Jacky could feel his father's silence.
'Okay,' Sloat continued. 'Let's go with the concept that, within a situation basically advantageous to ourselves, we can spread the benefits around to anybody on our side. We don't sacrifice the advantage, but we're not greedy about the bounty it brings. We owe these people, Phil. Look what they've done for us. I think we could put ourselves into a really synergistic situation over there. Our energy can feed their energy and come up with stuff we've never even thought of, Phil. And we end up looking generous, which we are - but which also doesn't hurt us.' He would be frowning forward, the palms of his hands pressed together. 'Of course I don't have a total window on this situation, you know that, but I think the synergy alone is worth the price of admission, to tell you the truth. But Phil - can you imagine how much f**king clout we'd swing if we gave them electricity? If we got modern weapons to the right guys over there? Do you have any idea? I think it'd be awesome. Awesome.' The damp, squashy sound of his clapping hands. 'I don't want to catch you unprepared or anything, but I thought it might be time for us to think along those lines - to think, Territories-wise, about increasing our involvement.'
Phil Sawyer still said nothing. Uncle Morgan slapped his hands together again. Finally Phil Sawyer said, in a noncommittal voice, 'You want to think about increasing our involvement.'
'I think it's the way to go. And I can give you chapter and verse, Phil, but I shouldn't have to. You can probably remember as well I can what it was like before we started going there together. Hey, maybe we could have made it all on our own, and maybe we would have, but as for me, I'm grateful not to be representing a couple of broken-down strippers and Little Timmy Tiptoe anymore.'
'Hold on,' Jack's father said.
'Airplanes,' Uncle Morgan said. 'Think airplanes.'
'Hold on, hold on there, Morgan, I have a lot of ideas that apparently have yet to occur to you.'
'I'm always ready for new ideas,' Morgan said, and his voice was smoky again.
'Okay. I think we have to be careful about what we do over there, partner. I think anything major - any real changes we bring about - just might turn around and bite our asses back here. Everything has consequences, and some of those consequences might be on the uncomfortable side.'
'Like what?' Uncle Morgan asked.
'Like war.'
'That's nuts, Phil. We've never seen anything . . . unless you mean Bledsoe . . . '
'I do mean Bledsoe. Was that a coincidence?'
Bledsoe? Jack wondered. He had heard the name before; but it was vague.
'Well, that's a long way from war, to put it mildly, and I don't concede the connection anyhow.'
'All right. Do you remember hearing about how a Stranger assassinated the old King over there - a long time ago? You ever hear about that?'
'Yeah, I suppose,' Uncle Morgan said, and Jack heard again the falseness in his voice.
His father's chair squeaked - he was taking his feet off his desk, leaning forward. 'The assassination touched off a minor war over there. The followers of the old King had to put down a rebellion led by a couple of disgruntled nobles. These guys saw their chance to take over and run things - seize lands, impound property, throw their enemies in jail, make themselves rich.'
'Hey, be fair,' Morgan broke in. 'I heard about this stuff, too. They also wanted to bring some kind of political order to a crazy inefficient system - sometimes you have to be tough, starting out. I can see that.'
'And it's not for us to make judgments about their politics, I agree. But here's my point. That little war over there lasted about three weeks. When it was over, maybe a hundred people had been killed. Fewer, probably. Did anyone ever tell you when that war began? What year it was? What day?'
'No,' Uncle Morgan muttered in a sulky voice.
'It was the first of September, 1939. Over here, it was the day Germany invaded Poland.' His father stopped talking, and Jacky, clutching his black toy taxi behind the couch, yawned silently but hugely.
'That's screwball,' Uncle Morgan finally said. 'Their war started ours? Do you really believe that?'
'I do believe that,' Jack's father said. 'I believe a three-week squabble over there in some way sparked off a war here that lasted six years and killed millions of people. Yes.'
'Well . . . ' Uncle Morgan said, and Jack could see him beginning to huff and blow.
'There's more. I've talked to lots of people over there about this, and the feeling I get is that the stranger who assassinated the King was a real Stranger, if you see what I mean. Those who saw him got the feeling that he was uncomfortable with Territories clothes. He acted like he was unsure of local customs - he didn't understand the money right away.'
'Ah.'
'Yes. If they hadn't torn him to pieces right after he stuck a knife into the King, we could be sure about this, but I'm sure anyhow that he was - '