Isaac Asimov Fullscreen Base (1951)

Pause

"Now what can lie behind gold?" prodded Pherl, with a down-curved smile.

"Certainly this is not the preliminary of another clumsy demonstration."

"Clumsy?"

Ponyets frowned slightly.

"Oh, definitely."

Pherl folded his hands and nudged them gently with his chin.

"I don't criticize you.

The clumsiness was on purpose, I am sure.

I might have warned his Veneration of that, had I been certain of the motive.

Now had I been you, I would have produced the gold upon my ship, and offered it alone. The show you offered us and the antagonism you aroused would have been dispensed with."

"True," Ponyets admitted, "but since I was myself, I accepted the antagonism for the sake of attracting your attention."

"Is that it?

Simply that?"

Pherl made no effort to hide his contemptuous amusement.

"And I imagine you suggested the thirty-day purification period that you might assure yourself time to turn the attraction into something a bit more substantial.

But what if the gold turns out to be impure?"

Ponyets allowed himself a dark humor in return,

"When the judgement of that impurity depends upon those who are most interested in finding it pure?"

Pherl lifted his eyes and stared narrowly at the trader. He seemed at once surprised and satisfied.

"A sensible point.

Now tell me why you wished to attract me."

"This I will do.

In the short time I have been here, I have observed useful facts that concern you and interest me.

For instance, you are young-very young for a member of the council, and even of a relatively young family."

"You criticize my family?"

"Not at all.

Your ancestors are great and holy; all will admit that.

But there are those that say you are not a member of one of the Five Tribes."

Pherl leaned back,

"With all respect to those involved," and he did not hide his venom, "the Five Tribes have impoverished loins and thin blood.

Not fifty members of the Tribes are alive."

"Yet there are those who say the nation would not be willing to see any man outside the Tribes as Grand Master.

And so young and newly-advanced a favorite of the Grand Master is bound to make powerful enemies among the great ones of the State - it is said.

His Veneration is aging and his protection will not last past his death, when it is an enemy of yours who will undoubtedly be the one to interpret the words of his Spirit."

Pherl scowled, "For a foreigner you hear much.

Such ears are made for cropping."

"That may be decided later."

"Let me anticipate." Pherl stirred impatiently in his seat.

"You're going to offer me wealth and power in terms of those evil little machines you carry in your ship. Well?"

"Suppose it so.

What would be your objection?

Simply your standard of good and evil?"

Pherl shook his head.

"Not at all.

Look, my Outlander, your opinion of us in your heathen agnosticism is what it is - but I am not the entire slave of our mythology, though I may appear so.

I am an educated man, sir, and, I hope, an enlightened one.

The full depth of our religious customs, in the ritualistic rather than the ethical sense, is for the masses."

"Your objection, then?" pressed Ponyets, gently.

"Just that.

The masses.