"Don"t we all," Pandit told her. "But we"re not hired yet. I am Pandit Gandhi Menon."
"Sria Krishna," the girl said, smiling at him. "What sort of work is it?"
"Don"t you know, Sria Krishna?"
The girl shook her head and Pandit said: "Actually, I guess I don"t know, either. But there are rumors the outworlders want jet-pilots. Not for rocketry. For jets. To fly to the Empty Places."
"The Empty Places? Why?"
Pandit shrugged. "Because they are empty, perhaps. Because they are too dry and too arid to support life. Because Denebian Export can claim whatever it found there, for free export. So go the rumors. But surely you can"t pilot a jet."
"Can you?"
"Yes," Pandit said promptly with a faint show of pride.
"My father taught me. I want to thank you for what--"
"Nothing. Anyone in my position would have done it. This rabble--"
The rabble was still noisy. Occasionally they hurled offal at the stragglers joining the rear of the long line. But Pandit and Sria Krishna stood in the forefront, and presently the door opened. In a few minutes Pandit watched the girl disappear inside. He waited nervously, licking dry lips with a parched tongue. It was early morning, but already very hot. He needed the work. Any work. He needed the money which outworlders could pay so abundantly for honest work. He wondered if the fanatic gurus ever thought of that. Then the door in front of him opened again and a fat, unctuous-looking Ophiuchan came out. He seemed to be an official of sorts.
"One more!" he said. "Only one! The rest of you begone."
Behind Pandit there was a general press of bodies, but he was first in line and did not surrender his position. The unctuous-looking man admitted him, half-expecting a bribe. Pandit pa.s.sed him by; he didn"t have a single copper.
He approached a desk. The crowd noise outside was loud, those who had not joined the line crowing because most of those on it had been turned away. Behind the desk sat a small Denebian man of middle years. He looked nervous.
"Can you fly?" he asked in a voice almost desperately thin.
"Yes," Pandit said. Then the rumors were right.
"How much experience?"
"Five years on and off."
"You have a license?"
"There are no licenses on Ophiuchus IX," Pandit pointed out.
"Yes, of course. I"m sorry. Habit. You people don"t lie."
"We try not to."
"Your name?"
Pandit told him. The Denebian wrote it down on a form and said: "You"ll do. Pay is twenty credits a mission." It wasn"t much, but it was more than Pandit had expected.
"What do we fly?" he asked. Questions didn"t seem welcome, but no harm trying.
The Denebian looked at him and laughed. "You want the job?"
"Yes, I want the job."
"Then don"t ask questions."
Pandit nodded.
"Out through that door, then. The other new pilots are a.s.sembling."
And Pandit left the small office.
A moment later a buzzer sounded on the Denebian"s desk. He spoke into a grid: "Orkap here. Go ahead."
"The guru near the League building reports that a native Ophiuchan left the building heading for the city."
"When was this?"
"Yesterday morning."
"And?"
"Draw your own conclusions. Natives don"t go near the League headquarters as a rule, do they?"
"No."
"And the League, of course, will want to know about the suicides?"
"Yes, but--"
"But nothing," said the radio voice, which belonged to the only other Denebian currently on Ophiuchus IX. "We can a.s.sume this native is a spy.
For the League, Orkap."
"All right. I don"t see any need to worry, though."
"Don"t you? The gurus, like the other natives, can sham, but they can"t lie. Sooner or later a guru will be brought out of trance by the League, questioned, and--"
"Tell them about us?" Orkap asked in a shocked voice.
"It could happen. Maybe it"s happened already. There won"t be any proof, of course, but the League would send a spy. Suppose I describe this native to you."
Orkap said, "Go ahead," and the radio voice did so.
In a shocked voice Orkap admitted: "I"ve given that Ophiuchan a pilot"s job this morning. There can"t be any doubt about it."