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June Challenge: The Real Thing

Goliath

Vice Admiral
Admiral
Alliance All-Risk 04: “The Real Thing”


TEASER

A lot of people think there’s no crime on Earth. With matter-antimatter reactors and replicators, all the necessities of life are free for the taking—and most of the luxuries.

But a lot of people forget—not everything can be replicated. And even when it can—some people still prefer the real thing.

So even on Earth, you’ll find people who want things they can’t have—or shouldn’t have. And sometimes those people will commit crimes that would make even a Ferengi shudder.

I know—because I am a Ferengi. My name’s Huff. I’m an insurance investigator, checking claims for Alliance All-Risk.

I was in my office on Ferenginar, one afternoon recently, filing my teeth, when I got a call from the claims manager, Tarbo—my boss.

“Huh-heeyah,” I said, trying to talk around my toothfile.

“Huff? Tarbo here. Come to my office right away.”

“What’s the rush?” I said.

“The Civil Guard on Markal IV pulled the body of a Human female out of the Wetlands, north of Belkalu City,” Tarbo said. “She turned out to be a policy holder.”

“What am I—a private detective?” I said. “Why don’t you let the cops find your killers?”

“We know who the killer is,” Tarbo said. “They’re going to mindwipe him at the end of the week. What we need to know about is the victim.


ACT ONE

Expense Account, submitted by Investigator Huff to Home Office, Alliance All-Risk Insurance Company, Ferenginar.

The following is an accounting of expenditures during my search for the beneficiary of policy-holder Jennifer Williams.

Item One: Spacefare from Ferenginar to Markal IV—specifically, Kar Zartkaar prison, last place of residence of the girl’s convicted murderer, Slat Zolmess.

He was sitting in his cell playing Markalian solitaire, his iguana-like face expressionless.

“Hey,” he said, looking up: “what time is it, Ferengi?”

“About thirteen o’clock, Slat,” I said.

“An hour more,” he said. Then: “How much you say the policy was for?”

“Fifty bars of gold-pressed latinum,” I said.

“Fifty bars,” he said, turning his attention back to his cards. “Heh. That’s funny. Just what I got paid for the job. Who’d she leave it to—the old lady?”

“Yeah,” I said.

“Yeah,” he said. “I knew she would.”

“You know where I can find the beneficiary?” I said.

“Beneficiary,” he said. “You didn’t know the beneficiary, did you?’

“Never had the pleasure,” I said.

“Well,” he said, “if you’d known her, you wouldn’t be looking for her.”

I shrugged, and said: “Mrs. Williams’ virtues are none of my business, Slat. The company has fifty bars of latinum, and I’ve got to help them get rid of it. What good are you doing yourself by not telling me where she is? If you know?”

“What time is it now?” he said.

“A little after thirteen,” I said.

“Boy, did that money look good,” he said. “You know all the things you can do with those fifty bars? This girl back home…I was going to get married…ahh. Nah, I wasn’t going to get married. I would have lost it all playing dabo, like all them other times.”

“You never did say who hired you.”

“Yeah. That’s right. I never did.”

“Slat, I know you’ve been through this before, but you’ve got to admit—it’s a good point. They’re going to wipe your mind—and the real murderer is getting off free. Does that make sense to you?”

He looked at me again. “What’s your business, Ferengi?”

“Insurance.”

“Stick to it,” he said, and turned his attention back to the game.

“I think I will,” I said.

“You know what I’d do if I was you?” he said, turning over his last card. “I’d take all that latinum, and put it in flowers.”

“Thanks, anyway.”

“Hey, Huff,” he said, gathering up the cards and shuffling. “Let me give you some last-minute advice. Leave it alone. It’s the most unnatural mess you ever got yourself into in all your life.”

***

Expense Account—Item Two: Air-tram fare, from Kar Zartkaar Prison to Civil-Guard Headquarters, Belkalu City, where the next morning Inspector Snok Nasseng offered me photographs of the dead girl, a cup of nodwort tea, and what little information he had.

“Here’s her body,” he said, pointing a clawed finger.

I studied the crime-scene photos. “Are there many Humans on Markal IV?”

“Some. Not many.”

“Any connection between her and Slat Zolmess?”

“None that we know of.”

“How do you know it was him?”

“A patrol drone spotted him dumping her body in the Wetlands,” the Inspector said, pointing to another photo. “We picked him up on the way back to the city. The file was cut and dried.”

