Part 1
THE RAIDER
BY DON BERRY
_He was a hunter with a Cause that transcended all law. But, now, could the Cause forgive him his service?_
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
They dropped the raider on the night side, less than thirty miles from Thanlar, the capitol city. The dark, slim ship drifted silently to the ground, discharged its passenger and lifted again, moving slowly like a great shark in the night. On the way out into space, it was caught by the defense screens of Thanlar and disappeared in a gout of flaming energy that lit up the entire night sky.
The raider did not see it; he was already asleep.
He slept, and his dreams were troubled by images of a familiar face. Strong cheekbones, the mane of white hair, the famous half-smile of Mayne Landing, Earth Commissioner to the Colony Planets. Mayne Landing, the gentle representative of Terra to her children, the kindly old gentleman with the fist of steel, the benevolent despot over a hundred Colony Planets.
Mayne Landing: victim.
The raider woke with the dawn, a dawn that was slightly more red-tinged than the sun he was used to. He gathered his small store of equipment together and cached it in the low scrub of the surrounding forest. By a clear, sparkling stream he washed, wincing slightly from the shock of the too-cold water against his face.
He wore clothes indistinguishable from the other farmers of this district, slightly shabby, a uniform dun color. They did not fit him well, but they could not hide the wide shoulder and slim waist. Well, it didn't matter: the farmers of this planet, like all the Colonies, had to work hard to scrape their meager living from the rocky soil. They were all in good condition; he would not be conspicuous.
He finished washing and dried himself on the sleeve of his jumper. Then he began to walk down the rocky hill to the village that stood in the tiny valley below. In the early sun, the tiny assemblage of white clean houses sparkled like a handful of sand-polished shells clustered on a beach. He stopped for a moment, halfway down, looking at the village.
It was a nice little place, he thought. Peaceful in the early light, calm. There were a few people moving about the streets, probably farmers early on their way to the fields. It was a pastoral scene, like something he had read in a book a long time ago.
_Nice_, he thought. _Quiet. I wonder what it will be like when I'm finished here._
It didn't pay to think about things like that. Not in his business.
He let his eyes shift slightly to take in the tall towers of Thanlar, just visible over the crest of hills on the other side of the valley. Thanlar, the capitol. That was his concern. That was what he had to think about, not the village.
He sighed once, started down the hill again, walking slowly, picking his way through the loose rocks with care.
As he neared the village, he passed several crews of men going out into the fields. He greeted them in Interlingua, and they replied shortly, without curiosity. He knew he was a stranger to them; they did not recognize him, but they showed no curiosity. These days, curiosity was not much advantage to anyone, he thought. The farmers had probably learned long ago not to show too much interest in any stranger who suddenly appeared from nowhere.
He came into the village and walked quickly to the faded wooden sign that announced, TAILOR. Entering the little shop, more a general dry-goods store than a tailor, he moved to the rear, to a small counter. No one was there, and he rang the bell on the counter.
After a moment, a man appeared, hastily buttoning a tunic, his hair still tousled, sleep in his eyes.
"Yes, yes? What is it? You are too early."
"My apologies, old man," said the raider. "I am looking for a hunting cloak."
The small man's eyes narrowed. "Ah," he said. "A hunting cloak. I have several. What did you have in mind."
"Something in gray. To suit my name."
"Ah. And what might you be hunting, Mr.--Gray?"
"An animal of my home planet. It is called a jackal."
"Ah."
The old man suddenly turned from the low rack of cloaks and stared directly at his customer. His mouth compressed in a thin, bitter line.
"So. You are he. The Mr. Gray who hunts the jackal. Come."
He turned and led the way into his living quarters behind the counter.
"I will tell the others you are here," he said. He left through a rear door, leaving the raider to wander about the tiny room, inspecting it without interest. He had seen too many like it in the past five years to be interested. Dingy little rooms in the back of a store, insect-ridden chambers in public lodgings, shack in the backwoods outside a city, too many, too many. And never a place to rest.
