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  Rendezvous on a Lost World by A. Bertram Chandler

  Chapter 1

  When the dream dies, what of the dreamer?

  Chapter 2

  It was Kemp's dream, although we shared part of it. It was Kemp's dream, but Jim Larsen participated. in it, and Dudley Hill, and myself. It was a dream that is not uncommon among spacemen, especiallv such spacemen as ply their trade out and away from the well-serviced shipping routes. It was a dream that some few spacemen have made come true.

  Alan Kemp, when I first met him, was Chief Officer of the old Rimhound. He was a typical enough Rim Runners officer inasmuch as he, like most of us in such employment, had served in big ships before coming out to the Rim. He retained a dignity, almost a pomnosity of bearing that didn't match either the shabbiness of his uniform or the decrepitude of his vessel. For the rest, he was a big man, tall, gray-haired, and with the bleak blue eyes that spacemen always seem to own in fiction but so seldom do in fact. But he was, once you got to know him, once you got past his reserve, a good shipmate and a good friend. Had he not been so the rest of us would never have accompanied him in his venture.

  Old Jim Larsen was Rimhound's Second Interstellar Drive Engineer. We all called him "Old Jim." On meeting him for the first time, the impression of extreme age was the one that presented itself. But then you became aware of alertness, aliveness, of the somehow indestructible youth that looked out from behind his gray eyes. And this made nonsense of his bald head, withered frame and wrinkled face.

  Nobody knew just how old he was. His Chief Interstellar Engineer Certificate had been folded and refolded so many times that the date of birth recorded on the piece of parchment was illegible. It was strongly suspected that this date was nothing like the one that he used when signing ship's Articles. Also, his Certificate carried an Ehrenhaft Drive endorsement, and the last of the Ehrenhaft Drive ships, the gaussjammers, was broken up before I was born.

  Dudley Hill was Third Mate. Like Kemp, he had served in the big ships of the Interstellar Transport Commission. Unlike Kemp, he had not waited until he was a senior officer before he had resigned from the Commission's service. Rumor had it that he had been asked to resign, that he had been implicated in the collision of Beta Scorpü with an asteroid in the Rigellian planetary system.

  Rumor had it, too, that he had been made the scapegoat and that Beta Scorpü's Master, who possessed powerful friends in the Commission's upper hierarchy, was responsible for the error of judgment that resulted in the near-wreck. However, Rim Runners, chronically short of officers, asks no questions, and Dudley was as sober and reliable a spaceman as any on the Rim, and more so than most.

  And myself? I was Rimhound's Purser, the spacefaring office boy, as I was sometimes called. Like the others, I'd drifted out to the Rim. I was, rather more years ago than I care to remember, once in the Waverly Royal Mail. The Waverly Royal Mail has rather old-fashioned ideas as to what constitutes gentlemanly conduct on the part of its officers. (The Kingdom of Waverly, of course, is the last stronghold of old-fashioned ideas.) The Waverly Royal Mail doesn't like divorce cases in which the evidence has been collected aboard one of its ships. The Waverly Royal Mail especially does not like Pursers who have been named as correspondents.

  So…

  Anyhow, we'd served together aboard Rimhound for some months. We'd got to know each other, had learned a great deal about each other's backgrounds. I'd met Alan's wife-he was the only one of the four of us who was married— quite a few times when the ship was in at Port Farewell, on Faraway, and each time I had envied Alan.

  Veronica doesn't come into the story as a person, as a matter of fact, although her influence played a great part. Veronica was lovely. She was a Carinthian, and if you've ever met a typical woman from that planet you'll be able to guess what she was like. I don't know why or how it is, but human stock on Carinthia seems to have mutated slightly, to have developed along the lines of the Siamese cat. That, I know, is biological nonsense, but it's the best way of giving an impression of the coloring of Carinthian women, the sleekness, the grace. If you like Siamese cats—and I do, and Alan did—you'll like the women of Carinthia.

