The ugly pattern was beginning to emerge. Prudery, rape, frigidity, intrigue for power—and assassination? Beyond the one hint, Grinnel had said nothing that affected Syndic Territory.
But nothing would be more logical than for this band of brigands to lust after the riches of the continent.
Back of the waterfront were shipfitting shops and living quarters. Work was being done by a puzzling combination of mechanization and musclepower. In one open shed he saw a lathe-hand turning a gunbarrel out of a forging; the lathe was driven by one of those standard 18-inch ehrenhaft rotors Max Wyman knew so well. But a vertical drillpress next to it—Orsino blinked. Two men, sweating and panting, were turning a stubborn vertical drum as tall as they were, and a belt drive from the drum whirled the drill bit as it sank into a hunk of bronze. The men were in rags, dirty rags. And it came to Orsino with a stunning shock when he realized what the dull, clanking things were that swung from their wrists. They were chained to the handles of the wheel.
He walked on, almost dazed, comprehending now some cryptic remarks that had been passed aboard the sub.
"No Frog has staying power. Give a Limey his beef once a day and he'll outsweat a Frog."
"Yeah, but you can't whip a Limey. They just go bad when you whip a Limey."
"They just get sullen for awhile. But let me tell you, friend, don't ever whip a Spig. You whip a Spig, he'll wait twenty years if he has to but he'll get you, right between the ribs."
"If a Spig wants to be boiled, I should worry."
It had been broken up in laughter.
Boiled! Could such things be?