“You don’t have any idea where I can start looking for the mother?” I said.

The Inspector shook his head and sipped his tea. “Most I can do for you is give you the girl’s last known address,” he said. “But, we’ve been over the ground a hundred times. It’s a rooming house, for offworlders. Nice but stupid old couple that don’t know nothing.”

“The address on the policy…”

“Zarathustra, ten years ago.”

“Zarathustra?”

“Human colony on Epsilon Reticuli III. Became a Federation Trust Territory after they discovered the natives were sentient.”

“Right. I remember now. Most of the colonists had to leave. Was the girl one of them?”

“Guess so. We’re still working on it. Anything else?”

“Just the girl’s last known address,” I said.

***

Expense Account—Item Three: Cab fare, to a rooming house on the lower east side of Belkalu City.

An elderly Markalian female answered the door to the manager’s apartment when I knocked.

“Oh,” she said. “Come in.”

I came in. She said: “Norrl?” Then, to me: “Why don’t you sit down?”

“Thanks,” I said. An equally elderly Markalian male came in.

“You the manager?” I said.

“I’m the manager,” he said.

“Norrl’s the manager,” she said. They both sat down.

“My name is Huff. I’m with the—”

“It’s all right,” she said, “we don’t ask for references. Do we, Norrl?”

“Except under special circumstances,” he said.

“I’m afraid you misunderstand,” I said. “I’m not looking for an apartment. I’m an investigator with an insurance company, and I’d like to ask you a few questions.”

“We’ve never had a fire in this building,” he said. “That was next door.”

“They keep rubbish in the basement,” she said.

“The company’s warned them, time and time again.”

“It never does any good.”

“I’d like some information,” I said, “about a Human who I understand was a tenant here. A female named Jennifer Williams.”

“The civil guard were already here, Mr. Huff,” he said.

“Four times,” she said.

“Inspector Nasseng thanked us for our cooperation.”

“She was such a nice girl.”

“How long was she with you?” I said.

“How long was it, Norrl?”

“Just two weeks,” he said.

“Just two weeks,” she said, “but we got to know her so well. She was such a lonely girl. She used to come down after dinner, sometimes, and talk about all the places she’d been.”

“Where’d she come from, originally?” I said.

“Zarathustra,” said the old female. “Where the Fuzzies live.”

“We saw a Fuzzy once, at the zoo” he said. “Cute little thing. Only said ‘yeek’.”

“Of course, they had to let it go.”

“They’re intelligent, you know. Like little people.”

“So I’ve heard,” I said. “But about the girl. Did she have any visitors?”

“Oh, no,” she said.

“I remember,” he said, “one of the first things she told us was, no visitors. If anybody asked for her, she wasn’t at home.”

“No, Mr. Huff, no visitors.”

“Did she act as if she were frightened of something?” I said.

“That’s just what the Inspector Nasseng asked us,” she said, “and we told them before, and we told them at the trial, that she was frightened.”

“We had her luggage here for a while, but the civil guard took it,” he said.

“I’ve been through it, thanks.”

“Did you notice all the labels, from all over everywhere?” she said. “Wonder what they’re going to do with all those lovely dresses and shoes.”

“Look,” I said, “I know the civil guard asked all these questions, but did you happen to notice if she got any mail?”

“Yes, we did. She didn’t,” she said.

“Not a single letter,” he said.

“Hmm. She spend much time away from her apartment?”

“Very little,” she said. “Only—”

“Twice a day,” he said. “Once in the morning, once in the afternoon. But she always came back within an hour.”

“I don’t suppose you have any idea where she went?”

“That’s right. We don’t,” she said.

“Hmm,” he said. “What did you say you were again?”

“An insurance investigator,” I said, standing up. “Thanks for your time.”

***

Expense Account—Item Four: Numerous cab fares.

It spent the rest of that day and half of the next visiting neighborhood postal substations. It looked like a big waste of time—but I was betting that her daily excursions had been for mail.

The second afternoon I dragged into a fruit store that advertised “postal station 324,” along with a special on soursweet rindfruit. I walked up to the little cage.

“Anything for Williams today?” I said, without much hope.

“Who?” said the clerk.

“Williams. General delivery.”

“Just a minute. What was that name again?”

“Williams. W-I-L-L-I-A-M-S.”

“Just a minute. Yes, here we are: three issiks postage due, Las Vegas, Nevada, Earth.”

