Maslovic went over to the old captain. “What about you, Murphy? Is this really a surprise or were you delivering these girls to somebody before their babies were born?”
“Eh? I don’t know what yer talkin’ about, sonny boy.”
“You’re not the science type, but you’re not dumb, either. Sure, I believe these girls could make you take them along after they came aboard without you ever noticing. But if we’re right, and Tara Hibernius is more than a primitive backwater, then they’d need somebody to get subjects in and out without attracting any undue attention. You and your scow are just about ideal for that, Captain Murphy, and while you might have been under their spell, I don’t think they could have gotten into that small but extremely tightly guarded spaceport on their own, particularly in their condition. Don’t play the fool any more, Murphy. Who was paying you to pick up ones like these girls now and then and where were they to be taken? Might as well tell us. You should know more than anybody that, in the hands of people like us, there’s nobody who can’t be broken.”
Murphy’s grizzled features broke into a slight smile, and there was still something of a twinkle in his eyes. “You’re a smart laddie, aren’t you? ’Course, I’m no genius meself. I had no idea what them girls was capable of and that’s the Lord’s truth. I mostly never know, and that suits me fine. I have—had—a regular route. The extra couple of folks now and then they put on at Tara Hibernius was always young, usually young girls in a family way, you might say. The pay was good, and instead of deadheading out of that hole I made a handsome profit, all below the table, as it were. I never asked no questions. That woulda been bad fer business, y’see. There was always somebody at the other end worried about gettin’ ’em through the port, usually without the port knowin’, if you know what I mean. And me account in the Trade Bank of Marchellus would get fatter. Hell, I never even knew if I had a pickup ’til I got ’em. Sometimes yes, but only maybe a third of the time if that. I can say that most of them what came aboard was out-and-out devil worshippers or somethin’ of the sort, though. Just like them. All sorts of secret stuff and signs and blasphemous shit.”
“Did they all seem to believe that stuff, like these girls seem to?” Maslovic asked him.
“Some did. Some didn’t. You could kinda tell. But the ones that didn’t seem to be into it was often the scariest of the bunch.”
“In what way?”
“I can’t explain it to you. Not really. But you could feel it, deep inside. But if any of that sort had been aboard this time, we wouldn’t be standin’ here now talkin’ about it, ’cause they’d be runnin’ this whole damned tin soldier factory. This lot, they’re probably gettin’ their jollies playin’ Peepin’ Tom and explorin’ the place. They ain’t actin’, Sarge. They’re really that dumb. Like little kids. I got to tell you, if I knew about what these girls could do, I’da been makin’ plans to divert maybe to some worlds that got things worth stealin’ before I dropped ’em off.”
“And where were you to drop them off, Captain?” Mohr asked him, thinking.
“Same place as always. Didn’t make sense to keep ’em around any longer than we had to, so it was my next stop. Queer little place called simply Barnum’s World. You know it?”
Sittithong went over to the main console and ran a check. “Yes, here it is. Not much of a place. Apparently an old service world that bred and supplied plants and animals to newly terraformed colonies. They maintain themselves with some major grants and by replacing flora and fauna that needs it on worlds that have had problems keeping up their ecosystems. You’re right, Captain. Odd place. Everything from dogs to elephants to a number of things found in exploration without Old Earth origins, as well as purebred strains of grains, grasses, trees from high altitude evergreens to jungle vines. They always pay us our fees, so I don’t believe we’ve had cause to send anyone there in, well, at least as long as I can remember. Not much of a shore leave area… Huh. Says here it’s maintained by a Catholic monastic order, and its population is recruited from various colonies and isn’t native.”
“That’s the place,” Murphy agreed. “Run by an offshoot of the original Jesuits, they are. Smart lads. Zoologists, agronomists…”
“Geneticists?” Maslovic asked.
Murphy looked genuinely surprised as he caught the train of thought. “Be damned! Never would have thought of that. But these are real Holy Joes. Even as a blind they’d never go for Satanism. These are more like the ones who’d still burn witches at the stake.”
“Well, it would be a logical cover. And wasn’t that what you said these girls faced back home? No, I’m beginning to see a very disturbing pattern here,” Mohr commented. “I think maybe we’ve put off visiting this Barnum a bit too long. Don’t you agree, Commander?”
“I believe we should notify the captain of this before going any further,” Sittithong replied. “This is suddenly turning very, very dark.”
Mohr nodded. “I agree. And we’ve got something of a cover here with Murphy and his ship. We can simply explain our visit as taking our people where they were heading in the first place.”
They all seemed to like the idea—all, that is, except Murphy. “Uh, pardon me, folks, but ain’t you forgettin’ somethin’ here?”
“Yes?”
“I wasn’t kiddin’ about them girls bein’ scared out of their wits at the idea of goin’ back to their home world. They was all told that they would burn if they ever tried a comeback. And that’s where they think we’re takin’ ’em now. That’s why they did what they did.”
“Yes, but we’re not going to do that now. They’re going where they want to go,” Sittithong pointed out.
“Uh, yeah, well and good if you can get the word to ’em. But might I remind all of you that we ain’t got ’em? And we got no idea where they are around here or how the hell to find ’em?”
IV: A SUMMONS FROM THE DARK
“Okay, girls, where are you at?” Murphy’s voice came, friendly and fatherly sounding with a medium brogue through the ship’s general public address system. “This is yer old friend Captain Murphy here, and after ye pulled that neat disappearin’ trick the folks here they decided to make a deal. You can’t stay hid forever in any case. What if one of them wee ones was to decide to get born while nobody could see? No doctors, no midwives, no nothin’ around to make sure the wee ones don’t croak and the mother don’t bleed to death. Now, you know you can trust the old captain. They’re gonna let us go. Take us down where we was goin’ in the first place. All of us, fast, in one of their comfy shuttles. Now, I know you can hear me. God knows everybody else can. We’re in one of the ship’s lounges right now and we’ll stay there. All the maps on the walls will blink showin’ where we are, and they all show where you are, so just come on down. I swear this is on the up-and-up. They just want to be rid of us.”
He switched off the PA and settled back in his chair, a pint of synthetic dark ale in one hand. He took a swig, and the foam seemed to crust on his upper lip.
“You think they’ll buy it? That they’ll trust you?” Lieutenant Commander Mohr asked him, more than a little worried. Murphy had the feeling that the security officer wasn’t nearly as confident of the inviolability of his secret computers and files as he made out he was.
“Well, they’ll probably think about it for a bit,” Murphy replied, “but, then, one of them baby contractions will nip ’em in the tummy and they’ll get real tired out real fast and start thinkin’ it over. I expect they’ll eventually come here just to check it out before they show themselves, but, yes, if we’re straight with them, then they’ll be straight with us. I’m pretty sure of that.”