After another long day of trade negotiations, the delegates
at the Trans-Federation Galactic Trade Conference were enjoying another
reception. The formal banquet was over and a complicated play without
words, something that was popular in Poslodi culture, was being performed.
Soft music played on stringed instruments accompanied the dramatics.
Most of the delegates and their spouses were only paying
slight attention to the performance. They were talking among themselves
in small groups. Most were discussing trade and diplomacy. Some, especially
the group around Marion and Talitha, were deploring the conditions of
the Polodi underclass, the Poslugi.
It had not escaped anyone’s attention that the performers were
all Poslugi, paid barely subsistence wages and subject to harsh conditions
of labour.
“I do not understand it,” said the elegant spouse of the
Derillian Voivode with her silver skin and gossamer wings that her gown
was woven around. “On Derrilia people with artistic talents are
lauded and honoured and are paid king’s ransoms for their arts.”
“It is the same on Earth,” Marion confirmed. “In fact
some people with very little talent often manage the fame and fortune.”
“On Gallifrey ‘arts’ of this sort ARE the preserve
of the Caretaker class,” Talitha confirmed. “But the very
best enjoy almost the status of Newbloods. They are welcome in our homes
as equals. It is a way for Caretakers to rise above their birth status.”
The Alpha Centauran spouse confirmed that Music and Drama were held in
high regard on Alpha Centauri. Everyone secretly wondered what Centauran
music would be like and politely decided it would be an acquired taste.
But the consensus was that the Poslugi players were much maligned.
“The Poslugi are cruelly treated at all levels,” Talitha
reminded everyone, revealing the true nature of Malika’s mission
to Posludi IV. “I find it quite wrong that we are here at all, making
Treaties and partying at night while they toil for our benefit.”
“I don’t know a hotel or conference centre that doesn’t
have cleaners,” remarked the wife of the Alludrian Ambassador, shaking
both of her heads at once. “The SS Capri is one of the most luxurious
facilities of all and manned entirely by those creatures with the long
tails who do all of the menial tasks.”
“The Vulpesi,” Marion said remembering more than one visit
to that fantastic space borne hotel and conference centre with a unique
style of comfort. “But they are paid handsomely, even the lowliest
chambermaid. They are the elite of the service industries and highly respected.”
Again it was agreed that something must be done for the Poslugi, but
none of them knew what.
“What’s going on?” Marion asked, suddenly. There was
a noise that drowned out the music from the entertainment. The ballroom
doors crashed open and dozens of armed police marched in. They surrounded
the stage, first, demanding that the players and musicians surrender.
Meanwhile, the catering staff and waiters were all rounded up.
It was the Ambassador from the planetary state of Fahot, all seven-foot
tall and five-foot wide who rose from his reinforced chair, cement flesh
rippling, and demanded to know what was going on.
“There has been a rebellion in the domiciliary camps of Poslodi
IV,” was the reply. “It will be crushed in a very short time,
but meanwhile all Poslugi are to be detained in order to ensure the safety
of the Poslodavac.”
“But… who will arrange my hair?” asked the second wife
of the Arradnian representative whose hair sculpted on top of her head
added two feet to her height.
It was the most insensitive of all the comments that erupted. Many delegates
and their spouses were concerned, it is true, with their domestic arrangements
without Poslugi to cook and clean, but many others were outraged at the
detention of so many innocent men and women who were not a part of the
rebellion and demanded to know where they would be taken. The answer was
not hopeful. A detention camp was being prepared outside the capital.
“Outrageous!” The cry was taken up by all of the delegates
and their spouses, even those more concerned with their hair. The cry
was even louder when the Minister for Intergalactic Affairs came to the
ballroom with the aim of satisfying the delegate concerns.
“I protest most strongly to the Poslodi government about their
treatment of innocent Poslugi,” said the Derillian Voivode in his
most imperious tone. “I also wish to remonstrate about the stated
intention to ‘crush’ the rebellion. If that is what I think
it means, I have to say that mass slaughter of an underclass, even one
that has taken arms against their condition is not the mark of a civilised,
let alone democratic, government.”
“Poslodi is not a democracy,” the Minister replied. “Your
comments have been noted, but I must remind you that foreign delegates
have no voice in our internal affairs.”
“And I would remind you, sir,” said Kristoph, rising and
going to stand in front of the stage where the players and musicians were
being made to kneel with their hands on their heads. “This hotel
is under diplomatic jurisdiction. It is, in essence, a joint embassy for
every government represented here. The incursion by your armed militia
represents a violation of intergalactic law. These people are guests of
our embassies and any attempt to remove them to a place of detention is
a further violation. I hereby place every single Poslugi within this building
under the protection of the Gallifreyan government.”
“You cannot....”
“He can, and so can I,” said the Venturan ambassador. “They
are under the protection of MY planet, too.”
“And mine….” Everyone was a little surprised by the
consensus from the Mogarian delegate. Since oxygen was poison to them
they wore armour and full face masks and used a translator to communicate.
