"Shut up, you d.a.m.n fools! We can"t eat till this is over!"
Hutchinson introduced me, in very few words. I gathered that lengthy speeches at barbecues were not popular on New Texas.
"Ladies and gentlemen!" I yelled into the microphone. "Appreciative as I am of this honor, there is one here who is more deserving of your notice than I; one to whom I, also, pay homage. He"s over there on the fire, and I want a slice of him as soon as possible!"
That got a big ovation. There was, beside the water pitcher, a bottle of superbourbon. I ostentatiously threw the water out of the gla.s.s, poured a big shot of the corrosive stuff, and downed it.
"For G.o.d"s sake, let"s eat!" I finished. Then I turned to Thrombley, who was looking like a priest who has just seen the bishop spit in the holy-water font. "Stick close to me," I whispered. "Cue me in on the local notables, and the other members of the Diplomatic Corps." Then we all got down off the platform, and a band climbed up and began playing one of those raucous "cowboy ballads" which had originated in Manhattan about the middle of the Twentieth Century.
"The sandwiches"ll be here in a moment, Mr. Amba.s.sador," Hutchinson screamed--in effect, whispered--in my ear. "Don"t feel any reluctance about shaking hands with a sandwich in your other hand; that"s standard practice, here. You struck just the right note, up there. That business with the liquor was positively inspired!"
The sandwiches--huge ma.s.ses of meat and hot relish, wrapped in tortillas of some sort--arrived and I bit into one.
I"d been eating supercow all my life, frozen or electron-beamed for transportation, and now I was discovering that I had never really eaten supercow before. I finished the first sandwich in surprisingly short order and was starting on my second when the crowd began coming.
First, the Diplomatic Corps, the usual collection of weirdies, human and otherwise....
There was the Amba.s.sador from Tara, in a suit of what his planet produced as a subst.i.tute for Irish homespuns. His Emba.s.sy, if it was like the others I had seen elsewhere, would be an outsize cottage with whitewashed walls and a thatched roof, with a bowl of milk outside the door for the Little People ...
The Amba.s.sador from Alpheratz II, the South African Nationalist planet, with a full beard, and old fashioned plug hat and tail-coat. They were a frustrated lot. They had gone into s.p.a.ce to practice _apartheid_ and had settled on a planet where there was no other intelligent race to be superior to....
The Mormon Amba.s.sador from Deseret--Delta Camelopardalis V....
The Amba.s.sador from Spica VII, a short jolly-looking little fellow, with a head like a seal"s, long arms, short legs and a tail like a kangaroo"s....
The Amba.s.sador from Beta Cephus VI, who could have pa.s.sed for human if he hadn"t had blood with a copper base instead of iron. His skin was a dark green and his hair was a bright blue....
I was beginning to correct my first impression that Thrombley was a complete dithering fool. He stood at my left elbow, whispering the names and governments and home planets of the Amba.s.sadors as they came up, handing me little slips of paper on which he had written phonetically correct renditions of the greetings I would give them in their own language. I was still twittering a reply to the greeting of Nanadabadian, from Beta Cephus VI, when he whispered to me:
"Here it comes, sir. The z"Srauff!"
The z"Srauff were reasonably close to human stature and appearance, allowing for the fact that their ancestry had been canine instead of simian. They had, of course, longer and narrower jaws than we have, and definitely carnivorous teeth.
There were stories floating around that they enjoyed barbecued Terran even better than they did supercow and hot relish.
This one advanced, extending his three-fingered hand.
"I am most happy to make connection with Solar League representative,"
he said. "I am named Gglafrr Ddespttann Vuvuvu."
No wonder Thrombley let him introduce himself. I answered in the Basic English that was all he"d admit to understanding:
"The name of your great nation has gone before you to me. The stories we tell to our young of you are at the top of our books. I have hope to make great pleasure in you and me to be friends."
Gglafrr Vuvuvu"s smile wavered a little at the oblique reference to the couple of trouncings our s.p.a.ce Navy had administered to z"Srauff ships in the past. "We will be in the same place again times with no number,"
the alien replied. "I have hope for you that time you are in this place will be long and will put pleasure in your heart."
Then the pressure of the line behind him pushed him on. Cabinet Members; Senators and Representatives; prominent citizens, mostly Judge so-and-so, or Colonel this-or-that. It was all a blur, so much so that it was an instant before I recognized the gleaming golden hair and the statuesque figure.
"Thank you! I have met the Amba.s.sador." The lovely voice was shaking with restrained anger.
"Gail!" I exclaimed.
"Your father coming to the barbecue, Gail?" President Hutchinson was asking.
"He ought to be here any minute. He sent me on ahead from the hotel. He wants to meet the Amba.s.sador. That"s why I joined the line."
"Well, suppose I leave Mr. Silk in your hands for a while," Hutchinson said. "I ought to circulate around a little."
"Yes. Just leave him in my hands!" she said vindictively.
"What"s wrong, Gail?" I wanted to know. "I know, I was supposed to meet you at the s.p.a.ceport, but--"
"You made a beautiful fool of me at the s.p.a.ceport!"
"Look, I can explain everything. My Emba.s.sy staff insisted on hurrying me off--"
Somebody gave a high-pitched whoop directly behind me and emptied the clip of a pistol. I couldn"t even hear what else I said. I couldn"t hear what she said, either, but it was something angry.
"You have to listen to me!" I roared in her ear. "I can explain everything!"
"Any diplomat can explain anything!" she shouted back.
"Look, Gail, you"re hanging an innocent man!" I yelled back at her. "I"m ent.i.tled to a fair trial!"
Somebody on the platform began firing his pistol within inches of the loud-speakers and it sounded like an H-bomb going off. She grabbed my wrist and dragged me toward a door under the platform.
"Down here!" she yelled. "And this better be good, Mr. Silk!"
We went down a spiral ramp, lighted by widely-scattered overhead lights.
"s.p.a.ce-attack shelter," she explained. "And look: what goes on in s.p.a.ce-ships is one thing, but it"s as much as a girl"s reputation is worth to come down here during a barbecue."
There seemed to be quite few girls at that barbecue who didn"t care what happened to their reputations. We discovered that after looking into a couple of pa.s.sageways that branched off the entrance.
"Over this way," Gail said, "Confederate Courts Building. There won"t be anything going on over here, now."
I told her, with as much humorous detail as possible, about how Thrombley had shanghaied me to the Emba.s.sy, and about the chase by the Rangers. Before I was half through, she was laughing heartily, all traces of her anger gone. Finally, we came to a stairway, and at the head of it to a small door.
"It"s been four years that I"ve been away from here," she said. "I think there"s a reading room of the Law Library up here. Let"s go in and enjoy the quiet for a while."
But when we opened the door, there was a Ranger standing inside.
"Come to see a trial, Mr. Silk? Oh, h.e.l.lo, Gail. Just in time; they"re going to prepare for the next trial."
As he spoke, something clicked at the door. Gail looked at me in consternation.
"Now we"re locked in," she said. "We can"t get out till the trial"s over."