig, but it will sense out all the data you want. Otherwise, it will work just like any Ballard Reader in the best hospital on Terra."

Judge Frederic Pendarvis laid down the sheaf of papers, moved the ashtray a few inches to the right, and took a slender cigar out of the silver box on his desk. After he had lighted it, he leaned back in his chair and blew a smoke ring at the ceiling. Then he turned his attention to the bearded giant and the small, bristly-looking man who sat across the desk from him. "I see nothing wrong with this at all. Your assessment is quite correct, Gus. For my part, I agree that we are on solid ground with respect to the Federation Constitution and the body of colonial case law.

"Colonial Investigations Bureau," the Chief Justice said reflectively. He flicked a quarter-inch of ash from his panetella and smiled. "I must congratulate you both on putting this together. The very idea of getting all those different cops to pull together on something like this is nothing short of astounding. I've been dealing with all of the law enforcement agencies on the planet for the past fifteen years, and, I can tell you, they can be the damnedest bunch of fools-squabbling like fishwives over jurisdiction, proof of claim, interrogation priority, previous wants and warrants, perquisites and privilege-you name it. There isn't a one of them I haven't wanted to take a horsewhip to over the years, usually for clogging up the courts while they prove to one and all that their uniform is more righteous than the next guy's." Ben Rainsford frowned and looked at the floor. "Only one thing I'm unhappy about," he said.

"What's that, Ben?" Judge Pendarvis asked. "That young fella, Khadra. I wanted him to head up the CIB. Why'd he have to go and get married and run off to Beta?"

"I strongly suspect it's because he was in love," Pendarvis remarked drily.

Rainsford waved his hand impatiently and began fishing for his pipe in the pocket of his bush jacket.

The way he throws that pipe in and out of his jacket, Pendarvis thought, I'll bet the inside of that pocket looks as black as a Hathor wolfram-miner'slungs.

"Will this help any," Rainsford said around his pipestem as he touched flame to the bowl, "to slow up the congestion in your criminal courts docket?"

"No," Pendarvis sighed. "It will only make it more orderly."

"Well, I can't give you the extra judgeships you asked for in either department," Rainsford said, almost defensively. "There's just no money for it. The fact of the matter is that the CZC is financing this government at the moment-until we can get a constitution out of those lame-brained delegates , elect a proper legislature, and levy taxes. And the CZC is going to expect its money back one of these days. It's a hell of a way to start out a government-in debt-but it can't be helped, I suppose. Is there anything you and Gus can come up with to reduce the load on the criminal side?" Rainsford looked anxiously at both of them in turn. "I'll go along with anything that makes sense."

Pendarvis' eyes narrowed slightly. "Not much, unless you want to do it at the expense of fair and equal justice under the law," he said evenly.

Gus knew that Rainsford had hit a sensitive spot. "I could encourage my prosecutors to be a little more open to plea-bargaining," he offered. "A lot of these criminal cases are pretty cut and dried, but they stagger on through the system with a long trial-often because the defense attorney loves to hear the pure, spellbinding eloquence of his own courtroom oratory."

"And just as often is practicing his planned future political speeches on the jury," Pendarvis added. "I would have no objection to that, Gus-as long as we veridicate the accused in open court regarding any pressure than might have been brought on him to plead guilty to a lesser charge."

"What will that get us in terms of man-days saved?" Rainsford asked, "-or whatever measure of increased efficiency is applicable."

"Not much," Pendarvis said, "but being able to get one more preliminary hearing a day on each judge's docket will do more than it sounds like."

"The civil side isn't going to get any better, though," Gus said, "and there's nothing I can do about that-out of my jurisdiction."

"Yes," Pendarvis said, almost wistfully. "There's the real rub. We have more criminal cases, but they are simpler than before. Our civil cases-which we also have a great deal more of-are getting more complex."

Rainsford jabbed his pipestem at the air. "It's that Ingermann s.o.b.," he said. "He's behind this caseload problem that's starting to clog up the courts. Overloading the legal system is a fine first step toward bringing down the government. It helps frustrate people. Frustration generates lack of inclination to depend on the legal systems of redress, and that generates more and more lawlessness."

"If that's his purpose," Pendarvis said, "I can see how what you suggest would suit his purpose admirably. But I question that the soi disant geopolitician Hugo Ingermann has an organization that is quite so efficient."

"Oh, I think he does," Gus said. "I've been studying Mr. Ingermann's operation quite closely as I remain alert for ways to rid the planet of him. As I've said, Ingermann is Out to Get Us in capital letters. The more I learn about him, the more I agree with your notion-hare-brained though it seemed atfirst-"

Rainsford glared at him.