***

I looked at the envelope: Jennifer Williams, all right. It had been forwarded from Earth a week ago. I said something to myself about hard work, patience, and…dumb luck. Then I headed for a public communicator station.

My boss’s face appeared on the screen. “Hello?”

I said: “This is Huff, Tarbo. On the Williams thing. I’m still cold on the beneficiary, but we’ve got the girl traced as far as Earth.”

He scowled. “That’s a long haul for a fifty-bar policy. You have a final address on her, there?”

“A letter was forwarded to general delivery, here on Markal IV, which was originally addressed to the Piper Club, in a city called Las Vegas. I got a permit, and had it opened. It’s nothing but a dressmaker’s bill. I guess the Terran postal authorities sent it on. It’s all I got. Want me to follow it up?”

“Nothing else we can do. You hereby have authorization. Get going.”

***

Expense Account—Item Five: Space fare from Markal IV to Earth—specifically, the Piper Club, Las Vegas, Nevada.

I walked into the lounge at the Piper Club just as a female employee was taking a seat at the bar.

I walked up to the seat next to her. “Is this taken?” I said.

She looked a little surprised. “No,” she said. “Sit down.”

The bartender said: “What’ll you have, mister?”

“A good bourbon,” I said. “With soda.”

He smiled. “Well, thanks for your confidence in me. I’ll fix you up.”

While he was fixing me up, I turned my attention back to the female. “You worked here long?”

“Have I,” she said.

“You like Nevada?”

“Mmm,” she said, with a shrug.

“What’s your home town?”

“Las Vegas,” she said. “Arrowhead in the summer.”

“Yeah? I guess you’d know a lot of people here, huh?”

“By sight mostly. Very few by name. Everybody’s a stranger.”

“Say—maybe you know a Human friend of mine—I went to school with her, on Zarathustra. What was her name again—oh, yeah—Williams. Jennifer Williams.”

She got up to leave. “Save me my drink, Eddie, I’ve got to get back to work. Take it easy, mister,” she said. Then she was gone.

I was thinking, this would probably be a lot easier if I wasn’t a Ferengi when the bartender came back with my drink. “Best bourbon in the house,” he said.

“Thanks,” I said. “You take latinum?”

“Of course. That’s a strip and a half. This is a real clip joint,” he added, apologetically.

“Yeah, I can see,” I said. I gave him two strips. “Here you are.”

“Thanks!”

I sampled my whiskey: to be fair, it was pretty good. “Say—wait a second,” I said. “You know where I can find Mrs. Dorothy Williams? She’s the mother of a girl that used to hang around here—Jennifer.”

The bartender didn’t say anything—just stood there, polishing glasses, like he hadn’t heard me.

“Well?” I said.

“Yeah,” he said, finally. “Yeah, I think I can help you. Harry, take over.” Then, to my surprise, he gave me back my money. “Here’s your latinum. Come on.”

The stairway led to the mezzanine. I followed the bartender along the thickly carpeted hall to a door labeled Michael Black. My benefactor knocked, the door opened, and just like that—there he was. A long red gash of a scar ran along the left side of his face, twisting it into a humorless smile.

The barkeep was dismissed with a nod. We sat down.

“Drink?” he said

“Thanks, no,” I said.

“What can I do for you?” he said. He seemed friendly enough.

“I’m looking for a Mrs. Dorothy Williams,” I said.

“Why?”

“I’ve got business with her.”

“What kind of business?”

“Insurance.”

“She don’t need no insurance,” he said. Maybe not as friendly as he seemed.

“Where can I find her?”

“She don’t need no insurance,” he repeated. Definitely not as friendly as he seemed.

I stood up to leave. “Well, thanks, anyhow.”

“Sit down,” he said.

“What for?”

“You see this mark across my face? You know how I got this? Asking foolish questions, and not giving the right answers. Suppose you tell me what you want with Mrs. Dorothy Williams.”

“I’ll tell Mrs. Williams you were interested.”

“Ah, look, look,” he said, “this is no way to talk to me. I got a lot of respect for your business ethics, and all that but you know how it is sometimes.

Then he took out a small Type-I phaser. “Now, come on, Mr. Insurance,” he said. “What do you want with Mrs. Williams?”

“Are you a pretty good shot with that thing?”

“Type-Is are my specialty.”

“In that case, I’ve got a check.”

“What kind of check?”