_After this one_, he promised himself. _After this one._
Soon the little tailor came back, and there were two others with him. One was a ferret-eyed little man with a suspicious stare, the other a heavy-set farmer. The heavy-set man had a scythe in his hand, he had apparently been on his way to his fields when the tailor found him. He held the scythe tightly, and the raider could see he was very nervous. It was probably the first time he had ever come into contact with one of the raider's--profession. He didn't like it.
Extending his free right hand, the farmer said, "My name is Carroll. Joseph Carroll. You are--Mr. Gray?"
The raider took the proffered hand warmly, trying to gain this man's friendship. He would need all the help he could get.
"Gray is my given name, Mr. Carroll. My last name--" he laughed embarrassedly, "--well, they call me Wolf, for the time being."
"Appropriate," said the man bitterly.
"I'm sorry I have to meet you under these conditions, Mr. Carroll, very sorry."
The other shrugged, keeping his eyes fixed on the raider's lean, brown face, trying to guess what sort of mind lay behind it.
"In these times," he said finally, with an air of discouragement, "one cannot choose either one's friends or the conditions of meeting."
The ferret-eyed man had been watching the exchange closely, and now he sidled up to the raider with his thin, white hand extended. "Please forgive Joseph," he said smoothly. "He is not happy about this affair." His voice exuded a sort of artificial charm, and Wolf found himself repelled by the man.
"None of us do," he said. He turned to the farmer again, who was standing uncomfortably, his eyes on the floor. Wolf watched him for a moment, just long enough for the farmer to know he was being watched.
"Perhaps," said Wolf slowly, "we had better straighten this out right now."
The heavy-set man looked up defiantly. "All right," he said. "I admit I do not like this business, I do not like what you are here for, I do not like what will happen to our village when you are gone."
The thin man laughed. "The old man means to say he is a coward."
"No," said the man stubbornly, without taking his eyes away from Wolf. "I am not a coward. But your mission means death for many people, people I call my friends. I do not like that."
"There is a necessity," said Wolf, quietly.
"Perhaps, perhaps," said Joseph Carroll, shaking his head dubiously. "I do not pretend to understand the political complications. I know only that, whether you succeed or fail, our village is lost. Our people will suffer for what you do. Many will probably die. You cannot expect me to like that."
"No," Wolf agreed. "We do not expect that of you, Joseph. No one expects you to like this. But, tell me--"
"Yes."
"What was your tax the past year?" Wolf asked.
The old man laughed bitterly. "Seventy-nine percent."
"Enough to live on?"
"Barely," said Carroll, leaning heavily on the scythe. "It means we must work many hours, sixteen or more a day, in order to survive."
"That is what we fight," said Wolf simply. "That, and the near slavery of many of the Colonies. Do you know what happens to the money you pay the Terran Federation in taxes?"
"No," admitted Carroll. "No one has dared ask."
Wolf laughed. "And yet they say the Federation is a republic? When the citizen does not dare ask what happens to the taxes that are ground out of him? I'll tell you, my friend Joseph. It is used for administration. Simply that. Administration of a space empire is an expensive project, and you must pay for it. It costs a great deal of money, our treasured Empire. And what does the administration consist of? Machinery to collect taxes. It is like a snake that feeds on its own tail, Joseph. Taxes are increased in order to have enough money to collect more taxes. It never ends."
"This is one thing," said Joseph. "The killing of people is another."
"How many do you know who have died in Debtor's camps, or died because they could not work hard enough? Joseph, this is no life for a man. The Colonies cannot develop under the Federation. They must be free to govern themselves. Otherwise, we have simply a great, cancerous tumor, spreading through the universe, calling itself the Terran Federation."
Joseph sighed. "All right," he said. "In principle I agree. The colonies must be free. But is there no other way than murder and assassination? This violence--what can come of it? And if the revolution succeeds eventually, how can we know the Federation will not be replaced by the same thing under another name?"
