Retief - Retief of the CDT - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Hey," someone called from the front rank of the gallery. "He's not...?"
"Not still...?" someone else queried.
"Still holding his breath?" a third Tsugg said wonderingly.
"O'course not, lackwits!" Dir Blash bellowed. "How could he? E'en Grand Master Cutthroat Dirdir Hooch held out but to the count of twelve!" He looked closely at Retief. "Thou hast indeed resumed respiration...?" he murmured.
"Of course," Retief rea.s.sured the Tsugg. "I was just grandstanding."
Dir Blash grunted. "In sooth, I've a feeling ye went a good thirteen, if truth were known," he muttered confidentially. "Hast made a specialty of suffocation?"
"Staff Meetings, remember?" Retief prompted.
"To be sure." Dir Blash looked disgruntled. "Well, on to the Second Trial, Terry. Ye'll find this one e'en a straiter test of Tsugghood than the last!" He led the way upslope. Retief close behind, the crowd following. The path deteriorated into a rocky gully winding up between near-vertical walls of rock. Pebbles rattled around the party from the crumbling cliffs above as members of the party clambered toward choice vantage points. A medium-sized boulder came bounding down from a crag to whistle overhead and crash thunderously away among the trees below. The journey ended in a small natural amphitheater, the floor of which was thickly littered with stones of all sizes. The spectators took up positions around the periphery above, as pebbles continued to clatter down around the tester and testee, who stood alone at the center of the target. A head-sized rock smashed down a yard from Retief. A chunk the size of a grand piano poised directly above him gave an ominous rumble and slid downward six inches amid a shower of gravel.
"What happens if one of those scores a bull's eye on the candidate?" Retief inquired.
"It's considered a bad omen," Dir Blash said. "Drat the pesky motes!" he added as a small fragment bounded off the back of his neck. "These annoyances detract from the solemnity of the occasion!"
"On the contrary," Retief demurred politely. "I think they add a lot of interest to the situation."
"Umm. Mayhap." Dir Blash gazed absently upward, moving his head slightly to avoid being brained by a baseball-sized missile. "Now, Outworlder!" he addressed Retief, "prepare for the moment of truth! Bend over"-he paused impressively-"and touch your toes!"
"Do I get to bend my knees?" Retief temporized.
"Bend whatever you like," Dir Blash said with airy contempt. "I trow this is one feat ye've not practiced at your Ordeal of the Staff Meeting!"
"True," Retief conceded. "The closest we come is lifting ourselves by our bootstraps." He a.s.sumed a serious expression, bent over, and with a smooth motion, touched his fingertips to his toes.
"Zounds!" someone called. "He did it in one try!"
"Didn't even take a bounce!" another added. Then the applause was general.
"Lacking in style," Dir Blash grumbled. "But a pa.s.s, I allow. But now you face the Third Ordeal, where yer tricks will do ye no good. Come along." As they moved off, his words were drowned as the stone piano crunched down on the spot he and Retief had just vacated.
7.
The route to the Third Site led upward through a narrow cut to emerge on a bare rock slope. Fifty feet away a flat-topped rock spire loomed up from the depths, joined to the main ma.s.s of the peak by a meandering ribbon of rock some six inches in width, except where it narrowed to a knife edge, halfway across. Dir Blash sauntered out across the narrow bridge, gazing around him at the scenery.
"A splendid prospect, eh, Retief?" he called over his shoulder. "Look on it well; it may be thy last. What comest next has broken many a strong Tsugg down into a babbling Glert."
Retief tried the footing; it held. Keeping his eyes on the platform ahead, he walked quickly across.
"Now," Dir Blash said, "you may wish to take a moment to commune with your patron devils or whatever it is you Outlanders burn incense to, ere the Third Ordeal lays ye low!"
"Thanks, I'm in good shape incantationwise," Retief rea.s.sured his inquisitor, "only last night I joined in a toast to the auditors."
"In that case..." Dir Blash pointed impressively to a flat stone that lay across two square rocks, the top of which cleared the ground by a good twelve inches.
"Leap the obstacle!" the subchief commanded. "In a single bound, mind you!"
Retief studied the hurdle from several angles before taking up his position before it.
"I see you hesitate," Dir Blash taunted. "Dost doubt thy powers at last, Terry?"
"Last year an a.s.sociate of mine jumped fifty names on the promotion list," Retief said. "Can I do less?" Standing flat-footed, he hopped over the barrier. Turning, he hopped back again.
There was a moment of stunned silence. Then pandemonium broke out. Dir Blash hesitated only a moment, then joined in the glad cries.
"Congratulations, Dir Tief!" he bellowed, pounding the Terran on the shoulder. "I warrant an Outworlder of thy abilities would be an embarra.s.sment to all hands, but in sooth thou'rt now a Tsugg of the Tsuggs, and thy attainments are an adornment to our ilk!"
8.
"Remarkable," said Hoobrik the Uncouth as he stuffed a handful of sugar-coated green olives into his mouth. "According to Blash here, you went through the Ordeal like a Tsugg to the pavilion born! I may keep you on as bodyguard, Dir Tief, after I get the vote out and myself in."
"Coming from Your Truculence, that's praise indeed," Retief said. "Considering your willingness to offer yourself as a candidate without a whimper."
"What's to whimper?" Hoobrik demanded. "After my lads have rounded up more voters than the opposition can muster, I'll be free to fill my pockets as best I may. 'Tis a prospect I face calmly."
"True," Retief said. "But first there are a few rituals to be gotten past. There's Whistle-stopping, Baby-kissing, Fence-sitting, and Mud-slinging, plus a considerable amount of Viewing-with-Alarm."
"Hmm." Hoobrik rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "Are these Ordeals the equal of our Rites of Tsugghood, Retief?"
"Possibly even worse," Retief solemnly a.s.sured the chieftain. "Especially if you wear an Indian war bonnet."
"Out upon it!" Hoobrik pounded his tankard on the table. "A Tsugg fears neither man nor beast!"
"But did you ever face a quorum of Women Voters?" Retief countered quickly.
"Nay-but my stout lads will ride down all opposition," Hoobrik declared with finality. "I've already made secret arrangements with certain Five-eyed Off-worlders to supply me with all the write-in ballots I need to make everything legal and proper. Once in office, I can settle down to businesslike looting in an orderly manner."
"But remember," Retief cautioned, "you'll be expected to stand on your Party Platform-at least for the first few weeks."
"W-weeks?" Hoobrik faltered. "What is this platform, Retief?"
"It's a pretty shaky structure," Retief confided. "I've never known one to last past the first Legislative Rebuff."
"What, yet another Ordeal?"
"Don't worry about it, Your Truculence; it seldom goes as far as Impeachment."
"Well? Well? Don't keep me in suspense!" Hoobrik roared. "What doth this rite entail?"
"This is where your rival politicans get even with you for winning, by charging you with High Crimes and Misdemeanors-"