Man-Kzin Wars III by Larry Niven (good short books TXT) ๐
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- Author: Larry Niven
Read book online ยซMan-Kzin Wars III by Larry Niven (good short books TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Larry Niven
At the entrance, he paused. His grin going sour, he well-nigh said to hell with it and turned around. Tyra Nordbo should not have made him promise to keep this secret even from his wife, before she set the rendezvous. Nor should she have picked Haroldโs. He hadnโt cared to patronize it since visit before last. Now the very sign that floated luminous before the brown brick wall had been expurgated. A World On Its Own remained below the name, but humans only was gone. Mustnโt offend potential customers or, God forbid, local idealists.
In Saxtorphโs book, courtesy was due everyone who hadnโt forfeited the right. However, under the kzinti occupation that motto had been a tiny gesture of defiance. Since the war, no sophont that could pay was denied admittance. But onward with the bulldozer of blandness.
He shrugged. Having come this far, let him proceed. Time enough to leave if la Nordbo turned out to be a celebrity hunter or a vibrobrain. The fact was that she had spoken calmly, and about money. Besides, heโd enjoyed watching her image. He went on in. Nowadays the door opened for anybody.
As always, a large black man occupied the vestibule, wearing white coat and bow tie. What had once made some sense had now become mere costume. His eyes widened at the sight of the newcomer, as big as him, with the craggy features and thinning reddish hair. โWhy, Captain Saxtorph!โ he exclaimed in fluent English. โWelcome, sir. No, for you, no entry fee.โ
They had never met. โIโm on private business,โ Saxtorph warned.
โI understand, sir. If somebody bothers you, give me the high sign and Iโll take care of them.โ Maybe the doorman could, overawing by sheer size if nothing else, or maybe his toughness was another part of the show. It wasnโt a quality much in demand any more.
โThanks.โ Saxtorph slipped him a tip and passed through a beaded curtain which might complicate signaling for the promised help, into the main room. It was dimly lit and little smoke hung about. Customers thus far were few, and most in the rear room gambling. Nevertheless a fellow at an obsolete model of musicomp was playing something ancient. Saxtorph went around the deserted sunken dance floor to the bar, chose a stool, and ordered draft Solborg from a live servitor.
He had swallowed a single mouthful of the half liter when he heard, at his left, โWhat, no akvavit with, and you a Dane?โ The voice was husky and female; the words, English, bore a lilting accent and a hint of laughter.
He turned his head and was startled. The phone at his hotel had shown him this face, strong-boned, blunt-nosed, flaxen hair in a pageboy cut. That she was tall, easily 180 centimeters, gave no surprise; she was a Wunderlander. But she lacked the ordinary low-gravity lankiness. Robust and full-bosomed, she looked and moved as if she had grown up on Earth, nearly two-thirds again as heavy as here. That meant rigorous training and vigorous sports throughout her life. And the changeable sea-blue of her slacksuit matched her eyes . . .
โAmerican, really. My family moved from Denmark when I was small. And Iโd better keep a clear head, right?โ His tongue was speaking for him. Angry at himself, he took control back. โHow do you do.โ He offered his hand. Her clasp was firm, cool, brief. At least she wasnโt playing sultry or exotic. โUh, care for a drink?โ
โI have one yonder. Please to follow.โ She must have arrived early and waited for him. He picked up his beer and accompanied her to a privacy-screened table. Murky though the corner was, he could make out fine lines at the corners of her eyes and lips; and that fair skin had known much weather. She wasnโt quite young, then. Late thirties, Earth calendar, he guessed.
They settled down. Her glass held white wine. She had barely sipped of it. โThank you for that you came,โ she said. โI realize this is peculiar.โ
Well, shucks, he resisted admitting, I may be seven or eight years older than you and solidly married, but any wench this sightly rates a chance to make sense. โIt is an odd place to meet,โ he countered.
She smiled. โI thought it would be appropriate.โ
He declined the joke. โOver-appropriate.โ
โJa, saa?โ The blond brows lifted. โHow so?โ
โI never did like staginess,โ he blurted. His hand waved around. โI knew this joint when it was a raffish den full of memories from the occupation and the tag-end of wartime afterward. But each time I called at Wunderland and dropped in, itโd become more of a tourist trap.โ
โWell, those old memories are romantic; and, yes, some of mine live here too,โ she murmured. Turning straightforward again: โBut it has an advantage, exactly because of what it now is. Few of its patrons will have heard about you. They are, as you say, mostly tourists. News like your deeds at that distant star is sensational but it takes a while to cross interstellar space and hit hard in public awareness on planets where the societies are different from yours or mine. Here, at this hour of the day, you have a good chance of not to be recognized and pestered. Also, because people here often make assignations, it is the custom to ignore other couples.โ
Saxtorph felt his cheeks heat up. What the devil! The schoolboy he had once been lay long and deeply buried. Or so heโd supposed. It would be a ghost he could well do without. โIs that why you didnโt want my wife along?โ he asked roughly.
She nodded. โYou two together are especially conspicuous, no? I found that yesterday evening she would be away, and thought you would not. Then I tried calling you.โ
He couldnโt repress a chuckle. โYah, you guessed right. Poor Dorcas, she had no
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