out; he didn't know why he always unconsciously sounded off with that. "A Chief Ranger from Khatka just came on board," he reported, carefully offhand, as he busied himself reading labels. He knew better than to serve fish or any of its derivatives in disguise again. "Khatka!" Tau sat up straighter. "Now there's a planet worth visiting." "Not on a Free Trader's pay," commented Dane. "You can always hope to make a big strike, boy. But what I wouldn't give to lift ship for there!" "Why? You're no hunter. How come you want to heat jets for that port?" [Pg 8] [Pg 8] "Oh, I don't care about the game preserves, though they're worth seeing, too. It's the people themselves—" "But they're Terran settlers, or at least from Terran stock, aren't they?" "Sure," Tau sipped his coffee slowly. "But there are settlers and settlers, son. And a lot depends upon when they left Terra and why, and who they were—also what happened to them after they landed out here." "And Khatkans are really special?" "Well, they have an amazing history. The colony was founded by escaped prisoners—and just one racial stock. They took off from Earth close to the end of the Second Atomic War. That was a race war, remember? Which made it doubly ugly." Tau's mouth twisted in disgust. "As if the color of a man's skin makes any difference in what lies under it! One side in that line-up tried to take over Africa—herded most of the natives into a giant concentration camp and practiced genocide on a grand scale. Then they were cracked themselves, hard and heavy. During the confusion some survivors in the camp staged a revolt, helped by the enemy. They captured an experimental station hidden in the center of the camp and made a break into space in two ships which had been built there. That voyage must have been a nightmare, but they were desperate. Somehow they made it out here to the rim and set down on Khatka without power enough to take off again—and by then most of them were dead. "But we humans, no matter what our