"Because you will govern yourselves," Wolf said. "Every Colony will be autonomous, trading as a sovereign nation with the other Colonies. The idea of a Galactic Empire is self-defeating, Joseph, it is unhealthy, vicious. The only way man can go to the stars with his head up, is without dreams of infinite power blinding him."
"You are an idealist," said the ferret-eyed man, with surprise.
"A man must live for something," said Wolf, quietly.
"Certainly, certainly," the thin man agreed quickly. "I was surprised to find an idealist in your--trade."
"My trade is as distasteful to me as it is to you," said Wolf, speaking more to Joseph Carroll than to the pale, thin man.
"What will the death of Mayne Landing accomplish?" Carroll asked.
"Confusion. He is the Administrator of over one hundred planets. He is a strong man, a focal point. Without him, without his personal strength, the administration of those planets will falter, and stop. It isn't that he carries on the routine work, of course. But decisions come from him, the decisions that cannot be made by routine, the decisions that require a man's creative spark. Without that, the routine itself cannot stand."
"It rather sounds as if you respect the man," said Carroll.
"Respect him? I--" Wolf hesitated, uncertain. "Yes," he finished. "I respect him. He is doing what he thinks is right, as I do what I think is right."
"And you would kill a man for whom you hold no hatred," Carroll muttered. "This thing is making beasts of us all."
_If you only knew_, thought Wolf, _if you only knew._
"Sometimes it is necessary," he said aloud. "Sometimes bad things are necessary, that good may follow."
Carroll sighed. "Well, we are committed now. We must go ahead."
"I will need detailed information on Landing's plan of inspection," Wolf said.
"You will have it," Carroll told him. "Daimya has been in the city for five days, listening and watching."
"Good," said Wolf. He felt better now, getting into the operation. This he knew, this he could handle. It was what he was trained for. It was the other things that were bad, the thinking, the wondering, the long nights spent sleepless, uncertain.
"When will he be back?" Wolf asked. "This Daimya."
"She. Daimya is my daughter," Carroll said. "Even our children must have blood on their hands. She will return this evening."
* * * * *
Daimya came, just after dark. Wolf was startled. He had expected a child, from the way Carroll spoke, and Daimya was far from a child. She was a slim woman, in her early twenties, he estimated. Her body was sleek and fit, and her long black hair was tied behind her head, where it flowed over her back like a waterfall carved from ebony. She had large eyes, slightly almond shaped, that regarded him solemnly as she gave the information she had gathered.
"He will come to inspect this village in two days," she said. "He will visit four farms, picked at random, and then there will be a procession down the main street."
"That would be our time," Wolf mused. "Crowds about."
"Some will be killed," Daimya objected. "His guards will not take this thing lightly."
"I am sorry," Wolf said sincerely. "It is our best chance of success."
Daimya shrugged. "You are the killer, not I," she said, with obvious distaste.
Wolf felt an impulse to explain, to justify, to make this slight girl see that he hated this. Angrily he fought it down.
_It doesn't matter what she thinks_, he told himself. _It doesn't matter. What matters is to get the job done and get out. That's all._
"Tell me," Daimya said curiously, "how do you come to be mixed up in a thing like this? You don't act like a hired killer."
Wolf laughed shortly. "No," he said. "I'm an amateur. I was a Captain of the Security Patrol once. My whole family was in Federation Service, as a matter of fact. I was on Colony Patrol for three years. In that time I saw so much suffering, so much injustice, so much simple cruelty that--well, never mind. When I was contacted by a member of the revolution underground, I deserted. It almost killed my father. Since I was familiar with the Federation's higher echelons, I was assigned the pleasant job of assassin."
"How many men have you killed in that job?" Daimya asked, almost casually.
Wolf watched her for a long moment before answering. "You don't want to know that," he said slowly.
The girl dropped her eyes. "No. No, I guess you're right. I'm sorry."
She stood and went to the door. She stopped there and turned, looking at Wolf. He met her eyes and held them with his own, frankly, without embarrassment.
"I'm sorry," she repeated. She closed the door softly behind her, and Wolf bent to study the map of the village she had provided.
