He paced the room, stroking his beard, and sank into himself. For a few moments he gazed at himself in a mirror, intrigued as usual by his own soft, mournful brown eyes and the perennial question: an unusually strong man, or an unusually weak one?
They did not talk much for the rest of the afternoon. Rodrone spent most of it seated on a stool, watching the pictures in the lens. When it became night, he went out.
Activity on the spaceground underwent no abatement at night, but there were plenty of shadows and if anything it was even more crowded. Rodrone did not think he would have to worry much about being arrested unless he was careless; the local police would not dare to throw too much weight around in the presence of freemen from all over the Hub.
Of the first ten captains he approached, seven were not going his way and the other three laughed at him when he mentioned an item of luggage that had to be loaded in secret. News had got around.
The eleventh captain was more promising. To begin with, he was not particularly sober. Rodrone judged him to be approaching sixty years of age, but he seemed to have stopped maturing mentally about fifty of those years ago, and as a child he must have been uncontrollable. Rodrone had met men of his type before and he got on well with them. His face was cragged and seamed, surmounted by unkempt tufts of graying hair. He wore no uniform, but the individual dress of a free trader.
Cordially he invited Rodrone up to his quarters and poured him out a glass of pale blue
"I'm heading for the Skelter Cluster. I want passage for myself, a friend, and a small cargo. We'll pay well, if you're leaving soon."
"Dammit, we're leaving tonight, but Skelter's a bit out of our way. We've got a cargo for Tithe."
Rodrone rose to leave, nodding in disappointment. "I see. Well, sorry to have bothered you."
"Hey, wait a minute." Shone waved him back to his seat. "What's doing in Skelter? Anything I can cash in on? There's no hurry with our delivery and we've got no more work."
"Nothing special, but we can manage."
"Yes? What's the cargo, anyhow?"
Rodrone became tight-lipped. "That's a secret."
Shone cackled in delight. "I thought so!" He leaned forward conspiratorially. "Trouble with the Guild, eh?"
Rodrone took a chance. He nodded.
"Good," the captain said in satisfaction. "
"I didn't know that."
"Yup. Well they did. Whatever they wanted, they wanted it bad."
"It's no use to anybody but me."
Shone studied him. "Well, I can believe that. Skelter's quite a few degrees off course for us, Mister, but we'll detour for a mere fifty thousand credits."
Rodrone lost his breath at the exorbitant fee. The decision was out of his hands, however. "I'll pay at the other end," he said. "You can't expect me to carry that money in my pocket."
"I'll trust you." Gael Shone stood up. "Welcome aboard, then. You'll like it here; my crew are good lads, some of them have been with me for years. Now, if we're to get off Stundaker in one piece we'll have to move fast. Jermy will go with you in our runabout and you can collect this thing of yours together with your mate. Then we'll be off." He lowered his voice warningly. "I've heard the Guild are asking the 'ground owners for a ship-to-ship search."
Jermy, a small dark dapper man who was also rat-faced, met them at ground level by the cargo portal—situated where the drive unit was in most ships. Shone waved them goodbye as they drove off in the runabout, and then disappeared inside.
Although there had not been time for Shone to say more than a few cursory words to Jermy, he nevertheless seemed to be imbued with the urgency of the situation. Rodrone guessed that such was his usual mode of operation. He leaned tensely forward over the steering bar, darting through the semidarkness and too intent to say a word.
It was not until they burst in on Clave that the spacer spoke. Clave lifted his lank form off the couch where it had been draped, took a look at Rodrone and a more absorbed one at Jermy.
"Okay," Jermy rasped, his eyes darting about like a rodent's. "Is that it? Throw a blanket over it and let's get it out."
It was Rodrone and Clave who carried the lens, handling it carefully while being herded and snapped at by Jermy all the time. Rodrone felt glad at his efficiency—he had been well-trained as a criminal somewhere—as they bore the clumsy blanket-draped object through the brightly lighter foyer and on to the street. Soon they were hurtling back to the 'ground, Rodrone anxious for the safety of the lens which was bouncing dangerously in the back.