  Alan had met Veronica when she was traveling out to the Rim in the old Delta Sextans, of which vessel he was Chief Officer. He'd fallen for her, hard. He'd have been willing to have made his home on any planet of the galaxy as long as she was there, but I'm inclined to think that he was rather shaken when she announced her firm intention of living on Faraway. The Interstellar Commission doesn't maintain anything like a regular service to the Rim and so, throwing away his years of seniority, Alan left them and joined Rim Runners.

  So there we were, the four of us, in Rimhound when she was switched off the usual tramlines—the Lorn, Faraway, Ultimo, Thule and Eastern Circuit run—and chartered to the Shakespearian Line. It made a change. It was a plunge in towards the Center, although not-a very deep one. The Shakespearian Sector may not be officially regarded as part of the Rim, but it's so far out that the night skies of its worlds display only a sparse sprinkling of stars.

  We carried a full cargo of agricultural machinery from Port Farewell, on Faraway, to Port Fortinbras, onElsinore. It was our luck—bad luck, we thought at first—to arrive there in time for the beginning of the Cargo Handlers' strike, an industrial dispute that dragged on and on.

  As a result of this long period of enforced idleness there was ample planet leave. And there was, too, ample time for those of us with wives and families to become more than usually browned-off with a means of livelihood that made long periods of separation inevitable, that entailed the occasional lengthening of such periods by the stubbornness of trade union leaders and employers of labor on distant worlds.

  Of the four of us, Alan Kemp was the most browned-off. We were not surprised. We knew him well by this time, knew his moods, knew that even a month away from Veronica was, for him, little short of eternity. I know this much, too. If I'd been married to her my spacefaring days would have been over, even if the only shore employment offering had been shoveling sludge in the sewage conversion plant. But Alan was different.

  Even so, there could have been far worse worlds for a holdup than Elsinore. It's a pleasant enough hunk of dirt. The land is mainly flat, and fertile and well wooded. There are no extremes of temperature except at the Poles and at the Equator. There are almost no heavy industries. The people are an outwardly stolid breed, running to blondness and fatness, both men and women.

  In spite of their stolidity, or because of it, they are inveterate gamblers. They gamble on the turn of a card, on the fall of a coin or the dice. They make wagers on horseraces, on dograces, on races between representatives of such of the indigenous fauna as are noted for fleetness of foot or wing. Every town, every village, even boasts its casino. Then, to rake in such folding money as may still be loafing around, there are private lotteries, and municipal lotteries, and state lotteries.

  Oddly enough, none of us was a gambler. Come to that, we were rather deficient in all the vices—with the exception of old Jim Larsen—leading, by Rim Runners' standards, lives of quite exceptional virtue. But after a few weeks of Elsinore we began more and more to frequent the taverns in and around Fortinbras. Alan Kemp, was not often one of the party. About once a week, however, he would declare that he had to get off the ship before he was driven even farther round the bend than he was already, and join us.

  He was always rather a morbid drinker and liked to drink in morbid surroundings. When he was with us we invariably finished the evening at the Poor Yorick, an establishment justly famou
s for its funeral decor. We would sit around a coffin-shaped table drinking beer from mugs that were facsimiles of human skulls—they even had the horrid feel of old bone—listening to the fine selection of funeral marches that was the only music obtainable from the jukebox, the casing of which was the work of a monumental mason. The dim lighting was by flickering, smoking tallow candles. The floral decorations took the form of floral tributes.

  The night that it all started, the night that the dream began to come true, Alan was in fine form. There had been a mail in that morning—the Commission's Epsilon Crucis, inbound from the Rim—and there had been no letters for our Chief Officer. The inevitable result was that he was both sulking and worrying.

  "Space," he announced, for about the fifth time that evening, "is no life for a civilized man."

  "You," I told him, "are not a civilized man. You know damn well that you could never settle down ashore. Ships are your life."

  "That might have been true," he said, "before I met Veronica. It's not true now."

  "Then why don't you just get the hell out of it?" asked Jim Larsen.