* * * * *
The village lay in a cup-shaped valley. The main street was also a direct highway out of Thanlar. On either side of the highway, the farmer's fields stretched, checkered brown and green, to the foothills. The entire valley was not more than a mile wide, and the fields extended only a quarter of a mile on either side of the main road. The foothills added another quarter of a mile, and then, abruptly, the mountains started.
Though one of the principal highways to Thanlar, the main street was fairly narrow, bordered closely on either side by the small business district, composed mostly of single story buildings constructed out of native lumber from the hills.
Wolf decided the center of the business district would offer the most concealment. Any group of men at any other place would be viewed with suspicion by Mayne Landing's bodyguards, and their chances would be proportionately diminished.
It remained to determine the most effective weapon. Explosive? No, too many villagers would be killed. Yet that would certainly be the most certain way, a grenade thrown from the roof of one of the low buildings. He wondered how thoroughly the Administrator's men would check the village before the procession.
Joseph Carroll told him the check was cursory; except for the spasmodic attacks of the revolution underground, the Colonies were submissive enough, and the precautions taken were in the nature of routine.
It looked to be easy, Wolf thought wryly. The easiest of them all, since the planet was fairly distant from the scene of previous underground operations.
They wouldn't be expecting it, he thought. Down the main street in procession, the Administrator standing in the little ground car, smiling and waving to his subjects, genial, effusive. And then--
"Joseph," said Wolf suddenly. "How many men can I depend on?"
"Perhaps thirty," said the farmer. "Perhaps a few more."
"Are they completely dependable?"
"Within reason," said Carroll. "They are farmers, not soldiers. Plows are more familiar to them than guns."
"How many can you get me that will obey me without question, no matter what?"
Joseph Carroll tugged absently at his ear. Finally, he shrugged. "Perhaps five," he said. "Including myself."
"All right," sighed Wolf. "It will have to be that way, then. But the others can be depended on 'within reason?'"
"Yes," Carroll said. "Do not expect too much. They do not like this business."
"Neither do you," Wolf said. "But you count yourself among the five trustworthy."
Carroll didn't answer, and Wolf took his silence as a declaration of faith.
"All right," he said. "Leave me now. At sunset, bring your men to me, all of them. I will work out the attack."
"Very well," said Carroll, and started to leave.
"Joseph," said Wolf softly, and the older man turned at the door.
"What is it?"
"What about Daimya?"
"What about her?"
"Where will she be during--this attack?"
"At home, I expect," said Carroll. "Where she belongs."
Wolf toyed for a moment with the map that lay before him.
"Joseph," he said. "What _will_ happen to the village?"
"You don't know?" asked Carroll in surprise.
"No," Wolf admitted. "I have never stayed behind."
Carroll laughed bitterly. "One of two things," he said. "They will either demolish it from the air, including the populace, or they will put everyone in one of the forced labor camps." The farmer made a small gesture of resignation.
"I didn't know," Wolf said, almost under his breath. _Can I be responsible for that?_
"They don't like Colonists cooperating with the revolutionaries," Carroll continued. "Did you expect they exempted us all from our taxes as a reward?"
"No," Wolf said. "But I didn't know it was so--complete."
"They are thorough," the old man shrugged. "Any village where an incident occurs is made an example. Before long, you people will not find much welcome in the Colonies."
"I suppose not," Wolf mused. "Perhaps by then--"
"You really believe you're going to succeed in overthrowing the Federation, don't you?"
"I must," said Wolf. "Without that, all this--" he gestured to the map before him, traced with arrows, notations, ideas, "--is meaningless slaughter."
"So it seems," Carroll said flatly.
"Joseph," said Wolf suddenly. "With luck, there will be a ship waiting for me in the mountains when I've--finished here."
"That's your good fortune," Carroll said grimly.
"Will you come with me?"
"And join the revolutionaries?"
"You--and Daimya."
Carroll considered it slowly. "No," he said finally. "Not I. I have gotten my people into this, I must stay with them. All were against it when you first contacted us. All but me. It is my fault. I have to stay with them."
