John nodded. The explanation made good sense, and was in line with some of his own guesswork.
“Does that one corporation keep the contract forever?"
“Oh, no, of course not! Eventually the colony reaches the point where it can handle modern civilization, and allow in other corporations, or even build corporations of its own. There are a dozen colonies that were never handled by a single developer, and a few others that outgrew it. After all, FTL was invented by one of the colonies in the first place-Achernar IV, the home of the Interstellar Confederacy. They weren't going to stand for giving one company from Earth a monopoly!"
John did not entirely follow this, but did not let that distract him; he latched onto the point that concerned him. “How do they know when a planet is ready to let other corporations in?"
“Oh, that's easy-when the people of the planet invite other corporations, they're free to come. The CRA only chooses the company that can land without an invitation. The colonists own their own planets, though, so they have the final word about who comes and goes. I suppose they could even refuse to let the CRA's developer land at all-but that's never happened, so far as I know."
“You mean that if another corporation received an invitation from someone on Godsworld, they could move in tomorrow?"
“Worried about someone competing with you if you work for Bechtel-Rand, huh? Well, it's not quite that simple. First off, it would take more than a day for a message to reach Earth and a ship to come here. Second, the invitation has to come from someone who has the authority to issue it-the ship has to have a place to land. An innkeeper can't just invite in another company because he wants a better price on his liquor; you can't land a starship in a stableyard."
“I suppose not.” John looked at Kwam? thoughtfully. “How big an area do you need to land a starship?"
“Oh, a dozen hectares or so."
“What's a hectare?"
Kwam? snorted. “I think Godsworld must be the only planet in the entire galaxy where people don't use the metric system! Why your ancestors decided to use the ancient American system I will never understand!"
“They were Americans,” John said stiffly. Insulting the Founders was not something he could take lightly.
“Yes, I know, but even then America had been using metrics for a century or so!"
John had not been aware of that, but refused to be distracted. “What's a hectare?” he repeated.
“It's… it's… I don't know your units well enough. You could land a starship in a square about a thousand feet on a side, I think."
“A thousand-foot square? That would be twenty or thirty acres. That's not that much."
“It's enough."
“If I had a hundred acres of land somewhere, then, I could invite another Earth corporation to land there and trade with me and the rest of Godsworld?"
“Well, yes, I suppose you could-if you had some way of getting a message to them."
“Ah! That, Mr. Mawn-Tess, is why I wanted to talk to you where the machines couldn't hear us. Ms. Humble tells me you don't mind bending rules a little-would you consider delivering a message to the ITD Corporation for me?"
“What?"
“You heard me."
“Are you crazy? I'd lose my job! Why would you want to do that?"
“Mr. Mawn-Tess, I don't like the New Bechtel-Rand Corporation; I don't like the way they do business. I don't think they deserve to be the only corporation on Godsworld, and I want to invite in another one to take part of the planet away from them. If you won't help me, I can find someone else who will-and if you do help me, I would think that the ITD Corporation might be grateful enough to give you a job if you lose your position with Bechtel-Rand."
“They might, at that.” Kwam? looked at him thoughtfully. “They just might-and there could be a nice bonus in it, too."
“You see?"
“I'd need your word that you'd demand they hire me and keep me hired-after all, you'd be issuing the invitation, so you'd be the one with some say."
“I'd be glad to do that, Mr. Mawn-Tess."
“You'll need that landing site-thirty heckus, or whatever you said, of flat, clear ground."
“Acres-thirty acres. That won't be a problem."
“In that case, Captain Mercy-of-Christ, you've got a deal.” He stuck out his hand. This time John's shake was more enthusiastic.
Chapter Eighteen
“Where the word of a king is, there is power: and who may say unto him, What doest thou?"-Ecclesiastes 8:4
It had been easy to say that finding thirty acres he could use for a landing site would be no problem-easy to say, but not necessarily true. Certainly Godsworld had no shortage of empty land, but John did not happen to hold title to any of it, nor did he have any clear idea of how to remedy that lack. He did not have any significant amount of money; what had come in in donations to his guerrilla army had gone out to buy supplies of food and ammunition. He had never bothered to save his own money when he had been Armed Guardian of the True Word and Flesh; he had assumed that if he lived long enough to need it he would either be granted a pension or made an Elder. His family lands had gone to his uncle Lazarus, at John's own request-he had never wanted to be a farmer.
Furthermore, Kwam? pointed out that it would be better if the invitation came from a government of some sort rather than an individual. That made sense, John had to admit, but he no longer represented a government. The Anointed had, after supplying his initial wants, not bothered to stay in contact; still, he was the closest thing to an ally that John had. The Chosen had plenty of land-more of it than anyone else on Godsworld except the Heavener protectorate, now that the True Worders were out of the running. An invitation from the Chosen to ITD would be ideal.
For one thing, if the Chosen issued the invitation and events then devolved into open warfare, the brunt of it would fall on the Heaveners and the Chosen, and John still did not find himself in sympathy with either group. The Anointed had helped him, but only out of the basest of motives, and never as openly or effectively as John might have liked.
All he had to do was convince the Chosen to issue the invitation. For something this important John decided not to rely on messengers, but to go himself.
As escort-as commander, he could scarcely go alone-he chose David Beloved-of-Jesus, himself one of the Anointed's men, and Thaddeus Blood-of-the-Lamb. The pair had been decent companions, and having one of the Chosen and one of his own men seemed like a good distribution. He expected Miriam to insist on tagging along, but she surprised him by announcing her intention to stay at the inn. Kwam?, of course, could not leave his job in the fortress without raising suspicion.
That settled, the threesome set out at dawn on the tenth of November, on horseback-John had become quite familiar with the roads and countryside in the area during his time there, and although taking an airship to one of the outlying towns to the northwest would have saved a considerable amount of time, John thought it would also be far more likely to attract the attention of people at Bechtel-Rand whose attention he preferred to avoid.
The first day was quiet and uneventful. The second was marred by a long, loud theological argument between David and Thaddeus; David maintained that all men were damned unless they served the Lord's Anointed, while Thaddeus insisted that, quite aside from any spurious claims to divine authority made by mere mortals, God was sufficiently merciful to allow a second chance for any who lived out their lives without ever hearing the Word of God-such would be reborn to live new lives, again and again, until they got it right.