  "Given a job that pays as well as this," said Alan, "I would."

  "You wouldn't," I told him. "You're too fond of being a big frog in a small puddle. You've been a senior officer too long, first in the Commission's ships, then with Rim Runners. And you think that you might as well stick it out and become Master now."

  "All right," he said. "Perhaps I do. But there's only one way to be really happy as Master, and that's to be an owner as well." He sipped his beer thoughtfully. "A little ship could be fitted in the Eastern Circuit without trampling on our revered employer's corns too heavily. A shuttle service, say, between Mellise and Grollor."

  "Even little ships cost big money," pointed out Dudley Hill gloomily.

  Old Jim laughed. "This is the world to get it on. What about the lotteries? If you aren't in, you can't win."

  "The trouble is," I told them, "that money just can't be taken off Elsinore. Currency regulations and restrictions and all the rest of it."

  "Your point," said Alan, "is purely academic. Surely you know by this time that it is always somebody else who wins prizes in lotteries. I'll prove it." He beckoned to the waiter, a cadaverous, black-clad individual. "I suppose that you sell lottery tickets here?"

  "Indeed, yes, sir. TattersalTs? Elsinore State? Fortinbras Municipal?"

  "Which one is drawn the first?"

  "Tattersall's, sir."

  "Then I'll have a ticket. A losing ticket."

  The man smiled. "The winning ticket, sir."

  "Oh, no. If I hold it, it can't possibly win."

  "As you say, sir. That will be two dollars."

  "I'm prepared to pay to prove my point," said Alan gloomily

  Two days later, he learned that he had won a hundred thousand Elsinore dollars.

  Alan Kemp, like many others in like circumstances, had blandly assumed that all his worries would be over when he won the big prize. Like those others he soon discovered that his worries were just starting.

  "Until this moment," he grumbled, "I always thought that lack of money was my biggest trouble. Now I'm not so sure."

  "Come off it," I told him. I looked at the solidograph of Veronica that stood on his desk, the figurine in the cube of clear plastic that seemed almost alive, that held all the grace and loveliness of her in miniature. "Come off it, Alan. You've a beautiful wife and a not so small fortune. What the hell more do you want?"

  "She," he said patiently, "is on Faraway. The fortune is here. On Elsinore."

  "There are such vehicles as passenger-carrying spaceships, you know. I can see no reason why the pair of you shouldn't settle on Elsinore. You could set yourselves up in some kind of business."

  "I've thought of that. But there's only one kind of business that we've ever dreamed of setting ourselves up in."

  "You mean what you were talking about the other night? Owner and Master?"

  "Yes. As I was saying, a little ship with a minimal crew, paid on a share basis. Myself as Master and Veronica as Catering Officer—as you know, she's a first-class cook. Other people have made a go of it, on those lines. And now, when at last we have some capital to play with, there's no way of getting it off this blasted planet." He splashed some more gin into our glasses. "Are you sure there's no way, George?"

  "Quite sure," I said. "I've spent all day exploring every avenue on your behalf, leaving no stone unturned. I started in Port Fortinbras. There's only one way for you to get the money off Elsinore, and that's to buy things for export to the Rim Worlds. And you haven't a hope in hell of doing that, not for a couple of years, at least. All available tonnage is booked up that far ahead."

  "There's always the odd E^m'fcm-class tramp drifting in," he suggested, not very hopefully.

  "And suppose one does? What chance do you stand against the local exporters, all clamoring for cargo space?"

  "I could employ an Agent."

  "And he'd soon whittle your hundred thousand down to size. Seriously, Alan, why don't you and Veronica settle on Elsinore?"

  He refilled our glasses, then filled and lit his foul pipe. He said, "I've considered that. I'd be quite happy about it; as far as I'm concerned home is wherever Veronica is. But I'm pretty sure that she would never consent. You know, as well as I do, that there are two classes of people who come out to the Rim—although I suppose that most of us are sort of hybrids, belonging to both classes. There are those who come out to make a living, who think that there are better chances of advancement on the Rim Worlds than on the heavily populated planets of the Center. Then there are those who come out for psychological reasons, who are running away from something, who are running away as far as they possibly can."

