Magnus Ridolph frowned, glanced sharply at Blantham. "I'd naturally hire a servant. The water? What arrangements, if any, exist?"
"An excellent still. Two hundred gallons a day."
"That certainly seems adequate," said Magnus Ridolph.
He returned to the photograph. "What is this?" He indicated a patch in the field where one of the spurs from the badlands entered the field.
Blantham examined the photograph. "I really can't say. Evidently a small area where the soil is poor. It seems to be minor in extent."
Magnus Ridolph studied the photograph a minute longer, returned it. "You paint an arresting picture. I admit the possibility of doubling my principal almost immediately is one which I encounter rarely. If you'll tick off your address on my transview, I'll notify you tomorrow of my decision."
Blantham rose. "I've a suite right here in the hotel, Mr. Ridolph. You can call me any time. I imagine that the further you look into my proposition, the more attractive you'll find it."
To Magnus Ridolph's puzzlement, Blantham's prediction was correct. When he mentioned the matter to Sam Quien, a friend in the brokerage business, Quien whistled, shook his head.
"Sounds like a steal. I'll contract right now for the entire crop."
Magnus Ridolph next obtained a quotation on freight rates from Naos VI to Starport, and frowned when the rate proved a half munit less per ton than Blantham's estimate. By the laws of logic, somewhere there must be flaw in the bargain. But where?
In the Labor Office he approached a window behind which stood a Fomalhaut V Rhodopian.
"Suppose I want to harvest a field of ticholama on Naos Six," said Magnus Ridolph. "What would be my procedure?"
The Rhodopian bobbed his head as he spoke. "You make arrangements on Naos Six," he lisped. "In Garswan. Contractor, he fix all harvest. Very cheap, on Naos Six. Contractor he use many pickers, very cheap."
"I see," said Magnus Ridolph. "Thank you."
He slowly returned to the hotel. At the mnemiphot in the reading room he verified Blantham's statement that an acre of land yielded a ton of ticholama, which, when processed and the binding gums dissolved, yielded about five hundred pounds of resilian. He found further that the demand for resilian exceeded by far the supply.
He returned to his room, lay down on his bed, considered an hour. At last he stood up, called Blantham on the trans-view. "Mr. Blantham, I've provisionally decided to accept your offer."
"Good, good!" came Blantham's voice.
"Naturally, before finally consummating the sale, I wish to inspect the property."
"Of course," came the hearty response. "An interplanet ship leaves day after tomorrow. Will that suit you?"
"Very well indeed," was Magnus Ridolph's reply...
Blantham pointed, "That's your plantation, there ahead, the entire first half of the peninsula. Mine is the second half, just over that cliff."
Magnus Ridolph said nothing, peered through the copter windows. Below them the badlands - arid crags, crevasses, rock-jumble - fell astern, and they flew out over Hourglass Peninsula. Beyond lay Irremedial Ocean, streaked and mottled red, blue, green, yellow by vast colonies of colored plankton.
They put down at the cottage. Magnus Ridolph alighted, walked to the edge of the field, bent over. The plants were thick, luxuriant, amply covered with clusters of purple tubes. Magnus Ridolph straightened, looked sidelong at Blantham, who had come up behind him.
"Beautiful, isn't it?" said Blantham mildly.
Magnus Ridolph was forced to agree. Everything was beautiful. Blantham's title was clear, so Magnus Ridolph had verified in Garswan. The harvester agreed to a figure of eight munits a ton, the work to begin immediately after he had finished Blantham's field. In short, the property at the price seemed an excellent buy. And yet -
Magnus Ridolph took another look across the field. "That patch of poor soil seems larger than it appeared in the photograph."
Blantham made a deprecatory noise in his nose. "I can hardly see how that is possible."
Magnus Ridolph stood quietly a moment, the nostrils of his long distinguished nose slightly distended. Abruptly he pulled out his checkbook.
"Your check, sir."
"Thank you. I have the deed and the release in my pocket I'll just sign it and the property's yours."
Blantham politely took his leave in the copter and Magnus Ridolph was left on the plantation in the gathering dusk. And then - the wild yelling from across the field, the vaguely seen shapes, pelting against the afterglow. Magnus Ridolph returned into the cottage.
He looked into the kitchen, to become acquainted with his servant Chook, a barrel-shaped anthropoid from the Gar-swan Highlands. Chook had gray lumpy skin, boneless rope-like arms, eyes round and bottle-green, a mouth hidden somewhere behind flabby folds of skin. Magnus Ridolph found him standing with head cocked to the distant yelping.
"Ah, Chook," said Magnus Ridolph. "What have you prepared for our dinner?"
Chook gestured to a steaming pot. "Stew." His voice came from his stomach, a heavy rumble. "Stew is good." A gust of wind brought the yelping closer. Chook's arms twitched.
"What causes that outcry, Chook?" demanded Magnus Ridolph, turning a curious ear toward the disturbance.
Chook looked at him quizzically. "Them the Howling Bounders. Very bad. Kill you, kill me. Kill everything. Eat up ticholama."
Magnus Ridolph seated himself. "Now - I see." He smiled without humor. "I see!... Hmph."
"Like stew?" inquired Chook, pot ready.
Next morning Magnus Ridolph arose early, as was his habit, strolled into the kitchen. Chook lay on the floor, curled into a gray leathery ball. At Magnus Ridolph's tread he raised his head, showed an eye, rumbled from deep inside his body.
"I'm going for a walk," said Magnus Ridolph. "I intend to be gone an hour. When I return we shall have our breakfast."
Chook slowly lowered his head and Magnus Ridolph stepped out into the cool silence, full into the horizontal light of Naos, just rising from the ocean like a red-hot stovelid. The air from the ticholama fields seemed very fresh and rich in oxygen, and Magnus Ridolph set off with a feeling of well-being.
A half-hour's walk through the knee-high bushes brought him to the base of the outlying spur and to the patch of land which Blantham had termed poor soil.
Magnus Ridolph shook' his head sadly at the devastation. Ticholama plants had been stripped of the purple tubes, ripped up, thrown into heaps.
The line of ruin roughly paralleled the edge of the spur. Once again Magnus Ridolph shook his head.
"A hundred and thirty thousand munits poorer. I wonder if my increment of wisdom may be valued at that figure?"
He returned to the cottage. Chook was busy at the stove, and greeted him with a grunt.
"Ha, Chook," said Magnus Ridolph, "and what have we for breakfast?"
"Is stew," said Chook.
Magnus Ridolph compressed his lips. "No doubt an excellent dish. But do you consider it, so to speak, a staple of diet?"
"Stew is good," was the stolid reply.
"As you wish," said Magnus Ridolph impassively.
After breakfast he retired to the study and called into Garswan on the antiquated old radiophone.
"Connect me with the T.C.I. office."
A hum, a buzz. "Terrestrial Corps of Intelligence," said a brisk male voice. "Captain Solinsky speaking."
"Captain Solinsky," said Magnus Ridolph, "I wonder if you can give me any information concerning the creatures known as the Howling Bounders."
A slight pause. "Certainly, sir. May I ask who is speaking?"
"My name is Magnus Ridolph; I recently acquired a ticholama plantation here, on the Hourglass Peninsula. Now I find that it is in the process of despoliation by these same Howling Bounders."