They couldn’t even offer asylum in their diplomatic suite since
it was airlock sealed and filled with their own kind of atmosphere.
But the offer was made, anyway. It was backed up by several others.
“I repeat, this is diplomatic territory,” Kristoph said.
“Remove your armed militia from this building at once.”
The Minister was startled, but he knew that he had been outflanked by
more experienced politicians than he would ever be.
He removed the militia. He removed himself. For a little while there
was silence in the ballroom. Then Kristoph looked at the buffet table,
still groaning under the weight of food when the delegates were sated.
“Go and eat your fill,” he said to the Poslugi. “Get
a drink, whatever you want. Yes, I know there have been worrying developments,
but we all need time to think about our next step.”
“We all have families,” said one of the actors.
“None of us know what’s happening outside this room. I promise
we, the delegates, will try to help all of you. But until we find out
what is happening beyond these walls we must all make the best of the
situation.”
His calm voice reassured worried people and they did as he said, freely
eating the luxury food they never saw except in stolen leftover portions.
Some of them drank champagne and port. Most tasted these delights carefully
and kept a clear head.
Two of the men who had been waiting on them approached the table where
Kristoph and his party were sitting. Marion and Talitha both recognised
Dario, who had been attending them in their personal spa. He introduced
his friend, Maloi. They both looked nervous, even more so when invited
to sit with their ‘betters’, but they did so.
“Sir,” Dario began. “Am I to understand that you and
your colleagues have guaranteed our safety as long as we are within this
building?”
“That is so,” Kristoph assured him.
“If some of us chose to leave….”
“Oh, don’t,” Talitha begged. “They’ll shoot
you.”
“Madam, my thanks for your concern, but if I choose to take the
risk….”
“This isn’t just concern about your family, is it?”
Kristoph had met freedom fighters and revolutionaries of every sort. He
recognised the look in the eyes of a man who had burnt his boats already.
“You have a plan? You have safe houses, arms caches? No, I don’t
have to know about any of it. You know where you have to go?”
“I do,” Dario answered.
“When you leave here, you are on your own and there is nothing
I can do to help you. Diplomatic privilege is barely holding here. The
Minister thought he could run roughshod over it already. I can’t
help you with weapons or ammunition. That would betray the very idea of
diplomatic neutrality. But there may be one small way I can help. Come
with me, before you go on your way.”
The two men were puzzled, but Dario already knew that the Gallifreyan
delegates were fair-minded men who might be trusted. They followed Kristoph
to the ante-room outside the conference room. They watched as he opened
a cupboard and extracted a wooden
box with the seal of Rassilon embossed on the lid. It contained dozens
of medallions on simple ribbons.
“Put one of these on,” Kristoph told Dario, handing him one
of the medallions. The young man, still puzzled, did so. His companion
gasped.
“You’re invisible! At least… I can see you if I try…
if I concentrate.”
“Perception filters,” Kristoph explained. “Not invisibility,
just a way of not being noticed. Time Lord technology, leant out to delegates
who might want to slip in and out without disrupting the proceedings.”
Dario was catching on, but Kristoph expanded his explanation.
“They will get you out of the building and past any patrols in
the streets. They may give you an edge if any of your plans involve a
surprise attack. They’ll get you closer than you could hope without
them.”
“Sir…”
“As I said, guns or ammunition would breach diplomatic protocol.
Even medical aid is difficult. But these are just bits of metal and fabric,
and unlikely to be missed until the delegates re-convene.”
“Sir, you may have helped us succeed in overturning the Poslodavac
government.”
“No, don’t tell me things like that,” Kristoph told
the two would-be revolutionaries. “Just go, now. Don’t let
me hear anything, one way or another, until it is over.”
The two men nodded. Before they turned away they saluted, clumsily. Kristoph
returned the gesture more precisely. But saluting didn’t matter
for a rebel army. Tactics and bravery mattered. He knew they had the latter,
at least.
He went back to the ballroom where everyone except the Mogarian delegates,
for obvious reasons, were deciding how many of the Poslugi refugees might
be accommodated in their respective diplomatic suites. There was little
else for anyone to do except get some sleep and see what the morning would
bring.
The Gallifreyan delegates took their fair share of them. Marion and Talitha
found clothes for the players to change out of their costumes and arranged
makeshift beds.
But when things were quiet, later, Marion and Talitha looked out of the
window in their drawing room. There were signs that something terrifying
was happening in the city. Beyond the sound-proofed windows they could
see police hover cars with flashing lights and soldiers patrolling the
streets. In the distance there were fires. They didn’t know what
was on fire, or why, but it all made for a ghastly scene.
“I only hope Malika is safe,” Talitha whispered, almost to
herself.
“He has to be,” Marion assured her. “We would know
if anything had happened to him.”
She hoped that was true, but since the rebellion had begun on Poslodi
IV, the very place Malika had gone with Polin, then there was no way to
know for certain.
The morning might bring news for all of them, Poslugi, Poslodavac and
diplomatic visitors alike.
But what sort of news?
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