Charles Sheffield - With the Knight Male.pdf

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With the Knight Male (apologies to Rudyard
Kipling)
Charles Sheffield
I received the final payment this morning. To: Burmeister and Carver, Attorneys. Payable by: Joustin'
Time .
Logically, Waldo should have signed the transfer slip. He deserves the money, far more than I do. But
given his contusions, fractures, lacerations, and multiple body casts, he is in no position to sign anything.
In fact, all the negotiations, arguments, offers, and counteroffers to Joustin' Time had perforce to come
from me. But if Waldo learns anything from his experience—doubtful, given his history—my extra effort
on his behalf will be well worthwhile.
I ought to have been suspicious at the outset, when Waldo drifted into my office from his next-door one,
preened, and said, "Got us a client."
"That's nice. Who is he?"
"She. It's a lady, Helga Svensen."
I ought to have stopped it right there. Every man is entitled to his little weakness, but Waldo's track
record with women clients has been, to put it mildly, unfortunate.
On the other hand, although the love of money is widely acknowledged to be the root of all evil, the lack
of money isn't too good either. The legal firm of Burmeister and Carver—Waldo and me—was at the
time utterly broke.
I said, "What does this Helga Svensen want us to do?"
"Nothing difficult. Seems she's a major player in the pre-Renaissance tournaments that have been so big
recently. There's a royal games next week at the Paladindrome on Vesta, and she wants our help with
her performance contract. She also asked me to check out one of the accessories. Wants to know if it
can be shipped legally interplanet before she commits to anything."
 
I nodded. World-to-world tariff laws were a nightmare—or, seen from another point of view, a boon for
hungry attorneys.
"What is it this time?" I said. "Bows, swords, tankards? Antique suits of armor? Jousting equipment?"
"None of them." Waldo helped himself to a handful of chocolate malt balls sitting in a jar on my desk.
"Mainly, she's interested—mm—in the—mm—blagon."
"The flagons?"
"Naw." He had spoken with his mouth full, and was forced to pause and swallow before he could say,
"The dragon. Apparently it's a different model from what they've been using before. I'm going to meet
Helga Svensen over at Chimera Labs tomorrow morning and we're going to check it out together. Want
to come?"
I did not. The mindless rush of the biolabs to create, through fancy DNA splicing, everything from
centaurs to basilisks to gryphons has never made sense to me. On the other hand, there is such a thing as
due diligence. If we were going to object to—or press for—import/export restrictions on a dragon, I
needed to take a look at one.
"What time?" I said.
"Nine o'clock. Nine o'clock sharp."
"I'll be there."
* * *
But I wasn't. An unpleasant conversation with our landlord concerning past-due office rental delayed me
and I did not reach the offices of Chimera Labs until nine-thirty. The aged derelict on duty at the desk
wore a uniform as wrinkled and faded as he was. He cast one bleary-eyed look at me as I came in and
said, "Mister Carver? You're expected. First room on the left. The brute's in there."
"The dragon?"
 
He stared at me gloomily. "Nah. The dragon's straight ahead, but you can't see it. You're to go into the
room on the left."
In twenty years of legal practice I had heard Waldo called many names, but "brute" was not one of them.
Puzzled, I opened the indicated door.
The voice that greeted me was not Waldo's. It was a pleasant, musical baritone, half an octave deeper
than his. That was fair enough, because its owner was over two meters tall and topped Waldo by a full
half-head.
She ignored my arrival and went on reading aloud. " `Article Twelve: Should a competitor fail to appear
at the allocated time for his/her/its designated heat, semifinal, or final, he/she/it will lose the right to
compete further in the tournament, and will in addition forfeit prior cumulative earnings and/or prize
money, unless a claim of force majeure can be substantiated before an arbitration board approved by the
tournament officials'—you see, it's this sort of blather that ties my head in knots—`in advance of the
participation of said competitor in any tournament event.' Now what the devil does that mean?"
Waldo offered a lawyer's nod of approbation. "Nice. It means that if you don't show up for an event, you
lose everything unless you can prove to them in advance that you couldn't possibly show up. Which is,
practically speaking, impossible." He had noticed my arrival, and turned to me. "Henry, this is Helga
Svensen. Helga, this is my partner, Henry Carver. Henry is an absolute master at reading the fine print of
a contract. If anyone can beat the written terms by using the contract's own words, he can."
While Helga nodded down at me with what I sensed as a certain rational skepticism, I took my chance
for an examination of our new client. She was more than just tall. She wore a scanty halter of Lincoln
green that revealed breasts like alpine slopes, shoulders wide enough to support a world, and tattooed
arms the size of my thighs. Her matching green skirt, shockingly short, ended high up on thighs as sturdy
and powerful as the fabled oaks of Earth. Waldo is a substantial man and his recent dieting efforts had
been a disaster, but I have to say that next to Helga Svensen he resembled a sun-starved weed.
Her mind was still on the contract. She flourished the offending document and said, "And this bit is
nothing like the usual agreement. `Article Seventeen. Any bona fide member of a participating team, such
representative or representatives to be termed hereinafter collectively the contestant , may enter into
single combat with the dragon. Should the contestant slay or otherwise defeat the dragon, the contestant
will win the Grand Prize; should the dragon slay the contestant, all prize money already won by the
contestant will be forfeited. In the event of the simultaneous death of both dragon and contestant, the
dragon will be deemed the winner.' "
"Sounds clear enough to me," Waldo said. "You kill the dragon and survive, you win big. What's wrong
with that?"
 