“A fifty bars of latinum kind of a check.”

“From whom?”

“Her daughter.”

“Jennifer?” he said, frowning.

“Jennifer,” I said. “She left her mother fifty bars of latinum.”

“How did you trace Jennifer to Las Vegas? Ah, never mind,” he said. “You know what you look like to me? You look like a city official.”

“It’s the paisley,” I said. “Now how do I find Mrs. Williams?”

“It’s very simple. Eddie!” he shouted. The bartender came back in. “Eddie, this is—what’s your name, insurance?”

“Huff.”

“Take Mr. Huff to see Mrs. Dorothy Williams. Treat him gentle—he’s got some money for her.”

***

The place looked and sounded the same on the way out, but something was different. Maybe it was the four muscle boys waiting at the door. As they fell in behind me, I thought maybe I’d asked one question too many.

At the alley, I found out how right I was.

It wasn’t the worst beating I’ve ever taken in my life, but it was pretty close. What they lacked in skill, they made up for with enthusiasm.
 
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ACT TWO

I woke up to someone shouting my name and slapping my face.

“Huff.”

“Huff!”

Huff!

“Unh?” I said.

A bunch of Humans started asking me questions.

“Where you from?”

“What’s this insurance business?”

“Who do you really work for?”

“Is it the Markalian Civil Guard?”

“Where did you get these cards in your wallet?”

“Come on, Huff!”

“Answer me, Huff!”

“Unh,” I said, again. Then: “Give me some water.”

“Get him some water.”

“Hey, get some water, Joe.”

“Now, sit up. Come on, come on, sit up. Here, I’ll help you. There.”

“All right, now, what’s the idea?” I said.

“That’s what we’d like to know. Where do you know Jennifer Williams from?”

“Oh…that name…”

“Come on.”

“I’m looking for her mother,” I said.

“What do you want with her mother?”

“She left an insurance policy. The girl. Fifty bars of latinum.”

“Here’s the water.”

“Thanks,” I said, and had a drink. “Ah. Who are you?”

“Mike Black.”

“Oh, yeah, yeah,” I said, scowling. “The face is familiar.”

“You mustn’t be bitter, Huff,” he said.

“Why?”

“My questions.”

“Look,” I said, “I’m just a working Ferengi. It’s so simple. There’s a company on Ferenginar—an insurance company. They sold a policy. The girl that bought it is dead. The policy is for fifty bars of latinum. The money goes to her mother. All I want to know is—where is mother?”

“No kidding,” said Black. “Are you really an insurance man?”

“No kidding.”

“Well, why didn’t you say so? Why didn’t you come right out with it? Why do you go sneaking into bars, asking funny questions?”

“Mister—do you know a Mrs. Dorothy Williams?”

“Here in Las Vegas?”

“Here, in Las Vegas.”

“I’ll tell you what I’ll do. I’ll look it up for you.”

“Thanks. Now—lay me back down again?”

***

Expense Account—Item Six: Medical bills. Nothing serious, but I couldn’t go out in the street looking like that. I stayed in my starport hotel room for two days until the swelling went down.

On the third morning I had a visitor. It was the Human female who gave me the brush-off in Piper’s bar. She had an overnight bag with her. There was a label: Deneva Colony.

“You’re in trouble, you know that?” she said.

“Three days ago, that information might have done me some good,” I said, a little bitterly.

“I mean, real trouble,” she said. “You don’t think Mike Black let you out of there because he believed your story?”

I shrugged. “No more than you think you weren’t followed here.”

She paced back and forth. “I know, I know. I should never have come here. But, Jennifer—get a message to her, will you? Tell her never to show up here again.”

“She won’t,” I said.

The female stopped pacing. “What do you mean, she won’t?”

“She’s dead.”

Her eyes widened, and her jaw dropped. Then, she said: “They got to her.”

“Do you know why?”

“I’ve got to get out of here,” she said, heading for the door.

“Wait a minute,” I said, moving to intercept her. “Why did Mike Black hire the Markalian to kill her?”

“Let me go,” she said, trying to get past. “I’ve got to get out of here!”

“You came up here for a purpose,” I said.

“Yes, but I didn’t know she was dead!”

“Are you going to let him get away with it?”

“It’s—”

“What?”

“Illegal food.”

“Illegal food?

“Yeek—things like that. People come from all over, and pay a fortune to try it. The gambling place is a front.”