Gus grinned and went on. ". . . that he's fastened himself on getting control of Zarathustra. And he's smart enough to have several scams working in that direction-on the theory that any one of them will be more apt to pay off in an atmosphere of general disruption and confusion."

A small bell chimed somewhere in Pendarvis' office, discreetly indicating that the time had come for him to go on to other matters.

Rainsford and Brannhard stood and prepared to leave.

"By the way, Governor," Pendarvis said, "I didn't request those judgeships because I thought the government could afford them or because l expected to get them anytime soon."

"What for, then?" Rainsford asked.

"For the record, "Pendarvis said, "so that when we can afford them, I won't be completely at the end of the line for budget increases."

Chapter 18.

Mr. Commissioner Holloway reached up behind his own head and pushed his hat down over his forehead to shade his eyes. He chuffed on his pipe and continued to swing the microray scanner ahead of him as he crossed and re-crossed the basin of Fuzzy Valley.

Gerd had his portable lab-screwed to a contragravity lifter-programmed for inorganics and was running soil samples. The lab floated weightless at bench height, bobbing slightly each time Gerd punched a set of data into the chart storage unit.

George and Ahmed were circling the rim of the valley on a small skid, looking for other signs of Fuzzy habitation that couldn't be seen from the air.

The Fuzzies had promptly disappeared upon arrival. "So ni-hosh shi-mosh-gashta," Jack had said. "You find the people like Fuzzies. Tell them Hagga love them, give good treats-give esteefee."

Jack set his microray scanner on the edge of Gerd's "bench," and took a long drink of water. He took off his hat and wiped his forehead with the back of his hand. "Nothing unusual about the geology, Gerd," he said. "This is all homogeneous-pretty much normal sedimentary stuff. I don't know anything now that I didn't know when I kicked my toe in the dirt and said that to begin with. "

Gerd punched another test result into the chart unit and raised one eyebrow.

"But now you know for sure," he said.

"True," Jack replied. "If there's anything buried in the valley, it's buried mighty deep."

"Well, there's something here," Gerd said, "that's putting a lot of titanium into the soil. So far, I have double, triple, and quad-ionized titanium traces, titanic acids, and titanates. The soil is rich enough to grow these plants again if it had sufficient water. The plants are sure to have picked the stuff up-and hence been tasty to Fuzzies. I'll take some plant samplesback for analysis, but that's just lip service. I'm sure I'm right."

"But, where is it coming from?" Jack insisted. 'Can you tell that?"

"Don't know yet," Gerd said. "I'm doing a random chart, now. If that doesn't 'point a finger.' so to speak, we can lay out a point-grid, with a sample from each point on a hundred-meter checkerboard, and graph that. 1 did have one thought." "Which is?"

"Does titanium ever come in meteorites'?" Gerd asked. Jack shrugged. "I don't know. I suppose it could." "Mmmmm," Gerd said. "That's so far out of my area, I wouldn't even know how to start looking it up. If, though, there was a big titanium-rich meteorite buried up on one of these mountains, it would decompose, ever so slowly, and release compounds like this into the soil as it washes down to the valley floor."

Jack leaned on the lifter and gazed south toward the woods. "You know, we could come up here and sink a water well. I'll bet money the water table isn't very deep. Sink the well upstream," he mused, talking more to himself than to Gerd, who understood and went on with his work while only half-listening.

"Wouldn't be unheard of to hit a structure that'd give us a good head of artesian flow. " He jerked his thumb back over his shoulder. "Why, it's plain as day that there's a saturation layer east of that saddle where the old creek ran. All kinds of folded structures around here. With the amount of hot springs and geothermal fumaroles we've spotted, there's a good chance of hitting a pressure dome. Something's keeping those trees alive down in the woods, there. No sign of them dying back since the rainfall dropped off."

"Why would you want to?" Gerd asked. "Want to what?"

"Bore a well, of course."

"Why to throw the switch again on the water supply," Jack said, "get things growing up here again. Think about it. Live plants that are rich in titanium compounds-that could put a whole new twist to your Fuzzy research." He laughed, quickly and shortly. "Fuzzy salad might hold the key to the whole problem."

"Hmmmph!" Gerd said."

"Son of a Khooghra!" Jack exclaimed suddenly. Without moving his head, he fumbled behind him, making the skid bob violently.

"What the blazes are you doing?" Gerd asked, snatching up one of his soil samples to keep it from being spilled. "Hand me the binos-quick!" Jack said.

Gerd placed the stereo-optic in Jack's outstretched hand. Jack clapped it to his eyes and chuckled, talking to himself under his breath.

"What is it?" Gerd asked.

"Here," Jack said, "see for yourself." Gerd grabbed the binos and looked. "So we said the Upland Fuzzies had unusual traits, did we-traits like co-operative hunting-that woods Fuzzies didn't bother with?" Jack said triumphantly.