"It's too generous." Helga wore her hair in long, golden plaits. They swayed about her plump pink cheeks
as she shook her head. "They offer a Grand Prize at every tournament, and nobody has won one in five
years—which is how long Joustin' Time has been in business. But the prize has never been for
dragon-slaying, which isn't too hard. That's the other reason I'm here. I want a sneak preview of the
dragon." She glanced at a massive left wrist seeking a nonexistent watch. "What time is it?"
"Nine-forty-five," Waldo said.
"Then he'll be there. Come on—quietly, now."
She opened a small door at the back of the room, lowered her head, and squeezed through. About to
follow her into a dark and narrow corridor, I hesitated and turned to Waldo.
"Is this going to be safe? I mean, a dragon . . ."
"Oh, I'm sure we can trust Helga. Come on." He ducked through.
Was this really Waldo Burmeister, a man nervous in the presence of toy poodles and somnolent cats? I
followed him, wondering about his interaction with Helga Svensen before I arrived.
I didn't wonder long because other concerns took center stage. The dark corridor ran for about fifteen
meters and ended in a great, dimly-lit chamber. I couldn't see much at first, but a smell like a mixture of
ammonia and sulfur made my nostrils wrinkle. I heard a whisper ahead of me, answered in Helga's soft
baritone. She handed something to a dark figure who at once slipped away into the gloom.
Helga turned to me and Waldo. "Right, we're promised five minutes. Let's take a peek."
I wasn't sure I wanted to. As my eyes adjusted, a shape was coming into focus by the far wall. It was
hunched and enormous, at least seven feet high and thirty feet long. I saw scaled legs like tree trunks
ending in feet equipped with gleaming talons, a wrinkled body the size of an upturned rowing boat, a
long, barbed tail, and a crocodile head. As I watched, two pairs of batlike wings on each side of the
body moved slowly up and down in a breathing rhythm. The whole thing was absolutely terrifying.
 
"Strange," Helga said in a puzzled voice. "Looks just like the dragon they used in the last tournament. I
killed that one myself, with a spear thrust to one of its hearts—but there was no Grand Prize offered for
doing it. What game are the crooks at Joustin' Time playing now? I wonder if there's something in the
contract that says you can't wear armor when you fight the dragon?"
She made no effort to keep her voice down and the dragon heard her. The barrel-sized head with its
great jaws turned in our direction. Green eyes blinked open.
Waldo stayed at Helga's side, but I began to back away nervously.
"It's all right," Helga said. "You're quite safe, because it's chained up. You can see the fetters on each leg
and around the body."
While she was still speaking, a roaring sound filled the air. Two roiling clouds of blue flame emerged from
the dragon's nostrils and streaked in our direction. They narrowly missed Waldo and Helga, came close
enough to me to singe my trousers, and incinerated the leather briefcase that I was holding. I dropped the
smoking debris as Helga said, "So that's it!"
She sounded delighted as she went on, "It's a real first. They've talked about flame-breathing dragons in
the games for years, but they never worked. The last one got the hiccups and blew itself to bits during the
opening ceremonies."
"You plan to fight that thing?" I said, as I tried to remember what had been in my briefcase. The only
thing I was sure of was a sandwich.
"Not me." Helga gave a booming laugh, reached down, and patted out the glowing remnants of my case
with one enormous bare hand. "Not now that I know what it can do. I'm not crazy, you know! This time
I'll just do the jousting and the hand-to-hand combat. I always do well with those."
I could believe that, even without a survey of the competition. As she bent over, sinews like ship's cables
sprang into view in her arms and legs.
"But you'll see for yourself," she went on, "at the tournament. Now, I got what I came for, and I have to
be going. Lots to do!" She led the way out of the dragon chamber and dumped a sheaf of papers into my
hand as we reentered the front room. "Here's the contract. After what Waldo told me about you and
your fine-print reading, I know you'll find a way around all the weasel-wording. See you at the royal
games!"
 
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