“What’s yeek?”

“Fuzzy meat.”

“You mean—Fuzzies, from Zarathustra?” Then, it hit me. “They’re eating sentient beings?

“I heard they even cooked a Trill symbiont,” she said, shuddering. “Jennifer found out about it, and that’s why they did it.”

“Does Black know Jennifer told you all this?”

“I don’t think so—but I’m not taking any chances. I’ve got a ticket on the next ship out of the Solar System. It’s boarding soon. I’ve only got a minute!”

I got out of her way. “Good luck,” I said.

***

Next I went to the window and watched her leave the hotel and cross the street. A nice girl, I thought. But I wondered how she got mixed up with Black’s crowd.

The doors to the starport slid open automatically. There was a flash—and she crumpled to the sidewalk, dropping her little overnight bag.

I got downstairs just ahead of the homicide squad. People were still standing around. A detective looked at me curiously.

“She was a nice kid,” I said.

“You knew her?” he said.

“Not for long.”

He looked at the crime scene, then back to me. “Did you see this happen?”

“Yeah.”

“Step over here for a second, would you please?”

We moved over to his unmarked car. “May I have your name, please?” he said.

“Yeah, sure,” I said. “Here’s my ID card.”

He looked at it. “Insurance investigation,” he said. “Something about her?”

“No, a friend of hers. Jennifer Williams. Pulled out of the Wetlands on Markal IV, stabbed to death.”

“Williams?”

“Yeah. You didn’t know?”

“Well,” he said, considering. “We heard she left town—that was about all. She got mixed up with Mike Black, and her family disowned her. Well, did you see what happened to this girl?”

“She was just walking into the starport. It looked like a phaser beam. She was working for Mike Black too.”

He nodded. “Yeah, I thought I recognized her.”

“She’d just come up to see me. Had quite a story to tell. Black’s running some kind of illegal underground supper club—serving Fuzzies, from Zarathustra. Things like that.”

He grimaced. “Yeah, so I’ve heard. We’ve had our eye on him for months, but we aren’t ready to pick him up yet. Why would she tell you that?”

“She had to tell somebody. She had a message she wanted me to deliver, to Jennifer.”

“Well, this is beginning to tie up. But what’s insurance got to do with it?”

“The Williams girl left a policy—fifty bars of gold-pressed latinum, to her mother.”

“Huh,” said the detective. He thought about that for a moment, then said: “Her conscience must have been bothering her. She comes from one of the finest families in this part of the country, and starts downhill with a crowd like that. Her mother needs fifty bars of latinum like I need ears like yours. And, Mister—if I were you, I’d take that check out to the Williams estate, and catch the next shuttle off the planet.”

“You know something, detective? That’s just what I’m going to do.”

***

And that’s just what I tried to do.

Expense Account—Item Seven: Cab fare, to the Williams Estate, on Juniper Drive.

They should have charged admission. There was an ivied stone wall, running all around, and a mile drive through a cactus rock garden to the mansion. A butler met me at the door, and led me inside, around an indoor swimming pool and potted palms, to the library. An elderly male Human was buried in a large leather chair, watching a holoprogram about gardening. I was introduced, and left alone with him.

“Insurance?” he said, looking up from one of my business cards, puzzled.

“Investigation,” I said. “How long since you’ve heard from your daughter?”

“Oh, such a long time—such a long time,” he aid, trying to remember. “Is she in more trouble?”

“She’s dead, Mr. Williams.”

“Dead?” he said, stunned. “Jennifer, dead? It can’t be! What happened?”

“She was killed.”

“An accident?”

“No, it wasn’t.”

“Not an accident?’ he said.

“Someone hired a killer,” I said.

After a moment, he said: “It’s my fault. I knew. I knew, and I did nothing.”

Then a female, about the same age, came into the room. “Christopher?” she said. “Christopher, I’ve been looking all over for you. Have you watered the palms today?”

“No,” he said.

“You didn’t water the palms? Now, Christopher, the leaves will get all yellow, and fall all over the floor, and it will take who knows how long to clean up the mess around all the pool, and I specifically told you the Music Club had changed from Wednesday to Monday, and Monday is tonight.”

The male pointed at me. “This is someone from the insurance company.”

She glanced at me briefly. “How do you do,” she said, then turned back to the male. “Now Christopher, please do this one thing for me—you know how much I have to do.”

“Dorothy,” he said. “It’s Jennifer.”

