FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   >>  
omparative sizes of the nose, ears and other features. There's no possible doubt that the pictures are of the same man." * * * * * "How do you explain it?" Johnson asked. "I don't," Hawkes replied quietly. "That's one of the things I'm here to learn. But did you notice this? The man we encountered this afternoon was not only the same as the one on those pictures: he still looks the same. We might, for the sake of argument, grant that a man's appearance would change only slightly in twenty-five years. But when you add another twenty-three on top of that--and he's still unchanged...?" "If you're certain that he's the man, why don't you arrest him?" Johnson asked. "Can we arrest a man apparently about thirty years old and accuse him of a crime committed forty-eight years ago--or even twenty-three years ago?" "I suppose not," Johnson agreed. "What do you intend to do?" "I haven't decided yet. First I'll have to learn more about the situation here. You can help me with that. Right now I'd like to know something about the native customs--especially in regard to legal matters." "Their laws are fairly simple," Johnson began. "There's no law against stealing or taking by force anything you can get away with. That sounds absurd by Earth standards, it prevents the amassing of more goods than an individual needs, and makes for fairly equitable distribution. If a native somehow acquires a sudden amount of wealth--goods, in their case--he must hire guards to protect it. Guarding is a major occupation. They do an especially big business during the tourist seasons. In time the pay of the guards will eat up any native's surplus. Either way--by loss or guard pay--the wealth is soon redistributed." "Can they even kill one another with impunity?" "No. Their laws are rigid in that respect. In the process of--relieving another of his property, they must neither break a major bone, nor inflict permanent damage. If they disobey, they are tortured to death in the public square." Hawkes asked, "Who enforces their law?" "One of the clans. Its members are supported in their duties by all the others. And there's a permanent open season on murderers. Anyone, police or civilian may revenge a victim." "How about the law against carrying firearms?" "With them, intent is tantamount to commission," Johnson replied. "Only foreigners are ever foolish enough to be caught armed. However, all na
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   >>  



Top keywords:

Johnson

 
twenty
 
native
 

permanent

 
fairly
 
arrest
 
pictures
 

replied

 

guards

 

wealth


Hawkes
 

respect

 

impunity

 

redistributed

 
tourist
 
occupation
 

Guarding

 

protect

 

amount

 
business

surplus
 

process

 

seasons

 

Either

 
carrying
 

victim

 

firearms

 
revenge
 

murderers

 
Anyone

police
 

civilian

 

intent

 

tantamount

 

caught

 
However
 

foolish

 

commission

 

foreigners

 
season

damage

 

inflict

 

disobey

 

tortured

 
property
 

public

 

square

 
duties
 

supported

 

members