Stranger in a Strange Land(14)

By: Robert A. Heinlein



“You’re a liar and I love you for it. I was on police beat for three years, Jill; I never got hardened to it.”

“What happened to the others?”

“I wish I knew. If we don’t break the bureaucrats and high brass loose from that log, we’ll never know—and I am enough of a starry-eyed newsboy to think we should know. Secrecy begets tyranny.”

“Ben, he might be better off if they gypped him out of his inheritance. He’s very . . . uh, unworldly.”

“The exact word, I’m sure. Nor does he need all that money; the Man from Mars will never miss a meal. Any of the governments and any of a thousand-odd universities and scientific institutions would be delighted to have him as a permanent, privileged guest.”

“He’d better sign it over and forget it.”

“It’s not that easy. Jill, you know about the famous case of General Atomics versus Larkin, et al.?”

“Uh, not really. You mean the Larkin Decision. I had to study it in school, same as everybody. But what’s it got to do with Smith?”

“Think back. The Russians sent the first rocket to the Moon, it crashed. The United States and Canada combine to send another one; it gets back but leaves nobody on the Moon. So when the United States and the Commonwealth are getting set to send a colonizing one jointly under the nominal sponsorship of the Federation and Russia is mounting the same deal on their own, General Atomics steals a march by sending one of their own from an island leased from Ecuador—and their men are still there, sitting pretty and looking smug when the Federation vessel shows up . . . followed by the Russian one.

“You know what happened. General Atomics, a Swiss corporation American controlled, claimed the Moon. The Federation couldn’t just brush them off; that would have been too raw and anyhow the Russians wouldn’t have held still. So the High Court ruled that a corporate person, a mere legal fiction, could not own a planet; therefore the real owners were the flesh-and-blood men who had maintained the occupation—Larkin and associates. So they recognized them as a sovereign nation and took them into the Federation—with some melon slicing for those on the inside and fat concessions to General Atomics and its daughter corporation, Lunar Enterprises. This did not entirely suit anybody and the Federation High Court was not all powerful in those days—but it was a compromise everybody could swallow. It resulted in some tight rules for colonizing planets, all based on the Larkin Decision and intended to avoid bloodshed. Worked, too—it’s a matter of history that World War Three did not result from conflict over space travel and such. So now the Larkin Decision is solidly a part of our planetary law and applies to Smith.”

Jill shook her head. “I don’t see the connection. Martinis—”

“Think, Jill. By our laws, Smith is a sovereign nation in himself—and sole owner of the planet Mars.”



5

Jill looked round eyed. “I’ve certainly had too many martinis, Ben. I would swear that you said that that patient owns the planet Mars.”

“He does. He maintained occupation of it, unassisted, for the required length of time. Smith is the planet Mars—King, President, sole civic body, what you will. If the skipper of the Champion had not left colonists behind, Smith’s tenure might have failed. But he did, and that continues occupation even though Smith came to Earth. But Smith doesn’t have to split with them; they are mere immigrants until he grants them Martian citizenship.”

“Fantastic!”

“It surely is. Also it’s legal. Honey, do you now see why so many people are interested in who Smith is and where he came from? And why the administration is so damned anxious to keep him under a rug? What they are doing isn’t even vaguely legal. Smith is also a citizen of the United States and of the Federation, by derivation—dual citizenship with no conflict. It’s illegal to hold a citizen, even a convicted criminal, incommunicado anywhere in the Federation; that’s one of the things we settled in World War Three. But I doubt if Smith knows his rights. Also, it has been considered an unfriendly act all through history to lock up a visiting friendly monarch—which is what he is—and not to let him see people, especially the press, meaning me. You still won’t sneak me in as a thumb-fingered electrician?”

“Huh? You’ve got me worse scared than ever. Ben, if they had caught me this morning, what do you think they would have done to me?”

“Mmm . . . nothing rough. Just locked you in a padded cell, with a certificate signed by three doctors, and allowed you mail on alternate leap years. They aren’t mad at you. I’m wondering what they are going to do to him.”