That made her pause. “I told you never to speak that name in my presence,” she said, finally.

“She’s dead.”

The female blinked. “Dead.”

I said: “She was murdered, Mrs. Williams. On Markal IV.”

The room was quiet for a moment. Then, she said: “I’m not sorry. Maybe I should be, but I’m not. Not in the least. She’s never done anything but bring shame to me, and to her father. She brought these awful people to the house—to this house, mind you—humiliating me in front of my friends! She even wanted to marry one of them!

“Dorothy, please—not now, Dorothy.”

“I’m not adept at putting on false grief like you are, Christopher. She was no good. When she brought this man in, I told her right there and then: you’re not my daughter! Go to the people that you fit in with. Well—this is the way it had to end. I’m going upstairs.”

“Uh, Mrs. Williams—just one thing more,” I said. “If you’ll sign this paper, my job will be over. I have a check for you.”

“A check?” said the male.

“A check?” said the female. “What kind of a check?”

“She left you fifty bars of gold-pressed latinum,” I said.

“Me? She left me fifty bars of latinum?”

“I remember,” said the male. “The policy she took out in high school, before we had to leave Zarathustra. She never cancelled it. Even when you sent her away.”

The female finally cracked. “I don’t want it,” she sobbed. “I don’t want it!” Then she ran out of the room.

“Tell me,” said the male. “Do you know who killed my daughter?”

“Well,” I said, scratching behind my ear. “The Markalian who did the actual killing has already been mindwiped, on Markal IV. The man who hired him—it’s only a suspicion, I’d rather not say.”

“Black,” he said.

“What about this check?” I said.

“I…I don’t think she wants the money,” he said. “You can tell your company that.”

“Look, Mr. Williams—I’ve come a long way. I’ll leave it here. You can sign the form and mail it. Would you mind calling me a cab?”

***

Expense Account—Item Eight: Cab fare.

Just as we pulled out of the driveway, someone else pulled in. I don’t know if he saw me, but I saw him. It was Mike Black.

***

The homicide detective frowned. “Are you sure, Huff?”

“Positive,” I said. “Detective, I woke up looking at that face.”

“What would Black be doing at the Williams place?”

“Could be a connection you didn’t know about.”

“Yeah,” he said, thinking it over. “This could be it. We’ve been looking for someone who supplied the capital. It’s a pretty big operation, and I’m sure Black didn’t have enough credit to start it.”

“Well?” I said. “What are we waiting for?”

***

I rode back with the police department. We got around the butler by taking him into custody. We heard voices coming from the library, and stopped outside the door.

“It was business, I had to do it.” It was Mike Black talking. “She threatened to go to the police. She may have been your daughter, but she wasn’t mine.”

“Why did you tell her?” That was Williams, the dead girl’s father

“I didn’t,” said Black. “She found out.”

Williams said: “She knew about us?”

“Sure, she knew about you,” Black said. “She knew about everything. She would’ve turned you and your wife in a long time ago, if you hadn’t been her parents. She was willing to turn me in, and I did what I had to. It wasn’t my idea, you coming into this thing, but now that you’re in it, you’ve got to learn—things like this happen.”

“Yes,” Williams said. And things like this happen, too!

We heard the phaser shot through the door. “Come on!” the detective yelled.

We broke into the room. Black was on the floor. Williams stood over him, the phaser in his hand.

“Drop it, Williams,” said the detective

The old man did what he was told. I heard someone come into the room. “And look who’s here,” I said. “Hello, Mrs. Williams.”

“Let’s go, Williams,” said the detective.

“No, wait,” said the old male, glaring at the female. “I want you to know about this woman. I want you to know what she is! All respectability and shine—chamber music, and non-objective paintings, and high society! And where did the money come from, Dorothy? From cannibalism! From the same people you hated so much!”

“Christopher, stop!” she cried.

“I had a sunstone business before the war,” said the old male. “But it wasn’t good enough for her. She wanted this place—Italian marble, tapestries! She met Black in back rooms and arranged for me to buy in to his gambling casino! That was the first thing!”

“Don’t you dare put the blame on me!”

“Whose idea was it to start serving sentient beings as food for wealthy perverts with jaded appetites? How many times did I beg you to stop?”

“Fuzzies aren’t sentient!” she screamed. “They’re animals! They took away our home, and gave it to a bunch of animals!