  "I never thought that Veronica came into that cateporv."

  "She does. I met her, you know, when she was traveling out in the old Delta Sextans from Carinthia to Van Die-men's Planet. She had her passage booked right out to Faraway even then—Interstellar Transport Commission, Shakespearian Lines, Rim Runners, the usual. When we got to know each other she told me something of her life story, enough for me to be able to fill in details for myself.

  "She and some man had contrived to make a stinking mess of each other's lives, so much so that she decided to make a clean break, to get out and clear, to get away as far as possible. I caught her on the rebound, I suppose. Or she caught me. And that's how and why I resigned from the Commission's service, to make a fresh start in these interstellar rustbuckets."

  "And she won't budge from the Rim?"

  "No. Shortly after I first came out I was offered a command in the Shakespearian Line. I had to turn it down, even though I was only a bold Third Mate with Rim Runners at the time. To the Rim she's come, and on the Rim she'll stay. With me, or alone."

  "I had no idea," I said, not entirely truthfully.

  "When it comes to the inner workings, or the malfunc-tionings, of a marriage," he told me, "outsiders rarely do."

  "I suppose not."

  "Some more gin?"

  "No thanks. I'll be drinking you out of house and home."

  He grinned wrily. "I can afford it."

  "All right, then. But make it a small one."

  I saw him stiffen abruptlv as he was pouring the drinks, his face suddenly alert. I wondered what was amiss and then heard, faintly, the wailing notes muffled by our hull insulation, the spaceport alarm siren.

  Alan slammed down the bottle, jumped to his feet, ran out into the alleyway. I followed him, saw him clambering up the short ladder from the officers' flat to the control room. I called out, asking him what was wrong. He replied curtly that he didn't know. (He thought, as I did, he told me later, that there was some kind of civil commotion arising from the strike, that the spaceport was under attack by a mob.)

  I was surprised and relieved to find, when I joined Alan at the big viewports, that all was apparently quiet, that the wide expanse of scarred concrete was deserted, that there was no unusua
l activity at or around the spaceport gates.

  Chapter 3

  The night was dark, clear overhead, but with a suggestion of mist at ground level. To the southward the lights of Fortinbras City were bright, casting their usual diffused glow into the sky but, as yet, the spaceport was almost without illumination. Atop the Control Tower the red light was flashing the warning signal that a ship was about to arrive or depart. But we were the only ship in port and our departure date was a matter for uninformed conjecture, and no other vessel was due for all of three weeks.

  "I've been ringing the Port Captain," Kemp told me, "but every time that I've tried to get through the line's been engaged. Give it a go, will you? When you raise him, let me know." He picked up a pair of powerful binoculars, stared through them up at the wide circle of night sky that was visible through the transparency at our stem.

  I picked up the telephone—it was spaceport property and was connected by landline to the communications system of Elsinore—and punched the buttons for the Port Office number. After six fruitless attempts the screen lit up. From it glared the worried face of a man whom I recognized as one of the minor port officials. "Yes?" he snapped. "What do you want?"

  "Officer in charge of Rimhound, here," I told him, handing the instrument to Alan.

  "What's all the flap about, Clancey?" Alan asked.

  Faintly I heard the reply. "Unidentified ship coming in. You'd better get that scow of yours off the field."

  "We can't. Main propellant pump's adrift for overhaul."

  "Then you'd better get all hands out of the ship and clear of the apron. The way the stranger's behaving, there's liable to be a mess when she hits."

  "Who is she?"

  "Didn't you hear me say that she was unidentified? She's got no Deep Space radio; didn't send any signals until she was already within radar range. She's homing on our beacon, but she's coming in on an oblique trajectory, like an aircraft. That's all that I can tell you. Now get off the line."