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"Join, Earl, not win. No one can ever do that. Not for keeps."

"So?"

"You aren't of the Orres. Even if you were born here you have to be of the Orres. They are the only ones who can own anything on this world. Every inch of land and sea, what's in it, on it or under it-the whole damned works. Didn't I explain all that?"

"What about the utilities? Water? Power?"

"All owned by a holder. Good returns and so highly valued. Sometimes they change hands but not often." Vardoon stooped, lifted a jug from the floor and poured himself a cup of thick liquid. Basic-the essential food of a spaceman, sickly with glucose, tart with citrus, laced with vitamins. A high-protein substance, each cup holding enough energy to last a normal man for a day. "A lousy system," he said after drinking. "Holders are limited so only the heads of Families can operate. That creates jealousies. Boredom too for those left out despite their allowances. Sometimes a holder resigns when too old, sometimes assassinated, sometimes quits if losing too much too often, but usually they hang on until they die of natural causes."

"Can they buy in?"

"The numbers are limited. If they fall too low and a vacancy arises then an outsider can challenge a holder for entry. Usually those wanting in are set one against the other until only one is left. Even then whoever wins has to be admissable. That means of the Orres."

A nice, neat, closed system which made sure that those who had continued to hold and those outside remained that way. A society with ingrained weaknesses and one sure to shatter given time; the pressure of heirs denied a part in the economy would ensure that. But, for now, he had to work with the culture as he found it.

Dumarest said, "So whoever owns the field can deny anyone passage if he wants."

"That's right." Vardoon drank more basic. "But why should they?"

"We stole those eggs, remember? The owner doesn't like it. He might intend to get them back and freezing us could be one way to do it."

"Trouble," said Vardoon. "Well, nothing comes easy, but who would have expected this? I just figured to go in, grab what was going and then out again. No one hurt. Nobody really robbed, just a little poaching, a little collecting and that was all. I still can't understand why those goons came after us the way they did. That shooting-" He broke off, shaking his head. "I'd better get up. I'm no use lying flat on my back. Any friends, Earl?"

"One," said Dumarest. "You might know her. You said you were with her brother when he died."

He had left her with the monks and found her seated with Tobol, a chessboard between them, men scattered in bright touches of gold and jet on squares of scarlet and silver. She played the game well, he noted, moving the pieces with a sure deftness, covering each attack and retreating when threatened. Skill refined over the years and sharpened when Carmodyne had died.

As the old monk acknowledged defeat and set the board for another game she said, "How is your friend?"

"Alive and impatient to be on his feet."

"And to be gone?"

"That too."

"As you are?"

He had no place here and she must know it but to admit to a desire to leave was to betray his indifference. An attitude any woman would take as an insult and she more than most.

"This is a pleasant world," he said. "One I have hardly had time to see. Now, with money, perhaps I shall enjoy it."

"Perhaps?"

"A doubt you could resolve, my lady. Turn from me and what has this planet to offer?"

An answer which pleased her even though she knew it for the flattery it was. One which salved her pride and reassured her that it would be she and not Dumarest who would end their relationship. But not yet; not when she enjoyed his company so much, not when others envied her so openly.

Tobol sighed as, again, she demonstrated her prowess on the board.

"You are too skilled for me, my lady. I must beg you to allow an old man to retain his pride. Perhaps a younger opponent?" He looked up to where Dumarest stood beside the board. "Will you take my place?"

"Can you play?" Fiona was direct.

"I know the moves."

"But can you play?" She gave him no time to answer. "You understand the object of the game? To move and force selected responses from your opponent. To trap the enemy king and so to win. A miniature game of war," she mused. "Combat reduced to the dimensions of a board and yet holding all the cunning and strategy of actual battle. Sit, Earl, fight with me, and for a wager?" She looked at him, the smile on her lips not matched by her eyes. "Double what you owe me if I win, the usual fees canceled if I am beaten."

"Fees?"

"As I explained; resident's, utilities, protection. All quite normal." She added softly, "And one-tenth of your treasure-mine by right as the holder of this sector. Shall we begin?"

Dumarest glanced at the monk and saw the almost imperceptible lift of the shoulders, the nod signifying she had the right. Above the vaulted roof reflected small sounds from the partitioned area outside the room in which they played; a scuff of shoes, a cough, the rustle of garments. Tiny murmurs drowned by the sharp rap of pieces on the board as she set them out for the new game. "Earl?"

"A game of war," he said. "Do I have it correctly? A game we play to win."

"With what you owe me as the fee-double or nothing." She extended both hands toward him, the fingers clenched, the pawns she held hidden by her flesh. "Your choice, Earl. Gold has first move." She smiled at his selection and opened her hand to reveal jet. "You lose, I win. An omen, perhaps?"

"If you are superstitious."

"Are you?"

"I hold certain beliefs."

"Such as?" She shrugged, again giving him no chance to answer. "We'll talk about such things later but for now let us concentrate on the game. My first move, Earl." She shifted her king's pawn two squares forward. "There!"

Dumarest followed her move.

Without hesitation she moved a cowled piece to a position four squares above its fellow. She smiled as, again, he followed her move, confident that, after the next, she would have him. Her smile vanished as, deliberately, he swept pieces from the board to leave it bare but for her checkmated king.

"My game, I think."

"You cheated!" She rose, quivering with anger. "A child's trick! Earl, I never expected it of you! Can't you bear to lose?"

"I won."

"No! You-" She appealed to the monk. "You saw what happened. He couldn't win and so ruined the game."

"A game of war," said Dumarest. "I asked and you agreed. A game we play to win. Well, my lady, that's what I have done."

"No! The rules!-"

"In war there are no rules!" His tone was harshly bitter. "There is only one aim-to win. To win no matter how. That is what I have done. Perhaps that is what you should remember to do."

A lesson she ignored as, eyes bright with anger, she pushed past him and from the room. As he picked up the scattered pieces Tobol shook his head.

"You play a dangerous game, Earl. She is not a woman to forgive a slight." He added quietly, "Does the money mean so much to you?"

"As much to me as to her."

"You could have won."

"No."

"Yet you have so much it seems unwise to risk losing all for the sake of a part." So unwise Tobol wondered if Dumarest had hidden motives. Setting the last recovered piece on the board he said, "You are under stress, something Fiona may have forgotten. And she tends to a certain willfulness."