Quarter Share: A Trader's Tale from the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper

Read Online Quarter Share: A Trader's Tale from the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper by Nathan Lowell - Free Book Online

Book: Quarter Share: A Trader's Tale from the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper by Nathan Lowell Read Free Book Online
Authors: Nathan Lowell
Tags: Fiction, General, Science-Fiction, Space Opera, Science Fiction & Fantasy
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    “Grishom’s, thirty-years-old and aged in the cask. I have four, one-liter bottles.”
    I practically choked. “But that’s a hundred creds a bottle,” I said in shock.
    He nodded.
    I just stared at him but then I made the connection. “That’s why you weren’t on liberty when I came aboard?”
    He nodded again. “It took all my creds to buy them. I made one trip down when we made port to pick them up from my Aunt Annie. She’d found and held them for me.”
    “Aunt Annie?”
    “Anne O’Rourke. She’s the Union Hall Manager. You met her, didn’t you?”
    “Small galaxy…hey, wait. How’d you get them under your mass limit? You must have almost nothing on board.”
    He laughed. “Probably more than you. Four liters is only a bit over four kilos. Even with the glass bottles and presentation cases, it was under eight. How much mass did you bring up?”
    He was right. “Less than ten kilos.”
    I realized I could have done the same thing, except I didn’t know anything about private trading and didn’t have four hundred creds to spare.
    “What will they bring you on Darbat?” I found the whole thing fascinating.
    He shrugged. “I don’t know for sure. It depends on the market. Last one sold there went for two hundred creds, but a lot could have changed between now and then. I have a restaurant connection. He’ll give me a hundred and a quarter a piece. That’s my fallback.”
    “Nice margin.”
    Pip gave a self-depreciating shrug. “I doubled my money going into Neris.”
    “Wow! Really? What’d you carry?”
    “Computer memory chips.”
    My eyebrows shot up. “Is there that much market for them?”
    “You wouldn’t think so, but yeah. I was able to buy a case back on Gugara for almost nothing. Neris Company controls all the cargo coming into the stores there and they apply a hefty tariff. It means company people pay much higher prices there than anywhere else. It really makes it hard to live there and difficult to save enough to buy a ticket off-planet.”
    “I noticed.”
    “It also means that a case of memory chips, without the tariff, can be turned around with a pretty good margin. It’s lightweight, high demand, and practically liquid.”
    “How do you know all this stuff?”
    “I’m from a trader family. It’s in my blood.” He grinned.
    “You’re full of surprises tonight.” I raised an eye brow at him. “But what’s a trader family?”
    “Well, Aunt Annie has been a trader for going on forty stanyers. She’s been taking a little down time at the Union Hall, but I suspect she’ll be back on a ship within a few months. My father owns two ships now. I grew up analyzing trade and traffic patterns on the galley table on his first ship.”
    I knew I was gaping, but I couldn’t stop myself. “You grew up on a ship?” I tried to picture kids on the Lois . “How’d you get aboard?”
    He smacked me playfully. “Not all ships are like this one, buffoon. Dad and Mom are the owner-operators of a small hauler over in the Sargass Sector. It’s small, just a few hundred tons. They run light freight out to the hydrogen miners and asteroid prospectors. We kept up on the trade data from the surrounding area because sometimes it was actually cheaper to take a jump over to Deeb to pick up something the clients wanted than to go all the way in-system to trade on Sargass Orbital. Depending on the orbits, it could be as much as three weeks into Sargass, but only four standays out to the jump. Deeb maintained an orbital that was usually only eight standays in on the other side. We could get to Deeb, do the trade, and be almost all the way back before we could have made it to the Sargass Orbital.”
    “So, what are you doing here? Why aren’t you still working with your father?”
    Pip didn’t answer right away and when he did, he sighed first. “He casts a big shadow. I wanted to get out from under it. Aunt Annie is my mother’s sister and helped me get onto the

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