The old man went on: “She never listened to me—she couldn’t keep from impressing the ladies and gentlemen! And when Jennifer wanted to marry a decent young man, she insulted him right out of this house! This is the woman who sent her daughter away because her friends weren’t good enough!”

The old female burst into tears again.

I said: “I don’t think you need me any more, detective. I’ll just take that check, and go home.”

***

Expense Account—Item Nine: Transportation back to Ferenginar.

I don’t know what to do with the fifty bars of latinum. I’d say, give it to the Fuzzies as compensation—but they wouldn’t know what to do with it, either. They have no civilization to speak of. From what I’ve read, they’re only as intelligent as children.

Anyway—it’s not my problem.

(Signed) Huff, Investigator.


THE END

(Read more about the world of Zarathustra and its inhabitants, the Fuzzies, in H. Beam Piper’s Little Fuzzy (1962))
 
Very interesting story! I have to say, that's possibly the most sympathetic Ferengi I've ever read. Yeah, he may say it's not his problem at the end, but I got the impression he had more guts and manners than you usually see a Ferengi given credit for...and the fact that he WAS appalled about eating sentient beings--shows he has some scruples about what kind of business is and isn't acceptable.

One question...just how far does a mindwipe go?
 
Very interesting story!

Thanks!

I have to say, that's possibly the most sympathetic Ferengi I've ever read. Yeah, he may say it's not his problem at the end, but I got the impression he had more guts and manners than you usually see a Ferengi given credit for...and the fact that he WAS appalled about eating sentient beings--shows he has some scruples about what kind of business is and isn't acceptable.
More stories starring Investigator Huff can be found here. The first story, "Double Dip," will give you a much better understanding of Huff's ethical code.

Unfortunately, I never did finish Episode 03. :(

One question...just how far does a mindwipe go?
I... don't know. I got the idea from Joe Haldeman's The Forever War.

Presumably, it would involve the total destruction of the offender's personality.

Since it's not in use by the UFP, I assume that it's not a particularly humane process. A mind-wiped prisoner is probably reduced to idiocy, and cannot be re-educated or rehabilitated.
 
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Very interesting story!

Thanks!

I have to say, that's possibly the most sympathetic Ferengi I've ever read. Yeah, he may say it's not his problem at the end, but I got the impression he had more guts and manners than you usually see a Ferengi given credit for...and the fact that he WAS appalled about eating sentient beings--shows he has some scruples about what kind of business is and isn't acceptable.
More stories starring Investigator Huff can be found here. The first story, "Double Dip," will give you a much better understanding of Huff's ethical code.

Unfortunately, I never did finish Episode 03. :(

One question...just how far does a mindwipe go?
I... don't know. I got the idea from Joe Haldeman's The Forever War.

Presumably, it would involve the total destruction of the offender's personality.

Since it's not in use by the UFP, I assume that it's not a particularly humane process. A mind-wiped prisoner is probably reduced to idiocy by the process, and cannot be re-educated or rehabilitated.
Would be interesting to see if they could re-educate and rehabilitate them, release them to the general public, and the old personality somehow starts to resurface. I think I saw that idea used before, but for the life of me I cant think where.
 
Would be interesting to see if they could re-educate and rehabilitate them, release them to the general public, and the old personality somehow starts to resurface.

I like the way you think. :evil:

You could also get a heck of a psychological drama if the new personality was upset by the old one and didn't like it.

Kinda like if my AU Dukat suddenly found Gul Dukat waking up inside his mind--he would be TERRIFIED and disgusted.
 
Would be interesting to see if they could re-educate and rehabilitate them, release them to the general public, and the old personality somehow starts to resurface.

I like the way you think. :evil:
Well, I've been having bad writers block lately, so I doubt I'd be able to do it justice. In that case, go ahead and use it. I look forward to see what you come up with.
 
Great story-and you won me over when I read the name of the planet. I love your Huff stories, always have. Tossing in what might be one of my top 3 fav authors(Piper) just sealed the deal. Little Fuzzy is just the start-they found and published the lost manuscript The Fuzzy Papers(?) I think it was called-the lost 3rd Fuzzy novel. Between Little Fuzzy, Fuzzy Sapiens and the lost novel it's quite an epic. Nice reference. I'd love to see more Huff-it's a shame you don't do more. Have you considered posting them as a series over at Ad Astra? I'd love to see the sum total.
 
Very interesting story!

Thanks!