Wolf felt a sudden surge of affection for the old man. Reluctant he might be, but he knew what he was doing and he knew the consequences and was willing to accept them.
"And Daimya?"
"That is a different matter," said Carroll. "It is not right that she should suffer for her father's folly."
_Or that a father should suffer for his son's folly_, thought Wolf. But he said nothing.
"You would take her?" Carroll asked.
"If I am--able," said Wolf.
"All right," said the old man. "I will see to it. Better she should be alive than dead. That is all that matters."
* * * * *
Wolfs final plan was simple. He had not enough men to count on a direct attack. The major work would be performed by the dependable five, of which Carroll assured him. The others would be used to create a diversion to cover the actual assault.
There was a slight bend to the highway just before it entered the village. When the procession passed this point, they would see a group of men disperse quickly into the low scrub at the side of the road. This would put them on their guard, they would be apprehensive, watching.
When the procession had entered the village itself and was within the short commercial strip, there would be an explosion back of them. Grenades, perhaps some shooting. If Wolf's prediction were accurate, this would divert the attention of at least the major portion of guards for long enough.
Long enough for the five men in the crowd to do what they had to do--
"This must be timed perfectly," he told the man who was to head the diversionary squad.
"I understand that."
"Too soon or too late, either will destroy us. It will take us too long to reach the Administrator. He must be exactly opposite the tailor's shop. It must be done right."
"It will be done right."
"If it is not, all the sacrifices are for nothing, you understand that? The consequences will be as bad, or worse, for the village, and we will have accomplished nothing. If the Administrator is dead, there will be time for most of the villagers to escape into the hills before the Federation can take action against them."
The man left, after Wolf had provided him with the weapons his group would need from his cache on the nearby hillside.
The dependable five were instructed in their parts, and then there was nothing to do but wait.
The next morning dawned clear. The air was cool, a slight breeze ruffled the fields around the village. As the sun rose higher in the sky, it glinted sharply from the towers of Thanlar.
It had been impossible to keep the entire operation a secret from the villagers. They knew something was to happen, and they knew it concerned the inspection trip of Mayne Landing to the village. It was not hard to guess what it was.
As the day drew on toward noon, the tension of the people grew. Small knots of farmers gathered on the corners, their fields forgotten for the day, talking low.
Wolf didn't like it, it was too obvious. The village was primed, ready to explode, and he was afraid the tension would make the guards _too_ alert. They had to be just tense enough to respond to the diversion, not enough so they would be watching _everywhere_. He was counting on an instinctive, rapid response.
He sat behind the tailor shop, talking to his men with a confidence and calm he did not feel. He spoke as if the success of the mission were a foregone fact, and the escape of the villagers into the hills. But he knew it was tenuous.
Perhaps he had planned it too critically. Perhaps a simple direct attack would have been better. Perhaps, perhaps--
Any number of things were possible, he thought. But it was done now. If he had made a mistake, they would know soon.
On the contraband comset behind the tailor shop, Wolf had called the mother-ship that hovered just out of detection range. All right, they confirmed, there would be a shuttle in the hills back of the town. Did he know the shuttle that had brought him had been lost? No? Well, it had. With the whole crew aboard.
_That many more_, thought Wolf. _If anybody's keeping a list, I've got a lot to my credit. Or damnation._ And, bitterly: _More friends than enemies._
Don't think about it. Do your job and get the hell out. If you can.
He spoke to Daimya, but on her father's advice did not tell her of his plan to take her along.
"She won't go voluntarily," the old man said frankly. "We will have to pretend we are all going to the hills. After that--" he nodded slowly, "--the problem is yours."
"I will take care of her, Joseph," Wolf had promised, and the sun-browned farmer had clasped his hand tightly in a mute gesture of hopefulness.
"You understand--a man and his daughter--you understand?"
_More than you probably know, Joseph._
"Yes," he said aloud. "I think I understand."
And then came the word that the Administrator's procession was in sight.