More stories starring Investigator Huff can be found here. The first story, "Double Dip," will give you a much better understanding of Huff's ethical code.

Unfortunately, I never did finish Episode 03. :(

One question...just how far does a mindwipe go?
I... don't know. I got the idea from Joe Haldeman's The Forever War.

Presumably, it would involve the total destruction of the offender's personality.

Since it's not in use by the UFP, I assume that it's not a particularly humane process. A mind-wiped prisoner is probably reduced to idiocy by the process, and cannot be re-educated or rehabilitated.
Would be interesting to see if they could re-educate and rehabilitate them, release them to the general public, and the old personality somehow starts to resurface. I think I saw that idea used before, but for the life of me I cant think where.

Babylon 5. The episode about the Black Rose Killer. "Walking Through the Garden" ? "Gethsemane" ? Something like that. It had Brad Dourif, who played Ensign Suder in Voyager-the sociopath.
 
Babylon 5. The episode about the Black Rose Killer. "Walking Through the Garden" ? "Gethsemane" ? Something like that. It had Brad Dourif, who played Ensign Suder in Voyager-the sociopath.
Thats probably it considering that I watch that show almost as much as I watch trek... which is more then anyone probably should...
 
Great story-and you won me over when I read the name of the planet.

Hehe. Thanks. I read Little Fuzzy and Fuzzy Sapiens years and years ago, as a kid.

I figured--if Larry Niven can use the Kzinti in TAS, I can certainly use the Fuzzies in my fanfic.

I'd love to see more Huff-it's a shame you don't do more. Have you considered posting them as a series over at Ad Astra? I'd love to see the sum total.

Well, the trouble is, the sum total, at present is 3 1/2 stories. You can read them all, by following the link above.

I like Huff too, but as time goes on, that first story seems more and more like a lightning strike. I've never been able to quite recapture that same combination of charm, shrewdness, lecherousness, and greed.

And that unfinished story is a big embarrassment to me. :(
 
My favorite Ferengi returns.

And you prove once more that the job of an insurance claim investigator is nowhere near as lame as it sounds. That is, if your name is Huff.

A great story about the not-so-dead seedy underworld on Earth. A great mystery you created here with the your usual fast-paced style and hilarious dialog.

I wonder if Jennifer kept that policy on purpose in order to stick it to her corrupted mother. That would've been very shrewd of her.

As for the mind wipe. It does have presedence in Trek, I believe. I'm sure some aliens tried to do that to O'Brien once on DS9.

Thumbs up to another great Huff mystery!
 
Thumbs up to another great Huff mystery!

Thanks, CeJay!

As for the mind wipe. It does have presedence in Trek, I believe. I'm sure some aliens tried to do that to O'Brien once on DS9.

Hmm. I don't remember that, but it wouldn't surprise me.

After all--aliens tried to do just about everything to poor O'Brien. :lol:

This sounds like a good excuse to watch some episodes of DS9.
 
As for the mind wipe. It does have presedence in Trek, I believe. I'm sure some aliens tried to do that to O'Brien once on DS9.

Hmm. I don't remember that, but it wouldn't surprise me.

After all--aliens tried to do just about everything to poor O'Brien. :lol:

This sounds like a good excuse to watch some episodes of DS9.

So I looked this up and it turns out they didn't wipe his memories but added some instead.

Still pretty nasty but I guess if you can add stuff, you can also take it away.
 
A Fuzzy / Trek crossover - never thought I'd see the day!

A very enjoyable story, and what I think is an all too realistic view of humanity in the future.
 
So basically you're doing "Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar" in space...

Okay, but it works better with Bob Bailey on the OTR tapes...

Still it's an interesting take using a really familiar riff, at least for me...
 
So basically you're doing "Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar" in space...

Bingo!:)

I invented the character before I first heard the show--a long time ago, actually.

But once I found a show devoted to an actual insurance investigator, I really liked the whole "expense account" gag. It makes transitions really easy.

Okay, but it works better with Bob Bailey on the OTR tapes...

Still it's an interesting take using a really familiar riff, at least for me...
Okay--the H. Beam Piper fans, I should have expected.

But I am honestly surprised to meet another OTR fan here.
 
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A great Huff story - very fun and entertaining!

For some reason, I always drift back to old Dragnet and Mike Hammer episodes when I read this. I almost expect to hear Huff say, "Just the facts, ma'am."

Great job! :)
 
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